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Top Obama ally, Tea Party upstart face debate clash Las Vegas, Nevada (AFP) Oct 14, 2010 President Barack Obama's top Senate ally and his upstart Tea Party-backed challenger faced a critical debate clash Thursday, under three weeks before voters in Nevada decide their fate. After weeks of lobbing rhetorical bombs at each other in campaign speeches and advertisements, Democratic Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid and Republican rival Sharron Angle are to lock horns in a one-off televised duel. Reid, gunning for a fifth six-year term, is fighting for his political life amid deep voter anger at the sour US economy and high unemployment, especially in Nevada, which has the country's top jobless and home foreclosure rates. Republicans hungry to retake the US Congress have made the soft-spoken political scrapper a top target in the November 2 elections, painting him as a champion of a free-spending Washington deaf to ordinary Americans' worries. But Reid has clawed back from public opinion polls showing him down by double digits after Angle shocked establishment Republican candidate Sue Lowden in the party's primary, and surveys now show a statistical dead heat. Angle, a former state assembly member, has defied early predictions she was unelectable and raked in a staggering 14 million dollars in campaign donations over the past three months while surviving a series of verbal gaffes. Unshackled by a controversial January US Supreme Court decision, conservative political groups funded by wealthy donors have vowed to pour millions into the race, arguably the most high-profile battle of the year. And Angle recently announced a staggering 14.3-million-dollar campaign funding haul over the past three months, setting her up to unleash a flood of television advertisements in the next two weeks. Reid has reportedly built up his get-out-the-vote machine and has leaned on visits from Democratic former president Bill Clinton as well as from Obama to fire up the party's core supporters. Obama was to visit Las Vegas next week for a Democratic National Committee rally to help Reid, who drove key White House initiatives like overhauls of US health care and the financial industry through a skeptical Congress. The debate comes after months of long-distance warring with fiercely negative advertising and as each candidate worked to overcome a tendency to make controversial, or at least unfortunate, statements. "Neither of them wants to say the stupid thing that becomes the defining event of the campaign," according to David Damore, an associate professor of political science at the University of Nevada Las Vegas. Reid, who drew fire in April 2007 for saying of Iraq that "this war is lost," was recently caught calling Democratic Senator Kirsten Gillibrand the Senate's "hottest" member. Last year Reid apologized to Obama after a political book quoted him as saying in 2008 that the future president would win the White House because he was "light-skinned" and lacked a "Negro dialect." Angle, a fierce foe of abortion, has suggested that a hypothetical teenager raped and impregnated by her father should turn "a lemon situation into lemonade" by considering options other than terminating her pregnancy. She has said the scientific consensus that human activity contributes to global warming is not "sound" and recently suggested, quite wrongly, that US cities of Dearborn, Michigan, and Frankford, Texas, were falling under strict Islamist "Sharia law." Reid will seek to hammer home a message of "you don't like me, but you know what you're getting," while Angle will argue "he's the problem, he's been there forever, Nevada is still not doing well, what's all this clout getting us?" said Damore. A key factor in the race is Nevada's grim economy, and an unemployment rate of 14.4 percent that is far higher than the national rate of 9.6 percent. The struggles of glittering gambling haven Las Vegas even sparked a spat between Obama and Reid, who angrily urged the White House to "lay off Las Vegas" after the president held up spending money there as a waste.
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Ecuador suspends senior police officers over mutiny Quito (AFP) Oct 13, 2010 Thirteen senior police officers were put on administrative leave Wednesday and could be fired for their role in a September 30 police mutiny, officials said. Scores of other police officers have been detained for their alleged role in the mutiny, in which President Rafael Correa was cornered in a hospital by police who seized barracks and stormed Congress to protest cuts in bonus pay. Th ... read more |
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