Thursday, February 28, 2013

FOXNews.com: Lawmakers Deadlocked as Cuts to Hit

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Lawmakers Deadlocked as Cuts to Hit
Mar 1st 2013, 05:01

The sequester lawmakers have been warning about for months will soon be reality.

Congress effectively missed the deadline to avert the automatic spending cuts, originally passed into law in the summer of 2011. President Obama will officially enact the cuts by the end of the day Friday – but there will be cuts.

Still, if you're reading this, odds are you've survived.

As the White House has come to acknowledge, the impact of the cuts will – for the most part -- not be felt immediately.

The billions of dollars in budget cuts are most likely going to phase in over the next few months. Furloughs of government workers will begin several weeks from now. Administration officials say the impact of this and other cuts will build up over time; President Obama describes the effect on the economy as a "tumble downward."

But some fiscal hawks see a silver lining, in that the sequester will force the government to trim the waste in order to shield higher-priority items. Already, the White House budget office is recommending agencies take a skeptical eye toward costly conferences and training programs.

And there's still time for a deal, only now the debate over the sequester gets wrapped into the debate over an expiring budget provision.

On Friday, Obama is scheduled to meet with congressional leaders from both parties at 10 a.m. This comes after Republicans and Democrats each put forward a proposal Thursday to avert the sequester; each was defeated, paving the way for talks toward a possible compromise.    

Still, the two sides remain deadlocked over the issue of raising taxes. Republicans want to replace the current regime of cuts with different, more sensible, cuts. Democrats want to blend in a set of tax increases, closing loopholes for top earners and some corporations.

The effects of the 2013 sequestration will be rolled out over the next several months. It won't be a government shutdown but it will be a government slowdown.

"The impact of this policy won't be felt overnight but it will be real," Obama said. "The longer these cuts are in place, the greater the damage."

The predicted impact of the spending cuts could come in flight delays, limited hours at national parks, longer wait times at border crossings and furloughs of civilian Pentagon employees – and workers at several other agencies.

Some officials say the administration has the leeway, or should be given the leeway, to spread around the budget pain.

"There is so much hype on this, it's ridiculous," David Walker, former U.S. comptroller general, told Fox News. "We spend as much money as the next 15 countries put together and some of the people who are hyping this big time are going to be really embarrassed."

How the public reacts to the cuts will have an effect on how Congress addresses the issue. If voters react with a shrug, the GOP may be less compelled to agree to the kinds of tax increases Obama wants. If there's a big backlash, the Obama administration may take it as vindication that the public won't stand for big cuts to federally funded programs. Still, Republicans point out that the sequester idea originated at the White House.

"The sky is not going to fall but things will get progressively worse," Maryland Democrat Rep. Chris Van Hollen said.

White House spokesman Jay Carney said Friday's talks are designed to be a "constructive discussion" about how to keep the deep spending cuts from having harmful consequences.

The meeting, the first face-to-face since Obama was sworn in for his second term in January, will essentially look past the current $85 billion in cuts to the next looming fiscal crisis – a possible government shutdown.

On March 27, the fiscal 2013 continuing appropriations resolution expires, cutting off the ability of most agencies and programs to operate. A new spending bill will be needed to keep the government from shutting down.

Following March Madness – budget style – Congress will have two months to decide on the debt limit. Congress has suspended enforcement of the $16.4 trillion limit on federal borrowing until May 18. The short-term debt limit deal will then raise the borrowing limit the following day, on May 19, to the debt accumulated up through May 18. The short-term extension, approved in January, will allow what budget experts project will be $450 billion in additional borrowing before the debt limit is raised to a new, higher level.

And then, even if no increase in granted by May 19, the Treasury Department will be able to stave off a final day of reckoning until late July or early August by redeploying cash management measures which would allow it to claw back about $220 billion worth of borrowing capacity.

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FOXNews.com: FOX NEWS POLL:Voters Say Cuts Are 'Only Way' to Control Deficit

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FOX NEWS POLL:Voters Say Cuts Are 'Only Way' to Control Deficit
Mar 1st 2013, 02:40

American voters think the impending across-the-board budget cuts, known as the sequester, are what it will take to get the federal deficit under control -- because there's no other way Congress will do it.  In addition, less than half think the cuts will have a negative effect on the country.  

A new Fox News national poll shows 57 percent of voters think the "only way" to control the deficit is through actions like the automatic cuts because lawmakers are unable to do it on their own.  Some 29 percent have confidence that Congress has the know-how and power to make it happen.  

Click here for full poll results.

The $85 billion in mandatory cuts are set to take effect Friday.

While 45 percent of voters think the consequences of the cuts would be negative, slightly more say they would either have a positive effect (27 percent) or not make much of a difference (22 percent).  

Even voters who think the cuts would have a negative effect are more likely to say sequester-style tactics are necessary to control the deficit.  

In January, President Obama and Congress reached a budget agreement that raised tax rates on wealthy Americans and postponed making spending cuts.  Since then, Republicans and Democrats alike have insisted there must be a smarter way to reduce the deficit.  How would voters like to see this done?  Just over half think a new debt deal should focus only (33 percent) or mostly on budget cuts (19 percent).  Thirty-six percent say it should include an equal mix of spending cuts and tax increases, while hardly any -- 7 percent -- think the new deal should focus only on tax increases.  

Meanwhile, people are feeling worse about the economy.  Over half -- 55 percent -- say it feels like things are getting worse for their family.  That's not only up from 45 percent who felt that way in October, but also nearly matches the high of 56 percent in 2006.  Thirty-one percent say it feels like things are getting better.

Views on the economy are closely tied to party identification:  52 percent of Democrats say things are getting better for their family, while just 8 percent of Republicans say the same.  Fully 77 percent of Republicans say things are getting worse, up from 71 percent in October.  

The president's ratings are down a bit, with 46 percent approving of the job Obama's doing and 47 percent disapproving.  Earlier this month 49 percent of voters approved and 45 percent disapproved (February 4-6, 2013).  

Despite his mixed ratings, the president continues to trounce Congress:  77 percent disapprove of lawmakers on Capitol Hill, almost five times as many as the 16 percent who approve.

In addition, more than twice as many voters have a favorable opinion of Obama (51 percent) as feel that way about his main Republican sparring partner on the budget negotiations, House Speaker John Boehner (23 percent favorable).  

On a series of issues the poll asks voters if they feel "fed up" or if it doesn't bother them that much.  Most voters are fed up with the growing deficit (81 percent), too much government spending (79 percent) and gridlock in Washington (78 percent).  The only thing to top the aggravation with what's going on in Washington: 84 percent are fed up with gas prices.   

After the State of the Union address this month, President Obama took his message on the road with campaign-style events in North Carolina, Georgia, Illinois and Virginia.  Voters disagree with this as a method for getting things done.  Nearly 6 in 10 say the best way for the president to solve the nation's problems would be to "lock himself in a room with Republicans" and work out solutions, while 32 percent think he should travel and "make his case directly to voters."  

The new poll, released Thursday, shows voters see the president in a better negotiating position than in the past.  A 54-percent majority says Obama is a "strong and decisive leader," up from 45 percent (August 2011).  

More voters think Obama is a strong leader than approve of the job he's doing.  That's because some 17 percent think Obama is a strong leader even though they disapprove of his job performance.  

Republicans are about two and a half times as likely to say Obama is a strong leader (24 percent) as they are to give him positive marks for his job performance (10 percent approve).  

Recently former Wyoming Sen. Alan Simpson, who co-chaired Obama's deficit-reduction commission, said that Obama will have a quote "failed presidency" unless he deals with entitlement programs such as Medicare and Social Security because those must be dealt with to get the economy on a sustainable path.  By a margin of 51-42 percent, voters agree with Simpson -- including 38 percent of Democrats, 49 percent of independents and 66 percent of Republicans.  Those most likely to agree are Tea Partiers (70 percent) and "very" conservatives (68 percent).

Former President George W. Bush stopped golfing after the start of the Iraq war.  Views are divided over whether the condition of the economy merits the same from President Obama:  43 percent think he should stop golfing until the unemployment rate improves and the economy is doing better, while 45 percent disagree.  

Republicans (57 percent) are more likely to say Obama should stop golfing, while over half of Democrats (55 percent) and independents (51 percent) come down on the other side.  

The Fox News poll is based on landline and cell phone interviews with 1,010 randomly chosen registered voters nationwide and was conducted under the joint direction of Anderson Robbins Research (D) and Shaw & Company Research (R) from February 25 to February 27.  The full poll has a margin of sampling error of plus or minus three percentage points.

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FOXNews.com: MOUNTAIN MAN-TRA:Keep Your Building Code Laws to Yourself

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MOUNTAIN MAN-TRA:Keep Your Building Code Laws to Yourself
Mar 1st 2013, 02:40

A self-styled 'Mountain Man' who left modern conveniences for the backwoods of North Carolina decades ago is butting heads with local officials who say his forest compound isn't up to code – and he may have television to blame.

Eustace Conway, who owns and operates a school that teaches hundreds of people how to live closer to nature, received a cease and desist letter from county officials who say his buildings don't meet code.

"Basically I'm living like the American heritage pattern of all our ancestors and the modern world isn't, and they don't know how to accept me," said Conway.

But Conway says the county has inspected the property before and told him everything was fine. Some believe the county only took notice after Conway appeared on the History Channel's "Mountain Men."

"This is supposed to be the land of the free. Government is supposed to help people."

- Eustace Conway

Everything in Conway's Turtle Island Preserve is organic and made from nature. The preserve's website notes the property's buildings are "carved literally from the wilderness."

But the naturalness of the property is precisely what has sparked county officials to take notice. Officials say unless Conway can meet building codes and safety regulations, the camp and school will be closed.

"If we complied to everything the county is requesting, we would cease to exist as we are," one Turtle Island staffer said. "We are inherently primitive."

The county says it is just looking to fulfill its duty to protect public health and safety.

"The primary concern of the county is that these visitors are in and out of these buildings which were neither permitted nor inspected for compliance with the NC building code," said the Watauga County Planning and Inspections Department.

"This is supposed to be the land of the free. Government is supposed to help people, protect their individual liberties and freedom -- that's not what's happening here," said Conway.

Conway says he plans to fight to keep his nature school the way it was built.

"I'm not confident I can win it. I'm confident I ought to win it," said Conway. "This is something I spent this much of my life, I don't have much left."

Click for more from MyFox8.com.

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FOXNews.com: Obama urges court to overturn gay marriage ban

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Obama urges court to overturn gay marriage ban
Mar 1st 2013, 01:14

In a historic argument for gay rights, President Barack Obama on Thursday urged the Supreme Court to overturn California's same-sex marriage ban and turn a skeptical eye on similar prohibitions across the country.

The Obama administration's friend-of-the-court brief marked the first time a U.S. president has urged the high court to expand the right of gays and lesbians to wed. The filing unequivocally calls on the justices to strike down California's Proposition 8 ballot measure, although it stops short of the soaring rhetoric on marriage equality Obama expressed in his inaugural address in January.

California is one of eight states that give gay couples all the benefits of marriage through civil unions or domestic partnership, but don't allow them to wed. The brief argues that in granting same-sex couples those rights, California has already acknowledged that gay relationships bear the same hallmarks as straight ones.

"They establish homes and lives together, support each other financially, share the joys and burdens of raising children, and provide care through illness and comfort at the moment of death," the administration wrote.

The brief marks the president's most expansive view of gay marriage and signals that he is moving away from his previous assertion that states should determine their own marriage laws. Obama, a former constitutional law professor, signed off on the administration's legal argument last week following lengthy discussions with Attorney General Eric Holder and Solicitor General Donald Verrilli.

In a statement following the filing, Holder said "the government seeks to vindicate the defining constitutional ideal of equal treatment under the law."

Obama's position, if adopted by the court, would likely result in gay marriage becoming legal in the seven other states: Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Nevada, New Jersey, Oregon and Rhode Island.

In the longer term, the administration urges the justices to subject laws that discriminate on sexual orientation to more rigorous review than usual, as is the case for claims that laws discriminate on the basis of race, sex and other factors.

The Supreme Court has never given gay Americans the special protection it has afforded women and minorities. If it endorses such an approach in the gay marriage cases, same-sex marriage bans around the country could be imperiled.

Friend-of-the-court briefs are not legally binding. But the government's opinion in particular could carry some weight with the justices when they hear oral arguments in the case on March 26.

Despite the potentially wide-ranging implications of the administration's brief, it still falls short of what gay rights advocates and the attorneys who will argue against Proposition 8 had hoped for. Those parties had pressed the president to urge the Supreme Court to not only overturn California's ban, but also declare all gay marriage bans unconstitutional.

Still, marriage equality advocates publicly welcomed the president's legal positioning.

"President Obama and the solicitor general have taken another historic step forward consistent with the great civil rights battles of our nation's history," said Chad Griffin, president of the Human Rights Campaign and co-founder of the American Foundation for Equal Rights, which brought the legal challenge to Proposition 8.

The president raised expectations that he would back a broad brief during his inauguration address on Jan. 21. He said the nation's journey "is not complete until our gay brothers and sisters are treated like anyone else under the law."

"For if we are truly created equal, than surely the love we commit to one another must be equal as well," he added.

Obama has a complicated history on gay marriage. As a presidential candidate in 2008, he opposed the California ban but didn't endorse gay marriage. He later said his personal views on gay marriage were "evolving."

When he ran for re-election last year, Obama announced his personal support for same-sex marriage, but said marriage was an issue that states, not the federal government, should decide.

Public opinion has shifted in support of gay marriage in recent years.

In May 2008, Gallup found that 56 percent of Americans felt same-sex marriages should not be recognized by the law as valid. By last November, 53 percent felt they should be legally recognized.

Gay marriage supporters see the Supreme Court's hearing of Proposition 8, as well as a related case on the Defense of Marriage Act, as a potential watershed moment for same-sex unions.

In a well-coordinated effort, opponents of the California ban flooded the justices with friend-of-the-court briefs in recent days.

Among those filing briefs were 13 states, including four that do not now permit gay couples to wed, and more than 100 prominent Republicans, such as GOP presidential candidate Jon Huntsman and Florida Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen.

Two professional football players who have been outspoken gay rights advocates also filed a brief in the California case. Minnesota Vikings punter Chris Kluwe and Baltimore Ravens linebacker Brendon Ayanbadejo urged the court to rule in favor of same-sex marriage.

The Supreme Court has several options to decide the case that would be narrower than what the administration is asking. The justices also could uphold the California provision, as opponents of gay marriage are urging.

One group, the National Organization for Marriage, expects the Supreme Court to uphold the votes of over 7 million Californians to protect marriage, spokesman Thomas Peters said.

One day after the Supreme Court hears the California case, the justices will hear arguments on provisions of the federal Defense of Marriage Act, which defines marriage as between a man and a woman for the purpose of deciding who can receive a range of federal benefits.

The administration abandoned its defense of the act in 2011, but the measure will continue to be federal law unless it is struck down or repealed.

In a brief filed last week, the government said Section 3 of the act "violates the fundamental constitutional guarantee of equal protection" because it denies legally married same-sex couples many federal benefits that are available only to legally married heterosexual couples.

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FOXNews.com: DRONES OVER CAMPUS?Schools Reportedly Look To Skies for Surveillance

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DRONES OVER CAMPUS?Schools Reportedly Look To Skies for Surveillance
Mar 1st 2013, 00:00

As college students are finding themselves, are schools using drones to find them?

Thirty-four colleges and universities applied for permission to fly unmanned surveillance drones over campuses across the country in 2012, according to records obtained by a privacy watchdog group. The schools cite plans for a wide array of scientific research, yet activists and privacy experts are nevertheless concerned about the high-flying spies.

"I find it troubling that this is the first most students have heard of secret plans to fly military-grade spy machines high above their dorms, classrooms and quads," Josiah Ryan, editor-in-chief of conservative education blog Campus Reform, told FoxNews.com.

"The constitutional right to privacy does not end on campus. The presidents of each of these 34 institutions owe their students, donors and taxpayers an explanation."

'We were concerned about the domestic use of drones.'

- Jennifer Lynch, staff attorney for watchdog group EFF

The use of unmanned drones has soared in the U.S. military, which has come to rely on the robotic planes for targeted attacks and covert spying worldwide. Domestically, drone use has skyrocketed as well: More than 80 applications for drone-flying permits were filed with the Federal Aviation Administration in 2012, including more than thirty universities, according to records obtained by watchdog group the Electronic Frontier Foundation.

"We were concerned about the domestic use of drones. Especially about who would be using them," Jennifer Lynch, staff attorney for the EFF, told FoxNews.com. "It's been good to get the information because people can go informed with questions to their local officials."

The lists of higher-learning institutions that have applied for the drone permits include:

  • Cornell University, which applied for a permit to use a university-built unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) to collect atmosphere and weather data as well as to track airborne spores in a study drafted to combat potato blight. The study was done in 2012 and the permit has since expired, and school officials say they have no other active permits.
  • the University of Michigan for use on Lake Michigan's Grand Traverse Bay for "persistent surveillance on open water by gathering data as a drifting surface buoy that repositions via flight."
  • the University of Florida, which applied for a permit to fly a NOVA "in support of ongoing aerospace, geomatics, ecological and aquatic research."
  • the University of Wisconsin-Madison for the purpose of attaching a camera to a remotely controlled plane to take "low-altitude pictures" for a river restoration project.

One campus public safety organization even applied to use drones to assist in monitoring the school grounds.

The Georgia Institute of Technology's police department applied for a permit to use two small helicopter drones during special events, as well as day-to-day operations, "to respond to areas before a police officer would quickly place 'eyes on the target or crisis area'."

The school's PD first applied in 2009, but was denied. Some experts say that using the drones in daily operations would likely have been ineffective.

"The majority of crimes on a college campus happen behind closed doors," Steven J. Healy, managing partner of Margolis Healy, a Vermont-based campus security consulting firm, told FoxNews.com. "Drones wouldn't do much good in helping to spot anything as it's occurring."

Officials at Georgia Tech may have agreed, having dropped their bid for a permit after being denied.

"The [drone] initiative was just in the concept phase. When the FAA denied the application, our police department decided to allocate its resources elsewhere," Georgia Tech spokesman Matt Negel said in a written statement to FoxNews.com.

Detractors say there is little to stop drones moving from the research department to the public safety branches of universities that have applied. That scenario is highly unlikely, Healy's business partner said.

"It would be surprising if a research drone obtained by a university was put on loan to the campus police department for surveillance," said Gary Margolis, managing partner of Margolis Healy who served as the chief of police at the University of Vermont and State Agricultural College for over a decade. "It is possible, but it would have to go through an internal bureau and it would be an unreasonable expense."

In recent years, the federal government has ramped up efforts to issue private licenses for drone use with nearly 1,500 issued since 2007, according to statistics released this month. While only 327 of those permits are still active, the findings have done little to quell the public's paranoia that big brother may be watching.

"What's often missed in this debate is that there are many, many applications [for drone use]," Steve Giten, a spokesman for drone manufacturer AeroVironment, told FoxNews.com. "Many of them are important and valuable and non-controversial."

"We are certain that people will gain understanding as time goes on," he said.

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FOXNews.com: FOX NEWS POLL: Voters Disagree With Obama on Transparency

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FOX NEWS POLL: Voters Disagree With Obama on Transparency
Mar 1st 2013, 00:00

Earlier this month President Barack Obama praised his administration as "the most transparent administration in history."  

American voters disagree.

A new Fox News poll finds that 37 percent of voters think the Obama administration is less open and transparent than previous administrations, and another 35 percent say it is about as transparent as others.

Click here for full poll results.

Twenty-six percent agree President Obama has met a 2008 presidential campaign commitment to openness and that his administration is more transparent than others.  

The issue rose to the surface again last week when the White House press corps was shut out from watching President Obama play golf with Tiger Woods.  Prior to that reporters had been questioning the openness of the administration on weightier issues, such as the Benghazi attack on U.S. diplomats.

The differing views of the administration's transparency have a strong partisan bias.  

By a 38 percentage-point margin, Democrats say Obama has been more transparent than previous presidents, while Republicans say it has been less open by a 58-point margin.  Among independents, 14 percent say Obama has been more open, 40 percent say less open and 45 percent say it's been about the same as others.

By contrast, by a 62-29 percent margin, voters say media coverage of Washington and the White House is focusing more on silly issues of little importance for the country than serious issues of great importance.  

The Fox News poll is based on landline and cell phone interviews with 1,010 randomly chosen registered voters nationwide and was conducted under the joint direction of Anderson Robbins Research (D) and Shaw & Company Research (R) from February 25 to February 27.  The full poll has a margin of sampling error of plus or minus three percentage points.

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FOXNews.com: COMMON-SENSE CUTS? Sequester Prompts Hard Look at Travel, Training

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COMMON-SENSE CUTS? Sequester Prompts Hard Look at Travel, Training
Feb 28th 2013, 21:49

Amid the doom and gloom over looming budget cuts, some are starting to see a silver lining. 

The government might finally be forced to cut the waste, fiscal hawks say, and officials are already beginning to do away with some of the costly trappings of their office. 

"Hopefully, we can begin moving in the direction of getting our economy moving by getting control of government overspending and debt," Tim Phillips, president of the conservative Americans for Prosperity, told FoxNews.com Thursday. "This is at least a modest step in that direction." 

Barring any shock developments, the sequester will go into effect Friday. The Senate held votes Thursday afternoon on dueling bills to avert the cuts, but both failed. The Republican bill died, garnering just 38 votes; the Democratic proposal garnered 51 votes, but not the 60 necessary to advance.
President Obama next will convene a meeting with the top four congressional leaders Friday in Washington, to discuss the way forward -- as the sequester battle now merges with the looming debate over an expiring budget bill. 

Few are actually rejoicing over these specific cuts, though Democrats have tried to give that impression about their Republican colleagues.   

"There are Republicans dancing in the streets, happy with the thought that sequestration will happen," Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., claimed Thursday. 

But the fact that Washington has stopped kicking the can on the cuts -- which were enacted in 2011 as part of the debt-ceiling debate and amount to $1 trillion over the next decade -- is seen by many Republicans as a win. Republicans aides claim to have the upper hand going into budget talks since they want the spending reductions. 

Neither side wants these specific reductions, which indiscriminately shave budgets across the board and hit the military particularly hard. Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., said Thursday he will "do anything" to scratch the defense portion of the sequester. But Republicans say the cuts don't have to be as bad as the administration is making them sound, especially if Congress grants the administration more flexibility. The pressure of the deadline being passed could compel both sides to reach an amicable agreement in the coming weeks that still shaves the deficit. 

Already, Washington is starting to show signs of more fiscal discipline. 

House Speaker John Boehner announced Wednesday that he is suspending the use of military aircraft for official travel by House lawmakers. 

And Vice President Biden said the sequester made him rethink the military flights he takes to his home state of Delaware. He said Wednesday that he's going to go back to taking the train. 

Biden, known for his fondness of Amtrak, was upbeat about that particular part of sequester. 

"I was able to say, 'Look guys, I've got to take the train now -- it's cheaper than flying.' So I get to take the train again," Biden said. 

And the White House budget office on Thursday told agency heads they should scrutinize new spending like "hiring new personnel" and issuing "monetary awards to employees." Addressing a pet peeve of fiscally conservative lawmakers, the office also urged against spending money on "new training, conferences and travel." The government spent hundreds of millions of dollars on conferences in fiscal 2012. 

For sure, the negative effects from the sequester will eventually be felt. White House Press Secretary Jay Carney warned Thursday of "dramatic effects." 

This includes some steps that have already gotten underway, including the release of low-priority illegal immigrants from Arizona jails and the docking of an aircraft carrier that was supposed to go to the Persian Gulf. 

Tens of thousands of federal workers are expected to be furloughed. Unemployment checks could be reduced. FAA cuts are, according to the Transportation Department, expected to result in longer delays for travelers. The Food and Drug Administration warned Thursday that the cuts will result in fewer food safety inspections. 

Phillips claimed Democrats are trying to make the sequester "as painful as possible," and that it will be up to conservatives to "fight" to prove that it doesn't have to be a catastrophe. 

"We've just got to keep reminding the American people this is 2 cents on the dollar, for a government that is spending a trillion more than it takes in," he said. 

Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell made the same argument Thursday. "Instead of directing his Cabinet secretaries to trim waste in their departments, he's going after first responders and teachers and almost any other sympathetic constituency you can think of," he said, calling this attitude "nonsense." 

Republicans want to make sure that if any package replaces the automatic spending cuts, it is replaced by spending cuts alone -- their unsuccessful bill Thursday would have given Obama more flexibility to spread the cuts around. Democrats, by contrast, want the package to be replaced with a mix of spending cuts and tax increases. 

"Republicans should give Congress true flexibility," Senate Democratic Leader Harry Reid said Thursday. "Flexibility to cut wasteful subsidies, flexibility to close unnecessary tax loopholes, and flexibility to ask the richest of the rich to contribute a little bit more. Instead they've completely become inflexible."

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FOXNews.com: HIGH-FLYING HOLDER: $11.4M Luxury Jet Tab For AG, FBI Director

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HIGH-FLYING HOLDER: $11.4M Luxury Jet Tab For AG, FBI Director
Feb 28th 2013, 20:57

Two high-tech luxury jets that the FBI convinced Congress were needed for the fight against global terrorism have instead been used to ferry around Attorney General Eric Holder and his predecessors, as well as FBI Director Robert Mueller, according to a government report released Thursday.

Those officials -- which included Holder and Mueller, as well as former Attorneys General Michael Mukasey and Alberto Gonzales -- racked up nearly 700 "nonmission" trips between 2007 and 2011, at a cost of $11.4 million, according to the Government Accountability Office 

Those officials are required to use government aircraft, and in some cases reimbursed the government for a portion of the expenses. But Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, ranking member on the Senate Judiciary Committee, said given the cost they should either not use the expensive Gulfstream V jets or cut back on their miles. 

"These luxury jets were supposedly needed for counterterrorism, but it turns out that they were used almost two-thirds of the time for jet-setting executive travel," he said. "Nobody disputes that the Attorney General and the FBI Director should have access to the secure communications, but, for instance, there's no reason they can't take a less expensive mode of transportation, or cut their personal travel." 

A call to the Department of Justice for comment was not immediately returned. 

The cost attributed to attorney general travel was $5.8 million; the FBI director's travel cost nearly as much. Roughly 70 percent of the AG flights were for business, and 28 percent were for personal reasons. 

The findings in the report come amid a highly publicized fight over spending cuts set to take effect Friday. 

The Obama administration has repeatedly painted a dismal picture of what could happen if across-the-board spending cuts are allowed to take place under the process known as sequestration. The $85 billion in cuts are scheduled to go into effect on March 1 unless Congress can reach a compromise, which is unlikely.

"I'm really interested in how the Attorney General can claim that federal law enforcement agents will be cut, knowing that over the last five years the Department has allowed for millions of dollars to be spent on personal travel. It's ludicrous," Grassley said.

According to the report, from 2007 through 2011, 61 percent of the flights were aboard one of the two Gulfstream V aircrafts, and 25 percent of the flights were aboard the FBI's Citation (CE-750). The remaining 14 percent of flights were aboard another FBI aircraft.

FBI officials told investigators that the Gulfstream Vs and the Citation were used because they have "secure communications, larger passenger capacity and the long-distance range that is necessary for their required use travel."

The report also points out that the government should be reimbursed for any personal travel at the full coach fare between cities. The reimbursement amount, or equivalent commercial fare, usually ends up being less than the cost of operating a government aircraft.

In November 2010, a personal trip taken by the attorney general to New York on the Gulfstream V had an estimated flight cost of $15,894, but the reimbursement at the equivalent commercial fare was $420.80.

The report said that for 88 of the trips, the attorney general reimbursed for a total amount of $47,000. The FBI director reimbursed roughly $4,500 for a total of 10 trips. 

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FOXNews.com: Rodman to Kim Jong Un: 'You have a friend for life'- Korean War soldier's remains returned 62 years later

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Rodman to Kim Jong Un: 'You have a friend for life'- Korean War soldier's remains returned 62 years later
Feb 28th 2013, 20:36

SEOUL, South Korea –  Ex-NBA star Dennis Rodman hung out Thursday with North Korea's Kim Jong Un on the third day of his improbable journey with VICE to Pyongyang, watching the Harlem Globetrotters with the leader and later dining on sushi and drinking with him at his palace.

"You have a friend for life," Rodman told Kim before a crowd of thousands at a gymnasium where they sat side by side, chatting as they watched players from North Korea and the U.S. play, Alex Detrick, a spokesman for the New York-based VICE media company, told The Associated Press.

Rodman arrived in Pyongyang on Monday with three members of the professional Harlem Globetrotters basketball team, VICE correspondent Ryan Duffy and a production crew to shoot an episode on North Korea for a new weekly HBO series.

The unlikely encounter makes Rodman the most high-profile American to meet Kim since the young North Korean leader took power in December 2011, and takes place against a backdrop of tension between Washington and Pyongyang. North Korea conducted an underground nuclear test just two weeks ago, making clear the provocative act was a warning to the United States to drop what it considers a "hostile" policy toward the North.

Kim, a diehard basketball fan, told the former Chicago Bulls star he hoped the visit would break the ice between the United States and North Korea, VICE founder Shane Smith said.

Dressed in a blue Mao suit, Kim laughed and slapped his hands on the table before him during the game as he sat nearly knee to knee with Rodman. Rodman, the man who once turned up in a wedding dress to promote his autobiography, wore a dark suit and dark sunglasses, but still had on his nose rings and other piercings. A can of Coca-Cola sat on the table before him in photos shared with AP by VICE.

"The crowd was really engaged, laughed at all of the Globetrotters antics, and actually got super loud towards the end as the score got close," said Duffy, who suited up for the game in a blue uniform emblazoned with "United States of America. "Most fun I've had in a while."

Kim and Rodman chatted in English, but Kim primarily spoke in Korean through a translator, Smith said after speaking to the VICE crew in Pyongyang.

"They bonded during the game," Smith said by telephone from New York after speaking to the crew. "They were both enjoying the crazy shots, and the Harlem Globetrotters were putting on quite a show."

The surprise visit by the flamboyant Hall of Famer known as "The Worm" makes him an unlikely ambassador at a time when North Koreans are girding for battle with the U.S. Just last week, Kim guided front line troops in military exercises.

North Korea and the U.S. fought on opposite sides of the three-year Korean War, which ended in a truce in 1953. The foes never signed a peace treaty, and do not have diplomatic relations.

Thursday's game ended in a 110-110 draw, with two Americans playing on each team alongside North Koreans, Detrick said. The Xinhua News Agency first reported on the game, citing witnesses who attended.

After the game, Rodman addressed Kim in a speech before a crowd of tens of thousands of North Koreans, telling him, "You have a friend for life," Detrick said.

At a lavish dinner at Kim's palace, the leader plied the group with food and drinks as the group made round after round of toasts.

"Dinner was an epic feast. Felt like about 10 courses in total," Duffy said in an email to AP. "I'd say the winners were the smoked turkey and sushi, though we had the Pyongyang cold noodles earlier in the trip and that's been the runaway favorite so far."

Duffy said he invited Kim to visit the United States, a proposal met with hearty laughter from the North Korean leader.

"Um ... so Kim Jong Un just got the (hash)VICEonHBO crew wasted ... no really, that happened," VICE producer Jason Mojica wrote on Twitter.

Rodman's trip is the second attention-grabbing U.S. visit this year to North Korea. Google's executive chairman, Eric Schmidt, made a four-day trip in January to Pyongyang, but did not meet the North Korean leader.

In Washington, the State Department refused comment on Rodman's visit or his meeting with Kim. "Private, individual Americans are welcome to take actions they see fit," spokesman Patrick Ventrell said.

He said the Obama administration wasn't in touch with Rodman and wasn't making an effort to contact him.

The administration had frowned on the trip by Schmitt and former New Mexico governor Bill Richardson, but has avoided criticizing Rodman's outing, saying it's about sports.

North Korea's invitation to a man known as much for his piercings, tattoos and bad behavior as for his basketball may seem inexplicable. But Kim is known to love the NBA, and has promoted sports since becoming leader.

"We knew that he's a big lover of basketball, especially the Bulls, and it was our intention going in that we would have a good will mission of something that's fun," Smith said. "A lot of times, things just are serious and everybody's so concerned with geopolitics that we forget just to be human beings."

Rodman's agent, Darren Prince, said Rodman wasn't concerned about criticism about making a visit to an enemy nation.

"Dennis called me last night and said it's been a great experience and he made this trip out of the love of the USA ," he said. "It's all about peace and love."

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FOXNews.com: SCHOLAR SEX CHANGE:Yale Weighs Paying Bills For Student Surgery

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SCHOLAR SEX CHANGE:Yale Weighs Paying Bills For Student Surgery
Feb 28th 2013, 20:57

Yale is considering joining Brown, Penn, Harvard and Cornell universities by picking up the tab for Ivy League students who want sex changes.

The New Haven, Conn., school is still reviewing policies regarding the procedure for its 5,322 undergraduate students and its 6,526 graduate and professional students, but has already extended gender reassignment coverage to employees.

"The benefit is offered to faculty and staff, and is being considered for students," Yale spokeswoman Karen Peart told FoxNews.com in an email. "Cost would vary depending on treatment."

Gabriel Murchison, a member of Yale's Resource Alliance for Gender Equity (RAGE), told FoxNews.com gender reassignment surgery is just one of several areas where student health care should be on par with that offered to faculty, staff and their dependents.

"It's among a handful of health care issues that are of concern to students right now; another would be improving access to mental health and counseling services," Murchison wrote in an email Thursday.

"It's among a handful of health care issues that are of concern to students right now; another would be improving access to mental health and counseling services."

- Gabriel Murchison, junior, Yale University

If Yale makes the change, it won't just join fellow Ivies. At least 36 colleges and universities nationwide cover sex-change surgeries in their student health plans. It's not known how many students have the surgery, which can cost $25,000 or more, but Murchison doubted that it would be enough to make much of a financial impact.

Dr. Paul Genecin, director of Yale's University Health Services, told the Yale Daily News that he has noticed "increasing interest" in offering insurance coverage for the procedure. A "small number of requests" have been received and changes to student benefits are currently "under consideration," Genecin said, adding that gender reassignment surgery coverage was not offered to students when it was extended to faculty and staff because the policies are considering separately.

Brown University made headlines earlier this month when it announced that its student health plan would include sex-change surgery beginning in August, becoming the 36th U.S. college or university to do so, according to the Transgender Law and Policy Institute.

Some 25 other colleges do not cover gender reassignment surgery but do cover related hormone therapy for students, including American University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, The Ohio State University and Princeton University.

The American Medical Association has since 2008 classified gender identity disorder as a "serious medical condition" characterized as a persistent discomfort with one's assigned sex and with one's primary and secondary sex characteristics. Victims may suffer severe depression and may be at risk for suicide.

The trend among schools follows one in the corporate world, where  25 percent of Fortune 100 companies have insurance plans that cover sex changes, up from just 1 percent in 2004, according to the gay rights advocacy group The Human Rights Campaign.

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FOXNews.com: Miss. mayoral candidate's death eyed as murder- Gunman in cop killing a 'ticking time bomb,' dad says

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Miss. mayoral candidate's death eyed as murder- Gunman in cop killing a 'ticking time bomb,' dad says
Feb 28th 2013, 15:53

JACKSON, Miss. –  The death of a Mississippi mayoral candidate who was found on a river levee Wednesday is being investigated as a homicide, authorities said.

Coahoma County Coroner Scotty Meredith said the body of 34-year-old Marco McMillian was found on the Mississippi River levee Wednesday at about 10 a.m.

MSNewsNow.com reports that the sheriff's office said it had a person of interest in custody. The individual had not been charged as of late Wednesday night, according to a post on the department's Facebook page.

The department also said authorities had been looking for McMillian since a man crashed the candidate's car into another vehicle on Tuesday. McMillian was not in the car. The sheriff's office said deputies responded to the two-car crash on U.S. Highway 49 South near the Coahoma and Tallahatchie county lines on Tuesday about 8 a.m.

The department could not confirm or deny to MSNewsNow.com if the individual in custody was the same person who crashed McMillian's car.

The 34-year-old McMillian was running for mayor of Clarksdale, a Blues hub where actor and Mississippi native Morgan Freeman co-owns a music club with Howard Stovall, a Memphis entertainment executive, and Bill Luckett, who also is running for mayor.

Meredith said the body was found between Sherard and Rena Lara and was sent to Jackson for an autopsy. He declined to provide further details or speculate on the cause of death.

McMillian was a Democrat. Campaign spokesman Jarod Keith said McMillian's campaign was noteworthy because he may have been the first openly gay man to be a viable candidate for public office in Mississippi.

Clarksdale, a town of about 17,800 people, is well known to Blues fans as the home of the crossroads, where Robert Johnson is said to have sold his soul to the devil for skills with a guitar.

The town is also home to Ground Zero Blues Club, of which Freeman, an Academy Award winning actor, is part owner.

Dennis Thomas, 33, who works at Abe's Barbeque, said McMillian's death has been the talk of the town.

"There's a lot of people upset about it. Why would somebody want to do something like that to somebody of that caliber? He was a highly respected person in town. He's been in the community helping out a lot," Thomas said.

McMillian was hoping to win the office being vacated by Mayor Henry Espy Jr., the brother of Mike Espy, a former congressman and U.S. Agriculture Secretary. Henry Espy decided not to seek re-election after more than two decades in office. Espy's son, state Rep. Chuck Espy, and Luckett were among the other well-known candidates in the race.

McMillian's campaign said in a statement that words cannot describe "our grief at the loss of our dear friend."

"We remember Marco as a bold and passionate public servant, whose faith informed every aspect of his life," the statement said.

The Gay & Lesbian Victory Fund and Institute tweeted: "Our hearts go out to the family and friends of Marco McMillian, one of the 1st viable openly (hash)LGBT candidates in Mississippi."

McMillian was CEO of MWM & Associates, described on its website as a consulting firm for nonprofit organizations. He had recently served as international executive director of Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity Inc.

Jimmy Hammock, the fraternity's international president, praised McMillian in a Facebook post for making "an incredible difference in his community and in Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity."

A statement from the historically black fraternity said he had secured the first federal contract to "raise the awareness of the adverse impact of HIV/AIDS on communities of color for the Fraternity." It noted that Ebony Magazine had recognized him in 2004 as one of the nation's "30 up-and-coming African Americans" under age 30.

McMillian also worked at Alabama A&M University and Jackson State University in the past. Photos on McMillian's website show him with a younger Barack Obama and with U.S. Rep. John Lewis, the Georgia Democrat.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Click here for more from MSNewsNow.com.

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FOXNews.com: FUEL FOR THOUGHT: Can Coal Technology Save the Electric Car?

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FUEL FOR THOUGHT: Can Coal Technology Save the Electric Car?
Feb 28th 2013, 16:01

New technological advances may make it possible in the near future to engineer a coal-powered car so clean that it produces nearly no polluting emissions, including carbon dioxide, experts tell FoxNews.com.

"There are many exciting possibilities for the clean coal technology," says Liang-Shih Fan, a chemical engineer and director of Ohio State University's Clean Coal Research Laboratory. "We found a way to release the heat from coal without burning it. This could be applicable for many industries."

Fan last week disclosed that he had discovered a way to get the energy out of coal without burning it, using iron-oxide pellets as an oxygen source, and contain the reaction in a small chamber from which pollutants cannot escape. The only waste product would be water and solid coal ash -- no greenhouse gases. As an added benefit, the metal from the iron-oxide is recyclable.

The energy creation process is commonly known as "oxidation," and is the chemical combination of a substance with oxygen. The use of the process is envisioned by Fan and his colleagues as a replacement for old-fashioned coal power plants, which spew greenhouse gases.

Auto Industry, Researchers Excited

Auto industry experts and other researchers are excited about the prospects for use of Fan's clean coal technology to power fleets of cars across America, and as a possible rival to battery-powered hybrids and electric vehicles already in use.

If the technology can be successfully miniaturized enough to fit into cars, the fueling infrastructure needed to service them would not be all that difficult to develop, experts say.

"In using clean coal pellets, a customer could pull up to a filling station, where the clean coal pellets would be introduced into the on-car storage tank. This clean coal would then be used to generate electricity through an on-board generator, which would charge up the ultracapacitors," suggests Chad Hall, founder and vice president of Ioxus, in Oneonta, N.Y., a maker of ultracapacitors for the auto industry.

"While the generator supplies a steady output of energy for maintaining even speeds, the capacitor would be used for acceleration, or as an assist during hill-climbing," said Hall. "The capacitors would continuously be recharged from the generator…and would also provide the necessary energy and heat to initiate the pellet oxidizing reaction during start-up."

Sharon Basel, a spokeswoman for General Motors Corp.'s environment, energy and safety communications department, called the use of Fan's technology to power cars "an interesting concept."
 
Basel notes that coal has been used as a power source for automobiles in the past, but in a much more polluting form. Crafty civilians in occupied France during World War II retrofitted cars to run on coal due to gasoline rationing, imposed by the Nazis and Vichy government. The range of cars like the 1938 Citroen Berline Gazogene 11 on display at the Lane Motor Museum in Nashville was about 30 miles between fill ups, and only a handful of these converted cars are around today.

Two containers under the front fenders were filled with coal and ignited. Methane gas would rise out the tops of the containers to feed a special carburetor fitted to a converted 4-cylinder internal combustion engine. These cars were not environmentally friendly – nor were they meant to be. They were used by a desperate people to survive during wartime.

Basel also points out that liquefied coal is also used today as an automobile fuel in South Africa, which produces a huge amount of coal. That fuel isn't clean coal either, but rather relies on a hybrid technology.

"They are using a technology that utilizes coal to produce a gas mixture, called synthesis gas, containing hydrogen and carbon monoxide, which is used as a building block to produce hydrocarbon liquids, such as gasoline and diesel, through a process called Fisher-Trospsch technology," Basel tells FoxNews.com.  "The process requires the synthesis gas to be pressurized to a very high pressure prior to the FT process, which makes the technology expensive."

Challenges Ahead

There are several challenges for clean coal cars to overcome, similar to those that have been encountered by electric and hybrid cars. Consumers may be initially cautious about such an innovation.

"The big problem with introducing any innovation like this in the auto industry is that by definition, cars are part of a whole system," Rita Gunther McGrath, an associate professor at Columbia Business School, tells FoxNews.com. "Unless there is capacity to re-supply the auto with the material, people operating in anything other than an absolutely fixed route are going to be anxious about adopting it because they are afraid of getting stuck."

GM, of course, already has a focus on electrified cars, says Basel, including the Chevy Volt and Cadillac ELR, but notes that coal is usually used to fuel the power plants that generate the electricity used to charge them. Fan's technology could reduce the emissions of those power plants, and thus lower the already small environmental footprint of these electric cars, a first step to a clean coal-powered highway of tomorrow.

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FOXNews.com: WOODWARD-GATE: White House Denies Threatening Journalist

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WOODWARD-GATE: White House Denies Threatening Journalist
Feb 28th 2013, 13:56

The White House is denying reports an unnamed aide threatened famed Watergate journalist Bob Woodward after the Washington Post reporter challenged President Obama's version of events on the looming sequester last week. 

Woodward claimed Wednesday night that an unnamed White House aide sent him an email saying he would "regret" his comments. Woodward wrote a column in his paper this past weekend claiming Obama was trying to re-write history regarding whose idea the sequester was.

He claimed that earlier in the budget battle, Obama was trying to move the goalposts by trying to shut off the sequester with a mix of tax hikes and spending cuts, instead of just cutting spending, the approach is he arguing for now.

After Politico reported tonight that Woodward was coming forward to claim he was threatened, a White House emailed Fox and other news organizations, denying Woodward was threatened.

"Of course no threat was intended," wrote the White House aide. "As Mr. Woodward noted, the email from the aide was sent to apologize for voices being raised in their previous conversation. The note suggested that Mr. Woodward would regret the observation he made regarding the sequester because that observation was inaccurate, nothing more. And Mr. Woodward responded to this aide's email in a friendly manner."

Fox News' Ed Henry contributed to this report. 

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FOXNews.com: Dems Push Assault Weapons Ban

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Dems Push Assault Weapons Ban
Feb 28th 2013, 10:30

Democrats have begun an all-out push to move a new assault weapons ban through Congress. But it faces strong headwinds from House Republicans, Democrats in pro-gun rights states and many legislatures in western and southern states who are moving in a different direction to ease gun control, rather than strengthen it.

The Senate Judiciary Committee, chaired by the bill's author, Democratic Sen. Dianne Feinstein, heard emotional testimony Wednesday from a witness list stacked with pro-ban speakers -- none more powerful than Neil Heslin of Newtown, Conn., whose son Jesse, was killed in the elementary school massacre. He pointed to his forehead and told the hushed hearing panel about the bullet that struck just below Jesse's  hairline. 

"Jesse looked at coward Adam Lanza in the eyes, saw his face and he looked at the end of that barrel, Jesse didn't run, Jesse didn't turn his back. That was the fatal shot that killed Jesse," he said.

Democrats are pushing for a new gun ban that would limit, among other things, 157 types of so-called assault weapons and magazines that hold more than 10 rounds of ammunition. When asked if there is a constitutionally protected right for someone to own a gun with that kind of capacity to kill, John Walsh, the U.S. Attorney for the District of Colorado speaking on behalf of the Justice Department, said, "There clearly is room for reasonable regulation particularly of dangerous and unusual weapons."

That phrase, "dangerous and unusual weapons," is key to the Democrats' strategy of seeking a new ban that withstands court challenges. In the Supreme Court's Heller decision, which struck down the District of Columbia's handgun ban, Justice Antonin Scalia referenced a 1939 U.S. Supreme Court decision that gave Second Amendment protection to weapons "in common use at the time" of its being written. 

Scalia wrote, "We think that limitation is fairly supported by the historical tradition of prohibiting the carrying of 'dangerous and unusual weapons.'"  

Clearly, Democrats think that a magazine with more than 10 rounds, containing bullets that can do serious damage, qualifies as "dangerous and unusual."

But Republicans argue that those weapons are hardly unusual if in the possession of millions of Americans. There are presently more than 4 million AR 15's in American homes alone, and many more millions of excess-capacity magazines 

Rather than create new laws that impinge on the Second Amendment, one Republicans asked why existing laws are not better enforced. Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., asked Walsh how many people who had failed gun background checks had been referred to state prosecutions. 

Walsh said, "Senator, I don't have a particular  number on that." 

Graham replied, using  the most recent DOJ statistics. "Almost 80,000 people failed background checks and 44 people are prosecuted, what kind of deterrent is that?" he asked.

Republican Sen. Charles Grassley asked why a second assault weapons ban is needed, when a Justice Department study found the effects of the first ban to be inconclusive. 

"They cannot clearly credit the ban with any of the nation's recent drop in gun violence," he said. 

The push for a new assault weapons ban occurs as some states are jockeying  to block a federal assault weapons ban -- while others are moving to enhance it.  

In Illinois, the state legislature has begun a series of votes on a concealed-carry law, after an appeals court ruled the state ban on concealed weapons was unconstitutional. In South Dakota, the Senate has extended permits for concealed weapons from four to five years. In Texas, a new bill would protect state law officers from having to enforce a new federal gun ban. 

One of its sponsors, Rep. Steve Toth, told Fox News, "Dozens and dozens of county sheriffs from around the state of Texas said we're not going to abide by this. This sets up a problem because if, in fact, this legislation does go through,  they would be subject to prosecution by Eric Holder and the Justice Department -- so we've got to protect them."

But there are 23 other states that currently have an "assault weapons ban" or have similar legislation currently pending in their legislature. 

The NRA's Jacqueline Otto tells Fox News, "This is very difficult to measure because anti-gun legislators are always trying to add anti-gun amendments to other pieces of legislation, so bill descriptions are changing constantly."  She added, "Some states that currently have an assault weapons ban are introducing more firearms to be included in their lists of assault weapons by changing the definition of assault weapon." 

Those states include California, Connecticut, Massachusetts, Maryland, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Vermont and Washington.

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