Friday, May 27, 2011

Deadly tornadoes devastate the South: How to help (The Newsroom)

A slew of powerful tornadoes ripped through the South recently, leveling entire towns and killing hundreds of people in six states. NOAA's Storm Prediction Center was able to give 24 minutes' notice of the approaching tornadoes, but for many people throughout the region, that wasn't enough time to escape the deadly twisters.

The majority of fatalities occurred in Alabama; Walter Maddox, the mayor of Tuscaloosa, Ala., told CNN, "I don't know how anyone survived."

Below are organizations that are working on relief and recovery in the region.

AMERICAN RED CROSS: Opening emergency shelters for families affected by the severe storms.  To designate your gift to Red Cross Disaster Relief, select "National Disaster Relief" in the designation field. Donate here.

SAMARITAN'S PURSE: Sending Disaster Relief Units to help victims of the violent storms in Alabama and North Carolina.  To designate your gift to U.S. Disaster Relief, write "US Disaster Relief" in the designation field. Donate here.

SALVATION ARMY: Responding to the deadly tornado activity throughout the South, mobilizing feeding units, and providing support to the victims.  To designate your gift to support relief after these tornadoes, write "April 2011 Tornado Outbreak" in the designation field. Donate here.

AMERICARES: AmeriCares is working with the National Conference of Community Health Centers to assess needs and mobilize a response for communities affected by the deadliest series of twisters in more than 40 years.  To designate your gift to US Disaster Relief, write "US Disaster Relief Fund" in the designation field. Donate here.

DIRECT RELIEF INTERNATIONAL: Assisting local clinics and health-care providers whose facilities have been destroyed or evacuated.  Direct Relief USA has been in contact with National Association of Free Clinics (NAFC), the National Association of Community Health Centers (NACHC), and State Primary Care Associations across several southern states to offer medical material aid to partner clinics from the organization's standing inventory.  To designate your gift to Disaster Relief, write "Emergency Preparedness & Response" in the designation field. Donate here.


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An iconic journey: From village priest to Pope John Paul II (The Newsroom)

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Space aliens from Russia (The Newsroom)

All the Mulders and Scullys out there want to believe, but if you're gonna hoax the believers, you have to try harder than chicken skin and stale bread.

That's what two Russian students used to create a faux space alien, complete with its own Siberian "crash site." The pair's YouTube video of the supposed alien landing snagged more than 7 million breathless believers. Not quite so gullible? The Russian police. Investigators dug a little deeper and eventually found E.T. stashed under a bed in one of the student's homes. (I'm guessing they just followed their noses.)


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Sunday, May 22, 2011

Michele Bachmann

Current Position: U.S. Representative (since January 2007)

Career History: Minnesota Senator (2000-2007); Treasury Department tax attorney(1995 to 2000);

Birthday: April 6, 1956

Hometown: Stillwater, Minn.

Alma Mater: Winona State University, B.A., 1978; Coburn School of Law at Oral Roberts University, J.D., 1986; Marshall-Wythe School of Law at the College of William and Mary, L.L.M., 1988

Spouse: Marcus Bachmann

Religion: Lutheran

DC Office: 107 Cannon House Office Building, 202-225-2331

District Office: Woodbury, Minn., 651-731-5400; St. Cloud/Waite Park, Minn., 320-253-5931

Email 

Website 


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Newt Gingrich

Current Position: Founder of Newt.org, American Solutions and the Center for Health Transformation, author, Fox News political analyst

Career History: Speaker of the House (1995 to 1998), Congressman from Georgia (1978 to 1998), Co-author “The Contract with America” (1994), professor, University of West Georgia, Carrollton, Ga.

Birthday: June 17, 1943

Hometown: Harrisburg, Pa.

Alma Mater: Bachelor’s Degree, Emory University, Atlanta, 1965; Master’s Degree, Tulane University, New Orleans, 1968; Doctorate, Tulane University, 1971.

Spouse: Callista Bisek Gingrich

Religion: Southern Baptist

Office:
Office of Speaker Newt Gingrich
5555 Glenridge Connector Suite 950
Atlanta, GA 30342

Gingrich Communications 
1425 K St, NW
Suite 350
Washington, DC  20005

Email 

Web site 


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Mike Huckabee

Like Bill Clinton, Huckabee was born in Hope, Ark.. Huckabee’s  father who was a firefighter and mechanicand a mother who worked as a clerk at the local gas company.

He often invoked his poor upbringing on the presidential campaign trail to portray his life as a kind of Horatio Alger story and to connect with working-class voters. When he was 8, he recalled to audiences, his father took him to hear a speech by the governor who was making a rare visit to their part of the state. "Son," Huckabee recalled his father telling him, "you may live your whole life and you may never actually get to see a governor in person." He joked that the only soap he had growing up in his house was Lava, and that, "Heck, I was in college before I found out it wasn't supposed to hurt to take a shower." When he was 14, he took his first job, as a disc jockey, which he held throughout college.

Huckabee married his wife Janet when he was 18, and graduated from Ouachita Baptist University in just over two years, explaining that it was the most economical way to get a degree. In 1976, he began working as director of communications for evangelical leader James Robison during which time he also attended Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary. The work for Robison brought him to Immanuel Baptist in Pine Bluff. The church asked him to serve as interim pastor starting in 1980, and his career began as a Baptist minister. An experienced and skilled communicator, by 1989 he was elected president of the Arkansas Baptist State Convention,which boasted a membership of 490,000.

In 1992, Huckabee entered politics by launching a U.S. Senate bid. Though he earned the Republican nomination, Democrat Dale Bumpers routed him in the general election, 60 percent to 40 percent.Following that election, Lt.  Gov.Jim Guy Tucker (D) replaced Bill Clinton as governor of Arkansas as Clinton took the presidency. Huckabee ran to replace Tucker in a July 1993 special election. By that time, Clinton was already under fire over his tax plan and new gays in the military policy, and Huckabee narrowly edged out Nate Coulter, a pro-Clinton Democrat, 51 percent to 49 percent.

In May 1996, Tucker was convicted for arranging nearly $3 million in fraudulent loans, and forced to resign that July, allowing Huckabee to rise to governor. He was elected in his own right in 1998, beating Democrat attorney Bill Bristow, 60 percent to 39 percent.In 2002, Huckabee’s popularity declined over ethics controversies involving gifts and what was seen as the self-aggrandizing firing of a state official.

Additionally, the Republican drew heat for issuing a string of unpopular pardons. Despite the turmoil, Huckabee won  re-election that year against the Democratic State Treasurer Jimmie Lou Fisher, though by a narrower margin of 53 percent to 47 percent.

Huckabee entered the 2008 presidential race as a heavy underdog for the Republican nomination, registering at one percent support in early polling. Short of money and with a skeleton organization, the governor decided to concentrate on making a strong showing in Iowa, the first nomination contest. The state's concentration of working-class, rural, and evangelical voters made it ideally-suited for his populist message and emphasis on Christian values.

In August 2007, Huckabee made a surprisingly strong showing in the Ames Straw Poll, an early test of who Iowan GOPers will choose, with 18 percent of votes cast, which was second only to Romney, who earned 32 percent. It was taken as an early sign of his potential in the state that Huckabee, who claimed to have spent just over $100,000 on the event, was able to come close to Romney, who had shelled out an estimated $2 million for the straw poll alone. "This really was feeding the 5,000 with two fish and five loaves," Huckabee quipped afterward.

The former pastor's task was made easier because no other candidate in the Republican field was able to consolidate support among the key social conservative base of the party. Romney, Huckabee’s chief Iowa rival, was publically pro-abortion rights until less than two years before he launched his campaign for president, prompting many to question his sincerity.  Huckabee underscored this difference in an October 2007 speech to the Value Voters' Summit, a gathering of social conservatives in Washington, D.C. organized by the Family Research Council. He endeared himself to the crowd by saying that he was at the event "as one who comes not to you, but one who comes from you." He received a rousing reception.

In fall 2007, Huckabee continued to get high marks for his debate performancesin which he'd mix populist rhetoric with homespun anecdotes and witty one-liners. He also got considerable mileage out of his endorsement from action star Chuck Norris, who campaigned with the governor and appeared in a campy ad in which Huckabee joked, "Chuck Norris doesn't endorse, he tells America how it's gonna be." Huckabee also took out an ad that referred to him as a "Christian leader," a move that was criticized by some as being too explicitly religious.

By December 2007, Iowa had evolved into a two-man race between Huckabee and Romney. Feeling the heat, Romney began airing ads criticizing Huckabee for raising taxes and being soft on immigration. Huckabee's rising national profile also brought with it more media scrutiny. His record of granting 1,033 pardons and commutations during his time as governor came to light as did commentsHuckabee made during his failed 1992 Senate campaign calling for the quarantining of AIDS patients.

But Huckabee fought back by portraying himself as a victim of Romney's "desperate" attacks and noting that he was being outspent 20-to-1. On January 3, 2008, Iowans gave Huckabee a nine-point victory over Romney in the Republican caucuses, catapulting him to the top tier of GOP candidates.

As the GOP primaries rolled on, however, it became clear that though Huckabee performed well in states where there was a critical mass of evangelical voters, his appeal was not much broader than that. After losing South Carolina to McCain (who had gained momentum from his win in New Hampshire), Huckabee's chances of winning the GOP nomination faded. In the end, the Arkansas governor won seven states in addition to Iowa and dropped out of the race in March 2008with the second most delegates in the Republican field.


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Mitt Romney’s authenticity appeal on health care

Former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney used a speech on health care today in Michigan to send a broader message about his commitment to authenticity in the 2012 presidential race.

Speaking to a small group of invited guests and reporters at the University of Michigan this afternoon, Romney, as expected, refused to apologize for signing a health care law in Massachusetts that has drawn unfavorable comparisons among Republicans to the national law put in place by President Obama.

“It wouldn’t be honest,” Romney said about calls for him to apologize for the Massachusetts law. “ I did what I believed was right for the people of my state.”

Later, Romney noted that his current health care proposal was very similar to what he proposed during the 2008 campaign despite the fact that his experience in Massachusetts had gone from a political positive to a negative over the past three plus years. “I am not adjusting the plan to reflect the political sentiment,” Romney said.

After walking the audience through the “why” of the Massachusetts plan, Romney acknowledged that “that explanation is not going to satisfy everybody” and added: “I respect the views of people who think we took the wrong course.”

But, it wasn’t just the words Romney used that aimed to push the authenticity narrative.

He spoke without a prepared script and without a TelePrompter, choosing instead to use a PowerPoint presentation to make his case. He wore no tie. He was accompanied to the speech by just three staffers.

The entire presentation screamed openness, pushing the idea that Romney is someone willing to be transparent about what he believes and why he believes it.

All of that is in striking contrast to the way Romney ran in 2008 when his flip-flops on social issues created a destructive storyline that he lacked conviction on any issue — choosing only to take the politically expedient path in every situation.

He and his political team have clearly made the calculation that the only strategic path for Romney to win the nomination is to “let Mitt be Mitt” — to embrace rather than run from his past records and statements.

That approach is not without political peril. Even before he spoke today, Romney was already faced with a quote from the 1990s unearthed by a liberal Massachusetts blog in which he expressed support for the idea of a federal mandate that would require everyone to purchase some form of health insurance, a major no-no for conservative voters.

And Romney’s opponents for the 2012 GOP nomination will spend untold hours combing through his record to find other instances where, on health care and other issues, he has contradicted himself to try and play up the flip-flop narrative.

But today’s speech was a clear attempt by Romney’s campaign to send the field a message: Romney is done running from his record. The question in the days, weeks and months to come is whether that strategy is the right one.

View Romney’s presentation:

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Newt Gingrich to announce presidential bid


Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich will announce his plans through Facebook and Twitter. (Mike Stewart - AP) Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich will announce his plans to pursue the presidency in 2012 on Wednesday, according to spokesman Rick Tyler.

Gingrich will make the announcement first on Facebook and Twitter — a bow to the power of social media in politics — and then will sit down with conservative television personality Sean Hannity on Wednesday night for an interview. Gingrich is expected to make his first formal speech as a candidate on Friday at the Georgia Republican party convention.

The announcement is not terribly surprising as Gingrich has been eyeing the race for months and went through a bit of a false start in early March when one top aide said he was in the race only to be contradicted by other members of Gingrich’s leadership team.

For Gingrich, the presidential bid is a culmination of a long political career that saw him rise from a backbencher in Congress to the architect of the 1994 Republican revolution that saw the GOP take control of the House for the first time in 40 years.

Gingrich was elected Speaker of the new Republican majority and touted as a potential presidential candidate. But, four years later Gingrich left the House amid a tumultous personal life and following wrong-headed predictions about the 1998 election.

Since that time he has built an empire of outside groups — organized under the umbrella of an entity known as American Solutions — designed to forward his policy ideas as well as raise money for conservative causes.

Gingrich’s entrance into the race likely kicks off a period of frenetic activity in the 2012 sweepstakes. Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels is expected to make a final decision on the race by the end of the month — if not sooner — and former Utah governor Jon Huntsman is moving toward a bid.

Both former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney and former Minnesota governor Tim Pawlenty have formed exploratory committees and are expected to formally enter the race in the near-term.

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Saturday, May 21, 2011

Newt Gingrich announces for president

Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich formally entered the 2012 Republican presidential race today, announcing his intentions in a web video.

“I believe we can return America to hope and opportunity,” Gingrich said. “We’ve done it before, we can do it again.”

Gingrich is scheduled to appear on Fox News Channel’s “Sean Hannity Show” this evening, his first public appearance as an official candidate. He is also set to sit down for an extended interview on NBC’s “Meet the Press” this Sunday.

Gingrich is the first major 2012 candidate to enter the race. Former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney and former Minnesota governor Tim Pawlenty have both formed presidential exploratory committees and are expected to formalize their bids soon.

Former Utah governor Jon Huntsman is moving quickly toward the race while Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels, former Arkansas governor Mike Huckabee, Minnesota Rep. Michele Bachmann and former Alaska governor Sarah Palin remain on the sidelines — for now.

For Gingrich, his presidential candidacy is the realization of a long time ambition.

Elected Speaker following his central role in the 1994 Republican takeover of the U.S. House, Gingrich was floated as a potential challenger to President Bill Clinton in 1996.

He passed on that race and by the end of 1998 he was out of Congress entirely, resigning after his prediction of Republican seat gains in that election proved drastically incorrect.

In 2008, Gingrich took a very serious look at running but backed away at the last minute citing his inability to leave American Solutions, the web of fundraising and policy groups he has created since leaving office.

Gingrich’s long life in the national spotlight is both his greatest strength and greatest weakness in the 2012 campaign.

He is universally well known — and generally well liked — by Republican primary voters, a positioning that other lesser-known candidates like Pawlenty and Huntsman will have to spend millions to rival.

Gingrich is also widely respected in GOP circles as a serious and innovative policy mind. “Newt Gingrich has always been an ideas man, and I’m sure will provide a lot of positive input in the debate,” House Majority Leader Eric Cantor (Va.) said of the Georgia Republican.

But, Gingrich’s notoriety hasn’t always been a good thing. His personal life — he has been married three times — is likely to become an issue for some social conservatives and his penchant for rhetorical excess could well get him into trouble.

For more on Gingrich, make sure to check out:

* Gingrich’s Political Inner Circle

* Good Newt vs Bad Newt

* Newt Gingrich: Serious candidate or sideshow?

Felicia Sonmez contributed to this report

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Obama’s targeted reelection launch

President Obama entered his 2012 reelection race via a two-minute web video released to supporters this morning, a video that provides a telling window into how – and where – the campaign will focus in the coming months.

The video features five average people advocating for Obama and, as importantly, his style of politics.

Let’s look at the people first.

The first three voices come from three swing states: “Ed”, a white man from North Carolina, “Gladys”, a Hispanic woman from Nevada and “Katherine”, a white woman from Colorado.

The other two – “Mike” and “Alice” – are, respectively, a college-aged white male and a middle-aged African-American woman.

That, in a nutshell, is the Obama electoral coalition (or the one his team hopes to create in 2012): base voters in the Hispanic and black community, energized younger people and the classic swing voter in the new south (North Carolina) and west (Colorado).

And, it’s not surprising. It’s an attempt to replicate Obama’s electoral success in 2008 when he won every swing state but Missouri and put places like Indiana, North Carolina and Virginia, which hadn’t voted for a Democrat in decades, in his camp.

What’s more telling is what each of the five people say in the video, as it provides a glimpse into how a candidate who ran on changing Washington will position himself running four years later as the incumbent.

“I don’t agree with Obama on everything,” says Ed. “But I respect him and I trust him.”

That idea will be at the core of the Obama reelection message. Put simply: ‘You may not agree with me on everything but you know I always have your best interests at heart.’

It’s a message aimed directly at independent voters who resist what they view as overly partisan governance and tend to be attracted by politicians who think they are doing what’s right no matter the political consequences.

That’s the group Obama must win back – independents went for Republican candidates by 19 points in 2010 – to claim a second term. And, judging from his announcement video, that’s the group he is talking to first and foremost in this campaign.

David Brock super PAC staffs up: Rodell Mollineau, a former communications aide to Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.), has signed on as president of American Bridge 21st Century, a so-called super PAC with ties to liberal operative David Brock that aims to play a major role in the 2012 elections.

Mollineau, who spent the last four years overseeing the Senate Democratic Communications Center, will be joined by Bradley Beychok, who will serve as the group’s campaign director. Beychok managed Louisiana Rep. Charlie Melancon’s (D) unsuccessful 2010 Senate campaign.

The goal of American Bridge is to build an outside infrastructure to rival that of American Crossroads, the very successful conservative-aligned group that spent tens of millions of dollars on the 2010 election. Like Crossroads, the new group has both a super PAC, which can accept unlimited contributions and spend on direct advocacy for or against candidates, and a 501(c)(4) non-profit.

Brock, a former Republican, has become a force on the left — first by starting the media watchdog Media Matters for America and now with the Super PAC.

It’s not clear whether American Bridge will grow into the dominant outside organization among liberals, though. Two former White House aides, Bill Burton and Sean Sweeney, are expected to start an outside vehicle of their own that would almost certainly compete with American Bridge for donations.

Lewis gets in NM-01 race: With Democratic Rep. Martin Heinrich running for Senate in New Mexico, the race to take his 1st district House seat is on.

After Democratic state Sen. Eric Griego announced Friday (before Heinrich even made his Senate run official) that he’s forming an exploratory committee, Albuquerque City Councilman Dan Lewis on Sunday became the first Republican in the race. Lewis was a pastor and a businessman before winning his city council seat two years ago.

New Mexico’s 1st is a swing district that Democrats took in 2008 for the first time since its creation 40 years earlier. But it has drifted towards Democrats in recent years, including going 60 percent for President Obama in 2008, so Democrats should have the early edge.

Hahn falls shy of party endorsement: A majority of California Democratic Party delegates backed Los Angeles City Councilwoman Janice Hahn for the 36th congressional district special election on Saturday. But she fell just shy of the 60 percent she needed to get the party’s official endorsement in the race to replace ex-Rep. Jane Harman (D).

Hahn took 57 percent of the delegates’ votes, while California Secretary of State Debra Bowen got 39 percent.

Under California’s new “top two” election rules, which are being tested for the first time in this election, the two candidates with the most votes in an open primary advance to the general election, regardless of party affiliation. Democrats already had a system for endorsing candidates by local delegates’ vote at a pre-primary summit.

In a statement, Hahn called the vote “a game-changer in this campaign, and it sends a strong message that I am the choice for Democrats in California’s 36th congressional district.” Bowen argued in her own statement that the results show the party was “clearly divided.”

Harpootlian to run for S.C. Dem chair: Former South Carolina Democratic Party Chairman Dick Harpootlian will attempt to reclaim his old post.

The very quotable and often politically incorrect Harpootlian earned 15 minutes of fame in early 2008 for accusing Hillary Clinton of using reprehensible tactics that he compared to something infamous GOP strategist Lee Atwater would use. Bill Clinton responded with an impromptu five-minute rant when asked about the quote.

Harpootlian will face two other candidates at the state party convention on April 30.

Fixbits:

Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-Minn.) has hired Wes Enos, who was former Arkansas governor Mike Huckabee’s 2008 Iowa political director. Enos will advise Bachmann’s PAC, though the hiring is geared toward when Bachmann launches her presidential campaign.

Huckabee won a straw poll in South Carolina this weekend.

Former senator John Sununu goes after Sarah Palin and Donald Trump in the Boston Globe: “For the record, I do not view Palin or Trump as a threat to the republic. But like the framers, I have always felt ill at ease with officeholders or candidates who are too enamored with the idea of holding a particular office.”

Former Minnesota governor Tim Pawlenty goes all Charlie Sheen on us.

Must-reads:

“Marco Rubio carefully reclaims spotlight” — Alex Leary, St. Petersburg Times

“Cuomo stands out among peers for low profile” — Nicholas Confessore, New York Times

“Jon Huntsman, the rock ‘ n’ roll years” — Ben Smith and Kasie Hunt, Politico

“Romney campaign shuns the limelight” — Matt Viser, Boston Globe

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