Tuesday, September 20, 2011

So Far, Obama's Been No Friend to Israel

Ed Koch, New York Daily News
When Gov. Cuomo announced there would be a special election in the 9th Congressional District to replace Anthony Weiner, I gave public voice to an idea that had been percolating in my head for some time. As everyone now knows, I wound up strongly supporting the candidacy of Bob Turner, who last week won the seat in a hotly contested race.I want to explain why I did what I did, so there's no misunderstanding of my intentions, or of my future plans. I hope President Obama gets the message that's been sent. If he does -- and if he announces, for example, that an attack by Turkey (which...

Source: http://www.realclearpolitics.com/2011/09/19/so_far_obama039s_been_no_friend_to_israel_263755.html

Ron Paul Colin Powell Vladimir Putin Muammar Qaddafi Condoleezza Rice

Disperse Gurkhas like asylum seekers, urges minister

But his comments have sparked anger among those who argue that Britain owes the veterans a debt of gratitude after years of loyal service in the army.

Peter Carroll of the Gurkha Justice Campaign said: ?This was entirely disrespectful. They are just as much constituents as white middle-class people who have lived there 30-years.

?His words have caused an enormous amount of fear among the community who are now concerned they are going to be uprooted and moved elsewhere.?

In 2009 a campaign spearheaded by actress Joanna Lumley, whose father was a Gurkha commander, succeeded in persuading the government to grant soldiers with four or more years of service the right to settle in the UK with their loved ones.



Powered By WizardRSS.com | Full Text RSS Feed | Amazon Plugin | Settlement Statement | WordPress Tutorials

Source: http://telegraph.feedsportal.com/c/32726/f/568387/s/1899cecd/l/0L0Stelegraph0O0Cnews0C87756870CDisperse0EGurkhas0Elike0Easylum0Eseekers0Eurges0Eminister0Bhtml/story01.htm

Al Gore Chuck Hagel Stephen Harper Dennis Hastert Vaclav Havel

Liberal Democrat conference 2011: live coverage

Rolling coverage of all the day's developments in Birmingham

8.27am: Nick Clegg's interview is now over. He's done various other interviews this morning too. I'll post a summary of the highlights shortly.

8.22am: The interview is still going on.

Q: What is the Lib Dem policy on the euro?

Clegg says the government is not going to join the euro this parliament.

Q: Does that mean the prospect of Britain joining is over for a generation?

Clegg says it is difficult to predict the future. He says he does not expect it to happen in his lifetime. Then he corrects himself, and says he does not expect Britain to join in his political lifetime, while he is Lib Dem leader.

He also says that no one predicted that the countries that signed up to the euro would be allowed to break the rules in the way that he did.

8.17am: The interview is still going on.

Q: What is your evidence that the bond markets would punish the UK if the government changed its economic plans?

Clegg says when the government came to powers, other countries had lower deficits. But they are being penalised because they are not tackling their deficits.

Q: But it looks as if Italy is being punished by the markets because of lack of growth, which is the problem here. And UK debt has to be paid back over a longer period of time?

Clegg says the government has pulled the economy back from the brink, creating the space where it can do more to promote growth.

Q: But Italy is being punished because it has not got enough growth. We've got the same problem.

Italy has other problems, Clegg says. It has an ageing population.

Q: Aren't you conceding then that the UK is not in the same position Italy?

Clegg says that saying Britain is not Italy is a statement of the obvious.

8.14am: Nick Clegg is on the Today programme now. Justin Webb is interviewing him.

Q: You said the government would not approve of "gratuitously offensive" bank bonuses. Aren't the current bonuses paid to bankers gratuitously offensive?

Clegg says he would like to have gone further. But in the Project Merlin agreement, the banks have committed themselves to bringing bonuses down.

Q: But it's not happening very quickly?

Clegg says it is not happening as quickly as he would like. But the government is introducing the greatest move towards transparency in this area the country has seen.

And Vince Cable has said shareholders should have more power in this area, Clegg says. Corporate governance is going to change, even though perhaps not as quickly as people would wish.

Q: But the cuts are taking place now. Why do you need to consult on these changes?

Clegg says in most areas of government people consult.

Q: When will the Vickers recommendations be implemented?

Clegg says everyone in government would like to do it as quickly as possible. But it is important to get it right. Vickers has set 2019 as a deadline. But that's a "backstop date", Clegg says. It might be possible to implement the changes ringfencing the retails arms of banks before then.

8.08am: Nick Clegg is about to give an interview to the Today programme. I'll cover it here, before taking a look at some of the other broadcast interviews he's been giving today. As for the rest of the day, here's what's coming up.

9am: The conference opens. Delegates debate party rule changes affecting emergency motions and appeals.

9.40am: Delegates debate a motion calling for rules stopping men who have had sex with men (MSM) from giving blood to be reformed.

10.20am: A debate on social care. Delegates debate a call for the establishment of an older people's commissioner.

11.15am: Steve Webb, the pensions minister, delivers his speech to the conference.

11.35am: Paul Burstow, the health minister, John Pugh, the co-chair of the Lib Dem parliamentary health committee and Shirley Williams, the Lib Dem grandee and health bill "rebel", take part in a question and answer session on health.

12.20pm: Chris Huhne, the energy secretary, deliver his speech to the conference.

2.30pm: Delegates debate a motion on green policies saying the legislation to set up a Green Investment Bank should be introduced next year.

3.30pm: Andrew Stunell, the communities minister, delivers his speech to the conference.

3.50pm: Delegates debate a motion calling for the establishment of a national institute of wellbeing.

5.20pm: Delegates debate motion urging the Lib Dems to make a renewed commitment to the principles of "community politics".

As usual, I'll be covering all the Lib Dem conference news, as well as looking at the papers and the best politics on the web. I'll post a lunchtime summary at around 1pm and an afternoon one at about 6pm. After that my colleague Paul Owen will take over the blog and keep it going into the evening.


guardian.co.uk © 2011 Guardian News and Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved. | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/blog/2011/sep/20/liberal-democrat-conference-2011-live

Tea Party Joe Biden John Boehner Sarah Palin Sean Hannity

Dale Farm Travellers win injunction delaying eviction

Celebrations after high court grants emergency order restraining Basildon council from clearing site

Residents due to be evicted from the Dale Farm Traveller site won an 11th-hour reprieve on Monday after being granted an emergency injunction restraining Basildon council from clearing structures on the site pending a further hearing at the high court on Friday.

There were cheers from the barricade shortly after 5pm when the news arrived that bailiffs, who were due to begin evicting 86 families from the site built on a former scrapyard, would not be able to enter legally until after the hearing.

The council will also not be able to cut off utilities to the site, something that had concerned residents, who argued that the lives of sick people on the site could be endangered.

Speaking at the high court in London, Mr Justice Edwards-Stuart granted the order because there were concerns that measures carried out by Basildon borough council "may go further" than the terms of the enforcement notices.

The case hinges on the argument that residents have not been sufficiently informed about what is allowed on each pitch and what must be removed.

Despite the scale of the operation by Basildon council, which includes a camp to accommodate bailiffs, police, council staff and the hundreds of journalists from around the world covering the case, it took three individuals, without the aid of a lawyer, to put a stop to their plans.

Candy Sheridan, vice-chair of the Gypsy Council of North Norfolk, resident Mary Sheridan and volunteer Stuart Carruthers appeared at three courts on Monday, including the high court, before the injunction was granted.

Speaking after the decision, Sheridan said: "This is a victory for residents who have been shown a glimmer of respect today from a judge who listened to our reasoned arguments."

The leader of the council, Tony Ball, said he was "extremely disappointed and frustrated" by the judge's decision.

"I am absolutely clear that on this issue, on Friday, the court will find in the council's favour and that the site clearance will be able to continue," he said.

"But until then, as always, this council will comply with the law and we will comply with the judgment that has been put before us."

The judge ruled that Basildon council must tell residents on a plot-by-plot basis what enforcement measures are proposed. Residents must respond to the proposals by noon on Thursday. The judge will then decide at 11.30am on Friday if there are any remaining legal issues that could extend the injunction further.

Physical structures including cars and caravans will not be able to be moved by bailiffs and electricity and water will not be cut off unless they pose a danger "to life and limb".

But the judge said further protest ? which has included several protesters chained to the gates, to concrete blocks and to each other ? should be discouraged and that the 20ft (6m) high barricade, festooned with banners of support, should be taken down.

"It is in nobody's interests that we have a riot on this site," he said. "There's got to be a bit of give and take over a limited timeframe to see if the problems can be dealt with in an orderly rather than disruptive way."

Council representatives should be allowed on site to discuss the arrangements with individual residents, he said.

He told the Dale Farm representatives: "I appreciate it is a deeply unpleasant situation but unfortunately this is a road which is reaching its end and there is sadly no mileage in prolonging the agony."

Some protesters were not in favour of bringing down the barricade. "I think it's tactical on their side and therefore it needs to be tactical on ours," said Carol Stuart McIvor, a writer on the site. "But the decision must be the Travellers'. It's their gig ? we are only here to support them."

The council's barrister, Reuben Taylor, told the judge a lengthy delay to the eviction could cause losses to the public purse "running into millions", he said.

Any damages granted would not come "anywhere near" meeting the council's costs for the thousands of police officers on special duty, compounds, plant hire and bailiffs, he said. "The consequences would be enormous."

The judge responded that there was "a lack of clarity" as to which properties would be affected and to what extent.

He said: "They are entitled to know whether their home is on the list for permanent removal or not, or whether just a little bit of their plot is to be removed."

There was delight at Dale Farm as the news came through after a tense day that saw bailiffs jeered as they issued a final warning to protesters and residents.

Bailiffs were called "scum" and "fascists" as they told residents the council was concerned for their safety as a result of the blocking of the site gate.

Tom Berry, a resident at the site, said the injunction was a stay of execution and a relief for families.

"I'm over the moon. Especially for my family and the other residents on here. At the end of the day, we've got another week for them to sort something out for us or somewhere to go to."

He had a personal message for the leader of the council who had, earlier in the day, insisted that delaying tactics from residents were unacceptable. "Tony Ball should go back to school," he said.

Meanwhile, it has emerged that the government refused help from the United Nations to help broker an agreement between the Travellers and the council.

Jan Jarab, the European representative of the UN high commissioner for human rights, said the UN had offered to help negotiate a "less dramatic" solution.

"There was communication between the British government and our headquarters, but it was made clear to us that we would receive a letter that that offer was rejected," he said.


guardian.co.uk © 2011 Guardian News and Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved. | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2011/sep/19/dale-farm-travellers-win-injunction

Tea Party Joe Biden John Boehner Sarah Palin Sean Hannity

Monday, September 19, 2011

Obama Leans Further Left

Michael Goodwin, New York Post
One of the enduring mysteries of the Obama presidency is why he keeps leaning far left when independent voters make it clear they want a centrist in the White House. It is not an academic point -- independents swung the 2008 election his way, and without them, Obama probably can’t win a second term.Well, consider the mystery solved. The reason Obama keeps tilting left is that so many independents have dumped him and he has almost no chance of getting them back. So energizing libs for a massive turnout is his next-best hope.

Source: http://www.realclearpolitics.com/2011/09/19/obama_leans_further_left_263765.html

Rudy Giuliani Jimmy Carter Dick Cheney Barack Obama George Soros

Tony Blair advising David Cameron on Middle East

Mr Blair has a country home in Buckinghamshire not far from Chequers.

William Hague, the Foreign Secretary, has said he speaks to Mr Blair regularly.

It is understood that Mr Hague and Mr Blair spoke this week about the UN process.

They are understood to have met in New York yesterday at the request of Mr Cameron.

The United States is threatening to veto Palestine's application for statehood and Germany and the Netherlands oppose it.

Spain, France and Sweden, however, are in favour.

Mr Blair said yesterday: ?The Palestinians are perfectly entitled to take their case to the UN, perfectly entitled to have the UN hear it.

"The real point, however, is whatever happens at the UN, we are in a better place to get a Palestinian state if we also have a revived negotiation.?

One of the main stumbling blocks to peace is that Israeli settlers continue to build on land which the Palestinians claim as their own.

Mr Cameron's choice of guests at Chequers has been scrutinised before.

Earlier this year, it was disclosed that Andy Coulson visited the Buckinghamshire house in March.

The former editor of the News of the World had resigned from his post as the Prime Minister's head of communications two months earlier.

Chequers has been the official country residence of the British prime minister since it was handed to the nation in 1921 under the terms of the Chequers Estate Act 1917.



Powered By WizardRSS.com | Full Text RSS Feed | Amazon Plugin | Settlement Statement | WordPress Tutorials

Source: http://telegraph.feedsportal.com/c/32726/f/568387/s/1897ce95/l/0L0Stelegraph0O0Cnews0Cpolitics0Cdavid0Ecameron0C87755490CTony0EBlair0Eadvising0EDavid0ECameron0Eon0EMiddle0EEast0Bhtml/story01.htm

Gloria Arroyo Joe Biden Abdullah bin Abdulaziz al-Saud King Abdulla Osama bin Laden

Obama arrives at UN as pressure grows on Palestinians over statehood bid

Diplomatic quartet meets to try to kickstart negotiations, as France admits showdown with US will damage Palestinian cause

Barack Obama arrived at the United Nations on Monday evening as pressure intensified on the Palestinian leadership to abandon its plan to ask the UN security council to declare the occupied territories a Palestinian state.

The Europeans are at the forefront of attempts to persuade the Palestinian president, Mahmoud Abbas, to back off from the request.

Even France, which is generally sympathetic to the call for statehood, is now saying that the diplomatic cost of a showdown with the US, which has said it will veto the move in the security council, will damage the Palestinian cause.

Abbas said "all hell has broken out against us" over the bid for statehood but he told the UN secretary general, Ban Ki-moon, that he would not be diverted from his plan to make the request to the security council on Friday.

The Middle East quartet of the EU, UN, US and Russia were to meet on Monday evening in an attempt to construct a formula to restart peace talks and stave off a showdown in the security council. Diplomats say the key is to make the proposal strong enough, in part by stating clearly that negotiations will be on the basis of 1967 borders with some swaps of territories, so that Abbas can claim a significant step toward ending the occupation. But the Palestinians remain deeply sceptical after 20 years of negotiations failing to win their independence.

The French foreign minister, Alain Juppe, said in New York that he planned to tell Abbas at a meeting later on Monday that going to the security council will be a political error.

"I will ask him: what is his strategy? Going to the security council, and what after that?" he said. "We have to avoid such a confrontation. We have to find a balanced solution."

Juppe said that the "relaunch of the peace process is needed" and that the international community has "three or four days" to find a solution.

But Juppe also warned that the status quo of the Israeli occupation is "neither acceptable nor tenable", and that lack of progress toward a solution will lead to another "explosion of violence".

The British foreign secretary, William Hague, said in New York that the Palestinian move is "not a course of action that we recommend, because it will just lead to confrontation".

"The best outcome of all the negotiations and discussions taking place here in New York this week would be if Palestinians and Israelis agreed to go back into negotiations together," he said, a position echoed by the US secretary of state, Hillary Clinton.

The Israeli prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu, who flies to New York on Tuesday, said Abbas was "wasting time" with the bid for statehood, and called on him instead to meet for face-to-face talks in New York.

"I call on the PA chair to open direct negotiations in New York that will continue in Jerusalem and Ramallah," Netanyahu said.

Diplomats said that the principal American strategy now appears to be to pressure enough non-permanent members of the security council to vote against Palestinian statehood or, more likely, abstain in the hope of denying Abbas the nine votes he needs to win and so save the US the embarrassment of having to wield its veto.

Neither Britain nor France has said how they will vote in the security council if the issue comes before them. Both are permanent members and a no vote would count as a veto.

However, there is the possibility the Palestinians could also take the matter to the general assembly. It has the power only to offer only observer status but a vote in favour would be a moral victory. Hague did not rule out British support for that move.

"We, along with all the other 26 countries of the European Union, have withheld our position on how we would vote on any resolution that may come forward in the general assembly in order to exert as much pressure on both sides to return to negotiations," he said.

Diplomats said a number of possilibitlies have been under discussion, including that Abbas might submit his request to the security council and that it will be put on hold while fresh peace talks begin. If they fail, or if agreement is not reached by a specified deadline, the request would then be revived and brought before the security council.

But backtracking now will prove difficult for Abbas, after a he made a resolute speech late last week saying that the Palestinians have been forced in to the move by Israeli intransigence, and that he would not be "bought off".

The Palestinian leadership is also deeply sceptical of American claims to be prepared to act as an honest broker in fresh talks. It has lost confidence in Obama's claims to be prepared to stand up to Israel.

"It's going to be a close-run thing," said one western diplomat at the UN. "Can Abbas be persuaded that it's not in the Palestinians' interests to have a confrontation with the Americans in the security council and to embarrass Obama? I doubt it, but it might happen. If not, can the Americans get the votes together in the security council to avoid the veto?

"I defy anyone to predict how this is going to turn out by the end of the week."


guardian.co.uk © 2011 Guardian News and Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved. | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/sep/20/obama-un-palestinian-statehood-bid

Osama bin Laden Tony Blair Sam Brownback Laura Bush George W. Bush