Winner in Georgia Drops Call for President to Quit - Wall Street Journal [getdailynow.blogspot.com]
Question by Amber: What is the name of the song and the singer from tonight's bullfighter "House" tv episode? It played at the beginning of the episode. I don't remember the words at all, sorry. Thought you may have watched the show & heard the song? What is the name of the song & singer from tonight's bullfighter "House" tv show? Thanks! Best answer for What is the name of the song and the singer from tonight's bullfighter "House" tv episode?:
Answer by S C
I didn't see the episode but I googled it and these two songs were listed Arcade Fire -- My Body is a Cage, Black Lab -- This Night Hope this helps!
Answer by Stephen Stephen
The name of the song is "This Night" by "Black Lab" http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yDLdJG0BukM
SCARY GAMES! - The House 2 Walkthrough with Reactions & Facecam Part 2 of 2Part 1: www.youtube.com T-Shirts (US): 408565.spreadshirt.com T-Shirts (Europe): 697745.spreadshirt.co.uk LIVESTREAM: www.twitch.tv Twitter: www.twitter.com Facebook: www.facebook.com If you're subbed to uberhaxornova then you've probably seen this, but here's my take on it. The House 2 reaction The House 2 Bedroom Reaction The House 2 Saferoom Reaction The House 2 Working Room Reaction The House 2 Face Cam Let's Play The House 2
House debate features divide on role of government. MATTHEW BROWN, Associated Press Copyright 2012 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. House debate features divide on role of government
By ALAN CULLISON
TBILISIâ"Georgia's likely next prime minister backed off from a call for President Mikhail Saakashvili to resign in conciliatory statements in which he said his first trip abroad would be to the U.S., which he called Georgia's "main partner."
Bidzina Ivanishvili's shift in tone, which included comments that he may soon meet with the president as he assembles a cabinet, followed a reminder from Mr. Saakashvili's government that the president still holds considerable powers and could dissolve parliament and call new elections before his term expires next year.
European Union officials also issued a rebuke to Mr. Ivanishvili, a billionaire whose upstart Georgia Dream party won a surprise victory in parliamentary elections Monday.
The back and forth was just the start of a year of likely complications in Georgian politics, when power will be shared by the Mr. Saakashvili, a hero of Georgia's 2003 Rose Revolution, and Mr. Ivanishvili, whose coalition now controls parliament. Mr. Ivanishvili has vowed to unravel many of the reforms enacted since the Western-leaning president took office in 2004.
But in comments Wednesday, Mr. Ivanishvili sought to end the unease he caused in a rambling and disjointed 90-minute news conference on Tuesday, in which he called for Mr. Saakashvili to resign and said members of the government could be arrested.
He also issued a statement saying he was misunderstood in his call for Mr. Saakashvili's resignation on Tuesday.
"As far as my yesterday's remarks are concerned, this is neither my nor the political coalition's political demand," it said. "We are ready for dialogue and settlement." He said his party had created a commission to hold negotiations with the government.
Based on the 98% of votes counted as of Wednesday night, Georgia's new parliament will be dominated by Mr. Ivanishvili's party in the coming year, but not by a wide enough margin to completely sideline supporters of Mr. Saakashvili, who will step down as president in late 2013.
Constitutional changes that shift many powers from the presidency to the parliament and prime minister in the coming year will further strengthen Mr. Ivanishvili's coalition. But the president still holds plenty of cards that could potentially spoil his rival's rule.
Mr. Saakashvili made a quick concession speech after elections Tuesday, and said that he would work with Mr. Ivanishvili to form a new cabinet. But Mr. Saakashvili's parliament speaker warned on Wednesday that the Georgian president could provoke a legislative deadlock and call new parliamentary elections within six months.
"It is possible to do this according to the constitution, though we aren't going to do it because we respect the Georgian peoples' choice and Georgian statehood," said David Bakradze, a longtime ally of the president. "Therefore we expect our opponents to show rudimentary respect toward Georgian statehood and the constitution."
U.S. and European officials said they were encouraged that elections went off well and by Mr. Saakashvili's quick concession speech. There was more concern about Mr. Ivanishvili's comments afterward, especially his call for the Georgian president to resign, a senior European diplomat said, calling it "not very useful."
Although vote-rigging had been a concern in the elections, Western monitors said they detected few irregularities during the vote on Monday. On Wednesday, however, Georgia's central election commission said that local electoral officials were being harassed in a half dozen districts by Mr. Ivanishvili's allies, who wanted some vote results to be reviewed.
One Western vote-monitoring group issued a statement Wednesday that the harassment "carries the threat of affecting negatively the positive assessment" held earlier this week by international observers of the election.
"It causes us a serious concern just a day after a seemingly peaceful and democratic transition of power," said Assen Agov, head of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization Parliamentary Assembly Delegation in Georgia.
â"Laurence Norman in Brussels contributed to this article.
BEACH HOUSE - "MYTH" (OFFICIAL TRACK)Beach House -- "Myth" -- debut single off of 'Bloom'
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