Nine West Virginia counties begin the week under state and federal emergency declarations after last Thursday’s spill of up to 7,500 gallons of toxic 4-methylcyclohexane methanol into the Elk River. 300,000 West Virginians are without safe water and are expected to remain so for “several days,” according to area utility West Virginia American Water. The leak has prompted over a hundred people to make their way to hospitals for various symptoms, but the folks in charge at Freedom Industries, owners of the errant MCHM, probably feel just awful about the whole goshdarned thing, so there’s that.
Early in the week, the House and Senate are expected to approve a temporary spending measure to fund the government all the way until… Friday! Once a temporary measure is agreed on, both chambers will turn their collective attention to an omnibus spending bill. What could go wrong? Plenty, but there’s really no point in panicking yet. Best to wait until midweek.
The Senate will also go back to work on an emergency unemployment benefits extension, after Harry Reid backtracked on Republican insistence that the cost be offset. You were right the first time, Harry. The idea of an offset is indeed “foolishness.” Speaking of foolishness, House Majority Leader Eric Cantor made the asinine claim last Friday that his party’s focus is “on employment, not unemployment.” Consider it an indication of what any Senate agreement on unemployment will face once Cantor and his fellow jackals in the House get hold of it.
It’s one of those delegated duties that have led countless politicians to refuse a position at the bottom of a presidential ticket. Vice President Biden will lead the Presidential Delegation to Monday’s memorial service for Ariel Sharon. Hey, maybe at least there’ll be a nice buffet afterward. Accompanying the Vice President will be Reps. Debbie Wasserman Shultz and Eliot Engel, plus US Ambassador to Israel Daniel Shapiro and one of his predecessors, Daniel Kurtzer.
John Kerry will not be attending the memorial service. Instead, he’ll be in Paris for multilateral talks on Syria. Kerry is trying mightily to get the Syrian National Coalition to attend peace talks with the Assad regime.
Wednesday, the President heads to North Carolina for another in his series of addresses on the economy, this one focused on manufacturing. Expect common sense, some innovative proposals, and a giant shrug from Congressional Republicans.
On Friday, the President will unveil reforms to the National Security Agency. Later on Friday, critics from various points on the political spectrum will thunder their disapproval, claiming that the changes are, a) a modest start but don’t go nearly far enough, b) mere window dressing, c) the very antithesis of the hope and change the President promised, d) a threat to national security, e) a threat to civil liberties, f) proof that he’s a Kenyan socialist, g) proof that he’s to the right of George Lincoln Rockwell. Others will ignore the President’s words and actions entirely and wait until Glenn Greenwald tells them what to think.
Saturday, Michelle Obama celebrates her 50th birthday with a White House event described as “Snacks & Sips & Dancing & Dessert.” The New York Daily News is at pains to note that explicitly asking guests to have supper on their own dime before the party “has left some etiquette experts scratching their heads.” The real tragedy is that the Daily News probably had a draft diatribe about the extravagance of the shindig all ready to go when the First Lady’s parsimony screwed things up.