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Cameron Recalls U.K. Parliament to Vote on Islamic State Attacks

U.K. Prime Minister David Cameron said he was recalling Parliament on Sept. 26 to vote on joining airstrikes against Islamic State militants in Iraq.

The decision follows a request for help from the Iraqi government, and the House of Commons will debate on a substantive motion, Camerons office said in an e-mailed statement today.

Cameron, who is in New York attending the United Nations General Assembly, has the backing of his Liberal Democrat coalition partners and opposition Labour Party leader Ed Miliband for airstrikes.

When Parliament voted on attacking Syria last year, Milibands on-the-day decision to vote against action led to Cameron losing the vote. The execution of a British hostage by Islamic State, also known as ISIL, and the threat to execute another Briton, has made the case for military action easier to support.

In a televised interview, Cameron said action against Islamic State was legal and right, and British troops would not be deployed on the ground.

As ever with our country, when we are threatened in this way, we should not turn away from what needs to be done, he said. I am confident we will get this through Parliament on an all-party basis.

He said any proposal to join U.S. airstrikes against Islamic State in Syria would require a separate parliamentary vote and debate.

Cameron addresses the UN at about 7 p.m. New York time today, and will then fly back to chair a cabinet meeting in London tomorrow at 1 p.m. He is due to meet Iraqi Prime Minister Haidar al-Abadi before he speaks.

Weve already made the request for U.K. and for any other coalition member to offer military support such as air cover at the Paris conference, Iraqi Foreign Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari, speaking in Arabic, said in an interview at the UN. Were waiting for the details of the parliamentary approval the U.K. government needs.

U.K. Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg, the Liberal Democrat leader, confirmed his party will be backing the call for airstrikes.

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Cameron Recalls U.K. Parliament to Vote on Islamic State Attacks

Gov Christie Interview over 2016 Presidential ‘I’m A Damn Good Republican’ – Video


Gov Christie Interview over 2016 Presidential #39;I #39;m A Damn Good Republican #39;
Download Audio: http://j.gs/4CDF Subscribe - http://q.gs/7YGzU Latest Videos - https://www.youtube.com/user/ItsBiggerThanLife/videos.

By: It #39;s Bigger Than Life!

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Gov Christie Interview over 2016 Presidential 'I'm A Damn Good Republican' - Video

Republican Strategist: If You Want to talk War on Women, Let’s Talk about War on DNC Chairwoman – Video


Republican Strategist: If You Want to talk War on Women, Let #39;s Talk about War on DNC Chairwoman
Ana Navarro talks about the "war on women" on ABC #39;s This Week.

By: National Review

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Republican Strategist: If You Want to talk War on Women, Let's Talk about War on DNC Chairwoman - Video

The Fix: Californias Republican party is almost nonexistent. But, why?

A recurring theme raised its head at last weekend's California Republican convention in Los Angeles: How to curtail the party's evaporation in the state. Fifteen years ago, 35 percent of registered voters were Republican. Today, 28 percent are.

Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.), there to rally the crowd (and lay more groundwork for 2016), even cracked a joke about the party's woes, according to the Los Angeles Times. "He said he'd heard that Republicans might have suffered a few recent losses in California, drawing chuckles from a crowd that's grown accustomed to getting clobbered," the paper reported. In a separate column, the Times explored the party's challenges.

What's interesting about California, though, is that voters aren't abandoning the party to become Democrats. They're largely abandoning the party for either third parties -- or for no one.

This isn't a new phenomenon; it's been written about as a national trend in the past. But what's happening in California differs dramatically from trends in other states.

Here's the trend there, according to official records from the California Secretary of State.

Compare that with the much smaller state of Wyoming, which has records going back to the 1960s.

In California, the Republican party is eroding and it's mostly among decline-to-states, the state's I-don't-want-to-choose option. (Though not entirely; more on that below.) In Wyoming, the Democratic party has withered -- and Republicans have seen the entire gain.

Now, look at New York.

New York also has a no-party option, but a decent chunk of the drop in Republican registration has been eaten up by the Democrats -- thanks in large part to a surge in 2008. Since 2004, Republican registration dropped 3.5 points; Democratic registration went up by 3.

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The Fix: Californias Republican party is almost nonexistent. But, why?

Catch Up with Busdeker: Michelle Ertel, straight-shooting Republican analyst

Holding the shotgun in my hands, I braced the butt of the gun into my shoulder and yelled out, "PULL!"

The orange, clay pigeon leapt out of the thrower and sailed through the air until...BAM!

How did I end up shooting gun in rural Seminole County?

Blame it on Michelle Ertel, Republican strategist and political commentator on News 13. Ertel lives in Geneva and suggested we shoot guns for the latest episode of "Catch Up with Busdeker."

A former print news reporter, Ertel, who's originally from Pennsylvania, moved to Central Florida in 2004, later helping launch the community newspaper theSeminole Chronicle.

Today, Ertel operates her own government relations firm - Florida Strategic Advisors - and is a political analyst on News 13 both appearing on TV and writing an online column.

(If the name Ertel sounds familiar, you may know her husband, Michael Ertel, the Seminole County Supervisor of Elections.)

On a recent morning, Michelle Ertel met me at the Danville Bed and Breakfast in Geneva to see who is the better shot. As we fired at clay pigeons and empty plastic jugs, we chatted about Florida politics, her job on News 13 and her thoughts on the upcoming election in November.

To see who hit more clay pigeons, watch the video "Catch Up with Busdeker: Michelle Ertel, straight-shooting Republican analyst."

And don't forget to check out the previous episodes of "Catch Up with Busdeker."

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Catch Up with Busdeker: Michelle Ertel, straight-shooting Republican analyst