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Fox News Poll: 71% of Republicans Don’t Want Palin to Run

Click here to view this media A large majority of tea party members want Sarah Palin to stay out of the 2012 presidential race, according to a Fox News poll released Friday. Among respondents who identified themselves as members of the tea party, a staggering 66 percent said that Palin should sit on the sidelines, while only 28 percent wanted to see her in the race. Even more Republicans — 71 percent — thought she would be making a mistake by declaring her candidacy. In all, 74 percent of voters hoped she would not be getting in. The former Alaska governor received her lowest support from non-white voters: only 13 percent were ready to give their approval to her candidacy. “When I run into tea party people across the country, many of them tell me, ‘Look, I love Sarah Palin. I hope she doesn’t run for president,’” Republican strategist Karl Rove told Fox News’ Gregg Jarrett Friday. “I think her diminishing influence, these rising number of people who don’t want her to run, is a result of her having a on-again, off-again tease. She ought to get in or she ought to get out.” The Hill ‘s Christian Heinze suspected that the bad poll numbers might make Palin even more likely to run . “That’s because she hates being marginalized, under-appreciated, or dismissed,” he wrote. “Politics is personal, but with her, it’s extra personal — that’s one of the reasons why she reacts so vociferously to the slightest criticism”

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CNN's Piers Morgan hosted New York Magazine columnist Frank Rich for a conservative-bashing session on Thursday. Morgan took the opportunity to ask his liberal guest if the Tea Party can even govern. “But can they actually govern? Or does the rather intransigent streak that they bring to all that policy-making, is that always going to be the problem?” Morgan asked. Rich responded that the Tea Party's refusal to compromise on the debt ceiling was “temper tantrum-throwing and pure, you know, far right ideology.” [Video below the break.] On the day before the August jobs report showed no new jobs created, Rich praised Obama's stimulus bill. “I think the stimulus actually did do a lot of good for this country,” he remarked. After the White House received widespread criticism for scheduling the President's address to Congress on the same night as the Republican presidential debate, Rich noted Obama's desire to appear “above the fray.” “I think he regards being gentlemanly, trying to be above the fray, trying to be the adult in the room as a positive virtue in American politics,” Rich remarked of Obama. “But, you know, he is entering a very tough reelection campaign. He's got to step up to the plate.” Morgan also tried to start a sympathy session for Obama. “How much of the criticism do you think, Frank, of President Obama is based on the ridiculously high expectation levels he came in with?” he asked Rich. “Could any President, coming in when Obama did, have done much different to have affected things in a more positive way, do you think? ” Rich also agreed with Morgan's claim that GOP candidate Rick Santorum's views on homosexuality “are bordering on bigotry.” He added that Santorum is “demagoguing” gays and lesbians. When giving the positive and negative consequences of 9/11, Rich replied that “no new taxes” was a negative. “And one of the points I make in my piece for the 9/11 anniversary issue of 'New York Magazine' is of all the things that Bush did after 9/11 that defrayed that goodwill, the worst may have been not calling for any sacrifice, any shared sacrifice,” said Rich. “He told people to go to Disneyworld, go shopping. There were no new taxes.” A transcript of the segment, which aired on September 1 at 9:04 p.m. EDT, is as follows: [9:03] PIERS MORGAN: I think the time has come for President Obama. You know, we're 15 months away from election now where people just want him to start doing a bit of chest-beating here and standing up for himself and for the Presidency, I think, and beginning to call the shots. I think they want proper leadership. And a lot of Americans say to me you know the problem is we bought into this whole thing of hope and audacity and change, and instead we're seeing somebody who quite regularly appears to be – and it's all perception – appears to be being treated pretty roughly by the Tea Party, by Republicans, by Speaker Boehner, and he doesn't seem to be the one calling the shots. FRANK RICH, New York Magazine columnist: I think he regards — and there's something human about this and likable about it, I think he regards being gentlemanly, trying to be above the fray, trying to be the adult in the room as a positive virtue in American politics. But, you know, he is entering a very tough reelection campaign. He's got to step up to the plate. One thing I hope he does is actually watch that Republican debate the night before and respond to it. And that's now set up for – it's teed off for him to do that. (…) MORGAN: It seems that the Tea Party have definitely been gathering momentum and a lot more support as they have gone. And you're right. Rick Perry is very much a Tea Party supporter in many ways. The problem comes, as we saw over the whole debt ceiling crisis, is that people are concerned, do they have what it takes to actually govern? It's all very well opposing and making lots of noise and being very critical and standing up for the people. But can they actually govern? Or does the rather intransigent streak that they bring to all that policy-making, is that always going to be the problem? RICH: It's always going to be the problem. And I think, again going back to that Republican establishment, the interest that actually financed and bankrolled the Republican Party, I don't think they like the idea that the country might have defaulted and that Michele Bachmann really didn't understand what the debt ceiling was or what the issues were and was willing to put the credit of America at stake for ideology. So, no, that's not governance at all. That's temper tantrum-throwing and pure, you know, far right ideology. MORGAN: How much of the criticism do you think, Frank, of President Obama is based on the ridiculously high expectation levels he came in with? Given the state of the economy when he arrived and given the fact it really hasn't improved at all — if anything, probably got slightly worse. Could any President, coming in when Obama did, have done much different to have affected things in a more positive way, do you think? Has he been disappointing or simply was it that expectation levels were way too high? RICH: Well, I think the answer is both. He was his own toughest act to follow. He is a very tough act to follow with himself, and he hasn't lived up to it. But more substantially, I think he has made mistakes. The talk about pivoting to jobs, discussing unemployment, to discussing foreclosures, people losing their jobs and their homes has rarely been center stage. And they've threatened to pivot to it over and over again. And they're going to pivot to it again next week. But I think that was a big mistake. I think the stimulus actually did do a lot of good for this country. And I do think they stabilized the banking system. But then we had a very protracted health care battle. And the job message and job action has never really been as much front and center as it should be. And now it's too late. All he can do is have a rhetorical victory because, of course, he is not going get anything through this Congress. (…) MORGAN: I mean, it's fascinating to me to see how various candidates now begin to handle what would have been not that contentious an issue before, but it becomes so. For instance, the issue of same-sex marriage. I've now had two quite lively encounters, one with Christine O'Donnell and one with Rick Santorum, where one walked off and the other one got quite heated. RICH: I saw the Santorum, yeah. MORGAN: Yeah, but what did you make of it? Because it seemed to be they're getting a little touchy about all this. As you get more and more American states signing up to same-sex marriage, it may be they're getting a little concerned that the form of very acceptable rhetoric of a Republican candidate no longer perhaps will resonate in the way it used to. RICH: Well, I think in your Rick Santorum interview, you saw exactly that. You said, correctly, that what he was saying was quite possibly bigoted. He wanted to disown it. Oh, no, he's just – you know, I don't know, everyone should do what they want but not – he was talking. It was like gobbledygook rhetoric. And here's why it doesn't play anymore. This country has turned the page very fast on this issue – shockingly fast to me as someone who has covered it for years. Santorum has no traction as a candidate. Demagoguing gay people and same-sex marriage or any sexual issue like that may arouse the hardest right of the base of the Republican Party, but it's going to drive away independent voters, drive away mainstream American voters. Everyone has gay people in their lives. The clock has run out on this. So they're really I think playing with a loaded gun pointed at themselves. I don't think it's going to help them politically at all. I think when someone like Rick Santorum is squirming and realizes that, I think they all realize have a problem. (…) MORGAN: Frank, the War on Terror is now 10 years in. What's your assessment of where the spoils of victory and defeat have worked themselves out? RICH: Well, a few good things can be said. The end of Osama bin Laden, for instance. And to some extent – although we don't know what to what extent after all these years, and in my view one unnecessary war in Iraq – a scattering of al Qaeda. But basically, in almost every conceivable way, America is worse off. And the tragedy is that at the time Bush gave that speech, the country was really united. America was really united behind him. People were devastated by this attack on American soil, and they rallied around the President, a very new, green President who had won in a very contentious election. And then it was all squandered. And one of the points I make in my piece for the 9/11 anniversary issue of “New York Magazine” is of all the things that Bush did after 9/11 that defrayed that goodwill, the worst may have been not calling for any sacrifice, any shared sacrifice. He told people to go to Disneyworld, go shopping. There were no new taxes. And I feel this anti-government cancer that is loose in America today comes from that moment. He said basically, you can fight two wars and not pay for them. And if you don't pay taxes for two wars, then why pay taxes for anything in the common good? And that's the kind of ideology that's now at loose and is paralyzing this country.

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Turkey to challenge Gaza blockade at International Court of Justice

Turkish announcement appears to rebuff attempts by UN secretary general Ban Ki-Moon to end its row with Israel Turkey is to challenge Israel’s blockade on Gaza at the International Court of Justice, amid a worsening diplomatic crisis between the once close allies. The announcement by Turkish foreign minister Ahmet Davutoglu appears to rebuff UN secretary general Ban Ki-moon’s attempt to defuse the row over Israel’s armed assault on a Gaza-bound aid flotilla in which nine people were killed. Turkey dramatically downgraded its relations with Israel, cutting military ties with its former ally and expelling the country’s ambassador over his government’s refusal to apologise for the killings of eight Turkish citizens and a Turkish American last May. Ban said today that the two countries should accept the recommendations of a UN report that examined the incident. The report found Israel had used “excessive and unreasonable” force to stop the flotilla approaching Gaza, but that it was justified in maintaining a naval blockade on the Palestinian enclave. But Davutoglu later dismissed the report, stating it had not been endorsed by the UN and was therefore not binding. “What is binding is the International Court of Justice,” he told Turkey’s state-run TRT television. “This is what we are saying: let the International Court of Justice decide. “We are starting the necessary legal procedures this coming week.” Israeli deputy foreign minister Danny Ayalon said his country had nothing to apologise for and accused Ankara of raising tensions for its own reasons. “The problem here is on the Turkish side …. They were not ready for a compromise and kept raising the threshold,” Ayalon said on Israeli TV. “I think we need to say to the Turks: as far as we are concerned, this saga is behind us. Now we need to cooperate. Lack of cooperation harms not only us, but Turkey as well.” The UN investigation, chaired by Geoffrey Palmer, a former New Zealand prime minister, focused on the events on the Mavi Marmara, a Turkish-flagged vessel which was the largest ship in a flotilla aimed at breaking the Gaza blockade, on 31 May last year. It was boarded by Israeli commandos who were met with resistance by spro-Palestinian activists on board, nine of whom died. Davutoglu said the investigation contradicted an earlier report by the UN Human Rights Council in September, which found Israeli forces violated international law , “including international humanitarian and human rights law”. He warned Israel that it risks alienation among Arab nations by resisting an apology. “If Israel persists with its current position, the Arab spring will give rise to a strong Israel opposition, as well as the debate on the authoritarian regimes,” Davutoglu said. The UN secretary general said earlier that strong ties between Turkey and Israel, which both share a border with Syria, were important for peace and stability in the Middle East. “I sincerely hope that Israel and Turkey will improve their relationship,” he added. “Both countries are very important countries in the region, and their improved relationship will be very important in addressing all the situations in the Middle East, including the Middle East peace process.” But Ban, speaking in Canberra on Saturday after talks with the Australian prime minister, Julia Gillard, would not be drawn on findings of the UN report on the flotilla incident last summer. “I’m not in a position to say any specific comments on the substance of the findings and recommendations of the panel’s report,” he said. “My only wish is that they should try to improve their relationship and do what they can to implement the recommendations and findings.” Turkey said on Friday that the Israeli ambassador, Gabby Levy, and other senior Israeli diplomats would have to leave their posts by Wednesday and that Turkey’s representation in Israel would be downgraded to the junior level of second secretary. Turkey Israel Europe Middle East Ban Ki-moon International court of justice David Batty guardian.co.uk

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Libya: Gaddafi sons and loyalist convoys ‘have fled strongholds’

Rebel leaders in town of Tahouna say convoys seen leaving military bases ahead of assault on town expected in days Members of the Gaddafi family were believed to have fled the town of Bani Walid on Saturday after residents raised rebel flags in a show of defiance. Rebel leaders in the nearby town of Tahouna said loyalist convoys had been seen leaving military bases ahead of an assault on the town, expected within days. Some were believed to be the remnants of the Khamis Brigades, which were controlled by Muammar Gaddafi’s son Khamis until he was apparently killed in a rebel ambush nine days ago. “There was a surprise movement this afternoon,” Tripoli’s rebel military commander, Abdul Hakim Belhaj, said. “The Gaddafi brigades appear to have abandoned their checkpoints.” “The radio station is under the control of the revolutionary people, and flags have been put up on a lot of the high buildings in Bani Walid.” Belhaj said the approaches to the town were not yet fully secure, but estimated that 90% of Bani Walid was now backing the rebels. Three of Gaddafi’s sons – Mutassim, Saif al-Islam and Saadi – are believed to have been staying in the military bases, while the Warfalla tribe, which controls Bani Walid, debated their future. Rebel officials in Tahouna and Tripoli had told tribal leaders that the town would soon be attacked if the tribe did not surrender the Gaddafis. The impetus for the apparent departure seemed to be a local uprising, which saw green loyalist flags torn down and regime checkpoints on Bani Walid’s outskirts evacuated. It was not immediately clear whether the uprising was localised to one area, or had spread to other parts of Bani Walid. Rebels were planning to send forays into town to test the mood of the people, who had largely been loyal to the ousted Gaddafi regime since the fall of Tripoli. They had expected to confront 500-600 loyalist soldiers with about 2,000 rebels. Residents had, in recent days, given the leaders of Tahouna’s rebel brigade regular updates on the whereabouts of Saif al-Islam and Mutassim, suggesting cracks in tribal solidarity. Tribal leaders had earlier told rebels they felt bound by custom to protect their guests. If military units carrying the Gaddafi sons have fled, they have few places to run to. The main road south-west is controlled by rebels after about 60 miles, meaning it is likely they would be forced to take a more difficult escape route through barren landscapes which become ever more treacherous the further south they go. More troubling for any overland escape is that it would be detectable by Nato surveillance aircraft, which could track every move. Nato continues to play an active role in Tripoli and in the hunt for Colonel Gaddafi, with the RAF bombing six targets in Bani Walid over the past week. Gaddafi is believed to have spent time in the town eight days ago before heading south. His whereabouts are unknown, but Nato and rebel officials believe he is hiding somewhere in an area from the southern town of Sabha to the Algerian border – a vast tract of land on the fringes of the Sahara desert, where he can count on the protection of Tuareg tribesmen. Two weeks after the battle for Tripoli, which rapidly ousted his 42-year regime, southern Libya remains largely a no-go zone for rebels. Sabha, a city of 500,000 people, is still thought to be in loyalist hands. Negotiations with tribes in Gaddafi’s hometown of Sirte have so far proved fruitless. Officials from the National Transitional Council have extended by a week a deadline they had earlier given for negotiations aimed at averting an invasion of the coastal city. Bani Walid and Sirte have been without electricity and water for more than a week. However, humanitarian aid has been allowed into both places. Tripoli also remains without mains water, with Gaddafi loyalists having cut the supply to the capital from just north of Sabha, fuelling speculation that they could have used the country’s greatest engineering feat, the Great Man Made River, to escape to the south. Libya Middle East Africa Muammar Gaddafi Martin Chulov guardian.co.uk

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Supporter Praises Romney for Creating Jobs with His Mansion Upgrade

Click here to view this media Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney has taken some heat for reportedly planning to quadruple the size of his $12 million California beachfront mansion, but at least one supporter is touting the jobs created by the massive upgrade. “I want to tell you this,” a supporter told Romney during the opening of his Tampa headquarters Friday. “You created more jobs with your house than Barack Obama has in the last three and a half years.” “That is true,” Romney replied. The Romney campaign has argued that the mansion’s living space is only being doubled. “The ‘quadrupling’ was a measurement of added non-living space, including a basement and garage,” according to the New Hampshire Union Leader ‘s Joe McQuaid , who spoke to Romney about the expansion. Romney and his wife Ann also own homes in Lake Winnipesaukee, New Hampshire and Boston, Massachusetts. They recently sold two other homes in Belmont, Massachusetts and near Park City, Utah for about $8.75 million.

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Vatican denies claims of abuse cover-up in Ireland

Officials issue rebuttal of report priests were told to keep quiet about abuse and hits back at criticism by Irish PM The Vatican has issued a tough rebuttal of a report claiming it told priests in Ireland to keep quiet about sexual abuse and described criticism by the Irish prime minister, Enda Kenny, as “unfounded”. The Vatican sought to dismantle, point by point, claims made by the report, ordered by the Irish government and released in July, which prompted Kenny to condemn the Vatican as riddled with “dysfunction, disconnection and elitism”. In the ensuing row, the Vatican took the highly unusual decision to recall its ambassador from staunchly Catholic Ireland, with one spokesman in Rome describing its “surprise and disappointment”. The groundbreaking report into abuse in the diocese of Cloyne highlighted a 1997 Vatican letter which expressed “serious reservations” about a policy drawn up the year before by Irish bishops requiring abusers to be reported to the police. It found the diocese then failed to report nine out of 15 complaints made against priests between 1996 and 2005 which “very clearly should have been reported”. The findings encouraged Irish politicians, led by Kenny, to claim the Vatican’s letter had effectively crippled the Irish church’s efforts to tackle the abuse within its ranks. Breaking with years of traditional subservience to the Vatican by Irish politicians, Kenny said: “The rape and torture of children were downplayed or ‘managed’ to uphold, instead, the primacy of the institution, its power, standing and ‘reputation’.” The Vatican’s response listed the reasons why the diocese’s poor track record on abuse could not be blamed on the 1997 letter by the then Apostolic Nuncio Archbishop Luciano Storero. While the response conceded that the Vatican viewed the bishops’ guidelines on police reporting as a mere “study document” and not binding, it stated that this was because Irish bishops had described it as such. “The [Vatican] congregation for the clergy did express reservations about mandatory reporting,” it said, adding that this was only because of concerns of clashing with the work of church tribunals in rooting out paedophile priests. Fears were also raised that the Irish guidelines would overlap with new powers handed to US bishops by the Vatican to stamp out abuse, which were extended to Irish bishops in 1996. “Meeting canonical requirements to ensure the correct administration of justice within the church in no way precluded cooperation with the civil authorities,” the Vatican document said. The document pointed out that mandatory reporting of abuse was not law in Ireland at the time. “Given that the Irish government of the day decided not to legislate on the matter, it is difficult to see how Archbishop Storero’s letter… could possibly be construed as having somehow subverted Irish law.” It admitted the Vatican’s “shame” over the “terrible sufferings which the victims of abuse and their families have had to endure” in Ireland, but stated the blame for abuse in Cloyne after 1997 was squarely with the diocese. Maeve Lewis, the Irish director for the anti-child abuse campaign group One in Four, said the response was a let-down. “Once again the Vatican has failed to take responsibility for a culture which prevails in the Catholic church which facilitates the sexual abuse of children,” she said. . “In the response, they seek to justify actions and present themselves as having been misunderstood, whereas people in the church were using Vatican writing and thinking to find a way to avoid reporting abuse to civil authorities. “I hope the Irish government now maintains its stance, which represented Irish thinking.” Vatican Ireland Italy Religion Catholicism Europe Tom Kington guardian.co.uk

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Vatican denies claims of abuse cover-up in Ireland

Officials issue rebuttal of report priests were told to keep quiet about abuse and hits back at criticism by Irish PM The Vatican has issued a tough rebuttal of a report claiming it told priests in Ireland to keep quiet about sexual abuse and described criticism by the Irish prime minister, Enda Kenny, as “unfounded”. The Vatican sought to dismantle, point by point, claims made by the report, ordered by the Irish government and released in July, which prompted Kenny to condemn the Vatican as riddled with “dysfunction, disconnection and elitism”. In the ensuing row, the Vatican took the highly unusual decision to recall its ambassador from staunchly Catholic Ireland, with one spokesman in Rome describing its “surprise and disappointment”. The groundbreaking report into abuse in the diocese of Cloyne highlighted a 1997 Vatican letter which expressed “serious reservations” about a policy drawn up the year before by Irish bishops requiring abusers to be reported to the police. It found the diocese then failed to report nine out of 15 complaints made against priests between 1996 and 2005 which “very clearly should have been reported”. The findings encouraged Irish politicians, led by Kenny, to claim the Vatican’s letter had effectively crippled the Irish church’s efforts to tackle the abuse within its ranks. Breaking with years of traditional subservience to the Vatican by Irish politicians, Kenny said: “The rape and torture of children were downplayed or ‘managed’ to uphold, instead, the primacy of the institution, its power, standing and ‘reputation’.” The Vatican’s response listed the reasons why the diocese’s poor track record on abuse could not be blamed on the 1997 letter by the then Apostolic Nuncio Archbishop Luciano Storero. While the response conceded that the Vatican viewed the bishops’ guidelines on police reporting as a mere “study document” and not binding, it stated that this was because Irish bishops had described it as such. “The [Vatican] congregation for the clergy did express reservations about mandatory reporting,” it said, adding that this was only because of concerns of clashing with the work of church tribunals in rooting out paedophile priests. Fears were also raised that the Irish guidelines would overlap with new powers handed to US bishops by the Vatican to stamp out abuse, which were extended to Irish bishops in 1996. “Meeting canonical requirements to ensure the correct administration of justice within the church in no way precluded cooperation with the civil authorities,” the Vatican document said. The document pointed out that mandatory reporting of abuse was not law in Ireland at the time. “Given that the Irish government of the day decided not to legislate on the matter, it is difficult to see how Archbishop Storero’s letter… could possibly be construed as having somehow subverted Irish law.” It admitted the Vatican’s “shame” over the “terrible sufferings which the victims of abuse and their families have had to endure” in Ireland, but stated the blame for abuse in Cloyne after 1997 was squarely with the diocese. Maeve Lewis, the Irish director for the anti-child abuse campaign group One in Four, said the response was a let-down. “Once again the Vatican has failed to take responsibility for a culture which prevails in the Catholic church which facilitates the sexual abuse of children,” she said. . “In the response, they seek to justify actions and present themselves as having been misunderstood, whereas people in the church were using Vatican writing and thinking to find a way to avoid reporting abuse to civil authorities. “I hope the Irish government now maintains its stance, which represented Irish thinking.” Vatican Ireland Italy Religion Catholicism Europe Tom Kington guardian.co.uk

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Thousands of Farm Workers to Rally in Sacramento Sunday for Fair Treatment for Farm Workers Now

Guest-blogged by Jocelyn Sherman of United Farm Workers On August 23, farm workers began a 200-mile pilgrimage from Madera to Sacramento, California, to press for the Fair Treatment for Farm Workers Act giving them the right to be paid overtime after eight hours like other workers . enlarge Credit: Scot Tucker This historic march will end this Sunday, Sept. 4th, Labor Day weekend, at the State Capitol. Thousands of farm workers from throughout California will attend this rally and personally tell Gov. Jerry Brown to sign their bills once they reach his desk. UFW president Arturo Rodriguez has walked every step of the march with the workers. He is grateful for all the support they have received from fellow union members and the public since Day 1. Leaving Madera, three farm worker women came up to us. “We can’t march with you, Arturo, but this is for food and water for the marchers,” one said. They handed us $19. A couple of days ago, an Ironworkers union member spotted us while driving down Hwy. 99, exited the freeway, made a U-turn and came back to ask what was happening and where we were headed. “I’ll be back,” he said. the next day, he showed up with his girlfriend. He couldn’t march, but brought cases of bottled water. Another woman and her husband, a Teamsters union member, came up to us at St. Jude Catholic Church in Ceres to find out what was going on. They also turned out yesterday. The husband brought several cases of water and she marched with us all day. Then there are the farm workers who are marching all 13 days–standing up for their rights. Odelia Chavez is one of these brave workers, putting her job at risk by marching and demanding change. Odelia says she is marching because of the bad conditions we farm workers work in: The farmers and farm labor contractors put a lot of pressure on us, they don’t respect us, we are paid very poorly and it is not enough to make ends meet. We are going to Sacramento to tell Governor Jerry Brown that it is time for him to sign what we are asking. I am tired, but we are going to reach Sacramento. We are going to get a victory. Luis Carranza is another one of these workers. Luis is lucky and has the protection of a UFW contract. He says: I am here to support the union and the march, so farm workers could get better salaries and treatment. Especially working conditions during the hot summer weather. They deserve it. I feel happy being part of the march, but exhausted because of the heat that we have to endure along the way. These peregrinos (pilgrims) will end their final trek on Sunday at California’s capitol. If you are in the area please rsvp to join them. If you are out of the area, please join them virtually by signing their petition to Gov Brown More information at : UFW.org A 20-plus year veteran of the UFW, Jocelyn Sherman is the UFW’s in house expert in electronic media. She is responsible for launching the UFW’s award winning www.ufw.org web site and has implemented and overseen the UFW’s e-mail action list and social media presence. Through her leadership, electronic activism has helped change the lives of those who are least plugged in.

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Anti-fascist protesters gather as EDL holds London demonstration

Huge crowds assemble to oppose ‘static’ protest by far-right English Defence League in Tower Hamlets Huge crowds are assembling before a planned demonstration by the English Defence League (EDL) in east London, vowing to defend the community from the far-right group. Amid a police presence of around 3,000 officers, hundreds of residents and anti-fascist campaigners converged along Whitechapel Road close to the East London mosque, a self-proclaimed target for some members of the EDL. Muslims accuse the group of fostering hate against them. At around 1.20pm, staff at King’s Cross station closed the entrance to the tube, preventing the majority of the EDL supporters gathered outside from travelling to the demonstration around Aldgate East tube for around half an hour. The EDL supporters then made their way towards Aldgate East, and police said they expected around 1,000 would attend the protest. Earlier, the RMT train drivers’ union said it would shut down Liverpool Street station on health and safety grounds if the EDL gathered there. Tensions have been heightened by the actions of the anti-Muslim extremist Anders Behring Breivik, who admitted killing 77 people in July when he detonated a bomb in the Norwegian capital, Oslo before embarking on a shooting spree at a youth camp on the nearby Utøya island. The EDL demonstration is its first since the killings by Brievik, who had praised the organisation in the past and claimed to have 600 EDL supporters as friends on Facebook. Along Whitechapel Road, scores of anti-EDL protesters waved placards carrying portraits of Brievik and Tommy Robinson, the founder of the EDL. Beneath ran the message: “Different faces, same hatred.” Some in the crowd drew parallels with the Battle of Cable Street, several minutes’ walk south, where the local community railed in defiance of Sir Oswald Mosley’s British Union of Fascists almost 75 years ago, refusing to let them pass through the East End. Jamie Pitman, who had travelled from Oxford to show solidarity with the residents of Tower Hamlets, said: “Cable Street showed that, in times of austerity and a poor economic climate, fascism and racism can flourish. We need to beat fascism by turning out in bigger numbers than them – not resorting to violence but providing a bigger show of strength.” The mood was defiant, with a number of people dancing to a sound system erected on a parked lorry. Reverend Alan Green, of St John on Bethnal Green and one of the organisers of United East End, a coalition of groups opposed to the EDL entering Tower Hamlets, said: “The vast majority of the population are very happy to live together in such diversity. “We need to show the extent of opposition to the EDL and how the things they say about the area, their rhetoric, is so wrong.” Claire Laker-Mansfied, 22, of the campaign group Youth Fight For Jobs, said: “We should have the right to defend our community against racist thugs and their racist lies about jobs and housing.” Martin Smith, of Unite Against Facism, was among those hoping that the EDL would not be allowed access to the borough, with police looking to contain the group at Aldgate, on the eastern periphery of Tower Hamlets. One concern is that pockets of EDL might pretend they are not part of the official demonstration and attempt to converge upon the Whitechapel mosque area. The EDL “static” demonstration comes after the home secretary, Theresa May, banned the group from marching in Tower Hamlets on police advice. But Dave Wainwright, an organiser of the Unite Against Facism wing in Leicester, predicted violence despite the ban. “In Leicester, the EDL were also banned from marching but that had little effect in terms of minimising their violence,” he said. “It stems from their ideology and a culture of heavy drinking. Yes, it will be violent.” It is the first time since the Brixton riots 30 years ago that police have requested powers to stop marches in London. English Defence League Police The far right Theresa May Mark Townsend Matthew Taylor guardian.co.uk

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We Are Ohio launched its first ad today in its “No on Issue 2″ campaign to repeal Senate Bill 5, the anti-collective bargaining law pushed by Gov. John Kasich (R). The ad features firefighters explaining why the law will make their job harder. The ad campaign was announced with events in major cities across the state where first responders told press how the bill would hurt them and the jobs they do: “I will vote NO on Issue 2 because Senate Bill 5 will make it harder for me to get the necessary training and equipment I need to protect my community,” said Dave Wright a firefighter in Dayton. “I’ve been a firefighter for 22 years. I just want to be treated fairly and serve the people of Dayton.” “I’m honored to stand with my fellow first responders today to say I’m voting NO on Issue 2 because Senate Bill 5 goes too far,” said Doug Stern a Cincinnati firefighter. “Senate Bill 5 makes it illegal for me to fight for safe staffing levels. This puts the safety of the people I’m trying to serve and protect, as well as my safety at risk.” Those who are interested can support the campaign by sharing the video with friends and family , follow the organization on Facebook or contribute to help finance this and other ads .

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