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Monday, September 5, 2011

BJP has ideological, personal issues: Wikileaks

Wikileaks has revealed how the US embassy in India noted that the BJP was facing crises of political ideology and personal enmity as RSS exerted its influence on India’s principal opposition party.

New Delhi: The latest WikiLeaks cache of secret US cables contains a labyrinth of information on a leadership tussle in the BJP and the RSS's stifling control over the party.

From L.K. Advani's controversial comments on Pakistan founder Mohammed Ali Jinnah's "secular" credentials that cost him his job to successor Rajnath Singh, to dropping PM-contender Narendra Modi from the party's crucial parliamentary board, the US charge d' affairs and other officials cited several instances of intraparty feuds from 2005 to 2007.

The US cables use the hounding of Advani after his Pakistan sojourn as an instance of the RSS's ideological control over the BJP.

Advani announced his resignation as BJP president in the party's national executive in Chennai in September 2005, and Rajnath took over the party's reigns on January 1, 2006, with the RSS's blessings.

The episode is well-documented along with several instances of how Advani's own protégés in the BJP's GenNext deserted him in the aftermath of his comments on Jinnah.

"There are several key events that will in the coming months provide indicators as to where the BJP is headed. One is the BJP leadership conference now scheduled for September 16-18 in Chennai. Media and political observers are predicting that swords could be drawn at the meeting. The Sangh Parivar could use this venue to make its move to unseat Advani," a cable said.

The cables suggested that while the BJP infighting was ideological, it was also a succession struggle between personalities.

"The RSS and VHP have clear preferences regarding who should replace A.B. Vajpayee and Advani. Modi is the favourite of both groups to replace Vajpayee and become the party's candidate for PM, while the VHP supports former Madhya Pradesh chief minister Uma Bharti, or Rajasthan CM Vasundhara Raje Scindia to replace Advani. The RSS purportedly favours BJP national executive member Sushma Swaraj for party president, but the VHP is not enthusiastic," another cable added.

Despite or perhaps because of his reputation as an international pariah, Modi has emerged for now as the figurehead for the Sangh Parivar. The cables list the pros and cons of Modi's takeover of the BJP.


Joe Jonas psyched for ‘intimate’ House of Blues show

Joe Jonas wants to go from tween heartthrob to teen heartthrob.

It seems like a simple transition, but it’s going to be tricky.

As the cutest of the Jonas Brothers (sorry, Nick and Kevin), he’s endeared himself to a generation of little girls through addictive bubble-gum power-pop, made-for-TV Disney movies, “Hannah Montana” guest spots and truckloads of JoBro-branded merchandise.


On Tuesday, the 22-year-old kicks off his first solo tour with co-headliner Jay Sean and opener JoJo at House of Blues. The club gig will be a change for a guy used to packing stadiums — the Jonas Brothers played TD Garden in 2009 and Comcast Center in 2010.

“It’s definitely going to be intimate compared to what I’ve done in the past,” Jonas said with a little laugh from his home in Cali-fornia. “But it will also be nice because it’s a step I’ve never taken.”

Jonas’ solo debut disc, “Fast Life,” drops Oct. 11. Fans are now getting a taste of the singer’s slicker sound on his first single, the r&b jam “See No More.”

Unlike brother Nick, who recruited Prince’s former backing band in an attempt to get old-school funky on his 2010 solo album, Joe is shooting for modern Top 40 pop.

“I love Nick’s stuff, it’s incredible, but I wanted to do something a little more mainstream,” he said.

Nick tried to jump right into adult rock, but Joe wants to ease into his new sound.

He mentioned Take That boy band singer and solo star Robbie Williams as a key influence. “Fast Life” producers include Danja and Rob Knox, who helped Justin Timberlake’s music mature.

“As I grow up, my fans grow up,” he said. “Because we’ve grown together, I think they’ll be able to relate to the album. ... I’m really thankful for the Jonas Brothers’ fan base. Now I need use that fan base to help find new ears to listen to the new stuff.”

Jonas knows he has to pay his dues. Even if he spent half a dec-ade doing just that as part of the Disney machine.

After 19 club dates over the next month, he’ll join Britney Spears as the opener on the European leg of the Femme Fatale tour. “It’s like starting over, and I understand that,” he said.

He would love “Fast Life” to be his “Future-Sex/LoveSounds,” the four-times platinum album that made the world forget Timberlake was ever in ’N Sync. But if it doesn’t, he has a solid backup plan.

“If it does well, I could be out touring and promoting it for two years,” he said. “But it could be six months, or three months. But when it’s all done, I will be getting back with my brothers to make more music.”

Sarah Palin stirs the pot but doesn’t announce

Sarah Palin didn’t announce her candidacy for president Saturday at a Tea Party gathering in Iowa. But she did complicate matters for front-runner Texas Gov. Rick Perry, suggesting an actual strategy may be at work: If Perry stumbles, she might get into the race. But don’t bet on it.

Mitt Romney and Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-Minn.) might want to sent Palin some flowers. She did an enormous favor for them in making the argument against “crony capitalism,” one of the most potent arguments against Perry. As this report observed:

“We’re celebrating red, white and blue America!” she began her speech, amid the sounds of cheering and what sounded suspiciously like a vuvuzela. After painting a dire picture of the American economy as it stands today, she railed against President Obama: “Is this what you call winning the future? I call it losing the country!” She told the crowd that the President had “awakened a sleeping America” and that while the nation was “about to lose the blessing of liberty and prosperity,” the “working people of this country . . . got up off the couch” (from which they were presumably working) to take back the country.
All the anti-big-government capitalism talk that many predicted was also in the speech, though not necessarily directly against Perry. “We are government by a political class, until we change them,” she told the crowd, reminding them that “I’ve seen this kind of crony capitalism before” in Alaska — “the same little-boy politics” that is common in governor’s positions.
The night before, she made much the same pitch to her fans, as the Los Angeles Times reported:

The evening before her big “Tea Party” speech in Indianola, Iowa, Sarah Palin arrived to raucous cheers and no small amount of delighted surprise at a meet-up of Conservatives4Palin in a sprawling restaurant just outside Des Moines. . . .
Many in the crowd had arrived by bus from Texas, which seems to be a particular stronghold of Palin supporters, despite the fact that the state’s governor, Rick Perry, is the presumptive leader in the race for the 2012 Republican nomination.
“Perry represents crony capitalism,” said Mai Duong, a naturalized citizen from Vietnam who is an accountant in Houston. Duong, who emigrated in 1994 and became a U.S. citizen 10 years later, said she was never political before the 2008 presidential campaign.
Perry’s campaign should take note. Perry’s name is quickly becoming linked to “crony capitalism,” so that voters and media assume an attack on the latter is actually an attack on Perry. His camp will want to quickly end that word association.

Palin’s theme — both directly anti-Obama and subtly anti-Perry — makes sense substantively as well as politically. Palin is right that trading Obama’s green-jobs racket for the sort of tech funds Perry championed in Texas wouldn’t be much of an improvement. And her call for an end to corporate loopholes and corporate welfare (although with no specifics) is a cogent free-market argument that identifies targets for debt reduction.

Politically, this line of attack is effective because it smudges Perry’s Tea Party image. If Palin does want to get into the race or even if she just wants to preserve her own primacy as the true Tea Party champion, she’ll need to keep throwing darts at the man who would be king, or at least leader, of both the Tea Party and the GOP. And perhaps that is what this is all about. Palin might be willing to (or out of necessity, forced to) give up her presidential aspirations so long as she remains the leader of the populist movement with which she is so closely identified. In that regard, one might suspect that she’d rather that neither Tea Party-type candidate (Perry or Bachmann) gets the nomination. But for now one thing is certain: Palin has set the stage for Wednesday’s debate and offered a helping hand to Perry’s challengers.

Revelations made by Wikileaks on India


David Mulford's cable allegedly called "Kashmir politics as filthy as Dal Lake" and that a Kashmiri businessman telling embassy officials that Mirwaiz Umer Farooq had acquired property in Dubai and the Kashmir Valley from payoffs done by intelligence agencies of India and Pakistan.

Narayanan expressed personal interest in "counterterrorism deliverables" and suggested the Indian government may ultimately split the tender.

In another secret cable written on December 10, 2009, US Ambassador to India Timothy Roemer said the ramifications of the "Telangana surrender" may go beyond Andhra Pradesh as similar demands that were simmering are likely to get a fresh impetus from the Telangana movement's "overnight success".

A 2008 US cable noted that not much was known of Rahul Gandhi's political beliefs and that he has avoided making a significant intervention in Parliament.

We bring you some of the revelations made by Wikileaks on India.

Obama vows federal help for Irene victims

PATERSON, New Jersey (Reuters) - President Barack Obama on Sunday urged Republicans not to play politics with federal disaster aid as he toured flood-stricken New Jersey and pledged to do everything possible to help states recover after Hurricane Irene.

With rain-swollen rivers receding in the Northeast after the region suffered its worst flooding in decades, Obama was greeted by cheering crowds of several thousand people lining the streets of the working-class city of Paterson, one of hardest-hit from the storm.

The Democratic president was joined in his first look at the storm damage by New Jersey Governor Chris Christie, a budget-cutting Republican who has bucked some of his party's fiscal hawks in Washington by calling for expedited federal aid to help his state's recovery.

Standing on a bridge over the rain-swollen Passaic River in central Paterson, Obama noted there had been a talk of a slowdown in aid and dismissed that, promising: "We are going to meet our federal obligations."

"The last thing that residents ... need is Washington politics getting in the way of making sure we're doing what we can," said Obama, who did not mention Republicans by name.

Earlier, Obama consoled homeowners at his first stop in a poor neighborhood in the town of Wayne, telling them the federal government would do everything possible to help them.

"I know it's a hard time right now," Obama told a group of residents clustered around him on the street. "You guys hang in there. We'll do everything we can to help you."

Irene cut a swath of destruction from North Carolina to Vermont and was blamed for at least 40 deaths. Total economic losses have been estimated at more than $10 billion.

New Jersey was especially hammered by flooding in the storm's wake last week. The floodwaters swept away homes, swamped roads and bridges and left hundreds of thousands without electricity.

Paterson now faces a massive cleanup after the Passaic River overflowed its banks in the center of the city of 150,000, dealing the latest blow to a one-time industrial powerhouse that has fallen on hard times.

Obama declared New Jersey a disaster area on Wednesday, making the state eligible for federal disaster aid.

He is expected to ask Congress for extra funds to help recover from Irene, but Washington's unrelenting budget battles -- and a deepening ideological divide between Republicans and Democrats over the role of government -- could complicate relief efforts.

UNLIKELY ALLIES

"When disaster strikes, Americans suffer -- not Republicans, not Democrats, not independents -- and we come together," White House spokesman Jay Carney told reporters traveling with Obama.

Eric Cantor, the No. 2 Republican in the House of Representatives, said last week that any new disaster aid must be offset with spending cuts elsewhere to avoid adding to the budget deficit, projected to hit $1.3 trillion this year.

But Christie, a rising Republican star and blunt-talking fiscal conservative who has repeatedly denied any interest in seeking his party's 2012 presidential nomination, has called for immediate assistance for his state.

He has insisted that New Jersey cannot wait while lawmakers in Washington fight over budget offsets.

That makes Christie an unlikely ally for Obama, who is seeking re-election next year, in the debate over storm relief. The two men shook hands warmly at the bottom of Air Force One's staircase and then boarded a presidential helicopter for an aerial tour of the storm damage.

The Obama administration opposes Cantor's position, and Democrats who oversee disaster funding in the Senate said they would refuse to cut other programs to boost emergency aid.

Asked about Cantor's push for budget offsets, Obama said, "we are going to make sure that the resources are here."

Lawmakers are debating further budget reductions after months of bitter feuding over the country's debt pushed the government to the brink of a shutdown in April and to the edge of a first-ever national default in August.

The Federal Emergency Management Agency has suspended funding for some rebuilding programs from earlier disasters to ensure that its disaster-relief fund will not run out of money, agency administrator Craig Fugate has said.

Cantor and other Republicans have made spending cuts a top priority since winning control of the House in November and have sought to challenge Obama and his Democrats on fiscal matters.

The White House has worked to show it has learned the lessons of the bungled handling of Hurricane Katrina under the administration of former President George W. Bush. Aides have portrayed Obama as deeply engaged in the Irene response.

The trip was Obama's first since October to New Jersey, a state he won handily in the 2008 election and hopes to keep in his camp for 2012 re-election bid.

But even as Obama visited New Jersey, his administration's emergency planners were keeping an eye on Tropical Storm Lee, threatening New Orleans and other parts of the U.S. Gulf of Mexico coast with heavy rains, high tides and flooding.

News from - http://news.yahoo.com/obama-vows-federal-help-irene-victims-055701287.html