Chief Minister Mufti Mohd Sayeed addressing PDP delegates at Jammu on Friday.
NPP leaders and party activists staging protest in Jammu on Friday. -Excelsior/Rakesh
NPP leaders and party activists staging protest in Jammu on Friday. -Excelsior/Rakesh
Union Minister Dr Jitendra Singh delivering inaugural address at the 6th National Conference of Nuclear Energy at New Delhi on Friday.

Union Minister Dr Jitendra Singh delivering inaugural address at the 6th National Conference of Nuclear Energy at New Delhi on Friday.
Family members of Rohit Sharma alongwith relatives and locals staging protest at Patoli Brahmana on Friday. —Excelsior/Rakesh

Family members of Rohit Sharma alongwith relatives and locals staging protest at Patoli Brahmana on Friday.
—Excelsior/Rakesh
In US cities, Republicans are looking for a few good losers for 2016
WASHINGTON, May 15: When Republican Stefanie Linares ran for office in the deeply Democratic city of Chicago last year, she knew that her hard work wasn’t likely to end in victory. “I wasn’t going to win, and I knew that going into it. It was just a platform to get our message heard,” she said. As she knocked on doors and handed out leaflets in affluent North Side neighborhoods, Linares acted as an ambassador for the Republican ticket as a whole, arguing that the Democrats who controlled state government were responsible for Illinois’s fiscal woes. The 31-year-old Hispanic lawyer lost her bid for the Illinois state Senate by a whopping margin. But Republican Bruce Rauner now sits in the Illinois governor’s mansion, thanks in part to the efforts of local candidates like Linares who helped boost the Republican vote in the state’s largest city. Now Republicans are looking for a few more good losers like Linares as the 2016 presidential campaign gets under way. The goal isn’t necessarily to win these races, but to improve the performance of the Republican ticket overall and build a base for success over the longer term. That could help the party’s presidential candidate as well – if he or she loses a city like Cleveland by a smaller margin, that boosts the chances of winning Ohio, a crucial swing state. The Republican party fielded eight state legislature candidates in Chicago last year, its best showing in decades. All of those candidates lost, but Rauner won 47,000 more votes in Chicago’s Cook County than the last Republican candidate did in 2010 – more than one-third of his margin of victory statewide. “These sorts of things trickle up,” said Caitlin Huxley, a Chicago Republican who helped recruit local candidates. RED NEIGHBORHOOD, BLUE NEIGHBORHOOD
Huxley and other Republicans are seeking to erode a geographic polarization that has grown more pronounced in recent decades as Americans have gradually sorted themselves into ideologically uniform neighborhoods, with Democrats clustering in densely populated cities and suburbs and Republicans scattering to distant exurbs and rural areas. (Graphic: http://reut.rs/1PJ8BOv) In 1980, Republicans won 48 percent of the vote in the 100 largest U.S. counties, according to James Gimpel, a University of Maryland political scientist. In 2012, that share had shrunk to 38 percent. That is an increasing liability. Republican George W. Bush carried the Cincinnati and Columbus metro areas when he won Ohio in 2004, but Obama won them both when he took the state in 2012. Bush won Colorado in 2004 thanks to his strong showing in the suburban areas around Denver; Obama won those counties, and the state, in 2012. Fast-growing urban areas are turning states that were once solidly Republican, like Virginia and North Carolina, into battlegrounds and pushing formerly competitive states like Pennsylvania further out of Republicans’ reach. Even in deeply conservative Texas, the state’s four largest cities – Houston, Dallas, San Antonio and Austin – voted for Obama in 2012. Stung by their poor performance among Hispanics in the 2012 election, the Republican National Committee has tried to build bridges with minority groups, who mostly live in urban areas. That’s important, but it overlooks the affluent professionals who may already be sympathetic to Republican views on fiscal issues, said Jill Homan, a Republican National Committee member in Washington. “Too often we have a conversation about who we need to reach,” Homan said. “The conversation should not just be about who, but about where.” Homan and other urban Republicans say the party can make inroads by emphasizing issues of particular importance to urban voters: fighting corruption, managing complex transportation projects effectively, paring back regulations and encouraging charter schools and other alternatives to existing public schools. “We need candidates and elected officials who actually have an urban agenda,” said Cuyahoga Republican Party chairman Rob Frost, who pointed out that Ohio Governor John Kasich won the heavily Democratic county last year in his successful re-election bid last year after campaigning on the need to improve schools in Cleveland. Frost recruited four African-American candidates last year and is aiming to recruit more for 2016. Democrats’ dominance in urban areas means that Republicans can more plausibly blame them for shortcomings. “There was more energy and more candidates in Chicago because there was a new hunger to change direction,” said Chip Englander, who managed Rauner’s campaign in Illinois and now is managing Kentucky Senator Rand Paul’s presidential bid. TALK TAXES, NOT GAY MARRIAGE
Some Republican activists say that if the party really wants to do better in urban areas, then it needs to tread more carefully on hot-button issues like gay marriage and abortion, which can alienate voters who tend to be more progressive on social issues. “Straying from the party platform is expected in Chicago. If we held candidates to a litmus test, I’m not even sure I would be here,” said Huxley, who heads the local chapter of the Log Cabin Republicans, a gay-friendly group. But these outreach efforts can be sabotaged by more strident voices. Republicans marched in Denver’s gay-pride parade in 2013, one of the city’s biggest civic events, but sat out last year after blowback from other Republicans. After Log Cabin Republicans were barred from a conservative conference and a state lawmaker said America was cursed for legalizing abortion, Denver Republican activist Earl Bandy concluded it was impossible to make inroads in his neighborhood. He quit the party a month ago. “The brand is damaged. You can’t start a conversation and say, ‘Hi, I’m from the Denver Republicans.’ That ends up with a door slammed in your face,” he said. In Chicago, Linares focused on issues like the state’s ongoing fiscal crisis as she campaigned in gay neighborhoods like Boystown. She won the endorsement of the Chicago Tribune and established herself as a rising star in the Republican Party. “She is, I believe, destined for greater things,” said Huxley. But those greater things won’t happen in Chicago. Newly married and expecting her first child, Linares is planning to move to suburban DuPage County, where Republicans aren’t quite so rare. (AGENCIES)
MLC Vikramaditya addressing farmers at village Rara in Ramgarh on Friday.
MLC Vikramaditya addressing farmers at village Rara in Ramgarh on Friday.
FBI arrests ex-military translator for lies about Islamic State ties Priority
WASHINGTON, May 15: An Iraqi immigrant who has been described as a former US military translator was arrested by federal agents for allegedly lying about pledging allegiance to the leader of Islamic State, a court document said. In a criminal complaint filed in federal court in Dallas, the Federal Bureau of Investigation accused Bilal Abood, 37, of traveling by way of several countries, including Mexico and Turkey, to Syria in April 2013 and returning to the United States in September that year. Upon his return, the complaint said, Abood, who had also tried to leave the United States in March 2013 but was barred from boarding his flight, was interviewed by the FBI. The complaint said he admitted to agents that he had gone to Syria to fight with the Free Syrian Army. When the FBI, armed with a search warrant, seized his computer last year, it discovered that Abood had “pledged an oath to Islamic State leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi,” according to the complaint. It said that on July 19, 2014, using an Islamic pseudonym, Abood tweeted: “I pledge obedience to the Caliphate Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.” The complaint said that when FBI agents last month went to Abood’s residence to return the computer, he denied ever pledging allegiance to the Islamic State leader but acknowledged that it was a crime to lie to the FBI. A US defence official said Abood had been a translator for the US military. Abood made an initial court appearance in Texas yesterday afternoon and was expected to remain in custody pending a detention hearing today. A law enforcement official said the case demonstrated the determination of federal agencies to move quickly against individuals suspected of engaging with the Islamic State and to deter other individuals from becoming involved with the group. Sam Ogan, a federal public defender listed with the court as Abood’s lawyer, could not be reached for comment. (AGENCIES)
More than 700 migrants land in Indonesia’s Aceh – search and rescue official
JAKARTA, May 15: More than 700 migrants from Myanmar and Bangladesh were brought ashore to the east coast of Aceh on Indonesia’s island of Sumatra today, a search and rescue official said. “The latest information we have is about 794 people were found in the middle of the sea and brought ashore by fishermen at 5 a. m.,” Khairul Nova, the official in the town of Langsa in Aceh, told Reuters by telephone. “They are now in a warehouse by the port as a temporary arrangement,” Nova added. A boat carrying nearly 600 migrants landed in Indonesia on Sunday. Thousands of migrants are stranded on similar boats in Southeast Asian seas as governments in the region seek to prevent them from landing, despite a request by the United Nations to rescue them. (AGENCIES)
Minister for Transport, Abdul Ghani Kohli addressing grievances redressal camp at Mendhar on Friday.

Minister for Transport, Abdul Ghani Kohli addressing grievances redressal camp at Mendhar on Friday.
Congress leaders during launching of membership drive at district Ramban on Friday.
Congress leaders during launching of membership drive at district Ramban on Friday.



