enlarge Via David Dayen , news that the Democratic Party of Wisconsin is pushing to disqualify three recall petitions against Democratic state Senators. They say while their recall efforts have been volunteer-led and above-board, the Republican campaigns featured fraud perpetrated by out-of-state sources. I kind of figured there was some funny business last month when Republicans announced one of their recall offices had been burglarized and the entire story stunk to high heaven. If there’s anything I know, it’s that Republicans will do anything to win: A formal challenge to be filed later today against Republican recall petitions asks the Government Accountability Board to disqualify thousands of invalid signatures, and reject recall elections against three Democratic state senators, because widespread and systemic election fraud has tainted the entire GOP operation. “The overwhelming evidence clearly shows a pervasive pattern of election fraud committed by the shady out-of-state organization hired by Republicans to collect recall petitions,” said Senate Democratic Leader Mark Miller. “Thousands of Wisconsin citizens fell victim to lies and misinformation spread by the circulators, and the papers submitted by this operation contain a river of omissions and wrong information.” Miller continued: “We believe that when the facts are reviewed, the GAB will throw out thousands of flawed signatures because they were fraudulent or defective. The vast depth of this misconduct calls into question the legitimacy of every signature collected by these circulators, and shows that the GOP effort failed to gather the valid signatures needed for recall elections.” Miller and the lead counsel for the DPW plan to reveal more at a news conference later this afternoon. But essentially, here’s their argument. An out-of-state firm named Kennedy Enterprises (editor’s note: This is the kind of stuff Kennedy Enterprises does ) got $100,000 from the Republican Party of Wisconsin to manage the recall petitions. The DPW has sampled the three Senate districts where Republicans were successful in getting the required signatures, and found that between 6.6% and 9.2% of the signers were “misled into signing the petition or asserted they had never signed.” The signature gatherers repeatedly lied about the petition, saying it was for work on a local park, or to recall a Republican Senator instead of a Democrat, or even to recall Governor Scott Walker. There are forged signatures of dead people in the petitions, names with fake addresses, and out-of-state signature gatherers with high incidences of fraud.
Continue reading …Academia should be a bastion of intellectual freedom, but this retraction shows writers are expected to keep the status quo Playwrights who speak out often suffer a backlash. It happened to Harold Pinter in Britain, and the latest example is Tony Kushner in the US . He was supposed to receive an honorary degree from John Jay College, part of the City University of New York (CUNY), but it’s now been vetoed because of a protest from a single trustee who claims that Kushner is anti-Israel. Kushner himself has robustly denied the charge that he ever advocated a boycott of Israel, however critical he may be of Israeli defence policies. It makes you wonder whether any self-respecting intellectual will in future want to accept an honorary degree from a college that seems so ready to stifle open debate. The irony is that Kushner is, among many other things, a profoundly Jewish playwright. He first came to attention with A Bright Room Called Day , which showed a group of friends in Weimar Germany in 1932-33 disintegrating under the pressure of Hitler’s rise to power. And Kushner’s most famous work, Angels in America , pits a conservative Mormon against a liberal Jew, depicts closeted gay McCarthy henchman Roy Cohn as both a political Machiavelli and an incarnation of life force, and rejects stasis in favour of reconciliation, hope and the possibility of change. What is absurd is that Kushner should be penalised at all for speaking out on the subject of modern Israel. But society likes its playwright to know their place. Pinter was constantly mocked in the media for attacking the lies and falsehoods of American foreign policy and its British supporters – until, that is, the invasion of Iraq on dubious legal and moral grounds woke people up to the truth of what he was saying. Like Kushner, Pinter was also highly critical of modern Israel, while affirming its right to exist . The key difference is that Kushner is operating in a society where support for Israeli policy is embedded in the national psyche and where any criticism is tantamount to heresy. I still find the withdrawal of Kushner’s proposed degree deeply depressing. It seems to be based on a totally inaccurate representation of Kushner’s actual views. It denies the fact that a playwright is a citizen as well as an artist and has a perfect right to express an opinion on public issues. Above all, it undermines the idea that, in a nation such as the USA, academia is the last bastion of intellectual freedom. In the end, it simply makes CUNY look puny. Tony Kushner Theatre Harold Pinter Higher education New York Israel United States Michael Billington guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Union urges meeting with London Underground after one of two drivers whose sacking sparked planned strikes wins tribunal Tube union chiefs have demanded a meeting with London Underground in an effort to avert strike action after one of two drivers at the centre of an employment row won his claim of unfair dismissal. Eamonn Lynch, a Bakerloo line driver sacked for breaking safety rules, took his case to an employment tribunal, claiming his dismissal was based on his trade union activities. London Underground said on Friday that a meeting with the Rail Maritime and Transport (RMT) union could not be held before the tribunal released its ruling on whether Lynch should be reinstated, expected on 3 June. The first of six planned walkouts, which threaten travel chaos for millions of passengers, is scheduled for 16 May. The RMT has backed the case of the second sacked driver, Arwyn Thomas, who is claiming unfair dismissal after being sacked for “unacceptable and abusive behaviour” towards colleagues. His tribunal result is expected later this month. Bob Crow, general secretary of the RMT, said: “We welcome Eamonn’s victory in the tribunal and we are calling for an immediate meeting with London Underground in the light of the ruling that he was unfairly dismissed for his trade union activities. “With the clear parallel with Arywn Thomas’s case, there is now an urgent need for London Underground to meet with the RMT to set out a plan for a return to work that can avoid plunging London into two blocks of strike action that everyone knows will lead to massive disruption. “The tribunal has found in favour of the RMT, justice has been done and now we need to meet with the company to finalise arrangements that can enable us to move forwards as quickly as possible.” An RMT spokesman said: “London Underground has no excuse not to reinstate these two drivers. It will ultimately be a decision for our executive, but if we can get these guys back to work we can move on with looking again at these dates for industrial action.” London Underground said it would study the outcome of the employment tribunal judgment and “carefully consider our next steps”. It added in a statement: “Whilst the tribunal has made a finding of unfair dismissal, it has also found that on 9 August 2010 Mr Lynch breached an established and significant safety rule and was in part culpable or blameworthy for his actions.” London Underground urged the RMT to call off the threatened strikes . Its managing director, Mike Brown, said: “As we have always said, disputes involving individuals should be dealt with through the mechanisms established for that purpose. “While that process takes its course, there remains no reason whatsoever for the RMT leadership to seek to disrupt Londoners by threatening strike action.” The first set of strike dates are: • 9.01pm on Monday 16 May to 11.59am on Tuesday 17 May • 12 noon on Wednesday 18 May to 11.59am on Thursday 19 May • 12 noon to 9pm on Friday 20 May The second set of dates are: • 9.01pm on Monday 13 June to 11.59am on Tuesday 14 June • 12 noon on Wednesday 15 June to 11.59am on Thursday 16 June • 12 noon to 9pm on Friday 17 June The move follows a 2-1 vote in favour of industrial action over the sackings by RMT members. They held a 24-hour strike in January over their dismissals and several other stoppages have taken place in recent months. Lynch is the RMT’s health and safety representative for Bakerloo line drivers and Thomas is a longstanding RMT activist. Transport for London (TfL) alleged Lynch breached safety rules while Thomas was abusive towards colleagues. The RMT said Lynch had an “unblemished” 15-year service record while Thomas had been an RMT member for 29 years and both were “clearcut cases of victimisation on the grounds of trade union activity”. Brown said on Wednesday that only 29% of the 1,300 drivers balloted had voted in favour of strike action. “The RMT leadership seems determined to disrupt London and its economy over several days. As ever, London Underground and TfL will work to keep London moving if the strikes go ahead,” he said. Meanwhile, the threat of further disruption to tube travellers grew on Friday when the RMT said it would ballot Jubilee line drivers for industrial action over changes to safety procedures. London Transport Trade unions Bob Crow guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Government’s advisory committee says it is time to look elsewhere for causes of leukaemia clusters Nuclear power plants have been cleared of causing childhood cancers by experts from the government’s advisory committee, which says experts should now be looking for other reasons, perhaps infections or even viruses, to explain leukaemia clusters in their vicinity. The 14th report (pdf) from COMARE, the committee on medical aspects of radiation in the environment , reviewed again all childhood leukaemia cases reported around 13 nuclear power plants in the UK. It was a response to a request last year from the department of health and devolved authorities as the UK prepares to build the most ambitious new fleet of nuclear reactors in Europe . Not only did the committee find no increase in cases linked to emissions, but it also found similar numbers of leukaemia in proximity to sites that had been considered for nuclear power plants, but where building did not take place. There were 20 cases of leukaemia in a child under five within a five-kilometre radius of one of the 13 power plants and 430 cases within 25 kikometres. There were 26 cases within five kilometres of one of the seven potential sites and 492 within 25 kilometres. Prof Alex Elliott, chair of COMARE, said it was time to look elsewhere for causes. “We should be keeping a watching brief but we think we should be looking at other places,” he said. There are other theories about the possible causes of cancer near power plants. Socioeconomic links have been established – the young children who develop leukaemia are more likely to be from higher socio-economic groups, which are a larger proportion of the staff working in nuclear installations. Childhood cancer is also less likely in over-populated areas, which is where the UK tends to site its power stations. Among the other possible explanations are the infection hypothesis of Leo Kinlan, which suggests that the cancers are triggered by the arrival of a group of people to work in the plant and their families carrying microorganisms from other parts of the country. A new unpublished US study has suggested a virus may be to blame. The COMARE report will be a blow to the Heysham Anti-Nuclear Alliance, which in March launched a legally aided action against the government’s nuclear expansion programme . Their case centres on a German study, which COMARE was specifically asked to review. The Kinderkrebs in der Umgebung von Kernkraftwerken (KIIK) study found a link between leukemia clusters and German power plants. But COMARE says KIIK was heavily influenced by cancer cases diagnosed between 1980 and 1990 and did not take fully into account later years when the risk was lower. KIIK was a case control study, not a geographical study of the sort COMARE undertakes, said Elliott. Nuclear power Health Cancer Children Sarah Boseley guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …• Spaniard’s family releases a statement on his website • Ballesteros had surgery on a brain tumour in 2008 The family of the golfing legend Seve Ballesteros has reported a “severe deterioration” in the 54-year-old’s health in his continuing battle against cancer. Ballesteros has been receiving medical treatment since 2008, when he was diagnosed with a brain tumour. Since then, the five-times major winner has undergone four operations and chemotherapy. The family’s statement, issued on Friday via Ballesteros’s website , said: “The family of Seve Ballesteros can report a severe deterioration in his neurological condition. The family will provide information on his state of health when more news becomes available.” Ballesteros, who announced his retirement from golf in 2007, collapsed at Madrid airport in October 2008 and two days later came confirmation that he had a brain tumour. He underwent an initial 12-hour operation, but further surgery was necessary before he was well enough to return home and begin chemotherapy and radiotherapy treatment. “I am very motivated and working hard, although I am aware that my recovery will be slow and therefore I need to be patient and have a lot of determination,” he said at the time. “For these reasons I am following strictly all the instructions that the doctors are giving me. Besides, the physiotherapists are doing a great job on me and I feel better every day.” After a second course of chemotherapy at Madrid’s La Paz hospital in February 2009 he said on his website: “The results of the check-up were really positive, better even than the first ones.” In December 2009 he appeared on television to receive the BBC’s lifetime achievement award at the Sports Personality of the Year event. He won the Open three times, the Masters twice and played an inspirational role in the Ryder Cup, helping Europe to lift the trophy in 1985, 1987, 1989 and 1995 before captaining them to another victory at Valderrama two years later. Ballesteros turned professional in 1974 at the age of 16 and made his first huge impact two years later by finishing second in the Open alongside Jack Nicklaus at Royal Birkdale. His first major title came in the 1979 Open at Royal Lytham; he then became Masters champion in 1980 and 1983 and lifted the Claret Jug again at St Andrews in 1984 – perhaps his greatest moment – and back at Lytham in 1988. After a total of 87 tournament wins, his retirement came following years of battling arthritic back and knee problems. He was planning a farewell appearance for British fans at last year’s Open at St Andrews – not in the main event, but in the four-hole Champions’ Challenge – but was not well enough to travel. Only last month Phil Mickelson decided on a Spanish menu for the champions’ dinner at the Masters in Augusta in honour of Ballesteros. Seve Ballesteros Golf Ewan Murray guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …• Player is latest celebrity to obtain privacy injunction • MP rumoured to have taken out superinjunction Another Premier League footballer has become the latest high profile individual to take out a privacy injunction to prevent details of an alleged extra-marital affair being made public. The footballer, who cannot be named, is married and allegedly had an affair with Kimberley West, an 18-year-old who claims she had a three-month relationship with the highly paid sports star after meeting in a nightclub. The footballer becomes the latest high profile figure to obtain a gagging order to prevent potentially embarrassing details about their private life being published. The high court granted the order on Thursday. Separately, it emerged yesterday that an MP was rumoured to have taken out a superinjunction, allegedly to prevent embarrassing details about his life being exposed. The MP, whose identity nor party membership can be named, joins others including a TV star, a leading actor, and other Premier League football players to have obtained a gagging order against the media. The respected BBC journalist Andrew Marr last month revealed that he too had obtained a wide-ranging superinjunction to protect details of his private life being made public. The Conservative MP Matthew Offord on Thursday raised the apparent increased use of injunctions in the House of Commons. He said: “There has been much public discussion on the increasing use of superinjunctions and the ability of judges to decide policy instead of elected parliamentarians. Is the leader of the house aware of the anomaly this creates, if, as has been rumoured, a member of this place seeks a superinjunction to prevent discussion of their activities?” Sir George Young, the leader of the house, acknowledged that it is a “very important issue about how we balance, on the one hand, an individual’s right to privacy and, on the other hand, the freedom of expression and transparency”. •
Continue reading …Prosecutors want Nicole Minetti, Emilio Fede and Lele Mora to be put on trial, charged with aiding and abetting prostitution Prosecutors in Milan asked on Friday for an Anglo-Italian former showgirl and two other people to be put on trial, charged with procuring 33 young women for so-called bunga bunga sex sessions at the home of Italy’s prime minister, Silvio Berlusconi. Nicole Minetti, whose mother was born in Britain, denies any wrongdoing. So do the other two accused: Emilio Fede, the best-known newsreader on Berlusconi’s television channels, and Lele Mora, Italy’s leading showbusiness talent scout. Minetti, a former dancer who qualified as a dental hygienist, met the prime minister during his dental surgery to repair the injuries he suffered in December 2009 when he was hit in the face by a mentally unstable assailant. She subsequently became a candidate for his Freedom People party and holds a seat in the Lombardy regional assembly. Prosecutors who have been overseeing an investigation of the three since last year asked a judge in Milan to put them on trial, charged with aiding and abetting prostitution “from early 2009 until January 2011″. The latter date means it is alleged that any wrongdoing continued right up until Berlusconi was indicted, and for three months after news of the investigation into his private life was made public. One of the women who visited his home, Moroccan-born Karima el-Mahroug, was aged 17 at the time and thus under the minimum age for prostitution. She is at the centre of the case involving Berlusconi himself. On 6 April, the 74 year-old TV magnate-turned-conservative politician was put on trial, accused of paying an underage prostitute and then abusing his official position to cover up the alleged offence. In a 36-page document submitted to the judge, the prosecutors separately accused the three of aiding and abetting juvenile prostitution from September 2009 until May 2010. The earlier refers to a beauty contest on Sicily in which Mahroug, then 16, was a contestant. Fede was among the judges. The prosecution claims that he lured her to Milan where Mora found her work dancing in nightclubs. Berlusconi and Mahroug, who also calls herself “Ruby the heartstealer”, have denied having sex with each other. Silvio Berlusconi Italy Europe John Hooper guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Coroner finds none of 52 victims could have been saved by faster rescue, but MI5 failings made terrorists’ job easier None of the 52 people who died in the 7 July terrorist attacks could have been saved even if help from the emergency services had arrived earlier, an inquest into their deaths has ruled. But confusion in MI5′s system of assessing terrorist suspects and questions over the security services’ record-keeping continued to cause concern almost six years after 7/7 attacks, the coroner said. Four bombs exploded in central London on 7 July 2005. Delivering verdicts of unlawful killing for all the victims, Lady Justice Hallett ruled that no failings from any of the emergency services involved had contributed to the deaths. “The medical and scientific evidence in relation to all 52 victims leads to only one sad conclusion,” she said. “I am satisfied on the balance of probabilities that each of them would have died whatever time the emergency services reached and rescued them.” The coroner criticised MI5, saying she did not accept that the Security Service had made every possible improvement since 7/7. During the inquest a senior MI5 officer, referred to as witness G, and James Eadie QC, counsel for the home secretary and MI5, argued the agency had learned from its mistakes. In a rule 43 report – which requires MI5 to respond to her concerns – Hallett said: “I feel unable to accept Mr Eadie and Witness G’s assurances that all is now well [within the security services].” Hallett added that “confusion [had] reigned” within the security services about photographs of two of the bombers that were shown to informants almost a year before the atrocity. She called badly cropped images “dreadful”. “I fully expect the Security Service to review their procedures to ensure that good quality images are shown and that whatever went wrong on this occasion does not happen again.” Hallett said she was “troubled” by witness G’s evidence that it was not normal practice for photos to be revisited when new sources became available. She criticised MI5′s record-keeping. “Witness G himself had to visit retired desk officers at their homes to discover as best he could what they had done and why.” She called for better communication and sharing of information about terrorist subjects between MI5 and the police. She called for a line to be drawn under the attacks and rejected calls for a public inquiry, saying the inquest had unearthed material not previously seen. “I am not aware of our having left any reasonable stone unturned. I would hope that these proceedings would be an end to the investigation of events,” she said. Speaking to two courtrooms packed with the bereaved families, survivors, members of the emergency services and the media, she began by thanking the families “for their understanding, their support and their quiet dignity” during the five-month inquest. She thanked the survivors who gave evidence, many of whom where still traumatised. “During the course of hearing evidence I ran out of superlatives in describing the courage and heroism of many who survived,” she said. The victims’ families had called for 32 recommendations they believed would prevent deaths in the event of another major terrorist attack. Some are likely to be disappointed with Hallett’s decision to make only nine recommendations under rule 43 of the Coroners Rules 1984. The coroner expressed “grave concerns” that, with London a major terrorist target and set to host the Olympics in 2012, there was dangerously low funding for volunteer helicopter medics and the London Air Ambulance (LAA). The LAA saved lives at the Tavistock Square bomb site but lack of funding meant a similar response today would fall “woefully short of the response that LAA was able to muster on 7/7″. “I am concerned that London, a major global capital, host to the Olympics in 2012 and a prime terrorist target, should find itself dependent upon corporate funding and charitable donations,” she said. She called for a review of how Transport for London contacts the emergency services after a terrorist attack. The inquest learned that a total failure in the underground radio network resulted in a unclear and incomplete picture of the nature of the attacks reaching both the London Underground control room and the emergency services immediately after the explosions. Hallett echoed the families’ requests for inter-agency training for major incidents; the establishment of a common rendezvous point at the scene of an emergency to be manned by London Underground; a review of how TfL confirms that rail line power is switched off; and a review of whether underground trains should carry first-aid kits and stretchers. The London ambulance service was told it should review its existing triage system so victims could be given immediate basic medical intervention. She criticised the use of complex acronyms and jargon by the emergency services, saying it may “confuse and impede communication”. “In a life-threatening situation everyone should be able to understand what everyone else is saying and what they are trying to do.” In a statement the home secretary, Theresa May said she hoped the inquest would provide comfort to the families and survivors. The coroner said she found no evidence MI5 knew of and failed to prevent the bombings. The government and security services would learn from the 7 July attacks and had insisted “there have been a considerable number of improvements put in place since 2005″. Immediately after the hearing, families represented by Russell Jones & Walker welcomed the verdict of unlawful killing. In a statement James Carlton, representing 10 of the 30 families said: “The coroner’s ruling marks the end of a lengthy process for the families.” “The coroner should be commended for her efforts in ensuring that these proceedings have been conducted at all times in a dignified, timely and sensitive manner to those who lost their lives to this tragedy.” 7 July London attacks Crime UK security and terrorism Terrorism policy Alexandra Topping Esther Addley guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Terror group posts message on extremist websites saying it will remain ‘a curse chasing the Americans and their agents’ Al-Qaida has confirmed the death of its leader, Osama bin Laden, and vowed veangance, pledging in a statement posted on militant websites that his blood “will not be wasted”. In what is apparently the first official reaction from the militant Isamist group since Bin Laden was gunned down by US special forces troops who raided his hideout in the Pakistani town of Abbottabad, the group called on the people of Pakistan, “where Sheik Osama was killed”, to rise up against their leaders. The group would soon release an audio message from Bin Laden recorded a week before his death, said the statement, dated 3 May and signed by “the general leadership of al-Qaida”. There was no independent confirmation that the message was authentic but it was posted on websites through which al-Qaida habitually issues statements. It continued: “We stress that the blood of the holy warrior sheikh, Osama bin Laden, God bless him, is precious to us and to all Muslims and will not go in vain. “We will remain, God willing, a curse chasing the Americans and their agents, following them outside and inside their countries. Soon, God willing, their happiness will turn to sadness, their blood will be mingled with their tears.” The statement came as US intelligence offials said Bin Laden had remained in close touch with the rest of the al-Qaida network from his safe house and had continued to plot potential terrorist attacks, including one against the US railway system. The information reportedly comes from the initial analysis of files seized after he was killed. The US Navy Seals who shot Bin Laden in the early hours of Monday took away a mass of digital information on computers, hard drives and storage discs, as well as paper documents. An initial trawl through the files indicate Bin Laden was not a mere figurehead for the militant group but remained closely involved in nuts-and-bolts planning, according to various US reports. As late as February last year, he seemingly took part in drawing up a previously unknown plot to attack a US commuter rail network, possibly on the 10th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks or another landmark date such as Christmas or new year, intelligence officials told US newspapers. While the plot, apparently involving an attempt to derail a train by tampering with tracks, appeared to be only speculative, the seized documents seem to show Bin Laden was in regular contact with al-Qaida operatives from his house in Abbottababd. Before the raid, some analysts speculated that he had become an increasingly marginalised figure during his long presumed exile in remote tribal regions along the Afghan border. Details have also emerged about the painstaking surveillance operation that preceded the raid on Bin Laden’s hideout, in which a CIA team spied on the house for months from a property they rented nearby. The officers scanned the compound using telephoto lenses and infrared imaging equipment, and attempted to listen in on conversations inside, anonymous US officials told the New York Times . The surveillance team regularly spotted a tall man walking through the compound’s courtyard, although they never confirmed whether this was Bin Laden. Such was the cost of the operation that the CIA requested tens of millions of dollars in extra funding from Congress in December last year, officials told the Washington Post . Staff at an FBI lab at the marine corps base in Quantico, Virginia, have been poring over the trove of data as quickly as possible in case they describe any imminent attacks, but as yet there have been no specific alerts. “He [Bin Laden] wasn’t just a figurehead,” one unnamed US official told the NYT. “He continued to plot and plan, to come up with ideas about targets and to communicate those ideas to other senior al-Qaida leaders.” The department of homeland security has ordered additional security at airports and other transport hubs, and issued a precautionary note about the railway plot. “As of February 2010, al-Qaida was allegedly contemplating conducting an operation against trains at an unspecified location in the United States on the 10th anniversary of 11 September 2001,” it said. “As one option, al-Qaida was looking into trying to tip a train by tampering with the rails so that the train would fall off the track at either a valley or a bridge.” A department spokesman told the Washington Post that the plot appeared speculative: “We have no information of any imminent terrorist threat to the US rail sector.” The documents might prove more fruitful in leading the US to other senior al-Qaida figures, including Ayman al-Zawariri, al-Qaida’s deputy leader. “We have lots of information on him,” Mike Rogers, the Republican congressman who chairs the House intelligence committee, told the Washington Post . “I can’t say it’s imminent, but I do believe we’re hot on the trail.” A day after laying a wreath to the victims of 11 September during a largely subdued visit to New York, Barack Obama is to travel to Fort Campbell, Kentucky, to meet the Seals who raided Bin Laden’s compound. Osama bin Laden al-Qaida Global terrorism US national security United States US foreign policy Peter Walker guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Click here to view this media The Republicans are holding their first presidential primary debate tonight in South Carolina and apparently a few of the participants didn’t mind doubling down on the torture card. Chris Wallace asks for a show of hands and who would be willing to continue the Bush administration’s use of waterboarding. Herman Cain, Tim Pawlenty and Rick Santorum all raised their hands. And guess who’s sponsoring the event tonight? The John Birch Society and the Oath Keepers. Seriously. Digby has more here . Jed Lewinson is live blogging the debate over at Daily KOS if you’d like to follow along — First Republican presidential debate .
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