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Top Teachers' Union Is Set To Spend More In 2014 Than It Has On Any Other Election

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In 2008, AFT spent more than $8.2 million on federal races. UPDATE: An AFT official says the union expects to spend more than $20 million this cycle.

Getty Images Mark Wilson

WASHINGTON — The American Federation of Teachers is set to spend more for Democrats ahead of the November midterm elections than it has on any other election cycle, including presidential years.

Speaking with reporters Monday, AFT President Randi Weingarten laid out the union's strategy leading up to November, where she said the union is "on the path" to spend more than it ever has.

The strategy focuses heavily on gubernatorial races, but also keys in on select Senate seats the union thinks it can help protect as Democrats vie to retain control of the upper chamber.

According to OpenSecrets.org, the AFT spent more than $8.2 million in the 2008 election cycle.

Weingarten singled out particular races she is concerned about that the union will focus on, including Mark Begich's bid in Alaska, Gary Peters' bid in Michigan and Al Franken's tighter-than-expected race in Minnesota.

Like other unions, Weingarten said they've partnered with the Senate Majority PAC, which focuses on keeping Democratic control of the Senate, while also putting people on the ground in states where they have large membership to try and retain or win governorships for Democrats.

The union will focus in particular on gubernatorial races in Michigan, Wisconsin, Illinois, Pennsylvania, Florida, and Connecticut.

"Basically, Washington will be immobilized if Democrats don't keep control of the Senate," Weingarten said.


Hillary Clinton Keeps Anthony Brown Fundraiser On The Books

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She’s sending Bill Clinton to Potomac, Md., instead. The Maryland Democratic could be a powerful ally for the Clintons in two years.

Shannon Stapleton / Reuters

Hillary Clinton canceled two other fundraisers in Washington, D.C., on Tuesday to spend more time with her new granddaughter, Charlotte — but she's keeping one on the books, sending her husband Bill Clinton in her stead.

The event is a fundraiser Tuesday night for Maryland Lt. Gov. Anthony Brown, who is running for governor this year. Should he win, Brown would be the only black governor in the country next year, and the third ever elected to that post in U.S. history. He is running to replace Martin O'Malley, who is considering a run for president, possibly up against Hillary Clinton in a Democratic primary.

Brown's campaign announced the switch to the Baltimore Sun on Tuesday.

The former secretary of state canceled two other appearances in Washington, an appearance at the Congressional Hispanic Caucus Institute, and a fundraiser for Lou D'Allesandro, the longtime New Hampshire state senator. "Baby came, family first," D'Allesandro told CNN, explaining why the fundraiser was canceled.

That Clinton did not cancel the Brown fundraiser — and sent her husband to headline the fundraiser instead — indicates the extent to which the Clintons consider Brown a key candidate, and powerful partner moving forward.

She attended two scheduled fundraisers on Monday in New York City, one for Kathleen Rice, the Democratic candidate running to replace Rep. Carolyn McCarthy, and another for the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee.

O'Malley is expected to appear alongside the 42nd president at the fundraiser. The Maryland governor said last week he would take a break from traveling — he is scheduled to be on the road on behalf of Democratic candidates just about every weekend until Election Day this November — to help Brown's campaign.

Bill Clinton also hosted a fundraiser for Brown in May. The event raised $1 million. Tuesday's fundraiser will take place at 5 p.m. in Potomac, Md., at a private estate in the Washington suburb. Tickets cost $4,000 each, with VIP tickets priced higher.

One Last - - M E S S A G E - - From The Democratic Party

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This isn’t real. It only feels like it’s real if you get email that’s in constant fake panic mode.

I'm sick.

I am literally sick with worry. This has been the single most difficult week of our entire lives. Democracy is dangling by Her fingertips.

Earlier today, [NAME], I emailed you with a message from the President. More than 8O,OOO people listened. Did you listen? I don't think you did.

And so I've been sitting here (I think I have a fever), thinking about this final FEC deadline. I am alone in the dark. (Okay, there's one light on.)

If we don't meet the deadline, then sure, the crust of the earth won't crack in half and send us all sliding into the horrible abyss. That would be a dramatic thing to say. But people like the Koch brothers, Karl Rove, and their cronies are going to be able to DESTROY Democrats with hundreds of millions of dollars in negative attacks like we've never seen before.

Am I angry? Not with you. But I am disappointed.

We have been trying so hard. Some nights I don't sleep. I am wracked with grief. And for what?

Do you think we want to put spaces between T H E L E T T E R S in our subject lines like we both have A P H A S I A, just so you open our emails at a H I G H E R F R E Q U E N C Y?

Do you think we like using capital o's instead of zeros to beg you for that last $5OO,OOO to stop John Boehner from impeaching Barack Obama?

Do you think we enjoy PLEADING with you?

We don't. We do this because this works. We do this because it's what you want based on our rigorous study of our open rates, click rates, and rate of return (we pull a lot of all-nighters for Democracy here at HQ). We have discovered the secret to fundraising through email and it's this. If I could cut my heart open to unlearn this secret, I would.

Because, unfortunately, it's not working on you. According to our records, it doesn't look like you've had a chance to reply to Our President's inspiring call-to-action yet. So, [NAME], let me ask you this:

Look — I'll be honest with you. No matter what I do, no matter what you do, no matter what basically anyone does — even though we've raised more money doing this than ever before, and I'm talking millions and millions of dollars from emails like these — the Democrats aren't getting the House of Representatives back this year.

Life is meaningless. But don't quit on us just yet.

24-HOUR DEADLINE: All Gifts Octo-Matched!

Chip in $5 immediately >>

Chip in $35 immediately >>

Chip in $50 immediately >>

Chip in $100 immediately >>

Chip in $250 immediately >>

Or click here to donate another amount.

Thanks,

Katherine

Sent from my iPhone


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CNN Anchor Says "Anyway You Slice It" Three Times In 10 Seconds Discussing Beheading

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He has already apologized.

John Berman, host of This Hour somehow used the phrase "anyway you slice it" three times in 10 seconds while discussing the Oklahoma beheading:

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The "Totally Ridiculous" Romney Boomlet

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Kristol is queasy. This is not a thing.

There's only one false note in Mark Leibovich's wonderful visit to Mitt Romney's quite nice new life, in which the former Republican nominee — rather than having the letter "L" for "loser" branded on his forehead — is enjoying the low-level celebrity of airport selfies and ongoing flattery of sycophants who say they want him to run for president.

The false note: "a confluence of political realities has created a genuine opening for a Romney third act."

There are a few people who think this is the case: true Romney loyalists and believers, Republicans like Emil Henry, Robert O'Brien, and Hugh Hewitt, who just love the guy and write about it in Politico. They are all but family; I'm not sure what the actual family thinks. Members of his former political staff — people who talk to Romney regularly, and regard him highly — said Tuesday morning that they didn't actually think he'd run, and viewed it, at best, as not a great idea. Indeed, some of his real admirers (and most people who worked for Romney do admire him) were trying out their eye-rolls Tuesday morning at this feeblest of boomlets.

This is, they say, not a thing.

"I respect Romney, but have the queasy feeling that Romney '16 would be a reprise of Dewey '48," Weekly Standard editor and former Romney champion Bill Kristol said in an email.

One top former Romney aide, who likes and respects Romney and thinks he would make a great president, agreed to speak on the condition of not being named or identified, and to outline the broad sense in what's left of Romneyworld.

"It's ridiculous — totally ridiculous," the former aide said.

The core flaw is a kind of cluelessness about how this is going to work, a bit of wishful thinking indulged by a handful of donors who love Romney — but not actually much on the minds of the top Republican fundraisers now thinking about Paul and Cruz, Rubio and Bush, and the other more plausible candidates for president.

"Here's the problem with the theory of the Romney candidacy, as much as I love the guy and as much as I think he'd be a good president," the former aide began. "The problem with the way these [Romney donors and friends] are treating a potential Romney candidacy is that they act as though Romney, if he were to get into the race, picks up where he gets off. As though, because he was the last Republican nominee, he's still the Republican nominee unless he decides to bequeath it to someone else."

"The field is not going to be nearly as weak as it was last time and nobody in the field, including the potential establishment candidates — Jeb or Chris Christie or Scott Walker — believe they should step aside for Mitt Romney," the former aide predicted. "So Romney gets into the race and he's suddenly competing with heavy-duty candidates who have as much claim on the mainstream donor base as he does, and suddenly he's in a messy primary where these people will be going at him in a very nasty way."

And here is the thing that Leibovich's piece really gets at: Mitt Romney has been surprised by his life since the defeat. He predicted he'd be branded a "loser for life" after 2012, his name — like Mike Dukakis' — synonymous with defeat. Instead, he's regarded with warmth, if not passion, by people who still think he would have made a decent president, and don't all blame him for blowing it.

"I think Romney really likes where he is right now," said the former aide. "He's saying, 'Wow — I ran and I lost and I'm still held in high esteem' … He's really taken aback by that. He wants to bottle that."

And to run would, probably, be to give that up for good.

"Wouldn't it be truly pathetic if on his third time he doesn't even win the nomination?" asked the former aide. "Then he does have the 'L' and he's truly truly a diminished figure.

"I think he personally has thought that through more than the people who are pushing him to run."

The Polarization Of American Politics In One Poll Question

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America’s support for keg stands is partisan.

Public Policy Polling asked voters about it and the reaction was split along party lines.

Public Policy Polling asked voters about it and the reaction was split along party lines.

PPP Polls / Via publicpolicypolling.com

PA Government IP Address Removed Unflattering Information About GOP Governor On Wikipedia

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And also changed Patrick Swayze’s name to “Penis Swayze.”

Mike Segar / Reuters

YouTube.com

youtube.com

Edits from a Pennsylvania government IP address removed unflattering information from Republican Governor Tom Corbett's Wikipedia page in 2012.

The IP address, which hosts PA.gov, seems to have only made edits to Corbett's page, also made three edits repeatedly changing deceased actor Patrick Swayze's name to "Penis Swayze."

Another edit likewise added Swayze's middle name as "balls."

The Swayze edits came in 2007 while Democrat Ed Rendell was governor of the state.

A summary of the edits to Corbett's page are below:


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GOP Congressman: Obama Will Replace Holder With "Female Minority" To Deflect Criticism

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“I would suspect a female minority that looks a lot like the thought process of Eric Holder as well as the president.”

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Republican Arizona Rep. Paul Gosar predicted Monday that President Obama will replace outgoing Attorney General Eric Holder with a "female minority" in an effort to dminish the effects of any GOP opposition.

"I would suspect a female minority that looks a lot like the thought process of Eric Holder as well as the president," Gosar said on NewsMaxTV's America's Forums. "So I wouldn't be surprised that he tried to paint Republicans [poorly] and anybody who would oppose him with a lady and being a minority. So that's what I would actually suspect."

Holder, who announced his resignation last week, plans to leave the Justice Department only after a successor is confirmed.


Nation's Largest Teachers' Union Plans To Spend More Than $40 Million In 2014

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That’s at least twice what the American Federation of Teachers said it will spend.

Stephen Lovekin / Getty Images

WASHINGTON — The nation's largest teachers' union plans to spend between $40 and $60 million in this year's election cycle, two sources at the National Educational Association told BuzzFeed News.

On Monday, the American Federation of Teachers, which has about half the membership of the NEA, said it would spend about $20 million in the same timeframe. Those numbers encompass all election spending, from Senate races down to local ballot measures.

While AFT President Randi Weingarten said they are spending more this year than they've spent in any cycle before, NEA Political Director Karen White said her union's estimate is roughly on par for what they usually spend in non-presidential election years.

In an internal memo White sent last week to top NEA leaders, she wrote that education is "emerging as a top issue" in some of tighter gubernatorial races and in the country as a whole.

Speaking in a phone interview with BuzzFeed News, White said she wasn't sure how the money would be split up between races, but said "more than 70%" will be focused on state-level elections.

"While we often expect education — and by extension, educators — to impact elections, this year we are seeing a perfect storm of sorts that puts education front and center in many key federal, state and local races," White wrote in the memo.

The memo points to states where governors have cut education funding as particularly viable for effective messaging from the union. It specifically calls out Gov. Tom Corbett of Pennsylvania and Rick Scott of Florida.

Aside from gubernatorial and down-ballot races, the NEA will put money into several of the close Senate races as Democrats fight to retain the majority there. The Senate races it will focus on are North Carolina, Alaska, Arkansas, and Colorado.

What the memo doesn't mention is Common Core testing, which has become a hotbed issue among education activists and a rallying cry for conservatives. The NEA, once a staunch supporter of the new standards, became more critical of the program this year.

"Educators are trusted and credible messengers. They are reliable voters," White wrote in the memo. "They live in every state, every city, every Congressional district, and every precinct. Their votes and voices matter. This will have a major impact on the coming elections."

Coming Thursday: When Battered Women Are Treated As Criminals

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A preview of an upcoming BuzzFeed News investigation.

Victoria Pedraza with her daughter Aubriana in 2010

Courtesy of Victoria Pedraza

Two-year-old Bri was dead, with bruises all over her stomach. Her mother, Victoria Pedraza, told a story that didn't add up. She told a police officer in a taped interrogation that Bri had fallen off a fishing dock:

The lake where Pedraza alleged the accident occurred

Photograph by Wil Chandler for BuzzFeed


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Source: Obama Speech Will Emphasize To Latinos That Immigration Action Is Coming

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UPDATED (4:18 p.m.): A White House official told BuzzFeed News that the president’s remarks do not include a reference to waiting “40 days.”

Olivier Douliery/Abaca Press / MCT

President Obama will reaffirm his promise of administrative actions to slow record deportations before the end of the year during a high-profile speech to Latinos and Hispanic officials on Thursday, BuzzFeed News has learned.

His speech at the Congressional Hispanic Caucus Institute (CHCI) gala — his first there since 2011 — comes as activists have expressed anger and frustration over repeated delays on executive actions.

Obama will tell Latinos in attendance that he understands their frustration but will also call on them to stick with him and wait 40 more days, until after the election, according to a source who viewed the president's prepared remarks. It was unclear if the 40 days comment is a reference to expanding the range of dates the White House would consider to act or if they continue to hold firm to a date after the holidays and before the end of 2014.

On Wednesday afternoon, a White House official disputed the information and said that the president's remarks do not include the "40 days" line.

"The president's remarks to the CHCI gala do not include the 'wait for 40 days' reference," a White House official told BuzzFeed News. "Whoever provided that information did not see the speech and is inaccurately describing the president's remarks."

According to a White House official, the president will use the speech to reiterate his commitment to expanding opportunities for all hardworking Americans including Hispanics and will highlight efforts by the administration that have led to significant, measurable progress in the Latino community.

Cecilia Muñoz, director of the White House domestic policy council and a key administration figure on immigration, is also expected to attend the CHCI public policy conference on Wednesday. She is expected to convey that administration officials are sorry about the delay but will seek to correct course with the eventual actions.

A separate source said the White House asked CHCI to share the stories of students who have benefited from Obama's Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program — which gave legal status and work visas to undocumented youth brought to the country as children — for Obama to include in his speech. But, for unclear reasons, the exchange never happened and the stories will likely not be told by the president.

The request by the administration would make sense: Obama has been on the receiving end of criticism from immigration activists throughout 2014, who have asked him to go big with some combination of expanding deferred action and using prosecutorial discretion to change enforcement priorities.

In fact, protesters from the National Day Laborer Organizing Network, who argue the delay of the executive actions means thousands of deportations, will be outside the president's speech.

Wisconsin Gubernatorial Race Features Dueling Plagiarism Ads

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In August, Wisconsin lost 4,300 jobs. That’s why in September, Scott Walker is attacking my jobs plan, saying it takes ideas from other states. Well, of course it does…”

The Associated Press

Steve Marcus / Reuters

Dueling TV ads in closely-watched Wisconsin gubernatorial contest are battling over Democratic candidate Mary Burke's jobs plan. Republicans in the state have seized on the large portions of plagiarized text in Burke's jobs plan and now Burke is fighting back with a new TV ad attempting to define the issue on her own terms.

"In August, Wisconsin lost 4,300 jobs. That's why in September, Scott Walker is attacking my jobs plan, saying it takes ideas from other states. Well, of course it does," Burke says in her ad titled "September." "As governor, I'm going to take the best ideas wherever I can find them. And if Scott Walker did the same, maybe we wouldn't be dead last in jobs growth. Take a look at my plan and decide for yourself, because Wisconsin shouldn't be dead last in anything, especially jobs growth."


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College Republicans Make "Say Yes To The Dress" Parodies For Bunch Of Governor Races

Secret Service Director Resigns Amid Mounting Criticism

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Julia Pierson will be replaced by Joseph Clancy, a retired director of the Secret Service’s presidential protection division.

Kevin Lamarque / Reuters

WASHINGTON — Julia Pierson, the embattled director of the United States Secret Service, resigned Wednesday.

Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson announced the resignation and said Joseph Clancy — a former director of the Secret Service's presidential protection division — will become acting interim director of the agency. Clancy currently serves as director of security for Comcast, the cable provider.

Johnson also announced a series of Homeland Security actions aimed at fixing the mounting problems at the Secret Service.

The general counsel at Homeland Security will take over the internal investigation of the security failures that led to a man entering the White House after climbing over the outer fence in September.

A special panel of investigators will submit an "assessment and recommendations concerning security at the White House compound" by Dec. 15, Johnson said in a statement.

TN Democratic Senate Candidate: Campaign Plagiarism "Laughable Situation," Report A "Hatchet Job"

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“We’ve adopted ideas from people as diverse from Rand Paul to Elizabeth Warren.”

Gordon Ball U.S. Senate / Via Facebook: gordonballsenate

Tennessee Democratic Senate candidate Gordon Ball says BuzzFeed News' report he plagiarized nearly his entire website from various politicians is "a hatchet job" and "a laughable situation."

Ball dismissed calls from Tennessee Republican Party Chairman Chris Devaney for him to drop out of the race.

"It's a laughable situation," Ball said in an interview with Fox13. "We've adopted ideas from people as diverse from Rand Paul to Elizabeth Warren. This is just a hatchet job by some of Lamar Alexander's Republican buddies and it's ridiculous."

Ball blamed the copied text on one of his campaign's "legal writers."

"It got there, one of our legal writers wrote that. I adopted the ideas and I believe in those ideas. And that's how it got there. But it got there and I believe in those ideas."

According to the The Tennessean, the Ball campaign originally blamed the text on an intern who is no longer with the campaign.

Here's the video:

View Video ›


Antiwar Activists, 9/11 Truthers Gather In Tehran For Anti-Zionist Conference

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Everyone from Code Pink’s Medea Benjamin to French comedian Dieudonné M’bala M’bala.

instagram.com

WASHINGTON — A number of American and European antiwar activists and conspiracy theorists have gathered in Tehran for a conference aimed at addressing supposed Zionist control of the United States, according to Iranian press reports and the Anti-Defamation League.

Code Pink chief Medea Benjamin, journalist and former Cambodian genocide denier Gareth Porter, conspiracy journalist and 9/11 truther Wayne Madsen, and PressTV contributor Kevin Barrett are all reportedly at the conference. Other reported attendees include Dieudonné M'bala M'bala, the anti-Semitic French comedian whose performances have been banned in several French jurisdictions, several Holocaust deniers, and former congressman Mark Siljander, who pleaded guilty in 2010 to being an unregistered foreign agent for an Islamic charity that the government said was connected to terrorism.

According to a PressTV article about the conference, the gathering's "goal is to unveil the secrets behind the dominance of the Zionist lobby over US and EU politics." The conference's chairman is Nader Talebzadeh, an Iranian state TV host who previously organized a conference about "Hollywoodism" as a response to the movie "Argo."

PressTV's video report from the scene includes interviews with Porter, who is also shown addressing the audience, and with Madsen, as well as Art Olivier, a former California mayor who is a 9/11 truther.

The conference was originally conceived under former president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, though Iranian President Hassan Rouhani cancelled the conference in 2013 as part of Iran's softening toward the West in advance of restarting talks over its nuclear program.

Former Council on American Islamic Relations official Cyrus McGoldrick, also in attendance, has been Instagramming photos from in and around the conference:

instagram.com

Panel topics include "Mossad's Role in the 9/11 Coup d'Etat" and "The Israeli Lobby vs. the U.S. National Interest (especially as it relates to Middle East Policy)," according to the conference website.


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Hillary Clinton Gets Close, Candid With Military Families

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The event, honoring the families of fallen veterans, was Clinton’s most intimate, unguarded public appearance since leaving State. “I’m so sorry. I’m so, so sorry.”

Hillary Clinton greets the families of fallen soldiers at an awards program in New York City for the Tragedy Assistance Program for Survivors.

Twitter / Shushannah Walshe / Via Twitter: @shushwalshe

Hillary Clinton looked down at the photo of the man in uniform.

A woman had emerged from the crush of people around the former secretary of state to present her with the picture of a young man — her son. Other mothers and fathers and sisters and brothers gathered around Clinton as she eyed the photo at a veterans event on Wednesday night in New York City's Herald Square.

"This is my son, who committed suicide," the woman told Clinton.

"This is his year anniversary. Thirty-five."

"I'm so sorry," Clinton said. "I'm so, so sorry."

She held the woman's hand, held her elbow, rubbed her arm.

The scene played out again and again on Wednesday at Stella 34, the Italian restaurant inside Macy's department store, where Clinton accepted a lifetime service award at an emotional and highly person event for TAPS, the Tragedy Assistance Program for Survivors. The 20-year-old organization, the only veterans group dedicated exclusively to families, worked with Clinton when she was a U.S. senator from New York. In 2006, she was TAPS' honorary chair.

It was perhaps Clinton's most intimate public gathering since she left the State Department in February of last year — more like the local events she used to hold as a senator than the large speeches and controlled, choreographed book tour stops that have occupied the last six months or so of her time.

When Clinton finished her speech before a crowd of about 150 people, the TAPS families approached Clinton with their stories, getting close. The security detail that follows the former secretary of state and first lady at all of her events did not interfere, and reporters there were not confined to a designated press area.

One man named Robert Meshanko, who described his nephew's protracted struggle with the Department of Veterans Affairs, urged Clinton to run for president. "If you run, and I hope you do, fix the VA and fix the mental health system," he said. "My nephew was lost, and let me tell you something...he really got screwed."

"At the VA?" Clinton said, moving closer.

"At the VA. They need to help these people. They need to point them in the right direction. They pointed him in the wrong direction. He tried to get help."

Clinton asked where — in what direction? The "wrong jurisdiction," Meshanko replied. "They sent him there, and he went there, and they said, 'We can't help you. You're out of our jurisdiction.' Why didn't someone know that?"

"I don't know," Clinton said, shaking her head.

Another woman approached Clinton and told her it had been two years since her brother committed suicide. "Did he get any help at all?" Clinton asked.

"Not the right help," the woman said. They took a picture together with the woman's cell phone, before Clinton squeezed her arm and said, "Thank you, dear."

As a senator, Clinton served on the Armed Services Committee and worked with TAPS and other veterans groups to increase benefits for families of fallen service members — a project she highlighted in her speech. "We fought, we cajoled," Clinton said, noting that immediate benefits for families rose from $12,000 to $100,000. She also said she pushed the VA to better assist survivors with health coverage, home loans, education, and access to government housing.

Bonnie Carroll, the president and founder of TAPS, said the group had worked with Clinton to expand its work with survivors to include families who have lost people serving in the State Department, certain government contractors, and other government agencies, including the CIA and National Security Agency.

"We count you as family," Carroll told Clinton, "and we love you a great deal."

Al Sharpton Receives Birthday Call From Hillary Clinton, According To Al Sharpton's Press Release About It

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“I just got a Early Birthday call from former Sec. Hillary Clinton saying she is sorry she can’t make celebration. I congratulated her too.”

Mario Anzuoni / Reuters

Shannon Stapleton / Reuters

Rev. Al Sharpton is celebrating his 60th birthday this week. Take note.

The civil rights activist and cable news host threw himself a birthday party on Wednesday night at the Four Seasons Hotel in New York City. Plenty of friends and very important persons showed up to celebrate the Rev., including Mayor Bill de Blasio, MSNBC president Phil Griffin, and the singer Aretha Franklin.


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Who's Actually Leading The U.S. Response To The Ebola Epidemic

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USAID is currently in charge of the international effort. A key senator says that’s not enough — the White House should appoint a single, high-level official to lead the fight against Ebola.

Nowa Paye, 9, is taken to an ambulance after showing signs of the Ebola infection in Liberia.

AP Photo/Jerome Delay

WASHINGTON — America's Ebola effort lacks a leader, a key senator told BuzzFeed News.

With Ebola cases doubling every 24 days in Liberia and showing no sign of slowing, Kansas Republican Sen. Jerry Moran said President Obama needs to appoint an Ebola czar to coordinate the government's sprawling, multi-agency effort. Moran, the ranking member on the Appropriations Committee's health subcommittee, said it has been difficult for even lawmakers to find the right person to talk to.

"We're trying to figure out about the funding," Moran said. But "there is no person to go to, to tell us how all this is going to be funded," he said, and "what resources will be needed."

Asked if he felt it was time for Obama to appoint someone to head up America's Ebola efforts in Africa, Moran said, "It's exactly the kind of thing I'm talking about."

"I don't think there is a person in charge," he added. "And I don't think there is a plan internationally to bring the folks together to combat this."

Moran's criticism may seem like arcane, inside-Washington politics, but he said it's actually about saving lives in an epidemic that has already killed more than 3,300 people and is raging out of control. Having a high-level White House point person responsible for the Ebola crisis, he said, could create greater urgency and focus — as well as mediate the inevitable turf wars among different agencies.

The Obama administration said it doesn't need an Ebola czar and that its campaign against the epidemic is being run by Jeremy Konyndyk, who leads the Office of Foreign Disaster Assistance at the United States Agency for International Development, known as USAID. Konyndyk does not work in the White House; for the last year, he's headed the office, following a five-year stint as policy director for Mercy Corps. From Washington, he coordinates efforts by Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the State Department, the Department of Defense, and National Institutes of Health.

"USAID has been leading the international response; they have been doing so from day one," said an administration official, who spoke on background in order to freely discuss the issue. "Regarding the notion of an 'Ebola Czar,' that obviously has resonance from other contexts, but we're always hesitant to create another layer of bureaucracy. We need our response to be as nimble as possible to bring this under control."

USAID and DOD are responsible for nearly two-thirds of the $95 million in federal funds already committed to fighting Ebola. An additional $80 million is expected to come online in the coming months to help fund the response, according to USAID.

Tasked with responding to international disasters, USAID's foreign disaster office has responded to a host of crises, including the 2011 tsunami in Japan, 2010 Haiti earthquake and subsequent cholera outbreak, and last year's Haiyan Typhoon.

In addition to the Ebola outbreak in West Africa, the office is also addressing crises in Syria, Iraq, and southern Sudan, setting up multi-agency teams, which are called Disaster Assistance Response Teams, in each of those areas.

The expanding scope of the Ebola crisis has stretched an already strained response system, a USAID official said. "The system was stretched even before" Ebola, the official said, because of the other disasters, particularly the escalating refugee crises in Syria and Iraq. "It's a challenge," the USAID official said.

Still, the official said, "I think at this point we're managing well. We prioritized Ebola."

According to the World Health Organization, as of Oct. 1, there are 7,178 confirmed cases of Ebola in West Africa, with the total number of deaths at 3,338, and the crisis has continued to worsen. In Liberia, for instance, confirmed cases increased 26% between Sept. 9 and Sept. 17, despite increased international focus on the country, according to data from USAID.

International attention became squarely focused on the Ebola crisis this summer. But it wasn't until U.S. aid workers were infected — and subsequently brought back to the United States — that Congress and the Obama administration fully engaged.

On Tuesday, CDC officials confirmed the first case of Ebola in the United States, involving a Texas man who had traveled to West Africa, and on Wednesday Texas Gov. Rick Perry acknowledged that several children had come in contact with the infected man.

USAID has no authority over domestic cases, however. Officials with the agency are quick to deflect any questions about response within the country, stressing that their mission is strictly international in nature.

CDC, in conjunction with state and local authorities, has thus far handled the isolated cases of Americans with Ebola inside the United States. Moran and Obama administration officials said Wednesday they remain confident an outbreak like the one in West Africa won't occur in the United States.

Moran argued, however, that politically it is important to have an identifiable person who is in charge of the international effort.

The White House needs "someone who can speak for the effort, speak to the American people … and I think that's difficult to find today," Moran said.

Rand Paul's New Mission: Helping Out The Republican Establishment

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The Kentucky senator has long been a thorn in the side of the GOP establishment. Now, two years before a bigger election, he’s campaigning all over the country for them.

Sen. Rand Paul

Getty Images Mark Wilson

RALEIGH, N.C. — When Rand Paul walked into the diner in downtown Raleigh, Tracy Perina started to get emotional.

Paul was in town on Wednesday to stump for Thom Tillis, the Republican candidate locked in a tight race with Democratic Sen. Kay Hagan. Tillis had come into the diner as well, but Perina, clad in a "Ron Paul for President" T-shirt, was entirely focused on getting a photo with Kentucky senator. After she did so, she burst into tears.

"I'm so embarrassed," she said, wiping her cheeks. "It's just…I can't believe I just met Rand Paul."

Perina explained to BuzzFeed News that she was not a Tillis supporter and, in fact, until Paul had shown up to support him, she had been considering voting for the libertarian candidate in the race, Sean Haugh.

"I trust Paul and his opinion," she explained. "Of course Thom Tillis is better than Kay Hagan, but he's an establishment Republican."

Voters like Perina — libertarian-leaning and actively engaged — are exactly the reason Tillis and other Senate Republicans are clamoring to have Paul come to their states. And Paul, a likely presidential contender in 2016, is happy to oblige.

Back in May, Paul came to North Carolina to stump for Tillis' primary opponent, Greg Brannon, much to the chagrin of many Republicans who had rallied around Tillis. At the event, at a point when Tillis' victory was a foregone conclusion, Paul called Brannon a "dragon slayer" and said Washington didn't need more of the status quo — an unsubtle suggestion that Tillis would simply be more of the same.

Four months later, everything's different. The shift, Paul argued in an interview with BuzzFeed News, has a lot to do with a general election — instead of the Republican ideological splits on display in a primary, the choice now is much simpler.

"The views of the Republican Party are remarkably different than the views of the Democrats," Paul said. "There's a variety of views within the Republican Party but when you line up Republican to Republican, Democrat to Democrat, and policy to policy, to me it's a night and day difference."

"The distinctions between the parties are so much greater than the distinctions within the party."

In the coming weeks, he'll head to Kansas to support both Republican Sen. Pat Roberts and Gov. Sam Brownback, both of whom are struggling in the polls. He'll also be making stops in Michigan, New Hampshire, Iowa, and Georgia for Republican candidates in those states. Next week, he's headlining a Republican National Committee fundraiser in New York, followed immediately by a fundraiser for the National Republican Senatorial Committee in the suburbs of San Francisco. These are not exactly the gestures of someone on the outs with the "establishment."

"I'm trying to help smooth things over," he said. "We fight amongst ourselves in primaries … Democrats don't agree with each other all the time. Yet they seem to somehow come together and quit fighting, and we need to do the same thing."

Democrats have hit Paul wherever he's gone, of course. A Hagan press release called Tillis and Paul "two peas in a pod on eliminating the department of education." The Democratic National Committee has called Paul "infamous for trying to have it both ways" on issues like voting rights, as he headed to North Carolina to campaign for Tillis, the legislator who helped craft and pass a law that limited early voting, got rid of pre-registration for 16- and 17-year-olds, and ended same-day registration. Democrats' favorite word to describe Paul is "fringe."

Besides the constant attention from Democrats, and the clear sense that Paul doesn't always quite agree with the candidates he stumps for, the campaigning has a big, obvious upside: It means a lot to Republicans. Should he run for president in 2016 — and all indications are that he will — the work he's doing now could pay off when he needs the favor returned.

"People don't forget stuff like this," said one Republican strategist who has been critical of Paul in the past. "His quick willingness to get on board will pay dividends down the line."

The strategist also pointed out that Paul's work was in stark contrast to Sen. Ted Cruz, another likely presidential candidate, who has openly sparred with the NRSC despite holding the title of vice chair for the committee. Cruz has "antagonized" Republican leadership, the strategist said, for sharply criticizing the committee during the primary season. But things could change soon: Now that primary season is over, Cruz's office says he has plans to campaign for several candidates this month (which ones will be announced at a later date). More recently, Cruz transferred $250,000 to the committee.

The gratitude for Paul's efforts extends to the NRSC, where a spokesman called Paul an "enthusiastic and cheerful advocate" for their candidates.

"Sen. Paul's enthusiasm not only resonates with core Republicans, but his message also appeals to younger voters who are fed up with Washington and want to shake things up," Brad Dayspring, the spokesman, said.

And when it comes to the uneasy ideological alliances, Paul sees a second benefit in showing up in places where he's not fully in line with the candidate: his ability to persuade on some of the core libertarian issues he cares about.

"I've told Republicans frankly, if you want to win the libertarian vote, tell voters what aspect of your platform is libertarian," he said. "I encourage people everywhere I go to talk about things that are important to libertarians — audit the fed is important, not detaining people without a trial, not taking people's records and spying on people, small constitutional government, not going to war with out congressional approval. All of these things are important to libertarians."

"The only way the Republican gets the libertarian voter is they address those issues … The war on drugs is a big deal," Paul said. "We think people are kept in prison for too long for too much of the time."

In practice, that persuasion may not be quite taking in North Carolina. At the diner in Raleigh, a reporter quizzed Paul: Was his presence in the state meant to get libertarians to support Tillis? Paul deferred to Tillis for an answer. But he did note that "many of libertarian ideas are Republican ideas."

Tillis wouldn't go there, and dodged the question. A follow-up email to his campaign about what libertarian ideas Tillis shared with Paul went unanswered.

"We want any member of the Senate caucus down here to show the broad base of support we have for this campaign," Tillis said.

But Paul is undeterred. In an interview, he said he believes that shying away from libertarian ideas is the wrong way to go for Republicans. His travel schedule, he said, proves that GOP candidates are looking for his help. And as he's tried to be seen as a different kind of conservative, he believes his schedule is a reflection of where the party is heading.

"It shows that libertarian-ish kind of ideas are popular," he said.

And has he been surprised by all of the interest in him?

"No, I'm a good person, it doesn't surprise me at all," he deadpanned.

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