Thursday, 30 April 2015

What really makes Obama angry?


In a comic riff at last weekend's White House Correspondents Dinner, President Barack Obama spoke alongside his "anger translator." His voice rose, and with it laughs from the audience, as he ripped political inaction on climate change.
Three days later he flashed a more genuine anger all on his own. The subject was rioting in Baltimore following the death of a young black man in police custody.
President Barack Obama.
Jewel Samad | AFP | Getty Images
President Barack Obama.
"We, as a country, have to do some soul searching," Obama said Tuesday at a news conference with the prime minister of Japan. "This is not new. It's been going on for decades.
Read MoreSurprise! Why the GOP, Dems agree on trade expansion

"If you have impoverished communities that have been stripped away of opportunity, where children are born into abject poverty ... it's more likely that those kids end up in jail or dead, than they go to college," Obama said. "In communities where there are no fathers who can provide guidance to young men, communities where there's no investment, and manufacturing has been stripped away ... the drug industry ends up being the primary employer for a whole lot of folks.

"If we think that we're just going to send the police to do the dirty work of containing the problems that arise there ... then we're not going to solve this problem," he concluded. "And we'll go through the same cycles of periodic conflicts between the police and communities and the occasional riots in the streets, and everybody will feign concern until it goes away, and then we go about our business as usual."

The president's remarks during an event meant to highlight his push for an Asian trade deal illuminated the often-aloof chief executive's deepest frustrations with the profession he has chosen.

He disdains the news media's fleeting attention to headline-grabbing symptoms—riots—rather than systemic economic and social problems. He loathes the propensity of fellow politicians to "feign concern" rather than take action.
Read MoreHarry Reid: Stepping down, yes. Retiring? Never

He believes his agenda—on early childhood education, job training, infrastructure development, criminal justice reform, taxation—would make a difference. But he can only wheedle congressional cooperation on a tiny fraction of it. Only 21 months remain in his presidency.

The overlay of race confounds Obama even more. Only by appealing to voters in broad, nonracial terms was he able to shatter historical barriers and win two terms as the nation's first African-American president. Yet a succession of tragedies involving the deaths of young black men have led him to address America's age-old problems with race more forthrightly in what he calls "the fourth quarter of my presidency."

He has launched a White House "My Brother's Keeper" initiative to challenge communities to expand opportunity for young blacks and Hispanics. Related endeavors may loom as large in his post-presidency as international peace efforts have in Jimmy Carter's or global health and environmental challenges have in Bill Clinton's.

If so, Obama will be using his political celebrity to press for action outside the hardened, polarized lines of America's formal political processes. Now more than ever, the dysfunction of those processes makes him mad.

Nicki Minaj performed at a bar mitzvah, turned boys into men

She did seven songs. (The clean versions, of course.)

And dropped some wisdom on the starstruck tweens.

“Get an education. Stay in school. And don’t be a slouch or a bum. And ladies, never let a man have to take care of you. Do you understand me? Be your own woman. Be your own person. Do you understand me?”

Matt totally fell in love, naturally.

Nicki asked him how old he was … and he said, “Old enough.” Genius.

And, she hung out with his parents.

Matt’s father is Andrew Murstein, the millionaire founder and president of Medallion Financial Corp.

This lucky guy got a selfie.

Nicki held a meet-and-greet after she performed, taking pictures with nearly all the attendee

One man. Four minutes. Every Beyoncé song. Epic.

The singer (and Beyoncé super-fan) has created a video that, he says, contains all of Beyoncé’s songs. That’s 70 songs, plus bonus tracks.
To produce the piece, he shot four single-take videos of himself singing different parts of the mashup, with different choreography. He wrote on YouTube that it took him four hours to film the video that’s purposefully four minutes long, “because of Beyoncé’s connection to the number 4.” He added:
“Let’s just hope it gets 4 Million views in the next 4 days lol.”
Dude, it might. It’s that good.
Hall writes that his reality show, Todrick, will premiere August 31 on MTV.

New couple alert? Ciara and Russell Wilson's picture-perfect night at the White House

(Olivier Douliery/Getty Images)
(Olivier Douliery/Getty Images)
Russell Wilson killed the is-he-dating-Ciara buzz over the weekend when he showed up at the White House Correspondents dinner with his grandmother.
But, like the bawse that he is, he revived the chatter last night when he strolled through the actual White House with the stunning singer on his arm.
It’s kind of insane how perfect they look together and we’re sure his ex-wife (Ashton Meem) and her ex-fiancé (Future) are somewhere wearing matching Boo Boo the Fool faces.
In the words of our reality TV shero NeNe Leakes, “BLOOP!”
On Instagram, Ciara played it cool by mentioning the new Obama china rather than her date.

Wow, look at the, um, plate.

But, we’re pretty sure we know what she was thinking when this photo was taken…

“Dear Future, To da left. To da left.”

(Olivier Douliery/Getty Images)
(Olivier Douliery, Getty Images)

Michelle Obama's latest look is pastel perfection

EPA/Mark Wilson / POOL
Michelle Obama is no lame duck when it comes to fashion.
Just check out the first lady’s stand-out Monique Lhuillier coat-and-dress outfit that glowed with hints of watery colors.
She wore it on Tuesday at the White House welcoming ceremony for Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and his wife Akie Abe, who are the guests of honor for tonight’s state dinner.
Lhuillier’s proud press release described the outfit as a “sunrise-printed scuba car coat and structured dress.” Made of a light neoprene fabric, it held up well against Abe’s crimson cape-and-dress outfit.
It was another fashion triumph for Mrs. O, sparking anticipation for what she might wear to the state dinner.
Update: She wore Tadashi Shoji, a stunning purple gown with a embroidered feather-motif and a full tulle skirt and plunging neckline.
Mark Wilson/Getty Images
Mark Wilson/Getty Images
Also on Tuesday, when she and Mrs. Abe visited an elementary school in Great Falls, Va., she changed frocks, donning a multi-color floral lace long-sleeved dress with a sheer banded inset, also by Tadashi Shoji.
Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP/Getty Images
Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP/Getty Images
And now that the Obama administration is entering its last two years, fashion watchers are hoping that the first lady is even more willing to be bold in her style choices and appearance, including her hair.
She impressed on Saturday night by wearing a silvery sheath gown by Zac Posen for the White House Correspondents Association dinner in Washington.
But the talk on social media revolved around her curly ringlets, a dramatically different hairstyle than her usually sleek-and-straight look.
Olivier Douliery/Pool/Getty Images
Olivier Douliery/Pool/Getty Images
Take a look at some other FLOTUS fashion finds in recent months:

Unconventional hem

Evan Vucci/AP
Evan Vucci/AP

Modern art print:

Wong Maye-E/AP
Wong Maye-E/AP

Splashy flowers:

Wong Maye-E/ AP
Wong Maye-E/ AP

The first lady of belts:

Shizuo Kambayashi/AP
Shizuo Kambayashi/AP

Bold duster over pants:

AP Photo/Kyodo News)
AP Photo/Kyodo News)

Abe and Obama look to 'swift conclusion' of Trans-Pacific Partnership deal

US President Barack Obama and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe hold a joint press conference in the Rose Garden of the White House in Washington, DC, April 28, 2015
US President Barack Obama has said the US and Japan are working towards a "swift and successful conclusion" to the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP).
Mr Obama was speaking at a joint press conference with Japan's Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who is in Washington on a state visit.
Earlier the two leaders agreed on new guidelines for defence co-operation.
The TPP is aimed at liberalising markets in 12 countries, and the US and Japan are among the biggest players.
It is poised to be the world's largest-ever free trade deal, and estimates suggest the proposed deal could cover up to 40% of global trade.
Other countries involved in the deal are Brunei, Malaysia, Vietnam, Singapore, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, Mexico, Chile and Peru.
China, which is not part of the TPP, sees it as an attempt to counter its economic might in the region and is working on a rival trade deal.
The deal has been in the making for about a decade. Both leaders have advocated for the partnership, arguing that freer trade will benefit their economies. But critics in their respective countries fear that jobs and certain industries will be made more vulnerable.
"I know that the politics around trade can be hard in both our countries," said Mr Obama in the press conference on Tuesday. "But I know that Prime Minister Abe, like me, is deeply committed to getting this done, and I'm confident we will."
Mr Obama is seeking Congress' guarantee to "fast-track" approval for the deal.

Air base relocation

Both countries also recently agreed on new defence guidelines which clarify the US's commitments to Japan's security.
Mr Obama said the US-Japan security treaty covers all territories under Tokyo's administration, including islands in the East China Sea which Beijing also claims.
Mr Obama hosted a tour of Washington DC for Mr Abe on Monday
But he said: "We don't think that a strong US-Japan alliance should be seen as a provocation."
The new guidelines also build on Japan's resolution last year to reinterpret its pacifist constitution and take on a more assertive military role, allowing Japan to defend the US and other allies.
Mr Abe discussed those guidelines with Mr Obama on Tuesday, as well as the controversial relocation of the Futenma US air base in Okinawa.
The central government is currently in a stand-off with local government on plans to shift the Futenma air base from a highly-congested part of Okinawa to Nago, in the north of the island.
Residents fear damage to environment and associate US camps with accidents and crime.
Mr Abe said Japan and the US would work to ease the local residents' burden of hosting US troops.

Donald Trump Blames President Barack Obama for Baltimore Riots—Read His Latest Twitter Rant


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    Donald Trump Blames President Barack Obama for Baltimore Riots—Read His Latest Twitter Rant

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    Barack Obama, Donald Trump
    Barack Obama, Donald Trump YURI GRIPAS/AFP/Getty Images; Jamie McCarthy/Getty Images
    Oh boy, that Donald Trump sure doesn't hold back, does he?
    The outspoken real estate tycoon hopped on Twitter earlier today to blame President Barack Obama for the current unrest in Baltimore and even went so far as to call him an "incompetent leader."
    "Wow, 15 policemen hurt in Baltimore, some badly! Where is the National Guard. Police must get tough, and fast! Thugs must be stopped. Blatant and rampant property destruction in Baltimore as the police stand by and watch. Should be a lesson on how NOT to handle riots. SAD!"
    PHOTOS: Hollywood gets political
    Trump's tweet spree continued, "Our great African American President hasn't exactly had a positive impact on the thugs who are so happily and openly destroying Baltimore! Now that the ineffective Baltimore Police have allowed the city to be destroyed, are the U.S. taxpayers expected to rebuild it (again)?"
    Naturally, his war of words didn't quite end there. Trump pointed the finger at Baltimore's mayor, saying, "she wanted to give the rioters 'space to destroy'—another real genius!"
    And before he began his regularly scheduled tweets about his upcoming real estate endeavors, Trump had a final message for POTUS:
    "Our country has to come together. We have to start working with, and really liking, each other. The whole world is watching Baltimore…President Obama, you have a big job to do. Go to Baltimore and bring both sides together. With proper leadership, it can be done! Do it."
    Of course, this isn't exactly the first time that Trump has slammed Obama. And considering the big election on the horizon, could he be finally ready to tackle a political career? We'll undoubtedly soon find out!

    Iran's Zarif Says Congress Can’t Stop Obama


    Iran's long arm.
    Photographer: Evrim Aydin/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images
    If Iran strikes a deal with the West, all sanctions will be lifted very quickly and there’s nothing the U.S. Congress can do to stop it, Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif told a New York audience Wednesday.
    In a set of blustery and self-righteous remarks, Iran’s top diplomat assured the crowd at New York University that President Barack Obama would be compelled to stop enforcing sanctions only days after any nuclear agreement was signed and would have to figure out how to lift congressional sanctions on Iran within weeks, no matter what Congress has to say about it. He also said that any future president, even a Republican, would be compelled to stick that agreement.
    Zarif also took several shots at the U.S. Senate, just as it debated amendments to a bill designed to slow the lifting of sanctions against Iran and give Congress an oversight role on the deal.
    “As a foreign government, I only deal with the U.S. government. I do not deal with Congress,” Zarif said. “The responsibility of bringing that into line falls on the shoulders of the president of the United States. That’s the person with whom we are making an agreement.”
    Zarif said that if there is a nuclear agreement by June 30, the negotiators' latest self-imposed deadline, then within a few days the United Nations Security Council would pass a resolution lifting all UN sanctions and requiring Obama to stop enforcing all of the U.S. sanctions immediately.
    “He will have to stop implementing all the sanctions, economic and financial sanctions that have been executive order and congressional. However he does it, that’s his problem,” Zarif said. “The resolution will endorse the agreement, will terminate all previous resolutions including all sanctions, will set in place the termination of EU sanctions and the cessation of applications of all U.S. sanctions.”
    The U.S. would have to endorse this resolution “whether Senator Cotton likes it or not,” Zarif said, jabbing at Arkansas Republican Tom Cotton, who initiated an open letter to the Iranian leadership promising that Congress could unravel any deal Obama makes with them.
    At the event, Washington Post columnist David Ignatius pointed out that according to the Obama administration’s statements, sanctions would be lifted only after the Iranians met an initial set of conditions. Zarif responded that it would take “only a few weeks” to meet those conditions and that “preparatory steps” would be taken in advance of such verification. He added: “That is the point where we take these measures, preparation for these measures, and the sanctions will be removed. How this will be done, we know the concept. The concept is these will be simultaneous.”
    Zarif also said that if the next president tries to change or withdraw from the agreement, as some Republican presidential candidates have promised, the U.S. would risk isolating itself in the world and ruining its credibility.
    “The American president is bound by international law, whether they like it or not. And international law requires the United States live up to any agreement this government enters into,” he said. “You know that, maybe Senator Cotton doesn’t.”
    Zarif criticized the effort in the Senate to pass a bill from Senator Bob Corker that would delay the lifting of sanctions by several weeks while Congress reviews any deal. Several Republican senators are trying to add amendments making the bill tougher on Iran. Zarif said the U.S. will pay if Congress successfully interferes with nuclear deal.
    “If the U.S. Senate wants to send a message to the rest of the world that all of these agreements that the United States has signed are invalid, then you will have chaos in your bilateral relations, although you are welcome to do it,” he said.
    Zarif also insisted that Obama would not be able to “snap back” sanctions after they are lifted, as the White House has repeatedly claimed. And he accused the U.S. government of violating the interim agreement in various ways, including the Treasury Department having added sanctions designations on Iranians that were not related to the nuclear program.
    “If people are worrying about snapback, they should be worrying about the U.S. violating its obligations and us snapping back,” he said. “That is a point that the United States should be seriously concerned about. This is not a game.”
    The last round of nuclear negotiations will begin in earnest next week, and will go non-stop until June 30, said Zarif. This week, negotiators are working on a first draft, which will identify differences remaining between the sides and set the baseline for new negotiations.
    That June 30 deadline could change, he said, and but he declined to specify where the remaining gaps lie.
    Zarif also commented on the Iranian Navy’s seizing of a cargo vessel Tuesday that was flagged from the Marshall Islands, a country that depends on the U.S. for and security. He said the Iranian Navy was executing a legal order based on a failure by the owner, the Danish company Maersk, to pay fees some 15 or 20 years ago. Zarif said the diversion of the Maersk Tigris wasn't meant to send a signal to the U.S. or anyone else amid the heightened tensions caused by the crisis in Yemen. He said the incident should have no impact on the nuclear negotiations.
    “It has nothing to do with Yemen,” he said. “This was a legal case … We shouldn’t read to much into it. Some people do try to read too much into it in order to torpedo a process that is independent of this.”
    Zarif also commented on several other regional issues. He denied that Iran has a controlling influence in any of four Arab countries --  Iraq, Lebanon, Syria and Yemen -- but that the citizens of those countries want an Iranian presence. "People of the region feel close to us because we were on the right side of history" in fighting a war against Saddam Hussein's Iraq, he said.
    He said that Iran has a good relationship with Saudi Arabia and would welcome Saudi Arabia developing a peaceful nuclear program similar to Iran's. He also accused Saudi Arabia of creating, funding, and arming the Islamic State. He criticized Saudi Arabia for bombing in Yemen but refused to acknowledge that Assad is using that tactic on much broader scale in Syria.
    When asked about the imprisonment of Washington Post reporter Jason Rezaian at a Tehran prison, Zarif said Rezaian will have to defend himself in court against serious charges. He added that many Iranians are imprisoned abroad, but Rezaian is better known because “the Washington Post has a much better publicity campaign.”
    Zarif’s statements about the nuclear negotiations -- and everything else, for that matter -- should be taken with a healthy dose of skepticism. But the gap between his view and Obama’s of how sanctions relief will occur shows that there is no agreement on the issue. And Zarif may be right that Congress can’t stop the administration from lifting sanctions. On this point, the Iranian foreign minister and the speaker of the House seem to agree.
    To contact the author on this story:
    Josh Rogin at joshrogin@bloomberg.net
    To contact the editor on this story:
    Tobin Harshaw at tharshaw@bloomberg.net

    No immigration reform, but Obama does live up to pledge to slow deportations

    Obama Immigration Deportations.jpgPresident Barack Obama has failed to keep a campaign promise to push through immigration reform legislation, but he has lived up to a postelection pledge to slow deportations – with or without approval from Congress.

    Obama’s Latest Non-Recovery Chokes Out

    Adolfo Garzony John Hayward30 Apr 20157

    The Washington Post plays a sad trombone over the demise of the latest phony “Obama Recovery” narrative:

    The gross domestic product grew between January and March at an annualized rate of 0.2 percent, the U.S. Commerce Department said, adding to the picture of an economy braking sharply after accelerating for much of last year. The pace fell well shy of the 1 percent mark anticipated by analysts and marked the weakest quarter in a year.
    The economy had expanded at a rate of 2.2 percent in the final three months of 2014 and at a rate of 2.4 percent for the year.
    If you guessed that Obama apologists would try to blame all this on the weather, give yourself a fool’s-gold star:
    Economists, employers and policymakers now face the challenge of determining whether the slowdown is temporary — stemming mostly from an unusually snowy winter in the Northeast — or a sign of broader problems.
    Snowy winters in the Northeast? Well, that’s never happened before. It seems like only yesterday that Obama was trying to convince us the climate was getting warmer. Actually, it was about three weeks ago. He even tried to blame global warming for his daughters’ asthma attacks. His faithful drones will now tell us an unexpectedly cold winter gave his “recovery” the flu.
    Too hot, too cold, too many rich people, not enough government spending… the temperature for the “Obama recovery” will never be just right. We’ve been hearing this ridiculous garbage about cold winters freezing the engines of the mighty Obama growth engine every year for the past six years. The hard, cold truth is that we’ve never had sustained growth under this President’s policies that could do anything more than slow the bleeding in the American workforce. Everything he does, from ObamaCare to his amnesty orders for illegal aliens, is a job-killer. It’s a tribute to the underlying strength of the American economy that we’re not in even worse shape.
    Not that politicians have any shame about such things, but the touchdown shuffle Democrats and their media allies were dancing during one utterly anomalous quarter of solid growth look ridiculous today. None of the factors contributing to that good quarter were particularly healthy, or sustainable. One of those factors was unnaturally high consumer confidence, goosed by a wave of media coverage about the supposed arrival of the “recovery” — years behind schedule and trillions of dollars over cost, but worth the wait! The phony enthusiasm didn’t last very long, did it?
    Hopefully the current GDP flatline won’t last or degrade into an outright contraction or recession. We’ve dodged quite a few world-event bullets that could have triggered another recession. We’ll most likely return to the growth-equals-inflation equilibrium we’ve been slogging through for the past few years… achieved at a staggering cost in deficit spending. Spending a few trillion dollars you don’t have to artificially stimulate a boom is arguably unwise. Spending it for 2 percent growth is folly, bordering on fiscal suicide.
    Meanwhile, even as Obama’s bummer economy increases the “income inequality” gap between hard-working people and oligarchs who donate lots of money to Democrats, the Left is still squealing about how they can fix the income gap if we just give them control over more of the private sector. The opposite is true; economic liberty is the one and only sustainable answer to “inequality.” America will start getting richer the moment we embrace that truth, and consider everyone who doesn’t unfit to hold public office, right down to the municipal level.
    You might have noticed that the degree of failure in local governments is directly proportional to the level of Democrat political control, stretching across generations. Have you enjoyed watching the latest grim demonstration of that causal relationship in Baltimore?
    Republicans have to be more than just the less-awful alternative. (But seriously, urban voters — shake up your moribund, corrupt local power structure by throwing Democrats out on their posteriors, en masse, and you won’t believe how much better things get. The new guys and gals will work much harder than the Jurassic left-wing machine politicians who run the show now, they won’t have as many payola connections, they’ll be really nervous about losing office in the next election, and your old bosses in the Democrat Party won’t take you for granted anymore. Win, win, win, win!)
    To be perfectly clear, no Republican has a magic formula for engineering “fair” prosperity. Neither does any single magnate in the private sector, which is something you should bear in mind when the next liberal-approved “socially conscious” billionaire unspools his plans for Utopia. Fairness is something we all find together, and prosperity is something we all build together. Our riotous, uncoordinated, combined genius far surpasses the agenda of any politician or bureaucrat. Left to our own devices, with free commerce protected impartially by a light and clear burden of law, we find the answers to questions politicians don’t even know how to ask.
    Not many of them are humble enough to admit that. They don’t have any incentive to admit it. They derive power by promising to overrule reality by decree. Reality has an unbroken string of total knock-out victories over politics, but politicians are constantly promising us the next big title bout.
    What should our gross domestic product and unemployment rate be right now? I don’t know, and neither does anyone else. I know what we’ve got now is far, far weaker than America’s demonstrated history. Every apologist for statism has a hundred carefully-rehearsed reasons for why all historical comparisons with Obama’s limp economy are invalid. The one indisputable truth is that we were more free when we did better.
    Let’s try that again, and see what happens. Let’s rattle some cages, pull the bony hands of bankrupt Big Government off the national steering wheel, and see where we can go. The control freaks had their chance — far more of a chance than we should ever have given them — and they sold us stagnation at premium prices.

    Read More Stories About:

    Big Government, Economics, Taxes, Big Government, GDP, economic growth, statism, economic liberty

    Obama Nominates Gayle Smith to Lead U.S.A.I.D.WASHINGTON

    — President Obama nominated Gayle Smith, a senior White House official, on Thursday to be the next administrator of the United States Agency for International Development, administration officials said.  If confirmed by the Senate, Ms. Smith, a longtime development and Africa specialist in the Clinton and Obama administrations, would succeed Dr. Rajiv Shah, who left the agency in February after five years on the job.  Ms. Smith, 59, who is well-known in Washington development circles, would be responsible for leading the government’s response to humanitarian disasters like the earthquake in Nepal, the refugee crisis in Syria and the receding Ebola epidemic in West Africa, as well as managing the agency’s $20 billion budget.  She would also have to figure out a way to duplicate her predecessor’s skillful managing of congressional Republicans. Dr. Shah was widely credited with successfully defending the agency’s budget at a time of belt-tightening and intense partisanship. He was also known for innovative programs that sought to tackle global health and development challenges in unusual ways. Photo Gayle Smith, special assistant to President Obama and a senior director on the National Security Council, at a Society for International Development meeting in 2011. Credit Jewel Samad/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images  For instance, last fall, during the height of the Ebola epidemic, Dr. Shah announced the Fighting Ebola Grand Challenge, in which the agency invited inventors to devise equipment for front-line medical workers fighting Ebola. The challenge produced an entry from Johns Hopkins University, with a team that included a Baltimore wedding dress designer, Jill Andrews. She designed a simplified protective suit that takes the wearer only eight steps to shed instead of 20, thus lowering the risk of exposure to the disease.  Ms. Smith should be able to match Dr. Shah’s success, said Liz Schrayer, president of the U.S. Global Leadership Coalition, a group of businesses and nonprofits that supports development, in part because she has backed the same initiatives.  “Gayle supports prioritizing economic growth and making sure countries have skin in the game and are committed to real reform,” Ms. Schrayer said. “That’s where I think Republicans who have been supportive of Raj will be supportive of Gayle.”  But Dr. Shah had missteps as well. The Associated Press reported in 2014 that during his tenure, U.S.A.I.D. operated a social media account to encourage young Cubans to revolt against the Castro government. The secret program ran out of funds in 2012, after two years; Senator Patrick J. Leahy, Democrat of Vermont, called it “dumb, dumb, dumb” after it was disclosed.  The Obama administration has since taken steps to normalize relations with Cuba. But Ms. Smith will inherit other efforts from her predecessor, in particular managing the end of the battle against the Ebola epidemic and trying to ensure that the next time the virus flares up, the world has a better and faster response.  She has experience in that area. As special assistant to Mr. Obama and senior director for development and democracy on the National Security Council, she helped coordinate the administration’s response to the epidemic last year, including Mr. Obama’s decision to deploy 3,000 American troops to Liberia.  Ms. Smith spent 20 years in Africa — Ethiopia, Sudan and Kenya — first as a freelance journalist for the British Broadcasting Corporation, Reuters, The Associated Press and The Boston Globe, and then with nongovernmental groups. She is a co-founder of the Enough Project to end genocide. Next in World Chinese and Russian Navies to Hold Joint Drills in Mediterranean

    Obama to Announce Free E-Books for Low-Income Kids

    President Barack Obama will go to a public library in one of Washington's poorest neighborhoods on Thursday to talk about a plan to give low-income children access to 10,000 e-books.
    Working with publishers and libraries, the White House sees the modest plan as part of a strategy to address inner city problems by increasing educational opportunities for kids -- woes brought into focus with recent riots in nearby Baltimore.
    Kids will need computers and devices to read the e-books. Jeff Zients, Obama's top economic adviser, noted the White House had previously announced programs to upgrade Internet services for schools and libraries, with private sector help from companies including Apple, which pledged $100 million in devices to low-income schools.
    "If we're serious about living up to what our country is about, then we have to consider what we can do to provide opportunities in every community, not just when they're on the front page, but every day," Zients said in a briefing with reporters.
    The plan includes $250 million in e-book commitments from publishers, including from the five major publishing houses: Macmillan, Simon & Schuster, Penguin Random House, Hachette, and HarperCollins.

    IN-DEPTH

    --- Reuters

    Hooters to Air Pacquiao-Mayweather Match Despite High Price Tag

    Boxing fans who’d hoped to scarf some chicken wings while watching the Manny Pacquiao-Floyd Mayweather fight will be able to do so after all.
    Hooters of America LLC will show the match on Saturday at about two-thirds of its U.S. restaurants. On Wednesday, Buffalo Wild Wings Inc. said it wouldn’t air the bout at most U.S. locations because of the $5,100-a-store price tag.
    “Without doubt, Hooters is airing The Fight of the Century!” Chief Marketing Officer Carl Sweat said in a statement. “While the investment is significant to make it happen, we want our guests to know that they can always count on Hooters.”
    About 229 of Hooters’ 340 U.S. locations will show the match. Live sports events are a big deal for bar-and-grill restaurants because they attract customers who stay for a while, noshing on food and ordering drinks.
    Hooters could use a lift from the fight. Last year, Hooters’ domestic sales rose 2.5 percent to about $848.8 million, following a gain of just 0.4 percent in 2013, according to restaurant researcher Technomic Inc. That trails the roughly 20 percent revenue gains Buffalo Wild Wings has posted the past two years.
    Buffalo Wild Wings isn’t alone in passing on the fight. Chili’s Grill & Bar also won’t air the bout.
    “It’s pay-per-view, and we do not typically subscribe to those type of events,” said Ashley Johnson, a spokeswoman for Chili’s owner Brinker International Inc.
    Applebee’s, owned by DineEquity Inc., said franchisees will decide if they want to show the fight or not.
    At Hooters, it costs $30 to reserve a seat for Saturday’s match. The admission comes with an appetizer of fried pickles and $20 in food coupons for future visits to the chain.
    Closely held Hooters, based in Atlanta, has about 430 restaurants globally.

    Photographer: Pete Marovich/Bloomberg Photos: Obama Gives Japan’s Abe an Impromptu Tour of Lincoln Memorial

    President Barack Obama and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe sprung a surprise on tourists in Washington Monday with an unannounced trip to the Lincoln Memorial, Bloomberg's Angela Greiling Keane reports. Shortly after Abe arrived in the capital, the two leaders jumped into a motorcade for the short trip from the White House to the memorial to the 16th U.S. president, Abraham Lincoln, which sits on the western end of the National Mall, adjacent to the Potomac River.
    1. Walk and talk
      Photographer: Pete Marovich/Bloomberg
      16

      Walk and talk

      President Barack Obama, right, and Shinzo Abe, Japan's prime minister, speak while walking to visit the Lincoln Memorial in Washington on April 27, 2015.
    2. Face time
      Photographer: Pete Marovich/Bloomberg
      26

      Face time

      President Barack Obama, left, and Shinzo Abe, Japan's prime minister, speak while visiting the Lincoln Memorial in Washington on April 27, 2015.
    3. Up close
      Photographer: Pete Marovich/Bloomberg
      36

      Up close

      President Barack Obama, left, and Shinzo Abe, Japan's prime minister, speak while visiting the Lincoln Memorial in Washington on April 27, 2015.
    4. Steps of history
      Photographer: Pete Marovich/Bloomberg
      46

      Steps of history

      President Barack Obama, left, and Shinzo Abe, Japan's prime minister, speak while visiting the Lincoln Memorial in Washington on April 27, 2015.
    5. Washington Monument
      Photographer: Pete Marovich/Bloomberg
      56

      Washington Monument

      President Barack Obama, left, and Shinzo Abe, Japan's prime minister, speak while visiting the Lincoln Memorial in Washington on April 27, 2015.
    6. Parks and rec
      Photographer: Pete Marovich/Bloomberg
      66

      Parks and rec

      President Barack Obama, right, and Shinzo Abe, Japan's prime minister, speak with U.S. Park Rangers while visiting the Lincoln Memorial in Washington on April 27, 2015.

    Martin O'Malley Cuts Short European Trip, Returns to Baltimore


    It's personal.
    Former Maryland Governor Martin O'Malley, who once served as Baltimore's mayor, abruptly cut short a trip to Europe on Monday to travel back to the city that exploded in rioting following the funeral of Freddie Gray, an African American who died in police custody.
    O'Malley, the prospective Democratic presidential candidate who had been scheduled to deliver paid speeches in London and Dublin, announced his return in a statement sent to media outlets and posted on Twitter.
    "I'm saddened that the City I love is in such pain this night," O'Malley said in the statement. "All of us share a profound feeling of grief for Freddie Gray and his family.  We must come together as one City to transform this moment of loss and pain into a safer and more just future for all of Baltimore's people."
    Governor Larry Hogan signed an executive order on Monday afternoon declaring a state of emergency, and mobilized the National Guard to send troops to try and calm the violence. Baltimore Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake, meanwhile, issued a city-wide curfew.
    O'Malley, who also served on Baltimore's city council, tweeted his support for Gray's family earlier in the day.
    Gray died 15 days ago of a spinal cord injury after being chased by police.

    Snow Sledding Wins Support on Capitol Hill

    Washington children may finally get to sled on one of the District's best hills in the full light of the law, thanks to an amendment the House Appropriations Committee approved Thursday along with the 2016 Legislative Branch Appropriations Bill.
    Sledding on the Hill was banned after the 9/11 attacks in 2001 prompted increased security.
    Representative Sam Farr, a California Democrat, first wrote the amendment's language, which instructs Capitol Police to "forebear" enforcement of the law "when encountering snow sledders on the grounds." It was included in an amendment submitted to the bill report by Representative Tom Graves, a Republican from Georgia, and could up the pressure on the police from the committee that provides their pay.
    On March 5, one of the last snowy days of the year, children rebelled and stormed the Hill with sleds in hand over the warning of Capitol police, according to Washington media reports. Eleanor Holmes Norton, D.C.'s delegate to Congress, had asked U.S. Capitol Police Board Chairman Frank Larkin to waive the rule but was denied.
    The bill is headed to the House floor.
    Erik Wasson contributed to this report.

    Elizabeth Warren Targets Cruises, iPads in Probe of Finance Perks

    U.S. Senator Elizabeth Warren has a new target: the biggest sellers of annuities and the diamond-encrusted rings, iPads, stock options and cruises she says they’re using to entice brokers to sell their investments.
    Warren, the Massachusetts Democrat and prominent critic of Wall Street, sent letters Tuesday to the U.S.’s 15 largest annuity providers, her office said. She wants to know whether perks they provide encourage brokers to put personal interests ahead of the retirement goals of clients.
    “I am concerned that these incentives present a conflict of interest for agents and financial advisers that could result in these agents providing inadequate advice about annuities to investors and selling products that may not meet the retirement investment needs of their buyers,” Warren said in the letters to companies including Prudential Plc’s Jackson National Life, American International Group Inc. and Lincoln National Corp.
    The American Council of Life Insurers, an industry group, said annuity providers are heavily regulated and comply with rules requiring truthful disclosure. Also, contracts in most states allow consumers full or partial refunds, typically within a period of 10 days, if they aren’t satisfied, according to the ACLI.

    Football Rings

    In the letters, Warren said car leases, National Football League Super Bowl-style rings and other perks are widely known in the industry and appear to be “kickbacks directed at annuity agents and brokers.” Warren’s office is asking the companies to provide by May 11 a list of all incentives offered to middlemen.
    Warren is latching onto incentives in the $235 billion market for annuities to build support for proposed Labor Department regulations that require brokers to act in their retirement clients’ best interest, a standard known as a fiduciary duty. The proposal issued this month is expected to face stiff opposition from Wall Street, Republicans and some Democrats.
    President Barack Obama endorsed Labor’s plan in February, putting new momentum behind the effort to revise rules that affect tens of millions of baby boomers nearing retirement age and workers who don’t have pension plans.
    The new protections would save investors $40 billion in fees over 10 years, according to the Labor Department. At present, brokers face a less-stringent suitability standard that requires investments fit a clients’ needs and risk tolerance.

    Risky Investments

    Financial-industry lobbyists have argued that costlier regulations could take options away for smaller investors.
    Annuities -- typically sold by insurance companies -- are investments that guarantee specific returns over time. People tend to buy them to ensure they have a steady source of income after they retire.
    Investor advocates have warned for years that some annuities carry high fees and big penalties for early withdrawals that make them risky investments for people nearing the end of their lives.
    “From product development to advertising to sales, life insurers offering annuities must comply with state and federal laws and rules that help protect consumers’ interests,” the ACLI said in its statement. “State regulations include extensive product disclosure, strong suitability standards, as well as truth-in-advertising and credentialing requirements.”

    Allianz, Prudential

    Warren sent the letters to Allianz SE’s U.S. life division, TIAA-CREF, New York Life Insurance Co., Prudential Financial Inc., Aegon NV’s Transamerica, Axa SA’s U.S. unit, MetLife Inc., Nationwide Mutual Insurance Co., Pacific Life Insurance Co., Forethought Financial Group Inc., Riversource Life Insurance Co. and Security Benefit Life Insurance Co.
    Representatives of Prudential Financial and Axa said their companies will comply with the senator’s request. Other insurers declined to comment or didn’t return messages.
    Warren is a member of the Senate Banking Committee, which held a Tuesday hearing on insurance regulation.

    Obama Says He Might Go Back to Community Organizing


    One day when he’s done wrangling with the Iranians and congressional Republicans, President Barack Obama plans to get back to where he once belonged.
    The most powerful man in the world wants to return to community organizing after he hands over the keys to the White House in 2017, he told middle-school students at a public library in Washington’s Anacostia neighborhood today.
     “I’ll be done being president in a couple of years and I’ll still be a pretty young man,” he said. “And so I’ll go back to doing the kinds of work I was doing before, just trying to find ways to help people.”
    Obama, who will be 55 years old when he leaves office in 2017, said his post-presidential agenda includes helping children get educations and better access to the job market, and luring businesses into low-income neighborhoods. Just out of college, he worked on Chicago's South Side as a community organizer, a career choice that earned him much derision from conservative quarters.
    “That’s the kind of work that I really love to do,” he said, after one child asked what inspired him to seek the presidency.
    The president’s comments came against the backdrop of unrest in Baltimore, where protests and riots have followed the April 19 death of Freddie Gray, 25, who suffered spinal-cord injuries while in policy custody. Earlier this week, Obama said the violence in Baltimore was indicative of a “slow-rolling crisis” in the nation’s inner cities that would require “some soul-searching.”
    “If our society really wanted to solve the problem, we could,” he said at an April 28 news conference. “It’s just it would require everybody saying this is important, this is significant, and that we don’t just pay attention to these communities when a CVS burns.”
     The president has previously hinted that he wanted to dedicate his post-presidential life to addressing those issues. Last June, Obama said at a town hall-style meeting that he and his wife, Michelle, had discussions about “developing young people and working with them and creating more institutions to promote young leadership.”
    He said at the town hall, however, that his first move, will be to plant himself on “a beach somewhere, drinking out of a coconut.”






    Obama's Correspondents’ Dinner Monologue Has a Thousand Fathers and Mothers

    If there's a comedy equivalent to the "nuclear football," the suitcase with the launch codes, it's a worn gray folder marked "Presidential Statement" that lives in the bowels of the White House, in the speechwriters' suite, and was delivered to the President Barack Obama last night. Inside that folder is a well-guarded arsenal of jokes, roughly 1,100-words, that will come together as the president's monologue for Saturday night's White House Correspondents' Dinner.
    Preventing the president from bombing at the dinner is a fully nationalized effort, involving aides past and present as well as a task force of comedic luminaries. This year, the month-long process leaned on Zach Galifianakis and other film and television comedians as well as White House lawyers, advisers, and cadre of former Obama aides, all coordinated by chief White House speechwriter Cody Keenan and his deputy and in-house funny man David Litt, who's the youthful point-man for the monologue. Litt and Keenan put the finishing touches on their draft Wednesday before sliding it into the folder and sending it upstairs to the leader of the free world. Litt, 28, a former intern at The Onion who honed his comedic skills in a Yale improv group, said there's something uniquely American about the tradition, especially the aspect of presidents poking fun at themselves. "Not every world leader would expose themselves like that."
    
<p>This folder carries the draft of the White House Correspondents Association dinner monologue to President Barack Obama.</p>
    Photograph: Margaret Talev/Bloomberg
    This folder carries the draft of the White House Correspondents Association dinner monologue to President Barack Obama.
    Until now, the president, who's been distracted by issues such as, oh, how to keep Iran from getting a nuclear weapon, or whether his push for a trade deal will hurt Hillary Clinton's bid for president, has had only a general sense of what his team is readying for this annual pop-culture rite of poking fun at himself, Washington, Hollywood, and the press.
    Now it's time for Obama, who is as good a trash-talker as he is a speech giver, and who obviously enjoys his comic turns, to weigh in. "His general interest is making sure it's funny," Keenan said. "What's great about it is it gives you a chance to point out all the absurdities of Washington—and there are plenty of them."
    As has become tradition, this year's process began about a month ago. Keenan and Litt considered the major news events of the past year and recent weeks in particular. They sought intelligence on which stars, newsmakers and journalists would be attending the dinner this year. Litt also reached out through e-mails and telephone calls to the available comic talent. The central players are: Former Obama speechwriter Jon Lovett, a comedy writer and producer for television who previously wrote speeches for Hillary Clinton and played Litt's role at the White House; former Obama chief speechwriter Jon Favreau, who now heads a speechwriting and media consulting firm from California; former senior adviser David Axelrod, who now directs the Institute of Politics at the University of Chicago and has been advising the Labour Party's Ed Miliband in his quest to be prime minister ahead of next month's elections in the UK; Tommy Vietor, a former National Security Council spokesman now in business with Favreau; and former senior adviser Dan Pfeiffer.
    The president's comedy team also has developed relationships over the years with an array of professional comedians and writers with whom they've become connected. Galifianakis, who bonded with Obama in a surprisingly successful "Between Two Ferns" sketch as the president tried to persuade young people to enroll in his health care plan, contributed "one really good joke" for the monologue this year, according to Keenan, though he wouldn’t say more; Judd Apatow; Stephen Colbert; writers for The Daily Show and Saturday Night Live including Katie Rich; Rachel Sklar, a media blogger; Jeff Nussbaum, Litt's former boss at West Wing Writers and a former speechwriter for Vice President Al Gore; and Nell Scovell, the creator of Sabrina, the Teenage Witch, and co-writer of Sheryl Sandberg's women's empowerment book, "Lean In." By the end of the process, Litt said, "I'm sure I'll write a couple hundred jokes to end up with 15 or 20 that make it into the speech!"
    At the White House, as in Hollywood, those outside the inner circle do not get to see the draft of the speech before it's delivered, current and former White House aides said. Also like Hollywood, the writers are often moonlighting. The speechwriters have to juggle this task with their usual duties—perhaps five to 10 speeches a week—such as the remarks Obama gave Wednesday in the Florida Everglades.
    The trick is to guard against This-Town insularity. As a White House speechwriter, says Lovett, "I always found I'd write a joke about something that happened and I'd wonder if anyone on the outside knows about this. Now that I'm on the outside, I'll see the joke and be like, 'I don't know what this is about. I just totally missed this thing.' I'm a little less inside the bubble."
    Lovett loved the gig, partly for the payback factor. "It's the best assignment in the world," Lovett said of contributing to the speech. "It's the coolest thing. It's a chance for the president to make fun of the most ridiculous people in the world. What could get better than that?"
    The normal rules of presidential speechwriting don't apply to the Correspondent's Dinner routine. "This is not like a normal speech where you guard each line desperately," says Jon Favreau, "because you want to test out these jokes."
    After working over the material throughout the month of April, Keenan and Litt met with Obama for the first time on this subject last Friday, at the end of a long day that included meetings with Italy's prime minister and a news conference—for a full five minutes. Then, on Thursday night, Obama and Litt and Keenan will meet again, after which point the process accelerates through the dinner. Up through Saturday night, he'll add jokes of his own, scrap the ones he doesn't like and suggest tweaks.
    Litt and Keenan won't disclose much about what's in this year's routine, though Keenan said that the campaign of "2016 is a safe bet." The kitchen cabinet also is under strict orders not to dish. Some obvious jumping off points might also include marijuana, Cuba, the Clintons and basically all Republicans. Whether the president thinks Harry Reid's debilitating exercise injury is in any way funny or is still in the category of "too soon" remains to be seen.
    A cone of silence hovers over the authorship of the best lines of past years. "Once they appear in the speech, they're the president's jokes," said David Axelrod. An exception is Obama's memorable roasting of Donald Trump at the 2011 dinner. In a joke shaped by comedian and film director Judd Apatow, Obama said:
    I know that he’s taken some flak lately, but no one is happier, no one is prouder to put this birth certificate matter to rest than the Donald. And that’s because he can finally get back to focusing on the issues that matter, like, did we fake the moon landing? What really happened in Roswell? And where are Biggie and Tupac?
    But all kidding aside, obviously, we all know about your credentials and breadth of experience. For example—no, seriously, just recently, in an episode of Celebrity Apprentice—at the steakhouse, the men’s cooking team cooking did not impress the judges from Omaha Steaks. And there was a lot of blame to go around. But you, Mr. Trump, recognized that the real problem was a lack of leadership. And so ultimately, you didn’t blame Lil’ Jon or Meatloaf. You fired Gary Busey. And these are the kind of decisions that would keep me up at night. Well handled, sir. Well handled.
    As he was blithely tormenting Trump, who was in the audience, U.S. special forces, on Obama's order, were preparing to kill Osama bin Laden in an extremely risky mission in Pakistan. Leading up to the speech, he'd instructed his writers to change one of the lines, about Republican candidate Tim Pawlenty, taking out a bin Laden reference. Obama suggested his reasoning was that bin Laden jokes were old-hat; only later did his team realize why he'd really wanted the change. "We had no idea what was going on, obviously," Favreau says.
    The speech can be the occasion for a White House bonding ritual. Some years, on the morning before the dinner, Obama will gather his speechwriters and former aides who've come back to DC for the big party weekend, at the White House, for a final practice session. They'll reminisce and he'll run through the jokes. Most of the gang will be in town this year, and if Obama calls they'll come.
    "This is a rite of passage for presidents, but it's also an opportunity to display self-effacing humor, which is really really important for public officials," Axelrod said.
    Axelrod is sitting this one out. He's tied up making preparations for the UK elections just a couple of weeks away. On Saturday night, he said, he'll watch the president deliver his monologue the way most Americans see it. "I'll be monitoring on C-SPAN."
    The president's revisions, though, may go right up until showtime. Litt says he'll be backstage, in the catwalk, just in case.
    Photographer: Mandel Ngan/AFP
    The Fun Police

    Snow Sledding Wins Support on Capitol Hill

    A committee vote on Thursday could make snow days a little more fun.
    Washington children may finally get to sled on one of the District's best hills in the full light of the law, thanks to an amendment the House Appropriations Committee approved Thursday along with the 2016 Legislative Branch Appropriations Bill.
    Sledding on the Hill was banned after the 9/11 attacks in 2001 prompted increased security.
    Representative Sam Farr, a California Democrat, first wrote the amendment's language, which instructs Capitol Police to "forebear" enforcement of the law "when encountering snow sledders on the grounds." It was included in an amendment submitted to the bill report by Representative Tom Graves, a Republican from Georgia, and could up the pressure on the police from the committee that provides their pay.
    On March 5, one of the last snowy days of the year, children rebelled and stormed the Hill with sleds in hand over the warning of Capitol police, according to Washington media reports. Eleanor Holmes Norton, D.C.'s delegate to Congress, had asked U.S. Capitol Police Board Chairman Frank Larkin to waive the rule but was denied.
    The bill is headed to the House floor.
    Erik Wasson contributed to this report.

    And Now for Something Completely Different