Saturday, 25 October 2014

Ranting And Throwing Papers: An Angry Candidate Runs For Congress



Illinois state Rep. Mike Bost argues about gun legislation in 2013. Bost's angry rants have become a campaign issue in his race against Democratic Rep. Bill Enyart for Enyart's U.S. House seat.i i



Illinois state Rep. Mike Bost argues about gun legislation in 2013. Bost's angry rants have become a campaign issue in his race against Democratic Rep. Bill Enyart for Enyart's U.S. House seat. Seth Perlman/AP hide caption



itoggle caption Seth Perlman/AP

Illinois state Rep. Mike Bost argues about gun legislation in 2013. Bost's angry rants have become a campaign issue in his race against Democratic Rep. Bill Enyart for Enyart's U.S. House seat.



Illinois state Rep. Mike Bost argues about gun legislation in 2013. Bost's angry rants have become a campaign issue in his race against Democratic Rep. Bill Enyart for Enyart's U.S. House seat.


Seth Perlman/AP


The anger of Illinois Republican state Rep. Mike Bost is spontaneous and raw.


In 2013, for example, he raged against a floor amendment to a concealed carry gun bill.


"Once again, your side of the aisle is trying to make ploys instead of dealing with the real issue!" a YouTube video shows him bellowing. "Keep playing games," he says. "Keep playing games."


Now, Bost is running for a seat in Congress against first-term Rep. Bill Enyart, a retired general and Democrat, and Bost's anger has become a campaign issue.


Voters in the 12th Congressional District in southern Illinois are hearing a lot of another Bost rant, a furious harangue from 2012 about language inserted into a pension reform bill on the final day of the House session.


"Enough! I feel like somebody trying to be released from Egypt! Let my people go!" he hollers. "These damn bills that come out of here all the damn time come out here at the last second and I've got to try figure out how to vote for my people!"


The video of those remarks went viral that year. In it, Bost is seen throwing the bill into the air. He whiffs at the pages as they fall, then picks up the papers and throws them again.


Enyart is running ads that point to Bost's rant as proof that he doesn't belong in Congress. Using footage of the lawmaker's outbursts, the announcer says, "Mike Bost. Twenty years yelling. Twenty years being the problem."


Bost has represented small towns in rural, conservative southern Illinois for nearly two decades. Many voters here see his fury as well-placed.


"I think this was appropriate," says Bost supporter Jill Bunyan of Bost's pension rant. "You can get angry, and that's OK. And I think at that time, for that few moments, that was an appropriate response."


Bunyan lives in the tiny town of Cobden, in southernmost Illinois, population 1,100. People in Bunyan's part of the district, which hugs the Mississippi River, are frustrated with the state's fiscal troubles and weak local economy.


But head north to some of the district's larger cities, like Belleville, population 44,000, and Bost's anger is embraced less and criticized more. Interviewed on Main Street, Richard Rockwell thinks "the rant" is all political theater.


"I'm hoping that's the reason, and not that he's acting the fool in a deliberative chamber," Rockwell says. "That would be rather disconcerting to me."


Bost, in his own ad, refers to a video of the rant and embraces it. He half smiles and explains in folksy fashion that he's angry about the direction his opponents are taking the country.


"What the Chicago politicians and Gov. Quinn have done really made me mad," Bost says. "And what Bill Enyart and President Obama are doing to our country upsets me as well."



Hariri voices support for Army measures in Tripoli


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Ballot Questions Draw Voters In 43 States



Audio for this story from Weekend Edition Saturday will be available at approximately 12:00 p.m. ET.





Ballot measures cover a lot of ground this year — from minimum wage to school calendars to one involving doughnuts and bear hunting. NPR's Charlie Mahtesian takes NPR's Scott Simon through the list.



Weekly Address: Focused on the Fight Against Ebola


President Barack Obama tapes the Weekly Address in the Roosevelt Room of the White House, Oct. 24, 2014.

President Barack Obama tapes the Weekly Address in the Roosevelt Room of the White House, Oct. 24, 2014. (Official White House Photo by Lawrence Jackson)




In this week’s address, the President discussed the measures we are taking to respond to Ebola cases at home, while containing the epidemic at its source in West Africa. This week, we continued to focus on domestic preparedness, with the creation of new CDC guidelines and the announcement of new travel measures ensuring all travelers from the three affected countries are directed to and screened at one of five airports.


The President emphasized that it’s important to follow the facts, rather than fear, as New Yorkers did yesterday when they stuck to their daily routine. Ebola is not an easily transmitted disease, and America is leading the world in the fight to stamp it out in West Africa.


Transcript | mp4 | mp3


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Justice minister: No safe haven, cover for militants battling Lebanese Army


TRIPOLI, Lebanon: Tripoli leaders united in their support for the Lebanese Army Saturday, with Justice Minister Ashraf Rifi working to ensure that no local figures provide safe haven to any militants involved in clashes rocking the northern capital.


Speaking to reporters after he met with several political figures including Future Movement lawmakers from Tripoli, Rifi said: "We should do our job to prevent anyone from destabilizing security in Tripoli."


"Any illegitimate armed movement is condemned, not [provided] covered by us or anyone and does not enjoy a safe haven. We are a safe haven for the Lebanese state, the Army and legitimate security forces."


"We are responsible for the security situation in Tripoli and we will defuse this landmine. ... We will not be dragged into chaos and our only bet is on the state,” he said, adding that he was in contact with civil society groups to help end the clashes.


"I will contact all figures in Tripoli to prevent any embrace of an illegitimate group,” he said.


In response to a question, Rifi told reporters that he was personally against the idea of turning his hometown of Tripoli into a military zone.


Rifi also said that Tripoli, Lebanon's second largest city, "was not a mailbox for anyone to send messages" or a battlefield in the Syria or Iraq conflicts.


Rifi, a retired security chief, held the gathering at his home hours after North Lebanon Mufti Malek al-Shaar convened a meeting of Tripoli’s political and religious figures at Dar al-Fatwa to address the situation in the city.


The attendees released a statement, voicing their undying support for the Army and urging the government to help Tripoli residents in impoverished areas.


"The attendees reaffirmed their support for the Army and security forces, and the duty of politicians is to preserve the peace and the safety of civilians,” Shaar said, reading the statement.


"We have always voiced our support for the security plans to restore peace to the city. What was left is for the Higher Relief Committee to help the poor people and provide [them] with decent living conditions.”


Tripoli residents have complained that the government has failed to compensate for residents affected by several rounds of clashes in the city over the past four years.


"We have great confidence in the Army and its wisdom and we are also confident that Tripoli residents will treat the Army in a good manner.”



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Prominent Islamists leading fighting in north Lebanon: report



BEIRUT: The armed group that attacked the Lebanese Army Friday evening in the northern city of Tripoli is led by two prominent Islamist figures affiliated with a radical group, Anadolu News Agency reported Saturday.


Quoting a Lebanese military source, the agency said the group was led by fugitives Shadi Mawlawi and Osama Mansour.


Military Investigative Judge Nabil Wehbe announced last week he was seeking the death penalty for Mawlawi and Mansour for their role in an August bombing that wounded 11 people. The target is believed to have been an Army post just 30 meters from the blast site.


Nine other individuals have also been named in connection to the bombing; eight are already in prison while the ninth, Mansour’s brother, is also a fugitive.


While the armed gang created by Mawlawi and Mansour has been labeled by locals as affiliated with ISIS, the pair are said to have pledged allegiance to the Al-Qaeda-affiliated Nusra Front.



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BEIRUT: Lebanon must not get used to the absence of a Christian president, Maronite Patriarch Beshara Rai warned Saturday.


“Just like any country cannot accept to be without a president, we cannot accept for any reason or plan to get used to not having a Christian president or live without him,” Rai said during a meeting with Christian religious figures of Eastern churches in the Australian capital.


Rai has been critical of political leaders’ inability to elect a new president to replace former President Michel Sleiman, whose six-year term ended on May 25.


Rivals in the March 8 and the March 14 groups have traded blame over the presidential paralysis, with each political party accusing the other of disrupting the election.


During his speech in Sydney, Rai called on Christians in the world, particularly in Lebanon, "not to be afraid because they are the original citizens of these countries and not minorities.”


“The Middle East today is in dire need of hearing the words of the Bible, the words of love and peace.”


The prelate asked the international community to “put an end to the wars whose goals were now clear and based on political and economic interests as well as [benefiting from] arms trade.”


“We should also put an end to supporting extremist and terrorist groups and stop [their] funding ... and urge countries to obstruct the movement of militants in their homeland.”



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Nusra Front warns of Lebanon civil war over Army measures



BEIRUT: The Nusra Front warned Saturday that what it called discrimination by the Lebanese Army against Sunnis risked dragging Lebanon into a civil war.


"Will sectarian discrimination in the Lebanese Army drag Lebanon into a civil war?” the Nusra Front tweeted.


“The logic today in Lebanon is that if you are against Iran's party's policy in the region, then you are a terrorist and your area is a safe haven for terrorists even if you have religious and political immunity."


The Nusra Front and its sympathizers in Lebanon as well as other Sunni politicians have criticized security measures as targeting Sunnis and ignoring Hezbollah’s actions, including its involvement in the war in Syria.


The Al-Qaeda-affiliated group also criticized the Lebanese government’s handling of the case of kidnapped soldiers and policemen, saying the matter had been politicized.


"The case of the captured soldiers we have has turned into a political game in the hands of the Lebanese government, which is dragging the Lebanese public into the abyss," it said.


The Nusra Front and ISIS are holding 27 Lebanese soldiers and policemen captured during clashes with the Lebanese Army in August in a Bekaa Valley border town. Nusra Front has killed one of the hostages while ISIS has executed two.


Nusra Front has also released seven of its hostages as a sign of goodwill.



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Clashes in north Lebanon wound 10, including five soldiers


TRIPOLI, Lebanon: Fierce clashes between the Lebanese Army and Islamist gunmen in the northern city of Tripoli showed no sign of stopping Saturday morning, with at least 10 people including five soldiers wounded overnight, security sources said.


A 17-year-old Lebanese boy, a Syrian and a Lebanese photographer were among the wounded in the fighting, the most intense in the city since the government implemented a security plan last spring to end sporadic clashes between opponents and supporters of Syrian President Bashar Assad.


Sources in the town said the armed group that attacked the Army was affiliated with ISIS and that Nusra Front fighters had rejected calls by the militants to join the fight.


A militant was killed during the clashed, which erupted Friday evening after gunmen attacked an Army patrol unit in Tripoli’s old souks.


Several ambulances were forced to evacuate some of the neighborhoods due to heavy fighting while a huge fire erupted in a shop in the Al-Arid market.


The sounds of rocket-propelled grenade explosions were heard throughout the night as soldiers, backed by armored vehicles, chased gunmen in the tiny streets of Tripoli, Lebanon's second largest city.


The city seemed deserted Saturday morning as most shops remained closed and residents took refuge in their own homes.


The Army reinforced its positions, deploying additional soldiers and snipers who were stationed on top of several buildings in the souks, where the clashes were concentrated, security sources said


The attack on the Army Friday evening was in retaliation for the arrest of an alleged ISIS commander who the military detained earlier Thursday during a raid in Dinnieh, north Lebanon, a security source told The Daily Star.


Described as a high-value terror suspect, Mikati allegedly told interrogators that he planned to kidnap more servicemen to exert pressure on the government to accept a swap deal with the militants holding 27 soldiers and policemen hostage.


An Army statement Thursday described Mikati, 46, as “one of ISIS’ most important cadres” in north Lebanon. It said Mikati planned a “massive terrorist act” in coordination with his son, Omar, who is fighting with ISIS on the outskirts of the northeastern town of Arsal. Mikati is also accused of recruiting young Lebanese men to join ISIS in Syria's Qalamoun region.


The security source said Mikati confessed that his group was involved in a plot to persuade Lebanese soldiers in the Dinnieh region to defect from the Army and join ISIS.



Clashes rock Tripoli, militant killed, two soldiers wounded


TRIPOLI/BEIRUT: The Lebanese Army clashed with gunmen in the northern city of Tripoli Friday night shortly after rumors spread that a high-value “terrorist” captured during a military raid in the Dinnieh region had died, security sources said. A militant commander was killed and two soldiers were slightly wounded in the clash that erupted around 8:30 p.m. in the neighborhood of Khan al-Askar and Tripoli’s old souks and subsided two hours later, the sources said.


The shootout began shortly after rumors spread in Tripoli that Ahmad Salim Mikati, a key ISIS member arrested by the Army during the raid in the Dinnieh region, had died, the sources said.


A number of gunmen took to the streets and began firing at military posts, prompting the Army to respond quickly and chase the gunmen, the sources told The Daily Star.


The militants then withdrew from the neighborhood and headed toward the old souks, slipping through small alleyways that cannot be accessed by armored vehicles, they added.


The Army quickly deployed reinforcements to surround the gunmen in the old souks. Soldiers closed roads leading to the Bab al-Raml neighborhood, near the site of the fighting, the sources said.


A senior military official said the Army would step up its “pre-emptive strikes” against terrorist groups following its successful raid in the Dinnieh region Thursday that led to the arrest of Mikati and the killing of three terror suspects.


“The Dinnieh raid is a link in a chain in the Army’s ongoing battle against terrorism. Whenever it receives information about the presence of terrorist groups, the Army will launch pre-emptive strikes at the right time,” the official told The Daily Star.


“The Army is determined to crush terrorism threatening the country.”


A day after his arrest during the Army raid in Dinnieh, Mikati has confessed to being a member of ISIS, allegedly telling interrogators that he planned to kidnap more servicemen to exert pressure on the government to accept a swap deal with the militants holding 27 soldiers and policemen hostage.


“Ahmad Salim Mikati confessed he belongs to ISIS and that he regularly coordinated with his son [Omar] and nephew [Bilal] stationed in the outskirts of Arsal,” a security source told The Daily Star.


An Army statement Thursday described Mikati, 46, as “one of ISIS’ most important cadres” in north Lebanon. It said Mikati planned a “massive terrorist act” in coordination with his son, Omar, who is fighting with ISIS on the outskirts of the northeastern town of Arsal. Mikati is also accused of recruiting young Lebanese men to join ISIS on the outskirts of Qalamoun.


The statement said Bilal Mikati was implicated in the beheading of 1st Sgt. Ali Sayyed.


Sayyed was among the dozens of soldiers and policemen that ISIS and the Nusra Front took hostage when they briefly overran Arsal in early August. The militant groups retreated to Arsal’s rugged outskirts after five days of fierce fighting with the Lebanese Army but are still holding 27 servicemen hostage after releasing seven and executing three.


The security source said Mikati confessed that his group was involved in a plot to persuade Lebanese soldiers in the Dinnieh region to defect from the Army and join ISIS.


The group, according to the source, also planned to kidnap more soldiers and policemen, “to add extra pressure on the Lebanese government and raise the demand ceiling, be it in terms of a swap deal or to ease the security siege on the armed militants by the Lebanese Army on the outskirts of Arsal.”


Army commander Gen. Jean Kahwagi met Prime Minister Tammam Salam at the Grand Serail to brief him on the Army raid in Dinnieh.


Kahwagi informed Salam of “the latest Army operation in Dinnieh that led to the killing of three terrorists and the arrest of a fourth [Mikati] and spared the northern region and Lebanon dangerous terrorist attacks that were being planned,” the National News Agency reported.


The Army chief also briefed Salam on his visit to Washington, where he met with U.S. officials and military commanders of other countries participating in the U.S.-led international coalition fighting ISIS in Syria and Iraq.


Salam and Kahwagi reviewed the ongoing efforts to release the 27 Lebanese servicemen held hostage by ISIS and the Nusra Front, the NNA said.


Meanwhile, the military said in a statement Friday night that DNA tests on one of the dead bodies of the three gunmen killed during the raid in Dinnieh belonged to Army defector Abdul-Kader Akoumi.