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Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina issued an unflattering description of countries south of the U.S. border Thursday.

Lindsey Graham blames immigration woes on south-of-the-border 'hell holes'

The GOP’s effort to woo Latinos may have suffered a minor setback Thursday, thanks to Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.). Republicans have been trying to improve their standing with the fastest-growing voting bloc ever since last year's election, when Latinos overwhelmingly cast their ballots for President Obama.

Graham, a member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, decided that Thursday’s “mark-up” of a bipartisan immigration reform bill was a good moment to review the differences between the situation on the U.S.-Mexico border and on the U.S.-Canada border. His conclusion: Canada is nice. Mexico isn't.

“We have a Canadian border.... Why are we OK up there and not OK to the south?… Why is one a problem and the other is not? Because Canada is a place where people like to stay. They like Canada. We like Canada. We love to have them visit. They want to go home because it’s a nice place,” said Graham. “The people coming across the southern...

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Wal-Mart Stores Inc. is one of the employers targeted by a bill by Rep. Jimmy Gomez (D-Echo Park) to penalize companies whose workers obtain healthcare coverage from Medi-Cal.

For Wal-Mart, should healthcare be a cost of doing business?

Big employers beware -- some California lawmakers want to pressure you to extend health insurance to virtually everyone who lands on your payroll, even part-timers who work less than two hours a day.

That's one of the effects that a bill by Assemblyman Jimmy Gomez (D-Echo Park) would have on companies and nonprofits that employ 500 or more people in the state. But it's not the one that Gomez, a former labor leader, emphasizes when talking about the measure, which the Assembly Health Committee approved on a party-line vote April 30.

Instead, the measure is being sold as a way to stop companies with low-paid workforces -- and Wal-Mart in particular -- from cutting workers' pay and hours so much that they wind up on Medi-Cal, the state's version of Medicaid. During a news conference Thursday, Gomez and Art Pulaski, chief of the California Labor Federation, argued that companies were using this tactic to avoid penalties that the 2010 federal healthcare law imposed on employers that didn't...

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During a rally last year at the Tesla factory in Fremont, Calif., workers cheer for one of the first Model S cars sold.

Oh, Lord, won't you buy me a Tesla Model S

It’s been a very good week for Tesla Motors Inc., the little electric car company that can -- with a little boost from the state of California and other automakers, that is.  

On Wednesday, Tesla reported a quarterly profit, the first in its 10-year history. And on Thursday, The Times reported that Consumer Reports magazine had given the company’s Model S its highest score: 99 out of 100.

In fact, the staid folks at Consumer Reports went, for them, absolutely bonkers in praising the car, saying it is “brimming with innovation, delivers world-class performance, and is interwoven throughout with impressive attention to detail. It’s what Marty McFly might have brought back in place of his DeLorean in  'Back to the Future.' "

Provided, of course, that a high school kid could pony up $89,650 for a car. All I can add is, I hope they’re right, given the rotten luck I had with a washer/dryer they recommended.

Still, this is not bad for a company selling...

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Will same-sex marriage lead to the demise of domestic partner benefits?

How same-sex marriage could affect health benefits

An unintended consequence of same-sex marriage could hearten wedding traditionalists by making marriage more attractive to all couples. It’s all about the health benefits — and what isn’t these days?

In Maryland, where voters recently approved same-sex marriage, the Baltimore Sun reports that Gov. Martin O’Malley wants to do away with domestic partner benefits for state employees who are gay and lesbian. Such benefits have been available only to same-sex couples because, unlike heterosexual couples, they were until now unable to wed. Now that marriage is theirs to claim, O’Malley says, it would be discriminatory to heterosexual couples if they couldn’t also sign up their domestic partners for benefits.

This is one very small action against domestic partner benefits. It affects only state employees and in a state that provides domestic partner benefits only to a relatively small segment of the population. Private employers have said they’re...

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Would shortening your name launch you from a cubicle to a corner office? Don't bet on it.

Do short names pay? That's a long shot.

Names and money, it turns out, have some correlation. According to a survey of top earners, the shorter the name, the higher the salary is likely to be. Or at least, people with high salaries tend to have very short names.

Before you go changing your moniker to Al, be aware that the survey just points out a certain amount of coincidence, not one thing causing another. It’s more likely that people who use short nicknames — and many of the top earners do — have certain personal characteristics in common that gear them toward higher pay. Maybe their inclination toward the short and informal indicates a certain gregariousness that we already know tends to help people in their careers. If you're a William kind of guy, switching to Bill probably isn't all that likely to land you in a corner office (though around here, there's a guy nicknamed Nick who has it).

It’s also worth noting that people from certain ethnic backgrounds might tend to have longer names than the...

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Rall: Gov. Brown marking the start of 'poison pill politics'?

Gov. Jerry Brown has submitted a plan to ease prison overcrowding in California -- but says he doesn't support his own plan. Could this mark the start of "poison pill politics"? 

ALSO:

Photo gallery: Ted Rall cartoons

McManus: Obama's plan to avoid lame-duckery

Tamerlan Tsarnaev and what the dead deserve 

Follow Ted Rall on Twitter @TedRall

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Nobody died at Watergate, but it was a bigger scandal than Benghazi

Before Wednesday's hearing into last September’s attack on a U.S. diplomatic compound in Benghazi, Libya, Rep. Steve King (R-Iowa) said: “If you link Watergate and Iran-Contra together and multiply it maybe by 10 or so, you’re going to get in the zone where Benghazi is.” Not even close.

Going into the hearing by the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, we knew that the facility in Benghazi had been underprotected and that the Obama administration clung too long to “talking points” that linked the attack that killed four Americans (including Ambassador J. Christopher Stevens) to outrage over an anti-Muslim video. (Contrary to what Republicans have been saying as far back as the Mitt Romney presidential campaign, the attack could have been both a terrorist attack and a response to the video.)

The hearing didn’t alter that picture much, though it featured some poignant testimony from Gregory Hicks, the former deputy chief of mission in...

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An arrivals board at Ben Gurion International Airport near Tel Aviv.

Debating Israeli airport security and racial profiling

More than 40 readers sent letters to the editor in response to George Bisharat's April 28 Op-Ed article on a bill to include Israel in the U.S. visa waiver program. Bisharat, an American law professor and a pro-Palestinian activist who has traveled several times through Israel's Ben Gurion International Airport, said the legislation would allow Israel to continue its racial profiling of U.S. citizens who are Muslim or of Arabic descent.

Four critical letters were published in response, including one from the bill's author, Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.). She wrote:

"The current visa waiver program requires participating countries to offer 'reciprocal' travel privileges to Americans. My bill does not waive this requirement. In fact, it gives us important leverage to ensure Israel welcomes Americans by requiring a certification from our secretaries of Homeland Security and State that Israel has made 'every' reasonable effort to grant reciprocal travel privileges to 'all' Americans.

"My...

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Mark Sanford gives his victory speech after wining back his old congressional seat in South Carolina on Tuesday.

Mark Sanford and the end of the GOP culture wars

In April 1861, South Carolina fired the first shots of the Civil War. Almost exactly 152 years later, it may have fired the final shots of the Republican Party’s culture war.

South Carolinians on Tuesday elected former Gov. Mark Sanford to the House of Representatives, handing him a convincing victory over Democrat Elizabeth Colbert Busch. Now, admittedly, she wasn’t the strongest of candidates -- her main claim to fame, face it, is that she’s the sister of late-night TV satirist Stephen Colbert.

But Sanford, of course, comes with his own baggage: an adulterous affair while he was governor -- recall his “Appalachian Trail” vacation that was actually a cover story for a visit to his mistress, er, soulmate, in Argentina -- followed by an increasingly messy divorce.

And did this matter to the good folks in the heavily Republican district? It did not. Sanford’s margin of victory was even wider than most pundits had predicted.

Now, let me be clear: I&...

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Arzalee Porter, a resident of Avalon Gardens, talks about her 50 years in South Los Angeles.

One South L.A. resident's prescription for Council District 9

Azalee Porter is not the typical resident of City Council District 9, the city's poorest and most blighted. And that's one of the challenges facing whoever wins the seat Councilwoman Jan Perry is vacating in July.

Porter has lived in Avalon Gardens in South Los Angeles for more than 50 years, having arrived from Greenville, S.C., with her husband Clarence Ray Porter Jr., an Air Force veteran, and their three children in search of a better life. At the time, the complex of low-slung garden apartments with shared lawns was reserved for service members and their families. Its 164 units are now run by the Housing Authority of the City of Los Angeles for low-income residents in general, so you might refer to it as "the projects." To Azalee Porter, however, it's a "development," a word more suited to the complex she moved into than the version she occupies today.

I sat down with Porter recently and with Kokayi Kwa Jitahidi, the 33-year-old chairman of the South L.A. Power Coalition, a...

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Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) laughs during a press conference with other members of the so-called Gang of Eight, a group of senators lobbying for an immigration overhaul.

GOP fights itself over immigration reform

Over the last few years the Republican Party has campaigned hard against comprehensive immigration reform and in favor of tougher internal enforcement and beefed-up security along the U.S. border with Mexico.

Now the GOP leadership is hoping to persuade its base to consider a different option: a bipartisan Senate bill that would result in sweeping changes to existing immigration laws. The bill would also create a pathway for millions of immigrants who are illegally in the United States to remain in the country and eventually apply for citizenship.

The problem is that GOP leaders are having a hard time persuading some in the party to throw their support behind the Senate bill. As The Times’ Lisa Mascaro reported, the tough task of selling immigration reform to the GOP faithful has been left to Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla).

Frankly, I’m not surprised that Rubio is getting push-back from some quarters of the Republican Party. After all, the GOP worked hard to defeat previous...

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