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Karmic Update: Russell Pearce recall campaign turns in 18,000 signatures — more than twice what’s needed

Click here to view this media We’ve been tracking the recall campaign against Arizona Senate President Russell Pearce, author of SB1070, because he insisted on playing his nativist fiddle in the Senate while Arizona’s economy burned to the ground. It probably hasn’t helped that he’s become belligerent whenever anyone brings up his role in the Fiesta Bowl scandal, either. Of course, Greta Van Susteren knew better than to ask Pearce any such tough questions last night on her Fox show. She mostly lobbed out the news of the day — the fact that the people leading the recall had filed more than twice what they needed, some 18,000 signatures — and let him swing away. But Pearce looked scared, and he should be: In a celebratory display of unprecedented organization, a bipartisan group of activists poured into the Arizona secretary of state’s office yesterday with more than 18,300 signatures to demand the recall of State Senate president Russell Pearce. The filing of the petitions marked the culmination of a campaign that has defied expectations, and a watershed moment for the beleaguered state. Once the state and Maricopa County recorders verify the legal requirement of 7,756 signatures from the traditionally conservative and Mormon-founded Mesa district, Pearce—who is considered by many as the de facto governor and motivating force behind the state’s notorious blitz of extremist policies on education, health, guns and immigration—will become the first State Senate president in American history to be recalled. Those signatures contain a message : Recall proponents say they filed petitions bearing 18,315 signatures. But campaign chairman Chad Snow acknowledged thousands of those might be duplicates or signatures of people who live outside the Senate President’s district. “We want those extra petition signatures to send a message,” Snow said. “We want to send a message to Sen. Pearce, to every legislator down here at the Arizona Legislature that this kind of extreme, ideologically driven policies will no longer be tolerated in our state.” Pearce claimed to Van Susteren that most of the signatures would be proven ineligible and that his legal team intended to contest them. Then he claimed that the people involved in the recall are “radical leftists” and “anarchists.” Then he claimed that his nativist agenda was in fact extremely popular with his constituents. Right. Of course, he has formed a response team : His supporters have formed their own group, The Citizens Who Oppose the Pearce Recall, and on Tuesday launched a website to solicit donations to fight the recall effort. “We will not sit back and let out-of-state and out-of-district special interests attempt to use a recall to harass and intimidate Arizona’s constitutionally elected officials,” said Matt Tolman, chairman of the group. “We will oppose this recall so that President Pearce and other officials can do the job for which they were elected.” I hope the folks in Mesa are ready for the fight of their lives.

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Bullying Network Rail boss escapes punishment and keeps pension

Peter Bennett condemned for racist, sexist language as QC upholds claim over firm’s misuse of public funds The head of human resources at Network Rail, who was condemned by an independent inquiry for a long running record of bullying and using sexist and racist language, has escaped disciplinary action and will retire on a generous, publicly-funded pension. Former staff who say they were pushed out of Network Rail by Peter Bennett are particularly angered by the internal email from the company’s chief executive, David Higgins, announcing Bennett’s departure, which praises his “professional approach”. The email said Bennett, who earns an estimated £350,000 a year in salary and benefits, would remain in his post before taking early retirement later this year. It was sent four days before Antony White QC, appointed by Network Rail to investigate allegations of impropriety within the company, expressed his amazement at Bennett’s behaviour and that there was no record of his ever being disciplined. White, from Matrix Chambers, wrote in his report: “I find it little short of astonishing that the director of human resources of a major national company described a senior female employee in his department who was complaining of sex discrimination as ‘a silly cow’ and a black female employee who had recently succeeded in a race discrimination case … as a ‘silly fucking black bitch.’” It was “equally astonishing”, White said, that Bennett wrote in a formal employment tribunal document that a sexually suggestive comment towards a junior female colleague “would not have been unwanted”. White’s 143-page report dismissed as unfounded a series of claims by the TSSA trade union that Network Rail’s former chief executive, Iain Coucher, and other senior staff abused their positions for financial gain. When White looked into separate allegations that the company, which received £3.7bn from the Department for Transport (DfT) last year, misused public funds by repeatedly paying off staff to avoid embarrassing industrial tribunals, he documented a wealth of damning evidence about Bennett’s style, none of which appears to be disputed by Network Rail. An outside consultants’ study in 2007 found Bennett’s methods to be “universally” disliked by staff, due to his abrasive style and “wholly inappropriate” language. White himself heard evidence about Bennett’s “bullying and blatant sexist language and conduct”, including the routine use of offensive comments and jokes and inappropriate physical advances to female colleagues. Bennett had no comment about the report or the allegations. Such claims have surfaced before, with Network Rail repeatedly saying Bennett had “no case to answer”. White discovered an internal investigation confirmed many of the allegations yet concluded they did not amount to serious misconduct. Network Rail said Bennett had been verbally warned about his behaviour, but White said he could find no record of this. He said: “I find it impossible to avoid the conclusion that Network Rail simply failed to take Mr Bennett’s admitted and established misconduct seriously.” The one specific claim about the abuse of public funds upheld by the QC relates to Victoria Lydford, a high-flying senior HR manager who took the company to an industrial tribunal after alleging Bennett unfairly sidelined her when she returned from maternity leave. The investigation uncovered legal advice to Network Rail urging it to settle Lydford’s claim before the hearing as she would almost certainly win her case and the publicity would cause “considerable collateral damage”. The eventual payout, protected by a confidentiality clause but reportedly close to £500,000, constituted a misuse of public money, the QC found. A former Network Rail staff member, who asked not to be named, said Bennett was known throughout the organisation as a “school bully” with extremely worrying attitudes to women: “He was a vulture. In our old headquarters, a lot of female staff would try very hard to get a position as far away as they could from where Peter sat. But it wasn’t just women. If you were a man and he found you wouldn’t stand up to him, Bennett would bully you mercilessly.” A Network Rail spokesman said the company had no comment to make beyond last week’s statement which welcomed White’s report and said the company was “profoundly different today in terms of both its leadership tone and standards of acceptable behaviour”. The company’s new senior management team has spoken previously of wanting to change a prevailing “militaristic” culture inside Network Rail. A DfT spokesman said the report “highlighted some serious issues”. He added: “We welcome the action Network Rail has taken to ensure there is no repeat of these failings, and we hope this report draws a line under the allegations.” Network Rail Travel & leisure Transport Discrimination at work Work & careers Equality Peter Walker guardian.co.uk

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Battle of the ‘Weiners’: Competing Parody Twitter Accounts Fight For Followers

It was really only a matter of time. @AnthonysWiener joined Twitter on Saturday, adding one more head’s thoughts to the hotly-debated controversy resulting from the lewd photo posted to Rep. Anthony Weiner’s Twitter account last week. A day later, @AnthonysWeiner debuted under the same premise. (LIST: 140 Best Twitter Accounts) Evidently, the users behind the

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President Raúl Castro turns 80 but Cuba is not proud of it

No plans to officially mark president’s 80th birthday amid growing concern over Cuba’s ageing leadership Raúl Castro turns 80 on Friday but Cuba is playing down the president’s birthday amid concern over the island’s ageing leadership. No official celebrations have been announced in the apparent hope of letting the event slide by, rather than refocus attention on the elderly figures who run the government and Communist party. The deputy president, José Ramón Machado Ventura, is 80 and Fidel Castro, who is retired but retains influence, is 84, meaning the three most important political figures are octogenarians. The government’s official No 3, vice-president Ramiro Valdés, 79, will soon join the club. At a Communist party congress in April Raúl Castro called the absence of younger leaders “really embarrassing” and lamented that fresh talent had not been groomed to take over. He promised to “rejuvenate” senior positions and said the party would consider limiting leaders, including himself, to a maximum of two five-year terms. But instead of promoting new faces at the congress Castro chose Machado and Valdés as his deputies. The appointments, said analysts, betrayed a failure of nerve as Cuba struggles to liberalise a moribund, centrally planned economy. “Their challenge is to bring in a younger generation but instead Raúl picked someone even older than him as his chief deputy,” Ann Louise Bardach, a Cuba expert and author of Without Fidel, told Associated Press . “It just shows how unconfident they are. They missed an opportunity.” The band of young guerrillas that seized power in 1959 has remained largely hermetic in power and has looked with suspicion on rising newcomers. In 2009 mooted successors such as Carlos Lage, a then 57-year-old vice-president, and Felipe Pérez Roque, the 43-year-old foreign minister, were respectively demoted and fired . Raúl is now a month older than Fidel was when a serious intestinal illness forced the latter to step down in 2006 . “And [Fidel] was always much healthier than Raúl as a young man … and now Raúl is 80,” said Bardach. Nevertheless the president appears in good shape. This week he accompanied Brazil’s former president, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, on a tour of Cuba and joked with reporters about his birthday. “How do I look?” he asked. “How many old men of 60 are there who aren’t in my shape?” Cuba Fidel Castro Rory Carroll guardian.co.uk

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President Raúl Castro turns 80 but Cuba is not proud of it

No plans to officially mark president’s 80th birthday amid growing concern over Cuba’s ageing leadership Raúl Castro turns 80 on Friday but Cuba is playing down the president’s birthday amid concern over the island’s ageing leadership. No official celebrations have been announced in the apparent hope of letting the event slide by, rather than refocus attention on the elderly figures who run the government and Communist party. The deputy president, José Ramón Machado Ventura, is 80 and Fidel Castro, who is retired but retains influence, is 84, meaning the three most important political figures are octogenarians. The government’s official No 3, vice-president Ramiro Valdés, 79, will soon join the club. At a Communist party congress in April Raúl Castro called the absence of younger leaders “really embarrassing” and lamented that fresh talent had not been groomed to take over. He promised to “rejuvenate” senior positions and said the party would consider limiting leaders, including himself, to a maximum of two five-year terms. But instead of promoting new faces at the congress Castro chose Machado and Valdés as his deputies. The appointments, said analysts, betrayed a failure of nerve as Cuba struggles to liberalise a moribund, centrally planned economy. “Their challenge is to bring in a younger generation but instead Raúl picked someone even older than him as his chief deputy,” Ann Louise Bardach, a Cuba expert and author of Without Fidel, told Associated Press . “It just shows how unconfident they are. They missed an opportunity.” The band of young guerrillas that seized power in 1959 has remained largely hermetic in power and has looked with suspicion on rising newcomers. In 2009 mooted successors such as Carlos Lage, a then 57-year-old vice-president, and Felipe Pérez Roque, the 43-year-old foreign minister, were respectively demoted and fired . Raúl is now a month older than Fidel was when a serious intestinal illness forced the latter to step down in 2006 . “And [Fidel] was always much healthier than Raúl as a young man … and now Raúl is 80,” said Bardach. Nevertheless the president appears in good shape. This week he accompanied Brazil’s former president, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, on a tour of Cuba and joked with reporters about his birthday. “How do I look?” he asked. “How many old men of 60 are there who aren’t in my shape?” Cuba Fidel Castro Rory Carroll guardian.co.uk

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Britain asks Iran to investigate death of women’s rights activist Haleh Sahabi

Daughter of veteran dissident leader died from a heart attack after scuffles with security forces at her father’s funeral Britain has called on Iran to launch an immediate investigation into the death of Haleh Sahabi, the daughter of a veteran Iranian dissident who died during scuffles with security forces at her father’s funeral on Wednesday. Sahabi was leading the procession at the ceremony by holding a picture of her father, Ezatollah Sahab. She died from a heart attack after reportedly being attacked by an agent and falling down. The Foreign Office (FCO) has joined the US state department and human rights organisations in urging Iran to carefully look into the case. “We call for an immediate and transparent investigation into her death and call on the Iranian authorities to allow her family and friends to mourn her father and her deaths without interference,” an FCO spokesperson said. Her funeral was held within hours of her death by authorities fearing popular protest. She was reportedly buried late at night in contrast to Islamic customs. Her relatives said her body was “confiscated” and her family were deprived of performing normal religious rituals. Iran’s opposition has blamed a security agent for Sahabi’s death, but authorities said she was already suffering from “high blood pressure and blood sugar”. “We are particularly disturbed by reports that her death followed heavy-handed action by the Iranian security forces at the funeral and by reports that the Iranian authorities rushed her burial that night with a limited traditional funeral,” an official spokesperson said. Haleh Sahabi, a women’s rights activist, was serving a two-year prison sentence but was allowed out temporarily to attend the funeral of her father, a highly respected dissident who was jailed before and after the 1979 Islamic revolution and spent a total of 15 years in prison. He headed an alliance of politicians whose activities came under scrutiny in recent years especially after the disputed presidential election in 2009 which gave Mahmoud Ahmadinejad a second term in the office. Iran Middle East Saeed Kamali Dehghan guardian.co.uk

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Britain asks Iran to investigate death of women’s rights activist Haleh Sahabi

Daughter of veteran dissident leader died from a heart attack after scuffles with security forces at her father’s funeral Britain has called on Iran to launch an immediate investigation into the death of Haleh Sahabi, the daughter of a veteran Iranian dissident who died during scuffles with security forces at her father’s funeral on Wednesday. Sahabi was leading the procession at the ceremony by holding a picture of her father, Ezatollah Sahab. She died from a heart attack after reportedly being attacked by an agent and falling down. The Foreign Office (FCO) has joined the US state department and human rights organisations in urging Iran to carefully look into the case. “We call for an immediate and transparent investigation into her death and call on the Iranian authorities to allow her family and friends to mourn her father and her deaths without interference,” an FCO spokesperson said. Her funeral was held within hours of her death by authorities fearing popular protest. She was reportedly buried late at night in contrast to Islamic customs. Her relatives said her body was “confiscated” and her family were deprived of performing normal religious rituals. Iran’s opposition has blamed a security agent for Sahabi’s death, but authorities said she was already suffering from “high blood pressure and blood sugar”. “We are particularly disturbed by reports that her death followed heavy-handed action by the Iranian security forces at the funeral and by reports that the Iranian authorities rushed her burial that night with a limited traditional funeral,” an official spokesperson said. Haleh Sahabi, a women’s rights activist, was serving a two-year prison sentence but was allowed out temporarily to attend the funeral of her father, a highly respected dissident who was jailed before and after the 1979 Islamic revolution and spent a total of 15 years in prison. He headed an alliance of politicians whose activities came under scrutiny in recent years especially after the disputed presidential election in 2009 which gave Mahmoud Ahmadinejad a second term in the office. Iran Middle East Saeed Kamali Dehghan guardian.co.uk

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Google hacking allegations ‘very serious’ says Clinton

FBI to investigate as China denies suggestions it was behind ‘phishing’ attacks on senior military and government personnel The FBI is to investigate “very serious” allegations that the Google mail accounts of senior US government officials have been attacked by Chinese hackers, the secretary of state Hillary Clinton said, as the long-running war between the technology giant and the Chinese government escalated. China hit back angrily at suggestions it was behind the “phishing” attacks on the email addresses of hundreds of targets, including senior military and government personnel from the US and South Korea. A spokesman for the Chinese foreign ministry called the accusation “a total fabrication” made by those “with ulterior motives”. “Hacking attacks are an international issue. China is also a victim,” Hong Lei told a press conference in Beijing. According to Google , the scam targeted the Gmail accounts of “hundreds of users including, among others, senior US government officials, Chinese political activists, officials in several Asian countries (predominantly South Korea), military personnel and journalists”. A cabinet-level official in the US government was among those whose Gmail password was stolen and whose data was compromised, an official told the Washington Post . Clinton told reporters that the US was disturbed by the reports. “These allegations are very serious,” she said. “We take them seriously. We are looking into them.” She declined to comment further on the matter, referring questions to both Google and “to the FBI which will be conducting the investigation”. Clinton said attacks such as the one described by Google were a prime reason the State Department has for the first time created a cyber-security coordinator. “We know this is going to be a continuing problem and therefore we want to be as prepared as possible to deal with these matters when they do come to our attention,” she said. The Pentagon said it had very little information since the reported breaches involved personal accounts rather than government email. And since the accounts were not official, it wasn’t aware whether defence employees were among the targeted individuals, the statement said. The US government intends to broaden its laws of armed conflict to designate cyber attacks a potential act of war, it emerged this week , in a move with significant implications for the militarisation of cyberspace. Google said on Wednesday that it had traced the scam to Jinan in Shandong province, believed to be a hub for Chinese cyber espionage. A “vocational school” in the city has been named as one of two colleges suspected in earlier attacks on Google and other American companies. The internet company did not directly accuse the Chinese government of being behind the attacks, but experts believe their sophistication and highly targeted nature point to a government source. Google said it had become aware of the scam, which sought to trick targets inadvertently to disclose their email logins and passwords, through its own “abuse detection systems” put in place following a “highly sophisticated and targeted” attack in December 2009. Following that assault, which it believed was intended to gather information on Chinese human rights activists, the company said it would no longer agree to censor its Chinese search results. The Chinese authorities have since withdrawn the licence for Google’s mainland-based search operations. On becoming aware of the latest attack, the company said on its official blog, it had notified all victims and taken steps to secure their accounts. Though the company became aware of the nature and scale of the scam relatively recently, it was first publicly exposed more than three months ago by a technology blogger based in Washington DC who writes pseudonymously as Mila Parkour . In a post on 17 February , Parkour noted that “spear-phishing” attacks, their origin at the time unspecified, had specifically targeted the personal Google email accounts of “military, government employees and associates”. She had been alerted to the issue by a contact, she told the Guardian, and so carried out “a mini- research and analysis and posted the findings as I heard it happened to other people in the military and US government”. So-called spear-phishing attacks work by tricking their targets into revealing their logons and passwords in order to take control of their email accounts. Because they depend on human lapses, they are a comparatively unsophisticated form of cyber attack that do not necessarily, in themselves, compromise hi-tech security systems. For that reason, Parkour saw no reason to alert Google immediately. Indeed, she wrote on her blog, she would not normally have blogged about the incident at all, were it not for its “particularly invasive approach”. The method of the scam she described displayed impressive levels of ingenuity. Targets would receive an email which appeared to come from a colleague or close associate – in fact a spoofed address – to which a file appeared to be attached. The hackers had taken care to use idiomatic, jargon-heavy language that would lend the mail credibility to recipients. One example, an email headed “Fw: Draft US-China Joint Statement”, read: “This is the latest version of State’s joint statement. My understanding is that State put in placeholder econ language and am happy to have us fill in but in their rush to get a cleared version from the WH, they sent the attached to Mike.” Clicking on the apparent attachment would open a page almost identical to the Gmail page, where victims were prompted to enter their user name and password, just as they would if logging into their own mail. Once the target had effectively handed over the keys to his or her private data, the attackers would then set up the account to forward all incoming emails to another address, read the incoming mail to learn more about the target, and use the information they learned – such as the details of family members and colleagues – to refine future spoof emails to victims, in the hope of engaging them in responses or even conversations. Such emails, said Parkour, would be sent on a monthly or bi-weekly basis. Asked about the length of time it had taken Google to disclose publicly the scale of the scam, Parkour said: “Looks like they exhausted all the leads and found out as much as they could to address it before going public. Sometimes it is best to finish the investigation before public notice not to alert the bad actors. It has been three months and considering that hundreds of victims involved, it is not too long.” US national security Hillary Clinton FBI United States China South Korea Google Internet Esther Addley guardian.co.uk

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Mitt Romney announces intention to run in 2012 US presidential race

Republican contender says Barack Obama has ‘failed America’ as he formally launches bid – but still no word from Sarah Palin Former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney took on the mantle of Republican frontrunner after formally declaring his intention to seek the party’s nomination for the 2012 White House race. He identified America’s faltering economy as the key to beating Barack Obama, accusing him of having failed to deliver on 2008 campaign promises to turn the economy round. “Now, in the third year of his four-year term, we have more than slogans and promises to judge him by. Barack Obama has failed America.” Romney, who is ahead in polls of Republican voters, is hoping to consolidate his lead by disclosing next month that he outperformed his Republican rivals in fund-raising, having taken in tens of millions of dollars over the last three months. He has been campaigning informally for at least 12 months before making the official announcement in Stratham, New Hampshire, at Bittersweet Farm, a location that might turn out to be prophetic of his campaign. He came off second best to John McCain in the Republican race in 2008, in spite of spending $40 million of his own money, and faces formidable problems in 2012. He demonstrated again yesterday he is a poor speaker, with a fondness for cliches, and is viewed with suspicion by right-wingers on health, abortion, gay rights and gun laws. Christian evangelicals may be reluctant to back a Mormon. He could be vulnerable to a run by a populist candidate such as Sarah Palin, McCain’s running mate in 2008. Even though she says has not decided yet whether to join the Republican contest, she has dominated the media all week with a bus tour of the east coast. Palin, supposedly on a tour to promote US interest in the constitution, mischievously took her bus to New Hampshire yesterday, saying it was only coincidental that she would be there on the same day as Romney’s announcement. “Maybe we’ll run into him,” Palin said. While Obama is favourite to win in 2012, he is vulnerable to a strong Republican challenge, with the US economy slow to come out of recession. Unemployment is hovering around 9% and no US president since the 1930s has won a second term with figures that high. In his speech Romney admitted that the economy was in recession when Obama took office, but said he had made it worse and made it last longer. “Three years later, over 16 million Americans are out of work or have just quit looking. Millions more are underemployed. Three years later, unemployment is still above 8%, a figure he said his stimulus would keep from happening,” Romney said. The country was in crisis and he, as a successful businessman, was capable to the “bold” actions needed to resolve it, he said. He also attempted to woo Tea Party activists by promising to repeal Obama’s health reforms.”I will insist that Washington learns to respect the constitution … we will return responsibility and authority to the states for dozens of government programmes – and that begins with a complete repeal of Obamacare,” Romney said. Mitt Romney US elections 2012 Republicans United States US politics Barack Obama Sarah Palin Ewen MacAskill guardian.co.uk

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Donald Trump rips Republicans for ‘mistakes’ on Medicare, says he might yet enter the race

Click here to view this media Anyone who takes Donald Trump seriously gets what they deserve. And yes, there were — and apparently still are — Republicans who take him seriously. Last night on Greta Van Susteren’s show, Trump — who at one time, before he announced he wasn’t running, was being touted on Fox by “Republican strategists” as a serious candidate — not only ripped into the Republican Party for their idiocy with Paul Ryan’s let’s-kill-Medicare plan and Eric Cantor’s refusal to help tornado victims, but threatened to enter the race after all, if the eventual Republican nominee turns out to be “a stiff.” Trump was too slippery to identify who might be among the stiffs, but it’s safe to say candidates like Romney, Paul, Gingrich, Pawlenty and Santorum are on that list. In any event, Trump told Van Susteren that he never actually really got out of the race, and he might decide to drop in, maybe as an independent, if the GOP fails to come through. The guy is a complete circus act and should be laughed off the stage. It tells you a lot about today’s Republicans that he hasn’t been yet.

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