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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: tejek who wrote (202149)9/15/2004 5:12:34 AM
From: Amy J  Respond to of 1573558
 
Tejek, "The prime minister may also face pressure to take action to push US President George Bush to take climate change seriously.

The US has yet to sign up to the Kyoto Protocol under which industrialised nations agreed to limit their greenhouse gas emissions. "

news.bbc.co.uk

What's up with Bush and the environment?

Regards,
Amy J



To: tejek who wrote (202149)9/15/2004 9:43:24 AM
From: combjelly  Respond to of 1573558
 
"Has youpid answered your question re. Boston and his new ghost NG unit?"

Yousef? Answer a guestion? Surely you jest...

It is difficult to write an agent to answer a question unless it is a highly structured one. So never expect yousef.exe to actually answer a question unless it is a 'yes/no' type.



To: tejek who wrote (202149)9/15/2004 3:49:30 PM
From: Road Walker  Respond to of 1573558
 
Democrats Score Win in Fight Over Nader in Florida

By Michael Peltier

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (Reuters) - A Florida judge ordered county elections officials on Wednesday to issue absentee ballots without the name of independent presidential candidate Ralph Nader (news - web sites), a possible blow to President Bush (news - web sites) in the battleground state.



Circuit Judge Kevin Davey overruled a move this week by Florida's elections supervisor to include Nader on the ballot for the Nov. 2 election as a Reform Party candidate.

Nader was a candidate in 2000 when Bush won Florida by 537 votes to clinch the White House. Analysts said most of Nader's nearly 98,000 votes in Florida would have gone to Democrat Al Gore (news - web sites) had Nader not been on the ballot.

A poll released on Aug. 30 by the Miami Herald and St. Petersburg Times showed Bush leading Democrat John Kerry (news - web sites) in Florida by 48 percent to 46 percent, with Nader at 2 percent. The poll surveyed 800 voters from Aug. 22 to 25.

Davey issued a temporary injunction last week preventing the state from putting Nader on the ballot, siding with a Democratic challenge that the Reform Party did not qualify as a national party under state law.

On Monday, Division of Elections Director Dawn Roberts told Florida's 67 county voting supervisors to put Nader's name on overseas absentee ballots that must be sent out by Saturday.

Roberts said Hurricane Ivan, set to strike the U.S. Gulf coast, had cast doubt on whether Davey could hold a hearing on a permanent injunction scheduled for Wednesday. As a result, she said, Florida's Department of State filed an appeal against the temporary injunction.

The appeal automatically stayed the injunction, allowing Roberts to certify Nader as a legitimate candidate and the counties to put his name on the ballots.

Davey on Wednesday overrode that stay and said that if counties had already sent out ballots with Nader's name on them, they must send corrected versions without it.

"The bottom line is ... I have a very small window of opportunity here to try to get it right and that's what counts," he said.

The Florida Democratic Party had accused Republican Gov. Jeb Bush of defying the judiciary in order to help his brother win the election. Bush said the election department's action was meant to ensure county elections supervisors had the time to fulfill their duties.

The case is also before the Florida Supreme Court (news - web sites), which deemed it of "great public importance" and scheduled oral arguments for Friday.