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Politics : Sioux Nation -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Travis_Bickle who wrote (162262)3/5/2009 11:35:03 AM
From: T L Comiskey  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 361830
 
Lets throw these guys
a cement 'flotation'
device....

For GOP: all pain, no gain
Ben Smith AP
Mar 5, 4:20

Four months after John McCain’s sweeping defeat, senior Republicans are coming to grips with the fact that the party is still – in stock market terms – looking for the bottom.

Republicans this week are processing two sobering new polls that found the party’s support reduced to a slim one-quarter of Americans. In the absence of a popular elected leader, its most visible figure is a polarizing radio host. Its strategic powerhouse is a still-divisive former House speaker forced from power 15 years ago.

And its hopes of demonstrating swift and visible change by pushing people of color to the fore have been dented by the stumbles of the party’s two most prominent non-white leaders, national Chairman Michael Steele and Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal.

So perhaps it’s no surprise that many prominent Republicans are forecasting a long winter.

“You think you hit bottom, and it can always go lower,” said Republican pollster Whit Ayres, who said his party’s best hope is that President Barack Obama overreaches. “The Republicans just entered the wilderness – we’re going to wander around there for a little while before coming back stronger than ever.

“I have no idea where the bottom is just like I have no idea where the bottom is on the stock market,” he said.

“It probably gets worse before it gets better, though I’m not sure how much worse it could get,” said Tom Rath, a New Hampshire Republican leader and former state attorney general. “The first chance at redemption is 18, 19 months away, and we’re going to have to gut it out here for a while.”

Another party wise man, Fred Malek, told POLITICO the party now sits at its “nadir” – though he, like others, said its best hope is to wait for the economy to tarnish Obama.

“Our leaders’ arguments are falling on deaf ears today, but they are sound. It’s just a matter of time before this becomes Obama’s recession,” he said.

The gap in trust and popularity is mirrored, prominent Republicans fret, by a vast gap between the parties’ infrastructure. Republicans also fear that they are outmatched by a Democratic publicity and fundraising machine honed in opposition, and on display this week in a successful effort to associate the GOP with radio host Rush Limbaugh. Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich is trying to fashion a role as the intellectual driving force of the GOP-in-exile, but he hasn’t held office since the 1990s.

Add in a politically popular and groundbreaking Democratic president in Obama, and even the Republicans’ most practiced brawlers feel the party is flat-footed.

“The Left has put together the most powerful political coalition I’ve ever witnessed,” said former House majority leader Tom DeLay, whose 1994 GOP coalition once might have vied for that honor. “Obama improved upon it in the presidential campaign, but the Republicans are still in denial.”

Added John Weaver, a former McCain aide: “We’re working damn hard to see how fast we can hit rock bottom – we’re allowing the Democrats to completely not only set the national agenda but also set our internal agenda.”

Meanwhile the party’s governors, typically a source of strength for an out-of-power party, are largely overshadowed by Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin. They’re keeping their focus local and bracing for the storm.

“It’s just a matter of enduring the early days of transformation – it’s never going to be pretty and it’s never going to be fun to watch it play out beyond a pure entertainment level,” Utah’s Jon Huntsman told POLITICO. “We haven’t had a healthy, rigorous discussion about our future in many years, and meanwhile the world has changed. Unless we want to be consigned to minority-party status for a long time, we need to recognize these tectonic shifts happening under our feet.”

Some of the GOP dissatisfaction has focused on new chairman Michael Steele, who has delivered a string of gaffes on television, while not putting much infrastructure in place at the party’s headquarters. Steele criticized Limbaugh as being merely an “entertainer” who makes “ugly” remarks – then said he was sorry two days later.

“He’s like Howard Dean, cubed,” griped one former party official. “People are kind of waiting to be led, and he’s just leading himself into green rooms.”

Ron Kaufman, a top political aide to the first President Bush, said Steele “bit off more than he could chew a little bit. He made a lot of change, perhaps, before he was ready to replace what was there before.”

“He’s trying to do the right thing,” Kaufman added, saying it was “too soon” to give a final judgment on Steele.

The discomfort with Steele is part of a broader complaint about a lack of a national leader, a common condition for an opposition party.

The party’s congressional leadership has shown discipline and focus in offering a near-unanimous rejection of Obama’s stimulus package -- but has not, so far, succeeded in offering a palatable alternative to the popular president’s economic leadership. An NBC/Wall Street Journal poll found that, by a 48-20 percent margin, Americans believe Democrats will do a better job digging the U.S. out of recession than Republicans.

“It’s unclear what is the ‘Republican stimulus plan,’ ” former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney told POLITICO last week, urging congressional Republicans to come up with clear alternatives to Obama’s policies.

Richard Viguerie, the direct mail pioneer who helped create the modern conservative movement, was more scathing in a press release Wednesday.

"The 'Rushification' of the GOP is the natural and inevitable result of the fact that those who are supposed to provide leadership -- Republican elected officials and party officers -- are doing little to bring the party back," he said. "Nature abhors a vacuum, and there is no vacuum in nature as empty as the leadership of the Republican Party today."

Conditions are more mixed in the states, where leaders say they are – for better or worse – insulated from the national storm.

“I am bullish on the Republican Party in Iowa,” said that state’s new GOP chairman, Matt Strawn. “I haven’t gotten a single call from a county leader on the Chairman Steele-Rush Limbaugh back and forth.”

Others are more downbeat.

“Up here we’ve got a very serious rebuilding problem and it starts at the ground level,” said Rath, of New Hampshire. “With all due respect, what Rush Limbaugh or Newt Gingrich or Michael Steele says is hardly relevant to the country chairman who’s trying to find candidates for the legislature.”

As for the search for national leaders, said Rath, “I’m not sure we’re ready for that yet – I’m not sure we need a serious relationship right now. I think we just need to sort through where we’ve been for a while.”

To the extent that Republicans see hope, it’s in Obama himself, the leftward tilt of his policies, and the chance that he comes to be blamed for the nation’s economic woes.

“This guy, just like [Bill] Clinton, is misreading the election results and governing from the left,” said Kaufman.

“In politics nothing’s ever as good or as bad as it seems,” said another seasoned observer, former party chairman Ed Gillespie, who was quoting one of his predecessors, Haley Barbour. “Even if it’s not as bad as it seems, though, things are bad for the Republican Party right now.”



To: Travis_Bickle who wrote (162262)3/5/2009 11:38:31 AM
From: T L Comiskey  Respond to of 361830
 
New jobless claims unexpectedly drop to 639,000
By CHRISTOPHER S. RUGABER, AP

WASHINGTON – The number of new jobless claims and the total number of people receiving unemployment benefits both dropped more than expected last week, though they remain at elevated levels and are unlikely to fall substantially in the coming months.

Few economists expect a turnaround in the battered labor market anytime soon with companies laying off thousands of workers weekly.

Still, the tally of initial requests for unemployment benefits fell to 639,000 from the previous week's figure of 670,000, the Labor Department said Thursday. Analysts expected a smaller drop to 650,000.

In separate reports, factory orders fell for a record sixth consecutive month in January, the Commerce Department said, as demand fell across a wide cross-section of industries. And worker productivity fell more steeply than previously estimated in the fourth quarter, the Labor Department said.

Retailers, meanwhile, said sales dropped in February but at a slower pace than the previous month.

The stock markets, already trading lower, extended their decline after the factory orders report. The Dow Jones industrial average dropped 132 points, or 1.9 percent, while broader indexes also fell.



To: Travis_Bickle who wrote (162262)3/5/2009 11:53:12 AM
From: T L Comiskey  Respond to of 361830
 
Another hairball...

coughed
Up..

KKR's Masonite to file for Chapter 11
Tue Mar 3, 7:34 pm ET

MISSISSAUGA, Ontario – Canadian door maker Masonite International Inc. said Tuesday it expects to file for bankruptcy protection from creditors as part of a deal with lenders to reduce the company's debt by nearly $2 billion.

Masonite, which is majority owned by U.S. leveraged-buyout firm Kohlberg Kravis Roberts, is seeking support for the plan from its broader lender and bondholder constituencies. If approved, a "pre-negotiated" reorganization plans would be filed in conjunction with a creditors' restructuring in Canada and Chapter 11 proceedings in the United States.

If cleared by lenders and bondholders, the plan will enable Masonite, one of North America's largest makers of doors and other building products, to reduce its total funded debt from $2.2 billion to up to $300 million.

The company said this would lower annual cash interest costs by about $145 million, giving Masonite greater liquidity and financial flexibility as it continues to face challenges created by the downturn in the global housing and tight credit markets.

Masonite was taken over by U.S. leveraged-buyout firm Kohlberg Kravis Roberts in 2005 in a deal worth $3.26 billion. Under terms of the agreement in principle, holders of Masonite's existing senior secured debt would hold roughly 97.5 percent of the common equity of a reorganized Masonite. That debt would be converted into a new senior secured term loan of up to $200 million and a new second-lien loan of up to $100 million.

The company's senior subordinated notes would be converted to about 2.5 percent of the common equity in Masonite plus warrants for about 17.5 percent of the common stock of the company.

Masonite said it expects to continue to operate its business during the restructuring process, with all manufacturing and distribution facilities around the world remaining open.

As of Monday, Masonite said it had more than $160 million in cash on hand available to pay trade suppliers and vendors.



To: Travis_Bickle who wrote (162262)3/5/2009 12:00:26 PM
From: T L Comiskey  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 361830
 
Those ..bastard guys

Whats next..?

A fatwa on The Beach Boys...?

<g>

Sufi Shrine 'blown up by Taleban'

Suspected Taleban militants in north-west Pakistan have blown up the shrine of a 17th Century Sufi poet of the Pashtun language, police say.

No casualties are reported but the poet Rahman Baba's grave has been destroyed and the shrine building badly damaged.

Rahman Baba is considered the most widely read and poet in Pashto speaking regions of Afghanistan and Pakistan.

The Taleban had warned they would blow up the shrine if women continued to visit it and pay their respects.

Historic popularity

Literary experts say the poet's popularity is due to his message of tolerance coupled with a powerful expression of love for God in a Sufi way.

The BBC's M Ilyas Khan in Islamabad says that his lasting appeal reflects the historic popularity of Sufism in South Asia.

But our correspondent says that his views are anathema to the Taleban, who represent a more purist form of Islam and are opposed to Sufism, preventing people from visiting shrines of Sufi saints in areas they control.

When the Taleban seized power in neighbouring Afghanistan in 1996, they locked Sufi shrines.

In Mohmand tribal region, the local Taleban captured the shrine of a revered freedom movement hero, Haji Sahib of Turangzai, and turned it into their headquarters.

Taleban leaders have said in the past that they are opposed to women visiting these shrines because they believe it promotes obscenity.

Residents of Hazarkhwani area on the eastern outskirts of Peshawar - where the shrine of Rahman Baba is located - say that local Taleban groups had warned that if the women continued to visit the shrine, they would blow it up.
Story from BBC NEWS:
news.bbc.co.uk

Published: 2009/03/05 11:53:24 GMT

© BBC MMIX