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MAY 19 | The Browning of America

MAY 18 | Heart & Soul Magazine Skips a Beat

MAY 15 | 'The First Gay President' -- Not

ANDREW'S BLOG ROLL

    Obama Meets with African Heads of State

    After addressing the United Nations on the topic of climate change and having a closely-watched bilateral meeting with Chinese president Hu Jintao, President Obama headed to the Clinton Global Initiative to address conference attendees from businesses, NGOs, and governments around the world. There, he gave a well-rounded, if vague address on the major crises of globalization, and the importance of public service, even outside of elected office. "No one nation, no matter how large and how powerful, can meet these challenges alone," he said--perhaps saving specifics on US foreign policy for his remarks to the UN General Assembly tomorrow morning.

    Before heading to the Clinton Initiative, Obama dined with 25 African heads of state and lead diplomats, a lunch designed to broaden and expand the vision for US partnership with the continent expressed in his July visit to Accra, Ghana. Michelle Gavin, senior White House adviser for African Affairs, briefed reporters on the working lunch at the Waldorf-Astoria hotel in New York:

    [T]he lunch focused on how we can forge stronger partnerships to create more opportunity for Africans...looking beyond immediate emergencies and crises, out into the future...

    It focused on three topics: job creation, particularly for youth; then increasing trade and investment; and particularly strengthening the agricultural sector and agricultural productivity.

    [T]he President stressed a couple key premises of his -- that an Africa that's prosperous and at peace is vital to the interests of the United States and the rest of the world, premise one; and premise two, that Africa's future is up to Africans.

    With that emphasis, Obama stuck with the framework established in Accra and during Secretary of State Hillary Clinton's August trip across the continent, which is that good governance, a robust civil society and investment in human capital are key to continued US partnership with Africa, in both the public and private sphere.

    Libyan president Muammar Qaddhafi, who with Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is one of the more controversial attendees of this year's UNGA, was not in attendance. Liberian president Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, the first woman head of state in Africa and a leading voice for economic and democratic advancement, led a conversation on how to provide good jobs to Africa's exploding under-30 population. Rwandan President Paul Kagame, whom Bill Clinton praised effusively during his private chat with reporters Monday, was also given the chance to speak. Rwanda was named the world's "top reformer" in the World Bank's recent "Doing Business" report--an example that could be instructive for the tens of thousands of African businesses and governments looking to attract foreign direct investment.

    Gavin continued:

    President Obama really did stress that this is not kind of a one-off situation, but it's a start of a dialogue between his administration and African leaders.  And I know that that dialogue won't be all just governmental leaders.  He's also interested in of course hearing from African civil society and the private sector.  We're trying to think about how to move this partnership forward and achieve some real transformation in terms of the nature of opportunity available to Africans.

    --DAYO OLOPADE

    Bill Clinton Up Close: Former Prez Dishes on Obama, Afghanistan and Climate Change

    Former President Bill Clinton spoke to a group of reporters at his Clinton Global Initiative gathering in New York this week. With the backdrop of the United Nations General Assembly and the G20 summit around the corner, Clinton was voluble, direct and full of expertise on issues ranging from health care reform (“We should fight like crazy to make the bill as good as we can”) to Afghanistan (“This is an away game, right?”) to the rights of women and girls worldwide (“You’ve got a Secretary of State that thinks it’s the most important thing going.”)

    Framing the motivations behind the CGI (now in its fifth year), Clinton said:

    Most of the time we were in politics we only debated two questions: What are you going to do and how much money are you going to spend on it? … Nobody ever asked the third question: How do you propose to spend whatever you have to maximize your good intentions in concrete results? …We strive for a min of speeches a maximum of conversation about what to do.

    The private conversation with Clinton began and ended on the future of energy--also the subject of President Barack Obama’s address to today’s United Nations summit on climate change. Clinton, hoping to lead the conversation on the global green future, stressed over and over that the politics of environmental action is not a matter of tree-hugging but of dollars and cents:

    We’re trying to disprove this myth that still has a grip on Congress, especially Democrats from traditional industrial states: that this is a net negative for the economy. … It is a huge myth that still as a stranglehold. I am convinced it’s the greatest economic opportunity we have.

    Clinton is right. For every 900 jobs created from nuclear energy, and every 800 from coal production, 2,000 jobs are created in solar generation and 6,000 jobs in weatherization and retrofitting. Lower-income and immigrant workers “can be trained quickly and mobilized quickly, and there is no limit to what you can do,” he added. The former president also repeatedly brought up Denmark, Sweden, Great Britain and Germany—the industrialized nations who were comparative economic successes in the 2000s, with new jobs, rising median incomes and reduced inequality. What do they have in common? “They’re going to beat their Kyoto targets,” he said.

    Needless to say, the U.S. didn’t ratify the Kyoto Protocol under Clinton in 1997, and China—along with the U.S., the largest emitter in the world—is at the United Nations to seek some kind of absolution before the thorny December climate change negotiations in Denmark. It’s clear, said Sen. John Kerry at a Climate Week event on U.S. / China dialogue, that “there isn’t going to be an agreement” without both nations.

    But while Chinese President Hu Jintao, addressing the UN for the first time, will have a bit of cover—China has leaped ahead of the U.S. in the development of solar and other renewable energy—Obama is tied down by domestic indifference toward climate action. Indeed, in his speech to the UN today, Obama garnered applause for affirming that “we have put climate at the top of our diplomatic agenda when it comes to our relationships with countries from China to Brazil; India to Mexico; Africa to Europe.” Still, he had to admit that

    As we head toward Copenhagen, there should be no illusions that the hardest part of our journey is in front of us. We seek sweeping but necessary change in the midst of a global recession, where every nation’s most immediate priority is reviving their economy and putting their people back to work. And so all of us will face doubts and difficulties in our own capitals as we try to reach a lasting solution to the climate challenge.

    Yesterday, Clinton also acknowledged the slim odds of victory on a cap and trade bill, currently languishing in a Senate committee—precisely because of the political energy being spent on health care reform. (Kerry also said as much). He encouraged doing bits and pieces of the change America needs, such as mandating efficiency for 15 everyday electronics. And Clinton was visibly disappointed about the green opportunities in the stimulus bill that passed Congress in February: “I wish [Obama] had gotten at least another $100 billion and put 100 percent of it into clean energy production,” he said wistfully.

    America doesn’t want to lose its standing in the world … We’ll look long in the tooth as a country and look like yesterday’s country. We need to be tomorrow’s country. We need to give the president a tailwind going into Copenhagen.

    —DAYO OLOPADE

    The Yes Men Take on Climate Change

    The infamous prankster activists known as the "Yes Men" have struck again--hijacking Monday's NEW YORK POST to promote the cause of climate action and energy security. Their successful reprinting of the widely read daily tabloid mirrors a November 2008 stunt wherein they circulated a credible-looking NEW YORK TIMES reading "Iraq War Ends."

    Monday's headlines shout out bad news on the green front:  "Congress cops out on climate"; "No Fire Without Smoke" and "Pentagon top brass warn: Act now, or pay later with ‘lives.’" The faux POST even contains gossipy (green) tidbits on Eva Longoria's green building advocacy, Brad Pitt's crusade to save New Orleans and a "Page Six" teaser declaring  "O's Grandma Goes Solar". The irony of the "fake" newspaper reporting is that many of these stories--on the "clean coal" canard, the progress of alternative energy in the developing world and the strong correlation between meat-eating and global warming--are not only true, but get little media attention.

    The Yes Men, otherwise known as Mike Bonanno and Andy Bichlbaum, are trying to provide a "global wake-up call" with their new HBO flick "The Yes Men Fix the World." Watch Bonnano and Bichlbaum discuss the film:

    This prank comes as climate week kicks off in New York City, and the United Nations gears up for its annual conference to take stock of international issues including nuclear disarmament, food insecurity and of course, climate change. President Obama is scheduled to address both the UN General Assembly and the smaller UN summit on climate change hosted by Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon. He will also speak to the opening plenary of the Clinton Global Initiative on Tuesday.

    Read the Yes Men's seriously informative joke here, and check back for more updates from this busy week of foreign affairs.

    --DAYO OLOPADE

    Obama to Meet with Colin Powell—Next at the Pentagon?

    The president has returned to Washington from two days of rigorous domestic policy talk. One year after the US financial markets went into freefall, Obama’s lecture to bankers on Wall Street and his pep rally for auto manufacturers in Michigan were important to restoring confidence in the American economy.

    Tomorrow, however, Obama turns to foreign policy, and a special, Republican guest: General Colin Powell. The president has cleared his schedule for over two hours to meet with Powell in the Oval Office in advance of his weekly meeting with Defense Secretary Robert Gates.

    What’s interesting about the official meeting is not just that Powell, an eloquent advocate for candidate Obama in the last days of campaign 2008, is taking his first meeting with the President since he was inaugurated.

    Rather, it’s the timing of the visit. In advance of the United Nations General Assembly and the meeting of the G20 next week, Obama is no doubt looking to hear some advice about how to proceed with the UN—a body Powell knows a little something about. And as tension in Washington mounts over how to allocate troops and resources for the intractable war in Afghanistan, Obama may have decided he needs an outsider ear he can trust.

    The general has kept a considerably low profile since making his 11th hour pitch for Obama on “Meet The Press.” But have he and Obama really severed all ties? This meeting screams ‘no.’ David Swerdlick, writing at The Root, has asked why Obama doesn’t have an “uncle”—a wise black man at 1600 Pennsylvania to slap him upside the head every once in a while. Why not Powell?

    It’s also worth noting that Powell will precede Gates into the Oval Office. While Gates and Obama have cordial relations, by all accounts, the current Defense Secretary has been widely understood to be a temporary pick, and a fulfillment of Obama’s pledge to have Republicans represented in his Cabinet. Republican Ray LaHood is playing his part. But Obama may yet have designs to scrap George W. Bush's pick and bring ‘Uncle Colin’ back to government—at the Pentagon this time.

    It might be worth it to see the GOP spontaneously combust.

    And don’t they look related?

    —DAYO OLOPADE

    UPDATE: White House press secretary Robert Gibbs said this about Obama--qho requested the meeting--and his relationship to Powell:

    [T]he President greatly values the counsel of General Powell on a number of different issues.  I think he's been involved in, obviously, throughout his career in military affairs, national security, all the way to service, volunteerism, and education. So I think the President will seek his counsel on a wide range of issues throughout the day.