Showing posts with label politics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label politics. Show all posts

The House GOP conference says the challenge spawned 11,000 new Facebook likes for participants.

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We told you about the New Media Challenge that Republicans in the U.S. House of Representatives launched to increase member participation on social media platforms, including Facebook. Well, round two just wrapped up and we’ve got the winners and losers hot off the press. The envelope please…
The House GOP conference says the challenge spawned 11,000 new Facebook likes for participants.
  • Rep. Shelley Moore Capito (WV), simply asked (er, pleaded) outright for more friends in a video post on Facebook. The straightforward approach shouldn’t be surprising, since politicians have to ask for things all the time, right? Unfortunately, this time it didn’t work as her competitor, Rep. Allen West (FL), moves on to the next round.
  • Or, there’s the “all for one and one for all approach,” as these Texas Congressmen shared on their respective pages (neither made it past Round 2.)
  • Congressman Steve Womack (AR) posted a photo from his recent trip to Arlington National Cemetery, along with storm and tornado tips for his constituents in Arkansas.
Worth noting are the number of freshman GOP members who have taken to the challenge, since they have only been in office since January.  More than half of the remaining players are new to Congress. The challenge started with 106 players and after today that’s been cut down to 24.
So, what’s the secret to increasing engagement? There may not be a tried and true formula, but here are a few highlights the Republicans learned about it during the week.
Leanne Goodman, who handles social media for California Congressman Howard McKeon’s office, said, “The strategy is straightforward- engaging our constituents on Facebook through relevant, consistent content that integrates different new media platforms. The Congressman is fully engaged in the process, regularly recommending articles and opening his doors to ‘behind the scenes’ views for constituents back in California.”

Readers, how likely do you think it is that Weiner’s accounts on Facebook and Twitter really got hacked

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Sometimes, having a higher profile than Twitter has its disadvantages, as Facebook found itself mentioned in a scandal it had absolutely nothing to do with over the weekend that went by the chuckle-inducing name of Weinergate.

Weinergate reared its ugly head Saturday, when Big Government reported that a photo of a man’s erection, concealed by underwear, appeared in the official Twitter account of Rep. Anthony Weiner (D-N.Y.), included in a Tweet directed to Gennette Cordova, a graduate student in Bellingham, Wash.
So what does this have to do with Facebook? Not much, except that Weiner apparently doesn’t know the difference between the U.S.’s largest social network and the 140-character microblogging site, as he replied in a Tweet, “FB hacked.”
Weiner told Politico in an email that he thought it was “obvious” that his account had been hacked, and his spokesman, Dave Arnold, told the New York Post, “Anthony’s accounts on both Facebook and Twitter were hacked.”
For her part, Cordova never mentioned Facebook, telling the New York Daily News:
Friday evening, I logged onto Twitter to find that I had about one-dozen new mentions in less than an hour, which is a rare occurrence. When I checked one of the posts that I had been tagged in, I saw that it was a picture that had supposedly been Tweeted to me by Weiner. The account that these Tweets were sent from was familiar to me; this person had harassed me many times after the congressman followed me on Twitter a month or so ago. Since I had dealt with this person and his cohorts before, I assumed that the Tweet and the picture were their latest attempts at defaming the congressman and harassing his supporters.
And as for the hacking itself, RedState blogger Caleb Howe Tweeted, “Haven’t seen it mentioned, but wouldn’t have to hack twitter/facebook to post from yfrog. Only have to hack yfrog. It’s authorized to tweet.”
And Photoshop expert Philip Bump went one step further for Mediate, reporting that the photo doesn’t match previous images uploaded by Weiner, that the type of camera is different, and that in his opinion, the photo did not come from Weiner.
Readers, how likely do you think it is that Weiner’s accounts on Facebook and Twitter really got hacked?

Commerzbank to Raise 5.3 Billion Euros to Help Repay State Aid

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May 22 (Bloomberg) -- Commerzbank AG, Germany’s second- biggest bank, plans to raise about 5.3 billion euros ($7.5 billion) selling new shares to help repay state aid.

Commerzbank will sell 2.44 billion new shares at 2.18 euros apiece, the Frankfurt-based bank said today in a statement. Shareholders will be allowed to subscribe to 10 new shares for every 11 already held from May 24 to June 6, the company said. New shares are expected to trade on June 7.

Chief Executive Officer Martin Blessing announced plans in April to repay about 14.3 billion euros by June through the sale of new shares and use of excess reserves. Commerzbank received more than 18 billion euros from the German government after agreeing to acquire unprofitable competitor Dresdner Bank two weeks before the collapse of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc.

Commerzbank shares rose 0.7 percent to 3.95 euros in Frankfurt trading on May 20. The stock has fallen 29 percent so far this year, compared with larger German rival Deutsche Bank AG’s 6.1 percent gain, hurt by the dilution from the capital increase and its exposure to sovereign debt, Merck Finck & Co. analyst Konrad Becker said on May 16.

Commerzbank has said it is seeking to raise a total of 11 billion euros, with 8.25 billion euros coming from investors and 2.75 billion euros from Germany’s bank-rescue fund Soffin, which will maintain its stake of 25 percent plus one share in the company. Soffin will spend about 1.3 billion euros on new shares, Commerzbank said today.

Allianz SE will fully participate in the rights offer, according to the Frankfurt bank.

The bank on April 14 said it raised 5.7 billion euros in the first step, helped by the sale of conditional mandatory exchangeable notes, leaving another 5.3 billion euros to be raised in the rights offer.

--With assistance from Julie Cruz in Frankfurt. Editors: John Simpson, Randall Hackle

Insurers May Owe More Than $1 Billion in Unpaid Policy Benefits

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Florida Insurance Commissioner Kevin McCarty, who made the estimate, said it was a “conservative number,” in a conference with reporters during a break in a hearing today in Tallahassee. Officials from MetLife Inc., the largest U.S. life insurer, and Nationwide Mutual Insurance Co., the policyholder-owned insurer, were subpoenaed to appear at a hearing by the Florida Office of Insurance Regulation to explain how they determine when policyholders have died.



“We want to ensure that insurance companies use as much effort to find and pay benefits as they do to find and collect premiums,” McCarty said during the call with reporters.

The hearing, which was attended by representatives from about 15 states, was held to help determine whether life insurers use Social Security Administration death records to stop annuity payments, without using that same data to identify life insurance policyholders who have died.

Liability for life insurance begins when the company receives proof of death, which is different than what happens in the annuity business, according to testimony by Todd Katz, executive vice president of insurance products for New York- based MetLife. If annuities continue to be paid out to deceased recipients, the insurer may have to reclaim those payments, he said.

Death List Check

MetLife began using Social Security data to stop some annuity payouts starting in the late 1980s, Katz said. The insurance company started using the death list to identify some life insurance policyholders’ deaths around 2004. The insurer used the death record to conduct a sweep of most of its life insurance policies in 2007 and in 2010 decided it would check the list at least once a year. When matches are made, an investigation begins and beneficiaries are contacted, Katz said.

MetLife paid more than $11 billion to beneficiaries in 2010 and turned over $51 million to the states, according to a statement from the insurer.

Using the Social Security death list “can be valuable as an aid in preventing errors and fraud and as a safety net to identify the small fraction of deceased insureds and account holders for which the company may not receive a claim in the ordinary course,” a MetLife statement said.

MetLife officials have also been subpoenaed to appear at a hearing in California on May 23. The National Association of Insurance Commissioners, the organization of state regulators, said this week it had formed a national task force, led by Florida, to help coordinate investigations into whether companies failed to pay benefits to beneficiaries of life insurance policies.

Hancock Settlement

The group includes members from California, Illinois, Iowa, Louisiana, New Hampshire, New Jersey, North Dakota, Pennsylvania and West Virginia, according to a statement from the NAIC. Model laws may be established to provide more uniformity for unclaimed benefit practices, McCarty said.

Florida’s insurance office announced a settlement with John Hancock yesterday, in which the insurer agreed to pay money to beneficiaries with interest dating from the date of death. The settlement also includes a payment of $3 million to the state, of which $600,000 was waived, according to a statement from the insurance office.

John Hancock, a unit of Toronto-based Manulife Financial Corp., agreed to restore the full value of more than 6,400 accounts, denied any wrongdoing and also agreed to establish a $10 million fund to facilitate payments to beneficiaries that cannot be contacted, the statement said.

“This agreement is consistent with John Hancock’s longstanding commitment to keeping our promises to owners and beneficiaries of our products,” the company said in statement.