Headlines for Tuesday, March 23, 2010

Tue, 03/23/2010 - 14:10
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Obama signs Health Care Bill amid ecstatic Democrats
A group of giddy Democratic Lawmakers gathered at the White House today to watch President Obama sign the monumental health care bill into law.

“Our presence here today is remarkable and improbably.  With all the punditry, all the lobbying, all the game playing that passes for governing in Washington, it’s been easy at times to doubt our ability to do such a big thing, such a complicated thing.  To wonder if there are limits to we as a people can still achieve.  It’s easy to succumb to a sense of cynicism about what’s possible in this country.”

Vice President Biden called this a truly historic day and said that Obama accomplished what a century of lawmakers could not.  But 12 Republican and one Democratic state attorney generals have filed suit challenging the constitutionality of the legislation.  The suit says the Constitution does not authorize a mandate that people buy health insurance.  Obama administration lawyers say the suit has little chance of succeeding.

 

ACORN to close its doors April 1
The Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now or ACORN announced it will close its doors on April 1. For past several months, it has been facing severe financial and image problems after a right-wing video sting operation caused a backlash against the organization.  FSRN’s Salim Rizvi reports.

Facing financial problems and lack of credibility, ACORN has decided to close down all offices in the more than 75 cities it serves across the country.  The community organizing group has faced criticism since last September, when videos surfaced in which ACORN employees in Brooklyn were shown allegedly advising two conservative activists, who were posing as pimp and prostitute, how to hide their illegal work.  Those employees were cleared of all criminal wrong-doing by New York prosecutors at the beginning of March.

Despite this, the incident prompted a steady loss federal grants and private donations. The US Census bureau severed ties as well.  The organization has also faced criticisms from conservatives about its handling of voter registration drives.

ACORN claims it is the largest neighborhood-based antipoverty group in the country.  It advocated for higher minimum wages, more affordable housing and increased voter registration. The 40-year old organization, at one point, had some 400,000 low- and moderate-income families as members. Salim Rizvi, FSRN, New York City.


Another Obama TSA nomination faces Senate confirmation
The US Senate is once again considering an Obama nomination to head the Transportation Security Administration, which has been without permanent leadership for more than a year now.  Retired Army Major General Robert Harding served for more than 3 decades in the military and also worked as a defense contractor.  Today he appeared before the Senate Commerce Committee, stressing the need to use intelligence to address security threats and…

“Moving away from things that appear to be more security theater than actual security.”

Tomorrow Harding is scheduled to go before the Senate Government Affairs committee.  Harding is the second Obama nomination for the position.  One of the main issues facing the new head is whether to give TSA screeners collective bargaining rights.

 

Suu Kyi urges National League of Democracy to boycott Myanmar elections
A Myanmar court has rejected a suit by the pro-democracy Party of Aung San Suu Kyi challenging new election laws.  The recently-passed laws say jailed opposition party members cannot participate in elections and have allowed the junta to throw out a 20 year-old election defeat by Suu Kyi’s National League of Democracy.  Today Suu Kyi’s lawyer said she does not want the NLD to participate in the coming elections, calling the new election laws unjust.  The party will decided next week whether to participate.

 

Bush and Clinton make visit to ravaged Port au Prince
About 200 supporters of former Haitian President Aristide demonstrated outside Haiti’s collapsed national palace yesterday, demanding the priest-turned-president be allowed back to Haiti to assist in earthquake relief efforts.  “There's no one else who can lead us,” said one protester. “If Aristide returns, he should be president again because his mandate was never finished.”

Aristide was ousted in a 2004 coup backed by the administration of former President George W. Bush, who yesterday toured Port-Au-Prince’s downtown Public Square with Bill Clinton.   From Haiti, FSRN’s Ansel Herz Reports.

Former Presidents Bush and Clinton have been charged by Obama Administration to manage a multi-million dollar Haiti recovery fund.  While visiting the rubble-strewn capital, Clinton told reporters that the United States should lower trade barriers to encourage the growth of Haiti’s textile and garment-making sectors and create jobs for millions of unemployed.  Activists say the plan relies on sweatshop labor and won’t create any lasting wealth in the country.

Clinton also said the relief effort had not done enough to provide decent shelter and sanitation for Haiti’s 1.3 million displaced people.  Heavy rains last week caused chaos in sloping, muddy camps through the capitol city.  More rains are expected next month.  Ansel Herz, Port au Prince, Haiti.

In other news, Haiti has received another financial boost:  The Inter-American Development Bank has agreed to offer debt forgiveness on about 40% of the 1.2 billion dollars the country owes.

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