Home » Archives by category » News » Politics (Page 1224)
Gaddafi forces renew Misrata attack

• Humanitarian aid cannot reach city’s harbour • Evacuees and casualties stranded in the assaults Muammar Gaddafi’s forces have bombarded Misrata with missiles and tank fire, preventing ships carrying humanitarian aid from entering the port for a fourth straight day. The sustained attacks on the port are causing deep concern in the city, which has been surrounded by Gaddafi’s troops on land for more than two months. Food, medical supplies and other aid can only be delivered through the harbour, while migrant workers and casualties can only be evacuated by boat. The shelling came as crowds gathered in Tripoli for the funeral of Gaddafi’s son Saif al-Arab and three of his grandchildren, who were killed in a Nato air strike on Saturday, according to the government. Gaddafi did not attend the funeral but his son Saif al-Islam did, watching as his brother’s coffin, covered in a green flag and flowers, was carried to the cemetery. The deaths triggered reprisal attacks on the French and British embassies in Tripoli, and the US diplomatic mission, for their role in the Nato mission. But in Misrata, where more than 1,000 people have killed since late February, there is increasing anger that Nato is not doing enough to destroy Gaddafi’s missile launchers that continue to pummel the city. A ferry chartered by the International Organisation for Migration has been forced to wait offshore since Saturday morning. It is due to collect at least 800 African workers who have been trying to escape the city for weeks, and who have been forced to endure the barrage of missiles in recent days. More than 30 hospital patients, four of them in intensive care, are also waiting to board the ship. “We know the only way to keep Misrata alive is to keep the harbour open,” said Hafed Makhlouf, the controller and ship pilot of the port. “Gaddafi realises this too, and knows that the only way to extinguish the revolution is by starving the people.” On Sunday, just hours after Makhlouf had pleaded for Nato to stop the attack on the port, it was pounded again by dozens of missiles that struck the land as well as the sea around the harbour mouth. A checkpoint on the road to the port was also destroyed, killing two guards. “To be honest, I am not that satisfied with Nato’s actions,” said Makhlouf, a navy veteran who has worked at the port since 1996. “The harbour has been nearly completely closed for days now.” But a few hours spent with Makhlouf in the controller’s office again highlighted the difficulties in communications between the rebels and Nato, which was illustrated last week when 12 rebel fighters were killed after straying into an area that had been cleared for bombing. “Nato, we have special information for you,” said Makhlouf, speaking quickly into the radio. “Do you have a warship close to the breakwater? It’s very urgent. Our men are going to fire.” The Nato radio operator answered immediately, promising to check. Makhlouf ran outside with his satellite phone and binoculars, scanning the harbour entrance. His phone rang: it was Nato confirming neither of its two frigates were that close to the port. Indeed, what the rebel lookouts had spotted was a group of doctors aboard a small boat that had been dispatched from a mother ship forced to remain far offshore. After losing the battle for Misrata’s city centre last week, loyalist forces have concentrated their efforts on shutting down the port, which Gaddafi says is used by rebels to bring in arms. They have been doing so, using small fishing boats from the eastern city of Benghazi but the vast majority of the incoming cargo has been food, drugs and other medical supplies. In addition to the missile attacks, Gaddafi has also attempted to sink some of the incoming ships using sea mines. According to Makhlouf, the rebels had received a tip on Thursday from Zleten, a town 30 miles west of Misrata, that three small microbuses had been spotted dropping off a crew of frogmen near the harbour. Makhlouf said he passed on the warning to the two Nato warships stationed off Misrata. At 4.30am on Friday, while he was asleep on the chair in his office, his radio crackled to life. It was Nato, saying it had spotted four small dinghies approaching Misrata at speed. “I asked Nato to act as I was sure it was a plot to destroy the warships, or other ships coming into Misrata,” said Makhlouf. He was right. The loyalist naval team was carrying several floating sea mines aboard two of the dinghies, which they sank about 1.5 miles offshore, directly in the shipping lane to Misrata. Nato said it had intercepted three mines, and disposed of them. Libya Muammar Gaddafi Arab and Middle East unrest Middle East Xan Rice guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
Fox & Friends wants to be sure everyone gives George W. Bush credit for Bin Laden’s death

Click here to view this media Fox & Friends had wall-to-wall coverage of the celebrations inspired by news of Osama bin Laden’s death this morning, and had on lots of analysts to discuss the Obama administration’s big victory in the so-called “war on terror”. To do that, strangely enough, they had on all sorts of commentators, including various politicians, such as Karl Rove, and featured statements from the likes of Dick Cheney. Oddly enough, not a single segment managed to include a Democratic politician or even one person from the Obama administration. Instead, what we heard all morning was how George W. Bush deserves credit too! They even ran a segment featuring Bush vowing in 2001 he would eventually get Bin Laden, with the longest time frame being a year from then. As Steve Benen puts it : There’s a fair amount of this rhetoric bouncing around this morning, and it’s not especially surprising — Republicans aren’t going to credit President Obama, regardless of merit, so it stands to reason they’ll try to bring George W. Bush into the picture. If this is going to be a new GOP talking point, we might as well set the record straight. In March 2002, just six months after 9/11, Bush said of bin Laden, “I truly am not that concerned about him…. You know, I just don’t spend that much time on him, to be honest with you.” In July 2006, we learned that the Bush administration closed its unit that had been hunting bin Laden. In September 2006, Bush told Fred Barnes, one of his most sycophantic media allies, that an “emphasis on bin Laden doesn’t fit with the administration’s strategy for combating terrorism.” And don’t even get me started on Bush’s failed strategy that allowed bin Laden to escape from Tora Bora . I’m happy to extend plenty of credit to all kinds of officials throughout the government, but crediting Bush’s “vigilance” on bin Laden is deeply silly. But it’s what we expect from Republicans. And especially the crew at F&F.

Continue reading …
Timeline: How the U.S. Found and Killed Osama bin Laden

Details of America’s plan to find and kill Osama bin Laden are still emerging. Here’s what reports have told us so far: May Day, 2011: 1pm EST – Top advisers began to gather at the White House in preparation for the strike. 2pm EST – Obama joins his advisers to review the final preparations. Meanwhile,

Continue reading …
Wanker Extraordinaire Joe Scarborough: Obama’s Base Didn’t Want Him To Catch Bin Laden

Click here to view this media (h/t Heather) I was out having dinner when I got the alert that President Obama was going to hold a late night press conference regarding National Security. As the media started to leak that the presser was to announce the capture and killing of Osama bin Laden, I looked at my husband and said, “Obama did what Bush couldn’t? Oh lord, the right wing nut jobs are going to lose it over this.” And anyone checking Twitter last night knows it didn’t take them long. But a very special Wanker Award really must go to MSNBC’s Morning Joe host Joe Scarborough, who took douchebagging sour grapes to an all new level this morning : Here, you know, I think Republicans should stand up and certainly salute Barack Obama for making some — again, for making some very tough choices that his own base did not want him to make . That takes courage, that takes leadership, and we saw the results of that courage and leadership saying no to his own base yesterday. [These are] decisions that he probably did not believe as a candidate he didn’t think he’d have to make…Going against his own ideological leanings to do what he believes he has to do. Okay, resisting the urge to say “bite me” for just a second, Joe’s petulant little brain probably forgot that POTUS was overwhelmingly elected by “his base” even after this little bit from Candidate Obama during the presidential debates: “What I have said is we’re going encourage democracy in Pakistan, expand our non-military aid to Pakistan so that they have more of a stake in working with us, but insisting that they go after these militants. And if we have Osama bin Laden in our sights and the Pakistani government is unable or unwilling to take them out, then I think that we have to act, and we will take them out. We will kill bin Laden. We will crush al-Qaida. That has to be our biggest national security priority.” You know what we call that, Joe? Mission REALLY Accomplished.

Continue reading …
AV ‘no’ campaign under spotlight over Tory funding

No to AV campaign’s cross-party claim under scrutiny as 42 of 53 named donors revealed to be from Tory sources The official campaign against AV has been almost exclusively funded by Conservative party donors, among them hedge-fund managers, bankers and big City names, raising new questions about the organisation’s claims to be cross-party and politically neutral. An analysis of the most complete set of accounts of donations reveals the extent of the no campaign’s reliance on the City for funding and how the Tory party fundraising machine helped shore up support for No to AV, which has seen it strengthening its lead in the polls in the runup to Thursday’s vote. The link between the no campaign and the Tory party’s financiers is causing some unease among Labour opponents to AV. But Margaret Beckett, the former foreign secretary, called it a “necessary evil” to counter the arguments of the better funded yes camp. Both campaigns provided the Guardian with every donation received in recent weeks, updating their previously declared donations. Despite the support of more than half of the Labour benches, 42 of the 53 named donors to the No to AV campaign are also Tory donors, having given £18.4m between them over the past decade. Nine are not readily identifiable in official donor records, a 10th is official funding from the electoral commission and just one is a Labour donor, the GMB union. Among the Tory names are seven Conservative peers including Lord Sainsbury of Preston Candover, who has donated nearly £3m to the Tories in six years. Jonathan Wood, who was the biggest shareholder in Northern Rock when it collapsed and later tried to sue the government over its handling of the bank’s nationalisation, and Lord Fink, the Tory co-treasurer who has been described as the “godfather” of the UK hedge-fund industry, have both come to the aid of the campaign in recent weeks, giving another £75,000 between them. Stockbroking and corporate finance group Shore Capital has given £25,000 while hedge fund Odey Asset Management Group, founded by Crispin Odey in 1991, has donated £20,000. Lord Wolfson, the boss of clothing chain Next, gave £25,000. John Nash, chairman of the healthcare company Care UK, has donated £25,000. His wife has previously donated more than £230,000 to the Tories including, controversially, sums to the health secretary Andrew Lansley, from whose health reforms the company could profit. Beckett, who is also a member of the committee on standards in public life, which is reviewing political funding, said: “The people who have the money are people who fund the Conservative party. “This is the truism in politics. I think it’s a pity, I’m sorry about it. Am I excited about it? No. “I would feel really uncomfortable being in a position where the yes campaign has £2m from the off and we aren’t able to have any funding to counter their arguments … It’s a necessary evil.” The figures reveal for the first time that the yes campaign has now outspent the anti-AV camp by £3.4m to £2.6m, the majority from the Joseph Rowntree Foundation and the Electoral Reform Society (ERS). George Osborne has accused the ERS of having a vested interest in a yes vote. The ERS’s commercial subsidiary Electoral Reform Services Ltd (ERSL) is printing the postal ballots for the referendum. The organisation has denied it would profit from a yes vote. The yes camp received an additional £236,579 from the ERS in the past month along with £50,000 from the venture capitalists C&C Alpha Group and £30,000 from Alan Parker, head of Brunswick PR, who has the distinction of being close to both Gordon Brown and David Cameron. It has also received £75,000 from Paul Marshall, the hedge fund manager and Liberal Democrat donor. But the No to AV figures do not include donations it received prior to the referendum bill passing in parliament. The law requires that the official campaigns name all donors who give more than £7,500 but it does not apply to the period before the bill got royal assent, during which No to AV lobbied to become the official no campaign. The yes figures include all sums received since it was set up last summer. Some Labour supporters of the no campaign called on the organisers to fully disclose all their funding sources. An aide to David Blunkett, the former home secretary, said: “He’s not involved in any of the administration of the no campaign. But he thinks both campaigns should disclose all their funding.” Martin Bell, the former MP for Tatton and supporter of the yes campaign, said: “We have a right to know who set them up and who bankrolled them from the start.” A spokesman for the No to AV campaign said: “There are people who donate – across the political divide – who prefer not to be named when they do. We have disclosed everyone who has donated from the time of royal assent in accord with our commitment. “Prior to that … there was no legal basis or reason to disclose our funding sources. It is a much easier job for the yes campaign because they are received funding from two opaque organisations.” AV referendum Party funding Electoral reform Conservatives Labour Liberal Democrats Margaret Beckett Polly Curtis Julia Kollewe guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
Joy Behar and Barbara Walters Politicize Bin Laden Death: Just Cancel 2012 Election Now

View co-hosts Joy Behar and Barbara Walters on Monday immediately politicized the killing of terrorist mastermind Osama bin Laden. After giving credit to Barack Obama for the successful strike, supposedly straight journalist Walters giddily announced, ” I would hate now to be a Republican candidate thinking of running.” Liberal comedienne Joy Behar played off a months-old comment by token conservative Elisabeth Hasselbeck. Behar crowed, “As Elisabeth always says, they should just skip the next election.”

Continue reading …

Lara Logan broke her silence on the sexual assault she suffered while reporting on the uprising in Egypt and her horrific story really highlights just what risks women take when attempting to do reporting around the world that their male counterparts do not have to endure and what a long way so many parts of our societies around the world have to go with their treatment of women. Listening to what she went through in Egypt on a day that should have been one of celebration was just truly horrifying. Lara Logan breaks silence on Cairo assault : The night of Feb. 11, the Egyptian dictatorship of Hosni Mubarak was falling. More than 100,000 people filled Cairo’s Tahrir Square in wild celebration. Among those in the crowd was our “60 Minutes” colleague, correspondent Lara Logan. Lara, a native of South Africa, is an experienced war reporter, but Tahrir Square became her most hazardous assignment. During the revolution, dozens of reporters were assaulted, often by agents of the regime. On the night of the 11th, a mob turned on Lara and her “60 Minutes” team and singled her out in a violent sexual assault. Since then, Lara has been recuperating with her husband and two children. Now, she is returning to work and she has decided to tell the story of what happened – just once – on “60 Minutes.” She’s speaking out, she tells us, to add her voice to those who confront sexual violence; to break what she calls the “code of silence.” Lara arrived in Cairo at a moment of triumph for Egypt. She didn’t imagine, in the hours before midnight, she would be fighting for her life. Full transcript at the link for 60 Minutes above.

Continue reading …
Reagan Proved Deficits Don’t Matter*

enlarge Credit: Gallup “Reagan,” Vice President Dick Cheney famously declared in 2002, “proved deficits don’t matter.” Unless, that is, a Democrat is in the White House . After all, while Ronald Reagan tripled the national debt and George W. Bush doubled it again , each Republican was rewarded with a second term in office. But as the Gallup polling data show, concern over the federal deficit hasn’t been this high since Democratic budget balancer Bill Clinton was in office. All of which suggest the Republicans’ born-again disdain for deficits ranks among the greatest – and most successful – political double-standards in recent memory. The triumph of the GOP messaging machine is reflected in a new Washington Post/Pew Research poll. In just the four months since the Republican majority took control of the House, the percentage of Americans believing the budget deficit is a major problem which must be addressed now catapulted from 70% to 81%. But even more revealing is an April Gallup surve y which showed the deficit (17%) rivaling the unemployment (19%) and the overall state of the economy (26%). And as it turns out, those cyclical swings in budget angst reflect the complete victory of the conservative deficit narrative. As predicted at the time, Reagan’s massive $749 billion supply-side tax cuts in 1981 quickly produced even more massive annual budget deficit s. Combined with his rapid increase in defense spending, Reagan delivered not the balanced budgets he promised, but record-settings deficits. Ultimately, Reagan was forced to repeatedly raised taxes to avert financial catastrophe, including the last major bipartisan tax code overhaul in 1986. By the time he left office in 1989, Ronald Reagan nonetheless more than equaled the entire debt burden produced by the previous 200 years of American history. It’s no wonder the Gipper cited the skyrocketing deficits he bequeathed to America as perhaps his greatest regret . Of course, President George H.W. Bush would come to lament them even more. Despite his legendary 1988 campaign pledge of “read my lips – no new taxes,” Bush the Elder just two years later was forced to break his promise. As PBS recounted: This “could mean a one term Presidency,” he confided to his diary, “but it’s that important for the country.” Bush 41 was right on both counts. For his part, Bill Clinton faced a double-whammy on the deficit issue. He was, after all, a Democrat. And in 1992 and again in 1996, Clinton was confronted with the third party candidacy -and the pie charts – of Ross Perot. But when President Clinton proposed boosting the top tax rate to 39.6% to help close the yawning Reagan/Bush budget gaps, every single Republican in the House and Senate voted no . While then Rep. John Kasich (R-OH) told Clinton and the Democrats, “your economic program is a job killer,” Dick Armey looked into his crystal ball to claim: “Clearly this is a job killer in the short run. The revenues forecast for this budget will not materialize; the costs of this budget will be greater than what is forecast. The deficit will be worse, and it is not a good omen for the American economy.” Most dramatic of all was Texas Senator Phil Gramm . The same man who led the 1990′s crusade to gut regulation of Wall Street and the IRS and later called America a “nation of whiners,” boldly – and wrongly – predicted: “I believe hundreds of thousands of people are going to lose their jobs…I believe Bill Clinton will be one of those people.” As it turned out, not so much. In 1996, Bill Clinton buried Bob Dole. Then in his second term, he buried the budget deficit as well. Then came George W. Bush , who promised in his 2001 message to Congress: At the end of those 10 years, we will have paid down all the debt that is available to retire. That is more debt repaid more quickly than has ever been repaid by any nation at any time in history. Instead, President Bush produced red ink as far as the eye can see. After inheriting a federal budget in the black and CBO forecast of a $5.6 trillion surplus over 10 years, President George W. Bush quickly set about dismantling the progress made under Bill Clinton. Even with two unfunded wars and the similarly unpaid Medicare prescription drug benefit, Bush’s $1.4 trillion tax cut in 2001, followed by a $550 billion second round in 2003, accounted for half of the yawning budget deficits he produced. As the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities explained, if made permanent those Bush tax cuts if made permanent, would add more to the national debt over the next decade than the impact of Iraq, Afghanistan, the recession, the stimulus and TARP – combined . During his presidency, Republicans in Congress voted seven times to raise the debt ceiling, the last to $11.3 trillion . By the time George W. Bush ambled out of the White House, he left his successor a $1.2 trillion budget deficit for 2009 . Barack Obama inherited two wars, a doubled national debt, and that $1.2 trillion deficit from George W. Bush. (As Orrin Hatch described the Bush years, “it was standard practice not to pay for things.”) But one thing was new: Republican concern about the budget deficit . “President Obama’s agenda, ambitious as it may be, is responsible for only a sliver of the deficits, despite what many of his Republican critics are saying,” the New York Times’ David Leonhardt explained in 2009, adding, “The economic growth under George W. Bush did not generate nearly enough tax revenue to pay for his agenda, which included tax cuts, the Iraq war, and Medicare prescription drug coverage.” That fall, former Reagan Treasury official Bruce Bartlett offered just that kind of honesty to the born again deficit virgins of his Republican Party. Noting that the FY2009 deficit of $1.4 trillion was solely due to lower tax revenues and not increased spending, Bartlett concluded: “I think there are grounds on which to criticize the Obama administration’s anti-recession actions. But spending too much is not one of them. Indeed, based on this analysis, it is pretty obvious that spending – real spending on things like public works – has been grossly inadequate. The idea that Reagan-style tax cuts would have done anything is just nuts.” Which is exactly right. Thanks to the steep recession, as the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) and others have documented time and again, the overall federal tax burden as a percentage of GDP is now below 15%, “levels that low have not been seen since 1950.” And as Jonathan Cohn and Paul Krugman each explained, it is not a mythical Obama “spending binge” but the drastic loss of revenue combined with automatic increases in mandated safety net outlays that is producing the current budget gaps. Nevertheless, only now – with Democrat Barack Obama in the Oval Office – Republicans like John Boehner warn Americans that “unsustainable debt and deficits threaten the prosperity of our children.” But despite their fear-mongering, the GOP would make the situation much, much worse. December’s two year tax cut compromise will add $800 billion to the deficits this year and next. And by making the Bush tax cuts permanent and lowering the top rate to 25%, the Ryan budget just passed by the House would drain over $4 trillion from the U.S. Treasury. Back in June, Rhode Island Democratic Senator Sheldon Whitehouse lamented the double-standard at work in the Republicans’ posturing on the national debt: “I understand the point about the debt and the deficit and the spending,” said Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse (D-R.I.). “But to me, that doesn’t have an enormous amount of credibility, because when President Clinton left office, he left an annual surplus… At the end of [George W. Bush's] term, we had $9 trillion in debt.” “We would have none of this if it hadn’t been for the Republican debt orgy that they went through,” Whitehouse said. Apparently, Sheldon Whitehouse and his Democratic allies don’t understand how this game works. As Cheney said, “Reagan proved deficits don’t matter.” Unless, of course, a Democrat is in the White House. (This piece also appears at Perrspectives .)

Continue reading …
Royals and sun boosts high street

Bunting, barbecues and bin-liners fly off the shelves for the spring party season The nation’s celebrations for the royal wedding and the long bank holiday weekend prompted a splurge in sales of picnic food, bunting, champagne, wine and barbecues. Waitrose reported a 23% rise in sales in the week to last Saturday, compared with the week following Easter last year. Bunting, union flags, paper plates and cups quickly sold out before Kate and William’s big day. The upmarket grocer’s royal trifle, created by celebrity chef Heston Blumenthal, also sold out. Meanwhile many customers made their own and sales of trifle sponges were up 370%. Post-party clean-ups prompted soaring sales of bin liners, foil and cling film. “The weather, the royal wedding and extra bank holiday combined mean that it’s been a good weekend for food and DIY retailers,” said Sarah Cordey of the British Retail Consortium. “There was a lot of promotional activity.” The unusually hot Easter weekend also provided a big boost, “not just in terms of people eating out but also new seasonal fashion,” she added. The BRC releases its latest retail sales figures next Tuesday. On the day before the wedding, Waitrose enjoyed its strongest sales on a Thursday outside the Christmas and new year period. This follows a record pre-Easter week, when sales climbed by 10.6% compared with the week before Easter last year. “The celebratory mood that swept the nation drove another week of strong sales, with the mid-week days showing particularly impressive uplifts as people got ready for royal wedding parties and the long weekend,” said Waitrose’s managing director Mark Price. “We’ve seen a wave of entertaining across the country, which would only be rivalled by the Christmas and new year period.” Retail industry Royal wedding DIY Supermarkets Julia Kollewe guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
Royals and sun boosts high street

Bunting, barbecues and bin-liners fly off the shelves for the spring party season The nation’s celebrations for the royal wedding and the long bank holiday weekend prompted a splurge in sales of picnic food, bunting, champagne, wine and barbecues. Waitrose reported a 23% rise in sales in the week to last Saturday, compared with the week following Easter last year. Bunting, union flags, paper plates and cups quickly sold out before Kate and William’s big day. The upmarket grocer’s royal trifle, created by celebrity chef Heston Blumenthal, also sold out. Meanwhile many customers made their own and sales of trifle sponges were up 370%. Post-party clean-ups prompted soaring sales of bin liners, foil and cling film. “The weather, the royal wedding and extra bank holiday combined mean that it’s been a good weekend for food and DIY retailers,” said Sarah Cordey of the British Retail Consortium. “There was a lot of promotional activity.” The unusually hot Easter weekend also provided a big boost, “not just in terms of people eating out but also new seasonal fashion,” she added. The BRC releases its latest retail sales figures next Tuesday. On the day before the wedding, Waitrose enjoyed its strongest sales on a Thursday outside the Christmas and new year period. This follows a record pre-Easter week, when sales climbed by 10.6% compared with the week before Easter last year. “The celebratory mood that swept the nation drove another week of strong sales, with the mid-week days showing particularly impressive uplifts as people got ready for royal wedding parties and the long weekend,” said Waitrose’s managing director Mark Price. “We’ve seen a wave of entertaining across the country, which would only be rivalled by the Christmas and new year period.” Retail industry Royal wedding DIY Supermarkets Julia Kollewe guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …