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January 31, 2007

Senate Adds Tax Breaks as It Passes a Wage Bill

January 31, 2007

WASHINGTON, Jan. 30 — The Senate voted overwhelmingly on Tuesday to move ahead on a bill to increase the minimum wage, signaling that the measure is likely to pass this week.

But the vote also sets up a conflict with the House that is likely to stall any increase.

The Senate bill includes $8.3 billion in tax breaks for small businesses that Democrats who sponsored the bill said were necessary to obtain Republican support.

The 87-to-10 vote on Tuesday was to limit debate on the bill. Democrats say they expect to achieve a similarly wide margin of approval on the final bill.

The House approved a simpler bill, including the wage increase but no tax breaks, this month. The Democratic leaders there insist that it should not be necessary to offer tax breaks in exchange for the wage increase, the first in 10 years.

The two bills would raise the minimum wage $2.10 an hour, from $5.15 to $7.25.

Democratic leaders from both chambers now have to figure out how to reconcile the measures. Assuming that the Senate bill passes, Democratic leaders can hold onto it and negotiate with their House counterparts. Or the Senate can send the bill to the House, which could block consideration of it or strip out the tax breaks and send it back to the Senate for another vote.

In the House, 82 Republicans joined Democrats to approve the wage increase. The Senate rejected the bill without tax breaks.

Senator Harry Reid of Nevada, the Democratic leader, said Tuesday that he expected leaders of the two chambers to work out the differences.

“There are many different ways it can happen,” Mr. Reid said, although he offered no specifics.

Democrats have accused Republicans of trying to stall the bill by offering dozens of amendments. Senator Edward M. Kennedy, Democrat of Massachusetts and the chief proponent of the bill, promised to press ahead until the wage increase passes.

“If they’re hoping we’ll get tired,” Mr. Kennedy said, “they’re sorely mistaken.”

Republicans, however, insisted that the Senate would not go along with the “clean” bill that the House wants.

“Clean means do it my way,” said Senator Michael B. Enzi of Wyoming, ranking Republican on the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee. “That’s not how we often do it in the Senate.”

Republicans noted that Democrats went along with a combined package for raising the minimum wage and tax breaks 10 years ago and that President Bill Clinton applauded them for it.

“And if it was O.K. in 1997, it ought to be O.K. now,” said Senator Charles E. Grassley, Republican of Iowa.

Copyright 2007 The New York Times Company

U.S. 'Satisfied' With Religion's Public Role, But More Want Less

January 30, 2007

WASHINGTON -- For the third consecutive year, the number of Americans calling for less religious influence in public life exceeded the number of Americans who want more, according to a new Gallup poll.

Most Americans, however, remain "generally satisfied" with organized religion's role in the U.S., the survey round.

Nearly 40 percent of Americans say religion's level of influence "in the nation" should not change, 32 percent would like it to have less influence and 27 percent would like it to have more, according to the survey. Weekly churchgoers are much more likely to agree that religion should have greater influence on government and politics than those who go to church less frequently, the survey found.

Opinions also tended to shift depending on political affiliation.

Some 41 percent of Democrats believed religion should have less impact, while 43 percent of Republicans felt it should have more.

During President Bush's first term, 2001 through 2004, more Americans believed the role of religion should increase than wanted its influence to fade. But by 2003, the numbers began to shift, and by 2005 a greater number of Americans believed religion should have less influence on public life.

The number of Americans who think religion should have less impact has increased 10 percentage points since 2001, according to Gallup.

The Gallup Poll of 1,018 adults was conducted between Jan. 15 and Jan. 18, with a margin of error of plus or minus 3 percentage points.

Romney Faces Questions About His Faith

January 30, 2007

Republican Mitt Romney on Tuesday dismissed questions about whether his Mormon faith would be an impediment to his White House aspirations, echoing the argument that voters will be choosing a president not a pastor.

The former Massachusetts governor faced questions about his faith in this Bible Belt state where a few Republicans expressed deep reservations about backing a Mormon. Romney said he was making inroads with the GOP in this early voting state.

"I've had a number of meetings with pastors of various faiths and religious leaders," Romney said in an interview with The Associated Press. "Almost to a person they've subscribed to what Dr. Richard Land (of the Southern Baptist Convention) said, which was: 'We're not electing Mitt Romney as pastor in chief.'"

Romney added: "In the early days of an acquaintance between a candidate and the electorate, the focus is on the personal, social issues and then it changes to be a focus on the major critical issues of the day."

That failed to sway Republican State Rep. Gloria Haskins.

"I don't think that I could see someone who is a member of a faith so contrary to my faith having my support," said Haskins, a graduate of Bob Jones University, the Christian fundamentalist college. Haskins is backing Sen. John McCain of Arizona.

In September, Charleston County GOP chairwoman Cyndi Mosteller questioned Romney after a speech, asking him to explain his faith.

On Tuesday, Mosteller, who is a Baptist, said, "The question is: Does Governor Romney support Joseph Smith's doctrines? We as evangelicals don't believe we can go in and change Paul's doctrine. I don't see how you move around this."

Romney said he is making inroads with Christian conservatives.

"I've been very encouraged so far," he said. "People have been willing to endorse my efforts."

Romney attended a House Republican Caucus meeting that always begins with a Bible verse and prayer in Christ's name, led by Republican state Rep. Bob Leach.

Leach told caucus members he asked Romney who Jesus Christ was and Romney responded that Christ "was his personal savior."

Leach said that was good enough to earn his vote.

___

WASHINGTON (AP) — A few presidential hopefuls offered their views on global warming Tuesday at a Senate hearing that sounded more like an echo chamber.

"This is a problem who's time has come," said Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, D-N.Y.

"This is an issue over the years whose time has come," said Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz.

"Will we look back at today and say this was the moment we took a stand?" said Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill.

The candidates may have competing political goals, but there was general agreement on global warming at the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee hearing. The panel chairwoman, Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-Calif., convened the session to survey lawmakers as Congress prepares to work on the issue.

Obama and McCain have introduced a bill with Sen. Joe Lieberman, I-Conn., that would impose mandatory caps on greenhouse emissions for power plants, industry and oil refineries. They would also let businesses buy emissions "credits" from other companies that have exceeded their reduction targets.

Clinton and Sen. Joe Biden, D-Del., another candidate who submitted written testimony, also are co-sponsors.

But not everyone is on board.

"My sense is a rush to climate change at this moment, all due respect to Senator Clinton, is something about an '08 election," complained Sen. Larry Craig, R-Idaho.

Associated Press Writers Erica Werner in Washington and Seanna Adcox in Columbia, S.C., contributed to this report.

Romney's Veto Could Hurt Him with Jewish Voters

January 31, 2007

Mitt Romney has been aggressively courting the Jewish community as part of his run for the presidency.

The former Republican governor of Massachusetts returned last week from a five-day trip to Israel, accompanied by Matt Brooks, executive director of the Republican Jewish Coalition, and Mel Sembler, a member of its board of directors.

He's attracted a small team of heavy hitters from the Jewish community. He named Sembler, a former ambassador, as his finance committee's co-chairman. In October, he brought on Noam Neusner, formerly President Bush's liaison to the Jewish community. And the Boston Phoenix reported that Sam Fox, nominated to be the U.S. ambassador to Belgium, gave $100,000 to Romney's Iowa PAC in July.

Now that he's in full presidential campaign mode, Romney may be wishing he hadn't vetoed a budget provision in 2003 that would have reimbursed nursing homes in Massachusetts that provided kosher meals to Jewish residents on Medicaid. The measure promised to pay an extra $5 a day per kosher diner. The state legislature overrode Romney's veto.

Nathan Diament, director of public policy for the Union of Orthodox Jewish Congregations, said that his organization was disappointed about the veto. "Access to kosher food is a critical aspect of Jewish observance," he said. "From our perspective, it's a religious liberty issue."

Charles Glick was the government affairs specialist in 2003 for the Boston-area Jewish Community Relations Council, which backed the measure. He said Romney's decision came as a shock.

"The Jewish community had what they thought was a good relationship with the governor," he said. "We knew of his ambitions and his outreach to the community in terms of raising money. So it was a bit of a puzzle."

Romney spokesman Eric Fehrnstrom told The Politico that the governor vetoed the legislation to cut spending.

"The state was in a fiscal crisis, and it would have led to higher Medicaid reimbursement rates for nursing homes, which was unaffordable at the time," he said. "Once we restored fiscal balance, we were in a position to add spending where appropriate."

The provision is now law, and Fehrnstrom said the veto has not become an issue on the campaign trail.

Yet given the intensity of the battle for Jewish donors, it may become one. "Governor Romney has been pushing his strong and unadulterated belief in a very strong state of Israel," said a national Jewish leader with close ties to the Republican Party. "Any sort of dents to his armor become problematic to him. There is hesitation in the community to begin with because of his Mormonism. …These sorts of chinks in his armor will help his opponents."

"It's definitely going to hurt Romney in the Jewish community," said Ira Forman, executive director of the National Jewish Democratic Council. "You'd think for someone who's of a minority religion he'd be a little more sensitive to these concerns."

Romney has defenders in the Jewish community. Brooks, the Republican Jewish Coalition leader, said the issue should have only a minimal impact. "In difficult financial times, there are difficult decisions the chief executives have to make. They can't fund every project and every particular effort that comes before them," he said. "I don't think anybody's going to view that as an attack or an offense to the Jewish community."

Gary Erlbaum, a Pennsylvania businessman who raises money for both Democrats and Republicans, said the only impact of the veto would be in the Orthodox Jewish community.

"If this were going to affect anyone, it would be someone who's morally Orthodox or cares about those who are. Don't forget that's a small minority of Jews in the United States," he said.

Even in that community, Diament said, the veto issue wouldn't decide the candidate's fate. "We know that Governor Romney has appreciation for religious freedom generally," he added, "and we look forward to continuing to talk to him and work with him."

The veto was reported by The Jewish Advocate in December 2003, but got little coverage elsewhere. Recently, a liberal-leaning blog called the Blue Mass. Group picked up the story and had some fun at Romney's expense, titling the post, "Romney: Let them eat pork!"

TM & © THE POLITICO & POLITICO.COM, a division of Allbritton Communications Company

The Clintonian Candidate

January 31, 2007

There's a Clinton in the presidential race. The surprise: It may not be Hillary.

The truly Clintonian figure running for the Democratic nomination is Barack Obama. The senator from Illinois, it's struck me lately, seems in many ways more like Bill Clinton than does the senator from New York.

When it comes to Obama and Bill Clinton, there are superficial similarities -- the absent father, the humble roots combined with Ivy League pedigree. Leave aside who would be the first black president, as many said of Clinton -- both represent generational change, Clinton as the first baby boomer president, Obama as the first would-be president of the post-baby boom.

Man from Hope -- meet Audacity of Hope.

Of course, the fit isn't exact: Obama, unlike Clinton, doesn't seem to have been running for the presidency since birth. But there are deeper ways, in his intellectual approach, his message and his personal style, in which Obama evokes Clinton.

Like Clinton before him, Obama presents himself as a new kind of politician who can rise above and bridge partisan differences. Go back to Clinton's 1991 announcement speech, and it's easy to imagine Obama speaking.

"Today, our leaders in Washington seem incapable of working together in a practical, common sense way," lamented one politician. The other called for "a new kind of leadership . . . not mired in the politics of the past, not limited by old ideologies." Can you tell the difference? The first is Obama, the second Clinton, but either could have been channeling the other.

Like Clinton, Obama has a homing instinct for the middle -- maybe too much of one. To read his book "The Audacity of Hope" is to be struck by his constant desire to understand -- even more, to respect -- conflicting views on whatever issue he happens to be discussing.

This is impressive until it becomes, finally, exasperating in its seemingly compulsive even-handedness. "I'm not unsympathetic to Justice Scalia's position," Obama, recovering law review president that he is, writes about the debate on constitutional interpretation. "Like many conservatives . . . I believe we ignore culture factors at our peril," he writes about the values debate. "Not all these fears are irrational," he writes of anti-immigrant sentiment.

In fact, Obama fits himself explicitly into the Clinton mold. "In his platform -- if not always in his day-to-day politics -- Clinton's Third Way went beyond splitting the difference," he writes. "It tapped into the pragmatic, nonideological attitude of the majority of Americans."

To Clinton critics drawn to Obama, equating them seems too facile: Obama's centrist tropism is born of a desire to accommodate and transcend differences, they argue, while Clinton's was an artifact of ruthless calculation in which he submerged differences for political advantage.

To Clinton advocates still unsure about Obama, the younger man has yet to demonstrate the capacity, in his own "day-to-day politics," to put his brand of Third Wayism into action. Clinton's Sister Souljah moment may have been the premeditated political move of a Slick Willie -- Obama suggests as much in his book -- but Obama doesn't have anything similar to brandish as a badge of New Democratic difference.

It's hard to name a prominent moment when, like Clinton pushing welfare reform, he deviated from party orthodoxy. Sorry, senator, but voting for class action lawsuit reform doesn't cut it. Obama's book features an erudite discussion of the folly, and futility, of resisting globalization -- at which point he summarily announces that he voted against the Central American Free Trade Agreement nonetheless. His signature divergence from the other leading candidates in the Democratic field comes from the left: He opposed the Iraq war from the start.

Obama is like Bill Clinton in his natural ease with people and his ability to win them over. A New York Times story about Obama's law school days described how Obama "cast himself as an eager listener, sometimes giving warring classmates the impression that he agreed with all of them at once." As they debated whether to use the term "black" or "African-American," "students on each side of the debate thought he was endorsing their side," the story said. " 'Everyone was nodding, Oh, he agrees with me,' " said professor Charles Ogletree.

Sounds like everyone who's ever emerged from a meeting with Bill Clinton.

If Obama is the Clintonian figure in the race, Hillary Clinton may be Al Gore, more disciplined policy wonk than natural politician. Like Gore, Hillary Clinton can be more adroit intellectually than politically; both face the challenge, fair or not, of convincing voters of their "authenticity."

It's hard to know whether the tempered Clinton or the untested Obama will prove the stronger candidate -- or would be the better president. But with both of them in the race, the 2008 campaign presents a twist on the 1992 offer: two Clintons for the price of one.

Bush makes good on a terrorism case (finally).

January 30, 2007

It speaks volumes about the topsy-turvy legal universe of the Bush administration that its mistakes are still trumpeted from the rooftops, while—on the rare occasion in which it does the right thing—no one seems to notice.

Compare the administration's handling of the Maher Arar affair last week with yesterday's proceedings in the trial of accused Iraqi insurgent Wesam al-Delaema. The first is a story of government error, abuse, and contempt for our allies in the war on terror. The second is a story of cooperation, pragmatic compromise, and respect for our allies. Maher Arar is still on the front pages, however, and Wesam al-Delaema is nearly buried.

Arar is a household name around the world. The Canadian software engineer was grabbed during a stopover at JFK Airport in 2002 and subjected to 10 months of "extraordinary rendition" in the care of our good friends in Syria. He was tortured until he falsely confessed, then sent home without explanation. A two-year inquiry by a prestigious Canadian commission determined that it had all been an awful mistake. The Bush administration refused to cooperate with that commission and still refuses to remove Arar from the American security watch list, claiming to have secret information that he's still dangerous although the Canadian authorities dispute that.
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Last Friday, Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper offered Arar a public apology and $8.9 million in compensation while the Bush administration has blocked his lawsuit, citing the executive branch's "state secrets privilege." The conclusions of the Canadians, admitting his arrest was a mistake, are disregarded. No concessions, no apology, no transparency, and no regard for our Canadian allies. Arar wins a permanent entry under A in the world's Dictionary of Reasons To Hate Us.

Now consider the case of the Iraqi-born Dutch citizen Wesam al-Delaema. Yesterday, following a two-year battle over the terms of his extradition, Delaema pled not guilty to several conspiracy counts in a federal criminal court. He faces a public trial on six counts, including conspiring to kill American citizens abroad, to use a weapon of mass destruction, and to maliciously damage or destroy U.S. government property by means of an explosive. Delaema and his cronies, who call themselves the "Mujahideen from Fallujah," videotaped themselves planting bombs on a road used by American forces in Iraq, and the videotape was aired widely on television in the Arab world. The tape—which evidently includes the defendant bragging "this is not the first operation we carry out … . Their casualties have gone beyond your imagination," was found in his house in Amersfoort in a 2005 raid.

Before he was extradited to the United States, Delaema told the Dutch courts he was on the tape only because he'd been kidnapped while visiting Iraq for a wedding. He said he was forced to plant the bombs (and presumably gloat about it) or he would be beheaded. The claim rings slightly false in light of a Dutch television interview he gave in 2003 in which he swaggered, "I don't care if I myself die or not. I want to offer myself up for my land, for my people." His family claims that interview was "a joke."

In order to win extradition for Delaema to face trial in the United States, prosecutors had to make a raft of promises to the Dutch authorities that would be insulting to American perceptions of the rule of law, were they not so completely well-earned over the past few years. The defendant will be tried in criminal court, not by a military tribunal. He will not face the death penalty, even though under our law his crimes could warrant it. He will serve his sentence—possibly a life one—in a jail in the Netherlands, not here. And, perhaps most astonishing of all, the United States had to agree that Dutch courts will be able to review and possibly modify the terms of the American court's sentence once Delaema is returned to the Netherlands. The American judgment, then, is not necessarily final. And all this because, according to Delaema's attorney, the U.S. government no longer can be trusted to treat its prisoners humanely. Clearly, the Dutch authorities agree.

There is much to be understood from this deal between the American and Dutch authorities. On the one hand, it highlights the level of mistrust and disdain we have earned from our Western allies. But it also reveals a new, almost sensible, oddly secret approach by the Justice Department. The Bush administration can become pretty accommodating when its option is either an open criminal trial or no domestic prosecution at all. Suddenly the criminal courts—long touted by Bush and Cheney as ineffective in prosecuting the war on terror—are adequate. Suddenly, open proceedings don't threaten national security. After literally years of dismissing our allies, the existing conspiracy laws, and the criminal courts, the Justice Department has finally agreed to give 'em a whirl. After years of fighting for symbolic legal gains at the expense of small, tangible ones, the president has finally accepted that it's worth nailing terrorists with powers he has, as opposed to powers he merely craves.

What a contrast between the Bush administration's striking inflexibility in Arar's case and humble pragmatism in Delaema's! The government cannot concede the error in torturing an innocent Canadian but is willing to take what it can get to prosecute a Dutch insurgent? Do we trust our friends in the Netherlands more than our allies to the north? Or is admitting a mistake more difficult for this administration than accepting a legal compromise?

Perhaps the difference between our treatment of Arar and Delaema is best explained as the slow triumph of expediency over empty symbols. As the post-9/11 fever recedes, the administration may be rediscovering the sober virtues of trials over torture, the benefits of multilateralism over going it alone. The president has either realized or been forced to accept that other Western democracies, the U.S. Congress, the federal judiciary, and the free press don't, in fact, want unhinged jihadists roaming the streets any more than he does. And having gone toe to toe with each of these institutions, it now seems he needs their help more than they need his. So, the president will cooperate. But he will never apologize.

In Dalaema's case, that means striking a bargain with the Netherlands. But in the Arar case it would require asking too much: apologizing so that the whole world can hear. And if the president's concern is now pragmatism over symbolism, let me offer a longer wish list: the closure of Guantanamo, fair trials for its occupants, and the dropping of all charges against Jose Padilla. The president isn't quite there yet. But with this Delaema deal, he may be starting to circle back to the legal world he pretty much demolished in the wake of 9/11. Welcome back to the Rule of Law, Mr. President. We've missed you.

Many Katrina victims still living on hold

January 31, 2007

Living the lives of nomads, Michael Brandner, his wife, Cindy, and their two sons lived in seven different places in the three months after Hurricane Katrina hit in August 2005 and destroyed their new dream house in Bay St. Louis, Miss.

"The frame of the house was still standing, but everything was totally blown out," Brandner says. "The wind just ripped it apart."

John and Claire Jo Tuepker lived in a trailer, then with relatives, then in an apartment after Katrina leveled their home about 1,200 feet from shore in Long Beach, Miss. "We went back the next day, and there was nothing but the concrete foundation," he says.

Wesley McFarland, 83, has lived in a trailer since his home in Bay St. Louis blew away and essentially disappeared. "There is nothing left," he says.

In the 17 months since the most destructive hurricane to hit land in U.S. history scoured much of the Mississippi Gulf Coast clean, and the failure of the levee system in New Orleans caused torrential flooding, tens of thousands of homeowners have been living life on hold. They haven't been able to rebuild because they've been unable to get the money they thought they were owed from their insurers.

But a settlement reached last week with State Farm — a deal that's been blocked, at least temporarily — would provide some compensation for 1,000 Mississippi homeowners whose lots were stripped bare.

Katrina's one-two punch of 140-mph winds and a 30-foot storm surge not only damaged homes along the coast; it scraped hundreds of them down to the slab. So little was left that the cause of the damage — wind or flooding — often couldn't be determined. Homeowners insurance policies typically cover damage from wind, but not from flooding. Only federal flood insurance covers flood damage.

After Katrina, State Farm argued that it shouldn't have to pay because in many cases the damage was caused by flooding. Its policies also allowed it to deny damage caused by a combination of wind and flooding.

Last Tuesday, State Farm agreed to pay at least $50 million and allow 35,000 homeowners to ask for their cases to be reopened so they could argue about what caused the damage. The total settlement could reach $500 million, the Mississippi attorney general said last week.

A federal judge, though, rejected the settlement Friday — at least for now — saying it didn't provide enough information to prove that it was fair and just. Still, just moving closer to a deal with a major insurer in Mississippi has brought a sense of relief to many after so much despair. "I've never had such a hopeless feeling in my life," Brandner says.

One of his sons, a tax lawyer, introduced him to Richard Scruggs, the attorney who has negotiated with State Farm. Brandner says he feels fortunate that he was able to join the lawsuit.

Lots of others did, too. After the hurricane, many homeowners flocked to Scruggs' law firm.

"Insurance denials started coming in, and it was like they got knocked down again," says Scruggs' son, Zach, who works with his father. The Scruggs family themselves lost a beachfront home built in the 1940s.

"That's where my parents were born and where I was raised," Zach Scruggs says. (The home was not insured by State Farm.)

Now that a resolution seems near, many Mississippi families hope they can finally move out of trailers and rental apartments.

The Tuepkers already have bought a house that is 500 feet farther from the beach than their former home was. But the new house, which was vacant at the time of Katrina, had 5 feet of water in it, so they've had to repair it. They also had to buy insurance, the cost of which has jumped.

"We're now paying ($5,500 a year) for a wind pool, flood and a homeowners policy, where we used to pay ($2,400 a year)," Tuepker says. "Apparently, that ($2,400) wasn't worth anything. This, I do think, at least will be worth something."

McFarland, a retired doctor, has lived alone in a trailer since his wife died in June. He says he'll manage. "But a lot of people have just been really hard up, and they just didn't have any money."

For all the destruction and loss, Brandner says, he's gained some strength from the disaster. With the help of his sons, Nicholas and Michael Jr., Brandner can now rebuild his retirement home.

"It won't be what it was, but it will be something that's acceptable to us, and we'll just move on."

Perhaps even more important, Brandner says, "We came together as a pretty good family. And I'm proud."

Contributing: Mindy Fetterman

U.S. boosting citizenship fees

January 30, 2007

The Bush administration will propose nearly doubling the fee it charges applicants for U.S. citizenship and significantly increasing fees for other immigration benefits, congressional and administration officials said Tuesday.

Fees for a wide variety of immigration services would rise an average of 66%, said the two government officials, who did not want to be named because the administration was scheduled to announce the proposal Wednesday.

The current fee of $330 to apply for citizenship would rise to slightly less than $600, said the administration official.

Congressional Democrats earlier this month warned the director of the Homeland Security Department's Citizenship and Immigration Services that they planned to review the agency's analyses behind any proposed immigration fee increases.

Immigration advocates have been bracing for the expected hikes. William Ramos, Washington director for the National Association of Latino Elected and Appointed Officials, said the increases are "just going to be devastating to our communities."

"It will basically create another obstacle for those who want to realize their dream of becoming American citizens," Ramos said.

Other fee increases are possible for green cards conveying legal residency, which now cost $325. Applicants also now pay a $70 fingerprinting fee in each case. Fees also are paid for things such as work permits, replacing lost green cards, and petitions to adopt orphans from other countries.

Democratic lawmakers said in a letter last week to Emilio Gonzalez, Citizenship and Immigration Services director, that they want to review how the agency came up with the proposed increases, and the cost estimates, assumptions and methodology used by the agency to justify the hikes.

The letter was signed by Senate Judiciary Chairman Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., immigration subcommittee chairman Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., House Judiciary Chairman John Conyers, D-Mich., and immigration subcommittee chairwoman Rep. Zoe Lofgren, D-Calif.

Citizenship and Immigration Services covers its costs with application fees. The agency is required to do a fee analysis every two years to determine whether money raised from fees is covering costs. The agency last raised its fees in 2004, citing the cost of more intense background checks in the wake of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.

Immigrant advocates have long argued that the agency's costs cannot be absorbed by application fees. They want Congress to appropriate money to help pay costs.

Large fee increases would be heavily felt in the Asian community, where two-thirds of the population in the U.S. is foreign-born, said Traci Hong, director of the immigration program for the Asian American Justice Center.

About 70% of foreign-born Asians in the country become American citizens, a high rate for immigrants. Hong worried that higher naturalization fees would slow that rate.

God and gorillas

January 31, 2007

Jan. 31, 2007 | Every human culture has believed in spirits, gods or some other divine being. That's why human beings have often been called Homo religioso. Some people take this long history of belief in the otherworldly as evidence for God; doesn't it explain why religion continues to be so pervasive? But many scientists are coming up with their own, decidedly secular, theories about the origins of faith. In fact, over the last few years, a small cottage industry made up of scientists and philosophers has devoted itself to demystifying the divine.

Take Daniel Dennett, the philosopher who has proposed that religion is a meme -- an idea that evolved like a virus -- that infected our ancestors and continued to spread throughout cultures. By contrast, anthropologist Pascal Boyer argues that religious belief is a quirky byproduct of a brain that evolved to detect predators and other survival needs. In this view, the brain developed a hair-trigger detection system to believe the world is full of "agents" that affect our lives. And British biologist Lewis Wolpert, with yet another theory, posits that religion developed once hominids understood cause and effect, which allowed them to make complex tools. Once they started to make causal connections, they felt compelled to explain life's mysteries. Their brains, in essence, turned into "belief engines."

Of course, these thinkers are either religious skeptics or outright atheists who mean to imply that we've been duped by evolution to believe in supernatural beings when none, in fact, exist. That's what makes Barbara J. King, an anthropologist at the College of William and Mary, so unique. She has no desire to undermine religion. In fact, she's been deeply influenced by the religious writers Karen Armstrong and Martin Buber. But her main insights about the origins of religion come not from researching humans' deep history, but from observing very much alive non-human primates.

For the last two decades, King has studied ape and monkey behavior in Gabon and Kenya, and at the Smithsonian's National Zoo. In her new book, "Evolving God: A Provocative View on the Origins of Religion," King argues that religion is rooted in our social and emotional connections with each other. What's more, we can trace back the origins of our religious impulse not just to early cave paintings and burial sites 20,000 to 40,000 years ago, but much earlier -- back to our ancient ancestors millions of years ago. And today, King says, we can see the foundations of religious behavior in chimpanzees and gorillas; watching our distant cousins can do much to explain the foundations of our own beliefs.

I spoke with King by phone about the ape's capacity for empathy and imagination and why religious belief may have given our ancestors the competitive edge to wipe out their Neanderthal rivals.

Why would an anthropologist who studies apes be interested in religion?

I think religion is all about emotional engagement and social action. And we can get a whole new read on the evolutionary history of religion by asking the kinds of questions that we ask of language and culture. We can see that way back in our past -- literally, millions of years ago -- some practices are visible in the archaeological record that reflect the deepest roots of religion. And apes today are pretty good stand-ins for those very early human ancestors. So when I go to the National Zoo in Washington, or spend time in Kenya looking at monkeys, what I see is very social. It's about emotional connection that's at the very ancient roots of religion.

So you're not saying that the great apes you study are religious -- or have spiritual lives -- but they show behaviors that are required if you're going to develop religion.

That's right. I'm not suggesting that apes are religious. In fact, I have to say that, because Jane Goodall, who is such a renowned and loved figure for her chimpanzee studies, has said very provocatively that chimpanzees may have an incipient sense of religious awe. For example, when she comes upon them looking at a waterfall -- something in nature that is amazing -- they're riveted. She's wondering what's going through their minds and if they may be spiritual in some sense. That's a fascinating idea, but that's not my approach. I don't look for things in apes that are religious. I look at how their behavior relates to the very foundation of what later became religion. For me, the question turns on how I understand religion. I want to be very careful to differentiate between what we think about religion today and how it evolved. I'm really talking about the earliest origins of religion, which was a social and emotional process.

So you're not talking about a set of beliefs? I think that's how most people think about religion.

I'm not talking about a set of beliefs. When I think about religion, what comes to mind are personal relationships with the supernatural, with God or with spirits, and compassionate action. Not necessarily books or texts that you read, but some sort of action in the world. This is coming from Karen Armstrong's work, who has helped me let go of the idea that religion is about a bunch of things in our head that we have to feel and believe. So if I'm going to think about religion as compassionate action, how do you look for that in prehistory? That's the real question that I face as an anthropologist. And the way I approach that is to look at the active expression of this emotional connection in something that I can identify as a spiritual realm.

I understand you don't want to get caught up in modern debates over belief and what we think about God. But isn't the core of religion the sense that there is some transcendent realm out there -- something that's separate from our world of everyday experience?

Oh yes, definitely. But the emotional connection to that transcendent realm is what I'm looking for, rather than a mental or rational formulating of beliefs about such a realm. A word that's so important to me is "embodied." It's an embodied religion. Religion is based in our senses, in our emotions.

What kinds of behavior do you see in the great apes that show us how religion evolved?

I look at four different kinds of behavior -- meaning-making, imagination, empathy and following the rules. Together, I think they give us a sense of what religion might have started out to be. The apes have bits and pieces of all these four things, but not in a coherent pattern that adds up to religious behavior. To my mind, apes are conscious beings and they do these four things in incredibly fascinating ways.

It's a provocative idea to say apes create meaning. How do they do this?

Typically, ape communication is viewed as the exchange of messages. You know, one hoots and the other responds. I don't see it that way at all. I see them really transforming each other as they act. The smallest gesture or eye gaze can cause one ape to shift its behavior toward the other, until they converge on a shared action or maybe decide to avoid each other. That's what I call meaning-making.

What's an example of this?

There's often some conflict over food in the gorilla group I've been studying. There may be a fight or a tussle. But things don't play out the same way every time. So let's say a female and a male are fighting with each other, then the male runs off with the food, and the female hits him as he goes by. This is fairly typical with gorillas -- the female will try to get in a swat at the male. What happens next depends very much on the mood of the two participants -- what happened that morning, how much sleep they had, how feisty they're feeling. So the female may walk up to the male, put her arm around his shoulders and look in his eyes. That's a very reconciling gesture. Alternatively, the male may be really annoyed and start hitting back at the female, and that may escalate into a fight. In other words, they affect each other every minute, and they shift in very subtle ways. And together, that's meaning-making.

You mentioned empathy as well. Are chimpanzees and gorillas empathic creatures?

Yes, they are. Many people may remember an incident that happened 10 years ago at Chicago's Brookfield Zoo. A female called Binti Jua was sitting with her gorilla family when a toddler tumbled into that enclosure, to the real horror of onlookers. Here's this little kid lying on the pavement with these large gorillas. Binti Jua had an infant on her body. She walked over, picked up this human boy, carried him to the zoo staff and got him to safety. This has been interpreted by primatologists as empathy. She's a mother who had youngsters; she saw that there was a hurt child and lots of very upset adults; and she solved the problem. There are also lots of examples in wild chimpanzees

Tell me about one of those stories from Africa.

A chimpanzee female named Tina was killed by a bite to the neck by a leopard. She'd been living in a community of chimpanzees for quite a long time. The group didn't just pull at her body or tug at it or ignore it. Rather, the dominant male of the group sat with her body for five hours. He kept away all the other infants and protected the body from any harm. With one exception. He let through the younger brother of Tina, a 5-year-old called Tarzan. That's the only youngster who was allowed to come forward. And the youngster sat at his sister's side and pulled on her hand and touched her body. I think this is not just a random occurrence. The dominant male was able to recognize the close emotional bond between Tina and Tarzan, and he acted empathically.

When I first read about that story, I was amazed. So I began to talk to people in the zoo world. And there's been a very interesting transformation lately in how deaths in great ape families are managed. When an ape dies, it's becoming a regular practice to allow the family to approach the body and say goodbye. If the ape simply disappears, it's much harder for them to cope.

You also talked about apes having an imaginative life. What's the evidence for this?

I spent some time at the Language Research Center at Georgia State University, at the invitation of the primatologist Sue Savage-Rumbaugh. And I worked with a group of bonobos. They're very chimpanzee-like apes and extremely intelligent. Many people know them as the sexy "make love, not war" ape. When I was watching them, I noticed that not only were they very tuned in and emotional with each other, but they were doing some things that I didn't understand. Sue explained that one of the apes was a female who couldn't herself have children. That female would often act in ways that seemed to be beyond even adoption behaviors with other infants. She would, for example, take a squirrel and strap it across her belly as mothers do when they're carrying their young, and apparently enter into an imaginary relationship with this other animal, as if she had an infant. A very well-known story in primatology circles comes from Uganda, where there was a chimpanzee who was also apparently rather lonely. He began to carry a log around in a way that made primatologists convinced he was imagining the log as a type of companion. He made sleeping nests for the log as he did for himself, as all chimpanzees do. He was very careful with how he cradled it.

It sounds like a child with an imaginary playmate.

Yeah. And if you bring great apes into the home -- which, thankfully, we don't do anymore, but people did in the '50s and '60s -- you see much childlike play. There was a famous chimpanzee named Viki, who liked having a pretend pull-toy. She would pull behind her something nobody could see, but she was very careful and precise in how she went around the house with this imaginary toy behind her. And lots of other examples suggest that apes have a very childlike type of curiosity.

Let's pick up this evolutionary history that you've been laying out. We know we're related to the great apes, but this goes way back. Apparently, our lineage broke off from other apes 6 to 7 million years ago.

That's right. I'm not suggesting that we evolved from the apes. We didn't. We have a common ancestor with the apes. I think apes are useful because they're good models for what happened after that split between apes and humans. Many people have heard of the australopithecines. These are the very first human ancestors going back 4 to 5 million years ago. We know very little about them except that they were small-brained, bipedal, they walked upright, and they lived in Africa. But how do we get a handle on what they might have been doing with each other? Here's where I think the apes come in. The apes give us a clue that a lot of these emotional interactions were in place very early in our evolutionary prehistory. And then I look for an intersection with the sacred realm.

But trying to find archaeological evidence for the sacred must be extremely difficult until you get into relatively modern history -- those cave paintings or burial sites dating back tens of thousands of years ago. Can you actually go back hundreds of thousands of years, or even millions of years, to detect some evidence of religiosity?

We can definitely go back before the cave paintings. First of all, I should say we now know that our species, Homo sapiens, is 200,000 years old. So we have a much longer history than the famous Lascaux cave paintings in France. The first concrete artifact that I have found useful in the search for the sacred is something called the "Makapansgat cobble," which was found in a South African cave and is dated to 3 million years ago. What we see here is a bit of jasper that very much resembles a human face. There are depressions where the eyes would be, and there's a nose-like projection in this piece of stone. I should add, no archaeologist has suggested that the australopithecines, who apparently carried this around, modified the piece of jasper to look like a face.

How do anthropologists know that it was carried around and not just lying there?

There's no such material like this in the cave, but several miles away from the cave, there is this kind of jasper. So through archaeological analysis, they determined that this artifact was carried into the cave. In other words, we think it meant something to these early human ancestors. And that raises very interesting questions. Some archaeologists have asked, Is there recognition of something like an afterlife? Is there recognition of a soul? I don't quite see the connection between those questions and just seeing a human face. But I do think it gets at the idea of self-awareness, of a being that's separate from other beings in the world. It's possibly being able to see that here we have ancestors, millions of years ago, who are not just scraping out survival but are aware of something like a symbol.

But that's quite a leap forward. You're talking about a symbolic image that would conjure up some kind of meaning. There's nothing in the ape world that's been found like that, has there?

No, not apes out in Africa, or apes in a normal zoo. But there are apes being raised by people who surround them with human culture and human language. And these particular apes interact symbolically with the world. So there's a capacity in the ape brain in the right environment to think symbolically. There's a bonobo named Panbanisha who communicates through lexigrams. These are very abstract symbols that are arranged on a board. So if you press, let's say, the abstraction that represents "orange," a computer voice will say "orange." Panbanisha is able to not only ask for foods she likes, but to deal with abstractions, like good and bad. She was scolded once for jumping on the family dog. The dog screamed. Savage-Rumbaugh pressed the lexigram for "bad, bad." Panbanisha had a very contrite and sorrowful expression on her face and pressed "good, good." That is symbolic interaction with the world.

That's fascinating. Of course, there is a basic mystery at the heart of evolution -- whether we humans are fundamentally different from our primate relatives, or whether the differences are only a matter of degree.

My whole career has been predicated on being what's called a "continuity theorist" -- a person who believes in degree and not kind. Sure, I can talk about how human language differs from any kind of complex ape communication. And I don't believe that apes are capable of constructing narratives of the past and the future, or really using concepts. But I think that is only a matter of degree.

To return to our evolutionary history, what are some of the most interesting findings after that masklike object dating back 3 million years?

Starting around 2.5 million years ago, we get a fascinating record of technology -- flakes and cobbles for hunting and gathering. But that is not particularly helpful with understanding the sacred realm. Then somewhere around 100,000 years ago -- well before the art caves -- we do begin to get this explosion of symbolic ritual that tells me very clearly we're in a sacred realm. It begins to coalesce when we get to burials.

And not just in our species. You know, the Neanderthals were an extremely fascinating hominid. I don't want to say human ancestor because it's pretty clear that we don't have an ancestral relationship with Neanderthals. Rather, Homo sapiens and Neanderthals coexisted in the world. We find that Neanderthals very carefully buried their social companions, but more interestingly, did so in a way that just cries out for a spiritual interpretation. They placed bodies in graves and then brought in bear bones and arranged them around the body, brought in slabs of rock and put them on top of the body, covered the graves with ash and boulders, put elk antlers on top of a whole grave and then lit a fire there.

Doesn't this behavior suggest that there was some belief in an afterlife?

I tend to think in that direction, but it's very hard to intuit what meaning-making was actually going on. We know there are symbols. We know there's ritual. What actually happened at that grave site is the question. And the hypotheses run the gamut. The archaeologist Steve Mithen has talked about how Neanderthals were singing and dancing and chanting in ways that go far beyond survival. I tend to envision a group of Neanderthals responding to death in a way that's also artistic. We have Neanderthals who make objects, such as the French Neanderthal Mask dated to 33,000 years ago. There are pieces of flint pushed through holes in a way that makes the face look more humanlike.

So we have these creatures that are capable of making art. We have them burying their dead. And it's fascinating because they lived for a very, very long time, and then they simply disappeared 27,000 years ago. So why? Why did they not continue to live, and why did we, Homo sapiens, go on?

Isn't the reigning explanation that our own ancestors somehow out-competed the Neanderthals and wiped them out?

Yeah. We don't think of some kind of interspecies war in which Homo sapiens literally clubbed them to death. But rather, there was some slight competitive edge that our species, Homo sapiens, had. And I really think this must have had to do with some edge in language production, an extra way to interact with the world through ritual and symbols and through the social solidarity that comes when all of those processes are deeply engaged.

What makes you think that?

The Neanderthals are pretty amazing. But then, starting maybe 70,000 years ago, Homo sapiens really has a much deeper engagement with the symbolic world. They're using jewelry and red ochre. They're decorating their bodies. They're beginning to surround themselves -- not just in death, but in life -- with symbols in art. When Homo sapiens die, it's not just a couple of bare bones and a fire. In some cases, thousands of ivory beads decorate the bodies as they're put into the ground. We think the group came together in these social ceremonies. And there's a kind of spillover effect to begin to think about death and the mystery of what comes after -- transcending things that happen in the natural world.

What do you make of those amazing pictures on the walls at Lascaux? These cave paintings weren't just naturalistic renderings of existing animals. Some were strange beasts, certainly suggesting some kind of symbolism.

Yes, it's an amazing experience to look at the paintings of Lascaux; many of the animals are so beautifully and realistically rendered. But then when you get to the less clearly readable images, something else happens to the mind of the observer. If you look at a picture that is part human and part bird, with a shaft or a pole next to him, one can't help but think about shamans. The idea of a designated healer in a community who could get into an altered state and go between the worlds -- between the natural world and the secular world. And one wonders, were there shamans 17,000 years ago?

Many of these paintings really are in deep, inaccessible parts of the cave. These were fantastic places for altered consciousness. It makes you wonder what it would be like to be in the dark, or lit up by a small lamp, and experience these images while singing or chanting or moving rhythmically. In that context, I'm most persuaded that we're dealing with people who were thinking about the mysteries of life that still plague us and delight us.

Isn't that also the core of a lot of shamanic experience? It could be singing or dancing or healing. There's some kind of ecstatic practice that's going on that sends you into an altered state of consciousness.

Yes, whether it's drumming or another rhythmic movement or noise. I think back to apes as well. Mothers and infants are all about establishing an emotional rhythm with each other. And I just can't help but see this as a vast continuum that connects all these different species over time.

Well, you haven't come out and said this, but the suggestion is that the sacred practices of our ancestors -- their religiosity -- gave them an evolutionary edge. Do you think religion enabled our ancestors to survive?

I do feel comfortable saying that. There's now a whole group of scholars who insist that religion is a mere byproduct of something in the brain, that our brain has evolved and adapted to selection pressures of our ancient hunting and gathering world. And if we're religious, it's really just a mistake. The most famous example of this is the work of Pascal Boyer. He says our brains are so attuned to predators who might eat us that we developed a God detector in our brains. We're really just going too far in detecting agency.

When you talk about agency, do you mean God or some supernatural being?

It's all an elaborate evolutionary mistake. Well, I don't think that works very well. When you look at the depth of our evolutionary history, and the fact that we were made to relate, that is where anthropology and theology come together. You have Martin Buber saying, "In the beginning is the relation." And that's what our primate history tells us. Not only is it a survival technique to come together as a social group, but especially to come together around the mysteries of life -- to ask questions and find answers about the afterlife and those mysteries. Yes, I do think it was not just an accident but something that is very much part of us and helped us survive.

You mentioned Martin Buber's classic book "I and Thou." Why is his understanding of religious experience so meaningful to you?

For an ape watcher to take a year, as I did, to read Karen Armstrong and Martin Buber and everyone in between, was an amazing experience. For Buber, you become real through transformation with another being. And I really think the whole process we're talking about is how hominids relating in social groups generated the spiritual.

What science can do that's so fascinating is look at the incredibly close connection between our social practices and the sacred realm. If you ask Native Americans today, they'll tell you that "religion" isn't even a word that computes in their native languages. You live religion. You don't talk about it. Certain questions -- Do you believe in God? Do you have a religion? -- don't necessarily make sense to all people. That's the lens through which I want to look at prehistory. And there's a certain resonance with Buber.

OK, I'm not going to ask whether you believe in God. But I do want to know, do you consider yourself religious?

I consider myself a spiritual person because of the way I feel when I'm around animals in particular, especially apes. The idea that I'm here in this world with other beings who are conscious in different degrees makes me feel part of a very big picture.

Do you think there's a transcendent reality out there?

Define transcendent reality.

Something that might be supernatural. A reality that we can't necessarily experience with our five senses.

I'm always open to that possibility. But that's veering really close to asking whether I believe in God. For me, it's a private question, but even more than that, it's a question that doesn't really reflect the depths of what we are as a species.

Are you saying it's just not an important question, whether there is a transcendent reality?

I think we have evolved to believe in transcendent realities. What we're about as a group of humans on this earth is believing that there's something more than us. It takes many different forms. I don't know that I'd focus on a single transcendent reality. I would say that because we're made to relate, we think and feel that we're in relationship with something bigger.

But isn't that the core question that everyone debates? Did human beings just make up the spirits and gods that they worship? Or is there really some other reality out there?

Yes, in my book I say that's a question I will not take up. I think my stance is rather beautiful because it's about "agnosis"; that means not knowing. That's where I would like to leave that question. But we as human beings have gotten to this certain place because of our evolutionary history.

So where does this whole evolutionary history leave us in today's scientific age? What are the implications for how we can talk about religion?

I'm part of the camp of people who thinks it's perfectly possible to see religion and science as compatible areas of thought and inquiry. In my book, I lay out three choices. You can say you've got to choose one. You can believe in science or you can have faith in God -- the Richard Dawkins school of thought. Or you can say there are "non-overlapping magisteria" -- the famous Stephen Jay Gould answer that religion will help us with meaning, and science will tell us about other things. I'm actually in a third place. If you can avoid being a biblical literalist, and if you can avoid being an arrogant scientist who tells everyone else what to think, you can think on multiple levels at once. There's a lot of beauty in seeing that religion and science are really about the same things. They can be perfectly compatible.

Several books have recently come out about the origins of religion. And you get lots of different theories. There was, for instance, Daniel Dennett's "Breaking the Spell." He seemed to argue that religious belief is a kind of meme, sort of an idea -- like a virus -- that spreads throughout human groups. What do you make of his argument?

Yes, let's not be overly kind to Daniel Dennett because he dishes it out and he can definitely take it. He not only says religion is the product of a virus, a meme, some small bit of culture that replicates and gets passed on, but that we humans are infested with this virus. So what do you do if a person is infected with religion? You'd better start talking rationally to that person. The problem that I see with Daniel Dennett's view is that a meme is this little bit of something that's supposed to live abstracted away from human pairs, groups and individuals. It has a life of its own. For an anthropologist, that just doesn't make sense. It's like taking a gene out of its environment. It's like taking a brain out of its environment. I believe in dynamic relationships with real people having real feelings in real social groups. Sure, we have genes and brains, but we are in a co-creative relationship with all these things. We're not controlled by our genes or our memes or our brains.

Do you think there's much at stake in these questions? Is this just intellectual curiosity, or is there much riding on how we think about religion today?

Oh, I think there's a huge amount riding on it. When I get students coming into my class, they so often feel they have to choose between religion and science. And I find that very distressing. I think it's very important to understand that our heritage has made us religious beings. And this fits very comfortably with our understanding of evolution. Being spiritual and having evolved go hand in hand.

Interference alleged on climate research

January 31, 2007

WASHINGTON -- Federal scientists have been pressured to play down global warming, advocacy groups testified yesterday at the Democrats' first investigative hearing since taking control of Congress.

The hearing focused on allegations that the White House for years has micromanaged the government's climate programs and has closely controlled what scientists have been allowed to tell the public.

"It appears there may have been an orchestrated campaign to mislead the public about climate change," said Representative Henry A. Waxman, Democrat of California. Waxman is chairman of the Oversight and Government Reform Committee and a critic of the Bush administration's environmental policies.

Climate change also was a leading topic in the Senate, where presidential contenders for 2008 lined up at a hearing called by Senator Barbara Boxer, Democrat of California. They expounded, and at times tried to outdo one another, on why they believed Congress must act to reduce heat-trapping "greenhouse" gases.

"This is a problem whose time has come," Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton, Democrat of New York, proclaimed.

"This is an issue over the years whose time has come," echoed Senator John McCain, Republican of Arizona.

Senator Barack Obama, Democrat of Illinois, said that "for decades far too many have ignored the warning" about climate change. "Will we look back at today and say this was the moment we took a stand?"

At the House hearing, two private advocacy groups produced a survey of 279 government climate scientists in which many of them say they have been subjected to political pressure aimed at downplaying the climate threat. Their complaints ranged from a challenge to using the phrase "global warming" to raising uncertainty on issues on which most scientists basically agree to keeping scientists from talking to the media.

The survey and separate interviews with scientists have "brought to light numerous ways in which US federal climate science has been filtered, suppressed, and manipulated in the last five years," Francesca Grifo, a senior scientist at the Union of Concerned Scientists, testified.

Grifo's group, along with the Government Accountability Project, which helps whistle-blowers, produced the report.

Drew Shindell, a climate scientist with National Aeronautics and Space Administration's Goddard Institute for Space Studies, said climate scientists frequently have been dissuaded from talking to the media about their research, though NASA's restrictions have been eased.

Prior to the change, interview requests of climate scientists frequently were "routed through the White House" and then turned away or delayed, Shindell said.

He described how a news release on his study forecasting a significant warming in Antarctica was "repeatedly delayed, altered, and watered down" at the insistence of the White House.

Some Republican members of the committee questioned whether science and politics ever can be kept separate.

"I am no climate-change denier," said Representative Tom Davis of Virginia, the top Republican on the committee. "The mere convergence of politics and science does not itself denote interference," said Davis.

Administration officials were not called to testify. In the past the White House has said it has only sought to inject balance into reports on climate change. President Bush opposes mandatory caps on greenhouse gas emissions, arguing that the approach would be too costly.

For more information, go to the website of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee at oversight.house.gov .

Fair Trade: What the left should offer business in order to revive the labor movement.

January 31, 2007

What can the left "trade off" to get labor law reform?

Organized labor's down to 7.4 percent of private sector workers. The big split, between the AFL-CIO and Change to Win, failed to bring on a new golden age of organizing. It seems the only hope is a new labor law.

And labor has a dream bill: the George Miller-authored "Employee Free Choice Act." It has more than a dozen Senate sponsors -- Kennedy, Clinton, Obama, all the party's big guns. It might really work. It would make U.S. labor law like Canada's, maybe even stronger. It would let employees get unions just by signing cards -- without having to run what can be a four- to five-year gauntlet of lawsuits, firings, intimidation, and all the bells and whistles of union-busting campaigns.

How big would it be for the left?

How about, it's the last chance to rein in the plutocracy and curb inequality. How about, nothing else but this bill will help out working families -- not more college loans, not more college B.A.'s, nothing but a change in the way we set wages. (In Working Under Different Rules, two Harvard economists showed a correlation between union wage setting and income equality in a study of twenty developed countries.) If it's all true, wouldn't it be worth a lot to get?

I know, it seems hopeless. In the Senate, Democrats are far short of a "60-vote" majority. Though one Republican (Arlen Specter) is a sponsor, the Democrats would hit a wall at least by 53 votes -- maybe even by 43 -- once the lobbies had done their ravaging. Even if it passed, Bush would veto any bill.

So there is no way to cut a deal -- unless business itself wants one. Of course, at first glance that seems even more impossible. What could business ever want so badly in return? Long ago, back during the time that labor started its decline, there was lots of talk about just such a "deal," a quid pro quo. But by 1976, and certainly after, there was nothing labor had, or nothing business wanted, for there to be any kind of deal.

Yet it turns out that, by wild good luck, there is now something that every CEO, every CFO, every global high-flyer in every one of the fifty states -- everyone who has ever done a deal on Wall Street -- really, really wants.

It's to call off Sarbanes Oxley.

Not necessarily repeal the whole thing; just the part of it that might throw these guys in jail.

So when I say they want it, I mean they want it in a way they don't "want" free trade, or even a spiking of the death tax. They want it in the way they don't want to be Ken Lay.

They want to live. And that's what labor has to offer.

Now, it's true it's also about money. Treasury Secretary Hank Paulsen is worried that with Sarbanes Oxley in place, Wall Street (New York) is losing to its evil twin The City (London). It turns out the Russians and others who are flush with oil money don't want to pay for the audits of the books that Sarbanes Oxley now requires. Even more, they don't want to sign the financial forms that say, under penalty of perjury, that they swear everything is true, there is nothing off the books, there is no bank account in the Cayman Islands, and if they're wrong they agree to go directly to jail.

Under Sarbanes Oxley, not only do the CEOs have to take an oath that all their numbers are honest, but -- to add to the injury -- they have to pay for the very outside audits that determine if they are lying and need to explain themselves to a federal grand jury.

The law is so onerous that even the Democrats will cut it back, at least to some degree. And while the changes being proposed are moderate and even sensible, they will of course end up much more sweeping when the doors close and they draft the final bill. No one wants a return to massive fraud, but CEOs and CFOs have grown up in a culture where people don't so much cook the books as lightly sauté them every year. They want to go back and do what they used to do before. And they want to be able to do it without doing federal time.

So this bargain would really be a new social contract: we let you do what you did in the 1990s, and we get to do what we did in the 1950s.

Barney Frank in the House has actually indicated he might be interested in a potential grand bargain along these lines -- so it's not completely crazy. Still, I can hear the chorus on the left: "Oh, but Sarbanes Oxley is a great reform." Of course it is. It's probably the most imaginative piece of legislation Congress has passed in the last three or four decades. The genius of Sarbanes Oxley is that it goes around the SEC and the federal bureaucracy to re-invent the corporation as something that blows the whistle on itself. It would be a tragedy to gut Sarbanes Oxley, as I propose.

But I'd do it gladly to get a labor movement back.

There are other objections: "The stockholders will be hurt." Labor doesn't represent the stockholders. Besides, sooner or later, Sarbanes Oxley will come back. Sooner or later, CEOs will end up in the same mess again, and they will have to bring back Sarbanes Oxley just to restore public trust. Remember: who put in Sarbanes Oxley? It was not the Democrats -- it was not the left. It was Bush and the GOP who put in place the toughest "anti-business" law that any Congress ever passed.

Even if gutted today, Sarbanes Oxley will likely come back -- in a new version, maybe a worse one or at least clumsier -- to deal with the next round of scandals. It's still worth a swap now, purely for the net incremental gain of social justice

Objection: "The Democrats would never propose such a bargain." But not all Democrats have to propose it. We only need forty senators to filibuster the coming changes in Sarbanes Oxley unless labor gets its bill. They need only say: "Yes, we want to give you relief on Sarbanes Oxley. Just sign off on this bill."

Objection: "Oh, but the wingnuts, the ideologues, the libertarian posse, they'll never agree!" No, but we're talking to the banks, to big business. When there's money at stake, the ideologues don't matter. Otherwise we would have invaded not Iraq but China.

Objection: "Oh, but the CEOs, they'll walk away. They won't take the deal." Let them walk away. They may turn around. After all, some in business will be smart enough to calculate that in 2008 the Democrats might get back in the White House. Think of all those Democratic U.S. Attorneys. If Sarbanes Oxley is a worry with Bush's people in, imagine what it will be like when the prosecutors are being picked by Clinton, or Obama, or maybe John Edwards. Even if they won't actually be on the left, prosecutors love nailing these guys with their super salaries. It's a lawyer thing. They hate business people, deep down, for making more money and not being as smart.

Sarbanes Oxley does have excesses, and a good argument can be made (even from the left) for getting rid of that oath requirement. But that barely even matters given what this bargain might offer for labor and the left.

These CEOs grew up cooking the books, just a little. It's how they came of age as businessmen. It's how they express themselves artistically. I wonder how many wake up at 3:00 AM and think, "I wish I were young again." Do they really want to go on signing those statements every year under penalty of perjury? I think I'm an honest guy, but I'd hate to swear an oath.

"But they'll never agree to a swap; they'll just walk away." Maybe they will.

But ask Skilling and the rest. There are worse things in life than dealing with a union.

Thomas Geoghegan is a labor lawyer in Chicago. His most recent book is The Law In Shambles.

Rabbi's legacy of spirituality and activism is guiding light

January 31, 2007

When members of Mishkan Shalom Synagogue in Philadelphia need inspiration to tackle society's thorny problems, they look no further than a social room named for their late hero: Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel.

"It's a testament to the power of his life and his teaching," Rabbi Jeff Sultar says. In the room, a hanging photo shows the wild-haired rabbi marching in Selma, Ala., in 1965 with Martin Luther King Jr. "It reminds us that spirituality is continuing to steer us back into the world rather than to take us out of it."

This year at the centennial of Heschel's birth, Jews and gentiles alike are remembering him as more than one of the most influential theologians of the 20th century. For people of varied backgrounds, he also is an enduring role model.

For the centennial, academics will debate Heschel's significance at Brandeis University in Waltham, Mass., on March 11-12. Another conference is Sept. 7-9 at the Thomas Merton Center at Ballarmine University in Louisville. Yale University Press will release Volume 2 of his biography.

Scholars will have plenty to discuss. Heschel's classic titles, including The Prophets and God in Search of Man, have made him a staple of undergraduate courses on religion. Yet unlike his colleagues at New York's Jewish Theological Seminary, who commonly regarded God as a set of abstract principles, Heschel wrote passionately about the Sabbath and the quest for a personal God in ways that earned him a broad appeal.

"Heschel's central idea … was a God of pathos, a God of emotions, a God who cares about human history and what human beings do, even individuals," says biographer Edward Kaplan of Brandeis. "It's a kind of astounding doctrine."

Beyond academia, Rabbi Michael Lerner, founder of the Berkeley-based Network of Spiritual Progressives and author of 2006 best seller The Left Hand of God, calls himself a Heschel "disciple."

"We are following in his footsteps," Lerner says. "We're manifestations of his legacy."

Richard John Neuhaus joined with Heschel and peace activist Daniel Berrigan in 1965 to establish the influential anti-war group Clergy Concerned About Vietnam. But today Neuhaus, a Catholic priest and editor of the religion journal First Things, says Heschel's influence on him and society is most clearly felt in Jewish-Christian relations, which Heschel shaped through his role as Judaic consultant to Vatican II at a time when Heschel's Hasidic community forbade theological dialogue with Christians.

Born Jan. 11, 1907, in Warsaw, Heschel was a religious "prodigy," Kaplan says. By age 4, he already knew ancient Hebrew and Aramaic; as a teen, he published his first Talmudic commentary.

In 1939, he fled the Nazis and took a teaching post at Hebrew Union College in Cincinnati. In five years, he was teaching in New York, where he lived until his death in 1972. Some colleagues ridiculed him for devoting time to spirituality and activism, says his daughter Susannah Heschel, a Judaic studies scholar at Dartmouth. "They would come up to me and say, 'Your father is just a poet,' " she says.

Yet because Heschel had a masterful command of Jewish texts, Lerner says, he was able to reclaim the tradition in ways that now inspire his intellectual descendants.

"Heschel opened the door," Kaplan says. "He made it possible to emulate the Hebrew prophets (by) joining spirituality and bold social commitments."

With Minnesota's 'Jewish Seat' Up for Grabs, Comic Eyes Run and GOPer Runs From Bush

January 26, 2007

Al Franken is not yet officially running for the Senate, but the comedian-turned-liberal pundit already may have unleashed the best joke of his campaign.

Franken’s favorite quip, the one he has repeated frequently at Democratic fundraisers over the past year, is that if he runs, he would be the only New York Jew in the race who grew up in Minnesota. The breezy one-liner is meant to undermine the charge that Franken is a carpetbagger, while also implicitly skewering his tentative 2008 rival, Republican Senator Norm Coleman, who is also Jewish but was born and raised in Brooklyn.

While it could be said that both Franken and Coleman are currently working to shed past skins — Franken as a jokester from out of state, Coleman as a vocal supporter of President Bush and the Iraq War — both men are indeed hewing closely to an oddly persistent Minnesota tradition: two Jews squaring off for Hubert Humphrey’s old Senate seat. Since 1979, the office has been held by a steady sucession of Jewish politicians, starting with Republican Rudy Boschwitz, followed by liberal Democrat Paul Wellstone and then by Coleman. Every election since 1990 has pitted two Jewish candidates against each other, except for the two weeks in 2002 when former senator and vice president Walter Mondale faced Coleman after Wellstone died tragically in a plane crash. (Franken also follows Minnesota’s more recent entertainer-turned-politician tradition: Pro-wrestler Jesse Ventura, winning his race for governor in 1998, became the highest-ranking Reform official in the country — unless one counts Rabbi Eric Yoffie.)

In recent weeks, Coleman, 57, has been among a cadre of Republican legislators vocally criticizing Bush’s plan to send additional American troops to Iraq, in what critics describe as an attempt to bolster his image in a state that went to Senator John Kerry in the 2004 race and saw high-profile Republicans defeated last November. Franken, meanwhile, has doggedly reached out to Democratic lawmakers and donors in preparation for a near-certain Senate bid.

Several Democratic insiders contacted by the Forward said they perceived Franken, 55, as a frontrunner — in part because of his charisma and visible support for a slew of Democratic candidates during the 2006 campaign — but also as a wildcard in a primary field that could be crowded with strong rivals, such as freshman Rep. Tim Walz, former Senate candidate Michael Ciresi and former Minnesota Senate majority leader Dean Johnson.

There are “great concerns that [Franken’s old] jokes can come back to haunt him,” said one Democratic insider, who wished to remain anonymous. “I think there’s a mixed reaction… some people really want him to run, but others think he’s better as a commentator and satirist. People are surprised that right now there is no obvious candidate besides Franken, and the fact that Franken appears to be near an announcement is intensifying the discussion.”

While some Democrats worry about Franken’s comedic past, Republican operatives are already busily working to dredge up any past missteps. In recent weeks, the blog MinnesotaDemocratsExposed.com has posted tasteless comments Franken made about homosexuals in the course of an interview with the Harvard Crimson in 1976. During the 2006 campaign, the website extensively detailed past ties between Democratic House candidate Keith Ellison and the Nation of Islam, and the issue utlimately spilled out into state and national news media. (Ellison later won the election.)

Although Franken is untested as a candidate, he is not new to Minnesota politics. He has supported state Democrats for years, and his ties also run deep: His mother, Phoebe Franken, was an active Democratic campaigner who served as a Minnesota delegate for Gene McCarthy during the 1968 presidential campaign.

Franken’s Midwest Values political action committee, formed in early 2005, has raised more than $1.1 million to date and supported a pack of candidates during the last election, including Walz and Minnesota’s freshman senator, Amy Klobuchar. Having moved back to the state about a year ago (Franken now broadcasts his Air America Radio show from Minneapolis), the pundit has also earned a reputation as a tireless campaigner. He attended more than 50 events in 2006, including appearances for both Klobuchar and Walz, as well as speaking engagements at such smaller venues as the Senate District 18 Wellstone Dinner and the Wabasha County Bean Feed.

“He is sort of repositioning himself to be more Minnesotan than Paul Bunyan,” said Steven Schier, political science professor at Carleton College. “What he’s going to do now is try to keep the field empty — scare off potential opponents — by being everywhere and raising buckets of cash.”

While Franken will undoubtedly attract out-of-state money from New York and California, he has yet to prove that he will be the frontrunner of choice among Minnesota’s Democratic bigwigs, chief among them power couple Sam and Sylvia Kaplan, and businessman Vance Opperman, head of the West Publishing empire.

“I will certainly wait to see how things turn out for quite awhile,” Opperman said in an interview with the Forward. “There are four or five people, any one of whom would represent the state very well, and the preliminary judgment is [that it could be] any one of them — depending on luck, and how things fall, and how the campaign comes together.”

Opperman said that Franken has contacted him a number of times to arrange a meeting, and that he plans to meet with Franken within the next few weeks, as well as with Ciresi, who narrowly lost the 2000 Democratic senate primary.

The state’s Democratic delegation is also taking a wait-and-see approach. “As far as our 2006 campaign, he did campaign with us a lot, but we’re really not commenting any further at this point,” said Meredith Salsbery, a spokeswoman for Walz, when asked about the new lawmaker’s potential support for Franken. Walz, a former teacher and military veteran, could himself emerge as a potential candidate, just as Minnesota Republican Rod Grams won election to the Senate in 1995 after serving just a single term in the U.S. House.

For his part, Coleman appears to have been put on notice by Klobuchar’s overwhelming victory last November. He has publicly opposed sending more troops to Baghdad, and last week he was one of only two GOP senators to initially vote for the Democratic ethics reform package, which passed in the Senate last Friday.

Coleman, who is married to a Catholic and opposes abortion rights, is also working to stake out a middle ground on the issue of stem-cell research. This past Tuesday, he introduced legislation to expand funding for research on stem cells that have died naturally, as well as research on a process called altered nuclear transfer, which involves programming an egg to produce cells that cannot become a human organism. He also introduced a bill that would extend the deadline, set by Bush, for federal funding of research using stem cells taken from embryos before August 9, 2001.

Should Franken and Coleman become the third pair of Jews to face off for Humphrey’s old Senate seat, it would be an interesting twist in Minnesota’s history. The state has fewer than 50,000 Jewish residents, and was at one time notorious for its antisemitism. In 1946, Nation editor Carey McWilliams declared Minneapolis “the capitol of anti-semitism in the United States” in an influential article that revealed the lack of Jewish participation in major Minneapolis industries.

In response, Humphrey, the city’s then-mayor, pioneered some of the country’s first anti-discrimination ordinances in housing and employment. Humphrey went on to be elected to the U.S. Senate in 1948, and was known as a champion of Israel throughout his career.

But observers in Minnesota say the state’s Jewish senator trend is coincidental.

“It’s an irrelevant quirk,” said Steven Silberfarb, who recently left his longtime post as the excutive director of the Jewish Community Relations Council of Minnesota and the Dakotas. “It just doesn’t seem to matter to anybody.”

Essay Linking Liberal Jews and Anti-Semitism Sparks a Furor

January 31, 2007

The American Jewish Committee, an ardent defender of Israel, is known for speaking out against anti-Semitism, but this conservative advocacy group has recently stirred up a bitter and emotional debate with a new target: liberal Jews.

An essay the committee features on its Web site, ajc.org, titled “ ‘Progressive’ Jewish Thought and the New Anti-Semitism,” says a number of Jews, through their speaking and writing, are feeding a rise in virulent anti-Semitism by questioning whether Israel should even exist.

In an introduction to the essay, David A. Harris, the executive director of the committee, writes, “Perhaps the most surprising — and distressing — feature of this new trend is the very public participation of some Jews in the verbal onslaught against Zionism and the Jewish State.” Those who oppose Israel’s basic right to exist, he continues, “whether Jew or gentile, must be confronted.”

The essay comes at a time of high anxiety among many Jews, who are seeing not only a surge in attacks from familiar antagonists, but also gloves-off condemnations of Israel from onetime allies and respected figures, like former President Jimmy Carter, who titled his new book on the Mideast “Palestine Peace Not Apartheid.” By spotlighting the touchy issue of whether Jews are contributing to anti-Semitism, both admirers and detractors of the essay agree that it aggravates an already heated dispute over where legitimate criticism of Israel and its defenders ends and anti-Semitic statements begin.

The essay, written by Alvin H. Rosenfeld, an English professor and the director of the Institute for Jewish Culture and the Arts at Indiana University in Bloomington, castigates a number of people by name, including the Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Tony Kushner, the historian Tony Judt, the poet Adrienne Rich and the Washington Post columnist Richard Cohen, in addition to a number of academics.

Mr. Judt, whose views on Israel and the American Jewish lobby have frequently drawn fire, is chastised for what Mr. Rosenfeld calls “a series of increasingly bitter articles” that have “called Israel everything from arrogant, aggressive, anachronistic, and infantile to dysfunctional, immoral, and a primary cause of present-day anti-Semitism.”

A historian at New York University, Mr. Judt said in a telephone interview that he believed the real purpose of outspoken denunciations of him and others was to stifle harsh criticism of Israel. “The link between anti-Zionism and anti-Semitism is newly created,” he said, adding that he fears “the two will have become so conflated in the minds of the world” that references to anti-Semitism and the Holocaust will come to be seen as “just a political defense of Israeli policy.”

The essay also takes to task “Wrestling With Zion: Progressive Jewish-American Responses to the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict” (Grove Press), a 2003 collection of essays edited by Mr. Kushner and Alisa Solomon. Mr. Kushner said that he and Ms. Solomon took great care to include a wide range of voices in their collection, including those of Ms. Rich, the playwright Arthur Miller and various rabbis.

“Most Jews like me find this a very painful subject,” Mr. Kushner said, and are aware of the rise in vicious anti-Semitism around the world but feel “it’s morally incumbent upon us to articulate questions and reservations.”

Over the telephone, the dinner table and the Internet, people who follow Jewish issues have been buzzing over Mr. Rosenfeld’s article. Alan Wolfe, a political scientist and the director of the Boisi Center for Religion and American Public Life at Boston College, said, “I’m almost in a state of shock” at the verbal assaults directed at liberal Jews.

On H-Antisemitism (h-net.org), an Internet forum for scholarly discussions of the subject, Michael Posluns, a political scientist at the University of Toronto, wrote, “Sad and misbegotten missives of the sort below make me wonder if it is not the purpose of mainstream Jewish organizations to foster anti-Jewishness by calling down all who take from their Jewish experience and Jewish thought a different ethos and different ways of being as feeding anti-Semitism.”

Others have praised Mr. Rosenfeld’s indictment and joined the fray. Shulamit Reinharz, a sociologist who is also the wife of Jehuda Reinharz, the president of Brandeis University, wrote in a column for The Jewish Advocate in Boston: “Most would say that they are simply anti-Zionists, not anti-Semites. But I disagree, because in a world where there is only one Jewish state, to oppose it vehemently is to endanger Jews.”

Although many of the responses to the essay have referred to its subject as “Jewish anti-Semitism,” Mr. Rosenfeld said in a telephone interview that he was very careful not to use that phrase. But whatever it is called, he said, “I wanted to show that in an age when anti-Semitism is resurgent, Jews thinking the way they’re thinking is feeding into a very nasty cause.”

In his essay he says that “one of the most distressing features of the new anti-Semitism” is “the participation of Jews alongside it.” Like others, Mr. Cohen of The Washington Post complained that the essay cherry-picked quotations. “He mischaracterized what I wrote,” he said. “I’ve been critical of Israel at times, but I’ve always been a defender of Israel.” He did add, however, that a wide range of writers were named, some of whom have written inflammatory words about Israel. “He has me in a very strange neighborhood,” Mr. Cohen said.

The dispute goes beyond the familiar family squabbling among Jews that is characterized by the old joke about two Jews having three opinions on a single subject. Bitter debates over anti-Israel statements and anti-Semitism have entangled government officials, academics, opinion-makers and others over the past year, particularly since fervent supporters and tough critics of Israel can be found on the right and the left.

Mr. Wolfe, who has written about a recent rise in what he calls “Jewish illiberalism,” traces the heated language to increasing opposition to the Iraq war and President Bush’s policy in the Middle East, which he said had spurred liberal Jews to become more outspoken about Israel.

“Events in the world have sharpened a sense of what’s at stake,” he said. “Israel is more isolated than ever,” causing American Jewish defenders of Israel to become more aggressive.

On this point Mr. Rosenfeld and Mr. Wolfe are in agreement. “It’s going up a notch or four or five,” Mr. Rosenfeld said in an interview. “One of the things that is clear,” he said of anti-Semitic and anti-Israel attacks, “is that what used to be on the margin and not very serious is becoming more and more mainstream.”

Mr. Rosenfeld, who has written and edited more than half a dozen books as well as other publications for the committee, emphasized that policy disagreements were natural and expected. Opposing Israel’s settlement of the West Bank or treatment of Palestinians “is, in itself, not anti-Semitic,” he writes; it is questioning Israel’s right to exist that crosses the line.

But Mr. Judt said, “I don’t know anyone in a respectable range of opinion who thinks Israel shouldn’t exist.” (Mr. Judt advocates a binational state that is not exclusively Jewish, something that many Jews see as equivalent to dissolving Israel). He contends that harsh complaints about Israel’s treatment of Palestinians are the real target.

Last year Mr. Judt came to the defense of two prominent political scientists, Stephen M. Walt at Harvard and John J. Mearsheimer of the University of Chicago, after they were besieged for publishing a paper that baldly stated (among other things) that anyone critical of Israel or the American Jewish lobby “stands a good chance of being labeled an anti-Semite.”

David Singer, the committee’s director of research, said the attention Mr. Rosenfeld’s essay had drawn was not unexpected. “We certainly thought that it would raise eyebrows in some quarters,” he said.

“I think it’s an act of courage” on the part of the American Jewish Committee and the author, he added. “It obviously deals with matters of great sensitivity.”

Bill would use 'flawed' embryos for stem cells

January 31, 2007

Faced with a likely second veto of legislation to expand embryonic stem cell research, the Bush administration is exploring alternatives — including a measure proposed by U.S. Sen. Johnny Isakson (R-Ga.) that would permit federal funding of new stem cell lines drawn from fertilized eggs incapable of surviving in the womb.

A White House spokesman confirmed that Bush policy advisers are in talks with Isakson, as well as other Republican members of Congress interested in ending the impasse over research that could lead to cures for a range of conditions, from diabetes to Alzheimer's to spinal cord injuries.

"If there's an alternative that doesn't cross that moral line, we're certainly willing to listen and consider it," said Tony Fratto, deputy White House press secretary.

Fratto wouldn't characterize the discussions with Isakson, and the senator would only describe them as frequent.

"There's a lot of enthusiasm on my part that the talks are continuing. We're not there yet," Isakson said this week.

Any embrace of the senator's overture would represent a subtle but significant shift in White House policy toward stem cell research.

Isakson's proposal was inspired by research at the University of Georgia using flawed embryos, destined to be discarded by fertility clinics, to create three stem cell lines.

The senator offered the legislation to move past the objections President Bush spelled out last July — on behalf of some religious conservatives — when he vetoed a bill to expand embryonic stem cell research. A second, nearly identical measure — the gift of a now-Democratic Congress — could hit Bush's desk next month.

Resistance to embryonic stem cell research may have contributed to the poor nationwide showing Republicans had last year, particularly in Missouri, where the GOP lost a U.S. Senate seat. GOP strategists fear the issue could loom larger in 2008.

"The challenge right now is for Republicans to demonstrate that they are at least open to pursuing some issues that are more popular among independents than among the Republican base," said GOP pollster Whit Ayers. "Stem cell research falls into that category."

Stem cells obtained from human embryos left over from fertility clinics are prized by researchers for their ability to morph into any human tissue. But the ethical issues have brought politics and religion into collision with the science. Because a healthy embryo is destroyed when stem cells are harvested, some conservative Christians have likened the process to abortion.

Like the measure vetoed by Bush last year, the stem cell bill passed by the U.S. House this month would permit federally funded researchers to use any embryo discarded by fertility clinics, once permission has been obtained from donors. Isakson's proposal would limit researchers to fertilized eggs that, because of poor development, aren't placed in the womb, and are judged unlikely to survive freezing.

Isakson's approach got an unexpected boost last week — from the government of Norway, which proposed lifting a four-year ban on embryonic stem cell research. Similar to Isakson's bill, the Norwegian government would restrict scientists to using embryos not implanted because of poor quality, or those stored in cryogenic freezers for more than the allowable five years.

"If you see somebody on the same track, you have to think that there's some validation there," Isakson said.

Isakson wrote his bill after studying UGA researcher Steve Stice's work.

He and Stice contend the embryos are scientifically graded for viability, using widely accepted standards.

Jim Galloway writes for the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. E-mail: jgalloway AT ajc.com

Merck lobbies states to require cervical-cancer vaccine for girls

January 31, 2007

Merck & Co. is helping bankroll efforts to pass state laws requiring girls as young as 11 or 12 to receive the drugmaker's new vaccine against the sexually transmitted cervical-cancer virus.

Some conservatives and parents'-rights groups say such a requirement would encourage premarital sex and interfere with the way they raise their children, and they say Merck's push for such laws is underhanded. But the company said its lobbying efforts have been above-board.

With at least 18 states, including Maryland, debating whether to require Merck's Gardasil vaccine for schoolgirls, Merck has funneled money through Women in Government, an advocacy group made up of female state legislators around the country.

A top official from Merck's vaccine division sits on Women in Government's business council, and many of the bills around the country have been introduced by members of Women in Government.

"Cervical cancer is of particular interest to our members because it represents the first opportunity that we have to actually eliminate a cancer," Women in Government President Susan Crosby said.

Gardasil, approved by the federal government in June, protects girls and women against strains of the human papillomavirus, or HPV, that are responsible for most cases of cervical cancer. A government advisory panel has recommended that all girls get the shots at 11 and 12, before they are likely to be sexually active.

But no state has yet to add Gardasil to the list of vaccinations youngsters must have under law to be enrolled in school.

Merck spokeswoman Janet Skidmore would not say how much the company is spending on lobbyists or how much it has donated to Women in Government. Crosby also declined to specify how much the drug company gave.

But Skidmore said: "We disclosed the fact that we provide funding to this organization. We're not in any way trying to obscure that."

The New Jersey-based drug company could generate billions in sales if Gardasil at $360 for the three-shot regimen were made mandatory across the country. Most insurance companies now cover the vaccine, which has been shown to have no serious side effects.

Cathie Adams, president of the conservative watchdog group Texas Eagle Forum, said the relationship between Merck and Women in Government is too cozy.

"What it does is benefit the pharmaceutical companies, and I don't want pharmaceutical companies taking precedence over the authorities of parents," she said.

Adams said Merck's method of lobbying quietly through groups like Women in Government in addition to meeting directly with legislators are common in state government but still should raise eyebrows. "It's corrupt as far as I'm concerned," she said.

A mandatory vaccine against a sexually transmitted disease could be a tough sell in the Lone Star State and other conservative strongholds, where schools preach abstinence and parents' rights are sacrosanct.

But Merck has doubled its spending on lobbyists in Texas this year, to between $150,000 and $250,000, as lawmakers consider the vaccine bill for girls entering the sixth grade.

Also, the drugmaker has hired one of the state's most powerful lobbyists, Mike Toomey, who once served as Republican Gov. Rick Perry's chief of staff and can influence conservatives who see him as one of their own.

"What we support are approaches that achieve high immunization rates," said Skidmore, the Merck spokeswoman. "We're talking about cervical cancer here, the second-leading cancer among women worldwide."

The legislation already has the enthusiastic support of the conservative governor.

"I look at this no different than vaccinating our children for polio," Perry said. "If there are diseases in our society that are going to cost us large amounts of money, it just makes good economic sense, not to mention the health and well being of these individuals to have those vaccines available."

Proposals for mandates have popped up from California to Connecticut since the first piece of legislation was introduced in September in Michigan. Michigan's bill was narrowly defeated last month. Lawmakers said the requirement would intrude on families' privacy, even though, as in most states' proposals, parents could opt out.

Even with such opt-out provisions, mandates take away parents' rights to make medical decisions for their children, said Linda Klepacki of the Colorado-based evangelical organization Focus on the Family. The group contends the vaccine should be available for parents who want it, but not forced on those who don't.

But Texas Rep. Jessica Farrar said her proposal is aimed at protecting children whose parents are less informed about or less interested in preventive care.

"Not everybody has equal sets of parents," said Farrar, a Houston Democrat who had precancerous cells removed from her cervix several years ago. "I think this is a public health issue and to not want to eradicate cervical cancer is irresponsible."

Drug-industry analyst Steve Brozak of W.B.B. Securities has projected Gardasil sales of at least $1 billion per year and billions more if states start requiring the vaccine. "I could not think of a bigger boost," he said.

Avoiding another US war in the Middle East

January 31, 2007

The post-9/11 US strategy to "take the war to the enemy" has now evolved into risky confrontation with Iran. The US has put more Navy ships in the Gulf, ordered a search for Iranian agents in Iraq, and put a squeeze on Iran's banks. The endgame?

That's not so clear.

Yes, President Bush wants Iran to suspend its bomb-grade uranium enrichment, a goal endorsed last month by the UN Security Council – with sanctions. And he wants an end to Iranian support of militias in Iraq and anti-Israel groups such as Hizbullah and Hamas.

But how far is Mr. Bush willing to apply unilateral aggressive actions against Iran, short of war?

And what of any danger if an unexpected armed incident triggers an irreversible slide toward war?

Going eyeball to eyeball with the unstable Islamic theocracy in Tehran should not be done without gaining more support from Congress and key allies in Europe. And, after relying on inaccurate information to invade Saddam Hussein's Iraq, the Bush administration should share at least some irrefutable secret intelligence about Iran's intentions and capabilities if it expects public backing for this perilous posturing.

On Monday, Bush warned that the US military in Iraq "will respond firmly" if Iran threatens American forces or Iraqi citizens. He's also reportedly set up a special military task force just to capture or kill Iran's agents in Iraq, after the US snagged a few who allegedly were involved with militias.

And that comes after the US has sent a second naval carrier group into the area, lined up a meeting of Arab states to express concern about Iran's influence in the region, and sped up delivery of more Patriot antimissile batteries to the region.

On the other hand, this creeping confrontation with Iran, which may be related to the "surge" of US troops in Iraq, could simply be a ploy by the White House, for three reasons:

1. Iran faces a late-February deadline set by the UN to suspend almost all its nuclear activities. US actions may force it to comply.

2. As pressure builds in Congress to draw down troops in Iraq, Bush may simply be trying to level the playing field with Iran in order to open talks about stabilizing Iraq and allowing a US withdrawal.

3. A power struggle appears under way in Iran with reports that Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei may be ill. The country could be in a succession crisis this year. US pressure may help some factions that favor suspending Iran's nuclear ambitions to avoid confrontation with the West.

Bush should be commended for seeking international support against Iran's destabilizing actions. And European governments need to be speedier in adopting legal means to restrain business deals with Iran.

But Bush's unilateral tactics and timing need better watchdogging by Congress and the press.

Questions need to be asked, for instance, about the Iranian agents captured in Iraq. What exactly were they doing there?

And Vice President Dick Cheney says Iran's threat is "multidimensional." But how urgent are those threats? Is North Korea, for instance, helping Iran prepare a nuclear test?

This game of chicken with Iran needs to be played with eyes open.

The US can't afford another Iraq.

Tucson, Ariz., diocese shuns retired Mich. Bishop Gumbleton

January 30, 2007

The Catholic Diocese of Tucson won't allow a retired auxiliary bishop from Detroit to speak on church property because the group hosting his visit takes positions contrary to church doctrine.

Tucson Bishop Gerald F. Kicanas said he's written to the Rev. Thomas J. Gumbleton, an outspoken advocate for sexual abuse victims and gays and lesbians, and told him that his visit to speak to the Tucson chapter of the Call to Action group can't be sanctioned by the church.

Call to Action is a group of lay Catholics that seeks changes in church doctrine on gays, lesbians and priestly celibacy, and has urged more democratic processes in the church, including election of bishops.

Because Gumbleton has been barred from speaking at diocese churches, he instead will speak Feb. 6 at the First Christian Church in Tucson, led by the Rev. Robin Hoover. Hoover's congregation supports making all religious entities more open and affirming of gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender people.

Gumbleton has spoken of his own youthful abuse by a priest.

He recently was denied reappointment as pastor of Detroit's St. Leo's Catholic Church, which he'd led since 1983.

In a video of his last Mass at St. Leo's, filmed by a parishioner and posted on the National Catholic Reporter Web site, Gumbleton says he still wants to lead St. Leo's and believes he was not reassigned because of his recent talks about sex abuse in the church.

The Archdiocese of Detroit says it did not renew Gumbleton's position because of his age.

At age 75, all bishops must submit a letter of resignation directly to the pope, Cardinal Adam Maida, archbishop of Detroit, wrote in a letter to parishioners distributed the weekend of Jan. 20-21. Maida wrote that the pope had accepted Gumbleton's resignation.

America's Most Wanted; In a new book, a right-wing critic blames the terrorist attacks of 9/11 on left-wing politicians, movie stars and activists.

February 7, 200 edition

In 2004, when Sen. Ted Kennedy was temporarily grounded by the appearance of a certain "T. Kennedy" on the No-Fly List, it was treated as an amusing bureaucratic snafu. But is it possible the government was on to something? Dinesh D'Souza, the right-wing author and critic, has made his own list, and Ted Kennedy is the very first name. D'Souza identifies more than 100 people and organizations as part of a "domestic insurgency" that is "working in tandem with [Osama] bin Laden to defeat Bush." Among them are such well-known terrorists as Sharon Stone, Henry Louis Gates and Cindy Sheehan. If you've ever given money to Planned Parenthood or the ACLU, D'Souza wants you to know, you've been aiding groups "at least as dangerous as any of bin Laden's American sleeper cells." So if you find yourself getting on a plane with Kennedy, or even Noam Chomsky, you might want to think about driving instead.

In his new book, ominously titled "The Enemy at Home," D'Souza takes pains to insist that "I am not accusing anyone of treason o