Authorities accuse 30 opposition members of conspiring to overthrow the government and supporting communism Malaysian authorities have accused 30 detained opposition members of conspiring to overthrow the government and to revive communist ideologies after the activists were arrested before a banned political rally. Opposition parties and human rights groups insisted it was a ludicrous accusation aimed at demonising activists planning a massive street demonstration on 9 July to demand greater electoral transparency. The detention of the 30 and the allegations against them mark an escalation in tensions between the government – dominated for decades by the ruling National Front coalition – and its political rivals before the rally, which could become Malaysia’s biggest in nearly four years. It comes before national polls widely expected by mid-2012. The opposition leader, Anwar Ibrahim, urged police to release the 30, calling the communist claim “a flimsy pretext”. Since Friday, police have detained about 80 people who were distributing political pamphlets, wearing T-shirts that promoted the planned rally or travelling to publicity events in various towns. Some were later released, but police obtained a court order to hold 30 activists for up to a week in northern Penang state. The state police official, Abdul Rahim Jaafar, said the 30 – who include an opposition member of parliament – were advocates of communist beliefs. He said they were found in a bus with T-shirts bearing the names and images of key figures who waged a communist insurgency that ended in Malaysia decades ago. The activists are being investigated under a rarely used law that makes it an offence to try to “wage war” against Malaysia’s constitutional monarch. They face up to life imprisonment if charged and convicted. The information minister, Rais Yatim, said authorities needed to take stern action against those involved in the alleged plot, stressing that “communism is outlawed and not recognised in Malaysia”, according to the national news agency, Bernama. A group of independent political activists who are organising next month’s opposition-backed rally issued a statement insisting its intention was not to oust the government but to “make the electoral system truly free and fair”. The arrest of the activists showed a “stark and alarming lack of logic and common sense [that] will further tarnish our nation’s image,” the group added. The prime minister, Najib Razak, has told Malaysians to avoid what officials would consider an illegal assembly next month, saying it was an opposition scheme to create chaos and undermine the government. Other cabinet figures made more ominous warnings. The home minister, Hishammuddin Hussein, said he could not rule out arresting rally organisers under a law that allows detention without trial if they threaten public security. The activists’ demands include overhauling voter lists and introducing transparent procedures for ballots to be cast and counted. The opposition has long accused Najib’s ruling coalition of manipulating election results to preserve its nearly 54-year rule, but the government says current election laws are fair. Malaysia Protest guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Leader’s planned trip had come in for criticism from human rights groups because he is wanted on war crimes charges A planned visit by Sudan’s president to China, which was criticised by human rights groups because he is wanted on international war crimes charges, has been delayed. President Omar al-Bashir was to have arrived in Beijing just after dawn on Monday, but by the middle of the afternoon his flight had not appeared. Chinese and Sudanese officials did not immediately give a reason for the delay, which put off a scheduled meeting with the Chinese president, Hu Jintao. A foreign ministry official, Guan Enxia, told reporters waiting at Beijing’s airport that Bashir’s scheduled events for Monday had been delayed. She did not give a reason. Chang Junling, a media official at the Sudanese embassy in Beijing, said the embassy did not know the reason for the delay or have any other information. Bashir’s planned state visit stirred up controversy because he is wanted by the international criminal court for allegedly orchestrating atrocities in Sudan’s Darfur region during the country’s civil war. It is the first such warrant against a sitting head of state. But China, which has major oil investments in Sudan, is not a member of the court and has expressed concerns that the indictment of Bashir could cause further instability in the region. The Sudanese leader rejects the charges from the Netherlands-based court, which has no police force and relies on member states to execute its orders and warrants. Amnesty International said earlier this month that China should withdraw its invitation to Bashir and arrest him if he travels to Beijing. “If China welcomes Omar al-Bashir, it will become a safe haven for alleged perpetrators of genocide,” said Amnesty’s deputy Asia Pacific director, Catherine Baber. Bashir has travelled without arrest to several other nations, including ICC treaty signatories Chad and Kenya. His talks with Chinese leaders are expected to focus on promoting peace in the African nation before south Sudan’s independence next month. Violence has escalated in areas contested by the north and soon-to-be-independent south, and China is pressing both sides to peacefully settle the disputes, Beijing’s special envoy for African affairs, Liu Guijin, said last week. China has long had close ties with the leaders of the north. It has been courting support in the oil-producing south, which becomes an independent country on 9 July. In an interview with China’s state-run Xinhua news agency before he left Sudan, Bashir said the split would not affect relations between Sudan and China, even if Beijing were to establish relations with the southern Sudan state. He praised China as an oil partner, calling the agreements with Chinese companies a “real exchange of benefits”, while saying deals with western companies were unfair. South Sudan’s declaration of independence will be the culmination of a 2005 peace deal that ended more than two decades of civil war that killed more than two million people. Omar al-Bashir Sudan China International criminal court Human rights Africa guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …‘Power to the workers’ banners erected as Greece debates bailout conditions In a dramatic start to a week dominated by one of the most crucial parliamentary votes in modern Greek history, communist militants stormed the Acropolis on Monday morning unfurling huge “power to the workers” banners from the monument’s ramparts. As tourists ascended the hill to the fifth-century BC site, they were greeted by gigantic protest banners proclaiming: “The peoples have the power and never surrender. Organize – Counter attack.” “We call upon working people, youth, women to join our popular uprising,” the All Workers Militant Front (PAME), an adjunct of the powerful Greek communist party, the KKE, declared in a statement. “We will strengthen our struggle with people from all over the world against capitalist brutality in order for the brutal measures that bankrupt the people not to be applied.” Although described as a symbolic move, the stunt reinforced the level of popular hostility to economic policies now seen as crucial if Greece is to avoid a possibly disastrous default . Upping the ante, unions have declared a 48-hour general strike starting on Tuesday – the first two-day walkout since the collapse of military rule and the return of democracy in 1974 – to coincide with parliament’s debate on the measures. Mass rallies have been scheduled in 65 towns during the two days that Greek politicians will discuss the belt-tightening policies. “It will be two days that have never seen before,” said Stathis Anestis of the General Confederation of Greek Workers, the country’s largest labour force. The debate on the austerity programme, which includes €28bn (£25bn) of fresh spending cuts and higher taxes, begins on Monday with a vote expected on Wednesday. Talks will also take place in Rome on Monday evening between EU officials and European bankers over the vexed question of the role of private creditors in a second rescue package for Greece. European debt crisis European banks Financial crisis Global recession Banking Greece Europe Helena Smith guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …‘Power to the workers’ banners erected as Greece debates bailout conditions In a dramatic start to a week dominated by one of the most crucial parliamentary votes in modern Greek history, communist militants stormed the Acropolis on Monday morning unfurling huge “power to the workers” banners from the monument’s ramparts. As tourists ascended the hill to the fifth-century BC site, they were greeted by gigantic protest banners proclaiming: “The peoples have the power and never surrender. Organize – Counter attack.” “We call upon working people, youth, women to join our popular uprising,” the All Workers Militant Front (PAME), an adjunct of the powerful Greek communist party, the KKE, declared in a statement. “We will strengthen our struggle with people from all over the world against capitalist brutality in order for the brutal measures that bankrupt the people not to be applied.” Although described as a symbolic move, the stunt reinforced the level of popular hostility to economic policies now seen as crucial if Greece is to avoid a possibly disastrous default . Upping the ante, unions have declared a 48-hour general strike starting on Tuesday – the first two-day walkout since the collapse of military rule and the return of democracy in 1974 – to coincide with parliament’s debate on the measures. Mass rallies have been scheduled in 65 towns during the two days that Greek politicians will discuss the belt-tightening policies. “It will be two days that have never seen before,” said Stathis Anestis of the General Confederation of Greek Workers, the country’s largest labour force. The debate on the austerity programme, which includes €28bn (£25bn) of fresh spending cuts and higher taxes, begins on Monday with a vote expected on Wednesday. Talks will also take place in Rome on Monday evening between EU officials and European bankers over the vexed question of the role of private creditors in a second rescue package for Greece. European debt crisis European banks Financial crisis Global recession Banking Greece Europe Helena Smith guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Defence secretary says reforms recommended by Lord Levene will create more ‘meritocratic armed forces as well as new career opportunities’ Britain’s armed forces will be radically overhauled in plans that will cut the number of senior officers and could also lead to ministerial posts being axed. Liam Fox, the defence secretary, said the aim was to “strike a new balance” inside the department, with better budgetary control and an end to the “micro management” that he claimed had undermined the culture in the department. Downing Street and the Ministry of Defence (MoD) have approved the reforms recommended by Lord Levene, and the proposals will be published on Monday. In a speech, Fox will say Levene’s blueprint sets out “a vision of transformation on a scale not seen in defence for a generation”. The long-awaited overhaul of one of Whitehall’s most complex and dysfunctional ministries will lead to each of the three services thinning ranks at the highest level. As the Guardian revealed last month, the army, navy and air force will each be run by a single chief. Fox told BBC Radio 4′s Today programme that his announcement would outline changes from some of the practices that had “bedevilled” defence in recent decades. “We need to prepare military structures for future roles and challenges, I want to create new career structures and opportunities as well as having better streamlined management because we’ve allowed costs to escalate and projects to run over in the most appalling way in the past and we need to bring that under control.” Fox said he believed there was a “very strong case” for reducing the “star count” – top military staff – to create space for those coming up the ranks. “What we will set out this afternoon I hope will set the direction to create more meritocratic armed forces as well as new career opportunities,” he said. At the moment, the services have two commanders, one in charge of strategy, the second in charge of day-to-day operations. The reforms would see operational control pushed down the chain of command. The three service chiefs will be removed from the defence board, a powerful committee the defence secretary chairs. The overall head of the military, the chief of the defence staff, currently General Sir David Richards, will represent them. The post of deputy chief of the defence staff will be retained initially, but is expected to become redundant when the current holder of the job, General Sir Nicholas Houghton, moves on. A committee chaired by an independent non-executive director, chosen by the defence secretary, will be in charge of appointments to the services’ top ranks. Levene argued that the services were top-heavy – a finding that chimed with Fox’s belief that the number of elite officers should be trimmed to reflect cuts further down the ranks. The department is seeking to make 17,000 service personnel redundant over the next three years. Levene also said the boundaries between the department’s ministerial posts were blurred, and that it may be time to scrap one of the junior positions. Some minor boards set up to oversee individual projects will be scrapped too. “These reforms should lead to major savings,” said a Whitehall source. By scrapping subcommittees set up to oversee procurement projects, the MoD hopes to speed up the process and make individuals responsible for costs. Fox said one of the problems the MoD has had is getting control of the budget from the centre. The overhaul will address this as well as allowing for a better alignment of decision making and accountability and as well as giving a bit more freedom to the armed forces themselves. He said it was a “balanced package”, which he believed military chiefs would feel able to support. Fox will say in his speech: “Lord Levene is clear in his critique. [The MoD is] a department with overly bureaucratic management structures, dominated by committees that led to indecisiveness and a lack of responsibility.” The MoD is expected to axe up to 8,000 civil servants in the next year. The Treasury has given the department the money to start the cuts, but some in Whitehall fear it will be difficult to implement Levene’s plans with so many staff leaving. There has been a gradual erosion of the powers of the individual service chiefs over the years and Levene’s proposals will see another shift of power away from them. However, they are being mollified by plans which would give them more overall control of their budgets and internal appointments. The Levene reforms are regarded as an important first step in the complete overhaul of the way the armed forces are managed. Next month they will be followed by details of how the MoD intends to meet the £1bn overspend in the budget for last year, as well as an assessment of what is really affordable between 2015 and 2020. The government has set out plans for the size and structure of the armed forces by 2020, but has recognised that the changes can only be achieved if defence spending increases significantly after 2015. The chancellor, George Osborne, has yet to commit any new money, but the MoD is negotiating with Treasury officials and the Cabinet Office because it needs to take some long-term procurement decisions now. A three-month study into what might be affordable is due to conclude at the end of this month. Liam Fox Defence policy Military Nick Hopkins Hélène Mulholland guardian.co.uk
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Continue reading …Defence secretary to reveal Lord Levene’s blueprint for tightening highest levels of services and cutting ministerial posts Britain’s armed forces will be radically overhauled in plans that will cut the number of senior officers and could also lead to ministerial posts being axed. Downing Street and the Ministry of Defence (MoD) have approved the reforms recommended by Lord Levene, and the proposals will be published on Monday. In a speech, the defence secretary, Liam Fox, will say Levene’s blueprint sets out “a vision of transformation on a scale not seen in defence for a generation”. The long-awaited overhaul of one of Whitehall’s most complex and dysfunctional ministries will lead to each of the three services thinning ranks at the highest level. As the Guardian revealed last month, the army, navy and air force will each be run by a single chief. At the moment, the services have two commanders, one in charge of strategy, the second in charge of day-to-day operations. The reforms would see operational control pushed down the chain of command. The three service chiefs will be removed from the defence board, a powerful committee the defence secretary chairs. The overall head of the military, the chief of the defence staff, currently General Sir David Richards, will represent them. Fox said on Sky News: “We’ve always wanted to see a tighter defence board. In opposition I made very clear the MoD had to have much better management, much tighter management.” The post of deputy chief of the defence staff will be retained initially, but is expected to become redundant when the current holder of the job, General Sir Nicholas Houghton, moves on. A committee chaired by an independent non-executive director, chosen by the defence secretary, will be in charge of appointments to the services’ top ranks. Levene argued that the services were top-heavy – a finding that chimed with Fox’s belief that the number of elite officers should be trimmed to reflect cuts further down the ranks. The department is seeking to make 17,000 service personnel redundant over the next three years. Levene also said the boundaries between the department’s ministerial posts were blurred, and that it may be time to scrap one of the junior positions. Some minor boards set up to oversee individual projects will be scrapped too. “These reforms should lead to major savings,” said a Whitehall source. By scrapping subcommittees set up to oversee procurement projects, the MoD hopes to speed up the process and make individuals responsible for costs. Fox will say in his speech: “Lord Levene is clear in his critique. [The MoD is] a department with overly bureaucratic management structures, dominated by committees that led to indecisiveness and a lack of responsibility.” The MoD is expected to axe up to 8,000 civil servants in the next year. The Treasury has given the department the money to start the cuts, but some in Whitehall fear it will be difficult to implement Levene’s plans with so many staff leaving. There has been a gradual erosion of the powers of the individual service chiefs over the years and Levene’s proposals will see another shift of power away from them. However, they are being mollified by plans which would give them more overall control of their budgets and internal appointments. The Levene reforms are regarded as an important first step in the complete overhaul of the way the armed forces are managed. Next month they will be followed by details of how the MoD intends to meet the £1bn overspend in the budget for last year, as well as an assessment of what is really affordable between 2015 and 2020. The government has set out plans for the size and structure of the armed forces by 2020, but has recognised that the changes can only be achieved if defence spending increases significantly after 2015. The chancellor, George Osborne, has yet to commit any new money, but the MoD is negotiating with Treasury officials and the Cabinet Office because it needs to take some long-term procurement decisions now. A three-month study into what might be affordable is due to conclude at the end of this month. Military Defence policy Liam Fox Liberal-Conservative coalition Conservatives Nick Hopkins guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Click here to view this media After walking out of the debt ceiling negotiations this week, which Chris Wallace conveniently forgot to ask Sen. Jon Kyl about, Kyl defended the Republicans refusal to raise taxes during this interview on Fox News Sunday. Republicans continue to pretend that trickle-down economics work with their claims that raising taxes on the rich will hurt the economy and Kyl went so far as to pretend raising taxes on those making over a half a million dollars a year would eventually mean taxes being raised on everyone. I’ve heard some whoppers as excuses for not raising taxes on upper earners, but this one has to take the cake. WALLACE: We’re going to get to the economic growth aspect in a minute. But let’s just go through the taxes because the White House says — and let’s just make it clear what we’re talking about here — the White House says they’ve given up on the idea of raising tax rates for individuals, even those over $250,000. They understand the politics, as you say, the House, it’s just a nonstarter. But let’s go through some of the things, Senator, that they are proposing. Let’s put them on the screen. Limit deductions — tax deductions for households making more than $500,000 a year to 10 percent of gross adjusted income. They said that would bring in $210 billion over the next decade. And here’s the argument the White House is going to make. I want you to respond to it. They say, do you really want to be protecting mortgage deductions for millionaires at the same time that you are cutting Medicare for seniors? KYL: Well, let’s be clear. What they are talking about is charitable giving, mortgage deductions, that sort of thing. And it always happens — they aim at the millionaires and billionaires. But there’s not enough money for those folks to run the government for very long. So, they end up affecting everybody. That’s what the alternative minimum tax did. And I think that’s what actually happened here. And naturally Wallace let him get away with that with no follow up. Full transcript below the fold. WALLACE: As we said, the president starts talks tomorrow, separate talks with Senate Democratic Leader Harry Reid, and then with Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell. Given the GOP’s refusal to include any new revenue, what’s the basis for a deal? KYL: Well, we have not refused any new revenue. For example, we’ve been discussing some fee increases and some other things that would actually generate revenue. But what we object to is changing the tax code. We don’t need new taxes right now. We need to reduce spending. WALLACE: But the White House is talking about $3 in spending cuts for every $1 in additional revenue. Given the fact that you got a divided government, you don’t control, Republicans, the whole deal, and given the fact that stakes are so enormous, danger of the country going in default — why isn’t that a $3 to $1, spending to taxes, why isn’t that a fair deal? KYL: First of all, the key here is to get economic growth going again. In the last quarter, our economic growth was less than 2 percent. I think it was 1.8 percent or 1.9 percent. We need to put people back to work. Most economists agree that in times of economic downturn like this, the last thing you want to do is to add more taxes on to the economy. So, it would be inimical to economic growth and job creation, which is what we all ought to be urging here. When our economy grows and people are making more money, at the same income tax rates, they would pay more a lot more in taxes and the government will have more revenues. But you don’t want to pile taxes on at a time when companies don’t have the ability to invest and hire people. That’s the primary reason we are opposed to raising taxes right now. There’s also a very practical problem in the House of Representatives. It’s not going to pass when you have big tax increases. WALLACE: We’re going to get to the economic growth aspect in a minute. But let’s just go through the taxes because the White House says — and let’s just make it clear what we’re talking about here — the White House says they’ve given up on the idea of raising tax rates for individuals, even those over $250,000. They understand the politics, as you say, the House, it’s just a nonstarter. But let’s go through some of the things, Senator, that they are proposing. Let’s put them on the screen. Limit deductions — tax deductions for households making more than $500,000 a year to 10 percent of gross adjusted income. They said that would bring in $210 billion over the next decade. And here’s the argument the White House is going to make. I want you to respond to it. They say, do you really want to be protecting mortgage deductions for millionaires at the same time that you are cutting Medicare for seniors? KYL: Well, let’s be clear. What they are talking about is charitable giving, mortgage deductions, that sort of thing. And it always happens — they aim at the millionaires and billionaires. But there’s not enough money for those folks to run the government for very long. So, they end up affecting everybody. That’s what the alternative minimum tax did. And I think that’s what actually happened here. We have always been willing to consider so-called tax expenditures — but as the president originally proposed, in the context of overall tax reform. He has said, for example, let’s eliminate some of these – they’re called tax expenditures even though you don’t think of deduction for charitable giving as a tax expenditure. But if we could reduce — WALLACE: That’s money that the Treasury is giving us. KYL: It’s foregoing. And so, if you could reduce some of those, you could also then reduce overall tax rates. And if you look at the United States as a worldwide competitor, for example, the president himself has proposed eliminating some of those things for business so that we could reduce the overall corporate tax rate. So, what we’ve said is we’re perfectly willing to consider those kinds of issues in the context of tax reform, which we would very much like to do. But we’re not going to have the time to do it or be able to do it in order just to raise revenue as part of the exercise which should be about reducing spending. WALLACE: All right. Let’s put up another White House proposal that doesn’t involve individual taxes. It involves tax breaks for specific businesses. Put it on the screen. Eliminate oil and gas subsidies for companies making more than — have more than $1 billion in annual profits. They say that would raise $21 billion. And again, this is at a time when Republicans are demanding big cuts in government programs and services. KYL: Yes. There are several answers here. First of all, if you want gas prices to rise, if you want to pay more than 4 bucks at the pump, then go ahead and do this. That’s not what we should be about right now. That kind of tax increase is going to flow right to the consumer. Everybody knows that. Secondly, what you’re doing is picking out one industry in the United States, an industry that employs almost 10 million people, represents about 7.5 percent of our gross domestic product. And you’re saying to them, you are not going to get the same kind of tax treatment that all other manufacturing corporations get in the United States. So, we’re going to — we’re going to punish you, because you make a lot of money. It’s also true that with those big profits, they have enormous costs of investment. You’ve, of course, covered the issue of how much it costs to put one of those platforms out in the middle of Gulf of Mexico. It’s billions of dollars. So, it’s big money all the way around. But you’re going to hurt the American consumer if you impose more taxes on them. WALLACE: So, in 30 seconds, if he says you got to have taxes, even if it’s $1 for $3 in spending cuts that you say no, how does that get resolved in the next month? KYL: I think the president has to make a decision. Which is more important to him: solving this problem, reducing spending somewhat, or making sure that we raise taxes on American economy? If that’s his ideological bench here and under all circumstances that’s what he’s going to insists on, we got a big problem. I think at the end of the day, he’ll recognize that simply getting a handle on spending and making sure that we cannot hurt the economy is going to be the way to derive revenues in the future when the economy begins to recover. WALLACE: So, basically, you’re saying he is going to agree to your terms? KYL: Well, I hope so. I hope he’ll — he’s got to make that choice, let’s put it that way. And the obvious, best choice, I think, is not doing anything to harm the economy at this point. WALLACE: Senator Kyl, we want to thank you. KYL: Thank you, Chris. WALLACE: Always a pleasure to talk to you, sir.
Continue reading …Fox News's Chris Wallace on Sunday actually asked Republican presidential candidate Michele Bachmann if she's a flake. Possibly feeling the question was a bit over the top, the Weekly Standard's Bill Kristol during the panel discussion segment of “Fox News Sunday” ribbed the host saying, “You can call me a flake if you want” (video follows with transcript and commentary): CHRIS WALLACE, HOST: Finally, let's talk about Michele Bachmann because — and you say — it's interesting. You say that the people saw in the debate and saw you as a serious person. I don't have to tell you that you have — the rap on you here in Washington is that you have a history of questionable statements, some would say gaffes, ranging from — talking about anti-America members of Congress — on this show — a couple of months ago, when you suggested that NATO airstrikes had killed up to 30,000 civilians. Are you a flake? CONGRESSWOMAN MICHELE BACHMANN (R-MINNESOTA): Well, I think that would be insulting, to say something like that, because I'm a serious person. WALLACE: But you understand when I say that, that that's what the rap on you is? BILL KRISTOL, THE WEEKLY STANDARD: I don't know. And I have just personally been radicalized on this in the last couple of months. And maybe you can call me a flake if you want. (LAUGHTER) WALLACE: I simply asked the question. KRISTOL: No, that's OK. WALLACE: It's a perfectly sensible answer. KRISTOL: She gave a good answer. I'll associate myself with her, on this issue at least, as a flake, because I don't really know why the Republicans should negotiate. Yes, she did give a perfectly sensible answer, but was it a perfectly sensible question? Would Wallace ask a male political figure that? Vice President Joe Biden has made his share of gaffes during his career. Would it be acceptable to ask if he's a flake? As NewsBusters has been reporting almost since the moment former Alaska governor Sarah Palin was announced as John McCain's running mate in August 2008, there has been a rash of sexist attacks by the press on conservative women the past three years. As a huge fan of Wallace's, I would never accuse him of acting like his liberal colleagues, but have to wonder what got into his head Sunday to ask such a question? Was he consciously or sub-consciously feeling the need to be extra hard on his guest after last Sunday's showdown with comedian Jon Stewart? Rather shockingly, Bachmann got more of a grilling on Fox Sunday than she did on CBS's “Face the Nation.” Seems a metaphysical certitude she didn't envision that when she woke up this morning. On the other hand, Wallace is by far one of the best interviewers on television, and has a reputation for being as tough on Republicans as he is on Democrats. With this in mind, maybe I'm being hyper-sensitive given all the conservative woman bashing the past three years. Regardless, it will be fascinating to see the media response to this exchange in the coming days. If the usual liberal suspects call Wallace out for this, it will be the height of hypocrisy given their own behavior regarding Bachmann, Palin, et al. If they don't, it might likely be because they recognize how hypocritical it would be, and they're better off letting the matter rest. Either way, it'll be very telling.
Continue reading …Fox News's Chris Wallace on Sunday actually asked Republican presidential candidate Michele Bachmann if she's a flake. Possibly feeling the question was a bit over the top, the Weekly Standard's Bill Kristol during the panel discussion segment of “Fox News Sunday” ribbed the host saying, “You can call me a flake if you want” (video follows with transcript and commentary): CHRIS WALLACE, HOST: Finally, let's talk about Michele Bachmann because — and you say — it's interesting. You say that the people saw in the debate and saw you as a serious person. I don't have to tell you that you have — the rap on you here in Washington is that you have a history of questionable statements, some would say gaffes, ranging from — talking about anti-America members of Congress — on this show — a couple of months ago, when you suggested that NATO airstrikes had killed up to 30,000 civilians. Are you a flake? CONGRESSWOMAN MICHELE BACHMANN (R-MINNESOTA): Well, I think that would be insulting, to say something like that, because I'm a serious person. WALLACE: But you understand when I say that, that that's what the rap on you is? BILL KRISTOL, THE WEEKLY STANDARD: I don't know. And I have just personally been radicalized on this in the last couple of months. And maybe you can call me a flake if you want. (LAUGHTER) WALLACE: I simply asked the question. KRISTOL: No, that's OK. WALLACE: It's a perfectly sensible answer. KRISTOL: She gave a good answer. I'll associate myself with her, on this issue at least, as a flake, because I don't really know why the Republicans should negotiate. Yes, she did give a perfectly sensible answer, but was it a perfectly sensible question? Would Wallace ask a male political figure that? Vice President Joe Biden has made his share of gaffes during his career. Would it be acceptable to ask if he's a flake? As NewsBusters has been reporting almost since the moment former Alaska governor Sarah Palin was announced as John McCain's running mate in August 2008, there has been a rash of sexist attacks by the press on conservative women the past three years. As a huge fan of Wallace's, I would never accuse him of acting like his liberal colleagues, but have to wonder what got into his head Sunday to ask such a question? Was he consciously or sub-consciously feeling the need to be extra hard on his guest after last Sunday's showdown with comedian Jon Stewart? Rather shockingly, Bachmann got more of a grilling on Fox Sunday than she did on CBS's “Face the Nation.” Seems a metaphysical certitude she didn't envision that when she woke up this morning. On the other hand, Wallace is by far one of the best interviewers on television, and has a reputation for being as tough on Republicans as he is on Democrats. With this in mind, maybe I'm being hyper-sensitive given all the conservative woman bashing the past three years. Regardless, it will be fascinating to see the media response to this exchange in the coming days. If the usual liberal suspects call Wallace out for this, it will be the height of hypocrisy given their own behavior regarding Bachmann, Palin, et al. If they don't, it might likely be because they recognize how hypocritical it would be, and they're better off letting the matter rest. Either way, it'll be very telling.
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