Tag: gaffe
California Representative Loretta Sanchez In Hot Water Over Indian War Whoop

California Representative Loretta Sanchez In Hot Water Over Indian War Whoop

Soon after Representative Loretta Sanchez (D-CA) announced her run for Senate, she opened her mouth a little too far.

A video surfaced Sunday evening showing her trying to differentiate between Native Americans and Indians by mimicking a war cry by putting her hand to her mouth. Her comments were made at a luncheon for Indian-American Democrats.

Her chief rival, Attorney General Kamala Harris, is of Indian descent — her mother is from the Asian country — and condemned Sanchez’s comment. “It is shocking and there is no place for that in our public discourse,” she said.

Sanchez is a 10-term congresswoman known for her flamboyance, with some political watchers wondering if this gaffe will impact fundraising for her campaign. Yet supporters say her style, while unorthodox, is a genuine reflection of her personality.

“Loretta Sanchez is the crazy aunt of the Democratic Party,” said Democratic strategist Steve Maviglio. “She’s been known to say crazy things. But what you see is what you get.”

Sanchez herself said Sunday, in a possible dig at her opponent, that she doesn’t “hid[e] behind the handlers,” referring to strategists and managers who often tightly script candidates’ remarks.

In her apology, she said that “like so many Mexican-Americans, I am proudly Native American on my mother’s side,” and added, “It’s hard to put yourself out there and to do what leaders need to do day in and day out. And yes, sooner or later we make mistakes because you know what, we are all humans. But that is the only way we truly connect with people. You cannot change the world from behind a desk.”

Both women are running for the seat being vacated by retiring Sen. Barbara Boxer.

Video courtesy of John G/YouTube:

Screenshot: Loretta Sanchez at California Democrats Convention 2015. Courtesy cademorg/YouTube

WATCH: Perry Apologizes For Comparing Gays To Alcoholics: ‘I Stepped Right In It’

WATCH: Perry Apologizes For Comparing Gays To Alcoholics: ‘I Stepped Right In It’

Texas governor Rick Perry apologized as only he can on Thursday, acknowledging that he “stepped right in it” when he compared gay people to alcoholics during an appearance at the Commonwealth Club of California last week.

“I got asked about issues, and instead of saying ‘you know what, we need to be a really respectful and tolerant country to everybody, and get back to talking about, whether you’re gay or straight, you need to be…having a job, and those are the focuses that I want to be involved with,'” he said during an event hosted by TheChristian Science Monitor. “I readily admit I stepped right in it.”

Perry ignited controversy last Wednesday when he was asked if “homosexuals can be cured by prayer or counseling,” a position that the Texas Republican Party endorsed in its most recent platform.

“I don’t know,” Perry responded. “I’m not a psychiatrist, I’m not a doctor.”

After being pressed by the moderator on whether being gay is a disorder, Perry made his ill-fated comparison. “I may have the genetic coding that I’m inclined to be an alcoholic, but I have the desire not to do that,” he said.

Perry then made matters worse with a clunky appearance on CNBC, in which he drew the ire of host Joe Kernan by repeating the “I’m not a doctor” line.

“I have a really high bar for what I would take offense to, but that would exceed the bar for me on being an offensive comment,” Kernan told the potential 2016 presidential candidate. “I don’t think gay marriage leads to cirrhosis of the liver or domestic violence or DWIs. I don’t see how that’s similar.”

Photo: The Texas Tribune via Flickr

Video via NBC News

Want more political news and analysis? Sign up for our daily email newsletter!

Burning Ambition: How Texas Wildfires Embarrass Rick Perry

Nothing has revealed the shortcomings of Rick Perry, as a governor and a thinker, as the terrible wildfires ravaging central Texas over the past several months. Having skipped out of a visit to burning Bastrop County over the weekend, he seems to realize that his handling of this disaster is a severe embarrassment both to him personally and to the state. That weekend no-show wasn’t the first time Perry appeared to shirk his duty; last week, he skipped a presidential campaign event in South Carolina, supposedly due to urgent responsibilities back home — and then turned up at a California fundraiser.

Around the same time, a Perry aide remarked that their campaign fundraising was “going like wildfire.”

But the ideological rot goes far deeper than goofs and gaffes. With his Tea Party disdain for the federal government and his record of slashing essential state services, Perry is ill-suited to cope with the realities of modern government — including droughts and fires that may well result from the climate change whose real origins he refuses to acknowledge. He now finds himself seeking additional disaster assistance from the federal government — and criticizing that same government for failing to do more when his general argument is that it must do far less.

Consider his own state budget, whose deep cuts meant depriving local volunteer firefighters of bulldozers and other essential equipment for stopping the spread of rural fires. Yet since last April, when the unprecedented wave of fires grew worse, Perry has been seeking federal aid to make up that shortfall — an ironic stance from a right-wing radical who threatened to secede from the United States not so long ago. Far from seceding, Perry is sulking because Washington hasn’t sent federal bulldozers to fight those fires in Bastrop County.

This disaster was not unforeseen. Over the past year, heat and drought not seen in the Lone Star State since the Dust Bowl era have led to a record-breaking conflagration: thousands of fires since December, more than a hundred active fires now and scores more reported every week. The state’s firefighters are exhausted; the trucks and planes used to combat the blazes can no longer be properly maintained. So the neglected and underfunded system is reaching its limit, which is why the state has turned in desperation to Washington eight times for aid. Fire commanders told the Christian Science Monitor last week that calls for help are going unmet because there is simply not enough manpower and equipment to serve the current need.

“Because so many fires are burning across the state, our resources are spread pretty thin,” said Texas Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst. “That’s why we need the federal government to step up to the plate immediately.”

Yes, they need the federal government to step up with hundreds of millions of dollars in aid, right away — even though the state reduced funding for its fire departments by nearly 75 percent last year and cut the budget for the Texas Forest Service by more than a third.

Perry suggests that fighting the wildfires will be financed eventually from the state’s “rainy day fund,” although many Texas legislators of both parties warn that fund has already been depleted. What he probably expects is that the costs of firefighting will be recovered somehow from the federal government — and he isn’t waiting to see how those expenditures are offset in the rest of the federal budget. As the lieutenant governor said, they want help “immediately.”

Of course the good people of Bastrop County and across beleaguered Texas deserve the nation’s assistance. They pay federal taxes and, despite their governor’s stupid remarks, they’re loyal and patriotic too. But they ought to reconsider the kind of irresponsible leadership that responds to environmental change with right-wing mythology and slashed budgets — and then must plead for salvation by that awful bureaucracy back east. And the rest of us ought to consider what would happen if he were in charge of the federal government. Where would everyone turn after he dismantles Washington, as he vows so eagerly to do?