Articles by "POLITICS"

5-6 minutes
Joe Biden and Bernie Sanders blasted President Donald Trump's handling of the Covid-19 coronavirus outbreak during a Democratic debate today and offered competing visions of leadership during a widening crisis that has upended the daily lives of Americans.
Democratic presidential hopeful former US vice president Joe Biden makes a point as he and Senator Bernie Sanders take part in  presidential debate  in Washington, DC on March 15, 2020.
Joe Biden says the US needs to approach the Covid-19 crisis as if it is a war. Photo: AFP
In their first one-on-one debate, the two Democratic contenders to face Trump in the November election clashed on the proper approach to the pandemic and other pressing issues, with Biden arguing his approach to leadership would get quick results and Sanders pushing for bigger, more fundamental changes.
Biden, the front-runner in the Democratic race, promised for the first time during the debate to pick a woman as his running mate if he is the Democratic nominee.
"If I'm elected president, my Cabinet, my administration, will look like the country, and I commit that I will in fact appoint and pick a woman as vice president," Biden said.
Sanders was less willing to commit to picking a woman, saying that "in all likelihood" he would.
The debate came two days before the nominating contests in the big states of Ohio, Illinois, Florida and Arizona, where another string of Biden victories would give him a nearly unassailable lead in delegates over Sanders.
But hopes the debate would be a first step to party unity ahead of the 3 November election against Trump seemed to fade during the showdown, as the two candidates bickered repeatedly over their approach to leadership.
"People are looking for results, not a revolution," Biden said, taking a shot at Sanders' promises to lead a political revolution to sweep in his anti-corporate economic agenda.
Democratic presidential hopefuls former US vice president Joe Biden (L) and Senator Bernie Sanders point fingers at each other as they take part in the 11th Democratic Party  presidential debate in Washington  on March 15, 2020.
Party unity was nowhere to be seen as Joe Biden, left, and Bernie Sanders bickered repeatedly. Photo: AFP
Sanders, a democratic socialist senator from Vermont, said his long-standing support for sweeping economic and social reforms was actually proof of his ability to lead and contrasted it with what he said was Biden's sometimes shifting views.
"I don't have to rethink my position," Sanders said. "That's what leadership is."
Both candidates criticised Trump for his handling of the coronavirus outbreak, saying he had contributed to growing worries by spending weeks minimising the threat before declaring a national emergency on Saturday (NZ time).
The debate, originally scheduled for Phoenix, took place in a Washington studio with no audience, a move made to limit possible exposure to the virus - a sign of how deeply the campaign routine has been reshaped by the global pandemic.
When the two candidates took the stage, they smiled and shared an elbow bump - abiding by the advice of public health officials to avoid handshakes.
Democratic presidential hopeful Senator Bernie Sanders makes a point as he and former US vice president Joe Biden take part in the 11th Democratic Party 2020 presidential debate in a CNN Washington Bureau studio in Washington, DC
Bernie Sanders says his long-standing radical plans for the economy and health show he has leadership qualities. Photo: AFP

'Like a war'

Biden recounted his experience as vice president in President Barack Obama's administration in dealing with the Ebola outbreak in 2014. He laid out a coronavirus plan to make testing free and widely available, establish mobile sites and drive-through facilities in each state and provide more help for small businesses hurt by the resulting economic slowdown.
He said he was willing to call out the military to help local officials build hospitals and take other necessary relief steps.
"This is like a war, and in a war you do whatever needs to be done to take care of your people," Biden said.
Sanders suggested the first step in responding to the outbreak would be "to shut this president up right now" because he was undermining the response of public health officials.
"We have got to learn that you cannot lie to the American people. You cannot be less than frank about the nature of the crisis," Sanders said, adding the crisis showed the need for his signature Medicare for All healthcare proposal, which would replace private health insurance with a government-run system.
"Let's be honest and understand that this coronavirus pandemic exposes the incredible weakness and dysfunctionality of our current healthcare system," he said.
Biden has opposed the Medicare for All plan, saying it is too costly and he prefers to build on the Affordable Care Act, known as Obamacare, by adding a public option for those who want it.
"That has nothing to do with the legitimate concern about income inequality in America. That's real. But that does not affect the need for us to act swiftly and very thoroughly and in concert with all the forces we need to bring to bear," he said.
Biden, 77, and Sanders, 78, have been forced to cancel public events and step off the campaign trail during the crisis. They said they were taking personal steps to stay healthy - avoiding crowds, washing hands and having their campaign staffs work from home.
Earlier in the day, Biden's campaign courted the progressive supporters of Sanders and Senator Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts, who dropped her White House bid earlier this month but has not endorsed anyone, by promising to back a Sanders plan to make public colleges tuition-free to families with incomes of less than $US125,000 a year.
- Reuters
Join Geezgo for free. Use Geezgo's end-to-end encrypted Chat with your Closenets (friends, relatives, colleague etc) in personalized ways.>>

Joe Biden
By Matthew Choi
Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden. | Scott Olson/Getty Images
Flush with cash after a string of Super Tuesday victories, Joe Biden is flexing more muscle on the airwaves, closing Bernie Sanders' spending advantage in a slew of Southern and Midwestern states holding primaries over the next two weeks.
Biden’s campaign has poured nearly $7 million into TV ads into a majority of the remaining March voting states, opening a spending advantage over Sanders in Michigan, Mississippi, Missouri, Ohio and Florida, according to TV spending data from Advertising Analytics.
Sanders, who has been the Democratic field's highest non-billionaire spender thanks to his prolific small-donor army, was on TV in many of these states weeks before Biden purchased ads there. He's spent over $8 million in the March states that vote after Super Tuesday, including states where Biden has not yet advertised.
Sanders remains the only spender in Washington, North Dakota, Idaho, Georgia and Arizona, where both candidates will share a debate stage next Sunday. But in Florida, Biden has spent $3.4 million on ads, besting Sanders there by a $1.3 million margin. In Michigan, where both candidates will be campaigning this weekend and early next week, Biden has pulled even with Sanders and is now edging him by a $32,000 margin.
The millions of dollars in new ads is another show of strength from the resurgent Biden campaign, which now has more money to spend thanks to new donors and supporters since Biden romped in the South Carolina primary and then took over the Democratic delegate lead on Super Tuesday.
Sanders is countering the former vice president with ads hitting Biden's record. One slams past Biden comments on Social Security and Medicare, plays audio of the former vice president speaking from the Senate floor about the cuts he's made to those programs as well as veterans' benefits and "every single solitary thing in the government."
"I not only tried it once, I tried it twice, I tried it a third time and I'll try it a fourth time," the Biden audio says juxtaposed against footage of Sanders promising to expand the same programs.
But Unite the Country, the super PAC that supports Biden, has matched the Biden campaign’s spending patterns in Michigan, Missouri and Mississippi, which will vote on Tuesday. The organization has spent close to $800,000 on ads in the states arguing that Biden is the strongest contender against Donald Trump in November’s general election.
The super PAC’s newest TV ad features soundbites from Biden’s victory speech in South Carolina: “Democrats want a nominee who’s a Democrat. An Obama-Biden Democrat.”
Biden also has new support from the party’s biggest spender, Mike Bloomberg, who shelled out $558 million on ads in his failed presidential bid. He endorsed Biden immediately after exiting the presidential race this week and Bloomberg's team has since announced plans to start a new outside group that will run pro-Democratic, anti-Trump ads to boost the Democratic presidential nominee and downballot candidates in battleground states.
Join Geezgo for free. Use Geezgo's end-to-end encrypted Chat with your Closenets (friends, relatives, colleague etc) in personalized ways.>>

Jay Inslee
By Matthew Choi
Washington State Gov. Jay Inslee addresses the press Thursday during a visit by Vice President Mike Pence to discuss concerns over the coronavirus. | Karen Ducey/Getty Images
President Donald Trump on Friday called Washington Gov. Jay Inslee “a snake” for criticizing his administration’s response to the coronavirus outbreak.
Speaking in Atlanta at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Trump went off on Inslee for saying that he wanted Trump to stick to the science when discussing the outbreak. Trump has repeatedly tried to downplay the gravity of the outbreak and floated his own hunches on matters of science.
“I told Mike not to be complimentary of that governor because that governor is a snake,” Trump said, referring to Vice President Mike Pence. “So Mike may be happy with him but I'm not, OK?”
Pence is Trump’s appointed head of the administration’s coronavirus efforts and has been reaching out to state and local officials to coordinate containment plans. Inslee tweeted last month that he had been contacted by Pence but said he wanted the Trump administration to stick to the facts about the outbreak.
“I just received a call from @VP Mike Pence, thanking Washington state for our efforts to combat the coronavirus,” Inslee tweeted. “I told him our work would be more successful if the Trump administration stuck to the science and told the truth.”
Washington state was the location of the first U.S. death from coronavirus, and the number of deaths has since grown in the state.
Trump has repeatedly complained that he isn’t getting enough credit for attempting to prevent the outbreak.
“If we came up with a cure today, and tomorrow everything is gone, and you went up to this governor — who is, you know, not a good governor, by the way — if you went up to this governor, and you said to him, ‘How did Trump do?’ He would say, ‘He did a terrible job.’ It makes no difference,” Trump said Friday.
Join Geezgo for free. Use Geezgo's end-to-end encrypted Chat with your Closenets (friends, relatives, colleague etc) in personalized ways.>>

A federal judge on Monday ruled that Hillary Clinton may be deposed in a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit regarding her use of a private email server while serving as secretary of state. Photo by Paul Treadway/ UPI
By Daniel Uria A federal judge on Monday ruled that Hillary Clinton can be deposed in a lawsuit about the State Department's record-keeping of her private emails while serving as secretary of state.
U.S. District Court Judge Royce Lamberth issued the order in a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit filed by the conservative group Judicial Watch nearly six years ago seeking emails related to the attack on the Benghazi consulate which killed four Americans in 2012.
The deposition would be the first time Clinton would be required to submit to live questioning under oath about the attack in Libya after having previously submitted sworn written answers in another lawsuit.
She was also investigated by the State Department inspector general and the FBI over the matter.
In his order on Monday, Lamberth said that the prior probes may not have answered all of the lingering questions regarding Clinton's use of a private email server.
"Any further discovery should focus on whether she used a private server to evade [the Freedom of Information Act] and as a corollary to that, what she understood about State's records management obligations," he wrote.
Lamberth ruled that Judicial Watch can also depose two State Department technology managers who worked on Clinton's email management and Clinton's top aide Cheryl Mills. The group, however, would not be able to ask about the U.S. government's response to the Benghazi attack.
Further, Lambert authorized the group to subpoena Google for records related to Clinton's emails during her time as secretary of state.
"The COurt is not confident the State currently possesses every Clinton email recovered by the FBI; even years after the FBI investigation, the slow trickle of new emails has yet to be explained," he wrote. "For this reason, the Court believes the subpoena would be worthwhile and may even uncover additional previously undisclosed emails."
Lamberth provided 75 days for depositions and evidence to be collected.
Join Geezgo for free. Use Geezgo's end-to-end encrypted Chat with your Closenets (friends, relatives, colleague etc) in personalized ways.>>

Rami Ayyub On the eve of Israel’s third election in a year, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has been urging supporters to mount a final push to win the one or two more seats he says he needs to form a government.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu looks on as he delivers a statement during his visit at the Health Ministry national hotline, in Kiryat Malachi, Israel March 1, 2020. REUTERS/Amir Cohen
But as he campaigns, another force in Israeli politics - the Arab minority - is hoping to use a new surge of anger against the right-wing leader and his U.S. allies to edge the electoral arithmetic the other way.
Arab lawmakers are urging their communities to turn out in ever greater numbers on March 2 to show their opposition to the new peace plan - dubbed the “Deal of the Century” - unveiled by U.S. President Donald Trump in January.
Anger among Israel’s Arabs has focused on one part of that plan in particular, a proposed redrawing of borders that would put some Arab towns and villages outside Israel and into the area assigned to a future Palestinian state.
“There is someone who set this plan: Benjamin Netanyahu,” said Ayman Odeh, chief of the Arab-dominated Joint List coalition.
“We need to overthrow him, our biggest agitator, the person behind the Deal of the Century,” Odeh added during a stop in Taibe, a village that could be moved outside Israel under Trump’s plan.
Polls show Netanyahu’s Likud movement virtually neck and neck with centrist leader Benny Gantz’s Blue and White party.
Arab lawmakers currently hold 13 seats in the 120-member Knesset. If the Arab and centrist blocs both hold their voting share - and certainly if they increase - that would make it harder for Netanyahu to get the extra seats he needs in the country’s finely-balanced political set-up.
Nearly 80% of Arabs who are familiar with the Trump plan oppose it, according to a Feb. 24 poll by the Konrad Adenauer Program for Jewish-Arab Cooperation at Tel Aviv University.
The poll’s author, Arik Rudnitzky, said the Trump initiative had injected “new blood into this relatively calm electoral campaign” and forecast a slight increase in Arab turnout over last September’s election, from 59% to 60%.
Graphic: Trump's Middle East plan - here
Reuters Graphic

“I AM STILL OCCUPIED”

Israel’s Arab minority - Palestinian by heritage, Israeli by citizenship - makes up 21 per cent of Israel’s population.
Mostly Muslim, Christian and Druze, they are descendants of the Palestinians whose communities, including Nazareth, found themselves inside Israel as the country was formed in 1948.
Their political representatives have had to choose their words diplomatically as they push their campaign against Netanyahu.
If they reject the notion of coming under Palestinian rule too aggressively or overtly, they could be seen as selling out their brethren in the occupied West Bank and Gaza. But if they embrace that notion, they risk losing the benefits of Israeli citizenship.
“Everyone wants to stay in Israel, everyone wants an Israeli I.D. because they can see the situation in the West Bank, and here it is better,” said Zuhri Haj Yahya, a Taibe resident.
He said it made no difference to his sense of identity whether he lived under Israeli or Palestinian rule.
“I am Palestinian,” he said. “I am still occupied, whether I am here or there.”
As the election neared, Netanyahu dismissed concerns about land swaps and sought to win over Arab voters.
“The last thing I believe in is uprooting anyone from their home. No one will be uprooted,” he told Arabic-language channels PANET and Hala TV on Feb. 18.
Likud also said its 15 billion shekel ($4.37 billion) investment program was more than any government ever invested in Arab communities.
But Arab politicians derided Netanyahu’s appeals, and his promises of direct flights to Mecca for Muslim pilgrims.
“What did Netanyahu really do for us,” asked politician Ahmad Tibi, calling it a last-ditch effort to “manipulate our community”.
Join Geezgo for free. Use Geezgo's end-to-end encrypted Chat with your Closenets (friends, relatives, colleague etc) in personalized ways.>>

3-4 minutesBillionaire environmentalist Tom Steyer, a fierce critic of President Donald Trump who had pushed early for his impeachment, abandoned his bid for the 2020 Democratic presidential nomination on Saturday after trailing in third place in the South Carolina primary, a campaign source told Reuters.
Democratic Presidential candidate entrepreneur Tom Steyer reacts as he speaks to supporters as he announced that he is suspending his campaign at his election night party on the day of the South Carolina primary in Columbia, South Carolina, U.S., February 29, 2020. REUTERS/Mark Makela
Steyer, who poured hundreds of millions of dollars of his own money into his quest, dropped out of the race on the day of his strongest showing yet in a 2020 Democratic nominating contest. Even so, he finished far behind winner Joe Biden and second-place finisher Bernie Sanders.
“Honestly, I can’t see a path where I can win the presidency,” Steyer told supporters in South Carolina.
“I love you very much, this has been a great experience, I have zero regrets. Meeting you and the people of America has been a highlight of my life.”
The 62-year-old former hedge fund manager from San Francisco portrayed himself as a political outsider and blasted corporate money in U.S. politics in July, when he joined a field of two dozen Democrats seeking to deny Trump, a Republican, a second term.
He poured $64.7 million of his own wealth in January into his bid for the Democratic nomination, bringing his total campaign spending to $267 million.
Like fellow billionaire Michael Bloomberg, Steyer drew criticism from other Democrats as trying to buy his way to the nomination. Spending tens of millions of dollars, however, did not win the level of support from voters needed.
Steyer said he would support the eventual Democratic nominee.
Steyer amassed a fortune, estimated by Forbes magazine at $1.6 billion, after founding investment firm Farallon Capital Management in the mid-1980s and serving as a partner at San Francisco private equity firm Hellman & Friedman.
In January 2019, he had said he was passing on a 2020 run to focus on efforts to impeach Trump and get Democrats elected to the U.S. Congress.
Steyer has been a force in Democratic fundraising over the past decade. During the 2018 election cycle, he was the second-largest donor to Democratic and liberal candidates and causes, according to the Center for Responsive Politics.
He has worked for years on climate change and voter engagement and donated about $170 million since 2015 to his independent political action committees, Need to Impeach and NextGen America.
Steyer billed himself as the only candidate who would make climate change his No. 1 priority as president. “It is a state of emergency and I would declare a state of emergency on Day One,” he said during a November debate.
Join Geezgo for free. Use Geezgo's end-to-end encrypted Chat with your Closenets (friends, relatives, colleague etc) in personalized ways.>>

3-4 minutes
Former US vice-president Joe Biden appears to have been handed a major boost in the Democratic race to take on Donald Trump in November's election.
Democratic presidential candidate former Vice President Joe Biden speaks during a campaign event in Des Moines, Iowa, 2 February.
Joe Biden speaks during a campaign event in Des Moines, Iowa last month. Photo: AFP / Getty Images
Biden is projected to win South Carolina's primary, according to US media. Voters there have been picking who they want to be the Democratic nominee for the White House.
Left-winger Bernie Sanders is likely to remain in the lead overall.
Another 14 states vote on Super Tuesday this week.
By the end of Super Tuesday, it could become much clearer who the nominee will be. South Carolina is only the fourth state to have voted so far in the months-long primary season.

What happened in South Carolina?

With 3 percent of votes counted, Biden has more than 51 percent of the share, ahead of Sanders and billionaire hedge-fund manager Tom Steyer.
Biden had been pinning his hopes on a strong result in the southern state, after performing poorly in Iowa, New Hampshire and Nevada. He regularly cited his strong support among African-Americans, which is likely to have helped his victory.
He also appears to have performed well among voters over the age of 45, an exit poll by Edison Media Research suggests.
If results confirm his win, this will be Biden's first ever victory in a primary in what is his third run for US president.
It is likely to hand the 77-year-old a boost ahead of the biggest day of voting on Tuesday, and allow him to make the case that he is the best-placed moderate Democrat to take on Sanders.
"If you send me out of South Carolina with a victory," Biden said earlier this week, "there will be no stopping us".
Candidates who have won more than 15 percent of the vote in South Carolina will be awarded delegates, who will then go to the party's convention in July to support their Democratic candidate.
It is unclear at this stage how many delegates Biden might win, and who else has performed well.

What happens next?

This Tuesday is Super Tuesday, the most important date in the race to pick the nominee.
Over the day, Democrats in 14 states will vote (as well as American Samoa and Democrats Abroad). A massive 1357 delegates will be distributed - almost a third of all the ones available in primary season, and the two most populous states, California and Texas, will be voting.
The entire picture could change in one day. Or we could see Sanders cement his lead as the front-runner - and even extend into a near-unbeatable lead, as seems possible.
- BBC
Join Geezgo for free. Use Geezgo's end-to-end encrypted Chat with your Closenets (friends, relatives, colleague etc) in personalized ways.>>

3 minutes
FILE PHOTO: Sinn Fein souvenirs on sale before a public meeting Liberty Hall in Dublin, Ireland February 25, 2020. REUTERS/Lorraine O'Sullivan
DUBLIN (Reuters) - The pro-Irish unity Sinn Fein party would easily win a repeat Irish election if ongoing government talks fail, with an opinion poll on Saturday showing it has almost twice as much support as its two nearest rivals.
The left wing party’s support jumped to 35%, ahead of Fianna Fail on 20% and acting Prime Minister Leo Varadkar’s Fine Gael on 18% in a Sunday Times/Behaviour & Attitudes poll that may influence early talks between the two centre-right rivals.
Sinn Fein shocked the political establishment in an election earlier this month by securing more votes than any other party for the first time, almost doubling its vote to 24.5%, ahead of Fianna Fail on 22.2% and Fine Gael on 20.9%.
But it has been frozen out of government talks by its two rivals, who refuse to contemplate sharing power due to policy differences and Sinn Fein’s history as the political wing of the Irish Republican Army, the militant group that fought against British rule in Northern Ireland in a conflict in which some 3,600 people were killed before a 1998 peace deal.
Caught by surprise themselves, Sinn Fein ran too few candidates to emerge with the most seats - a mistake it will not make next time around. It has already begun a series of packed national rallies to sure up its support.
Both Sinn Fein and Fianna Fail have 37 seats in the fractured 160-seat parliament, with Fine Gael on 35, meaning some sort of combination of two of the three largest parties is required to form a government.
Bruised by its election defeat, Fine Gael will reluctantly hold a “one-day policy exchange” with Fianna Fail next week as well as similar talks with the Green Party, whose 12 seats would be needed for the two historic rivals to reach a majority.
If Ireland’s two dominant parties cannot agree to lead the next government while also maintaining their steadfast opposition to governing with Sinn Fein, a second election would be the only way to break the deadlock.
All sides predict talks will take a number of weeks before such a choice has to be made.
Join Geezgo for free. Use Geezgo's end-to-end encrypted Chat with your Closenets (friends, relatives, colleague etc) in personalized ways.>>

2 minutes
A section of border fence is pictured by the U.S.-Mexico border in the Rio Grande Valley near Hidalgo, Texas, U.S., October 7, 2019. REUTERS/Loren Elliott
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Democrats in the U.S. House of Representatives are working on new legislation that would “claw back” funds the White House took from the Pentagon’s budget to fund construction of a wall on the U.S.-Mexico border, the chairman of the House Armed Services committee said on Thursday.
The legislation would aim to restore $3.8 billion back to the Pentagon’s weapons procurement and National Guard budgets.
“They robbed the bank and now they are running away with the money,” Democratic Representative Adam Smith, who chairs the committee, told reporters.
The Trump administration has vowed to build at least 400 miles (640 km) of wall along the border by November 2020. In his 2016 election campaign, Trump said Mexico would pay for the wall. The Mexican government has consistently refused to do so.
The bill is being discussed with the staff of top Republican on the Armed Services Committee, Representative Mac Thornberry, Smith said. Smith hoped to get it to the House floor as soon as possible.
The legislation would target the fiscal 2021 budget reprogramming that took money from the National Guard, and weapons procurement including the Lockheed Martin Corp (LMT.N) F-35 fighter jet program, Lockheed C-130 transport aircraft, Boeing Co (BA.N) P-8 Poseidon maritime patrol aircraft, Bell Boeing V-22 Osprey tilt-rotor aircraft, and shipbuilding.
While it might be approved in the House, the bill looks unlikely to be passed in the Senate, controlled by Trump’s Republicans.
Join Geezgo for free. Use Geezgo's end-to-end encrypted Chat with your Closenets (friends, relatives, colleague etc) in personalized ways.>>

6-7 minutes
GETTY IMAGES/AFP / WIN MCNAMEE The stage is set for the Democratic presidential debate in Charleston, South Carolina
Frontrunner Bernie Sanders will be in the firing line as the other Democratic White House candidates seek to derail his push for the nomination at a crucial debate Tuesday in South Carolina.
The Vermont senator is in pole position heading into South Carolina's primary Saturday and the debate could offer the final opportunity for other Democratic hopefuls, Joe Biden in particular, to halt his momentum.
Sanders, 78, emerged largely unscathed from the last debate and went on to win the Nevada caucuses, but he is expected to come under fire this time from all directions.
Besides claiming that Sanders is too left-wing to defeat President Donald Trump, his rivals are expected to attack him over his praise of some aspects of communist rule in countries like Cuba.
AFP/File / Jason Connolly Democratic presidential hopeful Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders is in pole position heading into South Carolina's Democratic primary
Sanders finished in a virtual tie with former South Bend, Indiana mayor Pete Buttigieg in the first nominating contest, in Iowa, and then won in New Hampshire and Nevada.
Seven candidates will take part in the debate beginning at 8:00 pm (0100 GMT Wednesday) in Charleston, South Carolina, the 10th debate of the campaign cycle.
Besides Sanders, Biden and Buttigieg, Massachusetts Senator Elizabeth Warren, Minnesota Senator Amy Klobuchar, media magnate Michael Bloomberg and fellow billionaire Tom Steyer will also be on stage.
Bloomberg, 78, seeks to rebound from a disastrous performance in his first debate and prove he is a credible, moderate alternative to the leftist Sanders.
The 77-year-old Biden has also been staking out the center and will be hoping to bounce back from dismal performances in Iowa and New Hampshire, where he finished fourth and fifth respectively.
AFP / JIM WATSON Former vice president Joe Biden will be hoping to bounce back from his dismal performance in Iowa and New Hampshire, where he finished fourth and fifth respectively
The former vice president came in second in the Nevada caucuses, but with 20.2 percent, he was well behind Sanders' 46.8 percent.
Biden has been counting on strong support among African-American voters in South Carolina to recharge his flagging campaign.
But Sanders has surged in polling in the southern state in recent weeks and Biden's lead there has dwindled to single digits.
He hardly helped himself with campaign trail gaffes Monday.
At one event, Biden told supporters he was "a Democratic candidate for the United States Senate." At another he claimed to have worked on the 2015 Paris climate accord with Chinese leader Deng Xiaoping, who died in 1997.
Another sign of trouble: a new poll showing support for Biden slipping among black voters, a core Democratic primary constituency.
The latest national Reuters/Ipsos poll shows that some 26 percent of black voters said they would vote for Sanders in their state's primary, up seven points from the previous poll conducted January 29 to February 19.
Biden's share among black voters shed 10 points, to 23 percent.
- Super Tuesday -
AFP / Mark RALSTON Mike Bloomberg will be looking to rebound from his disastrous performance in his first debate and prove he is a credible, moderate alternative to the leftist Sanders
A Sanders victory in South Carolina, or even a close second, could set him up for a knockout blow on "Super Tuesday" March 3, when 14 states go to the polls and a whopping one third of all delegates in the Democratic race are up for grabs.
Some Democrats argue that Sanders, who calls himself a "democratic socialist," is too far to the left for many Americans and would be a weak opponent against Trump in November.
That is a line of attack which the 38-year-old centrist Buttigieg employed in the last debate, when he called Sanders "polarizing."
Sanders clearly believes he is more in touch with the sentiments of Democratic voters than his rivals.
"I know if you look at the media, they say, 'Bernie's ideas are radical and they're extreme, they're out of the mainstream,'" he said at a CNN town hall Monday in Charleston.
"I don't think that that's true," he added.
AFP / Jason Connolly Pete Buttigieg has argued Bernie Sanders is too far to the left for many Americans and would be a weak opponent against President Donald Trump in November
"Is guaranteeing health care to all people as a human right a radical idea? Is addressing the existential threat of climate change a radical idea?"
Sanders' questions were met with chants of 'No' from the crowd, leading him to say, "I rest my case."
Sanders also defended remarks he made about Cuba's late leader Fidel Castro which came under attack from the Biden and Buttigieg campaigns.
"I have been extremely consistent and critical of all authoritarian regimes all over the world, including Cuba, including Nicaragua, including Saudi Arabia, including China, including Russia," Sanders said.
At the same time, Castro "initiated a major literacy program," he said. "I think teaching people to read and write is a good thing."
Reacting on Monday to earlier similar comments Sanders made about Castro, Biden's campaign released one of its strongest attacks yet on the Democratic frontrunner.
It said Sanders "seems to have found more inspiration in the Soviets, Sandinistas, Chavistas, and Castro than in America."
Join Geezgo for free. Use Geezgo's end-to-end encrypted Chat with your Closenets (friends, relatives, colleague etc) in personalized ways.>>

Kirsten Gillibrand thinks she can defeat President Donald Trump in 2020. No, it's not too early to skim her résumé for indicators of her understanding of key business issues.

"I'm going to run for president because as a young mom I am going to fight for other people's kids as hard as I would fight for my own," Gillibrand, 52, said during an appearance on CBS's The Late Show With Stephen Colbert on Tuesday.

Gillibrand has vowed to enact universal paid family leave as president, and as the junior senator from New York established herself as an advocate for workers and small businesses. Here are some of the business-related issues she has fought for during her political career.
Employee ownership

In 2018, Gillibrand wrote and helped pass the Main Street Employee Ownership Act, which gave the U.S. Small Business Administration tools to help small businesses transitioning to a co-op or employee stock ownership plan. In these plans, companies take out loans to buy shares from their shareholders, and then divide the shares among employees.
Small-business loans

Also last year, Gillibrand introduced a bill to expand the Small Business Administration's Microloan Program. The bipartisan Microloan Modernization Act would provide loans and technical assistance to women and minority business owners struggling to receive loans from banks. The bill passed in the Senate in 2018 and is awaiting House approval.
Wage equality

Gillibrand helped pass the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act of 2009, which gives victims of pay discrimination more time to file a lawsuit.

Gillibrand joins Massachusetts senator Elizabeth Warren in the race for the Democratic presidential nomination, marking the first time in U.S. history that two women senators will run for a party's presidential nomination at the same time. Raised in upstate New York, Gillibrand graduated from Dartmouth College and earned her law degree from the University of California, Los Angeles. She worked as an attorney for 10 years before entering politics.

https://www.geezgo.com/sps/52356

Join Geezgo for free. Use Geezgo's end-to-end encrypted Chat with your Closenets (friends, relatives, colleague etc) in personalized ways.>>

Americans still lean conservative over liberal, but liberals have made gains, as a majority of Democrats identify as liberal for the first time, a Gallup Poll said Tuesday.

Thirty-five percent of Americans have described their political ideology as conservative for the past two years, the poll said, compared to 26 percent as liberal. Another 35 percent describe themselves as moderate.

Conservatives have outnumbered liberals since Gallup's baseline measurement in 1992, but the gap has narrowed from 19 percentage points to nine points in recent years.

Meanwhile, the percentage of Americans identifying as liberal has risen from 17 percent in 1992 to currently 26 percent. The rising percentage of liberals was offset by the shrinking percentage of moderates, a segment that shrunk from 43 percent to 35 percent over the same period. The rate of conservatives stayed between 36 percent and 40 percent, before decreasing to 35 percent in the past two years.

The percentage of Democrats identifying as liberal sat at 51 percent in 2018, up from 50 percent in 2017 and marking the first time the party has been majority liberal.

In 1994, nearly half of Democrats identified as moderate with equal percentages, at 25 percent, calling themselves liberal and conservative.

The majority of Republicans identify as conservative, with 73 percent of Republicans identifying as conservative in 2018.

The number of Republicans identifying as conservative has risen 15 percentage points since 1994.

Independents are largely moderate, but lean more towards conservative than liberal with an edge of six percentage points in conservatives' favor in recent years.

Results are based on a random sample of 13,852 adults with a margin of error of 1 percentage point.
https://www.geezgo.com/sps/51768

Join Geezgo for free. Use Geezgo's end-to-end encrypted Chat with your Closenets (friends, relatives, colleague etc) in personalized ways.>>

Ambassador Michael McFaul discuss the implications of Haley's resignation, as well as the question of who can replace her.

On Tuesday morning, Nikki Haley announced her resignation as UN Ambassador in prepared remarks from the White House.

The former South Carolina governor had been on the job for nearly two years and was one of a handful of women in President Trump's male-dominated administration.

Ambassador Michael McFaul, who served as US Ambassador to Russia from 2012 to 2014, discusses the implications of this departure.
https://www.geezgo.com/sps/42290

Join Geezgo for free. Use Geezgo's end-to-end encrypted Chat with your Closenets (friends, relatives, colleague etc) in personalized ways.>>

An All Progressives Congress, APC, chieftain in Bauchi state, Ali Ibrahim Ningi has slammed President Muhammadu Buhari over plans by the government to disburse part of the Abacha loot to poor Nigerian households.

Ningi told DAILY POST, in an exclusive interview in Bauchi on Tuesday, that it was unfortunate for the Federal Government to plan giving Nigerian households N5,000 out of the Abacha loot as a palliative measure against poverty and hunger.

He said, “Yes, I listened to the programme aired by international radio with shock if it’s true that the Federal Government has decided to give Nigerians N5,000 out of the Abacha loot.”

The politician maintained that the APC government of Buhari is clueless and without advisers to make it address the more meaningful needs of Nigerians.

“It’s expected that the Federal Government should channel the funds to education, health and the N-Power programme apparently to cushion the adverse poverty among Nigerians as was the system during Buhari’s days as PTF boss where drugs were procured through the agency,” Ningi opined.

He cautioned the President not to allow himself be derailed by “corrupt presidential cabals”, stressing that any attempt to disburse the Abacha loot to Nigerians by the APC government would justify the weakness and incapability of the Buhari administration.

“Visit our education sector at all levels and received shocking conditions, same apply to the health sector with absence of drugs apart from youths who are now streets touts linked to poverty. As such, the Federal Government should kindly discard any ill-advised plan to disburse the Abacha loot to Nigerians just because of the 2019 elections,” Ningi added.
By Adams Adam
https://www.geezgo.com/sps/29066

US intelligence agencies believe North Korea has increased production of fuel for nuclear weapons at multiple secret sites in recent months and may try to hide these while seeking concessions in nuclear talks with the United States, NBC news quoted US officials as saying.



In a report on Friday, the network said what it described as the latest US intelligence assessment appeared to go counter to sentiments expressed by President Donald Trump, who tweeted after an unprecedented June 12 summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un that "there is no longer a nuclear threat from North Korea."

NBC quoted five unidentified US officials as saying that in recent months North Korea had stepped up production of enriched uranium for nuclear weapons, even as it engaged in diplomacy with the United States.

The network cited US officials as saying that the intelligence assessment concludes that North Korea has more than one secret nuclear site in addition to its known nuclear fuel production facility at Yongbyon.

"There is absolutely unequivocal evidence that they are trying to deceive the US," NBC quoted one official as saying.

The CIA declined to comment on the NBC report. The State Department said it could not confirm it and did not comment on matters of intelligence. The White House did not respond to a request for comment.

The NBC report raises further questions about North Korea's readiness to enter serious negotiations about giving up a weapons program that now threatens the United States, in spite of Trump's enthusiastic portrayal of the summit outcome.



NBC quoted one senior US intelligence official as saying that North Korea's decision ahead of the summit to suspend nuclear and missile tests was unexpected and the fact that the two sides were talking was a positive step.

However, he added: "Work is ongoing to deceive us on the number of facilities, the number of weapons, the number of missiles ... We are watching closely."

Jeffrey Lewis, director of the East Asia Nonproliferation Program at California's Middlebury Institute of International Studies, said there were two "bombshells" in the NBC report.

He said it had long been understood that North Korea had at least one undeclared facility to enrich nuclear fuel aside from Yongbyon.

"This assessment says there is more than one secret site. That means there are at least three, if not more sites," he said.

Lewis said the report also implied that US intelligence had reporting to suggest North Korea did not intend to disclose one or more of the enrichment sites.

"Together, these two things would imply that North Korea intended to disclose some sites as part of the denuclearization process, while retaining others," he said.

North Korea agreed at the summit to "work toward denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula," but the joint statement signed by Kim and Trump gave no details on how or when Pyongyang might surrender its nuclear weapons.

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said last week he would likely go back to North Korea before long to try to flesh out commitments made at the Trump-Kim meeting.

On Thursday, the Financial Times quoted US officials as saying that Pompeo plans to travel to North Korea next week, but the State Department has declined to confirm this.

Ahead of the summit, North Korea rejected unilaterally abandoning an arsenal it has called an essential deterrent against US aggression.

Trump said last week North Korea was blowing up four of its big test sites and that a process of "total denuclearization ... has already started," but officials said there had been no such evidence since the summit.

https://www.geezgo.com/sps/28730



Mahmood Yakubu, Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, has revealed what Nigerians should do against ballot-box snatching thugs during elections.

Yakubu said Nigerians should protect their votes during elections.

He spoke at a campus outreach organized by the Commission in conjunction with the European Centre for Electoral Support in Lagos.

The INEC boss also noted that active citizen participation remained the panacea to security challenges during elections.

According to Yakubu, “Nobody will take a gun where they know they will be challenged. But when people abandon polling units, it becomes easier for merchants of violence to disrupt the process.

“We also have a system of merging with security agencies and although we discourage armed security men in the polling units, there are armed men outside the polling units to also beef up security in the polling units.”

https://www.geezgo.com/sps/28391

WASHINGTON: A 28-year-old leftist and political novice has become the face of a new breed of American Democrat after slaying a congressional giant in a New York primary, as the party seeks its 2018 battle plan against Donald Trump's Republicans.

Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez achieved the near-impossible on Tuesday night.

Heavily outspent and an undisputed outsider in the race, the activist and educator from the Bronx who until recently worked in a restaurant defeated 10-term congressman Joe Crowley, a member of the Democratic leadership, in a result that slammed the party like an earthquake.

She was far from the only progressive to pull off an upset on Tuesday, as voters in seven states chose candidates for November's midterm elections, when Democrats aim to reclaim control of Congress and make inroads in governors' mansions and state legislatures.

In Maryland, Ben Jealous, a liberal former head of the largest black civil rights group, won the Democratic nomination for governor, topping the establishment candidate and signalling the party's voters are placing increasing faith in minority candidates.

Should he defeat the Republican incumbent he would become only the third African-American elected to lead a US state.

And in Colorado, congressman Jared Polis' primary victory could see him elected as America's first-ever openly gay governor.

But the image of a stunned Ocasio-Cortez realising she made history in New York is what resonated on Wednesday, and signalled that the progressive wing may be resurgent in the Democratic Party.

"Women like me aren't supposed to run for office," Ocasio-Cortez, born to a Puerto Rican mother and a father from the Bronx, said in a campaign video that went viral last month.

She was not supposed to win, either.

But Ocasio-Cortez pulled off the political upset of the year by delivering "a laser-focused message of economic, social and racial dignity for working class Americans," she told MSNBC.

"I felt like our party could be better, our message could be better, and that we could be better as a country," she said.

A member of the Democratic Socialists of America who aligns with far-left independent Senator Bernie Sanders, Ocasio-Cortez would also - should she win in November in her increasingly diverse district - become the youngest woman ever to serve in Congress.

MORE PROGRESSIVE PLATFORM?

Democrats are riding a wave of voter enthusiasm and grassroots energy in 2018, but they have struggled to define their political plan of attack against President Trump and congressional Republicans.

Sanders, whose 2016 presidential run highlighted the divide between the Democratic establishment moderates and progressives, wants to steer the party leftward, with policies including expanded Medicaid-for-all, tuition-free college, and a US$15 minimum wage - all policies backed by Ocasio-Cortez.

The 76-year-old senator said victories by Ocasio-Cortez and Jealous signal that "we can most effectively oppose Donald Trump's extremism with strong progressive leadership at the state and local level."

Democratic high priests are not sure that a more progressive platform is the answer.

Top House Democrat Nancy Pelosi waved off suggestions that Tuesday's far-left grassroots victories could be extrapolated to a national scale.

"Nobody's district is representative of somebody else's district," Pelosi told reporters.

Indeed, some recent races have shown that moderate Democrats are well placed to oust Republican incumbents in swing districts.

"Sanders-style candidates are still losing almost all of the Democratic primaries they run in," warned center-left think tank Third Way.

"If Democrats do regain control of the House - as we strongly hope and expect they will - it will be largely because of moderates winning in tough red and purple districts."

Trump himself weighed in late Tuesday to declare that Crowley's shock loss was a sign of party disarray.

"The Democrats are in Turmoil!" he tweeted.

As the party continues to search for its identity in the Trump era, no clear standard bearer has emerged. But Tuesday's results send a clear signal that voters want new blood in leadership.

The latest Democratic upheaval carried echoes of a political shocker four years ago, when the number two House Republican Eric Cantor was ousted by a little known Tea Party-backed conservative named Dave Brat.

Brat's victory was part of a wave of outsider, anti-Washington rebellion that culminated with Trump winning the White House in 2016.

Dave Wasserman, a writer for Cook Political Report, neatly summed up the parallel: "Tea Party '14, meet Resistance '18."

https://www.geezgo.com/sps/28371

President Donald Trump signaled an about-face Friday on immigration reform, calling on Congress to wait until after November's elections to ride what he called a "red wave" of new Republican lawmakers.


Trump visited lawmakers on Capitol Hill this week to discuss the subject, including its impact on migrant family separations, his long-promised border wall and DACA. At the time, he said he would support either of two GOP bills on immigration reform. Friday, he asked Republicans to wait a few months and try again.

"Republicans should stop wasting their time on Immigration until after we elect more Senators and Congressmen/women in November," Trump tweeted. "Dems are just playing games, have no intention of doing anything to solves this decades old problem. We can pass great legislation after the Red Wave!"

Trump's new message follows months of gridlock in Congress on immigration reform and his repeatedly blaming Democrats for the mess.

"Elect more Republicans in November and we will pass the finest, fairest and most comprehensive Immigration Bills anywhere in the world," he added in another tweet. "Right now we have the dumbest and the worst. Dems are doing nothing but Obstructing. Remember their motto, RESIST! Ours is PRODUCE!

"Even if we get 100% Republican votes in the Senate, we need 10 Democrat votes to get a much needed Immigration Bill -- & the Dems are Obstructionists who won't give votes for political reasons & because they don't care about Crime coming from Border! So we need to elect more R's!"

Friday afternoon, Trump will meet at the White House with "angel families," or those who have had relatives killed by illegal immigrants -- an issue the president has long felt strongly about.

Thursday, Republican leaders in the House rescheduled a vote on the more moderate version of two immigration bills after they rejected the more conservative variant. Lawmakers are seeking to secure more votes for the moderate bill, which was introduced by House Speaker Paul Ryan.

The bills have undergone modifications in recent days as the issue of separating migrant families at the border generated substantial controversy. Trump signed an order Wednesday to end the practice, which was part of his administration's "zero tolerance" policy.

ABC News reported Friday that hundreds of separated migrant families have been reunited since Trump signed the order.

Thursday, former FBI director James Comey told an audience in London the family separations could be the president's most harmful misstep yet -- and suggested Trump is trying to dodge the matter.

"Every so often, the giant is awakened that offends no matter where you are," he said. "It may be stirring the giant, that's why Trump ran so fast and lied so much -- one thing he is good at is sensing the giants awakening."

Trump's comments Friday came amid a report by the New York Daily News that said some facilities housing separated children are the same used for unaccompanied migrant minors, who in some cases are later being picked up by immigration agents when they turn 18.

From October through March, 466 unaccompanied minors in New York were detained by ICE agents -- an increase of more than 500 percent.

Twenty-four were detained in 2016, and 157 in 2017, the Daily News report said. Officials began noticing the phenomenon as teens turned 18 and left school.

ICE detention for migrants involve moving from foster-care type detention facilities with other children into more secure adult detention centers that resemble jails.

"You're talking about young people who are experiencing traumas, going through the journey of migration, fleeing extreme violence, and are now being put in the worst possible situation," said Bitta Mostofi, commissioner of the New York mayor's Office of Immigration Affairs.
By Susan McFarland
https://www.geezgo.com/sps/27868

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe offered some faint praise for North Korea's Kim Jong Un on Monday and said he would like to end a relationship of mutual distrust with Pyongyang.


Abe, who only a couple months ago had ruled out engagement with North Korea in favor of greater sanctions pressure, is changing his outlook on engagement with the Kim regime following the summit between U.S. President Donald Trump and Kim, NHK reported.

"Chairman Kim has leadership ability that was able to realize the U.S.-North Korea summit," Abe said before a parliamentary committee on Monday. "I would like to break the façade of mutual distrust with North Korea and take one more step to resolve" the abduction issue.

Abe was referring to Japanese citizens kidnapped to North Korea. A dozen abductees are still officially recognized by Tokyo, but Pyongyang has said none are alive.

The Japanese prime minister is expected to meet with Kim in 2018, but a date has not been finalized.

Abe has said he told Trump he encouraged the U.S. president to procure a written statement during the summit.

"At the Japan-U.S. summit in April, I told him it is important for the two leaders to come up with a document," Abe said, according to NHK.

The statement signed by Trump and Kim indicates the two sides will work on complete denuclearization, and the United States will provide security guarantees.

Kyodo News reported Abe has indicated an interest in taking an active role in denuclearization.

The funding required for the effort should also be shouldered by Japan, the prime minister said.

"As we stand to benefit from denuclearization, we must think about such matters," Abe said.

Japan previously pledged $1 billion toward a $4.6 billion project after 1994, under the consortium known as the Korean Peninsula Energy Development Organization, or KEDO.
By Elizabeth Shim

Geezwild

Contact Form

Name

Email *

Message *

Powered by Blogger.
Javascript DisablePlease Enable Javascript To See All Widget