truesee's Blog

Michelle Obama in Spain with 40 friends on your tax dollars

Material girl Michelle Obama is a modern-day Marie Antoinette on a glitzy Spanish vacation

Andrea Tantaros

 

Thursday, August 5th 2010, 1:53 AM

 

First Lady Michelle Obama smiles while she visits Marbella, southern Spain.

Torres/APFirst Lady Michelle Obama smiles while she visits Marbella, southern Spain.

 

 

Sacrifice is something that many Americans are becoming all too familiar with during this economic downturn. It was a key theme in President Obama's inaugural address to the nation, and he's referenced it numerous times when lecturing the country on how to get back on its feet. 

But while most of the country is pinching pennies and downsizing  summer sojourns - or forgoing them altogether - the Obamas don't seem to be heeding their own advice. While many of us are struggling, the First Lady is spending the next few days in a five-star hotel on the chic Costa del Sol in southern Spain with 40 of her "closest friends." According to CNN, the group is expected to occupy 60 to 70 rooms, more than a third of the lodgings at the 160-room resort. Not exactly what one would call cutting back in troubled times. 

Reports are calling the lodgings of  Obama's Spanish fiesta, the Hotel Villa Padierna in Marbella, "luxurious," "posh" and "a millionaires' playground." Estimated room rate per night? Up to a staggering $2,500. Method of transportation? Air Force Two. 

To be clear, what the Obamas do with their money is one thing; what they do with ours is another. Transporting and housing the estimated 70 Secret Service agents who will flank the material girl will cost the taxpayers a pretty penny. 

Perhaps it could be that the Obamas, who seem to fancy themselves more along the lines of international celebrities than actual leaders, espouse a different view of sacrifice. When Michelle Obama accompanied her husband to Copenhagen along with best buddy Oprah Winfrey, she billed the trip - an ultimately unsuccessful bid to bring the Olympics to Chicago - as follows: "As much of a sacrifice as people say this is for me or Oprah or the President to come for these few days, so many of you in this room have been working for years to bring this bid home." 

A quick jaunt to Denmark is a sacrifice? What portraits in courage! 

The Obama modus operandi is becoming clear. From lavish trips to Spain to reportedly flying Bo, the President's Portuguese water dog, on a separate aircraft to vacation with them in Maine, to a date night in New York City that perhaps cost nearly $100,000, their idea of austerity is really just the lap of luxury, at least for ordinary folks. 

Incredibly, the Obamas have long portrayed themselves as precisely such commoners. Just this month, Obama told ABC the First Couple is "not that far removed from what most Americans are going through." And that "it was just a few years ago that we had high credit card balances, we had two kids, thinking about college. We had our own retirement accounts, wondering if we were going to be able to get enough assets in there."

If that's true, why not select a more appropriate destination like the California coast? The scenery is just as gorgeous as that of Spain, and instead of patronizing a foreign country they would be pumping money into an American economy that desperately needs it. Camp David wouldn't exactly be slumming it, either. A long weekend there would really send a message of responsibility, leadership and compassion. For a couple that has sharply criticized former President George W. Bush so widely, they could stand to follow his example for once and select a more low-key locale, as Bush regularly did in his Texas vacations.

Instead, Michelle Obama seems more like a modern-day Marie Antoinette- the French queen who spent extravagantly on clothes and jewels without a thought for her subjects' plight - than an average mother of two. While she's spent her time in the White House telling parents they should relieve their chubby kids' dependency on sugar and stressing the importance of an organic veggie garden, hopping a jet to Europe to meet with Spanish royalty isn't the visual the White House probably wants to project. Perhaps they've forgotten the image of John Kerry, on the eve of the 2004 election, windsurfing off the coast of Nantucket?

I don't begrudge anyone rest and relaxation when they work hard. We all need downtime - the First Family included. It's the extravagance of Michelle Obama's trip and glitzy destination contrasted with President Obama's demonization of the rich that smacks of hypocrisy and perpetuates a disconnect between the country and its leaders. Toning down the flash would humanize the Obamas and signify that they sympathize with the setbacks of the people they were elected to serve.

In January, President Obama insisted that "everybody in the country is going to have to sacrifice something, accept change for the greater good. Everybody is going to have to give. Everybody is going to have to have some skin in the game."

If sacrifice is the precursor to change, what will the family that ran on change offer up? Elitist doublespeaking won't cut it.



Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/opinions/2010/08/04/2010-08-04_material_girl_michelle_obama_is_a_modernday_marie_antoinette_on_a_glitzy_spanish.html?page=1#ixzz0vkRq5AJ2
Entry #2,875

Atheist billboard greets state fair-goers

Kentucky

Last Updated: 8:24 am | Thursday, August 5, 2010

Atheist billboard greets state fair-goers

Group 'inspired' by similar billboard in Cincinnati

  Peter Smith • The Courier-Journal • August 5, 2010
Zoom Photo    

photo
Zoom Photo  

Provided/The Courier-Journal 
A new billboard at Interstate 65 and Phillips Lane is intended to draw people to a Kentucky State Fair booth run by a secular group

 

LOUISVILLE - A coalition of secular groups and advocates for church-state separation have unveiled a billboard that will be in full view of Kentucky State Fair goers with the message: "Don't believe in God? You are not alone."

The billboard was installed Monday at Interstate 65 and Phillips Lane under the sponsorship of the newly formed Louisville Coalition of Reason. 

The message is intended to draw fair goers to a booth at the state fair sponsored by the coalition, said Edwin Hensley, coordinator of the coalition. The billboard also refers viewers to the coalition's website, louisvillecor.org. 

The billboard will let people know "that we are here, and we wish to be accepted as an equal part of the community," said Hensley, who is also active in some of the coalition's groups, such as the Louisville Atheists and Freethinkers. 

Numerous cities have seen similar messages on billboards, buses and subways in recent months. Hensley said he wasn't aware of any similar billboards before now in Kentucky, where billboards and other prominent signs have often proclaimed religious messages such as the imminent return of Jesus Christ. 

Hensley said he was inspired by news of a similar billboard in Cincinnati. That sign had to be relocated in November 2009 from a building to a freestanding location because the building owner was receiving threats, according to the Cincinnati Enquirer.

"After reading that article, I got the idea that if they could do it in Cincinnati, we could do it in Louisville," Hensley said.

The Louisville billboard site is owned by the CBS Outdoor, and there were no problems getting permission to install the sign, according to Fred Edwords, national director of the United Coalition of Reason. CBS Outdoor did not return a call for comment.

The local coalition received $4,100 from the national group to install the billboard for August, timed to coincide with the annual Kentucky State Fair with its hundreds of thousands of visitors. The group's booth at the fair will provide information about local groups advocating for a secular world view and separation of church and state. It will also tout "famous atheists and freethinkers and their accomplishments," Hensley said.

Edwords added: "Non-religious people sometimes don't realize there's a community out there for them because they're inundated with religious messages at every turn. So we hope this will serve as a beacon and let them know they aren't alone."

Religious groups contacted said they disagreed with the billboard's message but endorsed the group's right to spread it.

"I don’t think there'll be any kind of protest or anything, because that tends to popularize it rather than deter," said Wesley Pitts, executive director of missions for the Long Run Baptist Association, a local Southern Baptist group with offices near the billboard.

He said he found the billboard "confusing" and thought at first it offered a "pro-Christian" message by offering companionship to those searching for God.
Given the state-wide draw of the fair, the group is sending word of the billboard to Baptist churches throughout Kentucky.

"We're trying to inform our people across the state that it's there and that they might have an opportunity to encounter some of these people” at the fair booth, Pitts said. "We just hope they'll be Christ-like and present a positive witness rather than a negative one."

MaryAnn Gramig, director of policy at the local group ROCK (Reclaim Our Culture Kentuckiana), said freedom of expression is one of the "inalienable rights that come from God and not from man," she said. The group has been active in promoting public expressions of the view that the nation has a Judeo-Christian heritage and limits on sexually oriented businesses.

"ROCK would differ from the Louisville Coalition of Reason in that it is because of America's founding principles and acknowledgement of Providence and God as giving rights to man that they are able to live in a country that is tolerant and respectful of those types of views," she said.

The coalition says on its website that member groups support "science, reason, skepticism, civil liberties, separation of church and state, and the improvement of the human condition."

Coalition members include: Louisville Atheists and Freethinkers, Louisville Secular Book Group, Kentucky Secular Society, Atheist Women of Louisville, Secular Parents of Louisville, Louisville Atheists and Freethinkers Adopt-A-Mile and the Kentucky Association of Science Educators and Skeptics.

The site also lists "friends" of the coalition, including the Socrates Café of Louisville and the local chapter of Americans United for Separation of Church and State.

Entry #2,872

40 Billionaires pledge to give away half of their wealth

Bloomberg, 39 other billionaires pledge to give away half their wealth

REUTERS

 

Last Updated: 3:28 PM, August 4, 2010
Posted: 10:28 AM, August 4, 2010

 

Forty U.S. billionaires pledged on Wednesday to give away at least 50 percent of their wealth to charity as part of a campaign by investor Warren Buffett and Microsoft founder Bill Gates. 

Among the billionaires joining the campaign are New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, entertainment executive Barry Diller, Oracle co-founder Larry Ellison, energy tycoon T. Boone Pickens, media mogul Ted Turner, David Rockefeller and investor Ronald Perelman, according to "The Giving Pledge" website. 

Gates and Buffett launched "The Giving Pledge" in June to convince hundreds of U.S. billionaires to give away most of their fortune during their lifetime or after their death and to publicly state their intention with a letter of explanation.

Microsoft Corp co-founder Bill Gates speaks as New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg sits during a news conference announcing joint efforts to combat the global tobacco epidemic in New York, July 23, 2008.

The full list of billionaires and their letters can be seen at www.thegivingpledge.org

The Giving Pledge does not accept any money; it simply asks billionaires to make a moral commitment to give away their wealth to charity. 

The billionaires announcing their pledge on Wednesday join real estate and construction billionaire Eli Broad, venture capitalist John Doerr, media entrepreneur Gerry Lenfest and former Cisco Systems Chairman John Morgridge who have already committed to giving away most of their wealth.

Buffett, who made his fortune with insurance and investment company Berkshire Hathaway Inc, Gates and his wife, Melinda, held several dinners with a couple of dozen rich Americans in the past year to urge them to make the pledge. 

Buffett pledged in 2006 to give away 99 percent of his wealth to the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and family charities. Bill and Melinda Gates have so far given more than $28 billion of their fortune to their foundation. 

Since the foundation began in 1994, it has given away more than $22 billion for health improvements in poor countries and to improve access for Americans to opportunities they need to succeed in school and life. 

Gates was ranked the second-richest man in the world by Forbes magazine this year with $53 billion, while Buffett came in at No. 3 with $47 billion. Forbes said the United States is home to 403 billionaires, the most in the world.

 
Read more: http://www.nypost.com/p/news/national/bloomberg_other_billionaires_pledge_IS2QUd3CkaNyLzvComMiCM#ixzz0vhHUTxP9

Entry #2,869

CBS responds to leaked video of Katie Couric mocking Palin

August 04, 2010

 

Sarah Palin

CBS responds to leaked Couric video

The Politico

As Jonathan Martin reported this morning, Sarah Palin’s supporters have been circulating leaked footage from 2008 showing their least favorite journalist, Katie Couric, expressing wonder at Palin’s children’s names while rehearsing.

The clip, posted to the Palin fan site Conservatives4Palin under the headline “EXPLOSIVE: New Video of Couric Mocking Palin on the Day She was Named as McCain’s Running Mate!,” shows Couric fact-checking the pronunciation of Wasilla and pausing after reading “Trig” and “Track” to say: “Where the hell do they get these names?”

Conservatives4Palin’s editors write that the clip “shows some tantalizing hints of Couric’s attitude toward the governor,” adding that the real story is the unserious way that Couric’s script frames Palin’s life story on the day she was tapped as John McCain’s running mate.

But what in this impressive biography did CBS News and Couric choose to focus on? Moose burgers and beauty pageants.

By their choice of the framing of the story, it’s evident Couric and CBS had an agenda here: They wanted to diminish Gov. Palin because her impressive record of accomplishments towered over the nonexistent record of the guy at the top of Democrat ticket.

CBS News, reached for comment, said only: “It must be a very slow news day.”

(The clip is the latest in a series of unscripted moments by CBS News anchors that have become YouTube fodder. Dan Rather was caught fretting about his trench coat before a taping in Seattle, and Couric’s own joking about the incident went viral on its own.)

Conservatives4Palin says that, in the background, you can hear the reaction of “CBS news employees who were in the control room as Couric said that about the governor’s kids.” But it’s not clear that the clip was leaked by CBS employees. In the background, a voice says, “They turned her down, dude, did you hear that? Katie, I’m getting you on YouTube,” suggesting the leaker might be watching on a monitor outside CBS.

The clip was originally posted by the College Press Video Network, whose inactive website says it will launch next year as a “selective website featuring the work of our nation's future pundits.”

Rob Brynaert at The Raw Story tracked down the website’s founder, Daren Copely, who said, "Our site is not a conservative or liberal website.” But Brynaert observed that all the blurbs on the impact of a previous incarnation of the site, launched in 2001, came from figures on the right such as Joseph Farah, editor and CEO of WorldNetDaily.com, and David Limbaugh, Rush Limbaugh’s brother.

Couric has been unpopular among Palin supporters ever since her series of interviews with the then-governor of Alaska proved to be one of the most damaging moments of Palin’s candidacy. In her book, “Going Rogue,” Palin writes in detail about the experience, calling Couric “a reporter who clearly had a partisan agenda.”

I couldn’t have known it then, but what transpired during the series of interviews and what CBS actually aired were two different breeds of cat. Camera crews shot hours of footage across the U.S.; Katie and her producers decided on which fraction America would see — and let’s just say the emphasis was on my worst moments. Editing footage is nothing new, of course; I created video packages when I worked as a sports reporter. But responsible editing means you keep the substance and context, and trim out the fat. When I saw the final cut, it was clear that CBS had sought out the bad moments, and systematically sliced out material that would accurately convey my message. The sin of omission was glaring.
Entry #2,868

Women charged in kindergarten brawl

Women charged for kindergarten graduation fight

 

 

August 03, 2010 5:09 PM

Tomoya Shimura

Daily Press 

VICTORVILLE • Prosecutors filed misdemeanor charges against two women whose argument reportedly sparked a brawl during a kindergarten graduation ceremony in June.

Queiona Burt, 31, of Victorville and Marina Ruth Vargas, 29, of Hesperia were charged with interference with peaceful conduct on campus and unlawful acts committed at school grounds, according to court records.

If convicted, they could face up to six months in jail on the former count and up to 90 days in jail or a $400 fine on the latter count.

The two women got into an argument on June 23 at Puesta del Sol Elementary in Victorville over a Facebook comment about the Los Angeles Lakers, according to Burt. It developed into a physical fight and several men jumped in, turning the incident into a brawl.

Burt and Vargas are scheduled to be arraigned Aug. 25.

 

LINK TO ORGINIAL STORY

http://www.vvdailypress.com/news/arrested-20086-brawl-kindergarten.html

JAMES QUIGG, DAILY PRESS Puesta del Sol elementary school, where fight broke out at a Kindergarten graduation ceremony.quigg-graduation-broke-sc

Entry #2,867

Woman tied up instant messages for help with toes

Atlanta News
12:49 p.m. Wednesday, August 4, 2010
 

Toe typist demonstrates how on national TV

 

Larry Hartstein

 

The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

 

Amy Windom demonstrated for a national television audience Wednesday how she used her toes to type a desperate message for help on her laptop.

The southeast Atlanta woman, who had been tied to her bed by an armed intruder, typed "HELP" and "CALL 911″ to her boyfriend, who summoned police to free her early Tuesday. 

ABC's "Good Morning America" interviewed Windom and her boyfriend, John Hilton, about the harrowing ordeal. 

Host Robin Roberts noted some were skeptical about Windom's story, "but after seeing this demonstration I think you've proved you are capable of something like this." 

"It never occurred to me that anybody would be suspicious until I saw some reference to it in one of the articles," Windom replied. "There's no way I could have done this other than the way I described, the way I was restrained." 

When police arrived at her Glenwood Avenue home, Windom had been tied to her bed by her hands for more than five hours. Her attacker had struck her in the forehead with a handgun. 

He had gone through the house stealing valuables but left her laptop at the foot of the bed. After he was gone, she used her toes to open the computer. 

On GMA, Windom showed how she had used her right big toe as a mouse. With her left foot, she grasped the power cord between her toes and used it to type. 

"I learned very quickly that using both of my [big] toes wasn't going to work," she told Roberts. "It's not the easiest thing, but that's how I did it." 

Windom said she was glad to hear police had recovered her 2009 Acura TSX, though the robber remains at large. 

Hilton described his girlfriend as "very creative" and "a fighter."

"All things considered," Windom said, "I'm doing remarkably well."

 

LINK TO PHOTO   

http://www.ajc.com/news/atlanta/toe-typist-demonstrates-how-584594.html

Entry #2,866

Panel allows mosque close to ground zero

Panel allows mosque close to ground zero 

No sign of Muslim-9/11 healing

 

The Washington Times 

9:41 p.m., Tuesday, August 3, 2010

 

 

An Islamic cultural center that the Cordoba Initiative and the American Society for Muslim Advancement hope to build near ground zero has been trumpeted as an effort toward building bridges between Muslims and the families of Sept. 11 victims. 

But that wasn't in evidence Tuesday as a key vote by a New York City panel prompted cries of "shame on you" and charges of "disaster," countered by protestations of "How big is the Muslim-free zone around ground zero?" 

In its 9-0 vote before an emotional crowd Tuesday morning, the Landmarks Preservation Commission denied landmark status to the 150-year-old building currently occupying 45-47 Park St., a few blocks from the former World Trade Center. 

According to the Associated Press, some members of the audience greeted the vote with applause, while others shouted "shame" as panel Chairman Robert B. Tierney called for the vote. 

In rejecting the bid to declare an Italian Renaissance-style structure a historic building, and thus constrain major changes at the site and make the current plan impossible, the Cordoba Initiative can go ahead with plans for a proposed Muslim cultural center and mosque it will call the Cordoba House. 

The project has become fuel for heated accusations from local and national politicians, from religious freedom and Muslim groups, and from anti-jihad activists. 

After the vote, author Pamela Gellar, a popular anti-jihad and pro-Israel blogger, blamed New York Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg, a supporter of Cordoba House, for the unanimous vote in the face of so much public controversy. 

"They're all Bloomberg appointees," she said. "Not one voted off the reservation; it's like Mike's toolbox." 

She said Mr. Bloomberg had pushed the mosque because he is focused more on "political correctness than patriotic correctness." 

But Ibrahim Hooper, national spokesman for the Council on American-Islamic Relations, called the effort to get the building declared a landmark a "smoke screen" for "Muslim bashers" — he specifically named Mrs. Gellar among them — who he says are using the cultural center and mosque to promote an anti-Muslim agenda. 

"How far away would they have to build?" said Mr. Hooper, pointing out that New York City and Manhattan already have several mosques. "How big is the Muslim-free zone around ground zero?" 

Mr. Hooper said his Washington-based Muslim civil rights and advocacy group supports the Cordoba Initiative and that the protesters inadvertently show how "these people would deny American Muslims their constitutional rights." 

He said a different vote Tuesday would have violated property rights and said religious and political conservatives fight for such rights for themselves but too often "cast off that belief when it comes to Islam and Muslims." 

The Cordoba Initiative hailed the vote as a victory for the organization. 

"Our faith community is indebted to them, and to our local community board, for their commitment to the democratic and constitutional ideals we all hold dear and which the community center we hope to create on the site will honor," said Feisal Abdul Rauf, the imam who is chairman of the Cordoba Initiative. 

Mr. Rauf called Cordoba House an opportunity for "healing, peace, collaboration, and interdependence" in his statement, but Mrs. Gellar said the effort to build what she called a "victory mosque" has caused enormous pain to families of Sept. 11 victims. 

"It's a grave insult, and the idea of this being outreach and healing and building bridges — frankly, it rings hollow," she said. "It's astounding, but it's not surprising."

One demonstrator during the New York vote held up a sign that said, "Islam builds mosques at the sites of their conquests and victories." Another read, "Don't glorify murders of 3,000. No 9/11 victory mosque." 

"I lost 3,000 American brothers and sisters, including courageous policemen and firemen, and this is a betrayal," Linda Rivera, who held up the latter sign, told an Associated Press reporter through tears. 

Critics noted that shortly after the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, Mr. Rauf said that "United States policies were an accessory to the crime that happened" and cited his refusal to refer to Palestinian group Hamas as a terrorist organization. 

Mr. Bloomberg celebrated the vote with a news conference with the Statue of Liberty as a backdrop. 

"The World Trade Center site will forever hold a special place in our city, in our hearts," he told reporters. "But we would be untrue to the best part of ourselves, and who we are as New Yorkers and Americans, if we said no to a mosque in Lower Manhattan."

The New York Civil Liberties Union and the American Civil Liberties Union also praised the vote as "promoting our nation's core values." 

"The free exercise of religion is one of America's most fundamental freedoms," they said in a statement Tuesday. "For hundreds of years, our pluralism and tolerance have sustained and strengthened our nation. … We see the center as a monument to pluralism, symbolic of America's commitment to religious freedom." 

The American Center for Law and Justice, which opposed the mosque project, said after the vote that "we're planning to file an Article 78 petition in state court to challenge the city's actions. We will allege that there's been an abuse of discretion in the Commission's decision."

The proposal had prompted months of contentious debate in New York and across the nation, with the highest-profile criticisms from former House Speaker Newt Gingrich and 2008 Republican vice-presidential nominee Sarah Palin. Both Republican primary candidates for New York governor — Carl Paladino and Rick Lazio — have said they would try to stop the mosque project, and former New York Mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani also has been critical.

Perhaps the most surprising criticism came last week from the usually liberal-leaning Anti-Defamation League. In a statement Friday, the Jewish civil rights group said that while the Muslim group had a legal right to build, the specific site is "counterproductive to the healing process."

Entry #2,864

' Botox bandit' arrested

`Beauty bandit' arrested at Miami restaurant

   Tuesday, 08.03.10

 Maria Elizabeth Chrysson, 29, was taken into custody Monday night.
Maria Elizabeth Chrysson, 29, was taken into custody Monday night. MIAMI-DADE COUNTY JAIL 
 
JUAN ORTEGA

Sun Sentinel

When Maria Elizabeth Chrysson was arrested at a Miami restaurant Monday night, she was concerned about the ``bad hair day'' she was having, police said.

And Chrysson, 29, of Miami Beach, was disappointed the news media were not at the Latin Café 2000, at 2501 Biscayne Blvd., to document her arrest on charges of stiffing a Miami cosmetic center after getting about $4,000 worth of treatments and cosmetic creams, police said.

``She likes the attention, apparently,'' Miami police spokesman Napier Velazquez said Tuesday.

Authorities say Chrysson received Botox and other cosmetic work at South Florida facilities over the past year and either bounced checks or walked out without paying.

The media nicknamed her the ``Beauty Bandit'' (also the ``Botox Bandit'') and she adopted the term herself, said Chrysson's lawyer, Daniel Lurvey. He said Chrysson was having money problems, but still planned to pay.

``We were in the process of making restitution when the arrest occurred,'' Lurvey said. ``We will continue to attempt to resolve the matter of the alleged victim.''

A Miami Beach facility that wasn't paid in December also has a pending court case against Chrysson, Lurvey said.

In the Miami case, she bounced checks in February and kept promising the Miami Institute for Age Management and Intervention that she would pay, but she never did, a police report said.

Chrysson was charged with three counts of grand theft and one count of scheming to defraud, all of them third-degree felonies.

``It seems foolish to steal this type of service,'' said Stephen Watson, co-founder of the Miami Institute.

Meanwhile, Fort Lauderdale police are investigating whether Chrysson was the woman who walked out of the Shino Bay Cosmetic Dermatology & Laser Institute on July 23 without paying a $3,300 bill.

She has not been charged in that case, Fort Lauderdale police said Tuesday.

At the Miami police station where she was taken Monday, Chrysson asked if she could access her Facebook account to see if people knew she had been arrested.

No access, police said.



Read more: http://www.miamiherald.com/2010/08/03/1759833/beauty-bandit-arrested-at-miami.html#ixzz0vdAjlfF5

Entry #2,863

President Obama's numbers drop again

President’s numbers drop again

 

Sam Youngman
The Hill
8/03/10 08:44 PM ET

President Obama’s job approval numbers fell to a new low Tuesday as the White House struggles to convince voters it is leading the economy out of recession.

Unemployment stands at 9.5 percent but is widely expected to rise in the coming months, starting with the monthly report for July, set for release on Friday.

Economic growth is also slowing, which makes it tougher for the White House to argue the economy would be in far worse shape without its policies, including last year’s $787 billion economic stimulus package.

So far that argument has fallen flat with voters, judging from polls, but political strategists say the administration has few options for changing its message.

“It’s a millstone around Democrats’ necks, and there’s not a lot they can do about it,” Cook Political Report author Charlie Cook said of the economy.

The White House awoke Tuesday to dismal numbers from USA Today and Gallup, which found only 41 percent of those surveyed approve of Obama’s job performance.

Such numbers are trouble for House and Senate Democrats, because low presidential approval ratings are generally disastrous for the president’s party in a midterm election. President Clinton hit 37 percent, the low for his presidency, in June 1993, according to Gallup’s poll. A few months later, Democrats lost the House and Senate.

Cook’s most recent projection is that Republicans will pick up between 32 and 42 seats in the House this fall. The GOP needs to win 39 seats and lose none to win back the majority.

Jamal Simmons, a Democratic strategist who worked in the Clinton White House, said Obama needs to offer a more compelling narrative about his agenda that will convince voters there is a strategy in place to improve their lives. Such a strategy will overcome even unemployment numbers, he said.

“Unemployment is important, but more broadly, President Obama has to offer the country a compelling and consistent narrative for his agenda,” Simmons said.

“The Clinton presidency was about ‘the economy, stupid,’ and George W. Bush’s was about the ‘war on terror.’ Until we know the overarching strategy of this White House for our country, it is hard for the public to judge the merits of individual policies.”

The White House has tried to tout good news in the economy.

On Friday, Obama visited GM and Chrysler auto plants in Michigan to highlight a strengthened U.S. auto industry, which the administration said has added 55,000 jobs in the last year. Obama also made the auto industry the centerpiece of his weekly address and criticized GOP critics who had opposed the industry bailout.

In a speech to party donors on Monday, Obama looked to rally his base by arguing that the economy was expanding under his policies after contracting in the final months of the Bush presidency.

White House press secretary Robert Gibbs acknowledged Tuesday that Obama’s approval rating is being dented by high unemployment, even as he said the president hopes voters will look at his entire record.

That should include the withdrawal of troops from Iraq, as well as the economy, Gibbs said.

“Whether it’s adding jobs in the auto industry, whether it’s taking 94,000 soldiers out of Iraq, I think that the president only hopes that people look at what he’s done and base their conclusions off that,” Gibbs said.

The White House’s theme that the economy would be worse if Obama had not taken the steps he has is thin gruel, but Democrats’ options are limited, according to Cook.

“They’ve got to say something,” Cook said. “It may not be the most effective argument, but it may be the only argument they have.”

Larry Berman, a professor of political science and expert on the presidency at the University of California-Davis, said Obama’s theme will not get through to people when the unemployment rate nears 10 percent.
“People aren’t buying it, and that’s the disconnect,” Berman said.

Entry #2,862