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Cameron denies ‘complete mess’ in health and justice reforms

Prime minister gives full backing to justice secretary Kenneth Clarke, saying he has ‘plenty more fuel left in his tank’ David Cameron has denied that his government has made a “complete mess” of health and justice reforms amid claims of two major policy U-turns on the same day. The prime minister also gave his full backing to the justice secretary, Kenneth Clarke, saying he has “plenty more fuel left in his tank”. The defence came after the Labour leader, Ed Miliband, seized on reports that Cameron has ditched controversial plans to introduce a 50% prison sentencing discount for an early guilty plea after holding talks with Clarke on Tuesday. Miliband told Cameron at prime minister’s questions: “He knows, and the whole country knows, he’s in a total mess on his sentencing policy, just like on all his other crime policy.” The Labour leader also accused Cameron of being in a “complete mess” over his health plans after the announcement on Tuesday that the prime minister was abandoning key elements of health secretary Andrew Lansley’s, original blueprint for health reforms. He pledged changes to deadlines, competition, funding and waiting times, causing consternation among many Conservative MPs. Cameron had changed course because he had been “found out” over his plans to turn the NHS into a “free market free-for-all” , Miliband said. Cameron dismissed Miliband’s attacks, accusing him of “empty opposition”, “weak leadership” and “jumping on a series of bandwagons”. Miliband turned first to sentencing policy, asking Cameron to confirm reports that he had “torn up” a key plank of the justice secretary’s policy on sentencing. The prime minister did not answer directly, but said: “What we want is tough sentences for serious offenders. “We produced a consultation paper that had widespread support for many of the proposals that it made and, in the coming weeks, we will be publishing our legislation.” He said it was the Labour government that introduced a one-third discount on sentences, and lent his support to Clarke when asked by the Tory MP Philip Hollobone why magistrates were forced to retire at 70 when the justice secretary, who appoints them, is 71 later this year. Cameron said: “It is important that you get turnover in the magistrates so that new people come in. To be fair to the lord chancellor, he has only been in his job for a year – he’s doing a superb job, and I can tell you there is plenty more fuel in his tank.” On the NHS, the prime minister said the review of the plans was conducted because the government “wanted to get these right”. He added that there had been “widespread support” for the review from the shadow health secretary, John Healey. “What he [Miliband] calls a shambles, his shadow health secretary calls good government,” Cameron said. “He’s not really in command of the ship.” Miliband said Cameron had made a series of promises before the election, such as no more top-down reorganisations of the NHS, because he was “completely shameless and he will say anything”. He said the prime minister “didn’t think the policy through”, such as the decision, last June, to stop enforcing the 18-week target, claiming that the amount of patients waiting longer than 18 weeks had gone up by 69%. The prime minister said Miliband’s performance at the dispatch box suggested he “wasn’t thinking about politics on his honeymoon”. Cameron said median waiting times had gone down and claimed Miliband had misled the house about the issue two weeks ago, prompting an intervention from the Commons Speaker, John Bercow, who urged him to withdraw the remark in line with protocol. Cameron said: “What I meant, of course … he gave an interesting use of facts in terms of waiting times, which are down in the NHS.” Miliband responded: “The whole house will notice he didn’t withdraw that, and obviously he is rattled about the health service. “After a year, he’s proved the oldest truth in politics – you can’t trust the Tories on the NHS.” David Cameron Ed Miliband PMQs House of Commons Labour Kenneth Clarke Conservatives Liberal-Conservative coalition Prisons and probation Health policy Health Public services policy UK criminal justice Hélène Mulholland guardian.co.uk

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So while Weiner did what he did, looks like the attack on his Twitter escapades was helped along by a political heavy hitter’s office. I’m sure it’s just a coinky dink! When are Democrats going to learn you don’t play nice with these people? There’s a lot of dirt on these Republicans, and it’s time the Dems started acting just like they do. It’s a shame, really: JUNE 6–The online duo who spearheaded a vicious months-long Twitter assault on Representative Anthony Weiner–whom they accused of improper contact with underage girls– apparently consulted with an aide to a powerful House Republican as they mulled over how to release information about Weiner’s purported relationship with a Delaware teenager, The Smoking Gun has learned. In a series of e-mails exchanged on May 25, Mike Stack and his Twitter sidekick “Dan Wolfe” discussed a Tumblr posting by the high school student that they believed showed she was having “private conversations” with Weiner. Wolfe, who noted that he had made screen captures of the girl’s Tumblr blog, exclaimed, “This is MAJOR!” Beginning earlier this year, Stack (a porn site moderator ) and Wolfe (whose true identity is unknown ) have carefully monitored Weiner’s Twitter page to catalogue the young women being followed by the New York Democrat. In several instances, they have sent tweets directly to these women “warning” them about the politician. The insinuation in these messages–as well as in postings on their individual Twitter pages–was that Weiner was a predator. After Wolfe told Stack about making the screen captures from the girl’s Tumblr page, Stack suggested how they could release the information: “I think that since we have the stuff screencapped we call or email his office. But cc a whole bunch of people asking for a comment.” But Stack then noted, “She is underage, however. Let me email Darrell Issa press sec.” Stack, e-mails reveal, was referring to Seamus Kraft, press secretary and “director of digital strategy,” for the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, which is chaired by Issa, a California Republican. Issa, who has called the Obama administration “corrupt,” is effectively the leading congressional investigator. In an e-mail to Wolfe , Stack wrote, “This guy Seamus Kraft is awesome.” Stack noted that he was referred to Kraft by a woman who had recently worked for Issa’s committee. The female staffer, Stack said, “thought I would be good at keeping Seamus and Mr. Issa up to date with ethics and BHO [Barack Hussein Obama] issues around the clock.” Stack then remarked, “They have proven to be great allies,” adding that Wolfe should “Follow mr Issa at @darrellissa.” Asked this afternoon about Weiner-related contacts with the toxic Twitter Twins, Kraft said, “I don’t recall that right now.” After saying that, “I have exchanged e-mails with Mike Stack before” Kraft promised he would call back a reporter in 15 minutes after conducting some research. By press time–nearly two hours later–Kraft had not called back with the results of that research (though Kraft did start following TSG’s Twitter feed at 2:55 PM).

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Possessing a half-ounce or less of pot will soon no longer be a crime in Connecticut. The state’s House of Representatives, after a spirited discussion, has voted to make the state the 14th to decriminalize possession of small amounts of marijuana, reports the Hartford Courant . Democratic Gov. Dan Malloy has…

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John Bercow dismisses Daily Mail as a ‘bigoted comic’

Commons Speaker’s caustic remarks follow repeated criticism by newspaper’s parliamentary sketch writer, Quentin Letts The Commons Speaker, John Bercow, has risked his political neutrality by describing the Daily Mail as a “sexist, racist, bigoted, comic cartoon strip”. He also apologised for breaking the trade descriptions act by describing the Mail as a “newspaper”. His stinging remarks came at a question and answer session with the political commentator Steve Richards at Kings Place in London. Bercow has been repeatedly criticised in the Daily Mail, notably by Quentin Letts, its parliamentary sketch writer. Letts recently described the Speaker as “preening, sycophantic, short-tempered and grotesque”. On another occasion Letts wrote: “Effortless humour is one of the things Squeaker Bercow so palpably lacks. Everything about him, even his wit, is by numbers, worn heavily, as though out of a book.” Bercow’s condemnation of the Mail was promoted by his wife Sally who is active on Twitter and is a staunch supporter ofLabour. There is a group of around 40 Conservative backbenchers and ministers that still deeply resent Bercow’s election to the Speakership either because they think he is too left wing, self promoting or simply unreliable. In his question and answer session with Richards, Bercow also discussed the sensitive issue of whether MPs were abusing their parliamentary privilege by mentioning details of super-injunctions. Bercow said that “no super-injunction should be preventing colleagues from trying to debate issues”, before noting that “it would be very sad if the sovereign nature of parliament as a whole and the House of Commons in particular was eroded by the judiciary.” Super-injunctions, he added, were “undesirable – we don’t want to see their spread”.But he criticised the Liberal Democrat MP John Hemming who has twice used parliament to reveal details of super-injunctions, sometimes already being discussed on Twitter. Bercow said: “Debating principles and issues is very different from violating an order to score a point.” He defended the right of his wife to express her views on a daily basis on Twitter. “She’s free to do what she wants. Sally is my wife, but not my chattel or my property. The duty of impartiality doesn’t extend to her – there isn’t a Mrs Speaker – and it’s a spectacularly sexist idea that Sally should have to be silent.” Bercow also said he believed IPSA, the body responsible for handling MPs’ expenses, was “far too complicated”. He disclosed he had written to IPSA asking it “sharply to reduce its own expenditures … particularly the large amount of money spent on communications officers to communicate with the public.” Bercow is known to be a supporter of further reforms to the Commons sitting hours, but will have to wait to see if any proposals emerge from the procedure committee or the modernisation committee. His signal achievement since becoming speaker apart from being willing to talk in public about his role has been to increase the number of ministerial statements or urgent questions, making the executive more answerable to parliament than for many decades. John Bercow Daily Mail Newspapers & magazines House of Commons National newspapers Patrick Wintour guardian.co.uk

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Gay Girl in Damascus blogger joins ranks of Syria’s detained

Amina Abdallah Araf al Omari is the among the best known of many thousands of Syrians detained since mid-March “If we want to live in a free country,” Amina Abdallah Araf al Omari wrote on her blog on 27 April, “we must begin by living as though we are already in a free country.” And so the 35-year-old Syrian, an outspoken lesbian, feminist and anti-government protester, continued to post highly critical entries on the blog, A Gay Girl in Damascus, even as the security situation in her home country became ever more precarious, and her own position increasingly at risk. She was teargassed, arrested and detained with other protesters at demonstrations in March and April; at one rally she saw a young man shot dead in front of her. But “for those of us who have taken part in the protests,” she wrote, “there’s no going back. For decades, we were afraid; be too critical of the regime, be seen as stepping out of official views, and one might expect a visit from the security police or a trip to a jail. Be more vocal and publicly call for the overthrow of the government and be prepared for either exile or death. Those of us who criticised things were very careful with our words and the forums we raised criticisms in. Now, though, everything has changed; too many have crossed those lines for there to be a going back.” Late in April, two men from the Syrian security services came to her house late at night to arrest her; her father stood up to them and they left. A week later, however, both she and her father had been forced into separate safe houses, moving from house to house, meeting only in disguise. Her American mother (Araf holds dual citizenship) and other family members had fled to Beirut, but her father, from an old and respected family, was determined to stay in Damascus, and so Araf stayed too, continuing to blog: “Our revolution will win; we will have a free and democratic Syria soon. I know it in my bones.” On Monday evening, Araf was silenced, for now at least. En route to a rendezvous with co-ordinators of the protest movement, she was snatched from a Damascus street by three armed men and bundled into a vehicle. Despite the frantic efforts of her father and wider family, nothing has been heard from her since. Araf’s kidnap, by men her family believe are members of Syria’s security services, makes her one of the best known of many thousands who have been detained since protests bubbled up across the country in mid-March, swelling to become one of the bloodiest and most protracted of the Arab Spring’s popular uprisings. According to Amnesty International , at least 750 people have been killed by the security forces; as many as 10,000 have been picked up by one of the country’s diverse security service groups, many of them held incommunicado. At least 12 people have died in custody, and reports of torture are common. Though Syria’s president, Bashar al-Assad , announced an amnesty last week for those detained before 31 May, Amnesty says the releases have been selective and ad hoc, and called for the immediate release of all detainees. Even before the latest unrest, bloggers and others challenging the government had been regularly locked up. Tal al-Mallouhi , a 20-year-old Palestinian-Syrian blogger from Homs, was sentenced to five years in jail in February, accused of spying for the US. Other bloggers and dissidents have faced similar fates. Though she had begun her blog in February principally as a defiant declaration of her sexuality and to explore lesbian and gender issues in Syria, Araf was rapidly swept up in the popular protests, and began writing impassioned, exhilarated, often very moving posts about her country and its longed-for future. “What a time to be in Syria! What a time to be an Arab! What a time to be alive!” she wrote on 24 March. A week later, expressing her dismay at Assad’s refusal to grant expected reforms, she wrote: “Come Friday, when Jumaa prayers are done, we will be out, in every city and every street, calling with one voice: “SOURIYA! AL HOURIYA!” FREEDOM!” The blog also contained extracts from an unpublished autobiography, detailing her teenage years in the US; she also wrote of her love of science fiction and Gil Scott Heron, and posted erotic lesbian poetry. At one point, her father laughingly reveals, she had been “on the list” forof those charged with finding a suitable wife for the man who is now Syria’s president, and who went on to marry a British-Syrian, Asma al Akhras . Why hadn’t he put her forward? “Do you think I hate you? I would not wish to be related to them.” But Araf was also clear about the risks she was running, writing chillingly about the regime’s use of torture in a post entitled “Why we fight” . Torture, she wrote, is “routine and normal”. “It is what all of us expect. It is why we keep our nails as short as possible so they can’t be pulled off. It is why we were slow to come out into the streets … It is why you don’t see so many women in the protests. What do you think happens to women who get picked up?” The following Araf had gained was evident when, within minutes of her disappearance being reported, campaigns were launched on Facebook and elsewhere to free her, with Syrian activists tweeting extracts from her blog. Some hours after reporting her disappearance, Araf’s cousin Rania Ismail, whom she had asked to post to her blog if anything happened to her, wrote a brief update . “I have been on the telephone with both her parents and all that we can say right now is that she is missing … We do not know who took her so we do not know who to ask to get her back. It is possible that they are forcibly deporting her. From other family members who have been imprisoned there, we believe that she is likely to be released fairly soon. If they wanted to kill her, they would have done so. That is what we are all praying for.” Nidaa Hassan is a pseudonym for a journalist in Damascus Syria Middle East Esther Addley Nidaa Hassan guardian.co.uk

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The terrible wrongness of the Ryan budget plan combined with the strangest, craziest Republican presidential candidate field ever makes it rather obvious how important it is to get President Obama re-elected. To have extreme right Republicans (that seems to be pretty much all of them these days) control every branch of government would do even more damage now, as weakened economically as we are, than the 2003-2006 run they had with Bush and Congressional Republicans running everything — and think how ugly that was for the country. The good news is that Republicans are doing a very good job right now showing how bad they are, with this weak field of presidential hopefuls in all-out pander mode to the far right of their party, and the lockstep support for the Ryan budget showing how extreme they are — not just on Medicare but on a wide range of other major issues. And I feel good about many of the Obama team’s moves so far this cycle, especially creating Democratic unity around opposition to Ryan’s budget. However, as is obvious to pretty much everyone who follows politics at all (and probably a fair share of people who don’t), the continued problems with our economic trajectory is going to remain a serious problem dragging down the President’s re-election chances. Conventional economists and D.C. politicos, who generally focus on fiscal policy to the exclusion of just about everything else, feel stymied because they feel like the economy needs another fiscal stimulus package, and they know that is the exact opposite direction that House Republicans want to go. As a result, most people in Washington have pretty much given up on improving the economy between now and the 2012 election, and are devising strategies for Obama around running without the background of an improving economy. It is a very bad thing that Republicans, for all their lip service about jobs, don’t want to do anything to actually promote, and that their budget policies will force many more people to lose their jobs as well. But the ironic thing is that President Obama does not have to depend on Republicans to provide a major boost to the economy right now. What the President can do to boost the economy is to put his energies into restructuring and rebuilding the housing market. The fact is that the single biggest thing dragging the economy down right now is the housing sector, which is in terrible shape right now and continues to get worse. Home prices, already at lower levels than at the worst point in the housing crash of 2008-9, are dropping like a stone. Almost 30 percent of mortgage holders are underwater (what they owe on the house is more than what it is worth). Foreclosures are sky high for the foreseeable future. With middle-class families’ biggest financial asset by far being their house, and home prices low, while foreclosures are high, it means middle-class assets are being decimated. And with no one buying homes, it means no one is building homes either. With the housing sector as huge a part of the economy as it is, as long as these kinds of trends prevail, we are not going to make the economy work well for the broad middle class. But look at what could happen if we address this issue head on. SEIU did a report a few months back on the economic impact of shoring up the housing market, and it showed some pretty remarkable things. Here’s what I wrote when their report came out: … this report does a great job of laying out the numbers in stark detail. Bank robber Wee Willie Sutton famously said that the reason he robbed banks was because that was where the money was, and if we are looking to get our economy moving again, we should be looking to get the money to do it where the money is. Right now, more than ever, the Big Banks are where the money is concentrated. The most important fact by far in Big Banks Bonus Bonanza is this one: Right now, 11,000,000 American homeowners owe $766 billion more on their mortgages than their homes are worth, but if the banks were to write down those mortgage principals to market value and refinance them into 30-year, fixed-rate loans, you would get $73 billion pumped directly back into the economy — every year for the next 30 years. Now unlike extending tax cuts for the rich or reducing the estate tax, which tends to be saved and invested in long term bonds, this money would go directly into stimulating the economy and creating jobs. Think about who those 11,000,000 underwater homeowners are: They are almost entirely middle- and working-class families who have spent the last couple of years sweating bullets to save their main life investment after its value plummeted by 20 percent, 30 percent, or more. They haven’t been spending money on new products, they haven’t been taking any vacation trips with their families, if they own a little mom-and-pop business they sure haven’t been taking any risks to expand it: They have just been desperately scrimping and saving and trying to hang on by the skin of their teeth. But if their mortgage is reduced to what their house is actually worth in today’s market, that means their overall financial situation is far more stabilized, and it means their monthly mortgage payment will go down as well. With a stabilized debt and lower monthly mortgage payments, with the psychological weight of probable foreclosure off their shoulders, these middle-class homeowners (at least the ones with jobs, which is most of the folks who still have homes) are exactly the kind of people who will be likely to start spending a little money in this economy. Maybe they will finally buy the car they have been holding off on now for years. Maybe they will do a little home improvement now that they know they will be able to stay in their home. Maybe they will feel able to finally make the investment in their small business they have been wanting to make, and hire a few extra folks as a result. The economic multiplier effect of this $73 billion would be as good as any money injected into the economy right now. You want to know what the second most important fact in this report is? The $73 billion it would cost to write down those mortgages would be only half what the top six banks alone are getting ready to write in bonuses and compensation for 2010. If forced to write down these mortgages, the banks will scream bloody murder, even claiming it would endanger them and the entire economy. But all they have to do is cut their bonus and compensation packages, the vast majority of which go to top executives and traders, by 50 percent. Given all the cash these banks are sitting on, all the profits made and bonuses distributed in recent years, I have no doubt they can afford the hit. The ironic thing is that if they wrote down these mortgages, they would be getting monthly mortgage checks from all these homeowners, plus avoid the costs of all those foreclosure proceedings, but they don’t want to write down the property because of their own phony accounting that claims the properties are worth far more than they actually are. So here’s the other little nugget the report alludes to: If you injected $73 billion into the economy through these write downs, the multiplier effects I was referencing earlier — homeowners being able to free up cash to buy things and invest in small businesses and do home improvements — would mean 1.8 million new jobs. That is a lot of jobs, folks: enough to drop the unemployment rate from the almost 10 percent it has been sitting at for a very long time down to the mid 8s. And it would finally begin to stabilize the housing market, which would do a lot for the economy all by itself. The problem is this: you have to take on the biggest banks on Wall Street to clean up this mess. And let’s be clear: Congress would not be on the side of the administration if they did take on those banks. Even when Democrats controlled both Houses of Congress by wide margins, Sen. Dick Durbin famously commented that that banks “own the place,” and now of course it is far worse: the Republican chair of the banking committee told bankers that his mission was to serve them, and the entire party is doing everything it possibly can to slow Elizabeth Warren down in her efforts to help consumers. But with all their sound and fury on behalf of Wall Street, let’s be clear on one other thing: the Obama administration does not need the Congress to do anything on this issue. The executive branch proved conclusively during the financial crisis that when something is important enough to them, they can do what they need to do and get the bankers to play along. If the regulatory agencies, the Department of Justice, and the Treasury Department, along with state AGs like Eric Schneiderman who already are putting the heat on — these bankers would have to go along with writing down a very big number of underwater mortgages, and cleaning up their foreclosure servicing operations in general. With fiscal stimulus out of the question, nothing the Obama administration could do right now would do more to help this economy. This makes economic sense and political sense, but Tim Geithner continues to stand firmly in the way. He continues to tell members of Congress and consumer and labor advocates he privately meets with that his hands are tied, there is nothing he can do, but in fact there is plenty he could do, he just doesn’t want to. Geithner is convinced that if you harm the banks, you harm the American economy — and if you help the banks, you help it. And the banks, whose balance sheets look so much better because the Mark-To-Model accounting system they use allows them to value the housing assets they hold at some inflated rate they project in the future when they assume the housing market will suddenly be better than it was in 2006, are telling Geithner that if they are forced to write down these mortgages, their accounting will show they have lost money. God forbid their books show their assets at what they actually are worth, because then they won’t be able to pay executive bonuses at such a high level. Given the makeup of Congress, Obama has just one chance to dramatically improve the American economy before the 2012 election, and that is to move aggressively to revitalize the housing market. He’ll have to take on Wall Street to do it, and he’ll have to pick a fight with them and their Republican allies in Congress. It’s a political fight worth having, and most importantly it would put our economy on the right path by giving it the jumpstart it needs.

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Twitter users must adhere to injunctions, says attorney general

Users of Twitter could face legal action for contempt of court if they use the site to breach privacy injunctions Users of Twitter could face legal action for contempt of court if they use the micro-blogging website to breach privacy injunctions, the attorney general has warned. Twitter played a key role in the exposure of footballer Ryan Giggs’s alleged affair with reality TV contestant Imogen Thomas, after an MP argued in the House of Commons that it was not possible to prosecute 75,000 of the site’s users who had named him. Alleged details of a number of injunctions have been anonymously posted on Twitter, and Giggs’s lawyers were taking legal action to discover the identity of those who named him. The attorney general, Dominic Grieve, said on Tuesday that Twitter users in England and Wales were not exempt from the requirement to observe privacy orders. It would normally be for those who had taken out injunctions to initiate action to enforce them, said Grieve. But he told BBC Radio 4′s Law In Action that he would take action himself if he thought it necessary to uphold the rule of law. Grieve said: “I will take action if I think that my intervention is necessary in the public interest, to maintain the rule of law, proportionate and will achieve an end of upholding the rule of law. “It is not something, however, I particularly want to do.” People found to have deliberately breached court orders can be fined or even imprisoned for contempt of court. In the Commons last month, Grieve warned people who thought they could use modern methods of communication to “act with impunity” that they might well find themselves in for “a rude shock”. Superinjunctions Twitter Internet Blogging Injunctions Newspapers & magazines Privacy Privacy & the media Media law Newspapers guardian.co.uk

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Anthony Weiner Press Conference: Admits Sending Racy Pictures, Refuses To Resign

NEW YORK — Rep. Anthony Weiner (D-N.Y.) insisted he’s staying in office Monday, even as a string of embarrassing new revelations and photos emerged that apparently reveal a hidden, lascivious online life. At first, Weiner vehemently denied that a photo of an underwear-clad erection, sent via Twitter to a 21-year-old woman, had come from him, insisting he’d been hacked. But conservative blogger Andrew Breitbart and his website Big Government rolled out a series of new pictures Monday, including a shirtless shot that appears to depict Weiner flexing and photographing himself. Breitbart also claimed to have X-rated pictures of Weiner, and other outlets, including Radar Online and ABC News, reported having more damaging information from women Weiner had purportedly communicated with. “I am deeply ashamed of my terrible actions,” a tearful Weiner told reporters at a remarkable press conference in New York. “I came here to accept the full responsibility for what I’ve done,” he said, apologizing to his wife of one year, Huma Abedin, and reporters and others he lied to about the initial reports. He even said he was sorry to Breitbart, who had commandeered the podium for his own impromptu press event before Weiner spoke. “I’m here to watch myself be vindicated,” said Breitbart, who had faced criticism for his role in the scandal. Photo from BigGovernment.com: Weiner admitted that he had had ongoing online relationships with six women, and said that he talked to his wife about ones that predated their wedding last summer. But she did not know about the more recent communication, and Abedin only learned Monday morning that Weiner had lied about having tweeted the photo, he said. Weiner insisted he was staying in office because he felt he was a good legislator, and he vowed to recapture the respect and trust of his Queens and Brooklyn voters, in spite of the lies, embarrassment and ridicule he will likely face. He also said that although he had lied repeatedly about his lewd behavior, he felt he had violated no laws or ethics rules. “I don’t see anything in what I did that violated the rules of the House,” Weiner said. “I don’t believe I did anything that violates any law or any rule.” He didn’t have any explanation for his online habits. “I don’t know what I was thinking,” Weiner said, explaining that he thought his sexting and racy communications were “frivolous.” He also said that he has never met any of the women he communicated with in person. He declined to say if he engaged in phone sex with them, as the latest allegations claim. “It was something that I did that was just wrong, and I regret it,” Weiner said, adding that he panicked when the first tweets went public, and lied to hide his other X-rated activities. “I was embarrassed, I was humiliated,” he said. “I was trying to protect myself and my wife.” He insisted he did not use government equipment, using his own phone and his home computer, to communicate with the women. People who know Weiner were stunned, having argued as recently as last week that he was too smart to have done what he was accused of. “Well, apparently he wasn’t,” one told The Huffington Post. Another said keeping his job may be the least of his worries. “Forget staying in office. He’s going to get divorced,” the person said. The congressman insisted that his marriage would survive, and said he might seek psychiatric help. “I’m going to try to handle this, and I have not ruled out seeing someone,” he said. “This is a deep weakness that I have demonstrated, and for that I apologize.”

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FACT WATCH: Sarah Palin’s Twist on Paul Revere

By FactCheck.Org Much-ridiculed former governor altered history — but isn’t entirely wrong Sarah Palin’s much-ridiculed story of Paul Revere isn’t entirely wrong, but it’s badly twisted. Revere didn’t ring bells or fire shots, and he was riding to warn two fellow rebels that the British were coming to arrest them — not to warn the British “that they weren’t going to be taking away our arms.” That’s what the former Alaska governor said in an offhand remark caught by a TV camera at a June 2 stop in Boston: [Revere] warned the British that they weren’t going to be taking away our arms, by ringing those bells and making sure as he was riding his horse through town to send those warning shots and bells that we were going to be secure and we were going to be free. Palin’s mangled history was quickly dismissed by news reporters and comedians. But then Palin said on June 5 on Fox News Sunday that she “didn’t mess up” the Paul Revere story, and that “I know my American history.” Here’s how that exchange went: Fox’s Chris Wallace: You realized that you messed up about Paul Revere, don’t you? Palin: You know what? I didn’t mess up about Paul Revere. Here is what Paul Revere did. He warned the Americans that the British were coming, the British were coming, and they were going to try take our arms and we got to make sure that we were protecting ourselves and shoring up all of ammunitions and our firearms so that they couldn’t take it. But remember that the British had already been there, many soldiers for seven years in that area. And part of Paul Revere’s ride — and it wasn’t just one ride — he was a courier, he was a messenger. Part of his ride was to warn the British that we’re already there. That, hey, you’re not going to succeed. You’re not going to take American arms. You are not going to beat our own well-armed persons, individual, private militia that we have. He did warn the British. And in a shout-out, gotcha type of question that was asked of me, I answered candidly. And I know my American history. So how does Palin’s version compare with, say, Paul Revere’s? Not very well. Revere, in the most complete account he gave of his famous ride, a letter written about 1798, stated that he rode to warn fellow rebels Samuel Adams and John Hancock that the British were coming to arrest them. This transcription, Revere’s spelling mistakes and all, is posted on the website of the Massachusetts Historical Society: On Tuesday evening, the 18th, it was observed, that a number of Soldiers were marching towards the bottom of the Common. About 10 o’Clock, Dr. Warren Sent in great haste for me, and beged that I would imediately Set off for Lexington, where Messrs. Hancock & Adams were, and acquaint them of the Movement, and that it was thought they were the objets. Revere didn’t mention firing any shots or ringing any bells, and neither does the account given by the Paul Revere House in its brief history, “The Real Story of Paul Revere’s Ride.” “On the way to Lexington,” states the brief history, “Revere ‘alarmed’ the country-side, stopping at each house, and arrived in Lexington about midnight. As he approached the house where Adams and Hancock were staying, a sentry asked that he not make so much noise. ‘Noise!’ cried Revere, ‘You’ll have noise enough before long. The regulars are coming out!’ It’s true that shots were fired and bells were rung, but not by Revere. According to David Hackett Fischer’s 1995 book Paul Revere’s Ride, Revere rode to the house of Captain Isaac Hall, commander of Medford’s minutemen, and it was Hall who triggered the town’s alarm system. Fischer added (on page 140): “A townsman remembered that ‘repeated gunshots, the beating of drums and the ringing of bells filled the air.’ ” In Palin’s defense: It’s true that American rebels had stored arms and gunpowder at Concord , and that British Gen. Thomas Gage not only had orders to arrest the leaders, but had decided to seize and destroy those arms. Alerted by Revere, American militia members confronted the British at the battles of Lexington and Concord, the first armed encounters of the Revolutionary War. It’s also true that Revere spoke to British officers — though that was by no means his intent. He was seized by a British patrol before he got to Concord. Revere, under questioning, told British officers that 500 Americans were coming to confront them. As he recollected in 1798: [An officer] asked me if I was an express? I answered in the afirmative. He demanded what time I left Boston? I told him; and aded, that their troops had catched aground in passing the River, and that There would be five hundred Americans there in a short time, for I had alarmed the Country all the way up. Another officer “[c]lapped his pistol to my head, called me by name, & told me he was going to ask me some questions, & if I did not give him true answers, he would blow my brains out,” Revere recalled. He was still in British custody when the first shots were fired at Lexington, “which appeared to alarm them very much,” Revere said. The British later released Revere, after taking the horse he had been riding. But Revere makes no mention of specifically “warning” the British against trying to seize arms. In fact, the Americans moved most of the arms before Gen. Gage’s troops could find them.

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Cantor: No reason to doubt Geithner’s Aug. 2 debt ceiling deadline

Click here to view this media In an interview released by ABC News Monday, House Majority Leader Eric Cantor said that he had no reason to doubt Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner’s warning that the U.S would start defaulting on its obligations if the debt limit was not raised by Aug. 2. “Secretary Geithner feels August 2 is his deadline,” Cantor told ABC News Jonathan Karl . “I don’t question the Secretary of the Treasury other than to say we’re trying to get in place real spending reductions — trillions of dollars of spending reductions — if the president wants us to increase the credit limit of this country by trillions of dollars.” Cantor’s message seemed to be at odds with newly elected tea party Republican congressmen who said they weren’t convinced after meeting with Geithner. “There were a lot of groans,” Rep. Frank Guinta (R-NH) told The Hill . “I think the urgency factor isn’t the deadline, it’s the perception of the market that you are running up to that deadline,” Rep. Jon Runyan (R-NJ) said. “Is the market going to start to slip before that fact in anticipation, because that’s more of a soft-deadline, where’s that deadline?” Former Republican vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin, also a tea party favorite, said Sunday that she didn’t believe Geithner’s warning. “I don’t believe Tim Geithner as he cries wolf for the fourth time now, telling us that there is a drop-dead date and crisis will ensue, and economic woes will befall us even greater than they already are if we don’t increase the debt limit,” she told Fox News’ Chris Wallace .

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