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Chris Huhne faces new driving ban allegations

Lib Dems on defensive following reports of phone transcript in which energy secretary pressed witness to keep quiet The Liberal Democrat hierarchy has defended Chris Huhne after a tape recording emerged in which the energy secretary allegedly pressed a witness not to discuss claims he had tried to avoid a driving ban. Aides to the deputy prime minister, Nick Clegg, said they believed nothing new had surfaced to change the energy secretary’s status since Vicky Pryce, from whom Huhne separated last year, made the initial claims 10 days ago. However, the local police force said it was deciding whether or not to investigate. Pryce claims Huhne “pressurised people” to take on his penalty points for speeding to avoid a driving ban in 2003 when he was an MEP and before he became the Lib Dem MP for Eastleigh. Huhne strenuously denies the claims. The Sunday Times reported that it had seen a transcript of a phone call in which Huhne urged the person with whom he was in conversation not to speak to reporters and to stay silent about the allegations. The call was said to have taken place before the allegations became public. Huhne was reported as having said: “If I were you … do not talk. I would have thought you would not want to talk.” He is also reported to have given advice on how to avoid journalists: “Just say, ‘Terribly bad line, terribly sorry, bad reception, I’ll talk to you later,’ and hang up.” Labour MP Simon Danczuk lodged a formal complaint with Essex police force. A spokesman for Essex police said: “We are aware of allegations regarding a speeding offence in 2003. This information will be passed to officers who will decide on whether an investigation will be launched. We take allegations such as this extremely seriously and will take action where necessary.” In recognition of the escalating severity of the claims, Huhne has instructed Charlotte Harris, a partner at London law firm Mishcon de Reya. Huhne and Clegg met last week to discuss the situation and in that meeting Huhne denied all allegations. A Lib Dem source said: “We are in a similar place to where we were last weekend. Has there been produced something devastating? Not really.” The party view is that at no point during the quotes attributed to Huhne did he admit the charge, the source added, pointing to a section where he insisted there was no truth in the allegation. Huhne is alleged by the Mail on Sunday and Sunday Times to have said towards the end of the 13-minute conversation: “There’s no question of it coming out, because it’s simply not true, that’s it.” The other person in the phone call then said, “I’m sorry, what? Why are you suddenly saying that?” Huhne is reported to then say it is not “sensible to have these sorts of conversations on the phone”. The coalition is uncertain how it would accommodate the loss of another Lib Dem cabinet minister, with David Laws likely to be out of action for at least a year. The Commons will vote on Monday to suspend Laws from the house for seven days – one of the most severe penalties an MP can face – after the report last week by the parliamentary commissioner found evidence of “serious” offences. The coalition deal requires five cabinet ministers from the junior partner in the coalition but Huhne and Laws are two of the party’s highest flyers and not easily replaced. Huhne’s estranged wife is writing a book variously described as a “tell all” tome about the minister or a guide to surviving a high-profile divorce. As Huhne’s profile has increased in the last six weeks, she has increasingly spoken out. Last weekend, asked whether he had asked someone to take his driving points, Pryce said: “Yes, he did. But, look, there is such huge pressure on politicians to be everywhere at once, especially early in their career, so that they are visible – huge pressure – and he does drive a bit like a maniac.” This weekend the Mail on Sunday and the Sunday Times reported the phone call between Huhne and a witness. This call is supposed to show Huhne dissuading the witness from letting “the genie” out of the bottle. The other person on the line at one point allegedly expresses concerns that they might have to lie to reporters. “It is one of the things that worried me when you made me take the points.” According to reports, Huhne said: “There is no evidence for this story unless you give it some legs by saying something. The last thing you want is a half-baked story saying you’ve taken points for me.” Huhne is said to have added: “The story they are trying to stand up is that ‘Cabinet minister persuaded XXX to take points’. The only way they can stand that up is by getting you to talk to them. There is simply no other person who could possibly tell them whether it is true or not.” The Sunday Times published the allegation that Huhne allegedly “entered another person’s name on the form, without consulting them”. Its report included the suggestion that that person would be able to provide proof that they were elsewhere that day: “The person Huhne allegedly identified as the driver was at work in central London on the day in question and attended a high-profile conference.” Chris Huhne Liberal Democrats Liberal-Conservative coalition Allegra Stratton guardian.co.uk

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Koussa among defectors ‘helping Nato bomb secret Gaddafi sites’

Gaddafi ex-loyalist is black box of regime, say Libyan officials as UK military calls for more air strikes despite deadly hostel hit A network of Libyan defectors, including the former regime stalwart Moussa

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Israeli army in deadly confrontations with pro-Palestinian protesters

At least 13 people killed as troops clash with demonstrators in Gaza and on the borders with Syria and Lebanon Thousands of Palestinians and their supporters were embroiled in deadly confrontations with the Israeli army as protests erupting across the Palestinian territories, Israel and its borders with Syria, Lebanon and Jordan were met with live fire, rubber bullets, stun grenades and teargas. At least 13 people were reported killed in a day of bloody confrontations, including 10 at the Lebanese border, at least two at the Syrian border and one in Gaza. However some sources said 10 people had been killed on the Syrian border. Police also fired teargas to disperse hundreds of protesters on the Jordanian border. Although Israel had been braced for violent protests, the clashes on its borders were largely unexpected. Israeli politicians, already deeply alarmed about uprisings in its neighbouring Arab countries, now face heightened tensions with Syria and Lebanon. Thousands of Palestinian refugees from Syria marched towards the village of Majdal Shams in the Golan Heights, which Israel captured from Syria in 1967. According to the Israeli military “hundreds of Syrian rioters infiltrated the Israeli-Syrian border … and violently rioted against [Israeli] forces”. It said its troops “fired selectively towards rioters”. “The Israeli army warned [the protesters] not to cross but they didn’t listen,” Shefa Abu Jabal, 25, a resident of Majdal Shams, said. “When the crowd started to come over … soldiers started shooting. “Around 200 have managed to get across. I’ve heard there are four people dead on this side and there are many more injured. People in the village are really scared. The Israel soldiers looked shocked. No one thought there would be trouble at this border.” Another resident, Hamad Awidat, said: “There are thousands and thousands of people on the Syrian border who are trying to cross. There has been a lot of fighting, and of course people are scared.” At Maroun ar Ras in southern Lebanon, Israeli troops opened fire after hundreds of protesters broke through Lebanese army barricades to throw rocks across the border. At least two people were killed. One man, apparently shot in the chest, was doused with water as protesters tried to revive him but shouts of “Allah Akhbar” broke out as his dead body was lifted over the crowd. One protester, his clothes soaked in blood, screamed: “Murderers, cowards, is a rock any match for a bullet?” Hezbollah, which controls Lebanon’s southern villages had given tacit support for the protest but the crowd was dispersed by Lebanese troops firing into the air. Yassir Ali, one of the protest organisers said the deaths were not unexpected. “Palestinian people are used to paying with their lives. It’s a big price, but one we are prepared to pay to prove our right to return to the motherland.” Brigadier General Yoav Mordechai, an Israeli military spokesman, said soldiers fired when demonstrators began vandalising the border fence. The army was “aware” of casualties, he said. UN peacekeepers on the Lebanese side of the border appealed for “maximum restraint” to prevent casualties. The Israeli security forces had deployed about 10,000 troops and police along the country’s borders and in the Palestinian territories. The West Bank was subject to a 24-hour closure, with only emergency access permitted. Confrontations were reported after about 600 people marched from the West Bank’s principal city, Ramallah, towards the Qalandia checkpoint into Jerusalem. There were also clashes in other areas of the West Bank. In Gaza, at least 80 people were injured after Israeli troops opened fire on demonstrators approaching the Erez border crossing, Palestinian medical sources said. The Israeli military said it shot dead a man trying to plant a bomb near the border. In Tel Aviv, an Israeli man was killed and 17 people were injured when a truck ran into vehicles and pedestrians. It was not clear whether it was an accident or a deliberate attack. The truck’s 22-year-old Israeli-Arab driver said he lost control of the vehicle due to faulty brakes. • Additional reporting: Phoebe Greenwood Israel Arab and Middle East unrest Middle East Palestinian territories Syria Lebanon Harriet Sherwood guardian.co.uk

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Matt Taibbi and Megan McArdle Square Off Over Potential Criminal Charges Against Goldman Sachs

Click here to view this media Matt Taibbi has a new article on Rolling Stone on the recent hearings in the U.S. Senate and whether or not Goldman Sachs executives should be facing criminal trials or not in the wake of ongoing investigations into their part in the financial meltdown we went through a few years ago. CNN decided to bring in the Atlantic Monthly’s Wall Street apologist Megan McArdle to debate Taibbi on Your Money. I’m no financial expert and a lot of this stuff is over my head, but McArdle’s arguments to me here seemed to be that all of these laws are just too terribly difficult to understand, therefore it’s too difficult to figure out if they did anything wrong and to prosecute them, but the people they were selling these toxic assets to should have known better and understood what they were buying. Looks like a classic case of blame the victim to me. FDL’s TBogg weighed in on the segment here — McBambi vs. Taibbzilla (Updated) . Mark Ames at AlterNet took her apart in this article — Anti-Government Ideologue Megan McArdle’s Amnesia About Her Privileged, Govt.-Funded Upbringing . AlterNet’s Chris Lehmann was critical of her glib dismissal of Taibbi’s earlier reporting on Goldman Sachs here — Matt Taibbi’s Great Squid Hunt . And Eric Salzman went into some specifics on why he disagreed with that same article of McArdle’s — Matt Taibbi Gets His Sarah Palin On in his post here — Taking Megan McArdle Apart – Part II . So for any of you wonks on the financial industry out there, if you take issue with any of the articles I posted here, I welcome the input, because I’m not an expert on the financial industry and don’t claim to be. That said, from a layman’s perspective, what she did during this interview sure looked like a whole lot of apologizing for Goldman Sachs’ behavior to me and exactly what CNN expected to get from her by bringing her on to counter Taibbi. Transcript via CNN below the fold. VELSHI: If you’ve been waiting to see a criminal conviction in the wake of the financial crisis, this was a good week for you. Raj Rajaratnam, the hedge fund titan accused of insider trading was found guilty Wednesday of conspiracy and securities fraud. Some of his information was obtained from a Goldman Sachs board member providing yet another headache for the investment firm itself dealing with an ongoing investigation. Matt Taibbi is a contributing editor at “Rolling Stone.” He built a case against Goldman Sachs long before anyone in Congress started sniffing around. Matt, Carl Levin Senate committee says it’s got enough evidence to move forward with criminal charges against Goldman Sachs. Our own Eliot Spitzer says in your latest article that based on that he’d be dropping subpoenas by the truckloads. But the Justice Department still seems reluctant to move forward. Assuming that the viewers today have not read the article, lay out your case in short form. MATT TAIBBI, CONTRIBUTING EDITOR, ROLLING STONE: Well, the Levin report is a 650-page document, and to put that into as short a hand as I can possibly make it, they’re saying that late in 2006, Goldman Sachs realized they were sitting on a time bomb of toxic mortgage assets. That they conspired to unload those assets on their clients and then bet against them at the same time, and then later on, the report also sort of lays out that in the process of investigating this issue, the Senate questioned Goldman. They also had testimony in Congress and it lays out that they believed that Goldman lied about some of these activities — VELSHI: Lied to congress. All right, let’s bring in Megan McArdle. She’s the business and economics editor at “The Atlantic.” Megan, you’ve read the articles. Matt laid out a convincing case? MEGAN MCARDLE, BUSINESS AND ECONOMIC EDITOR, THE ATLANTIC: I think it’s really tough. These cases are incredibly difficult to bring and when. If you notice, Eliot Spitzer didn’t in fact secure a lot of convictions despite all the subpoenas he laid down. What he did was he got settlements from firms and in some cases, it wasn’t really clear that the firms had done anything wrong. The problem is that a firm that’s dependent on capital for its lifeblood, once you drop a subpoena, they kind of have to settle a deal even if they didn’t do anything because otherwise — VELSHI: Goldman has done that elsewhere. They’ve come up with a settlement, but, Matt, you’ve been on this case a long before a lot of people thought. I mean, one might think you’ve got some kind of an issue with Goldman. But you definitely think they’ve done something wrong? TAIBBI: Yes, absolutely. I don’t think anybody could read this report and not see that Goldman definitely conspired to sell assets that it itself did not believe in on unsuspecting clients. One of the great e-mails in this entire document came after they sold $10 million worth of a deal called Timberwolf on an Australian hedge fund and they’re celebrating afterwards. And one guy says, we found a white elephant, a unicorn and a flying pig all at the same time. In other words, we found the ultimate sucker and this kind of stuff is all throughout the report. VELSHI: Now, Megan, while regular people were actually affected by these toxic assets that Goldman was dealing in because they might have been in their pension funds or might have been their city that invested in them and lost money. Generally speaking the other side of the deal, one of those Goldman deals, was always an institutional investor. Why – let just put the argument for – why wouldn’t those institutional investors have done the necessary homework to understand that Goldman was selling them junk? MCARDLE: Well, I think the fair argument is these investments are incredibly complicated and it’s very hard to know what happened. But the fact is that we generally assume that an institutional investor, like a pension fund or a hedge fund has the intelligence, the know-how and the motivation to figure out what’s going on in the other side. So we don’t offer them the same protections as we offer ordinary investors. VELSHI: That’s not true anymore, right? I mean, now I think we’ve probably learned that it seems they don’t — TAIBBI: If I could jump in there, Ali. There’s definitely a legal standard that requires an investment bank like Goldman Sachs to disclose adverse elements of the deal, like for instance, they had a $2 billion short position against — VELSHI: Let’s spell that out, you’re saying that they had a legal obligation to tell somebody they were selling an investment to they had a $2 billion bet against that investment? TAIBBI: Absolutely. MCARDLE: If I could jump in here — TAIBBI: Goldman actually in that deal even said affirmatively that their interests were aligned with the client because they had a $6 million stake in that same deal. But they didn’t disclose they had a $2 billion bet against the deal. VELSHI: Megan? MCARDLE: Look, inherently someone who is selling you an asset is going short that asset, right? They aren’t owning it anymore and you presume that there is a reason for that. Markets are made by people betting one way or the other and what you have to do — VELSHI: I’m not sure that makes sense for an investment firm, though. MCARDLE: What we have to do is disclose. It’s perfectly legal for a dealership to sell me a car I’m not going to like or that’s too expensive for me. It’s not legal for them to sell me a car that’s not what they represented it as. And we set certain legal minimum standards and that’s what happened here. At least, John Losera and all the devils who are here argues that he actually has gone through these documents and says that a lot of these things were disclosed. That in fact Goldman laid out in very lengthy detail all of the ways in which this could go wrong. I haven’t read the disclosure documents personally. TAIBBI: I have. MCARDLE: There are two competing versions of the story. VELSHI: Matt, you’ve read them? TAIBBI: Well, I’ve read all the documents in this report and I’ve also talked to some of the principals in this entire story. I definitely know some of the client that is Goldman was talking about were completely blindsided by the fact that, for instance. They were buying assets out of Goldman’s own book when they were told that Goldman was buying these assets off the street. They definitely did not make key disclosures that they were legally obligated to make. VELSHI: Megan, I think Matt wants to see somebody from Goldman arrested or charged with something. What do you think has to happen? Because clearly whether or not you think Goldman broke any laws, any of us who followed this got the impression that they were perhaps not dealing in the best interests of some of their clients. MCARDLE: I think they probably aren’t, just like most vendors aren’t always — look to their own interests before the interests of their clients. But here’s the thing. I think there is a real desire to have a sense of closure on this, a desire to track down a villain, figure out who did this to us. And I think that really underweight the power of human stupidity and poor system design. It can produce terrible results even without anyone doing — TAIBBI: You’re not ashamed to do the job that you do. How you were not ashamed to apologize for these billionaires who ripped off ordinary people. I can’t believe that — MCARDLE: There weren’t ordinary people. A hedge fund is not an ordinary — TAIBBI: How about this? They ripped off a billion dollar from Morgan Stanley, which then in turn took a $10 billion bailout from the taxpayer ergo they ripped us off. How do you answer that? MCARDLE: How do I answer that? I think that, you know, in fact, they do deals with big banks. There are questions about how we should have done those bailouts. But the fact is it’s not Goldman Sachs’ responsibility to make sure that Morgan Stanley makes money. More than it’s the Atlantic’s responsibility to make sure that Rolling Stone makes money. VELSHI: It’s a good point, yes. I think I’ll just leave it right there. TAIBBI: I don’t know how that makes sense on any planet in any universe. That is just insane. VELSHI: Last word to you, Megan? MCARDLE: Well, you know, I think that it’s very morally satisfying to try to track down people who did things to us. But I think in the end, justice wants to make a case that Goldman didn’t just do something that we don’t like. They want to make a case that Goldman did something that was actually illegal at the time when they did and that’s a lot harder standard to meet. In fact like in the aftermath of this crisis, what you get is a lot of cases brought that fail Eliot Spitzer didn’t make his cases. A lot of Rudy Giuliani’s cases ultimately fell apart. Even some of the Enron stuff has been falling apart. And so it’s actually a lot more difficult to track down — VELSHI: Not that this conversation could have been a lot better, but we would hope was that somebody from Goldman Sachs would participate in the conversation. They didn’t. We reached out to them and they gave us the following statement. Let me read it for you, with respect to Senator Levin’s remarks about misleading testimony with respect to the big short, the testimony we gave was truthful and accurate and this is confirmed by the subcommittee’s own report. The report references testimony from Goldman Sachs witnesses who repeatedly and consistently acknowledge that they were intermittently net short during 2007. We did not have massive net short positions because our short positions were largely offset by our long positions. And our financial results clearly demonstrate this point. I will just explain to our viewers obviously that long positions mean you’re buying something with the understanding or hope that it will increase in value. When you are short on something, you are betting that it is going to lose value and that’s what this hinges on. Matt Taibbi is a contributing editor with “Rolling Stone.” Megan McArdle is business and economics editor with “The Atlantic.” Obviously, the article’s worth a read because it stirs the pot a little bit.

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Mississippi floods threaten New Orleans

US army engineers open floodgate in attempt to save New Orleans from the river’s worst flooding since 1927 Residents in swampy areas of Louisiana’s Cajun country are waiting for the rising waters of the Mississippi to engulf their homes, after army engineers opened a key floodgate in an attempt to save New Orleans from the river’s worst flooding since 1927. Units of the US Army Corps of Engineers opened up the first gate on a structure known as the Morganza spillway, sending about 10,000 cubic feet of water per second into the Atchafalaya river basin. Water shot through the gates like a waterfall, hurling fish through the froth, witnesses said. The Associated Press reported that 100 acres were under a foot of water in the space of 30 minutes. It was the first time the corps, which is in charge of managing the Mississippi flood controls, had to resort to the spillway since 1973. Engineers were expected to open up at least two more gates on Sunday. The operation was designed to divert water from the Mississippi, and reduce pressure on the levees protecting the cities of Baton Rouge and New Orleans. The planned diversion will send the water into the Atchafalaya Basin, and then onwards to the oil service town of Morgan City. But it will drown about 3,000 square miles of low-lying, swampy land beneath up to 25 feet of water. A number of small towns in what is known as Louisiana’s Cajun country will be destroyed, driving 25,000 people out of homes they have occupied for generations. In towns such as Krotz Springs, one of the first areas on the flood path, authorities issued mandatory evacuation orders. “Everyone in the affected areas MUST BE OUT!” Don Menard, the president of St Landry parish said in his directive. Residents of one small town, Butte La Rose, told reporters they had been advised to pack for the long haul. “They told us to move as though we were moving – period – not coming back, not to so much as leave a toothpick behind,” said one woman. In other small towns in the path of the flood waters, people loaded up truckloads with sand bags to fortify levees. More of the 125 spillway’s gates will be opened in the coming days, with the gusher of water rising to 125,000 cubic feet per second, as the high waters of the Mississippi roll towards New Orleans. The river is forecast to reach its peak at New Orleans on May 23, and then take up to 2 weeks to pour out into the Gulf of Mexico. “It’s a marathon, not a sprint,” Major General Michael Walsh, the corps chief told reporters. “There is huge pressure on the system as we work the water through.” The system of spillways, which was first planned after catastrophic flooding in the 1920s, was designed to save oil refineries and chemical plants around Baton Rouge, as well as the population hub of New Orleans. But the decision to open the gates was a cruel choice, said Mitch Landrieu, the mayor of New Orleans. “It doesn’t make us feel any good that [by] protecting New Orleans, other folks are going to get hurt,” he told reporters But without the flood operations, New Orleans would face up to 20 feet of water pouring atop its levees, and floods far worse than Hurricane Katrina in 2005. Heavy snows in the mid-west, and record rain storms in April, have swollen the Mississippi to historic records. Engineers were forced earlier this month to act on two flood contingencies – blowing up a levee around the town of Cairo, Illinois, and opening up another Louisiana spillway. Flooding Louisiana Natural disasters and extreme weather United States Suzanne Goldenberg guardian.co.uk

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This means the area surrounding the Fukushima plant should have been evacuated right away — but wasn’t. And this, of course, is the problem when something as potentially catastrophic as a nuclear power plant is run by the private sector, whose executives define safety standards as buying enough politicians to cover your ass. Tokyo Electric Power Co. concealed data showing spikes in radiation levels at the Fukushima No. 1 nuclear power plant in March, one day before a hydrogen explosion injured seven workers. The Asahi Shimbun obtained a 100-page internal TEPCO report containing minute-to-minute data on radiation levels at the plant as well as pressure and water levels inside the No. 3 reactor from March 11 to April 30. The data has never been released by the company that operates the stricken plant. The unpublished information shows that at 1:17 p.m. on March 13, 300 millisieverts of radiation per hour was detected inside a double-entry door at the No. 3 reactor building. At 2:31 p.m., the radiation level was measured at 300 millisieverts or higher per hour to the north of the door. Both levels were well above the upper limit of 250 millisieverts for an entire year under the plant’s safety standards for workers. But the workers who were trying to bring the situation under control at the plant were not informed of the levels.

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David Gregory Accuses Gingrich of Racism for Calling Obama a ‘Food Stamp President’

As NewsBusters has been reporting for several months, Obama-loving media are doing their darnedest to depict every potential Republican presidential candidate as a racist. Doing his part, NBC's David Gregory on Sunday's “Meet the Press” accused Newt Gingrich of racism for having called Barack Obama “The most successful food stamp president in American history” (video follows with transcript and commentary): DAVID GREGORY, HOST: What, what about jobs? Jobless rate now at 9 percent. You gave a speech on Friday in Georgia, and you said the following about this president: (Videotape) NEWT GINGRICH: You want to be a country that creates food stamps, in which case frankly Obama's is an enormous success. The most successful food stamp president in American history. Or do you want to be a country that creates paychecks? (End videotape) GREGORY: First of all, you gave a speech in Georgia with language a lot of people think could be coded racially-tinged language, calling the president, the first black president, a food stamp president. GINGRICH: Oh, come on, David. GREGORY: What did you mean? What was the point? REP. GINGRICH: That's, that's bizarre. That–this kind of automatic reference to racism, this is the president of the United States. The president of the United States has to be held accountable. Now, the idea that–and what I said is factually true. Forty-seven million Americans are on food stamps. One out of every six Americans is on food stamps. And to hide behind the charge of racism? I have–I have never said anything about President Obama which is racist. Gingrich and all Republicans having the nerve to toss their hats into the ring better get used to this kind of question because absolutely every criticism they offer about the current White House resident in the next seventeen-plus months is going to be tied to the color of Obama's skin. It really is disgraceful that Americans have to be subjected to this nonsense in the year 2011. Our nation has very serious problems – probably the most serious since World War II. Media members like Gregory are constantly asking where the adults are in Washington willing to face these problems head on. Yet whenever someone on the right side of the aisle tries to do exactly that, he or she is immediately accused of racism. Maybe Gregory and his Obama-loving colleagues are the ones that need to grow up. (H/T Amanda Carpenter ) *****Update: For those interested in the demographics of food stamp usage, the Carsey Institute at the University of New Hampshire did an interesting study in 2005. They found that in rural areas, 53 percent of food stamp recipients were white as compared to 27 percent black. In urban areas, this breakdown was 34 percent white to 35 percent black. As such, despite Gregory's insinuation, food stamp usage is not a racial issue at all and shouldn't be depicted as such.

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David Gregory Accuses Gingrich of Racism for Calling Obama a ‘Food Stamp President’

As NewsBusters has been reporting for several months, Obama-loving media are doing their darnedest to depict every potential Republican presidential candidate as a racist. Doing his part, NBC's David Gregory on Sunday's “Meet the Press” accused Newt Gingrich of racism for having called Barack Obama “The most successful food stamp president in American history” (video follows with transcript and commentary): DAVID GREGORY, HOST: What, what about jobs? Jobless rate now at 9 percent. You gave a speech on Friday in Georgia, and you said the following about this president: (Videotape) NEWT GINGRICH: You want to be a country that creates food stamps, in which case frankly Obama's is an enormous success. The most successful food stamp president in American history. Or do you want to be a country that creates paychecks? (End videotape) GREGORY: First of all, you gave a speech in Georgia with language a lot of people think could be coded racially-tinged language, calling the president, the first black president, a food stamp president. GINGRICH: Oh, come on, David. GREGORY: What did you mean? What was the point? REP. GINGRICH: That's, that's bizarre. That–this kind of automatic reference to racism, this is the president of the United States. The president of the United States has to be held accountable. Now, the idea that–and what I said is factually true. Forty-seven million Americans are on food stamps. One out of every six Americans is on food stamps. And to hide behind the charge of racism? I have–I have never said anything about President Obama which is racist. Gingrich and all Republicans having the nerve to toss their hats into the ring better get used to this kind of question because absolutely every criticism they offer about the current White House resident in the next seventeen-plus months is going to be tied to the color of Obama's skin. It really is disgraceful that Americans have to be subjected to this nonsense in the year 2011. Our nation has very serious problems – probably the most serious since World War II. Media members like Gregory are constantly asking where the adults are in Washington willing to face these problems head on. Yet whenever someone on the right side of the aisle tries to do exactly that, he or she is immediately accused of racism. Maybe Gregory and his Obama-loving colleagues are the ones that need to grow up. (H/T Amanda Carpenter ) *****Update: For those interested in the demographics of food stamp usage, the Carsey Institute at the University of New Hampshire did an interesting study in 2005. They found that in rural areas, 53 percent of food stamp recipients were white as compared to 27 percent black. In urban areas, this breakdown was 34 percent white to 35 percent black. As such, despite Gregory's insinuation, food stamp usage is not a racial issue at all and shouldn't be depicted as such.

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Wigan Athletic 3-2 West Ham United | Premier League match report

With a plane circling overhead towing a banner that proclaimed “Avram Grant Millwall Legend”, West Ham were relegated from the Premier League in circumstances that will justify those calling for the dismissal of the club’s manager. Two up with a little over half an hour remaining, West Ham saw the lead snatched from them and were beaten with almost the final kick of the game when Robert Green, who had made some vital blocks, allowed a long-range, speculative shot from Charles N’Zogbia to slide under his body. The final whistle and a joyous pitch invasion followed. The match had a frantic feel to it from the start but it was West Ham who seized control through Demba Ba and Thomas Hitzlsperger. First, the German sent over a deep cross that Ba headed home from close range almost unmarked. Then the German delivered a free-kick that James Tomkins headed across the face of the goal and Ba bundled home between two covering defenders. Wigan always enjoyed the bulk of possession but it seemed that some superlative keeping from Green, particularly when denying a point-blank header from Hugo Rodallega, would be decisive. However, at half-time, Roberto Martínez made a double substitution that helped swing the game, while Grant’s talisman, Scott Parker remained on the bench until the 61st minute. Four minutes before Wigan had pulled a goal back when Tomkins bundled over N’Zogbia and the Frenchman drove the free-kick he had won so spectacularly into the roof of Green’s net. Moments later Ba had a one-on-one to seal his hat-trick and effectively the match. He drove his shot straight at Ali al-Habsi. Wigan were soon level and, when Connor Sammon slid between two West Ham defenders to turn home his shot, all the desire and inspiration drained from Grant’s side. Ben Watson struck the post before N’Zogbia sealed the match and, by the end, the 4,500 who had travelled from London were chanting: “Avram on the dole”. They will not have to wait long. Premier League Wigan Athletic West Ham United Tim Rich guardian.co.uk

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British defence chiefs want Nato to step up attacks on Gaddafi’s forces

General Sir David Richards says Nato must consider increasing range of legitimate targets in Libya or settle for stalemate British defence chiefs are applying pressure on other Nato countries to intensify the bombing campaign against Muammar Gaddafi’s regime amid deepening concerns that military action will end in stalemate. Nearly two months since the start of air strikes against Libya, Nato chiefs fear divisions within the alliance, and at the UN, will lead to fewer air strikes just at a time when, they claim, the regime is starting to feel the pinch and even its core support showing signs of cracking. They want Nato to expand its targets, as the UK and a number of smaller Nato nations already have done, to include more static targets such as command and control centres and not only those posing a direct and clear threat to Libyan civilians, such as tanks and artillery. Well-placed British government officials made this plain on Sunday as General Sir David Richards, chief of the defence staff, said that he wanted the rules of engagement changed so that attacks can be launched against the infrastructure propping up Gaddafi’s regime. “The vice is closing on Gaddafi, but we need to increase the pressure further through more intense military action,” Richards told the Sunday Telegraph. “We now have to tighten the vice to demonstrate to Gaddafi that the game is up and he must go,” he added. “We need to do more. “If we do not up the ante now there is a risk that the conflict could result in Gaddafi clinging to power.” Richards added: “At present Nato is not attacking infrastructure targets in Libya. But if we want to increase the pressure on Gaddafi’s regime then we need to give serious consideration to increasing the range of targets we can hit.” Though he said that Nato forces were not targeting Gaddafi directly, the Libyan leader could become a legitimate target if he was discovered directing attacks against Libyan civilians. The UN security council resolution allowed Nato to use “all necessary means” to protect civilians. “We are not targeting Gaddafi directly, but if it happened that he was in a command and control centre that was hit by Nato and he was killed, then that is within the rules,” Richards said. Taking a much tougher line than earlier in the conflict when he made clear Gaddafi was not a target – and was sharply criticised by Downing Street for his pains – Richards now says that Gaddafi cannot be allowed to remain in power. “If Nato withdraws its forces with Gaddafi still in power, then there is a significant risk that he will launch fresh attacks against the rebels,” he said. Significantly, Richards added: “The prime minister and I are on the same page. We are in total agreement that the only solution to this conflict is for Gaddafi to go.” Liam Fox, the defence secretary, admitted on Sunday that a number of Nato countries were “less happy” with Britain’s decision to extend the number of targets, to include command and control centres and what he called “intelligence networks”. Speaking on BBC1′s Politics Show, he said: “Not all Nato countries take the same view.” Fox added that if Gaddafi regime commanders chose to be in a command and control centre it was “a risk they take”. Concern among senior defence officials is likely to be increased further as Baroness Amos, former Labour cabinet minister and now top UN official for humanitarian relief, responded to Richards’s comments by calling for a temporary halt to hostilities. She called for a political solution as soon as possible, adding that “any upscaling of the fighting will have a significant impact on the people”. Adrian Mitchell, the international development secretary, said it was not the coalition engaged in air strikes, but Gaddafi”s forces, who were preventing medical supplies and food from being distributed. The military campaign was not about “targeting individuals”, he said. Libya Muammar Gaddafi Military Defence policy Nato General Sir David Richards David Cameron Richard Norton-Taylor guardian.co.uk

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