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Wednesday, March 3, 2010

 

Obama appointee's past statements attract criticism

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Just days after President Barack Obama appointed White House counsel Rashad Hussain as his special envoy to the Organization of Islamic Conference (OIC), Hussain is under the gun for statements he made in 2004, against U.S. treatment of a Muslim professor suspected of being associated with terror networks.

The Florida professor, Sami Al-Arian, later pleaded guilty to one count of aiding a terrorist organization and was sentenced to 57 months in prison, The online news source, Politico, unearthed a video showing Hussain at a Muslim students association meeting in Chicago, where he criticized the Bush administration's cases against Al-Arian and other Muslim terror suspects as "politically motivated persecutions."

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Thursday, January 21, 2010

 

Shah to coordinate U.S. disaster assistance to quake-hit Haiti

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Rajiv Shah, the new administrator of the country's foreign development assistance body, is already being tested within less than a week of taking office as administrator at the United States Agency for International Development (USAID). President Obama has assigned him to coordinate a major inter agency effort to send help to Haiti, hit by a disastrous 7.0 magnitude earthquake Jan. 12 that killed tens of thousands of people.

Speaking from the Diplomatic Reception Room at the White House the morning after the quake, President Obama announced a massive aid effort to Haiti, including sending an aircraft carrier to waters near the island nation.

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Monday, February 11, 2008

 

Kennedy helps Clinton Obama break the ice

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This time there was no "snub." Sens. Hillary Rodham Clinton, (D-NY), and Barack Obama, (D-IL), returned to the Senate February 6 after Super Tuesday's mega-battle of 22 state contests left their nomination fight practically deadlocked.

Clinton and Obama talked briefly and let out a pair of loud laughs during a close vote on a $157 billion economic stimulus plan pushed by Democrats, trying to set a different tone - at least in public - for a race that their closest advisers now say could last into the summer.

The person who broke the ice was Sen.

Edward Kennedy, (D-MA), whose endorsement of Obama played a key role in an earlier awkward Clinton-Obama encounter in the Capitol. Feb. 6, after Clinton won handily in Kennedy's home state, he approached her while she was talking to Sen. Dianne Feinstein, (D-CA), a prominent Clinton backer.

Kennedy cut in and made jokes at his own expense, prompting Obama to join in on the fun. Kennedy noted before a group of senators that Clinton's New York Giants had just stunned his New England Patriots in the Super Bowl, as well. "It's not been a good month for Ted in terms of contests," said Sen. Claire McCaskill, (D-MO), an Obama supporter.

What a difference nine days makes.

On Jan. 28, fresh off his trouncing of Clinton in South Carolina, Obama was endorsed by Kennedy. During a pair of appearances on the Senate floor, Clinton and Obama studiously avoided each other as his supporters treated Obama like a returning hero. Just before the start of the State of the Union address that night, Clinton reached out to shake hands with Kennedy as Obama turned to talk to McCaskill.

Played repeatedly on political chat shows on cable television, the event was turned into "The Snub."

With each candidate securing wins to be proud of on Feb. 5, Obama and Clinton were decidedly upbeat. "She's in a great mood," said Sen. Debbie Stabenow, (D-MI), a Clinton supporter who spoke with both candidates. "They both look tired, and they're

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