May 21, 2012

Santorum’s Iowa trip prompts more serious consideration of White House bid

Former Senator Rick Santorum, a Republican from Pennsylvania, is delivering two speeches in Iowa today, but the Republican says he’s far from declaring himself a candidate for the G.O.P.’s 2012 presidential nomination. However, Santorum says he’s been prompted to think more seriously about a run for the White House because of the attention today’s visit has gotten since he did an interview about it in August.

“If you Googled ‘Santorum in Iowa’ before I did that Politico interview, there were 350…entries that would come up on the search. I Googled it this morning. You know how many came up? Guess….1,360,000 entries!” Santorum said this morning during an interview with Radio Iowa. “That surprised me, you know, I mean, when I see that…it makes you step back and think when I actually wasn’t thinking about it.” 

Santorum will deliver a speech in Dubuque tonight that’s titled: “Jumpstarting America’s Economy.”  He’s spending his midday with members of the Iowa Right-to-Life Committee where he is well-known as a crusader against abortion.  Santorum says that’s one reason why tonight’s speech isn’t about social issues, but about the economy and about the looming threats on the international stage.

“You know I think it’s important to be a voice, to not just be a ‘Johnny One Note’ but to talk about all the issues and demonstrate…I don’t come lately to this. This is all stuff that I’ve worked on, but because, as you know, the mainstream media tends to love to pidgeonhole me, they’ve tried to do that with me,” Santorum said during his Radio Iowa interview.  “And I think if you go back and look at the record, it’s a very different story.” 

As part of his preparation for today’s visit, Santorum said he went online to watch the “YouTube” videos from some of Senator Chuck Grassley’s August “town hall” meetings.

“You know, part of what I’m here to do is to validate the concern, the angst that voters here have and other voters around the country have about the direction of our country,” Santorum says.

Read more about Santorum here.

Senator Harkin says public option will be in health care reform bill

Iowa Senator Tom Harkin, a Democrat, is leaving no doubt about his view on the prospect for a health care bill containing the so-called public option. “Let me put it this way, we will have a health reform bill on the president’s desk by Christmas. That bill, that he will sign, will have a public option in it,” Harkin says.

Harkin spoke with reporters today in a conference call, and was less committed when asked if he would ever support a bill without a public option. Harkin says they are working to get the bill together and says there are some “very delicate” negotiations going on. “I don’t like to take absolutes on what I might do in one situation or another. I just will repeat for the record. The final bill that goes to the president will have a public option,” Harkin says.

Harkin says the bills from the House and Senate have a lot of the same provisions and he believes they will be able to put both together in an acceptable form. He says merging the two will not be a walk in the park, but he says it will also not be overwhelming. Harkin is the chair of the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, which has passed one version of the Senate bill.

Iowa Senator Chuck Grassley, a Republican, is on the Senate Finance Committee which is working on another version of the health reform bill. Grassley said this week he didn’t believe the public option would have the votes to pass.

Urbandale compiling deer photo lineup to thwart poachers

Deer in a back yard.

Deer in a back yard.

A central Iowa police department is compiling a different kind of “Most Wanted” list. Police in the Des Moines suburb of Urbandale are looking for pictures of male deer. Officer Jeff Casey says they want to try and thwart poachers who want trophy bucks.

He says they started by asking officers and registered bow hunters to send in photos of bucks so they have an idea and inventory of the bucks out there. “We’ve had an extreme problem with poaching deer out in Urbandale over the past years in Urbandale, where we’ve found numerous bodies of deer missing their heads, just laying in ditches or on private property,” Casey says. Casey came up with the idea of making a photo lineup of the deer.

[Read more...]

Training plane in eastern Iowa resembles Air Force One

747 E-4-B

747 E-4-B

A pilot training mission at an eastern Iowa airport Wednesday had some people wondering if President Obama was in the state. It turns out the low 747 that resembles Air Force One was simply a pilot practicing takeoffs and landings. The plane from Offutt Air Force Base in Nebraska was circling the Eastern Iowa Airport in Cedar Rapids.

Lieutenant Colonel Sean Murphy is Chief of Training of the First Airborne Command and Control at Offutt Air Force Base. He says the plane was drawing attention because the Eastern Iowa Airport is rarely used as a landing spot for the plane.

“We have a variety of transition bases that we go to and Cedar Rapids is one of the airports that we can fly our airplane at…the runway is long enough and wide enough and has got the facilities that we need,” Murphy said. The plane in Cedar Rapids is a militarized version of a 747 called an E-4-B. Just as with Air Force One, the words “United States of America” are painted on the side. However, the E-4-B contains a different shade of blue and different color pattern.

“Our mission is to provide the President and the Secretary of Defense with a survivable command center for directing the United States forces during conditions of peace and war and we insure that the federal government can maintain continuity during military, national and natural emergencies,” Murphy said. There are only four 747 E4Bs in the Air Force fleet. They’re designed to serve as an airborne operations center for the president and secretary of defense during a national emergency.