Home » Posts tagged "the Obama administration" (Page 3)

Egypt’s Mubarak calls for cabinet to resign in revolt

Evans Liberal Politics
January 29, 2011

 

Egypt’s Mubarak calls
for cabinet to resign in revolt

Egypt’s Mubarak calls for cabinet to resign, The Raw Story, January 28, 2011, by Nathan Diebenow, photo of Hosni Mubarak courtesy of Wikimedia Commons: Evans Liberal Politics is pleased to partner with The Raw Story to bring you cutting edge news.

n his first appearance on television since a wave of protests engulfed his nation four days ago, Egypt’s President Hosni Mubarak has called for the members of his cabinet to resign.

official photograph of Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak

“I have asked the government to present its resignation today,” Mubarak said, according to a translator.

While Mubarak said that he would appoint a new government on Saturday, he did not step down.

Mubarak defended his decision to call in the Egyptian military to quell the protests against his regime, though regretting that there were “innocent casualties and victims.”

He also promised to initiate social, economic and political reforms, saying that he was on the side of the poor.

“[O]ur plans to combat unemployment and provide more educational services, healthcare and housing, will remain conditional on our efforts to maintain Egypt’s security,” he said.

Mubarak sent out the army and clamped a curfew on key cities on Friday as deaths in raging street protests demanding an end to his three-decade rule rose to at least 27.

Thirteen people died in clashes with police Friday in the canal city of Suez, at least five in Cairo and two more in Mansura, north of the capital with many fatalities caused by rubber-coated bullets, medics and witnesses said.

Seven people died on Wednesday and Thursday.

With the rising tide of anger exacting a heavy toll, key allies the United States, Britain and Germany expressed concern about the violence, with Britain noting that the protesters had “legitimate grievances.”

There were also rumblings in Washington that massive US military and economic aid to Egypt, which has a 1979 peace treaty with Israel, might come under review in light of Cairo’s suppression of the protests.

Thousands ignored a 6:00 pm (1600 GMT) to 7:00 am curfew in Cairo, Alexandria and Suez announced by state television, with many protesters calling on patrolling soldiers to join them.

“The army and the people, together!” protesters chanted in front of the Egyptian television building.

Soldiers made V-for-victory signs at passers-by near Cairo’s opera house more than two hours after the curfew was to go into effect, with some civilians clambering onto their armoured vehicles.

“We don’t want Mubarak any more, we don’t want this government any more. But we love the army,” said young Ehab Aley.

Protesters poured out of mosques after Friday prayers and run rampant through the streets, throwing stones and torching two police stations. Police chased them with batons, firing tear gas, water cannon and rubber bullets.

“Today is different: all Egyptians are together, the rich and the poor, to get Mubarak out,” shouted one protester in downtown Cairo, his face covered with a scarf against the billowing tear gas.

Protesters set fire to the Cairo headquarters of Mubarak’s ruling National Democratic Party, with television showing footage of the building which overlooks the Nile still ablaze six hours after it was engulfed in flames.

In Suez, protesters overran a police station, seized weapons and set fire to security force vehicles in fierce clashes.

The demonstrations, inspired by events in Tunisia, have swelled into the largest uprising in Egypt in the three decades of Mubarak’s rule, sending shock waves across the region.

At least 27 people have now been killed, hundreds more injured and some 1,000 arrested across the country since the protests broke out on Tuesday.

Looting broke out in several parts of Cairo after nightfall, including at offices linked to the government in the upmarket Mohandeseen neighbourhood, with people taking office equipment without any police intervention.

Egypt Cairo Uprising
Protest Video Jan. 28, 2011

Internet connections were cut across Egypt early on Friday, while mobile phone signals were patchy and text messages inoperative, affecting the ability of protesters to communicate with each other.

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton urged Egypt to do “everything” to restrain its security forces and to embark on immediate reform, while German Chancellor Angela Merkel called on Mubarak to “allow peaceful protests.”

US President Barack Obama, who had appealed to both sides on Thursday to avoid violence, held a 40-minute meeting on the situation with top members of his national security team, and ordered further briefings later in the day.

British Foreign Secretary William Hague said he was “very concerned about the pictures … coming from Egypt.”

He said it was “important to recognise that the people involved do have legitimate grievances.”

Analysts say the United States was growing increasingly concerned that the refusal of Egypt to implement more political reforms could lead to further unrest and instability.

Egypt is one of the world’s largest recipients of US aid, and receives $1.3 billion a year in military assistance alone.

But White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said: “We will be reviewing our assistance posture based on events that take place in the coming days.”

Concerns were reflected in the financial world as well on Friday, with Fitch ratings agency saying it had revised its ratings outlook for Egypt to negative.

Continuing unrest would threaten economic and financial performance and would lead to a rating downgrade, it said.

The Cairo bourse was closed for the weekend, after having plunged 10 percent this week, but stocks on Wall Street fell sharply on the news.

Oil prices were higher partly because of the Egyptian unrest.

Oil jumped “on the back of concerns that increased unrest in Egypt and the rest of North Africa could impact the Suez Canal and the safe passage of oil and gas to and from Europe”, CMC Markets analyst Michael Hewson said.

Mubarak, aged 82 and said to be in poor health, has not been seen publicly since the unrest erupted. However, the culture ministry has said he is to make an appearance on Saturday at the opening of the annual Cairo book fair.

Leading dissident Mohamed ElBaradei, who has said he would be prepared to lead a transitional authority if he were asked, was among a crowd of around 2,000 targeted by police and was forced to take refuge inside a Cairo mosque.

Some imams had encouraged worshippers to “go out and seek change,” an AFP correspondent reported.

In London, British Airways said it was delaying its Friday evening flight to Cairo until Saturday morning to avoid landing during the curfew hours.

With AFP

See Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution, The Raw Story, January 28, 2011, by David Edwards.

See Obama called on Egypt’s government to refrain from violence, The Raw Story, January 28, 2011, by Nathan Diebenow.

See US secretly backed Egyptian protest leaders, The Raw Story, January 28, 2011, by Nathan Diebenow, excerpt quoted verbatim:

For the last three years, the US government secretly provided aid to the leaders behind this week’s social uprising in Egypt aimed to topple the government of President Hosni Mubarak, according to a leaked diplomatic cable.

See Under ‘emergency’ for decades, Egypt’s special powers mirrored in post-9/11 US, The Raw Story, January 28, 2011, by Stephen C. Webster.

EMERGENCY APPEAL

EMERGENCY APPEAL: From Paul Evans: It’s a miracle that I am still able to bring you Evans Liberal Politics. I am in severe poverty and am now without fuel oil to heat my my home: the furnace is OFF. And it’s 10 degrees F out. Please help us! CenturyLink, my phone company and DSL provider, was kind enough to give me a short extension on bill payment. Folks, this won’t go on forever. We need your donations, ASAP. Please send checks OR money orders to Paul Evans, 5396 Overton Road, Wooster, OH 44691. Help keep free journalism alive and help my family have gas for my car and something to eat. If you can help though a direct donation, call me at 330-262-0571. Thank you and Bless you all.

OCInkjet.com 392x72 banner, image is updated by season.

Visit our well known Guide to Liberal News & Politics on the Web, where you find out where to find out the truth.

Have a Listen to Our Playlists of Classic Rock Only Music, the Liberal Christian Rock Playlist, or Pure Electronic Music, or just have a Listen to the master Playlist of 230 Rock, Pop & Electronic Hits. Get your music fix while you browse the news.

Follow Evans Liberal Politics and Paul Evans on
Twitter logo link for Evans Liberal Politics on Twitter

Follow Paul Evans on
Facebook logo link to follow Paul Evans on Facebook

News Video: Judge with Republican Party Ties Strikes Down Key Healthcare Provision on Insurance Mandates

Evans Liberal Politics
December 14, 2010

 

Judge with Republican Party Ties Strikes Down
Key Healthcare Provision on Insurance Mandates

The Why-Should-I-Get-Out-Of-My-Chair Gap in 2012

Evans Liberal Politics
December 14, 2010

 

The Why-Should-I-Get-Out-Of-My-Chair Gap in 2012

The Why-Should-I-Get-Out-Of-My-Chair Gap in 2012, Robert Reich.org, December 12, 2010, by Robert Reich, used with permission, quoted verbatim:

In the 2010 midterm elections Democrats suffered from a so-called “enthusiasm gap.”

If Dems agree to the tax plan just negotiated by the White House with Republican leaders, they’ll face a “why-should-I-get-up-out-of-my-chair” gap that will make 2010’s Dem enthusiasm seem like a pep rally by comparison.

OCInkjet.com 250x250 banner,<br /> image is updated by season.

It’s a $70,000 gift for every millionaire, financed by a gigantic hole in the federal budget that will put on the cutting board education, infrastructure, and everything else most other Americans need and want.

Some Dem apologists say the deal is a $900 billion stimulus. Not true. The rich spend a smaller share of their incomes than everyone else, so the huge benefits going their way will barely stimulate the economy. (Their savings will move around the world wherever they can get the highest return.)

And while middle and working class consumers will get a small break from payroll taxes, they’ll use most of it to help pay down their debts because they know the tax break isn’t permanent while their debt payments and penalties are growing. Again, very little stimulus.

An extension of unemployment benefits for the long-term jobless will surely help them and the economy overall. But a new WPA to put the jobless to work would have been far better. The longer they’re out of work the harder it will be for them ever to get back in, even if and when jobs return. But apparently a new WPA wasn’t even considered.

It’s not just the Dem base that worries about the deal. Independents who believe the dice are increasingly loaded in favor of the privileged and powerful are also concerned. (Just the latest example: The New York Times today reports on a small cabal of bankers from the biggest Wall Street houses who meet regularly to maintain their lock on the lucrative multi-trillion dollar derivatives trade. The Times story could have gone further and revealed how much the big banks are spending on lobbyists to gut provisions of the financial reform act aimed at regulating derivatives trading.)

Even Tea Partiers are convinced big government, big business, and Wall Street colluding against the rest of America. Only instead of blaming the powerful and privileged, the Tea Partiers are more comfortable taking aim at America’s so-called cultural and intellectual elites.

The point is that with income and wealth more concentrated at the top than it’s been since 1928, with money flooding politics as never before (much of it secret), and with cynicism about government at a post-World War II high, Obama’s tax deal couldn’t come at a worse time.

Enthusiasts on the right want to shrink government, and the deal sets them up nicely.

Most Democrats, many Independents, and everyone else who still sees government as our last bulwark against privilege and power, are aghast by the deal. They ask: How could it have come to this? And when 2012 rolls around, why should I get out of my chair?

here. Reich’s newest book, Aftershock: The Next Economy and America’s Future has been released September 21, and is available for ordering at this link (Amazon.com). The above article is from Reich’s new blog, and can be viewed here.

Robert Reich’s commentaries are available for listening to at Publicradio.com. Watch the video Aftershock: The next economy and America’s future (about his new book). Thanks to Professor Reich for permission to publish his articles on an ongoing basis.

InformIT (Pearson Education)

Have a Listen to Our Playlists of Classic Rock Only Music, the Liberal Christian Rock Playlist, or Pure Electronic Music, or just have a Listen to the master Playlist of 230 Rock, Pop & Electronic Hits. Get your music fix while you browse the news.

Follow Evans Liberal Politics and Paul Evans on
Twitter logo link for Evans Liberal Politics on Twitter

Follow Paul Evans on
Facebook logo link to follow Paul Evans on Facebook

News Video: Obama, GOP Reach Deal to Extend Tax Cuts

Evans Liberal Politics
December 7, 2010

 

Obama, GOP Reach Deal to Extend Tax Cuts

Evans Liberal Politics, December 7, 2010, Summary by Paul Evans: THIS is a Big ….Deal! Everyone (including the top two percent) gets the lower Bush tax rates for two years, which seems like a cave for the Obama administration until you consider the whole package. The lower tax rate is only for two years, when, presumably the economy will be on firmer footing. Democrats get some of what they want, too. Unemployment benefits get extended by 13 months, (which was the only decent thing to do in this economy). There is a measure cutting the Social Security tax by 2 percent for one year. Another compromise is that the estate tax is brought back, although at a lower level than Obama and the Democrats would have liked. A further measure that Obama pushed is that businesses will be able to write off any investments they make next year. This is indeed a big deal.

Will Democrats Split Over Obama Deal with the GOP?

See ‘Framework for a bipartisan agreement’ on tax cuts, MSNBC First Read, December 6, 2010, by NBC News and Carrie Dann of MSNBC, excerpt quoted verbatim:

Per Hill sources, Speaker Nancy Pelosi was very direct with the president this afternoon that a significant number of her members do not support this package.

Aides called it a deal with Republicans but not a done deal.

In a statement released after Obama’s remarks, a spokesman for Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid said simply: “Now that the President has outlined his proposal, Senator Reid plans on discussing it with his caucus tomorrow.”

Watch and Read White House seeks Democrats’ backing for tax deal, December 7, 2010, by CNN Wire Staff.

See Obama Calls Tax-Cuts Deal the ‘Right Thing to Do’; Many Democrats Disagree, Politics Daily, December 6, 2010, by Patricia Murphy.

See Democrats Frustrated Over Obama Tax Deal With GOP, NPR, December 7, 2010, by Mara Liasson.

See Sanders may filibuster Obama-GOP tax deal, Associated Press on The Raw Story, December 6, 2010, by AP.

Video: Is Obama Weak, Stupid Or Complicit?

Evans Liberal Politics
December 5, 2010

 

Is Obama Weak, Stupid Or Complicit?

$1.99 Web Hosting at Go Daddy

Video: Obama Optimistic About Bipartisan Deal on Taxes

Evans Liberal Politics
December 2, 2010

 

Video: Obama Optimistic
About Bipartisan Deal on Taxes


Also Watch: Boehner Blasts Dems
‘Chickencrap’ Tax Cuts Gambit

Obama and Dems Struggle to Reclaim Liberals’ Enthusiasm Ahead of Elections

Evans Liberal Politics
October 6, 2010

 

Obama and Dems Struggle to Reclaim
Liberals’ Enthusiasm Ahead of Elections


Obama Strains to Get Liberals Back Into Fold Ahead of Vote, © The New York Times, October 5, 2010, by Peter Baker, excerpt quoted verbatim:

WASHINGTON — With four weeks until Congressional elections that will shape the remainder of his term, President Obama is increasingly focused on generating enthusiasm within the base that helped put him in the White House two years ago, from college students to African-Americans.

If You Agree
Click on Bad Old Bush
to Visit Paul’s Playlist
of 206 Rock & Pop Hits


magazine cover from the Daily Mirror with the words 'How can 59,054,087 people be so DUMB' on Bush's re-election serves as a link to launch Paul's Playlist of 190 rock and pop hits

But Mr. Obama has aimed much of his prodding — and not a small amount of personal pique — at the liberals most deflated by the first two years of his presidency. Assuming that many independents are out of reach, White House strategists are counting on Mr. Obama to energize, cajole, wheedle and even shame the left into matching the Tea Party momentum that has propelled Republicans this year.

As he holds rallies aimed at college students and minority groups, sends e-mail to his old list of campaign supporters and prepares to host a town hall-style meeting on MTV, the president essentially is appealing to his liberal base to put aside its disappointment in him. Without offering regrets for policy choices that have angered liberals, Mr. Obama argues that the Republican alternative is far worse.

“You can’t sit it out,” he told a conference call of college student journalists last week. “You can’t suddenly just check in once every 10 years or so, on an exciting presidential election, and then not pay attention during big midterm elections where we’ve got a real big choice between Democrats and Republicans.” He added that “the energy that you were able to bring to our politics in 2008, that’s needed not less now, it’s needed more now.”

At times, though, the message has come across as scolding and testy, in the view of some Democrats. Mr. Obama told Rolling Stone magazine that Democrats “need to buck up” because it would be “inexcusable” for them to stay home. Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. told a fund-raiser recently that the base should “stop whining and get out there and look at the alternatives.”

The White House may be making progress closing the so-called enthusiasm gap with Republicans, according to Democratic strategists who point to improving poll numbers and fund-raising. But the fact that Mr. Obama needs to make such a concerted effort highlights the depth of disaffection among liberals over what they see as his failure to aggressively push for the change he promised.

“It’s great that President Obama is showing a fighting spirit in the weeks before an election, but what his former voters need to see is that same fighting spirit when he’s governing,” said Adam Green, a co-founder of the Progressive Change Campaign Committee, a group started last year to advocate for liberal goals and candidates.

David Axelrod, the president’s senior adviser, said the appeal to the base stemmed entirely from political reality. “It’s not frustration at all,” he said. “It’s fundamental. Almost the entire Republican margin is based on the enthusiasm gap, and if Democrats come out in the same turnout as Republicans, it’s going to be a much different election.” ….

Read the full article, here.

Why Pay More? $7.49 .COM Domains from GoDaddy.com 468x60

"The Republican Wave Has Crested;"
Democrats Gaining in Polls


“The Republican Wave Has Crested”; 2 New Polls Show Significant 7 Point Gains for the Democrats, Daily Kos, October 6, 2010, by TomP, excerpt quoted verbatim:

We have seen it recently in California where Brown and Boxer are opening up signifcant leads, in Washington and in Connecticut. Yes, the economy is making it a tough year, but new polling shows the Democrats coming back. The tradmed, however, is so invested in their wished-for Republican wave, that the news is not getting out. WE need to spread the word:

Submitted by Simon Rosenberg on 10/5/10

More evidence this morning confirming the argument we’ve been making for the past few weeks – the Republican wave has crested, and a new dynamic in election 2010 has taken hold.

New Rasmussen and Washington Post polls each show a 7 point swing towards the Democrats in the national Congressional Generic in the past few weeks. As we wrote yesterday this movement tracks similar movement seen in other polls released over the past few days, indicating that the Democrats have made substantial improvement in their position over the past month.

2 New Polls Show Significant 7 Point Gains for the Democrats

Simon Rosenberg is President and Founder of NDN and a veteran of the 1992 Clinton War Room. More from him:

In the lead Washington Post story on their new poll, the 7 point Democratic gain was “modest,” and the 6 point Republican lead “significant.” Not sure how that got by their editor this morning but shows how fundamentally invested much of DC’s political class is in the September version of this story which had Democrats losing the House, a wave election and big Republican gains were already “baked in the cake.”

2 New Polls Show Significant 7 Point Gains for the Democrats

Even with 9.5 % unemployment, the Republicans are having trouble winning both chambers of Congress. 9.5% unemployment. Yes, it was Bush’s fault, but people often just blame whoever is in office. 100s of millions of dollars spent by Big Business and the Billionaires, and yet the Republicans still have not put it away. This was their chance and they have not and will not succeed.

It’s despair that leads people to give up. We need to be agents of hope, showing that Dems can win. Simon Rosenberg sees Dem fortunes improving through October and into the election:

Given current trends it is reasonable to conclude that the Democrats could pick up another 3-6 points in the national polls before election day, which would have a significant impact of course on the many close races across the country.

Read the full article, here

OCInkjet.com 392x72 banner, image is updated by season.

Check out Paul’s Playlist of 206 Rock and Pop Hits, and have fun with all the artists you love while you surf the web.


NEW! For our readers: Check out our 40 song "Only Classic Rock Playlist", now on its own page!


Follow Evans Liberal Politics and Paul Evans on
Twitter logo link for Evans Liberal Politics on Twitter

Follow Paul Evans on
Facebook logo link to follow Paul Evans on Facebook

We’re Counting on YOU! Please share Evans Liberal Politics with friends! While we enjoy a certain level of popularity on the web, in order for us to keep bringing you the latest in liberal news and politics, we really need you to SHARE Evans Liberal Politics with your friends and contacts. Can you help us today? If you value liberal and progressive ideas and politics, please simply share Evans Liberal Politics with friends and contacts to keep free, independent and liberal journalism alive. Thanks in advance.

To make a Word or .pdf document of an article, or share or email it, simply load the individual article by clicking the dark blue title at the very top, or use the icons beneath the article.