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Monday, June 30, 2014

Obama: I'll act on my own on immigration - Yahoo News

Obama: I'll act on my own on immigration - Yahoo News
JohnButts@JBMedia - Reports:
Conceding defeat on a top domestic priority, President Barack Obama blamed a Republican "year of
obstruction" for the demise of sweeping immigration legislation on Monday and said he would take new steps without Congress to fix as much of the system as he can on his own.

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"The only thing I can't do is stand by and do nothing," the president said. But he gave few hints about what steps he might take by executive action.

Even as he blamed House Republicans for frustrating him on immigration, Obama asked Congress for more money and additional authority to deal with the unexpected crisis of a surge of unaccompanied Central American youths arriving by the thousands at the Mexico-US border. Obama wants flexibility to speed the youths' deportations and $2 billion in new money to hire more immigration judges and open more detention
facilities, requests that got a cool reception from congressional Republicans and angered advocates.

The twin announcements came as the administration confronted the tricky politics of immigration in an election year with Democratic control of the Senate in jeopardy. The fast-developing humanitarian disaster on the border has provoked calls for a border crackdown at the same moment that immigration advocates are demanding Obama loosen deportation rules in the face of congressional inaction.

Obama's announcement came almost a year to the day after the Senate passed a historic immigration bill that would have spent billions to secure the border and offered a path to citizenship for many of the 11.5 million
people now here illegally. Despite the efforts of an extraordinary coalition of businesses, unions, religious leaders, law enforcement officials and others, the Republican-led House never acted. Obama wanted to make immigration overhaul the central accomplishment of his second term just as the health care law was the signature achievement of his first term.
"Our country and our economy would be stronger today if House Republicans had allowed a simple yes-or-no vote on this bill or, for that matter, any bill," Obama said in the Rose Garden. "They'd be following the will of the majority of the American people, who support reform.

And instead they've proven again and again that they're unwilling to stand up to the tea party in order to do what's best for the country." Obama said that House Speaker John Boehner, a Republican, informed him last week that the House would not be taking up immigration legislation this year.

A growing number of advocates and congressional Democrats already have declared immigration dead, the victim, in part, of internal Republican politics, with the most conservative lawmakers resisting the calls of
party leaders to back action and revive the party's standing with Latino voters. The Central American migrant surge, along with the surprise defeat of House Majority Leader Eric Cantor at the hands of an upstart candidate from the right who accused him of backing "amnesty," helped kill whatever chances remain.
Boehner blamed Obama for the outcome.

"I told the president what I have been telling him for months: the American people and their elected officials don't trust him to enforce the law as written. Until that changes, it is going to be difficult to make progress on this issue," he said. Boehner called Obama's plan to go it alone "sad and disappointing." Obama directed Homeland Security Department Secretary Jeh Johnson and Attorney General Eric Holder to present him by the end of the summer with steps he can take without congressional approval.

For now the White House said he'd refocus resources from the interior of the country to the border, a move that would effectively further reduce the number of deportations in the country's interior by stressing enforcement action on individuals who are either recent unlawful border crossers or who present a national security threat, public safety, or border security threat.

Johnson made his third visit Monday in the last six weeks to the Border Patrol's McCallen station in southernmost Texas, touring the location with Health and Human Services Secretary Sylvia Burwell. He said 150 more agents are being sent to the region to help deal with the surge. Johnson has been weighing various additional steps to refocus deportation priorities on people with more serious criminal records, something the
administration has already tried to do with mixed results. But advocates are pushing Obama for much more sweeping changes that would shield millions of immigrants now here illegally from deportation by expanding a
two-year-old program that granted work permits to certain immigrants brought illegally to the U.S. as children.

Monday, June 23, 2014

Racial politics churn Miss. GOP Senate runoff - Yahoo News

Racial politics churn Miss. GOP Senate runoff - Yahoo News
JohnButts@JBMedia - Reports:
Race is roiling the Republican Senate runoff in Mississippi, a state with a long history of divided politics where the GOP is mostly white and the Democratic Party is mostly black.


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National tea party groups say they are working to "ensure a free and fair election" by sending several dozen observers to precincts to watch who votes during Tuesday's GOP contest, concerned about six-term Sen. Thad Cochran's efforts to persuade Mississippi Democrats to cast ballots. Challenger Chris McDaniel and the tea party portray cross-party voting as dangerous and even illegal, though state law allows it.
"Thad Cochran and his establishment handlers are out trolling, begging for Democrats to cross over and vote in the Republican runoff," Tea Party Patriots Citizens Fund chairwoman Jenny Beth Martin said in announcing
that her group and two others have hired an attorney to watch Tuesday's primary.
While Cochran rarely mentions race, he readily acknowledges he's seeking support from black and white voters.

"I think it's important for everybody to participate," he said. "Voting rights has been an issue of great importance in Mississippi. People have really contributed a lot of energy and effort to making sure the
political process is open to everyone."
Cochran's campaign staff believes he would get a boost if Mississippi voters who traditionally go for Democrats — black voters and union members — participate in the GOP runoff. The Republican nominee will be a heavy favorite in November, and several prominent black Democrats are supporting the incumbent as far preferable to his primary challenger.
rally Sunday in Biloxi, McDaniel, a state senator, never mentioned race.
But he received loud applause when he said: "Why is a 42-year incumbent pandering to liberal Democrats to get re-elected?"
A man in the crowd shouted: "Reparations!" McDaniel did not respond.

Tea Party Patriots Citizens Fund and two other independent groups that are supporting McDaniel, FreedomWorks and Senate Conservatives Fund, say they have hired a former Justice Department attorney, J. Christian Adams, "to ensure a free and fair election in Mississippi on June 24."

Adams was the Justice Department attorney who handled a 2007 case in which Ike Brown, a black elections official, was found to have violated the rights of white voters in majority-black Noxubee County. It was the first time the Justice Department had used the 1965 Voting Rights Act to allege racial discrimination against whites.
"Election integrity is essential, and Mississippi has a long, documented and tragic history of lawlessness in elections," Adams said. "The outcome of the runoff should be determined by who gets the most votes, not by who manipulates the system the best."
Adam Brandon said Monday that the groups will send several dozen
volunteers to precincts Tuesday, but he would not say where.
Asked if the Justice Department is watching this year's runoff, Justice
Department spokeswoman Dena Iverson said in an email: "The department is aware of concerns about voter intimidation and is monitoring the situation." Voters who experience problems are encouraged to report them, she said.

Mississippi voters do not register by party, and state law says the only people prohibited from voting in the Republican runoff Tuesday are those who voted in the Democratic primary June 3.

But there's potential for confusion as the tea party groups cite another Mississippi law that says a voter can participate in a party primary only if he intends to support that party's nominee in the general election. A federal appeals court ruled in 2008 that the law is unenforceable. The ruling came in a case in which Democrats sought to block Republicans from crossing over in primaries. A McDaniel supporter filed a lawsuit Monday in McDaniel's home county citing that law, but it was not clear if a judge would consider the suit before polls open Tuesday.
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general, a Democrat, and secretary of state, a Republican, issued a
joint statement Monday saying: "A person lawfully in the polling place
may challenge a voter based on party loyalty only if the voter openly
declares he does not intend to support the nominees of the party whose
primary the voter is participating in."
About 9 out of 10 white voters in Mississippi said they supported Republican nominee Mitt Romney in the 2012 presidential election, and more than 9 of 10 black voters said they supported Democratic President Barack Obama, according to an exit poll conducted for The Associated Press and other news organizations. Still, Cochran is supported by some black Democrats, including Vicksburg Mayor George Flaggs and state Sen. Willie Simmons.

Simmons told the AP on Monday that he voted in the Democratic primary June 3 and can't vote in the GOP runoff Tuesday, but he has campaigned for Cochran by making phone calls and sending letters to black churches citing the former Appropriations Committee chairman's support of Head Start and historically black universities.
"Sen. Cochran himself did not even ask me to support him," Simmons said. "I volunteered to support him because of the things he has done in the Senate."

Simmons said that while some black Mississippians quietly vote for Republicans in general elections, they might be reluctant to publicly declare their intentions by going to a Republican table to request a ballot on primary day.
"This election is going to put them in a position where they have to do two things that is unusual for them," Simmons said. "First, they have to pull out an ID and show it. And, second, they have to vote in a Republican runoff."
Simmons said if a poll watcher cites the unenforceable law about not voting in a primary unless intending to support the nominee in the general election, "that could lead to intimidation."

Tuesday, June 17, 2014

Hillary Talks Guns In CNN Town Hall, Says Minority ‘Terrorizes’ Majority [VIDEO] - Yahoo News

Hillary Talks Guns In CNN Town Hall, Says Minority ‘Terrorizes’ Majority [VIDEO] - Yahoo News
JohnButts@JBMedia - Reports:
During a televised town hall, Hillary Clinton was asked about guns, and said that the viewpoint held
by gun-rights advocates “terrorizes” the majority of Americans.
The town hall, broadcast live on CNN on Tuesday, closely resembled a commercial for Clinton’s new memoir, “Hard Choices.”
“I was disappointed that the Congress did not pass universal background checks after the horrors of the shootings at Sandy Hook and now we’ve had more,” said Clinton in response to a question from a Maryland teacher named Gloria Santa Maria.
“Seventy-four more,” Santa Maria interjected, seemingly referencing a now-debunked claim made last week
by the pro-gun control group Everytown for Gun Safety.
Everytown published a graphical map, which CNN aired, purporting to show 74 school shootings that have
occurred since the December 14, 2012 massacre at Sandy Hook elementary school in Connecticut.
The network later corrected the claim saying that only 15 of the 74 shootings that occurred at schools
had factors similar to the shooting at Sandy Hook, in which Adam Lanza killed 26 people, mostly children.
Many of the 74 shootings involved interpersonal disputes and other criminal activity, though
neither Clinton nor Amanpour corrected Santa Maria’s statistic. (RELATED: CNN Slashes School Shooting Stats Claim By 80 Percent)
“We cannot let a minority of people – and that’s what it is, it is a minority of people – hold a viewpoint that terrorizes the majority of people,” said Clinton.
The former secretary of state and likely 2016 presidential candidate also made imprecise references to “automatic” weapons.
“I don’t think any parent, any person should have to fear about their child going to school or going to
college because someone…could possibly enter that school property with an automatic weapon and murder innocent children, students, teachers,” she said.
“We’re going to have to do a better job protecting the vast majority of our citizens, including our children, from that very, very, very small group that is unfortunately prone to violence and now with automatic weapons can wreak so much more violence than they ever could have before.”
Automatic weapons are tightly regulated in the United States and were not used in the Sandy Hook shooting.

allAfrica.com: Libya: Joint U.S. Department of Defense Statements On the Capture of Ahmed Abu Khatallah

allAfrica.com: Libya: Joint U.S. Department of Defense Statements On the Capture of Ahmed Abu Khatallah
JohnButts@JBMedia - Reports:
Statement from Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel on the Capture of Ahmed Abu Khatallah
"I want to commend all the service members who were involved in the
planning and execution of the operation to capture Ahmed Abu Khatallah.
Their tireless efforts may only be known to a few but are felt by all
Americans who are proud of what they do every day to defend this
nation.  This successful counter terrorism operation is another example
of the extraordinary capabilities of the United States military and our
unrelenting commitment to hold accountable those who harm American
citizens."

Statement by Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Martin E. Dempsey
"Over the weekend, U.S. military forces in support of the U.S. 
Department of Justice, captured Ahmed Abu Khatallah. Abu Khatallah faces
criminal charges for his role in killing Americans in the attack on the
U.S. temporary mission facility in Benghazi in 2012. This team of
professionals acted with extraordinary skill, courage and precision,
successfully carrying out a dangerous and complex capture operation
resulting in no casualties. I'm proud of those who tirelessly defend our
nation, our freedoms and our way of life."

Friday, June 6, 2014

Judge rules revocation of teacher tenure, 25% contracts unconstitutional

Judge rules revocation of teacher tenure, 25% contracts unconstitutional
JohnButts@JBMedia - Reports:
Judge Robert H. Hobgood issued a written order in Wake County Superior
Court today declaring the 2013 General Assembly’s actions unconstitutional
in eliminating due process rights, or career status, for teachers who
already had obtained it. Hobgood made the ruling three weeks ago and issued
his written order today. The trial court also permanently halted the 25 ... more »