Showing posts with label would. Show all posts
Showing posts with label would. Show all posts

Saturday, April 5, 2014

Bill would require Florida craft brewers to sell beer to distributors, then buy it back for resale

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Bill would require Florida craft brewers to sell beer to distributors, then buy it back for resale

Monday, March 31, 2014

"I Would Have Painted the Walls With My Blood"


The knock on the door came just before 6pm last Saturday. Tom and Jane Hollinghurst and their younger daughter Hannah, 11, were sitting beside the swimming pool behind their home.


It was the kind of balmy Florida evening that the British couple had grown used to in the six years since they emigrated from Derbyshire. The sprinkler system was spreading waves of mist over the lawn. Nothing could have prepared them for what they were about to learn.


Jane Hollinghurst answered the door. When the two uniformed officers asked her to confirm her name, she summoned her husband.


“I have to inform you of some terrible news,” said Deputy Jason Platt. “Your daughter Alexandria was involved in a shooting incident in the early hours of this morning. I’m sorry to tell you that she, Brandon Goode and a police officer were found deceased.”


Alex, as she was known, was 17 and had been counting the days to her 18th birthday and adulthood. A petite blonde with blue-green eyes and an academic record that guaranteed her a good university place, she was popular at the local high school in Davenport, near Disney World, where she had worked part-time.


The boys who tried to go out with her had soon realised that she was interested only in her boyfriend, Brandon, an intense youth with slicked-back hair who had just turned 18. To the dismay of Alex’s parents, the couple had become almost inseparable over the previous three years.


“He was a super smart kid,” said Dominic Russo, who had known Brandon since they were both 10. “He’d come in with a new dress shirt and tie on every day. I guess he wanted to be GQ. High-end clothes. Different.”


Last month, Brandon and Alex were stopped by police in his silver Isuzu Rodeo and arrested after glass pipes and cannabis were found. Brandon was held in jail overnight and Alex taken to a juvenile assessment centre. They were due to appear in court last week. After yet another ugly row with her mother — there had been so many about sex or alcohol or drugs — Alex was forced to hand her mobile phone to her parents.


Unbeknown to the Hollinghursts, it was not Brandon’s first arrest. Less than two years earlier, his mother Connie had walked into the living room to find Brandon, his head shaven, sitting on the couch. Blankets had been used to cover some of the windows.


As she approached him, Brandon turned around. His face was covered in black paint and he had an axe. Brandon jumped up and pinned her to the wall, demanding that she accept a divorce settlement from his father.


But Sheriff Grady Judd, trying to make sense of events last weekend declined to portray Brandon as anything like the character played by Woody Harrelson in the film Natural Born Killers, where a psychopathic couple embark on a spree of mayhem and murder.


“He wasn’t a thug,” the sheriff said. “I consider him a child in search of direction in life. The incident with the axe was a divorce thing. He violated the law by being in possession of marijuana but he was not, by any stretch of the imagination, the criminal type that we see so often. This just does not fit the mould.”


THE Hollinghurst family emigrated to the US when Alex was 11. Andrew Cartledge, her primary school headmaster in Hadfield, Derbyshire, remembered “a great child” with an infectious smile. 




RealClearPolitics – Articles



"I Would Have Painted the Walls With My Blood"

Monday, March 10, 2014

What Would the West Fight For?



In 1983, an idealistic student of political science at Columbia University in New York penned an article for the university magazine railing against the “war mentality” of America and “the relentless, often silent spread of militarism in the country”.


President Ronald Reagan was a hostage to the “twisted logic of the Cold War”, the student wrote, and was “playing into the Russians’ hands” rather than “shifting America off the dead-end track” and pursuing the proper goal of a “nuclear free world”.


A quarter of a century later, the author — Barack Obama — was elected to the White House. While due allowance should be made for the callow scribblings of any student, there have been striking echoes of Obama’s youthful suspicion of American power during his five years as president.


Last December, after Obama declared that the use of chemical weapons by Syria would be a “red line” for the United States, President Bashar al-Assad’s regime killed an estimated 1,400 people, many of them children, in a chemical weapons strike on Damascus.


Obama ruminated for weeks about how to respond. With aides briefing that any action had to be “just muscular enough not to get mocked” and both parties on Capitol Hill reluctant to authorise any action, Obama opted to do nothing.


He was outmanoeuvred by President Vladimir Putin of Russia, who had conjured up a peace plan in which Assad’s stockpile of chemical weapons would be traded for a US undertaking not to use force. Obama had shown that his own words about a “red line” meant nothing.


“America is not the world’s policeman,” he declared. “Terrible things happen across the globe and it is beyond our means to right every wrong.”


Obama’s “cool war” approach to the battle with al-Qaeda meant that he had already stepped up politically risk-free drone strikes, killing some terrorist suspects and driving others from the tribal areas of Pakistan. He directed US Navy Seals to dispatch Osama bin Laden.


In dealing with other powers, however, he has been hesitant. The Syria deal made him look passive. Privately, White House aides now admit that Assad may never hand over his entire chemical arsenal.


“Obama’s basically someone who doesn’t want to get dragged into foreign policy, wants to focus on domestic issues, doesn’t believe that force or pressure is an answer and wants to have others lead and then the US can slot in behind,” said Kurt Volker, a former American ambassador to Nato under President George W Bush.


Vali Nasr, a former senior State Department official under Obama, said: “Once you have multiple crises in which a particular perception of the US and its credibility and policy gains ground, it becomes established and those who want to challenge the US and international norms will become much more brazen and confident.”


Putin realised that he could act with relative impunity. Keen to prevent Ukraine signing a trade deal with the European Union late last year, he offered enough money to Viktor Yanukovych, the president of Ukraine, to persuade him to cast the agreement aside.


When Yanukovych responded with brutal repression to popular anger on the streets over the retreat from the EU — and then fled the country — Putin had his own plan ready. Russians flooded out of their bases in Crimea and occupied the pro-Russian region in southeast Ukraine.


The Russian leader moved quickly to take control of CrimeaThe Russian leader moved quickly to take control of Crimea The Obama administration was reluctant to characterise the Russian military push — a flagrant breach of Ukraine’s sovereignty and international law — as a hostile action.


Instead it chose to term it an “uncontested arrival”, the most startling US foreign policy euphemism since the “war on terror” was renamed an “overseas contingency operation”.


Although Obama has belatedly ratcheted up the US reaction, imposing sanctions and visa restrictions and promising Ukraine $ 1bn (£600m) in aid, Putin has shown no sign of changing course. By Friday, despite a 90-minute telephone call with Obama, he was making clear his determination to hold a referendum in Russian-majority Crimea and then to annex it.


In a telephone call on Saturday afternoon, David Cameron spoke to Obama about the crisis. A No 10 spokesman said: “Both the prime minister and the president firmly believe that the proposed referendum in Crimea would be illegal and that any attempt to legitimise it would result in further consequences for Russia.”


THE Obama administration’s calculation appears to have been that Ukraine would be best left to the EU. Some officials felt US involvement might provoke a return to Cold War tensions over a strategically important country.


The EU failed to deliver. Both Washington and Brussels were blindsided by Yanukovych’s renewed embrace of Russia and subsequent inability to keep control, just as they had been when Russians moved into Georgia in 2008 while Bush was still president.


David Cameron, in Libya, and President François Hollande, in Somalia and Mali, have shown they are prepared to commit forces even after the costly wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.


However, a YouGov poll for The Sunday Times today finds only minority support for any form of British response to events in Ukraine, from 11% for military action to 42% for economic sanctions.


Britain and the Europeans are constrained by financial ties to Russia, just as the United States fears that alienating Moscow could undermine talks over Syria and Iran.


A document inadvertently displayed in Downing Street last week by Hugh Powell, the deputy national security adviser, revealed the government’s belief that the “UK should not support for now, trade sanctions … or close London’s financial centre to Russians”.


Hollande has opted not to cancel France’s £1.1bn deal to supply Russia with two Mistral-class warships. Angela Merkel, the German chancellor who speaks Russian and telephoned Putin at least three times last week, knows that 35% of German oil and gas imports come from Russia and 6,000 German companies do business there.


No one — apart from the Ukrainians — feels the effects of Obama’s disengagement more acutely than Latvia, where almost a third of the population is ethnic Russian, Estonia, where Russians make up about 25%, Lithuania with about 6%, or Poland, with its memories of the 1939 Nazi and Soviet invasions.


Britain and the Europeans are constrained by financial ties to Russia, just as the United States fears that alienating Moscow could undermine talks over Syria and Iran.


A document inadvertently displayed in Downing Street last week by Hugh Powell, the deputy national security adviser, revealed the government’s belief that the “UK should not support for now, trade sanctions … or close London’s financial centre to Russians”.


Hollande has opted not to cancel France’s £1.1bn deal to supply Russia with two Mistral-class warships. Angela Merkel, the German chancellor who speaks Russian and telephoned Putin at least three times last week, knows that 35% of German oil and gas imports come from Russia and 6,000 German companies do business there.


No one — apart from the Ukrainians — feels the effects of Obama’s disengagement more acutely than Latvia, where almost a third of the population is ethnic Russian, Estonia, where Russians make up about 25%, Lithuania with about 6%, or Poland, with its memories of the 1939 Nazi invasion.


However, a Nato official said it was “important to note that a demand to invoke article 5 [the Nato treaty’s mutual defence clause] could be approved only by a consensus of all 28 member states”.


“The Kremlin respects strength and despises indecisiveness — they see compromise as weakness,” said a diplomat from another Baltic state concerned that the EU “needs a very long time to come up with a common position”.


Nasr said the EU’s hesitancy reflected that of the United States. “Strong American leadership is more compelling to allies, just as it is to adversaries,” he said. “So if the assessment is that the US is wavering it doesn’t really encourage others to rally.”


Obama has declared that “the tide of war is receding”and said his administration would “pivot” away from Europe and the Middle East towards Asia.


At a conference last year General John Kelly, head of US Southern Command, said: “Pivoting to the Pacific — there’s probably a threat out there but I’ll be damned if I can find it right now.” He also expressed concern about plans to reduce troops to levels not seen since 1940, despite continuing conflicts with al-Qaeda militants. He said: “We have never disarmed during a war.”


Nasr, now dean of the school of advanced international studies at Johns Hopkins University in Washington, said Putin had learnt from Syria that America was “not eager for a showdown or willing to take up the gauntlet”. He added: “Ultimately it’s a broad question of what kind of an aura of power, credibility and leadership does the US convey.”


After the Russians invaded Afghanistan at the end of 1979, President Jimmy Carter’s national security adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski wrote in a memo: “Since we have not always followed … verbal protests up with tangible responses, the Soviets may be getting into the habit of disregarding our concern.” Last week the New York Post branded Obama as “Jimmy Obama”, shorthand for a weak, feckless commander-in-chief.


David Rothkopf, a former official in the Clinton administration, wrote: “We have gone from Pax Americana to Lox Americana. Our policy time and time again has effectively been to lie there like a fish.”


WHAT would the West fight for now that Putin believes he has restored some of the prestige that Russia lost when the Soviet Union collapsed, an event he has described as the greatest catastrophe of the 20th century?


Volker, who now runs the McCain Institute for International Leadership, fears Obama’s reaction to a Russian invasion of a Baltic state might not be much more than an effort to “de- escalate” — a favourite word in the White House these days — to avoid further conflict.


As for western military action when there is no direct threat to a big EU or Nato power, Putin has concluded it is a remote prospect.


Jane Harman, who sat for eight years on the House intelligence committee, said she gave “high marks” to Obama and John Kerry, the secretary of state, for their cool deliberation in handling the Russian leader.


But travelling around the world as head of the Woodrow Wilson Centre think tank, she often encountered the view that Obama was not “tough”. She said: “There is a perception, especially in the Middle East, that he blinks.”


The notion of the “pivot” towards Asia was a mistake, Harman added: “I can’t think of any postage stamp on the globe where a US leadership role is not required.”


Henry Kissinger, at 90 the venerable sage of realist foreign policy, wrote last week that Russia had historic interests in Crimea and compromise was possible.


Kissinger’s argument included the contention that Ukraine should not be allowed to join Nato but should be a bridge between the EU and Russia rather than the venue for a showdown.


Volker believes Obama will not change. “You have seen a lot of this and you’re going to see more. Russia, Syria, the Egyptian generals, Karzai in Afghanistan, Iran within Iraq, the Shi’ite government of Iraq, Hezbollah — you can keep rattling them off. Everyone is reacting to this weakness.”


China might seize the Senkaku, also known as the Diayou, islands from Japan; Iran might judge that the cost of acquiring a nuclear weapon would be bearable; North Korea might flex its muscles; Assad’s Syria has no obvious need to come to the table.


“We create a vacuum by not engaging, not being involved, a vacuum where we’re not willing to apply force,” said Volker. “Whoever is willing steps in and takes what they want.” 




RealClearPolitics – Articles



What Would the West Fight For?

Friday, February 21, 2014

What Would a Communist Oklahoma Look Like?

People’s Blog

What Would a Communist Oklahoma Look Like?


I wish all of this had happened 20-30 years earlier. Face it, old age is a bitch. Trying to get back enough flexibility to kiss my ass goodbye at the proper moment ain’t as easy as it once was. read more … Statistics : 22 Replies || 1318 Views Last post by Subvet
The People’s Cube – Digest



What Would a Communist Oklahoma Look Like?

Wednesday, February 19, 2014

UNEMPLOYMENT BENEFITS ONGOING SAGA, More House Dems retire, CBO: MINIMUM WAGE HIKE WOULD COST THOUSANDS OF JOBS


By Ginger Gibson (ggibson@politico.com or @GingerGibson)


UNEMPLOYMENT BENEFITS ONGOING SAGA – A group of Senate Republicans are trying to get the politically dangerous issue of unemployment benefits off the congressional agenda before the fall election. POLITICO’s Burgess Everett has the story: “Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) has vowed to press the GOP on unemployment benefits — forcing them to keep taking votes on a bill to extend aid to the long-term unemployed. But Republicans have rejected it twice since the program expired on Dec. 28.


“Sens. Dan Coats of Indiana, Rob Portman of Ohio, Dean Heller of Nevada and Susan Collins of Maine want a deal that could bring the Democratic drumbeat to an end. They gathered last week to plan how to revisit the cause when the Senate returns next week, hoping they can get Democrats to agree to their policy changes and finally move the red-hot issue off the Senate’s plate. “We’re still working on the same thing, which is solving the problem,” Portman said in an interview Tuesday. “I continue to believe that we can solve this if Democrats want to.”


“The political maneuvering is a reminder that voting down money for a government program might be good politics for hard-liners running on slashing deficits and spending, but for centrists, especially those from states where jobless rates remain high, looking unsympathetic to the long-term unemployed is a big risk. That explains the nuanced positions of senators like Coats, who has surprised Democrats by engaging in the unemployment debate last week.” http://politi.co/1bL5b02


CBO: MINIMUM WAGE HIKE WOULD COST THOUSANDS OF JOBS – POLITICO’s Brian Faler has the newest bombshell from the CBO: “Raising the minimum wage would cost thousands of jobs while simultaneously lifting wages for millions more, according to a new report sure to inflame an election-year battle over income inequality.


“In an analysis providing fodder to both Democrats and Republicans, the Congressional Budget Office said Tuesday that a proposal similar to one offered by President Barack Obama would reduce total employment by 500,000 workers or about .3 percent by 2016. At the same time, it would boost earnings for some 16.5 million people, lifting 900,000 above the poverty line, the report said.” http://politi.co/1jDiK0U


– House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi and Workforce Committee Chairman George Miller both released statements after the report saying they will continue to press for a hike in the wage.


EXECUTIVE AUTHORITY— President Obama announced a renewed effort to reduce emissions from large trucks and is acting with his executive authority. The Washington Post’s Juliet Eilperin reports: “President Obama announced Tuesday that the federal government will further tighten fuel efficiency for medium- and heavy-duty trucks, part of his ongoing effort to use executive authority to address climate change and spur domestic manufacturing.


“Speaking at the Safeway distribution center in Upper Marlboro, Md., Obama did not specify what new standard the Environmental Protection Agency and the Department of Transportation should set for these larger trucks, which weigh more than 8,500 pounds, but he said he was confident manufacturers could meet this “ambitious” goal.” http://wapo.st/1fghuAx


NUMBERS: DSCC raised $ 6.5 million in January, topped NRSC by $ 2 million – http://politi.co/N9oQLy


HOUSE DEM RETIREMENTS CONTINUE – Two more House Democrats announced they are not seeking reelection.


– Rocket scientist New Jersey Democrat Rep. Rush Holt will not run for reelection. Holt becomes the third member of the New Jersey delegation to skip out on Congress this year. POLITICO’s Alex Isenstadt reports: ““There is no hidden motive for my decision,” Holt, 65, said in a statement Tuesday. “As friends who have worked with me know, I have never thought that the primary purpose of my work was re-election and I have never intended to make service in the House my entire career. For a variety of reasons, personal and professional, all of them positive and optimistic, the end of this year seems to me to be the right time to step aside and ask the voters to select the next representative.”


“Holt, a member of the House Education and the Workforce Committee, is a former Swarthmore College professor. He’s also a five-time Jeopardy! champion.” http://politi.co/1kSNIW1


– Freshman California Democrat Rep. Gloria Negrete McLeod announced she will instead seek a seat as a San Bernardino County supervisor. The LA Times Richard Simon reports: “”My heart is here in the district,” she said in a written statement. After agonizing over whether to run for reelection to Congress or a seat on the Board of Supervisors, “my desire to represent this community locally, where I have lived for more than 40 years, and where I have long served as an elected official, won out,” she said.


“Negrete McLeod, 72, a former state lawmaker, defeated a fellow Democrat, then-Rep. Joe Baca of Rialto, to win election to the House in 2012. Baca said by telephone Tuesday that he was still planning to run for the seat being vacated by retiring Rep. Gary Miller (R-Rancho Cucamonga) but added that he was keeping his options open.” http://lat.ms/1dIIqbK


And then Baca – who is running for George Miller’s seat — called McLeod a bimbo: And then he apologized. The Hill’s Cameron Joseph has the story, asking Baca about party leaders trying to tip the scales against him: “Look at what we wound up with: Some bimbo who decided not to run again. … Here we go again now with another New Yorker trying to tell us who’s going to be the representative of the 31st. It’s up to the people to decide.”


“Baca called back Tuesday evening to apologize for his “poor choice of words.” “I was just upset the district lost a representative in a short period of time. To me, that’s a disservice to the area. I do apologize for my poor choice of words,” Baca told The Hill.” http://bit.ly/1bkZ3ez


MISSISSIPPI SENATE – POLITICO’s Alex Burns looks at the Mississippi Senate race: “As Sen. Thad Cochran faces a potentially career-ending primary challenge, his strategy for victory is straightforward: Stress his decades of bringing home federal largesse and his long relationships with home-state Republicans; tap Washington rainmakers to fill his campaign account; and bring in Mississippi political legends like Haley Barbour and Trent Lott to help seal the deal.


“Cochran’s opponent in the June 3 showdown, state Sen. Chris McDaniel, is practically salivating over the contrast that it represents. As the 2014 election cycle begins to accelerate, perhaps no race presents a sharper difference of views on what it means to be a Republican or offer a sharper microcosm of the ongoing GOP civil war than the race in Mississippi.” http://politi.co/1kWjCRH


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GOOD WEDNESDAY MORNING, FEB. 19, 2014, and welcome to The Huddle, your-play-play preview of all the action on Capitol Hill. Scott is out for the week, so send tips, suggestions, comments, complaints and corrections to ggibson@politico.com. You can also heckle me on Twitter @GingerGibson. Seung Min Kim will be taking over tomorrow. Email her skim@politico.com.


TODAY IN CONGRESS –. The House and Senate have both recessed for the week.


AROUND THE HILL – All is quiet on Capitol Hill. But far from the hill members are holding press conferences in their districts. Sen. Ted Cruz will hold a press conference to discuss his energy plan at 2 p.m. CT at Spindletop in Beaumont, Texas. No livesteam is available. 


MUST-WATCH: DRIVING THE DAY – POLITICO insiders Alex Burns, Anna Palmer, Manu Raju and Jake Sherman relaunch this classic POLITICO video series, taking you behind-the-scenes of what’s driving the day’s headlines every Tuesday – Thursday morning. Today’s video looks at the future of the Senate control and who has the upper hand, Republicans or Democrats: www.politico.com/drivingtheday .


DISCHARGE PETITIONS – Roll Call’s David Hawkings argues the unlikely success of two discharge petitions Democrats are pushing in the House: “the one they’ve been talking about most enthusiastically in recent days — the discharge petition — has a high probability of failure.


“It’s almost certainly not going to realize the stated legislative objective, which is to break the deadlock created by conservatives on both immigration and increasing the minimum wage. But neither is it likely to produce the unstated political objective, which is to push the GOP into looking like the sort of discordant and mean-spirited mess that’s undeserving of running the House for another two years.


“The reason for those predictions is the same on both counts. There just aren’t enough genuine moderates in the Republican conference, nor a sufficient number of endangered GOP incumbents, to give either discharge petition a chance for success.” http://bit.ly/1eQJXrV


Former Rep. Mel Reynolds arrested in Zimbabwe – No stranger to the legal troubles, former Rep. Mel Reynolds was arrested in Zimbabwe on Monday after authorities found him in possession of pornography, a crime in the African nation. Reuters has the story: “Former congressman Mel Reynolds has been arrested in Zimbabwe, an immigration official said on Tuesday, after state media reported the convicted sex offender had been found with pornography at a local hotel.


“Police and immigration officials were investigating Reynolds for living in the southern African country without a valid visa, Francis Mabika, an assistant regional immigration officer, told Reuters.” http://yhoo.it/1falXpS


HILL ALUMNI FILES: Former Carper aide running for Delaware treasurer – Sean Barney will primary embattled Democratic Treasurer Chip Flowers. The News Journal’s Jonathan Starkey has the story: “He has now launched a campaign website, where he takes only veiled shots at Flowers, who has come under fire in recent months for his troubled relationship with the board that manages a $ 2 billion taxpayer portfolio and questionable credit card spending out of his office. “I will restore the focus of the Treasurer’s office on its core responsibility of protecting the integrity of payments made with taxpayer resources,” Barney said on his website. He added that, “As policy director to the governor, I worked with 16 cabinet secretaries and cabinet agencies of state government to help develop consensus…. I understand that the role of the State Treasurer on the State’s Cash Management Policy Board operates in a similar vein– not to make policy unilaterally, but to work effectively with others to do right by the people of Delaware.”” http://delonline.us/1mrEJNr


Outside spending in Florida 13 –The Washington Post’s Sean Sullivan takes a look at the numbers: “There’s no doubt that Republicans and Democrats see the outcome of Florida’s 13th district special election as a crucial marker ahead of the midterm elections this fall. For proof, look at how much money organizations on both sides have been pouring in.


“The biggest spenders thus far have been Republican-aligned groups, according to a tally from the Center for Responsive Politics, which tracks campaign spending. GOP groups have spent more than $ 2.8 million to boost Republican nominee David Jolly or attack Democratic nominee Alex Sink, CRP’s most up-to-date numbers show. Democratic groups have spent nearly $ 1.5 million doing the opposite.” http://wapo.st/1jQq9gr


Happening in Ukraine – As violent clashes between protesters and riot police continue, government officials are beginning to take more public note of the conflict. From The Hill’s Justin Sink: “Vice President Biden on Tuesday called Ukranian leader Viktor Yanukovych to express “grave concern” about a brutal police crackdown in Kiev.


“According to the White House, Biden urged Yanukovych to “pull back government forces and to exercise maximum restraint.”” http://bit.ly/1oRjvY0


– From the NY Times: “Secretary of State John Kerry urged Mr. Yanukovych to stop the bloodshed. “We call on President Yanukovych and the Ukrainian government to de-escalate the situation immediately, and resume dialogue with the opposition on a peaceful path forward. Ukraine’s deep divisions will not be healed by spilling more innocent blood,” he said in a statement.” http://nyti.ms/1fdcy0B


TUESDAY’S TRIVIA WINNER – Something interesting happened with yesterday’s trivia that will result in two winners. When Mark Twain wrote “Congress doesn’t know anything about religion… You religious people there are too feeble, in intellect, in morality, in piety—in everything pretty much.” he was writing for Sen. Nye of Nevada in response to a constituent seeking help to incorporate the Episcopal Church in Nevada. Jim Sims of Molycorp chimed in with that answer, pointing to the recently published book by John Mueller “Mark Twain in Washington.” (See excerpt here: http://bit.ly/1bIqG1s)


But the Senate historian had a different answer on their website. In an article on their website (http://1.usa.gov/1bhYNNg), they stated that Twain was working for Sen. William Stewart, also of Nevada. Michael Brumas, in Sen. Mitch McConnell’s office, was the first one to respond with that answer.


Since there were conflicting responses, I went to the Senate Historian to try to get to the bottom of this piece of Twain trivia. Turns out, Mueller was correct and Nye was Twain’s employer when he penned those words. Twain blew through several jobs during his brief stint in Washington. They are changing their website. And now we can say Huddle changed history.


TODAY’S TRIVIA – Michael Brumas has today’s trivia question. On at least two occasions, what former member of the Senate Judiciary Committee prefaced his opposition to Supreme Court nominees with the adage, ‘When in doubt, don’t.’ The first person to correctly answer gets a mention in the next day’s Huddle. Email me at ggibson@politico.com.


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POLITICO – Top 10 – Huddle



UNEMPLOYMENT BENEFITS ONGOING SAGA, More House Dems retire, CBO: MINIMUM WAGE HIKE WOULD COST THOUSANDS OF JOBS

Tuesday, February 18, 2014

Congressional Budget Office: $10.10 minimum wage would lower employment by 500k, raise incomes for 16.5 million



Fast-Food Workers StrikeTHE WASHINGTON EXAMINER  – Raising the minimum wage to $ 10.10 by 2016 would increase wages for 16.5 million workers but lead to a loss of about 500,000 jobs, according to an estimate from the Congressional Budget Office released Tuesday afternoon.


The range of potential job losses projected by the CBO was from a “slight decrease” in employment to as many as 1 million.


The CBO examined the effects of a minimum wage hike similar to that advocated by congressional Democrats and the Obama administration, one that would raise the legal minimum hourly wage and index that rate to inflation so its value would not erode over time.


Read more at The Washington Examiner




Red Alert Politics



Congressional Budget Office: $10.10 minimum wage would lower employment by 500k, raise incomes for 16.5 million

Thursday, February 13, 2014

Lawmaker says bill would protect Idahoans from gun confiscation


Michael Locklear
KBOI2
February 11, 2014


A Republican state lawmaker, worried the Obama administration might try to take away some guns, has put forward a bill that would punish Idaho officers for confiscating firearms.


“The supervisors would be penalized if they gave an order to confiscate firearms or ammunition,” said Sen. Marv Hagedorn of Meridian.


The measure calls for a $ 1,000 fine for officers who instruct their subordinates to seize guns based on a federal order. The second offense would slap officers with a misdemeanor and they’d lose their jobs. The penalties are meant to protect Idahoans from having their guns confiscated.


Read more


This article was posted: Tuesday, February 11, 2014 at 1:31 pm










Infowars



Lawmaker says bill would protect Idahoans from gun confiscation

Wednesday, February 12, 2014

After a year of Conservative scandals, why would First Nations want them running their schools?

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After a year of Conservative scandals, why would First Nations want them running their schools?

Thursday, February 6, 2014

Black Openly Gay Judge Would Be Federal Bench"s First





hide captionFlorida Sen. Marco Rubio has indicated he won’t block the nomination of Judge Darrin Gayles, who would be the first openly gay black man to serve on the federal bench.



AP


Darrin P. Gayles, a Florida state circuit judge, appears to be on track to become the nation’s first openly gay black man to serve on the federal bench.


President Obama on Wednesday nominated Gayles, a former assistant U.S. attorney, to fill a vacancy on the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida.


His nomination, among four made by Obama, comes months after GOP Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida used his home-state prerogative to block the president’s nomination of circuit judge William Thomas of Miami, who is also gay and black, for the same position. Rubio initially backed Thomas’ nomination.


That reversal appears unlikely to be Gayles’ fate.


In an emailed statement, Rubio said he welcomes the president’s nomination, adding that: “I do not anticipate having an objection to moving forward on any of these nominations pending the outcome of the customary background check conducted on every nominee.”


Rubio, however, said he was disappointed that the president took a pass on Republican finalists for the bench who were “jointly suggested by Sen. [Bill] Nelson and myself.” Nelson is a Florida Democrat.


Last year, Rubio withdrew his support for Thomas’ nomination, citing concerns about his fitness for the position. He questioned sentences the judge meted out in a hit-and-run case, and Thomas’ decision to disallow a murder case confession because he found the suspects hadn’t been properly informed of their Miranda rights.


Thomas’ supporters asserted that he was being blocked from the higher bench because he’s black and openly gay.


“We hope Sen. Rubio doesn’t change his mind on [Gayles] as well,” said Fred Sainz of the Human Rights Campaign, one of the nation’s largest LGBT rights organizations.


Steve Thai of the Gay and Lesbian Victory Institute, which works to get gay Americans elected to office and appointed to federal positions, lauded Gayles’ nomination.


“We commend the administration for nominating a qualified jurist who will also add diversity to the federal bench,” Thai said in a statement. “If confirmed, Judge Gayles will be the nation’s first black, openly gay federal judge, and he will reflect the talent and commitment that exists in communities that are underrepresented in public service.”


According to a bio released by the White House Wednesday, Gayles has served as a circuit judge since 2011 when he was appointed by then-Gov. Charlie Crist. He previously was a county judge, an assistant U.S. attorney for the Southern District of Florida, and assistant district counsel at the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service.


He graduated from Howard University and received his law degree from George Washington University.




News



Black Openly Gay Judge Would Be Federal Bench"s First

Wednesday, February 5, 2014

Approval of Keystone XL Would Be a Disastrous Move


TRANSCRIPT:


JAISAL NOOR, TRNN PRODUCER: This is The Real News, and I’m Jaisal Noor in Baltimore.


Hundreds of protest vigils are planned across the country on Monday in protest of the Keystone XL Pipeline. On Friday, the much anticipated State Department’s environmental impact statement for the Keystone pipeline was released. The proposed pipeline would carry as many as 830,000 barrels of Alberta tar sands oil through Canada and the United States for processing and transportation. The review said, quote, “Approval or denial of any one crude oil transport project, including the proposed Project, remains unlikely to significantly impact the rate of extraction in the oil sands, or the continued demand for heavy crude oil at refineries in the United States”, and is seen as a backing of the plan.


The White House has yet to make a decision, though. Last June, President Obama said of his decision on the pipeline, he would do what’s in the best interest of the country.


~~~


BARACK OBAMA, U.S. PRESIDENT: Now, I know there’s been, for example, a lot of controversy surrounding the proposal to build a pipeline, the Keystone pipeline, that would carry oil from Canadian tar sands down to refineries in the Gulf. And the State Department is going through the final stages of evaluating the proposal. That’s how it’s always been done. But I do want to be clear: Allowing the Keystone pipeline to be built requires a finding that doing so would be in our nation’s interest. And our national interest will be served only if this project does not significantly exacerbate the problem of carbon pollution. The net effects of the pipeline’s impact on our climate will be absolutely critical to determining whether this project is allowed to go forward. It’s relevant.


~~~


NOOR: Now joining us to discuss this and give us an update is Jeffrey Sachs. He’s a world-renowned economist, bestselling author, director of Columbia University’s Earth Institute. His latest piece in the Huffington Post is “Keystone: The Pipeline to Disaster”.


Thank you so much for joining us.


JEFFREY SACHS, DIRECTOR, EARTH INSTITUTE: Pleasure to be with you. Thank you.


NOOR: So let’s get off by getting your response to the environmental impact statement by the State Department. And it’s saying that it’s–this pipeline will not have a significant impact on climate change. What’s your response to that?


SACHS: It’s really an odd statement, because it basically says, doesn’t really matter what we do, these oil sands are going to be used. And so it is a very passive kind of impact statement. It basically looks a bit at the pipeline, but it doesn’t really look at the core question, which is how much of these oil sands are going to be burned and what does that mean for the planet and for the climate. President Obama recognized that this is an issue that is part of the big and crucial issue of man-made climate change. But then the impact statement basically washes his hands of that complicated question by saying, doesn’t really matter what we do, this oil’s going to be used; and therefore they find a very benign conclusion to the whole story. I don’t find this satisfactory at all.


NOOR: And what’s most concerning for you about this report? It’s being perceived as sort of giving the green light for the construction, although the White House has said it hasn’t made its final decision.


SACHS: We have a basic problem, which is that if you add up all the oil, coal, and gas that Americans and Canadians and Russians, Chinese, Indians, and so forth all over the world are using, the result is that we are dangerously destabilizing the global climate. Every time we burn one of those fossil fuels, we emit carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, and that creates climate disruption.


And the scientists are quite clear and the reasons for it are quite clear: we have to go on a diet to cut back on how much carbon emission we’re causing.


But when a big project comes to develop a massive new unconventional source of petroleum, or similarly unconventional source of coal or natural gas, we have to take into account: what does that mean for our overall carbon budget? It’s a little bit like saying, okay, here is another binge dessert; should we eat it or not? And the conclusion is: yeah, it’s going to be eaten one way or another, so we might as well eat it; rather than going to the core of the question, which is: how much indigestion are we going to get when these massive new reserves are opened up?


Now, the State Department says: doesn’t really matter what we do; if we don’t build the pipeline, it’s going to be shipped by rail or some other means to some refineries or exported. It’s kind of incredible. This is the U.S. government talking, basically saying, we don’t have any real decision over how much fossil fuel is used, so might as well use it. It seems to be the gist of the argument, whereas the whole point of the global climate negotiations that are underway right now and that are supposed to conclude in December 2015 in Paris is that the world’s governments have to get together and say, enough is enough, we have to draw some lines. And this decision should be part of that kind of line drawing, so that we stay within a safe level of fossil fuel use that isn’t going to wreck the planet.


NOOR: And supporters would argue that this is going to bring badly needed jobs to the U.S. and to Canada and it’s going to boost our economy, it’s going to help the U.S. become self-reliant and not be dependent on Middle Eastern oil. How would you respond to those arguments? If the economy’s in a bad shape, we do get a lot of oil from the Middle East.


SACHS: Well, first of all, most of this oil is aimed, actually, to be transported through the United States, and a tremendous amount exported abroad. So it’s not even clear what this really means for our own use.


But more than that, we have alternatives. That’s the whole point of good, realistic energy policy. We have massive amounts of wind power, solar power, hydro, nuclear. I happen to be in favor of those options too if they’re properly managed. We have ways to have energy without wrecking the planet. And we’re supposed to be making choices. Those also can be good for the economy.


So this idea that you have to just burn whatever fossil fuel you have is a big mistake. It’s not going to help our economy. It’s going to wreck the planet. It’s going to lead to more droughts, more floods, more heatwaves, more extreme storms like the kind that pounded my city, New York City, in Superstorm Sandy. It’s going to lead to more extreme droughts like the kind that’s leading to a water emergency in California.


We have to raise our eyes a little bit to reality and not just go with these slogans of the oil companies, who of course want to make short-term profits and aren’t thinking about the future. For the rest of us, we actually are thinking about the future, thinking about our children, and thinking about the future of the planet. We have much better choices than just to go burning every bit of oil, coal, and gas we can find.


NOOR: And finally, so the environmental movement has made the opposition to this a key part of their agenda over the past several years. Twelve hundred people were arrested in front of the White House back in 2011. Hundreds of actions are planned for Monday night. What is it going to take to stop this? What kind of activism? You know, there’s–civil disobedience has been ongoing against the construction of this, throughout America and parts of Canada as well.


SACHS: Well, I think what we’re all yearning for is a government that actually makes policies to keep us safe. So if the United States government would show us that there is a climate strategy, a climate framework, an energy policy, and said, well, this does fit or doesn’t fit, but here’s our plan, we’d all feel a lot better.


There is no plan right now. There is no strategy. That’s why it said in this document, well, this is going to be burned no matter what we do. I was absolutely shocked to read a statement like that. It’s, like, government as passive bystander.


What we want is a government that has a strategy of working with Canada, with China, with India, with Russia, with Europe to come up with something that will be safe for the planet. And many people say, the ones that are in favor of this, well, you know, it’s–Canada’s going to just send it to China or do something else. But the whole idea of a global agreement is that we save ourselves altogether. And that’s what we’re aiming for.


I would hope that the White House would say, look, we’re not going to take a decision on this, because we have a bigger issue, which is a global climate agreement. We’ve got to reach that agreement, and this has to fit within that. If they do it that way, they’re actually putting the horse before the cart–we can actually move someplace. The way that they’re doing it right now is backwards. And I think that’s what the protesters, the environmentalists, and just the people who are watching and paying attention to this are yearning for, some common sense, so that it’s not just short-term greed but actually a strategy which is determining our policies.


NOOR: Jeffrey Sachs, thank you so much for joining us.


SACHS: My pleasure. Thank you.


NOOR: You can follow us at @therealnews on Twitter. Tweet me questions and comments @jaisalnoor.


Thank you so much for joining us.




Truthout Stories



Approval of Keystone XL Would Be a Disastrous Move

Monday, January 20, 2014

Commemorations ask what would Martin Luther King Jr. do in 2014?

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Commemorations ask what would Martin Luther King Jr. do in 2014?

Sunday, January 19, 2014

What Would A Constitutional Military Look Like?

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What Would A Constitutional Military Look Like?

Saturday, January 11, 2014

48.6% of Spaniards Aged 18-24 Would Take Any Job, Anywhere, for Low Wages; Ikea Spain Gets 100,000 Applicants for 400 Jobs; Walmart, McDonalds Comparison

48.6% of Spaniards Aged 18-24 Would Take Any Job, Anywhere, for Low Wages; Ikea Spain Gets 100,000 Applicants for 400 Jobs; Walmart, McDonalds Comparison

In contrast to McDonalds’ workers in the US demanding $ 15 an hour wages, Almost half of young Spaniards accept any job, anywhere, despite low salary

48.6% of Spaniards aged 18 to 24 said they would accept any job, anywhere and even with a low income. 84.9% felt very or fairly likely to have to work on what is available, 61.7% considered it equally likely to have to go abroad, and 79.2% said they need to study more. Despite this, an overwhelming majority (80%) are convinced that, at least in the near future, will have to be financially dependent on their family.

Future is Black


Young Spaniards recognize enjoy the benefits of the welfare state far more than their parents, except as regards stability and security. They are also convinced that their children will live much worse than them.


Frustrated Expectations


Only 20% of young people believe things will improve in the next two or three years, compared to 36% who think it will get worse. Moreover, nearly three in four young people (71%) considered likely to find little or no work in the coming year.


Ikea Spain Gets 100,000 Applicants for 400 Jobs


Also via translation from El Economista, please consider Ikea Spain Gets 100,000 Applicants for 400 Jobs

The Swedish multinational Ikea will have work to select staff for a store in Valencia because 100,000 people submitted applications to fill 400 jobs.

Ika received a total of 100,000 job applications through a web page offering. In the first 48 hours of processing, Ikea received 20,000 applications.


The store, which will open in summer, will have a staff of 400 employees and also generate about 80 indirect jobs to cover services such as security, transport and cleaning, among others.


Walmart, McDonalds Comparison


To be fair, there is a major difference between McDonalds’ employees and Spaniards seeking jobs.


The McDonalds’ employees demanding higher wages have jobs. Those seeking jobs, don’t.


However, every McDonalds’ employee knew their wage when they were hired. Like Spaniards willing to accept low wages, they took the jobs anyway.


1 Million McDonalds Applicants


I cannot find anything recent on McDonalds, but on April 28, 2011, Bloomberg reported “McDonald’s and its franchisees hired 62,000 people in the U.S. after receiving more than one million applications, the Oak Brook, Illinois-based company said today in an e-mailed statement. Previously, it said it planned to hire 50,000.


Walmart 23,000 Applicants for 600 Jobs


On November 19, 2013 NBC Washington reported Walmart to Open First D.C. Stores Dec. 4

Walmart’s H Street and Georgia Avenue locations will open Dec. 4 at 8 a.m. Both the 103,000-square-foot Georgia Avenue store and the 74,000-square-foot H Street location will feature fresh produce, a deli, organic food items and a full-service pharmacy.

The stores will hire a combined 600 associates after combing through the more 23,000 applications its received from potential employees.


The arrival of Walmart has not been a smooth one. Both stores were on the verge of never opening after the retail giant threatened to pull its plans if Mayor Vincent Gray signed a living wage bill.


The Large Retailer Accountability Act, known colloquially as the “Walmart Bill,” would have required  the company — and other big-box retailers — to pay its employees a minimum of $ 12.50 an hour.


Gray vetoed the bill in September.


Minimum wage in the District currently stands at $ 8.25 an hour.


Reflections on Living Wages


Take a poll of those employees. I bet 100% of them are happier to have a job at $ 8.25 an hour vs. no job at some presumed “living wage” that they would not get because there were no jobs.


Of course, now that they have a job and should be happy, some union activist is going to try to convince them they shouldn’t be happy.


The Real Problem


Other than a couple of like-minded Austrian bloggers, no one has bothered to complain about the real problem: The Fed pumping money supply like mad, while holding interest rates low.


Five Results


  1. Prices rising faster than wages

  2. Grossly distorted income inequalities

  3. Non-existent price signals

  4. Interest rates that encourage hardware and software solutions to eliminate employees

  5. Equity and bond market bubbles

I blasted the Fed regarding these issues early Friday.


For details and truly educational reading, please see Money as Communication: A Purposely “Non-Educational” Fallacious Video by the Atlanta Fed.


Mike “Mish” Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com


Mish’s Global Economic Trend Analysis




Read more about 48.6% of Spaniards Aged 18-24 Would Take Any Job, Anywhere, for Low Wages; Ikea Spain Gets 100,000 Applicants for 400 Jobs; Walmart, McDonalds Comparison and other interesting subjects concerning Economy at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Thursday, December 19, 2013

Would You Like A Canadian Politician To Say Hi To You?


Yesterday, the Ottawa Citizen posted a link to a website that featured a scandal-tainted Canadian Senator named Mike Duffy doing a fundraising pitch. Given ongoing accusations that Duffy was misappropriating government funds, it was an interesting piece of web-arcana that the conservative party certainly wouldn’t want to draw attention to. But what made it amazing wasn’t the pitch.




Duffy had recorded hundreds of lead-ins to the video, each one with a different name, hoping to personalize it for as many people as possible. The Ottawa Citizen invited people to try the link and replace it with their own names, to see if he had one especially for you, Grace. Or you, Lorraine. Or you, Wendell


On its own, it was a fun distraction – seeing if Duffy had read your name, maybe tweeting it at friends. But a politico (and programmer) named Kevin O’Donnell turned a diversion into a bizarre work of art. He did some sleuthing and found that all the “name” videos were centrally located, and then ran those videos against a list he found online of 3,500 names. Doing this netted him 750 first names videos recorded by Mike Duffy, now divorced entirely from the fundraising pitch that followed.


O’Donnell created a website that serves all the “name” videos, so you can now send it to anyone who appears on the list, or just lose yourself in them as he hypnotically says hello to Floyd, Francine, Francis, Frank, Franklin, and so on.


The internet allows us to create quick-hit, time sensitive content that we can post online in an attempt to reach people quickly. It also allows that content to exist, relatively undisturbed for months or years after its sell-by date. But rediscovering and reusing that content can reveal a world of riches.


This happens all the time with stuff like Keyboard Cat, and the Space Jam website. Little pieces of ephemera that have long since been forgotten/abandoned by their creators, that take on a new life when they capture the internet’s attention. But Mike Duffy – man, this one’s inspired.


(h/t Steve Portigal)




The latest articles from TLDR



Would You Like A Canadian Politician To Say Hi To You?

Thursday, December 12, 2013

Expert: Big Fault-Line Earthquake Would Nearly Destroy LA

Southern California, particularly Los Angeles, is not ready for the major impact of a high-magnitude earthquake shifting the San Andreas fault, a leading earthquake expert warns.

“Loss of shelter, loss of schools, loss of jobs and emotional hardship,” Dr Lucy Jones, a science adviser for risk reduction for the U.S. Geology Service, said this week. “We are risking the ends of our cities.”


Jones’ remarks came during a lecture to the American Geophysical Union in San Francisco, during which her lecture, “Imagine America Without Los Angeles,” painted a horrifying picture of the state’s future, reports CBS affiliate KCAL9. h


Jones, pointing to a USGS study called said a major earthquake does far more damage than just collapsing buildings and freeways like earthquakes in the past.


Modern life and conveniences are creating new vulnerabilities for California’s population that could be devastating if the “big one” hits, Jones explained.


Los Angeles’ supermarkets don’t even warehouse their own food, said Jones, as the Internet and quick shipping allows them to store supplies on the other side of the San Andreas Fault.


Fiber optics would also be disconnected if there is a large earthquake, said Jones, meaning Los Angeles would be completely cut off from the rest of the world.


“Two-thirds of the connectivity from Los Angeles to the rest of the world go through fiber-optic cables crossing the San Andreas fault,” Jones said. “So we expect at the time of the earthquake when the fault moves, we will break these fiber-optic cables and two-thirds of the data capacity between L.A. and everyone else will disappear.”


Natural gas and water would also be in short supply, said Jones. Natural gas pipelines cross the fault, and L.A.’s aging water lines, which already break frequently, likely would not stand up to a major earthquake, she said.


Water lines could take at least six months to be replaced, the USGS report says. “The ShakeOut Scenario” from the USGS estimates it could take six months for the broken water pipes to be replaced across Southern California after the earthquake.


Damage to the area’s high-tech capabilities could also hinder recovery efforts in Southern California, Jones said.


“The World Wide Web wasn’t in existence at the time of the Northridge earthquake,” she said, speaking of the region’s last major quake, which hit back in 1994. “Right now, think of how much both your personal life, but also our economic system, depends on having cellphone communications and Internet connectivity.”


The Northridge quake affected about a half-million people, Jones said, but a major earthquake on the San Andreas fault would hit about 10 million Californians.


Related Stories:


© 2013 Newsmax. All rights reserved.




Newsmax – America



Expert: Big Fault-Line Earthquake Would Nearly Destroy LA

Sunday, December 8, 2013

Rand Paul: Extending Unemployment Benefits Would Be A "Disservice"





WALLACE: Senator, let me ask you a direct question. Do you personally, do you support extending unemployment benefits, or would you let 1.3 million Americans lose those benefits before the end of the year?


PAUL: I do support unemployment benefits for the 26 weeks that they’re paid for. If you extend it beyond that, you do a disservice to these workers.


There was a study that came out a few months ago, and it said, if you have a worker that’s been unemployed for four weeks and on unemployment insurance and one that’s on 99 weeks, which would you hire? Every employer, nearly 100 percent, said they will always hire the person who’s been out of work four weeks.


When you allow people to be on unemployment insurance for 99 weeks, you’re causing them to become part of this perpetual unemployed group in our economy. And it really — while it seems good, it actually does a disservice to the people you’re trying to help.


You know, I don’t doubt the president’s motives. But black unemployment in America is double white unemployment. And it hasn’t budged under this president.


WALLACE: But, Senator –


PAUL: I think a lot of African-Americans voted for him, but I don’t think it’s worked. I don’t think his policies have worked.


WALLACE: But, Senator, how do you persuade the African-American voter in the inner city, you’re not going to spend more government money, you’re going to vote to let the — the unemployment benefits lapse, how do you persuade that black voter, this is good for them? This is the right policy?


PAUL: My economic stimulus plan for Detroit would leave over a billion dollars in Detroit’s economy and would stimulate Detroit. There is no other plan on the table. And there’s not going to be some grand bail out that’s going to go through Congress. Other than my plan, if my plan would pass, I think it’s the only one that politically could pass.


Over a billion dollars would be left in Detroit. I’m also talking about restoring voting rights. I’m talking about school choice. I think there’s a lot to offer in the Republican message that hasn’t been offered in the past. And I think there’s only upside potential for voters in Detroit or all the big cities for Republicans.




RealClearPolitics Video Log



Rand Paul: Extending Unemployment Benefits Would Be A "Disservice"

Thursday, December 5, 2013

Dem Sen. Mary Landrieu: I Would Vote For Obamacare Again


“The Affordable Care Act, as I said, the bill itself has very good concepts, and yes, I would support it again. But that doesn’t excuse the poor rollout of what should have happened. There should not have been a glitch in the software,” Sen. Mary Landrieu (D-Louisiana) told WAFB-TV, a local CBS affiliate in Baton Rouge.




RealClearPolitics Video Log



Dem Sen. Mary Landrieu: I Would Vote For Obamacare Again

Tuesday, December 3, 2013

Britain"s special U.S. ties would survive EU exit: Republican Rubio




LONDON Tue Dec 3, 2013 12:59pm EST



U.S. Republican Senator Marco Rubio prepares to answer questions after delivering his keynote speech entitled

U.S. Republican Senator Marco Rubio prepares to answer questions after delivering his keynote speech entitled ‘American Leadership and the future of the Transatlantic Alliance’ at Chatham House in London December 3, 2013.


Credit: Reuters/Toby Melville




LONDON (Reuters) – Britain will keep its strong relationship with the United States even if it votes to leave the European Union in a planned referendum, a leading Republican senator tipped as a possible 2016 presidential contender said on Tuesday.


In a speech on Anglo-American ties in London, Marco Rubio, a first-term U.S. senator from Florida, said the United States must respect the wishes of the British electorate in any vote on its membership of the 28-nation bloc.


The comments from a politician seen as an early favorite for the Republican presidential nomination offer some support for Prime Minister David Cameron, accused by critics of risking Britain’s global standing with his pledge to hold an EU vote.


“Our alliance, our partnership and our affection for your nation will continue regardless of the road you choose,” Rubio said in a speech at the Chatham House think-tank.


The remarks contrast with an unusually strong warning from a senior member of Democratic President Barack Obama’s administration in January that Britain must avoid “turning inwards” over Europe.


Obama told Cameron in the same month that he wanted a “strong UK in a strong EU”, according to a summary of a phone call between the two released by the White House.


Cameron’s promise to renegotiate the terms of Britain’s EU membership before an in/out referendum by 2017 was welcomed by Eurosceptics in his ruling Conservative Party, who are trailing in the polls and face a threat at the 2015 election from the small UK Independence Party, which wants to leave the bloc.


But the pledge left him open to claims he had endangered Britain’s long-term interests for short-term political gains.


Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg, leader of the pro-EU Liberal Democrats, who share power with the Conservatives, has said the United States would not take Britain seriously if it were “isolated and irrelevant” in Europe.


Clegg said in October the “special relationship” with the United States – a notion successive British leaders have promoted since World War Two – was based partly on Britain “being valuable to our American friends”.


In a speech about the future of that relationship, Rubio said Washington needed a strong EU to help stabilize the continent and act as a global partner.


But the Cuban-American – who rose to prominence with the backing of the conservative Tea Party movement before positioning himself as an internationalist – said it was up to Britain to decide if it wanted to remain in the bloc.


“As for Britain’s role in Europe, that should be a matter for the British people to decide and for your American partners to respect whatever decision you make,” Rubio said.


(Additional reporting by Patricia Zengerle in Washington; Editing by Mark Heinrich)






Reuters: Politics



Britain"s special U.S. ties would survive EU exit: Republican Rubio