Jumat, 22 Juni 2012

Axelrod says voters will judge Obama on actions

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WASHINGTON (AP) - Senior political adviser David Axelrod says he doesn't think voters will make much of President Barack Obama's remark that the private sector is doing fine.

Axelrod tells CBS's "This Morning" that what Obama meant to say was, quote, "in the last 27 months, we have created 4.3 million private sector jobs." Obama made the remark at a White House news conference, but subsequently explained it further, saying the economy needs to improve.

In his interview Monday, Axelrod said voters will make their judgments based on Obama's actions, not his words.

And he said Obama called the news conference last Thursday specifically to discuss "urgent actions we should take to undergird the economy."

Axelrod said the election will be about who is best suited to lead the country into the future.

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Wildfires in Colo., NM burn out of control

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By THOMAS PEIPERT
Associated Press

BELLVUE, Colo. (AP) - Massive wildfires in drought-parched Colorado and New Mexico tested the resources of state and federal crews Monday and underscored the need to replenish an aging U.S. aerial firefighting fleet needed to combat a year-round fire season.

Wyoming diverted personnel and aircraft from two fires there to help with a 64-square-mile wildfire in northern Colorado. Canada also lent two aerial bombers to fight the Colorado blaze following the recent crash of a U.S. tanker in Utah. And an elite federal firefighting crew arrived to try to begin containing a fire that destroyed at least 118 structures.

All told, about 600 firefighters will be battling the fire some 15 miles west of Fort Collins by Tuesday, said incident commander Bill Hahnenberg.

"We are a very high priority nationally. We can get all the resources we want and need," he said.

The U.S. Forest Service said late Monday it would add more aircraft to its aerial firefighting fleet, contracting one air tanker from Alaska and four from Canada. Two more air tankers were being activated in California.

The announcement came after Colorado's U.S. House delegation demanded that the agency deploy more resources to the fire, which was totally uncontained and has forced hundreds of people to abandon their homes.

The Larimer County sheriff's office confirmed Monday that one person died in the fire.

The family of Linda Steadman, 62, had reported her missing after the fire started Saturday, sheriff's officials said. Her home received two evacuation notices that appeared to go to her answering machine, and a firefighter who tried to get past a locked gate to her home to warn her was chased out by flames that he later saw engulf her home, Sheriff Justin Smith said.

Investigators found remains in her burned home Monday that haven't been positively identified yet, but her family issued a statement saying Steadman died in the cabin she loved, Smith said.

In a letter to the Forest Service, Colorado's congressmen said the need for firefighting aircraft was "dire." Colorado U.S. Sen. Mark Udall urged President Barack Obama to sign legislation that would allow the Forest Service to contract at least seven large air tankers to add to its fleet of 13 - which includes the two on loan from Canada.

The temporary additions to the firefighting aircraft fleet will make 17 air tankers available to the forest service, which has deployed 10 air tankers, 62 helicopters and 4,000 personnel to more than 100 fires nationwide.

One of the region's most potent aerial firefighting forces - two Wyoming Air National Guard C-130s fitted to drop slurry - sat on a runway in Cheyenne, 50 miles north of the Colorado fire. The reason: The Forest Service, by law, cannot call for military resources until it deems that its fleet is fully busy. It also takes 36 hours to mobilize the crews and planes, officials said.

"They just haven't thrown the switch yet because they feel like there are adequate resources available," said Mike Ferris, a spokesman for the National Interagency Fire Center in Boise, Idaho.

The Colorado fire had five single-engine air tankers, five heavy air tankers and seven helicopters on scene, fire officials said. The Colorado National Guard also provided two Blackhawk helicopters.

Evacuees expressed gratitude for the help.

"They're doing the best they can," said Barb Hermsen as she watched a helicopter make daring raids through smoke and flame to protect homes. "We know how much they have to go through, and where they're going - man, it's crazy."

In New Mexico, firefighters used a break in the hot and windy weather and got new air and ground support to battle a fast-moving wildfire that charred tens of thousands of acres and forced hundreds of residents to leave their homes in the southern part of the state.

Smoke filled the air in the mountain community of Ruidoso as evacuees gathered at a high school gymnasium to get an update on the lightning-sparked fire in the Sierra Blanca mountain range. The blaze exploded over the weekend and reached more than 54 square miles by Monday.

An estimated 35 structures have been damaged or destroyed by the blaze, and fire managers expect that number to grow once damage assessments are done.

Elsewhere in New Mexico, firefighters made slow progress against the largest wildfire in state history. The blaze has charred 435 square miles of forest since it was sparked by lightning in mid-May, and was 37 percent contained Monday.

Arizona's state forestry division dispatched two water tenders and 15 fire trucks to New Mexico, which also welcomed the arrival of a DC-10 jet that can lay a 100-yard-wide, mile-long line of retardant or water.

Fire bosses in New Mexico and Arizona ordered more elite crews, engines and air support from the Southwest Coordination Center in Albuquerque, where director Kenan Jaycox said resources are approaching full capacity.

"It's a balancing game," Jaycox said.

At least 18 large wildfires are burning in nine U.S. states, forcing the reshuffling of fire crews and aircraft. The National Interagency Fire Center said 4,000 of 15,000 federal firefighters are currently deployed at fires around the country.

Because aircraft had been scarce, federal fire managers asked Wyoming to send National Guard helicopters to a 4.5-square-mile wildfire in Guernsey State Park. In nearby Medicine Bow National Forest, crews containing a 13-square-mile fire sent air support to Colorado.

Forest Service Chief Tom Tidwell has long insisted the federal government has enough resources to respond to a year-round wildfire season driven by drought, heat, decades of fighting forest fires rather than letting them run their natural course, and bark beetle pine tree kill.

"We have enough resources at this time to be able to deal with the fires we currently are dealing with and what we expect to have to deal with the rest of this fire season," Tidwell told The Associated Press last week. He emphasized that the agency has the authority to transfer funds from other accounts to meet firefighting costs in any given year.

Some 1,459 square miles have burned across the country this year - less than the same period in 2011, when 6,327 square miles burned.

___

Associated Press writers Susan Montoya Bryan in Albuquerque, N.M.; Felicia Fonseca in Flagstaff, Ariz.; and Mead Gruver in Cheyenne, Wyo., contributed to this report.

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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Attorney: Terror suspect isolated for a year

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LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) - An Iraqi man facing terrorism charged in Kentucky is asking a judge to release him to home detention until his trial in August.

The attorney for 24-year-old Mohanad Shareef Hammadi says his client is being held in solitary confinement under an assumed name in a jail with no interaction with other inmates or recreation during daylight hours.

Attorney James Earhart says the treatment violates Hammadi's rights.

A co-defendant in the case, 30-year-old Waad Ramadan Alwan, has pleaded guilty and is awaiting sentencing on Oct. 2.

Hammadi faces 12 charges, including perjury and attempting to send material support to al-Qaida. U.S. District Judge Thomas B. Russell has postponed Hammadi's trial from July 30 to Aug. 27.

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Family of US hiker trapped in New Zealand relieved

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NEENAH, Wis. (AP) - The father of a Wisconsin college student trapped for nine days in the New Zealand wilderness with her boyfriend says the two are adept at solving problems and they made good decisions.

Erica Klintworth and boyfriend Alec Brown became trapped when a snowstorm prevented them from crossing a river and returning from a backpacking trip that began June 1. The University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point students were finally able to cross Sunday.

Dane Klintworth, of Neenah, says the couple made the right decision to wait to cross the raging river and to ration their food.

He says he and his wife didn't learn the 21-year-olds were missing until Saturday morning. He says it was the worst day of their lives until they got word that night that the two were safe.

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Jurors to hear closing arguments in Clemens case

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By FREDERIC J. FROMMER
Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) - After eight weeks, jurors will finally hear closing arguments in the Roger Clemens perjury trial Tuesday. They're expected to begin deliberations later in the day.

Jurors will have to digest and process 46 witnesses and 26 days of testimony.

On Monday, the defense made it official that Clemens would not take the stand. With the jury out of the room, Clemens came up to the podium, leaned in, and told the judge in a deep voice and Texas drawl: "Yes, sir, I am not testifying."

The former star baseball pitcher is on trial for allegedly lying to Congress when he denied using steroids or human growth hormone.

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Fla. gets divided opinions on self-defense laws

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By GARY FINEOUT
Associated Press

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) - Nearly 6,600 emails gathered by a task force looking into Florida's self-defense laws have been filled with passionate responses to the Trayvon Martin shooting as well as caustic criticisms of the Republican-controlled state government and of those who called for the arrest of George Zimmerman.

Gov. Rick Scott set up the task force, which will hold its first public hearing Tuesday in central Florida close to where neighborhood watch volunteer Zimmerman shot and killed the unarmed teenager in February. The 28-year-old has been both vilified and defended by people across the nation for his actions.

Zimmerman said after the shooting and since that he acted in self-defense and police in Sanford did not arrest him. But after weeks of protests, he was charged with second-degree murder and is back in jail because a judge revoked his bond. The shooting set off an intense national debate about self-defense laws, race and other matters, which were reflected in many of the emails sent by people from California to New York and the nation's heartland.

Florida passed the "stand your ground law" seven years ago. It allows use of deadly force to prevent "imminent death or great bodily harm," and it removed a person's duty to retreat in the face of such peril that was required in a previous self-defense law. The change was strongly backed by the National Rifle Association.

Many of the emails call on Florida to either keep the law as it is - or to repeal the "stand your ground" part. Those who oppose to the law called Florida a dangerous place to visit.

"Please repeal this terrible law that allows murderers to walk free," wrote Austin Doyle who lives in the Panhandle. "Christians shouldn't be carrying guns everywhere they go."

Micheal Rodney from Venice, Fla., blasted Scott for creating the task force and said it was premature to even look at the state's self-defense laws.

"We are a nation of laws, and the full extent of the law has not been applied in this case, and we do not know what laws, if any, have been broken," Rodney wrote in late April. "...For Governor Scott to have acted in the way he has been portrayed, without any rebuttal on his part, means that I have wasted my previous vote for his election."

W.M. Smith from Monroe County meanwhile urged the task force to "correct insane gun laws."

"My ancestors pioneered central Florida in 1830. They used guns to secure food, not for machismo. Thanks to the gun lobby, the opposite is true today," Smith wrote. "I currently feel far safer in Central America than in my native state."

Some of the emails complained about the racial overtones of Martin's killing that they said had been pushed by the national media. The case has become a racial flashpoint because the Martin family and supporters contend Zimmerman singled out the 17-year-old because he was black.

Roy Callahan of Gainesville sent to the task force a copy of a letter he sent to State Sen. Chris Smith. He sharply criticized the Fort Lauderdale Democrat for complaining that the current law is confusing.

"The only thing 'controversial' and 'confusing' is a Democrat and 'African American' politician using the term 'controversial', and 'confusing' to promote an agenda," wrote Callahan. "If the liberal media, Al Sharpton, Jessie Jackson and others of their ilk respected the rule of law the 'confusion on the part of the public, law enforcement, and judicial system' you refer to would not have occurred."

John Smith, who lives in the central Florida retirement community of The Villages, argued that Zimmerman's case was not covered by the "stand your ground" law since he had been following Martin the night of the shooting in the gated community outside Orlando.

"Please leave the law as it is, or at most, better define what 'stand your ground' means," wrote Smith. "I don't think it means you can be following someone on the move, and then when confronted, can use deadly force unless you are prevented from retreating."

___

Follow Gary Fineout on Twitter: http://twitter.com/fineout

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Kamis, 21 Juni 2012

Key senator wants tax overhaul to reduce deficits

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By ALAN FRAM
Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) - An overhaul of the nation's tax code should raise additional revenue to reduce massive budget deficits and should help strengthen the economy, the Senate's top tax-writer said Monday.

Though he provided almost no detail, the stance by Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont., that rewriting tax laws should be a part of deficit reduction underscored the differences between the two parties. Many Republicans say a tax overhaul should involve lower rates and fewer tax loopholes without producing extra revenue to erase red ink.

"Any tax reform plan must be developed with a sound budget in mind that reduces deficits and debt," Baucus said in remarks at the Bipartisan Policy Center, a policy research organization driven by moderates from both parties.

Baucus conceded that any tax overhaul would probably have to wait until after the November elections because partisanship is too strong now, a widely held view in Washington.

He also said he believes lawmakers will first have to deal with the year-end "fiscal cliff," when billions in tax cuts will expire and billions more in automatic spending cuts will start taking effect unless Congress acts.

Republicans want to renew broad tax cuts, first enacted under President George W. Bush, for everyone. President Barack Obama and many Democrats want to let the Bush tax cuts expire only for people earning over $250,000 yearly, though some Democrats want to raise that threshold to $1 million.

In an important tonal contrast with Republicans, Baucus said while he favors eliminating tax breaks to lower overall tax rates, "some of that's a little unrealistic politically" because of the popularity of many parts of the current tax code.

Republicans have already pushed a budget through the House that would create just two tax rates, 25 percent and 10 percent, down from the current five rates that top out at 35 percent.

It would be paid for by eliminating tax breaks, but Republicans have not specified which ones they would terminate, though they have asserted they could achieve their goal. Two of the largest breaks are the home mortgage interest deduction and the exclusion from taxes of the value of employer-provided health insurance, both of which are widely and intensely popular.

Baucus also said that dozens of narrow tax breaks - mostly for businesses - that have expired or will soon expire should not be renewed unless they have "a tangible benefit to our economy or society."

He said the goals of rewriting tax laws should be to help create jobs, make U.S. companies more competitive and innovative, and encourage more education and opportunity.

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