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Barack Obama handed the business community a surprise win today by asking the Environmental Protection Agency to scrap new smog standards that would force state and local government to improve air quality or risk losing federal funds, the Washington Post reports. “Work is already underway to update … the ozone…

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Storm Lee could unleash torrential rains and floods in Gulf coast states

Mississippi and Louisiana declare state of emergency, and New Orleans put on alert as tropical storm gathers strength Mississippi declared a state of emergency in seven counties on Friday as it prepares for tropical storm Lee. The storm has formed in the waters off Louisiana and is expected to unleash torrential rains along the Gulf coast over the Labor Day weekend. Some areas could receive up to 20 inches of rainfall. Louisiana has also declared a state of emergency, expecting flash flooding. In New Orleans, mayor Mitch Landrieu has taken similar measures for the city. The US national weather service has warned of “torrential tropical rains” for several days. The US army corps of engineers in New Orleans is monitoring developments but does not plan on closing any flood control structures yet, a spokesman said. Tropical storm warnings are in effect from Mississippi to Texas, including New Orleans, and flash flood warnings have been extended along the Alabama coast into the Florida Panhandle. The storm has halved the normal oil production from the Gulf of Mexico. The federal energy agency said it has evacuated 169 of the 617 manned production platforms and 16 of the 62 drilling rigs. The storm is also tantalisingly close to Texas but not close enough to alleviate the state’s worst drought since the 1950s. Lee is the 12th named storm of the Atlantic hurricane season. Storm watchers were also monitoring hurricane Katia, spinning in open waters 705 miles (1,134kms) east of the Leeward Islands and moving west-northwest at 14mph. It regained hurricane strength with maximum sustained winds of 75mph on Friday. The storm is expected to grow in strength but it is too early to say it will hit the US. There was also a slow-moving low pressure system about 450 miles south of Halifax, Nova Scotia, that could turn into a tropical cyclone in the next two days. The new storm warnings come days after the US east coast was hit by hurricane Irene, which caused major damage from North Carolina to New England. Natural disasters and extreme weather United States Louisiana Mississippi Hurricane Irene guardian.co.uk

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Obama backs down on tighter smog regulations

Environmental groups dismayed as president – under pressure from GOP – delays enacting stricter standards until 2013 Barack Obama has bowed to pressure from Republicans in Congress to postpone plans to introduce tighter controls over smog-producing companies. The decision provoked expressions of dismay among environmental groups campaigning for cleaner air. The retreat will add to the growing perception among voters that Obama is a weak president, reluctant to stand up to the Republicans. Obama had insisted he was intent on pushing ahead with tougher rules to force businesses to reduce concentrations of ground-level ozone. But Republicans argued it would increase the burden on businesses at a time when they are struggling and could lead to job losses. The Republican House majority leader, Eric Cantor, had described the proposed regulations as “job-killers”. It is another victory for the Republicans, who only control the House of Representatives but have managed to dictate much of the political agenda in the Democratic-controlled White House and Senate. Republicans, who return to Congress from holiday next week, paralysed Washington in the weeks running up to the summer break by threatening to vote against raising the country’s debt ceiling, forcing Obama to concede substantial spending cuts. The Republican leader in the Senate, Mitch McConnell, hailed Obama’s latest climbdown on Friday. “The president took a step today that highlights the devastating impact on jobs that has been created by this administration’s regulatory overreach. This action alone will prevent more job losses than any speech the president has given,” McConnell said. One of McConnell’s Senate colleagues, John Barrasso, echoed him: “Job creators scored a major victory today in the fight against Washington’s red tape.” Democrats in Congress saw it as a setback. Ed Markey, a Democratic congressman on the House natural resources committee, said: “I am disappointed that the president chose to further delay important clean-air protections that would have helped to prevent respiratory and cardiac disease in thousands of Americans.”Obama had promised to replace weak air-control standards introduced by George W Bush. In a statement, Obama said on Friday the changes would have to be delayed until 2013, after the White House election in November next year. He cited the impact on business as the reason for the delay. Obama insisted he remained committed to the environment. “At the same time, I have continued to underscore the importance of reducing regulatory burdens and regulatory uncertainty, particularly as our economy continues to recover,” he said. His decision overrules the advice of the federal government’s Environmental Protection Agency, a body treated with derision by Republicans, who see it as an embodiment of “big government”. In his statement, Obama told the head of the EPA, Lisa Jackson, to withdraw the proposal to tighten standards. The EPA’s independent panel of advisers earlier this year unanimously agreed that public health would benefit from the introduction of higher standards. Jackson had said the changes would have helped prevent as many as 12,000 premature deaths a year and save $100bn (£61.6bn) in health costs. The new rules would have forced companies to reduce emissions of certain chemicals that help create smog. Dow Chemical said the changes would cost as much as $90bn. Earthjustice, which has launched legal actions aimed at tackling smog-producers, expressed disappointment. Martin Hayden, the group’s vice-president, said: “The Obama administration knows the heavy cost of smog pollution but has made the terrible decision to leave outdated, weak standards in place, leaving thousands of Americans who suffer from lung and breathing problems at the mercy of this dirty air.” Gene Karpinski, president of the League of Conservation Voters, said: “The Obama administration is caving to big polluters at the expense of protecting the air we breathe. This is a huge win for corporate polluters and huge loss for public health.” US domestic policy Barack Obama Pollution Obama administration Activism Republicans Democrats United States US politics Ewen MacAskill guardian.co.uk

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Paul Krugman opens up on Eric Cantor in a scathing column today, accusing the House majority leader of taking victims of Hurricane Irene “hostage” by demanding that federal relief be offset with spending cuts . Cantor used the same kind of tactic in the debt ceiling talks, and Krugman sees it…

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The past couple of years have not been great for Kevin Smith: He has been in the news more for his rants (see here and here ) than for his film successes (see here and here ). Plus, he recently floated the idea of retirement. What’s to blame? Perhaps marijuana,…

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The “bunga bunga” fallout continues: Police nabbed an Italian businessman for allegedly blackmailing Silvio Berlusconi in the sex scandal that’s clouded his tenure as prime minister. Giampaolo Tarantini has acknowledged recruiting women for Berlusconi’s alleged sex parties, but he’s maintained that the PM didn’t know that some were escorts. Police…

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Ever wanted to ask Oprah Winfrey a question? Now’s your chance. The talk show queen will appear in a video interview on Facebook Live on Thursday from 4:30pm to 5:30pm EDT, Mashable reports. Fans can submit questions to the event wall (judging from what’s currently there—sample: “Could…

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Religious rioting in the troubled central Nigeria city of Jos has killed at least 21 people in recent days, as authorities seem to be unable to curb the rising violence. An AP journalist counted the bodies awaiting burial at the city’s central mosque today. Doctors at a university hospital collected…

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A jury came up empty yesterday in its attempt to decide the fate of a California teenager who shot a gay classmate in the head at point blank range. The judge declared a mistrial in the case of Brandon McInerney after the jury said it couldn’t come to a unanimous…

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Markets slide as US jobs stagnate

• Shares slip on both sides of Atlantic • George Osborne accused of ‘sitting on hands’ • Obama faces calls to stimulate economy Stock markets dived on Friday after weak US jobs figures, news of a slump in UK construction orders and further wrangling over the eurozone’s Greek bailout unnerved investors. The FTSE was down 137 points at 5280 while the US Dow Jones industrial average closed down 253 points, or 2.2%, at 11,240. Frankfurt and Paris followed the downward trend, with both losing more than 3% of their value. Politicians on both sides of the Atlantic are expected to come under pressure to reverse the decline in growth rates that is pushing western economies to the edge of a second recession in three years. Declines in business and consumer confidence have hit manufacturing and other key sectors, with knock-on effects for jobs and consumer demand. Barack Obama, who is due to deliver a speech on employment next Thursday, is expected to face calls to stimulate the economy from his Democrat supporters despite intense lobbying by opposition Tea Party representatives on Capitol Hill. The chancellor, George Osborne, has refused to waver in his plans for widespread spending cuts, insisting that his deficit reduction programme has prevented a Greek-style panic. Economist David Blanchflower, a former member of the Bank of England’s monetary policy committee, accused Osborne of sitting on his hands at an important time for the economy and warned that action was needed to create jobs or Britain could suffer a double-dip recession. His concerns echoed those of shadow chancellor Ed Balls, who said Osborne should use a G7 meeting in Marseille next weekend to agree a growth strategy to stop Britain and other leading economies from falling back into recession. Figures from the US labour department showed America failed to create any new jobs in August. Analysts expected at least 75,000 jobs to have been created last month, but the figure came in at zero. A strike by 45,000 Verizon telecoms workers distorted the August figures – which showed a 48,000 decline in the number of workers in the information services sector – but that was offset by a revision to the July numbers, which showed 58,000 fewer jobs had been created than thought. The US economy needs to add 150,000-200,000 new jobs each month to bring the jobless rate down. It remained at 9.1% last month. The US labour department said it was the weakest reading since last September, with firms holding off hiring after declines in consumer and business confidence. Few firms made redundancies, but the data showed a freeze on new hirings. The poor snapshot of the labour market led Goldman Sachs and several other big Wall Street firms to forecast that the US could back further rounds of quantitative easing. Goldman said that the federal open market committee, which determines the policy followed by the US central bank, might extend maturity on the Fed’s $1.65 trillion (£1trn) of government bond holdings after its policy meeting this month. “This report will certainly strengthen the case for the doves on the committee going into the next meeting this month,’ said Millan Mulraine, a senior strategist with TD Securities in New York. Rob Carnell, chief international economist at ING, said the figures would provide further ammunition for those arguing for policy easing. He said it would be difficult to boost consumer demand while the figures showed real wage growth stalling. “If there are any glimmers of hope, and basically there aren’t, you could point to the smaller decline in the government sector as a potential slowing of public sector job-shedding,” he added. “You could also assume this has bolstered the chances of a new round of quantitative easing from the Fed before the year end.” Britain’s MPC is also expected to discuss further quantitative easing at its next meeting after one of its chief hawks, Martin Weale, argued that the deteriorating situation in the UK might warrant further support from the central bank. More problems also emerged in Athens following negotiations between the International Monetary Fund, the EU and the Greek government. Talks were suspended after disagreement on the success of Greek austerity measures, which have already failed to generate the expected savings. The situation worsened after the Finnish government warned that it would only agree to lending Greece further funds if it was given a cash security. Recession Market turmoil US economy Dow Jones FTSE Quantitative easing Global economy Stock markets George Osborne Barack Obama Economics Phillip Inman guardian.co.uk

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