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To: Andrew N. Cothran who wrote (248178)4/30/2008 3:45:39 PM
From: KLP  Respond to of 793958
 
Yes, you are telling the truth, Andrew... But he is slippery enough to still get through with some of the American people....

I'd like for all three of the candidates to just 'disappear' but remembering that we must be careful of what we wish for, am afraid that we would get something much worse than any of them. Algore and/or Kerry come to mind...



To: Andrew N. Cothran who wrote (248178)4/30/2008 3:47:57 PM
From: goldworldnet  Respond to of 793958
 
Clinton, Obama get new superdelegates and McCain will soon face a negative attack ad.

WASHINGTON (CNN) -- Sen. Barack Obama, hoping to put the break with his controversial former pastor behind him, is getting some good news: five more superdelegates in the past 24 hours.

Sens. Clinton and Obama are battling it out before the May 6 Indiana and North Carolina primaries.

Clinton also picked up four more superdelegates within the same time period.

The endorsements come amid Obama's speech Tuesday condemning his former pastor's comments on September 11 and AIDS.

In his harshest criticism yet of Rev. Jeremiah Wright, Obama said he was "outraged" by Wright's comments at the National Press Club Monday, and "saddened by the spectacle." Watch Obama's comments »

But the controversy hasn't stopped the superdelegate endorsements from rolling in.

Indiana Rep. Baron Hill, a superdelegate, endorsed Obama Wednesday morning, citing his "strength of character and ability to change the tone of Washington." "I am truly hopeful that his campaign and election will help unify our nation and ultimately change our politics," the Democrat said in a press release.

Superdelegate Iowa Rep. Bruce Braley also endorsed Obama for president Wednesday, an Obama aide told CNN.

Braley is a first-term Democratic congressman who represents an eastern district that hugs the Illinois border.

Also Wednesday, Superdelegate California Rep. Lois Capps, co-chair of the Congressional Caucus for Women's Issues and mother-in-law to Obama campaign spokesman Bill Burton, endorsed Obama.

She joins fellow Iowan and Democratic National Committee member Richard Machacek, also a superdelegate, in supporting Obama this week. Superdelegate Kentucky Rep. Ben Chandler also announced he is backing Obama.

Meanwhile, North Carolina Gov. Mike Easley and Missouri Rep. Ike Skelton, both superdelegates, endorsed New York Sen. Hillary Clinton Tuesday. Watch more on Easley's endorsement »

Whether the Wright controversy is good news for Clinton's campaign or not, there is some better news for New York's junior senator.

Clinton's campaign announced Wednesday that Luisette Cabanas, a superdelegate from Puerto Rico, announced her support for Clinton, "giving the campaign the majority of automatic delegates on the island."

The campaign also announced that Pennsylvania AFL-CIO president and superdelegate Bill George announced his support for Clinton Tuesday, which could help her with working-class, blue collar Democrats in the state.

"Hillary Clinton has the strength and experience to jump-start the economy and rebuild the middle class," George said in a statement released by Clinton's presidential campaign.

Clinton and Obama both addressed the Pennsylvania AFL-CIO convention earlier this month. Clinton defeated Obama in Pennsylvania's April 22 primary.

According to CNN's latest count, Obama has a total of 1,730 delegates (Pledged: 1491, Superdelegates: 239). Clinton has a total of 1,593 delegates (Pledged: 1332, Superdelegates: 261)

Obama's campaign, meanwhile, has filed a formal complaint Wednesday over a pro-Clinton group running ads attacking the Illinois senator on jobs and the economy in Indiana.

The American Leadership Project, which includes veterans of the Clinton administration and longtime supporters, is a "527," which means it is not bound by federal campaign finance laws as long as it does not directly advocate on behalf of a particular candidate.

The group announced earlier this week that it was planning to buy $700,000 worth of airtime in the state leading up to Tuesday's vote.

Meanwhile, the Clinton campaign launched a new ad in North Carolina featuring famed poet Maya Angelou, who has endorsed Clinton.

Angelou says Clinton "intends to help our country become what it can become," and she has found the person she thinks "would be the best president for the United States of America." Watch the ad »

Another campaign ad, which began airing Tuesday in North Carolina and Indiana, one week before the crucial May 6 primaries in both states, attacks Obama for not calling for a freeze on mortgage foreclosures and not supporting a suspension of the gas tax.

Clinton has called for a 90-day moratorium on home foreclosures and $30 billion for an emergency housing fund. Watch more on the gas controversy »

Obama has called for a $10 billion foreclosure prevention fund to help homeowners who are victims of mortgage fraud sell their homes or modify their loans to avoid foreclosure and bankruptcy.

Meanwhile, Sen. John McCain, the presumptive GOP presidential nominee, will soon face a negative attack ad.

The 30-second spot will begin on May 5. The ad features five candles on a cake that bears the words "Mission Accomplished." The candles multiply until they reach 100, as McCain is heard saying the American people would not be concerned if U.S. troops remain in Iraq for 100 years. The MoveOn spot closes with a picture of President Bush and John McCain hugging.

The ad, paid for exclusively by MoveOn's Political Action Committee and its small donor contributors, will run for a week. Watch Move On's ad »

McCain is also facing some criticism from the man largely credited for organizing a campaign to defeat McCain in 2000.

Writing in the Wall Street Journal, former top Bush adviser Karl Rove called McCain "one of the most private individuals to run for president in history," and said the presumptive Republican nominee must reveal more about his unique life story in order to win the presidency.

"Private people like Mr. McCain are rare in politics for a reason," Rove writes. "Candidates who are uncomfortable sharing their interior lives limit their appeal. But if Mr. McCain is to win the election this fall, he has to open up."

Specifically, Rove says McCain should reveal more about his wartime heroics and days as a prisoner of war in Vietnam.

"Unless he opens up more, many voters will never know the experiences of his life that show his character, integrity and essential decency."

cnn.com

* * *



To: Andrew N. Cothran who wrote (248178)4/30/2008 3:52:20 PM
From: KLP  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793958
 
Speaking of hootzpaw...(grin) Clinton blasts Bush for not stopping a project Bill OK'd

By Steven Thomma | McClatchy Newspapers
Posted on Wednesday, April 30, 2008

mcclatchydc.com

INDIANAPOLIS — Hillary Clinton loves to tell the story about how the Chinese government bought a good American company in Indiana, laid off all its workers and moved its critical defense technology work to China.

It’s a story with a dramatic, political ending. Republican President George W. Bush could have stopped it, but he didn’t.
If she were president, Clinton says, she’d fight to protect those jobs. It’s just the kind of talk that’s helping her win support from working-class Democrats worried about their jobs and paychecks, not to mention their country’s security.

What Clinton never includes in the oft-repeated tale is the role that prominent Democrats played in selling the company and its technology to the Chinese. She never mentions that big-time Democratic contributor George Soros helped put together the deal to sell the company or that the sale was approved by her husband's administration.

In response, the Clinton campaign said that Bill Clinton's administration had gotten assurances at the time it approved the deal that production would remain inside the United States, and that the shift of jobs to China didn't occur until under the Bush administration.

“Hillary Clinton must have been hoping we Hoosiers have short memories,” Ed Dixon of Valparaiso said in a letter to a local newspaper after a recent Clinton visit. “Her husband was president at the time and allowed this to happen.”
“They would have us believe Bush was behind this sale,” added Fred Sliger of Valparaiso in another letter, “when in fact the Clinton administration rubber-stamped this along with the sale of numerous other high-tech secrets to the Chinese. …Let's get the facts straight.”

In an interview, Sliger amplified his view. "She blamed President Bush. I blame him, too, but she neglects to mention that it all started when her husband was in office," said Sliger, a mechanic at Valparaiso University. "They say those jobs went out the back door on Bush's watch. They wouldn't have gone out the back door if President Clinton hadn’t left the front door propped open. I blame everybody. I want the blame to go around." Here’s how Clinton tells it in a recent television ad she aired in Indiana.

“Right here, over 200 Hoosiers built parts that guided our military's smart bombs to their targets,” the New York senator says.

“They were good jobs, but now they're gone to China. And now America's defense relies on Chinese spare parts. George Bush could have stopped it, but he didn't. As your president, I will fight to keep good jobs here and to turn this economy around. I'm Hillary Clinton, and I approve this message because American workers should build America's defense." Here’s how she told it a few weeks ago at a union meeting in Washington.

“A Chinese company bought the company, called Magnequench, and they wanted to move the jobs to China. The people in Indiana protested, did everything they could to convince the Bush administration that this was a terrible mistake. Couldn't even get a hearing,” she said.

“The jobs went to China, but so did the technology. And now the United States military has to buy the magnets we need for the smart bombs we invented from China,” she said as the union members booed. Here's the complete story.

In 1995, General Motors decided to sell the Indiana-based Magnequench to a Chinese-American consortium.
The consortium included:
• San Huan New Materials and Hi-Tech Co, a company owned by the Chinese Academy of Sciences;
• Onfem Holdings, a company controlled by the State Nonferrous Metals Industry Administration in the Peoples Republic of China;
• Soros Fund Management, headed by George Soros;
• The Sextant Group, founded by Archibald Cox Jr.;

Soros, of course, is the wealthy investor who has contributed vast sums to Democratic candidates and liberal causes.

He’s given more than $250,000 to Democratic campaign committees, tens of thousands to individual Democratic candidates and about $2.5 million to the liberal group Moveon.org, according to Federal Election Commission records.
He’s also contributed to Hillary Clinton’s Senate campaign and to Obama’s Senate and presidential campaigns. He contributed to Republican Sen. John McCain’s first presidential campaign, in 1999, when McCain was running against Bush for the Republican nomination.

Because Magnequench made magnets for smart bombs, the sale to a group that included foreign owners required approval under a 1988 law.

After a 30-day review, the Clinton administration’s Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States, which includes representatives of the Pentagon, approved the sale in 1995.
The buyers reportedly promised to keep manufacturing in the United States.

Yet in 1998, they started building a plant in China, close to the source of the raw materials used in the magnets.
The company reorganized in 1999, buying out Soros as well as Onfem Holdings.

In 2000, Magnequench bought a magnet factory in Valparaiso, the same year it started operations at its China plant.
In 2001, it closed its original plant in Anderson, Ind.
And in 2003, it decided to close the Valparaiso plant, laying off its 225 workers.

Indiana politicians asked the Bush administration to intervene.
Sen. Evan Bayh, D-Ind., and Rep. Pete Visclosky, D-Ind., said the move would leave the United States without a significant domestic source of rare-earth magnets used in smart bombs. The Valparaiso plant made about 80 percent of the magnets bought by the Pentagon, they said.

The administration didn't block the move.

The Clinton campaign said she doesn't mention the role her husband played in the sale because it wasn’t relevant.
“In 1995, when this group bought Magnequench, there were assurances made that production would stay in the United States,” said Clinton campaign spokesman Jonathan Swain.

“The important thing is that in 1995, there was no indication that this production would leave the United States. Based on the information at the time this was reviewed, there was no indication that there was some risk to national security because these jobs would stay in the United States.”

Asked why the administration wasn’t concerned when the Chinese operators opened a factory in China, he said the real problem arose during the Bush administration when U.S. production was shut down.

Swain also noted that security was less of an issue in 1995 because the country had other producers of the magnets. By 2003, it did not.

The Clinton campaign issued a rebuttal to this story. Its first sentence is factually inaccurate. The story does not say that the Clinton administration approved the move of an Indiana factory to China. The story accurately reports that the Clinton administration approved the sale of an Indiana factory to a Chinese-American consortium, and that years later the Chinese bought out the American partners and moved the factory work to China. Read the rebuttal.