Showing posts with label Mayor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mayor. Show all posts

Sunday, February 9, 2014

Mayor: Nationwide Gun Confiscation Is Goal of Mayors Against Illegal Guns


Poughkeepsie, N.Y. mayor says he left the group over confiscation plans


Kit Daniels
Infowars.com
February 7, 2014


A current New York mayor has publicly announced his decision to leave Mayors Against Illegal Guns because the gun control group demands an all-out “confiscation of guns from law-abiding citizens.”


Former New York City mayor Michael Bloomberg co-founded Mayors Against Illegal Guns in 2006 to promote gun control.

Former New York City mayor Michael Bloomberg co-founded Mayors Against Illegal Guns in 2006 to promote gun control.



In an announcement published by his city’s newspaper, Poughkeepsie, N.Y. Mayor John C. Tkazyik said he quit the group after realizing it was simply a vehicle for Michael Bloomberg to “promote his personal gun-control agenda.”


“It did not take long to realize that MAIG’s agenda was much more than ridding felons of illegal guns,” he stated. “Under the guise of helping mayors facing a crime and drug epidemic, MAIG intended to promote confiscation of guns from law-abiding citizens.”


“I don’t believe, never have believed and never will believe that public safety is enhanced by encroaching on our right to bear arms and I will not be a part of any organization that does.”


Tkazyik also pointed out that Chicago’s extremely high crime rates are undeterred by the city’s highly restrictive gun laws.


“Depriving law-abiding citizens of their right to own firearms only makes them more vulnerable,” he added.


Tkazyik’s announcement is a stark contrast to the rhetoric of other politicians who want to grossly violate human rights.


At a gun control event earlier this year, Austin, Texas City Council Member Mike Martinez admitted that gun control is simply a step-by-step process to completely eliminate the Second Amendment.


While pointing at a sign held by a protestor which read “Stop Gun Ban,” Martinez said that “someone needs to inform him that there is no gun ban currently, but because of the work we’re doing today, we will make [his] sign legitimate shortly.”


“So you hang on to that [sign],” he said to a cheering crowd of gun control advocates.


And in a flashback to 1995, Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Ca.) told 60 Minutes that she wanted to outright ban all firearms owned by Americans.


“If I could have gotten 51 votes in the Senate of the United States for an outright ban, picking up every one of them … ‘Mr. and Mrs. America, turn them all in,’ I would have done it,” she said.


This is the true intent of gun control, even though many of its advocates whitewash the truth with a variety of propaganda techniques or by just simply being ignorant.


For example, the organizers for the event at which Martinez spoke told reporters that they didn’t want to ban guns even though that is exactly what Martinez demanded in his speech.


Gun control advocates constantly parrot deceptive phrases such as “common sense solutions” and “we don’t want to ban guns” when selling their agenda which will only lead to the complete disarmament of the population by authoritarians.


Fortunately, on the other hand, Mayor Tkazyik is joining an ever-increasing list of public officials who have denounced gun control.


Last month, Detroit’s Police Chief James Craig told reporters that legal gun owners deter crime.


“Coming from California, where it takes an act of Congress to get a concealed weapon permit, I got to Maine, where they give out lots of Carrying Concealed Weapon [permits], and I had a stack of CCW permits I was denying; that was my orientation,” he said. “I changed my orientation real quick; Maine is one of the safest places in America.”


“Clearly, suspects knew that good Americans were armed.”


And last year, Erie Co., N.Y. Sheriff Timothy B. Howard publicly announced that his department would not enforce New York’s latest gun control law, the SAFE Act.


“It’s an unenforceable law and I believe it will ultimately be declared unconstitutional,” he said to reporters. “Do you want law enforcement people that will say ‘I will do this because I’m told to do this, even if I know it’s wrong?’”


It is refreshing to see elected officials serving their constituents while also respecting the Bill of Rights.


This article was posted: Sunday, February 9, 2014 at 9:52 am










Infowars



Mayor: Nationwide Gun Confiscation Is Goal of Mayors Against Illegal Guns

Wednesday, January 22, 2014

Democratic Mayor, Eyewitness To Alleged Chris Christie Strongarming: Nope, Didn’t Hear It


HotAir.com:

As Ed wrote this morning and Guy Benson has covered exhaustively all weekend, the allegations mounted by Hoboken Mayor Dawn Zimmer on MSNBC now amount to several diary entries and a bunch of holes.

First, the central question. Did Hoboken get fewer Sandy funds than it needed or deserved? Are there actual damages to which one might tie this alleged political corruption? The original MSNBC report played fast and loose with the numbers to leave that impression, but the reality is Hoboken got millions in relief funds, but perhaps not in the exact amounts Zimmer was requesting. Guy Benson:

The original MSNBC story leaves the distinct impression that the city received less than $ 350,000 in aid out of a $ 127 million request. In fact, Christie’s office points out, Hoboken has benefited from nearly $ 70 million in federal and state recovery and relief funding — which they say is commensurate with aid received by similarly situated municipalities. They emphasize that not a single grant application from Hoboken was denied.


MSNBC’s report, Christie aides say, conflated total aid with the much narrower issue of “hazard mitigation” funds. They concede that Zimmer did, in fact, request more than $ 100 million in hazard mitigation assistance — which at the time accounted for more than one-third of the entire available budget allocated for that purpose.

Her story has changed. First, it was that Christie withheld Sandy funds because she didn’t endorse him, according to this New Jersey reporter:

Matt Katz @mattkatz00





8 days ago Hoboken Mayor told @WNYC & @GonzalezSarahA her loss of Sandy aid was tied to failure to endorse @GovChristie. Now different story










Politik Ditto



Democratic Mayor, Eyewitness To Alleged Chris Christie Strongarming: Nope, Didn’t Hear It

Saturday, January 18, 2014

Mayor: Christie aides tied Sandy funds to project







FILE – In this Saturday, Aug. 8, 2009 file photograph, Hoboken Mayor, Dawn Zimmer speaks to the media as she stands near the Hudson River in Hoboken, N.J. Zimmer, mayor of a New Jersey city that sustained severe flooding from Hurricane Sandy claims the Christie administration withheld millions of dollars in recovery grants because she refused to sign off on a politically connected development. MSNBC first reported her comments Saturday. (AP Photo/Mel Evans,file)





FILE – In this Saturday, Aug. 8, 2009 file photograph, Hoboken Mayor, Dawn Zimmer speaks to the media as she stands near the Hudson River in Hoboken, N.J. Zimmer, mayor of a New Jersey city that sustained severe flooding from Hurricane Sandy claims the Christie administration withheld millions of dollars in recovery grants because she refused to sign off on a politically connected development. MSNBC first reported her comments Saturday. (AP Photo/Mel Evans,file)













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(AP) — The mayor of a New Jersey city that sustained severe flooding from Hurricane Sandy claims the Christie administration withheld millions of dollars in recovery grants because she refused to sign off on a politically connected development.


Hoboken Mayor Dawn Zimmer tells The Associated Press that Gov. Chris Christie’s lieutenant governor and a top community development official said recovery funds would flow to her city if the commercial development went forward. MSNBC first reported her comments Saturday.


Zimmer says Lt. Gov. Kim Guadagno (gwah-DON-yo) pulled her aside at a May event and told her unless the project is approved “we are not going to be able to help you.”


Christie is embroiled in another scandal involving traffic jams apparently manufactured to settle a political score.


Christie’s office did not return messages from the AP. Spokesman Michael Drewniak called Zimmer’s claims “outlandishly false” in a statement to MSNBC.


Associated Press




Politics Headlines



Mayor: Christie aides tied Sandy funds to project

Thursday, January 16, 2014

Dem Mayor: NJ Legislature Bridge Probes All About Getting On TV


Elizabeth Mayor Chris Bollwage on Thursday criticized members of the New Jersey legislature for forming separate committees in the assembly and the senate to investigate Gov. Chris Christie the George Washington Bridge scandal, accusing them of preening for the camera.


“That doesn’t make any sense,” the Democrat said on MSNBC, as recorded by Politicker NJ. “It’s a waste of taxpayer money, and it’s all about who can get on television first.”




The state senate announced it would form a select committee to investigate the lane closures after the assembly announced it would do so.


Assemblyman John Wisniewski (D) started investigating the bridge scandal last year on the chamber’s transportation committee, and Bollwage said on MSNBC that Wisniewski should continue to lead the legislature’s probe.


Image via Chris Bollwage on Facebook




All TPM News



Dem Mayor: NJ Legislature Bridge Probes All About Getting On TV

Saturday, December 28, 2013

Clinton to swear in de Blasio as mayor

Bill de Blasio is pictured. | AP Photo

De Blasio will be sworn in with a bible once owned by Franklin Delano Roosevelt. | AP Photo





Former President Bill Clinton will lead the swearing-in ceremony for Bill de Blasio, who next week will become New York City’s first Democratic mayor in 20 years.


Set to become the city’s 109th mayor on Jan. 1, de Blasio said in a statement Saturday that he is honored to have Clinton and his wife, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, at the ceremony. The swearing-in will be performed with a bible once owned by President Franklin Delano Roosevelt.







De Blasio has a long professional history with the Clintons. He served as a regional director of the Department of Housing and Urban Development in the Clinton administration, and later worked as campaign manager for Hillary Clinton’s successful Senate bid in 2000.


De Blasio pulled off a landslide victory in the November mayoral election, beating Republican opponent Joe Lhota by 49 points. His progressive campaign focused on a class-based message, saying New York has become a tale of two cities — one city for the rich and another for the poor. His popularity has been widely seen as a rebuke of the city’s leadership under outgoing Mayor Michael Bloomberg.


The hour-long swearing-in ceremony will be performed Wednesday at noon on the steps of City Hall.


— Isaac Dovere contributed to this report.




POLITICO – TOP Stories



Clinton to swear in de Blasio as mayor

Monday, December 9, 2013

Ex-San Diego Mayor Sentenced to Home Confinement for Harassment


Bob Filner was sentenced Monday to three months of home confinement and three years of probation for harassing women while he was mayor of San Diego, completing the fall of the former 10-term congressman who barely a year ago achieved his long dream of being elected leader of the nation’s eighth-largest city.


Filner, who resigned amid widespread allegations of sexual harassment, pleaded guilty in October to one felony and two misdemeanors for placing a woman in a headlock, kissing another woman and grabbing the buttocks of a third.


Superior Court Judge Robert Trentacosta’s sentence was the same as what prosecutors recommended in a plea agreement with Filner. The 71-year-old former mayor faced a maximum penalty of three years in prison for the felony and one year in jail for each misdemeanor.


The judge specified the Filner may not seek or hold elective office during the term of his probation and will be monitored by GPS during his home confinement, which begins on Jan. 1 and ends March 31. Exceptions to home confinement include medical, mental health and therapy appointments as well as travel to religious services.


Filner spoke briefly during the sentencing hearing.


“I want to apologize to my family who have stood by me through this ordeal, to my loyal staff and supporters, the citizens of San Diego and most sincerely to the women I have hurt and offended,” Filner said.


He promised to earn back their trust and recover his integrity.


“Certainly the behaviors before this court today will never be repeated,” he said.


Melissa Mandel, supervising state deputy attorney general, said victims in the criminal complaint did not want to address the court. She said Filner had demeaned, humiliated and embarrassed them.


“Today is the day that Bob Filner begins to pay his debt to the citizens of San Diego,” she said.


Filner sold himself to voters as a champion of civil rights, she said, but his behavior revealed a “very different person.”


“Only time will tell if Filner is the changed man he claims to be,” she said.


Filner, who is divorced, was convicted of felony false imprisonment for restraining a woman against her will at a fund-raiser on March 6 and applying additional force when she resisted. His attorney, Jerry Coughlan, has said it was a headlock.


The misdemeanor counts of battery were for kissing a woman on the lips without permission at a “Meet the Mayor” event on April 6 and grabbing another woman’s buttocks at a May 25 rally to clean up Fiesta Island in Mission Bay. None of the victims have been identified.


Nearly 20 women have publicly identified themselves as targets of Filner’s unwanted advances, including kissing, groping and requests for dates. His accusers include a retired Navy rear admiral, a San Diego State University dean and a great-grandmother who volunteers answering senior citizens’ questions at City Hall.


The charges do not involve Filner’s former communications director, Irene McCormack Jackson, who expedited the mayor’s downfall by becoming the first to go public with sexual harassment allegations in July. She has filed a lawsuit against Filner and the city, claiming her boss asked her to work without panties, demanded kisses, told her he wanted to see her naked and dragged her in a headlock while whispering in her ear.


Gloria Allred, McCormack Jackson’s attorney, said outside court that Filner was “one lucky man” for being spared jail time.


“Mr. Filner, count your blessings. Your freedom is a gift which you do not deserve,” she said.


McCormack Jackson did not speak.


Filner disappeared from public view after leaving office Aug. 30, less than nine months into a four-year term. He said little when he resurfaced six weeks later to plead guilty in San Diego Superior Court, but his attorney told reporters then that the former mayor “profusely apologizes” for his behavior.


The former mayor devoted himself to jogging, getting therapy and talking to friends after leaving office, his attorney said in October. Television news crews hoping for a glimpse of Filner were disappointed when he showed up at jail a day earlier than expected for booking.


Filner was elected San Diego’s first Democratic mayor in 20 years, promising to put neglected neighborhoods ahead of entrenched downtown business interests. Two city councilmen seeking to replace him in a special election runoff — Republican Kevin Faulconer and Democrat David Alvarez — have embraced Filner’s neighborhoods-first mantra while scarcely mentioning the former mayor by name.


© Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.




Newsmax – America



Ex-San Diego Mayor Sentenced to Home Confinement for Harassment

Thursday, December 5, 2013

New mayor names Bratton to run NYPD


Fred Prouser / Reuters file



Los Angeles police chief William Bratton speaks to reporters at a news conference in downtown Los Angeles in this September 9, 2002 file photo.




By Richard Esposito
NBC News


Bill Bratton, who pioneered the crime-fighting techniques that helped make New York the nation’s safest big city as its top cop two decades ago, will return to his old job under incoming mayor Bill de Blasio.


Bratton, 66, and a contributor to NBC News, served as NYPD commissioner from Mayor Rudy Giuliani from 1994 to 1996, where he was widely lauded for a swift and dramatic reduction in crime, including homicide, which had been at an all-time high. His first job in New York, however, was as head of the Transit Police under Giuliani’s predecessor, Democrat David Dinkins, from 1990 to 1992. De Blasio served as an aide in the Dinkins administration.


De Blasio is set to announce Bratton’s appointment at a press conference in Brooklyn Thursday morning.


The long decline in New York’s crime statistics began when Bratton helmed those subway cops. He returned briefly to his native Boston to head the police force there until Giuliani brought him back as commissioner in 1994 to apply his theories of community policing to the nation’s largest police department.  They were theories that first took shape during that tenure as the head of the subway police.


As NYPD commissioner, Bratton managed to take guns off the street and reduce so-called “quality of life” crimes such as car theft, by using “Broken Windows” police practices, in which police addressed the small crimes that blighted neighborhoods. The crack dealers, petty criminals and squeegee men who plagued New York and shaped its national image began to disappear from the streets.


But as crack, gun violence and quality of life hassles were the key issues of that time, today the issues are civil liberties, the proper role of technology in policing public spaces, and the reshaping of “Stop and Frisk” – the stop and search program that became a lightning rod during the administration of Mayor Mike Bloomberg and a centerpiece of last fall’s mayoral campaign.


Current commissioner Ray Kelly stood behind the policy, which was unpopular among many city residents because it overwhelmingly targeted young black and Latino men. 


“I think it’s going to send a message to the cops and to the community that you can keep crime down and you can do it in a just way,” said Chuck Wexler, the executive director of the Police Executive Research Forum, a national nonprofit that advises law enforcement agencies. “Bill Bratton is one of the most experienced police chiefs in the world. This will be his seventh police chief job. New York is lucky to get him.”


Bratton has been the force behind a change in policing that placed his disciples in many key jobs  across the nation.


He took his techniques to Los Angeles as the LAPD’s top cop in October 2002, reconfigured key parts of the city’s oft-troubled police department and presided over a nearly 30 percent reduction in crime before leaving the post in 2009.


Since then he has been a private sector executive and a driving force in the International Association of Chiefs of Police, as well as an influential voice at PERF, where he served as president.


“The challenge back when Bratton came in to New York in the 90s was it had over 2200 homicides,” said Wexler. “Today it has less than 400. Back then it was getting crime down. Today it is keeping crime down. And doing that in a way that insures the cops that he has their backs and the communities that he understands and respects their needs.”


“I think from my view of the challenges that the NYPD has before it, primarily the public perception of stop and frisk and its impact on minority populations, he is a perfect pick,” said Michel Moore, assistant chief of the LAPD. “He is an insider and an outsider, he has never left New York or that department in his heart. But he has also been an outsider for the past seventeen years. So he’s a bit of a white knight.”


The New York Civil Liberties Union, which has fought stop and frisk in the courts, said in a statement it was “look[ing] forward to working with the new mayor and police commissioner to ensure that fundamental changes are made to the NYPD, including a top-to-bottom culture shift that ends racial profiling and the abuse of stop and frisk.”


More from NBC News Investigations:


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New mayor names Bratton to run NYPD

Sunday, December 1, 2013

Trayvon Killing: Sanford Mayor Jeff Triplett Fought Corrupt Police & Prosecutor To Release 911 Tapes

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Trayvon Killing: Sanford Mayor Jeff Triplett Fought Corrupt Police & Prosecutor To Release 911 Tapes

Tuesday, November 26, 2013

THE LATEST: Jon Stewart DESTROYS Obama and Mayor Rob Ford [FULL HD] To day (14th November 2013)

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THE LATEST: Jon Stewart DESTROYS Obama and Mayor Rob Ford [FULL HD] To day (14th November 2013)

Sunday, November 17, 2013

‘Saturday Night Live’ mocks Toronto Mayor Rob Ford for endless stream of apologies


Toronto Mayor Rob Ford on Saturday Night Live SNLIt’s been a rough week for Toronto Mayor Rob Ford. But don’t worry, he had a press conference to apologize for his actions — and then another press conference to apologize for his first press conference.


The scandal-ridden politician was the focus of the cold open during this week’s Saturday Night Live. The fake Ford, played by Bobby Moynihan, appeared on a Canadian broadcast news program. The host asked the Mayor what he wanted to say to his voters.


“Ooh, just that I goofed up, eh?” the Mayor explained.


Faux Ford wasn’t too worried about his public image though. The Mayor pointed out that he had held a press conference earlier in the day to apologize for using crude language earlier in the week. But during his appearance before reporters, fake Ford also brought chapstick for them to put on before kissing his a**.


But the Mayor realized his mistake and apologized at anotherpress conference shortly thereafter. That presser didn’t go well either, however, as Ford’s crack dealer showed up to make a deal.


And then just a half hour before his appearance on the news, program, fake Ford has held another press conference — during which he body slammed the podium after telling reporters to more lewd things.


After realizing that the Canadian broadcast anchor didn’t believe him, faux Ford resorted to appearing on a show where people would believe him — CBS‘ 60 Minutes, which recently came under fire for airing an interview with a ‘Benghazi witness’ who told lies about the attack.


Watch the cold open below:




Red Alert Politics



‘Saturday Night Live’ mocks Toronto Mayor Rob Ford for endless stream of apologies

Wednesday, November 13, 2013

‘Crack Smoking’ Toronto Mayor: ‘I’m Not Going Anywhere’


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By Shepard Ambellas | November 13, 2013 | 11:47am EST

Things are heating up in Toronto as the city’s mayor said “no apology is necessary” after being verbally attacked by members of the Toronto City Council Tuesday.


TORONTO, CANADA - JULY 24: Toronto mayor Rob Ford watches the Toronto Blue Jays MLB game against the Los Angeles Dodgers on July 24, 2013 at Rogers Centre in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. (Photo by Tom Szczerbowski/Getty Images)

TORONTO, CANADA – JULY 24: Toronto mayor Rob Ford watches the Toronto Blue Jays MLB game against the Los Angeles Dodgers on July 24, 2013 at Rogers Centre in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. (Photo by Tom Szczerbowski/Getty Images)



TORONTO (INTELLIHUB) — The erratically behaved Mayor Rob Ford says he’s “not going anywhere” as his colleges continue to press him to take a leave of absence after he admitted to smoking crack cocaine and threatened to kill an individual in a reported drunken rage earlier this year.


The mayor’s crack use surfaced back in May as Toronto police announced that they actually possessed video evidence of the mayor’s secret lifestyle. All the while the mayor has maintained that he does not have an addiction to the dangerous illicit drug, but admitted to smoking it in a drunken frenzy before.


However, as of now it looks as if it could prove to be a chore for the Toronto city council to remove the mayor. KOMO News out of Seattle reported, “the 44-member City Council is grasping for ways to shunt the larger-than-life leader aside and govern without him until next year’s municipal elections.


It is an unprecedented effort but in some ways, it may not be a stretch. Toronto’s mayor already has limited powers compared to the mayors of many large cities in the United States. He is just one voting member in the council and his power stems mostly from his ability, as the only councilor elected by citywide vote, to build consensus and set the agenda. That authority, many council members say, has evaporated in the crack scandal.


“We really just have to build a box around the mayor so we can get work done,” said councilor John Filion, who has introduced one of two motions in the council designed to isolate Ford.


The first motion, which goes to a vote Wednesday, would call on Ford to take a leave of absence, apologize to Toronto residents for misleading them and cooperate with police. If he refuses, the council would ask the province of Ontario to pass legislation to remove the mayor from office.”[1]


To top it all off, mayor Rob Ford bobble-head dolls surfaced in the city proceedings on Tuesday, adding a new element to the mix. The Chris Farley impersonating mayor was said to have even autographed a few of the dolls for supporters.


“It won’t be the end of Ford Nation, they just put up a billboard in support of him last week,” said Nelson Wiseman, a political professor at the University of Toronto. “The movement and the anti-government sentiment it embodied that got him elected will stay alive … His base will remain strong whether or not he’s removed from office.”


After winning office in 2010, Ford took measures that pleased his suburban voter base, including abolishing an annual $ 60 vehicle registration tax, squeezing valuable concessions out of the union representing 6,000 city workers, and reducing costs by contracting out half of Toronto’s garbage collection. Ford claims to have saved taxpayers $ 1 billion dollars in the process, though councilors dismiss that claim as highly inflated since he has increased the cost of transit, among other public services, along with hiking property taxes.”[1]


Some say this is an attempt to derail the good things the mayor has done for the city and believe that the mayor’s removal could lead the city into a new era of tyranny.


“Ford’s friend and occasional driver Alexander Lisi was also in court in a separate case on Tuesday. He is on trial for extortion and a number of drug charges. The judge set a judicial pretrial date for the drug charges for Jan. 14. 


It’s believed the extortion charge is related to Lisi’s efforts to obtain the purported crack video.


Ford, 44, has served as the mayor of Toronto for the past three years. He still has a year to go in his current mandate and has said he intends to seek re-election.”, reported CBC News.[2]


“The reason I drank or did drugs was not because of stress, but was out of sheer stupidity”, the mayor admitted Wednesday in a city council meeting.


Update 12:20pm EST: The Mayor stood up during a city council meeting Wednesday, calling out other council members as hypocrites saying, “You all are standing up here like you are holier than thou. The question is, have you ever smoked marijuana?” The mayor continued saying, “I know what the answer is”. as the floor maintained silence.


Sources:


[1] Toronto’s City Council seeks to isolate crack-smoking mayor – KOMONews.com


[2] Rob Ford facing ‘public flogging,’ says brother - CBC News


Writer Bio:

Shepard AmbellasShepard Ambellas founder, director and editor-in-chief of Intellihub.com, is a researcher, investigative journalist, radio talk show host, activist, and filmmaker. Follow him onTwitter.

For media inquires, interviews, questions or suggestions for this author, email: shepard@intellihub.com or telephone: (347) 759-6075.

Read more articles by this author here.

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‘Crack Smoking’ Toronto Mayor: ‘I’m Not Going Anywhere’

Toronto mayor admits he bought illegal drugs; council urges him to step aside




TORONTO Wed Nov 13, 2013 12:32pm EST





Toronto Mayor Rob Ford talks during council at City Hall in Toronto, November 13, 2013. REUTERS/Mark Blinch


1 of 4. Toronto Mayor Rob Ford talks during council at City Hall in Toronto, November 13, 2013.


Credit: Reuters/Mark Blinch




TORONTO (Reuters) – Toronto’s embattled mayor, Rob Ford, professed a zero-tolerance policy for drugs and gangs on Wednesday, but he also admitted he has bought illegal drugs in the past two years.


Speaking after Toronto City Council almost unanimously urged Ford to take a break from his duties, Ford said he could not change the past and would continue his efforts as mayor to save Toronto money.


Asked if he had bought illegal drugs in the past two years, he replied somberly: “Yes, I have.”


Ford last week admitted that he smoked crack cocaine “while in a drunken stupor”, and Wednesday’s call from council came in its first meeting since that admission.


An Ipsos-Reid poll conducted for several TV and radio stations and published on Wednesday showed that 76 percent of Toronto voters believe Ford should step down or take leave of absence.


“Over the last six months and especially the last few weeks we have grown increasingly concerned by the seemingly endless cycle of allegations, denials and belated admissions about your behavior,” City Councillor Jaye Robinson read from a nonbinding petition signed by 30 of the city’s 44 councilors, and passed by a vote of 41 to two.


That petition is separate from a motion, that has yet to be voted on, that asks Ford to take a leave of absence and apologize for “misleading” Toronto residents. Council has no power to force the mayor to step down or take a break unless he is convicted of a crime.


“Our city’s reputation has been damaged and continues to suffer,” Robinson said. “Together we stand to ask you to step aside and take a leave of absence to address your challenges privately outside of the public eye.”


The scandal, reminiscent of the one which enveloped former Washington, D.C., mayor Marion Barry after he was filmed smoking crack in 1990, has made Ford the target of late night-talk show jokes and drawn international media interest to Toronto.


Six months ago, the Toronto Star newspaper and media blog Gawker said they had seen a video of the mayor smoking the drug, and Toronto Police Chief Bill Blair has since confirmed the video exists.


Last week, the Star bought a separate video that showed Ford in an expletive-laden rant, making unspecified threats and pounding his hands together. Ford apologized and admitted he was “extremely inebriated”.


While council has no mechanism to remove Ford, the Ontario provincial government could unseat him through new legislation or an amendment to the City of Toronto Act, a risky move that the province’s Liberal government says would set a dangerous precedent.


While Ford has admitted to moments of heavy drinking and drug use, he has said he does not need to seek treatment.


(The headline and text of this story has been corrected to say Ford admitted to buying illegal drugs, not that he admitted to buying crack))


(Reporting by Cameron French, additional reporting by David Ljunggren; Editing by Janet Guttsman; and Peter Galloway)





Reuters: Lifestyle



Toronto mayor admits he bought illegal drugs; council urges him to step aside

Rob Ford: Yes, I Bought Illegal Drugs as Mayor


(Newser) – Another day in the exciting life of Toronto Mayor Rob Ford: Today, he had the pleasure of standing before city council and ‘fessing up to buying illegal drugs while serving as mayor over the last two years, reports the Toronto Sun. “Yes, I have,” Ford admitted, after a long pause, under questioning from a council member. At another point, he added, “There might be a coat hanger in my closet,” reports the Toronto Star. “I don’t know what’s left.” What’s decidedly not left: His previous confession to smoking crack.


He spoke before the same council that is trying to figure out a way to run the city without any interference from Ford, who continues to rebuff their pleas to at least take a leave of absence. (Here is the transcript of a letter councilors unveiled today, citing “the seemingly endless cycle of allegations, denials, and belated admissions about your behaviour.”) Ford also told the council that, on the advice of his attorney, he will not be cooperating with the police investigation into his actions, reports CNN.




Politics from Newser



Rob Ford: Yes, I Bought Illegal Drugs as Mayor

Friday, September 20, 2013

VIDEO: Philadelphia mayor: Food stamp vote "a disgrace"







Mayor of Philadelphia Michael Nutter says that the House’s decision to cut down food stamp funding is “mean-spirited” and “makes no sense whatsoever.”













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VIDEO: Philadelphia mayor: Food stamp vote "a disgrace"

Wednesday, September 11, 2013

VIDEO: NYC Mayoral Candidates Speak After Primary Vote







Bill de Blasio speaks to supporters after taking a decisive lead in the Democratic primary for mayor of New York City. Plus, a wrap-up of speeches from his primary opponents Anthony Weiner, Christine Quinn and Bill Thompson and Republican primary winner Joe Lhota. Video: AP













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VIDEO: NYC Mayoral Candidates Speak After Primary Vote

Monday, September 2, 2013

DeMaio to run for S.D. mayor

Carl DeMaio is shown. | AP Photo

DeMaio ran for San Diego mayor in 2012. | AP Photo





California Republican Carl DeMaio is ditching his campaign for Congress to run for San Diego mayor, according to a source with direct knowledge of his plans.


He is expected to make the formal announcement at a press conference Tuesday morning.







In a brief telephone interview on Sunday evening, DeMaio declined to comment, saying only that, “No decision has been made.”


DeMaio, who is openly gay, had been a top GOP recruit for next year’s midterms. After losing the 2012 San Diego mayor’s race to Democrat Bob Filner, he immediately launched a campaign to unseat freshman Democratic Rep. Scott Peters.


But as Filner came under fire for allegedly sexually harassing a number of women, DeMaio said that he had shifted his focus from the congressional race to possibly running for mayor again. Last month, Filner resigned, paving the way for a Nov. 19 special election.


It will now be up to national Republicans to find a new recruit to run against Peters, who is regarded as one of the most vulnerable Democratic incumbents in the country. Republican Kirk Jorgensen, a technology consultant and Iraq war veteran, has launched a campaign.




POLITICO – TOP Stories



DeMaio to run for S.D. mayor

Monday, August 26, 2013

With Sleazy Democratic Mayor Finally Set to Resign, ABC and NBC Again Skip Party ID



Why should things change now? NBC and ABC on Thursday night and Friday morning yet again refused to identify San Diego Mayor Bob Filner, accused of sexually harassing 18 women, as a Democrat. ABC’s Good Morning America devoted two segments to his impending resignation, but mentioned only “Mayor Bob Filner.”


In contrast, GMA on Thursday hyped the controversy of the Lieutenant governor of Texas, a “rising Republican star,” caught on a 911 call after he attempted to free his niece from jail. On Friday, only CBS This Morning identified Filner as a Democrat. Reporter Bill Whitaker interviewed the ex-fiancee of “Democrat Bob Filner.” Whitaker explained, “They already shared a passion for progressive politics, the fight for the homeless, civil rights, immigrants.”


He included a clip of Bronwyn Ingram describing her past excitement: “To have a Democratic mayor in a city that’s constantly, you know, run by Republicans was very exciting to a lot of us and we had big plans.”


On Thursday night’s Evening News, correspondent Ben Tracy noted that “18 women have accused the Democrat mayor of sexual harassment.”



NBC’s Today on Friday and Nightly News on Thursday both avoided ideological labels.


On ABC’s Good Morning America, Ryan Owens described Filner in rough terms: “The circus may finally be leaving town. Mayor Bob Filner spotted loading boxes into an SUV outside city hall.”


But he still couldn’t manage to mention the D-word. Similarly, World News on Thursday skipped a partisan label.


Way back on July 27, an on-screen Good Morning America graphic identified Filner as a Democrat. But the word was not spoken aloud.


A partial transcript of the August 23 CBS This Morning segment, which aired at 7:32am ET, is below:


7:32


BILL WHITAKER: When Democrat Bob Filner was sworn in as mayor of San Diego, Bronwyn Ingram stood proudly by his side. As his fiancé, she had planned to share her life with him. They already shared a passion for progressive politics, the fight for the homeless, civil rights, immigrants.


BRONWYN INGRAM: To have a Democratic mayor in a city that’s constantly, you know, run by Republicans was very exciting to a lot of us and we had big plans.


FILNER: It’s going to be a time of change for San Diego.


WHITAKER: But now the plans are crumbling in the face of accusations by 18 women who claim they were sexually harassed by Filner. Did you ever see him behave inappropriately towards women any time you were with him?


INGRAM: No. I have not seen any of the behaviors that are being described by the accusers.


FILNER: Do you believe these women?


INGRAM: I would find it hard to believe they were all fabricating those stories.



– Scott Whitlock is the senior news analyst for the Media Research Center. Click here to follow him on Twitter.




BiasAlerts



With Sleazy Democratic Mayor Finally Set to Resign, ABC and NBC Again Skip Party ID

Navalny shakes up Moscow mayor campaign








In this photo taken Wednesday, Aug. 21, 2013, Alexei Navalny speaks to supporters in downtown Moscow. Alexei Navalny, the anti-corruption blogger and a leader of the Russian protest movement, will face the incumbent Sergei Sobyanin, who has proven an invisible candidate rarely spotted on the debate floor or shaking hands with voters, in the upcoming Moscow’s mayor election on Sept. 8. (AP Photo/Ivan Sekretarev)





In this photo taken Wednesday, Aug. 21, 2013, Alexei Navalny speaks to supporters in downtown Moscow. Alexei Navalny, the anti-corruption blogger and a leader of the Russian protest movement, will face the incumbent Sergei Sobyanin, who has proven an invisible candidate rarely spotted on the debate floor or shaking hands with voters, in the upcoming Moscow’s mayor election on Sept. 8. (AP Photo/Ivan Sekretarev)





In this photo taken Wednesday, Aug. 21, 2013, Alexei Navalny, center, poses for a photo in downtown Moscow. Alexei Navalny, the anti-corruption blogger and a leader of the Russian protest movement, will face the incumbent Sergei Sobyanin, who has proven an invisible candidate rarely spotted on the debate floor or shaking hands with voters, in the upcoming Moscow’s mayor election on Sept. 8. (AP Photo/ Ivan Sekretarev)





Alexei Navalny, right, speaks to supporters in Sokolniki park in Moscow, late Sunday, Aug. 25, 2013. Navalny was detained right after the meeting. Alexei Navalny, the anti-corruption blogger and a leader of the Russian protest movement, will face the incumbent Sergei Sobyanin, who has proven an invisible candidate rarely spotted on the debate floor or shaking hands with voters, in the upcoming Moscow’s mayor election on Sept. 8. (AP Photo/Evgeny Feldman)





In this photo taken Wednesday, Aug. 21, 2013, Moscow’s acting mayor Sergei Sobyanin, center, waves to people at Nikolskaya street, which has been pedestrianised in time for the upcoming Day of the City celebrated in Moscow on Sept. 7. The incumbent Sergei Sobyanin, who has proven an invisible candidate rarely spotted on the debate floor or shaking hands with voters, will face Alexei Navalny, the anti-corruption blogger and a leader of the Russian protest movement in the upcoming Moscow’s mayor election on Sept. 8. (AP Photo/Alexander Zemlianichenko)





In this photo taken Wednesday, Aug. 21, 2013, Moscow’s acting mayor Sergei Sobyanin, center, speaks with people at Nikolskaya street, which has been pedestrianised in time for the upcoming Day of the City celebrated in Moscow on Sept. 7. The incumbent Sergei Sobyanin, who has proven an invisible candidate rarely spotted on the debate floor or shaking hands with voters, will face Alexei Navalny, the anti-corruption blogger and a leader of the Russian protest movement in the upcoming Moscow’s mayor election on Sept. 8. (AP Photo/ Alexander Zemlianichenko)













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MOSCOW (AP) — A motley gaggle of hipsters, mothers with children and two babushkas with hair dyed bright red gather to listen to something they haven’t heard in over a decade: a stump speech for Moscow mayor.


Alexei Navalny, the anti-corruption blogger and leader of Russia’s protest movement, is trying to take his following offline and into the street, waging a traditional campaign of hand-shaking and leaflet drives to win voters outside his base of the young and web-savvy.


Navalny has little hope of defeating incumbent Sergei Sobyanin — but polls show his star is rising. And if he gets a big chunk of the vote, the Kremlin will face pressure to show leniency over his five-year prison sentence, and the grassroots protest movement that fizzled out after Vladimir Putin’s return to the presidency last year may gain new wind.


Sobyanin, meanwhile, is playing the regal incumbent: Throughout the campaign, the Kremlin-backed politician has been all but invisible, allowing the constant drone of jackhammers or whiff of fresh paint that are signs of a Moscow makeover to remind voters of who’s in charge — and who can pull the purse-strings.


Navalny is the one who has been soaking up attention, and generating buzz. On a recent August day, the opposition leader stood on stage in a sprawling Moscow park dotted with enormous space shuttles and other scraps of Soviet-era glory, and attempted to connect with an audience he rarely reaches through Twitter: the feared and revered babushka contingency.


“We know that (in Soviet times) our oil money was spent on enormous factories, industry, railroads, roads, science, health care, rockets,” he boomed, riffing on a nostalgia felt by many older Russians, who saw their hopes dashed and savings depleted under post-Soviet political reforms.


“But can you name a single major business that’s been built in this country in the past 10 years? I can’t!”


The old ladies sitting in the first row chuckled and shook their heads.


On Sunday, police briefly detained Navalny after he left the stage of a campaign event, and released him a short time later. The detention was part of a series of public signals to Navalny, who was given a verbal warning about various alleged campaign violations by the Moscow electoral committee last week.


Polling data on the race is spotty and inconsistent, but the trends are clear: The number of Muscovites ready to vote for Navalny on Sept. 8 has breached 10 percent and may even be moving toward 20 percent. Meanwhile, Sobyanin’s ratings — while still above the 50 percent that would allow him to avoid a run-off — are slipping by the week. There are four other party-backed candidates in the race, none projected to snag more than 5 percent.


Alexei Grazhdankin, deputy director of the independent Levada polling center, said that Sobyanin’s voter base was clearly no longer growing, and that there’s now a small chance there will be a second round.


Last month, Navalny was sentenced to five years in prison on embezzlement charges, but was released the day after his conviction in what many have described as an effort to legitimize the mayoral race and ensure that Sobyanin — who was appointed as mayor and is seen as a possible successor to Putin — is regarded as an elected politician with widespread support.


Such legitimacy is considered important because Putin’s forces are at their weakest in his seat of power: Moscow. When Putin won back the presidency last year, after ruling for a term in the lesser role of prime minister, he won only 47 percent of the capital’s vote, compared to 64 percent nationwide. That may also be a reason why, although there’s no doubt that Sobyanin is the Kremlin’s man, he is running as an independent and has avoided public appearances with the president.


Masha Lipman at the Carnegie Endowment in Moscow said that Navalny had already achieved something: cast doubt over the inevitability of Putin’s power.


“One of his greatest achievements is … adding an element of risk and uncertainty,” she said. “Putin built a political system in this country that is risk averse, it’s a political monopoly.”


Rather than the issues — immigration, traffic, high cost of living — it’s a contrast in political style that lies at the heart of the mayoral campaign. In the Levada Center poll, 48 percent of respondents said they would vote for a mayor with “experience,” whereas 47 percent said that personal qualities, such as “openness and determination,” were crucial.


Navalny, a sharp-tongued 37-year-old lawyer, has plenty of the latter. He has waged a blitzkrieg campaign with nearly $ 1.5 million in funds raised online, meeting with hundreds of voters every day and mobilizing enthusiastic young volunteers to help hand out leaflets in the street and on the metro.


His team has also unleashed a flurry of new online projects. From a GPS mapping system that shows how many supporters live in each apartment block to an application that helps users spread pro-Navalny information on Russia’s biggest social networks, the campaign has been keen to lock down his natural base of young voters, many of whom often don’t make it to the polls.


“Currently the polls are assuming that those who haven’t yet figured out who to vote for will vote the same way as those who have,” Leonid Volkov, Navalny’s campaign manager, told The Associated Press. “The fight is for the 30 percent of voters who haven’t decided yet.”


Andrei Tvertnev, an unemployed 25-year-old former soldier who was lingering in the crowd around Navalny, is one of those yet to make up his mind.


Tvertnev wasn’t keen on Sobyanin, saying that the changes he’s brought to the city “could have been done much faster.” At the same time, he remained skeptical about Navalny.


“Do I vote for a bureaucrat who made some changes, or a different person who promises even more changes?” he asked. “I think I’ll only make up my mind on the day of the elections.”


Sobyanin, who made his name as the governor of the oil-rich Siberian province of Tyumen, makes up for his lack of charisma and enthusiasm with what talks in Russian politics: experience, access and the money that comes with it.


Despite his almost invisible candidacy, Sobyanin is genuinely well-liked for the changes he’s brought to Moscow. He has poured a yearly budget of approximately $ 54 billion into the city’s parks and cultural institutions, although other promises to tackle traffic and parking have been lagging or limited in scope.


As if to shore up his reputation as a fixer-upper, the city, which usually hits a sleepy summer lull in August, has been converted into an enormous construction site — with sidewalks torn up and facades repainted.


“There’s little doubt that before elections, the government becomes very affectionate and thoughtful,” Levada’s Grazhdankin said about the city’s makeover.


While Sobyanin, who was appointed to the mayor’s office, is eager to prove himself as a legitimately elected politician, the tactics used against Navalny — from accusations that he receives foreign funding abroad to refusals by media outlets to play his campaign ads — show that he still sees Navalny as a threat.


Even if Navalny’s eventual vote tally is relatively low, he may end up having an outsized impact on the Russian political scene.


“If he gets 10 to 12 percent, they can say, look at your opposition leader, he was only able to get this tiny fraction of the vote,” said Lipman. “But those people who are investing their emotions, time and money into this campaign, that experience won’t go away.”


Oleg Bogomolov, a 42-year-old human resources manager who was at Navalny’s headquarters to volunteer for the first time, said he didn’t truly believe Navalny could win.


“But I think the more people who know about him, the greater his chances of being set free,” he said. “If they put him behind bars again (after the election), there will be even more people in the streets.”


Associated Press




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Navalny shakes up Moscow mayor campaign