Tag: R&D Page 54 of 63

R&D: Brazil’s Presidential Race Heads to a Runoff, One of New York’s Senate Races Becomes Tighter, and the Impact of Elena Kagan’s Recusals

Here is your R&D for October 4th:

Brazil election goes to runoff after Rousseff falls short from the Los Angeles Times
Brazil’s frontrunner, Dilma Rousseff, failed to win 50% of the vote in Sunday’s general election and will have a runoff with Jose Serra in four weeks to determine who will be the country’s next president.

Could Kirsten Gillibrand Lose in New York? from RealClearPolitics
New York’s Democratic Senator Kirsten Gillibrand, who replaced Hillary Clinton when she left for the State Deparment, was expected to easily win re-election several months ago.  However, recent polls show that the race is tightening.  Could she lose?

Recusals could force newest justice to miss many cases from the Washington Post
Elena Kagan, the Supreme Court’s newest justice, has recused herself from a myriad of cases confronting the Court in its newest term.  Find out what cases she is not going to hear and how that may impact the Court’s decisions.

R&D: Rouse to Take Over as Chief of Staff, Correa is Rescued, and the Budget and the Midterm Elections

Here is your R&D for October 1st:

Rahm Emanuel leaving, Pete Rouse in on Friday from Politico
President Obama is expected to announce today that Rahm Emanuel will leave the White House to run for mayor of Chicago and that senior adviser Pete Rouse will become his new chief of staff.  Rouse was Obama’s chief of staff when he was in the Senate.

Ecuadorean soldiers rescue besieged president from the Guardian
Ecuadorean soldiers stormed a hospital today and rescued President Rafael Correa after police mutinied over austerity measures and prevented him from returning to the presidential palace.

The red ink war from the Economist
Spending and taxes will play a large role in the 2010 midterms.  This article from the Economist breaks down the debate over both issues and how it may impact America’s economy.

R&D: Pakistan Closes Afghanistan Border Crossing, McDonald’s Threatens to Drop Health Coverage, and the EU Launches Legal Action Against France

Here is your R&D for September 30th:

Pakistan Halts NATO Supplies to Afghanistan After Attack from the New York Times
After a NATO cross-border attack on a Pakistani security post, Pakistan has closed the most important border crossing that supplies NATO troops in Afghanistan.  The move signals a worsening military relationship between Pakistan and the UNited States.

McDonald’s May Drop Health Plan from the Wall Street Journal
As a consequence of President Obama’s healthcare reform bill, McDonald’s Corporation announced yesterday that it may drop its health insurance plan unless federal regulators allow it to waive requirements of the new law.  The move could impact 30,000 workers nationwide.

EU to Launch Legal Action Against France from Der Spiegel
The European Commission has launched legal action against France over its expulsion of Roma migrants.  The EU alleges that France is violating EU rules on freedom of movement.

R&D: Moscow’s Mayor Sacked, Different View of the FARC, and Anti-Outsourcing Bill Fails in the Senate

Here is your R&D for September 29th:

Friend says sacked Moscow mayor to file lawsuit from Reuters
Moscow Mayor Yuri Luzhkov was sacked from his position by Russian President Dmitry Medvedev.  Russian experts see this as part of a political game behind the scenes between Medvedev and former President Vladimir Putin to see who will be the leading candidate for the 2012 presidential elections.

Colombia: The Significance of the Killing of FARC Leader “Mono Jojoy” from the Colombia Journal (Courtesy of Upside Down World)
Left-leaning think tank Upside Down World presents a different perspective on Jorge Briceno, a FARC commander who was killed by Colombian forces on September 23rd.

Anti-outsourcing bill fails in Senate from the Washington Post
Yesterday, the U.S. Senate took up a new jobs bill that sought to punish companies that outsourced jobs overseas.  The bill was blocked when Republicans and four Democrats voted to block the bill from coming to the floor.

R&D: Top 5 Senate Races, Anger at Europe’s Austerity Measures, and Can Miliband Be a New Thatcher?

Here is your R&D for September 28th:

Five most competitive Senate races from Politico
Need some help identifying major Senate races this election cycle?  This Politico article can help you out.

Austerity whips up anger, protests mount in Europe from the Agence France Presse
Spending cuts by EU nations are causing trade unions across Europe to revolt.  Over 100,000 people from 30 countries are set to converge on Brussels in a sign of protest against EU austerity measures.

He’s been compared to Kinnock, to Duncan Smith. But what about Thatcher? from the UK Independent
Ed Miliband, the new leader of Britain’s Labour Party, has said that he wants Britain be a fairer country.  Can he succeed and does his vision make him too radical to make it to Downing Street?

R&D: The Feds Push to Use Internet Wiretaps, Chavez Suffers a Political Setback, and Sodium Tripental Shortage Halts Lethal Injections

Here is your R&D for September 27th:

Wiretapped phones, now the Internet? from the New York Times (courtesy of the Minneapolis Star Tribune)
In a move that alarms privacy advocates, national security officials are pushing for the ability to wiretap criminal and terrorism suspects on the Internet.

Elections a Blow for Chávez? from the Council on Foreign Relations
Venezuela’s recent National Assembly elections have curtailed the power of Presidnet Hugo Chavez.  His political opposition won 61 seats, which takes away Chavez’s two-thirds majority in the legislature.

Drug shortage prompts U.S. executions “Russian roulette” from the Los Angeles Times
The shortage of sodium tripental, used in the legal injection process, has forced several states to delay scheduled executions.

R&D: Congress Puts Off Fight on Bush Tax Cuts, Teresa Lewis Executed in Virginia, and Israel is Possibly Ready to Compromise on Settlements

Here is your R&D for September 24th:

Congress Punts on Taxes from the Wall Street Journal
In the midst of a very politicized environment, Democrats have abandoned plans to extend the Bush tax cuts to the middle class until after the November elections.

Teresa Lewis executed in Virginia despite protests from the Guardian
Early this morning, Virginia executed Terea Lewis for the plotting the murders of her husband and stepson in 2002.  Lewis is the first woman to be executed by the state of Virginia since 1912.  The execution was controversial because of Lewis’s low IQ.

Israel ‘ready to compromise’ on settlements from the Agence France Presse
With Israel’s settlement freeze set to expire shortly, the Israeli government has signaled that it would be open to compromising with the Palestinians on settlement construction.  However, the Israeli government refuses to freeze all settlement construction in the West Bank.

R&D: Clinton Offers Advice to Obama, the Republicans Make a Pledge to America, and What America Should Do About the Latest Japan-China Diplomatic Crisis

Here is your R&D for September 23rd:

Bill Clinton offers formula for Barack Obama success from Politico
Former President Bill Clinton has some advice for President Obama and Democrats heading into the 2010 midterms:  find a national message that independent voters will find more attractive than the Republican alternative.

House Republicans to Present Their Plan from the New York Times
Today, House Republicans will present their “Pledge to America”, which outlines their positions on spending, entitlements, government reform, health care, and national security.

Upping the Ante in China-Japan Clash from the Council on Foreign Relations
Japan’s arrest of the captain of a Chinese fishing boat has sparked a diplomatic crisis.  Sheila A. Smith, a Senior Fellow for Japan Studies, discusses why this issue is important for U.S. foreign policy.

R&D: Obama’s War Strategy Criticized in New Book, Lawrence Summers Announces that He is Leaving, and Sudan Fears its Future

Here is your R&D for September 22nd:

Obama presidency ‘hobbled by discord’ according to book from the Guardian
Extempers might receive questions soon about Bob Woodward’s new book Obama’s Wars, which chronicles the way that President Obama has fought the war in Afghanistan.  This article summarizes the arguments made in the book and argues that it may hurt Democrats in the midterm elections.

Obama’s top economic adviser leaving from the Washington Post
Under fire because of the country’s economic problems, President Obama’s top economic advisor, Lawrence H. Summers, has announced that he will step down after the midterms and return to Harvard University.

Sudanese fear future as historic referendum looms from the Agence France Presse
By January 9th, Southern Sudan will vote on whether to become an independent nation.  The vote, taking place in sub-Sarahan Africa’s third largest oil producing nation, has citizens in the North and the South on edge and some experts fear a return to civil war.

R&D: Obama Hints at Changes to His Economic Team, Netanyahu Details Plans for a Military Presence Near a Palestinian State, and Jerry Brown’s Possible Strategy in California

Here is your R&D for September 21st:

Obama Hints at High-Level Changes from the Wall Street Journal
With bad results forecast for the 2010 midterms, President Obama is looking to shake up his economic team.  Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner and National Economic Council Director Lawrence Summers are rumored to be on the chopping block.

Netanyahu Seeks Military Force on Any Palestinian State’s Eastern Border from Bloomberg
In a move that could complicate the Middle East peace process, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said that a peace agreement with the Palestinians must allow for an Israeli military presence on the eastern side of an independent state.

Would ‘one term’ pledge get Jerry Brown past Meg Whitman in California? from the Christian Science Monitor
With the California governor’s race in a dead heat, political analysts are speculating whether Attorney General Jerry Brown would benefit by promising voters that he would only serve one term.

R&D: Sweden’s Green Party Shakes Up the Ruling Government, Obama Considers a New 2010 Strategy, and Protests Renew in Thailand

Here is your R&D for September 20th:

Swedish Greens say won’t support centre-right govt from the Associated Press
Sweden’s Green Party has announced that it will not support the centre-right Alliance government, a move that complicates the political climate because the Alliance does not want to govern with the Sweden Democrats, a small nationalist party that will enter Parliament for the first time.

Obama Aides Weigh Bid to Tie the G.O.P. to the Tea Party from the New York Times
Seeking to energize the Democratic base for the midterm elections, the White House is considering launching ads that tie the GOP to the Tea Party movement.

Red shirts’ redux from the Economist
Just when you thought things were stabalizing in Thailand, you are quickly proven incorrect as supporters of former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra gathered Sunday to mark the anniversary of the 2006 coup that toppled him from power.

R&D: Doubts Grow Over Obama’s Economic Agenda, the Philippines Investigates Its Media, and the Senate Passes a Small-Business Jobs Bill

Here is your R&D for September 17th:

Rising Midterm Economic Pressures from the Council on Foreign Relations
This analysis brief, which links to other valuable news articles, describes how the Obama administration is struggling to show the American people that its economic policies are working.

Should the media be punished over Philippines bus siege? from CNN
As Filipino officials are leaving no stone unturned in an effort to punish those responsible for the bungled rescue of Hong Kong tourists taken hostage last month.  Some officials are pointing their fingers at the nation’s media.  This article analyzes the political fallout of such a move and if it is a threat to free press in the Philippines.

Senate passes small-business jobs bill, opening tax cut battle from the Christian Science Monitor
Find out what is in the Senate’s small-business jobs bill and what it means for the upcoming debate over the Bush tax cuts.

R&D: Home Repossessions Hit Record High, START Treaty Faces Test Vote, and Obama Looks to Name Warren as a Special Adviser

Here is your R&D for September 16th:

Foreclosure rates hold steady from CNN
Although the number of properties entering the foreclosure process dropped 30% last month, lenders repossessed a record 95,000 homes.  Find out what this says about the health of the housing market.

New START nuclear treaty faces key US Senate test from the Agence France Presse
Today, the START treaty with Russia faces a test vote in the U.S. Senate.  The Senate Foreign Relations Committee will take up the treaty and send it to the floor for approval.  67 votes are needed for ratification, but only two Republicans are on board to vote for it because of concerns that it will hamper plans for a missile defense system.

Obama reportedly to name Warren special adviser from the Boston Globe
President Obama reportedly plans to appoint Harvard law professor Elizabeth Warren to a Treasury Department post that lets her create the consumer protection bureau, which is part of the financial overhaul Congress passed earlier in the year.  Republicans have threatened to filibuster Warren’s formal nomination to the bureau, making the appointment necessary.

R&D: O’Donnell’s Upset Hurts GOP’s Senate Hopes, the State of Iran’s Economy, and Adrian Fenty Goes Down in D.C.

Here is your R&D for September 15th:

O’Donnell Wins, Bad Blood Simmers in DE GOP from Real Clear Politics
Tea Party candidate Christine O’Donnell scored an upset in Delaware’s Republican Senate primary last night, defeating Congressman Mike Castle, who was likely to win the seat in a general election.  After O’Donnell’s victory, Castle supporters are not happy and it will make O’Donnell’s chances of pulling an upset in the general election virtually impossible.

Iran’s slide to the bottom from the Asia Times
This is the first article of a two-part report from the Asia Times on the state of the Iranian economy.  Years of international sanctions and poor management have taken their toll.  Since extempers will run into questions on Iran’s nuclear program and political environment, keeping the nation’s economy in mind is never a bad idea.

How Adrian Fenty lost his reelection bid for D.C. mayor from the Washington Post
Last night, incumbent Washington D.C. Mayor Adrian Fenty lost in the District’s Democratic primary.  Fenty was a champion of education reform, but that wasn’t the only cause of his defeat according to this piece.

R&D: Cuba is Cutting State Employees, Election Day in 7 States, and Bush Tax Cuts 101

Here is your R&D for September 14th:

Cuba to cut 500,000 from state payroll from the Financial Times of London
In a sign that the Cuban economy is changing, the country’s trade union federation announced Monday that more than a million state employees are going to lose their jobs.  It constitutes the biggest shift to private enterprise since 1968.

Is Delaware the key to the Senate majority? (And four other storylines to watch in the Sept. 14 primaries) from the Washington Post
Today is primary day in seven states (Delaware, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New York, Rhode Island, and Wisconsin).  The race that has the most attention is the Republican Senate primary where Representative Mike Castle, who has led most of the way, is now in a dead heat with tea party candidate Christine O’Donnell.  An O’Donnell victory would give the Democrats new life in a race that they might lose if Castle is the nominee in November.

Bush tax cuts 101: What changes could be in store for taxpayers? from the Christian Science Monitor
Don’t quite understand the debate about the Bush tax cuts?  This article from the Christian Science Monitor clarifies a lot of issues.

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