Showing posts with label fight. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fight. Show all posts

Saturday, April 5, 2014

Road Rage Fight During Live Interview with Police Chief

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Road Rage Fight During Live Interview with Police Chief

Monday, March 24, 2014

Tea Party v. Establishment Fight May Intensify if GOP Regains Senate

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Tea Party v. Establishment Fight May Intensify if GOP Regains Senate

Friday, March 21, 2014

Gays join PIE fight (24.09.77)

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Gays join PIE fight (24.09.77)

Thursday, March 20, 2014

US Lawmakers Fight Russia on Twitter: "I Guess This Means My Spring Break in Siberia Is Off"

US Lawmakers Fight Russia on Twitter: "I Guess This Means My Spring Break in Siberia Is Off"
http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Motherjones/mojoblog/~4/4ixxP0kTLhk


On Thursday, shortly after President Obama expanded sanctions against Russia for its role in the Ukraine crisis, the Russian Foreign Ministry released its own list of nine US officials and lawmakers who will be targeted by sanctions. The list includes three White House aides—deputy national security advisors Ben Rhodes and Caroline Atkinson, and senior advisor Dan Pfeiffer—as well as six US lawmakers: Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.)​, Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.)​, House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio)​, Sen. Robert Menendez (D-N.J.)​, Sen. Mary Landrieu (D-La.)​, and Sen. Dan Coats (R-Ind.)​.


Many of the Sanctioned 9, none of whom will be allowed to visit the Russian Federation or attend Valdimir Putin’s birthday party (assuming it is held in the Russian Federation), took to Twitter to win the morning show their strength and solidarity.


Sen. Mary Landrieu (D-La.)​





Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.)



Sen. Robert Menendez (D-N.J.)​



Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.)





Sen. Dan Coats (R-Ind.)





Brendan Buck, spokesman for House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio), to senior White House advisor Dan Pfeiffer



“What did you do during the war, daddy?”


“Twitter, mostly.”



Political Mojo | Mother Jones




Read more about US Lawmakers Fight Russia on Twitter: "I Guess This Means My Spring Break in Siberia Is Off" and other interesting subjects concerning The Edge at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Wednesday, March 19, 2014

Illinois Residents Fight Back Against The State’s Coal Industry

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Illinois Residents Fight Back Against The State’s Coal Industry

Thursday, March 13, 2014

Iron Man, Thor & Captain America Fight from The Avengers - Homemade Shot for Shot

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Iron Man, Thor & Captain America Fight from The Avengers - Homemade Shot for Shot

Monday, March 10, 2014

What Would the West Fight For?



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


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


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


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


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


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


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


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


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


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


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


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


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


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


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


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


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


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


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


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


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


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


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


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


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


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


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


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


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


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


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


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


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


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


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


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


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


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


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


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


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


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


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


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


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


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


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


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




RealClearPolitics – Articles



What Would the West Fight For?

Sunday, March 9, 2014

Battle Royale: Fight to the Death!

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Battle Royale: Fight to the Death!

Saturday, March 8, 2014

GOP gains momentum in close fight for U.S. Senate


John Whitesides
Reuters
March 8, 2014


The Senate wing of the capitol was completed in 1800. Credit: Diliff via Wikipedia

The Senate wing of the capitol was completed in 1800. Credit: Diliff via Wikipedia




Eight months before the November 4 elections, Republicans have expanded the number of competitive races for U.S. Senate seats and have a growing chance of gaining control of that chamber and stalling Democratic President Barack Obama’s second-term agenda.

Public dissatisfaction with the president, concerns about his healthcare overhaul and a sluggish economy, and a series of retirements by key Democratic senators in conservative states have made a rugged year for Democrats even more so, analysts and strategists in both parties say.


Republicans, who are widely expected to retain control of the U.S. House of Representatives, need a net gain of six seats to take back the 100-member Senate. Recent polling indicates they have big leads in three states – Montana, South Dakota and West Virginia – where longtime Democratic senators have retired or will retire in January.


Read more


This article was posted: Saturday, March 8, 2014 at 10:47 am










Infowars



GOP gains momentum in close fight for U.S. Senate

Friday, March 7, 2014

Atheists’ misguided fight over the 9/11 memorial

A battle over an artifact becomes a religious fight




    








Salon.com



Atheists’ misguided fight over the 9/11 memorial

The Real Story Behind the Detroit Pension Fight and What it Means to America"s Future

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The Real Story Behind the Detroit Pension Fight and What it Means to America"s Future

Sunday, March 2, 2014

Right Sector Calls On Russia’s Bin Laden to Fight in Ukraine


Chechen Islamist has claimed responsibility for attacks on Russian civilians


Kurt Nimmo
Infowars.com
March 2, 2014


Doku Umarov, leader of the Islamic Caucasus Emirate, an al-Qaeda affiliate in the Caucasus. Image taken from a videotape in which Umarov took credit for the 2010 suicide attacks on the Moscow Metro.

Doku Umarov, leader of the Islamic Caucasus Emirate, an al-Qaeda affiliate in the Caucasus. Image taken from a videotape in which Umarov took credit for the 2010 suicide attacks on the Moscow Metro.



Right Sector, the ultra-nationalist street fighting group that targeted police prior to the coup in Ukraine, has called for Doku Umarov to fight in a war against Russia.


Umarov, known as the “Bin Laden of Russia,” is a Chechen Islamist who has claimed responsibility for attacks on Russian civilians. According to media reports, his most recent threat was against the Olympics in Sochi, Russia. No terrorist attacks, however, occured during the games.


Russian media reports the appeal to recruit Umarov was issued by Dmitry Yarosh, the leader of the ultra-nationalist and fascist Right Sector. The group is aligned with other extreme nationalist groups in Ukraine, including “Trident,” Patriot of Ukraine, “White Hammer” and the Ukrainian National Assembly – Ukrainian National Self Defense. Although it is not associated with the largest nationalist political party in the country, Svoboda, it has “a lot of common positions when it comes to ideological questions,” according to Yarosh.


The Voice of Russia reports:


President Yunus-bek Yevkurov of Ingushetia said that with his appeal to the leader of gangsters in the North Caucasus Doku Umarov, the leader of the Right Sector in Ukraine Dmitry Yarosh has confirmed that those who had been gangsters in the North Caucasus were also in Independence Square in Kiev. That appeal puts the Right Sector on a par with international terrorist organizations, he pointed out. He said that he was interested in the West’s response to this appeal because the West supported the new power in Ukraine.



There is a growing consensus in the United States Congress to support diplomatically, economically and, to a lesser degree, militarily the coup government in Ukraine.


Umarov’s connection to U.S. intelligence and the State Department


In April, 2013, we reported on Umarov’s shady connections. According to research conducted by Eric Draitser and others, Umarov’s Kavkaz Center was funded by the State Department and several supporting fronts including the National Endowment for Democracy-funded Russian-Chechen Friendship Society.


The militant Chechen effort to undermine Russia is supported by a number of influential neocons. “Despite the fact that organs such as Kavkaz Center operate in the service of terrorists who advocate the destruction of Russia, their activity alone is not altogether significant if seen in a vacuum,” writes Draitser.


Rather, it is the association of these types of individuals and organizations with the US State Department and US intelligence that makes them particularly insidious.  One such entity that bears scrutiny is the American Committee for Peace in the Caucasus (ACPC), previously known as the American Committee for Peace in Chechnya.  As reported by Right Web at the Institute for Policy Studies, “The ACPC was founded in 1999 by Freedom House, a neoconservative organization that has worked closely with the U.S. government, receiving funds from the National Endowment for Democracy and other U.S. democratization initiatives.”  This intimate relationship between the ACPC and the US State Department indicates not merely a confluence of interests, but rather a direct relationship wherein the former is an organ of the latter.



This article was posted: Sunday, March 2, 2014 at 12:28 pm









Infowars



Right Sector Calls On Russia’s Bin Laden to Fight in Ukraine

Wednesday, February 26, 2014

Last Night’s Big Fight On “The Bachelor” Basically Came Down To The Word “Default”

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Last Night’s Big Fight On “The Bachelor” Basically Came Down To The Word “Default”

Wednesday, February 19, 2014

Paul takes voter rights fight home

Rand Paul is shown. | AP Photo

Paul tweeted Wednesday morning about his push for voting rights restoration. | AP Photo





Sen. Rand Paul took his push for restoring felon’s voting rights to the state level on Wednesday, testifying before a Kentucky Legislature committee urging his home state to lead the way.


The Kentucky Republican was testifying before the state’s Senate State and Local Government Committee midday on Wednesday to urge passage of a bill that would give felons back the right to vote at the end of their sentence, parole or probation through a constitutional amendment.







Paul tweeted Wednesday morning about his push for voting rights restoration, both at the federal and state level.


The Kentucky bill, H.B. 70, had a good shot of passage after years of no movement, according to The Lexington-Herald Leader. It has already cleared the House, and if it passes the Senate, voters will be able to ratify the amendment to the state constitution in November.


The bill exempts felons convicted of treason, sex crimes, murder and bribery.


Criminal justice reform has been a key issue for Paul, an area in which he has found himself in agreement with Democrats including Attorney General Eric Holder, who also pushed for felon voting rights last week.




POLITICO – Congress



Paul takes voter rights fight home

Alabama RFID Cards: How Biometrics Helps DHS Fight Terrorism


Orig.src.Susanne.Posel.Daily.News- real.id.alabama_occupycorporatism

Orig.src.Susanne.Posel.Daily.News- real.id.alabama_occupycorporatism



Susanne Posel

,Chief Editor Occupy Corporatism | The US Independent
February 18, 2014


The Alabama Department of Public Safety (ADPS) are issuing new chipped driver’s licenses and IDs under the STAR ID initiative that promises to “improve the integrity and security of state-issued driver licenses and identification cards, which, in turn, will help fight terrorism and reduce fraud.”


STAR ID is the Alabama legislature’s response to the REAL-ID Act of 2005 (RIDA) which keeps the state in compliance with federal mandates while maintaining ‘security [and] authentication” of Alabama residents.


By December of 2017, Alabama states that all residents must have their STAR ID; having replaced their current ID and driver’s license.


RIDA is tasked with protecting Americans from terrorism by empowering the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and other federal agencies to monitor and profile residents to ensure their authenticity.


Over four distinct phases, the DHS is enforcing state mandatory deadlines for compliance and a courtesy 3 month “warning” period.


The phases of compliance are:
1. Restricted areas for DHS headquarters
2. All federal facilities and nuclear power plants
3. Semi-restricted areas at federal facilities
4. Entry into commercial aircraft


States that have complied with RFID chipped ID cards for residents include:
• Alabama
• California
• District of Columbia
• Florida
• Hawaii
• Illinois
• Kansas
• Maryland
• Nevada
• New Mexico
• North Carolina
• Oregon
• Rhode Island
• Texas
• Virginia
• Wisconsin
In 2003 the Department of Defense was receiving software for the Joint Protective Enterprise Network (JPEN) under directives from Oracle’s Homeland Security Program Office.


Oracle was paid $ 15 million to supply this system to military bases across the nation. JPEN would facilitate the Federal Bureau of Investigations (FBI), the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), the Transportation Security Agency (TSA) and the DHS; as well as connecting hospitals, air traffic control centers, nuclear power plant operators and police and fire departments.


Six years later, the DHS renegotiated contracts with Oracle. Under consolidation, DHS took 487,000 licenses, software and maintenance agreements from Microsoft; as well “unlimited” licenses between Oracle and the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).


The DoDare using biometrics to fight terrorism, catalogue active duty troops and maintain national security interests. The Biometrics Identity Management Agency (BIMA) utilizes biometrics to “identify the enemy” and verify individuals to ensure secure business and governmental functions.


The US Department of State Consular Consolidated Database (CCD) has more than 90 million people’s photographs data based with the continuous use of the Department of Facial Recognition Software.
The DHS Automated Biometric Identification System tracks an estimated 250,000 biometric communications a day. Over 126 million fingerprints, photographs and biographical information are filed for the US government to use at their discretion.


The National ID card by Oracle would establish “a standard and secure national identifier, we could ensure that any system that chose to use it could effectively share information with other systems that use it.”


Larry Ellison, founder of the Oracle Corporation, showed off a prototype of a National ID card at the National Press club in 2001 that included a picture, fingerprint and other digital controls to ensure security. He believed that the US government “could phase in digital ID cards to replace existing Social Security cards and driver’s licenses. These new IDs should be based on a uniform standard such as credit card technology, which is harder to counterfeit than existing government IDs.”






Susanne Posel | Original Author | Original Copyright Holder

http://OccupyCorporatism.com



Seattle, Washington, United States, -08:00




Susanne Posel



Alabama RFID Cards: How Biometrics Helps DHS Fight Terrorism

Thursday, February 13, 2014

A fight in Fla. for national bragging rights


Alex Sink and David Jolly are pictured. | AP Photos

Sink has found herself on the defensive recently, and Jolly has his own vulnerabilities. | AP Photos





Part of an occasional series on the hottest races of the 2014 midterm election.


ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — Voters in a special congressional election next month will decide between an ex-banker who backs Obamacare and a smooth-talking former Washington lobbyist.







But that uninspiring choice — foisted relentlessly on residents here every time they turn on the TV — doesn’t capture the true stakes of the race. Unfolding in one of the few remaining competitive House districts, the contest has become a proxy battle among the national parties for bragging rights heading into the November midterm election. Democrats are determined to blunt the prevailing wisdom that 2014 is destined to be an electoral bust, possibly ending with Republicans padding their House majority and taking the Senate. Republicans see a chance to deliver an irrefutable statement that momentum this year is on their side.


The vessels for those outsize expectations are Democrat Alex Sink, who fell a percentage point shy of becoming Florida governor in 2010, and Republican David Jolly, who spent more than a decade toiling for the man he’s looking to succeed, the late GOP Rep. Bill Young, before taking up a new career in Washington’s bustling influence industry.


(On the Ground: POLITICO covers the hottest races of 2014)


Each passing day leading up to the March 11 election brings fresh evidence of how badly each side wants a win. Vice President Joe Biden went to Florida on Wednesday to raise money for Sink — a rare foray by the White House into a single House election. Both national parties, plus an array of outside groups, have combined to spend an eye-popping $ 6 million on TV ads, a figure that’s poised to soar over the next four weeks. Florida Sen. Marco Rubio campaigned with Jolly on Monday, and House Majority Leader Eric Cantor is slated to fundraise for him on Friday.


But the intense national interest also reflects a tightening race. At the outset, Sink, boosted by her high name ID and prodigious fundraising, was seen as the clear front-runner. But with recent polls showing the race closing, Democrats aren’t nearly as confident as they once were, and Republicans aren’t nearly as pessimistic.


Count Sink herself among the worried. On a glum and drizzly Saturday afternoon, the former state chief financial officer sat inside a cramped union hall in one of the district’s abundant strip malls. Asked about her prospects, she marveled at the amount of money Republican groups are spending, which has narrowed the once considerable financial advantage she enjoyed. And she expressed one of her party’s central concerns about 2014: that Republicans are just a lot more fired up than Democrats are.


(Also on POLITICO: Sink, Jolly spar in Florida debate)


“In a special election like this, Republicans are more disciplined about voting, and they’re more frequent voters,” she said. “And in this state, unfortunately, Democrats like to vote in presidential elections and they like to stay home the rest of the time. That’s a lesson I learned four years ago.” In the 2010 midterm, a big election for Republicans nationwide, Sink lost a hard-fought race against GOP Gov. Rick Scott, 49 percent to 48 percent, a difference of just over 60,000 votes out of the more than 5 million cast.


She isn’t relishing the national scrutiny, calling all the attention “noise.”


“Unfortunately, we’re the first race of the cycle. That’s why people like you are down here,” she told a reporter. “If this was six months from now, I don’t think you’d be back here to write about my congressional race. So it gives you something to write about.”


(Also on POLITICO: U.S. Chamber of Commerce dings Sink in Florida)


The 13th Congressional District has long been regarded as a political prize: Many call it the foremost swing county in the foremost swing state in the country. The district broke for George W. Bush in 2004, then backed Barack Obama in consecutive presidential elections. Its residents are almost 90 percent white, and are nearly evenly split among Democrats, Republicans and independents. Located in densely populated Pinellas County, an area that hugs Florida’s western coastline, the district encompasses a swath of St. Petersburg and expands outward into its suburbs.


Sink, 65, has found herself on the defensive recently. Like many other Democrats this year, she’s being hammered over Obamacare and portrayed as a steadfast supporter of the president’s policies. It’s a potent attack line in a district where the president’s poll numbers are weak. Republicans like to point to quotes from Sink’s past, like when she came out in support of the president’s health care bill in 2010. The Chamber of Commerce has begun running a TV commercial saying “300,000 Floridians will lose their health insurance because of Obamacare — and Alex Sink supported it. And she still does.”


She has given a nuanced response, saying she wants to fix parts of the Affordable Care Act that aren’t working rather than repeal it completely. Yet Sink often sounds more like a supporter of the law than a critic. In a debate last week, she said some people were “thrilled” with the ACA.




POLITICO – TOP Stories



A fight in Fla. for national bragging rights

Today We Fight Back Against Mass Surveillance

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Today We Fight Back Against Mass Surveillance

Wednesday, February 12, 2014

The Day We Fight Back

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The Day We Fight Back

Tuesday, February 11, 2014

NSA Surveillance: Today is the Day We Fight Back

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NSA Surveillance: Today is the Day We Fight Back

Monday, February 10, 2014

Group Home Workers Ran ‘Mentally Disabled Fight Club’ (VIDEO)

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Group Home Workers Ran ‘Mentally Disabled Fight Club’ (VIDEO)