Home » Archives by category » News » Politics (Page 523)
Krugman: Time To Get Serious About Our Economy And Job Creation

Krugman points out that the threat of a double-dip recession is on the horizon and says we’re “not now and have never been on the road to recovery:” To turn this disaster around, a lot of people are going to have to admit, to themselves at least, that they’ve been wrong and need to change their priorities, right away. Of course, some players won’t change. Republicans won’t stop screaming about the deficit because they weren’t sincere in the first place: Their deficit hawkery was a club with which to beat their political opponents, nothing more — as became obvious whenever any rise in taxes on the rich was suggested. And they’re not going to give up that club. The Shrill One. But the policy disaster of the past two years wasn’t just the result of G.O.P. obstructionism, which wouldn’t have been so effective if the policy elite — including at least some senior figures in the Obama administration — hadn’t agreed that deficit reduction, not job creation, should be our main priority. Nor should we let Ben Bernanke and his colleagues off the hook: The Fed has by no means done all it could, partly because it was more concerned with hypothetical inflation than with real unemployment, partly because it let itself be intimidated by the Ron Paul types. Well, it’s time for all that to stop. Those plunging interest rates and stock prices say that the markets aren’t worried about either U.S. solvency or inflation. They’re worried about U.S. lack of growth. And they’re right, even if on Wednesday the White House press secretary chose, inexplicably, to declare that there’s no threat of a double-dip recession. Earlier this week, the word was that the Obama administration would “pivot” to jobs now that the debt ceiling has been raised. But what that pivot would mean, as far as I can tell, was proposing some minor measures that would be more symbolic than substantive . And, at this point, that kind of proposal would just make President Obama look ridiculous. The point is that it’s now time — long past time — to get serious about the real crisis the economy faces. The Fed needs to stop making excuses, while the president needs to come up with real job-creation proposals. And if Republicans block those proposals, he needs to make a Harry Truman-style campaign against the do-nothing G.O.P. This might or might not work. But we already know what isn’t working: the economic policy of the past two years — and the millions of Americans who should have jobs, but don’t.

Continue reading …
Tony Blankley Sarcastically Says to Rude and Dismissive Al Sharpton ‘You Are a Very Polite Gentleman’

MSNBC's Al Sharpton on Friday was being tremendously rude and dismissive to his guest the always well-mannered Tony Blankley. So discourteous was Sharpton that at the end of the discussion, Blankley sarcastically said, “You are a very polite gentleman” (video follows with transcript and commentary): AL SHARPTON, HOST: What is the plan of the Tea Party to create jobs? TONY BLANKLEY: Look, the Tea Party has two policies they are trying to get. They want to reduce the debt and they want to reduce the size of government. SHARPTON: How do you produce jobs? BLANKLEY: Let me at least finish a couple of sentences. The fundamental problem and the reason why the public is so alienated that the entire political class obviously doesn’t have an answer to these problems, and we are getting more and more scared everyday. And the Tea Party is one voice. They are representing a lot of populist sentiments. You’ve got progressives on the other side having another voice. Nobody is coming up with a convincing policy prescription. That’s why the country is so scared. SHARPTON: Oh, I got it. So I ask you and Joe was quiet and I was quiet, what is the Tea Party’s plan and you just spent the minute telling me about how nobody had a plan. So, I guess the answer is: the Tea Party has no plan. BLANKLEY: I told you — SHARPTON: It reminds me of James Brown my mentor. James Brown used to say, it's like a dog knife, Tony — it just can’t cut it. You’re talking loud and saying nothing. BLANKLEY: You are a very polite gentleman. How pathetic. Is this really what MSNBC is striving for in the 6PM time slot opposite Fox News's highly acclaimed “Special Report?” On Thursday, Report trounced MSNBC Live attaining four times the viewership in the all important demographic aged 25-54. It appears that I'm not the only one in America that thinks this show with the perilously biased Sharpton as host is totally unwatchable.

Continue reading …
Tony Blankley Sarcastically Says to Rude and Dismissive Al Sharpton ‘You Are a Very Polite Gentleman’

MSNBC's Al Sharpton on Friday was being tremendously rude and dismissive to his guest the always well-mannered Tony Blankley. So discourteous was Sharpton that at the end of the discussion, Blankley sarcastically said, “You are a very polite gentleman” (video follows with transcript and commentary): AL SHARPTON, HOST: What is the plan of the Tea Party to create jobs? TONY BLANKLEY: Look, the Tea Party has two policies they are trying to get. They want to reduce the debt and they want to reduce the size of government. SHARPTON: How do you produce jobs? BLANKLEY: Let me at least finish a couple of sentences. The fundamental problem and the reason why the public is so alienated that the entire political class obviously doesn’t have an answer to these problems, and we are getting more and more scared everyday. And the Tea Party is one voice. They are representing a lot of populist sentiments. You’ve got progressives on the other side having another voice. Nobody is coming up with a convincing policy prescription. That’s why the country is so scared. SHARPTON: Oh, I got it. So I ask you and Joe was quiet and I was quiet, what is the Tea Party’s plan and you just spent the minute telling me about how nobody had a plan. So, I guess the answer is: the Tea Party has no plan. BLANKLEY: I told you — SHARPTON: It reminds me of James Brown my mentor. James Brown used to say, it's like a dog knife, Tony — it just can’t cut it. You’re talking loud and saying nothing. BLANKLEY: You are a very polite gentleman. How pathetic. Is this really what MSNBC is striving for in the 6PM time slot opposite Fox News's highly acclaimed “Special Report?” On Thursday, Report trounced MSNBC Live attaining four times the viewership in the all important demographic aged 25-54. It appears that I'm not the only one in America that thinks this show with the perilously biased Sharpton as host is totally unwatchable.

Continue reading …
Police cars attacked in Tottenham

Two patrol cars attacked after members of a community where a young man was shot dead by police took to the streets Two patrol cars have been attacked after members of a community where a young man was shot dead by police took to the streets to demand “justice”. The 29-year-old, named locally as father-of-four Mark Duggan, died at the scene in Tottenham, north London, on Thursday. About 120 people marched from the local Broadwater Farm area to Tottenham Police Station, forcing officers to close the High Road and put traffic diversions in place. After night fell, two police cars parked about 200 yards from the police station were set upon. A Metropolitan Police spokesman said: “Missiles were thrown at them. One was set alight and one was pushed into the middle of the High Road.” Officers were being dispatched to disperse the crowd, he said. He could not confirm that those responsible for the trouble were connected to the protest. A family friend of Mr Duggan, who gave her name only as Nikki, 53, said the man’s friends and relatives had organised the protest because “something has to be done” and the marchers wanted “justice for the family.” Some of those involved lay in the road to make their point, she said. “They’re making their presence known because people are not happy,” she added. “This guy was not violent. Yes, he was involved in things but he was not an aggressive person. He had never hurt anyone.” Mr Duggan had been travelling in a minicab on Thursday and was gunned down after an apparent exchange of fire. A police officer’s radio was found to have a bullet lodged in it afterwards, suggesting they may have narrowly escaped being struck. Officers had been attempting to carry out an arrest under the Trident operational command unit, which deals with gun crime in the black community, according to the Independent Police Complaints Commission (IPCC). An IPCC spokesman said that at around 6.15pm on Thursday, officers from Trident, accompanied by officers from the Specialist Firearms Command (CO19), stopped a minicab to carry out an arrest. “Shots were fired and a 29-year-old man, who was a passenger in the cab, died at the scene,” he said. It is believed that two shots were fired by a firearms officer, equipped with a Heckler & Koch MP5 carbine. A non-police issue handgun was recovered at the scene as well as the police radio. “Both the radio and the handgun are being sent for expedited forensic tests,” the spokesman said. “The exact sequence of events is subject to the IPCC investigation. A CO19 officer was taken to hospital as a precautionary measure but has since been discharged.” Local MP David Lammy has called for calm, saying the community was anxious over what had happened. A police officer, PC Keith Blakelock, was hacked to death in 1985 following a riot in Broadwater Farm from where the marchers set off this afternoon. Gun crime guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
Texas Drought Continues, Massive Strain On Electrical Grid Will Produce Rolling Blackouts. Can We Talk About Climate Change Now?

enlarge So will Texans still chant the right-wing “no such thing as global warming” mantra, or will they finally wise up and start demanding their officials do something to save what’s left of our ability to survive on the planet? Oh, and grow crops, too: Electricity officials in heatwave-hit Texas have warned of impending rolling blackouts from power shortages as the U.S. state struggles to cope with the relentless scorching temperatures. Texans have turned to air conditioners in huge numbers in a bid to beat one of the hottest summers on record in America’s second most populous state. But bosses for the Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT) say the soaring power demand in the face of the brutal heatwave has left the state one power plant shut-down away from rolling blackouts. Temperatures in Texas are currently topping 100F (37.8C) and have been soaring for well over a month. Record highs have also been recorded this week in nearby states Oklahoma and Arkansas as the relentless heatwave spreads across southern America. In Forth Smith and Little Rock, Arkansas, the mercury hit 115F on Wednesday. ERCOT, which runs the power grid for most of Texas, cut power to some large industrial users after electricity demand hit three consecutive records this week alone. The grid operator now faces rolling blackouts similar to those which hit Texas during a bitter cold snap in February. In Dallas, Texas, a pensioner died from ‘heat-related’ causes after her air conditioning unit was stolen from her house. Power usage in ERCOT reached its highest level ever on Wednesday at 68,294 megawatts, almost four per cent over last year’s peak. The Texas grid faces at least one more day of extreme stress before temperatures cool slightly over the weekend.

Continue reading …
Richard Wolffe Flat Out Lies About Obama’s Eight Percent Unemployment Pledge

As the prospects for Barack Obama's reelection decline, American media are getting more and more cavalier with the truth when defending the object of their affection. On Friday, MSNBC political analyst Richard Wolffe not only lied about the adminstration's projection that unemployment wouldn't rise above eight percent if its stimulus package was enacted, he also badly misrepresented the timing of job losses during the recession (video follows with transcript and commentary): RICHARD WOLFFE, MSNBC POLITICAL ANALYST: Now, I’ve also got to pick up something that the Chairman Steele was just saying, though, because, you know, he comes out with a talking point of 8 percent. The president promising it won’t go above that. Actually, it was an economic forecast that they made during transition before huge job losses of January and February of 2009. So, let’s just have a little context here. I know people are scoring political points. It was an economic forecast that they made during transition before huge job losses of January and February of 2009? Hardly. On January 9, 2009, future administration officials Christina Romer and Jared Bernstein published a fourteen page report entitled ” The Job Impact of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Plan .” On page five they offered the following chart: As you can see, the incoming adminstration projected that if its stimulus package was enacted, unemployment would not go higher than eight percent. As such, this wasn't just some “economic forecast.” This document was the new administration's sales pitch to Congress and the American people to pass ARRP. To depict it any other way is dishonest. But Wolffe wasn't done: MICHAEL STEELE: Yes. WOLFFE: But actually, the big job losses happen in the — AL SHARPTON, HOST: He tried hard. You got to give him the credit. WOLFFE: first couple of months of this presidency. STEELE: Yes. And Obama wrapped himself all around that 8 percent and drove it for as long as he could until he couldn’t fit it anymore and didn’t wear well. WOLFFE: The job losses, Michael, the job losses came in the first few months of this presidency. Really? Let's look at a chart from the Bureau of Labor Statistics: Look to you like the “job losses came in the first few months of this presidency?” Quite the contrary, from January to December 2008, the economy shed over 3.6 million jobs, nearly two million in the fourth quarter alone. For Wolffe to claim that any economic projections made in January 2009 couldn't have possibly taken into account just how bad the job losses were because the worst was yet to come is nonsense. As this has been the position the White House has taken in order to deflect blame for its failure to solve the unemployment problem, it is certainly not surprising a shill like Wolffe would be echoing the same disingenuous talking points. But assuming MSNBC wants to have any credibility as a so-called “news” network, it should require that contributors given the title “political analyst” speak the truth whenever they're on the air. Failing this, its analysts are merely acting as White House propagandists and should probably be so designated to allow viewers to properly discount what they're being told.

Continue reading …
Father’s pride in son who shot attacking polar bear

Michael Reid, who ended animal’s rampage, among four Britons still being treated for injuries in Norway hospital The father of the adventure group leader who shot a polar bear that had killed a schoolboy and also savaged him and three other Britons in Svalbard on Friday says he has been moved by the tributes paid to his son. Michael “Spike” Reid, 29, was one of two leaders of the expedition, which came under attack while camped near the Von Postbreen glacier, 25 miles from Longyearbyen, the capital of the Norwegian islands that make up the Svalbard archipelago. Horatio Chapple, 17, a sixth-former from Bishopstone, near Salisbury in Wiltshire, was killed. Four others were injured: Reid and fellow trip leader Andrew Ruck from Aberdeen, and two teenagers, Patrick Flinders from Jersey and Scott Bennell Smith from Cornwall. The group were on a British Schools Exploring Society (BSES) expedition to the Arctic. Reid, from Plymouth, suffered head and neck injuries and is reported to be in a serious but stable condition after being airlifted to a hospital in Tromsø on the Norwegian mainland. His family said they had been told by British embassy officials that Reid had shot the bear as it was attacking the expedition group. “We have been told that everyone is saying it was Michael who shot the bear and he was a hero,” Peter Reid, Michael’s father, told reporters. “It was very moving.” He added that the incident had come as a complete shock. “We were more worried last year, when Michael went to Afghanistan to climb. We have been shaken by the news, but we have a son alive and under very good medical care in Norway. There’s a family in Wiltshire who have lost their son. Their grief must be unimaginable.” Horatio’s family paid tribute to a “strong, fearless and kind” boy. His relatives said he had been “so excited about his plans to be a doctor” and praised his “amazing sense of humour and ability to laugh at himself. He was on the cusp of adulthood and had a clear vision of where his life was going.” Eton College paid tribute to a popular pupil whose death was “devastating”. An investigation into the accident is expected to focus on the failure of an alarm that was supposed to be activated if a bear approached the camp. According to Terry Flinders, the father of Patrick, a tripwire – used to scare off bears by triggering a flare – had failed to

Continue reading …
Michael Mansfield condemns police brutality at student demo

Leading human rights lawyer claims riot squad tactics were aimed at halting political protest One of Britain’s most prominent human rights lawyers has likened “heavy-handed” and politicised treatment of student protesters to the brutal victimisation of the miners during the strikes of the Thatcher era. Michael Mansfield QC said “outrageous” tactics were being employed to quash political protest and peaceful demonstrations in the UK, within politics, the police and the judiciary. Known for taking on some of the highest-profile cases of recent years – including the Stephen Lawrence murder trial, the Guildford Four case and the defence of Barry George, who was acquitted of the murder of Jill Dando – Mansfield revealed that he is to leave partial retirement to act on behalf of Alfie Meadows, a 20-year-old student who suffered head injuries during a tuition fees protest last December. Meadows, who was left with brain damage after being allegedly struck on the head with a police officer’s baton, is awaiting trial on charges of violent disorder. Mansfield said the right to protest in Britain was under serious threat and that people who wanted to go on peaceful demonstrations now had to weigh up the risks they faced from heavy policing and draconian sentencing. “We praise those in the Arab spring and condemn the force used against them by their governments, yet allow our own rights to be eroded,” he said. “What is happening here? A direct attack is being made on the right of people to go out on the streets and show their solidarity and unity with others of the same opinion and hold peaceful protest.” His warning came amid controversy at unusually harsh prison sentences handed down to students Charlie Gilmour, 21, and Francis Fernie, 20. Fernie was jailed for a year for throwing two sticks at police lines at TUC anti-cuts protests. Gilmour was sentenced to 16 months for “outrageous and deeply offensive behaviour”. He had thrown a bin at a Rolls-Royce carrying Prince Charles, kicked at shop windows and swung off a war memorial. Both claimed to have “got carried away in the heat of the moment” and offered profuse apologies. Gilmour’s mother, Polly Samson, who is married to Pink Floyd guitarist Dave Gilmour, called her son’s sentence a waste of taxpayers’ money. An appeal is to be heard this week. She believes students were paying a “very heavy” price under a “catch-all” charge of violent disorder. Cambridge University has not confirmed whether Gilmour will be allowed to continue his studies after serving his sentence. Mansfield and other leading legal figures believe Gilmour and Fernie were made scapegoats to show disapproval of public objections to government policy at a time when the process of democracy was weakened by the disempowering of politicians by the expenses scandal. “There is a direct comparison to what was going on during the miners’ strike,” said Mansfield, “a shameful tradition… of riot squads or tactical support groups or response units, whatever you want to call them. They go in hard and heavy, and the whole idea is to intimidate.” He attacked the brutality that can come from a “unit mentality”. “When there is a culture of a unit, they share a uniform, they share an ethos, things can get out of control and that is something that has run from Blair Peach through to Ian Tomlinson [the newspaper vendor who died after being attacked by a police officer] and I fear the police still haven’t got their heads round this at all. “They have to be reminded that there is a right to peaceful protest in Britain and it worries me how many cases that shouldn’t ever have left the ground are ending up in the courts when there may have been an inconvenience to the public, a trespass, but nothing criminal.” He said it was a low-level politicisation. “I don’t think it’s done at cabinet level, but there is a very strong consciousness in the echelons of power of making examples of people.” Mansfield, who has been asked to stand for the chancellorship of Cambridge University, says that a 1966 UN agreement commits states to aim to provide free further education , so tuition fee protesters were on the side of the law. Many lawyers are concerned at the age of those facing court for little more than getting over-excited or scared by police kettling techniques and horse charges. Some 200 officers have been assigned to finding those who took part in the UK Uncut sit-ins and the tuition fees protests. Raj Chada, a lawyer with Hodge Jones & Allen who represented Jonathan May-Bowles, the man jailed for throwing shaving foam at Rupert Murdoch, said he had real concerns that a person now arrested during a political protest could expect harsher treatment than someone who committed a similar offence when not at a protest: “The fact they are at a political protest is now being treated as an aggravating factor, rather than a mitigating factor.” The tough approach by police and judges was having its desired effect, he said: “When I have spoken to protesters, some on the fringes say they do not want to go on protests any more. There are real concerns that the judiciary is being unduly harsh on political protesters.” Judge Price, who presided over the Gilmour and Fernie cases, refused their appeals for community service orders. Police Protest Students Michael Mansfield Human rights Tuition fees Tracy McVeigh Mark Townsend guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
Early Show Echoes White House, Dismisses Debt Downgrade As ‘Political’

Should anything happen to the Obamas' Portugese water dog Bo, perhaps the First Family could adopt Jeff Glor as a pet parrot.

Continue reading …
Conservative party unease grows as young rebel MPs take on coalition

Frustrated by governing with the Liberal Democrats, new MPs seek to take a stand for ‘true Tory policies’ Unhappy at having to govern with the Liberal Democrats? Frustrated at the lack of opportunities for promotion? Miffed at not having the ear of No 10? All are symptoms of a malaise among young Tory MPs disappointed by their life as backbenchers in a coalition. Such is the frustration that some ambitious MPs are launching an intellectual fightback during the annual conference against what they see as the stultifying conformity of parliamentary life. Inside No 10, there is suspicion about what the young guns are up to. In the Tory whips’ office, there is unease. Amid high secrecy, the MPs have written their own “true Tory” manifestos, to be unveiled at the Conservatives’ annual gathering in Manchester in October. “I was amazed by the lack of intellectual debate in the party after the election,” said one of those involved, insisting that the intention was merely to stimulate debate and help the party reassert an identity. “What is the point of being an MP if you can’t put forward ideas?” asked another. Tory blogger and managing director of BiteBack publishing Iain Dale said a burst of forthcoming books by Tory MPs was evidence of a feeling among young Conservatives that debate must begin now about life after the election and after the Lib Dems. “There is growing realisation across all sections of the party that they need to start thinking about these issues,” Dale said. “There is a feeling that they need to put a flag in the sand and say, ‘Thus far and no further.’” In time for the conference, Dale is publishing a volume by five up-and-coming Tory backbenchers who entered parliament last year. None is particularly rebellious and they are described as being broadly Thatcherite with the potential to be cabinet ministers. The book, which is the talk of the parliamentary party, is entitled After the Coalition, and is described by those involved as “a ressertion of Tory policy updated for the 21st century”. The five, who are refusing to reveal much in advance having agreed a newspaper serialisation, are Elizabeth Truss, Kwasi Kwarteng, Chris Skidmore, Priti Patel and Dominic Raab. “There are probably a total of 30 Tory MPs with cabinet potential in the new intake,” said Dale. “It is a very, very talented group and they want to get on.” Two other prominent backbenchers from the 2011 intake – Charlie Elphicke and Brandon Lewis – had been expected to take part too but, say colleagues, will not now do so in a sign, perhaps, that the initiative is frowned upon by the party’s high command. After the Coalition is not the only potential headache for the keepers of party discipline. A second Exocet missile – to be launched at the conference by ConservativeHome, a website for Tory activists that is not afraid to criticise David Cameron – will be fired off by David Davis. He is putting together a book with contributions from some 25 mainly rightwing Tory MPs, including new intakers Richard Drax, Therese Coffey and Steve Baker. The two books are likely to advance strongly eurosceptic agendas and suggest a fundamental rethink of the UK’s relationship with the EU. They are also expected to push for a lower-tax economy, advance new ideas on wealth creation and combine a commitment to civil liberties with radical ideas on immigration, criminal justice and the future of public services, including the NHS. Then there is another work, which Dale promises will have some “thought- provoking ideas”, entitled Masters of Nothing: The Crash and How It Will Happen Again Unless We Understand Human Nature , by two other up-and-coming Tories, Matthew Hancock and Nadhim Zahawi. In a forestaste of all this, Kwarteng publishes his vision for transport policy this week. The pre-publicity for Gridlock Nation says: “Britain needs a new revolution in transport – or gridlock will soon bring the country to a halt.” Paul Goodman, a former Tory MP who now writes for ConservativeHome, says many young Tory MPs were lured into the party by Cameron on a promise that they would be listened to and have influence, only to have been left disappointed by a perceived lack of interest and loftiness from No 10. They were demoralised by the government’s shambolic handling of the NHS, by the attempt to sell off forests and by criminal justice policy, and remain infuriated by the priority given to overseas aid while defence spending is cut. Some feel the true Tory party has been lost in coalition and know that their chances of getting a government job are reduced by the need to give positions in any future reshuffles to Lib Dems, to keep Nick Clegg’s party happy. Now, they are beginning to think they have nothing to lose by speaking out. Goodman predicts interesting times: “Putting all this together, there has never been a more difficult time to be a whip.” Conservatives Conservative conference Conservative and Liberal Democrat cabinet Toby Helm guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …