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BP faces shareholder revolt

As the Deepwater Horizon crisis continues, new chief executive Bob Dudley battles to turn the oil group around Bob Dudley, chief executive of BP, will face hostile shareholders on Thursday and, barring an 11th-hour breakthrough, the humiliating prospect of his controversial proposed alliance with Kremlin controlled oil company Rosneft collapsing. It was reported late on Wednesday that BP had broken off talks to buy out its Russian partners, the oligarchs who make up AAR and stand in the way of the Rosneft alliance being consummated. It is thought that AAR demanded too high a price for its 50% share in the joint venture TNK-BP in return for not blocking the alliance. A source close to AAR said: “It is up to BP to make a sensible proposal to get out of the mess it has created.One has not been forthcoming… They [BP directors] now face the consequences of their actions.” BP and AAR declined to comment. Almost a year on from the Deepwater Horizon accident in the Gulf, the present situation hardly represents the turnaround that Dudley, or BP, had hoped for. Dudley took the helm on 1 October, after his predecessor, Tony Hayward, paid the price for what is officially the world’s biggest offshore accidental oil spill. Less than four months into the job, Dudley announced an audacious proposal to transform the fortunes of BP , looking not west to the US but east: a $16bn share swap with Rosneft – the first of its kind between an oil major and a national oil company – to cement a new joint venture to explore the Arctic. BP has had its fingers burnt in Russia before. In the late 1990s, it lost out in a dispute with AAR. The two sides made up to eventually form TNK-BP, the Russian joint venture at the heart of the impasse over the proposed Rosneft deal. Last month an independent arbitration tribunal upheld an injunction , secured by AAR, which prevents the two companies consummating the deal. AAR had successfully argued that the Rosneft deal contravened the TNK-BP shareholder agreement, which requires BP to offer the joint venture first refusal over any business opportunity in Russia. Dudley claimed that AAR had been properly consulted on the deal when analysts queried him days after he had unveiled the Rosneft alliance. It soon transpired that AAR felt otherwise. But BP still looked secure, with the proposed Rosneft alliance seemingly having the blessing of the Kremlin. Rosneft chairman Igor Sechin was also deputy prime minister and in charge of Russia’s energy policy, a key player to have onside. At a dramatic Friday night press conference at BP’s St James’ Square headquarters in London in January, when the deal was announced, those listening in by phone overheard Dudley quietly thank Sechin, after his speech, for his “very nice words”. Dudley calculated that AAR would not dare to challenge the deal. The last oil oligarch to cross the Kremlin – Mikhail Khodorkovsky, ironically the boss of the dismantled oil company whose assets went to Rosneft – is still languishing in a Siberian prison cell. But Russian politics, particularly involving energy, are unpredictable at the best of times. Dudley, it seems, guessed wrong and BP is paying the price. To make matters worse, on Monday, Sechin quit his Rosneft post in a Kremlin reshuffle, leaving BP more isolated than ever. Iain Armstrong, analyst at stockbroker Brewin Dolphin, said: “It’s such a political misjudgment by Dudley. If it wasn’t for the fact that the chief executive position of BP is a poisoned chalice right now, he would be out. BP is lurching from one crisis to another.” BP’s two-month period of exclusivity with Rosneft – during which it was supposed to formally sign the alliance – expires on Thursday. It seems unlikely Rosneft would extend the deadline, which means it is free to seek other partners for the proposed deal. Now the tough negotiations will begin in earnest. All is not lost for BP however. It still has an advantage over other rivals wanting to become Rosneft’s partner, since the two companies have been in talks for years about exploring the Arctic. And AAR, which claims it wants to be involved in the Arctic exploration, would also lose out if BP was not able to form the alliance, whether through TNK-BP or not. But it is clear that if Dudley wants the deal to go ahead, he will have to cut a deal with AAR. It will not come cheap and could take weeks to negotiate. If BP cannot resurrect the Rosneft alliance, it will have little impact on the business in the short term. Exploration was not due to begin for several years and the chances of success are uncertain in any event. But it would be a major blow for Dudley, particularly as BP had championed the alliance as “historic” and an example for the rest of Big Oil wanting to team up with national oil companies to follow. Brewin Dolphin’s Armstrong says: “If the deal did not happen it would be a blow to Bob Dudley’s reputation. It would represent a setback for BP’s rehabilitation.” The Rosneft debacle is terrible timing for BP. The annual general meeting, at the ExCel centre in East London, was always going to be a stormy affair because of the Deepwater Horizon disaster. A protest by environmental activists is planned outside the conference centre before the meeting begins. Investors are also angry that the company paid bonuses to its finance director and head of refining last year, and about the £1m golden goodbye for Hayward. Big funds such as the California state pensions fund Calpers and Florida’s equivalent SBA, who own 0.4% of BP, as well as activist funds such as the Christian Brothers Investment Services group, will vote against the approval of BP’s report and accounts. The less environmentally and corporate governance-minded investors also have reasons to be unhappy. BP’s share price is still almost a third lower than it was just before Deepwater Horizon at a time when oil prices have surged and it lags behind rivals such as Shell. Hayward plots his City comeback Former BP chief executive Tony Hayward paid the price for the Deepwater Horizon disaster, leaving the company on October 1 last year. But he is already plotting his City comeback. He has been lined up as senior independent director of commodities group Glencore in its $60bn flotation. The role could be announced on Thursday when, as expected, Glencore formally fires the starting gun on the listing. Hayward is also reported to be setting up an oil and gas investment fund which could list in London through a £1bn flotation this year. Hayward was appointed as a non-executive director of BP’s Russian joint venture, TNK-BP, soon after he stepped down as BP chief executive. He joined just before the full-blown row erupted between BP and its Russian partners, who co-own the venture, over the proposed alliance with Rosneft. But even if it ends in tears for Hayward at TNK-BP, his wife Maureen could keep his BP association alive. She is reported to be writing a book in his defence of her husband, who was villified for such gaffes during the Gulf crisis last year such as “I want my life back”, and telling the Guardian: “The Gulf of Mexico is a very big ocean. The amount of volume of oil and dispersant we are putting into it is tiny in relation to the total water volume.” The comments were made in mid-May, when the official size of the spill was still estimated at 5,000 barrels a day. By the following month, it was increased to up to 40,000 barrels a day. BP is now contesting the official figures, which are likely to be one of the factors determining how much it will have to pay in fines. BP Bob Dudley Tony Hayward Oil and gas companies Russia Oil Oil Energy industry BP oil spill Pollution Oil spills Europe Tim Webb guardian.co.uk

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US citizen Jun Young Su was arrested in November for committing an as yet unspecified crime against North Korea North Korea has confirmed it has arrested an American man for committing an unspecified crime and is preparing to indict him. The man, identified by the North’s official Korean Central News Agency as Jun Young Su, is the latest US citizen to be detained in the reclusive communist state in recent years. North Korea informed Washington about the situation and Jun is being given necessary humanitarian conveniences including consular contact with Swedish Embassy officials in Pyongyang, the news agency dispatch said. Earlier this week, the US State Department called for North Korea to release one of its citizens and said Swedish officials had visited the American. The US which fought on South Korea’s side during the 1950-53 Korean War doesn’t have diplomatic staff inside North Korea and Sweden handles Washington’s interests there. Several Americans have been detained in North Korea in recent years and freeing them often requires high-profile negotiations. In August, former President Jimmy Carter brought home Aijalon Gomes, who had been sentenced to eight years’ hard labor for crossing into the North from China. He was detained for seven months in all. Korean-American missionary Robert Park defiantly walked into North Korea on Christmas Day in 2009 to draw attention to the North’s alleged human rights abuses and to call for the resignation of leader Kim Jong Il. He was released weeks later without charge. Also in 2009, journalists Laura Ling and Euna Lee were arrested for trespassing in North Korea and released only after former President Bill Clinton made a trip to Pyongyang to ask for their freedom. The latest arrest came as Carter plans to travel to Pyongyang again as early as this month. Carter said last week that he plans to focus on trying to revive international disarmament talks on the North’s nuclear program and seek ways to help with the country’s humanitarian woes. North Korea United States guardian.co.uk

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Lawrence O’Donnell: Americans Aren’t Rugged Individualists – They’re Socialists

Last November, MSNBC's Lawrence O'Donnell proudly declared himself a socialist on national television. On Wednesday, “The Last Word” host took this a huge step further saying the whole idea that Americans are rugged individualists is an illusion because they're all really socialists (video follows with transcript and commentary): (BEGIN VIDEO CLIP) PRESIDENT BARACK OBAMA: From our first days as a nation, we have put our faith in free markets and free enterprise as the engine of America's wealth and prosperity. More than citizens of any other country, we are rugged individualists, a self-reliant people, with a healthy skepticism of too much government. (END VIDEO CLIP) LAWRENCE O’DONNELL: This is an illusion, of course. We are not the rugged individualists we think we are. After getting an education paid for by the government, if we live long enough, we all get retirement income from the government and health care paid for by the government. That is a very healthy dose of good old-fashioned socialism, but we remain the country that pretends to hate socialism. Homeowners and the entire real estate industry float on a massive government subsidy written into the tax code called the mortgage deduction. The federal government gives millionaires and billionaires tens of thousands of dollars a year to pay, $50,000, to pay for their housing, a subsidy that none of them need, and yet our rugged individualist self-image continues. Honestly, this has more holes in it than Swiss cheese. First off, for the roughly 50 percent of the nation that pays taxes, nothing that we “receive” from the federal or state government is given to us. My parents paid federal, state, local, and property taxes that went for my public education, much as I've done for my children. As for the Social Security and Medicare benefits I may some day receive, I will have at that point paid into the system since I was 18-years-old, and, depending upon when I retire and eventually pass away, could very possibly have paid in more than I received not including a simple rate of growth applied to my contributions. For the percentage of our population that are much like myself in this regard, whatever they have and/or will receive from federal and state governments is a payback of what's been deducted from their income without their permission or – in some cases – approval. As for mortgage interest deductability being a subsidy, one really has to wonder what Lawrence learned at Harvard because tax deductions aren't subsidies. Even the liberal Wikipedia knows that: A subsidy (also known as a subvention) is a form of financial assistance paid to a business or economic sector. Most subsidies are made by the government to producers or distributors in an industry to prevent the decline of that industry (e.g., as a result of continuous unprofitable operations) or an increase in the prices of its products or simply to encourage it to hire more labor (as in the case of a wage subsidy). Examples are subsidies to encourage the sale of exports; subsidies on some foods to keep down the cost of living, especially in urban areas; and subsidies to encourage the expansion of farm production and achieve self-reliance in food production. A tax deduction is not a form of financial assistance paid to you by the government. Instead, it is a means by which you get to pay less taxes and therefore keep more of — are you listening, Lawrence? – your money. But this is a common mistake by liberals that are really socialists, for they don't understand that the government doesn't actually have any money except for what it takes from the citizenry, borrows or prints. What it taxes is ours, and any current or future statutes in the IRS code that allow us to keep more is neither a subsidy nor a gift. As it pertains to mortgage interest, if the Left wants to see this tepid recovery fall on its face quickly, they should eliminate this deductability and watch housing prices and the home construction industry collapse even further sending us right back into a recession. Maybe that's what a socialist like O'Donnell wants. Then there will be more folks trading in their rugged individualism for handouts from those that still believe in such a thing. Never let a good crisis go to waste, right?

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Title: I Got A Rocket In My Pocket Artist: NRBQ NRBQ is one of those bands where every member is a unique and unparalleled musician in his own way. Their sound ranges from R&B to Pop to Jazz to good ol’ Rock and Roll, and I can never get enough of them. Rumor has it that Keith Richards lobbied for bassist Joey Spampinato to replace Bill Wyman after playing with him in the Chuck Berry movie Hail Hail Rock And Roll . Shake it!

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Soros-Funded NPR Going After ‘Rupert Murdoch’s Media Empire’ Again

The $1.8 million grant George Soros gave to NPR was for local reporters in every state capital. But that doesn't mean NPR isn't also beginning to look like a Soros-pleaser on the national scene. Once again on Monday, NPR media reporter David Folkenflik went after Rupert Murdoch, and a voice-mail-hacking scandal at his U.K. tabloid News of the World. In England, the socialist newspaper The Guardian has been all over this story of disreputable media conduct, but The New York Times also filed a story on April 8.

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Soros-Funded NPR Going After ‘Rupert Murdoch’s Media Empire’ Again

The $1.8 million grant George Soros gave to NPR was for local reporters in every state capital. But that doesn't mean NPR isn't also beginning to look like a Soros-pleaser on the national scene. Once again on Monday, NPR media reporter David Folkenflik went after Rupert Murdoch, and a voice-mail-hacking scandal at his U.K. tabloid News of the World. In England, the socialist newspaper The Guardian has been all over this story of disreputable media conduct, but The New York Times also filed a story on April 8.

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NBC’s Engel ‘Worried’ About ‘Ferociously Anti-Israel’ Arab Street, ‘This Thing Ends in Jerusalem’
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Really, he’s been saying the same thing for years…but it’s still sickening None so blind as those who will not see . It would serve Bill Donohue and the Catholic League well if they went through some basic public relations training. Their latest attempt at bomb-throwing is a full page ad in the New York Times that blames the sexual abuse crisis on an overzealous media, scam artists, and, of course, “the gays.” The refrain that child rape is a reality in the Church is twice wrong: let’s get it straight—they weren’t children and they weren’t raped . We know from the John Jay study that most of the victims have been adolescents, and that the most common abuse has been inappropriate touching (inexcusable though this is, it is not rape). The Boston Globe correctly said of the John Jay report that “more than three-quarters of the victims were post pubescent, meaning the abuse did not meet the clinical definition of pedophilia.” In other words, the issue is homosexuality, not pedophilia. Abuse took place in the Church and it handled it very poorly. It doesn’t matter whether it was pedophilia or homosexual or heterosexual in nature. People were abused and the Church did nothing for decades. The Church failed not only the victims, it failed its flock. The rhetoric isn’t entirely new…the video above is from this time last year, and there are others from 2008 and 2009. The careful parsing of words (“It’s not pedophilia if they’re adolescents”) is yet another turn of the knife in the back of the victims, and so typical of Donohue. After all these years, he still doesn’t get that the refusal to take responsibility is part and parcel of why people lost faith in the Catholic Church. I’m pretty sure that the official Church would much prefer that Donohue (who is not officially sanctioned by the Catholic Church in any way) would just shut up, because he’s certainly not helping them bring people back to the flock . Donohoue likes to alienate people – not welcome and accept. He’s looking to make enemies and fight battles over things that don’t always make sense . Much of the apologetic work that Donohoue and his organization does hurts the greater Catholic cause. Donohue doesn’t represent the Catholicism I know and practice. He is not formally affiliated with the Catholic Church in anyway , something I wish more people knew. He represents the extreme conservative wing of the Church that thinks Church teachings revolve around sex and nothing else. He comes across as a hack that uses his well-funded bully pulpit for self-promotion. He should be dismissed by Catholics who want the Church to grow and not shrivel into some fundamentalist sect limited to pre-Vatican II adherents.

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Boss Hogs: Ed Schultz Calls Out CEOs

Click here to view this media Ed Schultz has a new big screen with all sorts of visuals, which he uses to his advantage, showing how CEOs pay has increased, middle class income has decreased right on the same curve as union membership decreases. It’s interesting, because I looked at the names of the Bush tax cut bills and lo, it seems that there was a promise contained in them that just hasn’t been realized. Cut #1: Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001 Cut #2: Jobs and Growth Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2003 Cut #3: Tax Increase Prevention and Reconciliation Act of 2005 (See, by 2005 they’d given up on the pretense altogether) We’ve had no economic growth or jobs, but plenty of tax relief, at least for some. I don’t really know how to do this when we’re swimming upstream against the likes of Faux News, policy peddlers from right wing think tanks and an electorate that wants to tune out until they actually have to figure out their taxes at which time they decide anything is too much, but we have to find a way to get the message out: Taxes are patriotic. They’re part of living in a society where we have the freedoms we do. The Progressive Caucus is unveiling their budget proposals today. It’s important, compassionate, and cuts taxes for the middle class while putting them on the people who should be paying them: CEOs, Wall Street fat cats and the banksters. With this Congress, it’s unlikely that they’ll get traction unless we get out there and start talking about this inequity in a way people understand. For all the nonsense the Republicans peddle, I give them credit for doing it in a way that sells. Us? Not so much. But we can do it. This video clip alone should be a great place to start.

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Cavuto: "We Could Do Worse Than Donald Trump. We Already Have"

Click here to view this media When Donald Trump decided to lose his mind in public this last time, I figured Fox was using his nutbaggery to make the other Republicans look better . And then Neil Cavuto opened his mouth, and proved that no, there are some Fox idjuts who just think anyone — ANYONE — is better than Barack Obama. Watch this clip as he turns jetsetter Trump from a rich dude who exploits bankruptcy laws to get richer into a populist, boxer kinda plain-spoken guy. That’s right, folks. We should make decisions about who will lead this country based on the fact that he has no manners and calls out women who criticize him. You see, the Donald is not politically correct, so Neil Cavuto thinks that qualifies him to be the next President or something. And I love this bit of revisionism at about 1:08 in: He cuts issues to the core by often turning those issues upside down. So rather than discuss cutting spending, like the businessman he is, he talks up creating revenue. Not from the usual political suspects like tax hikes, but unusual sources like OPEC nations. They get our protection, The Donald says, we get their oil. And we get their money. It is the school of business hard knocks and The Donald, a construction guy at heart, is more than happy to bang some heads. Yeah, maybe The Donald has banged a few too many heads, because his brain seems to be functioning like he’s on some kind of new psychotropic drug. Birtherism, big stories about private investigators, and more smells like Swiftboating to me, not leadership. As to that plain speak and creative thinking about revenue, has Cavuto forgotten Trump’s 1999 proclamation that we should tax the rich to retire the national debt ? But wait, Cavuto saves the best for last: Let voters decide. Yes, the world would bristle at a Donald Trump, especially those used to an America that kowtows to them. Not this guy, who’d sooner erect a finger than a building in their honor. Er, well, that’s because Trump likes to name buildings after himself, Neil. Haven’t you noticed? Yes, he would be a different cup of tea. But have you looked at these other cups? Not exactly making my cup runneth over. So we could do worse my friends. Take a look around. We already have. There’s so much wrong with that last statement I hardly know where to begin. Worse than what we have in office now? President Obama? Really? Imagine Trump telling Libya, hey you know, we’ll send some airplanes there but we want your oil fields. Screw you, screw principle, we just want your oil. Diplomacy squared there, yes indeed. Trump, the king of leverage. Owned lock, stock and barrel by the banksters . Art of the deal? Heck no. Art of the loan, maybe. At heart, Donald Trump is a gambler . And Neil Cavuto sees that as better than what we have now. Fox News is even more bankrupt than I thought.

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