Showing posts with label boost. Show all posts
Showing posts with label boost. Show all posts

Saturday, January 11, 2014

GOP Millionaire Ron Unz Backs Calif. Minimum-Wage Boost

Democrats across the nation are eager to make increasing the minimum wage a defining campaign issue in 2014, but in California a proposal to boost the pay rate to $ 12 an hour is coming from a different point on the political compass.

Ron Unz, a Silicon Valley multimillionaire and registered Republican who once ran for governor and, briefly, U.S. Senate, wants state voters to endorse the wage jump that he predicts would nourish the economy and lift low-paid workers from dependency on food stamps and other assistance bankrolled by taxpayers.


A push for bigger paychecks for workers at the lower rungs of the economic ladder is typically associated with Democrats — President Barack Obama is supporting a bill in Congress that would elevate the $ 7.25 federal minimum to over $ 10 an hour.


But entrepreneur Unz, 52, is a former publisher of The American Conservative magazine with a history of against-the-grain political activism that includes pushing a 1998 ballot proposal that dismantled California’s bilingual education system, an idea he later championed in Colorado and other states.


Two decades ago, as a 32-year-old, the theoretical-physicist-turned-software-developer tried to unseat then-Gov. Pete Wilson, a fellow Republican. After a long break on the political sidelines, Unz’s reappearance has startled members of both major parties, and his proposal — if it goes to voters in November — could unsettle races from governor to Congress.


“He is a wild card in the deck of California politics,” said Bill Whalen, a research fellow at Stanford University’s Hoover Institution and former Wilson speech writer.


Republican National Committee member Shawn Steel praised Unz for his 1998 initiative, which abolished most bilingual education programs for students who speak little, if any, English and replaced them with English-only instruction. But Steel predicted a jump in the minimum wage would eliminate jobs, penalizing young people who often hold them.


Unz “is an innovator, he’s extremely bright and he’s a lone wolf,” Steel said.


To Unz, who’s spoken out over the years on issues as varied as campaign finance to IQ and race, the proposal simply makes sense. As drafted, it would increase the minimum wage in two steps — to $ 10 an hour in 2015, and $ 12 the following year, which would be the highest among states at current levels.


His push comes as Seattle’s new mayor, Democrat Ed Murray, has said he wants workers there to earn a minimum of $ 15 an hour, and after fast-food workers staged nationwide rallies calling for higher income.


Unz says taxpayers for too long have been subsidizing low-wage paying businesses, since the government pays for food stamps and other programs those workers often need to get by. He posits that the increase — at $ 12-an-hour, up from the current $ 8 — would lift millions of Californians out of poverty, drive up income and sales tax revenue and save taxpayers billions of dollars, since those workers would no longer qualify for many welfare benefits.


He dismisses the notion that countless jobs would evaporate, noting that most of the state’s lower-wage jobs are in agriculture and the service sector, which can’t be easily automated or transported elsewhere. He believes higher wages would make the jobs more attractive to U.S. residents, curtailing a lure for illegal immigration.


For California, among the world’s 10 largest economies in 2012, the jump “would be a gigantic economic stimulus package,” Unz said in an interview. He hopes its passage in the nation’s most populous state would have a ripple effect, prompting other states to increases wages.


Unz is an unusual figure in California’s largely left-of-center political culture, untethered to traditional party apparatus, libertarian in his leanings and wealthy enough to make potential rivals nervous.


He declined to provide specifics on his personal wealth — he founded Wall Street Analytics, Inc., which was acquired by Moody’s Corp. in 2006.


He calls the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan “totally disastrous,” lambasts the government for bailing out Wall Street banks and sees little difference between Obama and predecessor George W. Bush.


In high school, he ranked among the top math students in the U.S. and studied theoretical physics at Harvard University, Stanford University and Cambridge University, according to his website.


His journalism and writings over the years — touching on subjects as diverse as college admissions, immigration and homosexuality — have been described as everything from insightful to offensive.


In an article for the New America Foundation, he wrote that the government’s “vast and leaky conglomeration” of assistance and benefit programs had failed to ensure a decent living for workers, so “perhaps we should just try raising wages instead.”


Businesses could raise their prices a fractional amount to cover much or most of the cost of the higher wages, which in turn would feed the economy with spending, he argues.


He estimates that discount retailer Wal-Mart, for example, could cover the cost with a one-time price increase of about 1 percent. Wal-Mart spokesman Kory Lundberg said he did not know the source of Unz’s calculation and added, “It seems kind of hard to believe.”


Would it be a wash for taxpayers if social spending decreases but the price of consumer goods rises?


Unz acknowledged it would be difficult to craft a precise analysis, since it’s difficult to predict if governments would lower taxes or how different industries would cover the cost, through higher prices or cutting into profits. But overall, he argued higher wages and lower welfare spending would be “a very beneficial result.”


The proposal is under review by the state attorney general, and if it clears that hurdle Unz can then begin gathering tens of thousands of petition signatures needed to qualify for the November ballot.


It’s hard to predict its chances of passage, but raising the minimum wage has had appeal in California in the past — voters endorsed a wage increase by a landslide in 1996.


Bob Mulholland, a longtime adviser to the state Democratic Party, predicted the proposal would help Democrats, defining them as candidates in touch with Main Street.


“I think (Democrats) will see him as a sinner in the past but a welcome angel now,” Mulholland said.


But it could become a tricky issue for Democratic Gov. Jerry Brown, who is seeking another term and just signed a law that will raise California’s minimum wage to $ 10 an hour by 2016. Businesses are unlikely to welcome another boost.


“This is the essence of insanity,” said John Kabateck of the National Federation of Independent Business in California, who said every bump in the wage threatens jobs created by mom-and-pop businesses also struggling with a new national health care law.


State labor leaders might seem likely potential supporters, but at this point, Unz is being viewed cautiously because of his history in conservative causes. Also, labor is eager to link future increases in the state minimum wage to the rate of inflation.


“We are not totally clear on his motivation or his strategy at this point,” said Steve Smith of the California Labor Federation. “He’s not someone who has a record of supporting workers.”


© Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.




Newsmax – America



GOP Millionaire Ron Unz Backs Calif. Minimum-Wage Boost

Tuesday, January 7, 2014

US to boost military presence in South Korea

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US to boost military presence in South Korea

Monday, November 18, 2013

Not yet enough US growth for sustained labor boost -Fed"s Dudley

Not yet enough US growth for sustained labor boost -Fed"s Dudley
http://currenteconomictrendsandnews.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/11/2daf8__p-89EKCgBk8MZdE.gif



NEW YORK Mon Nov 18, 2013 1:10pm EST



NEW YORK Nov 18 (Reuters) – The Federal Reserve has not yet seen enough U.S. economic growth momentum to convince policymakers of a sustained improvement in the labor market outlook, New York Fed President William Dudley said on Monday.


Talking to students at Queens College, Dudley said low inflation and high unemployment point to the need for accommodative policies for a considerable period of time. For now, he added, the benefits of bond buying outweigh the costs, and there are no current signs of “disturbing” asset bubbles.



Reuters: Bonds News




Read more about Not yet enough US growth for sustained labor boost -Fed"s Dudley and other interesting subjects concerning Bonds at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Thursday, September 26, 2013

Flavonoids from red grapes and blueberries synergistically boost immune response











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(NaturalNews) For the past decade, nutrition scientists have known that certain whole foods that are consumed in their natural and unprocessed forms promote vibrant health by stimulating the innate immune response system, while virtually all refined foods and hydrogenated fats promote disease. Extensive research studies have determined that protective compounds that protect plants from disease can have a similar effect when eaten by humans. Resveratrol found most commonly in red grapes and pterostilbene sourced from blueberries work in concert with our own natural reserve of vitamin D to stimulate our immune system and prevent chronic disease.

A research team from the Linus Pauling Institute at Oregon State University has released information about a study in the journal Molecular Nutrition and Food Research that explains how two natural compounds are shown to boost immune response and can significantly lower the risk of developing many chronic diseases. The scientists analyzed 446 naturally occurring compounds from fresh fruits and vegetables and found that resveratrol and pterostilbene from grapes and blueberries had a significant impact in raising the expression of the human cathelicidin antimicrobial peptide, or CAMP gene, which is involved in immune function.


The lead study author, Dr. Adrian Gombart, commented, “Out of a study of hundreds of compounds, just these two popped right out… their synergy with vitamin D to increase CAMP gene expression was significant and intriguing. It’s a pretty interesting interaction.” The studies were performed using laboratory cell cultures based on the established potential of some foods to improve human immune response. Dozens of prior studies have demonstrated that resveratrol can improve cardiovascular health and is preventive in the fight against cancer by squelching inflammation that fuels both diseases.

This study evolved around the discovery that the CAMP gene plays a key role in the innate immune system and provides the body’s first line of defense and ability to combat bacterial infection. This study is the first to show that consumption of red grapes and blueberries synergistically prompts the activation of vitamin D to express the CAMP gene and heighten our natural immune response to pathogenic invaders.


The research team concluded that resveratrol and pterostilbene (collectively known and stilbenoids) produced by plants to fight infections appear to affect some of the signaling pathways in humans that allow vitamin D to do its job. The scientists explained that combining these compounds with vitamin D has considerably more biological impact than any of them would separately. Health-minded individuals should eat three to five servings of red grapes and blueberries each week to boost immune health and fight immune-deficient disease proliferation.


Sources for this article include:


http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com


http://oregonstate.edu


http://www.medicalnewstoday.com


http://science.naturalnews.com


About the author:
John Phillip is a Certified Nutritional Consultant and Health Researcher and Author who writes regularly on the cutting edge use of diet, lifestyle modifications and targeted supplementation to enhance and improve the quality and length of life. John is the author of ‘Your Healthy Weight Loss Plan’, a comprehensive EBook explaining how to use Diet, Exercise, Mind and Targeted Supplementation to achieve your weight loss goal. Visit My Optimal Health Resource to continue reading the latest health news updates, and to download your copy of ‘Your Healthy Weight Loss Plan’.





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Thursday, August 22, 2013

Investor’s Business Daily Finds: Feds Economic Boost Didn’t Help Much

Federal Reserve program to buy bonds has done ‘little’ to improve U.S. economy.



The Federal Reserve has spent more than $ 2 trillion buying up assets since 2008 (often government bonds and mortgage securities) in an attempt to shore up the economy. Proponents argued what was called “quantitative easing” or QE was necessary “based on the idea that without it, the nation’s economy would have imploded,” according to Investor’s Business Daily.


But a new Fed study that looked at the $ 600 billion QE2 program suggests that wasn’t the case, IBD reported on the front page of its Aug. 20 edition.


Fed economists from the San Francisco and New York Federal Reserve Banks found that “Asset purchase programs like QE2 [second round of quantitative easing] appear to have, at best, moderate effects on economic growth and inflation.”


How much did the QE stimulus boost the economy? IBD wrote that the study found it “likely boosted GDP by a mere 0.13 percentage point.” In other words, “$ 600 billion in QE2 spending boosted GDP by less than $ 200 billion.”


IBD said it isn’t sure the Fed will be able to sell off those debts without an impact on the economy: “Once the Fed begins selling off its massive $ 3.6 trillion in assets acquired under the QE program (see chart), it will send interest rates surging and tank the economy.”


The business newspaper also criticized the Fed program for becoming “the No. 1 enabler of a spendthrift government that’s pushing us to the brink of fiscal disaster.”






Investor’s Business Daily Finds: Feds Economic Boost Didn’t Help Much

Wednesday, August 7, 2013

Closing Fannie, Freddie could boost mortgage rates







President Barack Obama speaks about housing, Tuesday, Aug. 6, 2013, in Phoenix. Obama was in Arizona to discuss the economy and the middle class and then to California to tape an appearance on “The Tonight Show with Jay Leno.”(AP Photo/Matt York)





President Barack Obama speaks about housing, Tuesday, Aug. 6, 2013, in Phoenix. Obama was in Arizona to discuss the economy and the middle class and then to California to tape an appearance on “The Tonight Show with Jay Leno.”(AP Photo/Matt York)













Buy AP Photo Reprints







(AP) — Homebuyers could feel the pinch if Congress follows through on plans to shut down Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the government-controlled mortgage guarantee giants that were rescued by a $ 187 billion taxpayer bailout during the financial crisis.


Borrowers would probably end up paying slightly higher mortgage rates under House and Senate bills that would phase out Fannie and Freddie over five years and shrink the government’s huge role in guaranteeing mortgage securities. Fannie and Freddie teetered under a crush of massive losses on risky mortgages before being bailed out.


The House Republican bill would virtually privatize the mortgage market. The Senate’s bipartisan plan envisions a continued but more limited government role in insuring mortgage securities. Supporters say that would keep mortgages available and affordable.


Congressional efforts to overhaul the nation’s mortgage finance system got a boost Tuesday from President Barack Obama’s call for changes that are generally in line with the Senate’s bipartisan plan.


“For too long these companies were allowed to make huge profits buying mortgages, knowing that if their bets went bad, taxpayers would be left holding the bag. It was ‘heads we win, tails you lose,’ and it was wrong,” Obama said. “The good news is right now there’s a bipartisan group of senators working to end Fannie and Freddie as we know them. And I support these kinds of reform efforts.”


The idea behind both plans is to shift more mortgage financing risk from the government to the private sector to prevent taxpayers from having to pay for future bailouts. But there’s a price homebuyers would likely pay for having private investors shoulder more risk to protect taxpayers.


“It will mean higher mortgage rates,” said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Analytics. “The question is how much higher.”


Typical borrowers could pay about $ 75 per month in extra interest payments, about half a percentage point, on an average mortgage under the Senate proposal, Zandi estimated, and about $ 135 more under the House plan. That’s on a conforming loan of about $ 200,000 with the borrower providing a 20 percent down payment.


“You have to assume that almost in any future model being drafted, loans will be more expensive,” said David Stevens, CEO of the Mortgage Bankers Association and a former Obama administration housing official.


Most Democrats tend to favor a continued government role backstopping the mortgage market because they say it stabilizes the housing market. Many House Republicans, especially conservatives, want to end government involvement and let the free market rule. Given the split, the rival bills stand as opening markers in a long fight.


“We all agree that the system with Fannie and Freddie needs to be changed,” said Rep. Michael Capuano, D-Mass., ranking Democrat on the House Financial Services subcommittee on housing and insurance. “The real question is, do we reform it or kill it the way House Republicans want to.”


Rep. Maxine Waters, D-Calif., the ranking Democrat on the Financial Services Committee, said the vast majority of housing industry groups such as real estate agents, mortgage bankers and homebuilders support keeping a government role insuring mortgage securities.


House Republicans, led by the chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, Rep. Jeb Hensarling, R-Texas, say their bill to vastly reduce the government’s involvement in the mortgage finance system will be a boon to consumers, spurring competition and innovation in the private sector and giving borrowers more choices. They blame Fannie and Freddie for inflating the market before the housing crash, contributing to the boom-bust cycle.


Hensarling, in a statement Tuesday, said his plan “puts private capital at the center of the housing finance system, ends the bailout of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and sustains the 30-year fixed rate mortgage – all goals the president today says he supports.”


Hensarling’s bill recently cleared his committee without any Democratic votes and is expected to get a House vote in the next few months.


Housing advocates warn that if the government’s role is scaled back too far, mortgages could be pushed out of reach for people with lower credit scores and smaller savings for down payments.


They say 30-year fixed-rate mortgages, long a staple of the housing market, could become harder to find and more expensive for borrowers with modest incomes because lenders would be less willing to offer such longer-term loans without government guarantees.


“Those people are now going to be locked out of the system or many will end up paying a premium because of these changes,” said John Taylor, chief executive of the National Community Reinvestment Coalition, a housing advocacy group.


Fannie and Freddie own or guarantee nearly half of all U.S. mortgages and 90 percent of new ones. They buy mortgages from lenders, package them as bonds, guarantee them against default and sell them to investors. That helps banks get rid of risk from their balance sheets, freeing up more money to lend.


During the financial crisis, as house prices tanked and foreclosures surged, the government rescued Fannie and Freddie from a flood of defaults on risky loans the agencies had guaranteed, many aimed at providing affordable housing for lower-income borrowers.


Like many banks, the two companies had relaxed their standards on loans they bought or guaranteed during the boom. High-interest loans, some with low “teaser” rates, were given to risky borrowers.


Now under government control, Fannie and Freddie are hugely profitable, and thanks in large part to the housing recovery they’re pumping billions of dollars into the U.S. Treasury. Fannie and Freddie have paid the Treasury $ 132 billion, more than two-thirds of the bailout.


In the Democratic-controlled Senate, a bipartisan bill by Sens. Bob Corker, R-Tenn., and Mark Warner, D-Va., would gradually replace Fannie and Freddie over five years with a new agency having a more limited role insuring mortgage securities against catastrophic losses.


The bill would create a new Federal Mortgage Insurance Corp. that would provide backstop insurance available only after a substantial amount of private capital is used up. Investors would pay insurance fees to the corporation while agreeing to put a substantial amount of their own capital at risk.


The bill in the GOP-controlled House nearly eliminates the government’s role in the mortgage financing system. It would limit the Federal Housing Administration to insuring loans only for first-time and lower-income borrowers.


Associated Press




Politics Headlines



Closing Fannie, Freddie could boost mortgage rates

Thursday, August 1, 2013

N.C."s right turn may boost Hagan


Protesters in North Carolina are shown. | AP Photo

Democrats point to weekly “Moral Monday” rallies as one encouraging sign for 2014. | AP Photo





The legislative session that just ended in North Carolina was a conservative bonanza — and Tar Heel State Democrats think that may be just what Sen. Kay Hagan needed to save her seat.


Next fall, Hagan (D-N.C.) will defend her seat in a Republican-controlled red state that narrowly went to Mitt Romney in 2012. The state’s Democrats are betting that the recent actions of the state Legislature will be perceived as overreach, helping out Hagan: Tougher abortion restrictions, broader conceal-carry powers and more stringent voter ID requirements all passed out of the statehouse following a busy and controversial session of the state Legislature.







Democrats are eager to tie the eventual Republican challenger to the statehouse — especially if House Speaker Thom Tillis receives the nomination.


(PHOTOS: Senators up for election in 2014)


Along with Democratic-held seats in the red states of Alaska, Louisiana and Arkansas, Hagan’s spot is considered a top pickup opportunity for Republicans, who need six more senators to take control of the upper chamber.


But Democrats note that North Carolina isn’t as deeply red as other places with competitive races, arguing that Romney barely won the state in 2012 and noting that President Barack Obama took the state in 2008. If they can paint the North Carolina GOP as being too extreme, the thinking goes, they can garner enough centrist votes to keep a hold on the Senate seat.


“Any Senate race is going to be a bit of a fight, but three months ago, I would have thought it was going to be a lot tougher than it is now,” longtime Democratic strategist Thomas Mills told POLITICO.


On Monday night, Republican Gov. Pat McCrory signed a controversial abortion bill that critics charge would restrict access to the procedure; supporters say it bolsters clinic standards. He also approved a gun bill that allows more leeway for where gun owners with conceal-carry permits can bring their weapons even as it adds more information to the state’s background checks system. The governor has also signaled that he will sign a measure that increases requirements for voting, among a bevy of other bills.


“The first thought is this: The bills passing are not right for the state of North Carolina,” said a North Carolina Democrat who is close to the Hagan campaign. “Beyond that, I think any strategist would look and be able to tell that Thom Tillis and [Senate Leader] Phil Berger are going to be caught up in the wildly unpopular legislation.”


Still, observers on both sides of the aisle note that Hagan needs to tread carefully. North Carolina has a more conservative electorate, and Republicans argue that if Obama couldn’t win over those voters during a devastating year for the GOP nationally, a Democratic candidate in a nonpresidential election has a tough road ahead.


Tillis is among the better-known Republican contenders for the seat, and Berger, among others, could jump in the race, but Democrats are invoking the activities of the state Legislature, regardless of who scores the nomination. They say the GOP-dominated statehouse has energized a broad coalition of opposition and hope to capitalize on that enthusiasm.


“In a low-turnout election where you’ve got nothing else on the ticket, no president, no gubernatorial, nothing … the party that has the most motivated voters tends to win,” Mills said. “It’s going to be very interesting to see because I think generally in an election like that, it’s driven totally by national mood. There’s [now] the possibility that it’s going to be driven by reaction to the state Legislature.”


Democrats point to “Moral Monday” rallies — weekly protests against the state Legislature’s actions over the past several months — as one encouraging sign for 2014.


On Monday, a rally in Raleigh drew 10,000 people largely protesting elements of the budget, according to organizers in news reports, though police pegged that turnout at closer to 3,000. Still, it was considered the biggest Moral Monday rally since the protests kicked off in April, reports said. On a smaller scale, Mills also pointed to an event in a “little tiny town” near Asheville that, he said, drew 450 people earlier this week.


“You don’t get that kind of reaction unless people are pissed,” he said.


A survey released earlier this month from the Raleigh-based, liberal-leaning Public Policy Polling firm found Hagan up double digits over all of her potential opponents — even as her own favorability rating only clocks in at 43 percent favorable to 45 percent unfavorable. The poll attributed her gains over opponents to “the incredible unpopularity of the North Carolina Legislature.”




POLITICO – TOP Stories



N.C."s right turn may boost Hagan

N.C."s right turn may boost Hagan


Protesters in North Carolina are shown. | AP Photo

Democrats point to weekly “Moral Monday” rallies as one encouraging sign for 2014. | AP Photo





The legislative session that just ended in North Carolina was a conservative bonanza — and Tar Heel State Democrats think that may be just what Sen. Kay Hagan needed to save her seat.


Next fall, Hagan (D-N.C.) will defend her seat in a Republican-controlled red state that narrowly went to Mitt Romney in 2012. The state’s Democrats are betting that the recent actions of the state Legislature will be perceived as overreach, helping out Hagan: Tougher abortion restrictions, broader conceal-carry powers and more stringent voter ID requirements all passed out of the statehouse following a busy and controversial session of the state Legislature.







Democrats are eager to tie the eventual Republican challenger to the statehouse — especially if House Speaker Thom Tillis receives the nomination.


(PHOTOS: Senators up for election in 2014)


Along with Democratic-held seats in the red states of Alaska, Louisiana and Arkansas, Hagan’s spot is considered a top pickup opportunity for Republicans, who need six more senators to take control of the upper chamber.


But Democrats note that North Carolina isn’t as deeply red as other places with competitive races, arguing that Romney barely won the state in 2012 and noting that President Barack Obama took the state in 2008. If they can paint the North Carolina GOP as being too extreme, the thinking goes, they can garner enough centrist votes to keep a hold on the Senate seat.


“Any Senate race is going to be a bit of a fight, but three months ago, I would have thought it was going to be a lot tougher than it is now,” longtime Democratic strategist Thomas Mills told POLITICO.


On Monday night, Republican Gov. Pat McCrory signed a controversial abortion bill that critics charge would restrict access to the procedure; supporters say it bolsters clinic standards. He also approved a gun bill that allows more leeway for where gun owners with conceal-carry permits can bring their weapons even as it adds more information to the state’s background checks system. The governor has also signaled that he will sign a measure that increases requirements for voting, among a bevy of other bills.


“The first thought is this: The bills passing are not right for the state of North Carolina,” said a North Carolina Democrat who is close to the Hagan campaign. “Beyond that, I think any strategist would look and be able to tell that Thom Tillis and [Senate Leader] Phil Berger are going to be caught up in the wildly unpopular legislation.”


Still, observers on both sides of the aisle note that Hagan needs to tread carefully. North Carolina has a more conservative electorate, and Republicans argue that if Obama couldn’t win over those voters during a devastating year for the GOP nationally, a Democratic candidate in a nonpresidential election has a tough road ahead.


Tillis is among the better-known Republican contenders for the seat, and Berger, among others, could jump in the race, but Democrats are invoking the activities of the state Legislature, regardless of who scores the nomination. They say the GOP-dominated statehouse has energized a broad coalition of opposition and hope to capitalize on that enthusiasm.


“In a low-turnout election where you’ve got nothing else on the ticket, no president, no gubernatorial, nothing … the party that has the most motivated voters tends to win,” Mills said. “It’s going to be very interesting to see because I think generally in an election like that, it’s driven totally by national mood. There’s [now] the possibility that it’s going to be driven by reaction to the state Legislature.”


Democrats point to “Moral Monday” rallies — weekly protests against the state Legislature’s actions over the past several months — as one encouraging sign for 2014.


On Monday, a rally in Raleigh drew 10,000 people largely protesting elements of the budget, according to organizers in news reports, though police pegged that turnout at closer to 3,000. Still, it was considered the biggest Moral Monday rally since the protests kicked off in April, reports said. On a smaller scale, Mills also pointed to an event in a “little tiny town” near Asheville that, he said, drew 450 people earlier this week.


“You don’t get that kind of reaction unless people are pissed,” he said.


A survey released earlier this month from the Raleigh-based, liberal-leaning Public Policy Polling firm found Hagan up double digits over all of her potential opponents — even as her own favorability rating only clocks in at 43 percent favorable to 45 percent unfavorable. The poll attributed her gains over opponents to “the incredible unpopularity of the North Carolina Legislature.”




POLITICO – TOP Stories



N.C."s right turn may boost Hagan

Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Barclays to sell shares to boost capital position


(AP) — Barclays plans to sell 5.8 billion pounds ($ 8.9 billion) in new shares to bolster its balance sheet amid new regulatory requirements meant to prevent a repeat of the 2008 financial crisis.


The sale to existing shareholders was announced along with the bank’s earnings statement, and came after the Prudential Regulation Authority told Barclays and other lenders to increase their capital as a buffer against future crises.


The regulator’s report increased pressure on banks, which are being ordered to hold more capital even as they are being pushed to lend to businesses and families to kick-start the economy.


The overall shortfall for Britain’s lenders was estimated at 27.1 billion pounds.


Barclays reported net income of 671 million pounds in the first half of 2013 compared with 148 million pounds last year.


Associated Press




Business Headlines



Barclays to sell shares to boost capital position

Thursday, July 25, 2013

China takes measures to boost growth


Worker climbs out of an underground construction site in Hefei, ChinaChina has previously used stimulus measures to help sustain its high growth rate


China has unveiled a series of moves aimed at boosting growth, indicating that policymakers are concerned about the slowdown in its economy.


The steps include tax breaks for small businesses, reduced fees for exporters and opening up of railway construction.


China’s economic growth rate has slowed for two quarters in a row and there are concerns that it may slow further.


But the cabinet said the economy is in a reasonable shape and it was pushing for reforms to stabilise growth.


“The economy is still running in a reasonable range,” the cabinet said.


“We must look at now and beyond to let restructuring and reform play an active role in stabilizing growth.”


Data released earlier this month showed that China’s economic growth slowed in the April to June period.


The world’s second biggest economy grew by 7.5% compared to the previous year, down from 7.7% in the January to March period.




BBC News – Asia



China takes measures to boost growth

Wednesday, July 17, 2013

Cartel leader"s capture may boost violence



The leader of Mexico’s most-feared drug cartel, the Zetas, is now in custody. Miguel Angel Trevino Morales was captured by Mexican marines. NBC’s Brian Williams reports.



By Becky Bratu, Staff Writer, NBC News


The capture Monday of Los Zetas leader Miguel Angel Trevino Morales may have dealt a major blow to the Mexican drug cartel, but experts say the take down won’t lead to a decline in gang violence in the near future — and will likely just set the stage for a bloody power struggle and turf war.


Trevino Morales, 40, and two companions were traveling between the border town of Nuevo Laredo and the state of Coahuila when Mexican Marines, in vehicles and a helicopter, began pursuing them around 3:45 a.m. Monday. They were captured without firing a single shot, the government said. 


Inside Trevino Morales’ car, authorities found $ 2 million, weapons and ammunition, according to Eduardo Sanchez Hernandez, spokesman for Mexico’s interior secretary. The Zetas leader and his alleged accomplices — a bodyguard and an accountant — were flown to Mexico City, where they will eventually be tried.


Trevino Morales is charged with ordering the kidnapping and killing of 265 migrants, along with numerous other charges of murder, torture and other crimes, according to the government spokesman.



Violence, including the discovery of 49 mutilated bodies near the U.S. border, is reaching new levels in the ongoing drug war in Mexico. NBC’s Mark Potter reports.



“This is the takedown of the most sadistic capo at least in the Americas,” said George Grayson, co-author of “The Executioner’s Men,” a book about the Zetas, and a professor of government at the College of William & Mary. “This is a resounding blow to a diabolical organization.” 


Yet others, who live in fear of the Zetas every day, weren’t so optimistic.


“This was a blow, but it’s only skin deep,” the Rev. Alejandro Solalinde, a Roman Catholic priest who runs a migrant shelter in the state of Oaxaca and has spent much of the last decade living under death threats from the Zetas, told the Associated Press.


“The Zetas operate in almost 20 states of Mexico. They have a lot of public servants on their payroll, a lot of police.”


The Zetas forcibly recruit some migrants, kill those who won’t join and increasingly kidnap young girls, who are forced into prostitution at Zetas-run bars or are made to distribute Zetas drugs.


“We’re talking about human trafficking, organ trafficking, kidnappings, forced recruitment, everything,” Solalinde said.


Nevertheless, Trevino Morales’ capture was seen as a victory for the administration of President Enrique Pena Nieto, who came into office in December 2012 promising to reduce the violence in Mexico. But his approach has been based more on intelligence information and has been less aggressive than that of former President Felipe Calderon. 


The U.S. Embassy in Mexico City even congratulated the government and law enforcement officials for getting Trevino Morales, whom they characterized as “one of the most wanted criminal suspects in Mexico.”


“This is yet another advance by the people of Mexico in the dismantling of organized crime,” the statement released Monday read. 


But the kingpin’s capture may simply result in more violence in the near future, as rivals move to make a play for his area of influence and internal foes fight over the cartel’s top position.


“To be sure, Miguel Trevino may have been the final stitch that held what was left of this disparate federation together,” wrote Steven Dudley, co-director of InSight, a joint initiative of American University and the Fundacion Ideas para la Paz that looks at organized crime in the Americas. “What comes next could be a spasm of violence as the group balkanizes.”




Mexico’s drug war is also part of a drug culture with roots in music, movies and even religion




Trevino Morales’ brother, Alejandro “Omar” Trevino Morales,  is expected to succeed him, but Grayson believes his days might be numbered, as he is seen as a weaker figure. 


“The Zetas used to be a hierarchical organization, now they’re so fragmented, they’re like McDonald’s franchises,” Grayson said. They lack the savvy and leadership they had when [former leader Heriberto] Lazcano was around, he added.


The disruption of Zetas leadership could also cause other cartels to get more aggressive.


The Zetas and Sinaloa cartel — led by Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman — have been involved in a bloody turf war that sparked a rise in homicides in the north. So violence will likely rise if Sinaloa makes a play for more Zetas-controlled areas, Grayson said.


And not only will Trevino Morales’s capture lead to more violence, but, according to Michael Levine, author and former Drug Enforcement Administration agent, it does nothing to stem the Mexican drug war.


“It means zero in the scheme of things,” Levine said. “It’s not even a blow to the Zetas. You think there aren’t 15 guys ready to take his place or are already taking his place?”   


“You will see no difference,” he said, adding that the capture is nothing but “career points” and a feather in the cap for the Pena Nieto administration.


The Associated Press contributed to this report. 


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Cartel leader"s capture may boost violence

Thursday, July 11, 2013

$12 billion in aid for Egypt only temporary boost








Egyptians break their fast the first day of Ramadan outside Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, Wednesday, July 10, 2013. Egyptians break their fast during the first day of Ramadan outside Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, Wednesday, July 10, 2013. After a week of violence and mass demonstrations, Egyptians were hoping that Wednesday’s start of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan will significantly calm the streets. The sunrise-to-sunset fast cuts down on daytime activity, although there are fears of unrest at night.(AP Photo/Nasser Shiyoukhi)





Egyptians break their fast the first day of Ramadan outside Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, Wednesday, July 10, 2013. Egyptians break their fast during the first day of Ramadan outside Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, Wednesday, July 10, 2013. After a week of violence and mass demonstrations, Egyptians were hoping that Wednesday’s start of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan will significantly calm the streets. The sunrise-to-sunset fast cuts down on daytime activity, although there are fears of unrest at night.(AP Photo/Nasser Shiyoukhi)













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CAIRO (AP) — A promise of $ 12 billion in aid from wealthy Arab Gulf nations would give Egypt’s new military-backed leadership breathing room by paying for vital food and fuel imports. But the benefits would be only temporary, because Egypt’s broken economy remains unrepaired.


More than two years of political turmoil, violence and deterioration in security have frightened away tourists and foreign investors. Just as harmful, badly structured subsidies on food and fuel eat up almost a third of Egypt’s strained budget.


The most recent round of violence, when more than 50 supporters of ousted Islamist President Mohammed Morsi died in clashes with the military on Monday, is likely to ripple through the economy, spreading doubts over the new leadership’s ability to provide stability.


A key demand among millions of people who demonstrated against Morsi was better living conditions. Little improved when he took office a year ago, after poverty, rampant corruption and crony capitalism propelled millions to join the youth-led uprising against President Hosni Mubarak in 2011.


Morsi inherited critical economic problems, and the economy deteriorated further under his one-year rule. The Egyptian currency lost more than 10 percent of its value against the dollar this year, unemployment rose to 13 percent and his government relied on handouts from sympathetic neighboring countries to survive.


This reinforced the impression that Morsi was incapable of governing, according to economic rights expert Amr Adly.


Now Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates, longtime critics of Morsi’s Muslim Brotherhood, are stepping up to back his replacements.


The $ 12 billion in aid, a mix of grants, cash deposits and oil and gas products, will likely be used by the incoming government to try to avert another gas and electricity shortage like the one just before Morsi’s ouster nearly two weeks ago.


On Wednesday, Kuwait announced its offer of $ 4 billion — a $ 2 billion cash deposit, a $ 1 billion grant and $ 1 billion worth of oil products.


A day before, the UAE announced its $ 3 billion aid package to Egypt, $ 1 billion of which is a grant and $ 2 billion of which is a no-interest loan.


Regional powerhouse Saudi Arabia weighed in with the largest aid package — $ 5 billion, made up of $ 2 billion to be deposited in Egypt’s central bank, $ 2 billion worth of oil and gas and $ 1 billion as a grant.


The $ 7 billion flowing directly into Egypt’s central bank is needed to keep foreign reserves from plunging further, after the bank warned they had already reached a “critical level.” Reserves stood at just $ 14.9 billion at the end of last month, less than half of what they were before the political upheaval that began in 2011.


The changes also mean that the tiny but influential Gulf state of Qatar has been sidelined after it showered Morsi’s government with around $ 8 billion in aid over the course of the past year. Qatar is a key backer of the Brotherhood in the region.


Ashraf Swelam, an economist and senior advisor to former presidential candidate Amr Moussa, warned that the billions of dollars in assistance may help Egypt stay afloat for only about six months. That’s when parliamentary elections are scheduled, according to a timetable drawn up by the interim president.


“The aid is not enough to cover the financial gap,” he said. “The importance of it is that it provides Egypt’s economy with a lifeline.”


Swelam said the aid is important for Hazem el-Beblawi, the country’s newly named prime minister who is also a French-educated economist, because it gives him “breathing space to maneuver” while paying Egypt’s debts, subsidies and government salaries for a while.


However, the caretaker government will not likely be able to introduce needed changes to the economy, since it has neither an election mandate nor much time to implement reforms.


Egypt’s interim president has promised parliamentary and presidential elections early next year. But the timetable could be derailed by unrest or credible threats that voting could make economic matters even worse.


The Muslim Brotherhood rejected the transition plan, charging it “confirms that those who carried out the coup, the dictator generals, don’t respect the will of the people.” Refusing to take part in the new government, the Brotherhood has instead called for an uprising against the military.


The rush by some Gulf countries to aid Egypt also reflects key regional support for the military in its power struggle against Morsi’s Brotherhood.


The Saudi king praised the military’s move, and Anwar Gargash, the UAE’s minister of state for foreign affairs, wrote in a commentary posted on Foreign Policy’s website that “the rejection by Egyptians of their Islamist government marks a turning point — not only for that country, but for the entire Middle East.”


According to Mohsin Khan, a senior fellow at the Rafik Hariri Center for the Middle East at the Atlantic Council in Washington, the money from Gulf nations is aimed at keeping Egypt from collapsing.


“It will not go to improving the economy, but to keep it from being worse. This money is essentially going to shore up the foreign currency reserves,” he said. “It will not be used to get Egypt out of the economic downturn it is in. At best in can just stabilize the economy temporarily.”


The political quagmire means Egypt is also further away than ever from securing a $ 4.8 billion loan from the International Monetary Fund. The IMF requires political consensus in the absence of an elected government before signing on to the loan. Morsi’s Brotherhood is unlikely to back any initiative by a new government, while liberals have long complained the IMF deal comes with too many conditions.


Khan, who was also head of the Middle East department at the IMF, said that while Gulf aid has surpassed what the IMF could offer Cairo, it fails to send positive signals about Egypt to investors who can create jobs for long-term economic recovery.


“This money from the Gulf countries is viewed by everyone in the market as politically motivated and will not have any impact on foreign investors,” he said.


Associated Press




Top Headlines



$12 billion in aid for Egypt only temporary boost

$12 billion in aid for Egypt only temporary boost








Egyptians break their fast the first day of Ramadan outside Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, Wednesday, July 10, 2013. Egyptians break their fast during the first day of Ramadan outside Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, Wednesday, July 10, 2013. After a week of violence and mass demonstrations, Egyptians were hoping that Wednesday’s start of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan will significantly calm the streets. The sunrise-to-sunset fast cuts down on daytime activity, although there are fears of unrest at night.(AP Photo/Nasser Shiyoukhi)





Egyptians break their fast the first day of Ramadan outside Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, Wednesday, July 10, 2013. Egyptians break their fast during the first day of Ramadan outside Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, Wednesday, July 10, 2013. After a week of violence and mass demonstrations, Egyptians were hoping that Wednesday’s start of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan will significantly calm the streets. The sunrise-to-sunset fast cuts down on daytime activity, although there are fears of unrest at night.(AP Photo/Nasser Shiyoukhi)













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CAIRO (AP) — A promise of $ 12 billion in aid from wealthy Arab Gulf nations would give Egypt’s new military-backed leadership breathing room by paying for vital food and fuel imports. But the benefits would be only temporary, because Egypt’s broken economy remains unrepaired.


More than two years of political turmoil, violence and deterioration in security have frightened away tourists and foreign investors. Just as harmful, badly structured subsidies on food and fuel eat up almost a third of Egypt’s strained budget.


The most recent round of violence, when more than 50 supporters of ousted Islamist President Mohammed Morsi died in clashes with the military on Monday, is likely to ripple through the economy, spreading doubts over the new leadership’s ability to provide stability.


A key demand among millions of people who demonstrated against Morsi was better living conditions. Little improved when he took office a year ago, after poverty, rampant corruption and crony capitalism propelled millions to join the youth-led uprising against President Hosni Mubarak in 2011.


Morsi inherited critical economic problems, and the economy deteriorated further under his one-year rule. The Egyptian currency lost more than 10 percent of its value against the dollar this year, unemployment rose to 13 percent and his government relied on handouts from sympathetic neighboring countries to survive.


This reinforced the impression that Morsi was incapable of governing, according to economic rights expert Amr Adly.


Now Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates, longtime critics of Morsi’s Muslim Brotherhood, are stepping up to back his replacements.


The $ 12 billion in aid, a mix of grants, cash deposits and oil and gas products, will likely be used by the incoming government to try to avert another gas and electricity shortage like the one just before Morsi’s ouster nearly two weeks ago.


On Wednesday, Kuwait announced its offer of $ 4 billion — a $ 2 billion cash deposit, a $ 1 billion grant and $ 1 billion worth of oil products.


A day before, the UAE announced its $ 3 billion aid package to Egypt, $ 1 billion of which is a grant and $ 2 billion of which is a no-interest loan.


Regional powerhouse Saudi Arabia weighed in with the largest aid package — $ 5 billion, made up of $ 2 billion to be deposited in Egypt’s central bank, $ 2 billion worth of oil and gas and $ 1 billion as a grant.


The $ 7 billion flowing directly into Egypt’s central bank is needed to keep foreign reserves from plunging further, after the bank warned they had already reached a “critical level.” Reserves stood at just $ 14.9 billion at the end of last month, less than half of what they were before the political upheaval that began in 2011.


The changes also mean that the tiny but influential Gulf state of Qatar has been sidelined after it showered Morsi’s government with around $ 8 billion in aid over the course of the past year. Qatar is a key backer of the Brotherhood in the region.


Ashraf Swelam, an economist and senior advisor to former presidential candidate Amr Moussa, warned that the billions of dollars in assistance may help Egypt stay afloat for only about six months. That’s when parliamentary elections are scheduled, according to a timetable drawn up by the interim president.


“The aid is not enough to cover the financial gap,” he said. “The importance of it is that it provides Egypt’s economy with a lifeline.”


Swelam said the aid is important for Hazem el-Beblawi, the country’s newly named prime minister who is also a French-educated economist, because it gives him “breathing space to maneuver” while paying Egypt’s debts, subsidies and government salaries for a while.


However, the caretaker government will not likely be able to introduce needed changes to the economy, since it has neither an election mandate nor much time to implement reforms.


Egypt’s interim president has promised parliamentary and presidential elections early next year. But the timetable could be derailed by unrest or credible threats that voting could make economic matters even worse.


The Muslim Brotherhood rejected the transition plan, charging it “confirms that those who carried out the coup, the dictator generals, don’t respect the will of the people.” Refusing to take part in the new government, the Brotherhood has instead called for an uprising against the military.


The rush by some Gulf countries to aid Egypt also reflects key regional support for the military in its power struggle against Morsi’s Brotherhood.


The Saudi king praised the military’s move, and Anwar Gargash, the UAE’s minister of state for foreign affairs, wrote in a commentary posted on Foreign Policy’s website that “the rejection by Egyptians of their Islamist government marks a turning point — not only for that country, but for the entire Middle East.”


According to Mohsin Khan, a senior fellow at the Rafik Hariri Center for the Middle East at the Atlantic Council in Washington, the money from Gulf nations is aimed at keeping Egypt from collapsing.


“It will not go to improving the economy, but to keep it from being worse. This money is essentially going to shore up the foreign currency reserves,” he said. “It will not be used to get Egypt out of the economic downturn it is in. At best in can just stabilize the economy temporarily.”


The political quagmire means Egypt is also further away than ever from securing a $ 4.8 billion loan from the International Monetary Fund. The IMF requires political consensus in the absence of an elected government before signing on to the loan. Morsi’s Brotherhood is unlikely to back any initiative by a new government, while liberals have long complained the IMF deal comes with too many conditions.


Khan, who was also head of the Middle East department at the IMF, said that while Gulf aid has surpassed what the IMF could offer Cairo, it fails to send positive signals about Egypt to investors who can create jobs for long-term economic recovery.


“This money from the Gulf countries is viewed by everyone in the market as politically motivated and will not have any impact on foreign investors,” he said.


Associated Press




Top Headlines



$12 billion in aid for Egypt only temporary boost

Wednesday, July 10, 2013

Egypt"s new leaders get boost from wealthy Gulf








A supporter of the ousted Egypt’s President Mohammed Morsi holds up a Quran during a protest in Nasr City, a suburb of Cairo, Egypt, Tuesday July 9, 2013. After days of deadlock, Egypt’s military-backed interim president named a veteran economist as prime minister on Tuesday and appointed pro-democracy leader Mohamed ElBaradei as a vice president, while the army showed its strong hand in shepherding the process, warning political factions against “maneuvering” that impedes the transition. (AP Photo/Manu Brabo)





A supporter of the ousted Egypt’s President Mohammed Morsi holds up a Quran during a protest in Nasr City, a suburb of Cairo, Egypt, Tuesday July 9, 2013. After days of deadlock, Egypt’s military-backed interim president named a veteran economist as prime minister on Tuesday and appointed pro-democracy leader Mohamed ElBaradei as a vice president, while the army showed its strong hand in shepherding the process, warning political factions against “maneuvering” that impedes the transition. (AP Photo/Manu Brabo)





In this image released by the Egyptian Presidency, Hazem el-Beblawi meets with interim President Adly Mansour, unseen, in Cairo, Egypt, Tuesday, July 9, 2013. The spokesman of Egypt’s interim president says a prominent economist, Hazem el-Beblawi, has been named prime minister and pro-democracy leader Mohamed ElBaradei as a vice-president. Ahmed el-Musalamani made the announcements Tuesday after days of political stalemate over the prime minister post. El-Beblawi, who is in his 70s, served as finance minister in one of the first cabinets formed after the 2011 uprising forced Hosni Mubarak from power and the military stepped in to rule. (AP Photo/Egyptian Presidency)





Supporters of ousted President Mohammed Morsi prepare symbolic coffins, representing some 51 people killed Monday, in Nasr City, Cairo, Egypt, Tuesday, July 9, 2013. After days of deadlock, Egypt’s military-backed interim president named a veteran economist as prime minister on Tuesday and appointed pro-democracy leader Mohamed ElBaradei as a vice president, while the army showed its strong hand in shepherding the process, warning political factions against “maneuvering” that impedes the transition. (AP Photo/Nasser Shiyoukhi)





Supporters of ousted President Mohammed Morsi protest in Nasr City, Cairo, Egypt, Tuesday, July 9, 2013. Egypt’s army chief says the military will not accept political “maneuvering,” in thinly veiled warning to the only Islamist party, Al-Nour, that sided with the army’s removal of President Mohammed Morsi but has since had frictions with other factions over forming a new leadership.(AP Photo/Nasser Shiyoukhi)





Supporters of ousted President Mohammed Morsi protest at the Republican Guard building in Nasr City, Cairo, Egypt, Tuesday, July 9, 2013. Egyptian security forces killed dozens of supporters of Egypt’s ousted president in one of the deadliest single episodes of violence in more than two and a half years of turmoil. The toppled leader’s Muslim Brotherhood called for an uprising, accusing troops of gunning down protesters, while the military blamed armed Islamists for provoking its forces. (AP Photo/Khalil Hamra)













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(AP) — Egypt’s new leaders have won $ 8 billion in promises of aid from wealthy Gulf Arab allies in moves aimed at stabilizing a political transition less than a week after the army deposed the country’s Islamist president.


Also on Tuesday, the interim president named a new prime minister and Egyptian armed forces warned political factions that “maneuvering” must not hold up the military’s ambitious fast-track timetable for new elections next year.


The sharp message underlined how strongly the military is shepherding the process, even as liberal reform movements that backed its removal of Mohammed Morsi complained that now they are not being consulted in decision-making.


The Muslim Brotherhood denounced the transition plan, vowing to continue its street protests until the ousted Morsi, Egypt’s first freely elected president, is returned to power.


Tuesday’s appointment of economist Hazem el-Beblawi as prime minister, along with the setting of the accelerated timetable, underlined the army’s determination to push ahead in the face of Islamist opposition and outrage over the killing of more than 50 Morsi supporters on Monday.


Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates provided a welcome boost for the new leadership. The two countries, both opponents of Morsi’s Brotherhood, celebrated his ouster by showering the cash-strapped Egyptian government with promises of $ 8 billion in grants, loans and badly needed gas and oil.


In doing so, they are effectively stepping in for Morsi’s Gulf patron, Qatar, a close ally of the Brotherhood that gave his government several billion in aid. During Morsi’s year in office, he and his officials toured multiple countries seeking cash to prop up rapidly draining foreign currency reserves and plug mounting deficits — at times getting a cold shoulder.


The developments underlined the pressures on the new leaders even with the country still in turmoil after what Morsi’s supporters have called a coup against democracy.


The military faces calls, from the U.S. and Western allies in particular, to show that civilians are in charge and Egypt is on a path toward a democratically-based leadership. The nascent government will soon face demands that it tackle economic woes that mounted under Morsi, including fuel shortages, electricity cutoffs and inflation.


White House spokesman Jay Carney said Washington is “cautiously encouraged” by the announcement of a plan to return to democratically elected government.


Still, several groups in the loose coalition participating in the political process were angered over the transition plan issued Monday by interim President Adly Mansour. His declaration set out a seven-month timetable for elections but also a truncated, temporary constitution laying out the division of powers in the meantime.


The top liberal political grouping, the National Salvation Front, rejected the plan late Tuesday. It said it was not consulted — “in violation of previous promises” — and that the declaration “lacks significant clauses while others need change or removal.” It did not elaborate but said it had presented Mansour with changes it seeks.


The secular, revolutionary youth movement Tamarod, which organized last week’s massive protests against Morsi, also criticized the plan, in part because it gives too much power to Mansour, including the power to issue laws. A post-Morsi plan put forward by Tamarod called for a largely ceremonial interim president with most power in the hands of the prime minister.


Egypt remains deeply polarized with heightened fears of violence, especially after Monday’s shootings. The Brotherhood and Islamist allies say they are under siege by a military crackdown that has jailed five of their leaders and shut down their media outlets. Tens of thousands of Islamists massed on Tuesday for another day outside a Cairo mosque. The crowds waved pictures of Morsi and brought in flag-draped empty coffins representing the slain protesters.


Still, there was no huge nationwide turnout that the Brotherhood leaders had called for after the killings. Also, for the first time since even before the June 30 protests began, Cairo’s Tahrir Square — where Morsi’s opponents were centered — was largely without crowds.


It’s unclear if the Islamic holy month of Ramadan, which starts Wednesday, when Muslims fast from sunrise to sunset, will significantly calm the street. The fast cuts down on activity during the day, but the demonstrations have been largely nocturnal affairs. The Islamist camp will likely use it to rally its base.


Mansour called for a reconciliation process called “One People” to begin in Ramadan, traditionally a period for Muslims to promote unity. It called for parties and movements to hold meetings. But there was no sign the Brotherhood and its allies would attend, much like Morsi’s opponents rejected his calls for dialogue, which were dismissed as empty gestures.


The interim president’s spokesman, Ahmed el-Musalamani, said posts in the new Cabinet would be offered to the Islamist camp — including to the Brotherhood’s Freedom and Justice Party and the Salafi Al-Nour Party. He spoke to Egypt’s privately owned CBC TV channel in remarks also carried by the state news agency. El-Beblawi is to start forming a Cabinet on Wednesday.


The statement by armed forces chief Gen. Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi against political maneuvering underlined how the military — while it says it is staying out of politics — remains a powerful presence in a transition ostensibly being led by Mansour and a collection of political factions.


“The future of the nation is too important and sacred for maneuvers or hindrance, whatever the justifications,” el-Sissi said in the statement, read on state TV. “The people and, behind it, the armed forces don’t want anyone to stray from the right path or deviate from the boundaries of safety and security, driven by selfishness or … zealousness.”


A spokesman for Mansour announced the appointment of el-Beblawi as prime minister and of pro-democracy leader Mohamed ElBaradei, a leader of the National Salvation Front, as vice president.


The naming of a prime minister was held up for days because the sole Islamist faction in the coalition, the ultraconservative Al-Nour Party, blocked candidates from secular, liberal and leftist groups. Those factions have been determined to have one of their own in the post.


Last week, Al-Nour blocked ElBaradei from becoming prime minister, then objected to one of his close allies put forward as a compromise. The moves infuriated the secular and liberal factions. ElBaradei, the former head of the U.N. nuclear watchdog agency and a Nobel Peace laureate, is considered one of the strongest pro-reform figures, but many Islamists vehemently oppose him as too secular.


El-Beblawi is from the liberal-secular camp — albeit a less-controversial, well-known or prominent figure than ElBaradei.


El-Sissi’s statement appeared to be a veiled warning to Al-Nour. But it suggests the military is ready to apply pressure on politicians when multiple disputes are almost certain to emerge.


He called for dialogue between the new leadership and their Islamist opponents. “Everyone in Egypt must sit together on the table for dialogue to solve current political differences, stop violence and bloodshed in the street,” he told the AP.


Under the new timetable, two appointed panels would draw up and approve amendments to the constitution, which would be put to a referendum within 4½ months. Elections for a new parliament would be held within two months of that. Once the parliament convenes, it would have a week to set a date for presidential elections.


Following Monday’s bloodshed, the military accused armed Islamists of starting the violence by attacking the headquarters of the Republican Guard. Morsi supporters say no such attack took place and that troops opened fire on their nearby sit-in after dawn prayers. Along with 51 protesters, an army officer and two policemen were killed.


An Egyptian security official said 650 people were arrested for allegedly trying to storm the headquarters. The official said there were Syrian and Palestinian nationals among those arrested. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to talk to the press.


Associated Press




Top Headlines



Egypt"s new leaders get boost from wealthy Gulf