Showing posts with label deal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label deal. Show all posts

Monday, March 31, 2014

Ron Paul Explains Why Aid For Ukraine Is A Bad Deal For All

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Ron Paul Explains Why Aid For Ukraine Is A Bad Deal For All

Sunday, March 30, 2014

Thousands in Taiwan protest China trade deal

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Thousands in Taiwan protest China trade deal

Saturday, March 29, 2014

N.Y. lawmakers, Governor Cuomo, strike budget deal before Monday vote



Sat Mar 29, 2014 4:44pm EDT



New York State Governor Andrew Cuomo smiles as he pauses during his fourth State of the State address from the New York State Capitol in Albany, New York, January 8, 2014 file photo. REUTERS/Mike Segar

New York State Governor Andrew Cuomo smiles as he pauses during his fourth State of the State address from the New York State Capitol in Albany, New York, January 8, 2014 file photo.


Credit: Reuters/Mike Segar




(Reuters) – Before a planned vote on Monday, New York legislators and Governor Andrew Cuomo reached a deal on the state’s 2014-2015 budget after several weeks of negotiating behind closed doors, according to state officials on Saturday.


The budget keeps growth in all funds spending below 2 percent at $ 137.9 billion and provides funding for statewide pre-kindergarten programs. It also cuts business taxes and introduces property tax relief for homeowners, Governor Cuomo said on Saturday.


The agreement comes after budget bills were printed late on Friday night, allowing lawmakers to vote on the plan on Monday, the last day of the state’s financial year. If passed, the budget would be Cuomo’s fourth on-time budget in a row.


“It has to be passed, and we don’t want to get ahead of ourselves, but it was a good piece of work,” Cuomo told reporters on a conference call.


The new budget earmarks $ 1.5 billion in property tax relief for homeowners. It also includes an increase of more than 5 percent in school aid, $ 300 million of which will go to pre-kindergarten in New York City and provides new protections for charter schools.


Lawmakers rejected New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio’s request for a tax hike on the city’s wealthy to help fund classes for preschoolers and pay for after-school programs.


The budget looks to cut taxes and create jobs by establishing a 20 percent real estate property tax credit for manufacturers who own or lease property. And, beginning in 2014, it will slash the tax rate on income for all manufacturers from the current 5.9 percent to zero.


Through budget initiatives, tougher bribery and anti-corruption laws will be implemented, and about $ 162 million will go to New York’s Environmental Protection Fund, an increase of $ 9 million over the previous budget.


Also, young people and new drivers will face stricter laws governing texting while driving. Licenses will be suspended for 120 days for first-time offenders, and a year’s suspension will be imposed for those convicted twice.


At the same time, New York State’s budget will fund a Commission on Youth, Public Safety and Justice. The commission will be entrusted to develop recommendations on ways to help raise the age at which juveniles are tried.


New York is one of only two states that prosecute 16- and 17-year olds through the adult criminal justice system.


(Reporting By Theopolis Waters in Chicago and Edward Krudy in New York; editing by Gunna Dickson)






Reuters: Politics



N.Y. lawmakers, Governor Cuomo, strike budget deal before Monday vote

Thursday, March 20, 2014

Taiwan students occupy legislature over China trade deal

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Taiwan students occupy legislature over China trade deal

Friday, March 14, 2014

A CRITICAL WEEKEND FOR CRIMEA – McCain to GOP: Don’t call yourselves ‘Reagan Republicans’ – ST. PADDY’S DAY LUNCH -- Senate strikes deal on jobless aid – HOUSE FIGHTS OVER ISSA AND iPADS


A CRITICAL WEEKEND FOR CRIMEA: RUSSIA MASSES TROOPS ON BORDER – In Moscow, Steven Lee Myers and Alison Smale report on A1 of the New York Times: “With a referendum on secession looming in Crimea, Russia massed troops and armored vehicles in at least three regions along Ukraine’s eastern border on Thursday, alarming the interim Ukraine government about a possible invasion and significantly escalating tensions in the crisis between the Kremlin and the West. The announcement of the troop buildup by Russia’s Defense Ministry was met with an unusually sharp rebuke from Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany, who warned that the Russian government must abandon what she called the politics of the 19th and 20th centuries or face diplomatic and economic retaliation from a united Europe.” http://nyti.ms/1lC5b2G


SECRETARY OF STATE JOHN KERRY is meeting today in London with his Russian counterpart, Sergei Lavrov, in an attempt to ease tensions before Sunday’s vote. While testifying on Capitol Hill Thursday, Kerry warned that Russia will face an immediate, “very serious series” of responses from the U.S. and Europe if it annexes Ukraine’s Crimea region. AP: http://bit.ly/1ikGNlZ


– U.S.: NO ARMS FOR UKRAINE … YET – “Ukraine’s interim government has appealed for U.S. military aid, including arms, ammunition and intelligence support, according to senior U.S. officials. But the Obama administration has agreed to send only military rations for now, wary of inflaming tensions with Russia. …” Adam Entous reports on A1 of the Wall Street Journal. The U.S. “wants to show support for Ukraine’s interim leaders without further antagonizing an unpredictable Moscow or inadvertently emboldening the Ukrainian military to take steps that could spark violence. ‘It’s not a forever ‘no,’ it’s a ‘no for now,’’ a senior U.S. official said of Ukraine’s request for lethal military support.” http://on.wsj.com/Nd0kIY


– McCAIN TO GOP: DON’T CALL YOURSELVES ‘REAGAN REPUBLICANS’— Seung Min Kim writes for POLITICO: “Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) ripped fellow Republicans on Thursday for objecting to a package of aid and sanctions to respond to the Ukrainian crisis, calling himself ‘embarrassed’ and telling his GOP colleagues: ‘Don’t call yourself Reagan Republicans.’ The Senate has erupted in a dispute over provisions related to the International Monetary Fund in the Ukraine bill, as conservative Republicans protest that it is an unnecessary component of the package that passed the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on a bipartisan vote this week.” http://politi.co/Ob2o5j


– U.S. markets tumbled Thursday over worries about the Ukraine crisis and a slowdown in China. The Dow fell 231.19 points or 1.4 percent. Reuters: http://reut.rs/Ob7r5R


** Presented by RepealSGR.org: Congress has bipartisan/bicameral legislation to repeal the SGR and reform the Medicare physician payment system. This new system will be sustainable, fair and efficient, secure patient access, and encourage quality, affordable care. Republican and Democratic Leadership in Congress need to continue working together to develop bipartisan pay-fors. www.repealsgr.org


SENATORS REACH DEAL TO EXTEND JOBLESS BENEFITS – Burgess Everett writes for the hometown paper: “Senators struck a bipartisan deal on Thursday to revive expired long-term jobless benefits following months of dramatic stops and starts on the issue. After an afternoon of frantic negotiations, five senators from each party announced a deal that should finally deliver 60 votes necessary for the aid package to pass the Senate, barring procedural snags. … The negotiations were led by Sens. Jack Reed (D-R.I.) and Dean Heller (R-Nev.), each hailing from states with high unemployment. …


– “It will be awhile before the package sees a vote. The jobless aid package will be considered in late March after the Senate returns from its St. Patrick’s Day recess — though Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) said aid to Ukraine will be the first order of business on March 24. And the legislation still must go through a conservative House, where aides to Speaker John Boehner declined to offer an assessment of the Senate deal on Thursday.” http://politi.co/1qC74ju


– Keeping with the spirit of bipartisanship, senators also passed two measures dealing with flood insurance and federally subsidized child care, writes the Washington Post’s Wesley Lowery and Ed O’Keefe: “The Senate voted 72 to 22 Thursday to pass a flood insurance bill that will roll back sharp premium increases to homeowners that were implemented as part of a federal overhaul of the flood insurance program. … Earlier Thursday, senators voted 96 to 2 to reauthorize a child-care development block-grant program and make several changes to improve the quality of federally subsidized child care.” http://wapo.st/1gw9CHW


OBAMA CALLS FOR DEPORTATIONS REVIEW – Seung Min Kim and Reid J. Epstein report for POLITICO: “President Barack Obama finally bowed to pressure from immigration rights activists and signaled on Thursday that he may change his deportation policy. The president changed course after months of claiming there was nothing his White House could do to stem the flow of deportations of undocumented immigrants. Obama announced in a meeting readout that he has requested a review of his administration’s enforcement policies for immigration laws to see if that enforcement can be done ‘more humanely within the confines of the law,’ the White House said Thursday. To immigrant rights activists, however, that is something of a victory. It means Obama is taking steps toward changing the administration’s deportation policies — though the groups won’t be satisfied until the policies are in force.” http://politi.co/1cXSgsl


‘OPEN MIKE’ LAUNCHES WITH MACON PHILLIPS – Check out the debut video of POLITICO’s new weekly series, “Open Mike,” featuring a conversation between Mike Allen and the digital diplomacy lead at the State Department, Macon Phillips. Watch Phillips’ take on how social media and digital strategies are helping shape diplomacy in Ukraine, and hear his thoughts on the popular Deathstar petition: www.politico.com/open-mike/


WHO WANTS PI? – The only two physicists in Congress, Reps. Bill Foster (D-Ill.) and Rush Holt (D-N.J.) will be celebrating Pi Day today with … pie. “On 3.14, take a break from the irrational Congress and celebrate an irrational number with the only two physicists in Congress,” Foster’s office said in an email. There will be a variety of pies and the event, at noon in Foster’s office in Longworth 1224, is open to the public.


COLIN POWELL’S #tbt pic was pretty sweet. But here’s Rep. Nita Lowey and her husband on their wedding day more than 50 years ago: pic.twitter.com/B4v9chykmK


FLORIDA REPUBLICAN DAVID JOLLY was sworn in Thursday as the newest member of the House. He won a special election Tuesday and fills the vacancy left by the death of Rep. Bill Young.


BOEHNER, PELOSI INVITE POPE TO ADDRESS CONGRESS – Our own Jake Sherman writes: “Speaker John Boehner has invited Pope Francis to address a joint session of Congress. It is an open invitation, the speaker’s office said, and it’s not yet clear when he’ll give the speech on Capitol Hill. … ‘His address as a visiting head of state before a joint meeting of the House and Senate would honor our nation in keeping with the best traditions of our democratic institutions’ [Boehner said in a statement]. ‘It would also offer an excellent opportunity for the American people as well as the nations of the world to hear his message in full.’ Boehner and the previous speaker, Democratic Rep. Nancy Pelosi of California, are Catholics.” http://politi.co/1gwfMYy


GOOD FRIDAY MORNING, MARCH 14, 2014, and welcome to The Huddle, your play-by-play preview of all the action on Capitol Hill. Send tips, suggestions, comments, complaints and corrections to swong@politico.com. If you don’t already, please follow me on Twitter @scottwongDC.


My new followers include @BenSchorr and @KatiepLong.


TODAY IN CONGRESS – The Senate is out today. The House is in at 9 a.m. with first and last votes expected between 10:30 and 11:30 a.m. on the SGR Repeal and Medicare Provider Payment Modernization Act. Both chambers are out on recess all of next week.


AROUND THE HILL – Democratic Caucus Chairman Xavier Becerra and Reps. Lucille Roybal-Allard and Michelle Lujan Grisham speak on the ACA and Latino Americans, at 9 a.m. in HVC 215. Speaker John Boehner hosts President Barack Obama, Vice President Joe Biden and Irish Prime Minister (Taoiseach) Enda Kenny at the annual St. Patrick’s Day luncheon at 11:30 in Statuary Hall. A departure ceremony takes place at 1:25 p.m. on the East House Steps.


SCOTT BROWN BEGINS SEEKING STAFF FOR SENATE RUN – Steve Peoples writes for the AP: “Former Massachusetts Sen. Scott Brown has begun seeking campaign staff while aggressively courting New Hampshire’s political elite, marking what local Republicans consider serious steps toward launching a Senate campaign against Democratic Sen. Jeanne Shaheen. The stakes are high for the GOP’s national push for the Senate majority this fall as well as for Brown’s own political ambitions. The longtime Massachusetts resident, having recently relocated to his seacoast New Hampshire vacation home, is expected to launch an exploratory committee to enter the race as soon as Friday, according to several New Hampshire Republican officials who spoke directly to Brown about his plans. The move officially allows him to begin raising money and hiring staff. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to publicly disclose his plans before an official announcement.” http://huff.to/1gnHsme


THE ANTI- HARRY REID – “Nevada Gov. Brian Sandoval is nearly impossible not to like,” Jon Ralston writes in POLITICO Magazine. “He has a sunny disposition and seems ever eager to work with Democrats, who have nary a bad word to say about him. He’s highly popular in Nevada, with approval numbers in the mid-60s, and he stays on message as well as anyone in politics. He is, in a phrase, the anti-Harry Reid. Which is why the prospect of Sandoval facing off against the occasionally dyspeptic, sharply partisan and manifestly unpopular Senate majority leader in the 2016 U.S. Senate race has some Republicans writing Reid’s political eulogy. ‘It would be a wipeout,’ said one Nevada insider. ‘He is 100 percent the perfect candidate against Harry Reid.’


– “Reid knows this, of course. No one plays the political chessboard like the majority leader; following his moves sometimes feels like watching a real life House of Cards, without the murders. He saw the Sandoval threat coming nearly a decade ago. Back then, Reid managed to sideline the up-and-coming Sandoval with a federal judgeship … But … Sandoval left the bench in 2009 and defeated Reid’s son, Rory, in a race for governor. Now it may be Reid the Elder’s turn as Sandoval could defeat two members of the same family for the two highest offices in the state. There’s just one question: Does Sandoval even want to run for the U.S. Senate?” http://politi.co/1npfFqI


A FIGHT OVER ISSA AND IPADS – Matt Fuller, Emma Dumain and Steve Dennis report for Roll Call: “Republicans once again blocked a Democratic resolution demanding a House floor apology from Oversight and Government Reform Chairman Darrell Issa for silencing Rep. Elijah E. Cummings last week during an IRS hearing. The nearly party line vote to table the privileged resolution came after a theatrical display of protest on the floor, with Democrats refusing to give up on the issue. As [Rep. Dan] Kildee and his Democratic colleagues offered the resolution, they defiantly held pictures of Issa making the throat-cutting motion, displaying the image on iPads, iPhones and paper. A floor procedure kerfuffle, in which a new House precedent may have been established, ensued.


– “Presiding officer Mike Simpson, R-Idaho, insisted that that ‘House will not proceed’ as long as Democrats continued to hold up their iPads displaying the image. ‘Regular order would be putting the iPads down,’ Simpson said.” http://bit.ly/1kQIfiS


POT LOBBY’S PITCH: IT’S GOOD BUSINESSES – Holly Yeager reports for the Washington Post: “The delegation from the National Cannabis Industry Association made a point of dressing well for its day on Capitol Hill, sporting mostly dark suits, lots of ties and plenty of the group’s signature lapel pins, which feature a sun rising over vibrant fields of marijuana. Marijuana advocates have come to lobby Washington before, often to argue for more lenient treatment under federal law. But on Thursday, buoyed by a flurry of state decisions that have expanded the legal use of marijuana, the cannabis crowd came less as social activists than as entrepreneurs, asking Congress to remove some of the obstacles that stand in the way of their fledgling businesses.” http://wapo.st/1iHCv6x


– How many members of Congress use pot? Jared Polis has a guess. Elahe Izadi in National Journal: http://bit.ly/1dWhFAC


THURSDAY’S TRIVIA WINNER – Paul Hays was first to correctly answer that Wilmer “Vinegar Bend” Mizell, a former North Carolina congressman, was raised in Mississippi but nicknamed after a town in Alabama where he was born.


TODAY’S TRIVIA – Brad Grantz has today’s question: This former Pennsylvania Democratic congressman had a grandson who went onto fame as a baseball announcer for the Pittsburgh Pirates. Name the congressman and his grandson. The first person to correctly answer gets a mention in the next day’s Huddle. Email me at swong@politico.com.


GET HUDDLE emailed to your Blackberry, iPhone or other mobile device each morning. Just enter your email address where it says “Sign Up.” http://www.politico.com/huddle/


** Presented by RepealSGR.org: Bipartisan/bicameral legislation to repeal the failed Medicare cost control formula called the Sustainable Growth Rate (SGR), and reform the Medicare physician payment system, has been introduced. The bill would create a system that is sustainable, fair and efficient, secure patient access and encourage quality, affordable care. SGR threatens patient access with drastic Medicare provider cuts. Physicians face constant instability, demonstrated by the 23.7 percent cut to physician payments scheduled for April 1. Congress has spent over $ 154 billion – more than the cost of the legislation – on 16 short term patches in the last decade. These patches are the equivalent of paying the minimum on a credit card – it delays the inevitable, increases the total bill and is bad for the budget. Republican and Democratic Leadership need to continue working together to develop bipartisan pay-fors so the House and Senate can pass S.2000/H.R. 4015, by March 31. www.repealsgr.org




POLITICO – Top 10 – Huddle



A CRITICAL WEEKEND FOR CRIMEA – McCain to GOP: Don’t call yourselves ‘Reagan Republicans’ – ST. PADDY’S DAY LUNCH -- Senate strikes deal on jobless aid – HOUSE FIGHTS OVER ISSA AND iPADS

Tuesday, February 25, 2014

White House says raised concerns with Iraq about report of arms deal with Iran



WASHINGTON Tue Feb 25, 2014 1:41pm EST




White House says raised concerns with Iraq about report of arms deal with Iran

Friday, February 21, 2014

Tensions high on Kiev square despite deal





Anti-government protesters watch a live broadcast from the parliament in central Kiev, Ukraine, Friday, Feb. 21, 2014. European officials say Ukrainian protesters have agreed to a deal with Ukraine’s president on defusing a deadly political crisis. Earlier Friday President Viktor Yanukovych announced early elections and promised to invite the opposition into the government. (AP Photo/Darko Bandic)





Anti-government protesters watch a live broadcast from the parliament in central Kiev, Ukraine, Friday, Feb. 21, 2014. European officials say Ukrainian protesters have agreed to a deal with Ukraine’s president on defusing a deadly political crisis. Earlier Friday President Viktor Yanukovych announced early elections and promised to invite the opposition into the government. (AP Photo/Darko Bandic)





Anti-government protesters man a barricade at the Independence Square in Kiev, Ukraine, Friday, Feb. 21, 2014. Ukraine’s presidency said Friday that it has negotiated a deal intended to end battles between police and protesters that have killed scores and injured hundreds, but European mediators involved in the talks wouldn’t confirm a breakthrough. (AP Photo/ Marko Drobnjakovic)





A fire burns on a barricade at Independence Square in Kiev, Ukraine, Friday, Feb. 21, 2014. Ukraine’s presidency said Friday that it has negotiated a deal intended to end battles between police and protesters that have killed scores and injured hundreds, but European mediators involved in the talks wouldn’t confirm a breakthrough. (AP Photo/ Marko Drobnjakovic)





A man carries a photo of an anti-government protester killed in clashes with the police, during a funeral procession at Independence Square in Kiev, Ukraine, Friday, Feb. 21, 2014. In a day that could significantly shift Ukraine’s political destiny, opposition leaders signed a deal Friday with the country’s beleaguered president that calls for early elections, a new constitution and a new unity government. (AP Photo/ Marko Drobnjakovic)





An anti-government protester stands on a barricade at Independence Square in Kiev, Ukraine, Friday, Feb. 21, 2014. Ukraine’s presidency said Friday that it has negotiated a deal intended to end battles between police and protesters that have killed scores and injured hundreds, but European mediators involved in the talks wouldn’t confirm a breakthrough. (AP Photo/ Marko Drobnjakovic)





Top Headlines



Tensions high on Kiev square despite deal

DEAL IN UKRAINE? – No chained CPI in Obama budget – Steve King, still not apologizing – KINGSTON"S TAXPAYER-BACKED HEALTH CARE – The new Ted Cruz?


TENTATIVE DEAL IN UKRAINE CRISIS – The New York Times with the breaking news this morning from Kiev: “The government of President Viktor F. Yanukovych announced a tentative resolution on Friday to a crisis that has brought days of bloodshed to Ukraine. The agreement, which has yet to be signed, was announced after all-night talks with opposition leaders, Russian representatives and the foreign ministers of Germany, Poland and France. In a statement later on his website, Mr. Yanukovych said he would call early presidential elections, form a coalition and reduce presidential powers through constitutional reforms. Any deal that does not include the president’s departure, however, is unlikely to get very far with protesters and it was uncertain whether, in the event of a final deal, the protest movement’s political leadership could deliver the support of an angry base comprising many different groups and factions.


–“Opposition representatives did not immediately comment on the tentative agreement or the president’s apparent concessions but leaders of the demonstrators on Independence Square called for their supporters to remain calm and avoid provoking the security forces. Previous settlements and truces have broken down several times, though those previous deals were not reached with the high-level involvement of European Union and Russian mediators, as was the case in the overnight talks Friday. The statement from Mr. Yanukovych’s office said the talks had been ‘very difficult.’ The statement said negotiators had agreed to initial an agreement to ‘settle the crisis,’ without elaborating, and that a settlement would be signed later on Friday.” http://goo.gl/HV1YC6


The Hill’s Julian Pecquet has the details of Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Bob Menendez’s (D-N.J.) plan for Ukrainian sanctions, announced Thursday evening: http://goo.gl/54aFqE


OBAMA DROPS CHAINED CPI FROM BUDGET – The Washington Post’s Zachary Goldfarb: “President Obama’s forthcoming budget request will seek tens of billions of dollars in fresh spending for domestic priorities while abandoning a compromise proposal to tame the national debt in part by trimming Social Security benefits. With the 2015 budget request, Obama will call for an end to the era of austerity that has dogged much of his presidency and to his efforts to find common ground with Republicans. Instead, the president will focus on pumping new cash into job training, early-childhood education and other programs aimed at bolstering the middle class, providing Democrats with a policy blueprint heading into the midterm elections.


–“As part of that strategy, Obama will jettison the framework he unveiled last year for a so-called grand bargain that would have raised taxes on the rich and reined in skyrocketing retirement spending. A centerpiece of that framework was a proposal — demanded by GOP leaders — to use a less-generous measure of inflation to calculate Social Security benefits. The idea infuriated Democrats and never gained much traction with rank-and-file Republicans, who also were unwilling to contemplate tax increases of any kind. On Thursday, administration officials said that the grand-bargain framework remains on the table but that it was time to move on.” http://goo.gl/Zgdma8


A roundup of some congressional reactions on Obama’s proposed budget –


Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.): “President Obama’s budget will be a powerful statement of Democratic principles. The policies it contains will provide a blueprint for creating jobs for the middle class, forging an economy where economic opportunity is shared by all – not just the top one percent – and protecting retirement security. In particular, I commend President Obama for his commitment to keeping Social Security strong, and for rejecting Republican calls to cut badly-needed cost of living increases.


Brendan Buck, spokesman for Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio): “This reaffirms what has become all too apparent: the president has no interest in doing anything, even modest, to address our looming debt crisis. The one and only idea the president has to offer is even more job-destroying tax hikes, and that non-starter won’t do anything to save the entitlement programs that are critical to so many Americans. With three years left in office, it seems the president is already throwing in the towel.” 


House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.): “House Democrats have stood behind President Obama’s honest efforts in recent years to forge a bipartisan grand bargain with congressional Republicans.  In the course of those negotiations, he put chained CPI on the table as a gesture of good faith; yet Republican leaders were unwilling to budge or close a single unfair tax loophole, and decided to walk away from opportunities to find common ground.  Democrats applaud the President for eliminating chained CPI from his budget, and we look forward to working across the aisle to adopt a responsible fiscal framework.”


Congressional Progressive Caucus co-chairs Rep. Keith Ellison (D-Minn.) and Rep. Raul Grijalva (D-Ariz.): “Americans and the Congressional Progressive Caucus have always known that cutting earned benefits for seniors is unacceptable and that chained CPI is a benefit cut for seniors, veterans and people with disabilities. The CPC applauds the president’s decision and looks forward to hearing more about his budget in the coming days.”


WHITE HOUSE MUM ON DEM IMMIGRATION DISCHARGE PETITION – House Democrats haven’t taken the step yet to try to force a vote on comprehensive immigration reform in their chamber, but the White House is staying quiet on whether the Dems should pull the trigger on a discharge petition, per NBC News’s Luke Russert: “After House GOP leaders all but shelved immigration reform this year, the White House sidestepped questions about whether it backs what’s known as a ‘discharge petition’ to force a vote on a House bill that closely mirrors the Senate-passed comprehensive immigration bill. ‘The president and this administration have committed to taking a step back and giving House Republicans the opportunity to consider a range of proposals … on immigration reform,’ spokesman Josh Earnest said at a daily press briefing. ‘So, we’re going to give House Republicans the opportunity to have some conversations among themselves.’” http://goo.gl/0zvJc5


STEVE KING, STILL NOT APOLOGIZING – The Iowa Republican tells his local newspaper that he doesn’t regret making controversial comments about immigrants – including remarks last summer likening young undocumented immigrants to drug mules – and in fact, says his words have helped change the rhetoric of immigration reform backers like Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.). Roll Call’s Emma Dumain writes it up: http://goo.gl/DJkBe6


SHADOW CAMPAIGNING FOR GOP LEADERSHIP? – The Washington Examiner’s David Drucker has the palace intrigue behind the jockeying for leadership positions among House Republicans, even as Speaker John Boehner says he has no plans to step down: “[T]here remains considerable speculation that Boehner will retire, and members interested in moving up are quietly exploring their options and laying the foundation for a leadership bid. They include members of Boehner’s team who are eyeing promotions and rank-and-file Republicans looking to win their first elected position in conference leadership. Overt campaigning, considered unseemly and counterproductive at this early stage, could accelerate over the summer. ‘There is definitely a lot of shadow campaigning going on,’ said a Republican lobbyist with relationships on Capitol Hill. ‘They all want to be ready.’


“The politics of running for a congressional leadership post differ from campaigns for public office. In a leadership election, members are the constituency, and winning is primarily about relationships, favors and fundraising. In other words, members with friends, who have helped boost colleagues’ legislation and campaign coffers, tend to have an edge. That a member might enjoy the support of party activists or influential outside groups usually matters much less. That is one reason why Boehner’s team has been remarkably stable despite the challenges it has faced periodically in rounding up the 218 votes required to pass legislation.” http://goo.gl/wAo7fW


TALK RUSSIA, UKRAINE & THE OLYMPICS with Greg Feifer, POLITICO Magazine contributor of “What Americans Don’t Get About Putin”, in today’s Facebook chat. Read Feifer’s story (http://politi.co/OgNAT7) and ask your questions at www.facebook.com/politico beginning at 9:45 a.m. ET today with live answers from Feifer at 10 a.m. ET.


**A message from POWERJobs: Jobs on our radar this week: Senior Data Modeler at Deloitte, Client Financial Management Analyst at Accenture and Director of Business Development at Evolver. Interested? Apply to these jobs and more at www.POWERJobs.com; finally, a career site made for YOU!**


GOOD FRIDAY MORNING, FEB. 21, 2014, and welcome to The Huddle, your-play-by-play preview of all the action on Capitol Hill. Send tips, suggestions, comments, complaints, corrections and your sympathies about Yuna Kim not winning the gold medal to skim@politico.com. Your usual Huddle host, Scott Wong (swong@politico.com), returns Monday. 


My new followers include @HotlineSteve and @johoeck.


TODAY IN CONGRESS – Nada. Why are you even at work?


AROUND THE HILL – All is quiet. USA-Canada men’s Olympics hockey semifinal starts at noon.


KINGSTON ATTACKS TAXPAYER-FUNDED HEALTH SUBSIDIES, GETS TAXPAYER-FUNDED HEALTH SUBSIDIES – National Journal’s Shane Goldmacher with the scoop: “As Jack Kingston runs for Senate in Georgia, the veteran Republican congressman has needled his GOP primary opponents over the issue of taxpayer-funded health insurance subsidies … [but] Georgia taxpayers are footing as much as 75 percent of the bill for his own health insurance. That’s because Kingston, 58, receives health coverage through a plush package that has allowed him access to a lifetime of subsidized health benefits due to his past service in the Georgia statehouse. Former state legislators pay ‘approximately 25 percent of the cost’ of their health insurance, said Pamela Keene, a spokeswoman for the Georgia Department of Community Health. ‘The rest is paid by the state,’ she said.


–Kingston spokesman Chris Crawford responds: “‘The State of Georgia health care plan is administered [in] Georgia. He has no vote on the rules of the plan and abides by those established by state lawmakers … He chose to stay on the Georgia plan when he first came to Congress because he did not want any part of the Potomac lifestyle.’” http://goo.gl/vqUTHt


LABRADOR FOR SPEAKER? – Buzzfeed’s Kate Nocera profiles the second-term House Republican who everyone seems to have an opinion on: “His allies love him. Labrador’s the smartest guy in the room, they say. Opinionated, principled, trustworthy — a leader. His detractors certainly don’t. Those who bristle at the mention of his name contend he’s misguided at best and self-serving at worst. ‘People aren’t indifferent to him,’ offered one Republican congressman. There’s good reason: Since he was elected to office just three years ago, Labrador’s built up a powerful base among conservatives and has never been shy about speaking his mind. On everything from immigration to the debt ceiling, the conservative wing of the party has tended to look to Labrador as a leader — and he clearly has big ambitions.


“Does he want to be speaker someday? ‘I don’t think about it that often,’ Labrador replied in an interview with BuzzFeed. He then elaborated, ‘I think a person who is in his second term in the House of Representatives is not qualified to be speaker of the House.’ That doesn’t mean that he doesn’t have big plans for this year. Many in the GOP blame the new breed of staunchly conservative members like Labrador for much of the infighting over the last few years, but to hear Labrador tell it, all he’s trying to do is unify the conference. While the legislative load for the rest of the 113th Congress looks light, Labrador says he and other conservatives will be pushing leadership to come up with ‘a bold agenda, putting things on the floor we are for—that unify the party.’” http://goo.gl/hCDDyM


THE NEW TED CRUZ? – Yahoo News’s Chris Moody profiles Rob Maness, the long-shot Louisiana Senate hopeful who’s got a lot of similarities with the Texas conservative firebrand – right down to the same black ostrich-skin cowboy boots: “Maness embraces Cruz’s hard line on federal spending bills. He believes there’s ‘no need to raise the debt ceiling’ under any circumstances. He opposes the Affordable Care Act and Obama’s 2014 strategy of using executive action to get around a deadlocked Congress, saying, ‘I’m with Sen. Cruz on that. It’s completely lawless.’ Both men went to Harvard — Cruz to Harvard Law and Maness to the Kennedy School of Government. Maness even wears black ostrich-skin cowboy boots, just like Cruz’s. And he decries political ambition. ‘Actually, I don’t want to be a senator,’ he told me when we met for coffee recently near Capitol Hill.”


–“Maness has yet to prove himself as a candidate who can dazzle conservative audiences in the same way Cruz did last year. His opponents cast him as less a Cruz mini-me than a more polished version of tea party-backed Texas Reps. Louie Gohmert or Steve Stockman, who has won Internet fame for outlandish comments made during his primary campaign against Texas Republican Sen. John Cornyn.” http://goo.gl/CRM2mn


SPEAKING OF STOCKMAN …. – POLITICO’s Katie Glueck writes about how the House Republican’s primary challenge against Cornyn, the second-ranking GOP-er in the Senate, has fizzled out: “It’s a disappointment for many national political watchers who had pulled out the popcorn for this race. Stockman has a penchant for making inflammatory statements — one of his bumper stickers read: ‘If babies had guns they wouldn’t be aborted.’ In December, he tweeted a picture of a can of ‘liberal tears,’ calling it the ‘best gun lubricant around.’ While that kind of rhetoric resonates with a corner of the GOP base, establishment Republicans trying to avoid intraparty warfare are relieved to see Stockman’s campaign founder. And as Cornyn sails toward the nomination and back to the Senate, even the most ardent Texas tea party activists are distancing themselves from the firebrand congressman — and wishing he would quit saying he’s one of them. ‘I think it’s horrible,’ said JoAnn Fleming, a prominent Texas tea party leader, of Stockman’s campaign. ‘We didn’t support Congressman Stockman, we haven’t had one conversation with him, he is a no-show at events. I’ve made it clear that Stockman’s unwillingness to be honest … disqualifies him from our organization to even consider him.’” http://goo.gl/rWUkzL


MERCURY NEWS CALLS FOR HONDA-KHANNA DEBATE — The San Jose newspaper acknowledges that Honda has not yet declined a debate against primary challenger Ro Khanna, but it’s still putting the pressure on the House Democrat: “The seven-term Democratic congressman and many of his colleagues are shocked, shocked that a young upstart Democrat is challenging him. It just isn’t done. And it’s not unusual for an incumbent, with that huge built-in advantage, to avoid events that would bring attention to a challenger. But declining to debate is wrong. It shows a fundamental disrespect for the democratic system and ultimately for voters. It was wrong when Sen. Dianne Feinstein stiffed her token Republican opponent in 2012. It’s worse for Honda, who faces a legitimate opponent in Khanna, a former Obama administration trade official whose campaign is getting national attention and raising tons of money. Honda technically has not refused to debate. He just hasn’t accepted any invitations — including (full disclosure here) one from this newspaper and the Santa Clara County League of Women Voters for a forum in Milpitas. His campaign manager said Wednesday no decisions have been made.” http://goo.gl/Om9vXz


‘HOUSE OF CARDS’ TO MARYLAND: WE NEED MORE TAX CREDITS – The Washington Post’s Jenna Johnson: “In his letter to [Maryland Gov. Martin] O’Malley, Charlie Goldstein, a Media Rights Capital senior vice president, wrote that the filming schedule for Season 3 has been pushed back to June to ensure that a big enough increase has been approved. ‘In the meantime I wanted you to be aware that we are required to look at other states in which to film on the off chance that the legislation does not pass, or does not cover the amount of tax credits for which we would qualify,’ the letter says. ‘I am sure you can understand that we would not be responsible financiers and a successful production company if we did not have viable options available.’ The letter does not specify the amount of tax credits the show is seeking. Last year, lawmakers increased the total allocation for film tax credits to $ 25 million, which made the larger credits for the first two seasons of “House of Cards” possible. But lawmakers are divided on whether it is prudent to continue giving away that much tax revenue.” http://goo.gl/Slcfzt


THURSDAY’S TRIVIA WINNER – Sean Neary of Edelman (and Baucus/Conrad alum) was the first to correctly respond that Jill Docking, the likely Democratic nominee for lieutenant governor in Kansas, has a husband (Tom) who previously served as lieutenant governor and his father (Robert) and grandfather (George) both served as governors of the state.


TODAY’S TRIVIA – Neary (still reeling from Wednesday night’s Boston College upset over previously undefeated Syracuse) offers today’s trivia question: What current Cabinet secretary received his law degree from Boston College? The first person to correctly answer gets a mention in the next day’s Huddle. Email me at skim@politico.com.


GET HUDDLE emailed to your Blackberry, iPhone or other mobile device each morning. Just enter your email address where it says “Sign Up.” http://www.politico.com/huddle/


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POLITICO – Top 10 – Huddle



DEAL IN UKRAINE? – No chained CPI in Obama budget – Steve King, still not apologizing – KINGSTON"S TAXPAYER-BACKED HEALTH CARE – The new Ted Cruz?

Wednesday, February 12, 2014

Syria: Deal on Homs Will Let Civilians Leave, Let Aid In

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Syria: Deal on Homs Will Let Civilians Leave, Let Aid In

Saturday, February 1, 2014

Opel reaches job guarantee deal with 3 German factories



FRANKFURT Sat Feb 1, 2014 9:29am EST



Thursday, January 30, 2014

VIDEO: Lenovo to Use Motorola to Break Into U.S. Market







Google sells handset business to Lenovo for nearly $3 billion. Bryan Ma of IDC tells the WSJ’s Aaron Back how Motorola phones will give Lenovo a shortcut into the competitive U.S. Market.













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VIDEO: Lenovo to Use Motorola to Break Into U.S. Market

VIDEO: Lenovo to Use Motorola to Break Into U.S. Market









Google sells handset business to Lenovo for nearly $3 billion. Bryan Ma of IDC tells the WSJ’s Aaron Back how Motorola phones will give Lenovo a shortcut into the competitive U.S. Market.













Thanks for checking us out. Please take a look at the rest of our videos and articles.







To stay in the loop, bookmark our homepage.







VIDEO: Lenovo to Use Motorola to Break Into U.S. Market

Sunday, January 26, 2014

Syria talks yield narrow deal, Assad "red line"








Haitham al-Maleh, senior member of the Syrian National Coalition (SNC), Syria’s main political opposition group, leaves a meeting with U.N. mediator Lakhdar Brahimi at the United Nations headquarters in Geneva, Switzerland, Sunday, Jan. 26, 2014. Syrians on opposite sides of their country’s civil war tried again Sunday to find common ground, with peace talks focusing on an aid convoy to a besieged city that once more came under mortar attack from the government. (AP Photo/Anja Niedringhaus)





Haitham al-Maleh, senior member of the Syrian National Coalition (SNC), Syria’s main political opposition group, leaves a meeting with U.N. mediator Lakhdar Brahimi at the United Nations headquarters in Geneva, Switzerland, Sunday, Jan. 26, 2014. Syrians on opposite sides of their country’s civil war tried again Sunday to find common ground, with peace talks focusing on an aid convoy to a besieged city that once more came under mortar attack from the government. (AP Photo/Anja Niedringhaus)





Monzer Akbik, center, a spokesman of the of the Syrian National Coalition, Syria’s main political opposition group, is surrounded by journalists after a meeting with the Syrian government at the United Nations headquarters in Geneva, Switzerland, Sunday, Jan. 26, 2014. Syrians on opposite sides of their country’s civil war tried again Sunday to find common ground, with peace talks focusing on an aid convoy to a besieged city that once more came under mortar attack from the government. (AP Photo/Anja Niedringhaus)





Monzer Akbik, center, a spokesman of the Syrian National Coalition, Syria’s main political opposition group, is surrounded by journalists after a meeting with the Syrian government at the United Nations headquarters in Geneva, Switzerland, Sunday, Jan. 26, 2014. Syrians on opposite sides of their country’s civil war tried again Sunday to find common ground, with peace talks focusing on an aid convoy to a besieged city that once more came under mortar attack from the government. (AP Photo/Anja Niedringhaus)





Monzer Akbik, a spokesman of the Syrian National Coalition, Syria’s main political opposition group briefs the media, at the European headquarters of the United Nations, in Geneva, Switzerland, Sunday, Jan. 26, 2014. Syrians on opposite sides of their country’s civil war tried again Sunday to find common ground, with peace talks focusing on an aid convoy to a besieged city that once more came under mortar attack from the government. (AP Photo/Keystone,Salvatore Di Nolfi)





Syrian Information Minister Omran al-Zoubi gestures as he gives a short press briefing upon his arrival to the United Nations headquarters in Geneva, Switzerland, Sunday, Jan. 26, 2014. Syria’s government and opposition face each other for the second time Sunday, buffered by a U.N. mediator hoping to guide them to a resolution of the country’s devastating civil war. (AP Photo/Anja Niedringhaus)













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(AP) — Two days of face-to-face peace talks yielded a narrow and tentative agreement Sunday for women and children trapped in a besieged Syrian city, and the government said President Bashar Assad had no intention of giving up “the keys to Damascus.”


With little progress to show after months of international pressure for the conference in Geneva, the U.N. mediator hoping to broker an end to Syria’s civil war defended their pace.


“I think being too slow is a better way than going too fast,” Lakhdar Brahimi said. “If you run, you may gain one hour and lose one week.”


The limited agreement to let women and children leave a blockaded part of the old city of Homs, under negotiation for at least two days, fell far short of expectations and was called into question by multiple reports of government shelling.


The talks have yet to touch upon the issue of a possible transitional government — their purpose according to terms laid out when they were first conceived. But the government was unequivocal that Assad’s future was assured in the country led by his family since 1970.


“This is a red line. If some people think we are coming here to give them the keys of Damascus they are wrong,” said Deputy Foreign Minister Faisal al-Mikdad, echoing the language U.S. President Barack Obama used to describe a chemical weapons attack in Syria.


In Syria, the war continued as if there were no effort to stop it — gunfire and shelling in Homs, between Assad’s forces and rebels, and between the al-Qaida-linked militants and Kurdish fighters, according to the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.


The blockaded districts of Homs came under intense fire that activists blamed on the government, calling into question how any deals reached in remote Switzerland could be implemented or verified in a chaotic civil war with dozens of players that began as a largely peaceful uprising against Assad. More than 130,000 people have died in less than three years, and millions of Syrians have fled their homes.


Brahimi acknowledged that the agreement for Homs fell short of his hope to send a humanitarian aid convoy to the city. But, he said, “to bring Syria out of the ditch in which it has fallen will take time.”


There have been a number of short-lived, local truces reached between opposition-held towns and government forces in recent months that, including in Moadamiyeh, a sprawling rebel-held community west of Damascus, where about 5,000 residents were allowed to evacuate in the fall.


Monzer Akbik, an opposition spokesman, said the coalition was still determined to stay for the political talks set to begin Monday despite accusing the government of stalling.


“They were sidestepping some issues and saying they want to refer back to Damascus for answers. It is clear to us that the regime delegation is not in charge of its own decisions,” Akbik said.


Both sides claim to represent the Syrian people.


The Western-backed opposition, made up largely of exiled Syrians, says Assad has lost legitimacy and can no longer lead a country after unleashing the military on largely peaceful protests nearly three years ago. They say Assad is being propped up by aid, weapons and fighters from Iran and Russia.


The government says the rebellion is rife with terrorists and that Assad is the only person able to end the fighting, blaming the West and Gulf states — especially Saudi Arabia — of turning the country into an al-Qaida haven.


Homs was considered a promising place to start the negotiations.


The city was one of the first areas that plunged into armed conflict in 2011. Neighborhoods in the old city have been ravaged and emptied of residents following repeated government assaults to reclaim control from rebels. Activists say about 800 families are trapped, without regular access to food, medicine and basic necessities.


“The regime is blocking all convoys to Homs and has been doing so for months,” a senior U.S. official said on condition of anonymity because the talks remain sensitive. “The situation in Homs is extremely urgent. Anything the government says to the contrary is false.”


Syrian activists, including the Observatory, said some rebel-held districts in Homs came under attack Sunday morning by mortar shells fired by government forces.


The two sides failed to reach agreement on a prisoner exchange, as Brahimi had hoped. Al-Mikdad said a list of names submitted by the opposition was greatly exaggerated, adding the government had no children in its jails, while the opposition said it had no control over the militants who have kidnapped hundreds of people, including aid workers and journalists.


Back in Syria, residents were following the talks closely, despite deep cynicism that they would achieve any concrete results.


“I watch the TV news twice a day and whenever else I have time,” said Ghassan Matta, a 47-year-old businessman in Damascus.


Qutaiba al-Rifai, 35, a private sector employee in Damascus said the peace talks in Geneva were premature and neither side was prepared.


“Till now, it’s unclear whether it’s a negotiations conference or a dialogue between the two sides.”


Monday’s talks promised to be far more difficult, and Brahimi wouldn’t predict how often the two sides could sit in the same room.


Al-Mikdad, the government official, said the opposition must come to the table “with their dreams outside the room when we sit and discuss concrete issues on the future of Syria.”


___


Associated Press writers Bradley Klapper in Geneva; Ryan Lucas and Diaa Hadid in Beirut, and Albert Aji in Damascus contributed to this report.


Associated Press




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Syria talks yield narrow deal, Assad "red line"