• Criminals,  France,  Politics

    France CPE Riot Watch: French Police Subdue Riots

    Riot policemen await orders next to the Notre Dame Cathedral, following a students’ protest against the First Job Contract in Paris, France Saturday, March 18, 2006. Tens of thousands of students and workers marched in Paris and other French cities Saturday in what appeared to be the biggest show of anger yet at a jobs plan that has led to violence in the streets and threatens to weaken the government.

    ASSociated Press:French Police Subdue Riots Over Jobs Law

    Police loosed water cannons and tear gas on rioting students and activists rampaged through a McDonald’s and attacked store fronts in the capital Saturday as demonstrations against a plan to relax job protections spread in a widening arc across France.

    Firefighters try to extinguished a car set ablazed by demonstrator in Paris at the end of a demonstration against a contested new labor law. Riot police teargassed scores of demonstrators in Paris after an estimated million people took to the streets of France to protest a widely unpopular new labor law.

    The protests, which drew 500,000 people in some 160 cities across the country, were the biggest show yet of escalating anger that is testing the strength of the conservative government before elections next year.

    At the close of a march in Paris that drew a crowd of tens of thousands, seven officers and 17 protesters were injured during two melees, at the Place de la Nation in eastern Paris and the Sorbonne University. Police said they arrested 156 people in the French capital.

    Four cars were set afire, police said, and a McDonald’s restaurant was attacked along with store fronts at the close of the march.

    Tensions escalated later Saturday as about 500 youths moved on to the Sorbonne, trying to break through tall metal blockades erected after police stormed the Paris landmark a week ago to dislodge occupying students. The university has become a symbol of the protest.

    Police turned water cannons on the protesters at the Sorbonne and were seen throwing youths to the ground, hitting them and dragging them into vans.

    “Liberate the Sorbonne!” some protesters shouted. “Police everywhere, justice nowhere.”

    Demonstrator clash with riot policemen in Paris at the end of a rally against a contested new labor law. Riot police teargassed scores of demonstrators in Paris.

    Protest organizers urged President Jacques Chirac on Saturday to prevent the law from taking effect as expected in April.

    The group issued an ultimatum, saying it expects an answer by Monday, when leaders will decide whether to continue protests that have paralyzed at least 16 universities and dominated political discourse for weeks.”We give them two days to see if they understand the message we’ve sent,” said Rene Jouan of CFDT, France’s largest union.

    This is a concerted effort of LEFTIE UNIONS to undermine the authority of the French government of President Jacques Chirac and Prime Minister Dominique de Villepin. In response to the November riots, the French center-right goverment has attempted to reduce unemployment that stands at 23 percent nationwide, and 50 percent among impoverished young people. The lack of work was blamed in part for the riots that shook France’s depressed suburbs during the fall.

    The law would allow businesses to fire young workers in the first two years on a job without giving a reason, removing them from protections that restrict layoffs of regular employees.

    Companies are often reluctant to add employees because it is hard to let them go if business conditions worsen. Students see a subtext in the new law: make it easier to hire and fire to help France compete in a globalizing world economy.

    On Friday night, a group of university presidents met with Villepin and called on him to withdraw the jobs plan for six months to allow for debate.

    Failure to resolve the crisis could sorely compromise Villepin, who is believed to be Chirac’s choice as his party’s candidate in next year’s presidential election.

    Villepin should restore order and hold firm on his employment plan. But, what else is he doing about the immigration “problem?”

    Stay tuned…….

    Previous:

    France CPE Riot Watch: First Job Contract Protests Grip French Cities

    France Riot Watch: Students Riot in Paris over New Youth Employment Contract


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  • Arnold Schwarzenegger,  California,  California Republican Party,  Election 2006,  Politics

    Arnold Schwarzenegger Watch: The New Majority

    ASSociated Press: Moderate Republican PAC has forged close ties with Schwarzenegger

    Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger could find a lot of reasons why the Legislature turned away his public works plan to spend billions of dollars on highways, schools and levees, but Paul Folino wasn’t one of them.

    The wealthy chairman of computer-components maker Emulex Corp. – who also is a personal friend of the governor and one of his most generous financial patrons – was just one of the administration supporters who called legislators in an ultimately futile bid to secure votes for the massive bond issue.

    Folino’s participation wasn’t happenstance. His informal lobbying is just one example of the close and beneficial relationship Schwarzenegger shares with Folino and the rapidly expanding political action committee he helped establish, the New Majority. Members of the centrist group have donated or raised more than $10 million for the Republican governor’s political ventures.

    “Our view of the world links up very closely with the governor’s – you have to consider the governor is a moderate Republican,” Folino said. “We’ve become close friends. I feel like my wife and I are part of the family.”

    At a time when Schwarzenegger is struggling to shore up support within his own party, his ties to Republican moderates are likely to become an increasingly important financial source for his emerging re-election bid.

    And California Conservatives are supposed to be happy that Republican “MODERATES” are driving California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger re-election?

    The Governor has been in trouble with conservatives since the November 2005 California Special Election.

    First, it was the Susan Kennedy appointment.

    Second, the Minimum Wage Increase announcement.

    Third, the appointment of a “moderate” to the California Supreme Court.

    Fourth, the Massive Infrastructure Bond.

    And the list goes on with the Governor having appointed an equal number of Democrats as Republican to the state bench, appointing other Democrats to staff positions in lieu of Republicans and the California Republican Assembly’s efforts to yank the pre-primary endorsement of the California Republican Party for Schwarzenegger.

    So, the question California conservatives must ask this Fall:

    Is it in the conservative movements best interests that Schwarzenegger wins in November?

    The New Majority’s website is here.

    “The New Majority group cares deeply about the future of California and includes some of the most distinguished leaders in the country. The governor is grateful for their ongoing support of his bold agenda to continue moving the state forward,” Schwarzenegger’s campaign manager, Steve Schmidt, said in a statement Friday.

    Members of the New Majority “are checkbook Republicans – individuals who are wealthy and raise big bucks to support moderate candidates,” said GOP analyst Allan Hoffenblum.

    Unlike the party’s social conservatives, he said, “they are not dominated by religious-right issues.”

    California conservative voters are being taken for granted by Arnold Schwarzenegger. He is NOT a conservative. But, then again, we knew this when we recalled Gray Davis.

    Will Flap and his friends turn out and vote for Arnold this November?

    Doubtful…….

    So, how many votes will the “New Majority” be able to buy for the Governor?

    Not Many……..

    Stay tuned for the MSM to expose the “New Majority” as special interests chasing California state contracts.

    What do they get in return?

    “I’ve never asked for a thing,” Folino said. “Most of my business is actually generated outside of California. It’s not about getting anything in return.”

    Baxter and Folino are members of the governor’s jobs commission, which advises Schwarzenegger on economic matters. Another member, Gary Hunt of the consulting firm California Strategies, is the campaign’s finance chairman. A.G. Kawamura, an Orange County grower who was a member of the PAC, is Schwarzenegger’s food and agriculture secretary.

    Other companies with ties to the group are involved in state business.

    State records show developer Irvine Co., headed by New Majority member Donald Bren, spent more than $350,000 for lobbying in 2005-06 on a host of state matters, including dealings with the governor’s office.

    Perhaps it is time for California conservatives to reject the “moderate” candidacy of Arnold Schwarzenegger and advocate staying at home this November rather than supporting/voting for a politician that is an anathema to their conservative principles.

    Will anyone beside Flap have the guts……?

    H/T: Jon Fleischman

    Previous:

    Arnold Schwarzenegger Watch: Public Works Bonds are DEAD and so is Schwarzenegger’s Re-election?

    Arnold Schwarzenegger Watch: Governor Avoids “GLADIATOR” Controversy

    Arnold Schwarzenegger Watch: Arnold Classic 2006

    Arnold Schwarzenegger Watch: The California Field Poll Part 1

    Arnold Schwarzenegger Watch: California Teachers Association President Barbara Kerr Ridicules Schwarzenegger on “Core Values”

    California Republican Party Convention Watch: McClintock ASKS for Unity to Help Schwarzenegger

    Arnold Schwarzenegger Watch: A History of BOLDNESS


    Arnold Schwarzenegger Watch: Keynote Address Tonight to California Republican Party

    Arnold Schwarzenegger Watch: New PPIC Poll Shows Schwarzenegger’s Republican Support Falling


    Arnold Schwarzenegger Watch: “What Does Arnold Schwarzenegger Believe in?”

    Arnold Schwarzenegger Watch: Latest Survey USA Poll NOT Favorable for California Governor

    Arnold Schwarzenegger Watch: California Governor to Push Global Warming Fight


    Arnold Schwarzenegger Watch: California Republican Assembly Drops Bid to Pull Republican Pre-primary Endorsement


    Arnold Schwarzenegger Watch: Chief of Staff Susan Kennedy Paid by Cadiz Real Estate


    Arnold Schwarzenegger Watch: New Politically Diverse Campaign Team Set for Governor’s Reelection


    Arnold Schwarzenegger Watch: Fundraiser with the Governor Nets Orange County Sheriff Carona $700,000


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  • Los Angeles,  Politics

    Los Angeles Unified School District Watch: Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa Details Plan for Schools

    The film is based on the true story of a group of Chicano students who staged a walkout in 1968 to against protest the injustices of the public high-school system in East Los Angeles. The movie premieres on HBO on March 18.

    Los Angeles Times: L.A. Mayor Details Plan for Schools

    Villaraigosa would keep an elected board — but in a lesser role — and hold the power to appoint superintendent and other top educators.

    Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa on Friday outlined his most detailed plan yet for taking control of the Los Angeles schools, saying that he would keep the elected Board of Education but in a reduced role and appoint the superintendent and other top district leaders.

    Villaraigosa, continuing his steady criticism of the Los Angeles Unified School District, said mayoral oversight would bring public accountability to a system lacking a “sense of urgency” or a “culture of reform.”

    Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa’s latest powergrab = Los Angeles Unitied School district. He attempted to take over the Metropolitian Water District with the Richard Katz fiasco and failed. Los Angeles parents and voters should do the same here.

    “I don’t see, frankly, right now the kind of leadership in that school district that is really engaged in reforms and making the bold decisions we need to get results,” Villaraigosa said at a City Hall news conference. “What we have isn’t working, pure and simple.”

    Of course, Los Angeles Unified School District has been BROKEN for years and needs to be dismantled into many separate school districts with their own elected boards.

    How will Mayor MEChAS plan improve the schools – besides that Antonio gains the CONTROL to appoint the Superintendent and other school staff?

    NOT AT ALL…….

    The head of the Los Angeles teachers union said that any power-sharing structure could ultimately backfire in a school district in which the needs of children and billions of dollars are at stake.

    “If I had a problem at a school that I needed to work on, would I go to the local school board elected person? Or would I go to the mayor?” asked A.J. Duffy, president of United Teachers Los Angeles. “As a citizen, and a consumer of public education, I’m confused already.”

    A poor plan which should be rejected out of hand.

    Villaraigosa is a meglamaniac desiring to exert his influence outside the power of Los Angeles City Hall. Antonio first things first……..


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  • Criminals,  France,  Politics

    France CPE Riot Watch: First Job Contract Protests Grip French Cities

    A protester throws a stone next to a burning car, during clashes with riot police, following a demonstration in Paris, France, against the ‘First Job Contract’, or CPE, Saturday, March 18, 2006. More than 500,000 students and workers marched in Paris and other French cities Saturday in the biggest show of anger yet at a jobs plan that has led to street violence and threatens to weaken the government.

    BBC: Job protests grip French cities

    Hundreds of thousands of people have marched through French towns and cities in protest at a new law making it easier to hire and fire young workers.

    Unions said more than a million people were on the streets, from Marseille in the south to Lille in the north. The government said 500,000 took part.

    Ministers say the law will reduce high youth unemployment, but opponents fear it will entrench job insecurity.

    Protests earlier in the week ended in unrest, with hundreds arrested.

    Tens of thousands of protesters marched through Paris.

    In Toulouse, in the south-west, up to 33,000 people took to the streets while between 10,000 and 25,000 people demonstrated in Lyon.

    Dijon, Marseille, Strasbourg and Bordeaux also saw large demonstrations.

    So, what do the French want to do? They have a high unemployment problem especially with immigrant Islamic young people. Their government proposes economic/employment reforms to enable these folks to obtain gainful employment instead of rioting (remember last November) or living on welfare or both. Do the French LEFTIES want a socialist solution of redistribution?

    Protesters are bitterly opposed to the new First Employment Contract (CPE), which allows employers to end job contracts for under-26s at any time during a two-year trial period without having to offer an explanation or give prior warning.

    The government says it will encourage employers to hire young people but students fear it will erode job stability in a country where more than 20% of 18 to 25-year-olds are unemployed – more than twice the national average.

    The demonstrations came after a series of mass protests by students in dozens of French universities, which have severely disrupted classes.

    Flap thinks the French protest too much. Give the reforms a try and relieve the unemployment situation. But, is there another agenda here?

    Are the French islamofascists and communists driving civil unrest in order to undermine the French government and society.

    More than likely……

    Related:

    Students hold a banner front of riot policemen that reads ‘State regressive, State repressive’ during a protest against CPE in Lille March 18, 2006. France braced for mass protests on Saturday against the new employment law as unions said more than one million people would march to increase pressure on the government to repeal the measure.

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    France Riot Watch: Students Riot in Paris over New Youth Employment Contract


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