Showing posts with label polls. Show all posts
Showing posts with label polls. Show all posts

Sunday, March 30, 2014

How can politicians make Obamacare the winning message? It’s in the polls.


Everyday Americans get up in the morning and go to work. They provide their services to companies and corporations. In return they expect a living wage. They expect that their work entitles them to financial security and healthcare security. For thirty plus years both have been eroding.

When President Obama ran for president in 2008 he understood that the root of every American’s economic security laid with ensuring every American would have access to affordable health care. He knew a single-payer health care system was the most effective system. However he was pragmatic enough to settle for RomneyCare on Viagra to begin the codification of health care as a right.


The reason health care reform has always eluded presidents of the past is because of ideological rigidity. President Obama minimized his ideological rigidity to the consternation of his left flank to get an imperfect law that will ultimately get improved. A few months ago I wrote a piece that placed this into context:


The genius in achieving the passage of Obamacare is immediately evident after reading the transcribed talk titled “A Brief History: Universal Health Care Efforts in the US” given by Karen S. Palmer MPH, MS in San Francisco at the Spring, 1999 Physicians For A National Health Program (PNHP) meeting. The talk revealed the headwinds that have blown over every President attempting to pass some form of universal healthcare. Doctor associations, insurance industry, unions, and other groups have always created opposition in some combination that guaranteed failure. She described the reason for failure as follows.

Political naiveté on the part of the reformers in failing to deal with the interest group opposition, ideology, historical experience, and the overall political context all played a key role in shaping how these groups identified and expressed their interests.


In effect, the very compromises President Obama has been knocked for are the compromises that allowed the passage of the Affordable Care Act. It was a running start that will need modification. The president is cognizant of this fact and he stated that much in the State Of The Union Speech on January 25th, 2011.



Please read below the fold for more on this story.



Daily Kos



How can politicians make Obamacare the winning message? It’s in the polls.

Thursday, March 27, 2014

Gary Johnson To Be Included In National Polls With Obama And Romney!

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Gary Johnson To Be Included In National Polls With Obama And Romney!

Sunday, March 16, 2014

Exit polls show Crimea annexation wins 93% of vote while under Russian occupation


posted at 3:31 pm on March 16, 2014 by Ed Morrissey



Big surprise, eh? No one took this seriously before it took place, and no one will take it seriously after the votes are counted. No one, that is, except for the occupying power in Crimea that forced the referendum in the first place. Russia and its new puppet regional government on the peninsula are reported record turnout and a 93% vote for annexation to its former sovereign, while the US and West denounced the entire exercise as just a pretense for a land grab:


Supporters of Crimea’s attempt to secede from Ukraine and join Russia have flocked to vote in a referendum denounced by Kiev and Western powers.


Polls closed at 18:00 GMT and officials hailed a “record” turnout. Preliminary results were expected within hours.


A vast majority of voters interviewed by journalists backed secession. Many opponents boycotted the vote.



The White House has officially rejected the results and the referendum itself, saying it occurred under duress:


The White House says Sunday’s referendum on secession is contrary to Ukraine’s constitution.


The U.S. says the world won’t recognize the results of a vote held under what it says are “threats of violence and intimidation from a Russian military intervention that violates international law.”


A written statement from the White House calls Russia’s actions in Ukraine “dangerous and destabilizing.”


The U.S. is urging other nations to “take concrete steps to impose costs” against Russia.


Secession was expected to be approved overwhelmingly.



John McCain uses a better word than referendum, one which I have used purposefully all along:


“Look, it is a bogus thing. We used to call it plebiscite in the days of Hitler and Stalin. It is a done deal,” he said on CNN’s “State of the Union.”


McCain and the U.S. ambassador to Ukraine have a running bet on how lopsided the vote will be. McCain thinks the referendum will be approved with 70 percent of the vote. …


“The United States of America, first of all, has to have a fundamental re-assessment of our relationship with Vladimir Putin. No more reset buttons, no more tell Vladimir I’ll be more flexible,” he said.



He’s right, but it’s too late for that now. Putin has already taken his measure of the West. Expect the annexation to happen immediately — and then wait for the inevitable repeat in eastern Ukraine, too.




Hot Air



Exit polls show Crimea annexation wins 93% of vote while under Russian occupation

Tuesday, February 18, 2014

Let’s Read the Polls About Amnesty


Poll numbers reveal that amnesty leads to big government and fewer rights


Phyllis Schlafly
Eagle Forum
February 18, 2014


The Congressional Budget Office just reported that Obamacare will shrink the U.S. workforce by 2.5 million full-time jobs. That’s stunning confirmation of how Barack Obama’s favorite legislative legacy is (as even Democrats have admitted) a “train wreck.”


The job loss is caused by businesses reducing their employees’ hours in order to avoid paying the employee mandate to buy insurance. Even more striking is the callous way Obama’s friends are trying to put a happy face on this bad news by claiming that Americans who are reduced to part-time jobs by Obamacare will be better off because they are liberated to exercise choice about how they spend their unemployed hours. As the New York Times wrote, it will be “more possible” to leave jobs (or reduce hours for less pay) because “new government subsidies will help pay premiums.”


Fifty million Americans of working-age (18 to 65) are not employed, and this number has held constant throughout the Obama presidential years. That’s an awesome 31 percent, a devastating blow to families’ livelihood, self-respect, and belief in America as the land of opportunity.


Republicans should be addressing the issues of jobs and Obamacare, but the tone-deaf Republican Establishment (the chamber-of-commerce, country-club types) keeps pushing for various versions of amnesty that will import millions of foreigners to take jobs from Americans, all the way from entry-level jobs to college graduates imported on H-1B visas. Establishment spokesmen talk a lot about devotion to the free-market system, but they ignore the Economics 101 lesson that increasing the labor supply reduces job opportunities and wages.


Businesses do market research to identify public opinion about their products, and politicians buy a lot of public opinion polls to identify voters who support their views and learn how those numbers can be increased. Today’s public opinion polls prove that Republicans are fools to support any form of amnesty or continuing to import millions of foreigners who reject conservative views and will vote for the Democrats who support big government and spending.


The Pew Research Center found that 75 percent of Hispanic immigrants and 55 percent of Asian immigrants prefer a “bigger government providing more services” and only 19 percent of Hispanics and only 36 percent of Asian immigrants prefer a smaller government. So why is anybody surprised that 71 percent of Hispanics and 73 percent of Asians voted for Obama in 2012?


The 2010 Cooperative Congressional Election Study found that 69 percent of immigrants support Obamacare. Pew Research found that 53 percent of Hispanics have a negative view of capitalism, which is even higher than views of self-identified supporters of Occupy Wall Street.


Polls show that Republican emphasis on patriotism and national sovereignty is likely to alienate many immigrants. A Harris poll found that 81 percent of native-born Americans believe that our schools should teach students to be proud of being American compared to only 50 percent of immigrants who have become naturalized U.S. citizens.


A survey that compared immigrants’ views on the U.S. Constitution and international law is particularly shocking. A Harris poll found that 67 percent of native-born citizens believe our Constitution is a higher legal authority than international law, but only 37 percent of naturalized citizens share that view.


Even the mainstream pro-Obama media admit the significance of these poll results. The New York Times Washington bureau chief admitted that “The two fastest-growing ethnic groups — Latinos and Asian-Americans — are decidedly liberal.” University of Alabama Political Scientist George Hawley observed, “immigrants are well to the left of the American public on a number of key issues.”


Heather Mac Donald of the Manhattan Institute pointed out that it “is not immigration policy that creates the strong bond between Hispanics and the Democratic Party, but the core Democratic principles of a more generous safety net, strong government intervention in the economy, and progressive taxation.”


Ronald Reagan signed a generous amnesty in 1986. Then, in the 1988 election, George H.W. Bush received only 30 percent of the Latino vote, seven percentage points less than Reagan himself had received.


Amnesty advocates like to point to the effective assimilation of millions of immigrants from about 1880 to 1920 as a model to encourage similar large-scale immigration today. However, that was followed by a national pause in immigration from the 1920s to the 1960s, which allowed newcomers to assimilate, to learn our language and customs, and to adapt to our unique system of government.


Moreover, it still took decades before those immigrants moved into the Republican column. Before they did, those immigrants and their children provided much of the political support to pass the New Deal and the Great Society.


The bottom line is that amnesty or any version thereof is suicide for the conservative movement and the Republican Party.


This article was posted: Tuesday, February 18, 2014 at 1:12 pm










Infowars



Let’s Read the Polls About Amnesty

Tuesday, December 31, 2013

Obama pollster: reporters should stop covering polls in 2014


posted on Dec, 31 2013 @ 08:26 PM


Well, considering that most “polls” are extremely small numbers of people in comparison to the population, whereby the statistics are skewed to favor a certain agenda or rhetoric, and then used by all major media outlets as “gospel”…

This actually surprises me. For once.


I can’t even take this seriously though. Someone got their panties in a bunch because they found out all the pathological lies are starting to catch up to them and need a quick fix. Shocking. If anyone believes the nonsense that these polls produce, I have a bridge to sell them.


Sometimes I wish you could buy common sense like junk food.




AboveTopSecret.com New Topics In Breaking Political News



Obama pollster: reporters should stop covering polls in 2014

Tuesday, October 22, 2013

Provocative art: Rebel sculptor gives Czech president the finger ahead of polls




Published time: October 22, 2013 15:57

Workers anchor a boat bearing an installation work by Czech visual artist David Cerny in front of the Prague Castle in Prague October 21, 2013. (Reuters/David W Cerny)

Workers anchor a boat bearing an installation work by Czech visual artist David Cerny in front of the Prague Castle in Prague October 21, 2013. (Reuters/David W Cerny)




A controversial Czech artist known for his anti-communist stance has sent a very clear message to the republic’s president ahead of parliamentary polls by installing a giant purple hand with a raised middle finger on Prague’s main river.


David Cerny, 45, placed his 10-meter statue of the hand making an obscene gesture on a pontoon boat on the Vltava River on Monday. The huge plastic sculpture is floating near the famous Charles Bridge and is pointed at the Prague Castle – the seat of leftist President Milos Zeman.


This unusual stunt comes only four days before Czech snap parliamentary elections, which may bring the Communist Party a share of indirect power for the first time since the Velvet Revolution ousted it in 1989. Zeman favors a post-election plan by the leftist Social Democrats to form a minority government with implicit support from Communists.


This finger is aimed straight at the castle politics,” Cerny told the New York Times. “After 23 years, I am horrified at the prospect of the Communists returning to power and of Zeman helping them to do so.


During the campaign ahead of January presidential elections, Cerny helped Zeman’s rival, charismatic aristocrat Karel Schwarzenberg of the Top 09 rightist party, who came second in the polls.


Our president is just another reason not to live in the Czech Republic,” the artist told The Prague Post in September. “The political system here is not good, most people know that.”


A Soviet WW II tank painted pink is located on a boat in front of the National Theatre in Prague June 20, 2011. (Reuters/David W Cerny)


Zeman was on a visit to Ukraine when the controversial installation was mounted. Through his spokesperson he declined to comment on the statue that he had not seen, Czech media reported.


Cerny is known for being provocative in his art. The floating hand is also not the first time that he has flipped the bird to make his point.


The artist first gained wide attention in 1991 when he got arrested after painting pink a monument to the Soviet tank – commemorating the liberation of Czechoslovakia by the Red Army in 1945 – and placing a raised middle finger on top of it. 


Cerny also came up with kind of a logo of a red hand, giving the finger with an obscene slogan written beneath it, referring to the Czech Communist Party. The offending finger was given even more prominence after the Rolling Stone’s Keith Richards wore a T-shirt with the logo on it on stage in 2003.


Czech sculptor David Cerny (AFP Photo)





RT – NewsPost id = does not exist.



Provocative art: Rebel sculptor gives Czech president the finger ahead of polls

Polls: Shutdown nightmare for GOP

John Boehner and House Republicans are shown. | AP Photo

A majority of Republicans said Congress would be better if most members lost their jobs. | AP Photo





The public’s opinion of Congress and the Republican Party has plummeted in the wake of the government shutdown, with two new polls showing record and near-record levels of disapproval.


Forty-seven percent of those surveyed said Congress would be better off if nearly every member was replaced in a new USA Today/Princeton Survey Research poll. Only 4 percent said replacing nearly every member would make Congress worse.







That tops the 40 percent who felt it would be better for Congress in 1994, when Democrats lost their majority, and the 42 percent who felt that way in 2006, when Republicans lost their majority.


Among Republicans, who have the majority in the House, 52 percent said Congress would be better off if most members lost their jobs.


The poll also found Republicans taking the blame for the shutdown: Americans said the GOP was responsible over Democrats 39 percent to 19 percent, with 36 percent blaming both parties equally.


Congress also received its worst approval rating ever in a new Washington Post-ABC News poll. Just 12 percent approved of the job Congress was doing, and 85 percent disapproved — 70 percent strongly. That is Congress’s worst rating in the nearly 25-year history of the Post’s polling on the subject, and compares to a 31 percent approval of Congress before the 1996 election. In July, Congress’s approval was at 21 percent.


President Barack Obama’s approval has held steady during the shutdown, at 48 percent approval to 49 percent disapproval in Tuesday’s poll.


The Post poll also found Republicans bearing the brunt of Americans’ anger: Only 32 percent, a new low, viewed the GOP favorably, and Americans blamed them for the shutdown over Obama, 53 percent to 29 percent.


USA Today surveyed 1,001 adults from Oct. 17 to 20 for its poll, which has an error margin of plus or minus 4 percentage points. The Post surveyed 1,002 adults in the same time-frame for its poll, which has an error margin of plus or minus 3.5 percentage points.




POLITICO – Congress



Polls: Shutdown nightmare for GOP

Tuesday, September 24, 2013

McAuliffe Leads Va. Governor"s Race in New Polls



Democrat Terry McAuliffe has pulled further ahead of Republican Ken Cuccinelli in the Virginia governor’s race, according to a pair of new polls.


The former Democratic National Committee chairman leads the state’s attorney general, 47 percent to 39 percent, among likely voters in the Old Dominion, according to a Washington Post-Abt SRBI poll. Libertarian candidate Robert Sarvis garners 10 percent of the support. Without Sarvis, McAuliffe’s lead narrows: 49 percent back him while 44 percent support Cuccinelli.


Another poll by NBC4/NBC News/Marist finds a slightly closer race, with McAuliffe leading by 43 percent to 38 percent among likely voters. Sarvis takes 8 percent of the vote. These numbers mark a change since May, when Cuccinelli led, 45 percent to 42 percent, in this same poll.


In both surveys, female voters fuel McAuliffe’s lead. The Washington Post poll finds the Democrat leading among women by 24 percentage points. The NBC survey shows McAuliffe with an 18-point lead among women. McAuliffe has been targeting women voters with ads hitting Cuccinelli for his stance on abortion.


Likability has also become a factor in this race, with both candidates embroiled in scandal — McAuliffe with his GreenTech car company and Cuccinelli with gifts received from a wealthy donor.


The Washington Post survey finds 48 percent of registered voters view McAuliffe favorably, while 36 percent find him unfavorably. Cuccinelli’s numbers are under water: 40 percent view him favorably while 47 percent view him unfavorably. NBC finds a similar dynamic. McAuliffe remains in positive territory, but with slightly lower numbers: 41 percent view him favorably, 34 percent negatively. Cuccinelli remains in the negative: 34 percent view him favorably, 47 percent unfavorably. The May poll found the Republican with positive ratings.


The two candidates will meet face to face Wednesday in Northern Virginia, a key area of the state, in a debate sponsored by NBC4 Washington and the Fairfax County Chamber of Commerce.


The RealClearPolitics polling average finds McAuliffe leading by four percentage points.


Lee Miringoff, the director of the Marist Institute for Public Opinion, told NBC News that “neither of these candidates has really passed the comfort level with Virginia voters.” With six weeks to go until Election Day, “there’s still a ways to go with where they are.”


The Post poll, conducted Sept. 19-22, surveyed 562 likely voters and had margin of error of plus or minus five percentage points. The NBC poll, conducted Sept. 17-19, surveyed 546 likely voters and had a margin of error of plus or minus 4.2 percentage points. 




Caitlin Huey-Burns is a congressional reporter for RealClearPolitics. She can be reached at chueyburns@realclearpolitics.com. Follow her on Twitter @CHueyBurnsRCP.




RealClearPolitics – Articles



McAuliffe Leads Va. Governor"s Race in New Polls

McAuliffe Leads Va. Governor"s Race in New Polls



Democrat Terry McAuliffe has pulled further ahead of Republican Ken Cuccinelli in the Virginia governor’s race, according to a pair of new polls.


The former Democratic National Committee chairman leads the state’s attorney general, 47 percent to 39 percent, among likely voters in the Old Dominion, according to a Washington Post-Abt SRBI poll. Libertarian candidate Robert Sarvis garners 10 percent of the support. Without Sarvis, McAuliffe’s lead narrows: 49 percent back him while 44 percent support Cuccinelli.


Another poll by NBC4/NBC News/Marist finds a slightly closer race, with McAuliffe leading by 43 percent to 38 percent among likely voters. Sarvis takes 8 percent of the vote. These numbers mark a change since May, when Cuccinelli led, 45 percent to 42 percent, in this same poll.


In both surveys, female voters fuel McAuliffe’s lead. The Washington Post poll finds the Democrat leading among women by 24 percentage points. The NBC survey shows McAuliffe with an 18-point lead among women. McAuliffe has been targeting women voters with ads hitting Cuccinelli for his stance on abortion.


Likability has also become a factor in this race, with both candidates embroiled in scandal — McAuliffe with his GreenTech car company and Cuccinelli with gifts received from a wealthy donor.


The Washington Post survey finds 48 percent of registered voters view McAuliffe favorably, while 36 percent find him unfavorably. Cuccinelli’s numbers are under water: 40 percent view him favorably while 47 percent view him unfavorably. NBC finds a similar dynamic. McAuliffe remains in positive territory, but with slightly lower numbers: 41 percent view him favorably, 34 percent negatively. Cuccinelli remains in the negative: 34 percent view him favorably, 47 percent unfavorably. The May poll found the Republican with positive ratings.


The two candidates will meet face to face Wednesday in Northern Virginia, a key area of the state, in a debate sponsored by NBC4 Washington and the Fairfax County Chamber of Commerce.


The RealClearPolitics polling average finds McAuliffe leading by four percentage points.


Lee Miringoff, the director of the Marist Institute for Public Opinion, told NBC News that “neither of these candidates has really passed the comfort level with Virginia voters.” With six weeks to go until Election Day, “there’s still a ways to go with where they are.”


The Post poll, conducted Sept. 19-22, surveyed 562 likely voters and had margin of error of plus or minus five percentage points. The NBC poll, conducted Sept. 17-19, surveyed 546 likely voters and had a margin of error of plus or minus 4.2 percentage points. 




Caitlin Huey-Burns is a congressional reporter for RealClearPolitics. She can be reached at chueyburns@realclearpolitics.com. Follow her on Twitter @CHueyBurnsRCP.




RealClearPolitics – Articles



McAuliffe Leads Va. Governor"s Race in New Polls

Sunday, August 11, 2013

Malians return to polls for 2nd round of voting






AAA  Aug. 11, 2013 5:08 AM ET
Malians return to polls for 2nd round of voting
By BABA AHMED and KRISTA LARSONBy BABA AHMED and KRISTA LARSON, Associated Press THE ASSOCIATED PRESS STATEMENT OF NEWS VALUES AND PRINCIPLES 






FILE – In this Sunday, July 28, 2013 file photo, men search for their names on a list of registered voters outside a polling station, in Kidal, Mali. Longtime politician Ibrahim Boubacar Keita, who many hope will hold strife-torn Mali together, heads into the presidential runoff election on Sunday, Aug. 11, 2013 as the clear favorite. Whether Keita will win such a strong mandate across Mali, though, remains unclear in a country where northern rebels do not fly the national flag and pelted his plane with rocks on a campaign stop there. This West African country’s pivotal election is aimed at unlocking some $ 4 billion in aid promised by international donors after more than a year of turmoil.(AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell, File)





FILE – In this Sunday, July 28, 2013 file photo, men search for their names on a list of registered voters outside a polling station, in Kidal, Mali. Longtime politician Ibrahim Boubacar Keita, who many hope will hold strife-torn Mali together, heads into the presidential runoff election on Sunday, Aug. 11, 2013 as the clear favorite. Whether Keita will win such a strong mandate across Mali, though, remains unclear in a country where northern rebels do not fly the national flag and pelted his plane with rocks on a campaign stop there. This West African country’s pivotal election is aimed at unlocking some $ 4 billion in aid promised by international donors after more than a year of turmoil.(AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell, File)





FILE – In this Sunday, July 21, 2013 file photo, presidential candidate Ibrahim Boubacar Keita, known by his initials ‘IBK,’ shakes hands with supporters as he arrives at the airport in Sevare, Mali. Longtime politician Keita, who many hope will hold strife-torn Mali together, heads into the presidential runoff election on Sunday, Aug. 11, as the clear favorite with endorsements from nearly all of the 28 candidates from the first round. Whether Keita will win such a strong mandate across Mali, though, remains unclear in a country where northern rebels do not fly the national flag and pelted his plane with rocks on a campaign stop there. (AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell, File)





FILE – In this Saturday, July 27, 2013 file photo, women hold separatist flags as they demonstrate against the vote, on the eve of the presidential election, in Kidal, Mali. Longtime politician Ibrahim Boubacar Keita, who many hope will hold strife-torn Mali together, heads into the presidential runoff election on Sunday, Aug. 11, 2013 as the clear favorite. Whether Keita will win such a strong mandate across Mali, though, remains unclear in a country where northern rebels do not fly the national flag and pelted his plane with rocks on a campaign stop there. This West African country’s pivotal election is aimed at unlocking some $ 4 billion in aid promised by international donors after more than a year of turmoil.(AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell, File)





FILE – In this Sunday, July 28, 2013 file photo, a French military convoy passes through a neighborhood as it escorts election materials to a polling station in Kidal, northern Mali. Longtime politician Ibrahim Boubacar Keita, who many hope will hold the strife-torn country together, heads into the presidential runoff election on Sunday, Aug. 11, 2013 as the clear favorite. Whether Keita will win such a strong mandate across Mali, though, remains unclear in a country where northern rebels do not fly the national flag and pelted his plane with rocks on a campaign stop there. This West African country’s pivotal election is aimed at unlocking some $ 4 billion in aid promised by international donors after more than a year of turmoil.(AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell, File)













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(AP) — Voters are choosing Sunday who should lead Mali out of turmoil after a coup, separatist rebellion and an Islamic insurgency unraveled one of West Africa’s most stable democracies, prompting a French military intervention earlier this year.


The presidential runoff vote between former Prime Minister Ibrahim Boubacar Keita and former Finance Minister Soumaila Cisse is aimed at unlocking some $ 4 billion in aid that has been promised to help Mali recover. The funds, though, are contingent on a democratically elected government being in place.


Keita, known by his initials “IBK,” has run on a campaign of restoring Mali’s honor after a French-led military operation forced the jihadists into the desert earlier this year and paved the way for the Malian military to return to the northern cities it had fled in the wake of the 2012 Tuareg rebellion.


Turnout in the first round of voting was nearly 50 percent, though in the northern provincial capital of Kidal where rebel flags still fly, it was a mere 12 percent. Separatist sentiment there remains high, though some within the National Movement for the Liberation of the Azawad had endorsed Keita because of his promise to hold a national dialogue on the crisis there.


Heavy rains kept many polling stations from opening on time Sunday in the capital of Bamako.


“We think that around 10 a.m. or 11 a.m., the voters will come out. There’s a possibility the governor of Bamako will extend the polling stations’ closing hours if he deems it necessary,” said Issaga Kampo, vice president of the National Independent Electoral Commission.


During the first round of voting, technical glitches kept many from casting ballots. Voters showed up at polling stations only to find their names were not on the list. Others encountered difficulties obtaining their voting cards ahead of the July 28 first-round ballot.


The presidential election is the first since the separatist Tuareg rebellion in northern Mali in early 2012 sparked anger within the military and led to a March 2012 coup that overthrew longtime President Amadou Toumani Toure. The chaotic aftermath allowed those separatists, and later Islamic extremists linked to al-Qaida, to grab control of an area the size of France.


Tens of thousands of northerners poured into the southern capital of this mostly moderate Muslim nation to flee the violence and harsh Islamic law that meted out punishments like amputations for alleged theft and whippings to women who went in public without their heads covered. Many are still here, and nearly 200,000 remain in neighboring Mauritania, Burkina Faso and Niger.


The U.N. refugee agency said initial estimates indicated only about 1,220 of them voted in the first round, though election materials also were being flown in for the second round poll.


___


Larson reported from Dakar, Senegal.


Associated Press










Top Headlines



Malians return to polls for 2nd round of voting

Sunday, August 4, 2013

Australians to go to the polls on Sept. 7








Australia’s Prime Minister Kevin Rudd speaks during a press conference at the Parliament House in Canberra, Sunday, Aug. 4, 2013. Prime Minister Rudd called an election on Sept. 7 and said Sunday that it will be fought over who can be trusted to manage the Australian economy as it transitions from a decade-old mining boom fed by Chinese industrial demand that is now fading.(AP Photo/AAP, Lukas Coch) AUSTRALIA OUT





Australia’s Prime Minister Kevin Rudd speaks during a press conference at the Parliament House in Canberra, Sunday, Aug. 4, 2013. Prime Minister Rudd called an election on Sept. 7 and said Sunday that it will be fought over who can be trusted to manage the Australian economy as it transitions from a decade-old mining boom fed by Chinese industrial demand that is now fading.(AP Photo/AAP, Lukas Coch) AUSTRALIA OUT













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CANBERRA, Australia (AP) — Prime Minister Kevin Rudd called an election for Sept. 7 and said Sunday that it will be fought over who can be trusted to manage the Australian economy as it transitions from a decade-old mining boom fed by Chinese industrial demand that is now fading.


In starting the five-week election campaign, Rudd said the economy can no longer rely on Chinese demand for iron ore and coal that made the country one of the few wealthy nations to avoid a recession during the global economic downturn.


“The boom, of course, has fuelled so much of our nation’s wealth,” he told reporters at Parliament House. “That boom is over.”


“Who do the Australian people trust to best lead them through the new economic challenges that lie ahead?” he asked.


Rudd conceded that his center-left Labor Party was the underdog, saying his advisers had told him that if the election had been held this weekend, his government would have lost.


But opinion polls also show that more voters prefer Rudd, a 55-year-old Chinese-speaking former Beijing diplomat, as prime minister than opposition leader Tony Abbott, a former Roman Catholic seminarian and journalist who is also 55.


Latest economic figures show a sharp decline in the nation’s finances, with the Treasury Department on Friday raising its estimated deficit for the current fiscal year to 30.1 billion Australian dollars ($ 26.8 billion) due to the mining slowdown. The new forecast for the year ending June 30, 2014, reveals a substantial deterioration in Australia’s finances since May, when the department forecast a deficit of AU$ 18 billion.


The government also announced a AU$ 33.3 billion shortfall in the revenue forecast over the next four years — a deterioration of about AU$ 3 billion a week since the May forecast.


Economic growth for the fiscal year, forecast at 2.75 percent in May, was downgraded on Friday to 2.5 percent.


The unemployment rate forecast in May to rise to 5.75 percent in the current fiscal year was revised up to 6.25 percent. The latest figures show the Australian jobless rate crept from 5.6 percent in May to 5.7 percent in June.


The conservative Liberal Party-led opposition coalition has accused the government of wasting money on stimulus spending after the last conservative government delivered surplus budgets years after year until it lost power in 2007.


After the election was announced, Abbott promised to “get the budget back under control,” and listed scrapping the unpopular carbon tax among his top priorities if elected.


The election promises to be an extraordinary contest for Australian politics. Labor leads Australia’s first minority government since World War II, and polls suggest the opposition faces an easier task picking up seats than Labor does.


Labor holds 71 seats in the 150-seat House of Representatives where parties form governments. The opposition holds 72 seats, with the remainder held by independent lawmakers or sole legislators from minor parties.


A recent poll has shown that secrets spiller Julian Assange and his WikiLeaks Party have a realistic chance of winning seats in the 78-seat Senate.


Rudd was first elected prime minister in 2007 but was ousted in 2010 by his then deputy Julia Gillard in an internal leadership showdown among Labor lawmakers.


He reclaimed the leadership in a similar challenge on June 26 as the government faced the prospect of a loss of historic portions with Gillard at the helm.


Since then, Rudd has changed several key policy positions, and opinion polls suggest Labor is closing the opposition’s lead.


Abbott opposes charging polluters for their carbon gas emissions, despite Australia having some of the world’s worst emission rates on a per capita basis. He has vowed to give priority to scrapping both the carbon and mining taxes.


Both taxes were introduced by Labor in July 2012. The carbon tax on Australia’s biggest polluters rose from AU$ 23 a metric ton of carbon dioxide to AU$ 24.15 from July 1, 2013. The opposition argues this is the world’s highest tax rate on carbon dioxide and is making Australian industry uncompetitive.


The tax is due to be replaced in 2015 by an emissions trading scheme, in which the cost of emitting a metric ton of carbon would be determined by buyers and sellers in a carbon market.


Rudd has pledged to bring forward the emission trading scheme linked to the European market by a year to July 2014, reducing the cost to Australians of emitting a metric ton of carb dioxide from AU$ 25.40 to an estimated AU$ 6.


The 30 percent mining tax on the profits of iron ore and coal miners was designed to cash in on burgeoning profits from a mineral boom fueled by Chinese industrial demand. But the boom was cooling before the tax took effect, with prices for iron ore and coal peaking in 2011. The tax was initially forecast to earn the government AU$ 3 billion in its first year but collected only AU$ 126 million after six months.


The opposition has also promised to scale down the government’s plan to build an AU$ 37.4 billion high-speed fiber-optic national broadband network. The government boasts it is the biggest infrastructure project in Australian history.


The opposition proposes a slower, AU$ 20 billion version that would incorporate the aging copper wire network rather than replace it.


The opposition would also introduce a new tax on big business to pay for a new maternity leave entitlement for middle and high income earners.


Mothers would be paid their usual salary of up to AU$ 150,000 while they take up to six months off work on maternity leave.


Mothers are currently entitled to the minimum wage of AU$ 622.10 a week for 18 weeks for maternity leave.


Both Labor and Liberal parties have promised to curb the number of asylum seekers reaching Australia by boat but propose different strategies to achieve this aim.


Labor has promised that every bona fide refugee who attempts to reach Australia by boat from July 19 will be settled on the impoverished South Pacific island nations of Papua New Guinea or Nauru.


The Liberals have promised new policies of turning asylum seeker boats back and creating temporary protection visas so that refugees can be sent back to their homelands when conditions improve.


Rudd said the September date meant he would not attend the G20 meeting in Russia that week, but Australia would likely be represented by Foreign Minister Bob Carr.


Associated Press




Top Headlines



Australians to go to the polls on Sept. 7

Australians to go to the polls on Sept. 7








Australia’s Prime Minister Kevin Rudd speaks during a press conference at the Parliament House in Canberra, Sunday, Aug. 4, 2013. Prime Minister Rudd called an election on Sept. 7 and said Sunday that it will be fought over who can be trusted to manage the Australian economy as it transitions from a decade-old mining boom fed by Chinese industrial demand that is now fading.(AP Photo/AAP, Lukas Coch) AUSTRALIA OUT





Australia’s Prime Minister Kevin Rudd speaks during a press conference at the Parliament House in Canberra, Sunday, Aug. 4, 2013. Prime Minister Rudd called an election on Sept. 7 and said Sunday that it will be fought over who can be trusted to manage the Australian economy as it transitions from a decade-old mining boom fed by Chinese industrial demand that is now fading.(AP Photo/AAP, Lukas Coch) AUSTRALIA OUT













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CANBERRA, Australia (AP) — Prime Minister Kevin Rudd called an election for Sept. 7 and said Sunday that it will be fought over who can be trusted to manage the Australian economy as it transitions from a decade-old mining boom fed by Chinese industrial demand that is now fading.


In starting the five-week election campaign, Rudd said the economy can no longer rely on Chinese demand for iron ore and coal that made the country one of the few wealthy nations to avoid a recession during the global economic downturn.


“The boom, of course, has fuelled so much of our nation’s wealth,” he told reporters at Parliament House. “That boom is over.”


“Who do the Australian people trust to best lead them through the new economic challenges that lie ahead?” he asked.


Rudd conceded that his center-left Labor Party was the underdog, saying his advisers had told him that if the election had been held this weekend, his government would have lost.


But opinion polls also show that more voters prefer Rudd, a 55-year-old Chinese-speaking former Beijing diplomat, as prime minister than opposition leader Tony Abbott, a former Roman Catholic seminarian and journalist who is also 55.


Latest economic figures show a sharp decline in the nation’s finances, with the Treasury Department on Friday raising its estimated deficit for the current fiscal year to 30.1 billion Australian dollars ($ 26.8 billion) due to the mining slowdown. The new forecast for the year ending June 30, 2014, reveals a substantial deterioration in Australia’s finances since May, when the department forecast a deficit of AU$ 18 billion.


The government also announced a AU$ 33.3 billion shortfall in the revenue forecast over the next four years — a deterioration of about AU$ 3 billion a week since the May forecast.


Economic growth for the fiscal year, forecast at 2.75 percent in May, was downgraded on Friday to 2.5 percent.


The unemployment rate forecast in May to rise to 5.75 percent in the current fiscal year was revised up to 6.25 percent. The latest figures show the Australian jobless rate crept from 5.6 percent in May to 5.7 percent in June.


The conservative Liberal Party-led opposition coalition has accused the government of wasting money on stimulus spending after the last conservative government delivered surplus budgets years after year until it lost power in 2007.


After the election was announced, Abbott promised to “get the budget back under control,” and listed scrapping the unpopular carbon tax among his top priorities if elected.


The election promises to be an extraordinary contest for Australian politics. Labor leads Australia’s first minority government since World War II, and polls suggest the opposition faces an easier task picking up seats than Labor does.


Labor holds 71 seats in the 150-seat House of Representatives where parties form governments. The opposition holds 72 seats, with the remainder held by independent lawmakers or sole legislators from minor parties.


A recent poll has shown that secrets spiller Julian Assange and his WikiLeaks Party have a realistic chance of winning seats in the 78-seat Senate.


Rudd was first elected prime minister in 2007 but was ousted in 2010 by his then deputy Julia Gillard in an internal leadership showdown among Labor lawmakers.


He reclaimed the leadership in a similar challenge on June 26 as the government faced the prospect of a loss of historic portions with Gillard at the helm.


Since then, Rudd has changed several key policy positions, and opinion polls suggest Labor is closing the opposition’s lead.


Abbott opposes charging polluters for their carbon gas emissions, despite Australia having some of the world’s worst emission rates on a per capita basis. He has vowed to give priority to scrapping both the carbon and mining taxes.


Both taxes were introduced by Labor in July 2012. The carbon tax on Australia’s biggest polluters rose from AU$ 23 a metric ton of carbon dioxide to AU$ 24.15 from July 1, 2013. The opposition argues this is the world’s highest tax rate on carbon dioxide and is making Australian industry uncompetitive.


The tax is due to be replaced in 2015 by an emissions trading scheme, in which the cost of emitting a metric ton of carbon would be determined by buyers and sellers in a carbon market.


Rudd has pledged to bring forward the emission trading scheme linked to the European market by a year to July 2014, reducing the cost to Australians of emitting a metric ton of carb dioxide from AU$ 25.40 to an estimated AU$ 6.


The 30 percent mining tax on the profits of iron ore and coal miners was designed to cash in on burgeoning profits from a mineral boom fueled by Chinese industrial demand. But the boom was cooling before the tax took effect, with prices for iron ore and coal peaking in 2011. The tax was initially forecast to earn the government AU$ 3 billion in its first year but collected only AU$ 126 million after six months.


The opposition has also promised to scale down the government’s plan to build an AU$ 37.4 billion high-speed fiber-optic national broadband network. The government boasts it is the biggest infrastructure project in Australian history.


The opposition proposes a slower, AU$ 20 billion version that would incorporate the aging copper wire network rather than replace it.


The opposition would also introduce a new tax on big business to pay for a new maternity leave entitlement for middle and high income earners.


Mothers would be paid their usual salary of up to AU$ 150,000 while they take up to six months off work on maternity leave.


Mothers are currently entitled to the minimum wage of AU$ 622.10 a week for 18 weeks for maternity leave.


Both Labor and Liberal parties have promised to curb the number of asylum seekers reaching Australia by boat but propose different strategies to achieve this aim.


Labor has promised that every bona fide refugee who attempts to reach Australia by boat from July 19 will be settled on the impoverished South Pacific island nations of Papua New Guinea or Nauru.


The Liberals have promised new policies of turning asylum seeker boats back and creating temporary protection visas so that refugees can be sent back to their homelands when conditions improve.


Rudd said the September date meant he would not attend the G20 meeting in Russia that week, but Australia would likely be represented by Foreign Minister Bob Carr.


Associated Press




Top Headlines



Australians to go to the polls on Sept. 7

Sunday, July 28, 2013

Cambodia goes to polls but results all-but-certain




  • Hun Sen has been in office for 28 years

  • The three main parties teamed up, and hoped for strength in numbers

  • More than 9 million people were eligible to vote

  • Opposition parties alleged widespread irregularities



Phnom Penh, Cambodia (CNN) — Cambodians went to the polls Sunday for an election whose outcome is all but certain: five more years in power for long-serving Prime Minister Hun Sen.


Hun Sen has been in office for 28 years. And so confident was he of victory, he didn’t bother campaigning ahead of the elections.


Still, opposition groups were energized.


The three main parties teamed up, and hoped for strength in numbers: Enough votes to take over control from the ruling party.


More than 9 million people were eligible to vote.


The excitement bubbled over Friday when opposition leader Sam Rainsy returned home from exile in France.


He left in 2009 to avoid prison on charges of spreading disinformation — charges many considered politically motivated. International pressure led to him receiving a royal pardon last week. But he arrived too late to run for office.


On election day, opposition parties alleged that widespread irregularities had marred the balloting.


At a local high school in Phnom Penh, the names of voters registered with the opposition parties were either missing or misspelled — meaning they couldn’t vote.


The national election committee said it worked hard to ensure the election was far.


“In preparing for the election this year, we started in the middle of 2012,” said Tep Nytha, the secretary general of the committee, ahead of the balloting.


Opposition supporters told CNN that if they end up losing the election due to voter fraud, they will appeal the results — but do so in a peaceful way.


They will take their grievance to the United Nations, they said, rather than to the streets.


Final results are expected to be announced later Sunday.




CNN.com Recently Published/Updated



Cambodia goes to polls but results all-but-certain

Friday, June 14, 2013

Iran says polls close across the country





Iranian women queue in a polling station to vote for the presidential and municipal councils elections, in Tehran, Iran, Friday, June 14, 2013. Iran’s supreme leader delivered a salty rebuke to the U.S. Friday as Iranians lined up to vote in a presidential election that has suddenly become a showdown across the Islamic Republic’s political divide: hard-liners looking to cement their control and re-energized reformists backing the lone moderate. (AP Photo/Vahid Salemi)





Iranian women queue in a polling station to vote for the presidential and municipal councils elections, in Tehran, Iran, Friday, June 14, 2013. Iran’s supreme leader delivered a salty rebuke to the U.S. Friday as Iranians lined up to vote in a presidential election that has suddenly become a showdown across the Islamic Republic’s political divide: hard-liners looking to cement their control and re-energized reformists backing the lone moderate. (AP Photo/Vahid Salemi)





In this photo released by an official website of the Iranian supreme leader’s office, Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei casts his ballot in the presidential election without publicly endorsing a candidate, in Tehran, Iran, Friday, June 14, 2013. On Friday, Khamenei delivered a salty rebuke to U.S. questions over the openness of the presidential contest , telling Washington “the hell with you” after casting his ballot in a race widely criticized in the West as pre-rigged in favor of Tehran’s ruling system. (AP Photo/Office of the Supreme Leader)





Iranian women attend a polling station to vote for the presidential and municipal councils elections in downtown Tehran, Iran, Friday, June 14, 2013. (AP Photo/Vahid Salemi)





Iranian citizens wait to get ballots for the Iranian presidential election at a polling station inside the Sadr Mosque in the Kazimiyah district of Baghdad, Iraq, Friday, June 14, 2013. Iranian voters appeared to heed calls to cast ballots Friday in a presidential election that has suddenly become a showdown across Iran’s political divide: Hard-liners looking to cement their control and re-energized reformists backing the lone moderate left in the race. (AP Photo/ Khalid Mohammed)





Iranian nationals queue to vote in the Iran presidential election at the Iranian Consulate in London, Friday, June 14, 2013. Iran holds presidential elections on Friday, June 14, to choose a successor to Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who cannot run for a third consecutive term in office. Six candidates remain in the race, a moderate, four conservatives and a hard-liner. (AP Photo/Sang Tan)





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Iran says polls close across the country