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Bobby Shriver Owned Hundreds Of Thousands In Oil And Tobacco Stock

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Shriver, the nephew of President John F. Kennedy, announced his candidacy for Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors Tuesday.

Stephen Lovekin / Getty

Bobby Shriver, the Kennedy family member who announced Tuesday his candidacy for the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors, held hundreds of thousands of dollars in oil and tobacco stock, despite his advocacy on environmental issues.

Shriver, the former mayor of Santa Monica, Calif., held between $10,000 and $100,000 worth of stock in companies such as ExxonMobil, Sunoco, and Occidental Petroleum, according to a statement of economic interests filed with the Santa Monica Office of the City Clerk in 2012. Shriver also owned between $100,000 and $1 million in Altria Group, Inc., the parent company of Philip Morris.

Records also show in 2011 he sold stock worth between $10,000 and $100,000 on ConocoPhillips and Transocean Inc., the offshore drilling contractors that owned and operated Deepwater Horizon, which exploded in 2010, killing 11 and spilling oil into the Gulf of Mexico.

"He has investments that were from his family," Bill Carrick, who is advising Shriver's campaign, told BuzzFeed Tuesday. "It's just things that have been in his portfolio for years that are part of investments that have been in the family for years that date back to his grandfather."

Shriver, a nephew of President John F. Kennedy, touts his record cleaning up beaches, parks and Santa Monica Bay during his time as Santa Monica mayor and city council member on his website. He was chairman of the California State Park and Recreation Commission from 2001 to 2008. He was initially reappointed to the commission when his then-brother-in-law Arnold Schwarzenegger was elected governor, but following his opposition to a toll road through a state park, he was not reappointed.


Sean Hannity To Leave New York As Soon As Son Graduates High School, He Says

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The conservative radio host no longer feels welcome in the state.

"Their problem is not me and the Democrats; their problem is themselves. Who are they? Are they these extreme conservatives who are right-to-life, pro-assault-weapon, anti-gay? Is that who they are? Because if that's who they are and they're the extreme conservatives, they have no place in the state of New York, because that's not who New Yorkers are."

"Now I want to tell you something – I was born and raised in New York. I want you to know that and I can't wait to get out of here. I really can't. I don't want to pay their 10% state tax anymore. I live in the second-highest property taxed county in the entire country in Nassau County. I can't wait to sell my house to somebody who wants it. I can't wait to pay no state income tax down in Florida or Texas. I haven't decided yet, but I'm leaning Florida because I like the water and I like to fish."

On Fox News Tuesday Hannity said he would leave New York after his son graduates high school: "As soon as I am able, some time probably when my son graduates from high school, I'm getting out of here as quick as I can."

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Glenn Beck: “I Think I Played A Role, Unfortunately, In Helping Tear The Country Apart”

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The Blaze mogul told Megyn Kelly he regrets that his language wasn’t more “uniting” during his days at Fox News.

During his appearance on Fox News' The Kelly File, Glenn Beck reflected on his hugely successful heyday at the network, telling Megyn Kelly that he regretted his on-air behavior.

"I remember it as an awful lot of fun and that I made an awful lot of mistakes, and I wish I could go back and be more uniting in my language," Beck said. "I think I played a role, unfortunately, in helping tear the country apart."

"I didn't realize how really fragile the people were. I thought we were kind of more in it together."

Via foxnews.com

Election Commission: Kids Should Stay Away From Schools Being Used As Polling Places On Election Day

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President Obama’s election commission says schools should keep students at home when balloting is going on.

AP Photo/The Knoxville News Sentinel, J. Miles Cary

WASHINGTON — The commission President Obama launched after millions of voters stood in long lines on Election Day 2012 said Wednesday that one way to solve the polling place bottleneck problem is to use more schools as polling places. But, citing the potential for school shootings, the commission found that means more schools will have to be closed.

The Presidential Commission on Election Administration, a blue-ribbon panel Obama first promised in his election night victory speech in November 2012, recommended more early voting options and simpler voter registration systems to avoid the snaking lines and confusion that marked Election Day 2012. The panel also recommended states open up more schools as polling places, noting that schools are election administrators' "preferred venue" for voting due to the facilities on hand and low cost when it comes to hosting voters.

School leaders have been shying away from serving as polling since the Newtown shooting, with administrators worried that opening the doors to voters poses a security risk.

"Since the tragic events in Newtown, Conn., some states have considered imposing additional limitations on access to schools for voting," the commission's report states. "It is this concern — security — that has presented the largest obstacle to widespread use of schools."

The solution proposed by the presidential commission: Close the schools to students when voters are there. From the commission's findings:

State legislators working with school boards and election officials should be able to craft legislatively authorized programs that effectively balance school and electoral administrative needs. The Commission strongly recommends that all states review their state laws and contemporary practices within their jurisdictions to ensure the continued and future use of schools as polling places. The Commission more specifically recommends close attention to the use of professional or in-service training days to enable voting to take place on days when students would not be on location in school.

Read the full commission report

Anti-Hillary Group Calls For Investigation Into Super PAC's Email List Rental

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Stop Hillary PAC filed a complaint with the FEC on Wednesday afternoon against Clinton and the group supporting her, Ready for Hillary.

Jason Reed / Reuters

A super PAC aimed at stopping Hillary Clinton from becoming president filed a complaint with the Federal Election Committee on Wednesday against the former secretary of state and Ready for Hillary, another outside group.

Stop Hillary PAC, a group founded last summer by a team of Republican operatives, alleged in the complaint that Clinton's 2008 presidential campaign violated campaign finance law by renting its list of email addresses to Ready for Hillary.

The complaint, filed with the FEC on Wednesday afternoon, requests an "investigation into whether Clinton's authorization of the use of her list by Ready for Hillary PAC constitutes violations of federal campaign finance laws."

Ready for Hillary used the Clinton 2008 list to send an email to supporters earlier this month offering free bumper stickers. PAC spokesman Seth Bringman told Time magazine then that the group sought the list "to connect with her past supporters."

Campaign finance regulation prohibits coordination between candidates and political action committees. Clinton, of course, is not a declared candidate. Dozens of entities have rented the 2008 campaign list, including the Clinton Foundation and EMILY's List, the group dedicated to electing pro-choice women to public office.

But the anti-Clinton PAC argues in the complaint that, in authorizing the rental to Ready for Hillary, Clinton is "openly encouraging and supporting the activity" of the group — an authorization, they say, that makes Clinton a candidate "by operation of law," and therefore subjects her to campaign finance regulation.

Bringman, the spokesman for Ready for Hillary, dismissed the complaint. "They're looking for something to do, I guess," he said of Stop Hillary. "But we're focused on our nearly 2 million grassroots supporters who are ready to support Hillary Clinton should she decide to run for president."

Stop Hillary's central allegation hinges on what they characterize as Clinton's "authorization" of Ready for Hillary. A candidate, the group says, may not designate a political action committee as an authorized committee when that PAC supports more than one candidate. Ready for Hillary does focus on Clinton, but also other candidates she supports, like Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe.

Dan Backer, Stop Hillary's lawyer, said the list rental "of course" indicates an authorization of Ready for Hillary. "What else could it be?" he said. "That violates federal election law, and we're calling on the FEC to swiftly investigate."

Any individual or group may file a complaint with the FEC.

Backer said he expects the FEC review process to take several months.

A representative for Hillary Clinton did not respond to a request to comment.

Whatever Happened To The "Death Panel"?

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Obamacare’s Independent Payment Advisory Board, derided by critics as a rationing board, still doesn’t exist. The administration says health care costs are slow enough, so recommendations to keep costs down won’t be needed until at least 2017.

Rep. Phil Gingrey has been one of the sharpest critics of the Independent Payment Advisory Board.

AP Photo/David Goldman

WASHINGTON — Not long ago, there was a surge of momentum on Capitol Hill to kill the Independent Payment Advisory Board — dubbed the "death panel" by GOP critics of the law.

But now they may not need much help: These days, the IPAB effectively doesn't exist.

The board, tasked with producing solutions to keep Medicare costs low, was supposed to start work this year. None of the board's 15 members has been put in place — no one has even been nominated. The omnibus budget signed into law last week slashed $10 million from its budget. And now, because of reported slowing health care spending levels, there are questions about when it will even be even necessary.

There's been nary a peep about the IPAB, too, either from the administration or from Congress.

Like so many Obamacare provisions, repealing the IPAB was once a prime target for Republicans hammering the law. Supporters argue the IPAB is a key method of reducing health care spending; critics call the IPAB a rationing board, claiming it will ultimately limit care to seniors, though the law stipulates the IPAB can't make recommendations that will lead to rationing. Unlike other key provisions of the law, though, repealing the IPAB found support with a good number of Democrats.

That bipartisan scorn has politicized what the IPAB's supporters argue is an essential piece of the cost control puzzle: to actually take the politics out of the decision making process.

"The idea of having a quasi-independent board, look at health care spending is one that has been on the table for a long time," said Tricia Neuman, a Medicare expert and senior vice president at the Kaiser Family Foundation. "There is some value in some having some people think independently and understand what's driving health care spending and think about ways to slow the growth… but the IPAB is certainly a lightening rod."

Rep. John Fleming, a GOP doctor, posited that the president would wait at least until after the 2014 midterm elections before moving on any nominations.

"The president is sort of operating this law on the fly," Fleming said. "I suspect there's a political downside to it and he's going to wait until after the 2014 elections. That's been his pattern in the past. It's a huge political issue and the last thing in the world they need is to start talking about IPAB."

With last year's rule changes, conceivably the administration could push nominees through the Senate — but that would likely be a difficult vote for Democrats facing tough reelections.

There's an even bigger question, however: Is the IPAB even needed right now? A report issued last year concluded both that health spending has slowed and that no recommendations from the IPAB would even be necessary.

Conceivably, had Medicare spending gone up, the IPAB would have had to make recommendations this year to slow spending growth — and considering the IPAB does not exist, the secretary of Health and Human services would have made them instead. The good news for the IPAB's supporters and opponents alike is that it will probably be a while before the panel's existence even becomes necessary.

"Two things happened this year: There haven't been any appointments, but what did happen is the actuaries were required to issue a report to say whether was spending was projected to exceed the target and they did and they said it wasn't," Neuman said.

An administration official told BuzzFeed there were no updates on nominations of appointees, but stressed that health care costs were growing at a slow enough rate that IPAB action wouldn't be necessary for a long time.

"Recent slower growth in health care costs means action would not be needed until 2017 according to the Medicare Trustees and CBO does not predict recommendations would be needed at all between now and 2023 (current budget window)," the official said in an email.

Among the most ardent critics of the IPAB, though, the fervor hasn't died.

Rep. Phil Gingrey, a Georgia Republican and doctor, was an original co-sponsor to the House bill to repeal the IPAB. He argued that that the rocky roll out of the health care law itself distracted from slashing things like the IPAB. Gingrey has previously said that the board will cause seniors to die.

"I don't think the issue has gone away one iota. The absolutely fiasco of the roll out continues, so why take the spotlight away from that?" Gingrey said. "When and if that's ever fixed than the spotlight's certainly going to go back to IPAB."

Utah's Lawyer In Marriage Case Cites Religious Duty In Defending Amendment

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“I have accepted th[e] position so that I can fulfill what I have come to see as a religious and family duty: defending the constitutionality of traditional marriage in the state where my church is headquartered and where most of my family resides,” Gene Schaerr wrote.

Larry Downing / Reuters / Reuters

WASHINGTON — The lead outside attorney for the state of Utah told his former law firm he was leaving to fulfill "a religious and family duty" to defend "the constitutionality of traditional marriage."

The departure email that Gene Schaerr sent to his Winston & Strawn colleagues on Jan. 17, published Wednesday by Above the Law, made clear that he was leaving the firm to assist the Utah Attorney General's Office in defending the state's ban on same-sex couples marrying because his own personal belief aligned with the state's position.

In the email, sent the morning after Utah Attorney General Sean Reyes announced his appointment as the lead outside lawyer helping the state to defend the state's 2004 amendment banning same-sex couples from marrying, Schaerr wrote:

When Schaerr's appointment was announced, Reyes' office noted that Schaerr was from Utah and got his undergraduate degree from Brigham Young University.

"It's quite alarming that the reason for him taking this position has nothing to do with the U.S. Constitution or the legal issues at play. His entire motivation for taking the position is to impose a certain religious viewpoint on all Utahns — and that's wrong," Human Rights Campaign vice president Fred Sainz told BuzzFeed. "When you become an attorney, you take an oath to uphold the U.S. Constitution, not any particular religious doctrine."

Schaerr is one of three outside attorneys hired by Reyes' office to assist at the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals and, potentially, the Supreme Court in its defense of the marriage amendment, Amendment 3. A federal trial judge struck down the amendment on Dec. 20, 2013, and more than 1,300 same-sex couples married before the Supreme Court stopped the judge's ruling from being in effect during the state's appeal.

HRC had taken an aggressive position back in 2011 against the decision by another law firm, King & Spalding, to help the House in its defense of the Defense of Marriage Act — a defense that it ended days later, leaving Paul Clement to join another, smaller firm to continue the defense.

Sainz pointed to Schaerr's decision to leave Winston & Strawn before taking on the case as a sign of victory, stating, "I definitely think it's a measure of our success as a movement that no serious law firm was willing to take this case. ... It's clear that Winston & Strawn made a reputational decision that taking this case was not in their best interests."

Of Schaerr's stated reasons for taking the case, though, others echoed Sainz in pushing back.

"At least it's clear what really is the underlying motivation of defending the discrimination," Freedom to Marry president Evan Wolfson said of the email. Of the religious grounding of Schaerr's comments, Wolfson added, "That's understandable given that the discrimination is really motivated by those kinds of attitudes."

Neither Schaerr nor lawyers for the plaintiffs in the Utah marriage case responded to requests for comment.


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Neel Kashkari Announces Run For Governor Of California

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The former head of TARP hopes to unseat Gov. Jerry Brown in November.

Kimberly White / Reuters

Neel Kashkari, a former U.S. Treasury Department official and Goldman Sachs banker, announced his candidacy for governor during a keynote address at California State University in Sacramento on Tuesday.

The Republican has never held elected office, but stands as a more moderate alternative to assembly member Tim Donnelly, the only other current gubernatorial candidate and a Tea Party favorite. Kashkari was appointed to the Department of Treasury in 2006 by President Bush and led the government's $700 billion financial rescue program following the economic crash. He has said he previously voted for Obama and supports marriage equality.

"If we could get Republicans and Democrats to work together in Washington, D.C., then I know we can get them to work together in Sacramento," Kashkari said in a statement. "If we could break the back of the worst economic crisis our country has faced in 80 years, then I know we can break the back of the crisis that is destroying opportunity for California families and kids."

Kashkari is now the second candidate, following Republican assembly member Tim Donnelly, who has officially announced his campaign for the 2014 California gubernatorial race. Gov. Jerry Brown has not yet officially announced his candidacy, despite raising $17 million for his reelection so far.


North Carolina Republican Senate Candidate's Organization's Old Website Full Of Conspiracy Theory Blog Posts

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Conspiracy theories and members of Congress “enslaving” us through Obamacare.

Greg Brannon is a Republican candidate for Senate in North Carolina.

He has been endorsed by Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul, among others, and a recent Public Policy Polling poll showed him leading incumbent Democratic Sen. Kay Hagan, 45-43.

Brannon garnered media attention earlier this month for saying food stamps are a form of slavery.

But Brannon previously made a name for himself as a tea party activist in North Carolina. He led as president an organization called "Founder's Truth."

According to an old newsletter, Founder's Truth was "an organization that seeks to enable all Americans to hold tightly to their individual Right to the American Dream through the tenacity of Truth found in our nation's founding documents – so America can once again flourish from the freeing nature of responsibility that comes from a nation of 'We the People.'"

The website for the organization was taken down some time last year.

This was the site's homepage.

This was the site's homepage.

Via web.archive.org

Here's the about page, which featured Brannon and his family.

Here's the about page, which featured Brannon and his family.

Via web.archive.org

The organization featured a blog on their website that posted whole items from other sides, many from conspiracy sites like NaturalNews.com and InfoWars.com.


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The Marriage Equality Movement Is Getting Ready To Go Back To The Supreme Court

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Evan Wolfson talks with BuzzFeed about “setting the stage for a successful return to the Supreme Court.” He and his group, Freedom to Marry, are focused on making sure the justices and other decision-makers across the country know the debate is over.

Mark Wilson / Getty Images

WASHINGTON — Evan Wolfson has never had a confidence problem. Even when many within the gay community opposed his focus on marriage rights as the key to unlocking equality in all realms of gay life, Wolfson stood his ground.

On Wednesday, more than 30 years after he made the case for same-sex couples' marriage rights while a student at Harvard Law School, Wolfson's confidence had become something more than that.

"It's time to end this discrimination, and not only will history vindicate those who do the right thing, but the public is ready for it," the founder and president of Freedom to Marry said Wednesday.

In dozens of interviews conducted over the past several years, Wolfson's tone has approached bravado at times, his spirit has been that of someone who knew he was pushing the envelope but did so because he was certain he was right. Now, speaking with BuzzFeed on Wednesday, Wolfson sounded more like a person who knows he's already won — and knows that others know it as well.

"We're coming off of several extraordinary years of momentum and progress and accomplishment, and everyone can feel the momentum," he said. "Every year, people think we can't top it — and then we top it."

Clearly, he has reason for his tone. In 2013 alone, marriage equality states doubled from nine on Jan. 1 to 18 on Dec. 31. In June, of course, the Supreme Court held that the federal ban on recognizing same-sex couples' marriages — the Defense of Marriage Act — was unconstitutional.

That 18th state, Utah, was a surprise to many — including most of the roughly 1,300 same-sex couples who married there — but is now in a sort of limbo, since the Supreme Court halted any more marriages during the appeal of the federal trial court judge's ruling striking down the state's marriage amendment. Nonetheless, Utah was soon joined by Oklahoma this month, when another federal judge ruled another state's marriage amendment unconstitutional.

Then, this week, the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that sexual orientation discrimination claims will receive "heightened scrutiny" within the circuit — a decision that would apply to a pending Nevada marriage case at the appeals court.

In a memorandum being distributed Thursday by the group Wolfson founded a little more than a decade ago, Freedom to Marry details "the Pathway to Winning Marriage Nationwide" in light of these and other recent developments.

"What we're trying to do in the memo is underscore that, while there will be flash points, there will be things that aren't 100% predictable — like, when a ruling comes where — the fact that there is this litigation is part of the strategy and part of the momentum and part of, though not the entirety of, the work that is needed — all of which is about setting the stage for a successful return to the Supreme Court," he said.

The pathway, to put it simply, is a trip back to the Supreme Court.

The trip back is needed because of the second marriage-related case the court heard last year, the challenge to California's Proposition 8. Although the justices' decision allowed same-sex couples' marriages in California to resume, Ted Olson's aim of a 50-state ruling from his case challenging the 2008 initiative didn't happen. Instead, the justices sent the case back on a decision about standing, or the right of a party to bring the appeal, that avoided a ruling on the merits of the plaintiffs' claims.

Then-Newark Mayor Cory Booker (left) celebrates the first night of marriage equality in New Jersey on Oct. 21, 2013.

Kena Betancur / Getty Images

So now Wolfson's aim is to make sure that his and other groups have done all they can before a case makes its way back to the Supreme Court so that the justices take that case head on — and decide it his way.

"We know what the strategy is, we know what the path forward is, but we don't know — and what no one knows is — the timeline," Wolfson said. "We have to operate on two timelines: one being where we're in front of the Supreme Court sooner" — likely, he said, in the next court term that begins in October and would be expected to end in June 2015 — "and the other where we're in front of the Supreme Court a little later" — which he would place in the 2017 to 2019 range. "Because we don't know, we have to do the work that's needed to win on that [latter] timeline, even as we're doing the work that's needed to win on the 2015 timeline. So, it's one strategy, two timelines."

The quicker timeline has become a significantly more likely possibility as the 6th and 10th Circuits, in addition to the 9th Circuit, have marriage or marriage recognition cases pending. Any of those cases, or others, could result in rulings this year that lead the losing party to seek Supreme Court review.

Wolfson's strategy until that time, though, entails continuing to press Freedom to Marry's long-term three-track strategy to win marriage equality nationwide: improving public opinion on the issue, winning more states, and ending federal marriage discrimination.

This is where the recent successes make Wolfson and other advocates' jobs a little more difficult — or at least, require of them a little more creativity. Even Freedom to Marry's memo acknowledges that it is only "working to secure marriage in one more state this year — Oregon — the first opportunity to reverse an anti-gay constitutional amendment and replace it with a guarantee of the freedom to marry."

No other states are expected to advance with marriage equality measures this year (although some advocates are pressing a ballot measure in Ohio similar to the one planned for Oregon) because most states that don't already have marriage equality have state constitutional amendments blocking same-sex couples from marrying. Only four states remain without marriage equality that do not have a constitutional amendment — Indiana, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, and Wyoming — and marriage equality is not expected to advance in any of those states' legislatures this year.

Freedom to Marry's third prong, ending federal marriage discrimination, is down to specific statutory provisions and regulatory decisions, but, for the most part, is being addressed. Moreover, remaining victories for federal recognition are unlikely to move the ball much in terms of changing the national discussion on the issue.

Which leaves public opinion. Freedom to Marry does plan to continue to push the conversation on that front, releasing new polling Thursday that shows that 51% of registered voters in states without marriage equality favor allowing gay and lesbian couples to marry legally, whereas only 41% oppose.


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13 Young, Secular People Who Also Believe Abortion Is Wrong

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“I’m pro-life and pro-gay.”

Masses of anti-abortion activists descended upon Washington, D.C., for the March For Life Wednesday.

Masses of anti-abortion activists descended upon Washington, D.C., for the March For Life Wednesday.

And although the vast majority of attendees are highly religious...

And although the vast majority of attendees are highly religious...

Jonathan Ernst / Reuters


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Video Appears To Show Ukranian Police Humiliating Naked Protester

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“Shades of Abu Ghraib.”

This video was posted to YouTube today from a previously unknown account, and immediately became a disturbing icon of the worsening standoff.

youtube.com

Uniformed officers film the man, naked but for his socks, in the snow.

Uniformed officers film the man, naked but for his socks, in the snow.

He's then forced to hold an axe-like tool.

He's then forced to hold an axe-like tool.


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19 Things That The New York Times Magazine "Planet Hillary" Cover Looks Like

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The “newspaper of record’s” magazine has entered a whole new universe.

Here is the latest New York Times Magazine cover featuring "Planet Hillary."

Here is the latest New York Times Magazine cover featuring "Planet Hillary."

Ted Cruz's Wrecking Ball

Ted Cruz's Wrecking Ball


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Virginia Attorney General Tells Court Same-Sex Marriage Ban Is Unconstitutional

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“The injustice of Virginia’s position in Loving will not be repeated this time.”

Virginia Attorney General Mark Herring

The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Virginia Attorney General Mark Herring's office informed a federal judge Thursday that the office now opposes the constitutionality of the state's amendment banning same-sex couples from marrying — a change of position from the state's previous attorney general.

The planned change in position was first reported overnight Thursday by The Washington Post's Robert Barnes, citing an official close to the attorney general. The change was made official in a court filing Thursday in a federal lawsuit challenging the marriage amendment.

"Having exercised his independent constitutional judgment, consistent with his oath of office, the Attorney General has concluded that Virginia's laws denying the right to marry to same-sex couples violate the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution," Stuart Raphael, the new solicitor general of Virginia, wrote in the filing Thursday in Bostic v. Rainey.

The lawsuit, filed shortly after the U.S. Supreme Court's decisions striking down the Defense of Marriage Act and allowing the invalidation of California's Proposition 8 marriage amendment, now includes representation by Ted Olson and David Boies — the lawyers behind the Proposition 8 challenge.

The attorney general's office also noted the state's history in defending its ban on interracial marriage up to its loss at the Supreme Court in Loving v. Virginia, with Raphael noting:

"'Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.' George Santayana, The Life of Reason: or the Phases of Human Progress 284 (1920). It is worth observing, therefore, that the arguments raised in Virginia's brief in Loving to defend Virginia's ban on interracial marriage are almost identical to the arguments that have been offered to support Virginia's ban on same-sex marriage," the attorney general's office detailed in a memorandum explaining its change in position. "The injustice of Virginia's position in Loving will not be repeated this time."

In the case, Herring's office is representing Janet Rainey, the State Registrar of Vital Records. The office detailed in the filings Thursday that she will continue to enforce the marriage amendment "until the judicial branch renders a decision that conclusively adjudicates the question." Also named as a defendant in the lawsuit is the clerk of the Circuit Court for the City of Norfolk, George Schaefer III. Finally, the filing notes, the clerk of the Circuit Court of Prince William County, Michèle B. McQuigg, "has been permitted to intervene and will also defend the ban" — "because she anticipated Rainey's change of position here."

The focus on these elements suggest that Herring's office does not believe that the case will end up in a position similar to that faced by Proposition 8, where none of the public officials in the lawsuit sought an appeal. In that case, the officials' decisions not to appeal led the initiative's proponents to appeal and then seek Supreme Court review, but the Supreme Court held that they lacked standing, or legal authority, to do so. The standing decision prevented the Supreme Court from making a final constitutional ruling on whether same-sex couples have a constitutional right to marry.

Read the filing announcing the Virginia attorney general's change in legal position:

Read the AG's memorandum:


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White House Press Secretary: Huckabee's "Uncle Sugar" Comments "Offensive To Women"

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“Whoever said it, it sounds offensive to me, and to women,” Carney told reporters.

Eric Henderson / Reuters

WASHINGTON — White House press secretary Jay Carney dismissed comments by former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee at a Republican meeting Thursday as "offensive."

"Whoever said it, it sounds offensive to me, and to women," Carney told reporters after saying he hadn't seen reports of Huckabee's remarks.

Huckabee told a crowd at the Republican National Committee's national convention Thursday that Democrats were acting like "Uncle Sugar" to women with the health care law's contraception coverage mandate:

Huckabee said Democrats tell women "they are helpless without Uncle Sugar coming in and providing them for them a prescription each month for birth control because they cannot control their libido or their reproductive system without the help of government."

Huckabee, who has used the line before, framed the comments as part of a larger pushback on the Democratic "war on women" rhetoric aimed at Republicans.

"I think it's time Republicans no longer accept listening to the Democrats talk about a 'war on women,'" he said. "The fact is the Republicans don't have a war on women, they have a war for women, to empower them to be something other than victims of their gender."


Dinesh D'Souza Charged With Election Fraud

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Conservative commentator Dinesh D’Souza is charged with directing $20,000 of straw donations to a candidate around August 2012.

Dinesh D'Souza, a conservative commentator and author, was indicted Thursday for arranging $20,000 in straw donations directed to an unnamed U.S. Senate candidate in 2012.

D'Souza faces one count of making illegal campaign contributions, which has a two year maximum sentence, and one count of causing others to make false statements, which carries a maximum five year sentence.

"As we have long said, this Office and the FBI take a zero tolerance approach to corruption of the electoral process," U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara said in a statement. "If, as alleged, the defendant directed others to make contributions to a Senate campaign and reimbursed them, that is a serious violation of federal campaign finance laws."

D'Souza's only campaign contributions in 2012 were to the failed Senate bid of Republican Wendy Long, who challenged incumbent Kirstin Gillibrand (D-NY) for her seat. D'Souza had also campaigned for Long.

D'Souza came under fire last last year when he tweeted that Obama was a "Grown-Up Trayvon" Martin.

He is expected to be arraigned Friday in Manhattan.

Menendez Spokesperson: FBI Investigation Story Full Of "Outlandish Allegations"

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Sen. Menendez believed the fugitive Isaias brothers were victims of persecution, his press secretary says.

Gary Cameron / Reuters / Reuters

WASHINGTON — A spokesperson for Sen. Bob Menendez said on Thursday that reports of a FBI and Justice Department investigation into his helping a pair of fugitive Ecuadorian bankers consists of "outlandish allegations" and that the senator's office is not aware of an investigation.

"A year after a false smear campaign was launched against Senator Menendez, once again we see anonymous sources making outlandish allegations," said Menendez's press secretary Tricia Enright. A Daily Caller story that came out around this time last year accused Menendez of seeing Dominican prostitutes. "Our office works each year with literally hundreds of individuals and families from across the country who are seeking help with the immigration process. We review each and every request we receive, and if we feel any inquiry is appropriate, we make it. In this particular case, Senator Menendez believed the Isaias family had been politically persecuted in Ecuador, including through the confiscation of media outlets they owned which were critical of the government."

"We are not aware of any inquiry into the Senator's actions on this matter," Enright said.

WNBC reported on Thursday that Menendez is the target of a federal investigation because of his help to the Isaias brothers, bankers who are wanted in Ecuador for embezzlement. Ecuador has been seeking their extradition from the U.S.

Investigators are reportedly looking at whether Menendez may have broken laws trying to help the brothers stay in the country in exchange for campaign contributions. According to WNBC, Menendez wrote letters to the State Department and the Department of Homeland Security asking for the brothers' residency process to be expedited.

Neither of the brothers reportedly donated to Menendez directly but their families gave money to his 2012 re-election campaign, NBC reported.

Spokespeople for the FBI and Department of Justice did not immediately return requests for comment. Neither did a spokesperson for the Ecuadorian Embassy in Washington.

Dinesh D'Souza And Wendy Long Once Had To Apologize For A Hitler Quote In Their School Paper

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D’Souza, who campaigned for Long during her 2012 U.S. Senate campaign, was indicted Thursday for election fraud . The indictment did not name the candidate he was supporting.

According to an Associated Press article, the two apologized after an unknown staffer put a quote from Adolf Hitler's "Mein Kampf" into the "statement of principles" published in the paper and distributed on Yom Kippur

According to an Associated Press article , the two apologized after an unknown staffer put a quote from Adolf Hitler's "Mein Kampf" into the "statement of principles" published in the paper and distributed on Yom Kippur

The full quote: "Therefore, I believe today that I am acting in the sense of the Almighty Creator: By warding off the Jews, I am fighting for the Lord's work."


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How Your City Is Trying To Sell Itself To The RNC

Bieber Coverage Proves That MSNBC Is Back In The Breaking News Business

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The cable network’s overlords at NBC News seem to be winning the war over programming.

Fusion labeled the Bieber story "Insignificant Breaking News."

While fledgling cable news outlets like Al Jazeera America and Fusion very publicly declared that they had no interest in covering the Justin Bieber arrest saga, the big three — Fox News, CNN, and MSNBC — waded knee deep into the story.

As recently as June 2013, MSNBC President Phil Griffin famously said that his network was "not the place" for breaking news. The pushback from NBCUniversal News Group Chair Patricia Fili-Krushel seems to have worked.

A perfect example of MSNBC's dedication to the Bieber story happened when NBC News veteran Andrea Mitchell, who also anchors the 1 p.m. hour at the network, was forced to interrupt a conversation with former Congresswoman Jane Harmon about National Security Agency spying to inform her viewers that Justin Bieber was about to go before a judge.

Even with that hilariously awkward transition, MSNBC still trailed both CNN and Fox News in total minutes dedicated to covering the Bieber story on Thursday, but the network's total coverage for the day was not far behind Fox:


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