Click here to view this media Republicans inside the Beltway were all bent out of shape this week over the fact that President Obama, in his speech on immigration earlier this week, called them out over their absurd gamesmanship on the issue: PRESIDENT OBAMA: So, here’s the point. I want everybody to listen carefully to this. We have gone above and beyond what was requested by the very Republicans who said they supported broader reform as long as we got serious about enforcement. All the stuff they asked for, we’ve done. But even though we’ve answered these concerns, I’ve got to say I suspect there are still going to be some who are trying to move the goal posts on us one more time. You know, they said we needed to triple the Border Patrol. Or now they’re going to say we need to quadruple the Border Patrol. Or they’ll want a higher fence. Maybe they’ll need a moat. (Laughter.) Maybe they want alligators in the moat. (Laughter.) They’ll never be satisfied. And I understand that. That’s politics. This caused quite the huff among Republicans, who have been nothing if not crassly and openly partisan in their handling of immigration issues during Obama’s tenure, abandoning all the pretense of bipartisanship they had adopted during the Bush years (see especially John McCain in this regard ). And it gave an excuse for the last of the “bipartisan” crowd, Sen. Richard Lugar, to join the Tea Party element in opposing the DREAM Act : In a statement, Lugar spokesman Mark Helmke blamed Democrats for turning immigration into a partisan issue. “President Obama’s appearance in Texas framed immigration as a divisive election issue instead of attempting a legitimate debate on comprehensive reform,” wrote Helmke. “Ridiculing Republicans was clearly a partisan push that effectively stops a productive discussion about comprehensive immigration reform and the DREAM Act before the 2012 election.” Actually, the shoe is on the other foot: As long as Lugar’s fellow Republicans insist on calling the DREAM Act “amnesty for illegals” and denouncing any effort to do something that is so clearly a no-brainer in the Right Thing To Do Department, then it’s clear Obama can count on having a productive discussion about these issues from Republicans for the foreseeable future — that is, until at least sometime after the 2012 elections. Even more noteworthy is that Obama wasn’t really saying anything controversial — he was pointing out the cold reality on the ground. There was a remarkable exchange in this regard the other morning on Fox News, when Alisyn Camerota — filling in Megyn Kelly on America Live — had a following conversation with reliable RightWingabot Monica Crowley on the subject. And Camerota (uncharacteristically for most Fox hosts) wanted to know exactly how Republicans could respond to Obama’s salient points here. And Crowley sputtered. At first she tried to deflect the answer into the familiar ground of “he’s talking up immigration to help his re-election chances,” but Camerota kept pushing — and Crowley pretty much came up blank, sputtering an incoherent garble of whatever fake “facts” she could grasp out of the thin air: CAMEROTA: OK, so to his point: More deportations, more boots on the ground, reinforcing the fence, and they’re never satisfied. What do Republicans want? CROWLEY: Well, I’m sure that that bit of sarcasm there with that bit about the moat with the alligators will go a long way to getting Republican support for whatever he wants to do. He’s looking at his poll numbers, first and foremost, because, as I said, there’s no way the the DREAM Act or any comprehensive immigration reform is gonna make it through, certainly before 2012. And what’s happening, when he’s looking at his core constituency, he’s seeing a pretty significant dropoff among Hispanic voters. He won the Hispanic vote by two thirds in 2008. It is now down among Hispanics, his support is down to low to mid-50s, Ali, so what he’s seeing is a need to shore up that core constituency, because he cannot win re-election without it. CAMEROTA: OK, but to his point — what more do Republicans want than what he has done? CROWLEY: The … [sigh] … He deserves credit for what he has done so far. However, that does not solve the problem. The chaos on the border has actually gotten worse over the last many years than better. And so if you look and you talk to law-enforcement officials, where they’re on the front lines, you talk to folks who are living on the front lines in Arizona and New Mexico and Texas — they will tell you that the violence spillover — 35,000 people have been killed in recent years over the border — that violence spillover — illegals coming across the border still at an unprecedented rate — a lot needs to be done. In reality, of course, there has been a sharp decline in border crossings in recent years, particularly as the U.S. economy his spiraled downward in a recession and unemployment has skyrocketed. But then, reality has never stopped people like Crowley from misreporting fake “facts” on Fox. It’s a feature, not a bug. Look, we’ll never, NEVER be able to have an honest conversation with right-wingers about immigration, because they refuse to argue it honestly. Their recent tactic has been to demand that “first we secure the border, then we can talk reform.” And then when all their demands are met, they just keep changing the goalposts. And then when they get called out on that, they claim we’re just being unfair and uncivil. Screw that. It’s time to figure out how to move on without them.
Continue reading …Departure underlines impasse of Israelis and Palestinians; Obama praises his role and earlier success in Northern Ireland The US Middle East peace envoy, George Mitchell, has resigned after failing to make any headway in resolving the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. He is to be replaced by his deputy, David Hale, the White House said on Friday. Mitchell, age 77, was a central figure in securing peace in Northern Ireland, but has been unable to replicate that success in the Middle East. His departure underlines the lack of any immediate prospects for a resumption of serious negotiations between the Israelis and Palestinians. Such is the lack of any diplomatic movement that the envoy has not bothered visiting the region since December. In his letter of resignation to Barack Obama, he said his original intention had been to serve two years and he had done longer than that. Obama appointed him special envoy in January 2009, two days after his own inauguration, a time of widespread optimism that some of the world’s most intractable problems might be solved. “I strongly support your vision of comprehensive peace in the Middle East and thank you for giving me the opportunity to be part of your administration. It has been an honour for me to again serve our country,” Mitchell said. His resignation is effective from next Friday. Obama described Mitchell’s mission as “the toughest job imaginable” and praised him for leaving “a proud legacy of dedicated public service” both in Northern Ireland and in the Middle East. The White House insisted that his departure did not mean an end to Obama’s efforts to find a solution. Obama is scheduled to make a major speech on the Middle East next Thursday, but it is to be directed broadly, reaching out again to the Islamic world and the post-Osama bin Laden landscape, rather than focusing on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Secretary of state Hillary Clinton, joining in praise for Mitchell, said the state department would miss his “steady leadership and wise counsel”. She added: “We will carry forward his commitment to pursue a comprehensive peace in the Middle East.” The former senator established a reputation for skilful negotiation, patience and resilience when he successfully helped broker the Northern Ireland peace deal. Former president Bill Clinton sent him to the Middle East in 2000; he produced a report a year later calling on Israel to stop Jewish settler expansion in the West Bank and the Palestinians to end violence. Israel is at present refusing to negotiate with the new Palestinian unity government, citing the presence of Hamas. But even before that, there was almost no sign of any progress, with the Palestinians objecting in particular to Israel continuing to authorise settler expansion in the West Bank. The Israeli prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu, is due to visit the US at the end of next week but no movement on peace negotiations is expected. As well as the politics of the Middle East, Mitchell had to contend with the internal politics of Washington, seeing much of his portfolio disappear when Obama appointed the veteran Middle East negotiator, Dennis Ross, to his national security team last year. Marina Ottaway, director of the Middle East programme at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, blamed a complex set of circumstances rather than anything Mitchell did or did not do, and accused Israel of inflexibility. “What is surprising is that he did not resign earlier … I do not think he ever had anything to work with. He did not have any cards to play.” Daniel Levy, co-director of the Middle East task force at the New America Foundation, said of Mitchell’s resignation: “Either he has advanced a certain approach that has not been taken up or, basically, that the chances of negotiation are diminishing by the day and he is not hanging about.” US foreign policy George Mitchell Middle East peace talks Israel Palestinian territories Middle East Northern Ireland Obama administration US politics United States Ewen MacAskill guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Largest rally in recent weeks comes on day ousted president’s wife detained on suspicion of illegally acquiring wealth Tens of thousands of Egyptians returned to Tahrir Square in Cairo on Friday in a show of national unity against sectarian tension, and to demonstrate their solidarity with the Palestinian people. The largest rally to be held in the Egyptian capital in recent weeks took place as Suzanne Mubarak, wife of ousted president Hosni Mubarak, was detained by investigators for 15 days on suspicion of illegally acquiring wealth. Cheers erupted in the square as news broke of Mrs Mubarak’s incarceration. The 70-year-old former first lady now joins her husband, two sons and more than 20 other ministers and business figures from the Mubarak regime on the list of those being investigated for crimes against the state. Last week former interior minister Habib Al-Adly was sentenced to 12 years in prison for financial fraud. He also stands accused of having ordered the killing of peaceful protesters, a charge that can carry the death penalty. In a sign of how vibrant and fragmented Egypt’s political landscape has become since the toppling of Mubarak in February, protesters came together on Friday to support a multitude of causes from local anti-corruption campaigns to unity with Arab uprisings elsewhere in the region. Following a week of sectarian violence in Cairo in which at least 15 people were killed in clashes at a church in the poor neighbourhood of Imbaba, many demonstrators held aloft placards depicting the Christian cross and Muslim crescent, and chanted: “We are all Egyptians.” On Wednesday the UN secretary general, Ban Ki-moon, said he was disturbed by the religious fighting, warning that it could threaten progress towards a “more free, just and harmonious Egypt”. Egypt’s Coptic Christian community comprises about 10% of the population, and claims it has long been the target of severe discrimination in the Muslim-majority country. “I think there are two themes playing out in Tahrir today,” said Hossam Bahgat, a human rights campaigner and director of the Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights. “One is the search for a lost moment: in every speech on the stage and on every leaflet handed out there are words to the effect of ‘do you remember [the anti-Mubarak protests in] January and February when we stood here together? What happened to that moment?’ “The second is the realisation that even if we succeed in re-creating that moment, we need to build a bridge between on the one hand that sentiment of unity which once overwhelmed Tahrir, and on the other the poorer rural and urban neighbourhoods, where it takes only the slightest thing or most absurd rumour to unleash large-scale communal violence.” Egypt’s interim government has arrested almost 200 suspects in the aftermath of the Imbaba violence, charging 23 of them with terrorism and premeditated murder. The clashes began when Salafist Muslims marched on a church where they claimed a female Copt who had converted to Islam was being held hostage, prompting a street battle in which shots were fired and Molotov cocktails thrown. An inquiry blamed hardline Salafists for the attacks, but hinted that elements of the old regime seeking to sow discord may also have played a part in the violence. “The policies of the Mubarak regime did actively contribute to a rise in sectarian tension,” argued Bahgat. “But at the same time we need to acknowledge that whoever has been involved in incidents of sectarian violence over the past few weeks are the same people that have been engaging in such violence for years. They are not hired thugs, they are not organised Islamic entities, and they are not elements of the previous regime – they are us. And until we recognise that they are us, the solution will remain elusive.” Protesters in Tahrir also hoisted aloft Palestinian flags to demonstrate their support for a recent Fatah-Hamas reconciliation agreement signed in Cairo, just two days before a planned march to the Gaza border to mark the 63rd anniversary of the “nakba” – an Arabic word meaning “catastrophe” which is used to describe the founding of Israel. As part of a region-wide set of demonstrations in favour of Palestinian refugees being allowed to return home, protest leaders in Egypt have called for a “third intifada” to be launched on Sunday, with a mass march from Cairo to the Rafah border post. Hamas leader Khaled Meshaal has discouraged the event, arguing that in its present state of transition Egypt cannot carry the “burden” of a “direct clash with the Zionist entity”. The Egyptian government has put all entry points to the Sinai Peninsula on high alert in an effort to stop the march. “Our chants against sectarian tension and in support of the Palestinians are not side-issues,” said Ibrahim Houdaiby, 27, a political activist who was formerly a member of the Muslim Brotherhood. “Without solidarity between Christians and Muslims, without justice for Palestine, our revolution will die. Today you’re witnessing an attempt to keep it alive.” Egypt Hosni Mubarak Middle East Arab and Middle East unrest Protest Africa Jack Shenker guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Click here to view this media While I commend Sen. John McCain for speaking out on the Senate floor this week condemning those who have come out since the death of Osama bin Laden defending the use of waterboarding — or as they want to call it, “enhanced interrogation” — and claiming that the torture somehow worked to gain intelligence, McCain is still on the wrong side of the issue with saying he doesn’t believe anyone should be prosecuted. Jonathan Turley rightfully pointed that out to Ed Schultz tonight. He also expressed his disdain for the Obama administration and Attorney General Eric Holder’s decision not to investigate and hold members of the Bush administration accountable for war crimes, which I share. TURLEY: One of the most powerful things about McCain’s speech is the truism that lies beneath it where he says, you know, being tortured is simply immoral. You know, I think much of the world is shocked by the debate that we’re having. This whole question of did it yield usable intelligence has long been rejected by the world and by the United States and its treaties as a viable argument for torture. Torture isn’t a war crime because it’s never beneficial. It’s a war crime because it’s immoral, because it is a war crime. And you can imagine how we look to the world in this debate when we have all of these officials who not only say that they ordered torture, but are trying to sell the American people on how good torture really is. I also always cynically wonder about John McCain’s political motivations any time he looks like he’s doing the right thing. While I have no doubt that his personal experience with being tortured as a prisoner of war has as much to do with him speaking out as anything, he also still really doesn’t have any use for any of the Bushies or George W. Bush after what they did to him when he ran against Bush for president and Karl Rove ran that whisper campaign against him in South Carolina . McCain always seems to have a penchant for doing the right thing if it means getting some digs in on his political enemies and ignoring wrong doings when it’s politically convenient as well . TPM has more on his Senate speech here: McCain Denounces Torture: ‘The Very Idea Of America’ Is At Stake (VIDEO) : Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) took to the Senate floor Thursday to condemn waterboarding and other torture techniques, saying that the debate over these techniques is ultimately “about morality. What is at stake here it the very idea of America.” In the time since Osama bin Laden was killed, a number of conservatives have sought to give credit for his death to George W. Bush, specifically for his decision to torture prisoners for information that they say ultimately led to bin Laden. McCain, who was tortured when he was a POW during the Vietnam War, has long been opposed to the interrogation methods implemented during the Bush Administration. He continued that he would oppose any legislation that would authorize a return to waterboarding or any other methods of interrogation that he believes “are torture, or cruel, inhuman, and degrading, and as such unworthy and injurious to our country.” McCain did offer some praise for those who implemented the techniques, saying that he understands why they were approved, “and I know that those who approved them, and those who employed them in the interrogation of captured terrorists were admirably dedicated to protecting the American people from harm.” He also added that he doesn’t believe anyone should be prosecuted for having used torture in the past . McCain expressed similar sentiments in his op-ed at The Washington Post here — Bin Laden’s death and the debate over torture . And here’s more from Turley’s blog from guest writer Lawrence Rafferty — Torture is still Torture, and it is Still Illegal.
Continue reading …Steve Field, the GP appointed to head the NHS listening exercise, warns that key services could be destroyed The senior doctor called in by David Cameron to review the government’s health reforms has dismissed them as unworkable and “destabilising” in provisional conclusions that could fatally undermine the plans. Prof Steve Field, chairman of the NHS Future Forum – set up last month to undertake the coalition’s “listening exercise” – flatly rejects the health secretary’s plan to compel hospitals to compete for patients and income, which he says could “destroy key services”. The proposal, contained in Andrew Lansley’s health and social care bill, has led key medical organisations to warn that it will lead to the breakup of the NHS and betray the service’s founding principles. In an interview with the Guardian, Field says Lansley’s plan to make the NHS regulator Monitor’s primary duty to enforce competition between healthcare providers should be scrapped. Instead it should be obliged to do the opposite, by promoting co-operation and collaboration and the integration of health services. “If you had a free market, that would destroy essential services in very big hospitals but also might destroy the services that need to be provided in small hospitals,” says Field. “The risk in going forward [with the bill] as it is, is [of] destabilising the NHS at a local level. It would lead to some hospitals not being able to continue as they are. If you were to say ‘we’re going to go out to competition for vascular surgery services’, University Hospital Birmingham wouldn’t be able to run their own trauma centre, for example, because you wouldn’t have the staff and the skills on site to do things and the volume of procedures needed to ensure clinical standards remain high.” UHB is one of England’s best-regarded hospitals and its trauma service, which treats injured military personnel from Afghanistan and Iraq, is widely admired. “We need some significant changes in how the role of Monitor is described and enacted in order to reassure patients and doctors and nurses”, Field says. The prime minister has become concerned that the bill’s promotion of competition has allowed its many critics to claim that the health service will be privatised, undermining Tory attempts to detoxify their reputation on the NHS. In a series of policy suggestions that will help Cameron deliver the “significant and substantial” changes to the bill he promised this week, Field suggests that there should be agreed lists of “designated” – protected – core services that each hospital in England had to provide to ensure the NHS remained a truly national service. For example, each smaller hospital should have to have an A&E and maternity unit, unless there was another close by, he said. Smaller hospitals could be given subsidies to ensure their long-term future. Field’s group of 44 health experts will deliver its final report to Cameron, Nick Clegg and Lansley at the end of the month. Fields comments should help neutralise the anxieties on competition raised by key medical organisations such as the British Medical Association and the Royal College of Physicians, and reassure sceptics that his review is meaningful. This is the first time he has publicly aired the initial conclusions he has reached after weeks of discussions with scores of NHS stakeholder organisations, health professionals and patients. His intervention will increase the pressure on Lansley, whose hold on his job has become the subject of speculation among MPs and within the NHS. If Field’s suggestions help persuade Cameron and Clegg to stage a U-turn then Lansley, who has become increasingly isolated during the listening exercise, may not survive. In remarks that will be closely studied in Downing Street, Field also suggests: • All the new GP consortiums should have a reserved place on the board for a nurse and a representative of local doctors, to reduce the alienation felt among health professionals. • A series of new “clinical cabinets” should be set up containing local health, social care and council representatives. They would advise consortiums, NHS hospitals and public health departments. • GPs do not have the skills to commission several key sorts of healthcare‚ “including maternity services and end-of-life care”, so in those areas will need to do so in new “networks” – groups of consortiums, overseen by the NHS National Commissioning Board. • Plans to overhaul medical education and training will be slowed down. • A new levy could be imposed on private hospitals, which do not train doctors, to fund the NHS’s training of future medics. However, while Field rejects the most controversial element of the Lansley plans, he also risks angering medical groups by suggesting that competition should still be increased in the NHS to drive up standards and give patients more choice. The limit on what semi-independent foundation trust hospitals can earn should be lifted and would benefit rather than endanger the NHS, he says. His backing for greater use of private and charitable providers of physiotherapy, opthamology and end-of-life care is also in line with Cameron’s view that the NHS must undergo major reform. Field criticises Lansley indirectly by stating that most of the controversy over the bill “is because the vision for what the government are trying to do with the NHS isn’t clear enough to the average person on the street”. But he also castigates unnamed senior doctors for “shroud-waving” and scaring patients by exaggerating the bill’s threat to the NHS. It is unclear if the NHS Future Forum’s final report will contain significant enough changes to assuage the Liberal Democrats, whose leader made clear last week that his MPs would block the bill unless they were happy with the scale of the rethink. A Department of Health spokesman said: “We recognise that people have some big questions about how competition in the NHS should work. Steve Field is quite right to say we’re looking for changes to make the legislation more clear and effective. We have always been very clear that it is not a free market, it’s a social and a regulated market. Competition must be on quality and not on price, [securing] the best quality services for patients.” NHS Health Health policy Andrew Lansley GPs Denis Campbell guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Former Labour MP is released from jail and says his treatment was inconsistent with that of David Laws The former Labour MP Eric Illsley, who was jailed in February for wrongly claiming £14,500 in expenses, has been released, highlighting differences between his treatment and that of the former Lib Dem cabinet minister David Laws. Within hours of leaving jail, Illsley made pugnacious comments about his imprisonment, comparing it to the treatment of Laws. Laws is to be suspended from parliament for seven days but will ultimately be allowed to carry on with his career. Leaving prison on Friday Illsley said he had been made a scapegoat. A year-long inquiry ruled that Laws “seriously and extensively” broke the rules to claim rent which was paid to his partner over a period of seven years. He has already paid back nearly £60,000 and was forced to apologise to the Commons. In February, Illsley pleaded guilty to three charges of false accounting, admitting to dishonestly claiming payments for insurance, repairs, utility bills and council tax at his second home between 2005 and 2008. Speaking at his home in Pogmoor, the former MP for Barnsley told Radio 5 Live: “It does seem rather strange that I have done that and then the next person who was found to have broken the rules in relation to expenses is simply allowed to carry on with his career by apologising to the House. “I ask the question, why couldn’t I have been taken the same way?” “What a lot of people didn’t know, and still don’t know, is that only a handful of MPs were ever investigated. My case didn’t allow me to highlight the fact that I hadn’t done anything different from a lot of other MPs who had simply kept their heads down and carried on with their careers and were quite happy to see me as a scapegoat.” Illsley went to jail for claiming on a second home £100 more per week than he was entitled to, over a three-year period. He will serve out the rest of his 12-month sentence under home curfew. Eric Illsley MPs’ expenses David Laws House of Commons guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Business, environment and ‘big society’ projects running months behind schedule only six months after they were published The government’s legislative agenda appears to have slipped in the last six months as it publishes business plans showing 87 revised deadlines and targets missed. The second publication of the government’s progress reports – an innovation devised by David Cameron to make government more efficient and transport – shows its business, environment and “big society” projects to be running months behind schedule only six months after their timetables were originally published. The documents also link for the first time the long awaited public services white paper – which it admits will eventually be six months late – has been held up by the “pause” and “listening exercise” taking place in the NHS reforms. First launched last November, the new regimes were heralded as a power shift from the centre to the people who would have a new ability to scrutinise the progress of government work. The No 10 website suggested the second round of plans had been reframed to reflect the government’s growing focus on social mobility and economic growth. “They also now include actions on growth and social mobility, and some minor presentation changes, including incorporating milestones into the main section of the business plans,” it says. The cabinet office was the department whose agenda had slipped the most with 17 rearranged targets. Next the business department with 11; education with 10, transport with 9 and Defra with 8. Delays include: • Plans for a new Public Data Corporation, to bring together all data services across government, are delayed from last month to the end of the year • Legislation to allow loans to be paid to people in further education have slipped from September 2011 to May 2012 • A white paper to reduce regulatory burdens on industry is delayed from May this year to October • The full establishment of the “big society” bank, using dormant bank account funds to invest in social enterprises, is delayed a year. An interim fund will be put in place. While the government reflected the well known pause in the NHS as it conducts a “listening exercise”, for the first time it made explicit there was a link between the newly imposed “pause” in the NHS reforms and the long awaited and much delayed wider public service reform white paper. It had been expected in January but now the business plan reveal it will be published in July. For the first time the documents acknowledge that it is on hold while the NHS reforms are on hold, suggesting that the two are inextricably linked. There has been some speculation that the link is Lib Dem opposition to privatisation. Not all date changes are delayed. A move towards individual voter registration, to tighten up the security of the electoral system, is being fast-tracked. Public services policy Health NHS Public sector cuts Health policy Education policy Allegra Stratton Polly Curtis guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Boy, this just gets better and better, doesn’t it? So those reports of very high radioactive leaks, the ones TEPCO denied, were accurate if the reactor core was exposed. There was indeed a nuclear meltdown: Tokyo Electric Power Company says the No.1 reactor at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant is believed to be in a state of “meltdown”. The utility company said on Thursday that most of the fuel rods are likely to have melted and fallen to the bottom of the reactor . Earlier in the day, it found that the coolant water in the reactor is at a level which would completely expose nuclear fuel rods if they were in their normal position. The company believes the melted fuel has cooled down, judging from the reactor’s surface temperature. But it suspects the meltdown created a hole or holes in the bottom of the reacto r causing water to leak into the containment vessel. It also suspects the water is leaking into the reactor building. But don’t worry – even thought it’s reached Level 7, it’s “still not as bad as Chernobyl”!
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