July 2, 2025

McCormick Responds!

Something new - a video message:

And here is a transcript:

A number of you have raised questions about the reconciliation process through letters or emails or phone calls. First, I want to thank you for engaging. Thanks for your questions. Let me try to give you a quick sense of what's going on.

Reconciliation is something that doesn't happen very often. It's only happened for Republicans five times in the last 100 years. The primary thing we're trying to do is deliver on President Trump's promises during the campaign that the American people voted for.

So, the first thing is to make sure that we don't raise taxes – have the highest increase in taxes in the history of our country. If you were a family that made $50,000, if we didn't pass the reconciliation bill, the big, beautiful bill, your taxes would go up by $2,000.

It also funds the border patrol and technology to make sure the terrible flow of fentanyl into our country is stopped. It builds up our defense. It's a very dangerous world right now with what's going on with Russia, Iran, and China around the world. So, it gets funding for next-generation defense.

And it tries to begin to cut the growing deficit. We have $37 trillion of debt and a $2 trillion deficit. We've got to bring that under control. One of the ways it does that is to try to eliminate waste, fraud, and abuse across our government.

In one area in particular, Medicaid, we've seen the highest growth of any program. It's grown by $250 billion dollars a year in the last five years. And so, what the reconciliation bill is going to do is ensure that working-age men without dependents, who the program was never designed for, are required to work or at least volunteer to work in order to get the benefits.

The key is to try to ensure that we can secure the program for the people it's designed for: the most vulnerable among us, people with disabilities, children, and women with dependents. So, there are lots of pieces to it.

Just know that I'm focused very much to make sure that I understand the implications of this for Pennsylvania and fighting for Pennsylvania's interest and delivering on the promises that I made during the campaign.

He's responding to this blog post of only a few days ago.  It's so good to know that his office can respond this quickly to a blog post (keeping in mind that it's evident from the text that he's not just responding to me but to a great many other Pennsylvanians as well).

There's a number of things to point out here - not only what Sen. McCormick says but also (and this is much more important) what Sen. McCormick chooses not to say

Like this, for instance: 

And it tries to begin to cut the growing deficit. We have $37 trillion of debt and a $2 trillion deficit. We've got to bring that under control. One of the ways it does that is to try to eliminate waste, fraud, and abuse across our government.

In a letter to Representatives Hakeem Jeffries and Brendan Boyle, the Congressional Budget Office wrote that the bill would include:

An increase in the federal deficit of $3.8 trillion attributable to tax changes, including extending provisions of the 2017 tax act, which includes revenues and outlays for refundable credits.

Does our good Senator not know this?  Does he not know that Trump's bill will increase the federal deficit by trillions? Or does he know this and just simply chose not to include it in his message to his constituents? 

How about this:

CBO estimates that household resources would decrease by an amount equal to about 2 percent of income in the lowest decile (tenth) of the income distribution in 2027 and 4 percent in 2033, mainly as a result of losses of in-kind transfers, such as Medicaid and SNAP. By contrast, resources would increase by an amount equal to 4 percent for households in the highest decile in 2027 and 2 percent in 2033, mainly because of reductions in they taxes they owe. The distributional effects vary throughout the 10-year projection period as different components of the legislation are phased in and out.

Something else Senator Dave McCormick chose not to tell you. 

He also leaves this part out that there'll be:

$267 billion less in federal spending for SNAP. 

For those who don't know, SNAP is the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program. And according to that link:

SNAP provides food benefits to low-income families to supplement their grocery budget so they can afford the nutritious food essential to health and well-being. 

So how many Pennsylvanians will see a decrease in their SNAP benefits - a decrease implemented in order to shuttle even more money to the already wealthy?

The Senator does not say.

Then there's this from the Kaiser Family Foundation:

The reconciliation package currently making its way through Congress would make significant cuts to federal funding for Medicaid and the Affordable Care Act. According to the Congressional Budget Office (CBO), an additional 11.8 million people could be uninsured in 2034 if the version introduced by the Senate is passed. (This is a fast-moving piece of legislation and additional changes could be made, though the reconciliation bill is likely to be put up for a vote before another CBO score can be completed).

How many of those losing coverage will be Pennsylvanians - coverage lost to cover the cost of greater tax decreases for the already wealthy?

The Senator does not say. 

He does say he's "focused" and "fighting for Pennsylvania's interests" which evidently means the interests of those constituents of his that don't need health insurance or, you know, food assistance. 

He's also lying about the deficit. 

 

Fetterman "Answers"

Note: I received two responses today - one from each Pennsylvania Senator.

This is John Fetterman's:

 And here is the text:

Thank you so much for reaching out to my office. I appreciate hearing from you. 

I believe that Pennsylvanians deserve a strong voice in Washington, so hearing from constituents like you about these critical issues is essential to my work. I’m here in D.C. fighting for solutions that deliver real results for Pennsylvanians and every corner of our commonwealth. As long as I’m your senator, that’s what I’ll always do. 

Thank you again for contacting me to share your thoughts. Please do not hesitate to reach out in the future about other issues of importance to you. If I can be of assistance, or if you’d like to learn more about my work on behalf of Pennsylvanians and our commonwealth, I encourage you to visit my website, https://www.fetterman.senate.gov/.

If you've been following my letters to Senator Fetterman, I've asked him a number of questions about Secretary Noem and the Department of Homeland Security and AG Bondi and the Department of Justice - since he voted to confirm each of them.

For instance, there is this letter about US Senator Alex Padilla being handcuffed and forced to the ground after asking a question of Sec Noem at a public press conference.

Or this letter about AG Bondi's possible ethics violations

Or this letter outlining how Sec Noem stated that habeas corpus was "a constitutional right that the president has to be able to remove people from this country and suspend their rights." 

Which is more or less exactly wrong. 

He could have answered any of those letters. Or any of the others.

But instead, he wrote three paragraphs of mostly nothing.

Pennsylvanians deserve better. Especially now. 

June 30, 2025

McCormick Monday

Another in an ongoing series

Dear Senator;

I am a resident of Pennsylvania and a constituent of yours and I'd like you to answer a question or two.

This is about President Trump's so-called Big Beautiful Bill now making its way through Congress.

If signed into law, how many of your constituents will loose their healthcare coverage?

NPR reports:

Under the "One Big Beautiful Bill Act" — budget legislation that would achieve some of President Donald Trump's priorities, such as extending tax cuts mainly benefiting the wealthy — some 10.9 million Americans would lose health insurance by 2034, according to estimates by the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office based on a House version of the budget bill. 

Senator, how many of those estimated 10.9 million are your Pennsylvania constituents?

The Kaiser Family Foundation estimates about 400,000 Pennsylvanians have opted to have health insurance from the Affordable Care Act. How many of those will lose their insurance, Senator?

They also estimate about 2.4 million are on Medicare. How many of those will lose coverage, Senator?

Additionally, in a letter to Senators Wyden and Sanders members of the Yale School of Public Health and Leonard Davis Institute of Health Economics, state that as many as 51,000 deaths would result due to the reductions in Medicare and the Affordable Care Act brought about by Donald Trump's Big Beautiful Bill. How many of those will be your constituents, Senator?

Roll Call reported:

The House-passed reconciliation bill would most benefit high earners and reduce financial resources available to the lowest-income households, the Congressional Budget Office said in a distributional analysis of the measure Thursday.

The nonpartisan agency said it estimates that over the fiscal 2026 through 2034 period, after-tax income and federal benefits “would decrease for households toward the bottom of the income distribution, whereas resources would increase for households in the middle and top of the income distribution.”

In other words:

Higher-income households would benefit the most by receiving a larger tax cut because they earn more money. The agency said the lowest 10 percent of earners would see a $1,600 or 3.9 percent reduction in their available income and benefits per year, adjusted for inflation, mainly due to cuts in Medicaid and SNAP.

How many of your constituents will have to lose their medical benefits (or their lives) just to order to pay for this upward distribution of wealth, Senator?

I'll await your answer, Senator.

As always, I'll post here whatever response I get. 


June 28, 2025

Wait, What?

H/T to Talking Points Memo on this.

Regarding Iran's "response" to President Trump's B-2 attack. 

Trump posted this on this on social media:

I want to thank Iran for giving us early notice, which made it possible for no lives to be lost, and nobody to be injured... 

But look carefully at this from Ronald Reagan's favorite news source, The Washington Times

President Trump said Iranian leaders cleared their plan with the U.S. to fire retaliatory strikes against an American airbase in Qatar, and even requested a specific time to attack.

“They said, ’We’re going to shoot them. Is one o’clock OK?’ I said it’s fine. And everybody was emptied off the base so they couldn’t get hurt, except for the gunners,” Mr. Trump said at a press conference in the Netherlands, where he is attending a NATO summit.

Monday’s Iranian attack on Al Udeid Air Base, the largest U.S. military installation in the region, was repelled by missile defense batteries, and there were no casualties, the Pentagon said.

TPM found a transcript to confirm:

You saw that, where 14 missiles were shot at us the other day.

And uh, they were very nice. They gave us warning. They said we're going to shoot them. Is 1:00, OK? I said it's fine. And everybody was emptied off the base so they couldn't get hurt except for the gunners. They call them the gunners. And uh, out of 14 high end missiles that were shot at the base in Qatar, all 14, as you know, were shot down by our equipment.

Trump gave the OK for a foreign country to attack an American airbase

Or at the very least he said he did. 

Let that sink in.

June 27, 2025

When You Know, You Know

 

As a reminder:

Congress shall make no law...abridging the freedom of speech...

Fetterman Friday

Another in an ongoing series

Dear Senator;

I am a resident of Pennsylvania and a constituent of yours and I'd like you to answer a question or two.

This is another question about Secretary Noem's Department of Homeland Security - I ask because it's such a threat to our democracy and you voted to confirm her.

CNN is reporting

President Donald Trump announced his appointments to an advisory council inside the Department of Homeland Security on Tuesday, with a list that includes a right-wing news commentator, former lawmakers, Trump’s former attorney Rudy Giuliani and a top former campaign adviser.

The announcement by Trump and Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem says the council, established first in 2002, will provide “real-time, real-world and independent advice on homeland security operations.”

The list includes right-wing political commentator Mark Levin, as well as Giuliani, who helped lead efforts to try and overturn the 2020 election results and was later sued for defamation by two Georgia election workers; a lawsuit he lost before a jury in Washington, DC. 

Didn't Rudy Giuliani lose $148 million in that defamation suit connected to Trump's 2020 election lies?

And wasn't he also  disbarred for telling those lies?

The answer to both questions is, of course, yes. 

CNN also reports:

The appointments also include Corey Lewandowski, a Trump campaign leader in 2016 who is currently a chief adviser to Noem. 

And wasn't Lewandowski removed from a MAGA PAC for (allegedly) sexually harrassing a Trump donor named Trashelle Odom?

Again, the answer is yes. 

Specifically, harassing this way

“On the evening of September 26 in Las Vegas, Nevada, I attended a dinner to support a charity and spend time with wonderful friends,” Odom said in a statement to POLITICO. “He repeatedly touched me inappropriately, said vile and disgusting things to me, stalked me, and made me feel violated and fearful,” she said, referring to Lewandowski.  

Giuliani and Lewandowski appointed to an advisory council? 

How is any of that a good idea? And do you still support Noem's appointment to head DHS?

I'll await your answer, Senator.

As always, I'll post here with whatever response I get from the Senator. 





June 25, 2025

So, Which Is It?

Hours after unilaterally bombing Iran, President Donald J. Trump said this:

Our objective was the destruction of Iran’s nuclear enrichment capacity and a stop to the nuclear threat posed by the world’s number one state sponsor of terror.

Tonight, I can report to the world that the strikes were a spectacular military success. Iran’s key nuclear enrichment facilities have been completely and totally obliterated.

Like most everything the orange vulgarity says, it turns out that this isn't quite true. 

From The New York Times

A preliminary classified U.S. report says the American bombing of three nuclear sites in Iran set back the country’s nuclear program by only a few months, according to officials familiar with the findings.

The strikes sealed off the entrances to two of the facilities but did not collapse their underground buildings, the officials said the early findings concluded.

And CNN:

The US military strikes on three of Iran’s nuclear facilities last weekend did not destroy the core components of the country’s nuclear program and likely only set it back by months, according to an early US intelligence assessment that was described by seven people briefed on it.

The assessment, which has not been previously reported, was produced by the Defense Intelligence Agency, the Pentagon’s intelligence arm. It is based on a battle damage assessment conducted by US Central Command in the aftermath of the US strikes, one of the sources said.

But The Dear Leader said "obliterated" as in "completely and totally"! 

More from the Times:

Officials cautioned that the five-page classified report was only an initial assessment, and that others would follow as more information was collected and as Iran examined the three sites. One official said that the reports people in the administration had been shown were “mixed” but that more assessments were yet to be done.

But the Defense Intelligence Agency report indicates that the sites were not damaged as much as some administration officials had hoped, and that Iran retains control of almost all of its nuclear material, meaning if it decides to make a nuclear weapon it might still be able to do so relatively quickly.

So, not so obliterated, I guess.

Of course the administration disagreed with the DIA:

President Trump pushed back Wednesday on the findings of a preliminary classified U.S. report, insisting again that Iran’s nuclear program was obliterated despite the early intelligence suggesting U.S. strikes had set the program back only by a few months.

The Trump administration has rebuked the media for reporting on that early assessment from the U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency, which officials said found that U.S. strikes had sealed off entrances to two of three nuclear sites but not collapsed their underground buildings.

But again this administration is not known for its excessive transparency or honesty.

We report. You decide. 

 

 

 

 

 

June 23, 2025

McCormick Monday

Another in an ongoing series.

Dear Senator;

I am a resident of Pennsylvania and a constituent of yours and I'd like you to answer a question or two.

About Iran, Reuters reported:

"It’s not politically correct to use the term, “Regime Change,” but if the current Iranian Regime is unable to MAKE IRAN GREAT AGAIN, why wouldn’t there be a Regime change??? MIGA!!!" Trump wrote on his social media platform.
 
Trump's post came after officials in his administration, including U.S. Vice President JD Vance and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, stressed they were not working to overthrow Iran's government.
 
"This mission was not and has not been about regime change," Hegseth told reporters at the Pentagon, calling the mission "a precision operation" targeting Iran's nuclear program.
 
Vance, in an interview on NBC's "Meet the Press with Kristen Welker," said "our view has been very clear that we don't want a regime change."

So which is it? 

And PBS reported:

Tulsi Gabbard left no doubt when she testified to Congress about Iran’s nuclear program earlier this year.

The country was not building a nuclear weapon, the national intelligence director told lawmakers, and its supreme leader had not reauthorized the dormant program even though it had enriched uranium to higher levels.

But President Donald Trump dismissed the assessment of U.S. spy agencies during an overnight flight back to Washington as he cut short his trip to the Group of Seven summit to focus on the escalating conflict between Israel and Iran.

“I don’t care what she said,” Trump told reporters. In his view, Iran was “very close” to having a nuclear bomb.

So, which is it? 

President Trump just sent B-2 bombers halfway across the world (in what might be an illegal violation of either the War Powers Act or the Constitution itself) and yet the administration can't get its story straight.

And given that The War Powers Act begins with this:

It is the purpose of this chapter to fulfill the intent of the framers of the Constitution of the United States and insure that the collective judgment of both the Congress and the President will apply to the introduction of United States Armed Forces into hostilities, or into situations where imminent involvement in hostilities is clearly indicated by the circumstances, and to the continued use of such forces in hostilities or in such situations. 

Shouldn't Congress have been notified of this attack?  Or is the War Powers Act just another law that President Trump can ignore?

I'll await your answer, Senator. 

June 20, 2025

Fetterman Friday

Another in an ongoing series.


Dear Senator;

I am a resident of Pennsylvania and a constituent of yours and I'd like you to answer a question or two.

Bloomberg is reporting

Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem directed the Federal Emergency Management Agency to prepare a memo on how to abolish itself and create a re-branded, radically smaller disaster response organization, according to a copy of the document reviewed by Bloomberg News.

As recently as last week, President Donald Trump and Noem said they wanted to wind down FEMA but offered few details publicly. The March 25 memo offers insight into how the administration has weighed which of its current functions to cut. Technically, only Congress can eliminate the agency.

Um. You voted to confirm Kristi Noem as DHS Secretary, right? Let's move on:

Titled “Abolishing FEMA,” the memo was addressed from then-acting FEMA head Cameron Hamilton to his bosses at the Department of Homeland Security and outlines a number of functions that “should be drastically reformed, transferred to another agency, or abolished in their entirety,” possibly as soon as late 2025. Potential changes included eliminating long-term housing assistance for disaster survivors, halting enrollments in the National Flood Insurance Program and providing smaller amounts of aid for fewer incidents — moves that by design would dramatically limit the federal government’s role in disaster response.

Is any of this a good idea, Senator? 

Then there's this:

The memo, meanwhile, outlines numerous ways to drive down federal disaster spending, largely by canceling long-running initiatives, revoking financial assistance altogether in some cases and pushing more disaster oversight and funding onto state and local governments. Many of these proposals appeared in the Heritage Foundation-led Project 2025 report — though its authors recommended keeping FEMA intact. Disaster experts, including ex-FEMA officials, say the plans would overwhelm state budgets and lead to longer recoveries, especially if carried out on a fast timeline.

Good idea? Bad idea? Do you support any of this, Senator Fetterman? And if not, when will you be making a public comment on it?

I'll await your answer, Senator. 

As always, I'll post whatever response I get here.