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Political Buzz – August 1st, 2011

GIFFORDS VOTES, RETURNS TO TWITTER

U.S. Rep. Gabrielle Giffords' voted Monday to raise the debt ceiling, surprising many of her colleagues by appearing on the House floor for the vote.

She's been out of the public eye except for a few occasions since she was shot through the head at a constituent event Jan. 8. Monday's vote was her first vote since the shooting. But Monday she was front and center on C-SPAN coverage of the vote, footage many other networks picked up, showing her greeting her colleagues and thanking them for their support.

Giffords sent this message on Twitter before the vote: "The #Capitol looks beautiful and I am honored to be at work tonight."

Giffords managed her own Twitter feed before the shooting, and the last tweet that she clearly wrote herself came Jan. 8. That morning, she wrote, "My 1st Congress on Your Corner starts now. Please stop by to let me know what is on your mind or tweet me later."

It was minutes later at that event a gunman shot Giffords and 18 others. Six died from their wounds.

Since then, her account has been a steady stream of messages about her congressional office's activity, but they've been written and signed by staffers.


INVOKING REAGAN: MCCAIN'S DEBT-CEILING ARGUMENT

By his own admission, Arizona Republican Sen. John McCain's strength is not the economy. Yet he discusses it in a way that makes one think he is expert in the field.

Take this interesting exchange he had with Democratic Sen. Dick Durbin of Illinois on the U.S. Senate floor Sunday during part of the ongoing debt-ceiling debate.

McCain asked Durbin to recall the year 1982, which is when they both first were elected to the U.S. House of Representatives, in the midterm elections of President Ronald Reagan's first term. In one of their first actions in the new term, McCain recalled, according to the Chicago Tribune: "We cut taxes. ... We had one of the strongest recoveries in recent history of this country because we didn't start spending and add spending without paying for them."

Durbin, according to the Chicago Tribune, parried: "Does he recall what happened with the Reagan tax cuts? Because what happened was we tripled the national debt during that period of time, and President Reagan came to Congress 18 times to extend the debt ceiling. He holds the record. So to argue the Reagan tax cuts led to great long-term prosperity is seriously in doubt, if we are going to use the deficit as a measure."

As many an economist has noted, Reagan's tax cuts did not do what Reagan and his economic advisers said they would do -- stimulate the economy through the "trickle-down effect." In fact, after the cuts, the trickle-down effect was a recession.

About Political Buzz

News, commentary, analysis from the AZPM political team: Christopher Conover, Andrea Kelly, Michael Chihak.