SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : THE WHITE HOUSE -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: pompsander who wrote (23693)10/11/2008 6:48:37 AM
From: GROUND ZERO™  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 25737
 
So what? I agree that wrong is wrong, but I would also have done the same thing to protect a 10 year old boy from further physical abuse, sometimes the laws are wrong, look at the entire civil rights issue... but this doesn't even come close to being life long friends with terrorists...<g>

AND YOU STILL HAVE NOT ANSWERED MY QUESTION!!!

GZ



To: pompsander who wrote (23693)10/11/2008 11:12:34 AM
From: DuckTapeSunroof1 Recommendation  Respond to of 25737
 
U.S.: McCain Sinks on Economy, Palin Pick, Negative Attacks

Analysis by Jim Lobe*
ipsnews.net

WASHINGTON, Oct 11 (IPS) - Overwhelmed by crashing stock markets and what is increasingly seen by even traditional conservatives as a Faustian bargain with the extreme right-wing core of his Republican Party, Sen. John McCain's chances of winning the Nov. 4 presidential elections have fallen sharply over the past three weeks.

Asked by the influential National Journal after the presidential debate Tuesday to estimate Democratic Sen. Barack Obama's chances of defeating McCain, 76 Republican "insiders" rated them on average at 73 percent -- up from 53 percent just three weeks ago.

Betters on the two biggest Internet gambling sites agree. The Iowa Electronic Markets (www.biz.uiowa.edu/iem), run by the College of Business of the University of Iowa, is currently rating McCain's chances of winning the White House at less than one in six, significantly worse than the better than one-to-three odds it offered as recently as Sep 29.

Its main competitor, the Intrade Prediction Market (www.intrade.), rates McCain's chances as somewhat better -- at around 21.5 percent. But that, too, represents a substantial drop from the 39 percent chance it gave him ten days ago. In mid-September, less than one month ago, Intrade was giving McCain roughly even odds with Obama.

Meanwhile, one of the most closely-monitored poll websites, www.fivethirtyeight.com, is now rating Obama's chances of winning the election in the all-important electoral college at just over 90 percent, up from 80 percent at the end of September.

"(A)ny world in which McCain has a chance to win on Election Day is a world that looks very different from this one -- some significant event will have to have occurred to fundamentally change the momentum of the race," noted the website's founder and chief analyst, Nate Silver, Friday after the publication of a spate of new polls from key "swing states" where the election will be decided.

According to those polls, Obama is not only widening his leads in states won by former Vice President Al Gore in 2000 and by Sen. John Kerry in 2004, he has also drawn even with or even surpassed McCain in several key states -- notably in Ohio, Virginia, Colorado, Florida, and even North Carolina -- that McCain must win in order to have any chance of prevailing.

McCain's decline also is increasingly threatening Republicans hopes of minimising their anticipated losses in Congressional races.

Before this week, Democrats had been expected to pick up at least five seats in the Senate, bringing their total there to 56. But new polls published this week suggest that several other states where Republican incumbents were expected to win are now considered either too close to call or leaning Democratic. If all of them went Democratic -- roughly a 25 percent chance, according to 538's statistical models -- the party would gain a filibuster-proof 60 seats.

As for the House of Representatives, Democrats believe they could gain as many as 30 seats, giving them 60 percent of the 435 seats, their largest majority since 1964 when Democratic dominance of Congress reached its zenith under President Franklin Delano Roosevelt.

McCain's and the Republican plunge is being blamed primarily on the ongoing financial crisis; U.S. stocks fell Friday for the eight straight day, capping one of the worst weeks since the 1929 Crash that set off the Great Depression with which the current situation is being increasingly compared.

While McCain repeatedly insisted during Tuesday's debate that he knew how to restore trust and confidence in the financial system, he was noticeably more vague than Obama who repeatedly reminded the audience of more than 60 million viewers that, throughout his career in Congress, including during George W. Bush's presidency -- which last week hit the lowest approval ratings of any presidency in the last 56 years -- McCain had supported deregulation measures that are widely seen as one of the main causes of the current crisis.

"John McCain has lost control of the economic issue, and the debate over the financial crisis has made voters doubt him," according to veteran Democratic pollster Peter Hart whose assessment, significantly, was quoted by one of the capital's chief public-opinion gurus, the Journal's Charlie Cook.

As to the debate itself and the polls, particularly of independent voters, taken immediately afterward, Silver concluded that Obama had won "according to essentially every objective metric." Indeed, those surveys showed that Obama prevailed – often by large margins – not only with respect to the question of who performed better, but also who was more trustworthy and presidential.

"John McCain needed a breakthrough during Tuesday night's debate," wrote Cook in his weekly Friday column. "If he got it, I must have been watching the wrong channel. The heightened economic and credit crisis has effectively changed the venue of this election to turf that is virtually unwinnable for a Republican presidential candidate."

But if the financial crisis -- a crisis that Republicans had vainly hoped would have been behind them after last week's Congressional approval of the administration's 700-billion- dollar bailout package -- best explains the plunge in McCain's electoral chances, it appears that his surrender to the right-wing base of the party -- signaled most dramatically by his selection of Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin as his running-mate, as well as her performance in both her rare and highly scripted media interviews and on the stump -- is also a major contributing factor.

While Palin has largely succeeded in energising the party's ideological core, virtually ever poll published in the last three weeks, including those following her debate with Obama's running-mate, Sen. Joseph Biden, has shown that she is acting as a drag on the ticket among all-important independent voters, who make up about a third of the electorate.

Friday’s publication by a Republican-dominated Legislative Council of a report in which a special investigator found that Palin had abused her power as governor in seeking the dismissal of her ex-brother-in-law from the state police will clearly raise new questions about her fitness for the vice presidency.

Moreover, her apparent role as the spear point for attacks on Obama's "character" -- including his past associations with William Ayers, a University of Chicago education professor who was a leader of the terrorist Weather Underground 40 years ago and black liberation theologian Rev. Jeremiah Wright -- as well as the increasingly angry and openly hostile crowds that she is drawing to her rallies appear to be alienating more traditional, conservative Republicans.

Earlier this week, neo-conservative David Brooks wrote in his New York Times column that Palin "represents a fatal cancer to the Republican Party," while, in an open letter to McCain published in the Baltimore Sun Friday, former Christian Right leader and one-time McCain supporter, author Frank Schaeffer, warned McCain that his and Palin's joint rallies "are beginning to look sound, feel and smell like lynch mobs".

"If your campaign does not stop equating Sen. Barack Obama with terrorism, questioning his patriotism and portraying (him) as 'not one of us,' I accuse you of deliberately feeding the most unhinged elements of our society the red meat of hate, and therefore of potentially instigating violence," he wrote.

Even more dramatic in its own way was the announcement Friday by essayist and one-time McCain speech-writer Christopher Buckley, son of the intellectual founder of the modern conservative Republican movement, William F. Buckley, that he will vote Obama for president.

Noting that his father once told him, "You know, I've spent my entire lifetime separating the Right from the kooks," Christopher, who has known and supported McCain personally since 1982 and still writes a column for his father's National Review, wrote, "Sarah Palin is an embarrassment, and a dangerous one at that."

*Jim Lobe's blog on U.S. foreign policy, and particularly the neo-conservative influence in the Bush administration, can be read at ips.org.



To: pompsander who wrote (23693)10/11/2008 11:49:38 AM
From: longnshort  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 25737
 
Finding number two states.

"I find that Walt Monegan's refusal to fire Trooper Michael Wooten was not the sole reason he was fired by Governor Sarah Palin, it was likely a contributing factor for his termination as Commisioner of Public Safety. In spite of that, Governor Palin's firing of Commisioner Monegan was a proper and lawful exercise of her Constitutional and statutory authority to hire and fire executive branch department heads".



To: pompsander who wrote (23693)10/11/2008 11:50:46 AM
From: longnshort  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 25737
 
something doesn't smell right.

This is interesting. Mr. Stephen Branchflower, the lawyer who prepared the report is Married to Linda J. Branchflower, an Anchorage Police Detective (now retired).

He also served as an Assistant District Attorney in Anchorage from 1974-1998, held numerous positions which required him to work closely with the Anchorage Police Department, where Walt Monegan was chief in 2001. He provided legal advice to APD officers, trained APD officers, and was a co-founder of the APD's Homicide Response Team. His detective wife worked under Walt Monegan.

It's tough to believe Branchflower, whose entire career was wrapped up in his relationships with the APD, and his detective wife did not have a professional relationship with Walt Monegan.

Conflict of interest?? I wonder if someone will find he violated the same statute as Governor Palin allegedly did.

Here's another interesting angle.

The project manager, Senator French, publicly suggested impeachment' before the Senate laid out any rules or an investigator was named. French supervised Branchflower in the preparation of the report and was a former colleague of Branchflower.

I doubt the media will mention these relationships.



To: pompsander who wrote (23693)10/11/2008 1:10:18 PM
From: DuckTapeSunroof  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 25737
 
Troopergate report: Palin abused power

By DON HUNTER, SEAN COCKERHAM and WESLEY LOY
Anchorage Daily News
Published: October 10th, 2008 09:13 PM
Last Modified: October 10th, 2008 09:13 PM
[With detailed links to all the source materials]
adn.com

A legislative investigation has concluded that Gov. Sarah Palin abused her power in pushing for the firing of an Alaska state trooper who was once married to her sister, or by failing to prevent her husband Todd from doing so.

The report by investigator Steve Branchflower was made public late this afternoon by a bipartisan 12-0 vote of the Legislative Council, which authorized the investigation.

Branchflower's report contains four findings. The first concludes that Palin violated the state's executive branch ethics act, which says that "each public officer holds office as a public trust, and any effort to benefit a personal or financial interest through official action is a violation of that trust."

Branchflower was investigating Palin's involvement in an effort to get state trooper Mike Wooten fired. Wooten was involved in a nasty divorce from Palin's sister. Palin and her husband, Todd, have accused Wooten of threatening Palin's father.

The investigation also looked into whether Palin dismissed public safety commissioner Walt Monegan because he resisted pressure to fire Wooten.

The report says Palin failed to reign in her husband's inappropriate efforts to use the governor's office to contact trooper employees in his attempts to have Wooten fired.

"Governor Palin knowingly permitted a situation to continue where impermissible pressure was placed on several subordinates in order to advance a personal agenda ... to get Trooper Michael Wooten fired," Branchflower's report says.

"Compliance with the code of ethics is not optional. It is an individual responsibility imposed by law, and any effort to benefit a personal interest through official action is a violation of that trust. ... The term ‘benefit' is very broadly defined, and includes anything that is to the person's advantage or personal self-interest."

In the second finding, Branchflower says Monegan's refusal to fire Wooten was not the sole reason for his dismissal but that it was a "contributing factor." Still, he said, Palin's firing of Monegan was "a proper and lawful exercise" of the governor's authority.

The third finding says a workers compensation claim filed by Wooten was handled appropriately. Number four concludes that the attorney general's office failed to comply with Branchflower's Aug. 6 request for information about the case in the form of e-mails.

Branchflower writes that his investigation did not take into account late-arriving statements from several administration officials who, on the advice of Attorney General Talis Colberg, resisted subpoenas. They agreed to provide written statements this week, however, after a state judge upheld the subpoenas. Information from those statements was provided to the Legislative Council separately.

In a five-page response issued Friday night, Palin's attorney, Thomas Van Flein, accuses Branchflower and Democratic Sen. Hollis French, who oversaw the investigation, of using the probe in a partisan attempt to "smear the governor by innuendo."

Van Flein says Branchflower's finding that Palin violated the ethics act is flawed because she received no monetary benefit from whatever actions she and her husband are accused of. He cited several prior ethics investigations.

"The common thread of all of these Ethics Act cases is money and the use of a government position to personally gain," Van Flein's statement says.

"Here, there is no accusation, no finding and no facts that money or financial gain to the Governor was involved in the decision to remove Monegan," the governor's attorney says. "There can be no ethics violations under these circumstances."

The McCain-Palin campaign also responded.

Because Branchflower's report does not recommend any particular penalty for Palin, it shows the investigation was outside the Legislature's authority, campaign Meghan Stapleton said.

"The Palins make no apologies for wanting to protect their family and the public interest by reporting to appropriate authorities the conduct of a threatening and abusive trooper," Stapleton said.

Stapleton and spokesman Ed O'Callaghan, a former New York prosecutor now working for the campaign in Alaska, have been meeting regularly with reporters in an effort to discredit the investigation.

The campaign also said Branchflower's finding that Palin broke state ethics laws is beyond the scope of the original investigation, which Stapleton and O'Callaghan said was to determine if she had a legitimate reason for firing Monegan.

In authorizing the investigation on July 28, the members of the legislative council voted "to investigate the circumstances and events surrounding the termination of former public safety commissioner Monegan, and potential abuses of power and/or improper actions by members of the executive branch."

The chairman of the Legislative Council, Sen. Kim Elton, D-Juneau, said he agreed with Branchflower's findings but wasn't ready to suggest there should be any consequences for the governor.

"We don't charge people, we don't try people as legislators," Elton said. Any further action or disciplinary measures, he said, would be up to Palin's executive branch, the attorney general or the state Personnel Board.

Sen. Gene Therriault, R-North Pole, said the report is flawed because Branchflower didn't take into account statements and other materials submitted earlier this week by Todd Palin and administration employees who earlier had resisted subpoenas.

Therriault said Todd Palin's written response indicates that Gov. Palin, at some point, urged her husband to drop his efforts against Wooten. That information goes to the heart of Branchflower's conclusion that the governor violated the ethics law, Therriault said.

Therriault said Branchflower was unable to consider those late-arriving materials "because we had this artificial deadline today."

"Why?" he continued. "Because we're in a political season."

Senate President Lyda Green said the report doesn't speak well for the governor.

"The problem with power is that people pay attention to it," the Wasilla Republican said. "And it's very easy to get beside yourself and use it in the wrong way.

"And we do have to leave personal business at home," she said.

Two other lawmakers said the governer and her husband's actions were understandable.

"Who is going to blame Todd Palin for protecting his family?" said Rep. John Coghill, R-North Pole. " Not me."

Another member of the Legislative Council, Rep. Bob Lynn, R-Anchorage, said he thinks Branchflower's findings are wrong, and that Palin didn't violate the ethics act. "She and Todd Palin were trying to defend their family," Lynn said. "I think any normal person would do the same."

The release of Branchflower's 263-page report came after a unanimous vote of the 12-member Legislative Council, which authorized the inquiry last summer. The vote followed an all-day, closed-door meeting with Branchflower. Three members participated by telephone.

Branchflower also recommends the Legislature change the way complaints against peace officers such as troopers are handled. He says lawmakers should consider making it possible for people who file such complaints to get feedback about the status of their complaint and whatever action was taken about it.

The initial complaint against Wooten was filed by Gov. Palin's father, Chuck Heath, before she was elected governor in 2006. Branchflower says the inability of the family to get information about what was happening with the complaint was frustrating to them.

"I believe their frustration was real as was their skepticism about whether their complaints were being zealously investigated," Branchflower's report says. "The irony is that the complaints were taken very seriously, and a thorough investigation was underway. However, the law prevented the Troopers from giving them any feedback whatsoever."

The law should try to balance the need for confidentiality with a recognition that feedback to the filer of a complaint is also important, the report says.

Daily News reporter Kyle Hopkins also contributed to this report.