Friday, February 27, 2009

RTV Featured Artist: Missy Higgins

It's Friday and we've got another RTV Featured Artist for you to check out: Missy Higgins.


Missy Higgins is an Australian native singer/songwriter and is extremely passionate about the environment. Missy will be a guest of Rock the Vote on a panel at this year’s Power Shift 09 Conference in Washington, D.C. Her songs have been used in Smallville, Grey’s Anatomy, the Hills, One Tree Hill, So You Think You Can Dance, as well as many other hit TV shows.

You can check out two tracks from Missy's album, On a Clear Night, at her Featured Artist page: "Where I Stood" and "Steer." Like what you hear? She's currently touring across the U.S. and will be in the D.C. at the 9:30 Club on Monday night.

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Vote in Special Elections Across the Country

And speaking of 2009 elections, there are a bunch of special congressional elections happening in the next few weeks. Live in these districts? Make sure to get out and vote!

Upcoming special elections to watch:

Illinois 5th - White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel's former seat. The primary election will be held this Tuesday, March 3rd. The general election will be held April 7th. Visit the Illinois Board of Elections site for more information.

New York 20th - The general election to replace freshly-minted New York Senator Kirsten Gillibrand will take place on Tuesday, March 31st. Visit the New York Board of Elections site for more information.

California 32nd - A special election date has not yet been set for new Secretary of Labor Hilda Solis' seat, but we've got our eye on it, and we'll let you know as soon as a date is set.

In addition to these high-profile seat vacancies, there are a number of special elections for local positions and ballot initiatives that are happening all across the country. Visit your Secretary of State's website for information on the elections happening in your area, and get out and vote!

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Vote Tuesday in Los Angeles

Seems like the 2008 elections just happened - but 2009 contests are right around the corner, with more than 600 mayoral races in cities across the country and two huge gubernatorial contests in Virginia and New Jersey.

And for our readers in Los Angeles, it's time to get to the polls next week!

On Tuesday, March 3rd, voters in Los Angeles will go to the polls citywide. Will you get out and vote?


What’s on the ballot? Just about every city office, that’s what - mayor, city council, board of education, community college board, etc. – plus ballot measures on solar energy, economic development, and more. Vote Tuesday and you’ll help decide who runs L.A. schools and community colleges, community safety programs, health care, housing and jobs programs, social services, and more.

Make sure you have a say in how your city is run - get out and vote on Tuesday, March 3rd. Polls citywide open at 7:00AM and close at 8:00PM.

Need more info?
Your vote makes a huge difference in city elections, where contests often come down to just a few dozen votes – or less. Make sure elected officials are hearing from you – get out and vote on Tuesday!

Questions? Call the Los Angeles City Clerk’s office at (213) 978-0444 or (888) 873-1000, or visit their website.

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What You Need to Know: 02.27.09

Economy suffering 'maximum recession stress'
"The economy contracted at a staggering 6.2 percent pace at the end of 2008, the worst showing in a quarter-century, as consumers and businesses ratcheted back spending, plunging the country deeper into recession.

The Commerce Department report released Friday showed the economy sinking much faster than the 3.8 percent annualized drop for the October-December quarter first estimated last month. It also was considerably weaker than the 5.4 percent annualized decline economists expected.

A much sharper cutback in consumer spending — which accounts for about two-thirds of economic activity — along with a bigger drop in U.S. exports sales, and reductions in business spending and inventories all contributed to the large downgrade."

Obama Administration to Rescind Bush's 'Conscience' Regulation
"The Obama administration has begun the process of rescinding sweeping new federal protections that were granted in December to health care workers who refuse to provide care that violates their personal, moral or religious beliefs.

The Office of Management and Budget announced this morning that it was reviewing a proposal to lift the controversial "conscience" regulation, the first step toward reversing the policy. Once the OMB has reviewed the proposal it will published in Federal Register for a 30-day public comment period."

Obama Plans to End Combat Mission in Iraq by August 2010
"President Obama heads to one of the nation’s most storied military bases Friday morning to unveil plans to pull most troops out of Iraq by August 2010 and he has support from an unlikely quarter — Senator John McCain, the Republican he beat in last year’s election.

Mr. McCain and other Republicans emerged from a meeting with Mr. Obama at the White House on Thursday evening reassured that the president’s withdrawal plan is responsible and reasonable. After securing assurances from Mr. Obama that he would reconsider his plans if violence increases, Mr. McCain and the Republicans expressed cautious support."

U.S. government boosts stake in Citigroup
"The U.S. government will exchange up to $25 billion in emergency bailout money it provided Citigroup Inc. for as much as a 36 percent equity stake in the struggling bank.

The deal announced Friday — the third attempt at a rescue plan for Citigroup in the past five months — is contingent on private investors also agreeing to a similar swap.

The aim is to keep the New York bank holding company alive and bolster its capital as it faces growing losses amid the intensifying global recession. Existing shareholders would see their ownership stake shrink to as little as 26 percent and the bank said it is eliminating all dividends on common shares."

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Thursday, February 26, 2009

RTV Launches Rock the Vote Radio

We're excited to announce the launch of Rock the Vote Radio, a new program bringing you the latest news and politics with commentary from a rotating panel of young adults.

In a weekly roundtable discussion, our panelists will tackle the economy, foreign affairs, social issues, the news media, and more.

For our first show, Rock the Vote Radio commentators Marcus Skelton, Andrew Thomaides, Jessica Brady, and Monika Wysocki discussed President Obama's big speech to Congress, as well as the conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan.

This is a brand new project and we want to hear from you - what do you want Rock the Vote Radio to cover? After you listen to the first show, make sure to leave a comment and tell us what you think.

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What You Need to Know: 02.26.09

Obama Plans Major Shifts in Spending
"President Obama’s new budget blueprint estimates a stunning deficit of $1.75 trillion for the current fiscal year, which began five months ago, then lays out a wrenching change of course as he seeks to finance his own priorities while stanching the flow of red ink.

By redirecting enormous streams of deficit spending toward programs like health care, education and energy, and paying for some of it through taxes on the rich, pollution surcharges, and cuts in such inviolable programs as farm subsidies, the $3.55 trillion spending plan Mr. Obama is undertaking signals a radical change of course that Congress has yet to endorse."

U.S. jobless claims tally tops 5 million mark
"New jobless claims rose more than expected last week and the number of Americans continuing to receive unemployment benefits has topped 5.1 million, fresh evidence the recession is increasingly forcing employers to shed jobs.

The Labor Department said Thursday that first-time requests for unemployment benefits jumped to 667,000 from the previous week's figure of 631,000. Analysts had expected a slight drop in claims.

The 667,000 new claims are the most since October 1982, though the labor force has grown by about half since then. The four-week average of initial claims, which smooths out fluctuations, rose to 639,000, the highest in more than 26 years."

Falling Revenues Threaten Rebuilding in Iraq
"In few nations around the globe are the consequences of the financial crisis as potentially sobering as they are in Iraq. Both oil revenues and American financial support have plummeted just as the country has the chance to take advantage of its increasing stability to improve basic services and upgrade its ruined infrastructure.

Now, projects are being put off as Iraq struggles to pay for huge raises granted to government employees as well as the salaries and equipment for hundreds of thousands of new Iraqi security troops."

House OKs $410B bill to boost spending
"The Democratic-controlled House approved $410 billion legislation Wednesday that boosted domestic programs, bristled with earmarks and chipped away at policies left behind by the Bush administration. The vote was 245-178, largely along party lines.

Republicans assailed the measure as too costly — particularly on the heels of a $787 billion stimulus bill that President Barack Obama signed last week."

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Wednesday, February 25, 2009

President Obama: "We Will Rebuild, We Will Recover"



Last night, Barack Obama delivered his first remarks as President to a joint session of Congress. In a State of the Union-style address, the President laid out his plans on a series of major issues, primarily focused on the economy - energy, jobs, education, health care, and more.

President Obama highlighted several actions already taken by Congress this year - passage of the economic recovery package, expanding the children's health insurance program, and signing a law to curb pay discrimination - and other actions in the works to fix our credit and banking problems.

But the bulk of his speech focused on a series of long-term investments in energy, health care, and education that he is proposing to Congress and the American people:

On energy:
"But to truly transform our economy, protect our security, and save our planet from the ravages of climate change, we need to ultimately make clean, renewable energy the profitable kind of energy. So I ask this Congress to send me legislation that places a market-based cap on carbon pollution and drives the production of more renewable energy in America. And to support that innovation, we will invest fifteen billion dollars a year to develop technologies like wind power and solar power; advanced biofuels, clean coal, and more fuel-efficient cars and trucks built right here in America."
On health care:
"Our recovery plan will invest in electronic health records and new technology that will reduce errors, bring down costs, ensure privacy, and save lives. It will launch a new effort to conquer a disease that has touched the life of nearly every American by seeking a cure for cancer in our time. And it makes the largest investment ever in preventive care, because that is one of the best ways to keep our people healthy and our costs under control.

"This budget builds on these reforms. It includes an historic commitment to comprehensive health care reform - a down-payment on the principle that we must have quality, affordable health care for every American. It's a commitment that's paid for in part by efficiencies in our system that are long overdue. And it's a step we must take if we hope to bring down our deficit in the years to come.

"Let there be no doubt: health care reform cannot wait, it must not wait, and it will not wait another year."
On education:
"I ask every American to commit to at least one year or more of higher education or career training. This can be community college or a four-year school; vocational training or an apprenticeship. But whatever the training may be, every American will need to get more than a high school diploma. And dropping out of high school is no longer an option. It's not just quitting on yourself, it's quitting on your country - and this country needs and values the talents of every American. That is why we will provide the support necessary for you to complete college and meet a new goal: by 2020, America will once again have the highest proportion of college graduates in the world.

"I know that the price of tuition is higher than ever, which is why if you are willing to volunteer in your neighborhood or give back to your community or serve your country, we will make sure that you can afford a higher education. And to encourage a renewed spirit of national service for this and future generations, I ask this Congress to send me the bipartisan legislation that bears the name of Senator Orrin Hatch as well as an American who has never stopped asking what he can do for his country - Senator Edward Kennedy."
You can check out some of the reaction to the full speech from the New York Times, the Boston Globe, the Washington Post, and the Huffington Post. Or you can watch the speech here or read it here.

After the speech, Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal gave the Republican response, which you can watch here or read here.

So, what did you think about President Obama's address last night? What about Governor Jindal's response? Let us know in the comments section.

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What You Need to Know: 02.25.09

Obama Vows, ‘We Will Rebuild’ and ‘Recover’
"President Obama urged the nation on Tuesday to see the economic crisis as reason to raise its ambitions, calling for expensive new efforts to address energy, health care and education even as he warned that government bailouts have not come to an end.

In his first address to a joint session of Congress, Mr. Obama mixed an acknowledgment of the depth of the economic problems with a Reaganesque exhortation to American resilience. He offered an expansive agenda followed by a pledge to begin paring an ever-climbing budget deficit."

In GOP Response, Jindal Blasts Stimulus
"Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal (R) continued his sharp criticism of the stimulus signed into law last week, as the man some Republicans view as the potential savior of their party used his response to President Obama's address to a joint session of Congress last night to challenge the vision laid out in the recovery package.

Delivering the official GOP response to Obama from the governor's mansion in Baton Rouge, Jindal defended the virtues of small government that he said even his own party had abandoned in recent years."

Obama Favoring Mid-2010 Pullout in Iraq, Aides Say
"President Obama is nearing a decision that would order American combat forces out of Iraq by August 2010 as he seeks to finally end a war that has consumed and polarized the United States for nearly six years, senior administration officials said Tuesday.

The timetable would give the military three months more to withdraw than the 16-month pullout Mr. Obama promised last year on the campaign trail. Officials said he was prepared to make that shift because he agreed with the concerns of ground commanders who wanted more time to cement security gains, strengthen political institutions and make sure Iraq did not become more unstable again."

One Illinois Senator Tells the Other to Step Down
"Richard J. Durbin of Illinois, the Senate’s No. 2 Democrat, met privately Tuesday with the state’s junior senator, Roland W. Burris, to suggest that he resign but was rebuffed, Mr. Durbin said.

“He said he would not resign, and that was his conclusion,” Mr. Durbin said. He said Mr. Burris, who recently acknowledged that he had tried to raise money for former Gov. Rod R. Blagojevich before being appointed to fill the seat vacated by President Obama, also said he had not made up his mind about seeking election in 2010. Mr. Durbin told him it would be “extremely difficult for him to be successful in a primary or general election under the circumstances.”"

Obama hopes its 3rd time lucky for Commerce
"Maybe the third time will be the charm. President Barack Obama can only hope.

On Wednesday, he named former Washington Gov. Gary Locke as his commerce secretary on Wednesday after his top two choices for the post fell through."

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Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Watch President Obama's Speech Tonight 9pm

You know how most years the President gives a State of the Union speech? Every member of Congress is there, plus all the Supreme Court justices and cabinet secretaries (except one - he or she gets to hide out somewhere secret. Just in case.)

Well, usually there's no State of the Union in an inauguration year - which makes sense, because it's hard to fully comment of the state of the union just a few weeks after taking office. So most presidents' first SOTU happens the year after his inauguration - and President Obama is sticking with tradition and waiting til 2010 to give his first State of the Union.

That said, in lieu of the SOTU, tonight at 9pm President Obama is giving a major speech to a joint session of Congress which "will have the trappings of a State of the Union address," with a strong focus on our country's economic issues and his proposals for fixing them.

According to news reports:

With the recession well into its second year, expect the remarks to be longer on the economy than on foreign affairs...The president is expected to show Americans how all the pieces [of his plans] fit together to make the economy sound again. There's the $787 billion just-signed stimulus bill, plus an even more expensive mix of rescues for the financial industry, auto companies and troubled mortgage holders.

He will touch on other priorities he says fit into the bigger picture. Potentially eye-popping expensive plans to broaden health care coverage to eventually insure everyone. Moving the country toward greener energy sources. Expanding education opportunities. Overhauling financial industry regulation.

And, he is all but certain to talk about the national debt and budget woes, stressing the need to get what he calls "exploding deficits" under control by controlling spending. His upcoming budget request will include his goal to slice the estimated $1.3 trillion annual deficit in half by the end of his first term.

The speech will air on all television networks, live, at 9pm EST tonight. Definitely check it out - and right afterward, Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal will give the Republican's response to the President's speech, also aired on the networks.

Make sure to watch tonight - and then come back here and let us know in the comments section what you thought about the speech. Agree with the ideas? Disagree? Have questions? Want to know more? We'll be watching, too, and be back tomorrow and throughout the week with our thoughts on the speech and reaction from young people around the country.

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What You Need to Know: 02.24.09

Obama pitching a broad economic case
"Barreling ahead on a mammoth agenda, Barack Obama is ready to offer a detailed sketch of the first year of his presidency, casting the nation's bleeding economy as a tangle of tough, neglected problems.

In a prime-time speech from the House of Representatives, Obama will make his case Tuesday that much more has to be done to turn around the economy — a message he knows he must explain."

U.S. Clears Path to Bank Takeovers
"The Obama administration yesterday revamped the terms of its emergency aid to troubled financial firms, setting a course that could culminate with the government nationalizing some of the country's largest banks by taking a controlling ownership stake.

Administration officials said the change, which allows banks to repay the government with common stock rather than cash, is intended to give banks more capital to withstand a continued deterioration of the economy, and not to nationalize the banking system.

But in seeking to bolster investor confidence in troubled companies such as Citigroup, the government said it is willing to acquire large chunks of their shares."

U.S. to Give $900 Million in Gaza Aid, Officials Say
"The Obama administration intends to provide some $900 million to help rebuild Gaza after the Israeli incursion that ended last month, administration officials said Monday.

In an early sign of how the administration plans to deal with Hamas, the militant Islamist group that controls Gaza, an official said that the aid would not go to Hamas but that it would be funneled through nongovernmental organizations."

"President Barack Obama's likely third pick for Commerce secretary is former Washington Gov. Gary Locke, a senior administration official said Monday.
Locke, a Democrat, was the nation's first Chinese-American governor when he served two terms in the Washington statehouse from 1997 to 2005."
"The Obama administration is considering establishing national rules for regulating greenhouse gas emissions for automobiles, according to White House officials, a move backed by both auto manufacturers and some environmentalists.
For weeks, administration officials have been meeting with car companies as well as green groups and representatives from California -- which is awaiting word on whether it will receive a federal waiver to regulate greenhouse gas emissions from vehicles -- to try to broker a deal on the issue. On Sunday, Carol M. Browner, assistant to the president for energy and climate, said she and others backed the idea of a single standard for cars and trucks."

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Monday, February 23, 2009

Understanding the Credit Crisis

If you're anything like me, you've had a hard time wrapping your mind around the current Wall Street/credit crunch mess. Sub-prime mortgages? Leveraging? Huh?

Which is why I've got to recommend this video: The Crisis of Credit Visualized. Compiled as part of his thesis work at the Art Center College of Design in Pasadena, California, Jonathan Jarvis uses graphics and plain talk to explain the convoluted relationship between homebuyers, brokers, investors, and all of the other players involved in the credit markets. It doesn't offer any answers to the problems we find ourselves dealing with now, but it at least explains how we got here. Check it out!



The Crisis of Credit Visualized from Jonathan Jarvis on Vimeo.

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What You Need to Know: 02.23.09

Governors, Obama to discuss stimulus plan
"After an evening of black tie grandeur at the White House, governors planned to return Monday morning for a business meeting with President Barack Obama to discuss how to spend the economic stimulus money soon flowing to their states.

Concluding a three-day winter meeting of the National Governors Association devoted largely to a discussion of the stimulus bill, governors planned to bring questions and offer ideas to Obama at a 90-minute meeting Monday morning."

Economists see recession getting worse
"Brace yourself: The recession is projected to worsen this year.

The country stands to lose a sizable chunk of economic activity in 2009 as consumers at home and abroad retrench in the face of persistent economic troubles. And the U.S. unemployment rate — now at 7.6 percent, the highest in more than 16 years — is expected hit a peak of 9 percent this year."

As Doubts Grow, U.S. Will Judge Banks’ Stability
"The Obama administration will begin taking a hard look at the financial condition of the country’s 20 biggest banks this week to judge whether they could hold up even if the downturn worsens further than policy makers already expect.

These reviews of the banks’ books, known as “stress tests,” are heightening a dilemma for Obama aides about how candid they should be about the health of banks like Citigroup and Bank of America. The tests are expected to take several weeks."

Clinton urges China: Don't stop investing in us
"U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton urged China on Sunday to continue investing in United States Treasury bonds and says that country's continued investment in the U.S. is a recognition that the two countries depend on each other."

Holder embarks on Guantanamo inspection
"Attorney General Eric Holder has taken off on a trip to the U.S. detention center at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, as the Obama administration weighs what is needed to shut the facility down.
The role of the prison in the war against terrorism and the treatment of suspects held there was a continuing controversy during the Bush administration. During his campaign, Barack Obama repeatedly pledged to close it if elected president.

Now, Obama has set a goal of shuttering the facility in Cuba within a year. And a large part of Holder's visit there on Monday will involve discussions with officials about detention and interrogation practices."

Supporters Upbeat About Bill to Give D.C. a Vote in Congress
"Supporters of D.C. voting rights believe that they are on the verge of their biggest victory in at least 30 years as the Senate prepares to take up a bill this week creating a full House seat for the District.

Two years ago, a similar measure failed to clear a key procedural hurdle in that chamber by three votes. Democrats picked up at least seven Senate seats in the elections last fall, boosting the current bill's chance of passage. They also expanded their majority in the House, where the bill is expected to be approved as early as next month."

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Friday, February 20, 2009

New Strong Army Steady Video

Rock the Vote artists Strong Army Steady have released a video in honor of Black History Month called "Black History." The video was directed by the Image Addikts.

Check it out:

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What You Need to Know: 02.20.09

Obama: Stimulus money must be spent wisely
"Invoking his own name-and-shame policy, President Barack Obama warned the nation's mayors Friday that he will "call them out" if they waste the money from his massive economic stimulus plan."

Clinton Addresses North Korea Succession
"When Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton warned Thursday that a succession battle in North Korea could complicate nuclear negotiations with that country’s government, she broke an informal taboo. Diplomats do not talk publicly about what comes after Kim Jong-il, the convalescing dictator who turned his isolated country into a nuclear rogue state."

Obama, Harper discuss poor economy, trade
"President Barack Obama stepped cautiously in his first foreign trip Thursday, refraining from asking Canada to rethink its plans to withdraw troops from Afghanistan and saying changes to the North American Free Trade Agreement can wait."

U.S. Has Dual Task On Climate Change
"Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton's decision to make her first overseas trip to China, where she arrives today, highlights the daunting tasks the new administration faces as the world scrambles to forge a new climate-change treaty this year: trying to persuade emerging economies to make deep cuts in greenhouse-gas releases that they have long resisted while coaxing Congress to adopt first-ever limits on the United States' own emissions.

These two challenges, which are key to securing a deal when climate negotiators convene December in Copenhagen, mean that President Obama and his deputies must launch a major push abroad and at home on an issue that President George W. Bush only reluctantly addressed. Bush ultimately launched a regular meeting of the world's biggest greenhouse-gas emitters -- an initiative Obama hopes to sustain -- but Bush's unwillingness to commit to binding domestic emissions cuts effectively stalled international efforts to curb global warming."

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Thursday, February 19, 2009

2009 Netroots Nation Conference: Special Student Rate!

Our friends at Netroots Nation have passed along a special offer for students interested in attending their 2009 conference: for just $50, you can participate in four days of insightful panels, training sessions, and networking opportunities at the netroots event of the year.

The 2009 Netroots Nation Conference will be held in Pittsburgh, PA on August 13-16, 2009.

The fourth annual gathering of the Netroots will include panels led by national and international experts; identity, issue, and regional caucuses; prominent political, issue, and policy-oriented speakers; a progressive film screening series; and the most concentrated gathering of progressive bloggers to date. Past gatherings have included a Presidential Leadership Forum that drew seven Democratic candidates, a surprise visit from Al Gore, and an interactive Ask the Speaker session with Nancy Pelosi.

So what are you waiting for? There are a limited number of student registrations available. Register now!

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What You Need to Know: 02.19.09

Obama Hoping to Reinforce U.S. Trade Relationship With Canada
"President Barack Obama will leave today for Canada -- his first foreign trip as president -- where he is expected to discuss trade and the environment with Prime Minister Stephen Harper.

A top Obama aide said this week that the president's main message to Harper will be to reassure Canadians that the United States intends to maintain a robust trading relationship with its neighbor."

Kansas Governor Seen as Top Choice in Health Post
"Gov. Kathleen Sebelius of Kansas, an early Obama ally with a record of working across party lines, is emerging as the president’s top choice for secretary of health and human services, advisers said Wednesday.

Should she be nominated, Ms. Sebelius would bring eight years of experience as her state’s insurance commissioner as well as six years as a governor running a state Medicaid program."

Burris feels more heat as questions swirl
"Sen. Roland Burris is pleading with ordinary Illinoisans to stop a "rush to judgment" amid growing fury over the new senator's shifting accounts of how he came to be appointed to the Senate.

"If I had done the things I've been accused of, I would be too embarrassed to stand up here in front of you because you all are my friends," Burris said Wednesday at a City Club of Chicago luncheon, adding that during his decades of public service there was "never a hint of a scandal."

Burris has announced he will no longer speak with the media, even as a preliminary Senate Ethics Committee inquiry gets under way, Illinois lawmakers ask local prosecutors to look into perjury charges and calls for his resignation grow, even from his own party."

Budget Clears Legislature in California After Scathing Battle
"After five days of intense, nearly nonstop negotiations over how to close a $41 billion gap, California state senators early Thursday morning agreed on a budget that raises taxes, cuts deeply into services and borrows far into the future, leaving nearly every person in the state scathed in some way."

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Wednesday, February 18, 2009

What You Need to Know: 02.18.09

Obama unveils $75B mortgage relief plan
"Seeking to tackle “a crisis unlike any we’ve ever known,” President Barack Obama unveiled an ambitious $75 billion plan Wednesday to keep as many as 9 million Americans from losing their homes to foreclosure.

Announcing the plan in Arizona — a state especially hard hit by the housing crunch — Obama said that turning around the battered economy requires stemming the continuing tide of foreclosures. The housing crisis that began last year set many other factors in motion and helped lead to the current, widening recession."

Obama’s War on Terror May Resemble Bush’s in Some Areas
"Even as it pulls back from harsh interrogations and other sharply debated aspects of George W. Bush’s “war on terrorism,” the Obama administration is quietly signaling continued support for other major elements of its predecessor’s approach to fighting Al Qaeda.

In little-noticed confirmation testimony recently, Obama nominees endorsed continuing the C.I.A.’s program of transferring prisoners to other countries without legal rights, and indefinitely detaining terrorism suspects without trials even if they were arrested far from a war zone."

Burris ‘welcomes’ Blagojevich contacts probe
"An increasingly embattled Sen. Roland Burris said he "welcomes" the opportunity to answer renewed questions from authorities and elected officials about how he landed a coveted Senate appointment from ousted Gov. Rod Blagojevich.

It appears he'll have his chance.

Burris' admission that he had more contact with Blagojevich advisers about the Senate seat than he described under oath to a state House impeachment panel has prompted furious lawmakers to seek a criminal investigation into whether the Democrat committed perjury."

Holder: U.S. 'a nation of cowards' on race
"Attorney General Eric Holder on Wednesday described the United States as a nation of cowards on matters of race, saying most Americans avoid discussing unresolved racial issues.

In a speech to Justice Department employees marking Black History Month, Holder said the workplace is largely integrated but Americans still self-segregate on the weekends and in their private lives."

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Tuesday, February 17, 2009

President Obama Signs Economic Recovery Legislation

President Obama just signed into law the economic recovery plan, the biggest and boldest investment in America’s economy we’ve seen in 40 years.

Seriously, this is a big deal. Our economy is in freefall – we lost 3.6 million jobs in the past year – and a major fix is needed, now.

President Obama’s plan will inject billions of dollars into the economy, a move leading economists say is desperately needed to create jobs and get people spending again. Governors – Democrats and Republicans alike – have made it clear that the plan will help stop worst-case scenario job losses and budget cuts in their states.

What does this plan mean for you? Whether you’re in the workforce, in school, or both, you, your friends, and your family probably will be impacted by it. Here’s some of what the plan will do:

  • Create or save 3.5 million jobs, from teachers and electricians to construction workers and police officers.

  • Help 7 million students afford college by upping the maximum Pell Grant by $500, to $5350, and providing a $2,500 tax credit for college tuition.

  • Direct $53.6 billion to the states to prevent cutbacks and layoffs in local school districts, and to modernize or repair public schools and higher education institutions.

  • Build or fix highways and bridges, improve mass transit and high-speed rail, invest in clean energy and green jobs, and bring Internet to underserved communities.

  • Help recently unemployed workers pay for health care (a.k.a. COBRA) and make ends meet until they can get new jobs.

  • Cut taxes for 95% of American workers, $400 if you’re single, $800 if you’re a couple.

That’s just some of it. Check out more details at Recovery.gov, the White House’s new site about the plan and what’s happening with it. And if you want a cool visual on how it will work, check out this video from our friends at the Center for American Progress.

Of course, the plan isn’t perfect - compromises were made, and it’s only one of several steps needed on our road to recovery.

But it’s a bold, important first step, and you helped make it happen: nearly 10,000 of you contacted Congress asking them to pass the strongest bill possible, and your involvement helped restore funding to save teachers’ jobs, create green jobs, invest in higher education, and provide health care help. Nice work.

Thanks for your action on this – we’ll keep you in the loop on how the plan rolls out throughout the year.

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Must-Read: "Yes, They Could. So They Did."

Thomas Friedman had a great op-ed this weekend in the New York Times: "Yes, They Could. So They Did." In it, he recounts his experience meeting two young American women in New Delhi that are working to create solutions to the global warming crisis through tenacity and innovation.

Friedman encountered Caroline Howe and Alexis Ringwald when they offered to drive him around New Dehli in a plug-in electric car that was also powered by rooftop solar panels:

“India is full of climate innovators, so spread out across this huge country that many people don’t get to see that these solutions are working right now,” said Howe. “We wanted to find a way to bring people together around existing solutions to inspire more action and more innovation. There’s no time left to just talk about the problem.”

Howe and Ringwald thought the best way to do that might be a climate solutions road tour, using modified electric cars from India’s Reva Electric Car Company, whose C.E.O. Ringwald knew. They persuaded him to donate three of his cars and to retrofit them with longer-life batteries that could travel 90 miles on a single six-hour charge — and to lay on a solar roof that would extend them farther.

Between Jan. 1 and Feb. 5, they drove the cars on a 2,100-mile trip from Chennai to New Delhi, stopping in 15 cities and dozens of villages, training Indian students to start their own climate action programs and filming 20 videos of India’s top home-grown energy innovations. They also brought along a solar-powered band, plus a luggage truck that ran on plant oil extracted from jatropha and pongamia, plants locally grown on wasteland. A Bollywood dance group joined at different stops and a Czech who learned about their trip on YouTube hopped on with his truck that ran on vegetable-oil waste.

Friedman, describing his encounter with the women, then wrote:

After a year of watching adults engage in devastating recklessness in the financial markets and depressing fecklessness in the global climate talks, it’s refreshing to know that the world keeps minting idealistic young people who are not waiting for governments to act, but are starting their own projects and driving innovation.

It's great to see Friedman acknowledging the creative solutions young people are dreaming up and implementing to address some of the biggest problems facing our world today. Read the entire article and let us know what you think!

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What You Need to Know: 02.17.09

Obama poised to sign stimulus into law
"President Barack Obama is ready to sign into law the most sweeping economic package in decades, a rescue plan meant to reinvigorate job creation, consumer spending and public optimism. Add the bill to an ever-growing deficit.

Capping the biggest victory of his month-old administration, Obama will sign the economic legislation Tuesday in Denver."

Calif. budget stalemate sets up fiscal calamity
"After a frustrating holiday weekend that failed to yield the one vote needed to end California's budget stalemate, the state is poised to begin layoff proceedings Tuesday for 20,000 government workers.

In addition to the layoffs, the state also plans to halt all remaining public works projects, potentially putting thousands of construction workers out of jobs."

GM, Chrysler Finalize Plans To Restructure
"General Motors and Chrysler raced to save their place in the American auto industry yesterday, putting the final touches on plans to curb production, cut jobs and pare brands in hopes of securing billions of dollars in additional federal aid.

The plans they are scheduled to submit today to the Obama administration call for a broad restructuring of their operations at a time the industry is suffering one of its steepest declines in decades. But as detailed as the plans are, they are more of a starting point than an end."

Obama Gains Support From G.O.P. Governors
"President Obama must wish governors could vote in Congress: While just three of the 219 Republican lawmakers backed the $787 billion economic recovery plan that he is signing into law on Tuesday, that trifling total would have been several times greater if support among the 22 Republican state executives counted.

The contrast reflects the two faces of the Republican Party these days."

Clinton warns North Korea on missile launch
"Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton on Tuesday warned North Korea against following through on a threatened missile launch, saying it would damage its prospects for improved relations with the United States and the world.

In Tokyo on her first trip abroad as America's top diplomat, Clinton also stressed U.S. commitment to Japan's security, signed a military deal to advance that and underscored the importance of the alliance by inviting Japanese Prime Minister Taro Aso to Washington next week."

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Friday, February 13, 2009

Get Your "Fond of Change" T-Shirt from Jason Mraz

Rock the Vote and Jason Mraz are partnering up to bring you this new Limited Edition “Fond Of Change” Tee just in time for President’s Day! Pre-order yours now before they sell out.

Keeping green in mind, this is a super soft 100% Organic Cotton Tee printed with Waterbased inks and environmentally friendly solvents. And, best of all, 50% of proceeds will go directly to Rock the Vote to help continue our voter education and registration efforts.

Get yours here!


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RTV Featured Artist: Jason Mraz


We're excited to announce our latest Featured Artist, Jason Mraz!
Check out his Featured Artist profile and take a listen to some of the tracks from Jason's latest hit release, "We Sing. We Dance. We Steal Things." These include: "Make It Mine," "I'm Yours," and "Lucky," featuring Colbie Caillat.

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What You Need to Know: 02.13.09

Congress readies final vote on stimulus bill
"Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid said Friday that Congress is nearly finished with a massive, $790 billion economic stimulus plan giving President Barack Obama a big victory — but not everything he wanted.

The Nevada Democrat said as debate resumed that the Senate would likely vote on the package of spending and tax cuts later in the day and that both the Senate and House would do the work necessary to quickly get the emergency legislation to Obama's desk."

Gregg Withdraws As Commerce Pick
"Saying he "made a mistake," Republican Sen. Judd Gregg withdrew yesterday as the nominee for commerce secretary, dealing a fresh blow to President Obama's quest to fill out his Cabinet and dramatically undercutting his efforts to forge a new bipartisanship in the capital.

Gregg said that he had simply lacked foresight and that he shouldered the burden of the decision entirely. "I should have focused sooner and more effectively on the implications of being in the Cabinet versus myself as an individual doing my job," he said at a news conference on Capitol Hill.

He cited concerns about Obama's economic recovery plan and the administration's intent to have the next census director report to senior White House officials as well as the commerce secretary."

Ailing Banks May Require More Aid to Keep Solvent
"Some of the nation’s large banks, according to economists and other finance experts, are like dead men walking.

A sober assessment of the growing mountain of losses from bad bets, measured in today’s marketplace, would overwhelm the value of the banks’ assets, they say. The banks, in their view, are insolvent."

Senate confirms Panetta as CIA director
"The U.S. Senate has confirmed Leon Panetta, former chief of staff in President Bill Clinton's White House, to run the Central Intelligence Agency.

Panetta's nomination sailed through the chamber by a voice vote Thursday night."

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Thursday, February 12, 2009

Happy Birthday, Abe!

Today marks the 200th anniversary of President Abraham Lincoln's birth. To celebrate the occasion, we're bringing you ten fascinating facts on Abraham Lincoln, compiled by MSN/Encarta:

10. Lincoln was the first president to be assassinated
On April 14, 1865, in Ford's Theatre in Washington, D.C., actor John Wilkes Booth shot United States president Abraham Lincoln in the head. The president died the next day at 7:20 a.m. He had been president for four years (1861-1865) when he was assassinated. Eerily, one week before his death, Lincoln had a dream of someone crying in the White House; when he found the room, he looked in and asked who had passed away. The man in the room said the president had. When he looked in the coffin it was his own face he saw. Lincoln's last direct descendant, his great-grandson Robert Lincoln Beckwith, died in 1984. He left no heirs.

9. Lincoln struggled with depression
Lincoln was known as a storyteller and jokester among family and friends, but he also suffered from deep depression. While most modern speculation attributes his depression to genetic predisposition, ideas vary as to what brought it out of dormancy. Lincoln wept openly in public, recited sentimental poetry and spoke of suicide on several occasions. "No element of Mr. Lincoln's character," said his associate Henry Clay Whitney, "was so marked, obvious and ingrained as his mysterious and profound melancholy." William Herdon, Lincoln's law partner, said, "His melancholy dripped from him as he walked."

8. Lincoln was an animal lover
Even though he was strong, a talented wrestler and proficient with an ax (he was known as "the Rail-Splitter"), Lincoln avoided hunting and fishing because he disliked killing and harming animals, even for food. Fond of pets, Lincoln owned horses, cats, dogs and even a turkey.

7. Lincoln was the tallest U.S. president
Truly a gentle giant, Lincoln was our tallest president at 6 feet 4 inches. (If you figure in his favorite stovepipe hat, he must have towered even higher, cutting quite a formidable figure!) As you can see in this image of Lincoln at Antietam on Sept. 17, 1862, he stands at least a head taller than all the other men pictured -- even sans stovepipe!

6. John Wilkes Booth's brother saved the life of Lincoln's son
In a strange coincidence, around 1863 or 1864 in Jersey City, N.J., Edwin Booth saved Robert Lincoln's life. A crowd of people were waiting for a sleeping car late at night when Robert was pressed against the train. When the train began to move he lost his footing and fell into the space between the train and the platform. Edwin Booth quickly pulled him to safety. Booth was considered the finest actor of his generation and was very well known. Historians doubt Robert Lincoln ever told his parents of this incident.

5. Lincoln was an avid reader and largely self-educated
Abraham Lincoln's desire to learn and his efforts to educate himself have become legendary. What's less known is that because he grew up in poverty in Kentucky and Indiana, Lincoln had little formal education -- only about 18 months -- and minimal access to books. As a boy, he would often read at night by the light of the fire in his family's cabin. When his father could spare him from chores, Lincoln attended an ABC school. Such schools were held in log cabins, and often the teachers were barely more educated than their pupils. According to Lincoln, "No qualification was ever required of a teacher beyond readin', writin' and cipherin', to the Rule of Three."

4. Lincoln first encountered slavery as a boat hand on the Mississippi
In 1831, Abraham Lincoln and two others were hired to take a flatboat full of cargo down the Mississippi River to New Orleans, La. Denton Offutt, a Kentucky trader and speculator, paid them 50 cents a day plus a $60 fee. According to popular legend, Lincoln saw his first slave auction while on this trip. Referring to the practice of slavery, he is said to have declared at the time, "If I ever get a chance to hit that thing, I'll hit it hard."

3. Lincoln's in-laws disapproved of him
In 1840, Lincoln met a cultured, high-strung Kentucky woman named Mary Todd, who was staying with a married sister in Springfield. After a long courtship, they were married on Nov. 4, 1842. A week later, Lincoln wrote a fellow lawyer, "Nothing new here, except my marrying, which to me is a matter of profound wonder." Mary Todd Lincoln came from a prominent family of slaveholders. Her parents disapproved of her marriage to Lincoln because he came from a poor family. Lincoln supposedly said that while God made do with one "d," the Todds demanded two.

2. His debating skills first earned him national recognition
In 1858, Stephen Douglas and Abraham Lincoln battled it out in a series of debates to represent Illinois in the U.S. Senate. When Douglas was told that Lincoln was his opponent, he said, "I shall have my hands full. He is the strong man of the party -- full of wit, facts, dates -- and the best stump speaker, with his droll ways and dry jokes, in the West." Douglas defended popular sovereignty and accused Lincoln of trying to divide the nation. To Lincoln, however, slavery was both a political and a moral issue, and was incompatible with American democracy. In the debate at Freeport, Lincoln cornered Douglas by asking whether the people of a territory could lawfully exclude slavery prior to the formation of a state constitution. Douglas replied that slavery could be excluded from a territory, despite the Dred Scott decision, if the people refused to enact the necessary local laws for its protection. This opinion, known as the Freeport Doctrine, cost Douglas much of his support among Southern Democrats who were thinking of him as a presidential candidate in 1860. Though Lincoln lost the election, these debates with Douglas brought Lincoln national recognition.

1. The Gettysburg Address was not his best speech
Though it may be the most famous, the Gettysburg Address is generally not considered Lincoln's best speech. In 1856, Lincoln publicly identified himself as a Republican, and in May he attended the Republican state convention at Bloomington. The moderate antislavery resolutions of this convention were acceptable to Lincoln. He signified his approval of the new party by giving the main address at the convention, speaking before dozens of reporters and over 1,000 people. This speech, considered by many to have been his most compelling, has been lost. It is said that those in attendance were so captivated by his speech that no one remembered to take notes.

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What You Need to Know: 02.12.09

Obama urges Americans to follow Lincoln
"President Barack Obama called on Americans Thursday to follow Abraham Lincoln's example of showing generosity to political opponents and valuing national unity — above all else.

At a ceremony in the stately Rotunda of the U.S. Capitol marking the 16th president's 200th birthday, Obama said he felt "a special gratitude" to the historical giant, who in many ways made his own story possible. On Thursday night, Obama, the nation's first black president, will deliver the keynote address at the Abraham Lincoln Association's annual banquet in Springfield, Ill."

Congressional Leaders Work to Pass Stimulus Before Presidents' Day
"A day after settling on the details of a nearly $790 billion economic stimulus package, congressional leaders moved to hold final votes on the plan tomorrow in hopes of sending it to President Obama to sign into law by his Presidents' Day deadline.

At a closed-door meeting of House Democrats this morning, House Majority Leader Steny H. Hoyer (D-Md.) told the caucus to expect to vote on the stimulus legislation tomorrow, according to a participant in the meeting. Current plans call for the Senate to hold its final vote on the bill after it arrives from the House."

White House may move to buy bad mortgages
"The White House is considering a proposal to head off potentially millions more home foreclosures by using federal funds to buy up at-risk loans and then refinance them with more affordable terms.

Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner and other Obama administration officials met Wednesday with a group of top bankers, community groups and financial industry representatives to discuss the plan."

Out of Work and Challenged on Benefits, Too
"It's hard enough to lose a job. But for a growing proportion of U.S. workers, the troubles really set in when they apply for unemployment benefits.

More than a quarter of people applying for such claims have their rights to the benefit challenged as employers increasingly act to block payouts to former workers.

The proportion of claims disputed by former employers and state agencies has reached record levels in recent years, according to the Labor Department numbers tallied by the Urban Institute."

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Dear President Ahmadinejad and President Obama: Support Generation Y Diplomacy

Check out an interesting open letter, from over at the Huffington Post, by Negar Razavi, a young Iranian-American, to the leaders of the United States and Iran.
"I write to you as an Iranian, as an American, as a young person, and most importantly, as an advocate for dialogue between Iran and the United States....

"You have both publicly stated your support for U.S.-Iran dialogue, and your governments are examining ways to launch such diplomacy. But dialogue between our two countries need not wait until Tehran and Washington sit down at the negotiation table.

"You can begin the process of dialogue by facilitating exchanges between young Americans and Iranians -- those who will gain the most from such interactions, yet have the least knowledge and understanding of the other...

"I have experienced first-hand how rewarding it can be to bring these young people together. In 2004, I co-led a delegation of American students to Iran for a dialogue exchange. The university in Tehran had never hosted Americans before, and the Americans had never traveled to Iran. For some of them, this was their first trip to a Muslim country. The two groups of students debated and discussed issues as diverse and as difficult as Abu Ghraib, terrorism, the role of the media, women's rights and art. On some issues we had clear differences, while on others we found common ground. Ultimately though, the process helped us gain a more nuanced and respectful understanding of the other....

"President Obama and President Ahmadinejad, if you are truly committed to dialogue, allow the young people from your countries to get to know each other. Remove the obstacles that keep them apart. These smart, motivated and innovative young people will find ways to interact, to learn from another, and ultimately to break apart the fear and misunderstandings that have developed between the Iranian and American people."

Check out the whole letter here - it's a fascinating read. Then tell us what you think: does the best chance for U.S.-Iran diplomatic relations lie with our generation?

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Wednesday, February 11, 2009

What You Need to Know: 02.11.09

Agreement in Congress Appears Near on Stimulus
"Congressional negotiators appeared on Wednesday to be near an agreement on an economic stimulus plan of just under $800 billion, and the pace of the talks suggested that the final legislation could be passed by the Senate and House and on President Obama’s desk by the end of the week."

Top bankers face grilling by dubious Congress
"Eight leaders of the nation’s top banks were facing a grilling from Congress Wednesday, meeting with deep skepticism from lawmakers who quizzed them aggressively about how they have used more than $160 billion in taxpayers’ money.

Speaking at the onset of a House Financial Services Committee hearing Wednesday morning, Rep. Barney Frank challenged the banking industry to work harder to fix a failing system, saying there is “a great deal of anger” across the country."

Regulator Calls for Lenders to Stop Foreclosures
"The Office of Thrift Supervision today called for the mortgage lenders it regulates to halt foreclosures until the Obama administration unveils a program to help struggling homeowners.

After presenting a plan to boost the financial sector yesterday, Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner said that a $50 billion initiative to help homeowners facing foreclosure is not expected for at least a week. The delay and the price tag -- it was the low end of expectations -- disappointed consumer advocates and lawmakers anticipating the announcement."

In Israeli Vote, the Winner Is Gridlock
"Israelis awoke Wednesday to find that their parliamentary elections had not yielded a new government but political gridlock instead and the prospect of weeks of wrangling and dealmaking before the country’s direction becomes clear.

With 99 percent of the vote counted, the center-left Kadima Party of Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni held a one-seat lead over the rightist Likud Party of Benjamin Netanyahu, 28 to 27 out of a total of 120 seats in Parliament. But the total gain of all parties on the right far outweighed those of the left, leading Mr. Netanyahu and his supporters to demand that he be given first crack at forming the next government."

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Tuesday, February 10, 2009

Last chance to take action on economic recovery

The U.S. Senate just passed their version of the economic recovery plan by a vote of 61-37.

We need a plan to fix our economy – now – and this vote is an important step forward. Unfortunately, the Senate bill is a mixed bag. It cuts funding from state education and health care programs, and would save or create 500,000 fewer jobs than the House bill.

A timid plan isn't what we need – the latest news is that we lost nearly 600,000 jobs in January, the worst month in 35 years. What we need is the boldest action possible to create the most jobs and get Americans back to work right now.

We have one last chance to make it happen. Starting today, leaders from the House and Senate are meeting to merge their two bills and create a final version - then they'll vote on that bill, possibly as early as Thursday.

Will you contact your representatives and urge them to support a bold economic recovery plan that creates the most jobs possible?

Last week, we heard from the Hill that phone calls and emails – including yours - helped stave off even bigger cuts to the jobs bill. You made a big difference – and now we have one last chance to make sure Congress hears from us.

Contact your representatives today!

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Gen Y's Jobless Aren't Crying in Their Martinis, They're Networking Online

You probably know someone that's recently lost a job. Or maybe you're the one looking for work. Either way, you should check out New American Media's article "Gen Y's Jobless Aren't Crying in Their Martinis, They're Networking Online," and read about some of the ways other young people are coping with the unemployment crisis.

Those looking to network, find job hunting tips, and develop new skills should check out LaidOffCamp:
LaidOffCamp is modeled on the successful, web-organized "BarCamp," which organizes meetings where attendees present information to each other. At LaidOffCamp, those interested in presenting will be asked to write their topic on a white board and attendees will decide which topics should be presented -- from how to live on a budget to how to brand yourself. The purpose, Hutchins says, is "for community members to help steer each other in the right direction -- whether that direction is looking for a new job, starting a company, finding freelance work or becoming independent consultants."
If you're looking to find a little humor in your situation, check out Unemploymentality:
The blog, which receives about 1,000 hits a day, has evolved into an "unemployment survival guide" for the young and savvy unemployed. Some pieces are farcical, such as Henion's "The Baller's Guide to Recession Dating," and "I've been laid off - five responses and your rebuttal," which advise jobless readers on how to maneuver through social situations while still holding their head up high. In another article, "Men: Taking Layoffs Like a Girl," Khadder takes a jab at a New York Times article about how unemployment hurts men's egos more than women's; she argues that women take it better because they are more used to being slighted.

And these are just a few examples of young people making the best out of a fairly awful situation. Despite everything that's been happening, we're still making the most out of it.

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What You Need to Know: 02.10.09

Senate passes $838 billion stimulus bill
"President Barack Obama's economic recovery plan has passed the Senate and is on its way to difficult House-Senate negotiations.

Just three Republicans helped pass the plan on a 61-37 vote and they're already signaling they'll play hardball to preserve more than $108 billion in spending cuts made last week in Senate dealmaking. Obama wants to restore cuts in funds for school construction jobs and help for cash-starved states."

Geithner Details New Bank Rescue Plan
"Acknowledging that Americans have “lost faith” in the government’s effort thus far to rescue the banking system, the Treasury secretary, Timothy F. Geithner, outlined a sweeping overhaul and expansion of the program on Tuesday.

The new program will attempt to marshal as much as $2 trillion from the Treasury, private investors and the Federal Reserve.

Hoping to address the bitter unpopularity of the program among voters and lawmakers in Congress, Mr. Geithner vowed that the Treasury will greatly increase the program’s openness to the public and demand much stricter accountability from financial institutions that receive government help."

Obama in Florida to rally stimulus support
"Fresh from his first White House news conference, President Barack Obama hit the road on Tuesday to rally support for a huge economic stimulus plan among Americans hit by the deepening recession.

Obama, who for days has urged the Congress to pass a more than $800 billion spending and tax-cutting bill, has travelled to Florida, a state that has been struck especially hard by the economic downturn."

New Media Breaks in, but Tradition Lives On
President Obama on Monday evening became the 10th American president to call on Helen Thomas at a White House news conference. And he was the first to call on Sam Stein, a reporter for The Huffington Post, whose Internet publication sprung to life during Mr. Obama’s candidacy.

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Monday, February 09, 2009

Obama Talks Tonight - Tune in at 8pm

The latest news on the economic recovery plan that we've been covering here is that the Senate will vote on it tomorrow afternoon.

Before that happens, though, President Obama is taking his case to the people for the strongest plan possible - earlier today he was at a town hall meeting in Elkhart, IN. Tonight, he's holding his first White House press conference.

Make sure to tune in and check out what he has to say - the press conference will be broadcast on all the major TV networks at 8pm. Let us know what you think in the comments below.

And while you're at it, pick up the phone to contact your Senators - today's your last chance! Make sure they know how important it is to pass a big and bold stimulus plan. We're all depending on it.

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What You Need to Know: 02.09.09

Economic stimulus bill moves to Senate vote
"The U.S. Senate lined up to advance the $827 billion economic stimulus legislation backed by the White House on Monday, and the Democratic leader vowed to deliver a bill to President Barack Obama's desk within days."

Obama Stumps for Stimulus in a City Hit Hard by Downturn
"President Obama took his case for an $800 billion economic recovery package to one of the most distressed places in America on Monday as he opened a series of campaign-style events intended to press Congress to approve the plan by week’s end.

Wrapping himself in the mandate of his election last November, Mr. Obama sounded like a candidate all over again, scolding greedy Wall Street bankers and pointedly rejecting Republican critics for sticking with what he called a failed philosophy. At one point, he spoke about people with as many as five homes, which sounded like a reference to his opponent last fall, Senator John McCain."

GOP Sees Positives In Negative Stand
"Three months after their Election Day drubbing, Republican leaders see glimmers of rebirth in the party's liberation from an unpopular president, its selection of its first African American chairman and, most of all, its stand against a stimulus package that they are increasingly confident will provide little economic jolt but will pay off politically for those who oppose it."

Steele Defends Payment to Sister
"Michael S. Steele, the new chairman of the Republican National Committee, said yesterday that there was nothing improper in a payment of more than $37,000 to his sister's company for work on his 2006 Senate campaign and that he would work with the FBI "to clear up my good name.""

U.S. Bank Bailout to Rely in Part on Private Money
"Wall Street helped produce the global financial and economic crisis. Now, as the Obama administration prepares to unveil a revised bailout plan for the banking system, policy makers hope Wall Street can be part of the solution.

Administration officials said the plan, to be announced Tuesday, was likely to depend in part on the willingness of private investors other than banks — like hedge funds, private equity funds and perhaps even insurance companies — to buy the contaminating assets that wiped out the capital of many banks."

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Friday, February 06, 2009

Tweet Congress

Looking for a quick and easy way to stay up-to-date on the latest Congressional happenings? Check out Tweet Congress, which let's you track the tweets from all of the Senators and Representatives using Twitter.

And there's a lot of action to be found. Missouri Senator Claire McCaskill has been updating nonstop on the Senate negotiations over the economic recovery package. And freshman Representatives Jared Polis from Colorado and Jason Chaffetz from Utah have been documenting their exciting first few weeks in office.

So check out Tweet Congress and start following your Congressperson today.

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What You Need to Know: 02.06.09

Jobless rate hits 7.6 percent as layoffs mount
"Recession-battered employers eliminated 598,000 jobs in January, the most since the end of 1974, and catapulted the unemployment rate to 7.6 percent.

The grim figures were further proof that the nation's job climate is deteriorating at an alarming clip with no end in sight."

Panel to Advise Obama on Economy
"Saying that he wanted to leave no stone unturned in finding ways to put people back to work, President Obama on Friday appointed a team of outside economic advisers to offer suggestions on ways to respond to the nation’s recession.

The White House Economic Recovery Advisory Board, led by a former Federal Reserve chairman, Paul Volcker, and modeled after the foreign intelligence board created by President Dwight D. Eisenhower, includes advisers from business, labor and academia."

Senators bounce stimulus proposals around
"The Senate struggled Friday to craft a huge stimulus package to revive the battered economy, with moderates trying to trim the $937 billion price tag to attract Republican senators who say it is too costly.

The cost has ratcheted up during five days of Senate debate, and a bipartisan group of senators tried to cut the package by up to $100 billion.

President Barack Obama said late Thursday he could accept a final price tag in the range of about $800 billion, but the challenge was agreeing on a list of cuts that would still garner the 60 votes needed to clear a certain Republican procedural roadblock."

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Worst Job Loss Since 1974

Another sucker punch on the job front today: according to new Labor Department estimates, 598,000 jobs were lost in January. Just in January! That's the worst job loss in one month since 1974. The unemployment rate is now up to 7.6%, with no sign of decreasing any time soon.

As bad as these numbers are, they just confirm what we've known for a long time: the economy sucks. We all have friends that have lost jobs. We're all trying to figure out ways to pay the rent. And as young people just starting out, we're in a particularly vulnerable position.

We're in trouble.

We need action.

As we've been covering here, the Senate could vote as early as tonight on an economic recovery bill intended to tackle our failing economy. The bill as originally crafted could help save or create 3-4 million jobs.

Unfortunately, pieces of the bill intended to create jobs through education and clean energy are in danger of being cut. And considering the horrible job numbers that came out today, it's clear we can't afford to do that.

We need the strongest economic recovery bill that creates the most jobs possible, and we need it yesterday.

You can help make it happen. Call your Senator now at (202) 224-3121 and urge him or her to pass the strongest economic recovery bill possible, including strong support for education and clean energy programs.

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Wall Street Accountability

So, President Obama just announced a $500,000 pay cap for executives at companies being propped up by taxpayer (a.k.a., your) money from last fall's bailout bill.

Makes sense to hold companies to certain reasonable standards when its public money that they're spending, right?

Apparently they disagree. Check out some of the Wall Street reaction to Obama's order:

“That is pretty draconian — $500,000 is not a lot of money, particularly if there is no bonus."
James F. Reda, founder and managing director of James F. Reda & Associates

“If I didn’t pay [bonuses], the people were going to go. … These people didn’t choose to cure cancer. These people didn’t choose to do public service work… These people chose to make money.”
Jack Welch, former CEO of General Electric

Really?

With today's news that almost 600,000 Americans lost their jobs last month, it's hard to feel sorry for corporate executives struggling to make ends meet on a half million dollars a year.

(And, just leaving aside the disputable argument that the "$500,000 is not a lot of money," Obama's executive order actually allows plenty of room for executives to accept bonuses, just not bonuses paid for with our tax dollars.)

What do you think? How do you think we should be keeping Wall Street accountable?

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Thursday, February 05, 2009

What You Need to Know: 02.05.09

Centrists in Senate Push to Cut Billions From Stimulus
"Anxious over the ballooning size of the proposed economic stimulus package, now at more than $900 billion, lawmakers in both parties were working Thursday on a last-minute plan to strip tens of billions of dollars from the bill.

Meanwhile, President Obama was said to be considering an address to the nation on Monday to promote the package.

The effort to trim back the program was being led by two centrist senators, Ben Nelson, Democrat of Nebraska, and Susan Collins, Republican of Maine, who say they would like to pare from $50 billion to $200 billion from the package. The final Senate vote on the stimulus package was expected late on Thursday."

Ginsburg has surgery for pancreatic cancer
"Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg had surgery Thursday after being diagnosed with pancreatic cancer, the court said.

The cancer was apparently in the early stages, according to the court announcement."

Obama's Faith-Based Office to Depart From Bush's Precedent
"President Obama today signed an executive order creating his Office of Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships, which adds a legal review on contentious issues of church and state separation as well as a panel of advisers that includes secular and religious leaders.

White House aides said it departs from the Bush administration's initiative, which allowed faith-based groups to hire only those of their own faith and, instead, will decide such issues on a case-by-case basis. Among the new priorities of the office, aides said, would be attempting to reduce the number of abortions and efforts to support women and families."

Iraqi Prime Minister Wins Key Provinces in Recent Elections
"Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki posted significant victories in Iraq's provincial elections, winning Baghdad and eight provinces in Iraq's Shiite south, according to official preliminary results released Thursday.

In voting for Maliki and his allies, Iraqis appeared to be supporting a strong central government and rewarding the prime minister for sending in government forces to fight Shiite militias in the southern city of Basra and Baghdad's Sadr City enclave. Maliki's State of Law coalition won 38 percent of the votes in Baghdad and 37 percent in Basra."

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National Teach-In on Global Warming Today

Today is the National Teach-In on Global Warming, with events happening in cities and on campuses across the country. Find an event near you.

The Teach-In's not a one-day event only, though - organizers are holding weekly teach-ins and mobilizing around a 100 days of action to stop global warming. Check out the call schedule and the experts involved, from Jessy Tolkan and Billy Parish of the Energy Action Coalition to Van Jones and Ross Gelbspan.

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Wednesday, February 04, 2009

Do you want Rush Limbaugh speaking for you?

In the past 24 hours, over 3,600 of you have emailed or called your Senators to demand immediate action to save our failing economy.

From what I hear, some in the Senate are starting to get the message we're sick and tired of watching our jobs disappear.

Problem is, I also hear that opponents of many of the most important programs - for green jobs, student aid, and job creation - are flooding the Senate with calls, spurred by angry diatribes from Rush Limbaugh over the past week.

Do you want Rush Limbaugh speaking for you? Or do want to go straight to the source and make sure your Senators get an earful from you, too?

Call your Senators today at 202-224-3121 and let us know what your hear.

We don't have any time to waste. Americans lost 524,000 jobs in December and a total of 2.6 million in 2008. You may have been one of the millions who's lost a job. If you weren't, I bet you have a friend or relative who has. I do. Too many of them.

This is a crisis situation, and we need a strong economic recovery bill to put us back on track. Economists estimate that the bill being debated right now will create or save 3-4 million jobs with investments in education, clean energy, roads and bridges, health care, and more.

Call your Senators today at (202) 224-3121. (not sure who they are? Find out here.)

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The District: Obama's First 100 Days as Reality TV

Check out Newsweek's new series The District, a hilarious (and yet somehow informative) take-off on The City and The Hills. Complete with overly earnest voice-overs, awkward pauses, and a perfect pop soundtrack, Barack, Joe, and Michelle could give Whitney, Jay, and Olivia a run for their money any time.

Take a look:


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What You Need to Know: 02.04.09

Obama Calls for ‘Common Sense’ on Executive Pay
"President Obama announced on Wednesday a salary cap of $500,000 for top executives at companies that receive the largest amounts of money under the $700 billion federal bailout, calling the step an expression not only of fairness but of “basic common sense.”

“We all need to take responsibility,” the president said, in discussing the compensation restrictions, which include an exception for restricted stock. He also used the occasion to prompt Congress once again to act on his separate economic stimulus program, whose cost could approach $1 trillion."

Obama Says He Erred in Nominations
"President Obama acknowledged yesterday that he had "made a mistake" in trying to exempt some candidates for positions in his administration from strict ethics standards and accepted the withdrawal of two top nominees, including former Senate majority leader Thomas A. Daschle, in the first major setback of his young presidency."

Nominee Slip Hurts Health Care Drive
"The abrupt collapse of Tom Daschle’s cabinet nomination on Tuesday undercut President Obama’s mission to expand health care by depriving him of an unusually well positioned architect for a big legislative campaign and leaving him without a backup plan.

Mr. Daschle’s decision to withdraw his candidacy for secretary of health and human services could slow the president’s drive to reshape the nation’s health care system as the White House searches for a replacement, and it could allow Congress to step into the vacuum during that delay, analysts said."

5000 rejected Minn. ballots get another look
"The judges in Minnesota's Senate election trial threw Republican Norm Coleman a lifeline on Tuesday, opening the door to adding nearly 5,000 rejected absentee ballots to a race that Democrat Al Franken leads by just 225 votes.

It wasn't a total victory for Coleman, who had wanted the judges to look at about 11,000 such ballots. He also has to prove the absentees were unfairly rejected, and it's likely that Franken would gain votes from the pile too."

Tuesday, February 03, 2009

What You Need to Know: 02.03.09

Daschle withdraws as health secretary nominee
"Former Senate Democratic leader Tom Daschle on Tuesday withdrew his nomination to oversee the Health and Human Services Department, citing controversies over his taxes and his ties to the health care industry — and telling NBC News that a New York Times editorial also played a role.

His withdrawal came just a few hours after another Obama nominee, Nancy Killefer, said she was withdrawing her nomination. Both had controversies with taxes and cited distractions over that as reasons for withdrawing."

Obama’s Pledge to Reform Ethics Faces an Early Test
"During almost two years on the campaign trail, Barack Obama vowed to slay the demons of Washington, bar lobbyists from his administration and usher in what he would later call in his Inaugural Address a “new era of responsibility.” What he did not talk much about were the asterisks.

The exceptions that went unmentioned now include a pair of cabinet nominees who did not pay all of their taxes. Then there is the lobbyist for a military contractor who is now slated to become the No. 2 official in the Pentagon. And there are the others brought into government from the influence industry even if not formally registered as lobbyists."

Obama nominates Gregg for Commerce head
"President Barack Obama nominated Republican Sen. Judd Gregg to be Commerce secretary on Tuesday, a bipartisan gesture that the Democratic president stressed was necessary with the economy in a virtual free fall."

Holder Sworn in as Attorney General
"Eric H. Holder Jr. was sworn in today as the nation's first African American attorney general, opening a new chapter for a Justice Department that had suffered under allegations of improper political influence and policy disputes over wiretapping and harsh interrogation practices.

Holder, promising a "break with the immediate past," said that the department's 110,000 employees could look forward to working in an environment where "there shall be no place for political favoritism. No reasons to be timid.""

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Monday, February 02, 2009

This is Our Time: Young Voices from the Inauguration

Check out this cool video from YES! , a nonprofit founded by two teenagers that works with young changemakers worldwide. The video, "This is Our Time: Young Voices from the Inauguration," was shot last week and features dozens of young people talking about what the moment means to them and the need to take advantage of this opportunity to mobilize around the change we want to see in the world.


New Opportunities to Help Serve America

Lost in the attention surrounding President Obama's $825 billion economic recovery package, another piece of a legislation was introduced last week that you should be aware of: the Serve America Act.

The bill is designed to expand national volunteer opportunities dramatically - from the current level of 75,000 to 250,000 positions. It also encourages people to engage in a lifetime of service, with programs geared toward students, working adults, and retirees.

This is great news for a lot of young people out there. We're part of one of the most service-oriented generations in history, and the interest in programs like AmeriCorps and Teach for America has long exceeded the limited number of spaces to be filled each year. It's also nice to see Congress acknowledge the service that is already being done by so many Americans - the bill helps existing organizations expand their work and recruit even more volunteers to help improve their communities.

Early signs point to broad bipartisan support, so we're hoping for some quick movement in favor of this legislation in the coming months. Check out the full bill summary here, and make sure to check back soon - we'll keep you updated as SAA makes its way through Congress.

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