Archive for the ‘Obama’ Category

Organizing For Action | Rally with Barack Obama in Tampa

Join Barack Obama at a rally in Tampa on Wednesday, May 21st.

St. Pete Times Forum 401 Channelside Drive Tampa, FL

Wednesday, May 21st, 2008 Doors Open: 10:30 a.m. Program Begins: 12:00 p.m.

The event is free and open to the public. Tickets are required. Admission is on a first-come, first-served basis. Tickets can be picked at the locations on the right.

For security reasons, do not bring bags and limit personal items. No signs or banners are permitted.

Hillsborough County

Hillsborough County Democratic Executive Office 4221 N Himes Suite 100 Tampa, FL 33607 Monday Tuesday 10 a.m. - 4 p.m.

Pinellas County

Pinellas Democratic County Headquarters 2250 1st Avenue North St. Petersburg, FL 33713 Monday and Tuesday 10 a.m. - 2 p.m.

Sarasota/Manatee County

Sarasota Democratic party headquarters 2245 Ringling Blvd Sarasota, FL 34236 Monday 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Tuesday 10:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m.

Sarasota News and Books 1341 Main Street (corner of Palm Ave.) Sarasota, FL Monday, Tuesday 7 a.m.- 11 p.m. Sunday 7 a.m.-10 p.m.

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Organizing For Action | Rally with Barack Obama in Tampa

Barack Obama tries to energize base in Maryland – POLITICO

Maryland is Obama country Barack Obama Elementary School is just down the road.

By Jennifer Epstein

10/19/14 06:22 PM EDT

Updated 10/20/14 06:35 AM EDT

UPPER MARLBORO, Maryland President Barack Obama hit the campaign trail here Sunday, vouching for his law school classmate and Democratic gubernatorial candidate, Anthony Brown, even after he was interrupted by a pro-immigration reform protester.

The problem is, Im actually for immigration reform, Obama said at Dr. Henry A. Wise, Jr. High School here, after a young man holding a handwritten sign reading #Not1More shouted out. Of course, he should be protesting the folks who are blocking it, but thats OK.

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The focus of Obamas remarks, though, was on encouraging the predominantly African-American crowd of 8,000 that filled the high schools massive gym and a smaller runoff room to get out and vote.

Go find your friends to vote. Get your cousin to vote. Get your uncle to vote, he said at the end of his 25-minute speech in support of Brown, the states lieutenant governor.

( Also on POLITICO: Back in Chicago, Obama urges voters)

This is Obama country Barack Obama Elementary School is just down the road, and close to 90 percent of votes cast here in the 2012 presidential election were for him, the best he did in any county in the state. The crowd was energetic in waiting for the president and in welcoming him to the stage, but once the president started speaking, the crowd began streaming out, a few at first, but then by the dozen once Obama was about 10 minutes into his talk. Still, the vast majority of the large crowd stayed for the full event.

Maryland, we have made progress, Obama said, making his case as he listed achievements of his presidency, including spreading access to health care through the Affordable Care Act. Dont let folks say otherwise.

But he acknowledged: Tonight were here because we know there is more work to do, including fighting terrorism and infectious diseases, his only reference to Ebola during the speech.

When you cast that vote youve got a choice to make, Obama said, between two very different visions for America.

I believe that Republicans are patriots, that they love their country, but they are a broken record, he said. Later on, he turned to a standard part of his political speeches, urging the crowd to choose hope over cynicism. Hope is a better choice and were selling hope.

( POLITICO's polling center)

Before Obama took the stage, the crowd cheered at an invocation noting that the slaves who built the White House would be proud to see a fellow African-American as president, and that Obama would prove the pundits wrong and eventually be seen as the countrys greatest presidents. As the crowd waited for Obama, Reps. Steny Hoyer and Donna Edwards spoke, encouraging attendees to take advantage of early voting, which runs from Oct. 23-Oct. 30.

Polls say some of us are apathetic, Hoyer said, but ,I dont see anybody apathetic in this hall today.

President Obama has moved us forward, not back, Gov. Martin OMalley said.

Brown led Republican Larry Hogan, 49 percent to 42 percent, in the Baltimore Suns most recent poll, released last week.

( Also on POLITICO: How to blow an easy GOP win)

With just 16 days until Election Day, it was the presidents first campaign rally a function of his limited appeal nearing the end of his sixth year in office and scheduling pressures. He had planned to travel to Connecticut on Wednesday for a rally with Gov. Dannel Malloy, but postponed that trip and another day of travel on Thursday to stay at the White House and focus on his administrations response to Ebola.

From here, Obama is headed to Chicago, where hell join Democratic Gov. Pat Quinn for a rally at Chicago State University, a historically black institution in Roseland, the neighborhood where the president worked as a community organizer in the 1980s. He is also slated to campaign for the Democratic candidates for governor in Maine, Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin.

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Barack Obama tries to energize base in Maryland - POLITICO

Obama can’t stay in Afghanistan, but he can’t leave …

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Outrage over the bombing of a Doctors Without Borders hospital in Kunduz, Afghanistan, by an American gunship Saturday focused increasingly rare media scrutiny on a conflict in which U.S. combat officially ended last year -- but where fighting still rages.

The immediate question is who bears responsibility for a strike in which 22 civilians, including doctors and patients, were killed in what the Nobel prize-winning NGO branded a war crime. But the disaster also raises a list of troublesome tactical questions for Washington.

It will renew serious doubts about the limits of cooperation between the U.S. and the Afghan units that apparently called in the strike, as well as the basic quality of that American-trained force. Pentagon strategists are also puzzling over how the resurgent Taliban was able to capture Kunduz in the first place.

Those questions could not come at a worse time for President Barack Obama, who is facing a much wider strategic dilemma over a war that as a candidate he termed "the right battlefield" for America but that has haunted his entire presidency.

Collateral damage: A brief history of U.S. mistakes at war

Heading into his final year in office, Obama is weighing whether to go ahead with his plan to bring home almost all U.S. troops in Afghanistan next year to honor a political promise to end the wars he inherited. He may instead opt to leave behind a reduced, but still considerable, U.S. force to boost the country's vulnerable military forces amid fears that they could eventually collapse under Taliban pressure.

Even before all details of the attack are established and Obama delivers his recommendation on troop numbers, the tragedy is provoking debate on the dangers inherent in the arms-length U.S. tactics in Afghanistan where American forces are supporting Afghan units who lack their own air support but not leading the fight themselves.

"The Afghan proxies on the ground have always been unreliable. Our forces are so thin in Afghanistan, we don't have enough people there to fight a war," former CIA officer and CNN intelligence analyst Robert Baer said. "We simply can't carry out air attacks based on Afghan reporting."

In a broader sense, the plight of Kunduz, and the fact that it fell to the Taliban at all, casts an unflattering light on Afghan forces built with billions of dollars from the U.S. and its allies in a bid to provide a rational for foreign troops to go home.

"The fact that the Taliban were able to gain control of Kunduz was a strategic surprise," said Nora Bensahel, an expert on U.S. defense policy at American University. "It does call into question some of the capabilities of the Afghan security forces."

Kunduz is not the only area in which the Taliban has lashed out at Afghan forces during this summer's fighting season, which has seen thousands of Afghan National Army troops die, a rate U.S. military officials warn may be unsustainable.

The Army has clashed with the militia across northeastern Afghanistan and struggled to contain a string of attacks in Kabul itself, including a car bombing of an Afghan member of parliament Monday. Large areas of the country outside the major cities remain beyond the control of government security forces. In some areas, the Taliban holds the land -- in others warlords operate fiefdoms where there is no dominant security player.

It is against this worrying backdrop that Obama must consider whether to go ahead with his already stated plan to leave only around 1,000 U.S. troops in Afghanistan -- mostly to protect the U.S. Embassy -- when he leaves office in 2017, down from around 34,000 American soldiers in the country when he became president in 2009.

Trump: Afghanistan war a 'mistake,' but troops need to stay

Since then, he has tried multiple strategies, all with limited success: He has surged troops into the war, established withdrawal timelines, pulled thousands of U.S. troops home and struggled through years of antagonism with former Afghan President Hamid Karzai.

Through all that, his vow to get American troops home from Afghanistan -- to match his withdrawal from Iraq -- has remained crucial to the President's political legacy.

Obama has tried to end a war that killed more than 2,300 U.S. soldiers. At the same time, he has wanted to create the conditions for a responsible departure that would leave the Afghan government capable of defending itself and prevent Afghanistan lapsing into the kind of terrorist haven that a Taliban government provided to Al-Qaeda while it plotted the September 11 attacks. It has been a difficult balance to strike.

U.S. Gen.: We need new Afghanistan plan

The recent upsurge in violence in Afghanistan and the difficulties the administration has had extricating the United States from a war that started 14 years ago has left some in Washington unsure over the end game in the conflict.

The war has yet to filter much into the 2016 election campaign, but in one statement Tuesday, Republican front-runner Donald Trump stoked controversy by saying on Fox News that the U.S.-led invasion of Afghanistan was a "terrible mistake." He added, however, that U.S. troops needed to stay to avoid a collapse of the government.

Trump's comments put him at odds with mainstream opinion. Whlie there have been frequent criticisms of the manner in which the George W. Bush and Obama administrations have fought the Afghan war, there has long been a political consensus in Washington that it was the correct decision to target al Qaeda and its Taliban hosts in Afghanistan.

Obama has already slowed the pace of plans to cut the current 9,800-strong U.S. force in Afghanistan to 5,500 by the end of the year.

And The Washington Post reported on Monday that a decision on the post-2016 U.S. troop presence could come soon, with Obama was seriously considering keeping 5,000 U.S. troops in Afghanistan after he leaves office -- five times the size of the garrison he had originally planned to keep in the country.

The top U.S. commander in Afghanistan, Gen. John Campbell, said Tuesday that assumptions had changed on the strategic needs for troop levels in Afghanistan based on an uptick in insurgent activity, an increased Al-Qaeda presence and signs ISIS might also be targeting the country.

"Based on conditions on the ground, I do believe we have to provide our senior leadership options different than the current plan we are going with," Campbell told the Senate Armed Services Committee.

"The current plan is embassy-based presence. As I take a look at conditions on the ground, when the President made that decision, it didn't account for the changes in the past two years," Campbell said.

But any modifications to the U.S. drawdown would also represent a political climbdown for Obama.

"President Obama was very clear when he set out that timeline that he would stick to that no matter what, and there was very little room to reconsider that," said Bensahel.

"He has every incentive to want the war to end in his administration on good terms," she said. "For him to be reconsidering the number of troops is clearly a political choice he does not want to have to make."

Any decision to retain U.S. troops in Afghanistan after 2016 would offer an opening to Obama critics to claim the President was implicitly admitting he had been wrong to pull U.S. troops home from another war -- Iraq -- opening a vacuum for ISIS to exploit.

Is U.S. bombing of Afghan hospital a war crime?

Scott Smith, a former senior aide to the U.N. special representative in Afghanistan, now with the U.S. Institute of Peace, said events in recent days make Obama's decision even more complicated.

"If there is decision now to stay, it will look like an act of desperation or of panic, and as a result of Kunduz," he said. "If it had been made much earlier, it would look like an act of solidarity with a government with which we have a partnership agreement."

One difference between Afghanistan and Iraq is that the power-sharing government of President Ashraf Ghani, which Washington invested plentiful diplomatic capital in forming, desperately wants U.S. troops to stay. That was not the case under the government of ex-Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki in Baghdad, who complicated U.S. efforts to leave a residual force.

That's one reason why the Afghan government's response to the hospital attack in Kunduz was fairly muted compared to Karzai's tirades against the many U.S. operations that caught civilians in the crossfire.

Smith said that in the end, it was possible that Obama would accept a plan to keep at least one base open in Afghanistan with up to 6,000 U.S. troops.

"The idea will be to keep them out of combat operations as much as possible -- but they will be able to hold the Afghan hands a little bit longer," he said.

But such a decision would also mean a second two-term U.S. president handing his successor a war that seems to have no end, but that Washington no longer has the desire or the resources to fight.

How Afghanistan can succeed

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Obama can't stay in Afghanistan, but he can't leave ...

Obama: Oregon College Shooting "Something We Should …

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At a news conference Thursday afternoon on the community college shooting at Umpqua Community College in Umpqua, Oregon, President Obama said gun control is "something we should politicize."

Obama pressured news outlets and networks to publicize the statistics of Americans "who have been killed through terrorist attacks over the last decade and the number of Americans who have been killed by gun violence."

"The notion that gun laws don't work or just will make it harder for law-abiding citizens and criminals will still get their guns, it's not borne out by the evidence," the president said. "We know that other countries in response to one mass shooting have been able to craft laws that almost eliminate mass shootings. Friends of ours, allies of ours, Great Britain. Australia. Countries like ours. So we know there are ways to prevent it."

"What's also routine, of course, is that somebody somewhere will comment and say, Obama politicized this issue. Well, this is something we should politicize," Obama declared.

"I would... have news organizations put up the number of Americans who have been killed through terrorist attacks over the last decade and the number of Americans who have been killed by gun violence and post those side by side on your news reports," Obama wished.

"This won't be information coming from me," he declared. "It will be coming from you."

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Obama: Oregon College Shooting "Something We Should ...

Obama: ‘Our thoughts and prayers are not enough’

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President Obama will make a statement Thursday evening on the mass shooting at an Oregon community college.

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David Jackson, USA TODAY 8:33 a.m. EDT October 2, 2015

President Barack Obama called for increased gun control hours after a mass shooting at Umpqua Community College in Roseburg, Oregon. USA TODAY

President Obama speaks in the Brady Press Briefing Room at the White House on Oct. 1, 2015, about the shooting at the Umpqua Community College in Roseburg, Ore.(Photo: Susan Walsh, AP)

WASHINGTON A visibly frustrated President Obama offered condolences to the victims of themass shooting at an Oregon college on Thursday,but he added that"our thoughts and prayers are not enough," and voters should demand changes to the nation's gun laws.

Having now spoken after more than a dozensenseless killings during his administration, Obama again called for "common sense" legislation aimed at preventing gun violence, and he mocked opponents of past initiatives he has pushed.

USA TODAY

Andy Parker: Oregon shooting shows we are at war

"Each time this happens, I'mgoing to bring this up," Obama said during emotional remarks in the White House press room. "Each time this happens, I am going to say that we can actually do something about it, but we're going to have to change our laws."

Obama noted thathe has been to Roseburg, Ore., where the shooting took place, and "there are really good people there" who are the latest victims of gun violence.

"Somehow, this has become routine," Obama said. "The reporting is routine. My response here at this podium ends up being routine ...we've become numb to this."

Throughout his presidency, especially after shootings, Obamahas called for legislation to try to stop gun violence, including enhanced background checks, an assault weapons ban, and improved mental health programs. On this occasion, the president said,"itcannot be this easy for somebodywho wants to inflict harm to get his or her hands on a gun."

As he echoed those calls in the wake of the Oregon shooting, Obamapredicted thatstatements of oppositionfrom gun rights groups were already being written. Many of those opponents will accuse him politicizing tragic shootings, the president said.

"Well, this is something we should politicize," Obamasaid. "It is relevant to our common life together, to the body politic."

He later said: "This is a political choice that we make,to allow this to happen every few months in America."

Oregon officials said a 20-year-old man killed at least 10people in a shooting at Umpqua Community College in Roseburg, about 180 miles south of Portland.Obama visited the city during his 2008 presidential campaign.

Obama has spoken in the wake of shooting tragedies on at least a dozen occasions, including the 2012 murders at an elementary school in Newtown, Conn., and this past summer's killings at African-American church in Charleston, S.C.

Other countries have mental health issues, but none have the kind of gun violence the United States does, Obama said.

The president mocked opponents of gun control legislation, including those who say the solution is "more guns" or fewer safety laws.

"Does anybody really believe that?" Obama said.

Given the frequency of mass shootings, Obama said people should demand action at the federal and state levels, and make it an issue at election time. He also said lawful gun owners should question whether gun rights organizations are truly representing their views when it comes to efforts to prevent violence.

I hope and pray that I dont have to come out again during my tenure as president to offer my condolences to families in these circumstances," Obama said. "But based on my experience as president,I can't guarantee that and that's terrible to say. And it can change."

Contributing: Gregory Korte

More coverage of the Oregon shooting:

USA TODAY

Ten killed in shooting at Ore. community college

USA TODAY

Oregon community college shooting: What we know now

USA TODAY

2015 school year off to a violent start

USA TODAY

Tributes pour in for #UCCshooting victims

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Obama: 'Our thoughts and prayers are not enough'