Tag: Politicians

  • Jammu & Kashmir: Ex-CMs, Ministers, Politicians, Bureaucrats Among Big Encroachers Identified – Kashmir News

    [ad_1]

    Jammu & Kashmir: Ex-CMs, Ministers, Politicians, Bureaucrats Among Big Encroachers Identified

    • Ex-CMs, Ministers, politicians, bureaucrats among big encroachers identified in Jammu
    • Encroachments not reflected in records but verified on ground
    • Commercial structures, party office raised on State land

    JAMMU, Jan 22: Former Chief Ministers, Cabinet Ministers, politicians, bureaucrats and hoteliers are among the big encroachers of the State land in Jammu and their names figure in the list prepared by the Government of Union Territory of Jammu and Kashmir for eviction. Shockingly, the encroachments made by these influential people have not been reflected in the records but have been verified on ground by the field officials of the Revenue Department.

    The list also included some politicians of National Conference and People’s Democratic Party, former Members of Legislative Assembly and relatives of politicians. Even office of a mainstream political party (PDP) has been constructed on the encroached land.

    As per the list of big encroachers, who are in illegal possession of State land other than the land patches covered under the Jammu and Kashmir State Land (Vesting of Ownership to the Occupants) Act, 2001 popularly known as Roshni Scheme, Dr Farooq Abdullah and Omar Abdullah, former Chief Ministers and senior leaders of the National Conference are the illegal occupants of about seven kanals and seven marlas of State land in Sunjwan village of Bahu tehsil.

    Similarly, former Cabinet Minister of PDP Choudhary Zulfkar Ali has encroached three kanals and 12 marlas of State land in Chowadhi village of Bahu tehsil and he has raised banquet hall over the encroached land.

    Former Cabinet Minister of National Conference Dr Mustafa Kamal too has encroached two kanals of land in Sunjwan area of Bahu tehsil. Another former Cabinet Minister of Congress Taj Mohi-ud-Din is in the illegal possession of 50 kanals of land in Jammu Khas tehsil and he has raised farm house over the land titled as Gair Mumkin Tawi.

    Businessman Subash Chudhary is in the illegal possession of two kanals of Gair Mumkin Khad in Deeli village of Jammu South and a building has been constructed over the encroached land while as former bureaucrat and political leader Basheer Ahmed Runyal has encroached one kanal and five marlas of land in Channi Rama village of Tehsil Bahu and a palatial house has been constructed over the same.

    Former MLA and National Conference leader Abdul Wahid Shan is in the illegal possession of 3.5 marlas of land in Sidhra area while as former MLA of National Conference Bashir Ahmed has encroached one kanal of land in Sidhra and the same is being used for residential as well as commercial purpose. Nazir Ahmed Koul, relative of politician and former Minister of State Aijaz Khan has encroached three kanals of land in Sidhra area.

    Even People’s Democratic Party (PDP) has encroached three kanals of land in Sunjwan area and party office has been constructed over the same. The Block Development Council Chairperson Satwari Nazeer Bibi has encroached three kanals of land in Sunjwan area while as influential businessman Mushtaq Chaya is in the illegal possession of one kanal and five marlas of land in Sunjwan area.

    PDP leader Talib Choudhary has encroached two kanals of land in Channi Rama area and the same has been converted into commercial property. Ashfaq Mir, son of retired Justice is in the illegal possession of one kanal of land in Sunjwan while as Zehan Din, relative of former Minister Aijaz Khan has illegally encroached two kanals of land in Sunjwan area.

    A property dealer Mohd Hussain, son of Noor Hussain, who is also relative of a politician, has encroached 15 kanals of land in Deeli area and a commercial building has been constructed over the same. Likewise, Nizam Din Khatana, Jamat Ali (Lamberdar Dungian) and former IGP Nissar Ali are in the illegal possession of huge chunk of land in Sunjwan and Channi Rama areas respectively.

    Imran Beg of Beig Construction Company is in illegal possession of five kanals of land in Channi Rama while as Owais Ahmed has raised Shuhul Showroom on two kanals of encroached State land in Channi Rama area.

    “All these encroachments have not been reflected in the official records but have been checked and verified on ground by the field staff of the Revenue Department”, sources said, adding “all these land patches were not covered under the Roshni Scheme”.

    Meanwhile, Khyber Hotel in Gulmarg has agreed to voluntarily remove encroachments as soon as weather improves as still there is lot of snow in the area. “The field staff of Revenue and Forest Departments has already removed the fencing around encroached area and land could not be removed due to inclement weather”, sources said.

    (News Source: Daily Excelsior/Mohinder Verma)

    CLICK ON THE BELOW PROVIDED LINKS TO FOLLOW KASHMIR NEWS ON: 


    Post Views: 50

    [ad_2]
    #Jammu #Kashmir #ExCMs #Ministers #Politicians #Bureaucrats #Among #Big #Encroachers #Identified #Kashmir #News

    ( With inputs from : kashmirnews.in )

  • When politicians climb down the ladder

    When politicians climb down the ladder

    [ad_1]

    government shutdown 06366

    Former Rep. Albio Sires spent eight terms in Congress, representing hundreds of thousands of constituents, before calling it quits last year.

    For his next job, the New Jersey Democrat is looking to downsize.

    Sires is gunning for mayor of West New York, a town with a population of around 53,000 people — more than an order of magnitude smaller than a congressional district. He said he’s often in the grocery store, at the dry cleaner’s, or getting a haircut when people approach him about what’s going on in the community. It’s a lot more intimate than the phone calls, letters and office meetings that form the daily rhythm of life in Congress.

    Local office is not a conventional career path after serving in Congress. Some turn to education or end up on cable news. Many land on K Street. But Sires is the latest in a small number of former members of Congress who’ve sought lower office, not a higher one, after leaving Washington on their own terms.

    A driving force behind that step is the frustration with gridlock that’s prevalent in Washington — often getting in the way of legislators delivering for their constituents. There may be some of that on the local level, but people are more supportive because “they see you have their best interests at heart,” Sires said.

    “I love the local stuff,” he continued. “I can go out on the street, people say, ‘Hey Albio, how’re you doing? You fixed the pothole? You rebuild the parks?’ … In Congress, you don’t see that. In Congress, you’re constantly fighting.”

    Sires is seeking a completely different scale of job than a few other mayoral hopefuls among his former colleagues, like now-Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass, who left Congress to run for mayor, or Rep. Jesus “Chuy” Garcia (D-Ill.), who’s running for mayor of Chicago. Those posts have constituencies well into the millions.

    Local politics are a calling for some after they leave the Capitol. Former Rep. Kathy Dahlkemper (D-Pa.), who lost her reelection race in 2010, went on to a long tenure as the Erie County, Pa., executive. But it’s a more common step for people who have lost and still want to continue in politics. More rare is a step like the one Republican Todd Platts took. Another former Pennsylvania representative, he retired from Congress and is now a judge on the York County Court of Common Pleas after running for and winning a seat.

    Former Rep. Chris Jacobs (R-N.Y.), who retired from Congress last year, has had his name floated for executive in his state’s Erie County. But he told The Buffalo News it’s unlikely he’ll run because he wants to focus on “my private business and my volunteer things.”

    Sires was previously mayor of West New York from 1995 through 2006, before he was elected to Congress. He said he didn’t necessarily see himself getting back into local politics after he left Washington earlier this year, but he was encouraged to do so by constituents who urged him to run upon his return.

    The nonpartisan election takes place in May, and the five candidates with the most votes are elected to the town commission, which then chooses the mayor among them. Current West New York Mayor Gabriel Rodriguez is leaving the position to run for the state Assembly.

    The filing deadline is in March, and Sires’ competition includes a slate of candidates led by Commissioner of Public Affairs Cosmo Cirillo, as well as Felix Roque, another former mayor of the town.

    For some diving back in, it’s because they have legislative priorities at the local level that they want to tackle — but the relative bipartisanship compared to Washington doesn’t hurt, either.

    “I’ve never looked at Congress as such an upgrade,” Sires said. “I always looked at the best era I had was serving the people of my community and doing things for the people in my community. Sometimes the party gets in the way.”

    A want to return to local office is a sentiment that former Rep. David Skaggs (D-Colo.) also shared. He’s in the running for a vacant Colorado state House seat — potentially a homecoming for Skaggs, who retired from Congress in 1999. Prior to serving in the House, he was a three-term member of the state House in the 1980s, including spending two terms as minority leader.

    It’s more common for state legislators to run for higher office — and much more rare the other way around.

    “I’d like to think that the experience I’ve had and the energy I still have can make a contribution at the state level,” Skaggs said.

    This is not a campaign he’s spent months planning out. The night before the Colorado legislative session began earlier this month, Democratic state Rep. Tracey Bernett announced her resignation, some weeks after the Boulder County District Attorney charged her with felony counts of attempting to influence a public servant, forgery and providing false information about residence, as well as misdemeanors for perjury and procuring false registration.

    But a state-level comeback is an idea Skaggs had in his head for years, inspired by Ohio Democrat Tom Sawyer, who was elected to the House in 1986, along with Skaggs. Redistricting following the 2000 census altered the lines of his district, and he ultimately lost reelection to his ninth term in 2002 to Tim Ryan in the primary. Sawyer ran for the House again in 2006, but lost in the primary to Betty Sutton. He then successfully ran for the state’s Board of Education that fall.

    The following year, Sawyer was appointed to the Ohio State Senate, where he served until 2016.

    “That’s always been an interesting proposition in my mind of what one might do to still apply whatever political and legislative skills have come my way,” Skaggs said.

    Most recently, Skaggs is a senior adviser at Dentons law firm. He previously was chair of the Board of the Office of Congressional Ethics, executive director of the Colorado Department of Higher Education and executive director of the Center for Democracy and Citizenship at the Aspen Institute and then the Council for Excellence in Government.

    Still, he said it’s not common for former members of Congress to talk about what they want to do once they leave the Capitol. “I think for most of us who have left that place, you’re sort of preoccupied with getting on with the rest of your life and something else. … There’s a certain prejudice about not looking back.”

    Skaggs has at least five other challengers, including Kitty Sargent, who serves on the Boulder Valley School District, Louisville City Councilmember Kyle Brown and Jenn Kaaoush, co-director of a nonprofit that provided support following the 2021 Marshall Fire. The vacancy committee will hold a meeting at the end of the month to select Bernett’s successor.

    Skaggs, who was a founding co-chair of the House Bipartisan Retreats while in Congress, said he’s looking forward to a collegial environment in the statehouse — one that’s absent from Washington lately.

    “Especially these days with so much dysfunction in Washington, state legislatures may be a much more productive and interesting place to be if you really want to change things,” he said.

    [ad_2]
    #politicians #climb #ladder
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Jacinda Ardern proved a true leader knows when to step back. If only US politicians could do the same | Arwa Mahdawi

    Jacinda Ardern proved a true leader knows when to step back. If only US politicians could do the same | Arwa Mahdawi

    [ad_1]

    Sign up for the Week in Patriarchy, a newsletter​ on feminism and sexism sent every Saturday.

    ‘Can women have it all?’

    It was inevitable that someone was going to ask that most cliched of questions and, voilà, they did. Shortly after Jacinda Ardern’s shock resignation as New Zealand prime minister this week, the BBC tweeted out a story about Ardern balancing motherhood with politics, with a headline asking if women can really have it all. After being accused of “staggering sexism”, the BBC deleted the headline and apologised.

    Having it all. Please, someone, ban that stupid phrase already. It is 2023! I’m pretty sure we’ve spent at least a decade talking about the fact that nobody ever asks whether working dads can have it all. When Boris Johnson had two new kids during his tenure as prime minister of Britain there wasn’t a lot of handwringing about how he’d balance life with a newborn, and the responsibilities of being a father of seven with his job. When Elon Musk became a dad for the umpteenth time the BBC didn’t ask how he was going to balance fatherhood with colonizing Mars. Or, if they did, I must have missed that article.

    Forget “having it all”, Ardern showed us all a powerful new model of leadership. Our current model of leadership (which, shameless plug, I’ve written an entire book called Strong Female Lead about) often treats empathy as a weakness. Ardern showed us all that kindness and compassion aren’t weaknesses, they’re strengths. Our current model of leadership prioritizes confidence over competence and tends to reward arrogance. Ardern, meanwhile, has spoken about the importance of self-doubt. “Some of the people I admire the most have that self-consciousness and that slight gnawing lack of confidence,” the politician said in a 2020 interview. When impostor syndrome creeps in, she explained, she thinks about how to use it constructively. “Does [that self-doubt] mean I need to do a bit more prep, do I need to think more about my decision making?” Wouldn’t it be nice if more politicians went through that exercise?!

    For a long time, women have been told to “lean in” to a patriarchal model of leadership. They’ve been told that, in order to be successful, they have to mold themselves into the image of a leader dictated by men. Ardern didn’t do that. She led on her own terms. And, perhaps, most powerfully, she stopped leading on her own terms. “I know what this job takes,” Ardern said when she announced her resignation. “And I know that I no longer have enough in the tank to do it justice.”

    We tend to equate leadership with being the loudest voice in the room. But true leadership means knowing when it’s time to pass the mic. True leadership means knowing when it’s time to step back. Unfortunately most lawmakers, particularly in the US, seem desperate to hold on to power for as long as humanly possible even if it’s not for the greater good. I mean, do you know how old the average senator in the US is? 64.3 years old. That’s over 20 years older than Ardern. Joe Biden, the oldest president in American history, is 80 and is expected to run again in the 2024 election. Senator Chuck Grassley is 89 as is Senator Dianne Feinstein of California. There have been a lot of concerns about Feinstein’s cognitive health and yet she still refuses to say whether she’s going to run for another term or not. Does it really serve her constituents for her to have another term, or does it serve it her ego?

    I’m not saying that there should be an age limit in politics, by the way. Experience is important. But there’s a real problem when the same people cling to power for decades and refuse to make room for new blood. Ardern, 42, says she no longer has enough in the tank to do her job justice. I’ve got to wonder what on earth some long-serving politicians in the US have in their tanks. I’ve got a feeling it may be narcissism.

    Is Milf Manor the queasiest new dating show on TV?

    Betteridge’s law states that: “Any headline that ends in a question mark can be answered by the word no.” But having read this Guardian piece on a horrifying new reality show called MILF Manor I think I’ve found the exception to that law.

    The Taliban bought a ‘verified’ check mark on Twitter

    It now appears to have been removed after some understandable outrage.

    Sierra Leone passes landmark law on women’s rights

    Under the new Gender Equality and Women’s Empowerment Act 30% of public and private jobs must be reserved for women. The law also requires some employers to give at least 14-weeks of maternity leave.

    The ‘virgin speculum’: proof that medicine is still rife with outrageous myths about women

    Out of the 16 million women in the UK who were eligible for a cervical screening test in 2022, only 11.2 million took one. That’s the lowest level in a decade. As Jenny Halpern Prince writes in the Guardian, women might feel more comfortable taking the test if it were updated a little bit. As it is, the speculum that is used for the examination is called a “virgin speculum”. Prince is calling for it to be renamed the “extra-small speculum” or for its medical name, the Pederson speculum, to be used. “The term virgin speculum should be removed from use by medical device advertisers and the medical profession (it is currently taught in medical schools),” writes Prince. That does seem a little bit like a no-brainer.

    The Wrestling Federation of India (WFI) is having a #MeToo moment

    Top athletes have accused the WFI’s president and several coaches of sexual misconduct. This goes beyond wrestling because the WFI president, Brij Bhushan Sharan Singh, is also a lawmaker for the ruling Bharatiya Janata party.

    The week in passwordarchy

    Netflix has been threatening to crack down on password sharing for a while and now it looks like it’s finally happening. During its recent earnings report the streaming service announced that it will enforce password-sharing rules “more broadly” in the next few months. Not sure this is a great idea, Netflix. You’re going to find yourself quite literally cancelled.

    [ad_2]
    #Jacinda #Ardern #proved #true #leader #step #politicians #Arwa #Mahdawi
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • One Woman Is Holding Politicians Accountable for Nasty Speech. It’s Changing Politics.

    One Woman Is Holding Politicians Accountable for Nasty Speech. It’s Changing Politics.

    [ad_1]

    dignity index r2

    ‘The Answer to Our Problems is Dignity’

    The ballroom of the Ahern Hotel in Las Vegas was a riot of red, white and blue when Pyfer arrived for the National Federation of Republican Women’s “Stars & Stripes” conference on Veteran’s Day weekend. Some 150 women from 17 western states were there, wearing bright-colored blazers and buttons. Pyfer had been invited at the last minute by one of the organizers, a woman named Kari Malkovich who had seen Pyfer talk about the Dignity Index in Utah and wanted her to do the same thing for this crowd.

    Pyfer and her husband took their seats to watch the speakers who would precede her, including Utah Rep. Owens and Utah State Treasurer Marlo Oaks. Almost immediately, Pyfer realized she was in trouble.

    One after the other, Owens, Oaks and other speakers stood up before the crowd and fired off volley after volley of blame, outrage and fear, whipping the crowd into something of a frenzy, according to multiple people who were present. Owens had just won re-election to Congress, although he’d declined to participate in two out of three debates. His words had been scored five times by the Dignity Index over the course of the election season, and all but one of those scores were low in dignity. This was, after all, a man who had written a bestselling book titled “Liberalism or How to Turn Good Men into Whiners, Weenies and Wimps.”

    Oaks, meanwhile, had received a lot of attention as Utah’s State Treasurer for challenging the Environmental, Social and Governance policies that have caught on with many large corporations and investment firms. He’d recently moved $100 million of Utah money from the investment firm BlackRock to different asset managers, accusing BlackRock of “using other people’s capital to drive a far-left agenda.” At the Vegas event, he stressed the importance of free speech and warned of cancel culture and censorship, showing a slide deck that referenced Hitler, Marxism and fascism. During a Q&A session afterward, a woman in the audience called Democrats “barbarians.” Watching this, Pyfer felt her heart pounding in her chest. She wondered if she could find an excuse to bow out. She texted Shriver and Rosshirt: “I don’t think this is going to end well.”

    “It was not quite a ‘1’ on the Dignity Index but a number ‘2’ for sure,” said Malkovich, the woman who’d invited Pyfer. Malkovich was an elected city council member from Woodland Hills, UT, and she’d arranged for a mix of speakers that weekend, including a panel of Holocaust survivors and a Paralympian. But by the time it was Pyfer’s turn to speak, the vibe was a little less than dignified, she had to admit. “I had to have a few congressmen there, and they were the cheerleaders. And everyone was back in that red-meat mentality,” she says. “There was some fear.”

    Sitting in the ballroom, waiting to be introduced, “I was dying,” Pyfer says.

    She turned to her husband. “I can’t give my presentation,” she said.

    “You have to,” he told her, sounding confident but looking worried. Frantically, she started tweaking her slides on her laptop, finding ways to remind her audience of her GOP bona fides.

    “She was nervous. She was pretty much shaking,” Malkovich remembers. “I knew I was putting her in a hard spot.” She grabbed Pyfer’s hand. “You got this,” she told her. “I really feel strongly that they need to hear this.”

    At the podium, Pyfer ditched her prepared opening gambit. Instead, she said: “I love the energy in this room. I’m a lifelong Republican woman, and I’m here surrounded by Republican women.” Then she paused.

    “I will tell you though, I’ve been asked to give a different perspective.” The room got quiet. “It’s a counterintuitive way to solve the problems in your communities, and it’s gonna surprise you.” This was a tactic she had learned as a teacher. “We call it a pre-instruction,” she told me later. “I just wanted to signal to them: ‘This is not what you want to hear.’”

    Then she hit them with the gut punch: “I think the answer to our problems is dignity.”

    Watching this, Malkovich felt the energy in the room shift. It was almost like someone had said something obscene. “There was whispering. I could see the restlessness in the crowd. We could all feel it.”

    Then, slide by slide, Pyfer went through the definitions of 1 through 8 on the Dignity Scale, just as she had so many times before in friendlier rooms. “Level two accuses the other side not just of doing bad or being bad,” she said, her mouth dry, “but promoting evil.” It was hard not to feel like she was indicting the entire room. So she tried to fall on her own sword, confessing that she routinely caught herself engaged in this same thinking. “Every day, I realize that the first thing that comes to mind sometimes for me is, ‘Those people are ruining everything,’ I’m like a 2 or a 3.” She saw some eye rolls — but also a few nods. She waited for someone to boo.

    At one point, she referenced a survey finding that one in four Americans believed it might be time to take up arms. Several women sitting up front cheered. “You better believe it! 2nd Amendment!” Still, Pyfer continued. “Yesterday was Veteran’s Day. My dad was in the military. And it frightens me, with what they went through for our country, that we would think violence is the way to solve our internal disagreements.”

    When she finished, there was tepid applause. No one booed. But about a dozen people approached Malkovich to complain about Pyfer’s talk. “Most were just angry. ‘Why did you pick her?’ That kind of thing,” she says. “I said, ‘I thought it was a really great presentation.’”

    Pyfer came up to her, shaking her head. “They hate me,” Malkovich remembers her saying. “I said, ‘They don’t even know you, Tami. They are upset at themselves, and they need to project it on someone else. Let it sit. It’s a spiritual and physical emotion, not just mental.’”

    The day before, these same women had listened to Holocaust survivors talk about what happens when contempt becomes the law of the land, when annihilation feels like the only option. They had wept with these survivors, wondering how countries could succumb to such brutality. Then, hearing Pyfer connect contemporary hyper-partisan language to political violence, the cognitive dissonance was hard to process, Malkovich said. It would take time. “When you recognize that you’re just one or two steps removed from the people you were crying with the day before, that’s quite a moment.”

    A few people came up to Pyfer afterward. One cried. One invited her to speak in her hometown. It was the most partisan crowd Pyfer had addressed, and it was a reminder of what the Dignity Index was up against. Trying to convince partisan Americans to reject contempt in 2022 was like trying to convince people in the 1600s that the Earth revolves around the sun. That’s how Galileo ended up in prison, after all.

    Still, Pyfer declined to criticize anyone at the event. “They were all playing their roles in a system that we’re all part of,” she told me. “And the Republican women were dutifully playing their roles. They want so badly to make a difference and do the right thing. How could you listen to these horrible things happening to your country and not be outraged?”

    The ordeal prepared her for whatever came next, she said. “It was horrible but necessary.” The Unite team is analyzing the results of the Utah demonstration project and expects to make a plan in early 2023 for expanding the Index. They might create a funders’ alliance, channeling donations to politicians who score high on the Index. Or a project like the one in Utah — but in many more states. Eventually, the Unite team could collect enough human-coded passages to develop a way of automating the scoring with artificial intelligence — a difficult but not necessarily impossible goal. One way or another, their ambition, Shriver says, is to “put dignity on the ballot in 2024.”

    [ad_2]
    #Woman #Holding #Politicians #Accountable #Nasty #Speech #Changing #Politics
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )