Her support among Republicans has shrunk. She's kept an unusually low profile. And there's no evidence that she's anywhere close to announcing whether she will run for president. But it's clear she still necessities to be part of the conversation.
After weeks of seemingly staying on the sidelines, the GOP's 2008 vice presidential nominee is back with public appearance, fiery criticism of President Barack Obama and a physically powerful defense of Donald Trump, the reality TV show congregation who has raised questions about the president's background without offering any proof of his assertions.
President Obama and the first lady determination travel to the south this morning, following the deadly storms that left more than 300 dead across six states this week. Obama will visit the hardest hit state, Alabama, where at least 210 people were killed. Elsewhere in the region, Mississippi report 32 fatalities, Tennessee had 34, Georgia with at least 15, Virginia had 5 and Arkansas with 13.
"In a matter of hours, these deadly tornadoes took mothers and fathers, sons and daughters, friends and neighbors, even entire communities," Obama said Thursday. Obama is expected to tour the debris while on his way to Cape Canaveral for the launch of the space shuttle Endeavour in Florida. He pledge full federal government support on behalf of all those affected by the storms and signed a disaster declaration for Alabama to assist in recovery and clean up pains from the tornado destruction.
Parsing Rhetoric on Government Spending, Savings from Budget Deal Will the bipartisan deal with the intention of shaved $38.5 billion as of the central budget for 2011 immediately affect the soaring deficit so many Americans say they're worried about. The answer is not really, according to the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office, a group of accountants along with analysts who study the plans. The agency says the much-touted deal, approved Thursday, will only set aside $352 million through the end of the fiscal year a tiny division of the $1.4 trillion the U.S. has spent beyond its means.
As the high cost of gasoline takes a toll on politics and pocket books, President Barack Obama said Tuesday he be calling on major oil producers such as Saudi Arabia to increase their oil supplies to help stabilize prices, warning starkly that lack of relief would harm the global economy.
"We are in a lot of conversations with the major oil producers like Saudi Arabia to let them know that it's not going to be good for them if our economy is hobbled because of high oil prices," Obama told a Detroit TV station. His annotations signaled a broad new appeal in the face of skyrocket gasoline prices in the United States and they came as he reiterated a call for Congress to repeal oil industry tax breaks.
At least seven deaths have been reported in connection with a series of tornadoes and severe weather with the intention of ripped through several states from Kentucky to Tennessee Monday, authorities said. Forecasters anticipate more rain and storms today to slam across the Midwest, as the system moves east.
In Arkansas, three people were killed in rising floodwaters and two died in a town where a possible tornado barreled through Monday, according to the Associated Press. In Vilonia, Ark., north of Little Rock, where a possible whirlwind killed two people, Caroline Thompson recalled taking cover seeing that the storm approached. "We all ended up in the closet. And then you possibly will just hear crashing and stuff being knocked around and blown around. And it tore us up," Thompson said.
Taliban militants dug a long-lasting tunnel underground and into the main jail in Kandahar city and whisked out more than 450 prisoners, most of whom were Taliban fighters, officials and insurgent said Monday.
The massive overnight jailbreak in Afghanistan's second-largest city underscores the Afghan government continuing weakness in the south despite an influx of international troops, funding and advisers. Kandahar city, in particular, has be a focus of the intercontinental effort to establish a strong Afghan government presence in former Taliban strongholds.
A year after the disastrous Gulf oil spill, the prospect of a major accident in oil's next frontier - the icy waters off Alaska's north coast - has experts even more concerned.
With no roads connecting remote coastal towns, storms and fog that can ground aircraft, no deepwater ports for ships and the nearest Coast Guard station about 1,000 miles away - it would be nearly impossible to respond on the scale that was needed last year to stop the runaway oil well and clean up the mess. That means the burden to respond would rest to an even greater degree on the company doing the drilling.
Iraq's prime minister has told the top U.S. military officer that Iraqi forces are able to maintain safekeeping in their own country, as discussions intensify larger than whether to keep any U.S. forces in Iraq past this year.
Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki made the remark during a late Thursday meeting with Adm. Mike Mullen, the chairman of the U.S. combined Chiefs of Staff. Mullen’s visit comes as U.S. and Iraqi officials are trying to decide what, if any, U.S. troop presence be supposed to remain in Iraq subsequent to the end of this year.An agreement between both countries stipulates that all American forces are to leave by Dec. 31.
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Requirements Designed to Help Passengers, Officials Say; Industry Groups Raise Cost Questions For Americans who have had their baggage lost on flights, or who have spent hours stuck on the tarmac without creature allowed to use the bathrooms, a new set of rules the Department of Transportation put in place today will come as a relief.
The Obama administration has introduced new passenger protection measures that would impose fines on airlines for losing baggage and kicking off travelers from overbooked flights. Under the new guiding principle, airlines would have to give money back baggage fees in the case of a lost bag, in addition to the compensation they already pay. There will be an additional incriminate for even-tempered delays in getting passengers their bags, though the DOT has not clarified what it considers unreasonable.
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President Obama has gotten no bounce from his reelection campaign announcement, with his job approval rating dropping by 7 entitlement points since January, his personal popularity at a career low along with 57 percent of Americans censorious of his handling of the economy. Yet he leads the potential GOP field.
There are chances for the Republicans in next year's elections, with former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney and former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, in particular, nipping close to Obama in the latest News-Washington Post poll. Economic pessimism, its highest in two years amid high-ceilinged gab prices, raises serious political peril for the head. But he benefits from two factors: personal approval that, while down, still exceeds his job rating, and considerable doubts about the opposing party's lineup.
More than 100 employees and customers at a home improvement store, crammed shoulder-to-shoulder seeking safety from solitary of the deadly storms that rip through the South, screamed in near unison once the steel roof curled off overhead, the store's manager said Sunday.
They all made it out alive Saturday, thanks to quick action by Lowe's store administrator Michael Hollowell and his employees, who carried out an urgent situation response plan they had learned. They herd all and sundry to the windowless rear area of the store, away from the through hit out front.
President Barack Obama confidently predict Friday that a divided Congress would raise the nation borrow limit to cover the staggering federal debt rather than risk triggering a worldwide recession, but he accepted for the first time he would have to offer more spending cuts to Republicans to acquire a deal.
Pushed to the brink, Obama said, the two parties would find "a smart compromise."In an interview with The Associated bear down on, Obama also took pains to promote his long-term plan to cuts trillions of dollars from federal deficits as a fairer, more concerned alternative to a Republican plan with the intent of surged to party-line passage Friday afternoon in the House.
Parsing Rhetoric on Government Spending, Savings from Budget Deal Will the bipartisan deal with the intention of shaved $38.5 billion as of the central budget for 2011 immediately affect the soaring deficit so many Americans say they're worried about.
The answer is not really, according to the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office, a group of accountants along with analysts who study the plans. The agency says the much-touted deal, approved Thursday, will only set aside $352 million through the end of the fiscal year a tiny division of the $1.4 trillion the U.S. has spent beyond its means.
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Japan's Nuclear and engineering Safety Agency Tuesday raised the level of severity at theFukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant from 5 to level 7 – the highest level on the international scale and equal to the Chernobyl disaster.
The agency says the level 7 ranking was made after the damaged reactors have been releasing large amounts of radioactive posing a menace to humans and the environment in a much wider area. "Echelon 5 is Three Mile Desert Island. Level 7 is Chernobyl. This doesn't mean it's as bad as Chernobyl. But that's the last time I think 7 was used. It's the highest set by the IAEA (intercontinental Atomic Energy Agency)," said physicist Michio Kaku.
Moments of Silence Observed in Country for Victims a 7.0 aftershock rattled Japan today on the one month anniversary of the clone disaster that left at least 25,000 dead along with officials scrambling to prevent a meltdown at damaged nuclear reactors.
A 3-foot tsunami warning was issued after the temblor hit the northeast coast 5:16 p.m. local time. All advisories and warning were later lifted about an hour later according to local Japanese TV. The aftershock was presently downgraded to a 7.0 by means of Japanese officials and USGS calculates the quake to subsist closer to a magnitude 6.6.
Nearing a shutdown that would affect millions, Obama and GOP scramble to reach budget deal uncomfortably close to a deadline, President Barack Obama and top congressional leaders have no more than hours to avert a Friday midnight government shutdown that all sides say would difficulty millions of people and damage a still fragile economy.
Obama said he still hoped to announce an agreement on Friday but did not have "wild optimism."In revealing nothing about what still divides them, Obama and the lawmakers, House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, and committee Majority organizer Harry Reid, D-Nev., all said another belatedly night of talks in the Oval administrative center had narrowed their differences over cutting federal spending and other matters.
After notching a rare victory by stopping highly radioactive water from flowing into the Pacific, workers at Japan's snowed under nuclear power many-sided turned to their next task early Thursday: injecting nitrogen to prevent more hydrogen explosions.
Nuclear officials said Wednesday there was no immediate threat of explosions like the three that rock the Fukushima Dai-ichi plant not long after a massive tsunami hit on March 11, but their plans are a reminder of how much occupation remains to stabilize the complex. Workers are racing to cool downstairs the plant's reactors, which have been overheating since power was knocked out by the 9.0-magnitude earthquake and tsunami that killed as many as 25,000 people along with destroyed hundreds of miles of coastline.
No deal yet but intensifying discussion as possible government shutdown looms Talks appear to be intensifying on Capitol Hill on reaching a deal on long-overdue legislation to finance the administration through the end of September and avoid a administration shutdown. Whether a shutdown can be avoided in three days' time is another matter.
A White House meeting Tuesday that included President Barack Obama, House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, and governing body Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., failed to manufacture the hoped-for burst through, however, with a temporary solution government funding bill set to expire Friday at midnight.
Tax Identity Theft Has More Than Tripled in the Past Five Years Tax day is less than two weeks away, and this year, for the first time ever, the Federal Trade Commission says tax refunds are the No. 1 target of identity thieves.
Tracey Cochran was anxiously anticipating this year's tax refund, because money was tight."I had been unemployed and just started temp work .She expected to receive a $2,400 check from the Internal Revenue Service. Instead she received a notice that something was wrong. Somebody else had filed a return in her name, and a thief was trying to intercept her refund.
Tea Party Supporters Say $33 Billion Figure Not Enough; Democrats, Republicans Find Little Common Ground Members of parliament are working behind congested doors to hash out a deal to fund the management for the remainder of the fiscal year as federal workers nervously prepare contingency plans.
But just five days away from the deadline, the threat of a government shutdown looks more real than it has in recent weeks at the same time as pressure from the Tea Partyand conservative lawmakers mounts. Democratic source indicated last week with the purpose of the two sides had agreed $33 billion would be slashed from the 2011 budget. But the GOP leadership has downplayed those reports amid call from their caucus that the number is far from acceptable.