Tuesday, April 30, 2013

FOXNews.com: FAA towers threatened by sequester to remain open, officials say

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FAA towers threatened by sequester to remain open, officials say
May 1st 2013, 05:43

  • controltoweropen12.jpg

    March 12, 2013: This photo shows the air traffic control tower at Chicago's Midway International Airport.AP

WASHINGTON –  Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood has assured lawmakers the Obama administration will prevent the closure of 149 small airport towers as well as end furloughs of air traffic controllers nationwide as a result of legislation passed by Congress, according to officials involved in negotiations on the bill.

The disclosure came as senators sought signatures on a letter to LaHood saying that that their support of the legislation "was based on the understanding that the contract towers would be fully funded." In all, 149 towers are ticketed for possible closure beginning June 15 as the FAA carries out its share of the $85 billion in across-the-board budget cuts that took effect in March at numerous federal agencies.

The letter said the towers, which are staffed by employees under contract to the FAA, are a "vital public safety and economic development asset for dozens of communities - many of them rural - in every corner of the country." It was circulated by Sens. Jerry Moran, R-Kan., and Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn.

The developments coincided with congressional passage during the day of a follow-up bill that fixed a stenographic error in legislation that cleared late last week. It was designed to give LaHood flexibility to shift up to $253 million among various accounts to "prevent reduced operations and staffing of the FAA," but the original measure lacked the letter "s'' on the word "accounts."

President Barack Obama is expected to sign the bill quickly.

Sen. John Thune, R-S.D., the senior Republican on the Senate Commerce Committee, said he met with LaHood on Thursday and spoke with him again the following day about the legislation. "I think his expectation is there is enough money and enough flexibility for him to" keep the towers open and end the furloughs of FAA employees, the South Dakotan said in a telephone interview.

"I would expect him to address that based on the discussions that took place."

He added that when he and Sen. Jay Rockefeller, D-W. Va., met last week with LaHood and FAA administration Michael Huerta, "it was understood they would take care of both of those issues if we gave them the money." Other officials said LaHood had provided similar assurances, although they spoke on condition of anonymity because they lacked authority to be quoted by name.

A spokesman for LaHood said the department was reviewing the legislation and will make a decision about the towers.

The impetus for the legislation was private pressure from the airlines whose business was disrupted by air traffic furloughs, coupled with public outrage from travelers who were forced to endure delays.

But political calculations also figured into a mini-drama that resulted in the bill's passage late last week, as Obama and Republicans continue to blame one another for the inconveniences caused by across-the-board spending cuts.

The White House abruptly retreated under pressure last Wednesday when it indicated it would accept an easing of the FAA cuts while leaving the balance of the $85 billion in reductions unchanged. Given lengthy political struggle surrounding across-the-board cuts, the issue was sensitive enough so that when Sens. Susan Collins, R-Maine and Mark Udall, D-Colo., initially proposed legislation that explicitly said the measure would assure the towers remain open, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., objected, according to several officials briefed on the discussions.

The wording was altered to drop the explicit reference, although the flexibility to keep the towers open was retained. It was not clear whether Reid insisted on his own behalf, as a proxy for other Democrats, or on behalf of the White House. But it was not the first time the leader has become involved in a struggle over the fate of the towers.

When the Senate was debating a different measure earlier in the year, he quietly prevented Moran from gaining a vote on a stand-alone proposal to keep the towers open.

A spokesman for Reid was not immediately available to comment.

Huerta testified recently that the cost of cancelling FAA furloughs would be $220 million through Sept. 30, leaving about $33 million in freed-up funding to maintain the towers. He also said the agency is working with about 50 communities and airport operators in hopes of arranging alternative funding.

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FOXNews.com: Alabama lawmakers vote to ignore new federal gun control laws

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Alabama lawmakers vote to ignore new federal gun control laws
May 1st 2013, 04:24

MONTGOMERY, Ala. –  The Alabama Legislature is telling the federal government and others to back off on gun control.

The Senate passed legislation Tuesday declaring that "All federal acts, laws, orders, rules or regulations regarding firearms are a violation of the Second Amendment." It also says federal laws in violation of the Second Amendment shall be considered null and void in Alabama. The vote was 24-6.

The sponsor, Republican Sen. Paul Sanford of Huntsville, said the bill resulted from hundreds of emails and calls he received from his north Alabama constituents concerned that Congress might enact new gun regulations or restore the previous ban on assault weapons. He said the assault weapon ban is an example of federal regulation that he considers a violation of the Second Amendment.

Democratic Sen. Bobby Singleton of Greensboro, who voted against the measure, said state law can't trump federal law. "This bill is null and void on its face," Singleton said.

In the House Tuesday, members voted 76-22 for a proposed constitutional amendment that would require Alabama's courts to use "strict scrutiny" when reviewing any new gun control laws. That would require proponents of the laws to show a compelling interest for the regulations and that they be narrowly tailored.

The Second Amendment bill sponsored by Republican Rep. Mike Jones of Andalusia was part of the "We Dare Defend Our Rights" agenda that the House Republican Caucus set for the 2013 session. To take effect, the bill still must be passed by the Senate and approved by Alabama voters in a statewide referendum.

In the Senate, Sanford said he was not trying to declare all federal gun laws void. Instead, he said he hoped that if Congress were to pass gun controls, the legislation would permit the state attorney general to issue an opinion that the law was unconstitutional and then Alabama law enforcement officers could refrain from enforcing it.

"We are going to declare it null and void and not participate with the federal government," said Sanford, who has a pistol permit and regularly carries a gun.

Republican Sen. Dick Brewbaker of Montgomery voted for the bill, but he said states trying to nullify federal laws have been losing ever since the 1830s when South Carolina tried it with a federal tariff in President Andrew Jackson's administration.

Sanford's bill would have to pass the House and be signed by the governor to become law. He said House approval will be hard to get because the Legislature has only four meeting days left in the 2013 session. "We are so late in the session, it makes it difficult to pass anything," he said.

The bill comes two weeks after Kansas' Republican governor, Sam Brownback, signed a law providing that all Kansas-made guns that have not left Kansas are exempt from federal gun control laws.

Immediately after passing Sanford's bill, the Senate passed a bill by Brewbaker allowing all city and county school systems to hire armed officers through their local sheriff and police departments to provide security in public schools. That bill, recommended by the state's School Safety Commission, also needs approval of the House and the governor to become law.

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FOXNews.com: Markey, Gomez win Massachusetts Senate primaries

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Markey, Gomez win Massachusetts Senate primaries
May 1st 2013, 01:43

  • MassSenate660371.jpg

    April 30, 2013: Democratic U.S. Senate hopeful, Mass. Rep. Edward Markey, D-Malden, carries his ballot while casting his vote in Malden, Mass.AP

BOSTON –  Democratic U.S. Rep. Edward Markey and Republican former Navy SEAL Gabriel Gomez won their party primaries on Tuesday, setting up a race between a 36-year veteran of Washington politics and a political newcomer for the U.S. Senate seat formerly held by John Kerry.

Markey defeated fellow U.S. Rep. Stephen Lynch in the Democratic primary while Gomez, who's also a businessman, bested former U.S. Attorney Michael Sullivan and state Rep. Daniel Winslow in the GOP primary, according to unofficial returns. The special election is scheduled for June 25.

The race to fill the seat Kerry left to become U.S. secretary of state has been overshadowed by the deadly Boston Marathon bombing, and the candidates had to temporarily suspend their campaigns.

Even before the April 15 bombing, the campaign had failed to capture the attention of voters compared with the 2010 special election following the death of longtime Democratic Sen. Edward Kennedy. Former Republican Sen. Scott Brown won the seat, surprising Democrats, but was ousted last year in another high-profile race by Democratic challenger Elizabeth Warren.

Markey, 66, led all the other candidates in fundraising and had won the backing early on of Kerry and a large segment of the Democratic establishment. Lynch, a South Boston conservative and self-described "pro-life" Democrat, was dogged in part by his decision to vote against President Barack Obama's 2010 health care law.

Gomez, 47, was virtually unknown in Massachusetts politics before announcing his plan to run for Kerry's seat earlier this year.

Gomez, the son of Colombian immigrants, celebrated his outsider status, wearing his lack of Washington experience as a badge of honor. Gomez also had a compelling life story, learning to speak English in kindergarten before going on to become a Navy pilot and SEAL, earn an MBA at Harvard Business School and launch a career in private equity.

Gomez, of Cohasset, cast himself as the new face of the Republican Party, which has struggled to reach out to minority populations following the defeat last year of GOP presidential candidate and former Gov. Mitt Romney.

Gomez has introduced himself in Spanish in campaign ads and on the stump in a state where Hispanic voters are a small but growing slice of the population.

Sullivan, an early favorite among conservative Republicans, touted his law enforcement and national security background, having helped investigate the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks and the failed attempt to blow up an airliner using shoe bombs.

But Sullivan, of Abington, collected the smallest amount of campaign contributions of the three GOP candidates and was unable to run any statewide TV ads.

Winslow, a former judge from Norfolk who served as chief legal counsel in Romney's administration, finished third despite putting $150,000 of his own cash into the race.

While Gomez easily outraised his challengers he also loaned his campaign at least $600,000.

The campaign, the third U.S. Senate race in Massachusetts in the past four years, was marked in part by the relatively low voter turnout. That turnout was likely hampered by the April 15 bombing and the search for the bombers, which consumed the attention of residents across Massachusetts.

In the town of Wayland, in Markey's congressional district, voters trickled in to polling places.

Holly Zaitchik, a retired Boston University professor, said she voted for Markey because he's "he's done a terrific job of being there when anything important happens" in Washington.

Zaitchik also thought the marathon attack might discourage turnout among voters.

"There are a lot of people who are still down and not wanting to participate in things," she said. "It's disheartening."

Markey, who's from Malden and has served in the U.S. House since 1976, and Gomez will be on the June 25 special election ballot along with Richard Heos, an independent from Woburn.

Democratic Gov. Deval Patrick had named his former chief of staff, William "Mo" Cowan, to fill Kerry's seat on an interim basis until after the special election.

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FOXNews.com: Arizona returning to gold rush roots with bill making gold legal tender

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Arizona returning to gold rush roots with bill making gold legal tender
May 1st 2013, 04:00

  • Arizona Governor Jan Brewer

    Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer, seen in this 2010 file photo, has vetoed a bill that would have allowed guns on public college campuses.AP

Arizona is returning to its gold rush roots with a bill that would make precious metals legal currency.

The GOP-led Senate gave final approval Tuesday to the bill that could make Arizona the second state in the nation to recognize gold and silver as legal tender. If signed into law by Gov. Jan Brewer, the measure would take effect in 2014.

The state Department of Revenue opposed the measure. It passed in the House only after an amendment was added to exempt the department from having to accept gold or silver as tax payments.

The measure reflects a growing distrust of government-backed money amid the declining value of the dollar, according to proponents. Republican Rep. David Livingston of Peoria, a financial adviser who ushered the legislation through the House, said his clients were eager to tap into their gold and silver reserves.

But Democrats, who voted against the measure in the Senate and House, said it sends a false message to constituents that gold and silver are safer than traditional currency.

"This is too extreme," Democratic Sen. Steve Gallardo of Phoenix said. "We don't need it."

Democratic Sen. Steve Farley of Tucson said the measure is unnecessary and would create long lines at businesses as store clerks inspect and weigh the gold and silver. The measure would allow the use of precious metals as money only when businesses agree to take them.

"Businesses are not clamoring for this, to say the least," Farley said. "This is basically growing the size and scope of government to create an entirely new currency system."

Farley noted that the price of gold saw a significant drop in early April, its biggest one-day plunge since 1983. He said allowing gold and silver as legal payment at grocery stores and other businesses would prove too unpredictable.

"Anybody who thinks gold or silver is a safe place to put your money had better think again," he said.

The Senate had previously passed Senate Bill 1439, but it was sent back for final approval after the House amendment passed.

Utah became the first state to allow gold or silver payments in 2011. Lawmakers in Minnesota, North Carolina, Idaho, South Carolina, Colorado and other states have debated copycat laws in recent years. The Maine Senate and House recently rejected a similar measure.

Gold-backed money fell out of favor during World War I because the U.S. and many other countries needed to print more cash to pay for the war. President Richard Nixon formally abandoned the gold standard in 1971.

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FOXNews.com: Texas Senate approves bill allowing guns in locked cars on college campuses

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Texas Senate approves bill allowing guns in locked cars on college campuses
Apr 30th 2013, 21:40

Published April 30, 2013

FoxNews.com

A bill that would allow Texas college students to keep handguns locked in their cars in college campus parking lots easily passed the state Senate on Tuesday.

The bill, OK'd in a bipartisan 27-4 vote, would override rules by several state colleges and universities that prohibit guns on campuses.

During the debate on the Senate floor, Democratic Sen. Jose Rodriguez of El Paso argued the bill would lead to allowing guns in college classrooms. He later told FoxNews.com, "I opposed the bill because, given today's climate and the rise of crime on ours campuses, the last thing we need to do is pass a bill like this."

Supporters say the measure isn't a traditional concealed weapons bill because the legislation would restrict students to keeping their guns in a locked vehicle. But Rodriguez says that would do little to deter a determined shooter.

"You allow it in the glove compartment of your car in the college campus and if you have a disgruntled student who wants to take (his or her) anger out on the teacher or an administrator, what's going to stop the student from walking to the car and getting it?" Rodriguez said.

Republican Sen. Glenn Hegar, a supporter of the bill, says the current restrictions unfairly single out college students.

Guns in Texas play a big part in the Lone Star state's culture, Rodriguez said. At the Texas Capitol, concealed handgun license holders are allowed to skip the metal detectors that others must go through to be allowed entry. Republican Gov. Rick Perry has been vocal about giving permit holders as much leeway as possible and has said permit holders should be able to carry guns in any public place.

Last year, lawmakers in the state pushed a plan to allow college students and professors with concealed handgun licenses the right to carry guns on campus but the measure failed.

This year's bill is expected to go to the House on Saturday, and it is likely to pass.

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FOXNews.com: Obama pledges inquiry on Benghazi survivors’ testimony

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Obama pledges inquiry on Benghazi survivors' testimony
Apr 30th 2013, 21:28

President Obama said he is unaware of longstanding efforts by Republican lawmakers to question survivors of the Benghazi attacks but pledged to investigate it.

"I'm not familiar with this notion that anybody has been blocked from testifying," the president said during a White House news conference on Tuesday. "So what I'll do is I will find out what exactly you're referring to."

Obama's pledge to find out more came as officials at the State Department pushed back against allegations -- first aired Monday on Fox News -- that career employees at the agency have been threatened if they furnish new information about the Benghazi attacks to members of Congress.

"The State Department is deeply committed to meeting its obligation to protect employees, and the State Department would never tolerate -- tolerate or sanction -- retaliation against whistle-blowers on any issue, including this one," spokesman Patrick Ventrell told reporters at a briefing on Tuesday. "That's an obligation we take very seriously -- full stop."

Four Americans, including U.S. ambassador to Libya Chris Stevens, were killed in terrorist attacks on U.S. installations in the port city of Benghazi, Libya on the night of Sept. 11, 2012. While the FBI investigation into the attacks continues, no known instances of any perpetrators being brought to justice have yet been reported.

Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif., chairman of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, will hold the first in a new round of hearings on the subject on May 8.

In two letters to the State Department, dated April 16 and April 26, Issa has sought explicit guidance on how attorneys representing witnesses with knowledge of the Benghazi attacks, including their prelude and aftermath, can receive the security clearances necessary to review classified materials.

"Attorneys representing Department personnel in this matter will require clearance to possess and discuss Top Secret and Sensitive Compartmented Information," Issa wrote on April 16 to Mary McLeod, the principal deputy legal adviser to the State Department.

But Ventrell insisted Tuesday that no such whistle-blowers have come forward, and no requests for security clearances have been made by private attorneys.

Victoria Toensing, a former Justice Department official and onetime Republican counsel to the Senate intelligence committee, disclosed on Monday that she is representing a career State Department official who identifies himself as a whistle-blower. Toensing said this individual has been threatened by superiors with career-ending reprisals if he cooperates with the oversight committee.

"[The State Department has] had two letters from Chairman Issa, one on April 16th, the other one April 26th, that specifically say, 'We want you to provide a process for clearing a lawyer to receive classified information,'" Toensing said during an interview Tuesday on "America's Newsroom" with Fox News anchor Martha MacCallum.  "How can they possibly get up there and just lie to the press corps?"

Ventrell said that the State Department periodically sends out notices to the entire staff advising them of the protections whistle-blowers enjoy under federal law, and that such a notice, in accordance with regular practice every spring, was disseminated just last week.

Interviewed on the Los Angeles campus of the University of Southern California on Tuesday, Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., argued the allegations of threats and intimidation expose the need for a more comprehensive probe of the Benghazi affair.

"People do not trust the president and his people," McCain told Fox News. "That's why we need a select committee."

Fox News' Martha MacCallum and Lee Ross contributed to this report.

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FOXNews.com: FDA: Morning-after pill to move over-the-counter

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FDA: Morning-after pill to move over-the-counter
Apr 30th 2013, 21:48

Published April 30, 2013

Associated Press

  • morning after pill.jpg

WASHINGTON –  The Plan B morning-after pill is moving over-the-counter, a decision announced by the Food and Drug Administration just days before a court-imposed deadline.

Tuesday, the FDA lowered to 15 the age at which girls and women can buy the emergency contraceptive without a prescription -- and said it no longer has to be kept behind pharmacy counters.

Instead, the pill can sit on drugstore shelves just like condoms, but that buyers would have to prove their age at the cash register.

Earlier this month, a federal judge had ruled there should be no age restrictions and gave the FDA 30 days to act. The FDA said its latest decision was independent of the court case.

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FOXNews.com: Sec. Kerry heading to Russia next week to discuss: Boston, Syria, Iran

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Sec. Kerry heading to Russia next week to discuss: Boston, Syria, Iran
Apr 30th 2013, 18:19

Published April 30, 2013

Associated Press

  • KerryandMexico.jpg

    Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, right, hands a folder to U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry before the start of the NATO- Russia Council meeting at NATO headquarters on Tuesday, April 23, 2013, in Brussels, Belgium.AP

Secretary of State John Kerry is headed to Russia next week for talks on Syria, Iran and terrorism concerns that have spiked since the Boston Marathon bombings.

Kerry will meet with Russian President Vladimir Putin and Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov.

Their conversations will also touch on a host of bilateral tensions between Washington and Moscow.

They include the Kremlin's halt on U.S. adoptions of Russian children and new Russian restrictions on civil society groups.

And the talks will definitely address the ethnic Chechen brothers suspected of killing three people and injuring over 200 in Boston earlier this month.

Kerry told reporters Tuesday his upcoming trip to Russia is "overdue."

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FOXNews.com: Low turnout for Massachusetts' special U.S. Senate election

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Low turnout for Massachusetts' special U.S. Senate election
Apr 30th 2013, 19:24

  • Mass Senate I Voted Senate Stickers.jpg

Turnout was relatively light across Massachusetts on Tuesday as voters chose which Republican and Democratic candidates will win their party primaries and go on to campaign in the state's second special U.S. Senate election in four years.

The race to fill Secretary of State John Kerry's former seat has been overshadowed by the Boston bombings, though turnout in the city was running slightly ahead of another special U.S. Senate primary three years ago in part because of an additional local race on Tuesday's ballot, the state's top elections official said.

Even before the bombings, the campaign had failed to capture the attention of voters compared with the 2010 special election following the death of longtime Sen. Edward Kennedy. Former Republican Sen. Scott Brown won the seat but was ousted last year in another high-profile race by Democratic challenger Elizabeth Warren.

Two Democrats, both members of the state's congressional delegation, and three Republicans are vying for their parties' nominations.

A win would help Senate Democrats maintain a caucus edge of 55-45 as they press forward on major issues like immigration and gun control.

The Boston Marathon bombs disrupted the political race, forcing the candidates to temporarily suspend their campaigns. The bombings also brought national security and terrorism issues to the fore in an election that was expected to turn on questions of the economy, gun control, taxes, immigration and abortion.

The Democratic primary pits U.S. Rep. Edward Markey, who has staked out more liberal positions, against fellow Rep. Stephen Lynch, a former ironworker who has tried to appeal to the party's working- and middle-class base.

Lynch, 58, has had to defend his decision to vote against President Obama's 2010 health care law, while Markey, who won his first elected office while in law school, has fended off efforts to portray him as a Washington insider.

Markey, 66, is the better-funded of the two Democratic candidates, having raised $4.8 million through the end of the last reporting period, compared with $1.5 million for Lynch.

Markey has also benefited from outside spending. Of the more than $2.2 million spent by outside groups, nearly 84 percent went to Markey, an Associated Press review of Federal Election Commission reports found.

In the town of Wayland in his congressional district, voters trickled in to polling places.

Holly Zaitchik, a 66-year-old retired Boston University professor, said she voted for Markey because he's "he's done a terrific job of being there when anything important happens" in Washington.

Zaitchik also thought the Marathon bombings might discourage turnout among voters still coping with the aftermath.

"There are a lot of people who are still down and not wanting to participate in things," she said. "It's disheartening."

The GOP primary race is pitting three candidates: former U.S. Attorney for Massachusetts Michael Sullivan, businessman Gabriel Gomez and state Rep. Daniel Winslow, former legal counsel for ex-governor and 2012 presidential nominee Mitt Romney.

Gomez, 47, has tried to portray himself as the new face of the Republican Party. The son of Colombian immigrants, Gomez learned English in kindergarten, then went on to become a Navy pilot and SEAL, earn an MBA at Harvard and launch a private equity career.

The 54-year-old Winslow said he's the only candidate with experience in all three branches of the government.

After 12 years as a private attorney, Winslow was appointed to a judgeship on the state's district court in 1995. He served eight years and left to join Romney's administration as chief legal counsel.

Sullivan, 58, has pointed to his national security resume, which includes helping investigate the Sept. 11 attacks and the failed attempt to blow up an airliner using shoe bombs.

Sullivan's law enforcement and criminal justice background was critical for Peter Bochner, a 60-year-old Wayland voter who cast his ballot for Sullivan and said he wasn't surprised at the relatively low turnout.

"Law enforcement gets the short shrift in political elections," he said. "I just think it's not a sexy election. I don't think primaries, unless they are hotly contested, get a big turnout."

Massachusetts Secretary of State William Galvin has said fewer than one in five registered voters could end up casting ballots.

Polls close at 8 p.m. The special Senate election is June 25.

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FOXNews.com: President, first lady say program to help vets get jobs has already tripled its goal

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President, first lady say program to help vets get jobs has already tripled its goal
Apr 30th 2013, 17:54

Published April 30, 2013

Associated Press

First lady Michelle Obama says companies participating in a program to help veterans find work have hired or trained 290,000 veterans and military spouses, nearly tripling the original goal of the program with about eight months to spare.

Obama said Tuesday that the program called Joining Forces has also generated pledges from businesses to hire or train another 435,000 in the next five years.

The jobless rate for those veterans who served after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks fell from 12.1 percent in 2011 to 9.9 percent last year.

But Obama said more help is needed, and she called on private companies to step up hiring to keep up with the demand that will occur as nearly 1 million members of the military become civilians in the next few years.

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FOXNews.com: Obama say he won't judge Mexican security moves

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Obama say he won't judge Mexican security moves
Apr 30th 2013, 17:20

Published April 30, 2013

Associated Press

  • mexico obama.jpg

    Mexico's President Enrique Pena Nieto.AP

President Obama says he will wait until he meets with Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto later this week before judging Mexico's moves to curtail broad access to U.S. security agencies in the battle against drug trafficking and organized crime.

Obama, who will travel to Mexico City Thursday, said Pena Nieto is "serious about reform." He said Mexican security changes appear to have more to do with internal Mexican coordination than with dealing with the United States.

The Mexican government said Monday all contact for U.S. law enforcement will now go through the federal Interior Ministry.

Obama said: "I'm not going to yet judge how this will alter the relationship between the United States and Mexico until I've heard directly from them what exactly they are trying to accomplish."

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FOXNews.com: Obama walks back 'red line' stance on Syrian government using chemical weapons

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Obama walks back 'red line' stance on Syrian government using chemical weapons
Apr 30th 2013, 16:48

President Obama, who earlier said use of chemical weapons by Syria on its people would be a "red line" requiring action by the U.S., walked the stance back on Tuesday, saying he needs more information on the reported attacks before responding.

Administration officials recently said intelligence analysts had "varying degrees of confidence" the embattled government of Syrian President Bashar Assad has gassed civilians with sarin. However, Obama said the administration is using all its resources to determine the facts about a weapon that he has said would be a "game changer" for U.S. policy in the war. 

"If we end up rushing to judgment without hard, effective evidence ... we can find ourselves in a position where we can't marshal the international community in support of what we do," Obama said. "It's important for us to do this in a prudent way."

The administration long ago called for Assad to step down and pave the way for a new government. But Obama has resisted calls from some Republicans in Congress to send U.S. military aid to the rebels and perhaps commit U.S. military resources directly.

"If we end up rushing to judgment without hard, effective evidence ... we can find ourselves in a position where we can't marshal the international community in support what we do."

- President Obama on a possible U.S. response to growing concerns Syria has deployed chemical weapons

So far, the war, which began in March 2011, has claimed an estimated 75,000 lives. While the U.S. has backed the Syrian rebels with non-military aid, critics have said that the forces include Al Qaeda fighters and other insurgents unfriendly toward the U.S., leaving uncertainty surrounding Syria's future under a post-Assad government.

Obama made the remarks at a wide-ranging White House press conference in which he also answered questions about his signature health-care law, defended the FBI in its efforts to crack down on terrorism before the deadly Boston Marathon bombing and said he'd renew efforts to close the terrorist prison camp at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

Four months into his second term, Obama said he remains open-minded about the immigration legislation being hammered out by congressional lawmakers and that he would not support a bill that excludes a pathway to citizenship – a sticking point for most Democrats and a divisive issue for Republicans. Reforming the nation's immigration system has been one of the president's top legislative priorities this term.

Asked about the FBI's investigation into a possible terrorist threat posed in the past by Tamerlan Tsarnaev, a suspect in the April 15 Boston Marathon bombings who died in an escape attempt, the president said, "Based on what I've seen so far, the FBI performed its duties, the Department of Homeland Security did what it was supposed to be doing."

Obama also said he'd renew efforts to close Guantanamo Bay. His first-term campaign promise to shut down the terrorist camp has been met with strong objection from lawmakers who don't want the prisoners transferred to American soil.

Asked about a hunger strike by some detainees, he said, "I don't want these individuals to die." The president also said the Pentagon was doing what it could to manage the situation.

Obama also noted that several suspected terrorists have been tried and found guilty in U.S. federal courts, a response to congressional critics who say the detainees must be tried in special courts if the United States is to maximize its ability to prevent future attacks.

On another contentious issue, the president said a variety of Republicans were working to foil the final implementation of the health care law he pushed through Congress three years ago.

He said GOP lawmakers want to repeal the law and some Republican governors don't want to have their states participate in establishing insurance pools where the uninsured can find coverage. In other cases, Republican legislatures object when governors are willing to go along.

"We will implement" the law,  Obama said, though he conceded there will be glitches along the way.

"Despite all the hue and cry and sky-is-falling predictions about this stuff, if you've already got health insurance, then the part of ObamaCare that affects you is already in place," he said.

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FOXNews.com: FDA says it will investigate added caffeine in foods, gum

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FDA says it will investigate added caffeine in foods, gum
Apr 30th 2013, 18:00

For people seeking an energy boost, companies are increasing their offerings of foods with added caffeine. A new caffeinated gum may have gone too far.

The Food and Drug Administration said Monday that it will investigate the safety of added caffeine and its effects on children and adolescents. The agency made the announcement just as Wrigley was rolling out Alert Energy Gum, a new product that includes as much caffeine as a half a cup of coffee in one piece and promises "the right energy, right now."

Michael Taylor, FDA's deputy commissioner of foods, indicated that the proliferation of new foods with caffeine added -- especially the gum, which he equates to "four cups of coffee in your pocket" -- may even prompt the FDA to look closer at the way all food ingredients are regulated.

The agency is already investigating the safety of energy drinks and energy shots, prompted by consumer reports of illness and death.

Taylor said Monday that the only time FDA explicitly approved the added use of caffeine in a food or drink was in the 1950s for colas. The current proliferation of caffeine added to foods is "beyond anything FDA envisioned," Taylor said.

"It is disturbing," Taylor told The Associated Press. "We're concerned about whether they have been adequately evaluated."

Caffeine has the regulatory classification of "generally recognized as safe," or GRAS, which means manufacturers can add it to products and then determine on their own whether the product is safe.

"This raises questions about how the GRAS concept is working and is it working adequately," Taylor said of the gum and other caffeine-added products.

As food companies have created more new ingredients to add health benefits, improve taste or help food stay fresh, there are at least 4,650 of these "generally recognized as safe" ingredients, according to the nonpartisan Pew Charitable Trusts. The bulk of them, at least 3,000, were determined GRAS by companies and trade associations.

Caffeine is not a new ingredient, but Taylor says the FDA is concerned about all of the new ways it is being delivered to consumers. He said the agency will look at the potential impact these "new and easy sources" of caffeine will have on children's health and will take action if necessary. He said that he and other FDA officials have held meetings with some of the large food companies that have ventured into caffeinated products, including Mars Inc., of which Wrigley is a subsidiary.

Wrigley and other companies adding caffeine to their products have labeled them as for adult use only. A spokeswoman for Wrigley, Denise M. Young, said the gum is for "adults who are looking for foods with caffeine for energy" and each piece contains about 40 milligrams, or the equivalent amount found in half a cup of coffee. She said the company will work with FDA.

"Millions of Americans consume caffeine responsibly and in moderation as part of their daily routines," Young said.

Food manufacturers have added caffeine to candy, nuts and other snack foods in recent years. Jelly Belly "Extreme Sport Beans," for example, have 50 mg of caffeine in each 100-calorie pack, while Arma Energy Snx markets trail mix, chips and other products that have caffeine.

Critics say it's not enough for the companies to say they are marketing the products to adults when the caffeine is added to items like candy that are attractive to children. Many of the energy foods are promoted with social media campaigns, another way they could be targeted to young people.

Major medical associations have warned that too much caffeine can be dangerous for children, who have less ability to process the stimulant than adults. The American Academy of Pediatrics says it has been linked to harmful effects on young people's developing neurologic and cardiovascular systems.

"Could caffeinated macaroni and cheese or breakfast cereal be next?" said Michael Jacobson, director of the Center for Science in the Public Interest, which asked the FDA to look into the number of foods with added caffeine last year. "One serving of any of these foods isn't likely to harm anyone. The concern is that it will be increasingly easy to consume caffeine throughout the day, sometimes unwittingly, as companies add caffeine to candies, nuts, snacks and other foods. 

Taylor said the agency would look at the added caffeine in its totality -- while one product might not cause adverse effects, the increasing number of caffeinated products on the market, including drinks, could mean more adverse health effects for children.

Last November, the FDA said it had received 92 reports over four years that cited illnesses, hospitalizations and deaths after consumption of an energy shot marketed as 5-Hour Energy. The FDA said it had also received reports that cited the highly caffeinated Monster Energy Drink in several deaths.

Agency officials said then that the reports to the FDA from consumers, doctors and others don't necessarily prove that the drinks caused the deaths or injuries but said they were investigating each one. In February, FDA Commissioner Margaret Hamburg again stressed that reports to the agency of adverse events related to energy drinks did not necessarily suggest a causal effect.

FDA officials said they would take action if they could link the deaths to consumption of the energy drinks, including forcing the companies to take the products off the market.

In 2010, the agency forced manufacturers of alcoholic caffeinated beverages to cease production of those drinks. The agency said the combination of caffeine and alcohol could lead to a "wide-awake drunk" and has led to alcohol poisoning, car accidents and assaults.

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FOXNews.com: Americans find ways to soften sequester; saving tourist seasons, programs for needy

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Americans find ways to soften sequester; saving tourist seasons, programs for needy
Apr 30th 2013, 15:46

  • Head_Start.jpg

    FILE: March 13, 2012: Children arrive at a Head Start facility in Frederick, Md.REUTERS

Americans cannot cover the entire $85 billion in federal budget cuts this year known as sequester, but they're pulling together to make up the losses for important matters like helping local economies and salvaging federal programs that serve needy children.

When the Navy decided to deal with sequester by pulling its popular Blue Angels fighter jet team from air shows and other events, organizers of Seattle's annual Seafair festival dug into their general fund to pay for a replacement –  the Patriots Jet Team.

Seafair President Beth Knox said the Blue Angels had performed at the festival over the past four decades so spending $80,000 was important to the community and worth the money.

"We've had to look outside the box and find ways that we can fill the gaps where our government is not able to provide those services," she told Fox News.

In addition to hiring the California-based group of retired fighter pilots, festival organizers also are bringing in a ship from the Canadian Navy to replace a U.S. warship that won't be coming to this summer's events. 

"Making sure the general public is educated about the value of our military, that doesn't change, even if the government has to cut back on its spending," Knox added.

In Wyoming, two cities stepped up when the National Park Service decided to save money by plowing snow at Yosemite National Park two weeks later than usual, which would have delayed the clearing of four park gates well past the typical May 1 opening.

The park service's decision will save U.S. taxpayers roughly $150,000, but it would have cost the cites of Cody and Jackson Hole much more because they depend on park-related tourism.

In response, city officials held a joint fundraiser and collected enough money to pay the state to clear the roads, ensuring the gates will be open on time.

"We needed to act, and if there was a way that we could make a difference we wanted to do that because people rely on that opening date," said Mayor Nancy Tia Brown. "And the moment that the park gate opens, things are different in Cody."

Officials told Fox many of the donations came from businesses that stood to lose revenue if the gates didn't open on time for the tens of thousands of visitors.

"We work on a 20-week tourism season, and if the first two weeks are going to be taken out because the park's not open, that's a big deal," said James Blair, of Blair Hotels.

In central Florida, a Head Start program directed to cut 5 percent from its budget as a result of sequester decided to temporarily stop contributions to the employee-retirement fund, instead of cutting services. The decision was made with support from staffers, according to The Tampa Bay Times.

The program provides child care and other services for preschool children from low-income families and for disabled children from families of all incomes.

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FOXNews.com: Obama says he's rethinking 'range of options' against Syria

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Obama says he's rethinking 'range of options' against Syria
Apr 30th 2013, 14:55

Published April 30, 2013

FoxNews.com

President Obama said Tuesday the U.S. would have to "rethink the range of options" it has against Syria. 

The president told a group of reporters he asked the Pentagon -- as early as last year -- for a range of options if President Bashar Assad's government had used chemical weapons.

Calling the move to use chemical weapons a "game changer," the president said there was evidence that chemical weapons were used inside Syria but questions remained about their use. 

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FOXNews.com: Liberal Frustrations Grow after 100 Days of Obama 2.0

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Liberal Frustrations Grow after 100 Days of Obama 2.0
Apr 30th 2013, 14:34

"We are writing to express our deep concern about the nation's corrupt campaign finance system and about your failure, to date, as President to provide meaningful leadership or take effective action to solve this fundamental problem facing our democracy."

-- Letter to President Obama from a coalition of liberal groups calling for more regulation of political donations and spending.

President Obama is not Mitt Romney. And on the 100th day of his second term in office, that seems to be his cardinal virtue among members of his political base.

Despite – or, more likely, because of – the president's boldly liberal vision and broad promises after his re-election, liberal Democrats are feeling crabby about Obamism these days.

A largely unchecked genocide in Syria, an ever-escalating drone warfare program, a botched effort for gun control, fumbling implementation of the new health law, defeats on fiscal policy and the president's seeming acceptance of business as usual in Washington are all causing alarm on the left. What is the use of having a crusading liberal president if he won't crusade or can't win when he does?

Obama is facing some serious problems with the mainstream electorate, too. The economy remains puny and faces growing peril. There is new evidence that the intelligence apparatus missed warnings about the April 15 terrorist attack in Boston. Frustrations are growing over federal debt. And the health law, already unpopular, is fulfilling many critics' worst expectations.

The president knew that his second term, and thereby the enshrinement of his legacy, would be a struggle. But he had a plan. The president, tapping into unlimited donations from well-heeled benefactors, would keep the same activist core that won him a second term on the march to achieve policy goals.

As Vice President Joe Biden said, "Don't compare us to the almighty, compare us to the alternative."

Obama offered Democrats a win-win scenario. Either recalcitrant Republicans would yield to pressure on policy points or face oblivion in Midterm Elections. Obama would unite Democrats behind a bold agenda on global warming, same-sex marriage, "cradle-to-career" education, gun control, amnesty for illegal immigrants, another round of tax increases on top earners, more stimulus spending and other long-sought liberal aims and take the fight to Republicans. As Republicans splintered on these subjects, Democrats would be poised to win some victories now and then run the table after retaking complete control of Congress.

A plan that risks alienating the middle to rally one's political base requires plenty of chutzpah. A plan that does so at a moment when voters are acutely concerned about dysfunctional government requires self-confidence bordering on the messianic.

But the same binary formula that helped Obama in the election (as Vice President Joe Biden said, "Don't compare us to the almighty, compare us to the alternative.") is less useful once returned to office. It was easy to convince liberals that it was important to prevent Romney from being president, but more difficult to convince them that Obama is governing the right way.

And House Republicans are not proving nearly so useful as foils as they did in 2011 and 2012.

Senate Democrats have now slammed the door on key Obama policy initiatives. Rather than forcing House Republicans to vote on gun control, the Senate first diluted and then disposed of the president's proposal. And when House Republicans demanded changes to "sequestration" disruptions at airports, the Senate buckled straight away, despite Obama's demand that any changes to the automatic spending reductions be done partly through tax increases.

When the time comes this summer for the fight over a full-year plan for borrowing and spending, Obama will have another chance to pillory House Republicans. But even then, moderate Senate Democrats will make it harder for the president's team to cast the budget as a Manichean struggle.

The dawning realization on the left that retaking the House is next to impossible and that holding on to the Senate will be a tough tote is feeding liberal impatience with the president. If the glories of a second half of a second term are proving illusory, then the time is now for the left to get what it can.

And even if liberal legislation isn't possible in a divided Congress, there's much the president can do on his own.

Every former member of team Obama that rakes in big checks from big business. Every civilian death in Syria. Every missed deadline and exemption on Obamacare. Every new BTU derived from fossil fuel. They all suggest to liberals that Obama doesn't share their sense of urgency.

And Now, A Word From Charles

"If you blow a whistle against a Bush or Reagan, you become a national hero on TV.  If you blow it against Obama, you get into a cone of silence except here and in other extremely select media outlets."

-- 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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