Posts Tagged Barack Obama

Ousted leader announces bid to return to Honduras

Honduras’ ousted president, bolstered by international support, said he will return home to regain control and he urged soldiers to stop cracking down on thousands of supporters who have protested his overthrow.

The military coup on Sunday provoked nearly universal condemnation from governments of the Western Hemisphere, from President Barack Obama to Venezuela’s Hugo Chavez, and it sparked clashes in the Honduran capital that have left dozens of people injured.

Flanked by Latin American leaders who have vowed to help him regain power, Manuel Zelaya said late Monday that he would accept an offer by Organization of American States Secretary-General Jose Miguel Insulza to accompany him back to Honduras.

Zelaya, a wealthy rancher who has forged close ties with Chavez, said he wanted to return to Tegucigalpa on Thursday after attending a meeting of the U.N. General Assembly on Tuesday to seek support from its 192 member nations.

“I want the support of whoever thinks I have the right to finish my presidency,” Zelaya said at a late night news conference in Nicaragua, where he earlier received a standing ovation during a meeting of Latin American leaders.

Just as significant was the support of the U.S. president.

“We believe that the coup was not legal and that President Zelaya remains the democratically elected president there,” Obama said in Washington. “It would be a terrible precedent if we start moving backwards into the era in which we are seeing military coups as a means of political transition rather than democratic elections.”

It was unclear how Honduras’ current leaders would react to Zelaya’s return. They say he was lawfully ousted because he was sponsoring a referendum that illegally called for an assembly to write a new constitution. Many saw the foiled vote as a step toward eliminating barriers to his re-election, as other Latin American leaders have done in recent years.

Zelaya has called for supporters to stage peaceful protests in Honduras, and thousands answered the call on Monday.

Soldiers and police in anti-riot gear used tear gas and rubber bullets to scatter protesters at the presidential palace in Tegucigalpa. The demonstrators, many of them choking on the gas, hurled rocks and bottles as they retreated. At least 38 protesters were detained, said Sandra Ponce, a government human rights official.

Congresswoman Silvia Ayala said she counted 30 injured at a single Tegucigalpa hospital and an Associated Press photographer in another area close to the palace saw protesters carrying away five injured people.

“In the name of God, in the name of the people, stop repressing the people,” Zelaya said in Nicaragua, urging soldiers to return to their barracks.

Zelaya said more than 150 people were injured and 50 were arrested but added that he didn’t “have exact figures, because I’m not there.”

The loudest voice calling for Zelaya’s return has been Chavez, who has urged a rebellion by the Honduran people.

“I’ll do everything possible to overthrow this gorilla government of Honduras. It must be overthrown,” the socialist leader said. “The rebellion in Honduras must be supported.”

Chavez vowed to halt shipments of subsidized oil to Honduras, though the country gets most of its oil comes from other sources.

Mexico’s conservative government joined the region’s leftist leaders in pulling its ambassador from Honduras.

Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega said El Salvador, Nicaragua and Guatemala would cut trade with neighboring Honduras for at least 48 hours.

The Organization of American States called an emergency meeting for Tuesday to consider suspending Honduras under an agreement meant to prevent the sort of coups that for generations made Latin America a spawning ground of military dictatorships.

Meanwhile, the replacement government insisted that no coup had taken place because the Supreme Court had ordered the army into action in response and Congress had immediately named a replacement president, Roberto Micheletti, to serve out the final seven months of Zelaya’s term.

Micheletti vowed to ignore foreign pressure and began naming Cabinet members, including a new minister of defense.

“We respect everybody and we ask only that they respect us and leave us in peace because the country is headed toward free and transparent general elections in November,” Micheletti told HRN radio.

Zelaya alienated the courts, Congress, the military and even his own party in his tumultuous three years in power but maintains the support of many of Honduras’ poor.

Officers armed with rifles briefly detained four journalists from the AP and three from Venezuela-based Telesur at their hotel, loading them in a military vehicle and taking them to an immigration office, where two officials demanded to see their visas. The group was released a short time later.

Recounting his detention, Zelaya said Monday that said his daughter hid under her bed for 35 minutes after masked soldiers burst into his residence to search for him.

When they found him, he said, soldiers ordered him to drop the cell phone he was using.

He said the soldiers were shaking as they pointed their guns because they were “facing the president of the republic, and they knew it.”

“I said, `I’m not going to drop it. If you have been ordered to shoot, then shoot,’” Zelaya said.

He said the soldiers simply yanked the phone from his hand.

Coups were common in Central America until the 1980s, but Sunday’s ouster was the first military power grab in Latin America since a brief, failed 2002 coup against Chavez.

It was the first military ouster of a Central American president since 1993, when Guatemalan military officials refused to accept President Jorge Serrano’s attempt to seize absolute power and removed him. They turned over power to a civilian within days.

Honduras had not seen a coup since 1978, when one military government overthrew another.

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Jackson death was twittered, texted and Facebooked

“Ladies and gentlemen, Michael Jackson has just died,” the woman called out breathlessly upon boarding a Manhattan bus, moments after the news had broken. Not a word was spoken in response. But nearly every passenger reached for a BlackBerry, a cell phone, whatever device was at hand.

“People are already texting about it, putting it up on Facebook, remembering his greatest moments,” noted Delmar Dualeh, sitting in the back. At 17, he confessed, the news didn’t really move him emotionally. He was too young to recall the 50-year-old entertainer in his prime. But he was fully engaged in the cultural moment. He hurried the conversation along so he could get back to texting.

In Iran, people speak of a Twitter uprising. Was this the first major Twitter celebrity death? Because it wasn’t just HOW lots of people first learned of Jackson’s demise, but what they did once they found out.

“Once you knew the news, there wasn’t so much more to know — the rest is all comment,” said media critic Jeff Jarvis. So, he said, maybe you’d go to your friends instead of the news: “You might care more what your friends say than some analyst.”

Jarvis himself tweeted the moment he heard of the death: He noted that Iran’s spiritual leader should be grateful to Jackson because the story wiped Iran off the day’s news agenda.

“That was re-tweeted a lot,” Jarvis said.

The company said news of Jackson’s death generated the most tweets per second since Barack Obama was elected president, and more than twice the normal tweets per second from the moment the story broke.

Plain old texting, Dualeh’s choice, had its largest spike on AT&T’s network in history. Nearly 65,000 texts per second were sent, the company said — more than 60 percent over normal volume.

And on Facebook, “sharing of all types went up — including wall posts, comments, notes, posted links,” wrote spokeswoman Jaime Schopflin in an e-mail. “Status updates in particular saw an increase of more than three times the amount than usual.”

Some posters were cynical, but many more were grief-stricken, like Jackson fan Scott Friedstein, an administrative assistant who lives in Brooklyn.

“There will never be another like him, ever,” Friedstein wrote. “The word ’superstar’ is tossed around a lot, but no one personified the term, lived and breathed it, and delivered like he did. To all the people who liked Michael Jackson when it wasn’t cool to … I feel for you.”

Facebook said there were no internal reports of the site slowing from too much traffic. But there were slowdowns or outages on other sites. Google said the spike in searches related to Jackson was so big that Google News initially mistook it for an automated attack.

Wikipedia, meanwhile, had trouble with traffic, with people getting intermittent error messages, said Jimmy Wales, founder of the online encyclopedia. He also described an online debate between users and regular editors over whether Jackson’s death should be added to his entry before the news was officially confirmed.

Finally, editors intervened and prevented entries about Jackson from being modified for about six hours, Wales said.

On MySpace, Jackson’s own profile was seeing an average of 100 new friends added per minute, the company said, and his friend total was on its way to being the site’s highest increase in one day.

And Jackson’s former wife, Lisa Marie Presley, posted a long, emotional statement on her own MySpace page. “All of my indifference and detachment that I worked so hard to achieve over the years has just gone into the bowels of hell, and right now I am gutted,” she wrote. She also said Jackson had long feared dying young and tragically.

The initial news of Jackson’s death broke on TMZ.com at 5:20 p.m. The Los Angeles Times and then The Associated Press confirmed the death just before 6:30 p.m. EDT, and networks then led their broadcasts with the news.

“TMZ is an AP customer and a good customer, but that report did not meet our standards for putting something on the AP wire,” the news organization’s vice president and managing editor for entertainment news, Lou Ferrara, said Friday.

TMZ turned out to be right. But there were plenty of false reports circulating across the Web that mainstream news organizations had to chase: Rumors of actor Jeff Goldblum falling off a cliff, Harrison Ford falling off a yacht and, on Friday, George Clooney in a plane crash.

Another challenge the mainstream media faced was presenting both sides of Jackson himself, and balancing the polarities of his story. On the one hand, there was ample video evidence of the extraordinarily gifted young man who took the world by storm, moonwalking on the Apollo Theater stage, or dancing hypnotically in the groundbreaking “Thriller” video.

On the other, there was the pale, older man, dangling his baby off a hotel balcony, or seen in video from his trial on charges of child molestation. So which Jackson to show?

“There was a duality to Michael Jackson that you had to deal with,” said Susan Zirinsky, executive producer of “48 Hours” and CBS specials. “The man died with a legacy of shame. The news had to be a combined sentence.”

To open the one-hour special she produced, anchored by Harry Smith, Zirinsky chose four words that she felt conveyed the dichotomy: “A prodigy. A sensation. The controversy. The tragedy.”

The same duality was evident on NBC’s “Today” show, where one moment Matt Lauer and Meredith Vieira were describing how Jackson was the most compelling entertainer they had ever seen.

Later, writer Maureen Orth, a guest on the show, told Lauer that Jackson had ruined the lives of families and children, and she cast doubt on the justice of his acquittal.

“But I did love his music,” Orth added.

“Today” executive producer Jim Bell acknowledged it was a challenge to balance the two sides. “But that was one of the main reasons he was such a compelling figure,” Bell said. “Otherwise, I don’t know that his death would have been such a momentous occasion.”

The fact that the news broke on a celebrity Web site and spread like wildfire across the social networking sites is a noteworthy change in how celebrity deaths get reported, Bell said. But he added that the mainstream media is becoming more nimble as a result.

And, Bell added, with a huge media event such as Jackson’s death, the audience is going to increase everywhere, including network TV. “There’s going to be a lot of eyeballs in both new and traditional media,” Bell said. “It’s not a zero-sum game.”

Maybe not, but Friedstein, the Brooklyn man, went home Thursday night and logged onto Facebook right away. He didn’t turn on the TV — he doesn’t even have one.

“I just wanted to see how other people were feeling,” he said later by telephone. “This was shattering, surreal even. It’s my generation’s version of Elvis dying.”

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Obama scoffs at Ahmadinejad’s demand for apology

President Barack Obama’s criticism of Iran escalated Friday into an unusually personal war of words. To Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s demand he apologize for meddling, Obama shot back that the regime should “think carefully” about answers owed to protesters it has arrested, bludgeoned and killed.

“The violence perpetrated against them is outrageous,” Obama said. “We see it and we condemn it.”

The president spoke at an East Room news conference capping his third set of meetings with German Chancellor Angela Merkel, one of several European leaders who spoke out more forcefully, more quickly than Obama on the unrest in Iran that followed the disputed June 12 elections.

“We will not forget,” Merkel said.

Turning to Iraq, where a deadline for U.S. combat troops to leave all cities was just four days away, Obama offered no support for allowing a spate of recent violence to push back the withdrawal. “If you look at the overall trend, despite some of these high-profile bombings, Iraq’s security situation has continued to dramatically improve,” Obama said.

Of bigger concern than the violence, Obama said, is the lack of movement on laws to share oil revenues and other matters that keep Iraq deeply fractured along sectarian lines. He called on Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki to step up his leadership.

Merkel’s visit happened to coincide with the day that a sweeping global warming bill came up for a vote in the House amid contentious partisan sniping about its effect on jobs and consumer costs. With the vote still hours away and the outcome in doubt, Obama and Merkel, who has made climate change a top priority, presented the rare sight of an American president and a visiting foreign leader together urging the U.S. Congress to act.

Obama said he had been “very blunt and frank” with Merkel that it will take significant time to turn the U.S. into a world leader on climate change but that the “critical” bill before the House was a good start.

Merkel sympathized with the difficulty of approving such legislation, which would impose the first-ever limits on greenhouse gas pollution and force a shift to cleaner energy sources. “I know what’s at stake, when you talk about reduction targets, how tricky that is,” Merkel said.

In Iran, the government proclaimed the incumbent hardline president, Ahmadinejad, the landslide winner of the June 12 voting over opposition leader Mir Hossein Mousavi, prompting widespread protests followed by a brutal state-led crackdown.

Ahmadinejad told Obama Thursday to “show your repentance” for criticizing Tehran’s response.

“I don’t take Mr. Ahmadinejad’s statements seriously about apologies, particularly given the fact that the United States has gone out of its way not to interfere with the election process in Iran,” Obama responded sternly.

“I would suggest that Mr. Ahmadinejad think carefully about the obligations he owes to his own people,” he added. “And he might want to consider looking at the families of those who’ve been beaten or shot or detained. And, you know, that’s where I think Mr. Ahmadinejad and others need to answer their questions.”

It was Obama’s first direct criticism of any of Iran’s leaders. Even more, it was coupled with his first specific boost for Mousavi. “Mousavi has shown to have captured the imagination or the spirit of forces within Iran that were interested in opening up,” Obama said.

The remark sought to clarify what many view as Obama’s biggest misstep — saying last week in a television interview that there may not be much difference between Ahmadinejad and Mousavi. But it appeared to swing over to an outright endorsement of Mousavi, though White House press secretary Robert Gibbs denied it was meant that way.

Obama also said for the first time that his offer to loosen the decades-old U.S. diplomatic freeze with Iran through direct talks is now in question.

“There is no doubt that any direct dialogue or diplomacy with Iran is going to be affected by the events of the last several weeks,” Obama said, without elaborating.

Gibbs said Obama was “more stating the obvious” that no talks are possible while developments are still unfolding. And Obama said that an existing system of multilateral talks with Iran over its suspected goal of building a nuclear bomb, involving nations including the U.S., Europe, China and Russia, must continue.

“The clock is ticking. Iran is developing a nuclear capacity at a fairly rapid clip,” he said.

Merkel agreed there must be no letup among nations trying to stop Iran’s nuclear development, which Tehran insists is aimed at providing only electric power, not weapons. She said “we have to bring Russia and China alongside,” referring to the two nations most historically unwilling to get tough with Iran over the nuclear standoff.

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House passes major energy-climate bill

In a triumph for President Barack Obama, the Democratic-controlled House narrowly passed sweeping legislation Friday that calls for the nation’s first limits on pollution linked to global warming and aims to usher in a new era of cleaner, yet more costly energy.

The vote was 219-212, capping months of negotiations and days of intense bargaining among Democrats. Republicans were overwhelmingly against the measure, arguing it would destroy jobs in the midst of a recession while burdening consumers with a new tax in the form of higher energy costs.

At the White House, Obama said the bill would create jobs, and added that with its vote, the House had put America on a path toward leading the way toward “creating a 21st century global economy.”

The House’s action fulfilled Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s vow to clear major energy legislation before July 4. It also sent the measure to a highly uncertain fate in the Senate, where Majority Leader Harry Reid said he was “hopeful that the Senate will be able to debate and pass bipartisan and comprehensive clean energy and climate legislation this fall.”

Obama lobbied recalcitrant Democrats by phone from the White House as the House debate unfolded across several hours, and Al Gore posted a statement on his Web site saying the measure represents “an essential first step towards solving the climate crisis.” The former vice president won a Nobel Peace Prize for his work drawing attention to the destructive potential of global warming.

On the House floor, Democrats hailed the legislation as historic, while Republicans said it would damage the economy without solving the nation’s energy woes.

It is “the most important energy and environmental legislation in the history of our country,” said Rep. Ed Markey of Massachusetts. “It sets a new course for our country, one that steers us away from foreign oil and towards a path of clean American energy.”

But Rep. John Boehner, the House Republican leader, used an extraordinary one-hour speech shortly before the final vote to warn of unintended consequences in what he said was a “defining bill.” He called it a “bureaucratic nightmare” that would cost jobs, depress real estate prices and put the government into parts of the economy where it now has no role.

The legislation would require the U.S. to reduce carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gas emissions by 17 percent from 2005 levels by 2020 and by about 80 percent by mid-century. That was slightly more aggressive than Obama originally wanted, 14 percent by 2020 and the same 80 percent by mid-century.

U.S. carbon dioxide emissions from the burning of fossil fuels are rising at about 1 percent a year and are predicted to continue increasing without mandatory limits.

Under the bill, the government would limit heat-trapping pollution from factories, refineries and power plants and issue allowances for polluters. Most of the allowances would be given away, but about 15 percent would be auctioned by bid and the proceeds used to defray higher energy costs for lower-income individuals and families.

“Some would like to do more. Some would like to do less,” House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, D-Md., said in advance of the final vote. “But we have reached a compromise … and it is a compromise that can pass this House, pass that Senate, be signed by the president and become law and make progress.”

That seemed unlikely, judging from Reid’s cautiously worded statement. “The bill is not perfect,” it said, but rather “a good product” for the Senate to begin working on.

And there was plenty to work on in a House-passed measure that pointed toward higher electricity bills for the middle class, particularly in the Midwest and South, as well as steps to ease the way for construction of new nuclear reactors, the first to be built since the accident at Three Mile Island in 1979.

The bill’s controversy was on display in the House, where only eight Republicans joined 211 Democrats in favor, while 44 Democrats joined 168 Republicans in opposition. And within an hour of the vote, both party campaign committees had begun attacking lawmakers for their votes.

One of the biggest compromises involved the near total elimination of an administration plan to sell pollution permits and raise more than $600 billion over a decade — money to finance continuation of a middle class tax cut. About 85 percent of the permits are to be given away rather than sold, a concession to energy companies and their allies in the House — and even that is uncertain to survive in the Senate.

The final bill also contained concessions to satisfy farm-state lawmakers, ethanol producers, hydroelectric advocates, the nuclear industry and others, some of them so late that they were not made public until 3 a.m. on Friday.

Supporters and opponents agreed the bill’s result would be higher energy costs but disagreed vigorously on the impact on consumers. Democrats pointed to two reports — one from the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office and the other from the Environmental Protection Agency — that suggested average increases would be limited after tax credits and rebates were taken into account. The CBO estimated the bill would cost an average household $175 a year, the EPA $80 to $110 a year.

Republicans questioned the validity of the CBO study and noted that even that analysis showed actual energy production costs increasing $770 per household. Industry groups have cited other studies showing much higher costs to the economy and to individuals.

The White House and congressional Democrats argued the bill would create millions of “green jobs” as the nation shifts to greater reliance on renewable energy sources such as wind and solar and development of more fuel-efficient vehicles — and away from use of fossil fuels such as oil, gas and coal.

It will “make our nation the world leader on clean energy jobs and technology,” declared Rep. Henry Waxman, D-Calif., who negotiated deals with dozens of lawmakers in recent weeks to broaden the bill’s support.

Pelosi, D-Calif., took an intense personal interest in the measure, sitting through hours of meetings with members of the rank and file and nurturing fragile compromises.

At its heart, the bill was a trade-off, less than the White House initially sought though it was more than Republicans said was acceptable. Some of the dealmaking had a distinct political feel. Rep. Alan Grayson, a first-term Democrat, won a pledge of support that $50 million from the proceeds of pollution permit sales in the bill would go to a proposed new hurricane research facility in his district in Orlando, Fla.

In the run-up to the vote, Democrats left little to chance.

Rep. Ellen Tauscher, D-Calif., confirmed by the Senate on Thursday to an administration post, put off her resignation from Congress until after the final vote on the climate change bill. And Rep. Patrick Kennedy, D-R.I., who has been undergoing treatment at an undisclosed facility, returned to the Capitol to support the legislation. He has said he struggles with depression, alcoholism and addiction, but has not specified the cause for his most recent absence.

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The Starting Point: Book battles, bunnies and aliens - Oh my!

The Starting Point is a snapshot of the news stories that occurred overnight. Look for updates throughout the day on Yahoo! News and in the news box on Yahoo.com.

Top story overnight: Iran’s Supreme Leader announced today that the government will not give in to pressure over the disputed presidential election, The Associated Press reported. Opposition leader Mir Hossein Mousavi and his many supporters claim that hard-line President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad stole the June 12 election through massive fraud, and want to hold a new election. Ayatollah Ali Khamenei effectively closed the door to any sort of compromise with the opposition, saying “neither the system nor the people will give in to pressures at any price.” During a press conference yesterday, President Barack Obama condemned Iran’s violent crackdown on opposition protesters, calling the threats, beatings and arrests “unjust.”

In other news: Afghan and coalition forces killed 23 suspected Taliban militants during clashes in southern Afghanistan. According to The AP, Mullah Ismail, a Taliban commander in the region, was among those killed in the battle.

Former Wilco guitarist Jay Bennett died from an accidental drug overdose, a coroner ruled yesterday. Toxicology tests showed the 45-year-old musician took an overdose of fentanyl on May 24, The AP reported. While several companies have recalled fentanyl patches for leaking and causing possible overdoses, there was no indication that Bennett had used a recalled patch.

Finally, Conan O’Brien paid tribute to the late Ed McMahon on “The Tonight Show” last night. McMahon played second banana to former “Tonight” host Johnny Carson for 30 years. McMahon died early Tuesday at the age of 86. Click here to watch O’Brien’s farewell.

Most-read stories overnight: “View” co-host Elisabeth Hasselbeck is being sued for plagiarism. Cape Cod author Susan Hassett claims Hasselbeck published word-for-word regurgitations of her book “Living With Celiac Disease” in the bestseller “The G-Free Diet: A Gluten-Free Survival Guide.” Hasselbeck called the allegations baseless.

Readers were also interested in this AP story about a hoarding incident. An animal control officer in New Mexico found 334 bunnies living in one couple’s yard. Nancy Haseman said she and her husband began rescuing unwanted rabbits, and the situation just got “out of control.” Haseman was cited under a local ordinance that allows just five pets per household.

Looking ahead: President Obama will meet with a bipartisan group of governors and hold a town hall meeting today on health care issues. And Elizabeth Warren, chairwoman of the Congressional Oversight Panel of the Troubled Asset Relief Program, will urge lawmakers to set up a new government agency to protect consumers from “tricks and traps” set by banks.

Today’s poll: June 24 is World UFO Day. Do you believe there are alien civilizations living on other planets? Click here to vote.

Yesterday’s poll: Should the U.S. government acknowledge Ahmadinejad as the winner of the election? Sixty percent of respondents said the U.S. must remain neutral until Iran solves this political crisis. Twenty-seven percent said the U.S. should actively support the opposition, and 8 percent said the U.S. should acknowledge Ahmadinejad’s disputed win.

Today in history: In 1807, a grand jury indicted former Vice President Aaron Burr on charges of treason and high misdemeanor. He was later acquitted.

Birthdays: Actress Minka Kelly, 29. Actress Sherry Stringfield, 42. Musician Curt Smith (Tears for Fears), 48. Singer Astro (UB40), 52. Musician John Illsley (Dire Straits), 60. Actor Peter Weller, 62. Musician Mick Fleetwood (Fleetwood Mac), 62. Former N.Y. Governor George Pataki, 64. Musician Jeff Beck, 65. Actress Michele Lee, 67. Actor Al Molinaro, 90.

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SC governor takes a hike, leaves leaders in dark

A dayslong absence by South Carolina’s governor left fellow state leaders scratching their heads.

The lieutenant governor couldn’t figure out where Gov. Mark Sanford was. Calls from a state senator and close friend rolled to voice mail. Even his wife said she hadn’t talked to him for several days.

The explanation came Monday night from his spokesman: The second-term chief executive was hiking along the Appalachian Trail “to kind of clear his head after the legislative session.”

That session included his losing fight to reject $700 million in federal stimulus cash that Sanford eventually accepted under duress and a court order.

The Republican governor left town on Thursday, his spokesman Joel Sawyer said, with plans to hike the trail, which passes through 14 states but not South Carolina. Sawyer said he didn’t know where exactly Sanford was along the 2,200-mile route and declined to discuss if anyone was hiking with him. The governor was expected back later this week.

“He’s an avid outdoorsman,” Sawyer said. “Nobody’s ever accused our governor of being conventional.”

While other governors eagerly gobbled up federal stimulus money to fill budget holes, Sanford has railed against President Barack Obama’s $787 billion bailout package. It left him dealing with protests at home, where educators predicted massive teacher layoffs without it. Sanford, who’s also chairman of the Republican Governors Association, wanted to use it only to pay down debt.

His absence has drawn more criticism. Some questioned who was in charge of South Carolina if he couldn’t be reached. The National Guard and the state’s top law enforcement agencies report to him, said Senate Minority Leader John Land, D-Manning.

Lt. Gov. Andrew Bauer said he’d been rebuffed by the governor’s staff when he tried to find out where Sanford was and had not been put in charge in his absence.

“I cannot take lightly that his staff has not had communication with him for more than four days, and that no one, including his own family, knows his whereabouts,” said Bauer.

Sawyer said if there was an emergency, the office would consult with other state officials before making any decisions.

“We knew he would be difficult to reach, and that he would be checking in infrequently,” Sawyer said in a statement.

Jenny Sanford said Monday she had not spoken with her husband for several days, including Father’s Day. The Sanfords have four sons.

“He was writing something and wanted some space to get away from the kids,” she told The Associated Press while vacationing at the family’s Sullivans Island beach house. A message left for her wasn’t returned after the governor’s hiking plans were disclosed.

“It’s one thing for the boys to go off by themselves, but on Father’s Day to leave your family behind? That’s erratic,” Land said. “And when those officials can’t get in touch with the commander, it’s really weird. That’s not responsible.”

Sanford is known for taking walks and runs without security, but flight logs show he seldom leaves the state without it. His security team wouldn’t comment. And Sanford’s office normally makes no secret of time he spends on vacation or out of state.

Sen. Jake Knotts, a Lexington Republican and a persistent Sanford critic, said the state needs to know where its governor is.

“The way things are in the world today and homeland security, we need the governor to be fingertips away,” Knotts said.

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Obama to sign anti-smoking bill in Rose Garden

President Barack Obama is set to sign into law an anti-smoking bill that will give the Food and Drug Administration unprecedented authority to regulate tobacco.

Obama is scheduled to sign the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act during an event Monday in the Rose Garden. The law allows the FDA to reduce nicotine in tobacco products, ban candy flavorings and block labels such “low tar” and “light.” Tobacco companies also will be required to cover their cartons with large graphic warnings.

The law won’t let the FDA ban nicotine or tobacco outright, but the agency will be able to regulate what goes into tobacco products, make public the ingredients and prohibit marketing campaigns, especially those geared toward children.

Anti-smoking advocates looked forward to the bill after years of attempts to control an industry so fundamental to the U.S. that carved tobacco leaves adorn some parts of the Capitol.

Opponents from tobacco-growing states like top-producing North Carolina argued that the FDA has proved through a series of food safety failures that it’s not up to the job. They also said that instead of unrealistically trying to get smokers to quit or to prevent others from starting, lawmakers should ensure that people have other options, like smokeless tobacco.

As president, George W. Bush opposed the legislation and threatened a veto after it passed the House last year. The Obama administration, by contrast, issued a statement declaring strong support for the measure.

Obama has spoken publicly of his own struggles to quit cigarettes.

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7 Lucrative Jobs from Obama’s Stimulus Plan

President Barack Obama’s plan to get the U.S. economy going has a strong focus on creating jobs. Two of the bills he’s recently signed, the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) and the Making Home Affordable program, provide funding that will create a wide variety of job opportunities with good salaries. Better yet, many of these jobs don’t require a four-year degree, so job-seekers may be able to move into these careers pretty quickly.
Here’s a selection of some of the best-paying stimulus jobs:

Computer Security Specialist

A big chunk of the ARRA money is dedicated to health-care information-technology initiatives — digitizing medical records so they’re easier to transmit and share between doctors, hospitals and pharmacists. Computer-security experts who can help keep electronic medical records locked away from computer hackers and other unauthorized users will be in high demand as the health-care sector modernizes, says Laurence Shatkin, author of “Great Jobs in the President’s Stimulus Plan.”

Other specialists will be needed to train workers on how to keep the data safe. A brief certificate program may suffice to get you started in this field, the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) says. “There’s going to be a special role here of how to keep prying eyes away,” Shatkin says.
Median annual salary: $78,376

Cost Estimator

For each of the major infrastructure projects that receive stimulus funding, an estimator must determine the likely cost of material plus labor so that accurate job bids can be submitted and budgets properly prepared. Shatkin says laid-off workers with a background in construction, who are familiar with the industry’s labor and materials costs, should find opportunities here, though many estimators have a four-year degree.
Median annual salary: $58,868

Civil Engineer

For each of these big federally backed construction projects, Shatkin points out, civil engineers must make sure structures are properly designed to withstand the elements. Engineers also make sure construction projects are executed correctly. You’ll need at least a college degree, usually in engineering. But the BLS notes a degree in science or mathematics might work to get you started here, too.
Median annual salary: $66,638

Insulation Installer

The ARRA is focused on making federal facilities more energy efficient, starting with simple methods such as weatherizing buildings with more insulation to save energy. Projects are happening all over the country, Shatkin notes, at science labs, military installations, and other federal buildings. High-school graduates often can receive on-the-job training, the BLS says.
Median annual salary: $44,460

Solar Panel Installer

President Obama has made cleaner, greener energy use a top administration priority. The ARRA includes funding for the installation of solar panels to cut energy use at many federal buildings … and that means someone with an understanding of electric, water and heating systems will need to climb up on the rooftops and put up these systems. Training programs may be as short as six months, Shatkin notes.
Median annual salary: $44,460

Physical Therapy Assistants

The ARRA included an extension of medical benefits for workers laid off in the recent downturn, Shatkin points out. That will keep business brisk for medical professionals, including physical therapy assistants. Assistants may have a two-year degree, or can be trained on the job, to assist patients who need exercises or must use crutches or other devices, according to the BLS.
Median annual salary: $48,999

Loan Officer

Just signed into law in May, legislation entitled Making Home Affordable provides federal incentives for banks to help up to 9 million distressed homeowners renegotiate their loans. Because each mortgage agreement and piece of property is unique, the work is time-consuming — a loan officer must sit down with each homeowner individually.

This initiative is creating a sudden need for more mortgage loan specialists who can renegotiate with homeowners, says Joseph Burkhart, director of recovery-related business development at recruiting firm The Mergis Group in McLean, Va. Burkhart says the majority of the nation’s loan-renegotiation work traditionally took place in the Dallas market, but that the huge volume of loan workouts planned means banks will be hiring all across the country.

“The mortgage industry in January only did 100,000 refis,” he says. “Now they’re projecting that millions of them will take place every month.”

Because of high demand, Burkhart says employers are looking at applicants with a variety of past work experience — former bank loan officers and others who understand contracts. One background that’s of interest, Burkhart says: call-center workers who’ve made contract offers over the phone.

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NKorea criticizes US nuclear protection of South

North Korea has accused the United States of plotting atomic war against the communist regime, saying President Barack Obama’s recent reaffirmation of nuclear protection of South Korea only exposed his government’s intention to attack.

In what would be the first test for the new U.N. sanctions against the North, South Korean media also reported Sunday that a North Korean ship sailing toward Myanmar via Singapore was being shadowed by the U.S. military over suspicion that it may be carrying illicit weapons.

U.S. officials said Thursday that the U.S. military had begun tracking the ship, Kang Nam, which left a North Korean port Wednesday.

South Korean television network YTN, citing an unidentified intelligence source in the South, reported that the U.S. suspected the 2,000-ton-class ship was carrying missiles and other related weapons toward Myanmar — which has faced an arms embargo from the United States and the European Union and has reportedly bought weapons from North Korea.

The report said the U.S. has also deployed a navy destroyer and has been using satellites to track the ship.

South Korea’s Defense Ministry, Unification Ministry and the National Intelligence Service said they could not confirm the report.

Tension on the Korean peninsula has spiked since the North defiantly conducted its second nuclear test on May 25. North Korea later declared it would bolster its atomic bomb-making program and threatened war in protest of U.N. sanctions for its test.

Obama reaffirmed Washington’s security commitment to South Korea, including through U.S. nuclear protection, after a meeting Tuesday in Washington with South Korean President Lee Myung-bak. Obama also said the U.N. sanctions will be aggressively enforced.

In its first response to the summit, North Korea’s government-run weekly Tongil Sinbo said that Obama’s comments only revealed a U.S. plot to invade the North with nuclear weapons.

“It’s not a coincidence at all for the U.S. to have brought numerous nuclear weapons into South Korea and other adjacent sites, staging various massive war drills opposing North Korea every day and watching for a chance for an invasion,” said the commentary published Saturday.

The weekly also said the North will also “surely judge” the Lee government for participating in a U.S.-led international campaign to “stifle” the North.

North Korea says its nuclear program is a deterrent against the U.S., which it routinely accuses of plotting to topple its communist regime. Washington, which has 28,500 troops in South Korea, has repeatedly said it has no such intention and has no nuclear weapons deployed there.

On Saturday, a South Korean Foreign Ministry official said Seoul has proposed five-way talks with the U.S., China, Russia and Japan to find a new way to deal with the North’s threats.

The U.S. and Japan have agreed to participate, while China and Russia have yet to respond, the official told The Associated Press, requesting anonymity because he was discussing a plan still in the works.

North Korea and the five countries began negotiating under the so-called “six-party talks” in 2003 with the aim of giving the communist regime economic aid and other concessions in exchange for dismantling its nuclear program. In April, however, the North said it was pulling out of the talks in response to international criticism of its controversial April 5 long-range rocket launch.

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Clinton: Push for racial equality far from over

The push for racial equality is far from over, in sports and in everyday life, former President Bill Clinton told a crowd at Major League Baseball’s Beacon Awards on Saturday, part of its Civil Rights Game.

Clinton, who as president took part in MLB’s ceremony retiring Jackie Robinson’s No. 42 uniform number in 1997, spoke at a luncheon honoring Hall of Famer Hank Aaron, Muhammad Ali and entertainer Bill Cosby for the trio’s contributions to civil rights and charitable works.

The former president told a crowd of about 1,400 at the Duke Energy Convention Center that despite such racial progress as the election of Barack Obama as president, problems remain that disproportionately hit minorities. Clinton cited unemployment, the mortgage crisis, high cost of college, and access to health care among continuing issues.

“A lot of people might be tempted to believe that the struggle — which both produced these three giants of sports and comedy and gave them the power to help so many others — that struggle for racial equality is over,” Clinton said.

“But I really came here to say if you want to honor Hank Aaron and Muhammad Ali and Bill Cosby, you must first recognize that this struggle is nowhere near over,” he said.

The luncheon was among events leading to Saturday night’s first regular-season Civil Rights Game, between the Chicago White Sox and Cincinnati Reds.

Ali, whose long battle with Parkinson’s disease has limited his physical activity, remained seated as fellow former boxing champion Sugar Ray Leonard presented him his award. Ali looked it over as his wife, Lonnie, spoke on his behalf.

Cosby had the crowd roaring during his acceptance speech, and urged the audience to make sure new generations know what Ali, Aaron and others had to overcome to be successful, and that there is more to be overcome.

“This is not a time to rest,” Cosby said.

Aaron, Ali and Cosby were driven onto the field on carts before the Reds played the Chicago White Sox in the Civil Rights Game, which was held in Memphis, Tenn., the last two years. This was the first time it was held in conjunction with a major league game.

Teams wore throwback jerseys from 1964, the year that the Civil Rights Act was passed outlawing racial segregation. Hall of Famer Frank Robinson, who became a star in Cincinnati before being traded to Baltimore after the 1965 season, threw a ceremonial first pitch to Reds Hall of Famer Tony Perez.

Ali wore a Reds jersey and raised his right hand slightly, acknowledging the crowd, as he was driven along the warning track for his grand entrance to Great American Ball Park. He was helped to a chair along the first base line to watch the pregame ceremonies, which included videoboard tributes to all three.

Aaron was particularly touched by the events. He told reporters before the game that Cincinnati has always been special to him.

“My connection with Cincinnati goes back a long, long ways,” said Aaron, who tied Babe Ruth’s previous home run record of 714 at now-demolished Riverfront Stadium in 1974. “This is a tremendous day for me, not only to get the Beacon Award but to be back in Cincinnati.”

Baseball commissioner Bud Selig said Aaron was deeply touched by the award.

“I don’t think I’ve ever seen him as emotional as he was today,” Selig said.

Major League Baseball was pleased with the weekend, which took the Civil Rights Game onto a much bigger stage for the first time.

“We’re very proud of this event,” Selig said. “It’s come a long, long way in a short period of time.”

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