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Obama Warns Cantor As Debt Talks Stall: ‘Don’t Call My Bluff’

WASHINGTON — Lawmakers and the White House had what nearly every party is describing as a “tough” and “testy” meeting on the debt ceiling Wednesday afternoon, culminating in a stormy exchange between President Barack Obama and House Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R-Va.). It was the fifth straight day of talks, but the first in which attendees, speaking on background, were willing to admit that steps were taken backwards. According to multiple sources, disagreements surfaced early, in the middle and at the end of the nearly two-hour talks. At issue was Cantor’s repeated push to do a short-term resolution and Obama’s insistence that he would not accept one. “Eric, don’t call my bluff. I’m going to the American people on this,” the president said, according to both Cantor and another attendee. “This process is confirming what the American people think is the worst about Washington: that everyone is more interested in posturing, political positioning, and protecting their base, than in resolving real problems.” Cantor, speaking to reporters after the meeting, said that the president “abruptly” walked off after offering his scolding. “I know why he lost his temper. He’s frustrated. We’re all frustrated,” the Virginia Republican said. Democratic officials had a different interpretation. “The meeting ended with Cantor being dressed down while sitting in silence,” one official said in an email. “[The president] said Cantor could not have it both ways of insisting on dollar-for-dollar and still not being open to revenues.” Lost in the rush to frame the dramatic conclusion of Wednesday meetings was word of the actual substance of the talks. According to several attendees, negotiations stalled from the onset over the same issues that have proved irresolvable. Working off of talks that had been spearheaded by Vice President Joseph Biden, the president said he would be comfortable signing off on northward of $1.5 trillion in discretionary spending and mandatory spending cuts. With additional negotiations, he added, he could move that figure up to $1.7 trillion, and with a willingness to consider revenue increases and tax loophole closures, lawmakers could get to over $2 trillion. His preference, he said, was to continue to push for the biggest package possible, so long as it was balanced. Cantor, who has taken over the mantle of chief Republican negotiator from Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio), responded by insisting that revenues were off the table and that without steeper cuts, the votes likely didn’t exist to pass anything but a smaller, more temporary package. House Republicans needed the administration to go to a higher number, he added. The president reportedly responded: “It is easy to get to a higher number when you are not asking anything difficult from yourself.” From there, the friction continued. When the White House pushed for an extension of unemployment insurance as part of the final package, Republicans objected. The White House was forced to explain that it would be offsetting that extension with cuts elsewhere. When the president pushed to lock in savings from cuts to the Department of Defense, Republicans objected again; this time, they were joined by Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.), who urged (conversely) for the president to go further in pulling savings out of the Pentagon. According to a Democratic official, the most contentious debate came when talks turned to discretionary spending, and, specifically, whether to count longterm savings based on current spending baselines or by tying them to inflation. Republicans wanted the former. It was, the official said, a debate over the “measurements of savings as opposed to the savings themselves.” From there, the conversation moved to how to enforce those savings in the long run. Those discussions, which took place between Sen. Jon Kyl (R-Ariz.) and top economic adviser Gene Sperling, were described as cordial compared to the earlier ones. But lawmakers quickly found themselves back on the same sticking point. Unhappy that negotiators remained at approximately $1.7 trillion in cuts, Cantor pressed again for a shorter deal or for negotiators to find their way to $2.5 trillion. The president, growing more agitated, argued that attendees were simply looking for ways to say no. “Talk about arbitrary,” he said of Cantor’s figure, according to a Democratic attendee. “I am totally willing to do the hard stuff to get well above what you need and you won’t do it because you can’t put one penny of revenue on the table.” “At least Mitch McConnell, to his credit, was willing to work for a solution,” the president added, acknowledging the proposal by the Senate Minority Leader to, essentially, give him the authority to lift the debt ceiling without passing commensurate cuts. “I have reached the point where I say enough,” Obama concluded, according to Reuters. “Would Ronald Reagan be sitting here? I’ve reached my limit. This may bring my presidency down, but I will not yield on this.” Before Obama left the meeting, he gave lawmakers a directive. By Friday, the president said, the people in the room needed to have figured out what path they were going to pursue so that they could start hammering out the details.

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US debt standoff threatens to turn crisis into catastrophe

• Republicans insist on spending cuts without raising taxes • Obama sets 22 July deadline for action • JP Morgan chief warns of severe damage to global economy if US defaults The US faces the prospect of a “catastrophe” as President Barack Obama stands firm against Republican demands for deep spending cuts without any tax increases as the condition for raising the country’s borrowing limit and avoiding a debt default. With Washington gripped by a growing sense that it may be too late to avert a crisis, the president has said he will give the increasingly rancorous negotiations until the end of next week to reach agreement on the terms for raising the US’s $14.3 trillion (£8.9tn) debt ceiling. The White House has said that if there is no agreement by 22 July, then discussion about budget cuts and taxes should be abandoned in favour of legislation dealing solely with raising the debt ceiling before the borrowing limit is reached on 2 August. But the Republicans have rejected legislation without agreement on budget cuts. With European leaders also facing a potentially ruinous debt crisis, a leading Wall Street figure described the prospect of a US default as catastrophic. Jamie Dimon, chief executive of JP Morgan, one of Wall Street’s biggest banks, said: “No one can tell me with certainty that a US default wouldn’t cause catastrophe and wouldn’t severely damage the US or global economy. And it would be irresponsible to take that chance.” On Wednesday, Ben Bernanke, the chairman of the Federal Reserve, warned of a “huge financial calamity” if a political agreement is not reached. He told Congress a default would “send shockwaves through the entire financial system”. Hours later, the credit ratings agency Moody’s warned that it may downgrade the US’s AAA credit rating, saying there is a “rising possibility” that no deal will be reached by next month’s deadline. On Thursday, Moody’s threatened to downgrade the AAA ratings of government lenders Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Federal Home Loan Banks and Federal Farm Credit Banks, illustrating the vulnerability of the already depressed housing market to a government default. China, the US’s biggest creditor, added to the pressure (on Thursday by publicly urging Washington to protect investors’ interests. The dollar continued its fall as investors shifted to other assets such as gold, which hit a record high on Thursday. At the heart of the political wrangling is a determination by each side to blame the other for a stagnant economy, with unemployment remaining stubbornly high at above 9%. The latest economic figures showed only a 0.1% increase in retail sales and a minor drop in the number of new jobless claims – by 22,000 to 405,000 last week – suggesting the rate at which companies are laying off workers is falling. If the debt ceiling is not raised by 2

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Lou Dobbs thinks President Obama is ‘beneath contempt’ for warning that debt-ceiling vote will hit Social Security payments

Click here to view this media The usual cast of right-wing pundits was all worked up yesterday on Fox about President Obama’s simple observation that if House Republicans refuse to raise the debt ceiling, he won’t be able to guarantee that he can write Social Security payment checks come Aug. 3. He’s fearmongering! Scaring old people! How disgraceful! This, of course, from the people who brought you “death panels.” Moreover, it’s coming from the same people who then turn around and try to make seniors fearful that Obama is going to take away their Medicare coverage. The apotheosis of this miscreancy was Lou Dobbs on Bill O’Reilly’s show last night, unleashing a relentlessly vicious assessment of every Obama step, culminating in his complaint that Obama’s remarks were “so low as to be contemptible” and indeed were “beneath contempt”. Of course, Lou Dobbs knows “beneath contempt”: That pretty aptly describes his nasty and ultimately derailed career at CNN, when no lie directed at Latino immigrants was too disgusting or vicious to transmit to his audience of millions. It’s why he’s been such a good fit at Fox News . It’s doubtful, though, that Dobbs can recognize it when he sees it.

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As you probably may know, Eric Cantor made the pundits shake when he declared that Obama got angry and left the debt ceiling talks. See, Eric Cantor has now replaced John Boehner as the GOP’s spokesperson in this sick negotiation. Cantor bolted from bipartisan meetings earlier in the process, so now it seems obvious that he wanted a little payback from the media. All he had to do to rile up the press was to give them something they would consider juicy. President Barack Obama abruptly walked out of a stormy debt-limit meeting with congressional leaders Wednesday, a dramatic setback to the already shaky negotiations . “He shoved back and said ‘I’ll see you tomorrow’ and walked out,” House Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R-Va.) told reporters in the Capitol after the meeting . And the Democrats are using Eric Cantor as their new symbol of Republican obstructionism. The story from yesterday shows how much the media are begging for scraps, because quoting Cantor as a reliable source who attacks the President is pretty silly after all these days of negotiations. Cantor was the one who walked out of the Biden meetings, after all. There’s a schism in the Republican party between those who are being pushed by Wall Street to get a deal done — who might even understand what would happen to the global economy if we default — and those who are stooges of the Rupert Murdoch-generated Tea Party, who want the federal government to be destroyed. Moody’s printed a story about the possible downgrade of our credit rating, which has upped the pressure on the GOP, excluding Michele Bachmann of course. Asian stocks ended in mixed territory Thursday as Moody’s Investors Service’s review of U.S. credit ratings for a possible downgrade prompted caution, pressuring financial stocks and some exporters. Resource-sector stocks propped up mainland Chinese stocks as some commodities got a boost after U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke indicated the Fed may once again step in to support the economy. “Bernanke’s comments to the House of Representatives yesterday mooting further stimulus options for the economy may have buoyed sentiment on Wall Street somewhat early yesterday, but news that Moody’s is reviewing the AAA credit rating for the USA has certainly rattled confidence since then,” said Cameron Peacock, an analyst at IG Markets. Yesterday the Huff Post reported this on the meeting: “Eric, don’t call my bluff. I’m going to the American people on this,” the president said, according to both Cantor and another attendee. “This process is confirming what the American people think is the worst about Washington: that everyone is more interested in posturing, political positioning, and protecting their base, than in resolving real problems.” — Democratic officials had a different interpretation. “The meeting ended with Cantor being dressed down while sitting in silence,” one official said in an email. “[The president] said Cantor could not have it both ways of insisting on dollar-for-dollar and still not being open to revenues.” Lost in the rush to frame the dramatic conclusion of Wednesday meetings was word of the actual substance of the talks. According to several attendees, negotiations stalled from the onset over the same issues that have proved irresolvable. Working off of talks that had been spearheaded by Vice President Joseph Biden, the president said he would be comfortable signing off on northward of $1.5 trillion in discretionary spending and mandatory spending cuts. With additional negotiations, he added, he could move that figure up to $1.7 trillion, and with a willingness to consider revenue increases and tax loophole closures, lawmakers could get to over $2 trillion. His preference, he said, was to continue to push for the biggest package possible, so long as it was balanced. It does appear that the White House is intent on trying to get the Grand Bargain. Via Digby , Ezra Klein writes about what he believes the administration’s plans are all about, and he’s pretty connected. The White House’s case for a big deficit deal A lot of Democrats took one look at the McConnell plan, which would raise the debt ceiling without substantive fiscal concessions, and saw their way out of this mess. But not the White House. What’s come clear in recent weeks is that the Obama administration is much more intent on reaching a major deficit deal, and much less intent on making revenues a major part of it, than most observers assumed. That’s led them to offer Republicans a deal that is not only much farther to the right than anyone had predicted, but also much farther to the right than most realize. In addition to the rise in the Medicare eligibility age and the cuts to Social Security and the minimal amount of revenues, it’d cut discretionary spending by $1.2 trillion, which is an absolutely massive attack on that category of spending. This deal isn’t just a last-ditch effort to save the economy from the damage of a federal default. The White House would far prefer this deal to the McConnell plan, or to the $2 trillion deal that was under consideration during the Biden negotiations. So why are administration officials so committed to striking a deal composed of policies they’ve mostly opposed? Here’s their thinking:.. read on It’s hard to know what is exactly true, but as more information leaks out, what do you think? Digby analyzes it thus : I still have a sneaking suspicion that the Republicans understand better than Obama that “the deficit” isn’t what people care about and that hugely cutting spending won’t help him be re-elected in 2012. (If they really believed that they would have done it themselves when they held the White House and the congress.) I think they’ll sign on to a deal that massively cuts government spending and which only required concessions are something like Unemployment Insurance. Seriously, think about it. Maybe they won’t sign on out of sheer contrariness. In which case hurrah for them. And they are threading a very fine needle on the electoral calculation. John Sides at the Monkey Cage games out the three scenarios … —– My personal feeling is that it takes about 18 months for voters to feel the effects of a recovering economy and that window is rapidly closing. I think if they were less rigid about their re-election plan and able to adjust to current realities they might do things differently. But it’s pretty clear that they’ve been counting on the Reagan Replay from the very beginning and changing circumstances just aren’t going to sway them. I can’t cheer this even if the economy turns around and unemployment is way down by the time of the election. The level and type of spending cuts that the White House has already proposed is a betrayal of liberal ideology and economic reality to such a degree that I’m rooting for the McConnell proposal, which is just bizarre. But it’s the most sane plan on the table. Paul Krugman uses Nate Silver’s information and charts to come to this conclusion. What Obama has offered — and Republicans have refused to accept — is a deal in which less than 20 percent of the deficit reduction comes from new revenues. This puts him slightly to the right of the average Republican voter. So we learn two things. First, Obama is extraordinarily eager to make concessions. Second, Republicans are incredibly unwilling to take yes for an answer — something for which progressives should be grateful.

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Obama Press Aide E-Mails: Fox News Anchor Bret Baier ‘Is a Lunatic’

No one expects the White House to like the Fox News Channel – since they expect every media outlet to be obsequious, and so many oblige. But White House e-mails acquired by the group Judicial Watch demonstrate that the animus gets a little heated in private: Regarding general anti-FNC bias within the Obama White House in an October 23, 2009, email exchange between Jennifer Psaki, Deputy White House Communications Director and [Treasure Department press aide Jenni]

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Martin Bashir on NBC’s ‘Today’: Rupert Murdoch ‘A Combination of Jack Abramoff and James ‘Whitey’ Bulger’

Appearing on Thursday's NBC Today, MSNBC host Martin Bashir shared his thoughts on the tabloid phone hacking scandal in Britain and proclaimed that News Corporation owner Rupert Murdoch was “…a combination of Jack Abramoff, the lobbyist, and someone like James 'Whitey' Bulger, the mobster.” [ Audio available here ] Despite Bashir's outrageous comparison – Abramoff was convicted on corruption charges and Bulger is accused of 19 murders during his time as the head of the Irish mob in Boston – co-host Matt Lauer offered no objection to the claim. View video after the jump In fact, Lauer began the discussion by praising Bashir's insight into news stories: “Sometimes when I have you, I like to just ask the simplest question first because I like your take.” Lauer then asked: “So as you've watched this story unfold over the last month or so, what jumps out at you?” In addition to describing Murdoch as a crime boss, Bashir declared: “It's the power of Rupert Murdoch. It's hard to imagine the power that he exerted on politicians….And what he had was the power to reward and to punish….Coercion by humiliation.” Lauer followed up by attacking the close relationship between many British politicians and Murdoch: “Look at what's happened over the last week or so. These politicians who used to have a very close, some would say incestuous relationship with Murdoch are now running from him as fast as they can run from him. Which, by the way, is typical of politics, but how much of a problem is it for Rupert Murdoch?” Bashir replied: “It's a massive problem.” Here is a full transcript of the July 14 discussion: 7:13AM ET MATT LAUER: Martin Bashir is the host of the Martin Bashir Show on MSNBC. Martin, it's good to have you here. BASHIR: Thank you, Matt. LAUER: Sometimes when I have you, I like to just ask the simplest question first because I like your take, you spent a lot of time as a journalist in the UK and here in the United States. MARTIN BASHIR: I worked for the Sunday Times between 1984 and 1985. [ON-SCREEN HEADLINE: Murdoch Under Fire; How Will Phone Hacking Scandal Impact Media Empire?] LAUER: Exactly. So as you've watched this story unfold over the last month or so, what jumps out at you? BASHIR: It's the power of Rupert Murdoch. It's hard to imagine the power that he exerted on politicians. Imagine a combination of Jack Abramoff, the lobbyist, and someone like James 'Whitey' Bulger, the mobster. And what he had was the power to reward and to punish. So for example, in 2004, when an MP stood up and said she thought having semi-naked women on page three of The Sun newspaper was now something we shouldn't do anymore, they sent 20 semi-naked people to her constituency office and called her 'fat, frumpy and dumpy.' Coercion by humiliation. LAUER: So – but look at what's happened over the last week or so. These politicians who used to have a very close, some would say incestuous relationship with Murdoch… BASHIR: Absolutely. Indeed. LAUER: …are now running from him as fast as they can run from him. Which, by the way, is typical of politics, but how much of a problem is it for Rupert Murdoch? BASHIR: It's a massive problem. Remember, The Sun and the News of the World were the only two newspapers that made him any money. The Times loses money in London. But the thing he desperately wanted BSkyB Broadcasting, because it's the television arm that makes the billions of pounds and now he's had to withdraw because he knows the politicians were not going to support that. LAUER: Well, but also, not only the politicians wouldn't support it, but does he also – do you think that deal is now dead because the people in Murdoch's organization understand that there is probably more damaging evidence about to come out? BASHIR: When they did the inquiry in 2007, they said there was one rogue reporter and about eight people had been hacked. Yesterday I spoke to a senior officer at the Metropolitan Police who said 4,800 people's phones had been hacked and they haven't even started to get to the bottom of the things that have been done. LAUER: This has pulled back a curtain, if you will, and exposed a very dark side of tabloid journalism. I guess the question a lot of people here in the States want to know, and let's face it, you could almost hear this story being pulled across the Atlantic… BASHIR: No doubt. LAUER: …yesterday, with these Senators writing letters to Eric Holder and a congressman writing to Mr. Mueller at the FBI. How much further does this go? Do you think this is a standard practice for tabloid newspaper and scandal magazines here in the U.S.? BASHIR: It's hard to know, but imagine, they said one reporter, but now it was clearly widespread in the News of the World news room. Are you telling me that people who work in that organization in this country have never ever used the same tactics? They may not have, but at the end of the day, the pressure to deliver the kind of stories, the kind of access – remember, we're talk about the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom's disabled son's medical records. He stands up in the House of Commons yesterday and he says the Sunday Times newspaper paid a criminal to procure those records. Now, we can't confirm whether that's true. But that's the level of interest that people had. And when stories kept appearing in tabloid papers, you had to ask yourself, 'How did they get that story?' After I interviewed Princess Diana in 1995, we had our third child in '96, Eliza, and she was incubated after birth because she was – she had problems with her lungs. Within two day, two journalists attempted to get into the ward, both of them working for The Sun newspaper. How did they know, when nobody else knew, that our daughter, who was just two days old, was unwell? LAUER: Clearly someone had access they shouldn't have had. BASHIR: Somebody had access. LAUER: Martin Bashir. Martin, always good to have you here. BASHIR: Great to be here. LAUER: Thanks very much. 17 after the hour. You can catch Martin's show weekdays at 3:00 p.m. Eastern Time on MSNBC.

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Possible Chupacabra Sighting In Texas (VIDEO)

Don’t resign yourself to chupacabra nightmares just yet. Even Jack Crabtree, the supplier of photos to The Facts, his local Texas paper, doesn’t think that he witnessed a real chupacabra, or “The Bigfoot of Latin Culture,” as dubbed by CNN during a previous chupacabra sighting. According to a report by ABC News, the retired wildlife biologist and his wife Linda saw the slow-moving, hairless creature wandering by a creek at the back of their house on the Fourth of July. They took photos, and Crabtree sent them to the newspaper, jokingly calling it a Chupacabra. However, the paper either didn’t get the joke, or didn’t care, and they ran it on the front page, stirring excitement similar to the other Texas Chupacabra sighting a few months ago. When that creature was spotted, Animal Control Officer Frank Hackett described the animal: “All I know is, it wasn’t normal. It was ugly, real ugly. I’m not going to tell no lie on that one.” Crabtree told ABC News that he can’t believe people’s reactions: “I’ve been amazed with the fascination people have with chupacabras and other mythical animals,” he said. “I’m really not a believer in chupacabras or Bigfoot or the Abominable Snowman.” WATCH the ABC News report on the “chupacabra”:

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There have been over 25,000 known security breaches at American airports since the Transportation Security Administration was created in 2001, the agency has told a House committee probing security shortcomings. The breaches include 14,000 people who have found their way into sensitive areas and 6,000 travelers who…

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NBC Highlights Revolt Against Light Bulb Ban, Fails to Note Dems Controlled Congress
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Bernanke Fights Ron Paul In Congress, Gold Isn’t Money

Congressman Ron Paul needs to remain on the House Financial Service Committee. His presidential ambition would deter going after the Federal Reserve. During the meeting between the Financial Service Committee and Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke, the Fed Chairman was very uncomfortable debating with Ron Paul. The Congressman cornered the Fed Chairman with very damning statements. Ron Paul needs to press… Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Conservative Blogs Central Discovery Date : 13/07/2011 22:30 Number of articles : 5

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