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DOMA Lawyer Files Federal Lawsuit Aimed At Ending Mississippi Marriage Ban

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Robbie Kaplan takes on a marriage case in the Deep South.

Robbie Kaplan stands at right as her client, Edie Windsor, speaks about her Supreme Court victory against the Defense of Marriage Act. Kaplan is now suing to end Mississippi's ban on same-sex couples' marriages.

Mike Segar / Reuters

WASHINGTON — Two same-sex couples and the Campaign for Southern Equality went to federal court on Monday in Mississippi, suing to end the state's ban on same-sex couples' marriages.

The couples — one of whom is seeking to marry in Mississippi and one of whom is seeking recognition of their Maine marriage — and the campaign are represented by, among other lawyers, Robbie Kaplan of Paul Weiss, who represented Edie Windsor in her successful challenge to the federal marriage recognition ban in the Defense of Marriage Act.

Rebecca Bickett and Andrea Sanders wish to marry in Mississippi and are suing because they were denied a marriage license by the Hinds County Circuit Clerk in March. Jocelyn Pritchett and Carla Webb married in Maine in 2013 and are suing to have their marriage recognized.

Courts around the country, including four federal appeals courts, have since applied the Windsor decision in striking down state bans on same-sex couples' marriages. Kaplan has sought unsuccessfully to intervene or represent same-sex couples and LGBT organizations in some of those cases.

The case has been assigned to Judge Carlton Reeves, nominated to the bench by President Obama in 2010.

"Equality cannot come quickly enough to Mississippi for these families," said Rev. Jasmine Beach-Ferrara, the executive director of the Campaign for Southern Equality, in a statement.

Referring to the wave of rulings leading to marriage equality since the Windsor decision, Kaplan said in the statement, "It is now time to take the next big step by making sure that gay families in Mississippi are accorded these same protections. The Supreme Court has made it clear that no matter where a gay person lives —whether it is in Maine, Minnesota, or Mississippi—our Constitution requires that they be treated with the same dignity and respect under the law as everyone else."

Previously, the only marriage-related litigation in the state was in a case in which a state court judge denied a request for a divorce from a same-sex couple who had married in California.

The lawsuit asks for:

The lawsuit asks for:

Read the full lawsuit:


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GOP Senator Campaign's Sunflower Fields Are In Ukraine

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Pat Roberts represents the Sunflower State (Kansas).

The image Republican Kansas Sen. Pat Roberts on every page of his website and on his press releases of a sunset on a sunflower field is of a field in Ukraine.

An image on his Facebook page is likewise from Ukraine.

Kansas is the Sunflower State.

Here's the header used on every page of Roberts' website:

Here's the header used on every page of Roberts' website:

Via patroberts.com

Here's the image on the press releases sent out by the Roberts campaign:

Here's the image on the press releases sent out by the Roberts campaign:

Pat Roberts Campaign Press Release

Here's Robert's image pulled out from his website:

Here's Robert's image pulled out from his website:


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Labor Department Completes LGBT Anti-Discrimination Rule

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The Labor Department was tasked by the president this summer with devising regulations barring federal contractors from discriminating against LGBT workers.

U.S. Labor Secretary Tom Perez at the Congressional Hispanic Caucus Institute's annual awards gala in Washington, Oct. 2, 2014.

Jonathan Ernst / Reuters

WASHINGTON — The Labor Department has finalized a rule barring federal contractors from discriminating against LGBT workers, sending it to the Office of Management and Budget on Monday for review, BuzzFeed News has learned.

The rule implements Executive Order 13672, which President Obama signed in July and bars federal contractors from discriminating on the basis of sexual orientation or gender identity. The final rule was submitted for review by OMB on Monday, according to a Labor Department spokesperson.

"The president tasked the secretary of labor with extending these workplace protections to LGBT Americans in the federal contracting workforce, directing the department to prepare regulations implementing the changes to EO 11246 within 90 days," the spokesperson told BuzzFeed News. "While 18 states, the District of Columbia, and many businesses, large and small, already offer workplace protections to LGBT employees, July's executive order was the first federal action to ensure LGBT workplace equality."

No timeline was given for the OMB review, after which the final rule would be expected to be published in the Federal Register. Additionally, the spokesperson said the full text of the rule would not be available until it is published in the Federal Register.

Human Rights Campaign Vice President Fred Sainz said of the news, "We are pleased that the President's Executive Order is one step closer to implementation. We look forward to final regulations that will ensure that employees of federal contractors are protected from discrimination based on their sexual orientation and gender identity."

Freedom to Work's Tico Almeida, who has been critical of the administration's pace on LGBT workplace issues, told BuzzFeed News, "We applaud Labor Secretary Perez and [Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs] Director [Patricia] Shiu for taking this important step towards ensuring that LGBT Americans get a fair shot to build successful careers at the companies that profit from taxpayer-funded contracts."

Grimes "Amnesty" Ad Attacking McConnell Still On Television

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The ad is still airing in two markets (Cincinnati, which includes parts of Kentucky, and Paducah).

A controversial television ad from Democratic Senate candidate Alison Lundergran Grimes attacking incumbent Sen. Mitch McConnell on immigration is still airing in at least two media markets.

Grimes cited McConnell's vote for a 1986 law which gave a path to citizenship to 3 million people people in the United States illegally as the basis for the attack.

Latino activists have criticized Grimes for the ad with some calling it "totally morally reprehensible."

While there sometimes can be a delay in pulling campaign ads because of media buys, on Friday, a Grimes campaign official told Insider Louisville "that the ad should be completely off the air at some point today throughout the rest of the state once it is saturated, and there will be no additional buy to air this particular ad again."

A closed captioning search showed the ad aired in the Cincinnati media market today at 11 a.m., 10 a.m., 8:42 a.m., 8:06 a.m., 7:15 a.m., 5:43 a.m., 5:21 a.m., 5:07 a.m., and 4:56 a.m. The ad also aired in the Paducah area at 7:29 a.m. and 6:20 a.m.

The Grimes campaign has not responded to a request for comment from BuzzFeed News.

Here's the ad:

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Democrats: It's Your Fault We're Losing

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Two weeks to go until Election Day and the Democratic finger-pointing is in full swing. “This is typical ass-covering.”

Obama and boxes of pastries on the trail in Illinois.

Kevin Lamarque / Reuters

WASHINGTON — With two weeks until Election Day, Democrats are focused on two things: shoring up what polls show to be an increasingly dire electoral position and furiously blaming one another for what went wrong.

The first battle is being fought on the ground, mostly in red states with incumbent Democratic senators. The second is raging in the press, where readers have been treated to mostly anonymous barbs from Democrats blaming President Obama, Senate Democratic messaging strategy, Latino voters, the White House, the DCCC, Ebola, the Supreme Court, and/or retiring Sen. Tom Harkin for the potential Nov. 4 doomsday scenario.

Partisans turning on each other ahead of tough elections is not a new concept. But there's just about no one left to blame after a glance at the headlines over the last several weeks.

There are some universal villains, of course. The Supreme Court's decision to let many voter ID laws stand is a Democratic favorite. The electoral map, heavy on red states when it comes to competitive races, and the off-year nature of the race have been touted by Democrats since the cycle began as reasons not to expect much in November.

Top Democratic observers say this is all par for the course, but warn the sound of Democrats pointing at each other before galloping away from bad poll numbers could have an impact on the actual election Democrats are supposed to be running.

"I think this is typical ass-covering, and it always happens in tight elections," said Stephanie Cutter, a top strategist for Obama's reelection campaign. "It's certainly not permeating to voters on the ground. The key is not letting it distract campaigns from getting out the vote and bringing us over the finish line. "

On Monday, the latest salvo of Democratic friendly fire was launched: women voters, a segment of the electorate the party has relied on to push their candidates across the finish line in recent years. "Obama is underwater with female voters — especially women unaffiliated with a political party — and it's making it harder for Democrats to take advantage of the gender gap, according to public polling and Democratic strategists," Politico reported.

Meanwhile, in the New York Times on Sunday, an unnamed strategist allied with President Obama said it was the Senate strategists who were to blame if the Democratic base stays home. "A senior official, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss strategy, said the White House was 'concerned that some of the campaigns are not focused enough on the importance of turning out presidential-year voters, including African-Americans,'" the Times reported.

Both the White House and the Senate Democratic strategists are responsible for what could prove to be lackluster enthusiasm among the Latino base, according to Democratic-allied Latino strategists, the Washington Post reported last month. The DSCC's candidates are to blame for pushing Obama to delay his long-promised executive actions on immigration; Obama is to blame for listening to them.

The AFL-CIO says Democrats failed to capitalize on the economic inequality message that was briefly supposed to be the central theme for 2014. Also, there's Ebola. The White House screwed Senate Democrats by not getting ahead of it more quickly, say some, while others say the Democrats screwed themselves by failing to find their message footing on the virus for weeks.

The blame game isn't just reserved for the nebulous strategist royalty at the top of Democratic politics. Specific people, beyond Obama of course, are also responsible for the bad news, according to Democrats. The most outside-the-box Democratic friendly fire of the cycle landed on retiring Sen. Tom Harkin, who a senior Democratic aide told Politico could cost Democrats the all-important Senate race in Iowa by keeping his remaining campaign cash to start a political institute at Drake University. Harkin intimated Democratic nominee Bruce Braley could be in trouble because of some self-inflicted "bumps" early on in the cycle.

Joe Trippi, who ran Howard Dean's insurgent bid for the Democratic nomination in 2004, said Democrats fighting with Democrats ahead of Election Day is literally a political cliché. But then again, the shoe could soon be on the other foot.

"Victory has a thousand fathers, but defeat is an orphan," he said. "Look no further than the GOP's victories in 2010 and then their defeat in 2012. The same may happen in 2014 and 2016 in reverse."

Obama On Democrats Avoiding Him: "Bottom Line...They Have Supported My Agenda"

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“The bottom line is though, these are all folks who vote with me.”

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President Obama says Democrats avoiding him in the 2014 midterm elections are only doing so because they need to win and are strong supporters of his agenda.

"So some of the candidates there, ya know, it is difficult for them to have me in the state because the Republicans will use that to try to fan Republican turnout," the president said in comments aired on Politics Nation with Al Sharpton.

The president said that politicians running from him are supporters of his agenda, though — something that's become a point of attack, actually, in Republican ads this cycle.
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"The bottom line is though, these are all folks who vote with me," he said. "They have supported my agenda in Congress. They are on the right side of minimum wage. They are on the right side of fair pay. They are on the right side of rebuilding our infrastructure. They're on the right side of early childhood education."

The president said his feelings aren't hurt and he tells vulnerable Democrats to do what they have to in order to win.

"So, this isn't about my feelings being hurt. These are folks who are strong allies and supporters of me. And I tell them, I said, you know what, you do what you need to win. I will be responsible for making sure that our voters turn out."

Chicago Man Tells Obama: "Don't Touch My Girlfriend"

Marriage Equality Comes To Wyoming

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Wyoming’s attorney general filed notice on Tuesday morning that he will not appeal last week’s decision that the state cannot bar same-sex couples from marrying. Wyoming becomes the 32nd state, plus Washington, D.C., with marriage equality.

As Wyoming Attorney General Peter Michael announced on Monday, the state filed its notice on Tuesday morning a little before 10 a.m. MT that it would not be appealing last week's ruling that same-sex couples could not be barred from marriage:

As Wyoming Attorney General Peter Michael announced on Monday, the state filed its notice on Tuesday morning a little before 10 a.m. MT that it would not be appealing last week's ruling that same-sex couples could not be barred from marriage:

After the state's filing, minutes later, Skavdahl issued an order ending his temporary stay of Friday's decision, formally bringing marriage equality to Wyoming:

After the state's filing, minutes later, Skavdahl issued an order ending his temporary stay of Friday's decision, formally bringing marriage equality to Wyoming:


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GOP Senator: Hey, We Can Always Screw Up Winning The Senate

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“If anybody can mess this up my side has the total capacity to here at the last minute to figure out how to turn 65% into 25%,” Sen. Roy Blunt says.

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Republican Missouri Sen. Roy Blunt had a blunt message for Republicans prospects of winning the Senate: We can also screw it up like we always do.

"You know, I'm not particularly good at that but everything I read says — there are people who do that and do that pretty much for a living — and they're all saying between 60% and 65%," Blunt said on The McGraw Show on KTRS Radio of the odds of Republicans taking the Senate. "But if anybody can mess this up my side has the total capacity to here at the last minute to figure out how to turn 65% into 25%."

"We proven a couple times in a row that we can do that," Blunt said on Republicans in previous elections snatching defeat from the jaws of victory.

Republicans were bullish on their chances of retaking the Senate in the landslide 2010 midterms only to not pick up the required seats.

In 2012, Democrats actually picked up seats in an election Republicans had again hoped to recapture the Senate.

6 Things You Won't Believe The "Duck Dynasty" Congressional Candidate Said

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Zach Dasher is challenging incumbent Rep. Vance McAllister.

https://www.facebook.com/DasherforCongress/photos/pb.544994868953516.-2207520000.1413842738./588420881277581/?type=3&theater

Zach Dasher is a cousin to the Duck Dynasty family — and he's challenging incumbent Republican Rep. Vance McAllister, best known as the "kissing congressman," in Louisiana.

Before running for Congress, Dasher was the proprietor of the website Willingtothink.org, which bills itself as "a website and podcast dedicated to encouraging folks to be willing to think about the deeper questions in life."

Dasher led the latest fundraising haul of candidates vying to oust McAllister, with $326,000. In the same time period, McAllister raised less than $16,000, The Hill reported.

On Dasher's personal podcast, all recorded before he ran for office, he made some controversial comments.

Dasher says he thinks "it's very likely that" a "Mussolini-Hitler-Stalin-type regime" could "happen in America."

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Chris Christie Is A "Mercenary"

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“I go to places where we can win.” The New Jersey governor campaigns, while people eat pancakes, for Maryland’s gubernatorial pick.

Shannon Stapleton / Reuters

BETHESDA, Maryland — Even in the midst of a tighter-than-expected governor's race, Gov. Chris Christie's presidential ambitions are still the biggest draw.

The New Jersey governor appeared with Larry Hogan, Maryland's Republican gubernatorial hopeful, at the Original Pancake House here in Bethesda, right outside of Washington.

Christie entered to an eager audience, ready to talk. Hogan is not the brand of retail politician that Christie is — he played it safe as he glad-handed unsuspecting patrons, awkwardly commenting back to back to back about their food.

"Those pancakes look delicious!" he exclaimed to one.

He commented on another's eggs Benedict.

"How's that bacon? That bacon's pretty good, huh?"

The breakfast event, populated by Hogan supporters, followed a fundraiser at private residence in the wealthy enclave of Potomac. Few gubernatorial candidates need Christie's popularity as much as Hogan, as he faces the uphill — but not completely impossible — battle of defeating Anthony Brown in the deeply blue state of Maryland.

Even Hogan himself said his would be the biggest upset in the country. Christie suggested Obama's campaign appearance with Brown earlier this week was evidence Hogan has momentum leading up to two weeks before the election. (In a bit of a weird twist, a picture of President Obama and Brown from
Sunday's event
in Prince George's County was still making the rounds on a flat-panel TV in the room.) Christie said his victories in New Jersey, a blue state, was evidence that a Hogan can make an impact. "I'm here to show people that I'm living proof that it can not only happen once, it can happen twice."

Sporting a leaner physique — more than once, a supporter yelled out that he looks "great" — Christie deflected a question from a reporter about whether he would run for president.

"I think he'd make a terrific president," eliciting cheers from supporters charged up on coffee and syrup. "I can't think of anybody who's done a better job as governor. I'm not just saying this because he's here with us this morning."

Christie seemed exasperated by the praise. But part of Christie's appeal as he crisscrosses through the country in his role as head of the Republican Governors Association, is that he is, in fact, a favorite among Republicans to pursue a run for the presidency; on Tuesday, he said he would begin to think about whether he would run early next year.

These are the types of events that will fill Christie's days — he said he will visit 18 states in October alone. "Listen, I'm a mercenary in this job. I go to places where we can win."

Outside of the restaurant, the crush of reporters and photographers held on to Christie's every move. After signing a bunch of autographs and even posing for a selfie, Christie put his arm around Hogan.

A woman running for local office asked Christie for a picture. "A picture? C'mon," he said, as Hogan got pushed into the frame. "With me and Larry? Sure, c'mon."

American Held By North Korea For Leaving Bible In Restaurant Returns To U.S.

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Jeffrey Edward Fowle landed in Ohio early Wednesday morning. He was released after five months of captivity yesterday.

A plane carrying Fowle landed early Wednesday morning at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, near Dayton in his home state of Ohio, the Associated Press reported.

His arrival back in the U.S. led to emotional scenes as Fowle was reunited with his wife, three children and other relatives. Base Col. John Devalier told AP that Fowle seemed happy, and was thrilled to have returned to the U.S.


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Hillary Clinton Raises "Record" Millions For Senate Democrats

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Clinton brings in $2.1 million for the DSCC. Katzenberg co-hosts.

Shannon Stapleton / Reuters

Andrew Kelly / Reuters

Hillary Clinton raised a record $2.1 million for Senate Democrats at a Los Angeles fundraiser organized on Monday night by Jeffrey Katzenberg, the top film executive who has positioned himself to play a leading, influential role in the possible presidential campaign many expect from the former secretary of state.

A person with knowledge of the final tally confirmed that the Clinton event for the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, held at Brentwood's Tavern restaurant, brought in $2.1 million. The number was first reported in Deadline.

The source said the total haul set a "record" for the DSCC.

An official with the DSCC, now struggling in the final days of the midterm elections to win enough races to keep control of the Senate, declined to confirm the total. The committee does not make public the amounts raised at its fundraisers.

The Clinton fundraiser on Monday was the second event during this year's election cycle that she has hosted for the DSCC. Also in attendance was the chairman of the committee, Sen. Michael Bennet, as well as both of California's U.S. senators, Dianne Feinstein and Barbara Boxer, according to the DSCC official.

Clinton appeared earlier in the day at a San Francisco event for the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, raising $1.4 million, a DCCC official said.

After promoting her new memoir at a series of book signings this summer, Clinton has jumped back into politics this month, hosting fundraisers for the Democratic committees and headlining a string of rallies for Democrats in states like Pennsylvania, Kentucky, Colorado, and Massachusetts.

Katzenberg, the CEO of DreamWorks Animation and a longtime player in the top-most circles of Democratic politics in Hollywood, is poised to be a major donor and fundraiser for Clinton, should she decides to run for president early next year.

Clinton and Katzenberg had a private meeting in Los Angeles in the spring of last year, and are said to be in touch.

The two have a long history. Katzenberg supported Bill Clinton in the '90s. In those years, he was close enough to the Clintons to lend them his vacation home and enjoy visits to the White House. But before the Democratic primary in 2008, Katzenberg and his two business partners, executives David Geffen and Steven Spielberg, split from the Clintons to back Barack Obama, then a U.S. senator.

Now, Katzenberg continues to play a strategic role in Priorities USA Action, the party's largest super PAC, where officials have said they are prepared to support Clinton early. He helped kick-start that group during the 2012 election with a check for $2 million. The PAC went on to raise and spend $65 million for Obama.

In addition to Katzenberg, who made remarks at the fundraiser, the event was co-hosted by Casey Wasserman, a major donor; Alan Horn, the Walt Disney Studios chairman; and, among others, Andy Spahn, Katzenberg's longtime political adviser.

Tickets for the event, which included a reception, photo line, and dinner, started at $32,400 per person, according to an invitation.


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Pollster: Most People Are Getting The Critical Latino Vote Wrong In Colorado

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And it could decide the heated Senate race between Democrat Mark Udall and Republican Cory Gardner. But is Udall’s outreach too little, too late?

AP Photo/Brennan Linsley

In 2010, Sen. Harry Reid was engaged in a bitter battle with Sharron Angle. He was headed for a loss, polls said.

Despite polls showing him down about 3% on average, he won by 5.6%. The surprise was largely attributed to Latino voters being polled incorrectly. Nate Silver wrote about this after hearing from Matt Barreto, of Latino Decisions, a polling firm focused on the Latino vote.

Now with the 2014 midterm election looming, Barreto argues to BuzzFeed News that it's happening again, this time in Colorado where polls show Republican Rep. Cory Gardner leading Democratic Sen. Mark Udall.

"Even if you give other polls the benefit of the doubt and assume the rest of their statewide numbers are correct — if you pull their Latino numbers out and put ours in — instead of Udall being down by 3, he's up 3 to 4," Barreto said.

While Barreto has been right before, a recent Denver Post poll showed Gardner not just winning the race, but leading among Latinos 49-35.

"There is absolutely no way that Cory Gardner will win the Latino vote in Colorado," Barreto said. "Obama won well over 80% of the Latino vote in 2012 and Gardner has been just awful on Latino issues, especially immigration issues. Our Colorado polling has very consistently shown Gardner way behind with Latino voters. The mainstream polls are just plain wrong in their Latino samples."

Latino Decisions says that mainstream polls fail in capturing the nuance of the Latino vote because many only poll in English, with small samples of Latinos somewhere in the 40-60 range, whereas they survey 400-600 bilingually. Cell-phone only, Spanish-speaking, lower socio-economic status Latinos are the most Democratic of all Latino voters, they argue, and are the most difficult and costly voters to include in a poll, according to a recent blog post. Polls in English, on the other hand, oversample higher income Latinos who are more likely to lean Republican, according to Barreto.

A recent Latino Decisions/NCLR Action Fund poll found that 66% of Latinos say they will or are likely to vote for Udall, while only 17% said they would definitely or are likely to vote for Gardner. But of those who were interviewed in Spanish, 76% said they will vote for or are likely to vote for Udall.

In a race that is considered a tossup, getting a big chunk of the electorate wrong matters. According to Latino Decisions, Colorado polls consistently underestimate the share of the electorate that is Latino, often putting it between 5% and 10%. "In comparison, the 2012 exit polls estimated that Latinos were 14% of the Colorado electorate and 12% in 2010," they wrote recently.

But critically, even among those who want Udall to win, many believe the Democrat's outreach to Latinos has been lackluster, only picking up recently.

"He's made the campaign mainly about women and hasn't done a very good job of connecting with and communicating to Latino immigrant voters," said veteran national immigration activist, Frank Sharry. "He's clearly better than Gardner on immigration, but he hasn't taken full advantage of it."

"He hasn't been as active as he should be in the community," one strategist with knowledge of Latino politics in the Southwest said.

Sharry said 40% of the Latino vote in Colorado are immigrants and their children, who are very concerned with immigration because it defines their family's future.

"He hasn't tried hard enough," said Matthew McClellan, executive director of the NCLR action fund, who commissioned the Colorado Senate poll with Latino Decisions. "There hasn't been enough genuine and substantial outreach to the Latino community during the midterms but it's not just him."

In terms of Latino outreach, Udall has been able to count on door-to-door canvassing from the SEIU union, including knocking on 2,000 doors a day, according to the organization, as well as $1 million in Spanish-language ads that knock Gardner for his stances on immigration, education, and opposition to raising the minimum wage — issues the union says matter to Latino voters.

Still, Udall has one big advantage: His stance on Obama's promised executive actions on immigration.

Jose Parra worked closely with the political director and ran Hispanic communications for Reid in Nevada in 2010. He said the tricky part about reaching Latinos in Colorado is that it's basically made up of two distinct Hispanic communities. There are those with deep roots in the state since the 1600s and others who arrived in the last 30 years and represent the Latino growth in the Denver area.

He, along with Barreto, pointed to Udall being one of the first senators to come out publicly in favor of President Obama's long-awaited administrative actions that would slow deportations of undocumented immigrants, as a plus for him.

"Outside of Senate leadership like Schumer, Durbin, and Menendez, he was one of the first rank-and-file senators to step out and call for executive actions in June, July. He was on the forefront of that," Parra told BuzzFeed News.

Because of Udall's position on the matter, he has been the beneficiary of get-out-the-vote efforts from the Colorado Immigrant Rights Coalition, because of anger at Gardner.

Parra and Barreto also acknowledged that turnout and voter excitement will likely not be as high as it was in 2010, and part of that is the way the race in particular has unfolded.

"It doesn't have the ugly rhetoric of 2010 — you can't cut a commercial of Sharron Angle saying Reid is the best friend an illegal alien ever had," Parra said, referencing one of Angle's controversial comments.

Barreto said a nationwide poll released Monday by Latino Decisions and America's Voice showed that Latino voter enthusiasm towards Democrats and Obama has dropped.

They found that immigration is now the top issue for Latinos ahead of the 2014 election, which is not always the case. The economy, education, and health care have previously been the top issues for Latinos.

The poll found that from June to October, during which Obama announced the delay of immigration executive actions, approval by Latinos of how Democrats and Obama were handling immigration policy fell 12%, respectively.

NCLR's McClellan lumped together pollsters and politicians in how they see the Latino community.

"There are always wildly inaccurate polls on Latino stances and positions, which is indicative of the larger problem of people not taking the time to understand the Latino community," he said. "This is what happens when you only pay attention to them for six weeks out of every two years."

Groups Seek LGBT Protections In Federal Government Profiling Policy Changes

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“[T]he harms of ineffective and un-American profiling are of clear concern and importance to the LGBT community,” more than two dozen groups tell Attorney General Eric Holder. A BuzzFeed News exclusive.

Gary Cameron / Reuters

WASHINGTON — The Justice Department's long-anticipated new policy for law enforcement's use of racial and other profiling should include LGBT people within its protections, more than two dozen LGBT advocacy groups wrote to Attorney General Eric Holder on Tuesday.

More than that, though, the groups also told Holder, the new policy should apply to any law enforcement agencies that get federal funding.

"Given the reality that most profiling and targeting of individuals on the basis of their actual or perceived sexual orientation or gender identity/expression occurs by state and local agencies, not including this aspect in the guidance would be a significant omission," they write in the letter, which was provided exclusively to BuzzFeed News.

They add their support, as well, for those "urging the Department to close the border and national security loopholes in the existing profiling guidance, extending it to cover surveillance activities, and making the rules enforceable."

On Sept. 26, the Los Angeles Times reported that sources at the Justice Department said the "broad new policy [...] banning religious and other forms of profiling by federal law enforcement officers" was expected "in the coming two to three weeks." A department spokesperson did not respond Tuesday afternoon to a request for any update on the status of the policy.

In Tuesday's letter, the groups, which include national organizations like the ACLU and Human Rights Campaign and state LGBT organizations, highlight the case of Monica Jones, a transgender woman of color who is a college student in Arizona and was arrested in 2013 because a police officer believed her clothes and location "suggested to him" that she was "manifesting intent to engage in prostitution."

Calling the underlying law "unconstitutionally vague and overbroad," several of the groups signing on to the letter have weighed in to support Jones in her appeal. The groups use Jones' case to note the history of "unlawful sting operations targeting gay and bisexual men and profiling of transgender women as sex workers," concluding that "the harms of ineffective and un-American profiling are of clear concern and importance to the LGBT community."

The full list of signatories:

American Civil Liberties Union, Basic Rights Oregon, Equality California, Equality Federation, Equality New Mexico, Equality North Carolina, Equality Ohio, Equality South Dakota, Family Equality Council, Fair Wisconsin, Fairness Campaign, Gay & Lesbian Advocates & Defenders, Human Rights Campaign, Immigration Equality, Lambda Legal, MassEquality, National Black Justice Coalition, National Center for Lesbian Rights, National Center for Transgender Equality, National Coalition of Anti-Violence Programs, National LGBTQ Task Force, National Queer Asian Pacific Islander Alliance (NQAPIA), New York Association for Gender Rights Advocacy (NYAGRA) PFLAG National, PROMO (Missouri), Services and Advocacy for GLBT Elders (SAGE), The Equity Project, Transgender Law Center, and Trans People of Color Coalition


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Democratic Congressional Candidate: Ebola Is Coming To Nevada, Ban Travel From Africa

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“I wasn’t sure why they didn’t stop tourists visas a week ago from Africa. I wasn’t sure about that, why that hasn’t happened?”

A Democratic congressional candidate says Ebola is coming to southern Nevada and wants to ban travel from Africa.

In a video from last Thursday, Erin Bilbray, the Democrat challenging Republican Rep. Joe Heck in Nevada's 3rd District

"I wasn't sure why they didn't stop tourists visas a week ago from Africa. I wasn't sure about that, why that hasn't happened" Bilbray said.

Bilbray said hospitals need to be equipped to handle Ebola saying, "I think it is gonna happen here in southern Nevada, god forbid."

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At a debate Monday evening, criticized the CDC's response to Ebola.

"I think the government response was not adequate," Bilbray said.

Bilbray again called for banning visas from Africa.

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Jordanian Man Allegedly Fleeing ISIS Detained At Mexican Border

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The man said he was fleeing extortion from local Jordanian officials and the threat of ISIS invading Jordan.

A helicopter border patrol in September.

John Moore / Getty Images

WASHINGTON — U.S. immigration officials in August apprehended a Jordanian national attempting to cross into the United States from Mexico who fled his home country in part because of the growing threat of ISIS terrorists operating in the region.

Despite claims that ISIS jihadis have infiltrated the United States through the southern border in recent months, so far there has been no public proof that terrorists have sought to use the Mexican border as a way into the United States. This case appears to be the first known instance of someone fleeing the violent organization and coming to the United States across the southern border.

According to internal Department of Homeland Security documents obtained by BuzzFeed News, on Aug. 29, Border Patrol agents apprehended a 52-year-old man as he was attempting to cross into the United States outside of Roma, Texas.

The man, who had previously sought legal entry in to the United States, told DHS officials that he fled Jordan in part out of fear of extortion from local officials, but also because of the looming threat of ISIS terrorists invading his home country.

He said he a smuggler known as "El Raton" arranged for him to pay a second man known as "Tornado" to take him across the Mexico-Texas border.

Although the Jordanian successfully crossed, he was apprehended shortly thereafter by Customs and Border Protection agents.

A CBP official referred a request for comment to the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, which did not immediately respond to the request. However, a CBP spokesperson did say that in fiscal year 2014, 12,816 immigrants at the nation's various Points of Entry made either asylum claims or provided CBP agents with a potentially credible fear of return, both of which would put them into the asylum system.

The episode is not the first involving someone claiming the threat of terrorism as a justification for coming to the United States through Mexico. Dozens of Somalis have fled persecution in their homeland by Al Shabaab, an Al Qaeda affiliate operating in eastern Africa.

Those asylum requests have triggered exhaustive investigations by federal anti-terrorism officials, including multiple FBI interrogations.

This post has been updated to remove the name of the detained man.

GOP Congressional Candidate's Veterans Health Care Plan Plagiarized From Fox News Article

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It’s an article about a proposed overhaul of VA health care.

Facebook.com

A Republican congressional candidate in Oregon appears to have plagiarized her plan for veterans from a Fox News article about proposed changes to the troubled Veterans Affairs health care.

Tootie Smith, a Republican running against Oregon Democrat Rep. Kurt Schrader in the state's 5th Congressional veteran's medical care plan uses nearly-identical language to a Fox News article from July on action taken by House and Senate Veterans Affairs committees.

The campaign for Smith, who currently serves as Clackamas County Commissioner, didn't return emails or phone calls about the similar text.

Here's the Fox News article:

The leaders of the House and Senate Veterans Affairs committees unveiled a tentative deal on Monday on legislation meant to improve veterans' health care and tackle the litany of scandalous problems at the VA, in a bid to get the wheels turning on a solution ahead of the looming August recess.

"This starts the conversation," said Rep. Jeff Miller, R-Fla., who leads the House veterans committee. "The VA is not sacred -- veterans are."

The proposal would authorize at least $17 billion in spending over the next three years to fix the veterans health program, with about $5 billion of that offset elsewhere in the budget. Congressional aides say the agreement includes funding to make it easier for veterans who can't get prompt appointments with Veterans Affairs doctors to obtain outside care and funding to hire doctors, nurses and other medical staff.

The plan also grants the VA secretary authority to immediately fire senior executives, while providing employees with streamlined appeal rights.

Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., chairman of the Senate veterans panel, proposed a bill last week that would cost about $25 billion over three years. Miller, his House counterpart, responded with a plan to approve $10 billion in emergency spending, with a promise of more spending in future years.

The two lawmakers' differences threatened to derail talks last week, but the lawmakers negotiated over the weekend and produced the plan announced on Monday.

"The United States Congress is in my view a dysfunctional institution ... so I'm quite proud of what we've accomplished," Sanders said Monday.

The leaders of both parties in both chambers would still have to take the pulse of their respective caucuses on the plan, which would still have to be approved by the House and Senate.

The announcement, though, could quell concerns that Congress would start a five-week summer recess without any legislative solution amid widespread national outrage over problems within the Department of Veterans Affairs.

The pair said in a joint statement that they had "made significant progress" toward an agreement on legislation "to make VA more accountable and to help the department recruit more doctors, nurses and other health care professionals."

The plan, among other provisions, includes funding to give veterans who can't get a VA appointment the option of receiving non-VA care; funding for the VA itself; and authority for the VA secretary to immediately fire corrupt or incompetent senior executives.

Eighteen veterans died while on a secret waiting list for care at the VA facility in Phoenix. And an inspector general's report in May found roughly 1,700 veterans in Phoenix were on the unauthorized list with some waiting as long as 115 days for treatment.

Veterans Affairs Secretary Eric Shinseki resigned shortly after the release of that report.

Lawmakers were working through dueling proposals last week. Those proposals would have scaled back separate House- and Senate-passed bills after lawmakers in both parties expressed shock at price tags totaling more than $35 billion.

The Obama administration says it needs about $17.6 billion to hire thousands of doctors, nurses and other health professionals, lease new facilities and upgrade its computers to reduce a backlog of veterans awaiting care at VA hospitals and clinics.

The administration's request does not include money to allow more veterans to go to private doctors to avoid long waits for VA care. Expansion of private care was the biggest cost in the bills approved by Congress.

Republicans complained that Acting VA Secretary Sloan Gibson's budget request was thinly documented. Miller told Gibson on Thursday he was surprised that such a large request was made in a slim, three-page memo.

The VA request includes $8.2 billion to hire 1,500 doctors and thousands of nurses and other medical and mental health professionals; $6 billion for construction projects to improve safety or patient access; $1.2 billion for computer enhancements; and $400 million for more staff to deal with the agency's backlog of benefits claims.

And here's Smith on veterans:

House and Senate Veterans Affairs committees revealed a tentative agreement on Monday for legislation that is meant to improve veteran's health care. It also includes a plan to address the scandalous problems at the VA.

This is only the first step, but it shows a commitment by the Congress in resolving the treatment our vets deserve and should expect "This starts the conversation," said Rep. Jeff Miller, R-Fla., who leads the House veterans committee. "The VA is not sacred — veterans are."

The proposal authorizes at least $17 billion in spending over the next several years to fix the veterans health program. Approximately $5 billion is to be offset elsewhere in the budget. The agreement includes funding to make it easier for veterans who can't get prompt appointments with Veterans Affairs doctors to obtain outside care and funding to hire doctors, nurses and other medical staff.

The plan also grants the VA secretary authority to immediately fire senior executives, while providing employees with streamlined appeal rights.

Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., chairman of the Senate veterans panel, proposed a bill
of approximately $25 billion over three years. Miller's, House plan would have approved $10 billion in emergency spending, with a promise of more spending in future years.

The differences were worked out over the weekend and produced the truly bi-partisan plan announced Monday. Sanders and Miller will still have to take the pulse of their respective caucuses on the plan, and need final approval by the House and Senate.

In a joint statement they said they had "made significant progress" toward an agreement on legislation "to make VA more accountable and to help the department recruit more doctors, nurses and other health care professionals."

Isn't this the leadership we should expect from our members of Congress? I think so!

Senator Leahy Blasts DEA For Impersonating Woman On Facebook

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Citing a case revealed by BuzzFeed News , the chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee said it’s “appalling” that a Drug Enforcement Administration agent created a fake Facebook page using a real woman’s name and photos — without her knowledge.

United States Attorney General Eric Holder, left, and Senator Patrick Leahy, right.

Gary Cameron / Reuters

In a blistering letter sent Tuesday, Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy called on Attorney General Eric Holder to condemn federal law enforcement agents' impersonation of real people on Facebook.

Leahy cited a case, disclosed by BuzzFeed News two weeks ago, in which a Drug Enforcement Administration agent posed as an upstate New York woman without her knowledge. He created a fake Facebook page using her real name, posted racy photos of her and an image of her young son that he found on her seized cell phone, and used the Facebook page to communicate with suspected criminals.

Calling the agent's actions "appalling," "unethical," and "potentially dangerous," Leahy wrote: "This extraordinary tactic placed this woman and her family at risk, and I expect the Justice Department to reconsider the use of such techniques."

Leahy's rebuke comes just days after Facebook sent a similarly critical letter to the head of the DEA, demanding that the agency stop using bogus profiles. "We regard the DEA's conduct to be a knowing and serious breach of Facebook's terms and policies," the social media site's chief security officer, Joe Sullivan, wrote.

After BuzzFeed News revealed that the Facebook profile actually was created by the DEA agent, Facebook removed the profile, and the Justice Department began its own review. A spokesman for the department did not immediately respond to a request for comment Tuesday, but said in a previous statement, "That review is ongoing, but to our knowledge, this is not a widespread practice among our federal law enforcement agencies."

The creation of the fake online profile by DEA agent Timothy Sinnigen came to light because the woman he impersonated, Sondra Arquiett, is suing him and the government in federal district court in New York, saying the bogus account violated her privacy and placed her in danger.

Law enforcement officers had arrested Arquiett in 2010, accusing her of being part of a drug ring. But evidence emerged that she was a bit player. She accepted responsibility and pled guilty, and a judge sentenced her to probation, which she has completed.

But while she was awaiting trial, Sinnigen created a Facebook page using her real name, which was then Sondra Prince. He posted photos from her phone, including one of her posing, legs spread, on the hood of a BMW and another of her with her son and niece, who were young children.

Facebook

Justice Department lawyers defended the practice in a court filing: "Defendants admit that Plaintiff did not give express permission for the use of photographs contained on her phone on an undercover Facebook page, but state the Plaintiff implicitly consented by granting access to the information stored in her cell phone and by consenting to the use of that information to aid in an ongoing criminal investigations [sic]."

Leahy panned this argument, writing: "This level of consent should in no way be viewed as permission for Federal agents to use the contents of her cell phone to publicly interact with suspected criminals under her name. This exploitation put her and the minor children in her photographs at risk without their knowledge."

Leahy concluded, "I hope the Justice Department will agree that creating an online profile using an unsuspecting person's identity to communicate with criminals is unethical, potentially dangerous, and should not be condoned by our nation's law enforcement agencies."


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Oscar de la Renta: Like Another Clinton

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​Last year, in a rare joint interview, the three Clintons honor​ed​ de la Renta​ —​ ​a​n otherwise infrequent glimpse into one of the family’s closest friendships.

Richard Kaufman for the Bill Clinton Presidential Library / Via youtu.be

They first met in a receiving line at the White House. Oscar de la Renta and his wife Annette waited their turn for a handshake along with dozens others at annual reception in for honorees of the Kennedy Center. When the designer reached the front of the line, he took Hillary Clinton's hand and said, "Is that my dress?"

Clinton had purchased the Oscar de la Renta dress off the rack. That was 1993. From then on, from the White House to the Senate and the State Department, Clinton wore the creations of the fashion icon, who passed away on Monday at 82.

All three Clintons detailed the Kennedy Center story and others about de la Renta in an intimate, nine-minute video tribute they commissioned last year for the Clinton Presidential Center in Little Rock, Ark. The film aired there last July at the invitation-only opening of an exhibit that featured more than 30 of de la Renta styles.

It also features a joint interview with Bill, Hillary, and Chelsea Clinton — one of the few they've ever given. The rare group appearance by all three Clintons, filmed last year in a vacant space inside the Time & Life Building in Manhattan, is a testament to de la Renta's exceptionally close relationship with the former first family.

"It was amusing to me," said Bill Clinton, by his wife and daughter in the interview, "because I've never had anyone go through a line and say, 'That's my suit.'"

Over the years, the Clintons vacationed with de la Renta at his estate in the Dominican Republic, where the designer was born. The relationship extended to some of the Clinton's closest aides: Huma Abedin, Hillary Clinton's longtime right hand, was also a close friend of de la Renta's. He designed her 2010 wedding dress.

"We are deeply saddened by the passing of our dear friend," said Bill, Hillary, and Chelsea Clinton, and Chelsea's husband, Marc Mezvinsky, in a joint statement on Tuesday. "We will always be grateful to Oscar for the love he showed us, and for sharing his talent on some of the most important occasions of our lives."

Richard Kaufman, a Los Angeles-based filmmaker, directed the film project. Kaufman has worked with the family before, producing the famous video that played before Hillary Clinton's speech at the 2008 Democratic National Convention. He also produced a number of films for her food security initiative at the State Department.

Two years ago, as Clinton was preparing to leave her post as secretary of state, Kaufman was commissioned by Haim Saban, a major Democratic donor, to produce a tribute to her four years at State. The video, put together without Clinton's knowledge and aired as a surprise at the Saban Forum gala, prompted some of the earliest speculation that the former first lady would run again in 2016.

Kaufman said he received a call one morning last April from the Clinton Presidential Center team, asking if he would produce a tribute for de la Renta.

He spent the next three months putting it together. The Clintons, Kaufman said, were "effusive" in the interview. "You get to see a certain side of the Clinton family."

"They saw what everybody else saw in him," he said. "This is a person who knew how to enjoy life, who shared a generosity of spirit with everybody he encountered."

Richard Kaufman / YouTube


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