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2007 CALENDAR 2007 Printable Calendar January 2007 _JANUARY 2007 NEWS_
February 2007 _FEBRUARY 2007 NEWS_
March 2007 _MARCH 2007 NEWS_
April 2007 _APRIL 2007 NEWS_
May 2007 _MAY 2007 NEWS_
June 2007 _JUNE 2007 NEWS_
July 2007 _JULY 2007 NEWS_
August 2007 _AUGUST 2007 NEWS_
September 2007 _SEPTEMBER 2007 NEWS_
October 2007 _OCTOBER 2007 News_
November 2007 _NOVEMBER 2007 NEWS_
December 2007 _DECEMBER 2007 NEWS_
YEAR 2007 CALENDAR Printable 2007 Calendar |
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-
John
Edwards
-
Iowa
-
Families
- Jobs
-
Money
-
Attorney
General -
North
Carolina
-
2008
Election
"Edwards
the orator energizes audience." ... "Dayton Countryman
said he's been around long enough to know what it means when a supposedly
underdog presidential candidate can pack more than 500 folks into a social
hall in this town [Boone, Iowa] of 12,000 people." ... ""This ought to
scare the hell out of the other campaigns," Countryman said Sunday as he
watched more and more people come in from the cold to hear [2008 Election
Democratic Presidential Candidate] Democrat John Edwards speak." ... "The
89-year-old lawyer is a former Iowa attorney general who recently became
a Democrat after more than 50 years as a Republican. He said he's fed up
with what's going on in Washington, D.C., and he'll caucus for Edwards
because he believes the former North Carolina senator will stand up." ...
"Edwards has been drawing increasingly large and energetic crowds in recent
weeks as he presses his case that America needs a fighter in the White
House. His audiences are filled mainly with people who are middle age or
older, and he's banking that such Iowans have been most likely to show
up in caucuses." ... ""The corporate greed that's stealing your children's
future, that's destroying middle-class jobs in this country, it's not just
destroying the middle class for Democrats. It's destroying the middle class
for independents. It's destroying the middle class for Republicans," Edwards
said." -By Tony Leys -DesMoinesRegister
-
Barack
Obama
-
Hillary
Clinton
-
Iowa
-
2008
Election -
2004
Election - History
"Obama:
Gore, Kerry Alienated "Half the Country"." ... "In
a speech this afternoon in central Iowa, [2008 Election Democratic Presidential
Candidate] Barack Obama seems to have widened his criticism of the politics
of the past to encompass not only [2008 Election Democratic Presidential
Candidate] Hillary Clinton but [former Presidential Candidates] John Kerry
and Nobel Laureate Al Gore." ... "Making an argument for his electability,
Obama said, "I don't want to go into the next election starting off with
half the country already not wanting to vote for Democrats -- we've done
that in 2004, 2000," according to a person at the event (rush transcript)."
-By Glenn Thrush -Newsday.com
-
John
Edwards
-
Iowa
-
North
Carolina -
Barack
Obama
-
Hillary
Clinton
- Corporate
-
Government
-
Illinois
-
New
York
-
2008
Election
"Edwards
in Iowa's Spotlight as Finish Line Nears." ... "With
the sounds of the Bruce Springsteen song "America Rising" as a backdrop,
former North Carolina [Senator and 2008 Election Democratic Presidential
Candidate] Sen. John Edwards walked into the [Iowa's] Sioux City Convention
Center and stood before hundreds of people to deliver his closing argument."
... ""Thank you for coming. There's an incredible energy and momentum behind
this campaign. We can feel it everywhere we go, everywhere," he said."
... ""My job as president is to work with the Congress to unify America,"
Edwards told the crowd. "I will do that as president of the United States,
but we have a huge battle with these entrenched moneyed interests. Those
people have a stranglehold on your democracy, an iron-fisted hold on your
democracy. Nothing will change until we break that hold."" ... "Edwards
compares himself on the stump to former presidents such as [Republican
President] Teddy Roosevelt, who fought the big trusts, or [Democratic President]
Franklin Roosevelt, who faced down corporate bullies." ... "Edwards has
also stopped playing Mr. Nice Guy, as he did four years ago. He recently
took a thinly veiled swipe at Democratic rivals Illinois [Senator and 2008
Election Democratic Presidential Candidate] Sen. Barack Obama and New York
[Senator and 2008 Election Democratic Presidential Candidate] Sen. Hillary
Clinton." ... ""We have very good presidential candidates. I know them
and I respect them," he said, but admonished that "the first time the tough
fight comes, they will do the political thing. You can take that to the
bank."" -By David Welna-NPR
-
Dennis
Kucinich -
Joe
Biden
-
Chris
Dodd
-
Ron
Paul
-
Duncan
Hunter
-
Television
- Politics
-
US
-
Iraq
-
Military
-
2008
Election -
New
Hampshire
"FOX,
ABC to reduce debate fields." ... "This weekend’s
[New Hampshire] presidential debates and forum will not include some nationally-known
candidates, and the chairmen of the state Republican and Democratic parties
are not happy." ... "Fergus Cullen and Raymond Buckley say the decisions
by ABC News, WMUR and, in Cullen’s case, FOX News, are inconsistent with
the New Hampshire primary’s tradition of providing a level playing field
for all candidates." ... "ABC News and WMUR-TV (Channel 9) confirmed today
that they have established performance-based criteria for Saturday night's
pair of presidential debates. Those rules could leave several relatively
well-known candidates on the outside looking in, including [2008 Election
Democratic Presidential Candidates] Democrats Dennis Kucinich, Joe Biden
and Chris Dodd." ... "And Cullen confirmed that FOX News has invited only
five presidential candidates to a GOP [GOP=Grand Old Party=Republican]
forum scheduled for Sunday night, leaving out [2008 Election Republican
Presidential Candidates] Ron Paul and Duncan Hunter." ... "GOP candidate
Paul has said that FOX News is “scared of me” and has called the network
“propagandists for this (Iraq) war, and I challenge them on the notion
that they are conservative.”" -By John Distaso
-UnionLeader.com
-
John
Edwards
- Music
-
Des-Moines
-
Iowa
-
Farm
- History
-
Working-
Poverty
-
Race
-
2008
Election
"Edwards
Wins the Mellencamp Primary." ... "So it is that
[singer John] Mellencamp will come to Iowa Wednesday to close the [2008
Election Democratic Presidential Candidate John] Edwards campaign off with
a "This Is Our Country" rally at the not-exactly-Hollywood Val Air Ballroom
in West Des Moines [Iowa]. (In case anyone is missing the point here, they
will be distributing the tickets from the United Steelworkers Local 310
hall.)" ... "Where [Oprah] Winfrey brought a big name but little in the
way of a track record on the issues that are fundamental to the rural and
small-town Iowans who will play a disproportional role in Thursday's caucuses,
Mellencamp is more than just another celebrity taking a lap around the
policy arena." ... "For a quarter century, the singer has been in the thick
of the fight on behalf of the rural families he immortalized in the video
for "Rain on the Scarecrow," his epic song about the farm crisis that buffeted
Iowa and neighboring states in the 1980s and never really ended." ... "Mellencamp
has not merely sung about withering small towns and farm foreclosures.
As a organizer of Farm Aid, he has brought some of the biggest stars in
the world to benefit concerts in Iowa and surrounding states, and he has
helped to distribute the money raised at those events to organizations
across Iowa." ... "Farm Aid is nonpartisan. It's not endorsing in this
race. But Mellencamp is. The singer, who this year will be inducted into
the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame but whose music remains vital enough to
have earned a 2008 Grammy nomination for Best Rock Vocal Performance, was
lobbied for support by other campaigns, especially Clinton's. But he has
a long relationship with Edwards. He has an even longer relationship with
the issues that Edwards is talking about. Indeed, his credibility is grounded
in the recognition that Mellencamp has repeatedly taken career-risking
anti-war, anti-racist and anti-poverty stances that other celebrities of
his stature tend to avoid." ... "What matters, of course, is the fact of
that credibility -- and the fact that it is so closely tied to the farm
and rural issues that have meaning even in the more urbanized regions of
Iowa. That is why, if there is an endorsement that is going to have meaning
with the people who drive down country roads to attend caucuses on what
looks to be a very cold and unforgiving Thursday night, it is likely to
be that of the guy who proudly sings that, "I was born in a small town...""
-By John Nichols -TheNation.com
-
Mike
Huckabee -
Mitt
Romney
-
Iowa
-
Television
-
Ads
-
Crime
- Money
-
Illegal
-
Immigrants
- Colleges
-
Abortion
- Health-Care
-
Arkansas
-
Massachusetts
-
2008
Election
"Huckabee:
Romney running 'dishonest' campaign." ... "Former
Arkansas [Governor and 2008 Election Republican Presidential Candidate]
Gov. Mike Huckabee blasted Republican presidential rival [2008 Election
Republican Presidential Candidate] Mitt Romney as running a "desperate
and dishonest" campaign and predicted the former Massachusetts governor
won't be the Republican nominee." ... "Romney has been blasting Huckabee's
record on crime and taxes as governor of Arkansas in [Iowa] television
ads in the last days of the race." ... "Asked on Monday on CNN's "American
Morning" why he felt the need to respond to Romney's attacks, Huckabee
said, "I think a lot of people are deceived, and you have to ask do people
want to elect a president who has been dishonest in order to get the job
and said things about his opponents that simply aren't true?"" ... "With
the two men locked in a statistical dead heat atop the latest Iowa polls,
Romney has been airing television ads criticizing Huckabee for raising
state spending, backing in-state tuition for illegal immigrants at state
colleges and granting more than 1,000 pardons and commutations." ... "Huckabee
has said the claims are taken out of context, and hit back by questioning
the sincerity of Romney's opposition to abortion -- which was covered by
the state health care program Romney pushed through in Massachusetts."
-CNN
-
John
Edwards
-
Barack
Obama
-
Hillary
Clinton
-
Iowa
-
New
York
-
2008
Election
"With
New Poll Results, Candidates Scramble for Edge in Caucuses."
... "[2008 Election Democratic Presidential Candidate John Edwards:] “You
can beat these people if you’re tough enough, if you’re smart enough, if
you’ve got the fight inside you,” Mr. Edwards said at a high school in
Carroll, Iowa. “You can’t nice them to death. You try and nice them to
death, they’ll trample all over you.”" ... "[2008 Election Democratic Presidential
Candidate Barack Obama:] “It is true that I believe we can disagree without
being disagreeable,["] Mr. Obama said. “I do not believe that change will
come with more angry rhetoric of turning up the heat on Republicans. We
don’t need more heat in Washington, we need more light.”" ... "Mr. Obama
also tweaked the third leading Democrat here, [2008 Election Democratic
Presidential Candidate and New York] Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton, by
knocking her husband by name for suggesting that an Obama presidency would
be a gamble for the nation." ... "“It’ll be a roll of the dice — that’s
what Bill Clinton said,” Mr. Obama said. “I have to remind people that
the real gamble in this election is having the same old folks do the same
old things over and over again and somehow expecting a different result.
That’s the real risk.”" ... "Howard Wolfson, a Clinton spokesman, said,
“The list of Democrats Senator Obama is attacking — John Edwards, Hillary
Clinton and now Bill Clinton — gets longer and longer as we get closer
and closer to the caucus.” " -By Patrick Healy and
Julie Bosman with contributions by David D. Kirkpatrick, Cate Doty, Michael
Cooper, Michael Luo, and Marc Santora -NYTimes
-
Money
-
Politics
-
Federal
-
Housing
- Legislation
-
New
Jersey -
Georgia
-
California
-
Texas
-
Utah
-
Maryland
-
Nevada
-
Oregon
-
Washington
-
2004
Election - US
-
Netherlands
"Lender
Lobbying Blitz Abetted Mortgage Mess: Ameriquest
Pressed For Changes in Laws; A Battle in New Jersey." ... "During the housing
boom, the subprime industry succeeded at more than just writing mortgages.
It also shot down efforts by some states to curtail risky lending to borrowers
with spotty credit." ... "Ameriquest Mortgage Co. [ACC Capital Holdings],
until recently one of the nation's largest subprime lenders, was at the
center of those battles. Working with a husband-and-wife team of Washington
lobbyists, it handed out more than $20 million in political donations and
played a big role in persuading legislators in New Jersey and Georgia to
relax tough new laws. Those victories, in turn, helped blunt efforts by
other states to crack down on reckless lending, critics of the industry
contend." ... "Home loans made by Ameriquest and other subprime lenders
are defaulting now in large numbers, roiling global credit markets and
sparking debate about whether regulators and lawmakers should have anticipated
the mess and taken action. A close look at Ameriquest's lobbying and political
donations shows how the subprime industry maneuvered to defeat legislation
that might have contained some of the damage." ... "Data from federal and
state campaign-finance records, Internal Revenue Service filings, and the
National Institute on Money in State Politics show that from 2002 through
2006, Ameriquest, its executives and their spouses and business associates
donated at least $20.5 million to state and federal political groups. In
comparison, over the same time period, Countrywide Financial, another large
subprime lender, gave about $2 million in campaign gifts, and spent an
additional $6.7 million lobbying in Washington, records indicate." ...
"Some of the giving by Ameriquest executives and associates was high-profile.
[Republican] President Bush received more than $200,000 for his 2004 re-election
campaign, and Ameriquest founder Roland Arnall and his wife, Dawn, contributed
more than $5 million to political organizations that backed the president.
Last year, [Republican] President Bush appointed Mr. Arnall ambassador
to the Netherlands, and his wife took over as chairman of Ameriquest's
parent company. California [Republican Governor] Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger's
campaigns received at least $1.4 million, along with stacks of tickets
to a Rolling Stones concert that were used to lure big donors." ... "Last
year, ACC Capital, its [Ameriquest Mortgage Company] parent company, agreed
to pay $325 million to settle regulators' claims that it charged excessively
high mortgage rates and didn't adequately disclose loan risks. Some of
the state attorneys general who signed the settlement, including Greg Abbott
of Texas, received campaign donations from the firm. Utah's attorney general,
Mark Shurtleff, received a $1,000 contribution and Rolling Stones tickets."
... "Ameriquest also handed out Rolling Stones tickets to state legislators
in Georgia, Maryland, Nevada, Oregon, Utah, Washington and California,
according to ethics records and local news accounts." ... "Federal lawmakers
didn't pose much of a threat to the subprime industry in recent years.
Members of Congress received at least $645,000 in donations from Ameriquest
and large sums from other big subprime lenders, Federal Election Commission
records indicate." ... "ACC Capital, Ameriquest's parent company, and its
executives gave more than $350,000 to Texas politicians in 2006, including
$100,000 to [Republican Governor] Gov. Rick Perry, according to state records."
-By Glenn R. Simpson -WSJ.com
News Reference # 2007
News # December
2007 News
December 30, 2007 News URL: #December-30-2007-News
20071230
Sunday
-
John
Edwards
-
Mike
Huckabee -
Hillary
Clinton
-
Barack
Obama
-
Mitt
Romney
- Money
-
Religion
- People
-
US
-
Iraq
-
Military
-
Iowa
-
2008
Election -
Poll
"Iowa:
Edwards surges, Huckabees bubble bursts." ... "[2008
Election Democratic Presidential Candidate] John Edwards has clawed his
way into contention to win Iowa's caucuses on Thursday in the first vote
for the Democratic presidential nomination, gaining strength even as rivals
[2008 Election Democratic Presidential Candidate] Hillary Clinton and [2008
Election Democratic Presidential Candidate] Barack Obama have lost ground,
according to a new McClatchy-MSNBC poll." ... "At the same time, [2008
Election Republican Presidential Candidate] Mitt Romney has regained the
lead among Iowa Republicans as [2008 Election Republican Presidential Candidate]
Mike Huckabee has lost momentum and support, even among the evangelical
Christians who had propelled him into the top spot just weeks ago." ...
"If all second-tier Democratic candidates fall short [in Iowa’s Democratic
caucuses] and their supporters switch to other candidates, Edwards gains
the most, rolling up a clear lead at 33 percent to 26 percent each for
Clinton and Obama." ... "Edwards, pushing a people-versus-the powerful
message, owes his gains to voters looking for a general election winner,
someone who agrees with them on the issues, and those who rank Iraq their
top concern." -By Steven Thomma
-McClatchyDC.com
-
Mitt
Romney
-
Mike
Huckabee -
John
McCain
-
Iowa
-
Television
-
Ads
-
2008
Election -
New
Hampshire -
Arizona
- Illegal
-
Immigrants
"Romney,
Huckabee attack each other in Iowa." ... "[2008 Election
Republican Presidential Candidate] Mitt Romney's blistering ads criticizing
[2008 Election Republican Presidential Candidate] Mike Huckabee and [2008
Election Republican Presidential Candidate] John McCain drew sharp rebukes
from their targets and wary responses from voters Saturday, as candidates
barnstormed Iowa five days before the nation's first presidential voting
takes place in caucuses here." ... "Romney launched a new one against McCain
in New Hampshire on Saturday." ... ""McCain championed a bill to let every
illegal immigrant stay in American permanently," the 30-second TV spot
says. "He even voted to allow illegal immigrants to collect Social Security.""
... "The tone was similar to one Romney rolled out Friday in Iowa against
Huckabee." ... ""Soft on government spending," the ad charges. "His foreign
policy? 'Ludicrous,' says Condoleezza Rice." ... "Huckabee fought back
Saturday." ... ""Every time you turn on your television you're going to
see all the terrible things my opponents said I did," he told hundreds
crowded into a restaurant in Indianola [Iowa]. "Mitt Romney's not only
attacking me. He's now attacked John McCain, he's attacked Rudy Giuliani,
he's attacked everybody. He's not telling people why he ought to be president.""
... "McCain, the Arizona senator, dismissed Romney's charges and called
him "a phony."" -By David Lightman with contributions
by Jim Morrill -McClatchy
News Reference # 2007
News # December
2007 News
December 29, 2007 News URL: #December-29-2007-News
20071229
Saturday
-
John
Edwards
-
Barack
Obama
- Oil
-
Drug
- Money
-
Foreign
-
Government- United
States -
Iowa
-
2008
Election
"Edwards
Pledges Ban on Lobbyists." ... "[2008 Election Democratic
Presidential Candidate] John Edwards vowed Saturday that corporate lobbyists
would not be allowed to work in his administration, if elected." ... "“When
I am president of the United States, no corporate lobbyists or anyone who
has lobbied for a foreign government will work in my White House,” Mr.
Edwards said, speaking at a public library." ... "He followed it up with
an implicit attack on [2008 Election Democratic Presidential Candidate
Barack Obama] Mr. Obama." ... "[John Edwards said,] “I hear people argue
that the way you can get things done is you sit at a table with drug companies,
insurance companies, oil companies and negotiate with them, and somehow
they will voluntarily give away their power,” he said. “I think it is a
complete fantasy.”" ... "In a November speech to Iowa Democrats, Mr. Obama
promised that lobbyists would not work in his White House." ... "But he
[Obama] later amended his position, saying that lobbyists would not “dominate”
his White House.”" ... "When campaigning, Mr. Edwards frequently reminds
voters that he has never taken campaign contributions from lobbyists."
-By Julie Bosman -NYTimes
-
Ron
Paul
-
Television
- Politics
-
New
Hampshire -
Iowa
- US
-
Iraq
-
Military
-
2008
Election
"Paul:
Fox News is 'scared of me'." ... "[2008 Election
Republican Presidential Candidate] Ron Paul said the decision to exclude
him from a debate on Fox News Sunday the weekend before the New Hampshire
Primary is proof that the network "is scared" of him." ... ""They are scared
of me and don't want my message to get out, but it will," Paul said in
an interview at a diner here. "They are propagandists for this war and
I challenge them on the notion that they are conservative."" ... "Paul,
the Republican Texas Congressman, was wrapping up his final day of campaigning
in New Hampshire until the Iowa Caucuses on Thursday." -By
James Pindell -BostonGlobe
-
Fred
Thompson
-
Tennessee
-
Iowa
-
2008
Election
"Thompson:
'Not particularly interested in running for president'."
... "Republican [2008 Election Presidential Candidate] Fred Thompson has
long faced criticism he lacks motivation to be President of the United
States, but the Tennessee Republican's latest comments Saturday are likely
to spawn fresh heat." ... "“I’m not particularly interested in running
for president," the former senator said at a campaign event in Burlington
[Iowa] when challenged by a voter over his desire to be commander-in-chief."
... "“But I think I’d make a good president," Thompson continued. "I have
the background, capability, and concern to do this and I’m doing it for
the right reasons.”" ... "Thompson took heat for not jumping into the White
House race until September — significantly later than every other candidate
— and has since been criticized for his lax campaign style and often-times
light schedule." -By Alexander Mooney
-CNN
News Reference # 2007
News # December
2007 News
December 28, 2007 News URL: #December-28-2007-News
20071228
Friday
-
John
Edwards
-
Barack
Obama
- Money
-
Iowa
-
2008
Election
"Edwards
ties rivals to special interests." ... "[2008 Election]
Democratic presidential candidate John Edwards said Friday that those who
take money from special interests cannot bring change to Washington, a
criticism aimed at his leading rivals as they compete for undecided voters
in Iowa's upcoming caucuses." ... ""To get real change, we need a president
who will stand up against the big corporations and powerful interests who
control Washington," the former North Carolina senator told about 250 people
in Dubuque [Iowa]. "Nobody who takes their money and defends the broken
system is going to bring change."" ... "In veiled criticism of [2008 Election
Democratic Presidential Candidate Barack] Obama, Edwards has said at recent
campaign events that if a candidate believes that he or she can sit down
at the table and negotiate with special interests, then the candidate is
living in "Never-Never Land" and that it's a "fantasy" to think that way."
... ""I'm not talking about fighting politicians. Nobody is interested
in seeing a bunch of politicians fight," he said. "We're going to put the
power in the people, and that's what this democracy is."" -By
Amy Lorentzen -AP
via -Yahoo
-
John
Edwards
- Working
-
Family
- Economics
-
Iowa
-
2008
Election
"Edwards
says he's ready to fight for the middle class." ...
"[2008 Election Democratic Presidential Candidate John] Edwards has been
trying to hammer home his message that he'll stand up to special interests
in Washington. As part of the effort, he has launched an eight-day, 38-county
tour keeping him in Iowa until the caucuses, which begins the 2008 nominating
process." ... ""My belief is that we desperately need to make this government
work for everybody again. We need to stand up to the forces of corporate
greed that are destroying the middle class of this country," he told a
crowd of about 150 people packed tightly into a small restaurant bar in
northeastern Iowa." ... "Edwards reminded them that despite his wealth
as an adult, he grew up in a working-class family and knows their struggles."
... ""The truth is, all of us have an enormous responsibility to our children,
to our grandchildren to do what our parents did for us and our grandparents
did for us _ to give them a better life," he said. "I have no intention
of letting this corporate power and corporate greed get in the way"" -By
Amy Lorentzen -QCTimes
- Economic
-
Construction
- History
"Sales
of New Homes in U.S. Dropped 9% to 12-Year Low (Update3)."
... "Sales of new homes in the U.S. fell to a 12-year low in November,
pointing to bigger declines in construction that will hobble economic growth
throughout 2008." ... "Purchases dropped 9 percent to an annual pace of
647,000 and October sales were revised down to a 711,000 rate, the Commerce
Department said today in Washington. Last month's sales were weaker than
the lowest forecast in a Bloomberg survey. " ... "A Bloomberg survey of
68 economists forecast sales would fall to an annual pace of 717,000 from
a previously reported 728,000 rate in October, according to the median
estimate. Economists' forecasts ranged from a low of 685,000 to a high
of 750,000." ... "Sales of new homes were down 34 percent from the same
time last year, the biggest 12-month drop since January 1991." ... "The
housing recession has deepened since the August turmoil in subprime mortgages
led to a worldwide credit shortage. Stricter borrowing standards and a
freeze on lending to borrowers with poor credit put mortgages out of reach
for more potential buyers. That's driving home prices lower, weakening
sales as people hold out for even bigger reductions." -By
Bob Willis -Bloomberg
-
US
-
Iraq
-
Afghanistan
-
Military
- Money
-
Legislation
-
Reconstruction
"Bush
rejects defense bill by pocket veto." ... "[Republican]
President Bush on Friday used a "pocket veto" to reject a sweeping defense
bill because he dislikes a provision that would expose the Iraqi government
to expensive lawsuits seeking damages from the Saddam Hussein era." ...
"In a statement, Bush said the legislation "would imperil billions of dollars
of Iraqi assets at a crucial juncture in that nation's reconstruction efforts.""
... "The president's objections were focused on a provision deep within
legislation that sets defense policy for the coming year and approves $696
billion in spending, including $189 billion for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Also in the legislation were improved veterans benefits and tighter oversight
of contractors and weapons programs." ... "The pocket veto means that troops
will get a 3 percent raise Jan. 1 instead of the 3.5 percent authorized
by the bill." -By Ben Feller
-AP via -Yahoo
News Reference # 2007
News # December
2007 News
December 27, 2007 News URL: #December-27-2007-News
20071227
Thursday
-
John
Edwards
- US
-
Pakistan
-
2008
Election
"More
on Edwards' Chat With Musharraf." ... "After reiterating
his insistence that Pakistan [leader Pervez Musharraf] "continue on this
path to democratization with free and open elections," [2008 Election Democratic
Presidential Candidate John] Edwards expressed some skepticism." ... ""He
assured me he'd do it," said Edwards. "But we have to hold his feet to
the fire because he's made those kind of promises before."" ... ""What
the president and the presidential candidates need to be doing is not talking
about politics and the political advantage supposedly this gives somebody
or somebody else," said Edwards. "This is a crucial, important issue that
presidential candidates need to show some calm and strength and leadership
on."" -By Aaron Lewis
-CBSNews
- US
-
Iraq
-
Afghanistan
-
Worldwide
-
Military
-
Government
-
Accounting
- Terrorism
-
Politics
-
History
-
Alaska
-
Ted
Stevens
"Wars
Cost $15 Billion a Month, GOP Senator Says." ...
"The latest estimate of the growing costs of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan
and the worldwide battle against terrorism -- nearly $15 billion a month
-- came last week from one of the Senate's leading proponents of a continued
U.S. [United States] military presence in Iraq." ... ""This cost of this
war is approaching $15 billion a month, with the Army spending $4.2 billion
of that every month," [Alaska GOP=Grand Old Party=Republican Senator] Sen.
Ted Stevens (Alaska), the ranking Republican on the Appropriations defense
subcommittee, said in a little-noticed floor speech Dec. [December] 18."
... "While most of the public focus has been on the political fight over
troop levels, the Congressional Research Service (CRS) reported this month
that the [Republican President] Bush administration's request for the 2008
fiscal year of $189.3 billion [$189.3/12=$15.775 billion per month] for
Defense Department operations in Iraq, Afghanistan and worldwide counterterrorism
activities was 20 percent higher than for fiscal 2007 and 60 percent higher
than for fiscal 2006." (1, 2)
-By Walter Pincus -WashingtonPost
-
US
-
Iraq
-
Military
"
US
military deaths in Iraq at 3,900." ... "As of Thursday,
Dec. 27, 2007, at least 3,900 members of the U.S. military have died since
the beginning of the Iraq war in March 2003, according to an Associated
Press count." -AP
via -Yahoo
-
Mike
Huckabee - Money
-
Religion
-
Abortion
-
2008
Election -
Polls
-
Marketing
-
Arkansas
-
Iowa
-
South
Carolina
"Huckabee's
Rise Drives Wedge Between Wall Street, Evangelicals."
... "The former Arkansas governor [2008 Election Republican Presidential
Candidate Mike Huckabee] has surged in Republican presidential-preference
polls, winning the support of Christian fundamentalists while peppering
his campaign rhetoric with jabs at the financial industry. He calls himself
the candidate who isn't a ``wholly owned subsidiary'' of investment banks,
decries large executive-pay packages and says the party needs to shift
its focus from Wall Street to Main Street." ... "In doing so, he threatens
the uneasy if effective coalition Republicans have counted on for three
decades: abortion opponents and other social-issue activists supplying
foot soldiers, proponents of tax cuts and business-friendly regulatory
policies putting up the money and getting the biggest economic benefits."
... "``Huckabee puts this long-simmering feud between the social-conservative
wing and the country-club and business crowd into starker contrast,'' said
Stuart Rothenberg, publisher of the nonpartisan Rothenberg Political Report
in Washington." ... "The stronger he gets in the polls, the stronger the
intra- party backlash against him. ``He's sort of a populist, and that
doesn't sell too well on Wall Street,'' said David Hedley, a retired managing
director at Donaldson Lufkin & Jenrette who raised at least $100,000
for [Republican President] George W. Bush in the 2000 presidential election."
... "The Club for Growth, a Washington-based group that advocates tax and
spending cuts, has mounted a [marketing] campaign against Huckabee in Iowa
and South Carolina, which holds its Republican primary on Jan. 19." ...
"After Huckabee finished second in an August Iowa straw poll, he said in
an interview that his biggest asset going into the contest ``was the negative
attack ads that the Club for Greed, excuse me, the Club for Growth was
running.''" -By Matthew Benjamin
-Bloombergvia -Yahoo
- Pakistan
-
Terrorism
-
Politics
-
Police
-
Religious
-
Female
- History
"Benazir
Bhutto assassinated." ... "Pakistan's former Prime
Minister Benazir Bhutto was assassinated Thursday in the wake of a suicide
bombing that killed at least 14 of her supporters, doctors, a spokesman
for her party and other officials said." ... "Bhutto suffered bullet wounds
in the aftermath of the bomb attack, TV networks were reporting." ... "Police
warned citizens to stay home as they expected rioting to break out in city
streets as a shocked Pakistan absorbed the news of Bhutto's assassination."
... "Bhutto, who led Paksitan from 1988 to 1990 and was the first female
prime minister of any Islamic nation, was participating in the parliamentary
election set for January 8, hoping for a third term." ... "A terror attack
targeting her motorcade in Karachi killed 136 people on the day she returned
to Pakistan after eight years of self-imposed exile." -Contributed
to by Mohsin Naqvi -CNN
-
John
Edwards
-
Wisconsin
-
Iowa
-
Poll
- Union
-
2004
Election -
2008
Election
"Edwards
may be closer than he appears." ... "In 2004 [Election],
when [2008 Election Democratic Presidential Candidate] John Edwards nearly
beat John Kerry in Wisconsin, he declared, "Objects in your mirror may
be closer than they appear."" ... "In 2008, he may be getting close again."
... "He has run in Iowa and knows the caucus system. He has worked rural
counties, where a little-reported study revealed that last time it took
only 22 caucus-goers to win a delegate, compared with 80 in urban counties."
... "According to a shrewd observer, a big chunk of Dick Gephardt's 2004
trade union support has gone to Edwards. Adding what he already had gives
him a solid share of the 122,000 people who caucused last time." ... "[Iowa]
Caucus-goers whose candidates don't get 15 percent at a given caucus can
switch on a subsequent ballot to a "viable" candidate. A recent poll found
Edwards is much more likely (42 percent) to be the second choice of those
whose candidate didn't make the cut than Obama (31 percent) or Clinton
(27 percent)." -By Dan Payne
-BostonGlobe
-
Government
- Corporations
-
Employee
-
Retirees
- Health
-
Law
-
Politics
-
History
"U.S.
Ruling Backs Benefit Cut at 65 in Retiree Plans."
... "The [Republican President Bush run] Equal Employment Opportunity Commission
said Wednesday that employers could reduce or eliminate health benefits
for retirees when they turn 65 and become eligible for Medicare." ... "The
policy, set forth in a new regulation, allows employers to establish two
classes of retirees, with more comprehensive benefits for those under 65
and more limited benefits — or none at all — for those older." ... "More
than 10 million retirees rely on employer-sponsored health plans as a primary
source of coverage or as a supplement to Medicare, and Naomi C. Earp, the
commission’s chairwoman, said, “This rule will help employers continue
to voluntarily provide and maintain these critically important health benefits.”"
... "But AARP and other advocates for older Americans attacked the rule.
“This rule gives employers free rein to use age as a basis for reducing
or eliminating health care benefits for retirees 65 and older,” said Christopher
G. Mackaronis, a lawyer for AARP, which represents millions of people age
50 or above and which had sued in an effort to block issuance of the final
regulation. “Ten million people could be affected — adversely affected
— by the rule.”" ... "The new policy creates an explicit exemption from
age-discrimination laws for employers that scale back benefits of retirees
65 and over. Mr. Mackaronis asserted that the exemption was “in direct
conflict” with the Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967." ... "Under
the new rule, employers may, if they choose, provide retiree health benefits
“only to those retirees who are not yet eligible for Medicare.” Likewise,
the rule says, retiree health benefits can be “altered, reduced or eliminated”
when a retiree becomes eligible for Medicare." ... "Further, employers
will be able to reduce or eliminate health benefits provided to the spouse
or dependents of a retired worker 65 or over, regardless of whether benefits
for the retiree are changed." -By Robert Pear
-NYTimes
News Reference # 2007
News # December
2007 News
December 26, 2007 News URL: #December-26-2007-News
20071226
Wednesday
-
Secret
-
Torture
- Terrorism
-
Government
-
Detainee
- Intelligence
-
Law
-
Virginia
-
Christmas
"Senate
meets briefly to block Bush." ... "The House was
quiet as a mouse the day after Christmas. But across the Capitol, the [Democratic
controlled] Senate was operating in an unusually efficient manner in its
ongoing power struggle with [Republican] President Bush." ... "A nine-second
session gaveled in and out by [Virginia Democratic Senator] Sen. Jim Webb,
D-Va.[Democratic-Virginia], prevented Bush from appointing as an assistant
attorney general a nominee roundly rejected by majority Democrats. Without
the pro forma session, the Senate would be technically adjourned, allowing
the president to install officials without Senate confirmation." ... "Democrats
wanted to block one such recess appointment in particular: Steven Bradbury,
acting chief of the Justice Department's Office of Legislative Counsel.
Bush nominated Bradbury for the job and asked the Senate to remove the
"acting" in his title." ... "Democrats would have none of it, complaining
Bradbury had signed two secret memos in 2005 saying it was OK for the CIA
[Central Intelligence Agency] to use harsh interrogation techniques — some
call it torture — on terrorism detainees." -By Laurie
Kellman -AP
via -Yahoo
-
John
Edwards
-
Barack
Obama
-
Hillary
Clinton
-
Iowa
-
Manufacturing
- Jobs
-
Family
- Health-Care
-
Environment
-
Human
Rights - US
-
China
-
Corporations
-
Iraq
-
Military
-
Indiana
-
Idaho
-
Illinois
-
Homes
-
Consumers
-
2008
Election
"Behind
the Edwards Surge: Right Message at the Right Time."
... "To a far greater extent than [2008 Election Democratic Presidential
Candidates Barack] Obama or [Hillary] Clinton, [John] Edwards has struck
at the heart of issues that should matter most in the race to replace not
just [Republican President] George W. Bush, but the Bush agenda of corporate
giveaways, job-crushing free trade deals, war profiteering in Iraq, and
subprime mortgage profiteering in Indiana, Idaho, Illinois and, yes, Iowa."
... "Edwards summed up his increasingly aggressive and powerful anti-corporate
themes with a declaration: "What makes America America is at stake: jobs,
the middle class, health care, preserving the environment in the world
for future generations."" ... ""But all those things are at risk. And why
are they at risk? Because of corporate power and corporate greed in Washington,
D.C. And we have to take them on. You can't make a deal with them. You
can't hope that they're going to go away. You have to actually be willing
to fight. And I want every caucus-goer to know I've been fighting these
people and winning my entire life. And if we do this together, rise up
together, we can actually make absolutely certain, starting here in Iowa,
that we make this country better than we left it."" ... "Edwards got to
know workers in Iowa. He stood with them in their struggles." ... "Turning
a broad question about human rights toward the specific issue of trade
policy, the former senator said that human rights, human needs and human
values "should be central to our trade policy."" ... ""But," he added,
"if you look at what's happened with American trade policy, look at what
America got: Big corporations made a lot of money, are continuing to make
a lot of money in China. But what did America get in return? We got millions
of dangerous Chinese toys. We lost millions of jobs." ... ""And right here
in Iowa, the Maytag plant in Newton [Iowa] closed. A guy named Doug Bishop,
who I got to know very well, had worked in that plant, and his family had
worked in that plant literally for generations. And his job is now gone.
The same thing, by the way, happened in the plant that my father worked
in when I was growing up. It is so important that we stop allowing these
corporate powers and corporate profits to run America's policy, whether
it's trade policy, how we engage with China. This is not good for America.
It's not good for American jobs. And it's not good for working people in
this country."" ... "That's an issue Edwards has taken far, far more seriously
than his opponents in what is now a three-way race in Iowa. And that seriousness
has benefitted the former senator." -By John Nichols
-TheNation
-
Consumer
- Money
-
History
"U.S.
Home Prices Fell 6.1% in October, Index Shows (Update2)."
... "Home prices in 20 U.S. metropolitan areas fell in October by the most
in at least six years, a private survey showed today." ... "Property values
fell 6.1 percent from October 2006, more than forecast, after dropping
4.9 percent in September, according to the S&P/Case-Shiller home-price
index. The decrease was the biggest since the group started keeping year-over-year
records in 2001. The index has fallen every month this year." ... "Prices
will probably remain under pressure as the jump in foreclosures puts even
more homes on the market just as stricter lending rules make it harder
for buyers to find financing. Declining values make it harder for owners
to tap home equity for extra cash, posing a risk to consumer spending."
-By Joe Richter and Courtney Schlisserman
-Bloomberg
-
US
-
Iraq
-
Military
-
Family
-
Poll
-
Idaho
-
Oregon
- Afghanistan
"Military
family members share public's division on Iraq war, Bush:
Polls: Almost half say invasion was a mistake." ... "Close family members
of U.S. [United States] troops are split on whether the Iraq invasion was
a mistake, and 55% disapprove of [Republican] President Bush's job performance,
according to USA TODAY/Gallup Polls focusing on immediate relatives of
servicemembers." ... ""They've maxed out on the troops. You've got guys
who are over there on their fourth or fifth tours. It's ridiculous," says
Jeanette Knowles, 40, of Mountain Home, Idaho, whose brother, Jeff, served
a tour in Iraq with the Oregon National Guard." ... "More than 1.5 million
servicemembers have been sent to Iraq or Afghanistan since Sept. 11, 2001,
and Army combat tours last up to 15 months." -By Gregg
Zoroya -USATODAY
-
John
McCain
-
Mitt
Romney
- Politics
-
Abortion
-
Immigration
-
New
Hampshire -
2008
Election
"The
Romney backlash: Conservatives are coming home."
... "[New Hampshire] Granite Staters want a candidate who will look them
in the eye and tell them the truth. [2008 Election Republican Presidential
Candidate] John McCain has done that day in and day out, never wavering,
never faltering, never pandering." ... "[2008 Election Republican Presidential
Candidate] Mitt Romney has not. He has spoken his lines well, but the people
can sense that the words are memorized, not heartfelt." ... "Last week
Romney was reduced to debating what the meaning of "saw" is. It was only
the latest in a string of demonstrably false claims -- he'd been a hunter
"pretty much" all his life, he'd had the NRA's endorsement, he marched
with Martin Luther King, Jr. -- that call into question the veracity of
his justifications for switching sides on immigration, abortion, taxes
and his affection for Ronald Reagan." ... "In this primary, the more Mitt
Romney speaks, the less believable he becomes. That is why Granite Staters
who have listened attentively are now returning to John McCain. They might
not agree with McCain on everything, as we don't, but like us, they judge
him to be a man of integrity and conviction, a man who won't sell them
out, who won't break his promises, and who won't lie to get elected."
-UnionLeader.com
News Reference # 2007
News # December
2007 News
December 25, 2007 News URL: #December-25-2007-News
20071225
Tuesday
-
Bill
Richardson
-
John
Edwards
-
Iowa
- Energy
-
-
New
Mexico -
North
Carolina -
2008
Election
"Iowa
caucus can elevate second choice." ... "Bill Grove
is a [2008 Election Democratic Presidential Candidate] Bill Richardson
man. He thinks the New Mexico governor, with his background as a United
Nations ambassador and secretary of the U.S. [United States] Department
of Energy, is well seasoned for the White House." ... "But Grove has a
backup plan." ... "If Richardson fails to qualify under Iowa's complicated
system of counting Democratic caucus votes, Grove says he will switch his
vote to former North Carolina Sen. [Senator and 2008 Election Democratic
Presidential Candidate] John Edwards." ... "Second choices usually don't
fare well in politics. In Iowa, though, being second could be critical
to success." ... "When Iowa Democrats caucus on Jan. 3, candidates who
receive less than 15 percent of the vote are considered nonviable. Their
backers have the choice of either going home or casting their ballots for
their second choice." ... "Grove picked Edwards as his second choice because
he likes Edwards' emphasis on helping restore rural America and his populist
message about the declining middle class." ... ""I like his fighting spirit,"
he said." ... ""His message really resonates with you. I just personally
like him."" -By Rob Christensen
-McClatchy via
-KansasCity.com
-
Dick
Cheney
- Car
-
Manufacturers
-
Fumes
- Corporate
-
Government
- Environmental
-
Science
-
Politics
-
California
-
Climate
"Cheney
accused of blocking Californian bid to cut car fumes."
... "The US [United States Republican] vice-president, Dick Cheney, was
behind a controversial decision to block California's attempt to impose
tough emission limits on car manufacturers, according to insiders at the
government Environmental Protection Agency." ... "Staff at the agency,
which announced last week that California's proposed limits were redundant,
said the agency's chief went against their expert advice after car executives
met Cheney, and a Chrysler executive delivered a letter to the EPA [Environmental
Protection Agency] saying why the state should not be allowed to regulate
greenhouse gases." ... "EPA staff members told the Los Angeles Times that
the agency's head, the [Republican President] Bush appointee Stephen Johnson,
ignored their conclusions and shut himself off from consultation in the
month before the announcement. He then informed them of his decision and
instructed them to provide the legal rationale for it, they said." -By
Dan Glaister -Guardian.co.uk
-
Secret
-
Dick
Cheney
-
David
Addington -
Government
-
Archives
-Law
-
Politics
"Challenging
Cheney: A National Archives official reveals what
the veep wanted to keep classified--and how he tried to challenge the rules."
... "J. William Leonard learned the hard way the perils of questioning
[Republican] Vice President Dick Cheney. The veteran National Archives
official challenged claims by the Office of Vice President (OVP) to be
exempt from federal rules governing classified information. His efforts
touched off a firestorm—and a counter-strike by Cheney's chief of staff,
David Addington, who tried to wipe out Leonard's job." ... "Now, Leonard
is quitting as director of the Archives' Information Security Oversight
Office (ISOO)—the unit that monitors the handling of government secrets.
He tells NEWSWEEK that his fight with Cheney's office was a "contributing"
factor in his decision to retire after 34 years of government service."
... "Leonard-described by National Archivist Allen Weinstein as "the gold
standard of information specialists in the federal government"-spoke to
NEWSWEEK's Michael Isikoff." ... "[Newsweek:] So how did matters escalate?"
... "[J William Leonard:] The challenge arose last year when the Chicago
Tribune was looking at [ISOO's annual report] and saw the asterisk [reporting
that it contained no information from OVP] and decided to follow up. And
that's when the spokesperson from the OVP made public this idea that because
they have both legislative and executive functions, that requirement doesn't
apply to them.…They were saying the basic rules didn't apply to them. I
thought that was a rather remarkable position. So I wrote my letter
to the Attorney General [asking for a ruling that Cheney's office had to
comply.] Then it was shortly after that there were [email] recommendations
[from OVP to a National Security Council task force] to change the executive
order that would effectively abolish [my] office." ... "[Newsweek:]
Who wrote the emails?" ... "[J William Leonard:] It was David Addington."
(1, 2, 3)
-By Michael Isikoff -Newsweek
News Reference # 2007
News # December
2007 News
December 22, 2007 News URL: #December-22-2007-News
20071222
Saturday
-
Families
-
Poverty
-
Agriculture
-
Christmas-Holidays
-
Thanksgiving
- Gasoline
-
Households
- Money
-
People
"Food
Bank Shelves Going Bare At Holidays: High Living
Costs Hurting Donations, While Increasing Demand By Needy Families." ...
"The reports from across the country are dismaying: Food pantries are running
short and cannot meet the needs of all those seeking help." ... "In the
Department of Agriculture's most recent study of hunger
in America, released in November, more than 35.5 million Americans,
including 12.6 million children, were found to have "low" or "very low
food security" (defined as households where hunger was prevalent, where
there was not enough money to buy adequate food supplies, where food purchased
did not last, or where family members had to cut down or skip meals - sometimes
not eating for a day or longer)." ... "That's roughly 1 in 9 households.
And the numbers are rising from last year." ... "Everywhere, people are
feeling the crunch of rising gasoline and grocery prices, as well as utility
bills, rent and mortgage payments." ... "Those factors also are cutting
into people's ability to donate to food banks for others in need." ...
"At Thanksgiving, the [America's
Second Harvest] organization estimated that food banks nationally
were short a total of 15 million pounds of food, or roughly 11.7 million
meals. " -AP
via -CBSNews
-
Mitt
Romney
- Political
-
Corporation
-
Marketing
- History
-
Gay-Rights
-
Pro-Choice
-
Stem
Cell - Science
-
Health
-
Law
-
Religious
-
Salt
Lake City -
Utah
-
Massachusetts
-
New
Hampshire - US
-
Torture
-
Prison
-
Guantanamo
Bay - Cuba
-
2008
Election
"Romney
should not be the next president." ... "[2008 Election
Republican Presidential Candidate Mitt] Romney's main business experience
is as a management consultant, a field in which smart, fast-moving specialists
often advise corporations on how to reinvent themselves. His memoir is
called Turnaround - the story of his successful rescue of the 2002 Winter
Olympics in Salt Lake City [Utah] - but the most stunning turnaround he
has engineered is his own political career." ... "If you followed only
his tenure as governor of Massachusetts, you might imagine Romney as a
pragmatic moderate with liberal positions on numerous social issues and
an ability to work well with Democrats. If you followed only his campaign
for president, you'd swear he was a red-meat conservative, pandering to
the religious right, whatever the cost. Pay attention to both, and you're
left to wonder if there's anything at all at his core." ... "As a candidate
for the U.S. [United States] Senate in 1994, he boasted that he would be
a stronger advocate of gay rights than his opponent, [Massachusetts Democratic
Senator] Ted Kennedy. These days, he makes a point of his opposition to
gay marriage and adoption." ... "There was a time that he said he wanted
to make contraception more available - and a time that he vetoed a bill
to sell it over-the-counter." ... "The old Romney assured voters he was
pro-choice on abortion. "You will not see me wavering on that," he said
in 1994, and he cited the tragedy of a relative's botched illegal abortion
as the reason to keep abortions safe and legal. These days, he describes
himself as pro-life." ... "There was a time that he supported stem-cell
research and cited his own wife's multiple sclerosis in explaining his
thinking; such research, he reasoned, could help families like his. These
days, he largely opposes it. As a candidate for governor, Romney dismissed
an anti-tax pledge as a gimmick. In this race, he was the first to sign."
... "In the 2008 campaign for president, there are numerous issues on which
Romney has no record, and so voters must take him at his word. On these
issues, those words are often chilling. While other candidates of both
parties speak of restoring America's moral leadership in the world, Romney
has said he'd like to "double" the U.S. prison at Guantanamo Bay [Cuba],
where inmates have been held for years without formal charge or access
to the courts. He dodges the issue of torture - unable to say, simply,
that waterboarding is torture and America won't do it." ... "When New Hampshire
partisans are asked to defend the state's first-in-the-nation primary,
we talk about our ability to see the candidates up close, ask tough questions
and see through the baloney. If a candidate is a phony, we assure ourselves
and the rest of the world, we'll know it." ... "Mitt Romney is such a candidate.
New Hampshire Republicans and independents must vote no."
-ConcordMonitor.com
News Reference # 2007
News # December
2007 News
December 21, 2007 News URL: #December-21-2007-News
20071221
Friday
-
Mitt
Romney
-
Civil
Rights -
Race
- History
-
2008
Election
"Romney
never saw father on King march: Defends figurative
words; evidence contradicts story." ... "[2008 Election Republican Presidential
Candidate] Mitt Romney acknowledged yesterday that he never saw his father
march with Martin Luther King Jr. as he asserted in a nationally televised
speech this month, and historical evidence shows that Michigan's Governor
George Romney and the civil rights leader never did march together." ...
"Romney said his father had told him he had marched with King and that
he had been using the word "saw" in a "figurative sense."" ... "But historical
evidence, including news accounts at the time, shows that George Romney
never marched with King, though he supported King's agenda." ... "Romney
has repeated the story of his father marching with King in some of his
most prominent presidential campaign appearances, including the "Tonight"
show with Jay Leno in May, his address on faith and politics Dec. 6 in
Texas, and on NBC's "Meet The Press" on Sunday, when he was questioned
about the Mormon Church's ban on full participation by black members. He
said that he had cried in his car in 1978 when he heard the ban had ended,
and added, "My father marched with Martin Luther King."" ... "Mitt Romney
went a step further in a 1978 interview with the Boston Herald. Talking
about the Mormon Church and racial discrimination, he said: "My father
and I marched with Martin Luther King Jr. through the streets of Detroit.""
... "Yesterday, Romney spokesman Eric Fehrnstrom acknowledged that was
not true. "Mitt Romney did not march with Martin Luther King," he said
in an e-mail statement to the Globe." -By Michael
Levenson -BostonGlobe
-
Mitt
Romney
-
Pro-Choice
-
Stem
Cells - Illegal
-
Immigrant
- Health
-
Crime
- Politics
-
History
-
Massachusetts
-
Michigan
-
2008
Election
"King
said George Romney didn't march: But, as usual, the
truth wasn't good enough for Mitt." ... "Running for Senate in Massachusetts,
in 1994, and trying to establish pro-choice credibility that he had done
nothing to earn, [2008 Election Republican Presidential Candidate Mitt]
Romney told stories about his mother, Lenore Romney, running on a strong
pro-choice platform in her own unsuccessful bid for public office in 1970.
Those tales were debunked by Boston Globe columnist Eileen McNamara."
... "Then, as now, Romney tried to buttress his statement with weak documentation
at odds with the precision of the claim: in that case, Romney provided
the Globe with a vaguely-worded campaign document that could be read as
supporting the pre-Roe v Wade status quo, in which abortion was a felony
in Michigan. ''I support and recognize the need for more liberal abortion
rights while reaffirming the legal and medical measures needed to protect
the unborn and pregnant woman [sic]," the document read." ... "Again, at
that time, Romney did not just pass along falsehood as fact. He sold it
as personal truth, speaking of the painful memories of a close relative's
death, from complications of an illegal abortion." ... "Romney was telling
that tale, of course, when it was politically expedient to be pro-choice.
Today, needing to be pro-life, he has a new, highly personal and emotional
tale of personal conversion after a doctor showed him how stem cells are
handled in research — another specific but uncorroborated story, about
which even the doctor involved has expressed skepticism." ... "Romney once
favored gun control; now, needing gun-rights voters, he has falsely claimed
to be a "lifelong hunter" and to have been endorsed in 2002 by the National
Rifle Association – an endorsement the NRA never gave him. Needing to establish
anti-illegal-immigrant credentials, he boasts of an attitude that he never
displayed while governor — when he expressed no concern over several "sanctuary
cities" in the state — until the very end of his term, when he had turned
his attention to the Republican Presidential nomination." ... "This week,
he finds the need to attack [2008 Election Republican Presidential Candidat]
Mike Huckabee on crime, and so Romney has re-invented his record there,
falsely claiming, in a new ad, to have cracked down on methamphetamine."
... "It is not just that these are untruths. They are the actions of a
man desperate to cater to the whims of his audience. What they want, he
must appear to be. " -By David S. Bernstein
-ThePhoenix.com
-
Mike
Huckabee -
Prisoners
-
Guantanamo
- Cuba
-
US
-
Military
- Law
-
Arkansas
-
2008
Election
"Huckabee:
Gitmo Is "Too Nice"." ... "Asked about Guantanamo
[American military prison in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba], [2008 Election Republican
Presidential Candidate] Mike Huckabee said he had visited the facility
and said it was “disappointing” that military personnel were eating meals
that averaged $1.60 while the detainees were eating Halal meals that cost
over $4 each." ... "“The inmates there were getting a whole lot better
treatment than my prisoners in Arkansas. In fact, we left saying, ‘I hope
our guys don’t see this. They’ll all want to be transferred to Guanatanmo.
If anything, it’s too nice.”" ... "Huckabee has said Guantanamo is more
a “symbolic issue” than anything else since the detainees are treated better
than prisoners in the US. Today Huckabee said, “Where they are detained
is of less importance to me than that they are detained…until we know they
are of no threat to us.”" -By Joy Lin and Mary Hood
-CBSNews
-
Tom
Tancredo -
Mitt
Romney
- Illegal
-
Immigration
-
Colorado
-
Iowa
-
2008
Election
"Tancredo
pulls out, backing Romney: Says he has best chance
of winning." ... "[2008 Election Republican Presidential Candidate] Tom
Tancredo pulled out of the presidential race yesterday and endorsed [2008
Election Republican Presidential Candidate] Mitt Romney, saying his erstwhile
rival is the Republican with the best chance to win the White House and
continue the fight to end illegal immigration, an issue the Coloradan helped
push to the forefront of the campaign." ... "The fifth-term congressman,
who consistently polled at the bottom of the nine-candidate GOP [Grand
Old Party=Republican] field, said he dropped out two weeks before the Iowa
caucuses because he feared his continued candidacy could enable an opponent
favoring a less-stringent approach to immigration to win."
-BostonGlobe
-
John
Edwards
- Working
-
Family
- College-Education
-
Money
-
Race
-
Des-Moines
-
Iowa
-
NC
-
Barack
Obama
-
Hillary
Clinton
-
2008
Election
"The
Road Warrior: Even if he loses in Iowa's bigger cities,
[2008 Election Democratic Presidential Candidate John] Edwards can still
win by wrapping up smaller, far-flung precincts." ... "For months, Edwards
has been rounding up support in the state's rural precincts where the front
runners have paid less attention. While [2008 Election Democratic Presidential
Candidate Barack] Obama and [2008 Election Democratic Presidential Candidate
Hillary] Clinton have drawn crowds in the thousands in places like Des
Moines [Iowa] and Ames [Iowa], Edwards has been winning over people in
tiny towns like Sac City [Iowa] (population: 2,189). That's important,
the strategists say, because under Iowa's arcane caucus rules, a precinct
where 25 people show up to vote gets the same number of delegates as a
place that packs in 2,500. In other words, even if he loses to Obama and
Clinton in the state's bigger cities, he can still win by wrapping up smaller,
far-flung precincts that other candidates have ignored. "The bulk of our
support is in small and medium counties," says Jennifer O'Malley, Edwards's
Iowa state director. O'Malley says Edwards has visited all 99 counties
in the state; the campaign has so far trained captains covering 90 percent
of all 1,781 precincts. Rural voters are sometimes reluctant to caucus,
so the campaign has been enlisting respected community leaders to encourage
first-timers to get past their apathy or fear." ... "This could be wishful
thinking from an ailing campaign. But it's worth keeping in mind just how
wrong the media echo chamber can be when it comes to predicting winners
and losers. At about this time four years ago, Vermont Gov. Howard Dean
was the press-anointed darling who could seemingly do no wrong in Iowa.
Dour John Kerry was scorned by reporters as the should-have-been who had
blown it and couldn't possibly win. But on caucus night, Kerry wound up
the victor—and Dean wound up screaming. Reporters were left to wonder what
they had missed. One story the talking heads may be missing this time:
just how badly John Edwards hates to lose." ... "The desire to get ahead—to
win—is no small thing for Edwards. He was raised in the depressed town
of Robbins, N.C. [North Carolina], where his father, Wallace, worked in
a now long-gone textile mill. It's a biographical detail the candidate
mentions so often in speeches and campaign ads that it can sometimes border
on self-parody. Yet his father's story is what Edwards's campaign, and
political career, is all about. His dad worked his way up in the mill and
was promoted to supervisor. But without a college degree, there was only
so far he could rise. "He heard his mother and I talk about it at the dinner
table, so he knew what I was faced with," his father tells NEWSWEEK. Money
was scarce. Wallace was determined that John and his younger brother and
sister, Wesley Blake and Kathy, would attend college. He set an example
of self-improvement. He took classes offered by the mill, and tuned in
to the education channel on TV early each morning when the station aired
lessons in statistics and probability." ... "Tall and good-looking—and
he knew it—John Edwards was a popular student and a star football player,
skinny but fast. His high-school friend John Mashburn remembers Edwards
as a leader. "In a little redneck town, he was different," he says. There
was still racial tension in Robbins in the early 1970s, and black students
were sometimes mistreated. In protest, several of them once held a sit-in.
Edwards persuaded his white friends to join in. "Johnny got a lot of the
athletes, myself, our girlfriends … he was instrumental in encouraging
us," Mashburn says. John Frye, another high-school friend, says it was
a gutsy thing to do. He "stuck his neck out," Frye recalls. "There was
a price to pay in how some folks treated him after that. We had people
who didn't embrace desegregation even though it had been a bridge crossed
years earlier."" (1, 2,
3,
4,
5)
-By Arian Campo-Flores and Suzanne Smalley Dec
24, 2007 Issue -Newsweek
-
Mitt
Romney
-
Civil
Rights -
Race
- Politics
-
Michigan
-
Massachusetts
-
Texas
-
2008
Election
"Romney
fields questions on King: Campaign says claim not
literal." ... "[2008 Election] Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney
has said he watched his father, the late Michigan Gov. [Governor] George
Romney, in a 1960s civil rights march in Michigan with Martin Luther King
Jr." ... "On Wednesday, Romney's campaign said his recollections of watching
his father, an ardent civil rights supporter, march with King were meant
to be figurative." ... ""He was speaking figuratively, not literally,"
Eric Fehrnstrom, spokesman for the Romney campaign, said of the candidate."
... "The campaign was responding to questions raised by the Free Press
and other media after a Boston [Massachusetts] publication challenged the
accuracy of Mitt Romney's account." ... "In a major speech on faith and
politics earlier this month in Texas, Mitt Romney said: "I saw my father
march with Martin Luther King."" ... "He made a similar statement Sunday
during an appearance on NBC's "Meet the Press." He said, "You can see what
I believed and what my family believed by looking at our lives. My dad
marched with Martin Luther King. My mom was a tireless crusader for civil
rights."" -By Todd Spangler and Alice Pepper
-FreeP.com
-
Secret
-Intelligence
-
War
-
Criminal
-
Videotapes
-
Censorship
- Politics
-
Military
- Terrorism
-
Texas
"Subpoena
of CIA officials threatened: Justice Dept. [department]
action in tape destruction probe angers House panel chairman, who expects
testimony from two top intelligence agency officials." ... "The chairman
of the House Intelligence Committee, chafing at the Justice Department's
handling of a probe into missing CIA [Central Intelligence Agency] interrogation
tapes, threatened Wednesday to subpoena two top CIA officials to jump-start
the panel's own investigation." ... "The department, which is conducting
a criminal inquiry with the CIA inspector general into revelations that
a CIA official destroyed videotapes of two terrorism suspects being interrogated
in 2005, asked the panel last week to defer its inquiry." ... "Committee
Chairman [Texas Democratic Representative] Rep. Silvestre Reyes (D-Texas)
has called a hearing for Jan. 16. He said he expected testimony from both
acting CIA general counsel John Rizzo and Jose A. Rodriguez Jr., the former
head of the agency's operations branch, who authorized destroying the tapes."
-By Richard B. Schmitt
-LAtimes
-
Mitt
Romney
-
Rudy
Giuliani
-
Mike
Huckabee -
Tom
Tancredo -
Criminal
- Illegal
-
Employer
-
Immigrants
- Employees
-
Language
-Terrorism
-
History
-
Colo
-
New
York
-
Arkansas
- US
-
Mexican
-
People
-
Noteworthy
-
2008
Election
"GOP
hopefuls run in a hypocrisy derby." ... "Everybody
knows that [2008 Election Republican Presidential Candidate] Mitt Romney
was running - as [2008 Election Republican Presidential Candidate] Rudy
Giuliani put it - a "sanctuary mansion." But not many people know that
he was not the only one." ... "No less an anti-immigrant zealot than [2008
Election Republican Presidential Candidate and Colorado Representative]
Rep. Tom Tancredo (R-Colo.[Republican-Colorado]), the would-be President
who built a failing campaign on the single issue of persecuting "criminal
aliens" - as he is fond of calling undocumented immigrants - also has a
few skeletons in his closet." ... "Listen to this: Five years ago, when
Tancredo wanted to install a home theater and make other renovations in
his house, he had no qualms hiring a contractor that - gasp! - also employed
undocumented workers." ... "The man who had said, "[The face of illegal
immigration] is the face of murder. It is the face of infiltration into
the country of people who are coming to do us great harm," wasn't at all
troubled by the fact that only two in the crew of five or six laborers
spoke English." ... "[In 1994, then New York Republican Mayor Rudy Giuliani
said] "If you come here and you work hard, and you happen to be in an undocumented
status, you're one of the people who we want in this city," he told The
New York Times in 1994." ... "While in Arkansas, he [Arkansas Republican
Governor and 2008 Election Republican Presidential Candidate Mike Huckabee]
was instrumental in bringing a Mexican Consulate to Little Rock [Arkansas's
capital]. That consulate issued thousands of identification forms that
now, after he has become a presidential hopeful, Huckabee has begun to
call "illegal immigrant identification cards."" ... "And do not forget
that if he is elected President, he has vowed to expel the nation's estimated
12 million undocumented immigrants within 120 days, which comes to deporting
100,000 people per day." -By Albor Ruiz -NYDailyNews.com
-
Secret
-
Alberto
R Gonzales -
David
S Addington -
Dick
Cheney
-
Harriet
E Miers
-
Torture
-
War
-
Crimes
-
Tapes
-
Censorship
- Law
-
Politics
-
Military
-
Government
- Intelligence
-
Terrorism
-
History
-
US
-
Iraq
"Bush
Lawyers Discussed Fate of C.I.A.Tapes." ... "At least
four top [Republican President Bush] White House lawyers took part in discussions
with the Central Intelligence Agency between 2003 and 2005 about whether
to destroy videotapes showing the secret interrogations of two operatives
from Al Qaeda, according to current and former administration and intelligence
officials." ... "The accounts indicate that the involvement of White House
officials in the discussions before the destruction of the tapes in November
2005 was more extensive than [Republican President] Bush administration
officials have acknowledged." ... "Those who took part, the officials said,
included Alberto R. Gonzales, who served as White House counsel until early
2005; David S. Addington, who was the counsel to [Republican] Vice President
Dick Cheney and is now his chief of staff; John B. Bellinger III, who until
January 2005 was the senior lawyer at the National Security Council; and
Harriet E. Miers, who succeeded Mr. Gonzales as White House counsel." ...
"It was previously reported that some administration officials had advised
against destroying the tapes, but the emerging picture of White House involvement
is more complex. In interviews, several administration and intelligence
officials provided conflicting accounts as to whether anyone at the White
House expressed support for the idea that the tapes should be destroyed."
... "One former senior intelligence official with direct knowledge of the
matter said there had been “vigorous sentiment” among some top White House
officials to destroy the tapes. The former official did not specify which
White House officials took this position, but he said that some believed
in 2005 that any disclosure of the tapes could have been particularly damaging
after revelations a year earlier of abuses at Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq."
... "The current and former officials also provided new details about the
role played in November 2005 by Jose A. Rodriguez Jr., then the chief of
the agency’s clandestine branch, who ultimately ordered the destruction
of the tapes." ... "The officials said that before he issued a secret cable
directing that the tapes be destroyed, Mr. Rodriguez received legal guidance
from two C.I.A. [Central Intelligence Agency] lawyers, Steven Hermes and
Robert Eatinger. The officials said that those lawyers gave written guidance
to Mr. Rodriguez that he had the authority to destroy the tapes and that
the destruction would violate no laws." ... "Current and former officials
said the two lawyers informed the C.I.A.’s top lawyer, John A. Rizzo, about
the legal advice they had provided." (1, 2)
-By Mark Mazzetti and Scott Shane with contributions
by David Johnston -NYTimes
-
John
Edwards-
Ron
Paul
-
Mike
Huckabee -
Noteworthy
-
Journalists
- Politics
-
Corporations
-
Legislation
-
Telecom
- Money
-
2008
Election
"Media
hostility toward anti-establishment candidates."
... "[2008 Election Democratic Presidential Candidate John] Edwards, [2008
Election Republican Presidential Candidate Ron] Paul and [2008 Election
Republican Presidential Candidate Mike] Huckabee are obviously disparate
in significant ways -- ideologically, temperamentally, and otherwise. But
there is a vital attribute common to those three campaigns that explains
the media's scorn: they are all, in their own ways, anti-establishment
candidates, meaning they are outside and critical of the system of which
national journalists are a critical part, the system which employs and
rewards our journalists and forms the base of their identity and outlook.
Any candidate who criticizes and opposes that system -- not in piecemeal
ways but fundamentally -- will be, first, ignored and, then, treated as
losers by the press." ... "It is very striking how little Edwards' substantive
critique of our political system has penetrated into the national discourse.
That's because the centerpiece of his campaign is a critique that is a
full frontal assault on our political establishment. His argument is not
merely that the political system needs reform, but that it is corrupt at
its core -- "rigged" in favor of large corporate interests and their lobbyists,
who literally write our laws and control the Congress. Anyone paying even
casual attention to the extraordinary bipartisan effort on behalf of telecom
immunity, and so many other issues driven almost exclusively by lobbyists,
cannot reasonably dispute this critique." ... "Yet because that argument
indicts the same Beltway culture of which our political journalists are
an integral part, and further attacks the system's power brokers who are
the friends, sources, and peers of those journalists, they instinctively
react with confusion, scorn and hostility towards Edwards' campaign. They
condescendingly dismiss it as manipulative populist swill, or cynically
assume that it's just a ploy to distinguish himself by "moving left." In
the eyes of our Beltawy press, the idea that our political system is "rigged"
or corrupt must be anything other than true or sincerely held." ... "As
Digby notes [**],
Ron Paul is going to raise more money than any Republican candidate this
quarter; he just topped the record for most money raised in a single day;
and has now exceeded Howard Dean's 2004 quarter total when Dean was at
the peak of his online fundraising prowess. Huckabee is now tied for the
lead in national polls and is leading in several of the key early states.
Yet our establishment media stars continue to sneer at these anti-establishment
candidates as though they are aberrational jokes, and there is virtually
no serious effort to understand the meaning of their success." ... "Worse,
whenever these candidates are discussed, it almost never entails any discussion
of the critiques they are making. Is Edwards right that corporations and
lobbyists dictate legislation in Washington and that this state of affairs
is profoundly anti-democratic and corrupt? Are Paul's criticisms of our
bipartisan imperial policies and his warnings of resulting financial unsustainability
(and increasing anti-Americanism) accurate? Is Huckabee's claim true that
the GOP has obliterated the economic prospects of its own middle- and lower-middle-class
followers?" -Glenn
Greenwald -Salon
-
Mike
Huckabee -
Rudy
Giuliani
-
Poll
-
2008
Election -
Iowa
-
Arkansas
"Huckabee
and Giuliani tied in 2008 Republican race." ... "[2008
Election Republican Presidential Candidate] Mike Huckabee has surged into
a virtual tie with front-runner [2008 Election Republican Presidential
Candidate] Rudy Giuliani in the national 2008 Republican presidential race
two weeks before the first contest [in Iowa], according to a Reuters/Zogby
poll released on Wednesday." ... "Huckabee, a former governor of Arkansas
whose campaign has caught fire in recent weeks, wiped out an 18-point deficit
in one month to pull within one point of Giuliani, 23 percent to 22 percent."
(1, 2,
3)
-By John Whitesides with contributions by David Wiessler
-Reuters
-
Kevin
Jeffrey Martin - Corporate
-
Government
- Politics
-
Media
-
Communications
-
Broadcast/
- Radio
"FCC
Loosens Newspaper-Broadcast Cross-Ownership Limits:
Federal Communications Commission Voted Along Party Lines; Copps Expects
Rule to Be Overturned." ... "To cries of " unfair" and "this vote is a
sham" from a handful of protesters, the Federal Communications Commission
voted along strict party lines Tuesday to loosen its newspaper-broadcast
cross-ownership rule." ... "Democratic commissioner Michael
Copps was the first commissioner to weigh in with a public statement
in advance of that vote, saying that the FCC [Federal Communications Commission]
was "just inking up a rubber stamp for another round of consolidation.""
... "[Republican President Bush's] FCC chairman Kevin
Martin called it a relatively minor change that may help to "forestall
erosion of local news coverage" and only loosens the rules where there
are many voices and competition." ... "The move sets up a showdown with
mostly Democratic senators who have pledged to nullify that vote, and the
deicison will likely
be taken to court by media activists opposing any more consolidation,
or even broadcasters arguing that it has not gone far enough -- no other
ownership rule was loosened, in contrast to the 2003 rule rewrite, the
remand of which by a court the FCC is wrapping up." ... "The commission
will presume that newspaper-broadcast combinations in the top 20 markets
are in the public interest so long as eight independent voices, including
newspapers, remain and the stations are not among the top four in the market.
It will also allow newspaper-radio combinations but require no voices test."
... "Newspaper-broadcast cross-ownership would also be presumed to be in
the public interest in markets smaller than the top 20 so long as at least
seven hours of local news is added to a station that did not do it before,
or if the station or newspaper is in financial distress." ... "The latter
is defined as a station or newspaper that has gone dark at least four months
before a waiver is filed for, or a station that has less than 4% of the
audience, where there has been negative cash flow for at least three years
(newspaper or station) and where no out-of-market buyer wants it." ...
"Copps called the ruling a shiny gift for big media and a lump of coal
for the rest. "Happy holidays," he said, adding that the change won't pass
muster with either Congress or the courts." ... "Citing the congressional
pushback, Democratic commissioner Jonathan
Adelstein said the FCC "has never attempted such a brazen act of
defiance against Congress. Like the Titanic, we are steaming at full speed
despite repeated warnings of danger ahead. It might yet sink. We should
have slowed down rather than put everything at risk."" ... "Adelstein said
three out of five unelected bureaucrats should not be able to overrule
the American people, whom, he added, weighed in passionately in public
hearings against consolidation. "They danced, they sang, they read us poems,"
he said, as well as providing expert opinions." ... "Both Adelstein and
Copps said Martin made last-minute changes to the proposal late Monday
night and they indicated that the commission was now granting waivers to
42 combinations in the dark of night." ... "Josh
Silver, executive director of Free Press, issued the following
statement: "FCC chairman Kevin Martin is ignoring the public will and defying
the [United States] U.S. Senate. His decision to gut longstanding ownership
rules shows once again how the largest media companies -- with their campaign
contributions and high-powered lobbyists -- are corrupting the policymaking
process at the expense of local news coverage and independent voices.""
... "He continued, "Martin's FCC relied on slanted research and a rigged
process to reach today's preordained outcome -- local media wrapped in
a bow for Tribune, News Corp., Gannett and all the rest."" -By
John Eggerton -BroadcastingCable.com
-
Gordon
Smith -
Trent
Lott -
Racism
- History
-
South
Carolina -
Mississippi
-
Oregon
"Gordon
Smith Defends Lott's Segregationist Comments." ...
"Speaking on the Senate floor Tuesday morning, [Oregon Republican Senator]
Sen. Gordon Smith, R-OR [Republican-Oregon], offered a passionate defense
of the pro-segregationist comments made by his colleague and friend, [Mississippi
Republican Senator] Sen. Trent Lott, more then three years ago." ... ""I
was half way around the world when an event befell Trent Lott that shook
me deeply," Smith said, referencing Lott's 2002 remarks in praise of Dixiecrat
[South Carolina Republican Senator] Strom Thurmond's 1948 run for the White
House. "I was celebrating my re-election and on vacation. I watched over
international news as his words were misconstrued, words which we had heard
him utter many times in his big warm-heartedness trying to make one of
our colleagues, Strom Thurmond, feel good at 100 years old. We knew what
he meant. But the wolfpack of the press circled around him, sensed blood
in the water, and the exigencies of politics caused a great injustice...""
... "In 2002, Lott lost his Senate Republican Leader post after he was
quoted praising the staunch segregationist Strom Thurmond during Thurmond's
100th birthday party. "I want to say this about my state: when Strom Thurmond
ran for President, we voted for him," Lott boasted. "We're proud of it.
And if the rest of the country had followed our lead, we wouldn't have
had all these problems over all these years, either."" ... "Lott apologized
repeatedly for his remarks, calling
them "insensitive," "repugnant" and "inexcusable" during an appearance
on a black-oriented cable channel." ... "Lott recently found himself back
among the leadership ranks. His election as minority whip in November 2006
came by a 25 to 24 vote. Sen. Smith
played a key role in the internal party election."
-By
Sam
Stein -HuffingtonPost.com
WATCH
Oregon Republican Gordon Smith defend Mississippi Republican Trent Lott's
celebration of South Carolina Republican Strom Thurmond's segregationist
run for President in 1948.
-
Fed
- Money
-
Politics
-
Investigate
- Law
-
History
-
People's
-
Homes
-
Consumer
-
California
-
New
York
-
Wyo
"Fed
Shrugged as Subprime Crisis Spread." ... "Until the
boom in subprime mortgages turned into a national nightmare this summer,
the few people who tried to warn federal banking officials might as well
have been talking to themselves." ... "Edward M. Gramlich, a Federal Reserve
governor who died in September, warned nearly seven years ago that a fast-growing
new breed of lenders was luring many people into risky mortgages they could
not afford." ... "But when Mr. Gramlich privately urged Fed examiners to
investigate mortgage lenders affiliated with national banks, he was rebuffed
by Alan Greenspan, the Fed chairman." ... "In 2001, a senior Treasury official,
Sheila C. Bair, tried to persuade subprime lenders to adopt a code of “best
practices” and to let outside monitors verify their compliance. None of
the lenders would agree to the monitors, and many rejected the code itself.
Even those who did adopt those practices, Ms. Bair recalled recently, soon
let them slip." ... "And leaders of a housing advocacy group in California,
meeting with Mr. Greenspan in 2004, warned that deception was increasing
and unscrupulous practices were spreading." ... "John C. Gamboa and Robert
L. Gnaizda of the Greenlining Institute implored Mr. Greenspan to use his
bully pulpit and press for a voluntary code of conduct." ... "“He never
gave us a good reason, but he didn’t want to do it,” Mr. Gnaizda said last
week. “He just wasn’t interested.”" ... "“The Federal Reserve could have
stopped this problem dead in its tracks,” said Martin Eakes, chief executive
of the center [Center for Responsible Lending]. “If the Fed had done its
job, we would not have had the abusive lending and we would not have a
[home] foreclosure crisis in virtually every community across America.”"
... "Mr. Greenspan and other Fed officials repeatedly dismissed warnings
about a speculative bubble in housing prices. In December 2004, the New
York Fed issued a report bluntly declaring that “no bubble exists.” Mr.
Greenspan predicted several times — incorrectly, it turned out — that housing
declines would be local but almost certainly not nationwide." ... " “Why
are the most risky loan products sold to the least sophisticated borrowers?”
Mr. Gramlich asked in a speech he prepared last August for the Fed’s symposium
in Jackson Hole, Wyo[Wyoming]. “The question answers itself — the least
sophisticated borrowers are probably duped into taking these products.”"
(1, 2,
3)
-By Edmund L. Andrews with contributions by Gretchen
Morgenson -NYTimes
-
Mitt
Romney
-
Abortion-Rights
- Money
-
Parent
-
Mass
- History
-
2008
Election
"Romney
Attended Planned Parenthood Fundraiser in 1994."
... "ABC News' Rick Klein Reports: [2008 Election Republican Presidential
Candidate] Mitt Romney attended a fund-raising reception for Planned Parenthood
in 1994 in conjunction with a $150 donation his wife made to the organization
-- notwithstanding Romney's contention that he had "no recollection" of
the circumstances under which his wife gave money to the abortion-rights
group." ... "In the photograph obtained by ABC News, Romney and his wife,
Ann, are shown in a yellow-and-white tent chatting with local political
activists, including Nicki Nichols Gamble, who was then president and CEO
of the Planned Parenthood League of Massachusetts." ... "Nichols Gamble
-- whose back is the camera in the photograph -- told ABC that the event
was a Planned Parenthood fundraising "house party" in Cohasset, Mass.,
in June 1994. At the time, Romney, R-Mass., was locked in a tight Senate
campaign with [Massachusetts Democratic Senator] Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass.,
and was touting his support for abortion rights." ... "That event, Nichols
Gamble said, was the occasion where Ann Romney wrote her $150 check --
drafted on a joint checking account she had with her husband -- to Planned
Parenthood of Massachusetts." ... ""They were both there, and I remember
very well chatting with both of them, and talking about his support for
the pro-choice agenda," she said. "We talked about the fact that he was
taking a pro-choice position on the issues, and we were very pleased about
that."" -By Rick Klein -ABCNEWS.com
-
Mike
Huckabee -
Ron
Paul
-
Religion
-
Ad
-
Liberty
- Book
-
2008
Election
"Huckabee
admaker calls cross imagery "absolutely accidental;" Paul says "fascism'
will be 'carrying a cross'." ... "Asked about Republican
rival Mike Huckabee's Christmas-themed ad, which
we wrote about yesterday and has attracted attention in part because
of the image of a cross that many see hovering over Huckabee's shoulder,
GOP presidential candidate Rep. Ron Paul said this morning on FOX &
Friends that:" ... ""It reminds me of what Sinclair Lewis once said.
He says, 'when fascism comes to this country, it will be wrapped in the
flag, carrying a cross.' Now I don't know whether that's a fair assessment
or not, but you wonder about using a cross, like he is the only Christian
or implying that subtly. So, I don't think I would ever use anything like
that."" ... "From [Sinclair Lewis's book] It Can't Happen Here:
"But he saw too that in America the struggle was befogged by the fact that
the worst Fascists were they who disowned the word 'Fascism' and preached
enslavement to Capitalism under the style of Constitutional and Traditional
Native American Liberty."" -By Mark Memmott
-USATODAY
-
Mitt
Romney
-
Religion
-
Secret
-
2008
Election
"Ex-Mormon
Cartoonist Says Romney Not Telling Truth." ... "As
an ex-Mormon, Arizona Republic editorial cartoonist Steve Benson has strong
opinions about current Mormon Mitt Romney [2008 Election Republican Presidential
Candidate]. He said the Republican candidate's recent speech on religion
should not be trusted by media people and other Americans." ... "In his
talk, Romney said "I believe in my Mormon faith" while also noting that
the church's "teachings" would not influence his decisions if elected president."
... ""Yeah, right," responded Benson, adding that "Romney also believes
in misrepresenting what his Mormon Church actually espouses."" ... "Benson
is the grandson of former Mormon leader Ezra Taft Benson." ... "He told
E&P that, in his view, a Mormon believer is required by church doctrine
(as dictated by the church's "living prophet") to "obey God's commands"
over anything else. He said "Romney, like all 'temple Mormons,' made his
secret vows using Masonic-derived handshakes, passwords, and symbolic death
oaths that he promised in the temple never to reveal to the outside world"
-- and that Romney also secretly vowed to devote his "time, talents" and
more "to the building of the Mormon religion on earth."" ... ""When Mitt
says he belongs to a church that doesn't tell him what to do, that's false;
it's a 24/7, do-what-you're-told-to-do church," asserted Benson, who won
the Pulitzer Prize for editorial cartooning in 1993." -By
Dave Astor -EditorAndPublisher.com
-
Mitt
Romney
-
Mike
Huckabee -
South
Carolina -
Utah
-
Arkansas
-
Massachusetts
- Politics
-
Poll
-
2008
Election
"Mormonism
an issue for Romney in South Carolina." ... "Something
about [2008 Election Republican Presidential Candidate] Mitt Romney just
isn't right with Bill Burdette. And something about [2008 Election Republican
Presidential Candidate] Mike Huckabee is." ... ""Romney's from Utah and
he's Mormon," said the 41-year-old software engineer from Iva, S.C. [South
Carolina] "Huckabee's from the South and he's Baptist."" ... "Understand,
Burdette said, he's not choosing his candidate based on religion, but Huckabee,
a Baptist minister who was the governor of Arkansas for 10 and a half years,
is someone he's comfortable with." ... "That's Romney's problem throughout
this crucial early-voting state, where a win Jan. 19 by the former Massachusetts
governor would give him a huge boost in his quest for the Republican presidential
nomination." ... "An estimated 63 percent of Republican primary voters
in South Carolina are "born again" or evangelical Christians, so a Romney
win would be hailed as dramatic proof that his Mormon faith wasn't a big
factor in voter judgments." ... "Except that evidence from polls and visits
throughout the state shows that it is." -By David
Lightman -McClatchyDC.com
-
Mitt
Romney
-
Mike
Huckabee -
Crime
-
Drug
-
Religious
-
Television
-
Ad
-
Iowa
-
New
Hampshire -
South
Carolina -
2008
Election
"Romney
continues Huckabee attacks." ... "This week, the
[2008 Election Republican Presidential Candidate Mitt] Romney campaign
launched a TV ad in Iowa accusing [2008 Election Republican Presidential
Candidate Mike] Huckabee of being soft on crime and reducing punishments
for those caught manufacturing meth." ... ""I think people recognize this
is very critical time in our nation's history and the issues are important,"
he said. "This is not just about feel-good. This is about how we would
deal with important issues."" ... "Romney's "feel-good" comment was a reference
to Huckabee's own television ad currently running in Iowa, New Hampshire
and South Carolina, in which Huckabee dons a red sweater and tells viewers
that "what really matters is the celebration of the birth of Christ.""
... "Romney questioned whether the ad, with its clear Christian overtones,
is politically appropriate. He said he hopes "we don't divide America on
the basis of faith."" -By Peter Hamby
-CNN
-
John
Edwards
-
Barack
Obama
-
Hillary
Clinton
-
2008
Election -
Iowa
-
Poll
"Poll:
Edwards leads in Iowa." ... "In an InsiderAdvantage
poll in Iowa, [2008 Election Democratic Presidential Candidate John] Edwards
leads among (977) likely voters 30-26-24 over [2008 Election Democratic
Presidential Candidate Hillary] Clinton and [2008 Election Democratic
Presidential Candidate Barack] Obama. Edwards is also the clear
second choice winner, 42-29-28 over Clinton and Obama." -By
Domenico Montanaro -MSNBC
-
Colorado
- Electronic
-
Voting
Machines -Technology
-
Hacking
-
Elections
-
Federal
- Politics
-
2008
Election
"Colo.
Bans Most Electronic Voting Machines: Security Risks,
Inaccuracy Cited; Federal Certification Process Called "Inadequate"." ...
"Colorado's top election official decertified electronic voting machines
used in many of the state's largest counties Monday, calling into question
equipment used in past elections in a move he said could have national
implications." ... "Electronic voting machines used in [Colorado counties:]
Denver, Arapahoe, Pueblo, Mesa and Elbert counties cannot be used in the
next [2008] election because of problems with accuracy or security, Secretary
of State Mike Coffman said." ... "A number of electronic scanners used
to count ballots were also decertified, including a type used by Boulder
County as well as more than three dozen small to mid-size counties around
the state." ... "His decision affects six of Colorado's 10 most populous
counties and three of the four equipment manufacturers allowed in the state."
... "The four systems are manufactured by Hart InterCivic, Premier Election
Solutions - formerly known as Diebold Election Systems - Sequoia Voting
Systems and Election Systems and Software [ES&S]." -By George Merritt
-AP via -CBSNews
-
John
McCain
-
Mitt
Romney
-
Immigrants
-
Gay-Rights
-
Abortion
- Finance
-
Law
-
New
Hampshire -
Arizona
-
Mass
-
2008
Election
"McCain
launches direct mail attack." ... "Republican hopeful
[2008 Election Republican Presidential Candidate and Arizona Senator] Sen.
John McCain, of Arizona, launched an attack – a direct mail campaign labeling
New Hampshire primary front-runner [2008 Election Republican Presidential
Candidate] Mitt Romney as a serial flip-flopper that "voters can't trust.''"
... "The two-page flier cites a May 2007 article in the Tampa Tribune,
which states Romney had once supported allowing illegal immigrants to "apply
for citizenship and permanent residency''" ... "It then refers to Romney's
decision to re-hire a firm after it had been found to have used illegal
immigrants to work on his Belmont, Mass.[Massachusetts], home." ... ""How
many times has Mitt Romney flip-flopped?'' the mailing asks. "Immigration,
taxes, gay rights, abortion, campaign finance reform.'' -By
Kevin Landrigan -NashuaTelegraph.com
-
Iran
-
Russia
-
Fuel
-
Business
-
Construction
- US
-
International
-
Military
- Politics
"Russia
starts nuclear fuel deliveries to Iran." ... "Iran
passed a significant milestone in its quest for nuclear power status yesterday
when it received a first delivery of enriched uranium from Russia, allowing
for the completion of a long-delayed reactor at Bushehr [Iran]." ... "The
head of Iran's atomic energy organisation, Gholamreza Aghazadeh, announced
that 80 tonnes of fuel had been received, with further consignments expected
in the next two months." ... "The delivery appeared to signal a weakening
of the international coalition opposing Iranian nuclear ambitions which
the US and its allies suspect are aimed at building an atomic bomb." ...
"It also means Iran is just months away from having its first nuclear power
station, after years of delays. The Russian contractors building the Bushehr
plant, which will be used to generate electricity, say it could be operational
within six months." -By Robert Tait
-Guardian.co.uk
-
Wave
- Technology
-
Company
-
Canada
-
San
Francisco -
California
-
Oregon
- US
-
Global
-
Climate
"PG&E
agrees to buy power from Canadian firm's proposed 'wave park'."
... "The dream of generating electricity from the ocean's waves will take
a major step forward today when Pacific Gas and Electric Co. announces
its support for plans to build the nation's first commercial wave power
plant off the coast of Northern California, the latest step in the state's
efforts to combat global warming." ... "The plant will consist of eight
buoys bobbing in the water 2 1/2 miles offshore, each buoy generating electricity
as it rises and falls with the waves. If all goes as planned, the "wave
park" will begin operating in 2012." ... "The power it generates won't
be much - enough to light 1,500 homes at most. But it represents another
potential front in the fight against climate change. California has ordered
utilities such as PG&E to buy more power from renewable sources that
don't spew greenhouse gases into the atmosphere and heat the planet. The
utilities are turning to the sun, the wind and now the ocean as a result."
... "San Francisco's [California] PG&E won't build or own the proposed
wave park, near Eureka [California], which will be designed and built by
Canadian company Finavera. Instead, PG&E has agreed to buy the plant's
power." ... "That promise will help Finavera get financing for the project
by showing potential investors that it already has a customer. It's an
unusual step for a technology that, until now, has existed more in the
lab than in the water." ... "There's no guarantee that the project will
work. Finavera's prototype buoy sank off the Oregon coast earlier this
year, for reasons the company hasn't completely nailed down." -By
David R. Baker -SFGate.com
-
Connie
Mack -
Florida
-
California
-
Wyoming
"Reps.
Mary Bono, Connie Mack marry." ... "[California Republican
Representative] Mary Bono, who was married to late singer-turned-politician
[Republican] Sonny Bono and replaced him in Congress after his death, has
married U.S. [United States Florida Republican Representative] Rep. Connie
Mack." ... "Mack, a Republican representative from Florida, and Bono, R-Palm
Springs [California-Republican], had been dating for two years." ... "
Bono and her previous husband, former Wyoming businessman Glenn Baxley,
filed for divorce in 2005." -AP
via -PE.com
-
Ron
Paul
-
Mitt
Romney
- Politics
-
History
-
Online-
2008
Election -
2004
Election
"Ron
Paul Supporters Make History with $6 Million Online Haul -- Updated."
... "[2008 Election] Republican presidential candidate Ron Paul made history
Sunday by raising $6 million in online contributions in 24 hours, breaking
the record for the most money raised by a national candidate in a single
day, and potentially putting Paul on track to surpass the fourth quarter
fund raising of all of his competitors in both parties." ... ""I just think
it's extraordinary," says Anthony J. Corrado, a campaign finance expert
and professor of government at Colby College in Maine. "In my view, I expect
that Ron Paul will raise more money than any other candidate this quarter.
At this point, his main competition will be [2008 Election Republican Presidential
Candidate] (Mitt) Romney's checkbook."" ... "The $6 million number beats
the 2004 [Election] record set by Democratic presidential nominee John
Kerry, who raised $5.7 million after he gave his nomination speech." -By
Sarah Lai Stirland -Wired
-
Chris
Dodd
- Corporate
-
Government
- Spy
-
Law
-
Intelligence
-
Politics
-
Telephone
- Internet
-
E-Mails
- Electronic
-
Civil
Liberties -
2008
Election -
Foreign
- American
-
Nevada
-
Conn
-
Wisc
-
VT
-
Mass
"Spy
law showdown postponed until next year." ... "Congress
won't decide until next year whether to pass a complex law that would let
telephone and Internet companies off the hook from lawsuits alleging illicit
cooperation with federal government spies." ... "In something of an unexpected
move, U.S. Senate Majority Leader [Nevada Democratic Senator] Harry Reid
took to the Senate floor on Monday evening and announced he would postpone
debate on the so-called FISA Amendments Act [FISA: Foreign Intelligence
Surveillance Act]. That bill, which has already been approved in a closed-door
meeting of the Senate Intelligence Committee, would grant such corporate
immunity and make it easier for the feds to snoop on phone calls and e-mails
involving foreigners and Americans without a warrant, drawing rampant criticism
from civil liberties groups." ... "Earlier
in the day, however, it appeared more certain that the Senate would
move ahead with a vote to approve the
controversial Senate measure, which would provide legal immunity to
electronic communications providers that have allegedly opened up their
networks to the National Security Agency and other federal spies since
the September 11, 2001 attacks. Above vocal objections from some Democrats,
the senators nevertheless voted 76-10 to limit debate and other stalling
tactics related to the bill." ... "But in the end, last-minute rallying
from Democrats opposed to the telecommunications immunity provisions applied
the necessary pressure." ... "Perhaps most notably, [2008 Election Democratic
Presidential Candidate and Connecticut Senator] Sen. Chris Dodd (D-Conn.),
a presidential hopeful, devoted
nearly the entire day to delivering one impassioned speech after another
about his opposition to granting legal immunity to telecommunications companies
accused of providing illegal assistance to government spying programs.
Other influential Democratic senators, including [Wisconsin Democratic
Senator] Russ Feingold (D-Wisc.), [Vermont Democratic Senator] Patrick
Leahy (D-Vt.), and [Massachusetts Democratic Senator] Ted Kennedy (D-Mass.)
echoed his concerns at various points during the day." -By
Anne Broache -CNET
-
Secret
-
Jack
Abramoff
-
Dick
Cheney
-
Government
-
Religion
- Politics
"Judge:
White House visitor logs are public documents." ...
"The [Republican President Bush] White House must release its visitor logs
and cannot hide behind a shield of privilege, a federal judge ruled Monday.
The Bush administration has resisted public disclosure while it fights
a lawsuit over alleged political influence by conservative Christian leaders."
... "The White House claimed exclusive control of the documents, subject
to the complete discretion of the president over their release." ... "Citizens
for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, a self-described government
watchdog group, sought the visit records of prominent conservatives James
Dobson of Focus on the Family, Wendy Wright of Concerned Women of America
and seven others including the late televangelist Jerry Falwell." ... "Separate
legal action by CREW and other groups, including Judicial Watch and the
Washington Post, sought White House visitor logs that listed lobbyist Jack
Abramoff. He pleaded guilty last year to public corruption charges." ...
"Another federal judge in Washington ordered the release of Secret Service
logs of visitors to [Republican] Vice President Dick Cheney's office. Cheney
claimed those logs were subject to executive privilege. That ruling is
being appealed." -By Bill Mears
-CNN
-
Mitt
Romney
-
Mike
Huckabee - US
-
Foreign
-
Military
-
Mentality
-
2008
Election
"Romney
Again Seeks Huckabee Apology." ... "At a campaign
stop here on Monday, [2008 Election Republican Presidential Candidate]
Mitt Romney continued his blunt criticism of his Republican rival [2008
Election Republican Presidential Candidate] Mike Huckabee, renewing a call
for Mr. Huckabee to apologize for characterizing the [Republican President]
Bush administration’s foreign policy as “arrogant.”" ... "Mr. Romney once
again accused Mr. Huckabee of using “the language of a Democrat” in an
article
he wrote for the January/February 2008 issue of Foreign Affairs in which
he asserts that “the Bush administration’s arrogant bunker mentality has
been counterproductive at home and abroad.”" -By Michael
Falcone -NYTimes
-
Hillary
Clinton
-
Barack
Obama
-
Drug
-
Criminality
-
Race
-
Religion
-
New
Hampshire -
Iowa
-
South
Carolina -
2008
Election
"Clinton's
stereotyping of Obama may backfire." ... "[2008 Election
Democratic Presidential Candidate] Barack Obama said Friday that he accepted
the apology of Democratic presidential rival [2008 Election Democratic
Presidential Candidate] Hillary Clinton after Bill Shaheen, Clinton's New
Hampshire cochairman, suggested that Obama's teenage drug use would hurt
him in the general election." ... "It was clear, though, that the apology
did not cover all the recent shots at Obama that raise questions as to
whether the Clinton campaign is getting desperate." ... ""The kindergarten
stuff was not mentioned," Obama said in an interview after a morning town
hall event here in eastern Iowa. The Clinton team was ridiculed in political
circles for dredging up an Obama kindergarten I-want-to-be-president essay."
... "That leaves open as to how far the Clinton campaign, whose poll leads
have evaporated in Iowa, New Hampshire, and South Carolina, will go to
stereotype Obama as not only naive, but cast him in a sinister light in
a nation where black drug use and criminality is exaggerated in the media
and where Muslims face undue wariness. Earlier this week, the Clinton staff
fired two Iowa volunteer coordinators for circulating a hoax e-mail saying
Obama, a Christian, was a Muslim who might help destroy the United States."
-By Derrick Z. Jackson
-BostonGlobe via -SeattlePI
- University
-
Politics
-
New
Jersey
"Police:
Princeton student faked attack, e-mail threats."
... "A [New Jersey] Princeton University student who argued that his conservative
views were not accepted on the campus confessed to fabricating an assault
and sending threatening e-mail messages to himself and some friends who
shared his views, authorities said Monday." ... "Princeton Township police
said Francisco Nava was not immediately charged with any crime, but the
investigation was continuing." ... "Nava claimed to have been assaulted
Friday by two men off-campus, police said. But he later confessed that
scrapes and scratches on his face were self-inflicted, and that the threats
were his work, too, said Detective Sgt. [Sergeant] Ernie Silagyi." -By
Geoff Mulvihill -AP
via -Newsday.com
-
John
Edwards
- Working
-
Families
- Energy
-
Corporate
-
Government
-
2008
Election -
Iowa
"Edwards
Offers Middle-Class Pitch: [2008 Election Democratic
Presidential Candidate] John Edwards Sharpens Pitch Aimed At Working Families."
... "Edwards, on the seventh day of an eight-day bus tour of the state
[of Iowa], spelled out the components of what he calls his "middle class
rising agenda," including tax breaks for working families, tougher trade
policies and investment in alternative energy." ... ""Corporate greed and
political calculation have taken over our government and sold out the middle
class," Edwards said. "That is wrong. It doesn't say 'life, liberty and
the pursuit of endless corporate profits' in the Declaration of Independence.""
... ""We have a fight in front of us, we have a fight for the future of
this country," he said. "We need someone who is going to step into that
arena on your behalf, someone who is ready for that fight, somebody who
has got it inside, somebody who has the toughness and strength and fight."
... ""Brothers and sisters, I was born for this fight," he told the more
than 500 people jammed into a high school gym [in Iowa] to hear him." ...
"Edwards also is making the case that he's best positioned to win the White
House in November [2008's Election], pointing to polls that show him ahead
of all the leading Republican presidential contenders." ... ""I was the
only Democrat who beat every Republican in head-to-head matchups," Edwards
said, telling backers to use that argument with wavering voters. "Make
sure they know that the data is powerful, that I'm a winner. Say it that
way."" -AP
via -CBSNews
-
Chris
Dodd
-
Secret
-
Telecom
- Industry
-
Government
- Spying
-
Politics
-
Net
-
E-Mails
-
Data
-
Iowa
-
Connecticut
-
2008
Election
"Dodd
out of Iowa for Senate filibuster." ... "With just
weeks until the pivotal Iowa caucuses, [2008 Election] presidential candidate
and Democratic [Connecticut Senator] Sen. Chris
Dodd has abandoned the Hawkeye State to lead a filibuster against
a controversial measure that would give special legal protections to the
telecom industry." ... "The Connecticut Democrat has criticized the proposed
renewal of government spying powers, insisting it gives too much power
to secret agencies and lets large telecommunications firms off the hook
for handing over reams of private data on American phone calls and e-mails."
... "Under the measure being considered this week, telecom firms would
be given legal immunity from invasion of privacy lawsuits that result from
the release of this information to government officials." -By
Lisa Desjardins and Rebecca Sinderbrand -CNN
-
Mike
Huckabee -
Mitt
Romney
-
John
Edwards
-
New
Hampshire -
Iowa
- US
-
Foreign
- Corporate
-
2008
Election
"Candidates
Scrambling to Cope With Rise of Huckabee." ... "The
campaign most immediately threatened by [2008 Election Republican Presidential
Candidate Mike] Mr. Huckabee’s rise was that of [2008 Election Republican
Presidential Candidate] Mr. Romney." ... "Mr. Huckabee, in his latest campaign
swing through New Hampshire, sounded almost like [2008 Election Democratic
Presidential Candidate] John Edwards, a Democrat running for president,
when he decried what he called “fat cat” chief executive officers and their
outsize paychecks." ... "In Iowa last week, Mr. Romney regularly tore into
Mr. Huckabee’s record, sometimes bringing it up directly with audiences
in town hall forums and other times waiting to do it with reporters afterward.
And after the Foreign Affairs article [where Mike Huckabee described Republican
President Bush's foreign policy as an "arrogant bunker mentality"], he
questioned Mr. Huckabee’s Republicanism." ... "“That’s an insult to the
president, and Mike Huckabee should apologize to the president,” Mr. Romney
said Sunday on the NBC program “Meet the Press.”" ... "The Romney campaign’s
decision to directly engage Mr. Huckabee carries risk; Iowans are known
to dislike negative campaigning." (1, 2)
-By Michael Cooper -NYTimes
-
Women
-
Poll
-
Rudy
Giuliani
-
Hillary
Clinton
-
New
York
-
Mich
-
2008
Election
"Women
more willing to forgive Monica scandal than Judi Giuliani's trysts."
... "More [women] were likely to punish Judith Giuliani for trysting with
the then-married [Rudy Giuliani, 2008 Election Republican Presidential
Candidate and former New York City, New York] mayor when she was Judith
Nathan than [former Democratic President] Bill Clinton for cheating on
his wife [Hillary Clinton, 2008 Election Democratic Presidential Candidate
and New York Senator] in the Oval Office." ... ""I think [the Giulianis]
have a lot of nerve to think they can get elected when the Republicans
won't let my poor buddy Bill alone for what he did," said Marie Klieman,
74, of East China, Mich. [Michigan.]" ... "Only 15% of respondents in the
poll said they worried about another sex scandal exploding should the Clintons
return to their old digs on Pennsylvania Ave." ... "The poll also found
that many female voters like the idea of Bill Clinton taking on a role
in his wife's administration, but they split on whether Rudy Giuliani's
third wife should get involved in government." ... "Hillary Clinton has
said she might put her husband to work helping out with diplomacy, and
54% of women in the poll said they approved. " -By
Helen Kennedy -NYDailyNews.com
-
John
Edwards
-
Iowa
-
2008
Election
"Edwards:
'I'm the strongest candidate in the general election'."
... "Taking a break from an eight-day Iowa bus trip, [2008 Election Democratic
Presidential Candidate] Edwards appeared on national talk shows on CBS,
ABC and CNN where he touted recent national poll showing that he was the
only Democrat who would defeat all the potential Republican rivals in the
fall." ... ""The empirical data points out, I'm the Democrat who beats
every single Republican in national testing," Edwards said on ABC News'
"This Week with George Stephanopoulos." "I'm the strongest candidate in
the general election."" ... ""What we ultimately have to do is have a president
of the United States - a Teddy Roosevelt - whose tough, who has what it
takes to engage in this fight to galvanize the American people in this
cause."" ... ""Edwards is really good," former [Democratic] President Bill
Clinton said in an interview Friday with PBS talk show host Charlie Rose.
"You are underestimating his chances. Edwards might win in Iowa."" -By
Rob Christensen -McClatchy
via -KansasCity.com
-
Mitt
Romney
-
Abortion
-
Gay
- Money
-
Law
-
History
-
Massachusetts
-
2008
Election
"Romney
Defends Charges Of Flip-Flopping: Says He Will Keep
Campaign Promises Despite Changing Views On Abortion, Same-Sex Rights."
... "Republican [2008 Election Presidenticdal Candidate] Mitt Romney sought
Sunday to deflect charges that he is a flip-flopper, insisting he had learned
from experience and could be counted on to keep his campaign promises if
elected president." ... "Romney acknowledged changing his views in 2004
from supporting abortion rights to opposing abortion. He said he did not
entirely betray abortion-rights voters, either, because he did not seek
to change Massachusetts abortion laws." ... "Romney said he promised not
to raise taxes as governor and did not go back on his word by raising fees
by about $240 million to help balance the budget. The fees were on services
such as gun licenses and training to combat domestic violence." ... "Romney
acknowledged that he initially supported federal efforts to ban discrimination
based on sexual orientation, but now only supports such laws at the state
level. In an unsuccessful Senate run in 1994, Romney promised to be "more
effective on gay rights in the Senate than [Massachusetts Democratic Senator]
Ted Kennedy."" -AP
via -CBSNews
-
John
Edwards
-
Des-Moines
-
Iowa
- Health-Care
-
Poverty
-
2008
Election
"Iowa's
first lady to back Edwards for president." ... "Iowa’s
first lady [Mari Culver, wife of Iowa's governor Chet Culver], who had
said she would stay neutral in the presidential race, has changed her mind
and plans to endorse [2008 Election Democratic Presidential Candidate]
Democrat John Edwards Monday." ... "“I decided to join in the fray,” Mari
Culver said in an interview today." ... "She said she agrees with his plans
to fight poverty and to reform health care, and she thinks he offers Democrats
the best chance to take back the White House." ... "“I think John is a
winner. He’s electable,” she said. “He’s been tested. He’s been on the
national ticket before. The national polls show him beating all Republicans
in the general elections. He inspires me. I think he inspires other Iowans,
and I think he can really rally Americans in the fall." ... "Mari Culver
said she will endorse Edwards at a rally in Des Moines [Iowa's capital]
at noon Monday, and she plans to appear at other events.” -By
Tony Leys -DesMoinesRegister
-
John
Edwards
-
Barack
Obama
-
Hillary
Clinton
-
Illinois
-
2008
Election
"Edwards
Sticks to the Positive." ... "[2008 Election Democratic
Presidential Candidate] John Edwards appeared on Sunday political talk
shows this morning and put forth a consistently positive demeanor, declining
easy opportunities to hammer his Democratic opponents." ... "He was particularly
hands-off when it came to [2008 Election Democratic Presidential Candidate
and Illinois] Senator Barack Obama. On “This Week with George Stephanopoulos,”
Mr. Stephanopoulos noted that the [2008 Election Democratic Presidential
Candidate Hillary] Clinton campaign has been making the case that Mr. Obama
is “untested, unexamined and ultimately unprepared and unelectable.”" ...
"“Are they right?” Mr. Stephanopoulos asked." ... "“Oh, I wouldn’t say
those things,” Mr. Edwards replied. “I think that Barack Obama – I’ve
gotten to know him during the course of the campaign. He seems to be a
good man. He’s thoughtful, and I have respect for him.”" ... "Mr. Edwards
then pointed out what he called a “fundamental philosophical difference”
that Mr. Obama is more willing to compromise when working for change."
-By Julie Bosman -NYTimes
-
Mitt
Romney
-
Massachusetts
-
2008
Election -
2002
Election
"Romney
Claims NRA Endorsement He Didn't Receive." ... "Under
[MSNBC TV host Tim] Russert's grilling about guns on this morning's "Meet
the Press," former Massachusetts governor [and 2008 Election Republican
Presidential Candidate] Mitt Romney claimed an endorsement he'd never won."
... "In answer to questions about whether he would sign an assault weapons
ban, Romney said: "Just as the president said, he would have, he would
have signed that bill if it came to his desk, and so would have I. And,
and, and yet I also was pleased to have the support of the NRA when I ran
for governor. I sought it, I seek it now. I'd love to have their support.""
... "Later in the interview, he added the following:" ... ""I just talked
about, about guns. I told you what my position was, and what I, what I
did as governor; the fact that I received the endorsement of the NRA.""
... "The problem?" ... "He was never endorsed by the NRA, and didn't have
their official support during his 2002 [Election] gubernatorial campaign."
-By Michael D. Shear -WashingtonPost
-
Secret
-Surveillance
-
Terrorism
-
Crime
-
Telecommunications
- Companies
-
Government
- Legislation
-
Politics
-
Intelligence
-
Drug
-
Consumer
-
Wireless
- Technology
-
United
States -
Global
-
Space
-
Colorado
-
New
Jersey
"Wider
Spying Fuels Aid Plan for Telecom Industry." ...
"For months, the [Republican President] Bush administration has waged a
high-profile campaign, including personal lobbying by President Bush and
closed-door briefings by top officials, to persuade Congress to pass legislation
protecting companies from lawsuits for aiding the National Security Agency’s
warrantless eavesdropping program." ... "But the battle is really about
something much bigger. At stake is the federal government’s extensive but
uneasy partnership with industry to conduct a wide range of secret surveillance
operations in fighting terrorism and crime." ... "The N.S.A.’s reliance
on telecommunications companies is broader and deeper than ever before,
according to government and industry officials, yet that alliance is strained
by legal worries and the fear of public exposure." ... "To detect narcotics
trafficking, for example, the government has been collecting the phone
records of thousands of Americans and others inside the United States who
call people in Latin America, according to several government officials
who spoke on the condition of anonymity because the program remains classified.
But in 2004, one major phone carrier balked at turning over its customers’
records. Worried about possible privacy violations or public relations
problems, company executives declined to help the operation, which has
not been previously disclosed." ... "In a separate N.S.A. [National Security
Agency] project, executives at a Denver [Colorado] phone carrier, Qwest,
refused in early 2001 to give the agency access to their most localized
communications switches, which primarily carry domestic calls, according
to people aware of the request, which has not been previously reported.
They say the arrangement could have permitted neighborhood-by-neighborhood
surveillance of phone traffic without a court order, which alarmed them."
... "The federal government’s reliance on private industry has been driven
by changes in technology. Two decades ago, telephone calls and other communications
traveled mostly through the air, relayed along microwave towers or bounced
off satellites. The N.S.A. could vacuum up phone, fax and data traffic
merely by erecting its own satellite dishes. But the fiber optics revolution
has sent more and more international communications by land and undersea
cable, forcing the agency to seek company cooperation to get access." ...
"[An ATT engineer is claiming in a lawsuit that as early as February 2001,]
“What he saw,” said Bruce Afran, a New Jersey lawyer representing the plaintiffs
along with Carl Mayer, “was decisive evidence that within two weeks of
taking office, the [Republican] Bush administration was planning a comprehensive
effort of spying on Americans’ phone usage.”" (1,
2)
-By Eric Lichtblau, James Risen, and Scott Shane
-NYTimes
-
John
Edwards
-
Barack
Obama
-
Hillary
Clinton
-
North
Carolina -
Illinois
-
New
York
-
2008
Election -
Government
- Oil
-
Drug
-Companies
-
Health-Care
-
US
-
Iraq
-
Military
-
Iowa
-
Fields
"Edwards
cuts sharper edge in Iowa trail speeches." ... ""The
few, the powerful, the well-financed, they now control the government,"
[2008 Election Democratic Presidential Candidate] John Edwards told a tight
crowd of about 350 last week. "They've taken over your democracy. And it
affects everything that happens in this country."" ... ""Everything," he
emphasized." ... "During an 18-minute span, the former North Carolina senator
took aim and fired freely at insurance, oil and drug companies and failed
chief executives rewarded with golden parachutes. He described the Republican
field as [Republican President] "George Bush on steroids" and said his
Democratic competitors are talkers, not fighters." ... "In what has often
been portrayed as a two-Democrat battle between [2008 Election Democratic
Presidential Candidate and Illinois Senator] Sens. Barack Obama of Illinois
and [2008 Election Democratic Presidential Candidate and New York Senator]
Hillary Clinton of New York the populist Edwards is making an eight-day
blitz across the frozen fields of Iowa, a sort of red-meat express to convince
the middle class that he is the one who will wrest the country from the
clutches of "corporate power and greed."" ... ""I know some people suggest
we'll be able to sit at the table with drug companies and oil companies
and think they can get their power away. Right," Edwards said dismissively,
indirectly referring to the approaches he says Obama and Clinton would
take." ... ""I'll tell you when they'll [corporations] lose their power:
when we take it away from them," he told a cheering crowd at the [Iowa]
Grinnell Eagles Club." ... ""There's been a change in America. We have
greater concentration of wealth and power in a few. We have an increasingly
dysfunctional health-care system. We have this war in Iraq that has gotten
much worse," he said. "I think we need a president who's willing to be
tough and to go after these things."" -By Tim Jones
-ChicagoTribune
-
Mike
Huckabee - Law
-
Politics
-
Money
-
Arkansas
-
Prison
-
2008
Election
"Huckabee
DWI clemency, donations raise questions." ... "Questions
are being raised about then-Gov. [former Arkansas Governor and now 2008
Election Republican Presidential Candidate Mike] Huckabee's 2004
decision to grant clemency to a repeat Driving While Intoxicated offender
in Arkansas named Eugene Fields, despite the objections of a law enforcement
official at the time. Documents obtained by NBC News reveal Fields' case
was handled differently from any other DWI clemency or pardon granted by
Huckabee, and some Republicans are now suggesting significant political
contributions may have influenced the governor's decision." ... "In August
2001, Fields, of Van Buren, Ark. [Arkansas], was convicted of his fourth
DWI charge, a felony in the state of Arkansas, was sentenced to six years
in prison and a $5,000 fine. Fields reported to prison in August of 2003."
... "But prison records obtained by NBC News show that six weeks into that
six-year sentence, Fields' application for clemency, a commutation of his
sentence the governor could issue to grant Fields an early release from
prison, was unanimously supported by the parole board. Within months, Huckabee
issued his intent to grant executive clemency to Fields, who was released
from prison soon thereafter." ... "Some Arkansas Republicans are also questioning
whether Fields' clemency was tied to sizeable political contributions."
... "According to Federal Election Commission records, a month after Fields'
appeal was denied, his wife made a $5,000 donation to the State Republican
Party in June of 2003. A month later, she made an additional $5,000 donation,
again to the Republican Party of Arkansas. The following month, Fields
reported to prison and began his clemency application process. He was a
free man in less than a year." ... "A former elected official in Arkansas
with fundraising experience for the State Republican Party says the timing
of Mrs. Fields' donations raises serious questions about their intended
purpose." ... "Prior to his wife's donations, Fields had made a $10,000
donation to the Republican Party of Arkansas in October of 2000 under "Fields
Investment Company," the name of his business. Both Mrs. Fields' 2003 donations
and Mr. Fields' 2000 donation placed them among the largest, individual
donors to the Republican Party of Arkansas in those years, on par with
donations from members of the Walton family, of the Wal-Mart department
store chain." -By Amna Nawaz
-MSNBC
-
Hacking
-
Ohio
-
Voting
Systems - Computers
-
Elections
- Technology
-
Politics
-
2008
Election
"Ohio
Elections Official Calls Machines Flawed." ... "All
five voting systems used in Ohio, a state whose electoral votes narrowly
swung two elections toward [Republican] President Bush, have critical flaws
that could undermine the integrity of the 2008 general election, a report
commissioned by the state’s top elections official has found." ... "“It
was worse than I anticipated,” the official, Secretary of State Jennifer
Brunner, said of the report. “I had hoped that perhaps one system would
test superior to the others.”" ... "At polling stations, teams working
on the study were able to pick locks to access memory cards and use hand-held
devices to plug false vote counts into machines. At boards of election,
they were able to introduce malignant software into servers." ... "Ms.
Brunner proposed replacing all of the state’s voting machines, including
the touch-screen ones used in more than 50 of Ohio’s 88 counties. She wants
all counties to use optical scan machines that read and electronically
record paper ballots that are filled in manually by voters." ... "The study
released Friday found that voting machines and central servers made by
Elections Systems and Software; Premier Election Solutions, formerly Diebold;
and Hart InterCivic; were easily corrupted." -By Bob
Driehaus -NYTimes
-
Mitt
Romney
-
Mike
Huckabee -
Foreign
- US
-
Military
- Illegal
-
Immigrants
- People
-
Baptist
-
Iowa
-
Massachusetts
-
Arkansas
-
Ads
-
2008
Election
"Romney
Hits Huckabee for Criticizing Bush." ... "Sensing
an opening in his desperate effort to retake the lead in Iowa, [2008 Election
Republican Presidential Candidate and] former Massachusetts governor Mitt
Romney on Saturday pounced on comments by [2008 Election Republican Presidential
Candidate and] former Arkansas governor Mike Huckabee in which he characterized
[Republican] President Bush's foreign policy as an "arrogant bunker mentality.""
... "Romney has started heaping criticism on Huckabee as the former baptist
minister has climbed into a comfortable lead in Iowa caucuses. On television
and in mailings to voters, Romney has attacked Huckabee's position on illegal
immigrants in the hopes of halting his momentum." -By
Michael D. Shear -WashingtonPost
-
John
Edwards
- Online
-
Finance
-
Law
-
Politics
-
History
-
North
Carolina -
2008
Election
"FEC
Rules Against Online Fundraiser ActBlue and John Edwards."
... "[2008 Election Democratic Presidential Candidate and] Former North
Carolina senator John Edwards can't match up the more than $4 million he's
raised from thousands of individuals through an innovative online raising
hub because of an outdated 1971 campaign finance law." ... "The Federal
Election Commission [FEC] on Friday decided that the more than $4.2 million
raised for the Democratic presidential candidate by ActBlue
doesn't conform to what's defined as individual contributions under federal
regulations, and thus can't be eligible for matching funds under the public
financing system that the candidate opted for earlier this year." ... ""A
matchable contribution consists of 'a gift of money made by a written instrument
which identifies the person making the contribution by full name and mailing
address,'" wrote FEC attorneys in an opinion that the commission approved
Friday afternoon. "The Matching Payment Act specifically excludes from
the definition of matchable contribution 'funds received by a political
committee which are transferred to that committee from another committee.'""
... "ActBlue is registered as a political action committee." ... "The problem
is that the money that ActBlue sent along to John Edwards was sent as a
weekly agglomerated check rather than funneled along marked from individuals."
-By Sarah Lai Stirland
-Wired
-
Noteworthy
- Industrial-
Government
-
Accounting
- Environmental
-
Health
-
Safety
- Politics
-
Air
-
Water
-
Ground
"EPA
was pressured to weaken toxic report rules." ...
"The [Republican President Bush] White House pressured the Environmental
Protection Agency [EPA] to weaken requirements that companies annually
disclose releases of toxic chemicals, congressional auditors say." ...
"In a study scheduled to be released next week, the Government Accountability
Office says the changes mean that industry will have to file 22,000 fewer
reports each year, reducing an important public monitoring tool on industrial
emissions." ... "The EPA rushed to complete the changes because of "pressure"
from the White House Office of Management and Budget to reduce the regulatory
burdens on industry, says the report obtained by The Associated Press.
The White House overstated the cost-savings to industry of making the changes,
it added." ... "For more than two decades, industries and businesses have
had to disclose to the EPA the amount of toxic chemicals they produce,
store and discharge into the air, water and ground." ... "Last December,
the EPA reduced the amount of information that needed to be disclosed in
the Toxic Release Inventory Report, or TRI, process." -By
H. Josef Hebert -AP
via -Chron
-
John
Edwards
-
Iowa
- Economy
-
Union
-
2008
Election
"Edwards
banks on veteran caucusgoers to pull off Iowa." ...
"... [M]ost of his [2008 Election Democratic Presidential Candidate John
Edwards] supporters already have experience with this state's sometimes
daunting system of caucuses held in each of 1,784 precincts." ... "Retired
postmaster John Backer, 62, of Greene [Iowa], is one of them. Come Jan.
3, as he has done in the past, he'll join a few dozen neighbors at the
community center and stand up for Edwards. "I know almost everybody in
town," Backer says. "I feel comfortable going there."" ... "Most polls
of Iowa show Edwards trailing his two rivals, yet still within the margins
of error and within reach of winning. They also show that as many as three-quarters
of his backers qualify as "likely caucusgoers" — that is, they've already
been to a caucus." ... "Edwards will need every vote he can get to stay
in the game." ... "Edwards has run a storm-the-barricades campaign this
year driven by rhetoric about economic unfairness and destructive corporate
influence." ... "But mostly his campaign is about basics: an endorsement
from U.S. [Iowa Democratic Representative] Rep. Bruce Braley, an army of
union members, that solid base of likely caucusgoers, visits to all 99
Iowa counties, and an 80-page policy book sent to more than 200,000 households."
-By Jill Lawrence -USATODAY
-
Mitt
Romney
-
Mike
Huckabee -
Religion
-
2008
Election
"Romney
hits Huckabee on remark on Mormonism." ... ""Don't
Mormons believe that Jesus and the devil are brothers?" [2008 Election
Republican Presidential Candidate Mike] Huckabee asks, according to a preview
of the article posted on the Times website. He made the comment after being
asked whether he believes Mormonism is a cult, as some evangelical Christians
do." ... "On morning news shows today, he [Mitt Romney, 2008 Election Republican
Presidential Candidate] said the comments amounted to an attack that was
un-American." ... ""I think attacking someone's religion is really going
too far," Romney said on the "Today" show. It's just not the American way,
and I think people will reject that."" ... "On MSNBC, he called the comment
"an old attack. I was sad to see it come out again....Attacking someone's
faith is simply un-American." " -By Foon Rhee
-BostonGlobe
-
US
-
Iraq
-
Military
-
Police
- Terrorism
-
Politics
-
Christmas
"Christians
in Basra told not to celebrate to protest 2 deaths."
... "The Christian archbishop of Basra on Tuesday canceled the celebration
of Christmas in that southern city to protest the deaths of a brother and
sister, both Christians, as bombings and mayhem struck at cities throughout
Iraq." ... "Archbishop Imad al Banna said Christians in Basra should still
pray to mark Christmas, but should forgo such celebratory trappings as
trees, gift-swapping and family gatherings to protest the deaths of Maysoon
Farid, a 30-year-old cashier at a local pharmacy, and her brother Osama,
33. The two were found dead Monday night, dumped in a neighborhood controlled
by the Shiite Muslim Mahdi Army militia." ... "Meanwhile, two police officers
in Baghdad [Iraq's capital] were killed by a car bomb that struck near
the homes of two prominent politicians, while south of Fallujah, in the
west, family members mourned a 9-year-old girl who they said was killed
by U.S. troops." -By Leila Fadel and Ali al Basri
with contributions by Hussein Kadhim in Baghdad and Jamal al Dulaimy
-McClatchy
-
John
Edwards
- US
-
Iraq
-
Military
- Corporate
-
Government
- Energy
-
Drug
- Health
-
Family
-
Farmers
-
2008
Election
"AP
Interview: Edwards on Iraq and Dems." ... "While
[2008 Election Democratic Presidential Candidate John] Edwards continues
to invoke ending the [Iraq] war as one of the major challenges facing the
nation, the thrust of his message is that entrenched corporate power has
prevented the government from tackling long-standing domestic problems."
... ""You hear a lot more questions about corporate power, health care,
energy, family farmers," he said. "Those are the things people ask about.""
... ""My focus for these last few weeks is on a positive agenda," he said.
"That's what America rising is all about."" ... "That's not to say Edwards'
message doesn't have an edge." ... "His culprits are "powerful, well-entrenched,
well-financed interests that are distorting the democracy in their favor
and against the interests of most Americans."" ... ""The specific examples
are oil companies, drug companies, insurance companies, power companies,
there are lots more examples," he said. "They've used money and power to
spread their influence and have kept the democracy from working for most
people."" (1, 2)
-By Jim Kuhnhenn -AP
via -NOLA.com
-
Mike
Huckabee -
Mitt
Romney
- Money
-
2008
Election
"Huckabee
says Romney 'desperate,' acting like a 'tattle-tale'."
... "[2008 Election Republican Presidential Candidate] Mike Huckabee called
fellow Republican [2008 Election Republican Presidential Candidate] Mitt
Romney’s new ad “desperate” Tuesday, comparing his actions to those of
“a tattle-tale in third grade.”" ... "“The more desperate and frantic campaigns
get when they see how much money they’ve spent and we’re winning, that
causes people to do some sometimes desperate things.”" -By
Dana Bash and Rebecca Sinderbrand -CNN
-
Mike
Huckabee -
Mitt
Romney
-
Religion
-
Massachusetts
-
Iowa
-
2008
Election
"Huckabee
Asks if Mormons Believe Jesus, Devil Are Brothers."
... "[2008 Election] Republican presidential hopeful Mike Huckabee, an
ordained Southern Baptist minister, asks in an upcoming article, ''Don't
Mormons believe that Jesus and the devil are brothers?''" ... "His rival
[2008 Election Republican Presidential Candidate] Mitt Romney, the former
Massachusetts governor, is a member of the Mormon church, which is known
officially as the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints." ... "The
authoritative Encyclopedia of Mormonism, published in 1992, does not refer
to Jesus and Satan as brothers. It speaks of Jesus as the son of God and
of Satan as a fallen angel, which is a Biblical account." ... "Earlier
this month in Iowa, Huckabee wouldn't say whether he thought Mormonism
— rival Romney's religion — was a cult." -By Libby
Quaid -AP
via -TIME.com
-
Barack
Obama
-
Ron
Paul
-
Illinois
-
Davenport
-
Iowa
- Law
-
2008
Election - Politics