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Boris Johnson Had Unkind Words for Hillary Clinton (WSJ)



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Boris Johnson Had Unkind Words for Hillary Clinton (WSJ)


By Tim Hanrahan

February 10, 2015



The Wall Street Journal
London Mayor Boris Johnson, set to meet with Hillary Clinton on Wednesday, found himself in a bit of hot water over a column he wrote in 2007 that took some jabs of the then-senator.

In the Telegraph column, Mr. Johnson -- today seen as a potential future U.K. prime minister -- said he found himself hoping that Mrs. Clinton would be the next U.S. president, despite his long list of misgivings about her.

“She’s got dyed blonde hair and pouty lips, and a steely blue stare, like a sadistic nurse in a mental hospital,” wrote Mr. Johnson. He added: “[S]he represents, on the face of it, everything I came into politics to oppose: not just a general desire to raise taxes and nationalize things, but an all-round purse-lipped political correctness.”

After a few more digs, Mr. Johnson explains why he was pulling for Mrs. Clinton, instead of the “plainly brilliant” Barack Obama and others: so that former President Bill Clinton could return to the White House as first husband.

In a statement to ITV News Tuesday, Mr. Johnson said: “I’m sure that whatever I’ve said in the past will be taken by the Senator ...in the light-hearted spirit in which it was intended.”

Bill, Hillary tee off; for pay — and to play (SF Chronicle)


Phillip Matier and Andrew Ross

February 11, 2015



The San Francisco Chronicle
Democrats’ other first family, Bill and Hillary Rodham Clinton, are getting into the swing of things around here — both on and off the golf course. Hillary Clinton is scheduled to headline the $295-a-head Lead On conference for women at the Santa Clara Convention Center on Feb. 24. The event is being put on by Watermark, an executive networking group for women, and is being sponsored by a number of prominent Silicon Valley companies, including Cisco and Intel, as well as by the San Francisco 49ers and The Chronicle. Watermark spokeswoman Karen Breslau said the organization does not comment on whether “any speaker is paid or not.” Meanwhile, Bill Clinton, who received $17 million in speech honorariums in 2013, delivered four for-pay talks last week in Oakland, San Rafael and San Mateo as part of the MPSF Speaker Series.

While he was in town, Bill also had time for some good old-fashioned political schmoozing, including a quick morning meet-and-greet with San Francisco Mayor Ed Lee at the Harding Park Golf Course. Afterward, the former president shot 18 holes with a foursome that included city Recreation and Park Commission President Mark Buell, whose wife, Susie Tompkins Buell, has been one of Hillary’s most ardent backers. “I’m always glad to welcome a Clinton to San Francisco,” Lee said of his get-together.So, apparently, was an SUV full of women who spotted Bill Clinton crossing the road and rushed to get his photo and autograph, causing the obliging ex-president to wave off the fast-descending Secret Service. Later, Clinton realized he had left his favorite sand wedge on the course. Rec and Park staff promised to get it to Mark Buell at City Hall.However, when the staffer showed up with club in hand, sheriff’s deputies refused to let it past security. Buell eventually retrieved the club outside City Hall and delivered it that night to Clinton — who greeted its safe return with his trademark toothy grin.

Split rail: It ought to be an interesting BART meeting this week when directors take up the question of what do to — or not do — about the 14 protesters who were arrested after shutting down the system for three hours on the Friday after Thanksgiving. “Right now, I see a three-way split,” said Board of Directors member Joel Keller. At issue is BART’s initial call for Alameda County District Attorney Nancy O’Malley to prosecute and seek $70,000 in restitution from the protesters — or $5,000 each — for losses from the shutdown. BART General Manager Grace Crunican has since backed off on the cash demand, saying she would prefer a payback through community service. The “Black Friday” protesters chained themselves to a BART train at the West Oakland Station, effectively shutting down the system for hours, to call attention to their anger over grand juries’ refusals to indict police officers who killed unarmed black men in New York and Ferguson, Mo.. BART Directors Rebecca Saltzman and Tom Radulovich want both the restitution and the charges dropped altogether. Keller and fellow director Nick Josefowitz have come out for dropping the restitution demand, but supporting whatever charges O’Malley decides to pursue. A third option would be to let the call for prosecution and community service stand. The nine-member board will hash it all out Thursday. “From my count, there are three directors leaning for each of the options,” Keller said.

Crash call: In San Francisco, everything gets political — even a head-on collision with a suspected car thief. At least that was the case for former Assemblyman Tom Ammiano, who was in a crash Saturday night with a suspected car thief who was fleeing from police. As Ammiano described it in an Internet posting, he and a friend were stopped at a red light at Sixth and Mission streets when the suspected thief “ran a red light, nailing 2 or 3 cars and then slammed into us.”Ammiano’s car was totaled, but he and his passenger escaped with “scrapes, bruises and whiplash,” Ammiano wrote. It was while sitting in the ambulance waiting to go to St. Luke’s that things took a political twist. According the Ammiano, a cabbie whose car had also been bashed by the fleeing thief yelled, “I hope this is a wake-up call to run for mayor!” “Only in San Francisco,” Ammiano said.



Inside the Beltway: Where’s Hillary Clinton - and why is she hiding? (Washington Times)


Jennifer Harper

February 11, 2015



The Washington Times
The Republican National Committee is fretting about Hillary Rodham Clinton’s absence from the public arena at the moment. “We’ve noticed it. You’ve noticed it: Hillary Clinton is hiding,” the committee notes in a public memo. “Potential Republican presidential candidates are out in public, speaking to voters, and sharing their ideas. But Hillary Clinton is nowhere to be found.” Their point has resonated. Others parse the who, what, when and where of it all. “Come out, come out wherever you are,” writes the Weekly Standard’s Daniel Halper. “Where in the world is Hillary Clinton? Over the past several weeks, she has been behaving like a reclusive third-world dictator,” declares Washington Free Beacon editor Andrew Stiles.

Journalist and author Sharyl Attkisson wonders why Mrs. Clinton — who once erroneously claimed she was shot at in a Bosnian war zone — isn’t scrutinized as closely as NBC News anchor Brian Williams, who falsely claimed he encountered enemy fire in the skies over Iraq. It’s ironic, Ms. Attkisson told NewsMax TV, that he could lose his career, “yet we didn’t care enough to have it matter with someone who became our Secretary of State.” The point was also brought home by Washington Times columnist Joseph Curl.

The GOP, meanwhile, points out that it has been 202 days since Mrs. Clinton held a press conference, and 184 days since offering a major interview. She has been spotted around Manhattan, enjoying a Broadway show, and appearing at a fundraiser also attended by Mitt and Ann Romney, speaking of irony. Mrs. Clinton had two public speaking engagements in Canada in late January, notable for a moment when she imitated Russia President Vladimir Putin. She is now said to be hard at work on a “modern, aggressive campaign,” according to the Washington Post.

The GOP is not buying any of it.

“Why would a would-be presidential candidate behave this way? Because she’s made a strategic decision that the only way to ensure she is the Democratic nominee is to make everyone think she’s inevitable. The last time she had to face voters and actually compete for the nomination, she lost to a newcomer. She doesn’t want to make the same mistake twice,” the organization continues. “As her poll numbers show, when Hillary is campaigning, she’s much less popular. What’s the only way not to seem like she’s campaigning? Go into hiding.”

FOR THE LEXICON

“Infotainment confusion syndrome.”

— A condition developed by NBC anchor Brian Williams, according to Comedy Central’s fake newsman Jon Stewart, who told a recent audience, “It occurs when the celebrity cortex gets its wires crossed with the medulla anchor-dala.” Mr. Stewart noted that “celeb-rellum” is then activated, adding, “That’s known as the brain’s applause center. Once that engages, there’s no going back.”

And what timing. Late Tuesday, NBC announced that Mr. Williams had been suspended from his newscast for six months minus pay, for his aforementioned fib - in the same hour that Mr. Stewart went public with news he would leave his own show later this year. And as the sages say, hmmm.

CALIFORNIA DREAMIN’

Fire up Air Force One, it’s California fundraising time. In 48 hours, President Obama will travel to Palo Alto to address the Summit on Cybersecurity and Consumer Protection at Stanford University. Well that’s nice. Then it’s on to San Francisco proper for a Democratic National Committee fundraiser — specifically an “intimate dinner” with 60 other fans in the private home of an investment guru, priced at $10,000 a person for dinner and a photo with Mr. Obama, and $32,400 for dinner, a photo and a “co-chair” title.

And just to review, the president attended 71 fundraising events in 2014, this according to an excruciating count by the Sunlight Foundation. But we also must mention that the group also says that New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie went to 109 fundraisers last year in his role as chairman of the Republican Governors Assoc.

Meanwhile, there is some more traveling to come, though. On Valentine’s day, “the President will depart San Francisco and travel to Palm Springs, California where he will remain overnight. Further details about the President’s travel to California will be made available in the coming days,” the White House advised earlier this week.

MCCAUL GETS BUSY

The mission does not end. A House Committee on Homeland Security hearing titled “Countering violent Islamist extremism: The urgent threat of foreign fighters and homegrown terror” has drawn some very helpful witnesses, including Nicholas Rasmussen, director of he National Counterterrorism Center; Francis X. Taylo r, undersecretary for intelligence and analysis at the Department of Homeland Security and Michael B. Steinbach, the FBI’s assistant director for counterterrorism.

“Islamist terror groups like ISIS and Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula are surging, and every day we witness their brutality and senseless violence. The threat they pose to the homeland has reached its highest level since 9/11,” says Rep. Michael McCaul, Texas Republican and committee chairman. “I want to make sure we are doing everything possible to keep that terror from reaching our shores.”

And on the death of Kayla Mueller, an American aid worker who was held hostage by the Islamic State group, Mr. McCaul says, “While Kayla selflessly devoted herself to the cause of helping those in need, violent Islamist extremists like ISIS have devoted themselves to death and destruction. Her death will only strengthen our resolve to destroy these depraved barbarians.”

The hearing is at 10 a.m. ET, and will be carried live by C-SPAN.

ONE FOR A HISTORIC FEBRUARY

Allen Wes t, Ben Carson and Kenneth Blackwell are among the sizable host committee for a Republican gathering of significance on Wednesday. The Republican National Committee hosts the 3rd Annual Black Republican Trailblazer Awards in the nation’s capital, meant to celebrate Black History Month and honor those with “historic victories,” says committee chairman Reince Priebus.

Awards and kudos will go to Sen. Tim Scott, Reps. Will Hurd and Mia Love, plus the late Ed Brooke — who is honored posthumously. The event is at the splendidly restored Howard Theater; onstage with Mr. Priebus and co-chairman Sharon Day: New York Jets owner Woody Johnson, TVOne host and editor Roland Martin, and CNN political analyst Tara Setmayer Love.

VOTE OR ELSE

“More than 100 Hamilton County poll workers got fired for failing to do the one thing that matters most on Election Day. They didn’t vote. The board of elections said goodbye to the 104 workers after learning they had not voted in either the 2013 or 2014 elections, despite spending most of those Election Days in a polling place, surrounded by voters and ballots,” reports the Cincinnati Enquirer.

“I’m frankly kind of shocked by the number of people on that list,” said Tim Burke, chairman of the board and leader of Hamilton County’s Democratic Party. “We want everyone to vote. If we have poll workers who don’t vote, we’re not encouraging that.”

POLL DU JOUR

• 74 percent of Americans say the federal government does not have the right rules and regulations in place to prevent another recession from occurring.

• 55 percent say the U.S. government did a “good” job helping the nation recover from the recession that began in 2007.

• 55 percent say “big business” has recovered from that recession; 52 percent say the stock market has recovered.

• 35 percent say their own family has recovered from the recession; 30 percent say their local real estate market has recovered.

• 27 percent say the same of local job markets have recovered, 18 percent say the same for small businesses.





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