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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: JDN who wrote (744571)7/5/2006 6:41:24 PM
From: longnshort  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769669
 
NJ's spending has gone up 45% in the last 5 years. you can't run a gov like that



To: JDN who wrote (744571)7/5/2006 7:15:40 PM
From: TideGlider  Respond to of 769669
 
No one seems to say CUT THE BUDGET. In fairness to Corzine, he has asked for deep cuts as well. There is more to it then just the headlines. I know a cabinet member in that state and he and the others had all been asked to submit budgets that show 5, 10 and 15% cuts.

Corzine's one cent sales tax is much more fair than a new payroll tax on all workers. Odd how the Democrats are fighting him. Fact is that he knows finances and he knows gimmicks. The past gimmicks have caused the problems. Dems and Repubs used them every year. I respect him for a more business like approach.

If he folds now, he is ruined. With the street and with people in general. His treasurer is from goldman as well. He is brilliant. They don't blame Republicans , they are blaming both parties.

It should prove interesting.



To: JDN who wrote (744571)7/6/2006 9:54:15 AM
From: Hope Praytochange  Respond to of 769669
 
demoRATs always put their personal ambitions above the country and their fellow citizens: Behind Standoff, a Struggle for Party Control


By LAURA MANSNERUS
Published: July 6, 2006
TRENTON, July 5 — Much of New Jersey's government has come to a shrieking halt because of a dispute over how to spend a half-cent in sales tax, over a payroll tax that most voters do not even know they pay, and over proposals that would ordinarily slip through the budget committees without discussion.

Yet while the spoken lines in this expensive political theater are about tax policy, conversations in the wings of the State House tell a different story: that this protracted inability on the part of the Democratic Assembly speaker and the Democratic governor to reach a budget agreement is much more about control of the party.

"This is less about policy than about people's personalities," State Senator Ellen Karcher, a Monmouth County Democrat, said of the standoff between Gov. Jon S. Corzine and Assembly Speaker Joseph J. Roberts Jr.

Mr. Corzine, who laid out his budget 106 days ago, has an unwavering message: The sales tax increase is crucial to the state's chronically underfinanced government, and anything less is an easy and empty gesture.
Mr. Roberts says that any sales tax increase must be dedicated to property tax relief, and that the 49 Assembly Democrats will not even accept a compromise that sets aside half a cent for that purpose. He has floated several alternatives, including an increase in a disability payroll tax that Mr. Corzine has rejected.

From the start of this standoff, the Senate, also controlled by Democrats, has stood with the governor, or at least with the half-cent compromise that Senate President Richard J. Codey proposed two weeks ago.

So have unions representing public employees and casino workers, who are losing money every day there is no budget. And so have a number of Assembly Democrats, who say privately that they would vote for Mr. Corzine's budget but are not ready to desert their speaker — yet.

But Mr. Roberts and the Assembly Budget Committee chairman, Louis D. Greenwald, have not budged. In fact, they say they have gained ground; more than 20 Assembly Democrats stood ready to support Mr. Corzine as of the deadline last Friday for a new budget, but in a show of hands on Tuesday, Mr. Roberts insisted the number was down to 15.

Mr. Roberts and Mr. Greenwald, both from Camden County, are leading a faction from South Jersey that for years has complained of slights by the statewide party. The current standoff reflects that estrangement — and perhaps, some legislators say, accounts for Mr. Roberts's resistance.

Many others say — although rarely for attribution — that the real chess match here is between Mr. Corzine and the Camden County organization, personified by Mr. Roberts and by George E. Norcross III, one of the party's most formidable power brokers.

Mr. Norcross, a former Camden County Democratic party chairman, is not only a political ally and former business partner of Mr. Roberts, but the patron of many other South Jersey Democrats. Nor does his influence end there, since the Camden County organization sends money to Democratic candidates all over the state.

At the same time, Mr. Corzine has tried to distance himself from the powerful Camden County organization.

As for Mr. Norcross, "The governor has not spoken to him for a while and has no reason to," said Anthony Coley, Mr. Corzine's press secretary.
This is a power struggle by South Jersey political boss George Norcross to display his power over the governor of New Jersey," Assemblyman Richard A. Merkt said, "and the governor is struggling to display his independence from the boss system of New Jersey."

Mr. Merkt added: "It's a battle that's long overdue. If I have to choose between an elected official and a hidden Cardinal Richelieu type, I'll take the elected official every time." But Mr. Merkt, like all Assembly Republicans, is opposed to all tax increases.

But Ross K. Baker, a political scientist at Rutgers, discounts the Norcross theory. "Joe Roberts is trying to protect South Jersey Democrats in marginal districts," Professor Baker said.

As he put it: "The idea that George Norcross uses Joe Roberts as a cudgel to beat up on the governor is ludicrous. But I do think the Democrats in the southern part of the state are feeling less secure, and the word 'tax' is a deal-breaker for many voters."

Mr. Roberts, who was in a daylong closed session with the Assembly Democrats, could not be reached for comment. But he said in a recent news conference that Mr. Norcross had no role in the standoff.

In a recent interview, he called Mr. Norcross his friend, but said that he would not last a day if "people thought that I was not independent."

Mr. Norcross was on vacation and could not be reached, an assistant said, and he did not respond to two e-mail messages over the last few days.

Many legislators say Mr. Roberts has simply backed himself into a corner — a situation that Republicans are enjoying as they watch the fireworks.

Assemblyman Guy Gregg, a Morris County Republican, said: "I don't mean this in a personal way, because I like Joe, but I think he's Dr. Frankenstein in a way because he's created this monster in his caucus" by casting its members as warriors against a tax increase.

"And now I think there's no going back," Mr. Gregg said. "The governor can change his mind tomorrow. Joe can't. He's leading 49 people."

Mr. Corzine, as the most visible figure in the budget battle, stands to bear the brunt of voter anger if the shutdown continues for long. But so far, he is receiving favorable reviews for his stubbornness from some legislators in both parties.

Senator Karcher, for example, said Mr. Corzine had shown admirable tenacity in the last few weeks — although she added, "Admiring his maneuver on this is not necessarily admiring what he's put on the table."



To: JDN who wrote (744571)7/6/2006 3:11:11 PM
From: Proud_Infidel  Respond to of 769669
 
N. Korea Holds onto Chinese Trains Bringing Aids(NK brazenly rips off China)
The Daily NK ^ | 07/04/06 | Yang Jung-a

N. Korea Holds onto Chinese Trains Bringing Aids

Japanese Media, "(N. Koreans) say that trains are part of the aid package."

[2006-07-04]

N. Korea refuses to return (Chinese) trains which brought aid supplies from China, even after the supplies were unloaded, leaving Chinese authorities increasingly frustrated, it has been revealed.

Quoting sources inside China, Jiji Press of Japan reported in its July 4th dispatch, "China is sending materials and goods to N. Korea, but, in recent days, N. Korea frequently refuses to return these trains, raising frustration of Chinese authorities."

According to Jiji, the sources speculated, "N. Korea appears to think that the trains are part of the aid package." It went on to explain that these recent incidents are indications of how imcomprehensible N. Korea is to outsiders.

There is a widespread view inside the central and local governments of China that bringing supplies to N. Korea via trains may result in 'the trains not coming back.' Chinese government is reportedly asking N. Korean Train Ministry to return the trains, but so far they have not taken any concrete steps (to get them back.)

Jiji Presss pointed out, " In N. Korea, trains are badly worn-out and in short supply. It is highly likely that the trains from China are used for domestic transportation."

Yang Jung-a correspondent