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Politics : How Quickly Can Obama Totally Destroy the US? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Taro who wrote (11958)10/29/2014 12:53:59 PM
From: joseffy  Respond to of 16547
 
SEE Entire Attack on "chickenshit" Netanyahu in Obama Mouthpiece ATLANTIC Magazine
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The Crisis in U.S.-Israel Relations Is Officially Here


The Obama administration's anger is "red-hot" over Israel's settlement policies, and the Netanyahu government openly expresses contempt for Obama's understanding of the Middle East. Profound changes in the relationship may be coming.

by Jeffrey Goldberg Oct 28 2014,

  • theatlantic.com



    Not friends at all (Reuters )

    The other day I was talking to a senior Obama administration official about the foreign leader who seems to frustrate the White House and the State Department the most. “The thing about Bibi is, he’s a chickenshit,” this official said, referring to the Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, by his nickname.

    This comment is representative of the gloves-off manner in which American and Israeli officials now talk about each other behind closed doors, and is yet another sign that relations between the Obama and Netanyahu governments have moved toward a full-blown crisis. The relationship between these two administrations— dual guarantors of the putatively “unbreakable” bond between the U.S. and Israel—is now the worst it's ever been, and it stands to get significantly worse after the November midterm elections. By next year, the Obama administration may actually withdraw diplomatic cover for Israel at the United Nations, but even before that, both sides are expecting a showdown over Iran, should an agreement be reached about the future of its nuclear program.

    The fault for this breakdown
    in relations can be assigned in good part to the junior partner in the relationship, Netanyahu, and in particular, to the behavior of his cabinet. Netanyahu has told several people I’ve spoken to in recent days that he has “written off” the Obama administration, and plans to speak directly to Congress and to the American people should an Iran nuclear deal be reached. For their part, Obama administration officials express, in the words of one official, a “red-hot anger” at Netanyahu for pursuing settlement policies on the West Bank, and building policies in Jerusalem, that they believe have fatally undermined Secretary of State John Kerry’s peace process.



    Obama: 'The Window Is Closing' for a Viable Israel-Palestine Peace Deal

    Over the years, Obama administration officials have described Netanyahu to me
    as recalcitrant, myopic, reactionary, obtuse, blustering, pompous, and “Aspergery.”

    (These are verbatim descriptions; I keep a running list.) But I had not previously heard Netanyahu described as a “chickenshit.” I thought I appreciated the implication of this description, but it turns out I didn’t have a full understanding. From time to time, current and former administration officials have described Netanyahu as a national leader who acts as though he is mayor of Jerusalem, which is to say, a no-vision small-timer who worries mainly about pleasing the hardest core of his political constituency. (President Obama, in interviews with me, has alluded to Netanyahu’s lack of political courage.)

    “The good thing about Netanyahu is that he’s scared to launch wars,” the official said, expanding the definition of what a chickenshit Israeli prime minister looks like . “The bad thing about him is that he won’t do anything to reach an accommodation with the Palestinians or with the Sunni Arab states. The only thing he’s interested in is protecting himself from political defeat. He’s not [Yitzhak] Rabin, he’s not [Ariel] Sharon, he’s certainly no [Menachem] Begin. He’s got no guts.”

    I ran this notion by another senior official who deals with the Israel file regularly. This official agreed that Netanyahu is a “chickenshit” on matters related to the comatose peace process, but added that he’s also a “coward” on the issue of Iran’s nuclear threat. The official said the Obama administration no longer believes that Netanyahu would launch a preemptive strike on Iran’s nuclear facilities in order to keep the regime in Tehran from building an atomic arsenal. “It’s too late for him to do anything. Two, three years ago, this was a possibility. But ultimately he couldn’t bring himself to pull the trigger. It was a combination of our pressure and his own unwillingness to do anything dramatic. Now it’s too late.”

    U.S. officials had described Netanyahu to me as recalcitrant, pompous, and “Aspergery.” But this was the first time I'd heard him called “chickenshit.”This assessment represents a momentous shift in the way the Obama administration sees Netanyahu. In 2010, and again in 2012, administration officials were convinced that Netanyahu and his then-defense minister, the cowboyish ex-commando Ehud Barak, were readying a strike on Iran. To be sure, the Obama administration used the threat of an Israeli strike in a calculated way to convince its allies (and some of its adversaries) to line up behind what turned out to be an effective sanctions regime. But the fear inside the White House of a preemptive attack (or preventative attack, to put it more accurately) was real and palpable—as was the fear of dissenters inside Netanyahu’s Cabinet, and at Israel Defense Forces headquarters. At U.S. Central Command headquarters in Tampa, analysts kept careful track of weather patterns and of the waxing and waning moon over Iran, trying to predict the exact night of the coming Israeli attack.

    Today, there are few such fears. “The feeling now is that Bibi’s bluffing,” this second official said. “He’s not Begin at Osirak,” the official added, referring to the successful 1981 Israeli Air Force raid ordered by the ex-prime minister on Iraq’s nuclear reactor.

    The belief that Netanyahu’s threat to strike is now an empty one has given U.S. officials room to breathe in their ongoing negotiations with Iran. You might think that this new understanding of Netanyahu as a hyper-cautious leader would make the administration somewhat grateful. Sober-minded Middle East leaders are not so easy to come by these days, after all. But on a number of other issues, Netanyahu does not seem sufficiently sober-minded.

    Another manifestation of his chicken-shittedness, in the view of Obama administration officials, is his near-pathological desire for career-preservation. Netanyahu’s government has in recent days gone out of its way to a) let the world know that it will quicken the pace of apartment-building in disputed areas of East Jerusalem; and b) let everyone know of its contempt for the Obama administration and its understanding of the Middle East. Settlement expansion, and the insertion of right-wing Jewish settlers into Arab areas of East Jerusalem, are clear signals by Netanyahu to his political base, in advance of possible elections next year, that he is still with them, despite his rhetorical commitment to a two-state solution. The public criticism of Obama policies is simultaneously heartfelt, and also designed to mobilize the base.

    Just yesterday, Netanyahu criticized those who condemn Israeli expansion plans in East Jerusalem as “disconnected from reality.” This statement was clearly directed at the State Department, whose spokeswoman, Jen Psaki, had earlier said that, “if Israel wants to live in a peaceful society, they need to take steps that will reduce tensions. Moving forward with this sort of action would be incompatible with the pursuit of peace.”

    It is the Netanyahu government that appears to be disconnected from reality. Jerusalem is on the verge of exploding into a third Palestinian uprising. It is true that Jews have a moral right to live anywhere they want in Jerusalem, their holiest city. It is also true that a mature government understands that not all rights have to be exercised simultaneously. Palestinians believe, not without reason, that the goal of planting Jewish residents in all-Arab neighborhoods is not integration, but domination—to make it as difficult as possible for a Palestinian capital in East Jerusalem to ever emerge.

    Unlike the U.S. secretary of state, John Kerry, I don’t have any hope for the immediate creation of a Palestinian state (it could be dangerous, at this chaotic moment in Middle East history, when the Arab-state system is in partial collapse, to create an Arab state on the West Bank that could easily succumb to extremism), but I would also like to see Israel foster conditions on the West Bank and in East Jerusalem that would allow for the eventual birth of such a state. This is what the Obama administration wants (and also what Europe wants, and also, by the way, what many Israelis and American Jews want), and this issue sits at the core of the disagreement between Washington and Jerusalem.

    Israel and the U.S., like all close allies, have disagreed from time to time on important issues. But I don’t remember such a period of sustained and mutual contempt. Much of the anger felt by Obama administration officials is rooted in the Netanyahu government’s periodic explosions of anti-American condescension. The Israeli defense minister, Moshe Ya’alon, in particular, has publicly castigated the Obama administration as naive, or worse, on matters related to U.S. policy in the Middle East. Last week, senior officials including Kerry (who was labeled as “obsessive” and “messianic” by Ya’alon) and Susan Rice, the national security advisor, refused to meet with Ya’alon on his trip to Washington, and it’s hard to blame them. (Kerry, the U.S. official most often targeted for criticism by right-wing Israeli politicians, is the only remaining figure of importance in the Obama administration who still believes that Netanyahu is capable of making bold compromises, which might explain why he’s been targeted.)

    “The Israelis do not show sufficient appreciation for America’s role in backing Israel,” the head of the Anti-Defamation League told me.One of the more notable aspects of the current tension between Israel and the U.S. is the unease felt by mainstream American Jewish leaders about recent Israeli government behavior. “The Israelis do not show sufficient appreciation for America’s role in backing Israel, economically, militarily and politically,” Abraham Foxman, the head of the Anti-Defamation League, told me. (UPDATE: Foxman just e-mailed me this statement: "The quote is accurate, but the context is wrong. I was referring to what troubles this administration about Israel, not what troubles leaders in the American Jewish community.")

    What does all this unhappiness mean for the near future? For one thing, it means that Netanyahu—who has preemptively “written off” the Obama administration—will almost certainly have a harder time than usual making his case against a potentially weak Iran nuclear deal, once he realizes that writing off the administration was an unwise thing to do.

    This also means that the post-November White House will be much less interested in defending Israel from hostile resolutions at the United Nations where Israel is regularly scapegoated. The Obama administration may be looking to make Israel pay direct costs for its settlement policies.

    Next year, the president of the Palestinian Authority, Mahmoud Abbas, will quite possibly seek full UN recognition for Palestine. I imagine that the U.S. will still try to block such a move in the Security Council, but it might do so by helping to craft a stridently anti-settlement resolution in its place. Such a resolution would isolate Israel from the international community.

    It would also be unsurprising, post-November, to see the Obama administration take a step Netanyahu is loath to see it take: a public, full lay-down of the administration’s vision for a two-state solution, including maps delineating Israel’s borders. These borders, to Netanyahu's horror, would be based on 1967 lines, with significant West Bank settlement blocs attached to Israel in exchange for swapped land elsewhere. Such a lay-down would make explicit to Israel what the U.S. expects of it.

    Netanyahu, and the even more hawkish ministers around him, seem to have decided that their short-term political futures rest on a platform that can be boiled down to this formula: “The whole world is against us. Only we can protect Israel from what’s coming.” For an Israeli public traumatized by Hamas violence and anti-Semitism, and by fear that the chaos and brutality of the Arab world will one day sweep over them, this formula has its charms.

    But for Israel’s future as an ally of the United States, this formula is a disaster.




    To: Taro who wrote (11958)10/29/2014 5:14:19 PM
    From: joseffy  Respond to of 16547
     

    1 Recommendation of 813987
    Democratic Group La Raza Caught Promoting Illegal Immigrant Voter Fraud

    Posted by Jim Hoft on Wednesday, October 29, 2014, 1:32 PM
    The Democratic group La Raza posted a guide on where illegal aliens can go vote without an ID.



    The Daily Caller reported:

    The pro-amnesty Hispanic activist organization the National Council of La Raza helpfully promoted a Washington Post article explaining which states people can vote in without having to use a photo ID.

    “Voter ID laws are at-issue across the country, with newly Republican-controlled legislatures having passed them in numerous states after the 2010 election,” explained The Washington Post’s Aaron Blake. “Most states still request some form of ID, but don’t require it. Another 20 states don’t require identification. In case you’re wondering where your state is at in all of this, a helpful (sic) graphic from the Post’s graphics team.”

    So who ended up using the Post’s helpful graphic? The country’s foremost pro-amnesty Hispanic immigrant organization.

    The Chicago chapter of Asian Americans Advancing Justice tweeted Blake’s article with the message, “Reminder — #Illinois does NOT require #voterID to cast a ballot,” along with the pro-Democrat hashtag #TurnOutForWhat. The tweet was helpfully retweeted by the National Council of La Raza.



    To: Taro who wrote (11958)10/30/2014 2:59:34 PM
    From: joseffy1 Recommendation

    Recommended By
    The1Stockman

      Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 16547
     
    Police Issue Arrest Warrant for Husband of Dem State Senator After GOP Volunteers Catch Him Red-Handed on Video

    Oct. 29, 2014 by Jason Howerton
    theblaze.com

    <More Surprise Here>



    Police in Middletown, Delaware, issued an arrest warrant for the husband of state Sen. Bethany Hall-Long on Wednesday after he was caught on video allegedly stealing campaign signs put up by Republicans. The suspect, identified as Dana Armon Long, has been charged with a Class A misdemeanor for theft under $1,500. He faces up to one year in prison and a fine of up to $2,300.

    On Wednesday, Republican campaign volunteers reportedly set up a camera at the location in Middletown where dozens of their political signs kept disappearing. Some of the signs apparently read, “Fix the Economy! Vote Republican.”

    “We got you, brother! We got the license plate, your face, and everything,” one of the volunteers says in the video.

    Watch the footage below:

    (snip)

    <More Surprise Here>



    To: Taro who wrote (11958)10/30/2014 8:49:15 PM
    From: joseffy  Respond to of 16547
     
    Many Empty Seats at Hillary Rally in Maryland

    .....................................................................
    Weekly Standard ^ | Oct 30, 2014 | DANIEL HALPER




    To: Taro who wrote (11958)10/31/2014 1:41:47 PM
    From: joseffy  Respond to of 16547
     
    How Many Elections Will The Democrats Steal?

    ......................................................................................................
    Investor's Business Daily ^ | October 31, 2014 | IBD EDITORIALS



    To: Taro who wrote (11958)11/3/2014 11:23:25 PM
    From: joseffy  Respond to of 16547
     
    Lefty Washington Post--Where did Obama go wrong?

    ..............................................................................

    By Juliet Eilperin and David Nakamura November 3 2014
    washingtonpost.com

    The week after his reelection, President Obama was a man full of promise and promises: His job-approval rating stood at 54 percent, the 2010 tea party wave that had knocked his first term off balance appeared to have receded, and he seemed as sober about the future as he was hopeful.

    “With respect to the issue of mandate, I’ve got one mandate ..... to help middle-class families and families that are working hard to try to get into the middle class,” he said at a news conference in the East Room of the White House in November 2012. Obama acknowledged the dangers of “presidential overreach in second terms,” but he put forward an expansive, legacy-building agenda: a major fiscal deal, immigration reform and action on climate change.


    View Graphic
    Election Lab: See our current forecast for every congressional race in 2014
    Two bruising years later, he has registered progress only on addressing climate change, and a president who once boasted of a barrier-breaking liberal coalition is under fire from his own party as his Republican rivals are poised to make gains in Tuesday’s midterm elections.

    A routine campaign stop Sunday on behalf of Gov. Dan Malloy (D) in Bridgeport, Conn., exemplified this reversal of fortune. As the president spoke, working to rally his party’s base, protesters — including one sporting an “Obama deports parents” T-shirt — interrupted him at least four times.

    “I am sympathetic to those who are concerned about immigration,” the president said amid shouts from the audience. “It’s the other party that’s blocked it. Unfortunately, folks get frustrated, then they want to yell at everybody.”

    Obama’s journey from triumphant, validated Democratic hero to a political millstone weighing on his party’s chances is a tale of a second-term president quickly and repeatedly sidetracked by a series of crises — some self-inflicted — and the widely held perception that the White House has not managed them well.

    The fallout has led to questions about the president’s effectiveness, his resolve and his general ability to lead, at home and abroad.

    “This is an administration that is very good at articulating some of its plans and responses and has delivered good speeches, but translating that into action has been a problem for the past six years,” said David Rothkopf, the author of “ National Insecurity: American Leadership in an Age of Fear.” “Right now, the vast preponderance of evidence is that management is not one of the strong suits of this administration.”

    Obama’s list of second-term leadership crises is a formidable one: the botched rollout of HealthCare.gov; long waits at Veterans Affairs hospitals; Edward Snowden’s disclosures of the National Security Agency’s secrets; a pileup of foreign children along the southern border; Islamist terrorists marauding across Syria and Iraq and beheading foreigners, including Americans; and the arrival of the Ebola virus in the United States.


    Voter turnout is notoriously low for midterm elections, but certain demographic groups will almost certainly show up at the polls this year. View Graphic

    “These are legitimate crises in their own right that have to be dealt with by the president. That’s his job,” said AFL-CIO Political Director Michael Podhorzer, a White House ally who blames the GOP for blocking Obama’s economic agenda. “But that has dampened his ability to speak out on other issues.”

    At a fundraising event in New York in September, Obama talked about “disquiet” in the country despite the improving economy. The reason for that, he said, is that most people “just think government doesn’t seem to be capable of working anymore.”

    He blamed Republicans, but it is the president and his party who may pay the heaviest price for that public perception.


    Defining moments

    About a month after Obama was reelected, his agenda priorities were dramatically altered when 20 children and six adults were killed in a shooting at a Connecticut elementary school. The massacre upended Washington’s political debate and focused it squarely on gun control. Thinking it had a strong hand to play, the White House launched an all-out push to ban assault rifles and require stricter background checks for gun buyers.

    “Every president finds that after setting an agenda on the campaign, the agenda is set for them by the world,” said Matt Bennett, vice president of Third Way, a centrist think tank that supports stricter gun laws. “This time, the external events dictated the timing of something no one thought they would be taking up.”

    But even the enthusiastic embrace of the issue by the White House was unable to deliver results. The Senate rejected all of the president’s gun-control proposals in April 2013, handing Obama an early defeat on an issue that had fixated much of the country.

    Inside the West Wing, the loss, while frustrating, was not considered an event that would set a tone of failure for the second term. The president and his advisers remained convinced that they could pursue big, bipartisan deals to cement an Obama legacy.

    The president set about trying to woo enough Republican senators to pass key bills with margins large enough to pressure the GOP-controlled House to follow.

    Most of the White House overtures quickly fell apart. Then-Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus (D-Mont.) and ranking Republican Orrin G. Hatch (Utah) began discussing a possible tax-reform proposal. But once the two sides delved into the details, the initiative — along with the broader discussion of a comprehensive fiscal deal — collapsed.

    Republicans said Obama’s lack of follow-through, rather than an ideological impasse, was to blame.

    That spring, a group of Senate Republicans met with Obama over dinner to explore entitlement and tax-code reform. Sen. Lamar Alexander (R-Tenn.) considered such an overhaul a priority, but he had a small side concern: He wanted to urge the president to use his influence with Democrats to prevent a change in the Senate’s filibuster rules. The change would strip the minority party — the GOP now, but maybe the Democrats next year — of its power to block or slow presidential nominations.

    At the dinner, Alexander said, he handed Obama a one-page memo making his argument that this administration would not be justified in changing the rules because it had gotten as many nominees approved as previous administrations in similar circumstances.

    Aside from a second request for the memo, Alexander said, he never heard back. He was disappointed, and he called the snub indicative of why the White House has trouble getting things done on Capitol Hill. “I would have liked for someone to show me where I was wrong or show me where I was right,” he said.

    White House senior adviser Dan Pfeiffer said the real problem was not disagreement about nominations but GOP intransigence on raising taxes as part of any fiscal deal, suggesting that the differences were substantial and maybe insurmountable.

    “If they’re unwilling to move off their core principle, then they are unwilling to compromise, and nothing can get done,” he said.

    Rep. Rosa L. DeLauro (D-Conn.) said that Republicans have deliberately let problems “fester” as part of a broader strategy of diminishing “the capacity of government to respond to crises.”

    By October 2013, Democrats believed that they had seized the upper hand on fiscal matters, as the GOP forced a 16-day government shutdown, causing furloughs for 850,000 federal workers and costing $2 billion in lost productivity. The shutdown was the most vivid evidence of the depth of antipathy toward Obama in the GOP, particularly in the House. The unwillingness to work with the president on almost any issue has spawned what is known as the “Hope Yes, Vote No Caucus.” These are lawmakers who might be inclined to support compromise measures but vote against them for fear that voters will punish them for working with Obama.


    The shutdown was a political disaster for the GOP, but hope among Democrats that they had finally broken the opposition was short-lived, as the White House quickly became consumed by the troubled rollout of the online federal health insurance exchange, which launched Oct. 1, the same day the shutdown began.

    Even as Obama and his aides scrambled to fix the Web site in the early days, according to people familiar with the situation, senior Health and Human Services officials did not provide them with accurate information about the depth of the system’s problems.

    Although the site was mostly repaired within two months, a White House ally cited the botched rollout as a defining moment because Republicans, who had been reeling after the 2012 election loss, stopped “feeling defeated” and were emboldened once again.


    A new strategy
    The wreckage of 2013 had similar effects on the combatants: The president’s approval ratings took a nose dive, and Congress’s were even worse. Gallup reported that 42 percent of the public approved of Obama’s performance as the new year dawned.

    Inside the West Wing, Obama’s top advisers developed a new strategy based on a memo from Pfeiffer that concluded that the president had acted too much like a prime minister, relying on lawmakers to get things done. In 2014, Obama would hold out one hand to Capitol Hill, but with the other he would more aggressively move the levers of executive power. John D. Podesta, a Democratic strategist with deep Washington experience, was brought aboard as a senior counselor — a signal that Obama’s insular inner circle meant business.

    Podesta’s influence was felt early on when the White House introduced an ambitious regulation to cut greenhouse gas emissions from existing utilities — the most far-reaching climate rule ever undertaken by the federal government, which does not need congressional approval.

    But whatever momentum the White House hoped to gain from that initiative was cut short as the news cycle was consumed by a crisis along the southwestern border, where tens of thousands of foreign children were crossing illegally. The situation was even more disruptive to Obama’s agenda than the health-care embarrassment; it helped drive the final stake through the heart of his 18-month push for an overhaul of the immigration system.

    After Obama was reelected, conventional wisdom in Washington held that the first broad immigration reform bill in three decades was within reach as Republicans sought to repair their image with the fast-growing Hispanic voting bloc. Even after House Republicans blocked a bipartisan Senate immigration bill in the fall of 2013, the White House held out hope that House leaders would relent after the 2014 primary season, when they would be safe from challenges from the right.

    But the combination of the border crisis and the defeat of House Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R-Va.) in the primary in June by a tea party challenger running on a staunch anti-immigration platform doomed the chances for a bill.

    At the end of June, Obama stood in the White House Rose Garden and announced that he would not wait for Congress and would act on his own to reform immigration laws. That threat sparked anxiety among vulnerable Democrats who persuaded the president in September to back off and wait until after the midterm elections to act.

    Immigration advocates, already angry at Republicans, turned their ire on the White House.

    “With regard to immigration, I just think the conviction isn’t there,” said Kevin Appleby, director of migration policy for the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. “Every decision that has been made has been based on political calculation. You live by the political sword, you die by it.”

    The executive-action delay was designed to protect Democratic incumbents in conservative states, but it put Sen. Mark Udall (D-Colo.) on the defensive with a key constituency in his state, whose population is 21 percent Hispanic.

    Udall said in an interview that Latino voters “saw me express my disappointment with the president’s decision to delay. I’ve made it very clear that after I’m reelected, I’m going to be at the doorstep of the White House pushing them to use the executive authority they have to keep families together.”


    International crises
    The White House attempted to regain its footing over the summer by sending the president on the road to connect with ordinary Americans, comparing Obama’s jaunts to a bear breaking free of his handlers.

    The goal was to talk about pocketbook issues — the minimum wage, equal pay for women — and cast Washington as consumed by manufactured political controversies. But the tour took on a discordant note when set against a series of international crises: the standoff with Russia’s Vladi­mir Putin in eastern Ukraine, the outbreak of Ebola in West Africa and the rise of the Islamic State militant group, whose gruesome executions of two Americans helped persuade Obama to authorize a new U.S. military campaign in Iraq and Syria.

    That decision was a major setback for a president who had staked his foreign policy legacy on ending U.S. wars in the Middle East. In late September at the United Nations, Obama noted a “pervasive sense of unease” across the world.

    To his critics, the Syria crisis highlighted Obama’s greatest foreign policy weakness: a determination to engage with the world in the opposite fashion from predecessor George W. Bush at almost any cost.

    Where Bush rushed into war in Iraq, Obama has been determined to limit U.S. military engagement and rely on diplomatic coalition-building. The president reversed himself in the fall of 2013 on plans to launch airstrikes against Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, leading even some of his heavyweight former Cabinet members — Hillary Rodham Clinton, Robert M. Gates and Leon Panetta — to question his approach.

    “Bush is a leader who didn’t like to think,” said Ian Bremmer, president of the Eurasia Group, a global political risk-management firm. “Obama is a thinker who doesn’t like to lead.”

    At home, as the president has made his case to voters this fall on behalf of fellow Democrats, he has returned time and again to the improving economy. The United States boasts its lowest national unemployment rate in six years, the stock market is at record highs, and about 10 million people have enrolled in health coverage under the Affordable Care Act.

    But the argument has largely fallen flat.

    John Puckett, co-owner of Punch Pizza, a Minneapolis chain that raised wages above the federal minimum, is stumped about why. Puckett met with Obama’s speechwriters ahead of the president’s State of the Union address in January, and Obama gave the pizzeria a shout-out while announcing plans to increase wages for federal contractors to start what the president called “a year of action.”

    Puckett said that business is humming and that Minnesota’s economy continues to grow.

    “It’s almost like you’re in a different world when you see the bad polls about how people feel about the future,” he said. “You do look at the national stuff and scratch your head.”



    To: Taro who wrote (11958)11/8/2014 11:04:31 AM
    From: joseffy  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 16547
     
    U.S.D.A. Approves Modified Potato. Next Up: French Fry Fans.
    ..................................................................
    By ANDREW POLLACKNOV. 7, 2014
    nytimes.com


    A genetically modified Innate potato, left, made by J.R. Simplot, next to a bruised conventional potato. Credit Simplot


    A potato genetically engineered to reduce the amounts of a potentially harmful ingredient in French fries and potato chips has been approved for commercial planting, the Department of Agriculture announced on Friday.

    The potato’s DNA has been altered so that less of a chemical called acrylamide, which is suspected of causing cancer in people, is produced when the potato is fried.

    The new potato also resists bruising, a characteristic long sought by potato growers and processors for financial reasons. Potatoes bruised during harvesting, shipping or storage can lose value or become unusable.

    The biotech tubers were developed by the J. R. Simplot Company, a privately held company based in Boise, Idaho, which was the initial supplier of frozen French fries to McDonald’s in the 1960s and is still a major supplier. The company’s founder, Mr. Simplot, who died in 2008, became a billionaire.

    The potato is one of a new wave of genetically modified crops that aim to provide benefits to consumers, not just to farmers as the widely grown biotech crops like herbicide-tolerant soybeans and corn do. The nonbruising aspect of the potato is similar to that of genetically engineered nonbrowning apples, developed by Okanagan Specialty Fruits, which are awaiting regulatory approval.




    But the approval comes as some consumers are questioning the safety of genetically engineered crops and demanding that the foods made from them be labeled. Ballot initiatives calling for labeling were rejected by voters in Oregon and Colorado this week, after food and seed companies poured millions of dollars into campaigns to defeat the measures.

    The question now is whether the potatoes — which come in the Russet Burbank, Ranger Russet and Atlantic varieties — will be adopted by food companies and restaurant chains. At least one group opposed to such crops has already pressed McDonald’s to reject them.

    Genetically modified potatoes failed once before. In the late 1990s, Monsanto began selling potatoes genetically engineered to resist the Colorado potato beetle. But the market collapsed after big potato users, fearing consumer resistance, told farmers not to grow them. Simplot itself, after hearing from its fast-food chain customers, instructed its farmers to stop growing the Monsanto potatoes.

    This time around could be different, however, because the potato promises at least potential health benefits to consumers. And unlike Monsanto, Simplot is a long-established power in the potato business and presumably has been clearing the way for acceptance of the product from its customers.

    Simplot hopes the way the potato was engineered will also help assuage consumer fears. The company calls its product the Innate potato because it does not contain genes from other species like bacteria, as do many biotech crops.

    Rather, it contains fragments of potato DNA that act to silence four of the potatoes’ own genes involved in the production of certain enzymes. Future crops — the company has already applied for approval of a potato resistant to late blight, the cause of the Irish potato famine — will also have genes from wild potatoes.

    “We are trying to use genes from the potato plant back in the potato plant,” said Haven Baker, who is in charge of the potato development at Simplot. “We believe there’s some more comfort in that.”

    That is not likely to persuade groups opposed to such crops, who say altering levels of plant enzymes might have unexpected effects.

    Doug Gurian-Sherman, a plant pathologist and senior scientist at the Center for Food Safety, an advocacy group, said that the technique used to silence the genes, called RNA interference, was still not well understood.

    “We think this is a really premature approval of a technology that is not being adequately regulated,” he said, adding that his group might try to get a court to reverse the approval of the potato.

    Photo



    A Simplot storage facility with gene-modified Russet Burbank potatoes, which resist bruising and, when fried, also produce less of a potentially harmful ingredient. Credit J. R. Simplot Company He said one of the substances being suppressed in the Innate potatoes appeared to be important for proper use of nitrogen by the plant and also for protection from pests.

    The Agriculture Department, in its assessment, said the levels of various nutrients in the potatoes were in the normal range, except for the substances targeted by the genetic engineering. Simplot has submitted the potato for a voluntary food safety review by the Food and Drug Administration.

    The company says that when the Innate potatoes are fried, the levels of acrylamide are 50 to 75 percent lower than for comparable nonengineered potatoes. It is unclear how much of a benefit that is.'

    Still, Gregory Jaffe, biotechnology project director at the Center for Science in the Public Interest, a consumer group that deals with nutrition issues, welcomed the approval. “We support clearly trying to reduce consumers’ exposure to acrylamide and if this product helps do that, I think it’s a benefit,” he said.

    Last year, the F.D.A. issued draft guidance advising the food industry how to reduce levels of acrylamide, which is also found in some baked goods, coffee and other foods. The agency listed numerous steps that could be taken in the growing, handling and cooking of potatoes. Many food companies no doubt have already taken steps to reduce acrylamide levels and might not need the genetically engineered potatoes.

    Whether McDonald’s, which did not respond to requests for comment, adopts the potatoes is somewhat academic for at least another couple of years. Simplot anticipates that only a few thousand out of the nation’s more than one million acres of potatoes will be planted with Innate potatoes next year, far too little to serve fast-food chains.

    Instead, the company will focus on sales of fresh potatoes and fresh-cut potatoes to supermarkets and food service companies and to potato chip manufacturers, said Doug Cole, a spokesman for Simplot.

    The National Potato Council, which represents potato farmers, welcomed the approval, albeit with reservations.

    John Keeling, chief executive of the trade group, said growers wanted new technology. But in comments to the Agriculture Department, the group has expressed concern that exports could be disrupted if genetically engineered varieties inadvertently end up in shipments bound for countries that have not approved the potatoes.

    China, for instance, recently turned away shipments of corn containing a genetically engineered variety developed by Syngenta that it had not approved for import. Some corn farmers and exporters have sued Syngenta for their losses.

    Mr. Cole of Simplot said growers would have to keep the genetically engineered potatoes separate from others and out of exports at least for now. The company plans to apply for approval of the potatoes in the major markets, starting with Canada, Mexico, Japan and then other parts of Asia.