Tag Archives: national

Obama slams GOP on campaign finance

Washington (CNN) — President Barack Obama on Monday criticized Republican opposition to a Senate campaign finance bill, calling it partisan gamesmanship that threatens to give special interests undue influence on U.S. elections.

“You’d think that reducing corporate and even foreign influence over our elections would not be a partisan issue,” Obama told reporters in a White House appearance that was scheduled earlier in the day.

The Senate is expected to hold a procedural vote Tuesday on whether to end debate on the bill, and Democrats fear a unified Republican filibuster will prevent the measure from moving to a final vote.

Obama accused the Republican leadership in the Senate of “using every tactic and every maneuver they can to prevent it from even coming up for an up-or-down vote.”

“We can’t afford these political games,” Obama said, adding that “a vote to oppose these reforms is nothing less than a vote to allow” special interests and foreign interest to hold sway over U.S. elections.

Referred to as the “Disclose Act,” the bill is a Democratic-led response to a Supreme Court ruling in January that struck down key provisions of campaign finance laws restricting spending by corporations, unions and independent groups.

The House has passed its version of the bill.

Obama, who has criticized the Supreme Court ruling, said the bill would allow Americans to know who is spending money to try to influence election campaigns.

“This is an issue that goes to whether or not we’re going to have a government that works for ordinary Americans; a government by and for the people,” Obama said.

Some Republicans have complained the bill touted by Democrats as promoting transparency was written behind closed doors and would violate the right to free speech.

When the House passed the bill, the president of Citizens United — which filed the lawsuit that led to the Supreme Court ruling — criticized Democratic sponsors of the House bill for exempting major organizations such as the National Rifle Association, labor unions and others.

“Citizens who are members of other grassroots groups will be muzzled by this legislation for no reason other than that they belong to a group without the financial and lobbying muscle to exempt itself from this bill,” said the statement from David Bossie of Citizens United.

“This bill is nothing more than incumbent protection in its worst and most cynical form,” Bossie’s statement said. “The American people will not be fooled so easily.”

Although the bill is aimed at reducing the influence of special interests in campaigns, it includes a major loophole exempting some major interest groups, including the NRA and AARP, from the disclosure requirements.

Under the bill, groups with 500,000 dues-paying members that have existed for at least 10 years and have members in all 50 states do not have to reveal their donors.

Obama slams GOP on campaign finance

Cheerleading doesn’t count as a real sport, judge rules

By

Stacy Teicher Khadaroo,

Tea Party Express leader gets the boot

(CNN) — The National Tea Party Federation, an organization that represents the Tea Party political movement around the country, has expelled conservative commentator Mark Williams and his Tea Party Express because of an inflammatory blog post he wrote, federation spokesman David Webb said Sunday.

Appearing on the CBS program “Face the Nation,” Webb said that Williams and the Tea Party Express — which has held a series of events across the country to generate support for the movement — no longer were part of the National Tea Party Federation.

“We, in the last 24 hours, have expelled Tea Party Express and Mark Williams from the National Tea Party Federation because of the letter that he wrote,” Webb said of the blog post by Williams that satirized a fictional letter from what he called “Colored People” to President Abraham Lincoln.

Webb called the blog post “clearly offensive.”

Williams did not immediately respond to a request for comment Sunday afternoon.

Williams wrote the blog post in response to a resolution by the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) that called on Tea Party leaders to crack down on racist elements in the movement.

Video: NAACP responds to expulsion

Video: Williams won’t be last ‘Partier’ booted

Video: Racist elements in Tea Party?

Video: Did Williams mock NAACP?

The NAACP, the nation’s main group advocating civil rights for African Americans, cited signs carried at Tea Party events and racial slurs reportedly shouted at black congress members during an event as some examples of racism in the movement.

The announcement by Webb on a Sunday talk show demonstrated that the public outcry over the issue had resonated with the Tea Party movement, and indicated a possible split within its leadership.

NAACP President Benjamin Jealous told CNN that other Tea Party leaders besides Webb, who is African American, should come out against racist elements in the movement.

“We hope that the household names, Sarah Palin and so forth, will come forward and say the same thing,” Jealous said, later adding: “We don’t think the Tea Party is racist, but we don’t think they’ve gone far enough yet either.”

Some political leaders interviewed on Sunday talk shows also said the Tea Party movement itself wasn’t racist, but needed to distance itself from any elements that bring prejudice and bigotry to its events.

“There are some members who have used the Tea Party — whether it’s the Tea Party itself, there are some individuals who have tried to exacerbate racial tensions in this country,” House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, D-Maryland, said on CNN’s “State of the Union.” “I have seen some virulent fliers that have been directed at our members, clearly referencing race, the president’s race and race generally.”

On the same show, however, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Kentucky, steered clear of the issue, saying: “I am not interested in getting into that debate.”

“Dear Mr. Lincoln,” began the fictional letter posted by Williams. “We Coloreds have taken a vote and decided that we don’t cotton to that whole emancipation thing. Freedom means having to work for real, think for ourselves, and take consequences along with the rewards. That is just far too much to ask of us Colored People and we demand that it stop!”

Williams went on to write that the Tea Party movement couldn’t be racist because it opposed government bailouts for Wall Street banks and big corporations.

“Bailouts are just big money welfare and isn’t that what we want all Coloreds to strive for?” the posting said. “What kind of racist would want to end big money welfare? What they need to do is start handing the bail outs directly to us coloreds!”

Williams, a conservative talk radio host, said the post was intended as satire. He took it down as criticism mounted.

Tea Party Express leader gets the boot

Senator warns of terrorist threat to oil rigs

Washington (CNN) — While the BP oil disaster in the Gulf of Mexico has put accidental spills squarely in the national spotlight, one U.S. senator is warning of another possible threat: deliberate sabotage.

Democrat Jim Webb of Virginia is calling on the Obama administration to develop plans to safeguard offshore platforms from attack by terrorists.

The senator, a member of the Senate Armed Services Committee, made his case in a letter to Defense Secretary Robert Gates, Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano and Interior Secretary Ken Salazar.

“While Congress will continue to scrutinize BP and regulatory agencies, I write to urge you to also be vigilant against deliberate acts, such as an attack or sabotage, that could similarly devastate the region,” Webb said in the letter, referring to the Gulf Coast. But he wants the security plans adopted for all U.S. coastal areas.

While there are no oil derricks off Virginia’s coast, Webb, the state’s senior senator, favors oil and gas exploration in Virginia waters. He also backs a controversial moratorium in deepwater drilling ordered by the Interior Department, until risks and safeguards can be better assessed.

Webb notes in the letter that the BP oil spill is the worst environmental disaster in the country’s history. He said that, “With dozens of wells operating in the Gulf of Mexico and elsewhere, we must employ policies that mitigate all types of risk.”

The senator said that a lack of vigilance on security issues “could leave the marine ecosystem, as well as certain areas of our national security, at great risk.”

He’s asking the federal agencies to assess how vulnerable offshore oil rigs are to attack and make recommendations to Congress for safeguarding them.

The senator points out in his letter that the Nuclear Regulatory Commission requires that nuclear reactors be able to withstand plane crashes and said similar standards should be considered for the oil and gas industry.

Webb’s request for security measures comes as he prepares for a possible rematch in 2012 with Republican George Allen, the incumbent he narrowly defeated in 2006. Allen, a former governor, also supports oil and gas exploration off Virginia’s coast.

Senator warns of terrorist threat to oil rigs

Heat wave: Triple-digit temperatures push East Coast to pools, malls

By

Mark Trumbull,

Hurricane Alex, first of 2010 season, heads for Texas, Mexico

By

Pete Spotts,

Obama quietly moving on immigration reform

Washington (CNN) — President Barack Obama on Monday met with grass-roots leaders Monday afternoon to discuss immigration reform, the White House said.

Obama told those at the meeting that he wants to see a bipartisan process for immigration reform based on a proposal presented in the Senate that addresses the need to secure the border and demands accountability from both workers who are in the United States illegally and employers who take advantage of the system, the White House said.

True border security requires comprehensive immigration reform, Obama said. The president will give a speech soon on the importance of passing that reform, the White House said.

The president also reiterated his views against the recently passed immigration law in Arizona, which the Justice Department is reviewing.

“Today, we strongly requested for the president to assert his leadership and escalate his efforts to assure comprehensive immigration reform legislation is enacted in 2010,” Ali Noorani, executive director of the National Immigration Forum and meeting attendee, said in a statement. “From our meeting, it is clear that the president is committed to comprehensive immigration reform and understands that congressional action is needed urgently.”

Other topics discussed at the meeting included concerns that the grass-roots leaders had about reforms to current detention and deportation procedures, Noorani said.

Monday’s meeting comes on the heels of a number of immigration movements that have been quietly percolating over the last 48 hours.

Sources outside the White House point to National Security Adviser for Homeland Security John Brennan’s meeting with Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer, which is scheduled to take place as early as Monday in Arizona.

Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano also has recently introduced a number of border security initiatives.

CNN’s Suzanne Malveaux and Dan Lothian contributed to this report.

Obama quietly moving on immigration reform

Arizona governor: Most illegal immigrants ‘drug mules’

(CNN) — A labor union representing nearly 20,000 border patrol agents and staff Friday disputed comments made by Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer that most illegal immigrants coming across the southern border are smuggling drugs.

Brewer initially made the comments earlier this month during a debate of Republican gubernatorial candidates. She repeated them Friday when asked by a reporter for the basis of the claim.

“Well, we all know that the majority of the people that are coming to Arizona and trespassing are now becoming drug mules,” Brewer said. “They’re coming across our borders in huge numbers. The drug cartels have taken control of the immigration.

“So they are criminals. They’re breaking the law when they are trespassing and they’re criminals when they pack the marijuana and the drugs on their backs.”

When pressed, Brewer explained that many are simply coming to the United States to look for work but “are accosted, and they become subjects of the drug cartels.”

T.J. Bonner of the National Border Patrol Council told CNN that Brewer’s claims were “clearly not the case.” Bonner said that some undocumented immigrants caught by border patrol agents have drugs on them, and that they sometimes blame pressure from the drug cartels.

But, he said, those claims have little credibility because drug smugglers are typically transporting much larger quantities of drugs. And besides, he said, if what Brewer said were true, there would be many more prosecutions for drug smuggling.

Brewer’s comments, Bonner said, don’t “comport with reality — that’s the nicest way to put it.”

Brewer doubled down on the comments later Friday, however, issuing a statement reiterating them.

“The simple truth is that the majority of human smuggling in our state is under the direction of the drug cartels, which are by definition smuggling drugs,” Brewer’s statement said, according to the Associated Press as reported in the Arizona Republic. “It is common knowledge that Mexican drug cartels have merged human smuggling with drug trafficking.”

Brewer said the “human rights violations that have taken place (by the cartels) victimizing immigrants and their families are abhorrent.”

Brewer’s statement is the center of a controversy over a recently passed law that requires law enforcement officials to ascertain the citizenship of the subject of any investigation if they have reason to believe their suspect is in this country illegally. The U.S. Department of Justice is considering whether to file suit against the law.

Arizona governor: Most illegal immigrants ‘drug mules’