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Stephen Colbert Shuts Down \'Super PAC\'

Count Stephen Colbert among those disappointed “super PAC” operatives who think they didn't help decide the presidential election.

But Mr. Colbert is taking it one step further: he is shutting down his group, Americans for a Better Tomorrow, Tomorrow.

In a letter posted to the group's Web site, Mr. Colbert cited the “timely passing” of Ham Rove, an actual canned ham that Mr. Colbert called the super PAC's “adviser and chief strategist.”

“Due to Ham Rove's timely passing, I am announcing that Colbert Super PAC is shutting down effective immediately,” Mr. Colbert wrote.

On Monday's “Colbert Report,” Mr. Colbert expressed fear in taking money from “anonymous, scary donors,” and professed that they were trying to kill him for using donations ineffectively.

After attempting to fob the blame on Jon Stewart, Mr. Colbert offered the donors “a head on a platter” and did away with Ham Rove. He then made the group's remainin g funds - almost $800,000 - “disappear” to a new 501c4 group through an Internal Revenue Service loophole, as explained by his lawyer, the former Federal Election Commission Chairman Trevor Potter.

“During this time of mourning, we ask that you respect our privacy, and more importantly, the privacy of our money,” Mr. Colbert continued in the letter. “It wishes to stay out of the public eye, so please don't go trying to find it. Rest assured, you won't. We have a really good lawyer.”

Mr. Colbert's super PAC was a joke that became real, evolving from a skit mocking the Citizens United decision to a full-fledged super PAC, at one point raising more than $1 million. While never explicitly stating his intentions, Mr. Colbert used the group to raise awareness of loose campaign finance laws.

Last August, his group released a 60-second ad, advocating a write-in campaign for “Rick Parry” in the Ames straw poll in Iowa. (Gov. Rick Perry of Texas, then considered an early favorite for the Republican nomination, opted not to officially enter the race until after the straw poll.)

The comedian then increased his super PAC credibility and released an attack ad in South Carolina during the state's primary, calling Mitt Romney a serial killer in a satire of the attacks against Mr. Romney's former company, Bain Capital.

As of Tuesday night, a termination report for Americans for a Better Tomorrow, Tomorrow had not been posted on the Federal Election Commission Web site.



Will Obama Agree to Entitlement Cuts? He Already Has

Labor unions and other liberal groups that helped re-elect President Obama are starting a push this week to make sure that any new budget deal does not chisel away at entitlement programs.

Their message to the president, beginning with a meeting at the White House on Tuesday, is that he won a mandate to raise taxes on the wealthy while resisting cuts to Medicare and Social Security, and that they intend to stand firm with him on that position.

The problem here is that urging Mr. Obama not to join House Republicans in reducing entitlement spending is like pleading with John Travolta and Olivia Newton-John not to reunite for a Christmas album. It's just too late.

Sure, there was a lot of specious debate during the campaign about which candidate would protect older people from the evil designs of the other. Mitt Romney claimed, dubiously, that Mr. Obama had raided sacred Medicare financing to pay for his health care plan. Mr. Obama said that Mr. Romney would follow the lead of his running mate, Representative Paul D. Ryan, and scrap Medicare altogether for future generations.

But both candidates had to know how thoroughly disingenuous this debate really was. The fact is that Mr. Obama, during his “grand bargain” negotiations with the House speaker, John A. Boehner, in the summer of 2011, had already signed off on painful cuts to Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security, even if he never once mentioned that during his re-election campaign. So he knew there was a deal to be had that would preserve - and perhaps even strengthen - these programs without destroying them.

And if Republicans were outraged over those cuts, it's only because they were demanding far steeper reductions in all three programs. The idea that Republicans had to stop Mr. Obama from recklessly cutting Medicare was probably Mr. Romney's most misleading attack, and that's saying something.

None of this is theoretical or subjective. It's spelle d out clearly in the confidential offers that the two sides exchanged at the time and that I obtained while writing about the negotiations last spring.

In his opening bid, after the rough framework of a grand bargain was reached, Mr. Boehner told the White House he wanted to cut $450 billion from Medicare and Medicaid in the next decade alone, with more cuts to follow. He also proposed raising the retirement age for Social Security and changing the formula to make benefits less generous.

Mr. Obama wasn't willing to go quite that far. But in his counteroffer a few days later, he agreed to squeeze $250 billion from Medicare in the next 10 years, with $800 billion more in the decade after that. He was willing to cut $110 billion more from Medicaid in the short term. And while Mr. Obama rejected raising the retirement age, he did acquiesce to changing the Social Security formula so that benefits would grow at a slower rate.

T his distance between the two sides on entitlement spending was sizable but not unbridgeable. In the end, the deal fell apart over the ratio of cuts to revenue. Mr. Obama wanted $400 billion more in new revenue than he and Mr. Boehner had initially discussed. Mr. Boehner couldn't sell that number to his caucus, and he wasn't going to try without getting even more drastic cuts to entitlements in return.

What's relevant here, though, isn't simply that Mr. Obama agreed to scale back entitlement spending. It's that he had the support of his most liberal advisers and allies, too.

No one working in the White House was thrilled by the prospect of slashing Medicare and especially Social Security, which Democrats firmly believe should be excluded from any budget negotiation. Even so, there was near unanimity among Mr. Obama's advisers that making those cuts was worth getting a framework that would avoid a debt default and begin to put the nation on a different fiscal traje ctory.

And just hours before the deal with the speaker unraveled, Mr. Obama met with his party's top Congressional leaders, Harry Reid and Nancy Pelosi, and asked for their support. Neither Mr. Reid nor Ms. Pelosi felt like celebrating over the terms, to be sure, but it's significant that both lawmakers told the president they would get behind it.

Liberal activists will tell the president that things are very different now. He's won a mandate, they will say, and that means he doesn't need to compromise.

But while Mr. Obama can probably claim some vindication on the need to make the tax code more equitable, it would be a stretch to say that the voters demanded that he hold the line against entitlement cuts as part of a broader deal. The possible terms of a grand bargain hardly ever came up during the campaign, because neither side wanted to talk about it.

Mr. Obama may have more leverage now than he did in 2011 to put a hard limit on the scale of entit lement cuts, but it's unthinkable that he could reach a comprehensive deal - something he still badly wants to do - without at least accepting the terms he found acceptable the first time around. That's how negotiations work.

So while it may be good strategy for progressive groups to pressure the White House on entitlement spending, no one should harbor the illusion that the president won't sign off on reductions. The simple fact is, he already has.



TimesCast Politics: The Petraeus Scandal Widens

Reuters
  • 0:01  The Latest on Petraeus

    Michael D. Shear reports on the latest from the investigation into General David H. Petraeus, including that the F.B.I. is said to have found thousands of pages of correspondence between Gen. John Allen, the top NATO commander in Afghanistan, and Jill Kelley.

  • 5:08  National Security Implications

    Dean Baquet looks at the possible national security implications stemming from Mr. Petraeus's resignation.

  • 10:44  An Intervie w With Rep. James Lankford

    Megan Lieberman interviews Representative James Lankford about the upcoming fiscal cliff negotiations.

  • 16:14  Previewing the Fiscal Cliff

    Carl Hulse looks ahead to the fiscal cliff negotiations.



Ryan Surprised by Voters in \'Urban Areas\'

Representative Paul D. Ryan of Wisconsin on Monday blamed Democratic turnout in “urban areas” for the loss by the Republican presidential ticket last week, saying he was surprised that he and Mitt Romney did not do better in the nation's big cities.

“The surprise was some of the turnout, some of the turnout especially in urban areas, which gave President Obama the big margin to win this race,” Mr. Ryan said in an interview with WISC-TV. “When we watched Virginia and Ohio coming in, and those ones coming in as tight as they were, and looking like we were going to lose them, that's when it became clear we weren't going to win.”

The remarks prompted scorn from some liberals who viewed Mr. Ryan as blaming inner-city minorities for the Republican defeat.

“Paul Ryan emerged from dustbin of n othingness 2 blame his & Romney's defeat on “urban” vote,” one person tweeted. “These 2 losers continue 2 demean minorities.”

Another tweeted that “Urban vote” = minorities. Paul Ryan is saying he lost because minorities actually went out and voted. SHOCKER. MINORITIES HAVE RIGHTS, TOO.”

Several people pointed out that Mr. Romney and Mr. Ryan also lost some largely rural states with few minorities, like New Hampshire and Iowa. Those losses cannot be explained away by focusing on urban voters, they noted.

In the interview with the television station, Mr. Ryan said he did not think that the nation's voters had rejected his long-standing ideas for how to restructure the nation's budget and cut spending.

“I don't think we lost it on those budget issues, especially on Medicare - we clearly didn't lose it on those issues,” he said.

Follow Michael D. Shear on Twitter at @shearm.



For Tablet Users Who Crave Pen and Paper

The Sky smartpen from Livescribe captures handwritten notes and audio, which are then accessible on computers and mobile devices.The Sky smartpen from Livescribe captures handwritten notes and audio, which are then accessible on computers and mobile devices.

Anyone who has tried to take notes on a tablet knows how tricky it can be. Your choices are often limited to hunting and pecking on a digital keyboard or fiddling with a clunky stylus.

Seeking to cater to fans of ink and paper, Livescribe has created the Sky smartpen, a writing tool with a tiny computer inside that records notes written on special microdot paper. The notes are then sent wirelessly to a personal account in the cloud through a partnership with Evernote, the digital a rchive service.

The pen has up to eight gigabytes of memory, which translates into thousands of pages of words, pictures and diagrams. It also records audio during the note-taking session, which can be beneficial for meetings and lectures. Users can play back precise moments of the audio by touching the pen to the corresponding spot in the handwritten notes.

Sky includes 500 megabytes of free storage through Evernote. Once in the cloud, the notes and audio are accessible on any computer, or any iOS or Android mobile device.

The pen comes with an extra ink cartridge, two easy-to-lose caps, a notebook of microdot paper and a micro USB cable for charging. The Sky pen and accessories, including extra notebooks, are available online at Amazon.com and Livescribe's Web site, as well as at retailers like Staples and Best Buy.

I tested the four-gigabyte Sky pen, which costs $200, and found it easy to set up and use. Instead of buttons, the pen's functions are listed in the notebook; just touch the pen to the command you want.

The pen, although chunky, felt comfortable in my hand when I was writing or doodling. And syncing through Wi-Fi to my Evernote account was effortless. I was able to see the notes quickly on my iPad and iPhone; however, I could not open the Livescribe player on my PC at work to play the audio.

Livescribe is working to iron out a few wrinkles, but the Sky smartpen could end up bridging the gap between paper and tablet.



Support Wavers for Anti-Tax \'Pledge\'

WASHINGTON - It is known simply as “the pledge.” And if you are a Republican member of Congress, it has been considered heresy to do anything short of fully devoting yourself to its low-tax principles.

But as Congress gathers for its lame-duck session and confronts a serious set of economic and tax questions that could bring the country to the brink of the so-called “fiscal cliff,” one of the lingering questions is whether the pledge - drafted and enforced by Grover Norquist's Americans for Tax Reform - will hold up.

Already there are indications it may not. According to a report in The Hill, the Capitol Hill newspaper, incoming members of Congress and even a few returning ones are refusing to honor it. The pledge calls for elected officials to oppose “any and all efforts to increase the marginal income tax rates.”

And, perhaps more critically, signing the pledge also includes vowing to oppose reducing tax deductions and credits. Members of both parties have signaled that they would be willing to accept a tax compromise that included eliminating certain deductions, especially those for high-income people, as opposed to a broad tax increase.

Mr. Norquist told The Hill he is not concerned that some members might walk away from the pledge. ““That doesn't keep me up at night.”



LED Cases Call Attention to Your Calls

If having overly loud phone conversations in public places is not getting you enough of the attention you crave, you might consider the OMG iPhone case from Sillybrandz. It has LEDs that illuminate the case when the phone is used.

The $30 case itself is made of clear plastic. It snaps on snugly and offers good basic protection against dings. An additional LED module plugs into the 30-pin connector.

When the phone is in use, in taking or making a call or even listening to music, the two white center LEDs pulse and two colored LEDs cycle between shades of red, green, blue, purple and orange. The LEDs cast a light behind a translucent graphic on the case for a backlit effect.

The LEDs draw power from the phone, so that will accelerate battery drain, the company says, but only by about 5 percent, because LEDs require little energy. You can slow the drain by using a shut-off switch on the module. The case comes with a USB cord that lets you recharge the phone, but not sync it, without removing the LED module.

While the display is pretty neat looking, it is not quite as impressive as it appears in the promotional video. The LEDs are visible as dots through the cover, which detracts from the effect. You can hold a thumb where the lights show through to mask them; then it looks suitably impressive.

If you doubt the attention-getting ability of the case, keep in mind that it is the brainchild of Adrienne Maloof, of “The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills” fame. You know how reality TV stars feel about attention.



Q&A: Preparing Data for Disasters

Q.

What disaster-proof backup options are out there besides backing up to a cloud server? I'd prefer to keep my personal files closer to home.

A.

Disasters come in many forms, including flood, fire and hard-drive failure, but you have many options for keeping files backed up locally. If you have a huge archive of photos, documents, music, videos and other important digital content, making a copy of your computer's hard drive with cloning or imaging software (available in places that offer utility programs) is one place to start.

Once you have a copy of the drive's contents on an external hard drive or set of DVDs, storing it in a water- and fireproof chest or safe-deposit box helps protect it from the elements.

Some hard drives themselves are built to withstand hazards like water, fire and long drops. Companies with drives that can better survive disasters include ioSafe and SentrySafe (available at office -supply sites or Amazon.com).



The Early Word: Deductions

Today's Times

  • Democrats are latching on to one of Mitt Romney's ideas - to raise taxes on the rich through a hard cap on income tax deductions. Jonathan Weisman explains that they think the cap could help reach a bipartisan deficit reduction agreement, while Mr. Romney proposed it as a way to pay for an across-the-board cut in income taxes.
  • Labor leaders' robust support for President Obama didn't end on Election Day, Steven Greenhouse reports. They intend to back him through his second term on issues like Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security.
  • Senator John Kerry of Massachusetts and Susan E. Rice, the American ambassador to the United Nations, are the front-runners to succeed Hillary Rodham Clinton as secretary of state, but they are both dogged by issues that could complicate their path, Mark Landler writes.
  • “The Optimizer” cannot be bought at any gadget store or online retailer, but obtaining it can help you beat a better-financed opponent in a presidential advertising war, Jim Rutenberg reports.
  • More same-sex marriage initiatives could be coming to a ballot near you in 2014, Erik Eckholm writes.

Around the Web

  • Former Gov. Rod R. Blagojevich of Illinois will now be slinging books at the prison library, WBBM Newsradio reports.

Happenings in Washington

  • The newly elected members of Congress will start their orientation on Capitol Hill.

 

 

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