Wednesday, April 19, 2017

Big election majority would strengthen UK's hand for arm-wrestle with the EU 27 that is still to come

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Andrew Grice

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  • Big election majority would strengthen UK's hand for arm-wrestle with the EU 27 that is still to come
    Independent.ie
    This will be a Brexit general election in every sense of the word. Although the parties will talk about the economy and public services, Theresa May will turn it into a referendum on her vision for Brexit and "getting on with the job" of implementing the people's decision last year.
    http://www.independent.ie/opinion/comment/big-election-majority-would-strengthen-uks-hand-for-armwrestle-with-the-eu-27-that-is-still-to-come-35634411.html
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This will be a Brexit general election in every sense of the word. Although the parties will talk about the economy and public services, Theresa May will turn it into a referendum on her vision for Brexit and "getting on with the job" of implementing the people's decision last year.

In her surprise statement, she positioned herself as the anti-Westminster champion who is taking on those MPs and peers who want to block or water down Brexit. It is quite an achievement for a prime minister to pose as the anti-establishment candidate.

The Liberal Democrats and the SNP will fight the election on a platform of opposing the hard Brexit offered by Mrs May, who has made clear the UK would leave the single market and customs union under her strategy.

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Teachers' union will ballot for strike action if pay for newer teachers is not addressed

Pay inequality: TUI president Joanne Irwin Picture: Daragh McSweeney/Provision
Pay inequality: TUI president Joanne Irwin Picture: Daragh McSweeney/Provision

Ralph Riegel and Katherine Donnelly

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  • Teachers' union will ballot for strike action if pay for newer teachers is not addressed
    Independent.ie
    The Teachers Union of Ireland (TUI) will ballot for industrial action next October if the Government does not fully tackle pay inequality for teachers.
    http://www.independent.ie/irish-news/education/teachers-union-will-ballot-for-strike-action-if-pay-for-newer-teachers-is-not-addressed-35635611.html
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The Teachers Union of Ireland (TUI) will ballot for industrial action next October if the Government does not fully tackle pay inequality for teachers.

A motion was overwhelmingly passed at the TUI's 50th annual conference in Cork which set a September deadline for the Government to signal the end of pay inequality within the profession.

An amendment from the TUI executive, which sought to remove the ballot stipulation and deadline, was defeated by 192 votes to 177.

TUI delegates overwhelmingly passed the motion which warned that: "Congress condemns this continuing unfairness of lower pay, allowances and pension entitlements for newer entrants."

"Congress instructs the executive to ballot for industrial action in October 2017 if these discriminatory rates are still in place in September 2017."

TUI President Joanne Irwin had spoke in favour of the executive amendment arguing that the union already had a ballot in favour of industrial action in place.

Ms Irwin insisted to congress that she has "fire in the belly" for the pay equality battle and said she would be putting that very issue to the minister today.

However, Eddie Conlon of TUI Dublin Colleges, speaking in favour of the motion, said it was vital that the union show the Government they were "very serious" about ending pay inequality.

Different pay and grading scales apply to teachers who entered the profession before and after 2011/2012.

One speaker warned that, by the age of 50, a new entrant will have lost out on €243,000 in earnings compared to a colleague who entered the profession just a few years earlier.

Union members warned that they wanted Education Minister Richard Bruton to know the TUI would no longer tolerate pay inequality and were willing to take determined action.

TUI members acknowledged that progress had been achieved but warned that much more needed to be done.

"The message needs to go out that we are now deadly serious about doing something about this," Mr Conlon said.

Joseph Farrelly from Louth, who became a teacher post 2011, said that after working for five years he had still not reached the pay scale he would have started on had he started a few years earlier.

"I am expected to teach (students) about equality when I don't have it myself," he said.

"Justice delayed in justice denied."

Other speakers said it was outrageous for teachers doing the same job to be paid differently.

ASTI has suspended the normal  business of its conference this afternoon to allow for a private debate on strategy in their dispute over pay and junior cycle.

The move was backed by an overwhelming majority after a number of delegates expressed concern about a lack of clarity in staff rooms over the direction being pursued by the union.

Several delegates spoke of how ASTI members in their schools were leaving the union and there warnings that more could go.

The ASTI is alone in having rejected the Lansdowne Road Agreement (LRA) on post-austerity pay restoration and is also refusing to co-operate with junior cycle reforms.

As a result, ASTI members are losing out on improved pay and conditions. Young teachers are worst - currently up to €220 a month behind their counterparts in other teacher  unions, and they also have to wait four years for a permanent contract,  rather than  two years  agreed under LRA.

In another big loss, about two in three ASTI members have forfeited an increment, worth  an average €1,200, this year because of the dispute.

In another consequence of the pay dispute, ASTI members are currently performing supervision and substitution duties without pay.

Online Editors

Adidas apologises for 'insensitive' email saying 'you survived Boston Marathon'

Stock photo: PA
Stock photo: PA
Catherine Devine

Catherine Devine Twitter Email

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  • Adidas apologises for 'insensitive' email saying 'you survived Boston Marathon'
    Independent.ie
    Sports brand Adidas has issued an apology after the company sent out an "insensitive" email with the subject line "Congrats, you survived the Boston Marathon".
    http://www.independent.ie/world-news/adidas-apologises-for-insensitive-email-saying-you-survived-boston-marathon-35634885.html
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Sports brand Adidas has issued an apology after the company sent out an "insensitive" email with the subject line "Congrats, you survived the Boston Marathon".

The company received backlash from customers who said the email was "offensive" and in "bad taste".

In 2013 three people were killed and more than 260 were wounded during the Boston Marathon when two bombs exploded near the finish line.

At least two survivors of the 2013 bombing participated in this year's event.

The sports company quickly apologised, saying it was "incredibly sorry".

Adidas' full statement said: "We are incredibly sorry.

"Clearly, there was no thought given to the insensitive email subject line we sent Tuesday.

"We deeply apologise for our mistake.

"The Boston Marathon is one of the most inspirational sporting events in the world. Every year we're reminded of the hope and resiliency of the running community at this event."

Online Editors

As Trump warned North Korea, his 'armada' was headed toward Australia for training

Donald Trump, pictured, says he hopes North Korean ruler Kim Jong Un wants peace (AP)
Donald Trump, pictured, says he hopes North Korean ruler Kim Jong Un wants peace (AP)
Independent.ie  desk

Independent.ie Newsdesk Twitter Email

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  • As Trump warned North Korea, his 'armada' was headed toward Australia for training
    Independent.ie
    When US President Donald Trump boasted early last week that he had sent an "armada" as a warning to North Korea, the aircraft carrier strike group he spoke of was still far from the Korean peninsula, and headed in the opposite direction.
    http://www.independent.ie/world-news/north-america/president-trump/as-trump-warned-north-korea-his-armada-was-headed-toward-australia-for-training-35634811.html
    http://www.independent.ie/world-news/article35634778.ece/233a8/AUTOCROP/h342/PANews_P-a12dca5f-58b1-4606-8162-ea4d3b6575ca_I1.jpg
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When US President Donald Trump boasted early last week that he had sent an "armada" as a warning to North Korea, the aircraft carrier strike group he spoke of was still far from the Korean peninsula, and headed in the opposite direction.

It was even farther away over the weekend, moving through the Sunda Strait and then into the Indian Ocean, as North Korea displayed what appeared to be new missiles at a parade and staged a failed missile test.

The US military's Pacific Command explained on Tuesday that the strike group first had to complete a shorter-than-initially planned period of training with Australia. But it was now "proceeding to the Western Pacific as ordered," it said.

The perceived communications mix-up has raised eyebrows among Korea experts, who wonder whether it erodes the Trump administration's credibility at a time when U.S. rhetoric about the North's advancing nuclear and missile capabilities are raising concerns about a potential conflict.

"If you threaten them and your threat is not credible, it's only going to undermine whatever your policy toward them is. And that could be a logical conclusion from what's just happened," said North Korea expert Joel Wit at the 38 North monitoring group, run by Johns Hopkins University's School of Advanced International Studies.

  • Read More: Kim's desire for peace 'deciding factor' in US-North Korea relations - Trump
  • Read More: North Korea mock-up birthday video shows missiles blowing up the US

The U.S. military initially said in a statement dated April 10 that Admiral Harry Harris, the commander of Pacific Command, directed the Carl Vinson strike group "to sail north and report on station in the Western Pacific."

Reuters and other __news outlets reported on April 11 that the movement would take more than a week. The Navy, for security reasons, says it does not report future operational locations of its ships.

Defense Secretary Jim Mattis initially appeared to play down the deployment on April 11, saying the Vinson was "just on her way up there because that's where we thought it was most prudent to have her at this time."

"There's not a specific demand signal or specific reason why we're sending her up there," he said.

But even Mattis initially misspoke about the strike group's itinerary, telling a __news conference that the Vinson had pulled out of an exercise with Australia.

The Pentagon has since corrected the record, saying the ship's planned port visit to Fremantle, Australia, was canceled - not the exercise with Australia's navy.

On April 15, the U.S. Navy even published a photo showing the Vinson transiting the Sunda Strait reported that the Vinson was in the Indian Ocean.

A U.S. military official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the Vinson carried out the exercises after passing through the Sunda Strait and wrapped them up this week.

Reuters

May's bid to be 'Brexit PM' poses fresh challenge for Taoiseach's leadership

Taoiseach Enda Kenny pictured in Boston in March (Niall Carson/PA)
Taoiseach Enda Kenny pictured in Boston in March (Niall Carson/PA)
Kevin Doyle

Kevin Doyle Twitter Email

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  • May's bid to be 'Brexit PM' poses fresh challenge for Taoiseach's leadership
    Independent.ie
    Theresa May has decided that in order to make things better, they'll have to get worse first. As she stunned her own MPs, and even more so those in opposition, the British Prime Minister said: "I have concluded that the only way to guarantee certainty and stability for the years ahead is to hold this election and seek your support for the decisions I must take."
    http://www.independent.ie/irish-news/politics/mays-bid-to-be-brexit-pm-poses-fresh-challenge-for-taoiseachs-leadership-35634561.html
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Theresa May has decided that in order to make things better, they'll have to get worse first. As she stunned her own MPs, and even more so those in opposition, the British Prime Minister said: "I have concluded that the only way to guarantee certainty and stability for the years ahead is to hold this election and seek your support for the decisions I must take."

In simple terms Mrs May, who was a low-key 'Remain' campaigner, wants a strong mandate that will allow her become the 'Brexit prime minister'.

It is a reverse of the situation here where Enda Kenny has anointed himself as our 'Brexit Minister' and is using the title to stay in power without much public support.

Yet on all sides of the political divide there is an acceptance that Mr Kenny has done the legwork and should lead our 'Team Ireland' into the negotiations.

The Taoiseach is wearing the green jersey. And the fact he has both personal and professional motives for doing so isn't a bad thing.

The same could be said of Mrs May. Apparently she decided it was time to call an election while walking with her husband in Wales over Easter.

"I have only recently and reluctantly come to this conclusion but now I have concluded it is the only way to guarantee certainty for the years ahead," she said.

Read More: May goes for broke on Brexit

It's hard to imagine she would be running to the polls if the Conservative party wasn't facing an Opposition devoid of charisma, imagination and energy.

Even Social Protection Minister Leo Varadkar admitted as much despite the fact most politicians publicly claim they don't let opinion polls influence decisions.

"I'm sure she looks at the opinion polls just as all politicians do," he said candidly. "And I'm sure she's also conscious of the fact that she has a relatively small majority and wants to strengthen that.

"I think the opposition in Britain is in total disarray and the Conservatives are 20 points ahead in the polls."

After just 10 months at the head of her government, Mrs May claimed the decision to be made by voters in the election "will be all about leadership".

"It will be a choice between strong and stable leadership in the national interest, with me as your prime minister, or weak and unstable coalition government, led by Jeremy Corbyn, propped up by the Liberal Democrats - who want to reopen the divisions of the referendum - and Nicola Sturgeon and the SNP," she said in a devastatingly accurate first shot of the campaign.

Back in Dublin it didn't take long for the Fine Gael wags to start speculating what all of this would mean for the leadership of this country.

There was minimal talk about how it will impact on the Government's Brexit strategy, and more about whether it will do anything to alter Enda Kenny's exit strategy.

Two theories were quickly put forward. One fits with the growing speculation that Mr Kenny may hang on until after next October's Budget.

Some sources believe Mr Kenny would use the British election as further evidence for why we should keep a steady hand on the tiller until the Brexit negotiations are fully underway.

The Taoiseach has already said he wants to see a power-sharing government formed in Northern Ireland before stepping aside to make way for Mr Varadkar or Simon Coveney.

He said that and Brexit should "take precedence over anything else".

Government sources last night admitted the ongoing stalemate in the North could result in a second Assembly election to coincide with the UK vote on June 8. That would see Mr Kenny's departure date put back until at least the middle of summer.

But other sources said Theresa May's calculated move offers an ideal opportunity for Fine Gael to simultaneously sort itself out.

"If the British PM has time for an election during Brexit, surely Fine Gael has time for an internal one," said one minister, noting that the pace of the Brexit talks is likely to slow pending the outcome of the elections.

Mr Varadkar was the only minister to appear in public yesterday, less than an hour after the shock press conference at Downing Street. Is he worried Mr Kenny might use the latest upheaval in Britain to stick around longer than planned? "Not in the slightest."

While everyone is speculating, nobody truly knows the Taoiseach's timeline.

Whether the events of yesterday change it is unclear but they certainly give Mr Kenny food for thought.

Irish Independent

UK elections always matter to us, but Brexit makes this one crucial

Britain
Britain's Prime Minister Theresa May speaks to the media outside 10 Downing Street, in central London, as she calls for an early election on June 8 Photo: REUTERS/Stefan Wermuth
Shane Coleman

Shane Coleman

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  • UK elections always matter to us, but Brexit makes this one crucial
    Independent.ie
    Not since Ireland won our independence has there been a British general election of such importance to this country as the upcoming one on June 8.
    http://www.independent.ie/opinion/comment/uk-elections-always-matter-to-us-but-brexit-makes-this-one-crucial-35634416.html
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Not since Ireland won our independence has there been a British general election of such importance to this country as the upcoming one on June 8.

Of course elections across the Irish Sea have always mattered to us - a combination of a post-colonial hangover, the immense trade and cultural links with Britain and, of course, the impact on events in the North meant that we always cared about the outcome.

But you have to go back to December 1918 - when Sinn Féin usurped the Irish Parliamentary Party and proclaimed the establishment of Dáil Éireann - to find a UK election with the potential to have such a direct impact on our lives here in Ireland.

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'Religion has no place in Irish hospitals' - survivors appalled nuns will own site of new maternity hospital

Minister Simon Harris said the hospital will be independent Picture: Tom Burke
Minister Simon Harris said the hospital will be independent Picture: Tom Burke
Allison Bray

Allison Bray Twitter Email

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  • 'Religion has no place in Irish hospitals' - survivors appalled nuns will own site of new maternity hospital
    Independent.ie
    Survivors of the Magdalene Laundries are appalled that the controversial Sisters of Charity order that ran the notorious workhouses will still own the new National Maternity Hospital - even if it is independently run.
    http://www.independent.ie/irish-news/health/religion-has-no-place-in-irish-hospitals-survivors-appalled-nuns-will-own-site-of-new-maternity-hospital-35634465.html
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Survivors of the Magdalene Laundries are appalled that the controversial Sisters of Charity order that ran the notorious workhouses will still own the new National Maternity Hospital - even if it is independently run.

Dr Rhona Mahony, Master of the National Maternity Hospital, issued a statement last night insisting that the new €300m hospital at Elm Park in south Dublin, will be "operated by a new company with an independent board and will be clinically and operationally entirely independent in line with national maternity policy".

But Steven O'Riordan, chair of Magdalene Survivors Together, said rather than the State paying the order for the land, the nuns should be required to hand the proceeds back to the State and have nothing to do with the hospital.

Survivors are infuriated that the order still hasn't lived up to its legal and moral responsibilities to pay millions of euro in compensation to victims of institutional abuse - despite agreeing to do so more than 15 years ago.

The order has yet to fulfil its obligations under the 2002 Indemnity Agreement in which the Sisters of Charity and 17 other congregations which ran residential institutions for children agreed to pay the State €128m towards redress for widespread abuse inflicted on children in their care.

The order still owes the State another €3m from a commitment it made almost a decade ago in 2009 to pay another €5m towards redress.

Mary Murphy (78) spent four years in what she described as "hell on Earth" as a virtual slave in the Stanhope Street laundry run by the Sisters of Mercy.

Now she is demanding that the Government reverse the controversial decision.

"Religion has no place in Irish hospitals. Just as it had no place in interfering in my life," she said.

She and other victims of abuse at the Church-run institutions reacted with shock and anger last night after learning that St Vincent's Healthcare Group - which is owned by the order - will be the "sole owner" of the new hospital which will be partially funded from the sale of the current national maternity hospital on Holles Street.

"Do they think we're fools?" asked Margaret Sullivan, who survived the Sean McDermott Street laundry.

"They say one thing and they do the complete opposite. What happened to getting the religious orders to pay up for the abuse we suffered? Why haven't the religious orders apologised, why don't they take responsibility for their actions?"

Kieran Mulvey- the former chairman of the Workplace Relations Commission, who acted as a mediator between Holles st and St Vincent's  - said the money owed by the sisters of Mercy didn't come into negotations.

He stressed that he sympathises with victims and said that the Sisters of Mercy own land at the site but won't have an active hospital governance role.

Speaking on Today With Sean O'Rourke, he said: "That's a separate process and a separate issue.

"I was solely concerned with the relocation of Holles St to St Vincent's campus ad put in appropriate arrangements that would be mutually accepted by all concerned.

"Number one they own the land on the campus, number two they have no real active role active role except on th board of St Vincent's Healthcare but I don't anticipate that the nuns themselves will sit on that board...

"In affect the State has a very prominent position in regards to protecting any investments on the campus."

Mr O'Riordan said the Magdalene survivors simply don't trust the order.

"The ultimate issue is the order still has ownership of the hospital," he told the Irish Independent.

"It's fine to say that it's independent. But the survivors were also told years ago that the laundries were a safe place," he said.

Health Minister Simon Harris also said the new hospital will be completely independent of the order.

Speaking earlier yesterday, he said the hospital will have full clinical, operational and financial independence.

But Workers Party councillor Éilis Ryan claimed that Church ownership of the hospital will have a direct impact on women. "Every week, another story emerges of the extraordinary harm done to women by the Church, with State complicity, in this country. What good is it to agree, finally, to remove archaic, Church-written clauses from our Constitution, if we hand over women's healthcare to that same Church?"

Irish Independent

Irish maternity system 'is like a production line'

Philomena Canning, chair of Midwives for Choice in Ireland, said:
Philomena Canning, chair of Midwives for Choice in Ireland, said: "This is the second time Ireland’s industrialised system of maternity care has been criticised by an international body." Stock photo
Eilish O

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  • Irish maternity system 'is like a production line'
    Independent.ie
    The need for an overhaul of the "over-medicalised" system of care in Irish maternity services has been supported by the Commissioner for Human Rights of the Council of Europe.
    http://www.independent.ie/irish-news/health/irish-maternity-system-is-like-a-production-line-35581158.html
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The need for an overhaul of the "over-medicalised" system of care in Irish maternity services has been supported by the Commissioner for Human Rights of the Council of Europe.

The support is outlined in the latest report of the watchdog and it follows calls by a midwives' lobby here.

The midwives want to reduce the practice of speeding up labour and end what they see as the "production line" which can leave women delivering babies within eight hours of being admitted to hospital.

Philomena Canning, chair of Midwives for Choice in Ireland, said: "This is the second time Ireland's industrialised system of maternity care has been criticised by an international body.

"We strongly support the international calls for maternity care that respects the needs and choices of individual women."

Women should have access to maternity and delivery services without time pressure or being exposed to artificial methods of speeding up birth, she said.

"During Ireland's human rights examination in February this year in Geneva, the UN's Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women called on the Government to ensure that women can access maternity services that do not use artificial methods to accelerate labour and that respect the normal birth process," she said.

"It described Ireland's system of maternity care as one that transformed the most important experience of a lifetime for women and their partners into a production-line process."

Lobby groups for a change in the way maternity services are delivered here have pointed to the fourfold in increase in the rate of caesarean sections in the past 30 years.

A study by the ESRI showed these births have risen from 7pc in 1984 to 13pc in 1993 and stood at 30pc by 2014.

The rise, which is due to a complex set of reasons, has helped lower the death rate among mothers and children in childbirth.

But it is acknowledged that more efforts need to be made in several hospitals to reduce the rate.

A HSE report showed that 35pc of first-time mothers in Cork University Maternity Hospital, University College Hospital Galway and Waterford Regional Hospital had an instrumental delivery with forceps or vacuum.

Women have identified priorities for their childbirth experiences as: the availability of pain relief; partnership with the midwife; and individualised care.

A survey of midwives in 2014 found there were 1,849 midwives employed in maternity services. This meant the ratio of one midwife to 38 births, based on a total of 70,879 births at the time. The figures showed that around 554 midwives were needed.

Negative

Ms Canning also said the organisation also "fully endorses the Commissioner's concerns about the negative impact of the Eighth Amendment on the human rights of all women throughout pregnancy and childbirth, and we share his hope that this legislation will soon be repealed".

"Bodily integrity is a legal, constitutional and human right in Ireland that is flouted on a daily basis in our labour wards," she added.

Irish Independent

Three babies born to mothers in prison in 2016

Clare Daly TD Photo: Tom Burke
Clare Daly TD Photo: Tom Burke

Gordon Deegan

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  • Three babies born to mothers in prison in 2016
    Independent.ie
    A total of three babies were born to mothers in prison custody in 2016 - equalling the highest annual number in recent years.
    http://www.independent.ie/irish-news/three-babies-born-to-mothers-in-prison-in-2016-35618931.html
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A total of three babies were born to mothers in prison custody in 2016 - equalling the highest annual number in recent years.

The trend of last year has continued with one baby being born to a mother in custody so far in 2017.

According to figures provided by Tánaiste and Justice Minister Frances Fitzgerald, the three births last year follow no births to mothers in custody in 2015 with three in 2014 and two in 2013.

In figures provided to Clare Daly TD in a written Dáil reply, Mrs Fitzgerald confirmed 14 babies have been born to mothers in custody between 2010 and the first quarter of this year.

In her reply, the minister said: "I am advised by the Irish Prison Service that the level of maternity care provided to women in custody, including ante-natal care, is comparable to that available to women in the community. It is provided on a shared care arrangement between the maternity hospital to which the patient is referred, and the healthcare team in the Dóchas Centre."

The Irish Prison Service has in place a mother and baby unit in the Dóchas Centre.

"Provision is made in the Dóchas Centre to facilitate new mothers keeping their infants with them so as not to disrupt early bonding," said Mrs Fitzgerald.

Irish Independent

Trump congratulates Erdogan as EU calls for vote probe

President Tayyip Erdogan addresses supporters at the Presidential Palace in Ankara on Monday Photo: Reuters
President Tayyip Erdogan addresses supporters at the Presidential Palace in Ankara on Monday Photo: Reuters

Raf Sanchez

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  • Trump congratulates Erdogan as EU calls for vote probe
    Independent.ie
    The European Commission has called for an investigation into alleged voting irregularities in Turkey's referendum, casting a fresh cloud over President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's disputed victory on Sunday.
    http://www.independent.ie/world-news/europe/trump-congratulates-erdogan-as-eu-calls-for-vote-probe-35634420.html
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The European Commission has called for an investigation into alleged voting irregularities in Turkey's referendum, casting a fresh cloud over President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's disputed victory on Sunday.

The call from the EU body came just hours after Donald Trump congratulated Mr Erdogan on his 51pc win, giving the Turkish leader a stamp of US approval amid criticism from Europe and Turkey's political opposition.

The Turkish president has signalled he plans to brush aside the controversy and press ahead with translating the vote into constitutional reforms that will vastly increase his own power.

The commission, made up of representatives from each of Europe's 28 member states, declined to congratulate Mr Erdogan and said that Turkey should look into concerns raised by a team of international election observers.

"We call on the authorities to launch a transparent investigation into these alleged irregularities," Margaritis Schinas, a spokeswoman for the commission, said.

Ms Schinas also warned that the EU would cancel Turkey's long-standing application to join the European bloc if Mr Erdogan pressed ahead with proposals to reinstate the death penalty in Turkey. "Not only is this a red line, but the reddest of all red lines," she said. "We have an unequivocal rejection of the death penalty."

The hard line staked out by the EU came in stark contrast to the reaction from Mr Trump - the only Western leader to congratulate Mr Erdogan after the vote.

Mr Trump called the Turkish leader "to congratulate him on his recent referendum victory" and to discuss the US strike taken against Bashar al-Assad and the operation to drive Isil out of Raqqa, the White House said.

The statement made no mention of the disputed referendum result nor of criticism levelled against Turkey's handling of the vote by the team of observers from the Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE). Mr Trump has shown himself to be comfortable embracing authoritarian leaders, including Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, who he recently welcomed to the White House.

Turkey's main opposition party, the secular CHP, made a formal request for the referendum results to be annulled yesterday.

Its objections focused on a last-minute decision by the High Electoral Board - made as voting was already under way - to accept ballots not officially stamped.

Kemal Kilicdaroglu, the CHP leader, said the board had "changed the rules of the game during the match".

"This is not something to be forgiven," he said.

The OSCE observers said the board's decision was a violation of Turkey's own election law.

But the board gave no signal it was prepared to accept the CHP's objections and Mr Erdogan's allies warned the opposition to drop its campaign to overturn the results.

"Efforts to cast a shadow on the result of the vote by spreading rumours of fraud are futile and in vain," Binali Yildirim, the Turkish prime minister, said.

Telegraph.co.uk

Irish-American mum horrified after husband 'accused of trafficking' their daughter on United Airlines flight

United Airlines
United Airlines
Amy Molloy

Amy Molloy Twitter Email

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  • Irish-American mum horrified after husband 'accused of trafficking' their daughter on United Airlines flight
    Independent.ie
    A young mother has told of the horrible experience her family endured when her Mexican husband was accused of trafficking their daughter while on board a United Airlines flight.
    http://www.independent.ie/world-news/north-america/irishamerican-mum-horrified-after-husband-accused-of-trafficking-their-daughter-on-united-airlines-flight-35635696.html
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A young mother has told of the horrible experience her family endured when her Mexican husband was accused of trafficking their daughter while on board a United Airlines flight.

Maura Furfey, who describes herself as an Irish-American, wrote about the ordeal in an article for the Huffington Post.

She was on the way to collect her husband and three-year-old daughter from Newark Airport in New Jersey when she received a call from security.

A man, who identified himself as a sergeant with Customs and Border Protection, said there had been an incident involving her husband and daughter.

"My heart was in my throat ― I couldn’t even bring myself to respond because my mind was racing to grasp all of the possibilities of what could have happened on the plane," she wrote.

A passenger on board their United Airlines flight, who had allegedly been drinking, accused her husband of child trafficking.

"She claimed that my fair-skinned daughter didn’t look like her Mexican father, and stoked suspicion that he had kidnapped her," she said.

"My husband is Mexican. I am of Irish descent. Our daughter, three years old, looks like both of us: she has dark hair and almond eyes with white skin."

When the plane landed, her husband was met by a number of officers from Customs and Border Protection.

Ms Furfey said they asked him where his daughter was born and where her birth certificate had been issued, before asking for a phone number for the child’s mother.

She was informed by the sergeant over the phone that the accusation was not coming from border protection, but from a passenger on the plane.

"There was no indication whatsoever ― other than the passenger’s racially charged observation ― that my husband had anything but a perfectly normal, loving relationship with his daughter.

"We never thought, however, that flight attendants on a major airline ― United Airlines ― would choose to take such an observation seriously ― and in doing so, that the Port Authority and CBP would drag my husband and daughter off an airplane and interrogate them with a presumption of guilt."

The pair had been returning from Cancun in Mexico after a week-long holiday.

"Never mind that he was traveling with a green card, carrying passports with the same last name and a notarized letter stating that I was allowing my daughter to travel to México for the week."

A few days later, after filing an official complaint, they received an apology and a $100 (€93) travel voucher.

"It is more important to us that United and other airlines review its procedures. A simple check of the passports or flight records would clearly show that there was no problem in this situation and would have prevented the drama and stress that it created."

In a response to Independent.ie, United Airlines said: "This deeply concerned us. We have apologised to the family and are continuing to review this to better understand what happened aboard the flight."

Online Editors

Vulnerable foster children left to live with families known to be 'risks'

Some 27 child protection and welfare complaints relating to the foster care of children were made in the previous 12 months. Stock Image
Some 27 child protection and welfare complaints relating to the foster care of children were made in the previous 12 months. Stock Image
Eilish O

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  • Vulnerable foster children left to live with families known to be 'risks'
    Independent.ie
    Vulnerable children were put at risk after being left in foster families who were deemed unfit to care for them, a new report has revealed.
    http://www.independent.ie/irish-news/vulnerable-foster-children-left-to-live-with-families-known-to-be-risks-35634460.html
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Vulnerable children were put at risk after being left in foster families who were deemed unfit to care for them, a new report has revealed.

The children were placed with relatives who were rejected by social services in the Dublin south central area due to concerns and "known risks".

But instead of being removed, a small number were left to live with the families, inspectors from the patient safety watchdog, the Health Information and Quality Authority (Hiqa), revealed.

The revelation is among a litany of concerns uncovered during an inspection of foster care services.

The area covers the south inner city, Rialto, Inchicore, Ballyfermot, Clondalkin, Rowlagh , Palmerstown and Lucan.

There were 351 children in foster care in the area when it was inspected in November and early December.

The inspectors found six foster carers whose vetting was not completed.

Another 107 carers had not been put through repeat vetting within the three years' deadline, as required under regulations.

Concerns also emerged about the failure to always secure Garda vetting for other adults living with, or who had unsupervised access to, children.

Some 27 child protection and welfare complaints relating to the foster care of children were made in the previous 12 months.

In a number of cases these related to the foster parents, but when files were checked three other concerns were found.

The files of two Tusla staff showed no evidence of them having gone through Garda vetting, the report said.

A separate report which looked at Care Visions, a private fostering service said children were cared for in safe and appropriate homes and had their physical and emotional needs met.

Inspectors were told there had been no child protection concerns in the last two years; however, on review four concerns of a child protection nature were found but were not made to the relevant department. Tusla and Care Visions both said that action plans are in place to address the issues.

Irish Independent

'Iron Lady' May shows her mettle as she seeks Brexit mandate with election U-turn

A woman carries a bookie
A woman carries a bookie's board after Theresa May announced an election Photo: REUTERS / Peter Nicholls
Dearbhail McDonald

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  • 'Iron Lady' May shows her mettle as she seeks Brexit mandate with election U-turn
    Independent.ie
    One of the criticisms routinely levelled at women in senior leadership roles is that they are not decisive - or at least not as decisive as our male counterparts.
    http://www.independent.ie/opinion/comment/iron-lady-may-shows-her-mettle-as-she-seeks-brexit-mandate-with-election-uturn-35634406.html
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One of the criticisms routinely levelled at women in senior leadership roles is that they are not decisive - or at least not as decisive as our male counterparts.

That's one charge that can't now be levelled against British Prime Minister Theresa May who stunned the world yesterday morning when she called a surprise snap election.

The former home secretary caught her critics and the markets off guard when a press conference was called for 11.15am. The rumour mill offered all manner of reasons for the sudden hot take outside Downing Street, including unfounded speculation that she was about to retire on health grounds.

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Tuesday, April 18, 2017

Nonprofit Working To Block Drug Imports Has Ties To Pharma Lobby

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An organization campaigning against foreign drug imports has deep connections to the lobbying group PhRMA, which includes Eli Lilly, Pfizer and Bayer. Bill Diodato/Getty Images hide caption

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Bill Diodato/Getty Images

An organization campaigning against foreign drug imports has deep connections to the lobbying group PhRMA, which includes Eli Lilly, Pfizer and Bayer.

Bill Diodato/Getty Images

A nonprofit organization that has orchestrated a wide-reaching campaign against foreign drug imports has deep ties to the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America, or PhRMA, the powerful lobbying group that includes Eli Lilly, Pfizer and Bayer.

The nonprofit, called the Partnership for Safe Medicines, has recently emerged as a leading voice against Senate bills that would allow drugs to be imported from Canada.

Both the lobbying group and the nonprofit partnership have gone to great lengths to show that drugmakers are not driving what they describe as a grass-roots effort to fight imports, including an expensive advertising blitz and an event last week that featured high-profile former FBI officials and a former Food and Drug Administration commissioner.

However, a Kaiser Health __news analysis of groups involved in the partnership shows more than one-third have received PhRMA funding or are local chapters of groups that have received PhRMA funding, according to PhRMA tax disclosures from 2013 to 2015.

Forty-seven of the organizations listed in the ads appear to be advocacy organizations that received no money from PhRMA in those years.

A PhRMA senior vice president, Scott LaGanga, previously led the Partnership for Safe Medicines for 10 years. At PhRMA, LaGanga was responsible for the lobbying group's alliances with patient advocacy groups, and he was simultaneously listed as the executive director of the Partnership for Safe Medicines on each of that group's annual tax filings since 2007, the earliest year for which they are available from ProPublica's Nonprofit Explorer.

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Scott LaGanga, a senior vice president at the pharmaceutical lobbying group PhRMA. Partnership for Safe Medicines/Flickr hide caption

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Partnership for Safe Medicines/Flickr

Scott LaGanga, a senior vice president at the pharmaceutical lobbying group PhRMA.

Partnership for Safe Medicines/Flickr

LaGanga wrote a 2011 article about the partnership's origins. Published in the Journal of Commercial Biotechnology, it described "public-private partnerships in addressing counterfeit medicines." His PhRMA job was not disclosed in the article.

From 2010 to 2014, the organization hosted a conference called the Partnership for Safe Medicines Interchange. In a video from a 2013 event, LaGanga thanks pharmaceutical companies, most of them PhRMA members, for sponsoring the event.

In February, LaGanga moved to a senior role at PhRMA and stepped down as executive director of the Partnership for Safe Medicines, just as the group's campaign to stop import legislation was revving up.

The partnership's new executive director, Shabbir Safdar, said LaGanga resigned from the group to avoid the appearance of a conflict of interest.

"That's why Scott's not executive director anymore," he said. PhRMA declined to make LaGanga available for an interview.

Considering Legislation

The Senate push to allow Americans to buy pharmaceuticals from Canada comes as more patients balk at filling prescriptions because of soaring drug prices. Prescription medicines purchased in the U.S. can run three times what they cost in Canada, data from the company PharmacyChecker.com show.

In 2016, about 19 million Americans purchased pharmaceuticals illegally from foreign sources through online pharmacies or while traveling, according to a Kaiser Family Foundation poll. Many survey respondents cited pricing disparities as the reason.

A bill cosponsored by Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) would provide a mechanism for Canadian drug manufacturers to sell to U.S. consumers and pharmacies. Sanders introduced the bill in February. In January, Sens. John McCain (R-Ariz.) and Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.) also introduced a bill to allow drug imports from Canada.

In the House, Rep. Elijah Cummings (D-Md.) introduced a similar bill to Sanders', along with 23 other Democrats.

The U.S. drug industry has strongly opposed efforts to open the borders to drug imports, but the PhRMA lobbying group is not mentioned in the nonprofit partnership's recent advertising blitz against the proposed legislation. The nonprofit says its grass-roots effort is supported by 170 members, including professional organizations and trade groups.

The nonprofit describes PhRMA as a dues-paying member with no larger role in shaping the group's activities. Partnership spokeswoman Clare Krusing would not say how much each member contributes. PhRMA spokeswoman Allyson Funk declined to say whether PhRMA funds the partnership.

"PhRMA engages with stakeholders across the health care system to hear their perspectives and priorities," Funk said. "We work with many organizations with which we have both agreements and disagreements on public policy issues, and believe engagement and dialogue are critical."

Campaigning Against Drug Imports

The partnership recently launched its ad campaign, warning against the alleged dangers of legalizing Canadian drug imports. It includes television commercials, promoted search results on Google and a full-page print ad in The Washington Post and The Hill. The group's YouTube page shows recent commercials targeted to viewers in 13 states.

"We don't disclose specific ad figures, but the campaign is in the high six figures," Safdar said.

The commercials ask voters to urge their senators to "oppose dangerous drug importation legislation."

Senate Democrats Split On Prescription Drug Imports

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Senate Democrats Split On Prescription Drug Imports

The newspaper ad reads, "Keep the nation's prescription drug supply safe. Urge the Senate to reject drug importation measures." Its headline declares that "170 healthcare advocacy groups oppose drug importation," noting a letter to Congress signed by its members. The ad lists 160 members who signed the letter, and PhRMA's name is not included.

"Having a big membership allows the coalition to present what looks like a unified show of grass-roots support ... but it does raise questions about which members of the coalition are really driving and funding the group's policy-making," said Matthew McCoy, a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Pennsylvania who studies patient advocacy groups.

The list of groups includes at least 64 trade organizations representing the biomedical industry, professional associations representing pharmacists, a private research company and two insurance companies.

One group that signed the letter, the "Citrus Council, National Kidney Foundation of Florida Inc.," represents a single volunteer, according to an email from the group. A spokesman for the National Kidney Foundation of Florida said the volunteer's views contradict the position of the umbrella group, and said the foundation supports "any sort of drug importation that allows our patients to have access to drugs at the best price."

Two of the hepatitis patients' advocacy groups that were listed, the National Association of Hepatitis Task Forces and the California Hepatitis C Task Force, are run by the same person, Bill Remak. Remak said the groups receive small amounts of PhRMA funding.

"I don't enjoy having to take this extreme position of saying we shouldn't import at all, but until we have some oversight regime, some way of protecting consumers, it's a really tough call," he said.

"Current drug importation proposals do not appear to have equal safety and chain-of-custody accountability laid out adequately for patient safety concerns," said William Arnold, president of the Community Access National Network, which is also listed in the ad and is an advocacy and support group for people living with HIV/AIDS or hepatitis in Washington, D.C. His group did not accept money from PhRMA between 2013 to 2015, the Kaiser Health News analysis found.

Concerns About Safety And Price

Last week, the partnership hosted a panel at the National Press Club featuring former FBI director Louis Freeh and former FDA commissioner Dr. Andrew von Eschenbach. The discussion focused on the alleged health and legal dangers of online pharmacies.

Trump, Democrats Look For Common Ground On Drug Prices

Shots - Health News

Trump, Democrats Look For Common Ground On Drug Prices

"You can talk about lowering prices, but if a drug comes with a high probability of toxicity and death, that comes at a high cost to the patient," von Eschenbach said. "That's what's at issue with drug importation."

Each speaker argued that the bill co-sponsored by Sanders would be harmful to patients. Around the same time that bill was introduced, the partnership also sent emails to member organizations seeking help to stop such a measure.

Speakers at the partnership event claimed importation would lead to a flood of counterfeit medicines laced with arsenic, fentanyl and lead paint.

"These drugs are manufactured in jungles, in tin drums, in basements. ... Those are the sort of sanitary conditions we're talking about here," said George Karavetsos, a former director of the FDA's Office of Criminal Investigations.

Both von Eschenbach and Karavetsos have ties to the pharmaceutical industry. Von Eschenbach left the FDA in 2009 to join Greenleaf Health, which counsels pharmaceutical clients, before starting his own consulting company, and Karavetsos counsels pharmaceutical clients at DLA Piper, a Washington, D.C., law firm.

In an interview, Josh Miller-Lewis, Sanders' deputy director of communications, refuted Karavetsos' arguments. He said Canadian drugmakers can apply for licenses, and all drugs would have to come from FDA-inspected plants.

Politico reported in October that PhRMA is bolstering its war chest by another $100 million per year, suggesting to many industry analysts that drugmakers are gearing up for a ferocious fight.

"I think it's safe to say pharmaceutical corporations are prepared to spend some fraction of their multibillion-dollar profits to fight drug importation and any other policy that might end the plague of overpriced medicine," said Rick Claypool, research director for Public Citizen, a watchdog group critical of the drug industry.

Kaiser Health News is an editorially independent newsroom that is part of the nonpartisan Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation.

We Asked People What They Know About Taxes. See If You Know The Answers

Back in 2012, Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney's campaign suffered a blow when a tape was leaked of him grousing that 47 percent of Americans don't pay federal income tax. It was one of the biggest gaffes of the presidential campaign, but a new poll conducted by Ipsos for NPR suggests that many Americans forgot it.

The way Romney characterized those who don't pay federal income taxes is what got him in trouble, but the figure was roughly true. The new poll, however, shows that a majority think that the share of Americans paying no federal income tax is far lower.

The poll gave respondents four options — 39 percent said that only 11 percent of Americans pay zero or negative income tax, and 31 percent said that only 27 percent pay zero or negative income tax. Only 21 percent got it right — right now, around 45 percent pay no federal income tax.

The poll, released the day before Americans' taxes are due, delved into what Americans know and what they believe is wrong with the U.S. tax code — and what they know is limited and at times contradictory. But this isn't just about pointing out what Americans know and don't know. Rather, there could be important policy implications to Americans' misperceptions about the tax system. For example, this question dovetails with questions about what people think the lowest-income Americans' tax rate should be.

Americans underestimate the share of Americans who don't pay federal income taxes

Given four choices of how many Americans pay zero or negative federal income taxes (11, 27, 45, or 63 percent), fully 70 percent of poll respondents chose the options under the correct answer, which was 45 percent. Some of these people simply have no taxable income, and others get money back as a result of refundable tax credits like the Earned Income Tax Credit. (Of course, these people might pay other taxes, like payroll taxes, as well as whatever sales and property taxes their states impose.)

Two-thirds of Americans believe lower-income people pay too much income tax (with heavy partisan differences — around 8-in-10 Democrats, 6-in-10 independents, and half of Republicans agreed with that statement). In addition, 60 percent of Americans believe taxes should be lowered for people making $49,000 or less (again, with Democrats and independents being somewhat more likely than Republicans to say those taxes should be lowered).

Taking these two ideas together — that people (mistakenly) think very few of their fellow Americans pay zero federal income tax, and that a majority of Americans think low-income people pay too much in income tax — there are a couple of possible conclusions.

One is that if more Americans knew how many others do not end up paying federal income taxes, they would say tax rates should stay the same or even be raised.

Then again, it's possible that Americans nevertheless would think their poorest fellow citizens do need more money, regardless of how the current tax code looks. That might mean they would advocate expanding the EITC or other tax breaks.

When it comes to taxes paid by the rich, things get complicated.

We posed the following statement to people as a true or false question: "For the highest earners, the percent of federal income taxes they pay now is significantly higher than it was in 1980."

In retrospect, there are multiple ways to interpret this question.

If "percent" is taken as "rate" here, the answer is "false." In 1980, the top marginal income tax rate was 70 percent. Today, it's 39.6 percent (something about half of Americans know, per our poll).

But if "percent" is taken as "share" here, the answer is "true." That is, the share of federal income tax revenue that the richest Americans pay has gone up since 1980.

How does that work? As the Tax Policy Center's Roberton Williams explained to NPR, the share of income going to the rich has climbed in a big way over the last few decades.

So how Americans think about this could affect what they think should happen to the top tax rates on the richest. In 1980, the top 10 percent brought in 32 percent of all adjusted gross income, according to the Tax Foundation. In 2013, it was 46 percent. For example, many Americans also believe taxes should be raised on the richest. The top tax bracket starts at $418,400 right now.

The poll shows that 70 percent of Americans believe taxes should be raised on people making $250,000 to just under $1 million, and that 75 percent believe they should be raised on people making $1 million or more.

That's already a sizable majority, but depending on whether people knew tax rates on the richest had indeed fallen (or, alternately, that the rich now pay a higher share in taxes), it could change what they think should happen to those marginal rates. (Of course, it's also possible that historical rates wouldn't affect their views at all.)

Those views differ widely by party; Democrats are much more likely to believe that taxes should be raised on the rich than Republicans.

Americans also appear to have strong views on how people earn their money. We asked people to what degree they agreed with this statement: "The tax rate on income from work should be lower than the tax rate on income from wealth."

Across the board, regardless of party, Americans agreed — 75 percent said they did, including 77 percent of Democrats, 71 percent of Republicans and 84 percent of independents.

This is another result that might make the richest Americans squirm. The rich tend to earn their income in a different way from most other Americans. Besides paychecks, many make money from capital gains — income they get from selling investments like stocks. Most of those capital gains are taxed at a rate far below that top income tax rate. (People at any income level of course can have those kinds of investments, but capital gains are overwhelmingly concentrated at the top of the income spectrum.)

The top rate that the highest-income Americans will pay on most capital gains is 20 percent, around half the top marginal rate for ordinary income.

Americans overestimate how important income taxes are to government revenue

About half of the poll's respondents (with very little variance by party) said they believe 75 percent of the federal government's revenue comes from personal income taxes. In reality, it's just under half.

Of all the taxes Americans pay, income tax probably requires the most thought. After all, payroll tax comes automatically out of each paycheck. Sales tax is imposed at the cash register. And so on.

So maybe it makes sense that Americans think all that work they put into filling out their forms ends up doing the lion's share of funding the government.

What else we learned

Beyond all this, there were a few more fascinating findings in the poll.

Phrasing matters. One thing we learned is that using the phrase "death tax" instead of "estate tax" seems to make people more opposed to that tax — but, interestingly, that effect appears to be by far largest among Democrats.

Sixty-five percent of all people said the "estate tax" should be abolished, compared to 76 percent who said the "death tax" should be. However, among Democrats that swing was far larger: only half said they wanted to abolish the "estate tax," but 71 percent said the same of the "death tax."

The estate tax affects fewer than 1 in 500 estates. Many opponents of the estate tax — who have tended to be Republicans — use "death tax" as a euphemism. This shows that to the extent that that phrasing helps them, it could be helping them pick people up across the aisle.

On tax policy, views aren't always all that partisan. Democrats are often seen as the party that wants a more progressive system — Hillary Clinton, for example, ran for president in 2016 with a tax plan that would have ramped up taxes for the ultra-rich.

But in our poll, nearly half of Democrats — 45 percent — agreed with the proposition that "federal income taxes should be cut for all income levels."

Likewise, Republicans — the party that has spoken of "makers" and "takers" — were split roughly evenly on the idea that tax cuts for the wealthy lead to economic growth. (Democrats and independents tended to disagree — that is, to say that tax cuts for the wealthy do not lead to that growth.) Incidentally, it's not at all clear that this is true; one recent comparison of tax rates and growth rates across advanced economies found no strong linkage between the two.

These are only two examples, but they suggest that partisan messaging in Washington on some specific issues doesn't necessarily filter down to Americans.

Protesters Use April 15 To Demand Trump

Politics

Protesters Use April 15 To Demand Trump's Tax Returns

Americans agree: Taxes are too complicated (but that's no reason to cheat). There are a few more areas where Americans tend to agree across party lines: nearly 9 in 10 believe the tax code is too complicated, three-quarters say it's not OK for people to underreport income on their taxes, and 77 percent say their own personal federal income taxes are too high.

In addition, 72 percent knew that taxes are due on April 18. For those remaining 28 percent, it might be time to file that extension.

The poll was conducted online on April 11-12, with a sample of 1,010 adults age 18 or older. For all respondents, the poll has a credibility interval of plus or minus 3.5 percentage points. The credibility interval is plus or minus 5.7 percentage points for Democrats, plus or minus 6.1 percentage points for Republicans, and plus or minus 8.3 percentage points for independents.

Mexico Catches One Of Several Fugitive Former Governors After A Half-Year Hunt

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Javier Duarte, the former governor of the Mexican state of Veracruz, sits handcuffed following his arrest in Panajache, Guatemala, on Saturday. AFP/Getty Images hide caption

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Javier Duarte, the former governor of the Mexican state of Veracruz, sits handcuffed following his arrest in Panajache, Guatemala, on Saturday.

AFP/Getty Images

When Javier Duarte stepped down from office last October, the former governor of Mexico's Veracruz state vowed to fight the mounting corruption allegations that unraveled his tenure.

"The circumstances created by false accusations ... force me to dedicate myself full-time to clear my name and that of my family," Duarte said on Oct. 13, according to The Yucatan Times, just one day after he ended his term six weeks early.

Then, Duarte disappeared.

It would be another half-year before the he surfaced — this time in handcuffs, escorted from his hotel at a lakeside resort in Guatemala on Saturday night. Authorities say he had been squirreled away in a hotel room with his wife, attempting to pass as a tourist.

Now he is in a prison cell in Guatemala City, awaiting his widely expected extradition back to Mexico, where Reuters reports he'll face allegations that he diverted public funds for his personal enrichment. That includes a luxury ranch — packed with paintings by masters such as Joan Miro and Leonora Carrington, the BBC reports — that authorities say was paid for by siphoned dollars.

More Than 250 Bodies Found In Mass Grave In Mexico

Latin America

More Than 250 Bodies Found In Mass Grave In Mexico

Mexican  paper Shuts Down In

The Two-Way

Mexican Newspaper Shuts Down In 'Act Of Protest' After Journalist's Murder

During his roughly six years in office, Duarte's Gulf Coast state also earned the inglorious distinction of becoming "one of the world's most lethal regions for the press," according to the Committee to Protect Journalists. The CPJ estimated last year that at least 12 journalists were murdered during Duarte's tenure; other organizations have placed that number even higher.

A 2012 dispatch from CPJ correspondent Mike O'Connor explains the atmosphere that took shape under Duarte:

"Veracruz is a beautiful, long, thin state on the Gulf coast of Mexico where many journalists are terrified not only of the rampant organized crime groups that kill and control, but also of the state government. Fear that state officials will order them murdered for what they investigate or write has forced about a dozen journalists to flee the state, claiming that fear also puts a clamp on coverage for those who remain."

And that's not to mention the mass grave discovered outside Veracruz city last month that contained 252 bodies, many of which are believed to have been buried years ago.

Strikingly, Duarte's allegation-plagued tenure was by no means uncommon. The politician isn't the only former Mexican governor to draw prosecutors' attention — nor was he the only former leader in his own party, the ruling Institutional Revolutionary Party, to go on the lam for an extended period.

Scandal-plagued former governors

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Top row: Veracruz's Javier Duarte, Nuevo Leon's Rodrigo Medina, Sonora's Guillermo Padres, Tamaulipas' Eugenio Hernandez Flores, Quintana Roo's Roberto Borge. Bottom row: Aguascalientes' Armando Reynoso, Tamaulipas' Tomas Yarrington, Quintana Roo's Mario Villanueva, Chihuahua's Cesar Duarte, Tabasco's Andres Granier. Marco Ugarte, Eduardo Verdugo, Susan Montoya Bryan, Harry Cabluck, Israel Leal, Guillermo Arias/ AP; Monica M. Davey, P. Mera, Alfredo Estrella, Raul Ibanez/AFP/Getty Images hide caption

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Marco Ugarte, Eduardo Verdugo, Susan Montoya Bryan, Harry Cabluck, Israel Leal, Guillermo Arias/ AP; Monica M. Davey, P. Mera, Alfredo Estrella, Raul Ibanez/AFP/Getty Images

Top row: Veracruz's Javier Duarte, Nuevo Leon's Rodrigo Medina, Sonora's Guillermo Padres, Tamaulipas' Eugenio Hernandez Flores, Quintana Roo's Roberto Borge. Bottom row: Aguascalientes' Armando Reynoso, Tamaulipas' Tomas Yarrington, Quintana Roo's Mario Villanueva, Chihuahua's Cesar Duarte, Tabasco's Andres Granier.

Marco Ugarte, Eduardo Verdugo, Susan Montoya Bryan, Harry Cabluck, Israel Leal, Guillermo Arias/ AP; Monica M. Davey, P. Mera, Alfredo Estrella, Raul Ibanez/AFP/Getty Images

Former Tamaulipas Gov. Tomás Yarrington was caught in Florence, Italy, just last week after five years on the run. U.S. prosecutors have alleged he "accepted millions of dollars in drug cartel bribes and invested it in Texas real estate," according to The Associated Press. And The Wall Street Journal, citing orders issued by state police, says that Yarrington had been assigned eight law enforcement officers as bodyguards as late as last year.

Meanwhile former Chihuahua Gov. Cesar Duarte — no relation — has still eluded authorities after he stepped down last year. Once a rising star in the PRI like Javier Duarte (who was suspended from the party around the time of his disappearance) and Yarrington, Cesar Duarte is being pursued over embezzlement charges.

All of this makes for a rather persistent problem for the party's leader, Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto, who has been battling historically terrible approval ratings.

So it's not too much of a surprise that, as the AP reports, the PRI cheered the capture of the former Veracruz governor, who the party said should "be punished in an exemplary fashion, as well as anyone who is confirmed to have taken part in his criminal ring."

Still, it will do little to erase the rather unexemplary records of many governors across Mexico — and not just those in the PRI. The Duartes have plenty of company.

The Los Angeles Times breaks it down: In a country of 31 states and one federal district, nearly a dozen governors recently out of office are on the lam, under investigation or already in prison.