Apr 22, 2012

Book: GOP freshman class turned into ‘a monster’ for Boehner, other House leaders

Book: GOP freshman class turned into ‘a monster’ for Boehner, other House leaders:
Time and again last year, House Republican leaders faced a nearly in­trac­table opponent: the very freshman class that propelled them into the majority with the historic 2010 midterm elections.
Revolting from the very outset of the 112th Congress and later wreaking internal havoc during talks to increase the Treasury’s ability to borrow funds, the massive freshman class repeatedly created problems for House Speaker John A. Boehner (R-Ohio), according to a new book.
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Afghanistan, U.S. reach pact on post-2014 American support

Afghanistan, U.S. reach pact on post-2014 American support:
KABUL — After more than a year of negotiations, U.S. and Afghan officials reached an agreement Sunday confirming the United States’ commitment to Afghanistan for a decade after its formal troop withdrawal in 2014.
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Arizona immigration law: Supreme Court again examines federal power

Arizona immigration law: Supreme Court again examines federal power:
The Supreme Court will conclude one of its most significant and controversial terms in decades by taking on one more issue that has divided the nation: Arizona’s crackdown on illegal immigrants.
The court’s final oral argument on Wednesday — Arizona v. United States — provides yet another chance for the justices to confront fundamental questions about the power of the federal government. And the rulings the court will issue between now and the end of June could dramatically alter the nation’s election-year landscape.
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Europe crisis creeps back into danger zone

Europe crisis creeps back into danger zone:
LONDON — After weeks of relative calm, Europe’s debt crisis is reawakening, as investors fret over a growing pushback in the region against the tough austerity prescribed to cure its fiscal ills.
Europe’s crisis had finally seemed to ebb in late January, with confidence in the region’s ability to put its fiscal house in order and aid its troubled banks easing the turbulence that rocked world markets from London to Hong Kong to New York for nearly 2 1/2 years.
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Radical left at crossroads in Latin America

Radical left at crossroads in Latin America:
BOGOTA, Colombia — Quite suddenly, whether intentional or not, Argentine President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner became the standard-bearer of populist nationalism in Latin America when her country seized a Spanish oil company last week.
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Pakistani militant Hafiz Mohammad Saeed seeks protection from bounty hunters

Pakistani militant Hafiz Mohammad Saeed seeks protection from bounty hunters:
LAHORE, Pakistan — The United States has tied him to terrorist plots from Northern Virginia to Mumbai and offered $10 million for information leading to his conviction, but Hafiz Mohammad Saeed knows his rights and where to exercise them: in the Lahore High Court, an ornate red-brick remnant of British rule.
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Sarkozy, favorite Hollande set to advance to runoff in French presidential vote

Sarkozy, favorite Hollande set to advance to runoff in French presidential vote:
PARIS — Francois Hollande, the Socialist candidate for president of France, staked a clear lead over President Nicolas Sarkozy in Sunday’s first round of voting, according to exit polls, and headed into a May 6 runoff election favored to become the country’s next chief executive.
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Laos Site Eyes World Heritage List

Laos Site Eyes World Heritage List: Officials say they hope to make the ancient Plain of Jars an international attraction.

Apr 21, 2012

Laos Rejects China Rare Earth Plant

Laos Rejects China Rare Earth Plant: The Lao government turns down a Chinese company’s application based on environmental concerns.

Xayaburi May Open Floodgates

Xayaburi May Open Floodgates: Experts worry that construction of the Xayaburi dam may set a risky precedent for other dams on Southeast Asia’s key artery.

Regulating domestic drones on a deadline

Regulating domestic drones on a deadline:
In February, President Obama signed into law a reauthorization of the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) that requires the agency — on a fairly rapid schedule — to write rules opening U.S. airspace to unmanned aerial vehicles. This puts the FAA at the center of a potentially dramatic set of policy changes that stand to usher in a long list of direct and indirect benefits. But the FAA is not a privacy agency. And although real privacy concerns have arisen about these aircraft, asking the agency to take on the role of privacy czar for unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) would be a mistake.
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After Bo's fall, Chongqing victims seek justice

After Bo's fall, Chongqing victims seek justice:
BEIJING — The dramatic ouster of Bo Xilai as Communist Party chief in Chongqing has prompted an outpouring from people who say their relatives were wrongly jailed under his rule and want the government to reopen their cases.
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Deposed Maldives president says coup has fueled radical Islam

Deposed Maldives president says coup has fueled radical Islam:
NEW DELHI — Saying he was saddened and shocked by the speed with which his friends in Washington had abandoned him, the former president of Maldives warned Thursday that radical Islam has gained ground across the sprawling Indian Ocean archipelago since he was deposed in February.
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Thousands of protesters rally in Cairo's Tahrir Square, but messages compete

Thousands of protesters rally in Cairo's Tahrir Square, but messages compete:
CAIRO — Tens of thousands of Egyptians flocked Friday to Cairo’s Tahrir Square, the spot where they overthrew autocrat Hosni Mubarak last year and a symbol of the strength that flows from unity. But this time, the square served as a stage for the discord generated by the country’s troubled transition to democracy.
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On Twitter: Only 36 percent of tweets worth reading

On Twitter: Only 36 percent of tweets worth reading:
Those mediocre updates about choosing a food truck for lunch, complaining about work, or a link to the same viral video you saw a month ago: No, it’s not just you rolling your eyes and scrolling quickly.
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South Sudan to withdraw from disputed town

South Sudan to withdraw from disputed town:
NAIROBI — Yielding to international pressure, South Sudan announced Friday that it would withdraw its forces from the contested oil town of Heglig, backing down from a dispute that brought the newly independent nation closer to full-blown war with its neighbor Sudan.
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In online video, minorities find an audience

In online video, minorities find an audience:
Catch Kevin Wu’s latest comedy program on YouTube, and you may think he’s nothing more than a young Asian American talking to a camera in his bedroom. But almost each of his shows command at least 2 million views — rivaling the nightly TV audiences of Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert.

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Unions back American-US Airways merger

Unions back American-US Airways merger:
Bowing to what airline analysts consider the inevitable, US Airways moved a step closer to merging with bankrupt American Airlines Friday when three key unions announced their support.
If the merger goes forward, the US Airways brand would go the way of Pan Am, TWA and Eastern Airlines, consigned to history as the merged carrier flies under the American banner.
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American nuns stunned by Vatican accusation of ‘radical feminism,’ crackdown

American nuns stunned by Vatican accusation of ‘radical feminism,’ crackdown:
American nuns struggled to respond Friday to a Vatican crackdown on what it calls “radical feminism” among the women and their purported failure to sufficiently condemn such issues as abortion and same-sex marriage.
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After ouster of Bo Xilai, questions surround China’s security chief

After ouster of Bo Xilai, questions surround China’s security chief:
BEIJING — With Chinese politics roiled by the purge of Bo Xilai, a former provincial Communist Party chief, there are growing questions about whether the corruption and murder scandal that felled him might reach into the Party’s highest echelon to undercut an official considered Bo’s staunchest ally and defender.
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Outside groups plan to focus on air war, ground game in 2012 election fight

Outside groups plan to focus on air war, ground game in 2012 election fight:
With just more than six months to go before the November elections, two distinct strategies have emerged among political interest groups: an air war on the right and a ground game on the left.
A cadre of super PACs and nonprofit groups backing Republicans plans to spend more than $450 million to oppose President Obama and other Democrats, relying almost exclusively on waves of radio and television ads that will wash over battleground states in coming months. The onslaught has begun as Republican groups strive to damage Obama’s standing ahead of the parties’ national conventions this summer.
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Apr 19, 2012

Gallup Poll - U.S. Leadership Losing Some Status in Key Countries


Gains seen in 2009 in Africa now erased

by Julie Ray
WASHINGTON, D.C. -- Although the image of U.S. leadership is showing some cracks in the third year of President Barack Obama's presidency, it remains more positive worldwide than during the last years of the Bush administration. Across 136 countries, median approval of U.S. leadership in 2011 stood at 46% -- relatively unchanged from the 47% median across 116 countries in 2010.
global medians of U.S. leadership approval
Yet, U.S. leadership ratings in 2011 failed to regain the momentum they lost in 2010, and instead remained static or retreated even more in some places. Gallup surveyed more countries in 2011 than in 2010, but looking at approval in just the countries surveyed in both 2010 and 2011, the median is slightly lower at 43%, suggesting the U.S. has lost some of its status.
Approval Declines in Africa, Where U.S. Leadership Gets Its Highest Marks
A closer look at where U.S. leadership stands at the regional and country levels reveals specific areas of strength and weakness. The image of U.S. leadership continued to be the strongest worldwide in Africa in 2011, bolstered by strong majority approval in sub-Saharan Africa. However, this strong support in the subcontinent is showing signs of weakening for the first time during the Obama administration. After two consecutive years of approval in the mid-80s, support across Africa dropped to a median of 74% in 2011.
Africa medians of U.S. leadership approval
Double-digit losses in 10 sub-Saharan countries, including an 18-percentage point drop in South Africa, led the declines that essentially negate the gains after the transition from the Bush to the Obama administration. Still, at least two-thirds of residents in 33 sub-Saharan African countries surveyed said they approve of the job performance of the leadership of the U.S.
U.S. leadership remains far less popular in North Africa. No approval rating tops 40% there. Interestingly, ratings in North Africa after the Arab Spring are not any worse or any better in most countries except Tunisia and Morocco, where ratings were somewhat higher.
U.S. Image Sinks in the Americas
U.S. approval initially surged in the Americas when Obama took office, but it has been falling since. Although declines have not completely erased gains, the trend is moving in that direction. Median approval dropped to 40% in 2011 from 46% in 2010.
Americas medians of U.S. leadership approval
Approval fell significantly for the second consecutive year in many of the Latin American and Caribbean countries surveyed. There were notable double-digit losses in several key countries, including Colombia and Panama, which inked long-delayed trade deals with the U.S. in 2011.
In countries such as Mexico, where approval declined 14 points, losses did not necessarily mean higher disapproval. More Mexicans in 2011 were uncertain about the leadership of their northern neighbor, with 42% saying they did not have an opinion. In Chile and Panama, however, disapproval rose almost as much as approval declined.
Approval Sees Ups and Downs in Europe
Median approval in Europe is still more than twice as high in 2011 as it was during the last years of the Bush administration, but the trend is moving in a negative direction. A median of 42% across 37 countries surveyed approved of U.S. leadership last year, down from the peak of 47% in 2009.
Europe medians of U.S. leadership approval
Approval increased by double digits in the United Kingdom and Belgium in 2011. The U.S. also retained majority support in eight countries in 2011 that span several regions: Kosovo, Albania, Ireland, the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, Macedonia, Hungary, and Lithuania.
However, U.S. leadership lost favor among other longtime allies, with double-digit declines in countries such as France, Germany, Spain, and Sweden. In France and Spain, approval fell below the majority level. Ratings did not change significantly in about half of the 37 countries Gallup surveyed, which could be a positive indicator given the declines in leading nations and the volatility of the economic situation gripping Europe and the U.S.
Approval in Asia Steady
As the Obama administration shifted its foreign policy focus to Asia in 2011, Gallup's surveys found approval in the region remained generally stable between 2010 and 2011. The 39% median approval in 2011 was still higher than any rating during the Bush administration.
Asia medians of U.S. leadership approval
Views of U.S. leadership varied a great deal across Asia in 2011. Ratings in most of the region tended to be more positive than negative, except for the Middle East and parts of South Asia, where residents were still more likely to disapprove than approve.
One of the challenges of increasing U.S. engagement with Asia, particularly in the Asia-Pacific region, is that the U.S. continues to have visibility issues with residents. Despite Obama's multiple visits to the region during the first three years of his presidency, sizable proportions still do not have an opinion of U.S. leadership.
More Big Losses in 2011, Few Big Gains
The list of countries where approval of U.S. leadership dropped substantially --10 points or more -- in 2011 is nearly twice as long as the list in 2010. The list represents every major global region and includes major nations and longtime U.S. allies. U.S. leadership approval made substantial gains in three countries in 2011: Belgium, the United Kingdom, and Cambodia.
biggest losses in U.S. approval worldwide
Implications
As the U.S. attempts to build engagement around the world, it does so already well-positioned with the public in many parts of it. At the same time, the U.S. cannot take any of this support for granted. Gallup data show that approval waned after the initial euphoria after Obama's election wore off -- even among some of the biggest fans of the country's leadership. Bolstering the U.S. image worldwide will likely be a challenge for the next president regardless of who that will be.
Read the complete findings from the U.S.-Global Leadership Project.
For complete data sets or custom research from the more than 150 countries Gallup continually surveys, please contact SocialandEconomicAnalysis@gallup.com or call 202.715.3030.
Survey Methods
Results are based on face-to-face and telephone interviews with approximately 1,000 adults, aged 15 and older, conducted throughout 2010 in 116 countries and 2011 in 136 countries. In Algeria, Comoros, Egypt, Iraq, Lebanon, Mauritania, Morocco, Palestinian Territories, Somaliland region, Tunisia, and Yemen, measures are aggregated based on multiple surveys conducted in 2010 and 2011. For results based on the total samples, one can say with 95% confidence that the maximum margin of sampling error ranges from ±1.7 percentage points to ±5.7 percentage points. The margin of error reflects the influence of data weighting. In addition to sampling error, question wording and practical difficulties in conducting surveys can introduce error or bias into the findings of public opinion polls.
With some exceptions, all samples are probability based and nationally representative of the resident population aged 15 and older.
Exceptions include areas where the safety of interviewing staff is threatened, scarcely populated islands in some countries, and areas that interviewers can reach only by foot, animal, or small boat.
For more complete methodology and specific survey dates, please review Gallup's Country Data Set details.

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Singapore - Frankenstein in Asia's El Dorado

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Frankenstein in Asia‟s El Dorado

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18 hours ago – Frankenstein in Asia‟s El DoradoEl Dorado is the fabled city of gold in Americas, where explorers seek great wealth. Transforming itself since ...