Rocksolid Light

Welcome to novaBBS (click a section below)

mail  files  register  newsreader  groups  login

Message-ID:  

6 May, 2024: The networking issue during the past two days has been identified and fixed.


interests / alt.politics / Re: Transportation post has become political nightmare for Buttigieg

SubjectAuthor
* Re: Transportation post has become political nightmare for Buttigiegnettles
`- Re: Transportation post has become political nightmare for ButtigiegFrank

1
Re: Transportation post has become political nightmare for Buttigieg

<82c4b94b0b254c4daaba4afe16eea31f@dizum.com>

  copy mid

https://www.novabbs.com/interests/article-flat.php?id=26641&group=alt.politics#26641

  copy link   Newsgroups: alt.atheism alt.politics alt.rush-limbaugh alt.survival talk.politics.guns
From: nett...@gmail.com (nettles)
References: <ssh5t0$ia5e$2@news.freedyn.de>
Subject: Re: Transportation post has become political nightmare for Buttigieg
Message-ID: <82c4b94b0b254c4daaba4afe16eea31f@dizum.com>
Date: Mon, 6 Mar 2023 08:23:43 +0100 (CET)
Newsgroups: alt.atheism, alt.politics, alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.survival,
talk.politics.guns
Path: i2pn2.org!rocksolid2!news.neodome.net!weretis.net!feeder8.news.weretis.net!sewer!news.dizum.net!not-for-mail
Organization: dizum.com - The Internet Problem Provider
X-Abuse: abuse@dizum.com
Injection-Info: sewer.dizum.com - 2001::1/128
 by: nettles - Mon, 6 Mar 2023 07:23 UTC

On 22 Jan 2022, All Trumpers Are Traitors <deathfortreason@gmail.com>
posted some news:ssh5t0$ia5e$2@news.freedyn.de:

> Trump's Long Campaign

When Pete Buttigieg became Transportation secretary at the start of the
Biden administration, some Democrats said it would be a perfect platform
for his political prospects if not in 2024, then 2028.

Buttigieg could crisscross the country, appearing before crowds in key
states while elevating his name recognition, resume and overall brand.

Instead, the job of Transportation secretary has been a set of compounding
problems for Buttigieg, 41, who has been seen as one of the Democratic
Party�s brightest stars.

Buttigieg has been blasted for taking too long to travel to East
Palestine, Ohio, the site of a train derailment that has created serious
environmental and health concerns for the community.

In January, he bore the brunt of criticism over a disastrous holiday
travel season for Southwest Airlines, which resulted in thousands of
people being stranded. And that same month, he was criticized over
problems with the FAA, which had to ground flights for two hours for the
first time in more than 20 years.

�I don�t think his story was supposed to go this way,� said one Democratic
strategist. �I think he took the job thinking there wouldn�t be a lot of
risk surrounding the role. I don�t think he understood how political this
job would be and how he�d be a punching bag.�

The latest criticism came on Thursday from Sen. Mitt Romney (R-Utah) who
said Buttigieg is �not ready for the responsibilities he has.�

�He was a fine mayor from what I understand, but the position he�s got
really would be better served by a person who�s managed a large
enterprise, a state, or something of the scale he�s now dealing with,�
Romney told the HuffPost when he was asked about Buttigieg�s job
performance.

In the past, Transportation secretaries weren�t always magnets for
political criticism. But Buttigieg�s situation is unique.

He�s among the most high-profile figures in the Biden administration, seen
as second to Vice President Kamala Harris in terms of Democratic
presidential politics as a potential successor to Biden.

He�s also leading a department that is now solidly in the news given the
times. COVID-era issues with the supply chain, travel and inflation have
put various transportation issues in Buttigieg�s portfolio in the public
view.

GOP opponents have suggested that Buttigieg got his job because of his
high political profile and that he didn�t deserve it.

�Pete Buttigieg couldn�t organize a one-car funeral,� Sen. Tom Cotton (R-
Ark.) wrote on Twitter at the time. �He was never remotely qualified for
this role.�

Rep. Andy Biggs (R-Ariz.) also sought to cast blame on Buttigieg.

�� I am not surprised that he doesn�t know anything because that�s
consistent with how he�s handled any kind of question or issue that we�ve
had in our transportation sector since he became secretary,� Biggs said on
Fox and Friends, the morning show on Fox News.

Republicans have hit Buttigieg on personal terms as well, criticizing him
for taking family leave in 2021 to care for his newborn twins alongside
his husband.

Earlier this week, the Transportation Department�s internal watchdog said
it would also be auditing Buttigieg�s use of Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA) jets. The audit came after a request from Sen. Marco
Rubio (R-Fla.) who pointed to a FOX News Digital report showing the
secretary had flown at least 18 times on the FAA planes.

The attacks on Buttigieg haven�t just come from conservatives.

Progressives, who had taken a dim view of Buttigieg during the 2020
primary and were critical of his background as a McKinsey consultant when
he was nominated for the post, have also suggested he and his department
are too close to powerful transportation interests.

In a speech last month, Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) criticized
Buttigieg for protecting corporate airline monopolies.

�Secretary Buttigieg has the power to stop anti-competitive airline
mergers and he should use that power right now,� Warren said.

Additionally, the Progressive Change Campaign Committee tore into
Buttigieg for �being silent for 10 days� following the Ohio train
derailment.

The White House has largely come to Buttigieg�s defense in the face of
such attacks. Last week, press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre called the
latest round of attacks �pure politics.�

�There�s been a lot of bad faith attacks on Secretary Buttigieg,� Jean-
Pierre said.

She pointed to Elaine Chao, who served as Transportation secretary to
former President Donald Trump. �When there was these types of chemical
spills, nobody was calling for her to be fired,� Jean-Pierre said.

Democrats say the criticism aimed at Buttigieg is to be expected because
of his rising-star power on the political stage.

�It�s not complicated. He is highly competent and a good communicator, and
they want to tear him down because they are scared of him,� said Steve
Elmendorf, a Democratic lobbyist and donor.

Democratic strategist Rodell Mollineau agreed, saying Buttigieg has become
the ultimate foil for Republicans because of his stature within the party
but also because he�s become a face for the administration�s perceived
failures.

�Republicans have realized it�s hard to go after President Biden directly,
so it makes sense to try and bring down the people around him,� Mollineau
said. �Given Secretary Buttigieg�s name recognition, I�m not surprised
they�ve been attacking him.�

And while Democrats broadly acknowledge the criticism has taken a toll on
Buttigieg�s political prospects, Mollineau said there are also
opportunities for him to course correct.

�It hasn�t been a great beginning of the year for Secretary Buttigieg, but
I also know House Republicans can�t help but overreach,� he said. �I think
the secretary regains the upper hand over time by continuing to be
thoughtful and analytical in his approach while letting the firebrands
show their ultra partisanship.�

<https://thehill.com/homenews/administration/3883037-transportation-post-
has-become-political-nightmare-for-buttigieg/>

Re: Transportation post has become political nightmare for Buttigieg

<tu50a2$1nds1$1@dont-email.me>

  copy mid

https://www.novabbs.com/interests/article-flat.php?id=26647&group=alt.politics#26647

  copy link   Newsgroups: alt.atheism alt.politics alt.rush-limbaugh alt.survival talk.politics.guns
Path: i2pn2.org!rocksolid2!news.neodome.net!weretis.net!feeder8.news.weretis.net!eternal-september.org!reader01.eternal-september.org!.POSTED!not-for-mail
From: "fran...@frank.net (Frank)
Newsgroups: alt.atheism,alt.politics,alt.rush-limbaugh,alt.survival,talk.politics.guns
Subject: Re: Transportation post has become political nightmare for Buttigieg
Date: Mon, 6 Mar 2023 10:19:29 -0500
Organization: A noiseless patient Spider
Lines: 139
Message-ID: <tu50a2$1nds1$1@dont-email.me>
References: <ssh5t0$ia5e$2@news.freedyn.de>
<82c4b94b0b254c4daaba4afe16eea31f@dizum.com>
Reply-To: frank@frank.net
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8; format=flowed
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
Injection-Date: Mon, 6 Mar 2023 15:19:30 -0000 (UTC)
Injection-Info: reader01.eternal-september.org; posting-host="ac936f9f7182f9ee6f04c42e3211b9f3";
logging-data="1816449"; mail-complaints-to="abuse@eternal-september.org"; posting-account="U2FsdGVkX1/4vv3NjDAd4nZApsif2J+Qne2ducvf8/g="
User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0; Win64; x64; rv:102.0) Gecko/20100101
Thunderbird/102.8.0
Cancel-Lock: sha1:F2PRH0muOA/jd221yLL4oy9vC58=
Content-Language: en-US
In-Reply-To: <82c4b94b0b254c4daaba4afe16eea31f@dizum.com>
 by: Frank - Mon, 6 Mar 2023 15:19 UTC

On 3/6/2023 2:23 AM, nettles wrote:
> On 22 Jan 2022, All Trumpers Are Traitors <deathfortreason@gmail.com>
> posted some news:ssh5t0$ia5e$2@news.freedyn.de:
>
>> Trump's Long Campaign
>
> When Pete Buttigieg became Transportation secretary at the start of the
> Biden administration, some Democrats said it would be a perfect platform
> for his political prospects if not in 2024, then 2028.
>
> Buttigieg could crisscross the country, appearing before crowds in key
> states while elevating his name recognition, resume and overall brand.
>
> Instead, the job of Transportation secretary has been a set of compounding
> problems for Buttigieg, 41, who has been seen as one of the Democratic
> Party’s brightest stars.
>
> Buttigieg has been blasted for taking too long to travel to East
> Palestine, Ohio, the site of a train derailment that has created serious
> environmental and health concerns for the community.
>
> In January, he bore the brunt of criticism over a disastrous holiday
> travel season for Southwest Airlines, which resulted in thousands of
> people being stranded. And that same month, he was criticized over
> problems with the FAA, which had to ground flights for two hours for the
> first time in more than 20 years.
>
> “I don’t think his story was supposed to go this way,” said one Democratic
> strategist. “I think he took the job thinking there wouldn’t be a lot of
> risk surrounding the role. I don’t think he understood how political this
> job would be and how he’d be a punching bag.”
>
> The latest criticism came on Thursday from Sen. Mitt Romney (R-Utah) who
> said Buttigieg is “not ready for the responsibilities he has.”
>
> “He was a fine mayor from what I understand, but the position he’s got
> really would be better served by a person who’s managed a large
> enterprise, a state, or something of the scale he’s now dealing with,”
> Romney told the HuffPost when he was asked about Buttigieg’s job
> performance.
>
> In the past, Transportation secretaries weren’t always magnets for
> political criticism. But Buttigieg’s situation is unique.
>
> He’s among the most high-profile figures in the Biden administration, seen
> as second to Vice President Kamala Harris in terms of Democratic
> presidential politics as a potential successor to Biden.
>
> He’s also leading a department that is now solidly in the news given the
> times. COVID-era issues with the supply chain, travel and inflation have
> put various transportation issues in Buttigieg’s portfolio in the public
> view.
>
> GOP opponents have suggested that Buttigieg got his job because of his
> high political profile and that he didn’t deserve it.
>
> “Pete Buttigieg couldn’t organize a one-car funeral,” Sen. Tom Cotton (R-
> Ark.) wrote on Twitter at the time. “He was never remotely qualified for
> this role.”
>
> Rep. Andy Biggs (R-Ariz.) also sought to cast blame on Buttigieg.
>
> “… I am not surprised that he doesn’t know anything because that’s
> consistent with how he’s handled any kind of question or issue that we’ve
> had in our transportation sector since he became secretary,” Biggs said on
> Fox and Friends, the morning show on Fox News.
>
> Republicans have hit Buttigieg on personal terms as well, criticizing him
> for taking family leave in 2021 to care for his newborn twins alongside
> his husband.
>
> Earlier this week, the Transportation Department’s internal watchdog said
> it would also be auditing Buttigieg’s use of Federal Aviation
> Administration (FAA) jets. The audit came after a request from Sen. Marco
> Rubio (R-Fla.) who pointed to a FOX News Digital report showing the
> secretary had flown at least 18 times on the FAA planes.
>
> The attacks on Buttigieg haven’t just come from conservatives.
>
> Progressives, who had taken a dim view of Buttigieg during the 2020
> primary and were critical of his background as a McKinsey consultant when
> he was nominated for the post, have also suggested he and his department
> are too close to powerful transportation interests.
>
> In a speech last month, Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) criticized
> Buttigieg for protecting corporate airline monopolies.
>
> “Secretary Buttigieg has the power to stop anti-competitive airline
> mergers and he should use that power right now,” Warren said.
>
> Additionally, the Progressive Change Campaign Committee tore into
> Buttigieg for “being silent for 10 days” following the Ohio train
> derailment.
>
> The White House has largely come to Buttigieg’s defense in the face of
> such attacks. Last week, press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre called the
> latest round of attacks “pure politics.”
>
> “There’s been a lot of bad faith attacks on Secretary Buttigieg,” Jean-
> Pierre said.
>
> She pointed to Elaine Chao, who served as Transportation secretary to
> former President Donald Trump. “When there was these types of chemical
> spills, nobody was calling for her to be fired,” Jean-Pierre said.
>
> Democrats say the criticism aimed at Buttigieg is to be expected because
> of his rising-star power on the political stage.
>
> “It’s not complicated. He is highly competent and a good communicator, and
> they want to tear him down because they are scared of him,” said Steve
> Elmendorf, a Democratic lobbyist and donor.
>
> Democratic strategist Rodell Mollineau agreed, saying Buttigieg has become
> the ultimate foil for Republicans because of his stature within the party
> but also because he’s become a face for the administration’s perceived
> failures.
>
> “Republicans have realized it’s hard to go after President Biden directly,
> so it makes sense to try and bring down the people around him,” Mollineau
> said. “Given Secretary Buttigieg’s name recognition, I’m not surprised
> they’ve been attacking him.”
>
> And while Democrats broadly acknowledge the criticism has taken a toll on
> Buttigieg’s political prospects, Mollineau said there are also
> opportunities for him to course correct.
>
> “It hasn’t been a great beginning of the year for Secretary Buttigieg, but
> I also know House Republicans can’t help but overreach,” he said. “I think
> the secretary regains the upper hand over time by continuing to be
> thoughtful and analytical in his approach while letting the firebrands
> show their ultra partisanship.”
>
> <https://thehill.com/homenews/administration/3883037-transportation-post-
> has-become-political-nightmare-for-buttigieg/>
>

All Biden appointees got there with the boxes they checked like
homosexuals, blacks and tyrannies. If they do a poor job they cannot be
fired for fear of losing votes from their ranks.

1
server_pubkey.txt

rocksolid light 0.9.81
clearnet tor