The White House expects the national budget deficit to peak at $1.65 trillion this year, or roughly 10.9% of GDP—its highest level since World War II, the Wall Street Journal reports. That figure—which is significantly more pessimistic than the Congressional Budget Office’s $1.48 trillion estimate—…
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Ron Paul won the CPAC straw poll for the second year straight, but that doesn’t make him a CPAC winner. Chris Cillizza runs down his take on the winners and losers coming out of this year’s Conservative Political Action Conference for the Washington Post , and there are a few surprises:…
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Army clears protesters but small core of demonstrators remains in square at centre of protests that brought down Hosni Mubarak’s regime
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Propagating the human race far away from home could be tough: Powerful radiation in space would likely sterilize female embryos conceived there, NASA finds, and it could shrink sperm counts, too. At the moment, we don’t have the technology required to create spacecraft shielding to block the radiation, the Telegraph…
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The founder and CEO of a 32-store chain of natural foods grocery stores located around the Southwest stepped down yesterday after being arrested on suspicion of felony child prostitution in Phoenix on Thursday, reports the Arizona Republic . Police said Sunflower Market CEO Michael C. Gilliland (also the founder of Wild…
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Move seen by some as reaction to pro-democracy calls across Middle East and follows announcement of overdue elections The Palestinian Authority cabinet has resigned in a move seen by some as a response to calls for democratic reform echoing around the Middle East. The prime minister, Salam Fayyad, tendered the cabinet’s resignation to the PA president, Mahmoud Abbas, and is expected to form a new team of ministers within a few weeks. The move follows the announcement at the weekend that long-delayed general elections will be held by September . Hamas, the Islamist movement that controls the Gaza Strip and which welcomed the fall of Egypt’s president, Hosni Mubarak, said it would not take part in the elections nor recognise their outcome. Fayyad, the unelected prime minister of the PA, is respected by the west for implementing a programme of reforms and state-building measures in the West Bank. He is thought to be keen to form a cabinet dominated by technocrats. After Mubarak’s departure on Friday , there were street celebrations in Ramallah, the West Bank’s main hub, in solidarity with Egyptian protesters. Elections have not been held since January 2006, when Hamas won an overall majority. Abbas’s term as president expired two years ago. He has not declared whether he will be a candidate in the elections this year, but has repeatedly threatened to quit in the past. Many ordinary Palestinians complain of increased repression in the West Bank, including the intimidation, detention and torture of political dissenters. Hanan Ashwari, a veteran Palestinian legislator and member of Fayyad’s Third Way party, rejected the idea that the cabinet’s resignation was connected to events in Egypt. “This has been in the making for some time, so it would be a mistake to overload the timing with significance,” she said. “This has nothing to do with Egypt. The delay was due to technical problems.” She said Fayyad wanted a cabinet of “qualified, professional people” to oversee elections and assist in building institutions in preparation for a Palestinian state. The PA, which is dominated by the Fatah political faction, has limited rule in the West Bank. Israeli military and civil authorities control about 60% of the territory. Since Hamas took control of Gaza in June 2007, 18 months after winning the elections, there has been a split between the two territories and their dominant political factions. Hamas accuses the Fatah-led PA of assisting Israel’s economic stranglehold of Gaza. Meanwhile, Saeb Erekat, the chief Palestinian negotiator who handed in his resignation on Saturday following the leak of thousands of documents from his office , cancelled a press conference to explain his move. Palestinian territories Middle East Gaza Fatah Hamas Mahmoud Abbas Egypt Hosni Mubarak Israel Harriet Sherwood guardian.co.uk
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Police dismantle remaining tents in Cairo’s Tahrir Square, as Egyptian troops attempt to get the country back to work
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Fear the Bieber! Or at least the wrath of Justin Bieber fans—especially if you had the misfortune to beat the young heartthrob in the Grammy Awards last night. Angry fans of the Bieb ran wild on Esperanza Spalding’s Wikipedia page last night, after the talented but less-well-known singer won…
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Mubarak has stepped down in Egypt, but other states around the Middle East and North Africa are scrambling to keep the lid on their simmering populations, trying combinations of reforms and crackdowns, reports the Los Angeles Times . Algeria responded to protests Saturday with thousands of police officers, and Iran has…
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A Tea Party revolution may be brewing in Barack Obama’s very Democratic backyard. The local branch of the upstart party is backing a rival of former White House chief of staff Rham Emanuel in the fight to be Chicago mayor. But another mayoral candidate sees the endorsement of Gery Chico…
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