President Obama’s half-uncle was in court today on drunk-driving charges —and he seemed to find the media’s attention rather funny, notes the Boston Herald , which describes him as giggling and “stifling laughter” a number of times. Accompanied by attorneys and an unidentified man, Onyango Obama made a very brief appearance…
Continue reading …Bank of America customers beware: Your debit card is about to get a lot more expensive. The bank intends to start charging many customers $5 a month if they use their debit cards, in what the company says is an effort to offset new federal regulations limiting the fees it…
Continue reading …As President Obama prepares to honor the legendary 1985 Chicago Bears , one player is having none of it. Defensive tackle Dan Hampton says he has three reasons for not going to the Oct. 7 event, USA Today reports: First, families aren’t invited. “Secondly, I’m not a fan of the guy…
Continue reading …Even as Alabama’s stringent new immigration law takes effect today , the Obama administration is ramping up efforts to challenge it and other laws like it around the country. The administration has already sued Arizona and Alabama, its lawyers are talking with Utah officials about another suit there, and Georgia, Indiana,…
Continue reading …Feeling a little deja vu over the latest GOP poll , the one that shows Herman Cain surging as Rick Perry and Michele Bachmann sink? You should, explains Steve Kornacki at Salon , because Republicans have once again embraced the “nuisance candidate.” It’s a pattern they’ve been repeating for a while now,…
Continue reading …In the Grapes of Wrath , the Joad family gets a hard lesson in economics, when they follow a handbill for jobs to California—only to find there are no jobs. Why, he asks, did they put out the handbills? A fellow homeless man replies that if you’ve but one man…
Continue reading …The female victims, aged 17, 18 and 19, in serious condition after incident on John Fearon Walk in North Kensington Three teenagers were in a serious condition in hospital on Thursday night after being shot in the street. The female victims, aged 17, 18 and 19, were shot outside a property on an estate in North Kensington, west London. Police hunting the gunman were investigating if the attack was a botched drive-by shooting. It was initially believed that only one shot was fired. One of the victims was taken to hospital in a critical condition but has since improved. The victims’ injuries are not believed to be life threatening. Scotland Yard said the teenagers were shot outside an address in John Fearon Walk at around 7.15pm. The 18-year-old was treated for gunshot wounds at the scene before being taken to hospital by air ambulance. The other two victims made their own way to hospital. A police spokesman said they were alerted to the incident by the ambulance service, which had received reports that several females had been shot and injured. The spokesman said: “We have got officers down there trying to piece together what is going on. At this stage we are doing all we can.” An investigation is being led by Trident detectives, who are responsible for dealing with gang crime in black communities. No arrests have been made. Karen Buck, the MP for Westminster North, expressed her concern as she visited the Mozart estate, where the attack took place. The Labour politician, who has previously called for crackdowns on knife and gun crime, tweeted: “On Mozart estate after reports of 3 girls being shot. Desperately worried about local gang and youth violence. We have to get a grip.” Community leaders have made several attempts to make the area safer in recent years. Yew trees and a herb garden in a chequerboard pattern were planted along John Fearon Walk after it was identified as a hotspot for antisocial behaviour. London Gun crime Crime Cherry Wilson guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Bundestag vote approves increase of Germany’s guarantees from €123bn to €211bn Victory for Angela Merkel in the crunch parliamentary vote on increasing the powers of the euro bailout mechanism could prove shortlived as Germany comes under increasing pressure from EU officials to deliver fresh proposals to give the rescue fund a supercharged boost. German public opinion is firmly against any “leveraging” of the European Financial Stability Facility and both Wolfgang Schäuble, the German finance minister, and Philipp Rösler, the economics minister, set their stalls out against any such extension as the Bundestag voted 523 to 85 to increase the EFSF’s available funds to €440bn (£382bn). The vote approves the increase of Germany’s guarantees from €123bn to €211bn. Schäuble said any further increase, mooted after last weekend’s IMF meeting in Washington, was “out of the question”. Behind the scenes, however, officials are discussing at least three options for leveraging the fund to help head off the threat of potentially catastrophic defaults across the eurozone and these talks are expected to accelerate now that Germany has approved the 21 July decision to give the EFSF enhanced powers. “The only player that matters is Germany – despite what Sarkozy says. We can now get on with these discussions since Berlin knows they must take place no matter what ministers say in public,” one senior source said. Analysts cautioned, however, that it would be unrealistic to expect a fully fledged scheme to be in place in time for the G20 summit in Cannes in early November, let alone the next EU summit in mid-October. There remains deep anxiety that the greater urgency to resolve the eurozone’s sovereign debt crisis and ward off a deep recession could yet be undermined by Slovakia, the last of the 17 countries to vote on the changes to the EFSF. Iveta Radicˇová, the country’s premier, is said to need substantial opposition support to secure a majority for enhancing the EFSF. She wants a mandate before the 17-18 October EU summit but has warned Brussels a vote may not be possible until a week later. The immediate threat of a Greek default is thought to be over, with Athens expected to get the sixth instalment of the first bailout package or €8bn by the end of October. But private bondholders – mostly large European banks – are already spooked by talk within Berlin about a 40%-50% “haircut” in the event of a default rather than the voluntary 21% agreed in July. The discussions about “leveraging” are so sensitive, especially given market volatility, that none of the ideas has so far been formally been circulated. “We’re talking about non-papers so far,” an official said. But the three options are said to focus on turning the EFSF either into a bank, or an insurance scheme, or giving it the powers to borrow funds from the European Central Bank or private investors to buy eurozone government bonds. The options are said to be so technically fraught that even senior officials are struggling to master the ideas, while they are also certain to unleash political conflicts. Schäuble remains enraged by the suggestion of Tim Geithner, the US treasury secretary, that the EFSF be “leveraged” up to €2tn. But one Brussels official, referring to Geithner’s guest appearance at an informal Ecofin meeting this month in Poland, said: “Pity Geithner can’t come to all the meetings of eurozone finance ministers.” The Bundestag vote gave an immediate boost to chancellor Merkel, asserting her authority by winning without needing to rely on opposition support. A majority of her coalition MPs – 315, or four more than her nominal majority – backed the EFSF boost with the number of suspected dissidents falling to just 13 after days of arm-twisting. Eighty-five voted against the motion, including 10 from Merkel’s own Christian Democratic bloc and three from the Free Democratic party (FDP), the chancellor’s coalition partners. Most of the “no” voters belonged to the far-left Linke party, who believe the bailout fund will make banks richer and ordinary Europeans poorer. Just a month ago, test votes suggested up to 25 coalition MPs were planning to rebel after polls showed three-quarters of Germans opposed the bill. Had Merkel failed to pass the vote without relying on support from opposition MPs from the Social Democratic (SPD) and Green parties, many analysts believed the coalition would have collapsed. “This shows the clear determination of the coalition on this issue,” Rainer Brüderle, parliamentary leader of Merkel’s junior partner, the FDP, told a broadcaster after the vote. “We have made an important decision for Europe.” Yet Frank Schäffler, also of the Free Democrats, argued that bailout measures had worsened Greece’s economic situation. “Despite all arguments, the first bailout did not make the situation for Greece better, but worse,” Schäffler said. “Expanding the fund will make the situation even worse.” Although a European commission spokesman issued a bland statement welcoming the Bundestag vote – “Once ratified by the remaining member states, we will have a stronger and more versatile tool at our disposal to ensure financial stability in the euro area” – officials were privately delighted that it signalled Germany’s re-commitment to the single currency. Officials close to José Manuel Barroso, the EC president, signalled that he intends to press ahead with his proposals for eurobonds – including those which would require significant changes to the EU treaty. Such changes would require up to four years to be agreed upon and implemented after an intergovernmental conference. So the talks about a “new” enhanced EFSF are said to take on an added urgency. Barroso’s aides also confirmed that he wants the EFSF’s planned, permanent successor, the European Stability Mechanism, to be in place far earlier than the proposed July 2013 – even as early as mid-2012. This would also require speedy ratification by the eurozone’s 17 national parliaments. European debt crisis Angela Merkel European banks Europe Greece Germany Nicolas Sarkozy European commission Helen Pidd David Gow guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …A nearly empty House of Representatives today passed a stopgap spending measure to avert a government shutdown this weekend and refill disaster aid coffers. The measure passed the House with the unanimous permission of all members present in a chamber that was nearly deserted because Congress is on vacation. It…
Continue reading …Could the iPhone 5 be Apple’s biggest hit yet? Consumers still haven’t even seen the device— it’s set to be unveiled Tuesday —but a recent survey from the mobile ad network inMobi found that a whopping 41% of North American mobile users are already planning to buy the thing, MSNBC…
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