Friday, November 30, 2012

FOXNews.com: State judge rules Louisiana school voucher program unconstitutional

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State judge rules Louisiana school voucher program unconstitutional
Nov 30th 2012, 20:56

Published November 30, 2012

Associated Press

BATON ROUGE, La. –  Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal's private school tuition voucher program has been ruled unconstitutional by a state judge.

State Judge Tim Kelley said Friday that the program improperly diverts money allocated through the state's public school funding formula to private schools. He also said it unconstitutionally diverts local tax dollars to private schools.

Kelley ruled in a lawsuit backed by teacher unions and school boards seeking to shut down the voucher program.

The state education department and the Board of Elementary and Secondary Education said the programs were funded and created in line with the constitution.

It was not immediately clear how the ruling would affect more than 4,900 students now enrolled in 117 private schools with taxpayer dollars.

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FOXNews.com: Pentagon, Lockheed reportedly agree on deal for 32 more F-35 fighter jets

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Pentagon, Lockheed reportedly agree on deal for 32 more F-35 fighter jets
Nov 30th 2012, 21:11

Published November 30, 2012

FoxNews.com

  • F-35deal.jpg

    The 3rd Marine Aircraft Wing's first F-35B touches down Friday afternoon, Nov. 16, 2012, at Marine Corps Air Station Yuma in Yuma, Ariz.AP

The U.S. Defense Department and Lockheed Martin Corp have reportedly reached an agreement on a fifth batch of 32 additional F-35 fighter planes. 

Reuters reported Friday that the deal is worth around $3.8 billion, but said both sides are still finalizing the details. 

Pentagon spokesman George Little told Reuters that details on the cost per aircraft would be disclosed once the final contract is finalized. 

The F-35B stands out among military aircraft because it can be launched from small Navy ships and land in confined areas, allowing it to support ground troops on smaller battlefields. Its sophisticated stealth capabilities also means, like the Air Force's F-22, the aircraft can fly into enemy territory without being detected by radar. 

Click for more from Reuters

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FOXNews.com: Susan Rice under fire from left for investments in Keystone pipeline firm

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Susan Rice under fire from left for investments in Keystone pipeline firm
Nov 30th 2012, 20:05

UN Ambassador Susan Rice, already under fire from Republicans, is now taking hits from the left over six-figure investments in the company behind a controversial oil pipeline.

Rice, rumored to be on the short list to replace Hillary Clinton as Secretary of State, owns between $300,000 and $600,000 in TransCanada Corp. stock, according to the TheHill.com, which cites Rice's financial disclosure forms. TransCanada is the company whose 1,700-mile Keystone XL pipeline, which would bring oil from Canada down to Gulf refineries has been repeatedly delayed and now is in regulatory limbo.

The liberal group RootsAction.org, has started an online petition demanding that Rice "immediately sell every dollar of stock" in the company behind the $7 billion project. Environmentalists say the pipeline would pollute air and water supplies as well as harm fragile ecosystems. Energy industry officials argue that the Keystone XL would be no different from an extensive network of energy pipelines already in place – and some say its state-of-the-art design would make it safer than many of the country's aging pipelines.

The State Department would have to sign off on the pipeline because it spans the border between the U.S. and Canada 

"It's indefensible that Susan Rice has millions of dollars invested in oil companies and banks that will make huge profits if the State Department gives approval to the XL pipeline," the group says in a statement online. 

The website, OnEarth.org, published a story Wednesday on Rice's reported investments in more than a dozen Canadian oil companies and banks that would stand to benefit from the pipeline.

"It's really amazing that they're considering someone for Secretary of State who has millions invested in these companies," Bill McKibben, a writer and founder of the activist groups 350.org and Tar Sands Action, told the website. "The State Department has been rife with collusion with the Canadian pipeline builders, and it's really distressing to have any sense that that might continue to go on."

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FOXNews.com: Graham says keep 'crazy bastards' at Guantanamo Bay

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Graham says keep 'crazy bastards' at Guantanamo Bay
Nov 30th 2012, 20:41

South Carolina Sen. Lindsay Graham couldn't have been more clear about his position on bringing Guantanamo Bay detainees to a U.S. prison, saying "those crazy bastards" don't belong on American soil.

"Simply stated, the American people don't want to close Guantanamo Bay, which is an isolated, military-controlled facility, to bring these crazy bastards that want to kill us all to the United States," the South Carolina Republican said Thursday during a debate on the Senate floor.

"The American people don't want to close Guantanamo Bay, which is an isolated, military-controlled facility, to bring these crazy bastards that want to kill us all to the United States."

- Sen. Lindsay Graham, (R-S.C.)

"Most Americans believe that the people at Guantanamo Bay are not some kind of burglar or bank robber," Graham said. "They are bent on our destruction. And I stand with the American people that we're under siege, we're under attack and we're at war."

"Some of my colleagues in this body have forgotten what 9/11 is all about," he said. "The people who attacked us on 9/11, in that prison, want to destroy our way of life. They don't want to steal your car. They don't want to break in your house. And we've got a military prison being well run, so I think the American people are telling everybody in this body, 'Have you lost your mind? We're at war. Act like you're at war.'"

Fellow Republican Sen. Rand Paul didn't object to Graham's characterization of the detainees, but did differ with his recommendation.

"I will tell you, since I know this record of this debate will be widely read, that I want to make formal objection to the 'crazy bastards standard,'" Paul said. "I don't really think that if we're going to have a 'crazy bastards' standard that we shouldn't have a right to trial by jury, because if we're going to lock up all the crazy bastards, for goodness sakes, would you not want, if you're a crazy bastard, to have a right to trial by jury?"

Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., released a report earlier this week from the Government Accountability Office that concluded the option is viable -- despite Congressional opposition.

"This report demonstrates that if the political will exists, we could finally close Guantanamo without imperiling our national security," Feinstein said.

This is not the first time such a plan has been considered. 

President Obama announced plans in late 2009 to buy a state prison in rural Thomson, Ill., and retrofit it to host military trials and house up to 100 terror suspects held in Guantanamo, possibly including 9/11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammad. The plan drew harsh objections from Illinois residents and lawmakers at a public hearing Dec. 22, 2009.

The plan would remove the "taint and the stigma" of Guantanamo and would deprive terrorists of a powerful recruiting tool, Alan Liotta, the Defense Department's principal director for detainee policy, told the hearing.

Republicans lawmakers in Washington objected, noting that a congressional vote is required before detainees not facing trial can be held indefinitely on U.S. soil.

The issue was revived in October, when the Justice Department announced plans to buy the same prison from Illinois for $165 million, though Attorney General Eric Holder, in a letter to lawmakers, said that the prison wouldn't be used for Guantanamo detainees, noting the law prohibits transferring inmates from the prison in Cuba to the U.S. Holder said the facility would instead be used to alleviate overcrowding at federal high-security prisons.

But skeptical Republicans accused the administration of trying to sneak through its longstanding plan to shutter Guantanamo, possibly by moving prisoners from another federal prison to Thomson, and then using that prison to house Guantanamo detainees.

"The president says his goal is to shut down Guantanamo Bay and move the prisoners here," Virginia Republican Frank Wolf told Fox News at the time. "This gives him a great opportunity to do it, particularly right after the election."

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FOXNews.com: House debates GOP-backed bill that would give residency to advanced-degree foreign graduates

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House debates GOP-backed bill that would give residency to advanced-degree foreign graduates
Nov 30th 2012, 14:36

A House vote to offer permanent residency to foreign students graduating with advanced degrees in science and math from U.S. colleges and universities is setting the stage for a bigger battle next year on how to redesign the nation's flawed immigration system.

House Republicans, with the help of a minority of Democrats, are expected to prevail Friday in passing the STEM Jobs Act, which would provide up to 55,000 green cards a year to those earning masters and doctoral degrees from U.S. schools in the fields of science, technology, engineering and mathematics.

But the bill is unlikely to go anywhere this year in the Democratic-controlled Senate, and the Obama White House has come out against it, saying it "does not support narrowly tailored proposals that do not meet the president's long-term objectives with respect to comprehensive immigration reform."

A major point of contention is that the bill offsets the increase in visas for the highly educated by eliminating the Diversity Immigrant Visa Program. This year the program made 50,000 visas available to people from countries with traditionally low rates of immigration. About half of those visas go to African nations. 

The House voted on a similar STEM Act in September, but it fell short under a procedure requiring a two-thirds majority. It is being revived under rules needing only a simple majority. Republicans are scrambling to show the Hispanic community, which largely deserted them in the recent election, that their party is committed to fixing the immigration system.

Earlier this week, Republican Sens. Jon Kyl of Arizona and Kay Bailey Hutchison introduced their version of the DREAM Act. Their bill would allow young people brought into the country as children without authorization to stay without fear of being deported, an initiative previously opposed by most Republicans.

House Judiciary Committee Chairman Lamar Smith said the STEM Act, a top priority of the high-tech industry seeking to stop the "reverse brain drain" of highly skilled foreign graduates of U.S. universities leaving for jobs overseas, "will help us create jobs, increase our competitiveness and spur our innovation."

And in an attempt to pick up more votes, Smith added a provision that makes it easier for the spouses and children of residents to come to the United States while they wait for their own green card applications to be approved.

But while most Democrats support increasing STEM visas, there was sharp criticism of the Republican approach.

"This is a partisan bill that picks winners and losers in our immigration system," Rep. Luis Gutierrez, a leader on immigration issues in the Congressional Hispanic Caucus, said of the elimination of the Diversity Visa Program.

"This bill is premised on the dangerous thought that immigration is a zero-sum game," said Rep. Zoe Lofgren. The Democrat, who represents high-tech companies in her northern California district and has long pushed for more STEM visas, said the Smith bill would eventually result in fewer visas issued because far fewer than 50,000 degrees are given every year to foreigners in eligible STEM fields, and the bill does not allow unused visas to be transferred to other programs.

The STEM Act visas would be in addition to about 140,000 employment-based visas for those ranging from lower-skilled workers to college graduates and people in the arts, education and athletics.

The Diversity Visa Lottery Program, created in 1990 partly to increase visas for Ireland, has shifted over the years to focus on former Soviet states and now Africa. In 2010, almost 25,000 visas went to Africa; 9,000 to Asia and 16,000 to Europe. Applicants must have at least a high school education.

Critics say the visa lottery program has outlived its purpose because Africans and East Europeans are already benefiting from family unification and skilled employment visas, and the lottery program is subject to fraud and infiltration by terrorists. Lofgren said it was "preposterous" that terrorists would try to get into a country under a program that picks 55,000 people at random out of more than 14 million applicants.

Fox News' Chad Pergram and the Associated Press contributed to this report. 

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FOXNews.com: Congress considers doing away with the $1 bill

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Congress considers doing away with the $1 bill
Nov 30th 2012, 15:24

American consumers have shown about as much appetite for the $1 coin as kids do their spinach. They may not know what's best for them either. Congressional auditors say doing away with dollar bills entirely and replacing them with dollar coins could save taxpayers some $4.4 billion over the next 30 years.

Vending machine operators have long championed the use of $1 coins because they don't jam the machines, cutting down on repair costs and lost sales. But most people don't seem to like carrying them. In the past five years, the U.S. Mint has produced 2.4 billion Presidential $1 coins. Most are stored by the Federal Reserve, and production was suspended about a year ago.

The latest projection from the Government Accountability Office on the potential savings from switching to dollar coins entirely comes as lawmakers begin exploring new ways for the government to save money by changing the money itself.

The Mint is preparing a report for Congress showing how changes in the metal content of coins could save money.

The last time the government made major metallurgical changes in U.S. coins was nearly 50 years ago when Congress directed the Mint to remove silver from dimes and quarters and to reduce its content in half dollar coins. Now, Congress is looking at new changes in response to rising prices for copper and nickel.

At a House subcommittee hearing Thursday, the focus was on two approaches:

—Moving to less expensive combinations of metals like steel, aluminum and zinc.

—Gradually taking dollar bills out the economy and replacing them with coins.

The GAO's Lorelei St. James told the House Financial Services panel it would take several years for the benefits of switching from paper bills to dollar coins to catch up with the cost of making the change. Equipment would have to be bought or overhauled and more coins would have to be produced upfront to replace bills as they are taken out of circulation.

But over the years, the savings would begin to accrue, she said, largely because a $1 coin could stay in circulation for 30 years while paper bills have to be replaced every four or five years on average.

"We continue to believe that replacing the note with a coin is likely to provide a financial benefit to the government," said St. James, who added that such a change would work only if the note was completely eliminated and the public educated about the benefits of the switch.

Even the $1 coin's most ardent supporters recognize that they haven't been popular. Philip Diehl, former director of the Mint, said there was a huge demand for the Sacagawea dollar coin when production began in 2001, but as time wore on, people stayed with what they knew best.

"We've never bitten the bullet to remove the $1 bill as every other Western economy has done," Diehl said. "If you did, it would have the same success the Canadians have had."

Beverly Lepine, chief operating officer of the Royal Canadian Mint, said her country loves its "Loonie," the nickname for the $1 coin that includes an image of a loon on the back. The switch went over so well that the country also went to a $2 coin called the "Toonie."

Rep. Bill Huizenga, R-Mich., affirmed that Canadians have embraced their dollar coins. "I don't know anyone who would go back to the $1 and $2 bills," he said.

That sentiment was not shared by some of his fellow subcommittee members when it comes to the U.S. version.

Rep. Lacy Clay, D-Mo., said men don't like carrying a bunch of coins around in their pocket or in their suits. And Rep. Carolyn Maloney, D-N.Y., said the $1 coins have proved too hard to distinguish from quarters.

"If the people don't want it and they don't want to use it," she said, "why in the world are we even talking about changing it?"

"It's really a matter of just getting used to it," said Diehl, the former Mint director.

Several lawmakers were more intrigued with the idea of using different metal combinations in producing coins.

Rep. Steve Stivers, R-Ohio, said a penny costs more than 2 cents to make and a nickel costs more than 11 cents to make. Moving to multiplated steel for coins would save the government nearly $200 million a year, he said.

The Mint's report, which is due in mid-December, will detail the results of nearly 18 months of work exploring a variety of new metal compositions and evaluating test coins for attributes as hardness, resistance to wear, availability of raw materials and costs.

Richard Peterson, the Mint's acting director, declined to give lawmakers a summary of what will be in the report, but he said "several promising alternatives" were found.

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FOXNews.com: Senate passes expanded Iranian sanctions targeting country's domestic industries

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Senate passes expanded Iranian sanctions targeting country's domestic industries
Nov 30th 2012, 15:41

The Senate voted in favor Friday of a new package of tough sanctions on Iran that targets the Islamic Republic's domestic industries.

The vote marked the third time in less than a year that Congress has hit Iran with punitive measures designed to cripple its economy and thwart Tehran's nuclear ambitions. 

The measure, introduced by New Jersey Democrat Bob Menendez and Illinois Republican Mark Kirk, passed with an overwhelming majority of 94-0. 

The package of penalties will sanction transactions with Iran's energy, port, shipping and ship-building sectors. The legislation also will penalize the sale of commodities such as graphite, aluminum and steel, all products that are crucial to Tehran's ship-building and nuclear operations.

Tehran has found ways to bypass existing international sanctions, such as Turkey's use of gold to pay for natural gas imports.

The Menendez-Kirk measure would allow the president to impose sanctions in the sale or transfer of precious metals.

Fox News' John Brandt and the Associated Press contributed to this report. 

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FOXNews.com: Democrats playing chicken in fiscal talks as tax hikes loom for all, says GOP

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Democrats playing chicken in fiscal talks as tax hikes loom for all, says GOP
Nov 30th 2012, 13:24

President Obama is once again heading out Friday on the tax-hike campaign trail as top Democratic lawmakers appear willing to play chicken with Republicans on the looming fiscal crisis, refusing to budge on their insistence that high earners pay more in taxes and betting Republicans will blink before massive spending cuts and across-the-board tax increases kick in.

With just one month left before the fiscal poison pill Congress put in place a year ago as an incentive to reach a deal kicks in, Republican insiders complain that the other side's intransigence seems calculated to make them blink. After signaling that they would be open to closing tax loopholes – and possibly raising taxes on families making above $250,000 – Republicans say Democrats have countered with calls for more stimulus, a package of additional spending and permanently raising the borrowing limit, while postponing talks about reforming entitlements or cutting spending.

"Even as an opening bid, this offer would be ludicrous."

- Republican insider familiar with fiscal talks

"The spending cuts they are offering (which come later) are wiped out by all the new goodies [Obama] is also requesting," a Republican insider told Fox News.

If the two sides can't come together, tax rates will go up for all brackets, hitting all of the half of Americans who pay federal income tax. Polls have suggested that if that happens, a majority of Americans will lay the blame on the GOP and President Obama has been engaging in a campaign-style effort to portray Republicans as willing to let everyone's taxes go up in a bid to protect the rich.

On Thursday, a frustrated House Speaker John Boehner left a meeting with Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner and said President Obama's money man offered no "specific" plan for averting the looming end-of-year fiscal crisis.

"First, despite the claims that the president supports a balanced approach, Democrats have yet to get serious about real spending cuts," the Ohio Republican said. "And secondly, no substantive progress has been made in the talks between the White House and the House over the last two weeks."

The sessions were seen as an important step in determining how the government will avoid a year-end package of tax increases and spending cuts that could throw the economy into recession.

Both Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid and the White House, through spokesman Jay Carney, dismissed Republican demands that any increases in the debt limit be offset with spending cuts.

Obama's tax plan calls for an extension of the existing tax rates for most Americans – individuals earning $200,000 or more and couples earning $250,000 and up -- while allowing for tax rates to increase for the wealthiest 2 percent. Republicans have been divided on whether to go along with that, but even those who may be willing, notably Oklahoma Rep. Tom Cole, want deep spending cuts in return.

The White House and Congress are trying to reach a deal before Jan. 1 – when all of the Bush-era tax cuts are set to expire and huge reductions to the federal budget kick in automatically. Those spending cuts are part of a default agreement by Congress after it failed to reach a more measured deal to reduce the trillion-dollar annual deficits that have brought the national debt to more than $16 trillion.

The mix of tax increases and budget cuts will equal roughly $100 billion alone next year and about $1.2 trillion over the next 10 years should Congress and the White House fail to reach a deal. Some economists say that could plunge the economy into a recession.

In addition to raising rates on high-income earners, the current Democrat proposal includes raising taxes on capital gains and dividends, extending the payroll tax holiday, raising estate taxes and another $600 billion in new spending, according to those familiar with talks. Democrats are pushing for new stimulus spending, including $50 billion for 2013, and raising the debt ceiling for good.

Republicans say Democrat plans to reform Medicare in the future to shave off $400 billion, would be more than offset by the new spending, which also includes extending unemployment insurance and refinancing underwater mortgages.

A senior Republican familiar with negotiations dismissed the idea that the Democrats are simply playing hardball with their opening offer.

"Even as an opening bid, this offer would be ludicrous," he said. "But we're way past that. We had about seven weeks to resolve this. Three of those weeks are gone, and this is what he comes with?"

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FOXNews.com: Gay marriage debate shifts to US Supreme Court

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Gay marriage debate shifts to US Supreme Court
Nov 30th 2012, 14:04

The running fight over gay marriage in the U.S. is shifting from the ballot box to the Supreme Court.

Three weeks after voters backed same-sex marriage in three states and defeated a ban in a fourth, the justices for the country's top court are meeting Friday to decide whether they should deal sooner rather than later with the claim that the Constitution gives people the right to marry regardless of sexual orientation.

The court also could duck the ultimate question and instead focus on a narrower but still important issue: whether Congress can prevent legally married gay Americans from receiving federal benefits otherwise available to married couples.

The court could announce its plans as soon as Friday afternoon. Any cases probably would be argued in March, with a decision expected by the end of June.

Gay marriage is legal, or will be soon, in nine states -- Connecticut, Iowa, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New York, Vermont, Washington -- and the District of Columbia. Federal courts in California have struck down the state's constitutional ban on same-sex marriage, but that ruling has not taken effect while the issue is being appealed.

Voters in Maine, Maryland and Washington approved gay marriage earlier this month.

But 31 states have amended their constitutions to prohibit same-sex marriage. North Carolina was the most recent example in May. In Minnesota earlier this month, voters defeated a proposal to enshrine a ban on gay marriage in that state's constitution.

The biggest issue the court could decide to confront comes in the dispute over California's Proposition 8, the constitutional ban on gay marriage that voters adopted in 2008 after the state Supreme Court ruled that gay Californians could marry.

The case could allow the justices to decide whether the U.S. Constitution's guarantee of equal protection means that the right to marriage cannot be limited to heterosexuals.

A decision in favor of gay marriage could set a national rule and overturn every state constitutional provision and law banning same-sex marriages. A ruling that upholds California's ban would be a setback for gay marriage proponents in the nation's largest state, although it would leave open the state-by-state effort to allow gays and lesbians to marry.

In striking down Proposition 8, the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals crafted a narrow ruling that said because gay Californians already had been given the right to marry, the state could not later take it away. The ruling studiously avoided any sweeping pronouncements.

But if the Supreme Court ends up reviewing the case, both sides agree that the larger constitutional issue would be on the table, although the justices would not necessarily have to rule on it.

Throughout U.S. history, the court has tried to avoid getting too far ahead of public opinion. The high court waited until 1967 to strike down laws against interracial marriage in the 16 states that still had them.

Some court observers argue that the same caution will prevail in the California case.

"What do they have to gain by hearing this case? Either they impose same sex marriage on the whole country, which would create a political firestorm, or they say there's no right to same-sex marriage, in which case they are going to be reversed in 20 years and be badly remembered. They'll be the villains in the historical narrative," said Andrew Koppelman, a professor of law and political science at Northwestern University. Koppelman signed onto a legal brief urging the justices not to hear the California case.

Yet some opponents of gay marriage say the issue is too important, and California is too large a state, for the court to take a pass.

"The question is whether there's a civil right to redefine marriage, as the California Supreme Court did. We don't think there is," said Brian Brown, president of the National Organization for Marriage.

Regardless of the decision on hearing the California case, there is widespread agreement that the justices will agree to take up a challenge to a part of the federal Defense of Marriage Act.

The law was passed in 1996 by overwhelming bipartisan majorities in the House and Senate and signed by President Bill Clinton. It defines marriage for all purposes under federal law as between a man and a woman and has been used to justify excluding gay couples from a wide range of benefits that are available to heterosexual couples.

Four federal district courts and two courts of appeal have overturned the provision in various cases on grounds that it unfairly deprives same-sex couples of federal benefits. The justices almost always will hear a case in which a federal law has been struck down.

The Obama administration broke with its predecessors when it announced last year that it no longer would defend the provision. President Obama went further when he endorsed gay marriage in May.

Republicans in the House of Representatives stepped in to take up the defense of the law in court.

Paul Clement, the Washington lawyer representing the House, said the law was intended to make sure that federal benefits would be allocated uniformly, no matter where people live.

"DOMA does not bar or invalidate any state-law marriage, but leaves states free to decide whether they will recognize same-sex marriage," Clement said in court papers.

The court has several cases to choose from, including that of 83-year-old Edith Windsor of New York. Windsor faces $363,000 in federal estate taxes after the death of her partner of 44 years in 2009. In two other cases, same-sex couples and surviving spouses of gay marriages in Connecticut, Massachusetts, New Hampshire and Vermont are seeking a range of federal benefits, including Social Security and private pension survivor payments, access to federal employee health insurance and the right to file a joint federal income tax return.

In the only instance in which a gay couple already is receiving federal benefits, federal court employee Karen Golinski in San Francisco has been allowed, under a court order, to add her wife to her health insurance coverage. That could be reversed if the Supreme Court upholds the marriage law provision.

No matter which case the court chooses, the same issue will be front and center -- whether legally married gay Americans can be kept from the range of benefits that are otherwise extended to married couples.

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FOXNews.com: Former President George H.W. Bush remains in stable condition

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Former President George H.W. Bush remains in stable condition
Nov 30th 2012, 15:17

HOUSTON –  Former President George H.W. Bush remains in stable condition at a Houston hospital where he is being treated for a lingering cough related to bronchitis.

George Kovacik, a spokesman for Methodist Hospital, said Friday that there is no change in the status of the 88-year-old Bush. Kovacik provided no additional information.

Hospital officials said Thursday that Bush, who lives in Houston, has been in and out of the hospital recently for complications resulting from bronchitis. Aides to the 41st president say Bush is expected to be discharged by this weekend.

Hospital visitors have included Bush's son, former President George W. Bush, and his wife, former first lady Laura Bush. They live in Dallas.

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Thursday, November 29, 2012

FOXNews.com: Senate approves measure to prevent transfer of terrorist detainees to US

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Senate approves measure to prevent transfer of terrorist detainees to US
Nov 30th 2012, 05:15

The Senate has passed a measure that prevents terrorist detainees from being transferred to facilities on U.S. soil, a day after it was revealed a prominent Democrat had commissioned a federal report to identify U.S. locations that may be suitable for housing Guantanamo prisoners.

The measure, which was introduced by Sen. Kelly Ayotte, R-N.H., was approved by a vote of 54 to 41 late Thursday. 

Ayotte argued that the facilities at Guantanamo Bay are "singularly equipped" to handle terrorist prisoners, calling the prison "top-rate."

"The administration may want to close Guantanamo, but the American people do not want foreign terrorists like Khalid Sheikh Mohammed brought to the United States," Ayotte said.

The vote comes the day after Fox News revealed exclusively that longtime Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., had commissioned the report and concluded the option to house Guantanamo prisoners in the U.S. is viable, despite congressional opposition to such a plan when the Obama administration proposed it.

"This report demonstrates that if the political will exists, we could finally close Guantanamo without imperiling our national security," Feinstein said. "The GAO report makes clear that numerous prisons exist inside the United States -- operated by both the Department of Defense and the Department of Justice—capable of holding the 166 detainees who remain at Guantanamo in an environment that meets the security requirements."

In response to Ayotte, Feinstein, the chairwoman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, said the United States not only can but has handled terrorist suspects, with 180 now languishing in super maximum prisons. She complained that the measure would erase the president's flexibility.

"I don't think the right thing to do is to tie anyone's hands," she said.

Democratic Senate Armed Services Committee Chairman Carl Levin, who had pushed for several of the provisions on terror suspects in last year's defense bill, said Ayotte's measure was "unwise in terms of our national security." He also warned that the provision was certain to draw a presidential veto.

In fact, the administration, in threatening to veto the bill, strongly objected to a provision restricting the president's authority to transfer terror suspects from Guantanamo to foreign countries. The provision is in current law.

The White House said the provisions were "misguided when they were enacted and should not be renewed."

Current law denies suspected terrorists, including U.S. citizens seized within the nation's borders, the right to trial and subjects them to the possibility they would be held indefinitely. It reaffirms the post-Sept. 11 authorization for the use of military force that allows indefinite detention of enemy combatants.

Several Democrats vulnerable in the 2014 elections voted with Republicans on Ayotte's measure. 

Fox News' Catherine Herridge and The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

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FOXNews.com: New Jersey Mayor Booker to live on food stamps for a week

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New Jersey Mayor Booker to live on food stamps for a week
Nov 29th 2012, 22:51

Published November 29, 2012

Associated Press

NEWARK, N.J. –  Cory Booker, the mayor of Newark, N.J., says he will live on food stamps for a week starting Tuesday.

Booker told The Associated Press on Thursday that he will honor the challenge he made to a Twitter follower earlier this month. Booker says he will be limited to $1.40 for each meal.

The North Carolina woman he challenged says she will do the same, possibly during a different week. But she says she is angry that Booker did not consult her about when the challenge will be held.

The woman uses the Twitter handle (at)MWadeNC and goes by the name TwitWit. She spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity because she says she has received threats.

Booker challenged others to participate and said he will soon announce a celebrity who will take part.

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FOXNews.com: Senate votes to accelerate withdrawal of troops in Afghanistan

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Senate votes to accelerate withdrawal of troops in Afghanistan
Nov 29th 2012, 20:36

Published November 29, 2012

Associated Press

WASHINGTON –  The Senate has voted to accelerate the withdrawal of U.S. forces from Afghanistan.

The 62-33 vote on Thursday reflected the nation's war-weariness after more than a decade of fighting.

Although the vote was for a nonbinding amendment to the defense bill, it sent a strong signal about the ongoing conflict. Democratic Sen. Jeff Merkley of Oregon sponsored the measure.

It also set the stage for a fight with the House, which passed a bill in May that calls for President Barack Obama to maintain a force of at least 68,000 troops through the end of 2014.

The House and Senate will have to reconcile their competing versions of the defense policy bill.

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FOXNews.com: Senate panel approves bill requiring police to get a warrant to read emails

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Senate panel approves bill requiring police to get a warrant to read emails
Nov 29th 2012, 17:17

A key Senate panel approved legislation Thursday  that would require police to obtain a search warrant from a judge before they can read a private citizen's emails, Facebook messages or other electronic communications.

The revised Electronic Communications Privacy Act (ECPA) passed by the Senate Judiciary Committee will now move on to the full Senate for a vote. Passage would be a victory for privacy advocates, who say current privacy rules have been left in the dust by technological progress.

"After decades of the erosion of Americans' privacy rights on many fronts, we finally have a rare opportunity for progress on privacy protection."

- Sen. Pat Leahy, (D-Vt.)

Committee Chairman Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.), who played a key role in drafting the original bill, has called the existing law, written 26 years ago, "anachronistic."

Leahy said that Americans "face even greater threats to their digital privacy, as we witness the explosion of new technologies and the expansion of the government's surveillance powers."

The revised law will make it more difficult for the government to access the content of a consumer's emails and private files from Google, Yahoo and other Internet providers.

Under the Electronic Communications Privacy Act (ECPA) of 1986, police only need a subpoena, issued without a judge's approval, to read emails that have been opened or that are more than 180 days old.

The updated law would require a judge to sign off on a warrant to obtain any email from any time period from a third-party provider. It also eliminates the "180-day rule" that in the past has established different legal standards for law-enforcement to obtain older emails.

"[When the current law was drafted,] no one could have imagined that emails would be stored electronically for years or envisioned the many new threats to privacy in cyberspace," Leahy said. "That is why I am working to update this law to reflect the realities of our time and to better protect privacy in the digital age."

The Justice Department and other law enforcement agencies have resisted the changes over concerns that investigations could take longer due to the new requirement in response to these issues. An amendment from Senators John Cornyn (R-Texas) and Mike Lee (R-Utah), which was passed by voice vote, will modify the provision to allow a delay of notice for up to 90 days for governmental agencies that are not law enforcement.

This is not the first time that the topic of email privacy has been raised in the Judiciary Committee, where Leahy introduced the bill nearly two years ago.

"After decades of the erosion of Americans' privacy rights on many fronts, we finally have a rare opportunity for progress on privacy protection." Leahy said Thursday.

The Associated Press contributed to this story.

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FOXNews.com: Washington lawmakers threaten cutoff of Palestinian aid

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Washington lawmakers threaten cutoff of Palestinian aid
Nov 29th 2012, 18:52

Published November 29, 2012

Associated Press

WASHINGTON –  A bipartisan group of senators is warning the Palestinians that they could lose U.S. financial aid and face the shutdown of the Washington office if they use upgraded U.N. status against Israel.

Republican Sens. Lindsey Graham and John Barrasso and Democratic Sens. Chuck Schumer and Bob Menendez said Thursday that they would push for an amendment to the defense bill on the Palestinians. The announcement came just hours before a likely vote in the United Nations recognizing the Palestinians as a state.

The legislation would cut off U.S. aid if the Palestinians use their newfound status to file charges against Israel in the International Criminal Court. Unwillingness to conduct meaningful negotiations with Israel would result in the closing of the Palestinian Liberation Organization's office in Washington.

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FOXNews.com: Arizona Gov. Brewer sued over license policy for immigrants

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Arizona Gov. Brewer sued over license policy for immigrants
Nov 29th 2012, 17:21

PHOENIX –  Immigrant rights advocates filed a lawsuit Thursday that seeks to overturn Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer's order denying driver's licenses for young immigrants who have gotten work permits and avoided deportation under a new Obama administration policy.

The lawsuit alleges the state has in effect classified young-adult immigrants as not having permission to be in the country and asks a federal judge to declare Brewer's policy unconstitutional because it's trumped by federal law and denies licenses without valid justification.

"Arizona's creation of its own immigration classification impermissibly intrudes on the federal government's exclusive authority to regulate immigration," the lawsuit said.

The Obama administration in June took administrative steps to shield as many as 800,000 immigrants from deportation. Applicants must have been brought to the United States before they turned 16, be younger than 30, have been in the country for at least five continuous years, have graduated from a high school or GED program or have served in the military. They also were allowed to apply for a two-year renewable work permit.

Brewer has defended her Aug. 15 order on driver's licenses as necessary for ensuring that state agencies adhere to the intent of state laws denying public benefits to illegal immigrants.

The governor has clashed with the Obama administration in the past over illegal immigration, most notably in the challenge that the federal government filed in a bid to invalidate Arizona's 2010 immigration law. The U.S. Supreme Court upheld the law's most contentious section, but threw out other sections.

Lawyers for two civil rights groups that led a challenge to the 2010 state law also filed the lawsuit over Brewer's driver's license policy.

The latest case was filed on behalf of the five young-adult immigrants in Arizona who were brought to the United States from Mexico as children and were granted deferred deportation protections under the Obama administration's policy but were denied licenses or complained that Brewer's order has caused significant hardships.

Brewer's policy makes it difficult or impossible for such young immigrants to do essential things in their everyday life, such as going to school, going to the grocery store, and finding and holding down a job, the lawsuit said.

The lawsuit said Brewer's order means federal work permits for the program's participants won't be accepted as proof of their legal presence in the country for the purpose of getting a driver's license. Still, the lawsuit said, the state will accept such a work permit from immigrants who have won deferred deportation status as part of other federal immigration programs.

The five young immigrants aren't seeking money damages and instead are asking a judge to bar Arizona from denying driver's licenses to immigrants who were granted deferred deportation status by the federal government. It seeks class-action status that would let all other young immigrants in Arizona who were granted the deferred-deportation protection join the lawsuit.

About 11,000 people living in Arizona have applied for the deferred deportation protection under the Obama administration's policy.

The lawsuit was also filed on behalf of the Arizona DREAM Act Coalition, a group that advocates for federal legislation that would provide a path to legal status for hundreds of thousands of young immigrants.

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FOXNews.com: Clinton releases road map for AIDS-free generation

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Clinton releases road map for AIDS-free generation
Nov 29th 2012, 16:11

Published November 29, 2012

FoxNews.com

The Obama administration is releasing an ambitious road map to slash the global spread of AIDS by getting more people treated sooner and accelerating the use of other proven tools.

Thursday's report outlines how progress could continue if U.S. spending remains constant -- something far from certain as Congress and President Obama struggle to avert looming budget cuts at year's end.

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said the plan shows her call for an AIDS-free generation is a goal within reach.

According to the report, even the hardest-hit countries could begin turning the tide of the epidemic over the next three to five years.

Some 34 million people worldwide are living with HIV, and 2.5 million were infected last year.

The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

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FOXNews.com: Obama Has Romney to Lunch, Republicans for Lunch

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Obama Has Romney to Lunch, Republicans for Lunch
Nov 29th 2012, 16:14

"I think there is a tradition here, and I think that it is one of the often-overlooked but remarkable things about this democracy, this oldest democracy, is that we have -- we consistently have elections … without violence and without the kind of anguish and disruptions that you see in so many other countries around the world, and you've seen throughout history."

-- White House Press Secretary Jay Carney explaining President Obama's motives for inviting Mitt Romney over for lunch.

President Obama is having lunch with Mitt Romney today in a show of what the White House Press Secretary Jay Carney said was the continuing tradition of peaceful transfers of power in the United States.

But it seems rather unlikely that Romney would have taken up arms against Obama, having conceded and everything. Though Power Play would have enjoyed covering what would have been called The Bain Rebellion, with private equity-bought tanks and uniforms designed by Stuart Stevens to appeal to middle-class Hispanic women.

The real issue in Washington isn't whether Obama will retain power without crushing an insurrection but whether having been returned to power, the president can find a way to do business with the Republicans, also returned to power. The answer from Obama today: Maybe later.

Today's lunch might have been a sign of new bipartisan comity, but it is instead a celebration of the fact that there won't be a rebellion. Talk about your lowered expectations.

Democrats are feeling pugnacious right now, reevaluating the election and deciding that maybe they did get a mandate after all. Obama won by 3 points – a larger majority than most were expecting, and Senate Democrats rather unexpectedly enlarged their majority.

In the immediate aftermath of the election, the Obama Democrats felt like they had dodged a bullet. Now they are feeling more like conquerors than survivors. In the shadow of the split-decision election, Democrats and the president were all talking about compromise, but now they are talking about reaping the spoils of their victory.

The net effect for you, dear readers, is this: your taxes are increasingly likely to rise.

What many assumed would happen in the aftermath of the election and with jittery markets eyeing the overstuffed lame-duck session in Congress was that Obama and lawmakers would retreat into the inky depths of a "grand bargain" that would allow both sides to claim some share of victory and produce a product so indecipherable that liberal and conservative activists alike would have trouble summoning real outrage.

Politicians, when pressed, usually retreat into complexity. It is their safe haven from the electorate.

But as the anxiety of the election fades, the president is trying to simplify things – to pick a fight, rather than avoid one. Rather than allowing Republicans to have people pay more in taxes but not have to vote for a tax increase, Obama is demanding that the vanquished party submit and call a tax hike a tax hike.

He promises graciousness and compromise later on, but, as he made clear in his campaign-style event on Wednesday, the Republicans first have to allow tax rates to rise on top earners. Like naughty children, they must admit their wrongdoing and accept their punishment before playtime can begin again.

Obama is trying to not only teach Republicans a lesson but also, he hopes, break their resolve heading into the next round of the endless battles over spending, entitlements and taxes. And since these battles will continue as long as the country has a weak economy and massive debts, which is to say, the foreseeable future, Obama is keen to have the strongest hand possible.

While Obama acknowledges that lower taxes stimulate growth, he believes that income inequality is a moral ill that plagues the nation.

Republicans are playing a numbers game on government revenue, trying to leverage out-year growth and spending estimates to come up with something that looks like a plausible plan for now. Obama wants them to accept a tax rate increase not because it is key to the deficit, but because he wants Republicans to admit defeat on the issue that has animated their party since the mid-1990s.

The GOP freak-out has already begun, with Rep. Tom Cole of Oklahoma calling for Republicans to accept Obama's punishment and move on to other things.  Cole is right that the longer Republicans resist Obama's daily calls for the tax hike, the greater the pressure will become and the deeper public frustration over the impasse will be.

But that's not the way human beings, especially in politics, operate. Every day that Obama goes out and tells Republicans to take their whippings, resentments and anger will deepen within the party. That's what Obama is counting on. He's hoping that he gets to make a televised plea on New Year's Eve: "Please prevent this tax hike Republicans, before it's too late."

The Democratic bet is that having thoroughly panicked the nation, the president will be in much better position to extract huge concessions from the GOP, by then desperate for a deal of any kind. Then they will not only have deepened public resentment for the Red Team but also kicked off a destructive round of primary challenges for 2014.

Republicans had hoped to avoid this by coming to the table with concessions in mind. But Obama doesn't want to avoid the fight, he wants to have it out so that he can win.

And Now, A Word From Charles

"The Republicans stood for one thing consistently.  It's held them together ideologically and generally, it's helped them electorally. They are the low-tax party. The other guys want to tax to match their reckless spending.  If [the Republicans] give it up now in return for nothing, Obama wins and he wins big."

-- Charles Krauthammer on "Special Report with Bret Baier."

Chris Stirewalt is digital politics editor for Fox News, and his POWER PLAY column appears Monday-Friday on FoxNews.com. Catch Chris Live online daily at 11:30amET  at  http:live.foxnews.com.

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