Powered By Blogger
Showing posts with label POLITICS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label POLITICS. Show all posts

Friday, 3 June 2016

Obama tells military grads U.S. needs 'steady' leader...

Obama tells military grads U.S. needs 'steady' leader

OBAMA
OBAMA
BY PEACE NEWS
(PEACE NEWS)President Barack Obama Thursday used his final commencement address at a U.S. military academy to talk about the security challenges facing America, to make the case for a steady commander-in-chief, and to urge that America not look away from the world in isolationism.
While Obama did not mention presumptive GOP nominee Donald Trump in his remarks to graduates of the U.S. Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs, Colorado, he rebutted some of the foreign policy arguments Trump has put forward -- proposals that lean toward reducing America's role in global affairs.
"As we navigate this complex world, America cannot shirk the mantle of leadership," Obama said. "We can't be isolationist. It's not possible in this globalized, interconnected world. In these uncertain times, it's tempting sometimes to pull back and try to wash our hands of conflicts that seem intractable, let other countries fend for themselves. But history teaches us, from Pearl Harbor to 9/11, that oceans alone cannot protect us. We cannot turn inward."
The President said being commander-in-chief was the "highest honor of my life."
Obama added that while the country faces big challenges, American values like freedom and equal opportunity inspire the world, including immigrants striving to reach U.S. shores.
    The speech to the Air Force Academy's class of 2016, which was more a tribute to the school's 812 graduates and to the U.S. military, highlighted the threats facing national and global security, from terrorism to Russian aggression to the conflict in the South China Sea.
    Obama's remarks came just hours before former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton was to deliver a foreign policy address in California in which aides said she would slam Trump's foreign policy approach and lay out why she believes he is "unqualified" and "unfit" to serve as president.
    Obama also argued that treaties -- some of which Trump has questioned -- help keep America safe, citing as an example the treaty that established NATO.
    Obama opened his remarks hailing the airmen he has come to know as president and joking that some days he spends more time with those in the Air Force than with his own family.
    "I'm really gonna miss Air Force One," the President said, after noting the crew's punctuality, the fact that he does not have to take off his shoes before he flies, and that his luggage never gets lost.
    "We can never know what the future holds but in the not so distant future when I'm no longer president, I will sleep knowing men and women like you serve to keep us free."
    BY PEACE NEWS

    Democrats weigh how to nudge Sanders out...

    Democrats weigh how to nudge Sanders out

    POLITICS
    PEACE NEWS
    (PEACE NEWS)Democrats in Washington have begun discussing how to encourage Sen. Bernie Sanders to end his campaign without alienating his legions of supporters, as party leaders grow eager to unite the party behind Hillary Clinton and provide a more robust defense for her candidacy.
    In private conversations on Capitol Hill, senior Democrats are weighing how to persuade Sanders to step aside without appearing as if they are trying to strong-arm him out of the race. In a phone call last month, Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid made the case to Sanders why it would make sense for him to leave the race after New Jersey and California vote on June 7, according to sources familiar with the conversation.
    The widespread view, according to interviews with senators, House members and senior party officials, is that Sanders needs to see the writing on the wall himself: That he has no mathematical possibility to win the race and would be better-served to see his agenda enacted if he urged his backers to support Clinton.
    "We will walk out of our convention with a nominee," Rep. Xavier Becerra, a California Democrat and active Clinton surrogate, told CNN. "We should be able to walk into the convention in a consolidating mode."
    BY PEACE NEWS 

    Sunday, 22 May 2016

    Trump vs. Clinton

    Will Trump vs. Clinton be a nailbiter???

    BY PEACE NEWS
    TRUMP VS CLINTON
    TRUMP VS CLINTON
    BY PEACE NEWS
     REPORTER
    (PEACE NEWS)Democrats knew a general election battle between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump would be rough, but many never considered the potential of a nailbiter.
    During a primary in which Trump usurped the GOP establishment, alienated crucial sectors of the general electorate on issues like immigration and abortion and dinged his own approval ratings, many Democrats salivated at talk of a November duel with the billionaire.
    Now, as Trump prepares for a general election showdown and a pair of new polls show a statistical dead heat, veteran Democrats warn there is little room for complacency.
    "It will be close," said Mark Alderman, a veteran Democratic Party fundraiser who worked on President Barack Obama's transition team.
    "I think that Trump as the nominee is an advantage for our party, but not nearly the advantage that some people had thought and hoped it would be," said Alderman, now with Cozen O'Connor Public Strategies. "I think he has proven to be a far more formidable candidate than expected."
      Jay Carson, Clinton's 2008 press secretary who has also worked for her family's foundation, recently took to Instagram to sound the alarm on Trump.
      "Here's the bad news -- this guy can win the general election pretty damn easily," Carson, who is now a producer on the Netflix series "House of Cards" and a Principal at Bloomberg Associates, wrote on his private account. "I hear far too many of my liberal friends calling him a 'joke' and acting like the general (election) is in the bag which is nuts because he's dangerous and he has a path to victory."
      Donald Trump goes after Hillary Clinton on guns
      Trump became the presumptive Republican nominee earlier this month following the Indiana primary, ending any talk of a contested convention and allowing him to enjoy the luxury of setting his sights exclusively on November. Clinton, meanwhile, is the likely Democratic nominee but still fighting Bernie Sanders, who has spoken of taking their race to the national convention in July. That's hurt her ability to completely turn to the battle with Trump.
      BY PEACE NEWS

      Tuesday, 10 May 2016

      SADIQ KHAN

      London Mayor Sadiq Khan slams Donald Trump's 'ignorant' take on Islam.

      BY PEACE NEWS
      SADIQ KHAN
      SADIQ KHAN
      BY PEACE NEWS
      REPORTER 
      (PEACE NEWS)The new mayor of London is criticizing Donald Trump's stance on Islam, describing it as "ignorant" and warning it could make both the UK and the U.S. "less safe."
      Sadiq Khan, whose win last week made him the first Muslim mayor of any Western capital, made the comments Tuesday after Trump suggested the Londoner would be exempt from his proposed ban on Muslims entering the United States.
      "Donald Trump's ignorant view of Islam could make both our countries less safe -- it risks alienating mainstream Muslims around the world and plays into the hands of the extremists," Khan said.
      He rejected Trump's suggestion that he could be an exception to the proposed Muslim travel ban, saying: "This isn't just about me -- it's about my friends, my family and everyone who comes from a background similar to mine, anywhere in the world."
      The statement continued: "Donald Trump and those around him think that western liberal values are incompatible with mainstream Islam -- London has proved him wrong."
      BY PEACE NEWS REPORTER

      Sunday, 1 May 2016

      OBAMA VS TRUMP

      White House Correspondents' Dinner: Obama vs Trump, the sequel.

      BY PEACE NEWS REPORTER 
      OBAMA VS TRUMP
      OBAMA VS TRUMP
      BY PEACE NEWS REPORTER 
       (PEACE NEWS)Obama ... out.
      President Barack Obama took his leave of the White House press corps Saturday with a sardonic blast at Donald Trump, the Republican Party and even fellow Democrats in his final tart-tongued stand-up riff for the White House Correspondents' Association dinner.Trump, the widely anticipated target of Obama's barbs who was memorably skewered in 2011, was not in attendance -- a fact that did not go unnoticed by the commander in chief.
      "I am a little hurt he's not here tonight," Obama said. "We had so much fun the last time. And it is surprising -- you have a room full of reporters, celebrities, cameras. And he says no. Is this dinner too tacky for The Donald? What could he be possibly doing instead? Eating a Trump Steak? Tweeting out insults to Angela Merkel? What's he doing?"Obama took shots at the Democratic race, telling Bernie Sanders, who was in attendance, "You look like a million bucks. Or to put it in terms you'll understand, you look like 37,000 donations of $27 each."
        He also weighed in on the speculation surrounding the 2016 race, joking, "Next year at this time, someone else will be standing here in this very spot. And it's anyone's guess who she will be."Obama ended his speech telling the audience, "And with that, I just have two more words to say -- Obama out." He brought two fingers to his lips, using his other hand to lift a microphone up in front of him and dropped it in a dramatic fashion, referencing when performers intentionally "drop the mic" to emphasize a great performance.Washington salivated at the prospect of a sequel to his blistering evisceration of Trump in 2011. Back then, the President used that speech to publicly ridicule Trump -- who was in the audience -- for the billionaire's claims that Obama was not a natural-born American and was therefore disqualified from being President.
        BY PEACE NEWS REPORTER 

        Wednesday, 27 April 2016

        DONALD TRUMP JUMPS IN

        Donald Trump jumps in: The Donald's latest White House run is officially on.

        BY PEACE NEWS REPORTER
        DONALD TRUMP
        DONALD TRUMP
        BY PEACE NEWS
        REPORTER
        (PEACE NEWS)Donald Trump finally took the plunge.
        The real estate mogul and TV reality star launched his presidential campaign Tuesday, ending more than two decades of persistent flirtation with the idea of running for the Oval Office.
        "So, ladies and gentlemen, I am officially running for president of the United States, and we are going to make our country great again," Trump told the crowd in a lengthy and meandering 45-minute speech that hit on his signature issues like currency manipulation from China and job creation, while also taking shots at the president and his competitors on the Republican side.
        "Sadly the American dream is dead," Trump said at the end of his speech. "But if I get elected president I will bring it back bigger and better and stronger than ever before."
        Just over four years after he came closer than ever to launching a campaign before bowing out, Trump made his announcement at the lavish Trump Tower on Fifth Avenue in New York, laying out a vision to match his incoming campaign slogan, "Make America Great Again."
        BY PEACE NEWS REPORTER

        Monday, 25 April 2016

        JOHN KASICH JOIN TO STOPS

        Ted Cruz, John Kasich join forces to stop Donald Trump.

        BY PEACE NEWS REPORTER
        DONALD TRUMP
        DONALD TRUMP
        PEACE NEWS
        (PEACE NEWS)Ted Cruz and John Kasich are joining forces in a last-ditch effort to deny Donald Trump the Republican presidential nomination.
        Within minutes of each other, the pair issued statements late Sunday saying they will divide their efforts in upcoming contests with Cruz focusing on Indiana and Kasich devoting his efforts to Oregon and New Mexico. The strategy -- something the two campaigns have been working on for weeks -- is aimed at blocking Trump from gaining the 1,237 delegates necessary to claim to GOP nomination this summer.
        Trump's son: GOP would rather lose with Cruz than back dad.
        The extraordinary moves reflect the national strength Trump has shown and the inability of Republicans who oppose the New York billionaire to come together to stop him. Dividing up some of the remaining primary states by putting forward one strong alternative to Trump in each could be enough to take away delegates and curb Trump's run to the nomination.
        "This is a nationwide campaign and we're making a decision where to focus our time, energy and resources," Cruz told conservative radio host Laura Ingraham on Monday. "We are now focused very, very heavily on the state of Indiana. It is significant that John Kasich is pulling out of Indiana and allowing us to go directly head to head with Donald Trump."
        Kasich said Monday despite the agreement, he still wants Indiana voters to support him.
          "They ought to vote for me," he said during a gaggle with reporters at a Philadelphia diner.
          "I'm not campaigning in Indiana and he's not campaigning in these other states, that's all. It's not a big deal," Kasich said.
          Trump is the only candidate who can realistically get a first-ballot victory -- there's no mathematical path for Cruz or Kasich to clinch the nomination heading into the convention. The billionaire is poised for a strong performance Tuesday, when Republicans in Maryland, Pennsylvania, Delaware, Connecticut and Rhode Island head to the polls.
          BY PEACE NEWS REPORTER

          Tuesday, 19 April 2016

          DILMA ROUSSEFF

          Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff vows to fight impeachment

          BY PEACE NEWS REPORTER
          DILMA ROUSSEFF
           (PEACE NEWS)A defiant Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff vowed to stand her ground Monday, a day after the country's lower house passed a motion to impeach her.
          "I will fight, like I have always done in my life. ... I am sure that we will have the opportunity to defend ourselves in the Senate," she told reporters.
          But Rousseff slammed the impeachment process against her as unjust, comparing it to a coup.
          "Today, above all, I feel injustice," she said.
          Rousseff, who became Brazil's first female President when she was elected in 2010, isn't on trial yet. But she could be soon.
            The impeachment motion will next go to the country's Senate. If a majority approves it there,Rousseff will have to step down for 180 days to defend herself in an impeachment trial.
            That means Rousseff could be suspended as early as May. That would be about three months before the Summer Olympics kick off in Rio de Janeiro, an event that was supposed to showcase Brazil as a rising power on the global stage.
            BY PEACE NEWS REPORTER


            DONALD TRUMP POLITICS

            How Donald Trump can win the inside delegate game in New York???

            BY PEACE NEWS REPORTER


            DONALD TRUMP
            (PEACE NEWS)When New York voters head to the polls in the Republican primary on Tuesday, they will be deciding how the state's 95 delegates vote on the first ballot.
            But the actual men and women who will cast those ballots at the Republican National Convention in Cleveland this July will be chosen in a separate, new process for the New York GOP. It's the same type of inside baseball Donald Trump is railing against in other states, calling it "rigged," as he's watched Ted Cruz supporters position themselves for success if the convention goes multiple ballots.
            In New York, however, Trump has the advantage as he's poised for a resounding victory Tuesday night. He enjoys more GOP party support there than possibly any other state operation, and New York could prove to be a better scenario from Trump than states like North Dakota and Colorado where his campaign has been out-maneuvered for delegates by Ted Cruz's operation.
            "There's a lot of support here for Donald Trump," said Nicholas Langworthy, Erie County GOP chairman and a Trump campaign state co-chairman. "I look back to (delegate selection in) Colorado, and I just think what they did is disgraceful because there was no will of the voter paid attention to. ... I think our rules allow us to take into account the will of the voters and also support those who work hard, and deliver most of the support for Donald Trump.
            BY PEACE NEWS REPORTER