The C64, a legend of the 8bit era, is set to return – with brand new insides! It was one of the most successful home computers of the eighties and now it’s making an unlikely comeback. A new version of the Commodore 64 is set to be released this summer, featuring entirely modern innards including a 1.8ghz dual-core Intel Atom D525 processor, Nvidia Ion 2 graphics chipset, 2 GB of DDR3 memory and your choice of a DVD or Blu-ray drive. Best of all, the revived machine will feature exactly the same design as its 8bit predecessor, right down to the beige body and rather spongy keyboard (you can see more images on the Commodore USA Facebook page ). The old cartridge port and joystick interfaces will be gone, though, replaced with HDMI and USB connections. Users will also be able to install Windows 7, although the machine will ship with Linux and will eventually get its own Commodore OS 1.0, complete with an emulator to play classic C64 titles. The new device is apparently on sale now, and orders are being taken at the price of $595 (£364), although at the moment, the company’s website seems to be struggling to cope with the amount of interest a PC in a brown plastic box is generating. Although the original Commodore Business Machines declared bankruptcy in 1994, the brand has passed through a number of hands in the subsequent years. It is now jointly shared by the creator of the new C64, Commodore USA, as well as Commodore Holdings and Commodore Gaming , which builds high-spec PCs. But the big question is, which classic C64 titles should be updated along with the machine? Games Retro games Windows Windows 7 Keith Stuart guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …800,000 federal employees set to be suspended from midnight on Friday as budget talks hit new sticking point The US Congress has begun sending out letters warning staff they will be suspended from this weekend along with hundreds of thousands of other workers as part of a looming federal government shutdown. The letters inform staff whether they are regarded as essential – necessary to maintain security and keep Congress running – or non-essential. The process will be repeated at the White House, the Pentagon and hundreds of federal agencies that are preparing to scale back or cease operation from midnight on Friday. The Democrats and Republicans failed on Thursday to end the stalemate in their budget dispute that will see the federal government shut down. Barack Obama called the House speaker, John Boehner, a Republican, to the White House to see if their differences could be bridged.If no last-minute agreement is reached, the government will begin stopping everything from tourist visits to the Statue of Liberty and Alcatraz to wages for about 800,000 federal employees. In Washington, libraries will close, there will be no parking attendants and, for one week, no rubbish collection, and the University of the District of Columbia would also be shut. One of the most emotional issues is that troops in Afghanistan, Iraq and elsewhere would not receive pay cheques until the crisis is resolved. But they would at least continue earning during any shutdown, unlike civilian employees. Hopes that a deal was closer rose after a White House meeting late on Wednesday between Barack Obama, Boehner, and the Democratic Senate leader, Harry Reid. But on Thursday morning, both Reid and Boehner went into reverse, with Reid saying he was more pessimistic than he had been the night before. One of the Republican leaders in the House, Eric Cantor, signalled that a deal was unlikely before the Friday midnight deadline when he interrupted House proceedings to announce that Republican legislators were preparing to stay in session over the weekend to try to end the impasse. The Republicans want a cut in the federal deficit of $40bn( £24bn). The Democrats made a compromise offer of $34.5bn on Wednesday. The new sticking points are mainly the areas where the Republicans want cuts – abortion programmes and environmental protection, on which the Democrats refuse to give way. Reid, speaking in the Senate, said: “The numbers are basically there. But I’m not nearly as optimistic – and that’s an understatement – as I was 11 hours ago. The numbers are extremely close. Our differences are no longer over how much savings we get on government spending.” He added: “The only thing holding up an agreement is an ideology.” He said the Republican leadership had drawn a line in the sand over abortion and clean air, issues he said had no place in a budget bill. But Boehner’s office disputed that there was even agreement on the numbers. The House, which is controlled by the Republicans, began passage of a bill that would keep the federal government going for at least another week. But the Senate, which is Democratic-controlled, will not pass it and Obama said he would veto it anyway. The Democrats say they are not interested in another stop-gap measure and insist is only a Republican attempt to avoid blame for a shutdown. As evidence, they say that the bill includes $12bn in cuts. But Boehner said: “The bill the House is considering today would fund our troops through September in the face of three conflicts and keep the government from shutting down tomorrow, while reflecting meaningful reductions in government spending that are widely accepted by both chambers of Congress.” US politics US Congress United States Democrats Republicans Ewen MacAskill guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …During his Talking Points Memo at the top of Wednesday's O'Reilly Factor on Fox News, host Bill O'Reilly called out NBC Today co-host Matt Lauer for denouncing Republican efforts to cut spending on things like “climate control”: “Are you kidding me, Lauer? Funding for climate control? Nobody can control the climate but God. So give a little extra at mass or services.” As NewsBusters reported , on Wednesday's Today, Lauer lamented: “…some of the things the Tea Party and others on the far right are asking for – no funding for Planned Parenthood, no funding for climate control, public broadcasting.” In response, O'Reilly remarked: “Funding for Planned Parenthood and public broadcasting when the debt stands at 14 trillion? Have a telethon on the Today show for those concerns. Raise the money privately. This is nuts. The country's nearly bankrupt. China holds more than a trillion dollars of our debt and you guys want climate control funding? I feel a cold front coming on.” Here is a transcript of O'Reilly's April 6 comments: 8:01PM ET (…) BILL O'REILLY: Liberal Americans simply do not want to cut spending very much. They want to take from affluent Americans in order to expand income redistribution. And they want an entitlement society like Holland and other European countries have. Listen to this exchange on the Today show. MATT LAUER: And when you look at some of the things the Tea Party and others on the far right are asking for – no funding for Planned Parenthood, no funding for climate control, public broadcasting – does it seem to you, Senator, that this is less about a fiscal debate or an economic policy debate and they're making an ideological stand here? CHUCK SCHUMER [SEN. D-NY]: That's exactly right, Matt. You've hit the nail on the head. Even in the cuts they want to make, we can find other cuts that don't cut into the muscle, that don't prevent students who deserve to go to college from going to college. And they're saying no, not because they care about the deficit, but they have an ideology just to get rid of all government. O'REILLY: They don't want to get rid of all government, Senator Schumer, just unnecessary government. And are you kidding me, Lauer? Funding for climate control? Nobody can control the climate but God. So give a little extra at mass or services. Funding for Planned Parenthood and public broadcasting when the debt stands at 14 trillion? Have a telethon on the Today show for those concerns. Raise the money privately. This is nuts. The country's nearly bankrupt. China holds more than a trillion dollars of our debt and you guys want climate control funding? I feel a cold front coming on. — Kyle Drennen is a news analyst at the Media Research Center. You can follow him on Twitter here.
Continue reading …1,000 fighters continue to defend Ivory Coast’s ex-president after French helicopter crew rescues Japanese envoy United Nations forces have surrounded the last troops loyal to defeated Ivory Coast presidential candidate Laurent Gbagbo after 24 hours of drama in which French forces staged a helicopter rescue of the Japanese ambassador. Gbagbo’s forces, said to number around 1,000, have been desperately defending the recalcitrant former leader against forces loyal to Alassane Ouattara, who won the November presidential election. Gbagbo, who had repeatedly forced postponement of the poll, refused to cede power, alleging fraud. Gérard Longuet, the French defence minister, told the French Senate on Thursday: “At this moment the military situation is as follows; the UNOCI [United Nations mission in Ivory Coast] troops have surrounded in a limited area the last defenders of the previous president, Gbagbo.” The UN deployment came after Gbagbo’s fighters stormed the Japanese ambassador Yoshifumi Okamura’s residence in Cocody on Wednesday, barely allowing time for him to escape with seven staff into a safe room behind a bulletproof door. The fighters then set up rocket launchers and cannons on the roof of the house and began firing into the residential area. Around midnight, French troops with night-vision glasses abseiled from a helicopter into the ambassador’s home. After coming under fire they shot back, the French military said, destroying three vehicles. In a 30-minute operation, the soldiers managed to free Okamura and his colleagues, one of whom was hurt, and airlifted them to a French military camp. Besides taking over the Japanese residence, Gbagbo’s forces also tried to break into the French ambassador’s house, before French forces destroyed their two vehicles. Other countries are now frantically trying to withdraw their diplomats, with Israel requesting help from France in taking its staff to safety. The fierce week-long street battles in the commercial capital Abidjan has caused serious shortages of food and water, with most residents too afraid to leave their homes. More than 1,500 foreigners are taking shelter at a French military base, as well as 20 international journalists who were evacuated from a city centre hotel on Thursday. The UN secretary general, Ban Ki-moon, has urged Gbagbo to stand down for the sake of his country, which has been plunged back into civil war at a time it was meant to be unifying after years of divisions between the north and south. More than 1,500 people have been killed since the disputed poll. “This is his last opportunity to gracefully exit,” Ban said during a visit to the US. Earlier in the week it appeared that Gbagbo was willing to give himself up after months of failed mediation attempts, but the former history professor remained defiant, despite being confined to his personal residence in the upscale neighbourhood of Cocody. Gbagbo’s spokesman in France, Toussaint Alain, told Associated Press that the 65-year-old leader would not negotiate his surrender but he would talk to Ouattara. Alain said that France, Ivory Coast’s former colonial ruler, should not be involved in the talks. France has becoming increasingly involved in the conflict this week, strafing Gbagbo’s military depots in a joint aerial operation with the UN. The fighters guarding Gbagbo include youth militias and members of the feared Republican Guard, and are equipped with heavy weapons and tanks, according to French media. After talks to secure Gbabgo’s exit failed, they were able to repel a large attack by Ouattara’s forces on Wednesday, even as the Japanese ambassador and his staff remained trapped nearby. Speaking in a video released by the French military after the rescue mission, Okamura described his ordeal. “Unfortunately my residence was attacked by mercenaries and I was locked in my room since the morning. The mercenaries took over my home but in the end I was saved by the Licorne [French peacekeeping troops in Ivory Coast],” he said. “The work was very professional and they secured the environment, and that’s why I am here.” According to French military spokesman Colonel Thierry Burkhard, Okamura had managed to alert the Japanese authorities about his plight while in the safe room. The UN, which has a large peacekeeping mission in Ivory Coast, then notified France, which has sent military reinforcements to the country in recent weeks. Burkhard said Gbagbo’s forces had used the Japanese ambassador’s home to fire into residential areas, targeting the French ambassador’s house in particular. “In less than half an hour, the ambassador and his colleagues were evacuated to [the military base of] Port Bouet. Our troops were then engaged, which led to a response, mainly with anti-tank missiles.” No French soldiers were injured in the operation, he said. Ouattara’s forces, which swept into Abidjan last week, are drawn mainly from the Muslim north of the country, which had remained under the military control of the former rebel New Forces movement since the 2002-03 civil war. Gbagbo accused France of supporting the rebels during that conflict. Laurent Gbagbo Ivory Coast Alassane Ouattara United Nations France Japan Xan Rice guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Julian Assange hands over tranche of secret files to newspapers in Israel on its co-operation with US and view of neighbours Mohammed Tantawi, the head of Egypt’s ruling generals, was an obstacle to Israeli efforts to stop arms smuggling within the Gaza strip, according to Israeli security forces. The assessment was privately delivered to US diplomats, alongside praise for former intelligence chief Omar Suleiman’s efforts to stop weapons trafficking, according to the WikiLeaks embassy cables. The revelations come in a tranche of the most militarily sensitive cables from the US embassy in Tel Aviv. They have been handed over to Israeli newspapers by WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange. The Hebrew-language paper Yediot this week announced a deal under which it will print an interview with Assange, who has recently had to defend WikiLeaks from accusations of antisemitism. The cables show intimate co-operation between US and Israeli intelligence organisations. Israel’s preoccupation with Iranian nuclear ambitions is well known and the US cables detail the battering on the subject that diplomats repeatedly receive from Tel Aviv. They also shed detailed and sometimes unexpected light on Israel’s military analyses of its other enemies and friends in the region. Egypt is the primary route for weapons and munitions into the Gaza strip, and the US has been facilitating co-operation between Israel and Egypt to tackle this for several years. On arms smuggling across the Egyptian border to Hamas in Gaza, Israeli intelligence chiefs described as “supportive” Omar Suleiman, who was Egypt’s intelligence minister, but said defence minister Mohammed Hussein Tantawi was “an obstacle” in a November 2009 cable . Another cable seen by the Guardian reveals that the King of Bahrain, whose Arab state has recently been shaken by protests, has had friendly links with the Mossad, the Israeli intelligence agency. The cables report a private talk between the then US ambassador, William Monroe, and King Hamad of Bahrain in the king’s palace on 15 February 2005. Monroe reported back to Washington : “He [the king] revealed that Bahrain already has contacts with Israel at the intelligence/security level (ie with Mossad) and indicated that Bahrain will be willing to move forward in other areas.” The cables also shed light on Israel’s assessment of Hezbollah’s mounting capability to strike directly at Tel Aviv with an arsenal of more than 20,000 missiles. Israeli intelligence chiefs briefed their US counterparts during a regular Joint Political Military Group (JPMG) session on 18 November 2009 about the scale of potential Hezbollah attacks from Lebanon . Washington was told: “Hezbollah possesses over 20,000 rockets … Hezbollah was preparing for a long conflict with Israel in which it hopes to launch a massive number of rockets at Israel per day. A Mossad official estimated that Hezbollah will try to launch 400-600 rockets and missiles at Israel per day – 100 of which will be aimed at Tel Aviv. He noted that Hezbollah is looking to sustain such launches for at least two months.” Other cables detail regular secret talks between the US and Yuval Diskin, head of Israel’s internal security agency, Shin Beth, over the role of Hamas in Gaza. On 12 November 2009 the embassy reported the views of the general responsible for Gaza and southern Israel, Major General Yoav Galant, that Hamas needed to be “strong enough to enforce a ceasefire” . He told the Americans: “Israel’s political leadership has not yet made the necessary policy choices among competing priorities: a short-term priority of wanting Hamas to be strong enough to enforce the de facto ceasefire and prevent the firing of rockets and mortars into Israel; a medium priority of preventing Hamas from consolidating its hold on Gaza; and a longer-term priority of avoiding a return of Israeli control of Gaza and full responsibility for the wellbeing of Gaza’s civilian population.” Galant was to be made Israel’s chief of defence staff earlier this year but the appointment was cancelled due to scandal. The US embassy cables WikiLeaks US foreign policy Julian Assange James Ball David Leigh guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Julian Assange hands over tranche of secret files to newspapers in Israel on its co-operation with US and view of neighbours Mohammed Tantawi, the head of Egypt’s ruling generals, was an obstacle to Israeli efforts to stop arms smuggling within the Gaza strip, according to Israeli security forces. The assessment was privately delivered to US diplomats, alongside praise for former intelligence chief Omar Suleiman’s efforts to stop weapons trafficking, according to the WikiLeaks embassy cables. The revelations come in a tranche of the most militarily sensitive cables from the US embassy in Tel Aviv. They have been handed over to Israeli newspapers by WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange. The Hebrew-language paper Yediot this week announced a deal under which it will print an interview with Assange, who has recently had to defend WikiLeaks from accusations of antisemitism. The cables show intimate co-operation between US and Israeli intelligence organisations. Israel’s preoccupation with Iranian nuclear ambitions is well known and the US cables detail the battering on the subject that diplomats repeatedly receive from Tel Aviv. They also shed detailed and sometimes unexpected light on Israel’s military analyses of its other enemies and friends in the region. Egypt is the primary route for weapons and munitions into the Gaza strip, and the US has been facilitating co-operation between Israel and Egypt to tackle this for several years. On arms smuggling across the Egyptian border to Hamas in Gaza, Israeli intelligence chiefs described as “supportive” Omar Suleiman, who was Egypt’s intelligence minister, but said defence minister Mohammed Hussein Tantawi was “an obstacle” in a November 2009 cable . Another cable seen by the Guardian reveals that the King of Bahrain, whose Arab state has recently been shaken by protests, has had friendly links with the Mossad, the Israeli intelligence agency. The cables report a private talk between the then US ambassador, William Monroe, and King Hamad of Bahrain in the king’s palace on 15 February 2005. Monroe reported back to Washington : “He [the king] revealed that Bahrain already has contacts with Israel at the intelligence/security level (ie with Mossad) and indicated that Bahrain will be willing to move forward in other areas.” The cables also shed light on Israel’s assessment of Hezbollah’s mounting capability to strike directly at Tel Aviv with an arsenal of more than 20,000 missiles. Israeli intelligence chiefs briefed their US counterparts during a regular Joint Political Military Group (JPMG) session on 18 November 2009 about the scale of potential Hezbollah attacks from Lebanon . Washington was told: “Hezbollah possesses over 20,000 rockets … Hezbollah was preparing for a long conflict with Israel in which it hopes to launch a massive number of rockets at Israel per day. A Mossad official estimated that Hezbollah will try to launch 400-600 rockets and missiles at Israel per day – 100 of which will be aimed at Tel Aviv. He noted that Hezbollah is looking to sustain such launches for at least two months.” Other cables detail regular secret talks between the US and Yuval Diskin, head of Israel’s internal security agency, Shin Beth, over the role of Hamas in Gaza. On 12 November 2009 the embassy reported the views of the general responsible for Gaza and southern Israel, Major General Yoav Galant, that Hamas needed to be “strong enough to enforce a ceasefire” . He told the Americans: “Israel’s political leadership has not yet made the necessary policy choices among competing priorities: a short-term priority of wanting Hamas to be strong enough to enforce the de facto ceasefire and prevent the firing of rockets and mortars into Israel; a medium priority of preventing Hamas from consolidating its hold on Gaza; and a longer-term priority of avoiding a return of Israeli control of Gaza and full responsibility for the wellbeing of Gaza’s civilian population.” Galant was to be made Israel’s chief of defence staff earlier this year but the appointment was cancelled due to scandal. The US embassy cables WikiLeaks US foreign policy Julian Assange James Ball David Leigh guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …As the prospect of a government shutdown continued to make headlines today, MSNBC’s Contessa Brewer accused Republicans of exploiting troop paychecks for political gain, even though the House approved legislation to fund the Pentagon in the event of a shutdown and President Barack Obama threatened to
Continue reading …Rebels also ‘positive’ about three-point plan after separate meeting with Turkish officials Turkey has proposed a path to a peaceful resolution to the deadlocked conflict in Libya, involving a withdrawal by Muammar Gaddafi’s forces from cities held by the rebels, and democratic reform. Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the Turkish prime minister, has outlined the proposal in Ankara, saying: “We are working on the details of this roadmap.” It would include humanitarian corridors in Libya, he said. Turkey, which this week hosted an envoy from the Gaddafi regime, the new foreign minister, Abdel Ati al-Obeidi, said the measures would be discussed at an international meeting on Libya in Qatar next week. The US, European countries and Middle Eastern allies will take part. Obeidi was reported to be floating ideas for a three-country tour in search of a political solution, with Gaddafi staying in power while constitutional reforms were introduced. Libya’s opposition and the international coalition reject any plan involving Gaddafi remaining in power. Erdogan outlined three elements to his proposal: a ceasefire in the cities surrounded by Gaddafi’s forces, including Misrata; a humanitarian corridor to allow aid to enter, co-ordinated with Tripoli; and negotiations leading to a new political process in Libya, including free elections. Sources close to Erdogan said he had discussed the proposal with Obeidi, who would take the message back to Tripoli. The Turkish government also met Mustafa Abdul Jalil, the chairman of the rebel council, in Doha recently. Jalil was said to have been “positive” about the proposal. Meanwhile, Nato is investigating a claim by Libyan rebels that a botched air strike has killed at least 13 of its fighters as the west scrambled to deal with what commanders admit is a flaw in communications with rebels on the battlefield. The revolutionary leadership sought to defuse anger at Nato over the strike near the frontline town of Brega, where several missiles hit rebel tanks, by claiming that it was carried out by Gaddafi’s air force. That appeared unlikely given the imposition of the no-fly zone and the destruction of his air defences in recent days. The Nato aircraft appear not to have been informed that, for the first time, rebels had moved several tanks, rocket launchers and other armour up to the frontline . All of it was seized from government forces and therefore was indistinguishable from Gaddafi’s weaponry. But the second Nato attack on rebel forces in less than a week deepened anger and suspicion about the actions of the alliance, which is accused in rebel-held areas of abandoning the fight against Gaddafi. Nato had been keen to assuage those concerns by demonstrating that it is still taking on the Libyan leader’s army. A rebel commander, Ayman Abdul-Karim, told the Associated Press that he had seen air strikes hit tanks and a rebel convoy, including a bus carrying fighters toward Brega. He and other rebels described dozens killed or wounded. Rebel fighters who saw the strike were furious. “Nato are liars. They are siding with Gaddafi,” said Salem Mislat. Thirteen people, including three doctors, died last Friday in a western air raid after rebels opened fire with an anti-aircraft gun while a Nato plane was overhead. Yesterday’s incident came as western powers tried to improve slow communications between the rebels and Nato commanders, who are receiving old information about the situation on the ground. A fresh assault by Gaddafi’s forces appeared to be pushing the revolutionaries back once again. The government army advanced close enough to Ajdabiya, the last main town before the revolutionaries’ de facto capital, Benghazi, to shell its western gate. That sent people fleeing in their thousands from Ajdabiya, which has changed hands several times. The revolutionaries’ military problems are being compounded by a looming economic crisis. Western governments that have established diplomatic ties with the revolutionary council are now urgently trying to find ways to legally get frozen Libyan assets to the rebel administration, which says it has less than a fortnight’s cash available. The matter is complicated by UN sanctions against Libyan state bodies, which appear to prevent western governments from transferring funds in to banks even in rebel-held territory. The US holds about £20bn in Libyan assets and Britain has several billion, but officials say releasing the funds is proving legally complicated. The economic crisis is likely to be compounded by plunging oil production that was cut further on Wednesday by an attack on a pumping station. Nato dismissed the regime’s claims that British planes were responsible for the attack, saying it was carried out by Gaddafi’s forces. The American general who heads the US’s Africa command, Carter Ham, told Congress that he believes the conflict is settling into a stalemate. He advised against providing weapons to the rebels until the US is confident about who exactly they are, amid warnings from other members of the American military about ties to Islamist extremists. However, that concern is rapidly receding among western diplomats dispatched to Benghazi to deal with the rebels who say that they have been impressed by a commitment to creating a free and democratic society. Libyan spokesman Musa Ibrahim said he was not aware of the details of the plan, but added: “We are open to all proposals for reform from within Libya.” Libya Middle East Turkey Nato Muammar Gaddafi Chris McGreal Seumas Milne Harriet Sherwood guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …According to World News' Diane Sawyer, House Speaker John Boehner is being “held hostage” by the Tea Party. Over two days and two shows, Sawyer and interviewer George Stephanopoulos hit the Republican as captive to an unreasonable base who want to shut down the government. On Thursday's Good Morning America, after Boehner asserted that taxpayer dollars shouldn't fund abortions, Stephanopoulos chided, “If you hold on to that, the White House and Democrats have been very clear, there's no deal. The government is going to shut down.” He didn't make the obvious logical conclusion that the Democrats are being held hostage by a liberal, pro-abortion base. Later, the GMA host reiterated his point, arguing: “You know what the Democrats say. They say they can cut a deal with you. But you don't buck the Tea Party.” In a political warning to the Speaker, Stephanopoulos wondered, “You saw what happened to Speaker Gingrich during a government shutdown. Are you going to avoid that fate?” (What exactly was Gingrich's fate? He was reelected, kept his job through 1998 and the Republicans held the majority until 2006.) On Wednesday's World News, Sawyer spun, ” We keep reading that a lot of people think he's being held hostage, as it were, to the Tea Party inside his own party .” A transcript of the April 7 GMA segment, which aired at 7:06am EDT, follows: GEORGE STEPHANOPOULOS: You know, that potentially explosive issue of congressional pay is just one of the topics I covered in my exclusive interview with Speaker Boehner. He also took on claims by Democrats that he's kowtowing to the Tea Party. And just hours before that White House meeting, signaled why he wasn't ready to accept president Obama's proposal. SPEAKER JOHN BOEHNER: We're fighting for the largest cuts that we can because it will help our economy. STEPHANOPOULOS: But you called for $32 billion in cuts in your original proposal. Now, you're at $33 billion. BOEHNER: George, remember where all this started. The Democrats controlled the House last year. They controlled the Senate. They should have done this budget last year. They couldn't come to an agreement. We're cleaning up last year's mess. STEPHANOPOULOS: When you came in this year, you proposed and your leadership proposed a bill that would cut $32 billion. And now, they're beyond that. Why isn't that good enough? BOEHNER: Well, because the House came up with $100 billion worth of spending cuts. And specific policy riders that have been part of everybody appropriations process. And we send it over to the Senate. It's been 46 days. The Senate has not acted. STEPHANOPOULOS: You mention those policy riders. Some of them include cutting funding for Planned Parenthood. Cutting the enforcement for the Environmental Protection Agency. The President says those have no place in a short-term continuation resolution. Your response? BOEHNER: There's never been an appropriation process where there were
Continue reading …In carefully balanced trip Queen will pay respects to Irish soldiers who fought the British crown and others who wore its uniform Bill Clinton displayed a deft touch in 1995 when he became the first US president to visit Northern Ireland since the start of the Troubles. Political leaders from all sides swooned as a carefully orchestrated White House operation ensured that Clinton met each one of them in a way that made them all feel special. Buckingham Palace has clearly paid attention to Clinton’s ground breaking visit to Northern Ireland in the early years of the peace process as the Queen prepares to make history by becoming the first British monarch to visit the Irish Republic. The Queen will visit a series of sights which symbolise the complexity of Anglo-Irish relations and explain why no British monarch has stepped onto the soil of any of the 26 counties since George V visited Dublin in 1911. In those days it was part of the UK. The complexity of relations between the two islands will be shown soon after the Queen arrives in Dublin when she is formally received by Mary McAleese, the Irish president, at her formal residence, Áras an Uachtaráin. McAleese was technically born as a subject of the Queen’s father, George VI, in Belfast in 1951. This is how the trip, which will take place between 17-20 May, has been balanced: Nationalist Ireland • A tour of Dublin’s Garden of Remembrance. The Queen’s grandfather George V would probably utter an expletive to beat his famous ‘Bugger Bognor’ outburst if he knew that Lillibet, who was ten when he died in 1936, is to visit the garden that commemorates the Irish Republicans who tried to overthrow his rule over Ireland in the sixth year of his reign in the 1916 Easter Rising. • A visit to Croke Park, home of Gaelic Athletic Association (GAA) sports which are one of the main symbols of nationalist Ireland. The modern world was introduced to the significance of Croke Park in the Liam Neeson Michael Collins film which depicted the 1920 Bloody Sunday shootings. British troops fired on a gaelic football match, killing 14 people. It was only in 2005 that the GAA relaxed its famous Rule 42, which banned the playing of ‘garrison games’ (rugby and soccer) on its grounds. Anglo-Ireland • A tour of the Islandbridge National War Memorial Gardens in Dublin. The gardens commemorate the thousands of Irish soldiers who died in British or allied uniforms during the first and second world wars. Eamon de Valera, who famously passed on his condolences to the German legation in Dublin when Adolf Hitler died, was supportive of the site. But it was not until 1995 that a Taoiseach (John Bruton) formally visited the gardens. • Visits to Trinity College Dublin, which educated generations of Anglo-Irish professionals, and to the home Guinness which was traditionally associated with the Protestant community. Everyone’s Ireland, good and bad • The Rock of Cashel. This takes everyone’s breath away as it comes into view on the main road from Dublin to Cork. Once the seat of the Kings of Munster, this is the pride of all traditions in Ireland. But it did play host to Anglo-Irish battles when it was sacked by English Parliamentarian troops in 1647 during the Irish Confederate Wars A visit by the Queen to the Irish Republic has always been seen (excuse the pun) as the crowning moment in the peace process that sets the seal on the full normalisation in relations between the United Kingdom and the Irish Republic. Julian King, the British ambassador to Ireland, hailed the visit as an historic moment: The State Visit programme announced by Buckingham Palace and Áras an Uachtaráin is a wide-ranging and exciting celebration of the close ties between our two countries. Her Majesty and The Duke of Edinburgh will be able to experience at first hand the vibrant links that make our relationship with Ireland so important. This is a historic visit that also celebrates our close modern partnership. But will a tradition of state visits by the Queen be maintained? British ambassadors in post during a state visit by the Queen are usually knighted. But would it be right to bump up Julian King, who is already a CMG (Call Me God), to the full status of KCMG (Kindly Call Me God) after a trip to the 26 counties whose independent republican citizens have taken a dim view of British gongs? The Queen Ireland Northern Ireland Bill Clinton Nicholas Watt guardian.co.uk
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