Showing posts with label Committee. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Committee. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 12, 2014

Senate committee takes up Ukrainian aid; McCain to travel there

John McCain in Iraq, 2007.
The man likes his trips.


A few details of the Senate’s Ukrainian aid bill are coming to light, via Foreign Relations chairman Bob Menendez.

The bill mirrors one passed in the House last week by providing $ 1 billion in U.S. loan guarantees to Ukraine but goes further by containing language allowing a 2010 restructuring of the IMF to go forward.

It also directs the administration to help Ukraine in recovering assets linked to corrupt activities by former President Viktor Yanukovych, provides $ 50 million in direct aid for “democracy, governance and civil society assistance” and $ 100 million for military aide.



The committee will do a mark-up of the bill this afternoon; IMF reforms may be the main sticking point for conservatives, since those reforms may weaken United States’ influence over the organization.

Meanwhile, Sen. John McCain is helping the way he generally helps out during a crisis: by arranging photo-ops.


Seven senators plan to visit Ukraine this weekend to meet with the country’s political leaders and show support for the country’s ongoing standoff with Russia. Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), who is leading the delegation, confirmed to reporters that he and “a large number” of senators of both parties would be making the trip.


Never really been a fan of senators of either party drifting off to make foreign policy statements in crisis zones, that generally being not their job, but I realize I’m probably in a tiny minority on that one. And McCain, who have we mentioned lately really wanted to be president so he could be in charge of these things, probably gets a warmer reception in Ukraine than he does in his home state.



Daily Kos



Senate committee takes up Ukrainian aid; McCain to travel there

Tuesday, February 11, 2014

Arizona: Committee will be voting on the Convention of States Project application

Arizona: Committee will be voting on the Convention of States Project application
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There will be a crucial vote in Arizona tomorrow. The Federalism and Fiscal Responsibility Committee will be voting on the Convention of States Project application HCR 2027 tomorrow at 2:00pm MST at the Arizona State Legislature in Phoenix.


The application was proposed by Rep. Kelly Townsend, R-Mesa.


“Our federal representatives have created a national debt that threatens our most basic freedoms,” Townsend said, “and threatens the liberty of generations to come. The states must act now to forestall further damage to our economic and personal liberties.”


The purpose of the Convention of States is to propose amendments to the U.S. Constitution; the gathering is also known as an Article V Convention. It was founded to stop the out of control spending by the federal government, stop them from taking power from the states and taking liberty from the people.


This vote is the first step that at least 34 states must take in order to set into motion the call for a convention of states. Article V of the U.S. Constitution says that if two-thirds of state legislatures request a convention of states, the federal government must call for a convention.


Article V allows the states to propose and ratify amendments to the U.S. Constitution without the votes of federal representatives and signature of the president.


In order for an amendment to take effect, it must receive support from three-fourths of the 50 state legislatures, or 38 states. How each state ratifies an amendment is to be decided by the U.S. Congress. The convention itself will only propose amendments; it will not ratify them.


Townsend has posted a wealth of information on her Facebook page. She lays out all of the facts and arguments. She has also posted which elected officials are on board with her proposal and the national policy institutes that endorse the Convention of States.


Mark Meckler of the Arizona COS Project Team has called upon all supporters to attend the hearing at the State Legislature. In an email today he wrote, “Your voice could be the deciding factor in the success of the COS application.”


The vote will take place in Room HHR 1 at the Arizona State Capitol, 1700 West Washington Street.





Jared Day


Jared is a Citizen Journalist that supports grassroots organizations that stand for individual liberty, free market and limited government. He is a Writer/Contributor/Social Media Admin at RedKnucklePolitics.com and Red Nation Rising NFP.


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Monday, January 27, 2014

Joint N.J. legislative committee probing Christie"s "Bridgegate"

(Reuters) – New Jersey state legislators voted on Monday to merge parallel investigations into the George Washington Bridge traffic scandal ensnaring Republican Governor Chris Christie.


Reuters: Top News



Joint N.J. legislative committee probing Christie"s "Bridgegate"

Wednesday, January 15, 2014

Senate Committee says Benghazi Attacks Preventable









FILE – This Sept 13, 2012 file photo shows a Libyan man investigating the inside of the U.S. Consulate in Benghazi, Libya, after an attack that killed four Americans, including Ambassador Chris Stevens. The Senate Intelligence Committee released a report on the deadly assault on the diplomatic compound in Benghazi, Libya, Wednesday, laying blame on the State Department, the late Ambassador Chris Stevens and the intelligence community for failing to communicate and heed warnings of terrorist activity in the area and protect diplomatic facilities. The highly critical report also says the U.S. military was not positioned to aid the Americans in need, though the head of Africa Command had offered military security teams that Stevens _ who was killed in the attack _ had rejected weeks before the attack. (AP Photo/Mohammad Hannon, File)






FILE – This Sept 13, 2012 file photo shows a Libyan man investigating the inside of the U.S. Consulate in Benghazi, Libya, after an attack that killed four Americans, including Ambassador Chris Stevens. The Senate Intelligence Committee released a report on the deadly assault on the diplomatic compound in Benghazi, Libya, Wednesday, laying blame on the State Department, the late Ambassador Chris Stevens and the intelligence community for failing to communicate and heed warnings of terrorist activity in the area and protect diplomatic facilities. The highly critical report also says the U.S. military was not positioned to aid the Americans in need, though the head of Africa Command had offered military security teams that Stevens _ who was killed in the attack _ had rejected weeks before the attack. (AP Photo/Mohammad Hannon, File)






(AP) — The Senate Intelligence Committee released a report on the deadly assault on the diplomatic compound in Benghazi, Libya, Wednesday, laying blame on the State Department, the intelligence community — even the late Ambassador Chris Stevens — for failing to communicate and heed warnings of terrorist activity in the area.


The highly critical report also says the U.S. military was not positioned to aid the Americans in need, though the head of Africa Command had offered military security teams that Stevens — who was killed in the attack — had rejected weeks before the attack.


It also said that in the aftermath of the attacks, U.S. analysts confused policymakers by blaming the violence on protests without enough supporting intelligence.


The 2012 Benghazi attacks have dogged the Obama administration, because then-U.N. Ambassador Susan Rice initially blamed the violence on mob protests over an anti-Islamic film. Al-Qaida-linked militant groups were later blamed for the attacks, first when militants overran the temporary U.S. mission on Sept. 11, 2012, and later that same night, when militants fired mortars at the nearby CIA annex where the Americans had taken shelter.


The bipartisan report may settle what has become a running political battle between Republicans, mostly in the House, who say the Obama administration has been covering up what they consider misdeed before, during and after the attack, and the administration, which says Republicans are on a political witch hunt.


Committee chairman Dianne Feinstein, a California Democrat, says she hopes this will put to rest conspiracy theories about the militant attacks that night. Republican vice chairman Saxby Chambliss of Georgia said the report shows despite a deteriorating security situation in Benghazi, the U.S. government did not do enough to prevent the attacks or to protect the diplomatic facility.


“The State Department should have increased its security posture more significantly in Benghazi based on the deteriorating security situation on the ground and IC threat reporting on the prior attacks against Westerners in Benghazi_including two previous incidents” at the temporary diplomatic facility that year, a summary of the report states.


The State Department said Wednesday that there have been dozens of reports, hearings and briefings on the Benghazi attack and that many of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence’s findings are similar to those made by the independent Benghazi Accountability Review Board, which issued a report in December 2012.


The Senate report does note that the State Department has created a new assistant secretary position for high threat posts to focus on such dangerous areas, but says the department should in the future react more quickly to security threats and only in rare instances use facilities that are inadequately protected. It said State should not rely on local security alone in countries where the host government cannot provide adequate protection.


The report notes that the State Department in 2012 had ignored its own “tripwires” set to determine when it had become too dangerous to operate in Benghazi, and continued to operate the facility there, despite a steady drumbeat of U.S. intelligence reports showing the danger was rising.


The report faults the military for being unable to help when needed. “No U.S. military resources in position to intervene in short order in Benghazi to help defend” the U.S. facilities in Benghazi, it said.


Yet it points out that Stevens had rejected additional security. The Defense Department had provided a Site Security Team in Tripoli, made up of 16 special operations personnel to provide security and other help. The State Department, according to the report, decided not to extend the team’s mission in August 2012, one month before the attack. In the weeks that followed, Gen. Carter Ham, the head of Africa Command, twice asked Stevens to employ the team, and twice Stevens declined, the report said.


The report also dives into the contentious talking points issued by the intelligence community after the attacks that helped fuel Republican allegations of an Obama administration cover-up of militant links to the violence.


“Intelligence analysts inaccurately referred to the presence of a protest at the U.S. mission facility before the attack based on open source information and limited intelligence, but without sufficient intelligence or eyewitness statements to corroborate that assertion,” the report said, adding that the U.S. intelligence community then took too long to correct their error, “which caused confusion and influenced the public statements of policymakers.”


It also says the intelligence community should expand its mining of social media to watch for unrest, and also draw more heavily on eyewitness reporting “especially from U.S. government personnel_in the aftermath of a crisis.”


The senators also take the administration to task for failing to bring the attackers to justice more than a year after the Benghazi attacks.


It says U.S. intelligence has identified several individuals responsible, but can’t track them down because of limited intelligence capabilities in the region.


White House spokesman Jay Carney said the committee report “largely reaffirms” the earlier findings from an independent panel. He said a number of the committee’s security recommendations are also consistent with steps the State Department has already taken.


“This reinforces what other investigations have found, which is that there was not enough security to protect the four Americans who lost their lives,” Carney told reporters traveling with Obama Tuesday to North Carolina.


—–


AP Writers Julie Pace and Deb Riechmann contributed to this report.


Follow Kimberly Dozier at http://twitter.com/kimberlydozier and Julie Pace at http://twitter.com/jpaceDC


Associated Press



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Senate Committee says Benghazi Attacks Preventable

Sunday, December 1, 2013

Republican National Committee thanks civil rights pioneer Rosa Parks for ‘ending racism’

Republican National Committee thanks civil rights pioneer Rosa Parks for ‘ending racism’
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By Scott Kaufman
Sunday, December 1, 2013 12:58 EST








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  • The Republican National Committee (RNC) thanked Rosa Parks for “her role in ending racism” in a tweet published early this morning:


    Recent studies indicate that, far from being “ended,” the majority of Americans are still racist against black people.


    The tweet didn’t include a link to the GOP’s more anodyne “Message Celebrating Rosa Parks,” in which RNC Chairman Reince Priebus said that “[w]e remember and honor Rosa Parks today for the role she played in fighting racism and ending segregation.”


    “Rosa Parks was a hero of the civil rights movement,” said Chairman Priebus. “On this day 58 years ago, the 42-year-old seamstress took a bold stand—by staying seated. Her arrest ignited a bus boycott that challenged the injustice of segregation and in turn helped to change this nation for the better.”


    The person responsible for the tweet that thanked Parks for “ending racism” is unknown, but as of 12:44 p.m. EST the tweet has not been deleted, nor has any official apology for the tweet been issued.


    ["Republican National Committee Chairman Reince Priebus Addresses The Republican Leadership Conference On June 18, 2011 At The Hilton Riverside New Orleans In New Orleans, La." on Shutterstock]



    Scott Kaufman


    Scott Kaufman


    Scott Eric Kaufman is the proprietor of the AV Club’s Internet Film School and, in addition to Raw Story, also writes for Lawyers, Guns & Money. He earned a Ph.D. in English Literature from the University of California, Irvine in 2008.








    The Raw Story




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Sunday, October 13, 2013

U.S. Olympic Committee Adds Sexual Orientation To Discrimination Rules


Months ahead of the Winter Olympics in Russia, where controversy surrounds a law that targets homosexuality, the U.S. Olympic Committee adds protection against discrimination based on sexual orientation to its policies.


“The fact that we do not think it is our role to advocate for a change in the Russian law does not mean that we support the law, and we do not,” USOC CEO Scott Blackmun said.


The organization’s board adopted the measure after its chairman, Larry Probst, said he would support adding sexual orientation to the International Olympic Committee’s non-discrimination policies.


“Americans are among Olympic athletes who’ve expressed outrage about the law,” NPR’s Howard Berkes reports for our Newscast unit. “The International Olympic Committee has warned athletes that engaging in political protest during the Olympics violates the Olympic Charter. The USOC is pushing the international Olympic body to also ban discrimination based on sexual orientation.”




News



U.S. Olympic Committee Adds Sexual Orientation To Discrimination Rules

U.S. Olympic Committee Adds Sexual Orientation To Discrimination Rules


Months ahead of the Winter Olympics in Russia, where controversy surrounds a law that targets homosexuality, the U.S. Olympic Committee adds protection against discrimination based on sexual orientation to its policies.


“The fact that we do not think it is our role to advocate for a change in the Russian law does not mean that we support the law, and we do not,” USOC CEO Scott Blackmun said.


The organization’s board adopted the measure after its chairman, Larry Probst, said he would support adding sexual orientation to the International Olympic Committee’s non-discrimination policies.


“Americans are among Olympic athletes who’ve expressed outrage about the law,” NPR’s Howard Berkes reports for our Newscast unit. “The International Olympic Committee has warned athletes that engaging in political protest during the Olympics violates the Olympic Charter. The USOC is pushing the international Olympic body to also ban discrimination based on sexual orientation.”




News



U.S. Olympic Committee Adds Sexual Orientation To Discrimination Rules