Saturday, June 16, 2012

Iranian President Ahmadinejad: I will retire from politics in 2013 #Iran

Ahmadinejad: I will retire from politics in 2013

Ahmadinejad: I will retire from politics in 2013 | Coffee Party News | Scoop.it
by JPOST.COM

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad plans to retire from politics after his second term ends in 2013, AFP quoted him as saying on Saturday in an interview with Germany's Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, scheduled to be published on Sunday.

"Eight years is enough," Ahmadinejad reportedly told the German paper. Iran's Constitution prohibits a president to serve for more than two consecutive terms, but Ahmadinejad also ruled out the possibility that he would let someone serve one term after him and then return for a third term four years later, as Russian President Vladimir Putin recently did.

Ahmadinejad said that he would likely return to academia. "Maybe I'll involve myself in politics at the university but I will not form a political party or group," he said.
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www.huffingtonpost.com - June 15, 7:35 PM

McCain Criticizes Romney Super PACs, Says Foreign Money Should Not Influence American Elections

McCain Criticizes Romney Super PACs, Says Foreign Money Should Not Influence American Elections | Coffee Party News | Scoop.it
by PHILIP ELLIOTT, Huffington Post

Sen. John McCain said in an interview posted online Friday that "foreign money" was helping fellow Republican Mitt Romney's presidential hopes and singled out one of his ally's most generous supporters.

McCain, the GOP's 2008 presidential nominee, suggested casino magnate Sheldon Adelson's $10 million contribution to a pro-Romney super PAC was a conduit for Adelson to use profits from properties in Macau to shape American elections. McCain also criticized the Supreme Court ruling that allows individuals and corporations to make such unlimited donations to nominally independent political action committees.

"That is a great deal of money. And, again, we need a level playing field and we need to go back to the realization that Teddy Roosevelt had: that we have to have a limit on the flow of money and that corporations are not people," McCain said in an interview with PBS' "NewsHour."

The comment about corporations was at odds with Romney, who last year told a heckler at the Iowa State Fair that "corporations are people, my friend." Romney's critics seized on the comment as proof the wealthy candidate favored businesses over individuals.

The NewsHour later released a transcript of an unaired portion of the interview where journalist Judy Woodruff reminded McCain of Romney's comments about corporations and his seeming split with Romney.

"I think that in that context he was talking about they are made up of people and that's true in that context," McCain said. "But to be corporations for purposes of involving campaigns, to be treated the same as people, I just don't agree with that."
McCain, a Romney rival in 2008 and now one of his top supporters, said the Supreme Court got it wrong in Citizens United, the court case that paved the way for super PACs. He called the decision "the most misguided, naive, uninformed, egregious decision of the United States Supreme Court, I think, in the 21st century." [MORE]