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Politics : Bush Administration's Media Manipulation--MediaGate? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: PartyTime who wrote (7020)5/17/2006 6:50:48 PM
From: jttmab  Respond to of 9838
 
The RNC is going to have to give Tobin a special job at a high salary to make up for Tobin's sacrifice for the good of the party.

They're also going to have to think of a better way for next time. Maybe toss away cell phones?

jttmab



To: PartyTime who wrote (7020)5/18/2006 12:00:34 PM
From: Skywatcher  Read Replies (5) | Respond to of 9838
 
excellent...little late, but this should continue to snowball



To: PartyTime who wrote (7020)5/18/2006 7:41:57 PM
From: longnshort  Respond to of 9838
 
Tedwardo Kennedias joins ACLU and Messico against the US!



To: PartyTime who wrote (7020)5/19/2006 8:55:55 AM
From: Proud_Infidel  Respond to of 9838
 
Caught in deep water: Chirac swims against a tide of scandal
The Times ^ | May 11, 2006 | Charles Bremner

AT 73 and in the final months of a 12-year presidency, Jacques Chirac should be contemplating a comfortable retirement as a respected elder stateman.

Instead, he finds himself beset by scandal, presiding over a feuding and paralysed Government, and an object of widespread derision. In Paris, as in London, there is a pervasive smell of political decay.

In an apparent act of desperation, M Chirac made a rare television appearance after a Cabinet meeting yesterday to try to extract Dominique de Villepin, his Prime Minister, from a dirty tricks scandal and rebuff reports that he himself had held £30 million in a Japanese bank account. “The Republic is not a dictatorship of rumours, a dictatorship of calumny,” he said.

But even as he did so the so-called Clearstream affair claimed its biggest victim yet — Jean-Louis Gergorin, a vice-president of EADS, the FrancoGerman parent of Airbus, who was a former colleague of M de Villepin in the Prime Minister’s earlier career as a diplomat.

The President’s belated intervention did little to dispel the impression that his administration was near anarchy with a discredited Prime Minister locked in combat with his No 2, Nicolas Sarkozy, the Interior Minister and leader of the Union for a Popular Movement party.

The Socialist Opposition tabled a no-confidence motion in the Government. Its leader, François Hollande, said that the Government had become an international laughing-stock and that “in a normal democracy, de Villepin would have been out a long time ago”.

Libération, the left-wing daily, said: “This is no longer a Government. It is a raft which has been drifting for weeks along the coast of discredit.”

The Prime Minister’s authority has been shredded by the rejection of his labour reforms, and successive disclosures in the Clearstream affair — a tale of skullduggery involving spies and high civil servants.

The disclosures concern his apparent role in a 2004 campaign to smear M Sarkozy with a fake list of alleged bribe- takers. The list, proven to be fabrication, alleged that M Sarkozy banked bribes from defence contractors allegedly paid through Clearstream, a Luxembourg finance house.

M Chirac dismissed the affair as a witch-hunt driven by rumour, and insisted: “I have every confidence in the Government of Dominique de Villepin to conduct the mission I have entrusted him with.”

The Elysée Palace also dismissed as a fabrication a related report of an illicit Chirac bank account in Japan. The alleged account was said to have been mentioned by General Philippe Rondot, a spy chief, to judges investigating the Clearstream affair and leaked to the media in a further manifestation of the poisonous political atmosphere in Paris.

Though he is now fighting for survival, M de Villepin set off for a long-planned dinner meeting with Tony Blair in London last night, declaring that France was not interested in “media soap opera”.

M de Villepin and M Chirac are banking on the public’s boredom with the murky Clearstream affair, especially as the World Cup and summer holidays approach. Polls show that only about 35 per cent believe M de Villepin should go.

By tradition, the President would have imposed his authority by replacing M de Villepin after he bungled a labour reform this spring. In practice, M Chirac has to stand by his loyal steward because he is the only viable centre-right challenger to his adversary, M Sarkozy, in next year’s presidential election.

M Chirac tried to rein in M Sarkozy yesterday, telling his ministers to focus on their jobs. “Of course there is the outlook of elections exciting individuals, but the presidential election is a year away. Right now it is governance that is needed,” he said.

But M Sarkozy, 51, continues to exploit the Clearstream affair to boost his campaign. In open mutiny against M Chirac and M de Villepin, he lacerated the Prime Minister in a speech on Tuesday. “I do not accept being associated with the dirty tricks of apprentice conspirators,” he said.

Two investigating judges are trying to trace the author of the list containing the alleged bribe-takers and the person who sent a copy anonymously to the authorities.

The plot thickened yesterday when M Gergorin was relieved of his duties at EADS in order to “defend himself”, after it emerged that he was in possession of the Clearstream “list” in 2003 and disclosed it to Renaud Van Ruymbeke, a senior investigating judge.

DIRTY TRICKS AND DISCREDIT: WHAT THE COMMENTATORS SAY

‘There is no Government any more. No initiatives are possible. All action is bogged down in mutual suspicions. Every day it is sinking further’

François Bayrou, leader of the centre-right Union for French Democracy (UDF)

‘The sorry spectacle we are providing for the world is enough to send France to despair . . . destabilised by the excesses of a political system that has run out of steam, undermined by dirty tricks and manipulation’

Le Figaro

‘This is not a Government any more. It is a raft which has been drifting for weeks along the coastline of discredit . . . dragging with it a whole country, mocked by foreigners and overwhelmed by moral decay’

Libération

‘Chirac has demonstrated to the point of nausea the impotence of the armoured presidential office (of the Fifth Republic), the conquest of which obsesses politicians and feeds scandal’

Le Monde



To: PartyTime who wrote (7020)5/21/2006 7:50:17 PM
From: Proud_Infidel  Respond to of 9838
 
Howard sings U.S. praises in Ottawa
Globe and Mail.com ^ | JEFF SALLOT

Australian leader's laudatory remarks win Tory applause, NDP, Bloc silence

OTTAWA — Australian Prime Minister John Howard cautioned Canadians yesterday that they really don't want to see an isolationist United States because that would mean a far more dangerous world.

Mr. Howard, who arrived in Ottawa directly from a triumphal Washington visit, told a joint session of Parliament that he's an unapologetic friend and ally of the U.S., which he described as a "remarkable and powerful force for good in the world."

Moreover, Canada, Australia and other nations should deeply appreciate "the decency and hope that the power and purpose of the United States represents to the world."

He referred directly to the previous Liberal government's opposition to the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq, a military operation that included Australian troops, and he later appeared to address the skepticism still found among opposition Canadian MPs about U.S. President George W. Bush's Middle East policy.

Those who would like to see Washington playing a lesser role in world affairs should be careful what they wish for, Mr. Howard said, because "a retreating America will leave a more vulnerable world. It would leave a world more exposed to terrorism and would leave a more fragile and, indeed, dangerous world."

The Australian leader's laudatory remarks about Washington won warm applause from Prime Minister Stephen Harper and Conservative MPs and senators. The applause from Liberal benches was not quite as enthusiastic. NDP and Bloc Québécois MPs sat silently.

Mr. Harper's minority Conservative government is trying to cement better Canadian political relations with the Bush administration, an objective that may be closer to realization with the decision this week to extend the Canadian military deployment in Afghanistan for an additional two years.

Mr. Howard paid tribute to the "enormous" Canadian contribution to the war on terrorism in Afghanistan, and said he mourns with the families of Canadian soldiers killed in combat.

Defeating terrorism, Mr. Howard said, depends on good intelligence, "military action where appropriate" and most important, the spread of democracy to Islamic countries.

He also had a word of warning about the need for the international community to put more energy into the current round of trade-liberalization negotiations. There may be only a few weeks left to make these talks work, and now is the time for European nations, India, Japan and Brazil to reciprocate recent U.S. concessions on agricultural trade.

Mr. Howard is the first foreign head of government to get the red-carpet welcome from Mr. Harper. The two leaders share a small-c conservative view of the proper role of government even though, as Mr. Harper joked, his guest leads the Australian Liberal Party.

Mr. Harper's political strategists took a page from Mr. Howard's political playbook in the recent federal election, including targeted tax cuts designed to appeal to middle-class voters. In his introductory remarks, Mr. Harper made special reference to Mr. Howard's economic policies, which he credited for lower taxes, high employment and public-debt retirement.

Both leaders noted the things the two countries have in common, including a federal political structure, a parliamentary tradition, populations drawn heavily from European stock, vast and open rugged territory and an outward-looking view of the world.

Outside the Centre Block on Parliament Hill, about a hundred trade-union demonstrators protested against Mr. Howard's visit in solidarity with Australian public-service unions, which have been in protracted conflict with their government.

Mr. Howard was the first Australian leader to address Parliament since 1944.