As the protests in Egypt continue, its neighbour Israel is keeping a close eye on developments. It’s worried about its old ally, President Hosni Mubarak – but could be eyeing up a new friend in his deputy, Omar Suleiman. Al Jazeera’s Tony Birtley has more from Jerusalem.
Continue reading …It was hard for this old progressive warrior to see President Obama go give a speech to the Chamber of Commerce. The Chamber was always conservative, but for the last 16 years (since a takeover in 1994 by a hard-right faction), it has become one of the worst institutions in America With its tens of millions in anonymously funded and blatantly partisan attack ads; its far-right positions on health care, global warming, and taxes; and its blatant selling of its lobbying services for any company that wants to attack legislation but needs a front group, the Chamber has soiled its reputation almost beyond repair. Having said that, I also think the President is the President for the entire country, and I have no problem with him meeting with anyone, even his political opposition. If I have no problem with Obama meeting with Boehner and McConnell — which I don’t — I can’t see why he shouldn’t go give a speech to the Chamber. As long as he understands who they are, and how much damage they want to do to him in most other circumstances, speaking to them is no problem. The other thing is that speaking to them also gives him a chance to challenge them. Did he do that enough in his speech? Not to my tastes, of course. I wish he would have banged on them — directly challenging them on things like all the anonymous ads they ran in the 2010 cycle — a lot more than he did. And I couldn’t disagree more with Obama in his extended embrace of “free trade” deals that do damage to American workers and jobs. But there were two important times when Obama did make at least a nuanced argument in direct opposition to the Chamber’s ideology. On neither point did he say enough, but I thought both were interesting. The first is on the debate over regulations. Obama reached out to the Chamber on the issue of regulatory overhaul, but as in the State of the Union, he gave a relatively strong defense of some government regulations as being both necessary and actually helpful to the economy: So we were just talking about regulations. Even as we eliminate burdensome regulations, America’s businesses have a responsibility as well to recognize that there are some basic safeguards, some basic standards that are necessary to protect the American people from harm or exploitation. Not every regulation is bad. Not every regulation is burdensome on business. A lot of the regulations that are out there are things that all of us welcome in our lives. Few of us would want to live in a society without rules that keep our air and water clean; that give consumers the confidence to do everything from investing in financial markets to buying groceries. And the fact is, when standards like these have been proposed in the past, opponents have often warned that they would be an assault on business and free enterprise. We can look at the history in this country. Early drug companies argued the bill creating the FDA would “practically destroy the sale of … remedies in the United States.” That didn’t happen. Auto executives predicted that having to install seatbelts would bring the downfall of their industry. It didn’t happen. The President of the American Bar Association denounced child labor laws as “a communistic effort to nationalize children.” That’s a quote. None of these things came to pass. In fact, companies adapt and standards often spark competition and innovation. I was travelling when I went up to Penn State to look at some clean energy hubs that have been set up. I was with Steve Chu, my Secretary of Energy. And he won a Nobel Prize in physics, so when you’re in conversations with him you catch about one out of every four things he says. (Laughter.) But he started talking about energy efficiency and about refrigerators, and he pointed out that the government set modest targets a couple decades ago to start increasing efficiency over time. They were well thought through; they weren’t radical. Companies competed to hit these markers. And they hit them every time, and then exceeded them. And as a result, a typical fridge now costs half as much and uses a quarter of the energy that it once did — and you don’t have to defrost, chipping at that stuff — (laughter) — and then putting the warm water inside the freezer and all that stuff. It saves families and businesses billions of dollars. So regulations didn’t destroy the industry; it enhanced it and it made our lives better — if they’re smart, if they’re well designed. And that’s our goal, is to work with you to think through how do we design necessary regulations in a smart way and get rid of regulations that have outlived their usefulness, or don’t work. I also have to point out the perils of too much regulation are also matched by the dangers of too little. And we saw that in the financial crisis, where the absence of sound rules of the road, that wasn’t good for business. Even if you weren’t in the financial sector it wasn’t good for business. And that’s why, with the help of Paul Volcker, who is here today, we passed a set of common-sense reforms. The same can be said of health insurance reform. We simply could not continue to accept a status quo that’s made our entire economy less competitive, as we’ve paid more per person for health care than any other nation on Earth. Nobody is even close. And we couldn’t accept a broken system where insurance companies could drop people because they got sick, or families went into bankruptcy because of medical bills. That is not someone apologizing for the need to regulate just a wee little bit; that is a fairly robust argument in favor of an active regulatory role for the federal government. At a time in our country’s history when Republicans and most business executives think of regulations as the ultimate dirty word, and a time when one of the biggest bank’s spokesperson brags that, “The bank CEOs have been collaborating with the Fed” on their regulatory policy, for the President to give that kind of vigorous defense in terms of the need for regulations in front of the Chamber is a very positive thing. By the way, in case you didn’t think you were reading that quote right because a bank spokesman couldn’t possibly be that arrogant, or that perhaps I was taking it out of context, you are wrong. The Bank of America and their CFO Charles Noski really did happily admit that the biggest bank CEOs “collaborate” with regulators on their regulatory policy, in this case on the swipe-fee issue, an issue I have been following closely while working with retailers and consumer groups. Hopefully the Fed will “collaborate” just as closely with all the small businesses and consumers impacted by swipe fees as they are doing with bank CEOs. This is the environment we are in right now, though; bankers feel no need to hide their blatant attempts to seduce and capture regulators. Given that environment, the President standing up for certain strong regulations is a very positive thing. The second area of the President’s speech that I loved was about the social compact. When I first heard that Obama would be speaking to the Chamber, as soon as I stopped cursing, my first thought was this: I hope he makes the case for the social contract, or as he called it, compact. That old but still central idea, totally rejected by the kind of selfishness-is-a-virtue, Ayn Rand conservatives who dominate in too many corporate board rooms and the modern Republican Party, is that there is contract between our country’s citizens, government, and private sector, that much is given to each of us but much is required in return. As President Obama said: But we have to recognize that some common-sense regulations often will make sense for your businesses, as well as your families, as well as your neighbors, as well as your coworkers. Of course, your responsibility goes beyond recognizing the need for certain standards and safeguards. If we’re fighting to reform the tax code and increase exports to help you compete, the benefits can’t just translate into greater profits and bonuses for those at the top. They have to be shared by American workers, who need to know that expanding trade and opening markets will lift their standards of living as well as your bottom line. We can’t go back to the kind of economy and culture that we saw in the years leading up to the recession, where growth and gains in productivity just didn’t translate into rising incomes and opportunity for the middle class. That’s not something necessarily we can legislate, but it’s something that all of us have to take responsibility for thinking about. How do we make sure that everybody’s got a stake in trade, everybody’s got a stake in increasing exports, everybody’s got a stake in rising productivity? Because ordinary folks end up seeing their standards of living rise as well. That’s always been the American promise. That’s what JFK meant when he said, “A rising tide lifts all boats.” Too many boats have been left behind, stuck in the mud. And if we as a nation are going to invest in innovation, that innovation should lead to new jobs and manufacturing on our shores. The end result of tax breaks and investments can’t simply be that new breakthroughs and technologies are discovered here in America, but then the manufacturing takes place overseas. That, too, breaks the social compact. It makes people feel as if the game is fixed and they’re not benefiting from the extraordinary discoveries that take place here. So the key to our success has never been just developing new ideas; it’s also been making new products. So Intel pioneers the microchip, then puts thousands to work building them in Silicon Valley. Henry Ford perfects the assembly line, and then puts a generation to work in the factories of Detroit. That’s how we built the largest middle class in the world. Those folks working in those plants, they go out and they buy a Ford. They buy a personal computer. And the economy grows for everyone. And that’s how we’ll create the base of knowledge and skills that propel the next inventions and the next ideas. The President didn’t challenge the Chamber, or the American business community, enough in his speech. I sure would have banged on them some for sleazy anonymous attack ads paid for by secretive, and possibly foreign, corporations. I would have been more direct in my criticism of too many companies not creating more jobs while making record profits last year, and in outsourcing jobs and escaping taxes through phony offices in foreign countries. But it was good to see him make a strong case for the role of regulation, and for the importance of the social contract. To go before a group like the Chamber and make those arguments required some guts, and I appreciated that he did it.
Continue reading …Good Morning America's George Stephanopoulos on Tuesday repeatedly hectored Donald Rumsfeld, goading the former Defense Secretary to apologize for not supporting a troop surge in Iraq. At no point did the former Democratic operative admit that
Continue reading …Megyn Kelly invited the resident expert in all things British at Fox, Stuart Varney, on to discuss that sensational story from the Telegraph claiming that the Obama administration was selling British nuclear secrets to the Russians. Of course, Varney believes every word of the story, even though it has in fact been pretty readily debunked. And lots more, too: VARNEY: There’s an increasing feeling in Britain that the American administration doesn’t like the British, for whatever reason. KELLY: What’s the evidence of that? VARNEY: Well, there’s two symbolic items, and two more serious items. To first, the symbolism: The first act of President Obama when he walks in the White House — send back a bust of Winston Churchill, the great statesman between America and Britain. Second — KELLY: Why did he do that? VARNEY: Because his father — President Obama’s father — disliked the colonial administration in his native Kenya. Varney then described the other supposed anti-British offenses: the White House’s clumsy gift gaffe of presenting the Queen with an iPod; the administration’s ardent prosecution of British Petroleum over the catastrophic Gulf oil spill; and now, the supposed nuclear-secrets release. Kelly ran through these and actually demonstrated that they’re all either nonsense — such as the supposed “secrets” release, which has been debunked by the State Department (it seems we’ve been providing Russia with this information since 1991, and everyone has known about it) — or otherwise perfectly explicable. But she was at a loss on the Churchill-bust charge, which Varney again asserted has convinced Britons that President Obama “dislikes” them: KELLY: But the thing about the bust — has the White House ever come out publicly to explain why they sent that bust back? VARNEY: It was apparently because President Obama’s father, who was a native Kenyan — KELLY: Have they admitted that? VARNEY: I believe that is out there. I’ve not read the formal statement. But an explanation was requested. And the explanation was that Obama’s father, being a native Kenyan, disliked the British colonial rule in Kenya, which ended in 1963. Now, the folks at Media Matters are more polite than I am. They called this a “fact-free Obama smear and a “betrayal of reality.” Actually, this is just a flat-out baldfaced lied. Because in reality, back when the explanation was requested, a very clear one was given by both the White House and the British embassy: The bust had been a loan to the White House that expired with President Bush’s tenure and was simply due to be returned. A British Embassy spokesman said: “The bust of Sir Winston Churchill by Sir Jacob Epstein was uniquely lent to a foreign head of state, President George W Bush, from the Government Art Collection in the wake of 9/11 as a signal of the strong transatlantic relationship. “It was lent for the first term of office of President Bush. When the President was elected for his second and final term, the loan was extended until January 2009.” Varney is right in at least one respect, though: This theory linking the return of the bust to Obama’s father and his Kenyan background has been “out there” alright — floating around the GlennBeckosphere since at least last summer, when Beck adopted Dinesh D’Souza’s cockamamie theory that Obama is secretly an anticolonialist, just like his father from whom he was utterly estranged and for whom he had no known affinity. As Matt Gertz observes at MM , in a sane and rational world in which journalistic standards actually meant something, Varney would be fired for this kind of naked race-baiting : That is an extraordinary and — if true — damning allegation. Such allegations, when made on an avowed “straight news” program, demand evidence. But Varney offered no evidence whatsoever. Instead, Varney portrayed his claim as conventional wisdom that is “out there.” One of two things is true: Either Fox News is sitting on a story that would be massively damaging to the Obama administration, or they are employing a hack who pushes libelous, evidence-free speculation during its news reports. It’s pretty obvious that Door No. 2 is the only one that’s going to open. But at Fox News, it will almost certainly make no difference.
Continue reading …William Hague, Britain’s foreign minister has paid a visit to Tunisia to support the new interim government. The UK is pledging $8 million in aid following the removal last month of president Zine El Abidine Ben Ali. Al Jazeera’s Nazanine Moshiri reports from the capital Tunis.
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Continue reading …Click here to view this media I used to write posts called ‘ When Conservatives Collide’ when Brit Hume and Bill Kristol used to duke it out on FOX News Sundays back in 2005 and it was always a fun time. Now that Beck has entered into his full-frontal John Bircher mode over Egypt, Bill Kristol has pulled out his Ginsu knives. Monday, Beck responded to Kristol’s earlier remarks. Politics Daily: On his radio show Monday, Glenn Beck hit back hard at Bill Kristol over comments Kristol made in a recent column. “People like Bill Kristol. I don’t think they stand for anything anymore,” said Beck. “All they stand for is power. They’ll do anything to keep their little fiefdom together, and they’ll do anything to keep the Republican power entrenched.” Beck was responding to a Weekly Standard column Kristol recently authored, which said: When Glenn Beck rants about the caliphate taking over the Middle East from Morocco to the Philippines, and lists (invents?) the connections between caliphate-promoters and the American left, he brings to mind no one so much as Robert Welch and the John Birch Society. He’s marginalizing himself, just as his predecessors did back in the early 1960s. Beck continued slagging Kristol on his Fox News show Monday afternoon, declaring that the Egyptians’ conception of freedom is so radically different from ours that the only possible outcome for “freedom” in Egypt is a totalitarian Islamic caliphate. Only one side can be right, he declared: Bill Kristol’s side, or the view from Planet Beck. Good times, good times. I don’t like much of anything that comes out of either of these two, so it’s nice to see them go MMA on each other. This is the same battle the Buckleys and Welches have had for decades and it will never stop. Pass me the popcorn please. Beck also claimed that Kristol does not understand that “we are fighting the forces of evil on this planet.” Geez. If you were asked to name which conservative made that statement, you could safely say, “they all do.” They’re all heroes in their own minds.
Continue reading …More details on Wisner’s possible conflict of interest, but it’s the least of the challenges facing the Obama administration As I indicated yesterday , the idea that just because diplomat Frank Wisner worked for the Patton Boggs law firm, that didn’t necessarily mean that he was personally involved in working on matters related to Egypt. Now comes this from Justin Elliott in Salon : “The law firm of Frank Wisner, who was the Obama administration’s special envoy to Egpyt last week, is denying that Wisner ever worked for the Egyptian government, which has been a client of the firm, Patton Boggs. “The denial comes after journalist Robert Fisk, writing in the UK Independent, accused Wisner of a conflict of interest because Patton Boggs has, according to its website , worked for the ‘the Egyptian military, the Egyptian Economic Development Agency, and has handled arbitrations and litigation on the [Mubarak] government’s behalf in Europe and the US.’ “But Ed Newberry, managing partner at Patton Boggs, told Salon today that the firm ‘represented the Egyptian government in the past – in the mid 1990s’. He said the firm also handled ‘a very small legal matter’ for the Egyptian embassy in Washington last year, but that Wisner did not work on that case. Newberry said that matter generated fees of less than $10,000. Just thought you would want to know. Wisner still went off-message, but evidently for his own reasons. Meanwhile, we have entered the second phase of this revolution, at least from a US perspective, in which Washington now has no choice but to get deeply involved in pressing for reform that may or may not happen under Omar Suleiman. From the New York Times : “Administration officials say that in recent days, Vice President Joseph R Biden Jr – who has a long relationship with Mr Suleiman from his days on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee – has been pressing Mr Suleiman for a clear road map of democratic reforms, linked to a timetable. “But among the protesters and opposition groups in Egypt, there is deep scepticism that Washington is demanding enough of Mr Suleiman. “The administration sought amendments to the Egyptian constitution to legalise political parties, termination of one-party rule, and the end of extralegal efforts to lock up government opponents and regulate the media. But much of the opposition considers the constitution fatally flawed, and is calling for an entirely new document on which to base a more democratic Egypt. “Similarly, a meeting with opposition groups on Sunday led by Mr Suleiman was seen by many Egyptian activists as nothing more than political theatre that yielded no concrete steps toward reform. In a statement afterward – characterised by opposition figures as propaganda – Mr Suleiman offered some of what the administration sought, but left himself a lot of wiggle room.” This is going to be awfully difficult. Egypt Obama administration United States Middle East US foreign policy Hosni Mubarak Michael Tomasky guardian.co.uk
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