US on brink of economic crisis after negotiations over outline of $3tn cuts package and tax rises break down The US is on the brink of a major economic crisis after negotiations between Barack Obama and Republican Congressional leaders over the national debt dramatically broke downon Friday. Obama, showing anger, passion and verbosity rare in public in his two-and-a-half years as president, called a press conference at the White House at short notice to express his frustration with the Republicans. He told reporters there had been “a breakdown in trust” between the White House and the Republican leadership. In a snub to the president, the Republican leader in the House, John Boehner, failed to return calls from the White House throughout the day, with his office saying he was unavailable. Boehner finally called the president on Friday evening to inform him the Republicans were walking away from weeks of negotiation aimed at resolving the country’s debt crisis. The collapse in talks comes with 10 days left until the US, for the first time in its history, faces the prospect of defaulting. If it fails to raise its $14.3tn (£8.7tn) borrowing ceiling, there will be serious consequences for not only the US economy but other countries around the world. The Republican withdrawal came just a day after Obama and Boehner had seemed close to an agreement on the broad outlines of a package to cut $3tn in federal spending over the next 10 years, and to raise some taxes. But Boehner was unable to sell it to diehard Republicans in the House, many of whom were elected last year with the support of the Tea party movement, which seeks deep cuts in spending but no tax rises. In a letter published just minutes after Obama began to speak, Boehner said: “In the end, we couldn’t connect. Not because of different personalities, but because of different visions for our country.” He blamed Obama for failing to agree to deep cuts in social security and other welfare benefits and for demanding that taxes be raised. “For these reasons, I have decided to end discussions with the White House,” Boehner said. An exasperated Obama called Democratic and Republican Congressional leaders to meet at the White House at 11 o’clock on Saturday morning to offer alternative proposals for dealing with the looming deadline on the debt ceiling. The president insisted that the debt ceiling had to be raised or Americans across the country would suffer. “We’ve got to get it done. It is not an option not to do it,” he said. If there is no deal, he said, he could not guarantee that the 70 million cheques due to go out to social security recipients, veterans and others on 3 August, the day after the deadline, would be sent. The US chamber of commerce expressed nervousness over the prospect of America’s credit rating being downgraded. Federal payments to state governments could also be hit. State governors are laying down emergency plans, with California, among others, looking for alternative sources of borrowing to tide it over. Banks and businesses are also working feverishly preparing for worst-case scenarios. The crisis is the biggest test of wills yet between Obama and hardline Republicans endorsed by the Tea party movement. It dwarfs the stand-off earlier this year when the federal government faced shutdown. According to the Treasury, America reached its borrowing limit of $14.3tn on 16
Continue reading …Some 30% of unemployed workers across the US—about 4.4 million people—had been jobless for more than a year as of last month, Labor Department data shows. Long unemployment periods were especially pronounced in New Jersey (37.1%), Georgia (36.8%), Michigan (36.0%), South Carolina (35.7%),…
Continue reading …The California woman who allegedly cut off her husband’s penis may first have drugged his tofu soup. Catherine Kieu Becker’s husband’s dinner tasted odd, and remnants of it have been sent to a lab in an attempt to figure out which poison may have been used, a law enforcement insider…
Continue reading …Google’s new social networking site, Google+, has gotten an impressive 20 million unique visitors in its first 3 weeks online; of those, 5 million are from the US. And that’s with access still limited only to those who have been invited by other members—and without any advertising yet through…
Continue reading …Captain America: The First Avenger , starring Chris Evans, isn’t exactly deserving of 50 stars, but as far as superhero flicks go, it’s an enjoyable, if somewhat enhanced, period piece. Just don’t expect Dark Knight -quality stuff. “Captain America , like its unapologetically corny hero, is propelled by unpretentious and plucky ingenuity,…
Continue reading …The Obama administration deported a record 393,000 people last fiscal year, with half of those deported considered criminals. That jibes with the Obama administration’s pledge to go after the “worst of the worst,” but the AP reports that some critics are scoffing: The figure includes big increases in the…
Continue reading …So Greece has a bailout deal , and the US is maybe closing in on its own agreement to avoid a default. Cause for celebration? More like depression, writes Paul Krugman. Or, as he puts it in the New York Times , a “Lesser Depression.” Policy-makers might “manage to avoid immediate catastrophe,…
Continue reading …Things got extra heated during an employee strike outside a Hyatt hotel in Chicago yesterday, when a manager turned on 10 heat lamps that were hanging above picketers—and left them on for nearly an hour, reports the Chicago Tribune . “This is one of the hottest days of the summer,…
Continue reading …It’s probably only a matter of time before someone writes a screenplay about this: Rabid bats have been invading Los Angeles in increasing numbers this summer. The city public health department says 12 have already been found, up from the eight to 10 typically discovered over a full year, reports…
Continue reading …Father on control order must leave London over fear of fundraising for militants A terrorist suspect and father of five has been ordered to move to a city outside London because of the risk that he might participate in fundraising for Pakistani militant groups. The 38-year-old, who can only be identified as “BM”, is already the subject of a control order which restricts his movements under the 2005 Prevention of Terrorism Act. MI5′s assessment, accepted by the home secretary, is that BM is “committed to terrorism – in particular terrorism in Pakistan” and wishes to travel there, the high court was told. BM was described in court papers as a 38-year-old British national born in Sheffield with five young children who had been living in Ilford, east London. A requirement of the control order being challenged was that he must relocate to “an address in a city outside London”. BM’s lawyers argued such a “drastic step” of removing him to another part of the country would cut him off from anything but occasional contact with his children and was not justified. They had argued there must be other ways of reducing or eliminating the risk he posed. Mr Justice Calvert-Smith, sitting in London, however, rejected the appeal. Relocating him would involve a “particularly serious” infringement of his right under Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights to a private and family life, the judge acknowledged. But that right was outweighed by the real risk that without such a restriction “the appellant would take part in the transfer of monies to those fighting against allied troops”. The existence of associates in London who would be able and willing to assist him in sending funds “has not been denied”, said the judge. Relocating him to another city would make that more difficult. The judge said there was evidence BM assisted his two brothers to go to Afghanistan to commit acts of terrorism in April 2009. The first control order was imposed on April 30 that year and he was banned from his east London home on 21 May. But a high court judge ruled the relocation decision was flawed and he returned to London. MI5 then produced evidence that, from late 2009, BM was involved with sending significant sums of money to his brothers in Pakistan. In January 2010 he was again ordered out of the capital but became involved in criminal proceedings over alleged breaches of his control order. In April this year the court of appeal revoked the first control order and the proceedings were dropped. A second control order was imposed on 8 April. Control orders are due to be replaced with less stringent terrorism prevention and investigation measures (TPIMS). UK security and terrorism Terrorism policy Global terrorism Control orders UK criminal justice London Owen Bowcott guardian.co.uk
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