Tag Archives: white

Channing Tatum – „G.I. Joe“-Star Channing Tatum produziert eigene Sitcom

„White House Down“ ist gerade erst abgedreht, schon folgt das nächste Projekt: US-Schauspieler Channing Tatum wird eine neue Sitcom produzieren. Die Show soll unter dem Namen „Nicky“ laufen.

Nachdem letzte Woche sein erstes Kind zur Welt kam, gibt es bei Channing Tatum (33,

„21 Jump Street“

) schon wieder Neuigkeiten. Er wird die neue Sitcom „Nicky“ produzieren. Mit an Bord: Seine Freunde und Kollegen Reid Carolin (31) und Nick Zano (35,

„2 Broke Girls“

). Carolin und Tatum werden die Serie mit ihrer gemeinsamen Firma produzieren, Zano übernimmt die Rolle des Co-Produzenten, berichtet „Deadline“. Aber Zano ist noch stärker eingebunden.

Ab August erhältlich, schon jetzt hier vorbestellbar: Channing Tatum in „G.I.Joe: Die Abrechnung“

Der Schauspieler wird auch die Hauptrolle übernehmen und hat außerdem am Drehbuch mitgearbeitet. Kein Wunder also, dass sich die Story um Zanos Leben dreht, der in einem Mehrgenerationen-Haus zusammen mit sieben Frauen aufgewachsen ist. In der Sitcom spielt er den 30-jährigen Nicky. Der will eigentlich von daheim ausziehen, bleibt aber doch, um seine kleine Schwester aufzuziehen.

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Channing Tatum – „G.I. Joe“-Star Channing Tatum produziert eigene Sitcom

Apple Publishes iOS 7 Transition Guide To Help Developers Adopt Flat Design

As expected, Apple is introducing a completely new design language for iOS 7. For developers, this means they will have to adapt their apps to match the rest of the operating system if they don’t want them to look antiquated. Thankfully, Apple today also published a pretty extensive guide to designing for iOS 7 and transitioning apps to the new version that helps developers understand how they should use new UI elements like borderless buttons, translucent bars and full-screen layouts for their apps. As Apple notes, iOS 7 provides “a rare opportunity to revisit the way apps communicate their core purpose and functionality to users.” Here are Apple’s three main themes for developing for iOS 7: Deference. The UI helps users understand and interact with the content, but never competes with it

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Apple Publishes iOS 7 Transition Guide To Help Developers Adopt Flat Design

Susan Rice to be U.S. security adviser

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

  • NEW: President Obama names U.N. envoy Susan Rice his national security adviser
  • Columnist John Avlon says Obama made a “fascinating, decisive move”
  • Obama will nominate Samantha Power as U.N. ambassador
  • GOP opposition forced Rice to withdraw from consideration to be secretary of state

Washington (CNN) — In one move Wednesday, President Barack Obama managed to reshape his national security team, bring longtime confidante Susan Rice to the White House and annoy Republican critics of the U.N. ambassador.

Obama announced in the White House Rose Garden that Rice, who got caught up in political controversy over the Benghazi, Libya, terrorist attack, will replace the retiring Tom Donilon in the influential foreign policy post of national security adviser.

Donilon will step down in July following this weekend’s meetings between Obama and Chinese President Xi Jinping.

The president also said he would nominate Samantha Power of the National Security Council to succeed Rice at the United Nations.

Two explosions near the finish line of the Boston Marathon on April 15, 2013, killed three and injured more than 260 others. Tamerlan Suspect Tsarnaev died after a violent confrontation with police while his brother, Dzhokhar, was captured. Federal officials have declared the attacks an act of terror. As President Obama announces a new national security team, here is a look at key moments in national security since 2009:Two explosions near the finish line of the Boston Marathon on April 15, 2013, killed three and injured more than 260 others. Tamerlan Suspect Tsarnaev died after a violent confrontation with police while his brother, Dzhokhar, was captured. Federal officials have declared the attacks an act of terror. As President Obama announces a new national security team, here is a look at key moments in national security since 2009:

Boston bombings | 2013

Use of drones | 2012

Killing Osama bin Laden | 2011

North Korea | 2013

Arab Spring | 2011

Libya | 2011

Attack in Benghazi | 2012

Times Square bombing | 2010

Chinese hackers | 2013

Somali pirates | 2009

Guantanamo Bay | 2009

Iraq pullout | 2011

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By choosing two women known as advocates for human rights, including the NATO-led intervention in Libya with U.S. support, Obama signaled a potentially more robust foreign policy in his second term.

At the same time, his decision to make Rice the head of his national security team angered Republicans who are demanding further details on what they believe was a politically motivated effort by the administration to downplay the Benghazi attack in the middle of last year’s election campaign.

While Obama made no direct reference to the politics of the announcement, he praised Rice for being “fearless, tough” and a great patriot who champions justice and human dignity.

“I’m absolutely thrilled she’ll be back at my side, leading my national security team for my second term,” Obama said with a smiling Rice at his side.

Rice became the focus of Republican criticism after the terrorist attack last September 11 on a U.S. diplomatic post in Benghazi that killed four Americans, including Ambassador Christopher Stevens.

Five days after the assault that came on the anniversary of the 2001 terror attacks, Rice appeared on Sunday news shows to say it was a spontaneous development during a protest, rather than a terrorist strike.

She had been considered a top contender to succeed Secretary of State Hillary Clinton at the start of Obama’s second term, but Republican opposition over the erroneous CIA talking points she had delivered forced her to withdraw her name from consideration in December.

Biden on Susan Rice: She speaks for the president

Obama ultimately nominated former U.S. Sen. John Kerry for the post.

As national security adviser, Rice will play a key role in developing and guiding the administration’s foreign policy.

Unlike a Cabinet post, the appointment requires no Senate confirmation, allowing Obama to avoid a showdown with Republicans in giving a new job to one of his most public foreign policy voices during the 2008 presidential campaign.

Rice also has been a deputy secretary of state and was previously considered a possible candidate for the national security adviser job when Obama appointed Donilon.

She said Wednesday that she was “humbled” to serve as Obama’s national security adviser and thanked the president for his confidence in her.

Mindful of the need to work with the various government, law enforcement and military entities involved in national security, she declared her admiration for “the exemplary work done every day by our colleagues at State, Defense, the intelligence community and across the government” to keep the nation safe.

To columnist and CNN Contributor John Avlon, Obama’s choice of Rice and Power showed the freedom he felt now that he won the last election of his career last year.

“Susan Rice is not on the Republicans’ Christmas card list, but this appointment, which doesn’t need Senate confirmation, is being read as a slap in the face,” Avlon said. “President Obama says he doesn’t much care. He is rewarding Susan Rice for her loyalty to his administration and moving her into the White House. She can have more influence now than she ever did on White House policy.”

He called it a “fascinating, decisive move” by a president “who is apparently liberated by a second term, who is not worried about burning bridges with Republicans and Congress who are already his critics.”

Republicans immediately criticized Obama’s choice, with conservative GOP Rep. Jason Chaffetz of Utah tweeting: “Judgement is key to national security matters. That alone should disqualify Susan Rice from her appointment.”

Sen. John McCain of Arizona, a leading Republican voice on foreign policy, tweeted that he disagreed with Obama’s appointment but added that he would “make every effort to work” with Rice on important issues.

In a statement later Wednesday, McCain expressed support for Power, calling her “well-qualified” for the job as U.N. ambassador and saying he hoped the Senate would act quickly on her nomination.

Power worked for Obama’s campaign in 2008 until she resigned after referring to Clinton — the other leading Democratic contender at the time — as a “monster.”

She is senior director for multilateral affairs and human rights at the National Security Council and a former special assistant to the president. Power also has written extensively on preventing genocide, with criticism of the United Nations for failing to stop attacks in Bosnia and Rwanda.

Avlon called Obama’s move “a coalescing within the Obama administration” by promoting “two women who are in policy terms not that far from their Republican critics. “

“The president is circling the wagons, appointing stronger supporters from his inner circle. That’s what second-term presidents do,” Avlon said, adding “these are actually strong, confident moves in a Democratic foreign policy that believes in humanitarian intervention.”

Now, he said, the roles of Rice and Power raise “real questions about what the administration will do going forward in Syria,” where critics at home and abroad contend the Obama administration has failed to intervene as needed.

Obama called himself “wistful” to be losing Donilon, the former deputy national security adviser who Obama picked to replace retired Marine Gen. Jim Jones in October 2010. Donilon was heavily involved in the raid to kill Osama bin Laden in 2011, as well as the administration’s strategic shift of foreign policy focus to Asia.

Donilon, who also was chief of staff to Secretary of State Warren Christopher in the Clinton administration, is married to Cathy Russell, whom Obama recently nominated to be the State Department’s ambassador at large for global women’s issues.

The president lauded Donilon’s commitment, including in-person briefings almost every day in recent years on a portfolio that covered “literally the entire world.”

“I’m personally grateful for your advice, for your counsel, most of all for your friendship,” Obama said, adding that “a president can’t ask for anything more” than the contributions and service of Donilon.

When he finished, the two men shook hands and embraced.

Obama nominates three to bench, courts political fight

CNN’s Jim Acosta and Adam Aigner-Treworgy contributed to this report.

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Susan Rice to be U.S. security adviser

Erfolgreicher Überschall-Testflug – Touristen können bald Urlaub im Weltraum machen

Der Traum vom Urlaub im All ist für rund 150 ;000 Euro vielleicht schon zum Jahresende möglich. Die Raumkapsel „SpaceShipTwo“ hat einen weiteren Test erfolgreich bestanden. Über 500 Touristen haben schon gebucht – auch Schauspieler Ashton Kutcher.

Mit einem erfolgreichen Überschall-Testflug der Raumkapsel „SpaceShipTwo“ sind geplante Touristenflüge ins All näher gerückt. Nach Mitteilung des Unternehmens

Virgin Galactic

fand der Test am Montagmorgen in der kalifornischen Mojave-Wüste statt.

„SpaceShipTwo“ wurde an Bord des Trägerflugzeugs „WhiteKnightTwo“ in etwa 14 Kilometer Höhe gebracht und dort ausgeklinkt. Nach Zündung der eigenen Raketentriebwerke erreichte „SpaceShipTwo“ kurzzeitig Überschallgeschwindigkeit und eine Höhe von 17 Kilometern. Die von zwei Testpiloten gesteuerte Kapsel landete anschließend auf einer Landebahn.

Sechs Passagiere können Platz nehmen

Virgin-Galactic-Gründer Richard Branson

verfolgte den Test vor Ort mit. Erstmals sei es gelungen, die Schlüsselkomponenten bei einem Flugeinsatz zu testen, sagte der britische Unternehmer in einer Mitteilung. Dieser Erfolg würde nun zu einer raschen Ausweitung ihrer Tests führen, mit dem „sehr realistischen Ziel eines Raumflugs bis zum Jahresende“.

Das 18 Meter lange „SpaceShipTwo“ bietet zwei Piloten und sechs Passagieren Platz. Es soll bei den geplanten Weltraumflügen mit Raketenantrieb auf 110 Kilometer Höhe steigen. Die Passagiere sind dann einige Minuten schwerelos.

Ausflug ins All ist bereits billiger geworden

Mehr als 500 Menschen haben schon einen Flug gebucht, darunter die deutsche Unternehmerin Sonja Rohde und der US-Schauspieler Ashton Kutcher. Die Kosten für den Zweieinhalb-Stunden-Trip mit einigen Minuten Schwerelosigkeit liegen bei 200 ;000 Dollar (150 ;000 Euro).

Flüge ins All mit dem Ziel Internationale Raumstation ISS gibt es für Touristen bereits seit 2001. Sie sind jedoch erheblich teurer. Als erster Tourist im Weltraum ist Dennis Tito für rund 20 Millionen Dollar (15 Millionen Euro) zur ISS geflogen, seitdem haben

sechs weitere Gäste

für enorme Summen die Station besucht.

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Erfolgreicher Überschall-Testflug – Touristen können bald Urlaub im Weltraum machen

Cannes – Dior ist Modesieger in Cannes

Neben den Film-Premieren beherrschte ein weiteres Thema die diesjährigen Filmfestspiele in Cannes: die Mode. Absoluter Favorit unter den Designern 2013 war der Belgier Raf Simons, der für die Edelmarke Dior kreiert.

Die Stars in Cannes waren sich einig. Absoluter Top-Favorit unter den Designern dieses Jahr war der Belgier Raf Simons (45). Jennifer Lawrence (22), Marion Cotillard (37), Nicole Kidman (45) und viele andere Hollywood-Schönheiten legten die Kleiderfrage für die 66. Filmfestspiele an der Cote d´Azur vertrauensvoll in die Hände des Modeschöpfers aus dem Hause Dior.

Ob die Stars wohl auch das passende Parfüm zu ihren Outfits trugen? Hier gibt´s die ultimative Duftauswahl aus dem Hause Dior

Jennifer Lawrence präsentierte sich den Kameras im glamourösen Black-and-White Look. Die schulterfreie, körperbetonte, bodenlange Robe machte sie zum Hingucker des Abends. Jury-Mitglied Kidman hingegen wählte eine etwas farbenfrohere Variante. Das sommerliche, trägerlose Blümchenkleid kombinierte die Schauspielerin mit pinken Pumps. Cotillard punktete in Streifenoptik und einem Dior-Traum aus weiß, schwarz, blau und gelb. Dazu dezenter Silberschmuck und elegante Hochsteckfrisur – absolut ladylike!

Auch „The Great Gatsby“-Star Carey Mulligan (28) wollte sich die Edelmarke nicht entgehen lassen und erschien in tief dekolletiertem Elfenkleid. Genauso im Trend lag Schauspielerin Rooney Mara (28), ebenso wie Lawrence. Und auch Model Rosie Huntington-Whiteley (26) sah in ihrem schneeweißen, schulterfreien Minikleid und den farblich passenden Pumps einfach hinreißend aus.

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Cannes – Dior ist Modesieger in Cannes

LG announces white Nexus 4, will launch internationally starting May 29

LG1 520x245 LG announces white Nexus 4, will launch internationally starting May 29

LG confirmed today that it will be launching a white version of its popular Nexus 4 smartphone on May 29, starting with Hong Kong before a wider roll-out in Asia, North America, Europe and the Middle East over the coming weeks.

The refreshed Nexus 4 will be equipped with exactly the same hardware as its predecessor, including a 4.7-inch display with a 768×1280 resolution (318 ppi). It’s also powered by a 1.5 GHz quad-core Qualcomm APQ8064 Snapdragon processor, as well as 2GB of RAM and either 8GB or 16GB of internal storage.

There’s also an 8-megapixel rear-facing camera capable of shooting 1080p video at 30 frames per second, as well as a weaker 1.3-megapixel counterpart on the front. It’s also powered by the same non-removable 2100 mAh battery and doesn’t support LTE connectivity.

LG NEXUS4 WHITE1 LG announces white Nexus 4, will launch internationally starting May 29

Perhaps most importantly, the white Nexus 4 runs stock Android out of the box, without any form of pre-installed skin, themes or apps (i.e. bloatware) from LG.

“Nexus 4 set the standard for Android 4.2 Jelly Bean smartphones,” said Dr. Jong-seok Park, president and CEO of LG Mobile Communications Company. “Nexus 4 White delivers the same Google experience to consumers in a stylish and attractive color option.”

The Nexus 4 is still an incredibly affordable device, but it faces some stiff competition from the Samsung Galaxy S4 and HTC One. Both have received considerable spec bumps over their predecessors, but will set consumers back a fair old amount for a SIM-free version.

Google also unveiled a new ‘Google Edition’ of the Samsung Galaxy S4 at its annual I/O developer conference. The new variant also runs stock Android out of the box, making it a compelling choice for developers and those looking for a so-called ‘pure’ Android experience on their smartphone.

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LG announces white Nexus 4, will launch internationally starting May 29

Former IRS commissioner heads to Hill amid scandal

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(AP) — Lawmakers are getting their first chance to question the former head of the Internal Revenue Service, the man who ran the agency when agents were improperly targeting tea party groups.

Some of the questions on Tuesday will be direct: What did you know, and when did you know it?

They also want to know why former IRS Commissioner Douglas Shulman didn’t tell Congress that agents had been singling out conservative political groups for additional scrutiny when they applied for tax-exempt status — even after he was briefed.

Shulman, who was appointed by President George W. Bush, left the IRS in November when his five-year term ended. He could prove to be a significant player in a scandal that has driven the Obama administration to distraction. Shulman is testifying before the Senate Finance Committee, which has launched a bipartisan investigation into the matter.

On Monday, the White House revealed that chief of staff Denis McDonough and other senior presidential advisers knew in late April that an upcoming inspector general’s report was likely to find that IRS employees had inappropriately targeted conservative political groups.

The White House says McDonough and the other advisers did not tell President Barack Obama about the impending report, leaving him to learn the results from news reports on May 10. White House press secretary Jay Carney said Obama was comfortable with the fact that “some matters are not appropriate to convey to him, and this is one of them.”

A Treasury official also disclosed Monday that the department told the White House twice in late April about IRS plans to address the targeting publicly, including during congressional testimony and a possible speech by Lois Lerner, the head of the IRS division that oversees tax-exempt groups. White House deputy chief of staff Mark Childress and Treasury chief of staff Mark Patterson were in communication on the matter, as were lawyers at the White House and Treasury.

However, the official said Treasury did not tell the White House about Lerner’s eventual decision to apologize for the targeting at a conference on May 10. The official was not authorized to discuss the matter publicly and insisted on anonymity.

The IRS is an independent agency within the Treasury Department. Because of that independent status, the official said Treasury deferred to the IRS in its decision about how to make the targeting public.

A new poll by the Pew Research Center says 42 percent of adults think the Obama administration was involved in targeting conservative groups. Thirty-one percent said the decision was made by IRS employees, while the rest said they didn’t know.

On Monday, the panel’s top two members raised questions about the agency’s rationale for why agents targeted conservative groups in the first place. IRS officials have said the agency was facing a large increase in the number of applications for tax-exempt status, so agents adopted inappropriate shortcuts to identify groups that may be involved in political activity.

But at the time when agents started targeting conservative groups, the number of applications was relatively flat, according to a report by the agency’s inspector general.

Committee Chairman Max Baucus, D-Mont., and Utah Sen. Orrin Hatch, the ranking Republican, sent a letter to the agency Monday, asking for an explanation. The letter included 41 separate requests for information. They gave the IRS until May 31 to respond.

The two senators said the IRS had not been forthcoming about the issue in the past.

“Targeting applicants for tax-exempt status using political labels threatens to undermine the public’s trust in the IRS,” Baucus and Hatch wrote. “Lack of candor in advising the Senate of this practice is equally troubling.”

For more than a year, from 2011 through the 2012 election, members of Congress repeatedly asked Shulman about complaints from tea party groups that they were being harassed by the IRS.

Shulman’s responses, usually relayed by a deputy, did not acknowledge that agents had ever targeted tea party groups for special scrutiny. At a congressional hearing March 22, 2012, Shulman was adamant in his denials.

“There’s absolutely no targeting. This is the kind of back and forth that happens to people” who apply for tax-exempt status, Shulman said at the House Ways and Means subcommittee hearing.

The IRS has said Shulman did not know about the targeting at the time of the hearing.

The agency’s inspector general says he told Shulman on May 30, 2012, that his office was auditing the way applications for tax-exempt status were being handled, in part because of complaints from conservative groups. However, the inspector general, J. Russell George, said he did not reveal the results of his investigation.

George was also testifying at Tuesday’s hearing. So was Steven Miller, who took over as acting commissioner in November, when Shulman’s term expired. Last week, Obama forced Miller to resign.

George issued a report last week blaming ineffective management for allowing agents to inappropriately target conservative groups for more than 18 months during the 2010 and 2012 elections.

The agents were trying to determine whether the groups were engaged in political activity. Certain tax-exempt groups are allowed to engage in politics, but politics cannot be their primary mission. It is up to the IRS to make the determination, so agents are supposed to look for clues when reviewing applications for tax-exempt status.

In March 2010, agents starting singling out groups with “Tea Party” or “Patriots” on their applications. By August 2010, it was part of the written criteria for identifying groups that required more scrutiny, according to George’s report.

Agents did not flag similar progressive or liberal labels, though some liberal groups received additional scrutiny because their applications were singled out for other reasons, the report said.

___

AP White House Correspondent Julie Pace contributed to this report.

___

Follow Stephen Ohlemacher on Twitter: http://twitter.com/stephenatap

Associated Press

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Former IRS commissioner heads to Hill amid scandal

Obama agenda marches on despite controversies

President Barack Obama speaks about jobs, at Ellicott Dredges in Baltimore, Friday, May 17, 2013, during his second “Middle Class Jobs and Opportunity Tour”. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

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(AP) — Despite Democratic fears, predictions of the demise of President Barack Obama’s agenda appear exaggerated after a week of cascading controversies, political triage by the administration and party leaders in Congress and lack of evidence to date of wrongdoing close to the Oval Office.

“Absolutely not,” Steven Miller, the recently resigned acting head of the Internal Revenue Service, responded Friday when asked if he had any contact with the White House about targeting conservative groups seeking tax-exempt status for special treatment.

“The president’s re-election campaign?” persisted Rep. Devin Nunes, R-Calif.

“No,” said Miller.

The hearing took place at the end of a week in which Republicans repeatedly assailed Obama and were attacked by Democrats in turn — yet sweeping immigration legislation advanced methodically toward bipartisan approval in the Senate Judiciary Committee. The measure “has strong support of its own in the Senate,” said Sen. Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn., a member of the panel.

Across the Capitol, a bipartisan House group reported agreement in principle toward a compromise on the issue, which looms as Obama’s best chance for a signature second-term domestic achievement. “I continue to believe that the House needs to deal with this,” said House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, who is not directly involved in the talks.

The president’s nominee to become energy secretary, Ernest Moniz, won Senate confirmation, 97-0. And there were signs that Republicans might allow confirmation of Sri Srinivasan to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, sometimes a stepping stone to the Supreme Court.

Separately, a House committee approved legislation to prevent a spike in interest rates on student loans on July 1. It moves in the direction of a White House-backed proposal for future rate changes to be based on private markets.

Even so, Rep. Fred Upton, R-Mich., chairman of the Energy and Commerce Committee, said, “It’s been a bad week for the administration.”

Several Democratic lawmakers and aides agreed and expressed concern about the impact on Obama’s agenda — even though much of it has been stymied by Republicans for months already.

At the same time, Rep. Dave Camp, R-Mich., voiced optimism that the IRS controversy would boost the push for an overhaul of the tax code, rather than derail it. “It may make a case for a simpler tax code, where the IRS has less discretion,” he said.

Long-term budget issues, the main flash point of divided government since 2011, have receded as projected deficits fall in the wake of an improving economy and recently enacted spending cuts and tax increases.

Even before Obama began grappling with the IRS, the fallout from last year’s deadly attack on the U.S. diplomatic mission in Benghazi, Libya, and from the Justice Department’s secret seizure of Associated Press phone records, the two parties were at odds over steps to replace $85 billion in across-the-board spending cuts. In particular, Obama’s call for higher taxes is a nonstarter with Republicans.

Other high-profile legislation and presidential appointees face difficulties that predate the current controversies.

Months ago, Obama scaled back requested gun safety legislation to center on expanded background checks for firearms purchasers. That was derailed in the Senate, has even less chance in the House and is unlikely to reach the president’s desk.

Republicans oppose other recommendations from the president’s State of the Union address, including automatic increases in the minimum wage, a pre-kindergarten program funded by higher cigarette taxes and more federal money for highways and bridge repair.

In a clash that long predates the IRS controversy, Senate Republicans seem intent on blocking Obama’s nomination of Tom Perez as labor secretary. Gina McCarthy’s nomination to head the Environmental Protection Agency is also on hold, at least temporarily, and Democrats expect Republican opposition awaits Penny Pritzker, Obama’s choice for commerce secretary.

Rhetorically, the two parties fell into two camps when it came to the White House troubles. Democrats tended to describe them as controversies, Republicans often used less flattering terms.

Speaking on the Senate floor, Sen. Roger Wicker, R-Miss., accused the administration of fostering a “culture of intimidation.” He referred to the IRS, the handling of the Benghazi attack and Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius’ “fundraising among the industry people she regulates on behalf of the president’s health care law.”

Two days later, Camp, a 23-year veteran lawmaker, opened the IRS hearing by calling the agency’s actions part of a “culture of cover-ups and intimidation in this administration.” He offered no other examples.

Rep. Trey Radel, a first-term Florida Republican, said in an interview, “What we’re looking at now is a breach of trust” from the White House.

House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi of California offered a scathing response when asked if the controversies would hamper Obama’s ability to win legislation from the Republican-controlled House. “Well, the last two years there was nothing that went through this Congress, and it was no AP, IRS or any other (thing) that we were dealing with.”

“They just want to do nothing. And their timetable is never,” she said of GOP lawmakers.

Similarly, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid gave no ground on Benghazi, a dispute that increasingly centered on talking points written for administration officials to use on television after the attack last September in which U.S. Ambassador Chris Stevens and three other Americans were killed.

“It’s obvious it’s an attempt to embarrass President Obama and embarrass Hillary Clinton,” he said of Republican criticism that first flared during last year’s election campaign.

On a third front, Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., resurrected legislation that would requiring a judge to approve subpoenas for news media communications records when investigating news leaks said to threaten the national security. It was a response to the FBI’s secret, successful pursuit of Associated Press phone records in a current probe.

While Democrats counterattacked on Benghazi and parried on leaks, they bashed the IRS’ treatment of conservative groups as improper if not illegal — and warned Republicans not to overplay their hand.

Associated Press

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Obama agenda marches on despite controversies

Obama focusing on job creation in Baltimore visit

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(AP) — President Barack Obama is leaving behind scandal-focused Washington to focus on the country’s slowly improving jobs picture.

Obama is to fly by helicopter Friday about 40 miles north to Baltimore, which has had its share of tough times in the move from an industrial to service economy. But Maryland has experienced steady job growth so far this year as part of a nationwide economic recovery.

The White House said the trip is designed to focus on three areas of needed investment to grow the middle class — jobs, skills and opportunity.

The president plans to highlight one of the manufacturing companies still thriving in the city by speaking at Ellicott Dredges. It makes equipment for excavation under water and on beachfronts around the world.

Obama also plans to visit a community center that provides job training to parents and an elementary school that provides early childhood education. Obama has proposed that public preschool be available for all 4-year-olds from low-income families.

At Ellicott Dredges, Obama was to announce that he signed a memorandum to cut timelines in half for the permit process for major federal infrastructure projects. The White House said it’s an important step in his goal of creating jobs by making urgent repairs to roads, bridges and railways.

The focus on Obama’s economic agenda comes at the end of a week that has been consumed by a trio of controversies. They include the targeting of conservative political groups by the Internal Revenue Service, the administration’s response to last year’s deadly attack on a U.S. diplomatic facility in Benghazi, Libya, and the seizure of Associated Press phone records by the Justice Department as part of a leak investigation.

Obama’s turn to the economy comes in a state that added 4,700 jobs in March, according to preliminary data released last month by the U.S. Labor Department’s Bureau of Labor Statistics. That marked Maryland’s fourth consecutive month of job growth. The Maryland Department of Labor, Licensing and Regulation says the state has recovered nearly 97 percent of the jobs lost in the recession. Maryland’s unemployment rate held at 6.6 percent in March.

“Last year, we had the best-rated job creation of any state in our region and we have very nearly recovered 100 percent of the jobs that we lost during the recession,” Maryland Gov. Martin O’Malley said at a bill-signing ceremony on Thursday.

___

Associated Press writer Brian Witte in Annapolis, Md., contributed to this report.

Associated Press

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Obama focusing on job creation in Baltimore visit

Ouster of IRS official isn’t ending investigations

President Barack Obama speaks on the Internal Revenue Service’s targeting of conservative groups for extra tax scrutiny in the East Room of the White House in Washington, Wednesday May 15, 2013. Obama announced the resignation of Acting IRS Commissioner Steven Miller, the top official at the IRS. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)

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(AP) — Don’t look for the outcry over the Internal Revenue Service’s improper targeting of tea party groups to subside with the ouster of the agency’s acting commissioner.

Three congressional committees are investigating and the FBI is looking into potential civil rights violations at the IRS, Attorney General Eric Holder said.

Other potential crimes include making false statements to authorities and violating the Hatch Act, which prohibits federal employees from engaging in some partisan political activities, Holder said.

President Barack Obama said Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew had asked for and accepted Steven T. Miller’s resignation.

“Americans are right to be angry about it, and I am angry about it,” Obama said Wednesday evening in a televised statement from the White House. “I will not tolerate this kind of behavior in any agency but especially in the IRS, given the power that it has and the reach that it has into all of our lives.”

Miller’s ouster came five days after an IRS supervisor publicly revealed that agents had improperly targeted groups with “tea party” or “patriots” in their applications for tax-exempt status. It came a day after an inspector general’s report blamed ineffective management in Washington for allowing it to happen for more than 18 months.

The report said tea party groups were asked inappropriate questions about their donors, their political affiliations and their positions on political issues, resulting in delays averaging nearly two years for applications to be processed.

Miller, a 25-year IRS veteran, took over the agency in November, when the five-year term of Commissioner Douglas Shulman ended. Shulman was appointed by President George W. Bush.

Obama has yet to nominate a permanent successor. A new acting commissioner was not announced Wednesday evening.

In an email to employees, Miller said: “This has been an incredibly difficult time for the IRS given the events of the past few days, and there is a strong and immediate need to restore public trust in the nation’s tax agency. I believe the service will benefit from having a new acting commissioner in place during this challenging period.”

At the time when tea party groups were targeted, Miller was a deputy commissioner who oversaw the division that dealt with tax-exempt organizations.

The report by the Treasury inspector general for tax administration does not indicate that Miller knew conservative groups were being targeted until after the practice ended. But documents show that Miller repeatedly failed to tell Congress that tea party groups were being targeted, even after he had been briefed on the matter.

The IRS said Miller was first informed on May, 3, 2012, that applications for tax-exempt status by tea party groups were inappropriately singled out for extra, sometimes burdensome scrutiny.

At least twice after the briefing, Miller wrote letters to members of Congress to explain the process of reviewing applications for tax-exempt status without disclosing that tea party groups had been targeted. On July 25, 2012, Miller testified before the House Ways and Means oversight subcommittee but again was not forthcoming on the issue — despite being asked about it.

In all, members of Congress sent at least eight letters to the IRS over the past two years, asking about complaints from conservative groups that they were being harassed by the IRS. None of the IRS responses acknowledged that conservative groups were targeted.

Miller was scheduled to testify Friday at a Ways and Means hearing. A committee aide said Wednesday evening that Miller was still expected to attend the hearing.

“These allegations are serious — that there was an effort to bring the power of the federal government to bear on those the administration disagreed with, in the middle of a heated national election,” said Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky. “We are determined to get answers.”

The Justice Department opened its criminal investigation last Friday, Holder said.

“I can assure you and the American people that we will take a dispassionate view of this,” Holder told the House Judiciary Committee at a hearing Wednesday. “This will not be about parties, this will not be about ideological persuasions. Anybody who has broken the law will be held accountable.”

But, Holder said, it will take time to determine if there was criminal wrongdoing.

Wednesday’s hearing was the first of several in Congress that will focus on the issue. The House Oversight Committee announced Wednesday that it would hold a hearing May 22, featuring Lois Lerner, the head of the IRS division that oversees tax exempt organizations, and Shulman, the former commissioner.

The Senate Finance Committee announced a hearing for next Tuesday.

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Follow Stephen Ohlemacher on Twitter: http://twitter.com/stephenatap

Associated Press

Taken from: 

Ouster of IRS official isn’t ending investigations