Quantcast
Channel: BuzzFeed News
Viewing all 15742 articles
Browse latest View live

The GOP's Crusade To Defund Obamacare Is Over

$
0
0

Three years after Obama signed the Affordable Care Act, Republicans accept they can't defund it. But they keep going through the motions.

Image by Chip Somodevilla / Getty Images

WASHINGTON — Just shy of the three-year anniversary of the Affordable Care Act becoming law, Republicans in Congress took another vote to cut funding to the program.

But pretty much everyone admits it was just for show.

"It's really important to demonstrate that if you're going to head toward a balanced budget, you actually can't have these types of programs that explode the spending," said Republican Rep. David Schweikert on Thursday after he placed his vote, albeit nonbinding, for Rep. Paul Ryan's budget, which proposed cutting funding for the health care law.

Saturday will mark three years since the president signed "Obamacare" into law, and for three years Republicans have been waging a relentless, multi-front war on the president's signature achievement — on the campaign trail, on cable news, and in the Supreme Court, which upheld the law in June. But while the battle has continued, most Republicans acknowledge they are just going through the motions at this point.

Since it became law, House Republicans have voted dozens of times to defund all or part of the Affordable Care Act. In the Senate this month, Sen. Ted Cruz proposed defunding the measure, and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell later spoke on the Senate floor in support of such a path.

"I've spoken about 100 times on the Senate floor against Obamacare, and I've warned against its consequences: Increased premiums, lost jobs and higher taxes," McConnell said. He added, "It needs to be pulled out by its roots, and we need to start all over. This bill needs to be repealed, and it needs to be replaced."

But few within the GOP are deluded about the how little their votes and speeches have accomplished. Privately, Republicans concede that the fight to defund the health care law has been lost — at least for now.

"We recognize that we don't control the Senate or the White House, so votes to defund will not be successful," a House Republican aide said. "But what we are confident about is that over the next year, the pain of Obamacare will be felt as premiums go up and businesses mull the massive new costs and whether to drop coverage."

At this stage, votes to defund the law are carried out mostly to placate the most conservative members of Congress, the aide said.

That conservative contingent is growing restless, even as the health care law has fallen out of mainstream political discourse, and some lawmakers have floated the idea of tying the fate of the next debt limit increase to no less than defunding the Affordable Care Act.

"We've kicked this around internally, and some of the things we'd like to have are maybe the Boehner rule — for every dollar increase in the debt ceiling we have a dollar of savings — or tie it to Obamacare," Rep. Jim Jordan said at a panel discussion Wednesday featuring the most prominent conservatives in the House.

House Republican leadership, well aware of the comical number of votes lawmakers have already taken to defund the law, likely won't warm to that tack.

"There will be opportunities ahead," Boehner said last week in an interview with Sean Hannity. "But do you want to risk the full faith and credit of the United States government over ObamaCare? That's a very tough argument to make."


Gay Couples File Marriage Lawsuit In New Mexico

$
0
0

New Mexico has no specific law allowing or banning same-sex couples from marrying.

Two same-sex couples who were denied marriage licenses in Bernalillo County, New Mexico are suing in state court, seeking a marriage license and an injunction stopping the county clerk from refusing to grant same-sex couples marriage licenses.

The American Civil Liberties Union and National Center for Lesbian Rights are co-counsel in the lawsuit. The couples, according to an ACLU news release, are Miriam Rand, 63, and Ona Porter, 66; and Rose Griego, 47, and Kim Kiel, 44.

New Mexico has no specific law allowing or banning same-sex couples from marrying. Earlier this week, the ambiguous status of same-sex couples' marriage rights was raised when the Santa Fe city attorney issued an opinion that asserted same-sex couples are allowed to marry.

"Ona and I have been together for over 25 years. Together, we raised children, we took care of our mothers when they were dying and are currently raising our granddaughter. We are family. We love and care for one another through good times and bad. We want our community to recognize our love and commitment for what it is – a marriage," Rand said in a news release announcing the lawsuit.

American Bridge Chief Welcomes New Republican Competition

$
0
0

“They’ll learn it’s not as easy as it looks,” says Mollineau.

U.S. Senate candidate, Rep. Todd Akin, R-Mo., and his wife Lulli acknowledge supporters before Akin makes his concession speech to U.S. Sen. Claire McCaskill, D-Mo. Tuesday, Nov. 6, 2012, in Chesterfield, Mo.

Image by Charlie Riedel / AP

WASHINGTON — As part of the Republian party's post-2012 reboot, a group of GOP heavy-hitters announced Thursday that they'll form America Rising, a massive opposition research organization aimed at digging up the kind of dirt on Democrats that sent Todd Akin packing in 2012.

The man in charge of a similar group on the left, American Bridge 21st Century, which is the model for America Rising and caused untold headaches for Republicans last election, told BuzzFeed Thursday he welcomed the competition. But he warned his new Republican counterparts that until they make more fundamental changes to the way their party works, their job could be a tough one.

"Imitation is the sincerest form of flattery," said Rodell Mollineau, president of American Bridge. "I think they'll learn that it's not as easy as it looks and it's not all glitter and gold."

Mollineau called former RNC spokesman and Jon Huntsman presidential campaign communications director Tim Miller — who, along with former Mitt Romney campaign manager Matt Rhoades and RNC research director Joe Pounder, are the founders of America Rising — a "good communicator," and he offered his congratulations to Miller on Twitter.

The recent RNC "Growth And Opportunity" report specifically called for a Republican version of American Bridge.

As the report puts it, "An allied group dedicated solely to research to establish a private archive and public website that does nothing but post inappropriate Democrat utterances and act as a clearinghouse for information on Democrats would serve as an effective vehicle for affecting the public issue debate."

But Mollineau said that the America Rising team may find it will be tough to dig up a Democratic Akin, even with similar resources to American Bridge. (Mollineau's group first alerted national media to Akin's famous quote in a local TV interview.)

"I understand why they'd want to do it," Mollineau said of the founding of America Rising. "But I think the dynamics between Democrats and Republicans [are different.] One of the reasons, and it's not the only reason, but one of the reasons why we were able to have success is that they — and I think this is a Republican thing, it's not a Democratic thing — they say one thing in their primary to get past tea party activists and go as far to the right as you can in the primary and then try to justify that during the general. From what I've seen, our candidates are pretty consistent. It seems to be a Republican problem, not a Democratic problem."

"It's not all about the gotchas," Mollineau said. "It's also about the hypocrisy. And I think you see much more of that on the Republican side than you do on the Democratic side."

Of course, Democratic candidates do their fair share of gaffing, and Miller said the new group will reveal just how much the party has to be embarrassed about.

"We look forward to exposing Democrat pandering and hypocrisy in the coming years and demonstrating just how wrong he is about that," Miller responded.

6 People In Politics Who Lost Their Jobs Because Of Twitter

$
0
0

Happy 7th birthday to the micro-blogging social networking site!

Anthony Weiner

Anthony Weiner

The Queens Congressman famously resigned after sending inappropriate texts and pictures to a number of women.

Source: i.huffpost.com

Phil "Me Likely Broke Girls" Hardy

Phil "Me Likely Broke Girls" Hardy

The spokesman for Congressman Raul Labrador was fired after sending an errant tweet from the Congressman's account. It was there for 14 seconds.

A Senate staffer for Senator Susan Collins

A Senate staffer for Senator Susan Collins

Maine Senator Susan Collins sent this mean-spirited tweet about Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders: "Good ol' @SenSanders is always entertaining. Not a huge fan." The staffer who sent the tweet, Luke Welch, a "New Media/Press Assistant," for the Senate, was fired according to US News And World Report.

Three legislative aides to Congressman Rick Larsen

Three legislative aides to Congressman Rick Larsen

Three legislative aides to Congressman Rick Larsen, a Democrat from Washington state, were fired after they sent tweets mocking the congressman, complaining about their jobs and spoke about drinking while at work.

The staffers — legislative aides Seth Burroughs and Elizabeth Robbee and legislative correspondent Ben Byers — tweets were first noticed by a conservative political blog covering Washington state.

Via: media.seattlepulp.com


View Entire List ›

George W. Bush Painted A Corgi

Ohio's Republican Governor Endorses Civil Unions, Then Takes It Back

$
0
0

John Kasich's office says he was using the term “loosely” when he said he supported civil unions.

Image by Rick Osentoski / AP

Ohio Republican Gov. John Kasich said he favored civil unions in an interview published Thursday morning, but by Thursday afternoon his spokesman said otherwise.

"He may have used the term 'civil union' loosely in this instance," Kasich spokesperson Rob Nichols said in a statement sent to BuzzFeed.

"The governor's position is unchanged. He opposes gay marriage and opposes changing Ohio's Constitution to allow for civil unions," said Nichols. "He's opposed to discrimination against any Ohioan and, while he may have used the term 'civil union' loosely in this instance, he recognizes the existing rights of Ohioans to enter into private contracts to manage their personal property and health care issues."

Kasich had been asked about Ohio Sen. Rob Portman's recent conversion on same-sex marriage in an interview with Scripps published Thursday morning. Although he doesn't join Portman in supporting marriage rights for same-sex couples, he said he was "for" civil unions:

Kasich was asked if he could imagine a situation that might cause him to change his position.

"I really can't see one, I mean, I talked to Rob and encouraged him," Kasich said. "If people want to have civil unions and have some way to transfer their resources, I'm for that. I don't support gay marriage. "

"I've got friends that are gay and I've told them 'Look, (same sex marriage) is just not something I agree with' and I'm not doing it out of a sense of anger or judgment, it's just my opinion on this issue. "

"I just think marriage is between a man and a woman, but if you want to have a civil union that's fine with me," Kasich said.

Civil unions, like same-sex marriage, have been banned by Ohio's constitution since 2004. Marriage equality supporters are hoping to change that with a ballot initiative this fall.

"I hope Gov. Kasich understands civil unions are banned by the Ohio Constitution as well and they are a cruel substitute for legal marriage," Ian James, a leader of the marriage equality group FreedomOhio told Cincinnati's CityBeat.

View Video ›

Battle Brews Over Labor Demands As Immigration Talks Enter Home Stretch

$
0
0

“Every time you make progress … the unions come in the next day and throw something else on the table. They keep moving the goal posts,” says a lobbyist.

WASHINGTON, D.C. - MARCH 21: Members of the group Casa In Action demonstrate for immigration reform in the Hart Senate Office Building, March 21, 2013, in Washington, D.C.

Image by Win McNamee / Getty Images

WASHINGTON — Union officials are trying to kill a bipartisan immigration reform bill by insisting on stringent protections for domestic construction workers, Republicans and business lobbyists charged Thursday.

With talks literally in their final hours, there are dozens of moving parts to the immigration bill, and nothing will be firmed up until a final universal deal is agreed to. But as senators rapidly approach a deal, everyone — immigration activists, conservative opponents, labor unions, and business leaders — is jockeying for position.

For weeks, the worker visa program, which is at the heart of the reforms to future immigration, has been one of the main sticking points in the bipartisan talks as lawmakers rapidly close in on a final agreement.

A veteran business lobbyist familiar with the talks said that while much of the public angst has been about Republicans and conservative reaction to the comprehensive package's pathway to citizenship, union leaders are also proving to be a major impediment.

"Every time you make progress … the unions come in the next day and throw something else on the table. They keep moving the goal posts," the lobbyist said.

"Everyone is pretending like the [American Federation of Labor] wants this, and they don't," the lobbyist added.

AFL-CIO spokesman Jeff Hauser rejected that argument.

"The Republican effort to suggest that employer-based visas are the front and center issue … is nothing more than a desperate negotiating ploy," Hauser said. "The future viability of the Republican Party rests on them embracing a pathway to citizenship … Republicans know they need to give up on that issue."

"But they want to, if possible, do whatever possible to cater to their business friends to lower wages … This is about being seen by their donors as fighting to the last inch," Hauser continued.

The spat, which several Senate aides said was little more than last-minute jockeying by interest groups, underscored the difficulty of achieving immigration reform.

The so-called Gang of 8 bipartisan negotiators were meeting late Thursday afternoon for the second time that day, and were expected to work well into the evening. Sen. Charles Schumer, one of the leaders of the talks, indicated he hopes to have work on the bill largely wrapped up by Friday.

According to multiple sources, several parts of the worker visa plan laid out by labor, which is led by the AFL-CIO, are proving to be particularly contentious.

Among the problematic union proposals are the following: a 10,000 annual cap on low wage work visas; barring work visas for any trade covered by Davis Bacon, a federal wage law that would encompass most of the construction industry; and creating an unemployment-based trigger for work visas that would come into effect only when employment drops below a specific level, which sources said has been proposed at several levels, including 8% and 5%.

Although there is general agreement on the use of inflation as a trigger for issuing new work visas — and the fact that construction unemployment always runs higher than national averages — the proposal has inflamed business interests.

Of particular concern to the business community is the sense that Senate Republicans involved in the talks have essentially agreed to much of what the unions want. However, Republican and Democratic aides said no final agreement has been reached and that in the end, neither business leaders nor labor leaders will be happy with much of what makes it into the final bill.

But beyond those interests, there's the House to consider, and aides there said that much of what labor wants simply won't pass muster with the GOP.

"There's no way, no way, our guys go for this stuff," a leadership aide said.

Congress Holds Asteroid Hearings, Because There Are No Other Problems

$
0
0

Both the House & Senate sat down to discuss the risk of armageddon.

Follow NowThis News on Facebook and Twitter.
The NowThis News app is live -- and it's FREE! Download it.


Sequester Protests Take Place Across The Nation

$
0
0

Federal employees were rallying to end the effects of the sequester before furloughs and layoffs take place.

View Video ›

Image by

Barack Obama Retweeted A Yoko Ono Photo About Gun Violence

$
0
0

John Lennon's wife tweeted this picture yesterday in an effort to fight gun violence.

He was wearing these glasses when he was murdered in New York City in 1980.

He was wearing these glasses when he was murdered in New York City in 1980.

Via: @yokoono

A better look at the image she tweeted

A better look at the image she tweeted

Via: @yokoono

Is Hillary Clinton Too Conservative To Become President?

$
0
0

While she was at the State Department — and out of politics for four years — Clinton's party was moving to the left, and fast. “Now that she's unshackled by the boundaries of her office, she'll step up to the mic,” says Singer.

Can the Democratic Party's next presidential nominee be a candidate who favors the death penalty, opposes marijuana decriminalization, objects to driver's licenses for undocumented immigrations, calls for a pathway to legal status over citizenship, and gets beat on a marriage-equality endorsement by Republican Senator Rob Portman?

Hillary Clinton could soon find out.

Clinton's statement in support of same-sex marriage this week — made by way of a five-minute, direct-to-camera video explicating the ways in which her personal views on the issue have been "shaped over time" — was a sure sign that the potential presidential candidate is still in the game and ready to revisit a campaign platform that has been all but frozen in amber since she left the political stage for the State Department four years ago.

Because the former Secretary of State jumped from the campaign trail in 2008 to Washington's Foggy Bottom, where she was barred from talking domestic politics, Clinton will have to dust off, and likely shift, her policy positions, Democratic strategists say, if she wants to run for president in 2016 in a party that has moved sharply to the left in recent years.

While her possible primary opponents, governors Martin O'Malley of Maryland and Andrew Cuomo of New York, have clambered to the left of one another — proposing progressive legislation on gun control, most recently — Clinton has stayed locked in place and "out of politics," as she told CBS News in a 60 Minutes interview before leaving her cabinet post in February.

"It's not so much a function of Hillary feeling like she needs to play catch-up," said Phil Singer, a consultant and the deputy communications director for Clinton's 2008 presidential bid. "She's been in a position that prevented her from speaking out in real time, and now that she's unshackled by the boundaries of her office, she'll step up to the mic."

"I would bet my left arm that she's going to be playing a significant role in the national conversation now," Singer said.

Clinton, who opposed same-sex marriage in favor of civil unions during her campaign four years ago, had to rush to "get on the train for gay marriage, because the train was leaving the station," said Larry Sabato, director of the University of Virginia's Center for Politics. (Her announcement came just a week before the Supreme Court is set to hear oral arguments for the cases against the federal Defense of Marriage Act and California's same-sex marriage ban.)

Clinton, though, will have to do more to reintroduce herself, politically, to the American people over the next three years, said Sabato.

"She has some flexibility. When exactly that will expire, I can't say. But she has time," he said. "No one expects her to have a press conference this month and say, 'I missed the following issues over the last four years, so let me tell you where I stand precisely,'" Sabato added.

But immigration, strategists said, could be one policy area on which Clinton will want to clarify her position, given the fast-moving debate and fervent activist base this year around comprehensive reform legislation, which President Barack Obama and Congressional leadership from both parties have made a top priority for 2013.

Clinton's 2008 candidacy was dogged for weeks by a botched response to a debate question about then-Gov. Elliot Spitzer's proposal to allow undocumented immigrants in her home state to obtain driver's licenses. Asked to weigh in on the policy during a primary debate, Clinton gave a muddled answer; released a statement after the debate that only confused her position more; talked around the issue in interviews with the press; and finally, after weeks of scrutiny, came out against the Spitzer proposal.

And despite her votes in the Senate for bills that offered a path to citizenship, Clinton's line on the stump and in primary debates was a call for "legalization," unlike her Republican opponent, Sen. John McCain, who called specifically for citizenship.

Clinton's 2008 campaign website, meanwhile, promised voters she would support "earned legal status" — the legislative option favored this year by the conservative faction of House Republicans. The politics on earned citizenship have shifted such in the past four years that when former Florida governor Jeb Bush reversed his support for the measure in a new book, published earlier this month, he was met with attacks so fast and loud that he crept back to his original stance the next morning in a cable news interview.

"Immigration is one where it's important she be part of this conversation," said one Democratic consultant who preferred to speak without attribution. "She can release a video with La Raza, or go do a Charlie Rose interview and make sure the question gets asked, but the date of expiration on gay marriage was the Supreme Court hearing, and the date of the expiration on immigration will be this bill."

"On the social issues and immigration, as long as she gets to the right place before she becomes a candidate, she'll be fine," said the consultant. "The only price she'll pay is if she refuses to comment on something."

Clinton may consider a shift on left-wing measures that she hasn't backed — like a death penalty repeal, a measure O'Malley headed up this year, or marijuana decriminalization — or reaffirming her commitment to curbing climate change, if not to appease environmentalists who believe the Clinton State Department wanted to move forward with the Keystone XL Pipeline, a project bitterly opposed by activists in the movement to stop carbon emissions.

But on a host of other issues more often talked about by voters, Clinton's platform still lines up in large part with today's Democratic Party: She favored the reinstatement of an assault weapons ban, promised to cut taxes for the middle class, supported a cap-and-trade bill, and was a champion of universal health care well before the president.

"The Democratic Party has moved in various directions, mainly to the left, since 2008," said Sabato. "But she's been frozen in place. So naturally she's behind the curve of an O'Malley or a Cuomo."

How to start talking politics again will be up to Clinton — but if this week's solo and scripted video announcement was any indication of her strategy moving forward, the former secretary of state will be "pushing off the press," said Sabato.

"It seems to be a very successful strategy. Very few people complain anymore — they should, but they don't," he said. "It was a fire-side announcement, not a fire-side chat. Do you blame her for doing it? She's doing what she can get away with. How long can that last — I don't know, but it'll fade."

As she does step back into the conversation, though, Clinton could be at pains to avoid a repeat, in whatever form, of the damage her presidential bid incurred from her fateful Senate vote in 2002 to authorize the use of force in Iraq. Despite pressure from the left throughout her campaign, Clinton would not acknowledge the vote as a mistake, or reverse her position on it, as her primary opponent John Edwards did.

"That was a painful lesson of her professional life. It cost her not just the nomination, but a two-term presidency had it not been for that vote she cast in Iraq," said Sabato. "I'm sure in her own mind, or maybe in discussions with Bill and her staff, she's examining the issues that she's missed."

But Jason Stanford, a Democratic strategist and researcher, said he couldn't envision Clinton getting "hounded again for any kind of mea culpa."

"People now have enough respect for her to understand that, on something like gay marriage or another issue, she's changed her mind," said Stanford. "Democratic primary voters already punished her enough for that in 2008."

Correction: An earlier version of this article stated that O'Malley's administration was heading up marijuana decriminalization. The governor has not taken a position on this issue, although his administration is pursuing a bill that would create a medical marijuana program.

It's Obama, In Israel

$
0
0

Now, the story of a wealthy country's president on a visit to the Middle East.

Follow NowThis News on Facebook and Twitter.
The NowThis News app is live -- and it's FREE! Download it.

Guess How Much Tickets To MSNBC's "Morning Joe" Are Worth

Netanyahu Apologizes To Turkey For 2010 Flotilla Incident

$
0
0

Blames it on “operational mistakes.”

Image by Jason Reed / Reuters

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu apologized to Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan on Friday for the Gaza flotilla raid in 2010 that killed eight Turkish citizens and one American national.

From the White House pool report:

Netanyahu apologized for the Mavi Mara flotilla incident and acknowledged "operational mistakes," said one official.

Erdogan accepted the apology, according to this official.

The other sao called this a "first step" toward normalization of relations between the two countries.

They said this had been the subject of talks between Obama and Netanyahu in Jerusalem this week.

The call took place in the trailer at the aiport just before Obama took off.

The leaders talked for about 30 minutes. At some point, Obama got on the phone.

This is the first time Netanyahu and Erdogan have spoken since the incident.

New Republican Group Borrows Name From John Edwards

$
0
0

“America Rising” is the name of a new GOP opposition research SuperPAC — as well as a multi-stop bus tour launched by the former Democratic presidential candidate in 2008. One of Edwards's favorite stump speech lines.

Here's the kickoff speech for Edwards's Iowa bus tour.

View Video ›

The whole speech is on Edwards's YouTube account here.

Image by

Via: web.archive.org

Via: web.archive.org


Department Of Education Website Quotes Mao Zedong

$
0
0

The “Kids' Zone” of the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) website, part of the Department of Education's Institute of Education Sciences, quotes communist leader Mao Zedong. The NCES is the “primary federal entity for collecting and analyzing data related to education in the U.S. and other nations.” Update: The quote has been removed and the Department of Education has issued a statement.

h/t Lee Fang of The Nation

Via: nces.ed.gov

The quote has been removed: "Sorry there is no quote of the today."

The quote has been removed: "Sorry there is no quote of the today."

The quote has now been replaced with a quote from Abraham Lincoln.

The quote has now been replaced with a quote from Abraham Lincoln.

"The Kids' Zone website hosted by the National Center of Education Statistics earlier today featured a poorly chosen quote, intended to highlight the importance of teaching and learning, in the 'Quote of the Day' feature. This feature, which automatically generates one education-related quote per day from a database of quotes last updated in 2007, has been temporarily suspended pending a review of the database's contents."


View Entire List ›

Witness How Much MSNBC's Chris Matthews And Phil Donahue Hated Each Other

$
0
0

MSNBC was a very different place before the Iraq War.

Veteran talk show host and former MSNBC employee Phil Donahue sat down with HuffPost Live for a look back at the media's handling of the Iraq War and how his anti-war views, along with a battle for "supremacy" with Chris Matthews, led to his downfall at the network.

View Video ›

The HuffPost Live interview featured an old snippet from a very tense episode of Donahue's MSNBC show where he and Chris Matthews duked it out over the Iraq War. Matthews went so far as to accuse Donahue of "being negative" which Mathews found to be a "problem." A quick search on YouTube found the full Donahue segment. It should be required viewing for all media junkies:


View Entire List ›

Texas Congressman Solicits Lobster Donations To "Help Feed Starving Democrats"

$
0
0

Texas Republican Congressman Steve Stockman is poking fun at DNC chair Congresswoman Debbie Wasserman-Schultz by attempting to solicit “emergency shipments” of “lobster, foie gras, and caviar” for her office. The post comes in response to comments the DNC Chair made at a hearing Tuesday saying staffers were getting “priced out” of “a high quality meal.” The website Legistorm shows few of Wasserman-Schultz's staff have six-figure salaries.

Via: facebook.com

Wasserman-Schultz's comments Tuesday:

View Video ›

Image by

Army Of 50,000 Ready For Arrest If Obama OKs Keystone

$
0
0

With massive protests already planned, environmentalists see new signs Obama is going their way.

Image by Manuel Balce Ceneta / AP

WASHINGTON — Environmentalists are promising mass arrests and acts of civil disobedience if the Obama administration moves forward with a controversial pipeline project through the midwest — even as Obama's political arm seeks to use the project in it's latest fundraiser.

Opponents to the Keystone XL pipeline, which would run from Canada to the Gulf of Mexico, said they have more than 50,000 recruits ready to be jailed as part of one of the largest broad scale direct action protests in their movement's history.

"With our Keystone XL pledge of resistance, over 50,000 of us have put President Obama on notice that we will risk arrest to make him take meaningful action on climate by rejecting Keystone XL," said Becky Bond, political director at CREDO, a San Francisco-based progressive group that has protested Obama over Keystone before. The group has also stood with the administration on issues like gun control, but it says it has a list of more than 50,000 activists ready to be arrested in civil disobedience actions should Obama approve the pipeline.

Although during a recent meeting with the House GOP President Obama raised pipeline supporters' hopes that he remains open to backing the project, on Thursday his newly independent political operation invoked Keystone in a call to action.

In an email to supporters, Organizing for America specifically mentioned Keystone and slamming members of Congress who hope to force construction of the massive pipeline regardless of what the administration says.

"They'll try to block the EPA's climate change rules, end renewable energy tax credits, and circumvent the State Department's process evaluating the Keystone XL oil pipeline," the email reads. "This kind of backhanded environmental attack is what's broken in Washington -- powerful special interests are calling the shots right now. If we want to start fixing it, we've all got to stand up and fight back."

The email goes on to call on OFA supporters lobby congress to stop "trying to load up the budget with anti-environment amendments."

For environmentalists, the OFA mention of Keystone was a good sign. Some progressives have worried that organizers on the left and the Obama team could could butt heads over the pipeline. The email was a sign, they said, that OFA and the environmental movement may be on the same side of Keystone after all.

"We were obviously very excited to see that," Kate Colarulli, a top organizer at the Sierra Club, told BuzzFeed. "It was really great to see the email from OFA...I hope that email and the response it will get really help show OFA and show the White House team that the people who elected Obama want to see him reject Keystone."

Sierra Club broke longstanding rules against civil disobedience this year when its executive director was arrested outside the White House over Keystone, a sign Colarulli said of how polarizing the issue is for members of the environmental movement. Colarulli said that though Sierre Club hasn't decided whether to use civil disobedience again if the Obama administration okays Keystone, the group has seen its membership rolls balloon with people upset over the potential for the pipeline.

CREDO organizers were also piqued by the OFA email. An OFA spokesperson said the email was focused on Congress.

"There are a number of Members of Congress who have tried to circumvent the process to determine whether it is in our national interest for the Keystone Pipeline to be approved and we believe that it is important that process be seen fully through," the spokesperson said. "The process has been overseen by the State Department for both Republican and Democratic administrations in order to take the decision out of politics and OFA believes this is an important process to reach a sound decision that must not be undercut."

The White House referred questions about the Keystone approval process to the State Department. A spokesperson defended the president's environmental record when asked about the reaction to the OFA email.

"The President has made clear that continuing to confront climate change will be a priority in his second term, building on the historic progress already achieved in his first term, including establishing historic fuel economy standards that will nearly double how far our cars go on a gallon of gas, saving families $1.7 trillion, reducing oil consumption, and slashing carbon pollution," the spokesperson said. "At the same time the President will continue to take steps to increase our energy independence."

Meanwhile, Friday could be a big day in the battle over the pipeline. Senators may be set to vote on a bi-partisan non-binding proposal led by North Dakota Republican John Hoeven that would call for Obama to approve the pipeline.

Environmentalists said the proposal only serves to show that Keystone remains on Obama's plate, and they warned him that if he crosses them he'll have thousands of protesters to deal with.

"The only thing today's nonbinding, symbolic vote underscores on Keystone XL is the fact that this is President Obama's decision and his alone," Bond said in a statement. "Ironically, the president speaking to a foreign audience this week declared that politicians will only make the bold decisions when they are forced to make them by the people."

She reiterated the willingness of her group's 50,000-strong army to get arrested if that's what it takes to stop Keystone.

Media, UN Battle One Man Blogger Rebellion

$
0
0

The U.N.'s maverick blogger finds himself at odds with his fellow reporters. “I'm not an insane person.”

An independent journalist whose muckraking coverage of the U.N. earned him profiles in the New Yorker and the New York Times has become a source of tension among the U.N. press corps — though he says he's been unfairly singled out by them because he refuses to conform.

On one side, traditional journalists at the UN have accused Matthew Lee of Inner City Press of making unwarranted attacks on them on his blog and to their employers, and along with U.N. officials, allege that he created a safety hazard with his very messy office.

On the other side, Lee says that his fellow reporters have colluded with officials to shut him out, even, in the case of Voice of America, asking the media accreditation office to review his credentials, and that they are part of the reason his office was searched without warning earlier this week.

"I very much feel/know they're trying to silence me," Lee said in an email.

Lee was one of the first bloggers ever given U.N. credentials. He's known for his aggressive questioning of U.N. officials, and when he was first accredited, his mainstream media colleagues seemed to respect him. The president of the UN Correspondents Association said at the time, "I don't see any difference in what he's doing and what we are doing."

But that has changed. With the recent search of his office by U.N. officials and ensuing drama, tensions are running high among the people who make a living of covering Turtle Bay — among whom Lee has become an outcast.

"I'm not an insane person," Lee told BuzzFeed.

Members of the UN Correspondents Association say Lee has gone over their heads and written to their bosses complaining that they stole quotes from him, though the quotes came from a public press conference. They say he's become obsessively antagonistic towards the UNCA, where he used to sit on the board, and which he now calls the "UN Censorship Alliance." One member called Lee's attitude towards the UNCA "insidious." He has referred to other reporters as "lap dogs" on his blog, which prompted the parties involved to lodge a complaint against him.

Pamela Falk, a correspondent for CBS News and the president of UNCA, declined to comment for this story.

Lee says that his office at the U.N. was searched on March 18 without his consent and without any warning.

"A week after Reuters and AFP filed complaints against Inner City Press for having called them lapdogs of UN officials, and three days after the UN declined to provide a copy of the complaints, UN officials entered Inner City Press' office at the UN without permission and took photographs," Lee wrote on his blog. "When Inner City Press, notified by another member of the Free UN Coalition for Access, arrived on the scene, the officials were inside its office, going through papers. In the hallway, the president of the UN Correspondents Association, Pamela Falk of CBS, took cell phone photographs."

The Free UN Coalition for Access is a rival group to the UNCA, started by Lee in December.

"There were people that were inside were literally going through my papers," Lee said in an interview. "The head of media accreditation was there, as well as security officials." Lee put a video on YouTube of the scene that he says he was asked to take down.

According to a U.N. spokesperson, Lee's office was searched because it was very messy.

"On 18 March 2013, a staff member with the Department of Public Information's Media Accreditation and Liaison Unit visited the office of Mr. Matthew Lee of Inner City Press to follow up with him on his question about the timing of the move-back date for the UN press corps to the Secretariat building," said spokesman Martin Nesirky.

"On reaching the office, which was open, the DPI staff member met with the Vietnam News Agency correspondent, who shares the office space with Mr. Lee. The staff member observed that there was a large volume of trash in the office, prompting her to contact fire and security personnel owing to serious concerns over potential safety, health and fire hazards."

"Mr. Lee subsequently disposed of the garbage that had accumulated in his part of the office," Nesirky said.

Photos of Lee's office were sent to BuzzFeed from an anonymous "Concerned UN Reporter" email account.


View Entire List ›

Viewing all 15742 articles
Browse latest View live




Latest Images