Tuesday, 28 October 2014

Lebanon's Arabic press digest – Oct. 29, 2014



Lebanon's Arabic press digest – Oct. 29, 2014


The following are a selection of stories from Lebanese newspapers that may be of interest to Daily Star readers. The Daily Star cannot vouch for the accuracy of these reports.


Al-Joumhouria


Christian talks precede Parliament’s extension


Lebanese Forces and Kataeb Party sources told Al-Joumhouria that a meeting Tuesday between Kataeb MP Sami Gemayel and LF leader Samir Geagea addressed a wide-range of Lebanon issues.


Albert Costanian, who accompanied Gemayel to the LF headquarters in Maarab, said the visit underlined the strategic relations between the Kataeb and the Lebanese Forces.


Costanian, in remarks to Al-Joumhouria, said the Kataeb Party was “trying to find common ground of communication between Christians regardless of the presidential candidates [being proposed].”


He said the meeting also discussed the “strategic threat” to Lebanon and the Christians as a result of the influx of the Syrian refugees and ways to implement the Cabinet decisions to stop the exodus.


More to follow ...



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Opposition to Parliament extension melts away


BEIRUT: Free Patriotic Movement leader MP Michel Aoun Tuesday ruled out the possibility of holding parliamentary elections, sending the strongest signal yet that the extension of Parliament’s mandate has become a foregone conclusion.


Speaker Nabih Berri said he would call a session to extend Parliament’s term in the first week of next month.


Political sources said lawmakers are expected to debate and endorse a draft proposal presented by Zahle MP Nicolas Fattoush that calls for the extension of Parliament’s term for two years and seven months to make it a full four-year mandate after lawmakers, citing security concerns, extended the House’s term for 17 months in May 2013.


Former Prime Minister Saad Hariri, meanwhile, urged rival political leaders to end the five-month-old presidential vacuum by agreeing on a new president to ensure a transfer of power.


“I call on all Lebanese leaders ... to immediately launch national consultations to agree on a new president and end the vacancy in the first presidency,” Hariri said in a statement. He said the election of a successor to former President Michel Sleiman, whose six-year tenure ended on May 25, would “adjust the work in all institutions and constitutional timelines and achieve the transfer of power in accordance with the laws in force.”


Hariri’s remarks come on the eve of a Parliament session to elect a president amid signs that the new session is destined to fail like previous ones over a lack of quorum. Wednesday’s session will be the 14th aborted attempt in more than five months to elect a president.


Berri, according to visitors, reiterated his position to comply with the National Pact on partnership between Muslims and Christians in addressing the extension of Parliament’s mandate.


Berri, who met separately Tuesday with Aoun and Lebanese Forces MP George Adwan, said he informed the two men of his position.


The speaker, according to visitors, stressed the need to ensure constitutional partnership in next month’s Parliament session to extend its mandate with the presence of Christian parties. “The National Pact on partnership is applied on everyone and not on just one component,” he was quoted as saying.


Berri said he warned during his meetings with Aoun, the LF and the Kataeb Party that the failure to hold elections and extend Parliament’s mandate would plunge the country into “a parliamentary vacuum that would make it impossible to elect a new president.”


“Anyone who does not want [parliamentary] elections or an extension means that he does not want the election of a new president. In this case, let him bear responsibility,” he added.


Aoun, a staunch opponent of the extension of Parliament’s mandate, which expires on Nov. 20, acknowledged the difficulties in holding parliamentary polls, given the unstable security situation in the country.


“There will be no elections and Parliament will extend its mandate. [Parliamentary] elections are out of the question,” Aoun told reporters after meeting Berri at the latter’s residence in Ain al-Tineh.


Aoun, the Hezbollah-led March 8 alliance’s undeclared candidate for the country’s top Christian post, said he was in agreement with Berri over the presidential vote, but he ruled out the election of a president soon.


“The current circumstances are not favorable for the election. We hope the circumstances become better soon,” he said.


Aoun had earlier met with Grand Mufti Abdul-Latif Derian. “We need to overcome this situation with the least possible damage, and start a new phase characterized by national unity,” Aoun told reporters after the meeting at Dar al-Fatwa.


Aoun said contacts between his bloc and Hariri have not ceased, adding he received an oral message from him Tuesday.


Lebanese Forces MP George Adwan said after meeting Berri that lawmakers were left with the choice of either extending Parliament’s mandate or facing a parliamentary vacuum.


“We are in a predicament and the country is in a predicament. It is no longer a situation of either an extension [of Parliament’s term] or holding elections. Rather, it is either a [parliamentary] vacuum or an extension of Parliament’s term,” Adwan said.


Kataeb Party MP Sami Gemayel rejected the extension of Parliament’s term. “A Parliament, which has failed in everything, must not have its mandate extended,” Gemayel said after meeting Lebanese Forces leader Samir Geagea at the latter’s residence in Maarab.


The talks focused on the presidential deadlock and the extension of Parliament’s term.


For his part, Marada Movement leader MP Sleiman Frangieh said Christians prefer a presidential void over a weak president. He said the extension of Parliament’s term is a foregone conclusion. “Christians today prefer a vacuum over a weak president and this is a positive thing,” Frangieh said a statement carried by the National News Agency.



International donors pledge to boost Syrian refugee aid


BEIRUT: An international conference on the Syrian refugee crisis vowed Tuesday to extend long-term financial aid to countries struggling with what the U.N. calls the world’s “most dramatic humanitarian crisis,” but did not commit to an overall figure.


Around 40 countries and international bodies adopted a declaration saying donors would “mobilize for years to come” increased development support to help nations like Lebanon and Jordan shoulder the impact of millions of Syrian refugees.


It did not include any concrete figures. Germany said this had not been the conference’s prime aim.


Berlin said it was budgeting 500 million euros ($637 million) for 2015-2017 to help Syrian refugees, and the U.S. announced $10 million in additional humanitarian assistance for host communities in the region.


Addressing the conference, Prime Minister Tammam Salam urged the U.N. to increase funding to boost Lebanon’s economy, hit hard by the Syria war, and speed the resettlement of Syrian refugees.


“In order to reach an effective solution ... we must focus on finding ways to encourage donors to increase their contributions to funding development projects aimed at the rehabilitation of public services and the expansion of educational and health institutions as well as promote stability,” Salam said.


“It is also vital that this conference will look at the various options for the resettlement of Syrian refugees in other countries,” he added. Salam said the Syrian war not only has affected the Syrians who were forced to flee their homes, but also the Lebanese people who host the refugees.


Salam said slowness in economic activity and the significant decline in production over the past two years have increased unemployment and raised the percentage of the Lebanese population who live below poverty line to more than 5 percent, according to the World Bank.


He said the dramatic rise of government spending linked to the population increase, combined with the decline in tax revenues caused by the economic slowdown, had made an already fragile situation worse and raised the budget deficit by 10 percent of gross national product.


Lebanon hosts around 1.2 million registered Syrian refugees, but unofficial figures are much higher. Their presence is exerting enormous pressure on the country’s ailing infrastructure.


He noted that public schools were forced to receive, in a very short time, additional students equal to 40 percent of the number of Lebanese students.


U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees Antonio Guterres told the conference that the impact of 3 million Syrians having fled the long and bloody conflict was “enormous” on its neighbors.


“Economics, public services, the social fabric of communities and the welfare of families are all affected, not to mention the security impact of the Syrian conflict in the whole region,” Guterres said.


Salam stressed that poor communities had been unprepared to deal with the influx of Syrian refugees, saying the strain “poses a number of challenges and threats that constitute a fertile ground for extremism and violence.”


He said Lebanon had paid dearly for its openness policy, where 85 percent of the Syrian refugees live in ordinary houses within Lebanese towns and villages, despite the presence of temporary camps scattered across Lebanon. Many of them have even set up small businesses and were operating without licenses, engaging in unfair competition with Lebanese traders, he said.


Salam also urged the UNHCR “to explore ways to enable the Syrian refugees to exercise their right to return to their homes. This ... may prove to be the most appropriate and effective solution. “


Before Tuesday’s ministerial conference, Salam attended the meeting of the International Support Group for Lebanon, where participants emphasized the “crucial importance of national unity for stability and security” in Lebanon and “expressed support for the efforts of Salam and his government in confronting the many challenges facing the country.”


The attendees, who included Salam and the German foreign minister, voiced their concern over a prolonged vacancy in Lebanon’s presidential post and the impact the void has on state institutions, according to a statement issued by participants after the meeting. They also affirmed that “it is vital that Lebanon’s political leaders act to resolve the issue in the interest of all in Lebanon without further delay.”



Hariri: Time to get out of Syrian fire


BEIRUT: Lebanon must disengage from the civil war destroying Syria, former Prime Minister Saad Hariri said Tuesday, strongly condemning calls for Sunnis to defect from the Lebanese Army.


“The itinerant incidents we are witnessing these days in the Bekaa, Tripoli, Akkar, Minyeh, Dinnieh, and elsewhere, are a small sample of the huge fire that broke out in Syria,” Hariri said in a statement, “and impacts of the war that Bashar Assad told us would reach Lebanon and other countries.”


His message, which came a day after the Lebanese Army defeated a group of Islamist militants that were reportedly aiming to create an Islamic emirate in north Lebanon, laid out a series of principles that Hariri said the country must hold to in order to avert catastrophe.


The Future Movement leader called on Sunnis to remain united with the state, rejecting the idea of a Sunni revolution as “far from the aspirations and goals” of the sect.


“All calls to defect from the Army and incite the Sunni youth in particular to leave their posts and join armed organizations in Lebanon or abroad are condemned and rejected,” Hariri said.


“This call is equal to the plots to end the Lebanese formula and replace it with incomplete mini-states based on sectarianism that survive on the rubble of joint national life.


“The Sunnis in Lebanon were and always will be the solid base for moderation and unity. They are entrusted with a national and patriotic legacy and will not abandon it, regardless of the intensity of bullying against them with foreign weapons and weapons of those who depart from the state and its institutions.”Hariri insisted that Lebanon must implement an integrated security strategy, making the legitimate security forces “exclusively responsible for protecting the borders with Syria and preventing any military action in both directions, whether from Syrian groups toward Lebanon or Lebanese groups toward Syria.”


Hariri said that the advocates of the Syrian regime were making a considerable effort “to hold us responsible for a share of the fire and its spreading in a number of areas, in order to establish a Lebanese sectarian balance in the Syrian war that would justify the armed participation of Hezbollah in the Syrian war, and establish an equivalence ... between the humanitarian and political support we offer the Syrian revolution, and the violation of the border by thousands of militants who went to Syria for the defense of Bashar Assad’s regime.”


“Our stance about the Syrian revolution is based on the noble meanings on which this revolution was built,” he said.


“We still have the firm conviction that the Syrians will be able to get through this ordeal and will refuse to choose between tyranny and terrorism regardless of the extent of despair and criminality.”


However, Hariri called on Syrian fighters to leave Lebanon out of their battle, saying it would only serve “the dearest wishes of the Syrian regime.”


“The armed and terrorist groups that are crossing the Lebanese borders and avenging Hezbollah on its own ground ... are giving Hezbollah a new pretext to intervene in the Syrian war and to expand its security and military action in Lebanon,” he warned.


He also called on the government to balance the humanitarian needs of the Syrian refugees in Lebanon with national security concerns, while pressing political figures to come together to end the presidential vacancy.


“All partners in the country should put Lebanon’s interest over any other, and not allow the interest of the Syrian regime or any other external party to prevail over it,” he said.


“The time has come to be aware of the dangers of the deliberate involvement in the Syrian fire and to disengage from the Syrian front.”



Army arrests 33 terror suspects in north Lebanon


TRIPOLI, Lebanon: The Lebanese Army arrested 33 terror suspects during its hunt for remaining militants in north Lebanon Tuesday, as families were returning to the embattled port city of Tripoli following clashes that left 42 people dead and more than 150 wounded.


An Army statement said soldiers rounded up 33 people suspected of belonging to terrorist groups while searching the areas of Minyeh, Ayoun al-Samak, the forests of Akkar al-Atiqa, Akroum and Nabi Yousheh for fugitive gunmen.


“Army units continued to boost their deployment in Bab al-Tabbaneh and Tripoli’s old souks,” the statement said, referring to areas that were the scenes of pitched battles between the Army and militants inspired by ISIS and the Nusra Front that broke out over the weekend.


The Army blocked the main highway linking the area of Minyeh with the Syrian border as troops carried out raids in nearby Bhenin, military sources said.


Although the battle for Tripoli is over, a senior military official told The Daily Star Tuesday that troops would continue “raids in search of fugitive gunmen, including wanted militant leaders Shadi Mawlawi and Osama Mansour,” who were blamed for attacks on military posts.


Reports said Mawlawi and Mansour have fled along with several gunmen to Dinnieh’s rugged outskirts.


Fighting in Tripoli ended Monday after the Army seized a mosque in the city’s Bab al-Tabbaneh neighborhood that had been used as a stronghold by militants inspired by ISIS and the Nusra Front.


The four days of battles between the Lebanese Army and militants devastated swaths of the troubled streets. Returning residents expressed shock as they took stock of the damage inflicted on their property.


With Army reinforcements arriving in Tripoli, troops set up permanent and random checkpoints in Bab al-Tabbaneh and nearby Al-Tal, Mina, Zahrieh and Abi Samra. Soldiers also conducted foot patrols in and around Tripoli.


“Stability has been restored in Tripoli,” Future Movement MP Ammar Houri said. “Residents are going back to the city.”


About 50 percent of residents have returned to their homes in Bab al-Tabbaneh, while local organizations, including the Future Movement, began providing relief aid to people whose houses were damaged during the fighting.


Tripoli Municipality’s workers began removing debris and broken glass from the streets, while shop owners inspected the damage to their stores.


Commando units pursued remaining militants who fled toward the orchards or the barren peaks.


Security sources said the Army was hunting a group of gunmen spotted heading from Ayoun al-Samak toward the outskirts of Akkar and Arbeen mountains.


Army reconnaissance planes also flew over Bhenin and towns in the Akkar district looking for fugitives.


Asoun Mayor Motasem Abdul-Kader said there was no presence of ISIS or Nusra Front “sleeper cells” in the village in the Dinnieh area of north Lebanon.


But the mayor expressed concerns that militants who fled the gunbattles in Bab al-Tabbaneh have likely sought shelter in Asoun.


“We are fully cooperating with the security forces and we are conducting joint patrols in the village,” Abdul-Kader told the Voice of Lebanon radio station.


Asoun was the scene of a military raid last week. The Army captured one of its highest value terror suspects yet in a dramatic pre-dawn raid and gunbattle there Thursday.


Three gunmen were killed during the raid to arrest Ahmad Mikati, who is also a relative of a jihadist involved in the beheading of a captive Lebanese soldier.


Meanwhile, Defense Minister Samir Moqbel dismissed reports of a compromise brokered by political leaders to end the fighting and allow gunmen to flee Tripoli.


“We have heard talk of compromises in Tripoli, but we affirm that no deal had been reached in Tripoli or elsewhere,” Moqbel told reporters after meeting former Prime Minister Najib Mikati at his Beirut office. “The Army and the military command continue to do their job.”


“There is no backing down,” Moqbel vowed. “The military operation is ongoing to clean the area of gunmen and of all the terrorists.”


The local daily Al-Akhbar said Tuesday that the fighting suddenly stopped after a deal was reached that called for the “disappearance” of the militants while the Army deployed inside the battered areas of Bab al-Tabbaneh and Minyeh.


Security sources had told The Daily Star that the Army was resolute in the crackdown on armed militants and was taking a no-compromise approach.


Mikati also denied reaching a deal to end the Tripoli battle. “I did not sponsor any compromise of any form,” he said.


The Army also continued its raids for the third day running in the southern city of Sidon in search of supporters of fugitive Salafist preacher Ahmad Assir suspected of plotting to attack an Army Intelligence center and a Hezbollah-affiliated compound in the city.


Mohammad F., a Lebanese and one of the terror suspects, gave himself up to Army Intelligence, security sources said.


The Army Monday foiled an attack on Sidon’s Fatima Zahra Compound, which houses a Shiite mosque, an infirmary and a lecture hall, before thwarting an assault against an Army Intelligence post. – Additional reporting by Mohammed Zaatari



Time to capitalize on anti-ISIS sentiment


A diplomatic report sent to Beirut recently touched on the result of a poll published earlier this month by the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, which showed that just 1 percent of Lebanon’s Sunni population has a positive opinion of ISIS. Of the 1,000 Lebanese interviewed for the survey, not a single Christian, Druze or Shiite respondent was supportive of ISIS.


Still, that means there are probably “a few thousand” ISIS sympathizers in Lebanon, according to David Pollock, the director of the Washington Institute’s Fikra Forum, who designed the survey.


According to the diplomatic report, Lebanon could capitalize on this widespread rejection of ISIS through a series of political and developmental steps, particularly in light of the fact that poverty is a root cause of violence and terrorism.


Second, the report said frank dialogue was needed between all Lebanese factions to allay concerns or fears that any of the groups was resorting to terrorism to shift the balance of power in Lebanon, as such actions would be destructive for all involved.


Third, the document recommended officials and politicians communicate to the public that ISIS would be highly detrimental to the Sunni community and would not address its grievances as claimed, something that was made clear by the fighting in Tripoli over the weekend that led to the aerial bombardment of the city’s marketplace.


According to the report, the only way to prevent terrorism from taking hold in Lebanon was by rebuilding state institutions, ending the five-month presidential vacuum and electing a new Parliament instead of extending its term for a second time, a move that would erode the democratic process.


The report warned that delaying the drafting of a new election law – which would be based on proportional representation in order to fairly represent all Lebanese groups – could provide a favorable environment for everything from terrorism and religious fanaticism to violence and corruption.


In spite of all these bad signs, however, a centrist politician described Lebanon as “unstable, but [it] will not totally collapse.”


He said Arab, regional and international developments had paralyzed state institutions in Lebanon and that there were still no signs of an imminent breakthrough on the presidential deadlock, parliamentary elections, or Cabinet productivity.


To a large extent, the situation in Lebanon has become connected to external developments and will remain in limbo until the various regional conflicts are resolved, he added.


In the meantime, things in Lebanon will remain relatively calm, but there is unlikely to be any radical solution to the country’s economic, social and financial problems.


On the security level, the politician said Western countries were deeply concerned with what was happening in the north and along the eastern border with Syria.


But he said that Lebanon was different from other countries in the region due to the fact that it does not have a particularly favorable environment for jihadist ideologies, and was being protected by an international decision to prevent the country from totally exploding.


As the status-quo in Syria remains unchanged, the politician said, Lebanon would have to wait for the outcome of the ongoing American-Iranian talks over the Islamic Republic’s nuclear program, which are also expected to tackle the country’s role in the region.


It would also be important to examine how Saudi-Iranian ties would develop, the politician said.


He revealed that U.S. decision-makers were deeply divided on the fate of Syrian President Bashar Assad, with some strongly insisting he stay in power and others campaigning for him to step down.


According to the centrist politician, the crisis could be resolved by keeping Assad in his post but stripping him of most of his powers, which would instead be distributed to governors, the prime minister, Parliament and the Syrian Army.


He added that any solution under which a national unity government was formed in addition to the deployment of international peacekeeping forces was a proposal worth considering.



Extension session likely to happen next week


BEIRUT: Speaker Nabih Berri will likely call for a session to extend Parliament’s mandate next week, now that Christian parties who oppose the extension have indicated their willingness to come to the chamber and attend the vote. The presence of the Free Patriotic Movement, the Kataeb Party and the Lebanese Forces, though they oppose the extension of the mandate, will allow the session to go forward, since it will longer be seen as violating the National Pact, an unwritten arrangement that laid the foundation of Lebanon as a multi-confessional state.


Berri is talking to Christian leaders about extending the legislature’s term, and is expected to schedule a session next week to vote on a two-year-and-seven-month extension.


The speaker told Lebanese Forces MP George Adwan that Parliament risked plunging in vacuum if the extension did not happen.


“You should assume your responsibilities as MPs and as Lebanese Forces. You are presented with the option of vacuum and its repercussions today,” Berri was quoted as having said to Adwan, who visited him Tuesday.


After strongly opposing extension in the previous months, Berri said last week he was convinced it was necessary, after the Future Movement, the representative of the Sunni sect in the country, announced that it wouldn’t take part in parliamentary elections in the midst of a presidential void.


Berri said holding parliamentary polls amid a boycott by the Future Movement would violate the National Pact. He also said that if Parliament’s term expired Nov. 20, and neither extension nor elections had happened, then there would no longer be a legislature to elect a president.


It will not be possible to hold parliamentary elections on time, FPM leader Michel Aoun said Tuesday after meeting Berri.


“There will be no elections, and the Parliament will extend its mandate,” Aoun told reporters as he walked out from the meeting at Berri’s Ain al-Tineh residence.


However, he reiterated his bloc’s objection to the extension.


“Our stand is based on principles,” he said. “Last time we opposed the extension, and so we are doing this time,” he said in reference to his group’s rejection of May 2013’s extension.


Sources in the Christian parties that oppose the extension indicated they might attend the session without voting, guaranteeing its legitimacy in Berri’s eyes and making the renewal of the mandate a fait accompli, since it is supported by other Christian parties and by representatives of Sunnis and Shiites in Parliament.


The sources said that their parties would not boycott the session, particularly if its agenda included important items that had to do with the daily lives of the Lebanese.


Other Christian groups including the Marada Movement, the Tashnag Party along with Metn MP Michel Murr and a number of independent Christian MPs from the March 14 coalition are likely to vote in favor of extension.


Speaking to The Daily Star, a number of March 8 and March 14 MPs said that a Parliament session that convened last week to elect members of Parliament’s Secretariat and parliamentary committees was a prelude to the extension session.


This is because if parliamentary elections were to be held on Nov. 16 as scheduled, there would have been no need to elect new members of the Secretariat and committees.


Berri will convene Parliament Wednesday in a session aimed at electing a new president.


But in the absence of a consensus candidate, the meeting will be an opportunity for further talks between rival factions to agree on the duration of the extension.



Kansas Gov. Brownback's Radical Tax Cut Has Mixed Results



Audio for this story from All Things Considered will be available at approximately 7:00 p.m. ET.





When Gov. Sam Brownback proposed a radical tax cut for small businesses in Kansas, people cheered. Now four years later, his "real live experiment" may cost him his political career.



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Runoffs Could Delay Answer Of Senate Control After Election



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An updated look at this year's Senate races and why we might not know who has won control of the Senate on Election Day.



Constituent Services Give Voters Something To Remember



Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky, poses with constituent Noelle Hunter. In a campaign ad, Hunter explains that McConnell helped get her daughter back from Mali after a custody battle.i i



Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky, poses with constituent Noelle Hunter. In a campaign ad, Hunter explains that McConnell helped get her daughter back from Mali after a custody battle. AP hide caption



itoggle caption AP

Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky, poses with constituent Noelle Hunter. In a campaign ad, Hunter explains that McConnell helped get her daughter back from Mali after a custody battle.



Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky, poses with constituent Noelle Hunter. In a campaign ad, Hunter explains that McConnell helped get her daughter back from Mali after a custody battle.


AP


Even in the bleakest of years, incumbent lawmakers almost always get re-elected. Here's one reason why: They have a powerful built-in advantage in something called constituent services.


The casework that congressional staffers tackle runs the gamut from headaches over Social Security checks and IRS problems to veterans' benefits and mortgage issues. These days, immigration issues are among the biggest problems.


And if played just right, members of Congress can see a political payoff from simply doing their jobs and helping out the voters that elected them.


"The only time a political benefit can happen is if they do a high-profile case or they do a pretty high profile case that can be turned into a pretty good political ad," says Brad Fitch, who heads up the Congressional Management Foundation. "That's happened a few times that members of Congress have demonstrated their value at getting things done and asked folks, 'hey would you mind recording a TV ad, a testimonial on my behalf?'"


Earlier this month, Sen. Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) released an ad featuring a woman whose ex-husband abducted their young daughter and took her to Africa. She explains how McConnell helped her retrieve her daughter by working with the State Department. The video shows Noelle Hunter, an African-American community college professor, standing alongside McConnell and posing for a photo.


"I reached out to Sen. McConnell and he took up my cause personally. I can't even talk about him without getting emotional," she says. "He cares."


The minute-long sentimental ad stood out in an avalanche of negative advertising in the tight Kentucky race. But it also functions to humanize McConnell and show that he's been effective in Washington.


McConnell's not the only incumbent leaning on casework to make the case that voters should elect him for another term.


North Carolina Democratic Sen. Kay Hagan used an ad to spotlight her work to provide health care for thousands of people who were poisoned by toxic water at Marine Corps Base Camp Lejeune. Speaking straight to the camera is the father of a woman who died of leukemia:


Kansas Sen. Pat Roberts released an ad talking about his efforts to rescue a Kansas woman who was taken hostage while teaching children in Ethiopia:


And Sen. Al Franken of Minnesota's ad puts the spotlight on a food safety law. His ad features a man whose mother died after eating contaminated peanut butter.


"These are politicians. They love being loved," says Fitch. "And so the idea that you can call up, say, the grandson of a World War II veteran and say 'Guess what? I got the DOD to reissue those medals he got in World War II.' Boy those are the moments worth living for if you're a public servant."


Plus, Congress isn't getting all that much done these days — little legislation passes and with the ban on earmarks, there's no pork. And that leaves little to brag about other than what they're doing for their constituents at home. So, they're turning to testimonials.


Even in years when Congress has been more productive, constituent services are a big part of lawmakers jobs. Fitch says it's a major part of the labor investment in Hill offices.


"The idea of becoming an ombudsman for citizens and members of Congress performing this role evolved in the 1960s and 70s when Congressional offices started to grow," he explains. "They wanted to provide more services to constituents so they increased their staff sizes from maybe 5, 6, 7 staff members to now maybe a cap of 18 full time staff members in the House of Representatives."


And on average, about one-third of those staffers are diving into casework on a day-to-day basis.


Fitch says casework like this is very labor-intensive, and staffers function as quasi-social workers.


"It's not like you can transfer your skill sets from being a customer service representative in the private sector and then go work for the government," he said. "It's a very unusual job because you have both the politics of working in a congressional office combined with dealing with the maze that is a federal bureaucracy. And by the way, every federal office is different. Every case may have a different flavor so you have to be very nimble and very experienced."


Congressman Dave Price, a North Carolina Democrat, says his office handles as many as 100 requests each month for casework. He and his staff try to get to all of them.


"There's a full range of dealings that people have with the federal government that are prone sometimes to red tape or to errors and we're the ones who serve as the ombudsman as they call it in some of the European countries," Price says. "We're the ones that people come to when they need something straightened out with the bureaucracy and often we're able to help."


Price, a political science professor, says his office deals with every request in some way.


"We're not always able to deliver exactly what they want but we certainly can get them a straight answer," he says.


But what about the politics? I asked Price how much that motivates him and other lawmakers. He says it does for some — but he has no doubt that constituents remember what their lawmaker does for them.


"Very few people will remember a vote I took 10, 15 years ago or whether I sponsored a bill, but they sure will remember if I helped them adopt a child," he says, using overseas adoptions in Vietnam as an example. "Citizens do remember this and I think they appreciate it."


That's true for the individual voter. But University of California, San Diego political science professor Gary Jacobson says the idea that incumbents can protect themselves by touting their constituent services may be a bit dated.


"That story about how incumbents insulate themselves by constituent services was accurate, or at least was arguably accurate for several decades, but it no longer seems to be," he says.


Here's why — the electorate is more polarized today than ever.


"There are just fewer voters who are willing to cross party lines to support an incumbent no matter what they've done for the district," he says.



Political Scientists Find A Guinea Pig: Montana



Montana Democratic Sen. Jon Tester wants investigations into a research study by Stanford University and Dartmouth College political scientists that sent 100,000 Montana voters a "voter guide" about state Supreme Court candidates.i i



Montana Democratic Sen. Jon Tester wants investigations into a research study by Stanford University and Dartmouth College political scientists that sent 100,000 Montana voters a "voter guide" about state Supreme Court candidates. J. Scott Applewhite/AP hide caption



itoggle caption J. Scott Applewhite/AP

Montana Democratic Sen. Jon Tester wants investigations into a research study by Stanford University and Dartmouth College political scientists that sent 100,000 Montana voters a "voter guide" about state Supreme Court candidates.



Montana Democratic Sen. Jon Tester wants investigations into a research study by Stanford University and Dartmouth College political scientists that sent 100,000 Montana voters a "voter guide" about state Supreme Court candidates.


J. Scott Applewhite/AP


Political scientists looking to test their hypotheses about voting behavior found a ready pool of test subjects this election: Montanans.


A hundred-thousand registered voters received a rating four nonpartisan state Supreme Court candidates by their liberal or conservative ideology. Voters were urged: "Take this to the polls."



The flier sent to Montana voters by political scientists at Stanford University and Dartmouth College to study voter interest in nonpartisan races. Fliers were also sent to voters in California and New Hampshire.i i



The flier sent to Montana voters by political scientists at Stanford University and Dartmouth College to study voter interest in nonpartisan races. Fliers were also sent to voters in California and New Hampshire. Stanford University/Dartmouth College hide caption



itoggle caption Stanford University/Dartmouth College

The flier sent to Montana voters by political scientists at Stanford University and Dartmouth College to study voter interest in nonpartisan races. Fliers were also sent to voters in California and New Hampshire.



The flier sent to Montana voters by political scientists at Stanford University and Dartmouth College to study voter interest in nonpartisan races. Fliers were also sent to voters in California and New Hampshire.


Stanford University/Dartmouth College


Only in the fine print was this disclosure: "This guide was created as part of a joint research project at Stanford and Dartmouth."


State election officials and Montana Democratic Sen. Jon Tester did not appreciate the experiment — and are now demanding investigations.


Both schools are conducting internal reviews, and both issued apologies.


"Stanford takes this issue seriously, and we sincerely apologize to the voters who received the mailers for the confusion and concern they have caused," read a university statement.


Tester, for one, remains miffed.


"Using the people of Montana as their guinea pigs is bad enough, but the truth is that elections should not be a lab for political experiments," Tester told NPR.


In a letter to the presidents of the two schools, Tester wrote: "While I strongly support providing necessary resources and freedom to do academic research, I have incredible concern about universities and noncandidate groups manipulating data and testing their hypotheses on the voting public."


According to statements by both schools, Montana voters were not the only ones receiving fliers in the experiment: 66,000 voters in one of New Hampshire's two congressional districts received fliers about candidates in the Republican primary, and 143,000 voters in two California congressional districts — both feature two Republicans facing off in November — also got fliers.


The point of the research, according to a page on Stanford's website, is to see if voters are more likely to cast ballots in nonpartisan or single-party races when they have more information about candidates.


"Our goal in this research is to understand how providing voters with nonpartisan, visual information about candidates' positions ... affects the likelihood that voters leave their lower ballot races blank," reads a synopsis of the experiment.


The money for the experiment came from the Hewlett Foundation, which provided $250,000, and Stanford University, which provided $100,000.


Montana Secretary of State Linda McCulloch has filed a complaint against the Montana mail piece with the state's Commissioner of Political Practices, while Tester has sent a letter to the chief postal inspector over the flier's use of Montana's official seal to see if it violated the federal Deceptive Mailings Act.


"For the universities, and so-called researchers within these universities, to use the voting public as lab rats is very, very unfortunate," Tester said.



Money Mixes Up Missouri Circuit-Court Race


Money is flowing into state elections for trial judges and supreme court justices. One big player is the little-known Washington group Republican State Leadership Committee.




Copyright © 2014 NPR. For personal, noncommercial use only. See Terms of Use. For other uses, prior permission required.


RENEE MONTAGNE, HOST:


And now another story of big, political money coming to small-town America. In Cole County, Missouri, a circuit court judge is fighting to stay on the bench. Her challenger was underfunded until he got some outside help. NPR's Peter Overby reports.


PETER OVERBY, BYLINE: Patricia Joyce has been a Cole County judge since 1994. In August, she campaigned for reelection at the county fair. Her campaign manager is Dale Doerhoff.


DALE DOERHOFF: If you go to the Cole County fair, you buy something if you're a candidate. She bought a goat. She gave it back to the little girl who raised it. But yeah, she's trying every way she can to get out there and interact with the people as much as possible.


OVERBY: But for the final month of the campaign, she's up against this...


(SOUNDBITE OF POLITICAL AD)


UNIDENTIFIED ANNOUNCER: Radical environmentalists think Joyce is so groovy. And the lawyers funding her campaign do, too. Pat Joyce ruled against farmers...


OVERBY: The ad, with its 1960s flower-power images, comes from the Missouri arm of the Republican State Leadership Committee, a political group based in Washington. It raises money to help state and local GOP candidates around the country. Matt Walter, president of the RSLC, says the Cole County ad is part of a new judicial fairness initiative.


MATT WALTER: It's something we launched earlier this year in response to the flood of dollars going into judicial elections from rich, liberal billionaires and union officials and trial lawyers who practice in front of these judges.


OVERBY: He says more money leads to more information, better informed voters and higher turnout. He poses this question...


WALTER: Why all of the anxiety now about trying to have more information?


OVERBY: But money itself is the problem, according to Bert Brandenburg.


BERT BRANDENBURG: Like the rest of politics, outside groups are muscling their way into judicial races.


OVERBY: Brandenburg is the director of the advocacy group Justice at Stake. It catalogs the attacks financed by business groups and trial lawyers, unions, state parties and so-called social welfare groups which don't disclose their donors.


BRANDENBURG: This goes far beyond information. It's an attempt to actually buy a seat on the court.


OVERBY: So here's how it unfolded in Cole County - Democratic incumbent Patricia Joyce's campaign went into October with $17,000 in the bank. Republican challenger Brian Stumpe's campaign was $8,600 in the red. Then, Stumpe got $100,000 from the Republican State Leadership Committee. And by last Thursday, the RSLC had put even more than that into its state PAC - nearly $170,000 for the attack ad and some mailers, with plenty of cash left over. Again, Matt Walter at the RSLC.


WALTER: What we're doing is pointing out the judicial predisposition and the facts involved so that voters can make their own decision.


OVERBY: Why the big fight for a circuit court seat? Cole County includes the state Capitol in Jefferson City, so the county judges handle lawsuits pertaining to state laws and ballot initiatives. Pat Joyce is the last Democrat on the bench. Eli Yokley edits the blog politicmo.com. He says that even in that political setting...


ELI YOKLEY: It's just an insane amount of money that is going into this judicial race here. I don't think you can stress that point enough of how much money this actually is in this race.


OVERBY: Five years ago, the U.S. Supreme Court made a West Virginia judge recuse himself after a defendant spent $3 million to promote the judge for reelection. The RSLC says it doesn't let donors earmark money for specific races. This month's batch of benefactors won't be publicly known until after Election Day. Peter Overby, NPR News, Washington.


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NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by a contractor for NPR, and accuracy and availability may vary. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Please be aware that the authoritative record of NPR's programming is the audio.



Bear-Baiting And Big Races Drown Portland, Maine, In Campaign Ads


In terms of campaign ads, Portland, Maine, is punching well over its weight.


Nielsen ranks the Portland media market 91st in the country. But it comes in at No. 8 in terms of campaign-ad volume, according to Kantar Media research.


With voting day next week, more than $1 billion has been spent on some 2 million ads around the country. Portland proves it's not just TV viewers in the big states that are being deluged.


Political scientist Michael Franz says there are a number of reasons why Portland is so popular.


"I think what we're seeing is a number of races that are of interest to people," says Franz, co-director of the Wesleyan Media Project. "Namely, the governor's race at the top, obviously, is drawing a tremendous amount of advertising."


There's also a controversial ballot measure on bear-baiting: Question 1 on the Maine ballot Election Day would ban the use of things like jelly donuts to lure bears out of the woods so hunters can shoot them. It's getting a lot of attention in the state.


Franz says some 1,300 ads in the past two weeks alone have aired for and against the issue. The folks who would ban such bear-baiting are led by the Humane Society and have been airing ads like these:


Other groups, including some of Maine's game wardens, are behind ads that would keep the practice of baiting, along with hunting with dogs, legal. They argue that these methods are necessary to keep the state's black-bear population under control.


Also getting a lot of attention is the state's U.S. Senate race. Republican Susan Collins is seen as a shoe-in for re-election. But that hasn't stopped her Democratic opponent, Shenna Bellows, from advertising in the Portland TV market, which covers the more Democratic-leaning southern part of the state. Her campaign has been running an ad featuring the endorsement of perhaps Maine's most famous resident, novelist Stephen King.



Maine Wildlife Conservation Council/YouTube



Residents of southern Maine have also been treated to ads for a congressional race. And because of the Portland market's low cost, there are even ads for the hotly contested U.S. Senate race in neighboring New Hampshire.


Voters may throw their hands up in disgust, but political scientist Franz says the ads will keep coming, in part because there are so many more media options available.



Shenna Bellows for Senate/YouTube



"The more options we have, the more divided our attention spans are," he says, "so the more bludgeoning it takes for us to get the point."


Fear not, though: The campaign ads in Portland and almost everywhere else will fade to black in a week.



Ford Brothers Lose Toronto Mayor Race, Hold On To Council Seat



John Tory speaks to supporters Monday night after being elected as mayor in Toronto.i i



John Tory speaks to supporters Monday night after being elected as mayor in Toronto. Aaron Harris/Reuters/Landov hide caption



itoggle caption Aaron Harris/Reuters/Landov

John Tory speaks to supporters Monday night after being elected as mayor in Toronto.



John Tory speaks to supporters Monday night after being elected as mayor in Toronto.


Aaron Harris/Reuters/Landov


Unofficial results Monday night showed the next mayor of Toronto would be John Tory, who topped fellow Progressive Conservative Doug Ford in a race that was upended earlier this year when Ford's scandal-ridden brother, incumbent mayor Rob Ford, left the race after being diagnosed with cancer.





After that announcement, Doug Ford stepped up to run for mayor in his brother's place, while Rob Ford ran for his brother's council seat. He kept that council seat on Monday night, winning 59 percent of the vote for the position his family has held since the ward was created in 2000.


The Toronto Globe and Mail reports:




" 'I am humbled and honoured by the trust that has been put into me,' Mr. Tory told supporters after his opponents had conceded.


" 'As your new mayor, I will move Toronto not right, not left, but forward ... Torontonians want to see an end to the division that has paralyzed city hall the past few years.' "




Rob Ford's four years as Toronto's mayor were tumultuous, marked by confrontational politics and increasingly erratic public and private behavior that culminated in his admission that he had smoked crack cocaine. After several more embarrassing public moments, the City Council voted to strip him of most of his mayoral powers.



Mayor Rob Ford kisses his wife, Renata, as his children Doug and Stephanie watch the municipal election results Monday in Toronto. Ford dropped his re-election bid after being diagnosed with cancer earlier this year. Monday night he won the City Council seat that his brother Doug vacated to fill Rob's slot in the mayoral race.i i



Mayor Rob Ford kisses his wife, Renata, as his children Doug and Stephanie watch the municipal election results Monday in Toronto. Ford dropped his re-election bid after being diagnosed with cancer earlier this year. Monday night he won the City Council seat that his brother Doug vacated to fill Rob's slot in the mayoral race. Mark Blinch/Reuters/Landov hide caption



itoggle caption Mark Blinch/Reuters/Landov

Mayor Rob Ford kisses his wife, Renata, as his children Doug and Stephanie watch the municipal election results Monday in Toronto. Ford dropped his re-election bid after being diagnosed with cancer earlier this year. Monday night he won the City Council seat that his brother Doug vacated to fill Rob's slot in the mayoral race.



Mayor Rob Ford kisses his wife, Renata, as his children Doug and Stephanie watch the municipal election results Monday in Toronto. Ford dropped his re-election bid after being diagnosed with cancer earlier this year. Monday night he won the City Council seat that his brother Doug vacated to fill Rob's slot in the mayoral race.


Mark Blinch/Reuters/Landov


From NPR's Eyder Peralta:




"After a chaotic session that saw Mayor Rob Ford lash out at the public and topple a colleague, the Toronto City Council voted to strip Ford of most of his duties and slashed his budget to 40 percent of what it used to be.


"As the council discussed the legality of the motion on Monday, the body erupted into chaos. At one point, Ford and his brother Doug Ford, a council member, started screaming at the public. ...


"All of this comes, of course, after Ford admitted to smoking crack and then faced an unrelenting set of allegations, including that he drove drunk, sexually harassed one of his staff members and that he was seen doing lines of cocaine at a bar. As Saturday Night Live made clear in its sketch about the mayor, Ford has not helped his own cause, holding one outrageous news conference after another."




Despite his demotion from mayor to city councilman, Ford suggested his political career would recover, the Globe and Mail reports:




" 'If you know anything about the Ford family, we never, ever, ever give up,' he told his cheering supporters. 'I guarantee, in four more years, you're going to see another example of the Ford family never, ever, ever giving up.'


"Asked after his speech if he planned to run for mayor in 2018, Rob Ford said it was too soon to say."





ENERGY STAR Day: The Power of the Little Blue Label

Ed. note: This is cross-posted on EPA Connect, the official blog of EPA's leadership. See the original post here.


Watch on YouTube


Let’s start with a few numbers:


$300 billion in savings. That’s how much consumers and businesses have saved on utility bills in the last 22 years because of the ENERGY STAR program.


Two billion metric tons of greenhouse gas emissions avoided, or the equivalent to the annual emissions of more than 420 million cars, over the last 22 years. Thanks to our little blue ENERGY STAR label, folks are doing their part to reduce their greenhouse emissions and combat climate change.


Since President Obama took office, ENERGY STAR has helped American consumers and businesses save over one billion metric tons of greenhouse gas emissions and approximately $110 billion on their utility bills.


That’s one powerful little label.


read more


Rai: Militants tarnishing Islam’s face


Failed gamble lands Turkey between two fires


When Sunni rebels rose up against Syria’s Bashar Assad in 2011, Turkey reclassified its protégé as a pariah, expecting...



EDL contract workers protest over delayed salaries


BEIRUT: Electricite du Liban’s contract workers held a protest Tuesday outside of a company service provider, NEU-Debbas, to demand the payment of their suspended salaries for September.


The workers held a sit-in, the second in a week, facing NEU’s building near EDL’s headquarters in Mar Mikhael, urging the company to follow the example of the other two service providing firms.


While the workers once again burned tires at their protest, their tone switched from rage to courtesy.


“Our protest today in front of Debbas is because the company has not paid the contract workers their monthly salaries,” the workers’ spokesman Ahmad Shoeib told reporters. “We know that Mr. Robert Debbas is a self-made and prominent man in the Lebanese society, and we will not accept that his reputation is distorted.”


EDL’s contract workers had been on strike for several months, blocking the company’s headquarters to demand employment as full-timers at EDL. They have been employed by the three private service providers since 2012, and the companies’ contracts will end in 2016.


EDL decided to only employ 897 of the nearly 2,000 workers, who are demanding the employment of all those eligible, or a promise to be employed at EDL if the service providers’ contracts are not renewed in two years.


Shoeib’s nice words to the owner of NEU were echoed by the head of the contract workers’ league Lubnan Makhoul.


“You are a respected man, and I hope your image remains white as snow,” Makhoul said, addressing Debbas. “But we have a natural right to strike for our salaries because we have registered our children in schools.”


Makhoul explained that the talks between the workers, the EDL administration and public officials were positive, and that good news might be coming out soon.


However, Bilal Bajouk, another spokesperson for the workers, warned EDL and the service providers against printing bills. He said such behavior would lead to further escalation by the workers.


Not able to reach its offices for two months, EDL decided earlier this month to start printing bills from other offices, in order to collect money from clients and pay the company’s expenses.


This move undermined the significance of the workers’ protest, after they had held the bill collection as a strong card in the conflict with EDL administration.



Lebanon needs strong support in refugee crisis: Salam


Salam: Refugees the most dangerous issue


Prime Minister Tammam Salam said Monday, after arriving in Germany to attend a Syrian refugee conference, that the...



Lebanon's Arabic press Digest - Oct. 28, 2014


The following are a selection of stories from Lebanese newspapers that may be of interest for The Daily Star's readers. The Daily Star cannot vouch for the accuracy of the reports.


As-Safir


Army aborts terror attacks in Sidon


The Lebanese Army aborted two terrorist attacks that were supposed to take place at dawn Monday, targeting a Shiite religious center and an Army Intelligence office in Sidon, the newspaper said. It quoted “well-informed” security sources as saying that the cell that was tasked to carry out the attacks in parallel of the fighting in Tripoli was made up of four followers of fugitive sheikh Ahmad al-Assir, including one Lebanese and three Syrians who are being hunted down by the Army.


A Palestinian who is linked to one of the suspected terrorists turned himself in to the Army, and another suspect, identified as the father of a wanted terrorist hiding in the Palestinian camp of Ain al-Hilweh, was apprehended during army raids of suspected hideouts in old Sidon, where weapons were also seized, the sources added.


Al-Akhbar


Inconclusive deal ended Tripoli fighting


The three-day fierce battle between the Army and Nusra-linked Sunni militants in Tripoli came to a sudden stop after a deal was reached allowing the “disappearance” of the gunmen and the Army’s deployment inside the battered areas of Bab Tabbaneh and Minyeh, the paper reported quoting political sources.


According to the sources, the settlement was worked out with the help of former Prime Minister Najib Mikati and Future Movement officials, including Justice Minister Ashraf Rifi, and was implemented in two phases. The first stipulated that the gunmen pulled out from the old souk to preserve it, and in the second phase the gunmen were “allowed to vanish” from the embattled areas at dawn Monday, leaving their weapons behind. Some of the gunmen escaped from Tripoli and were reported to have resettled in the outskirts of Dinnieh further north, and others remained in Tripoli, the sources said. The Army has in fact won one battle in the Tripoli war, the sources added.


Ash-Sharq


Presidential election not before next year


On the eve of the 14th Parliament session to elect a president set for Wednesday, diplomatic sources have played down the possibility of holding the presidential poll before next year, arguing that the international community was overwhelmed by urgent international issues and that Lebanon was relegated to the backlog.


In the meantime, the Lebanese are requested to handle their affairs until the fog in the region has dissipated and the situation in neighboring countries, especially in Syria, has become clearer, the sources said. During that “standby phase” the Lebanese can try to reach agreement on a compromise president, who should have a clear vision on how to complete the implementation of the Taif Agreement that ended the Lebanese Civil War.