2011年6月16日 星期四

Lawmakers push back against White House's defense of involvement in Libya

Lucy Madison
Foreign Policy
U.S. House Speaker John Boehner

House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio.

(Credit: AP Photo/Kathy Willens)
Republican lawmakers are pushing back against the White House's recent 32-page defense of its military operations in Libya -- and say they will subject the administration's actions to intense scrutiny in coming weeks.

House Speaker John Boehner told reporters Thursday morning that the White House's argument didn't "pass the straight face test," and warned that lawmakers still had "the power of the purse."

The White House on Wednesday sent a lengthy report to Congress detailing U.S. military operations in Libya so far, and ultimately concluding that American actions there were in accordance with the War Powers Resolution.

The letter came a day after Boehner warned Mr. Obama, via letter, that the administration might soon be in violation of the resolution, which prohibits forces from serving in armed conflict for more than 60 days - or, with an extension, 90 - without congressional approval or having declared war.

The White House report countered by positing that "U.S. operations [in Libya] do not involve sustained fighting or active exchanges of fire with hostile forces, nor do they involve the presence of U.S. ground troops, U.S. casualties or a serious threat thereof, or any significant chance of escalation into a conflict characterized by those factors." As such, it contended, the War Powers Resolution had not been violated.

"The President is of the view that the current U.S. military operations in Libya are consistent with the War Powers Resolution and do not under that law require further congressional authorization," the report says.

In a statement Wednesday night, a Boehner spokesman promised that the speaker would closely examine what he described as the White House's "creative arguments."

"The creative arguments made by the White House raise a number of questions that must be further explored," said Brendan Buck.

Still, the Boehner spokesman argued, regardless of whether or not the president's argument holds up, he has neglected his responsibility to keep Congress adequately informed with regard to U.S. actions in Libya.

"The Commander-in-Chief has a responsibility to articulate how U.S. military action is vital to our national security and consistent with American policy goals," Buck said. "With Libya, the President has fallen short on this obligation. We will review the information that was provided today, but hope and expect that this will serve as the beginning, not the end, of the President's explanation for continued American operations in Libya."

Rep. Scott Garrett, R-N.J., the chairman of the House Constitution Caucus, argued that a mere "progress report" on the situation was insufficient - and demanded an up-or-down vote on the matter in Congress.

"At long last, President Obama has decided to update Congress and the American people on his unauthorized use of military force in Libya," he said in a statement, according to the Washington Post. "Unfortunately, a progress report from the White House is no substitute for congressional authorization. If the president thinks it's in the best interest of the United States to commit U.S. military personnel to the conflict in Libya he needs to come to Congress for an up or down vote. Otherwise, he is in violation of Constitution and the oath he took to preserve, protect and defend it."

And while few Democratic lawmakers have as yet responded on the White House letter, at least one - Rep. Dennis Kucinich, D-Ohio, who earlier on Wednesday led a group of ten bipartisan lawmakers in filing suit against Mr. Obama and Defense Secretary Robert Gates on Libya - is taking the Obama administration to task on the arguments of the report itself.

Citing data from The Guardian newspaper in London, Kucinich noted that the U.S. had so far provided upwards of a billion dollars worth of resources toward the conflict - and contended that the American people had a right to a say in the use of their tax dollars.

"According to an analysis by the Guardian UK, more than one month after NATO took over operations, the U.S. had thus far provided 93% of the cruise missiles, 66% of the personnel, 50% of the ships and 50% of the planes for the international operations in Libya at a cost to the American taxpayers now rapidly approaching a billion dollars," he said.

"The White House claim that the war is not war is not a legal argument. It is a political argument," he continued. "The legal argument will hopefully be addressed by the courts. Today, I, along with 9 of my colleagues, filed suit in federal court challenging the rationale that has brought our nation to an Orwellian war that is not war."

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Source: http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-503544_162-20071573-503544.html

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Oh my: Dem caucus meeting turns angry over Weiner

posted at 9:28 pm on June 15, 2011 by Allahpunditprinter-friendly

That?s the good news. The better news? They?re meeting again tomorrow and may call for a vote to strip him of his committee assignments, which will only further antagonize the left?s dumb ?you?re only hating on Anthony because he stands up for our ideals? wing.

Hopefully he?ll find comfort in the fact that some people are giving his ideological ?package? due credit.

Those tensions spilled out in a private Democratic Caucus meeting Tuesday when New Jersey Rep. Bill Pascrell laid out his views on the right and wrong ways to handle allegations of wrongdoing by a member of the caucus. He said he understands the need for certain Democrats ? party leaders and those whose reelections could be affected by the scandal ? to call on Weiner to resign, but then, by implication, scolded Pennsylvania Rep. Allyson Schwartz for jumping ahead of leadership last week when she told POLITICO that Weiner should step down and followed up with a round of national television interviews?

It grew so heated that many lawmakers left the meeting voluntarily, and aides were kicked out to try to prevent leaks?

Schwartz, the clear but unidentified target of Pascrell?s remarks, rose to defend herself during the meeting. She explained that she had been in a lawyer?s office in New York, dealing with her recently deceased father?s will, when she heard that Weiner had acknowledged ?sexting? with six women over the course of three years. Schwartz, who is an advocate for women?s rights, was disgusted by Weiner?s behavior and felt he should resign. Without checking in with House leaders, she said, she decided to make her feelings public.

That made Pascrell even more upset: He would have preferred coordination ? at least an effort to make sure it was the message party leaders and Weiner?s rank-and-file colleagues wanted.

National Journal looked at his financial disclosures tonight and concluded that the poor guy is sufficiently bad off that he can?t cruise into early retirement. He needs to work, assuming he can find a job in Hopenchange America. Which makes me wonder: Isn?t there a mutually satisfactory solution in the offing here? The Democrats want him out of Congress; Weiner wants a steady income. There?s one person who?s perfectly positioned to cut a check and make both sides happy. How about it, Nancy?

Here?s the Ginger Lee/Gloria Allred trainwreck in case you missed it at Mediaite earlier. Like Ace, I?m confounded by her claim that she didn?t reciprocate any of Weiner?s sexual overtures in their chats. She has no reputation to protect so there?s no obvious reason for her to lie, but she?s also been known to say ? publicly ? ?I want to have sexual relations with Anthony Weiner? and ?He can get buck wild anytime I?m around.? He finally noticed her and sent her an e-mail, which escalated into sexual come-ons, and her response was to ? try to steer the conversation back around to the debt ceiling or something? Every conversation? Huh. Behold the world?s most cerebral, politically focused former porn star.

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Source: http://hotair.com/archives/2011/06/15/oh-my-dem-caucus-meeting-turns-angry-over-weiner/

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GOP Civil War Erupts: Tea Party Freshman Rips Chamber CEO Tom Donahue

By Pat Garofalo on Jun 15, 2011 at 6:15 pm

The Chamber of Commerce, as ThinkProgress has extensively documented, went to great lengths to elect Republicans in 2010, funding attack ads against several Democrats. The Chamber has also launched a series of broadsides against the Obama administration agenda, working with Republicans to undermine everything from the Affordable Care Act to the Dodd-Frank financial reform law.

This week, though, Chamber of Commerce CEO Tom Donohue may have ignited a civil war within the GOP. Many Tea Party freshman within the House Republican caucus have said that they will not vote to raise the debt ceiling, which would force the U.S. to default on its debt obligations. In fact, many said that raising the debt ceiling would be a ?betrayal? of the platform that they ran on.

But Donohue sent a message those freshman during a speech before the Rotary Club of Atlanta: Fail to raise the debt ceiling and ?we?ll get rid of you.? Today, Rep. Joe Walsh (R-IL) appeared on Fox News, where he tore into Donohue for threatening House Republicans:

I found Tom Donahue?s comments outrageous, tone-deaf, totally establishment, and doesn?t understand at all where we?re at right now?If Tom Donahue is more comfortable having Nancy Pelosi as Speaker next year because he wants to get rid of all of us tea party, fiscally-conservative freshman who came here on a mission to save our kids from the debt we?re placing on their backs, then fine. He can have Nancy Pelosi as his Speaker.

Watch it:

A Chamber spokesman later said that Donohue was joking and that the comment was merely part of ?pleasant and humorous banter going back and forth? between Donohue and his audience. But Walsh said during the interview that he wasn?t buying it. And many other GOP freshmen aren?t either.

?This is typical Washington, D.C., insider politics. The idea that head of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce would rather pick fight with the 87 freshmen than with Democrats, that?s pretty disappointing. But that?s what?s different about the freshman class. We don?t listen to folks inside the beltway, we listen to constituents across the country,? said freshman Rep. Tim Huelskamp (R-KS). Freshman Rep. Steve Southerland (R-FL) added, ?as far as I am concerned, [the Chamber's] leadership forfeited its position as a voice for small business when it became comfortably entrenched in Washington?s status quo.?

As the Center for American Progress? Michael Linden and Michael Ettlinger have found, failing to raise the debt ceiling would have significant adverse impacts on the U.S. GDP. But it?s not only Republican freshman who have threatened to let the U.S. default. Sen. Pat Toomey (R-PA) said that failing to raise the debt ceiling wouldn?t have a negative impact on the economy, while House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan (R-WI) said it was more important that the GOP receive concessions from Democrats than vote to raise the debt ceiling.

Mobile

Source: http://thinkprogress.org/politics/2011/06/15/246496/gop-freshmam-chamber-donohue-debt-ceiling/

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2011年6月15日 星期三

Obama, February 2009: If this economy hasn?t rebounded in three years, I?m a one-termer

posted at 7:40 pm on June 15, 2011 by Allahpunditprinter-friendly

I?m stealing this from Ace, who in turn stole it from this guy, but the theft is justified in the interest of circulating such a devastating clip. The key bit comes at 4:20. If, like me, you hadn?t seen it until today, rest assured that you?ll be seeing it again in about 8,000 different GOP attacks ads next year. It?s a killer twice over: Not only does it preempt the ?Bush?s recession? narrative that The One will inevitably resort to once he gets desperate (Debbie Downer is feeding Republicans lots of ammo against that point, thankfully), but it?s lethal to the White House?s new messaging calling for patience on the economy. Remember when he used to talk about ?the fierce urgency of now?? That?s the old Obama; the new Obama is more of a ?it?s going to take time? kind of guy. I?ll leave you to the clip below of the man himself to explain how much time, reasonably, it should take.

Sometimes I read stuff like this and think he really misses the old Obama:

?It?s not as cool to be an Obama supporter as it was in 2008, with the posters and all of that stuff,? he acknowledged to an intimate gathering of donors in Miami this week.

It?s a line he delivered with a chuckle, a variation on a theme that he is using with his base of supporters. But it holds an important truth for the Obama campaign: Obama is now a known quantity and he will not inspire voters this election the same way he did in the previous one?

To hear First Lady Michelle Obama tell it, the president has even had to reassure her at times?

?Barack always reminds me that we?re playing a long game here. He reminds me that change is slow.?

Right, but not so slow that he?d predict a one-term presidency for himself in 2009 if he didn?t have the economy on the mend as of six months from now. As a gloss on that, I?m giving you a second clip below of a woman so exasperated by the reality of American unemployment that her best bet to put some food on the table for her kids is ? to sell the handwritten letter she received from Obama. It?s a perfect complement to the 2009 clip: He started out as a mega-celebrity tasked with fixing the economy, and three years later the economy?s still so broken that cashing in on his celebrity is some people?s best financial option. At this point, his time?s probably best spent autographing stuff and mailing it out to Americans randomly so that the lucky recipients can sell it for a few hundred or thousand bucks and pay the rent. From an industrial economy to a service economy to a Wonka-ticket economy. Change indeed.

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Source: http://hotair.com/archives/2011/06/15/obama-february-2009-if-this-economy-hasnt-rebounded-in-three-years-im-a-one-termer/

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Weiner watch: Dems shift to denial as porn star tells media Weiner should resign

posted at 1:25 pm on June 15, 2011 by Ed Morrisseyprinter-friendly

Will he or won?t he?� Anthony Weiner has held out for more than ten days after his confessional press conference and another five days since acknowledging his private interactions with a high-school junior without resigning his office.� As his wife returns from her overseas trip with Hillary Clinton, Democrats hope that Huma Abedin will bring the embarrassment to a swift close:

Rep. Anthony Weiner?s wife, Huma Abedin, returned to Washington early Wednesday from a trip abroad, setting off a new round of speculation that the New York Democrat?s resignation could come soon.

Friends of Weiner have said he would not make a decision on whether to quit until he had a chance to talk to Abedin, a top aide to Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, who returned to the United States from a trip to Africa with Clinton that began early last week.

Weiner and Abedin are expected to meet on Wednesday, and she was spotted driving into the garage alone at their northwest D.C. apartment building in the early morning hours. She has not yet been seen leaving the building.

Abedin, who is 35 and in�early months of pregnancy, is said to have urged her husband last week to fight to keep his job. But, while she was away, pressure on Weiner got more intense, with top House Democrats calling for him to resign.

National Journal reported yesterday that Democrats are holding their breath, which is one reason why they delayed a decision on Weiner?s committee assignments:

House Democrats emerged from a closed-door meeting on Tuesday saying they wanted Rep.Anthony Weiner, D-N.Y., to resign, but they conceded that their best strategy for getting to that point is hoping that Weiner?s wife will persuade him to go. ?

When Minority Whip�Steny Hoyer, D-Md., was asked in a news conference if the caucus had decided to take action against Weiner for his lurid online activities?such as stripping him of his committees?he said, ?there?s been no decision on that.?

Other lawmakers echoed that there was no such decision made at the meeting.

But a senior Democratic aide said there was much anticipation expressed by members?if not desperation?that Weiner might be talked into resigning by his wife, Huma Abedin, later this week.

The Hill reports that Democrats have decided on a new strategy on the scandal, which is to pretend as if it doesn?t exist, at least for now.� In their desperation to move off of the story, they seem to be contradicting their own public statements on the economy:

The Democrats are hoping to shift public attention away from Weiner?s dubious celebrity for fear that his personal crisis could become the party?s political handicap. ?

Most Democrats have declined to comment on the scandal ? a trend that continued Tuesday ? while others sought to shift the national discussion back to more substantial issues like healthcare and unemployment.

?We?re discussing the economy and other issues,? Rep. Nydia Vel�zquez (D-N.Y.) said tersely as she left the caucus meeting.

?Oil prices are being manipulated, in order to be higher. That?s what this caucus was about,? said an equally concise Rep. Jan Schakowsky (D-Ill.). ?The rest I?m not commenting on.?

Some Democrats scolded the Fourth Estate for showering so much attention on the tawdry Weiner episode even as millions of people remain unemployed and the economy continues to limp.

Excuse me, but aren?t these the same Democrats who are insisting that we?ve had an ?economic turnaround??� The contradictions here are priceless.

Also, it?s a little hard to ignore the scandal when Gloria Allred is holding press conferences on behalf of a porn star who wants to discuss dozens of messages from Weiner.� The big news from the presser was that Ginger Lee alleges that Weiner asked her to lie, and often talked about his ?package? in his e-mails.� The result?� The porn star no longer has much confidence in him and he should resign:

Ginger Lee, flanked by her celebrity attorney Gloria Allred, told a news conference in New York, that Weiner ?asked me to lie? about their interchanges which included about 100 emails as well as messages over Twitter.

Lee, a stripper, said her relationship began with the Democratic lawmaker from New York over political issues such as a woman?s right to choose abortion, and health care, but that Weiner kept trying to turn the conversation sexual.

She said she never reciprocated his lewd messages, which were often about ?his package.?

?I think that Anthony Weiner should resign because he lied. He lied to the public and the press for more than a week,? she said. ?If he lied about this, I can?t have much faith in him about anything else.?

Gloria Allred?� Yeah, that strategy of ignoring the story is totally going to work now.

Meanwhile, the National Enquirer added another set of pictures to the growing pile, but these are hardly an issue.� Apparently, Weiner posed for ?cross dressing pictures? as part of annual Christmas pranks at Plattsburgh State College.� I hate to break this to the Enquirer, but that?s not exactly an unknown phenomenon in college.� The Hasty Pudding Club at Harvard routinely has men dressing in drag for its well-known theatrical presentations.� Even outside of college, cross-dressing for humor is a long tradition in comedy; Eddie Izzard started his career with it.� Cutting loose in college is hardly the problem with Weiner?s behavior, but it seems that one or more of his friends from that time period has found a way to cash in on the scandal.� Memo to college students: pick your friends carefully, at least if you plan to have a public career later.

Will Weiner resign?� If he does, it will be soon.� If his wife returns and he sticks around, though, Democrats may wind up revisiting the committee assignments as another way to pressure him into leaving.� Clearly they wanted to hold that in reserve ? mainly because it?s their last play until an ethics investigation produces an actionable report, which could take months.� If he hasn?t resigned by Monday, Democrats have to decide whether to live with him or to escalate matters yet again.

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Source: http://hotair.com/archives/2011/06/15/weiner-watch-dems-shift-to-denial-as-wife-returns/

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Perry rallies New York Republicans as he weighs presidential bid

Perry rallies New York Republicans as he weighs presidential bid
Perry rallies New York Republicans as he weighs presidential bid

New York (CNN) ? Emphasizing that the country needs to embrace a conservative vision to help solve some of its problems, Texas Gov. Rick Perry urged an audience of New York Republicans Tuesday night to "stand with us over the next 16 months."

Perry is seriously considering entering the GOP presidential field. Though his speech to the New York County Republican Committee didn't specifically mention that possibility, it contained what could be the outlines of a future campaign vision.

He asked the sellout audience: "Are you ready to take this country back?" He said he was referring to the need to elect more GOP governors to help states regain more power.

He talked about how Washington has too much power and attacked the Obama administration's handling of the economy.

"They promised jobs, and they delivered economic misery," said Perry. "America cannot continue on this course of economic ruin," he said citing the high unemployment rate and growing debt.

He alluded to the importance of upcoming elections.

"Conservatives are alive and well ... we will send a message in 2011 and 2012" against such Democratic-pushed programs as the 2009 stimulus and the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, he said, and future elections will help "to ensure we are electing the right kind of leader."

Several times he touted some of Texas' successes, including tort reform and leading the nation leading in job creation, as examples of the benefits of conservative fiscal policy and empowering the private sector.

"We have produced the strongest economy in this country," he said.

In March Perry agreed with state legislators to use $3.2 billion in reserves to help erase a $4.3 billion deficit in a deal that also called for hundreds of millions of dollars in budget cuts.

A recent University of Texas/Texas Tribune poll showed the governor with a 42% approval rating.

Known as a leader in the social conservative wing of the party, Perry talked about his strong opposition to abortion and how that was of paramount importance. He also talked about how the Republican Party can find a home for both social and economic conservatives.

Perry said Tuesday six weeks ago running for the GOP nomination was not on his "radar screen."

Asked what changed, "it was a number of conversations with people I trust, including my wife, that basically said listen, our country is in trouble, and you need to give this a second thought," Perry told Fox News on Tuesday.

He said he did not have a timetable for making a decision.

"There is some, I guess, drop-dead time that you have to be in," Perry told the Texas Tribune Tuesday. "I don't think it's (arrived) yet."

"People would like to have some other options in the race," he told the publication.

Earlier Tuesday, Perry had lunch with about 30 leading GOP donors, including businessmen, Wall Street traders and lawyers.

The Tuesday dinner speech is one in a series of national appearances this week before key constituencies. He asked the audience to text the word "leadership" to a number and that would give them future updates them on some of his initiatives.

?Follow Kevin Bohn on Twitter @kevinbohncnn

Source: http://politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com/2011/06/14/perry-rallies-new-york-republicans-as-he-weighs-presidential-bid/

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Boehner Warns Obama on Libya Operations

By JENNIFER STEINHAUER

House Speaker John Boehner on Tuesday warned President Obama that his administration would be in violation of the War Powers Resolution unless he seeks authorization from Congress for America?s military involvement in the NATO operations in Libya or the United States withdraws from those operations.

In a letter, Mr. Boehner requests that the president explain the legal grounds for failing to seek Congressional authorization in the 90 days since Mr. Obama informed Congress of the start of the mission in Libya; on Sunday, it will be 90 days since Congress was formally notified that the mission had begun. (Under the War Powers Resolution, the president is supposed to terminate a deployment into hostilities if Congress has not provided authorization within 60 days, although some circumstances the deadline can be extended another 30 days.)

The request comes less than two weeks after the House voted 268 to 145 to formally rebuke Mr. Obama for continuing to maintain an American role in NATO operations in Libya without the express consent of Congress, and directed the administration to provide detailed information about the cost and objectives of the American role in the conflict.

?Since the mission began, the administration has provided tactical operational briefings to the House of Representatives, but the White House has systematically avoided requesting a formal authorization for its action,? the letter reads. Mr. Boehner further states, ?I remain deeply concerned the Congress has not been provided answers from the executive branch to fundamental questions regarding the Libya mission necessary for us to fulfill our equally important constitutional responsibilities.?

After Mr. Boehner released his letter, Tommy Vietor, a spokesman for the National Security Council, said in a statement: ?We are in the final stages of preparing extensive information for the House and Senate that will address a whole host of issues about our ongoing efforts in Libya, including those raised in the House resolution as well as our legal analysis with regard to the War Powers Resolution. Since March 1, administration witnesses have testified at over 10 hearings that included a substantial discussion of Libya and participated in over 30 member or staff briefings, and we will continue to consult with our Congressional colleagues.?

There is bipartisan anger within the halls of Congress about the continued role of the United States in the mission in Libya, and the sense that Congressional powers have been usurped. Some senators have offered their own resolutions on the matter. House Republicans have suggested that they will funding for the Libyan operations if their requests are not met.

However, it is not clear if the resolution and follow-up letter have any teeth. A decision by the Supreme Court more than two decades ago suggested that Congress is not empowered to enforce a resolution or other directive that the president has no chance to veto ? as he can with a bill.

The United States is providing NATO with intelligence, logistical support and armed drones in what is largely a bombing campaign against Libyan government forces. The administration has contended that it is within Mr. Obama?s power to initiate American participation in the hostilities without Congress?s approval because the combat is limited to an air offensive. These notions were reiterated in a letter that Mr. Obama sent to Congress last month, in which he said that the United States had turned control of the operation over to NATO and that it was primarily providing support to allies.

Perry Speaks, but Avoids Big Question

The Republican governor of Texas unleashes a critique of President Obama, but doesn?t say whether he wants his job.

Bachmann Used Debate to Widen Her Appeal

Michele Bachmann toned down her rhetoric and offered herself as a competent, knowledgeable insider who will nonetheless fight big government.

For Rubio, a Senate First

Unlike less tradition-sensitive colleagues, Marco Rubio, a new Republican senator from Florida, waited more than five months to give his first speech on the floor.

Bachmann Used Debate to Widen Her Appeal

Michele Bachmann toned down her rhetoric and offered herself as a competent, knowledgeable insider who will nonetheless fight big government.

No Brawl for Republican Candidates ? Yet

The Republican presidential rivals declined repeated opportunities to attack one another at Monday night?s debate.

Candidates Show G.O.P. Less United on Goals of War
By JEFF ZELENY

Some presidential candidates are shifting from the hawkish consensus on national security that has dominated Republican foreign policy for the last decade.

In Visit to Puerto Rico, Obama Offers (and Seeks Out) Support
By HELENE COOPER

In San Juan, the president promised to stand by Puerto Rico no matter what future it chooses ? statehood, independence or the status quo.

Effort to End Tax Credit for Ethanol Fails in Senate
By CARL HULSE

Most Democrats banded together with farm-state Republicans to defeat the challenge to the subsidies.

Banks Turn to Schumer on Patents
By EDWARD WYATT

Senator Charles E. Schumer inserted into a bill a provision that appears aimed at helping banks address a costly problem with a patented system for processing digital copies of checks.

Economic Scene: Cutting the Deficit, Adding Jobs
By DAVID LEONHARDT

Both Democrats and Republicans have reason to compromise on the debt talks under way as the economy shows signs of stumbling.

Source: http://thecaucus.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/06/14/boehner-warns-obama-on-libya-operations/

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