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To Hold House Democrats Eye GOP-Held Districts Won By Biden
To Hold House Democrats Eye GOP-Held Districts Won By Biden
To Hold House, Democrats Eye GOP-Held Districts Won By Biden https://digitalalaskanews.com/to-hold-house-democrats-eye-gop-held-districts-won-by-biden-2/ By WILL WEISSERT Associated Press GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. (AP) — While preparing to march in a Saturday morning parade through this fast-growing city’s westside, Democratic congressional candidate Hillary Scholten warned her staff that the area was traditionally very conservative and they should brace for possible booing. But the crowd lining Fulton Street to mark the region’s Polish pride was friendly. Only one man bellowed what sounded to the candidate like “Go to hell, Hillary!” as she passed. But he also grinned and flashed a thumbs-up later. He’d actually cried, “Give ’em hell, Hillary!” It’s been 32 years since a Democrat won the House seat where Scholten is competing against Republican John Gibbs. But, its largest city, Grand Rapids, has turned steadily bluer lately, and redrawn congressional maps have converted it from a district that backed Donald Trump for president in 2020 to one that Joe Biden would have carried instead. It’s one of 14 U.S. House seats nationwide that are held by Republicans but that Biden would have won under new maps. As Democrats brace for midterm defeats that could erase their narrow, five-seat control of the House, a chance to limit the damage may lie in flipping Republican-held seats that voted for Biden to stanch the effect of losses elsewhere around the country. Scholten, a former Justice Department attorney and Christian Reform Church deacon, lost the seat to Republican Rep. Peter Meijer in 2020. But Meijer was defeated in his Michigan GOP primary this year by Trump-backed challenger Gibbs, a former software engineer who falsely purports that the 2020 presidential election was stolen. Scholten is trying to become the first Democratic woman elected to the House from western Michigan and isn’t counting on more favorable boundaries to get her there, noting that it’s “hard for people to believe in what they’ve never seen before, and we feel that every day.” But even Gibbs concedes the new maps have Democrats excited. “In a year where they’re expected to have a very difficult time in the midterms,” he said, “for them, a pickup is something that they’re salivating over.” The list of GOP-held Biden districts feature three Los Angeles-area seats and one in California’s Central Valley. Others are the territories of Republican Reps. Don Bacon in Omaha, Nebraska, and Steve Chabot in Cincinnati. Pennsylvania Republican Rep. Brian Fitzpatrick, who represents the moderate swing battleground of Bucks County, north of Philadelphia, faces a similar test. On the other side are a dozen districts that voted for Trump but are held by Democrats. Retirements and redistricting mean many no longer have incumbents running. Still, Democrats see high stakes in their efforts to flip seats won by Biden. When House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer recently predicted that his party would hold the chamber, he mentioned such territory in California and Illinois, as well as Bacon’s and Chabot’s districts, and the Grand Rapids race. Not every incumbent is sweating toss-up races. Chabot says that, during his 26 years running for reelection in southwestern Ohio, he’s “had more challenging races, for sure, than anyone in the House.” But, as he competes for potential crossover voters, Chabot is not emphasizing Trump. “I agree with most of his policies, but I’m running on my own record,” Chabot said. “People can make up their own minds.” Gibbs says that, despite Trump’s endorsement, he’s building appeal among independents and swing voters. He recalled one man approaching him in the lakefront city of Muskegon, northwest of Grand Rapids, and saying: “I voted for you. I’m a Democrat. Is that OK?” “This race is not so much about Democrat vs. Republican. It’s more crazy vs. normal,” said Gibbs, pointing to high gas and food prices and “what they’re trying to do to kids in school,” with modern curriculums and inappropriate material in campus libraries being especially outlandish. But, echoing Trump, Gibbs left open the possibility that he may object to the results of his own election next month. “If it’s fair and everything’s on the up and up, I’ll accept whatever the result is,” he said. But asked if he could define fair, Gibbs replied, “Not at this point.” “We’ll just have to kind of see how it goes,” he said. A Scholten win would cement this area’s political transformation from red to blue. Booms in health, university and technology jobs are attracting scores of college-educated workers — with new residents often importing Democratic voting preferences. Grand Rapids and its suburbs have also turned more diverse, including notable increases in Hispanic voters. Such a change was long unthinkable in the home city of Gerald Ford and former Trump administration Education Secretary Betsy DeVos, which once epitomized pro-business, country club conservativism. “I love to play golf. We play at public courses,” Scholten said, laughing. “I think that’s a pretty good analogy, actually.” Despite Democrat-friendly lines, national Republicans see the district as a “checks and balances” area where voters might have shunned Trump but want to control Washington’s spending and potential federal overreach. Meijer was one of 10 House Republicans who voted to impeach Trump, prompting the former president to endorse Gibbs. The Democratic House campaign committee even financed a GOP primary ad proclaiming that Gibbs was “hand-picked by Trump to run for Congress,” believing he’d be beatable in November. Trump once nominated Gibbs to head the Office of Personnel Management, but he wasn’t confirmed amid questions about past tweets, including one from 2016 in which Gibbs wrote, “Today’s Dem party: Islam, gender-bending, anti-police, ‘u racist!’” Gibbs says Democrats have posted far more incendiary things. “I don’t apologize. I never have and will not,” he said. Democrats hope that a question on Michigan’s ballot asking voters to put the right to an abortion in the state constitution energizes their base. “The issue of choice is front and center in a way that it wasn’t before,” Scholten said. “It’s changed a lot of minds.” Gibbs counters that his steadfast opposition to abortion is a winner. He’d only allow exceptions if a pregnant woman’s life is endangered. In instances of rape or incest, Gibbs said: “That baby, born in that case, is innocent. So I don’t see why an innocent person should have to perish.” Raised in the Pentecostal church, Gibbs spent seven years as a missionary in Japan. But he converted to Catholicism in 2021 and now tries to go to Mass multiple times per week. He has that in common with Biden, who is also a devout Catholic, though Gibbs isn’t seeking bipartisanship there. He retorted of the president’s frequent Mass attendance, “Yeah, I just wish he would accept the teachings.” “If I ever saw him at Mass, I’d have a nice, frank conversation,” Gibbs said. “Give him a copy of the Catechism of the Catholic Church: ‘You oughta learn this.’” ___ Associated Press writer Joey Cappelletti contributed to this report. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
To Hold House Democrats Eye GOP-Held Districts Won By Biden
New Evidence To Show Trump Was Warned Of Violence On Jan. 6
New Evidence To Show Trump Was Warned Of Violence On Jan. 6
New Evidence To Show Trump Was Warned Of Violence On Jan. 6 https://digitalalaskanews.com/new-evidence-to-show-trump-was-warned-of-violence-on-jan-6/ The probably final public hearing of the House committee investing the Jan. 6, 2021 attack on the U.S. Capitol is expected to highlight newly obtained Secret Service records showing how President Donald Trump was repeatedly alerted to brewing violence that day, and he still sought to stoke the conflict, according to three people briefed on the records. The committee plans to share in Thursday’s hearing new video footage and internal Secret Service emails that appear to corroborate parts of the most startling inside accounts of that day, said the people briefed, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive internal records. Former White House aide Cassidy Hutchinson testified in June that Trump was briefed on Jan. 6 that some of his supporters were armed for battle, demanded they be allowed into his rally and insisted on leading them on their march to the Capitol. Surveillance footage the committee plans to share was taken near the Ellipse that morning before Trump’s speech and shows throngs of his supporters clustered just outside the corralled area for his “Stop the Steal” rally. Secret Service officers screened those entering who sought to get closer to the stage. Law enforcement officials who were monitoring video that morning spotted Trump supporters with plastic shields, bulletproof vests and other paramilitary gear, and some in the Secret Service concluded they stayed outside the rally area to avoid having their weapons confiscated, according to people familiar with the new records. Other internal emails likely to be revealed at the hearing further buttress accounts about staff members warning Trump about the risk and then the reality of violence that day, as he continued to press nervous Secret Service agents to take him to the Capitol to join his supporters marching there, the three people said. After being alerted to violence erupting at the Capitol when he returned to the White House, Trump tweeted criticism of Vice President Mike Pence for not blocking the certification of the election, whipping up supporters who had already trampled over security barricades and were battling police to break into the halls of Congress. The newly obtained Secret Service records are just part of a larger hearing in which the committee hopes to summarize and remind the American public of all the ways Trump is said to have played a central role in fomenting a violent insurrection at the Capitol, one of the most brutal attacks on democracy in U.S. history, according to multiple people briefed on the evidence and committee plan. While the committee’s previous hearings took center stage over several weeks this summer, the committee is trying to revive interest in its probe and deliver what it has privately called its “closing arguments” about past and ongoing threats to democracy as voters prepare to cast ballots next month in the midterm elections. The hearing aims to highlight new evidence gathered by investigators that corroborates the committee’s key findings about Trump and the Jan. 6 insurrection, according to the people briefed: that he sought to rile up his supporters to help block the certification of Joe Biden’s electoral victory; used his bully pulpit to encourage a fiery showdown at the Capitol; and then refused to budge to help rescue thousands of lawmakers, staff members and police officers on Capitol Hill who were either fleeing or fighting for their lives that afternoon. It’s unclear, however, if the new material will shed any light on a particularly dramatic part of Hutchinson’s testimony, in which she recounted a senior Secret Service official telling her that Trump had erupted in anger and lunged at the lead security agent in his motorcade when told he could not go to the Capitol. Email shows question over Trump’s plans One email the committee has obtained highlights the level of alarm inside Secret Service headquarters on Jan. 6 about the possibility that Trump would get his wish to head to the Capitol — and join a melee in progress. By 1 p.m. Eastern time that day, according to police testimony, hand-to-hand combat between protesters and officers was breaking out on the steps and platforms immediately outside the Capitol. The Secret Service had just then offered to send reinforcements to help an overwhelmed U.S. Capitol Police force, according to texts and testimony from then-Capitol Police Chief Steven Sund. The new correspondence obtained by the committee shows that while Trump was still speaking to his supporters and announcing he was going to the Capitol, Secret Service personnel in charge of transportation and field operations scrambled to try to secure a safe motorcade route for the president and his entourage, two people briefed on the records said. The Secret Service staff members sought D.C. police help to block intersections. But with tens of thousands of protesters in downtown Washington, and D.C. police being dispatched to help Capitol Police with protesters breaking through barricades, D.C. police declined the Secret Service’s request. About 1:10 p.m., Trump had left the Ellipse in his motorcade after finishing his speech, and demanded to go to the Capitol. Trump’s detail leader, Bobby Engel, riding with Trump in his sport utility vehicle, told an enraged Trump that they were heading back to the White House and it was not safe to take him to the Capitol, The Washington Post previously reported. “We don’t have the assets,” Engel told Trump of the inability to secure safe passage for his motorcade, according to a Secret Service official briefed on Engel’s account. By about 1:20 p.m., Trump was back at the White House. One of the committee’s newly obtained documents shows that sometime between 1:30 and 2 p.m., a senior Secret Service supervisor for protective operations emailed Engel with an urgent update and seeking to know if Trump’s plan to go to the Capitol was successfully quashed. It came after a tumultuous hour for the Secret Service detail, which had effectively ignored a command from the president. Even with Trump back at the White House, Secret Service headquarters wanted to be sure the president was staying put. The supervisor, Ron Rowe, warned Engel that the situation was rapidly devolving at the Capitol and sought Engel’s confirmation he was not considering taking Trump there, according to a senior law enforcement official familiar with the records turned over to the committee. Rowe urged Engel to call him. Rowe declined to comment, but Secret Service spokesman Anthony Guglielmi said Rowe’s email reflected the larger agency’s position: Trump’s idea of going to the Capitol was a non-starter. In other internal emails, agents relayed reports that Trump was angry about being told he couldn’t go to the Capitol. Some of the information, the people briefed said, calls into question the previous testimony of Engel and Anthony Ornato, then a Secret Service leader who was serving in an unprecedented political role of White House deputy chief of staff. Both men told the committee in closed-door depositions that they could not recall certain events relayed by other witnesses, including Trump’s demand that the Secret Service let armed people into his rally. After Hutchinson testified that Ornato told her that Trump had lunged at Engel inside the sport utility vehicle they were traveling in, anonymous Secret Service sources said that Engel and Ornato disputed any altercation occurred and were prepared to say so under oath. The committee has not yet re-interviewed the two men, as lawmakers sifted through the additional trove of Secret Service records. Ornato and Engel, through a Secret Service spokesman, declined to comment. How the committee got the documents The vast trove of records turned over to the Jan. 6 committee is the result of an ironic twist of events, according to the people briefed on the documents. The same Secret Service that permanently deleted agents’ texts from Jan. 6 and the surrounding days amid congressional requests last year has now provided to the committee this large volume of internal communications from the same time period. Voluntarily, the agency has turned over every record it kept of logistical planning, security concerns, and private discussions related to the scheduled protests and president’s movements. This extensive sharing of records — more than 1 million pages’ worth and many which the committee did not specifically request — followed a period when the Secret Service came under fire for executing an agencywide destruction of all texts exchanged from agents phones in that key period. Federal regulations mandate the preservation of government records, and the Secret Service’s deletion of these records prompted a federal investigation into the failure to do so. The texts were wiped from agents’ phones as part of a Secret Service-wide update of employees phones that began in January 2021. Secret Service officials have said the mass deletion of reams of potential evidence was unintentional, and the agency’s telephone provider has concluded those texts are now impossible to recover. The committee had considered sharing a portion of its videotaped interview with Ornato at a previous hearing and it’s unclear if lawmakers will do so Thursday. In one portion of his interview, according to two people briefed on his account, Ornato described briefing White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows the afternoon of Jan. 6 about detailed reports of violence breaking out at the Capitol, as well as police officers being transported to a hospital. The committee learned from other witnesses that Meadows then briefed Trump. The hearing could build out the evidence that Trump took steps to ratchet up the conflict at the Capitol, despite being warned of escalating violence. Lawmakers on the com...
·digitalalaskanews.com·
New Evidence To Show Trump Was Warned Of Violence On Jan. 6
Parts Of Bengaluru To See Power Cuts On October 13: Full List Of Areas
Parts Of Bengaluru To See Power Cuts On October 13: Full List Of Areas
Parts Of Bengaluru To See Power Cuts On October 13: Full List Of Areas https://digitalalaskanews.com/parts-of-bengaluru-to-see-power-cuts-on-october-13-full-list-of-areas/ The power outages are a result of maintenance works, the Bangalore Electricity Supply Company (BESCOM) said. Several parts of Bengaluru are expected to face power outages on Thursday, October 13. The power cuts are a result of a series of maintenance works across Bengaluru East, the Bangalore Electricity Supply Company (BESCOM) said. The following areas will be affected between 10 am and 5 pm: HBR Layout 1st, 2nd and 3rd block, Yasin Nagar, Subhash Layout, Rama Temple Road, Ramdev Garden, Krishnareddy Layout, Teachers Colony, Shivaramaiah Layout, Ring Road Service road, KK Halli Village, CMR Road, Kammanahalli Main Road, Ramaiah Layout, Lingarajapuram, Janakiram Layout, Kanakadasa Layout, Govindapura main road, Rashad Nagar, Farida Shoe Factory, Arabic College, KG Halli, Govindpura Village, Vinobhanagar, BM layout, Arogyamma Layout, Kaveri Garden and surrounding areas, 4th Block Yasin Nagar, Nagawara, NJK Garments, Byrankunte, Kuppuswamy Layout, HKBK College, Vidya Sagar, Thanisandra, RK Hegde Nagar, K Narayanapura, NN Halli, Balaji Layout Phase 1 to Phase 3, BDS Layout, Central Excise, KK Halli, Hennur Main Road, Oil Mill Road, Aravind Nagara, Nehru Road, Kammanahalli main road, Bethel Street, AK Colony, CMR Road, Hegde Nagar, Nagenahalli, Police Quarters, Kempegowda Layout, Shabarinagara, KMT Layout, Bhartiya City, Noor Nagar, Bharath Math Layout, Hidayath Nagar, Lidkar Colony and surrounding areas. Read: Bengaluru biker crashes into open car door, gets run over by another vehicle Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Parts Of Bengaluru To See Power Cuts On October 13: Full List Of Areas
Why Aren't National Dems Bankrolling WA's 3rd Congressional Race?
Why Aren't National Dems Bankrolling WA's 3rd Congressional Race?
Why Aren't National Dems Bankrolling WA's 3rd Congressional Race? https://digitalalaskanews.com/why-arent-national-dems-bankrolling-was-3rd-congressional-race/ Support from one of the state’s leading Democrats – elected statewide three times, Ferguson is considered a potential successor to Gov. Jay Inslee – gives Gluesenkamp Perez’s campaign a boost. But at the rally, Ferguson said out loud what others have been thinking: Where is the help from the national party for a candidate in a race that could change the balance of power in the other Washington? In his speech, Ferguson noted Kent’s anti-abortion stance, but focused especially on the Republican’s support for former President Donald Trump and the unfounded claims of widespread election fraud. “There is also a time where you draw a line in the sand, and you can’t cross that,” Ferguson said. “And when it comes to the big lie, the stakes are absolute.” Ferguson then invoked the acronym of the national party arm tasked with helping win races and keeping the Democratic majority: “If the DCCC is listening to me, send resources.” But as the calendar scrolls toward Nov. 8, the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee hasn’t sent money to boost the candidate, according to a Gluesenkamp Perez spokesperson. In a statement, a DCCC spokesperson wrote that the organization is “continuing to watch this seat closely.” As of mid-July, Kent had raised nine times more money than Gluesenkamp Perez, according to campaign-disclosure figures, and he had $353,000 on hand still to spend. She had at that point $82,300 to spend. Since then her campaign has trumpeted  solid  fundraising in August and shared an internal poll showing a close race. The national Democratic party’s absence has left Gluesenkamp Perez to simultaneously parent her infant child, run a small auto shop with her husband and try to blunt the advance of Kent, who Democrats in Washington and around the nation are calling “too extreme” and a threat to democracy.  An outspoken America First candidate, Kent has been dogged by media reports of affiliations and interactions with far-right street brawlers and white nationalists. He has promised to use congressional authority to investigate the 2020 election results amid Trump’s baseless contention that it was stolen, and to impeach Biden and several other members of the administration. In an interview last week, Ferguson said he understood that national Democrats have tough choices in how to spread thin resources across the nation. But he noted the size and energy of that Vancouver campaign rally and Gluesenkamp Perez’s quality as a candidate. Abandoning the field, he said, would be “a mistake.” “I’d encourage them to consider what folks on the ground here see,” Ferguson said. “And what I see is a race that’s winnable.” The nation’s 435 House of Representatives seats are up for election, and nearly all of them are safe bets for one of the major political parties. As Democrats fight to keep their slender U.S. House majority, the remaining few dozen races are ultra-competitive, with campaign budgets that can run into the multimillions. Washington’s 3rd Congressional District election to succeed U.S. Rep. Jaime Herrera Beutler – a Republican who was sidelined in the August top-two primary after voting to impeach Trump – fits into neither category. Now, two relatively young and unorthodox candidates are campaigning in a potentially competitive race – Trump won the district in 2020 by 4 percentage points – that is largely off the national radar. David Wasserman, House editor for the Cook Political Report, described the race as “on the periphery of competitiveness and outside of both parties’ spending sphere.” “And that is good news for Joe Kent, because he wants to simply ride the party label to victory,” said Wasserman, who conducts nonpartisan election analysis. On the national Republican radar Absent barrages of TV ads, the campaign between Gluesenkamp Perez and Kent is playing across breweries, town halls and community events across southwest Washington. Kent, however, has been featured on the National Republican Congressional Committee’s “Young Guns” list, which highlights GOP candidates running in open seats and urges donations. The first-time candidate has vowed to impeach Biden and others in his administration, close America’s southern border with Mexico – by sending the military if need be – and to sharply restrict immigration and tackle the drug-overdose crisis. He also has a six-figure Twitter following and makes regular appearances on Fox News, which is generally the most-watched mainstream news organization in America. Kent has continued to barnstorm across the district, which includes Clark County – the major population center and home to the city of Vancouver – along with Pacific, Wahkiakum, Skamania, Cowlitz and Lewis counties as well as a slice of Thurston County. His campaign didn’t respond to a request for comment, but in an interview last month Kent discussed his efforts, including the need to unify Republicans after a long and bitter primary between several candidates on the right. “So really I just think staying active on the campaign trail, town halls, I think that’s how we won the primary, and that’s how I think we’re going to win in the general as well,” he said. “Basically no rest.” Kent in that interview also dismissed contentions by Democrats that his questioning of the 2020 election results represents a danger to the republic. “The fact that they have to go to this, like, high-level, ‘you’re a threat to democracy,’ it just shows how weak their actual arguments are,” he said. Kent, who deployed 11 times overseas and later worked in intelligence, has said his experiences in America’s invasions – along with the death of his wife in Syria while fighting ISIS – created in him a distrust and skepticism of the government. The experience left him disillusioned with former President George W. Bush and he ultimately found a political home with the rise of Trump. In 2020, Kent said he’d been campaigning for Trump and was under consideration for a job: “I did the interview process for a second admin, I was going to work in the National Security Council.” But Kent has also sought to appeal to other disgruntled voters. Kent pointed to his opposition to foreign interventions – like helping Ukraine fend off the Russian invasion – and his support for using federal antitrust laws to break up the social media behemoths. “Some people would say it’s very right-wing to defer to the free market or be constantly involved in foreign intervention,” he said. The populist approach is a good message for the region, said state Rep. Jim Walsh, R-Aberdeen. Walsh’s 19th Legislative District overlaps with much of the congressional district: they share Pacific and Wahkiakum counties and parts of Lewis and Cowlitz counties. In 2016, Walsh became the district’s first Republican elected legislator in three decades – and conservatives have since come to win comfortably in legislative races there. “What does Bernie Sanders have that people like?” Walsh said, citing Kent’s stated distaste of some major corporations, like defense contractors and social media companies. “It’s not his socialist stuff, it’s his populist stuff. He speaks to a frustration and a need that American people have.” In Kent, Walsh described the kind of candidate skilled at winning over voters. “Firm handshake, good eye contact, he’s got that thing, that Clinton-like thing,” Walsh said, describing it as “lightning in a bottle.” “And I think he’s going to be a national figure pretty quickly when he gets in there,” Walsh added. “For better or worse.” ‘Brutal, taxing’ campaign                               Gluesenkamp Perez owns a Portland auto-repair shop with her husband, and they live in rural Skamania County with their infant child. In 2016, she campaigned unsuccessfully for county commissioner, and caucused for Sen. Bernie Sanders that year for the Democratic presidential nomination, which she said she saw as a way to avoid a Bush-style Clinton dynasty. Gluesenkamp Perez is campaigning to boost trade and technical education, help small businesses and preserve legal abortion. “My husband’s working hard to keep things running smoothly at the shop,” Gluesenkamp Perez said in an interview last month. “I’ve got a 13-month-old at home, I’m still waking up at 4 a.m. every morning to feed him.” “It’s brutal, taxing, and it’s totally worth it,” she added. “Because democracy’s on the line.” After her primary win, Gluesenkamp Perez’s campaign announced a surge in donations, netting more than $600,000 in August. A spokesperson wouldn’t say how much the candidate raised in September – updated campaign numbers should post later this month – but the campaign just increased its full-time staff by one, to five people. And the campaign recently announced an advertisement “backed by a substantial six-figure buy” on cable and network TV. It focuses on her pro-abortion stances and Kent’s anti-abortion views in the wake of the U.S. Supreme Court’s rollback of protections. For a Gluesenkamp Perez victory, the campaign would need to give moderate or soft Republicans a reason to break from Kent, said Wasserman of the Cook Political Report. “And she would need likely several million dollars in advertising for the Portland [media] market, that would allow her to make that case by featuring moderate Republican voters who are crossing over from Herrera Beutler to vote for Perez,” said Wasserman. Still, “If Democratic donors put even half the money into this race that they’ve put into a completely unwinnable race against Marjorie Taylor Greene, then Marie Perez would be in a better place right now,” he added. Local Democrats have been working to fill the void. Gov. Jay Inslee sent out a fundraising pitch for Gluesenkamp Perez, according to a report in The Seattle Times, and a campaign spokesperso...
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Why Aren't National Dems Bankrolling WA's 3rd Congressional Race?
3 Philadelphia SWAT Officers Shot Serving Warrant
3 Philadelphia SWAT Officers Shot Serving Warrant
3 Philadelphia SWAT Officers Shot Serving Warrant https://digitalalaskanews.com/3-philadelphia-swat-officers-shot-serving-warrant/ PHILADELPHIA (WPVI) — Three SWAT officers were shot while serving an arrest warrant in North Philadelphia, Action News has learned. It happened around 6:30 a.m. Wednesday at the intersection of 8th and Brown streets. One officer was shot in the hip, another in the leg, and the third in the chest. The officers were taken to Jefferson University Hospital. They are listed in stable condition. Action News is told officers did discharge their weapons. A civilian was shot on the property during the incident. The person’s condition has not been released. In audio from police radio obtained by Action News, one of the injured officers called in after being shot. “We got two officers shot. We are en route to Jefferson Hospital…let them know, I’m shot in the hip. My partner is shot in the leg,” the officer said. A barricade situation unfolded at the scene after the warrants were served. Chopper 6 showed police officers bringing out children from the home. Chopper 6 showed police officers bringing out children from the home. Moments later, officers took two people away in handcuffs including an adult male. Officers took two people away in handcuffs including an adult male. Several officers have arrived at Jefferson Hospital to check on the wounded SWAT members. Several officers arrive at Jefferson Hospital to check on the wounded SWAT members. This is a breaking news story. Stay with 6abc.com as more information becomes available. Copyright © 2022 WPVI-TV. All Rights Reserved. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
3 Philadelphia SWAT Officers Shot Serving Warrant
Druzhba Pipeline Leak Reduces Russian Oil Flows To Germany
Druzhba Pipeline Leak Reduces Russian Oil Flows To Germany
Druzhba Pipeline Leak Reduces Russian Oil Flows To Germany https://digitalalaskanews.com/druzhba-pipeline-leak-reduces-russian-oil-flows-to-germany/ WARSAW, Oct 12 (Reuters) – Germany said on Wednesday it was receiving less oil but still had adequate supplies, after Poland found a leak in the Druzhba pipeline that delivers crude from Russia to Europe that Warsaw said was probably caused by an accident rather than sabotage. The discovery of the leak in the main route carrying oil to Germany, which operator PERN said it found on Tuesday evening, comes as Europe is on high alert over its energy security as it faces a severe crisis in the aftermath of Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine which has cut supplies of gas. “Security of supply in Germany is currently guaranteed,” an economy ministry spokesperson said in an emailed statement. “The refineries in Schwedt and Leuna continue to receive crude oil via the Druzhba pipeline.” Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com The Schwedt refinery, which supplies 90% of Berlin’s fuel, said in an emailed statement that deliveries were taking place at reduced capacity. Germany said it was hoping for more information soon from Poland about the cause of the leak and how it can be repaired. Europe has been on high alert over the security of its energy infrastructure since major leaks were found last month in the Nord Stream 1 and 2 gas pipelines running from Russia to Europe under the Baltic Sea. Both the West and Russia have blamed sabotage. However, Poland’s top official in charge of energy infrastructure, Mateusz Berger, told Reuters by telephone that the leak in the Druzhba pipeline was most likely caused by “accidental damage”. “We are living in turbulent times, different connotations are possible, but at this stage we have no grounds at all to believe that,” he said, when asked about the possibility of sabotage. Berger said the leak was located 70 km (44 miles) west from Plock, where Poland’s biggest refinery owned by PKN Orlen is located. As a result, part of the shipping capacity towards Germany was not available, he said, adding that repairs would likely “not take long”. PERN said supplies to Germany were reduced but continuing. Reuters Graphics GERMAN, POLAND REFINERY SUPPLIES A model of a pipe line is seen at the main entrance to the Gomel Transneft oil pumping station, which moves crude through the Northern Druzhba pipeline westwards to Poland and Europe, near Mozyr, Belarus, in this file picture taken January 4, 2020. REUTERS/Vasily Fedosenko The Druzhba oil pipeline, whose name means “friendship” in Russian, is one of the world’s largest, supplying Russian oil to much of central Europe including Germany, Poland, Belarus, Hungary, Slovakia, the Czech Republic and Austria. Russia’s Transneft state-owned pipeline monopoly said that oil continues to be pumped towards Poland. Poland’s PKN Orlen (PKN.WA) said that oil supplies to its Plock refinery were not interrupted while Czech pipeline operator MERO said it had not seen any change in flows to the Czech Republic. “The main action (we are taking) is to pump out the liquid and locate the leak and stop it,” fire brigade spokesman Karol Kierzkowski told state broadcaster TVP Info. “When the pressure decreases, the leak will stop and allow us to reach the leak,” he said, adding that it was too early to establish the cause and there was no danger to the public. Firefighters in the mid-northern Kujawsko-Pomorskie region of Poland said they had pumped about 400 cubic metres of oil and water from the site of the leak which was in the middle of a corn field. The second line of the pipeline, and other elements of PERN’s infrastructure, were working as normal, PERN said. “At this point, all PERN services (technical, operational, in-house fire brigade and environmental protection) are taking action in accordance with the algorithms provided for this type of situation,” the operator said. The total capacity of the western section of the pipeline that ships oil from central Poland to Germany is 27 million tonnes of crude oil per year. Germany’s Schwedt refinery is particularly dependent on Druzhba. The German government aims to eliminate imports of oil from Russia by the end of the year under European Union sanctions. But in the first seven months of the year, Russia was still its top supplier, accounting for just over 30% of oil imports. As Germany looks for alternative supplies for Schwedt, Druzhba could be instrumental in supplying oil via the Polish port in Gdansk. The German government has also been in talks to secure oil from Kazakhstan to supply Schwedt, but that oil would have to flow to Germany via the Druzhba pipeline too. Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com Reporting by Reuters bureaus writing by Alan Charlish and Marek Strzelecki; Editing by Jan Harvey and Elaine Hardcastle Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Druzhba Pipeline Leak Reduces Russian Oil Flows To Germany
Amazon's Prime Day Sale Ends Tonight 100 Of The Best Deals To Shop
Amazon's Prime Day Sale Ends Tonight 100 Of The Best Deals To Shop
Amazon's Prime Day Sale Ends Tonight — 100+ Of The Best Deals To Shop https://digitalalaskanews.com/amazons-prime-day-sale-ends-tonight-100-of-the-best-deals-to-shop/ Day 2 of Amazon’s Prime Early Access Sale, an event created by Amazon, is here — which means there are just a matter of hours left to shop the event before the deals are gone for good. From fashion essentials to kitchen appliances and must-haves for parents, hundreds of thousands of items are on deal until the event comes to a close tonight at 11:59 p.m. PDT. To make navigating the remaining hours of the event a little easier, Shop All Day contributor Chassie Post joined TODAY to share the best Prime Early Access deals you can expect on the final day of the sale. If you want to browse even more picks, the Shop TODAY team has you covered. We scoured through the hundreds of thousands of items on sale and narrowed down some of the best deals in tech, beauty, fashion and so much more. Click through the list below to see our favorites from everything from home essentials to genius stocking stuffers ahead of the holiday season, or scroll down to see everything for yourself. Amazon Prime Day deals on TODAY Amazon Prime Day TV and tech deals Amazon Prime Day beauty deals Amazon Prime Day fashion deals Amazon Prime Day home and kitchen deals Amazon Prime Day toy deals Amazon Prime Day deals on TODAY Kasa Smart Video Doorbell Camera Shop TODAY readers love the smart switches and outlet plugs from this brand — and it seems Kasa’s smart doorbell camera is worthy of just as much praise, according to reviewers. The two-way audio capabilities mean that you can answer whoever is at the door by using the app on your phone without having to be home, the brand says. The HD camera enables you to see a 160-degree diagonal plane, while the night vision technology lets you see within 30 feet of the lens. When you connect the doorbell to your phone, you can also create alerts that are triggered by activity in custom activity zones, so you know if someone is close to your home. AtivaFit Indoor Cycling Bike If the cold weather is deterring you from walking outside, try cycling indoors! Post found this indoor bike on deal for more than 50% off right now, so you can keep up with your fitness routine without breaking the bank. While it’s compact, the brand says it can support users of up to 265 pounds and the design of the frame lends it to a more sturdy setup. If you’re tight on space, you can fold the bike up whenever it is not in use and use the wheels to stow it away inside your closet (no one wants an eye sore in their living room). The battery-powered bike also features eight different resistance settings you can use to get your heart rate up (which you can monitor via the display screen). Original Peloton Bike Been waiting for the right moment to get your hands on a Peloton bike? Consider this a sign. The brand is offering a 15% discount during the final day of the Amazon Prime Early Access Sale, which means you can save over $200 on the top-rated fitness machine. The brand says the bike’s footprint is smaller than your average yoga mat, so it won’t take up too much space in your home, either. If you want to unlock courses with Peloton instructors, you’ll have to sign up for a monthly subscription, but you’ll gain access to more than 50 different coaches and thousands of fitness classes. What sets this bike apart from most? It features Bluetooth capabilities, a stereo speaker system, front-facing camera, built-in microphone and it can sync with Apple Watches. Kindle Paperwhite Plan on tackling a good portion of your fall reading list soon? You’ll probably want to take advantage of this deal on the Kindle Paperwhite — it’s Amazon’s No. 1 bestselling e-book reader and a Shop TODAY team favorite. Whether you prefer to read indoors, outdoors or late at night, Amazon says that won’t be an issue, as the display is glare-free the temperature of the lighting can be adjusted depending on your settings. For those who like to relax and read in the tub, the device can also withstand accidental immersion in water. According to Amazon, the device boasts a 10-hour battery life, but if you ever forget to charge it you can download the Kindle app and sync all of the titles to your phone to keep up with your reading. Laneige Prime Day deals Shop TODAY editors and writers alike have been fans of Laneige’s skin care products for quite some time now. From its lip care products to its sleeping mask, the premium beauty brand doesn’t disappoint when it comes to hydration — which we all need ahead of the colder months of the year. During the final day of the Prime Early Access Sale, you can shop some of the brand’s top-rated products for 30% off. Laneige Lip Sleeping Mask This leave-on mask gets to work while you sleep, so you can wake up with softer lips. You can choose between seven different scents — including the limited-edition pumpkin spice scent — for less than $25 right now. The brand credits nourishing ingredients such as vitamin C and shea butter for the masks’s hydrating capabilities. Laneige Water Bank Blue Hyaluronic Cream Moisturizer According to the brand, this moisturizer can be used on all skin types, including sensitive skin. It’s a silky cream that can be applied as the last step in your skin care routine in order to trap moisture in your skin (courtesy of superstar ingredient hyaluronic acid). Laneige Water Sleeping Mask Overnight Gel This overnight gel is one way to switch up your skin care routine without breaking the bank, thanks to the 30% discount. The brand says the hypoallergenic gel can be applied after your night cream and rinsed off in the morning in order to achieve a brighter and clearer complexion. Laneige Lip Glowy Balm If you want something that you can reapply throughout the day, Laneige’s Lip Glowy Balm is a treatment you can stick right in your bag and carry along with you. Like many of the brand’s other hydrating products, it is formulated with coconut oil and shea butter, two ingredients that are said to help nourish your skin and lips. Olaplex Prime Day deals Another beauty must-have that Post and the Shop TODAY team can’t get enough of? Olaplex’s hair care system. It checks all of the boxes when it comes to hair care: It’s safe for color-treated hair, can treat a range of hair care concerns and easy to implement into your routine. Right now, you can snag several of the brand’s bestsellers for 20% off. Olaplex Hair Perfector No. 3 The No. 3 is intended to be used as a nourishing treatment up to three times a week, according to the brand. It’s suitable for all hair types, but recommended for damaged hair. Olaplex No. 4 Bond Maintenance Shampoo If you’re trying to take care of your hair from the moment you step in the shower, Olaplex’s Bond Maintenance Shampoo might be a good place to start. The brand says it is “highly moisturizing” and helps eliminate frizz, flyaways and breakage — plus, it can be used daily if needed. Olaplex No. 5 Bond Maintenance Conditioner To top off your hair care routine, you can use Olaplex’s corresponding conditioner. Like the shampoo, it is also suitable for daily use and helps to repair damage, split ends and frizz, according to the brand. Amazon Prime Day TV and tech deals JBL Vibe 200TWS True Wireless Earbuds TP-Link AC1750 Smart WiFi Router Bose SoundSport Wireless Earbuds Samsung 32-Inch Class Frame Smart TV Echo Dot (3rd Gen, 2018 release) Goplus 2-in-1 Folding Treadmill Amazon Fire TV 55-Inch 4-Series 4K UHD Smart TV Insignia 32-Inch Class F20 Series Smart HD 720p Fire TV LG OLED C1 Series 65-Inch Alexa Built-In 4K Smart TV 2021 Apple 12.9-Inch iPad Pro Sony WH-XB910N Extra BASS Noise Cancelling Headphones Amazon Halo View Fitness Tracker Colsur Wireless Charging Station McAfee Total Protection 2022 2020 Apple MacBook Air Laptop Kindle Paperwhite Essentials Bundle JBL Vibe 200TWS True Wireless Earbuds Apple AirPods (2nd Generation) iWalk Mini Portable Charger Apple AirPods Pro (2nd Generation) Beats Studio3 Wireless Noise Cancelling Over-Ear Headphones Garmin Venu 2 Smartwatch JBL Go2 Waterproof Ultra-Portable Bluetooth Speaker Belkin BoostCharge Wireless Charging Stand Nixplay 10.1-Inch Smart Digital Photo Frame Acer Chromebook 512 Laptop For more of the best Amazon Prime Early Access tech deals, check out: 63% off a smartwatch, $17 earbuds and more Amazon tech deals to shop now Deal alert: Up to 43% off Apple Airpods during the Prime Early Access Sale 26 clever home gadgets from Amazon Prime Early Access Sale — starting at $10 Amazon Prime Day beauty deals hum by Colgate Smart Electric Toothbrush Kit Stila Stay All Day Waterproof Liquid Eye Liner Color Wow One-Minute Transformation Styling Cream Murad Clarifying Cleanser SolaWave 4-in-1 Facial Wand Pura D’or Original Gold Label Anti-Thinning Biotin Shampoo Body Restore Shower Steamers Aromatherapy Mighty Patch Variety Pack from Hero Cosmetics Laneige Lip Sleeping Mask Waterpik Aquarius Water Flosser Paula’s Choice Skin Perfecting 2% BHA Exfoliant Revlon Infrared Hair Dryer StriVectin Tighten & Lift Advanced Neck Cream Anastasia Beverly Hills Brow Definer Revlon One-Step Volumizer Plus 2.0 Grande Cosmetics GrandeLASH-MD Lash Enhancing Serum The Original MakeUp Eraser Philips One by Sonicare Rechargeable Toothbrush Crest 3D Whitestrips RoC Retinol Correxion Deep Wrinkle Retinol Serum Pura D’Or 20% Vitamin C Serum Drybar High Tops Self-Grip Rollers Hot Tools 24K Gold One-Step Hair Dryer and Volumizer Wet Brush Original Detangler Winky Lux Glimmer Balm For more of the best Amazon Prime Early Access beauty deals, check out: Score up to 30% off on these Color Wow favorites during the Prime Early Access Sale 35 Amazon beauty deals you can still shop during the Prime Early Access Sale, starting at $9 Amazon Prime Day fashion deals The Drop Sparta Chunky Sole Combat Boot Pre...
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Amazon's Prime Day Sale Ends Tonight 100 Of The Best Deals To Shop
American Diwali: President Biden Will Light A Lamp At The White House Trump Will Make Fireworks This Time!
American Diwali: President Biden Will Light A Lamp At The White House Trump Will Make Fireworks This Time!
American Diwali: President Biden Will Light A Lamp At The White House, Trump Will Make Fireworks This Time! https://digitalalaskanews.com/american-diwali-president-biden-will-light-a-lamp-at-the-white-house-trump-will-make-fireworks-this-time/ Strong points Donald Trump will celebrate Diwali on October 21 at Mar-a-Lago Resort Biden will light a lamp at the White House on October 24 for Diwali Donald Trump’s team also plans to do fireworks Washington, US President Joe Biden will celebrate Diwali at the White House on October 24, while his predecessor Donald Trump plans to celebrate it on October 21 at his Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida. Biden plans to celebrate Diwali with prominent members of the Native American community and members of his administration. First Lady Jill Biden will also attend the celebration to be held at the White House on October 24. Detailed information regarding the Diwali celebration at the White House has yet to be released. Meanwhile, the Republican Hindu Coalition (RHC) announced on Tuesday that Trump would celebrate Diwali with his party members and Indo-American community leaders at his Mar-a-Lago resort town on Oct. 21. RHC’s Shalabh Kumar said it was discussed for four hours. Trump’s team also plans to do fireworks. Be the first to read the latest news in America News84Media America | Today’s Breaking News, Live Updates, Read Most Trusted America News Website News84Media America | Tags: Diwali celebration, White House FIRST POST: October 12, 2022, 11:41 PM HST , Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
American Diwali: President Biden Will Light A Lamp At The White House Trump Will Make Fireworks This Time!
Trump News Live: Jan 6 Panel To Reveal surprising New Material As Biden Insists He Can Beat Trump Again
Trump News Live: Jan 6 Panel To Reveal surprising New Material As Biden Insists He Can Beat Trump Again
Trump News – Live: Jan 6 Panel To Reveal ‘surprising’ New Material As Biden Insists He Can Beat Trump Again https://digitalalaskanews.com/trump-news-live-jan-6-panel-to-reveal-surprising-new-material-as-biden-insists-he-can-beat-trump-again/ The select committee investigating the 6 January attack on the US Capitol is set to hold another hearing tomorrow, a session that member Zoe Lofgren says wil include “pretty surprising” new material gleaned from a flood of testimony and evidence. “We’re going to be going through, really some of what we’ve already found,” she told CNN yesterday, “but augmenting with new material that we’ve discovered through our work throughout this summer.” On another front, Joe Biden said on Tuesday that he believes he “can beat Donald Trump again”. Both men are widely expected to run again in 2024, but neither has publicly made their plans official. Meanwhile, the Department of Justice has asked the Supreme Court to refrain from intervening in an ongoing dispute between the government and former president Donald Trump over classified documents found during the 8 August search of his Mar-a-Lago property. Key points Jan 6 hearing to reveal “surprising” new material Speculations are rife that Tulsi Gabbard can be Trump’s VP choice Data shows Trump legal fees eat up money that could be spent on other GOP candidates DoJ asks Supreme Court to stay out of Trump Mar-a-Lago document case Report: Trump lawyer Christina Bobb cooperating with Justice Department Zoe Lofgren: “surprising” new Jan 6 material to be revealed 12:01 , Andrew Naughtie With the latest January 6 hearing scheduled for 1pm ET tomorrow, panel member Zoe Lofgren yesterday told CNN’s Wolf Blitzer that the session will cast a wide net to unpack what the committee has learned in recent months. “I do think that it will be worth watching,” she said. “There’s some new material that, you know, I found as we got into it, pretty surprising.” Watch her interview below (the discussion starts at about 3:16). Trump legal fees eat up money that could be spent on other GOP candidates, data shows 11:30 , Andrew Naughtie The nearly 20 major lawsuits and investigations facing Donald Trump are draining millions of dollars away from supporting other GOP candidates, according to campaign filings. So far, according to election filings tracking spending through the end of August, Donald Trump’s Save America leadership political action committee has spent about as much paying Mr Trump’s legal bills as it has backing Republicans in the midterms. The group has spent $8.4m on GOP campaigns and committees, while doling out $7m on legal fees and another $2m to nonprofits run by former top Trump officials. Josh Marcus has more. Trump legal fees eat up money that could be spent on other GOP candidates, data shows Tulsi Gabbard’s ties to secretive cult may explain her perplexing political journey 11:00 , Shweta Sharma Tulsi Gabbard has staked out extreme positions on LGBT+ rights, spread disinformation about Ukrainian biolabs, and claimed she was being shadowbanned by Big Tech while using her vast social media footprint to label Joe Biden a “warmonger”. In one breath Gabbard expresses a desire to bring love and aloha from her native Hawaii to the world, in the next she is fanning conspiracy theories on Tucker Carlson’s Fox News show. Read Bevan Hurley‘s special report Tulsi Gabbard’s ties to secretive cult may explain her perplexing political journey ‘I believe I can beat Donald Trump again’: Biden 10:15 , Shweta Sharma Joe Biden has said he is confident he can beat Donald Trump again if the two rematch in the 2024 presidential elections. Speaking to CNN’s Jake Tapper he will think about whether to seek another term after the midterm elections in November. “Is one of the calculations that you think you’re the only one who can beat Donald Trump?” Tapper asked. “I believe I can beat Donald Trump again,” Mr Biden responded. Both Mr Trump and the president are teasing the idea of re-running the elections but have stopped short of announcing plans for the bid. Trump shares bizarre nature documentary voiceover video of himself 09:30 , Oliver O’Connell Donald Trump has shared a bizarre video clip of himself during his presidential days – but with a voiceover imitating a nature documentary valorising the lion. The clip, roughly one minute and 20 seconds long, was posted on his Truth Social account late on Monday and shows him waving to people while the narrator can be heard saying, “This lion, he’s the king of the jungle… huge mane, he’s so big, he’s so hot”. Read more: Trump shares bizarre nature documentary video about himself Trump’s comment that JD Vance is an ‘ass-kisser’ thrown in his face 08:30 , Oliver O’Connell Representative Tim Ryan threw back former president Donald Trump’s words at his Republican opponent JD Vance in their debate for Ohio’s open Senate seat on Monday evening. Toward the end of the debate, Mr Ryan hit out at Mr Vance for seeking Mr Trump’s endorsement. During a rally in Youngstown last month, Mr Trump pointed to Mr Vance, who he has endorsed, for courting him. “JD is kissing my ass, he wants my support so much,” Mr Trump said at the time. “And that’s bad, because that means JD Vance is going to do whatever he wants,” Mr Ryan said. Eric Garcia watched the debate live from Ohio. Tim Ryan calls JD Vance an ‘ass-kisser’ after Trump remarks in Ohio Senate debate Speculations are rife that Tulsi Gabbard can be Trump’s VP choice 08:12 , Shweta Sharma After her decision to quit Democratic Party, several are speculating that former congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard could be Donald Trump’s choice for running mate in the 2024 elections. During Tuesday’s broadcast, Fox News host Greg Gutfeld praised her and said even though he disagrees with her on many things but she could be a possible choice for Mr Trump. “The thing I like about Tulsi… she’s the definition of an individual,” he said. “Look, I disagree with her on probably at least 30 percent, maybe 40 percent of the things… I think she’s going to be Trump’s VP… that’s where this is going.” A poll by Newsmax’s journalist Alex Salvi asked people if Ms Gabbard was “really a viable candidate to be a Republican Vice President pick. While 44 per cent of respondents said “no” as of Tuesday night about 37 per cent said “yes”. “Lot of chatter today about Tulsi joining a Trump ticket,” Jack Posobiec, a ring-wing commentator said in a tweet. Midterms 2022: Crucial races to watch as election day nears 07:00 , Oliver O’Connell Election Day is less than a month away and the 2022 midterm races are entering their final sprint. Republicans are still hope that Americans’ frustration with inflation and the economy, as well as rising crime, will obfuscate their concerns about the Supreme Court’s Dobbs v Jackson Women’s Health Organization decision overturning Roe v Wade. Conversely, Democrats hope to make abortion a centrepiece of the election, but also hope to point “MAGA Republicans” as threats to democracy and highlight the January 6 insurrection. Eric Garcia looks at the most important elections to watch this cycle. Most important midterm election a month out from Election Day 2022 Why has Kanye West turned on Jared Kushner? 05:30 , Oliver O’Connell Kanye West took issue with a figure he’d previously professed his love for in his wide-ranging interview with Fox News’s Tucker Carlson: Jared Kushner. Throughout the explosive Thursday night sitdown between the pair, Kanye addressed a number of topics, including his pro-life stance, his decision to don a red MAGA cap, labelled the body positive moment “demonic” and admonished the fashion industry for encouraging his ex-wife, Kim Kardashian, to “stick her a** out” for magazines. In one of the more zany and unexpected exchanges, Kanye sharply criticised Mr Kushner, a former senior White House adviser to his father-in-law, Donald Trump, insinuating that he was a person solely motivated by financial gain. Johanna Chisholm takes a look at the relationship between the two. Why has Kanye West turned on his old friend Jared Kushner? Fact check: Sorting presidential papers in an ex-bowling alley 04:00 , Oliver O’Connell At a rally for Nevada Republicans on Saturday, former President Donald Trump argued against the federal probe into the storage of classified documents at his Mar-a-Lago estate by falsely suggesting that past presidents did the same thing. Read more: FACT FOCUS: Sorting papers and facts in an ex-bowling alley Trump claims Bill Clinton ‘lost’ the nuclear codes 03:15 , Oliver O’Connell As federal investigators continue to probe which White House materials Donald Trump took to his Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida, the former president is claiming Bill Clinton lost the nuclear codes while in office. On Monday evening, Mr Trump reposted a statement on Truth Social from former Clinton military aide Robert “Buzz” Patterson, who wrote that, “Just a reminder, but Bill Clinton actually LOST the nuclear codes during my tenure with him. We weren’t raided.” Josh Marcus has the story. Donald Trump claims Bill Clinton ‘lost’ the nuclear codes Cassidy Hutchinson reportedly testifies in Georgia election probe 02:30 , Oliver O’Connell The former White House aide whose bombshell testimony gave House January 6 committee members a window into former president Donald Trump’s actions on the day of the Capitol riot is reportedly cooperating with a Georgia-based criminal probe into Mr Trump’s push to overturn the 2020 election there. According to CNN, former Mark Meadows assistant Cassidy Hutchinson is now aiding Fulton County, Georgia, district attorney Fani Willis’ ongoing probe into whether Mr Trump or his associates violated Georgia election laws by pressuring Peach State officials to throw out ballots after Mr Trump became the first Republican to lose there in decades. Andrew Feinberg reports. Ex-White...
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Trump News Live: Jan 6 Panel To Reveal surprising New Material As Biden Insists He Can Beat Trump Again
Who Will Represent? Flathead Beacon
Who Will Represent? Flathead Beacon
Who Will Represent? – Flathead Beacon https://digitalalaskanews.com/who-will-represent-flathead-beacon/ With the general election less than a month away, the race for Montana’s new western congressional district is crystallizing as three candidates — Republican Ryan Zinke, Democrat Monica Tranel and Libertarian John Lamb — campaign for the historic opportunity to sit down at a 435-member table that for more than 30 years has assigned Montana a single place setting. Since 1990, Montana has remained one of only a handful of states that elects a single member to the U.S. House of Representatives, and it currently has the lowest measure of federal representation in Congress: One representative occupies an at-large seat covering all 147,000 square miles, 1 million-plus people and 56 counties. On Nov. 8, that’s set to change. Based on new population data, Montana has gained a second congressional post, and the inaugural race to fill it has attracted a dynamic slate of candidates to a weighty midterm contest in which control of the U.S. House is at stake. With eligible voters set to receive absentee ballots this week and on the heels of two recent debates that illuminated new dimensions of each candidate, while also redefining the shape of the race in broader terms, constituents comprising a newly bifurcated district division are about to decide an essential question on Montana’s reconfigured political landscape — Who will represent? It’s a question that has gained urgency since the district lines were redrawn last year as a host of highly consequential national issues add gravity to this fall’s midterm, ranging from access to abortion, energy independence, health care, immigration, gun violence, and the economy, which remains the dominant issue as everyday Americans are hobbled by the rising costs of goods, services and housing.  Matching the scope of issues in their diversity are the three Montana candidates, including Zinke, a former state legislator, congressman and cabinet member to President Donald Trump who nabbed the Republican nomination and assumed the role of de facto incumbent due to his powers of name recognition, which peaked during his brief tenure at the White House; Tranel, a Democrat who has never held elected office but worked for three decades representing renewable energy clients before the Public Service Commission, as well as working as a staff attorney for the quasi-judicial regulatory body (and running unsuccessfully for a seat on it in 2020) after wrapping up a career as an Olympic rower; and Lamb, a Madison County farmer who runs his “non-monetary campaign” with the help of his wife and six of his 12 children, and whose appearances alongside Tranel at a steady lineup of statewide community forums has helped him gain recognition as a third-party candidate advocating for individual liberty while limiting the reach of the federal government.  Even with the odds stacked against Lamb, his candidacy has livened the debate stage and could affect the vote, prompting longtime observers of Montana politics to draw comparisons to Independent Dan Cox, who stumped from a third-party platform in 2012’s U.S. Senate race between incumbent Democrat Jon Tester and Republican U.S. Rep. Denny Rehberg. Tester won that race by four percentage points, with Cox notching 6.5% of the total vote, siphoning critical support from Rehberg. “That was a sizable share of the right-of-center vote, and as we see Zinke going after Lamb a little bit on the debate stage, I have to think that he’s at least somewhat concerned that Republicans and conservatives might be moving toward Lamb,” Rob Saldin, a University of Montana political science professor, said. “And Zinke wants to cut that off as a viable alternative. Even if Lamb only appeals to a small segment of voters, we saw in the primary that Zinke really can’t afford to bleed any support from his base.” Although a review of Montana’s voter turnout favors Republicans, particularly in midterm contests, the state hasn’t shied away from electing Democrats to statewide and federal office. Still, despite the work of an independent redistricting commission engineering Montana’s new congressional district to be as competitive as possible, national polls have cast it as “leaning Republican” and continue to peg Zinke as the odds-on-favorite. Those odds might have diminished over a two-year period spanning 2019 and 2021 during which Zinke mostly avoided the public spotlight, holding his nose whenever he openly entertained the prospect of a future run for office. Instead, Zinke has enjoyed all the advantages of an incumbent candidate. Notwithstanding the public opprobrium he endured under his tenure serving Trump — or, perhaps, because of it — he emerged as a favorite to win the seat immediately upon announcing his congressional bid in 2021.  Ryan Zinke waves at traffic along North Meridian Road in Kalispell on June 7, 2022. Hunter D’Antuono | Flathead Beacon Indeed, from his roots as an Eagle Scout and standout high school football player in Whitefish to his meteoric rise in state and national politics and, finally, to his resignation as Interior Secretary in Washington, D.C., Zinke’s orbit in public service charts a dizzying path. In less than a decade, the former Navy SEAL vaulted from retired military commander to Republican darling in Montana, winning a 2014 bid for the state’s lone seat on the U.S. House of Representatives and handily defending his incumbency in 2016 before a newly elected President Trump plucked Zinke from the halls of Congress and deposited him in the centrifuge of his innermost circle, setting into motion a 21-month career overseeing the nation’s federal lands and natural resources during which Zinke clocked a rapid tailspin. He not only accrued a heap of ethics investigations ranging from conflicts of interest to abuse of taxpayer funds to Hatch Act violations, but he also endured sharp criticism from an environmental lobby that turned from cautiously optimistic to enraged as Zinke cleaved away a half-century of environmental policy designed to furnish protections on millions of acres of public land. When he resigned amid the numerous probes in late 2018, Zinke described the investigations as “meritless and false claims” and has continued to dismiss them as politically charged “witch hunts,” which he says are now part of the increasingly “hostile territory” enveloping D.C., and which figured prominently into his decision to step back from the public arena. “There was too much hostility,” he told the Beacon in 2019, describing his egress from the Trump administration. “I just needed a break in my life. Between the SEALS, the state Legislature, Congress and Interior, you’re looking at 31 years of public service. And I’m honored to do it, and I’m honored to represent Montana. But I needed a break.” That break officially ended with the inception of Montana’s western district, which was drawn to include the Democratic enclaves of Missoula, Bozeman and Butte, as well as the reliably conservative Flathead and Bitterroot valleys while depositing Helena and Great Falls into the eastern district. Widely considered the frontrunner, Zinke’s supporters expected him to easily clear the primary field. Instead, a hard-fought race ensued with Zinke beating his closest rival, Kalispell physician and former state Sen. Al Olszewski, by less than 2 percentage points. A conservative hardliner whose political makeup aligns with the House Freedom Caucus, Olszewski trounced Zinke on his home turf, winning Flathead County, the district’s conservative nerve center, by 17 percentage points, capitalizing on his popularity with a contingent of local voters that skews to the far-right margins of the political spectrum. Dr. Al Olszewski ran unsuccessfully for the Republican nomination in the U.S. Senate primary in 2018. Pictured here on June 5, 2018, he, waves to drivers in Kalispell. Beacon file photo In contrast, Zinke has been portrayed by his fellow Republicans as too moderate, despite an endorsement from Trump in his back pocket. The new political dimension signals just how sharply the GOP has shifted to the right, even as senescent members of Montana’s GOP establishment (hailing from a mostly bygone era) have drummed Zinke out of its ranks. For example, Marc Racicot, a fixture in Republican politics who served as Montana’s governor from 1993 to 2001, and Bob Brown, a former Republican state senator and secretary of state, recently endorsed Tranel in the congressional race, calling Zinke’s allegiance to Trump “indefensible.” “It is noteworthy that early on, after announcing his candidacy, Zinke sought and received Donald Trump’s endorsement, describing Trump as a ‘kingmaker in terms of his sway with the voters,’” Racicot and Brown espoused in a co-written op-ed piece published this week by Montana news organizations. “Since that time Zinke has prominently displayed the Trump endorsement on his campaign website and campaign materials … It may be an understatement to describe Ryan Zinke as an acolyte and an enabler of the feckless and unprincipled former president, who has been, and who remains, a clear and present danger to the survival of the longest functioning democratic republic in the history of humankind.” But Zinke flexed his political prowess on the debate stage last month when he dodged barbs from Tranel and turned them against her, characterizing her stance on access to abortion “barbaric,” despite doing so largely out of context, accusing the Democrat of supporting “open-ended” abortions and performing them “right up until birth” — a flourish of political rhetoric that Republicans have seized on to accuse their opponents of supporting elective late-term abortions, which medical experts say occur only in instances when a mother’s life is at risk or a fetus is not viable. “This is not about privacy,” Zinke said at a debate last month hosted by the Mont...
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Who Will Represent? Flathead Beacon
Pro-Putin Hungarian Leader Joins Twitter: 'Where Is My Good Friend Donald Trump?' Meta Platforms (NASDAQ:META) Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA)
Pro-Putin Hungarian Leader Joins Twitter: 'Where Is My Good Friend Donald Trump?' Meta Platforms (NASDAQ:META) Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA)
Pro-Putin Hungarian Leader Joins Twitter: 'Where Is My Good Friend, Donald Trump?' – Meta Platforms (NASDAQ:META), Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) https://digitalalaskanews.com/pro-putin-hungarian-leader-joins-twitter-where-is-my-good-friend-donald-trump-meta-platforms-nasdaqmeta-tesla-nasdaqtsla/ Russian President Vladimir Putin’s ally and Hungarian leader took a jibe at Donald Trump while making his debut on the social media platform Twitter. Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán took a jibe at former U.S. President Donald Trump while making his debut on the social media platform Twitter on Tuesday. What Happened: Orbán — one of the key allies of Russian President Vladimir Putin — tagging Trump’s suspended Twitter handle, wrote, “after my first day on Twitter, there’s one question on my mind. Where is my good friend [Donald Trump]?” After my first day on Twitter, there’s one question on my mind. Where is my good friend, @realDonaldTrump? pic.twitter.com/vCzWfAy2sh — Orbán Viktor (@PM_ViktorOrban) October 11, 2022 See Also: Will Putin Use Nuclear Weapons? Biden Thinks Russian Leader ‘Has Miscalculated Significantly’ Within a day, Orbán gained over 59,000 followers and was following just 43 people, including several right-wing politicians Giorgia Meloni, Matteo Salvini, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, and Jair Bolsonaro. In his social media bio, the prime minister describes himself as a “freedom fighter, husband, father, grandfather and prime minister of Hungary.” Twitter and other social media platforms, such as Meta Platforms, Inc.’s META Facebook, suspended the former U.S. president’s accounts last year following the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol riots. Trump is expected to be back on the platform before the midterm elections if Tesla Inc TSLA CEO Elon Musk closes the deal to buy Twitter. Orbán also said Trump is the only person who can end the war in Ukraine. “This is going to sound brutal, but hope for peace goes by the name of Donald Trump,” he said, according to Politico.  Check out more of Benzinga’s Europe and Asia coverage by following this link. © 2022 Benzinga.com. Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved. Read More Here
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Pro-Putin Hungarian Leader Joins Twitter: 'Where Is My Good Friend Donald Trump?' Meta Platforms (NASDAQ:META) Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA)
In Crucial Nevada Economic Woes Threaten To Shake Democrats Grip
In Crucial Nevada Economic Woes Threaten To Shake Democrats Grip
In Crucial Nevada, Economic Woes Threaten To Shake Democrats’ Grip https://digitalalaskanews.com/in-crucial-nevada-economic-woes-threaten-to-shake-democrats-grip/ LAS VEGAS — Karla Pike calls herself liberal and opposed the end of Roe v. Wade. But she blames Democrats for the rising costs now stretching her retirement budget, and she singled out one for criticism: Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto. “I hate to admit it because I didn’t care for them before, but … things were cheaper when the Republicans were in office,” Pike, a former flight attendant in her 70s, said on her way to a grocery store, echoing many others in the state who were dismayed at the economy. She compared her vote this fall to flipping a coin. Here in Nevada, a crucial midterm battlefront where Republicans haven’t won a Senate race in a decade and have come up short in other key races, economic woes have raised the GOP’s hopes of flipping seats throughout the ballot, according to interviews with voters, candidates and strategists, as well as a review of polling. The financial strains are testing Democrats’ ability to retain and turn out the minority, working-class voters who have long helped power them to victory. Nevada has one of the highest inflation rates in the country; gas prices still hover above $5.50 per gallon, sometimes surpassed only by California. High costs and economic fallout from the coronavirus pandemic have hit communities Democrats hope to get to the polls hard, adding to the challenges of a lower-turnout midterm year. Republicans say they see a chance to make inroads in this diverse state, where a high proportion of residents do not have college degrees. The GOP’s ability to harness frustrations could help determine control of the Senate as well as the outcome of competitive contests for governor, the House and secretary of state, a post overseeing elections in a 2024 battleground. Democrats have long braced for tough reelection fights in a state where President Biden won by just over two percentage points. They have a formidable line of defense: the “Reid machine,” a sprawling get-out-the-vote operation that is named for the late Senate majority leader who helped create it, Harry M. Reid, and includes the powerful Culinary Workers Union. But some recent polling shows GOP candidates here chipping away at Democrats’ lead with Latino voters. The state has replaced the jobs it lost as the pandemic shuttered Nevada’s tourism industry, state officials say, but nearly 1 in 5 members of the 60,000-strong Culinary Workers Union have yet to get their old jobs back. At a recent gubernatorial debate, a panel of voters included a Culinary Workers Union member who was undecided and said her top issue was inflation. “To the extent that there ever was a time when Democrats might lose some of their base, this would be that election,” said Tick Segerblom, a Democrat who is seeking reelection as a commissioner for Clark County, which includes Las Vegas. If Democrats can pull through this year — “I think we can” — that should give them confidence for years to come, he added. The Senate race pits Cortez Masto, who became the first Latina senator after her 2016 win, against former state attorney general Adam Laxalt. The governor’s race features incumbent Steve Sisolak, Nevada’s first Democratic governor in 20 years, against Republican Joe Lombardo, the sheriff of Clark County. Republicans in both races have focused on economic issues and crime, while Democrats have touted their efforts to bring down costs and vowed to protect abortion access. At the same grocery store where Pike shopped this month, Lindsey Ugale, a Filipino American nurse, said she used to automatically vote for Democrats. But this year, she said — largely because of the economy — she wants to learn more about all the candidates. At another market, a Latino man, who declined to give his name, said he voted against Donald Trump in 2020 but didn’t see much reason to cast a ballot this year. Canvassing for the Culinary Workers Union in the hills outside Las Vegas late last month, 63-year-old Jean-Marc Polleveys found some supporters of Cortez Masto and Sisolak but no new converts. One woman, who didn’t know whether she would vote, cracked her door open just long enough to take a pamphlet. “We’ll be back,” Polleveys said. The hotel banquet chef had more luck getting people to sign a petition for rent control. “Everything is going up,” he said. Republicans in Nevada say Democrats for drove up prices with government spending and kept businesses and schools closed too far into the coronavirus pandemic. “What’s going on is absolutely unsustainable, and it is crushing the Las Vegas Valley, and it’s crushing the working class and the middle class — the groups that the Democrats pretend that their policies are supporting,” Laxalt said at a recent event. Democratic candidates say they are working to cut costs and will fight corporate interests such as Big Oil. Cortez Masto stands by her vote for big aid packages during the pandemic, saying people needed relief, and reminds people that she helped pass legislation lowering prescription drug prices and funding affordable housing in Nevada. Sisolak, defending his handling of the pandemic, said during a gubernatorial debate that he prioritized saving lives: “The economy came back. Those lives we could never regain.” That message has convinced some voters such as Enrique Barboza, who was laid off from a casino on the Las Vegas Strip during the pandemic. Waiting to pick up food from a strip mall, he said Democrats “do more for us” and were trying to protect people from the coronavirus. “Within a year and a half, I lost more people than in 30 years,” he said, counting 11 relatives who died. With four weeks left until Election Day, Nevada’s importance this year has only grown as GOP Senate nominees in other battleground states have struggled. Party operatives searching for the net gain of one seat they need to win back the Senate agree the Silver State is key. “Nevada is Republicans’ number one pickup opportunity map-wide,” said John Ashbrook, a former top aide to Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), who is working on Laxalt’s race. “Full stop.” A CNN poll released last week found Laxalt leading with likely voters by 2 percentage points, within the margin of error. Nevada had both a Democratic and a Republican senator for most of the 2000s, as well as a Republican governor from 1999 to 2019. But its voters have favored the Democratic candidate in every presidential election since 2008, when Barack Obama swept the state by more than 12 percentage points. Disappointed at their losses in 2018, some Republicans declared Nevada a “blue state.” “When the Democrats are motivated to vote, it will be tough for any Republican to win,” said Danny Tarkanian, who lost that year to now-Rep. Susie Lee (D). This year, Lee is in a tough reelection battle, as are Democratic Reps. Steven Horsford and Dina Titus, newly vulnerable after redistricting. “If we win here in Nevada, it’s going to be because of us,” said Ted Pappageorge, secretary-treasurer of the Culinary Workers Union. The most closely watched races this fall are all toss-ups. Sitting in his Las Vegas office, Pappageorge turned around briefly to point out a 2010 election-night photo of his predecessor with Reid, who grew up poor in Nevada and helped harness the Culinary Workers Union’s organizing power while representing the Silver State in the Senate for 30 years. Reid died late last year, leaving some to wonder whether his political machine’s power would wane without his ability to marshal donors and strong-arm as needed. A dramatic rift in the state Democratic Party also threatened to disrupt midterm preparations after new liberal leadership triggered mass resignations early in 2021. Allies of Reid launched a new group, Nevada Democratic Victory, to run a separate operation. That group — which all the top-tier candidates have chosen to work with — did not get access to the state party’s precious voter data until early this year. Local Democrats say they have powered through the rocky period. The Culinary Workers Union is in the midst of its largest election-year effort ever, leaders said, on track to knock on the doors of more than half the Black and Latino voters in the state, plus more than a third of the Asian American voters. “It’s a pretty straightforward message: ‘Who do you think is actually going to take on these issues? Who has more credibility?’ ” Pappageorge said. Political scientist Ruy Teixeira once predicted in the 2002 book “The Emerging Democratic Majority” that Nevada could become “dependably Democratic in the next decade,” in part because of its growing Latino population. Now he says the results in Nevada could underscore a national problem for the Democratic Party. Teixeira said he listened in on a Democratic-led focus group of Hispanic voters in Nevada where people expressed concerns about the economy and in some cases criticized Democrats’ immigration policy. “I think both parties have a job to do if they want to be the party of the working class, but recent trends look good for the Republicans,” Teixeira said, noting the high proportion of working-class Latino voters. Democrats have defended their outreach to Latino voters. Veronica Yoo, a spokeswoman for the Senate Majority PAC, noted that Laxalt has promoted a Spanish-language website and Spanish-language radio ad as part of an “unprecedented” effort. Meanwhile, the Democratic side had been doing that “cycle after cycle after cycle,” Yoo said. Cortez Masto’s campaign has been airing Spanish-language ads since March, emphasizing her support for workers and small businesses. Recent Nevada polling has shown Democrats leading among Latino voters but with a slimmer advantage than when exit polls showed Biden outpacing Trump among the state’s Hispanic voters by 26 points in 2020. In some...
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In Crucial Nevada Economic Woes Threaten To Shake Democrats Grip
Catherine Cortez Masto Ditches 'Latinx' Just In Time For Reelection Bid
Catherine Cortez Masto Ditches 'Latinx' Just In Time For Reelection Bid
Catherine Cortez Masto Ditches 'Latinx' Just In Time For Reelection Bid https://digitalalaskanews.com/catherine-cortez-masto-ditches-latinx-just-in-time-for-reelection-bid/ Democrats Nevada Dem touts Latina heritage after years of peddling gender-neutral term Democratic senator Catherine Cortez Masto (Nev.) / Getty Images Collin Anderson • October 12, 2022 5:00 am Nevada Democratic senator Catherine Cortez Masto is ditching her years-long use of the gender-neutral term “Latinx” just in time for her tight reelection bid against Republican Adam Laxalt, which is expected to hinge on Hispanic voters. Cortez Masto began peddling the “woke” term shortly after former president Donald Trump entered the White House. When Trump’s first wave of Cabinet nominees did not include a Latino, Cortez Masto in February 2017 tweeted, “I don’t believe that there isn’t one Latinx fit for any of Trump’s Cabinet positions. This is sheer ignorance.” Days later, Trump announced his plan to nominate Alexander Acosta, the son of Cuban refugees, as labor secretary. Cortez Masto’s use of “Latinx” continued over the next two years. In September 2018, the Democrat applauded the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, for “bringing attention to all the ways the Latinx community has contributed to southern NV.” Months later, in June 2019, Cortez Masto implored Democratic presidential candidates to avoid taking “NV’s Latinx voters … for granted.” Cortez Masto has also used “Latinx” in both official and campaign press materials. “Nevada is one of the most diverse states in America with a vibrant Latinx community,” she said in one release. “You can’t tell the history of Las Vegas without hearing Latinx voices,” she wrote in another. Cortez Masto’s campaign Twitter account, by contrast, did not use the term “Latina” for roughly three years, from October 2017 to August 2020. Now, Cortez Masto is ditching the unpopular term as she courts Hispanic voters. Many of the Democrat’s digital ads tout her status as “the first Latina ever elected to the U.S. Senate,” and Cortez Masto’s latest campaign press releases swap “Latinx” for “Latino.” The change comes as a tacit admission that Cortez Masto’s past embrace of progressive rhetoric could alienate a crucial voting block in her race against Laxalt. Just 2 percent of U.S. Hispanic voters use the term “Latinx,” according to a December 2021 Bendixen & Amandi International poll, while 40 percent say the term offends them, and 30 percent say they would be less likely to support a politician who uses it. Roughly 20 percent of midterm voters in Nevada are expected to be Latino, a National Association of Latino Elected and Appointed Officials report found. Cortez Masto, who did not return a request for comment, will face Laxalt at the polls in just one month, and the Democrat’s top allies are sounding the alarm that disgruntled Hispanic voters may not show up over economic concerns. Inflation has hit Nevada especially hard—the average price for a gallon of gas, for example, is $5.40, which is 32 percent higher than the national average. That issue has caused some working-class voters in Nevada to dismiss Democrats. “You think I am going to vote for those Democrats after all they’ve done to ruin the economy?” one East Las Vegas voter asked a Culinary Workers Union canvasser last week. “It’s what’s keeping me up at night,” the president of the liberal Somos PAC told NBC News. “What I’m looking at is: Do Latinos actually turn out to vote this year?” Prior to their Senate contest, both Cortez Masto and Laxalt served as Nevada’s attorney general. Cortez Masto held the job from 2007 to 2015—during that time, thousands of rape kits in the state sat untested. When Laxalt succeeded Cortez Masto, the Republican secured $3.7 million to “clear the backlog.” Nearly 7,400 kits were sent to labs for testing by the end of Laxalt’s term. As Nevada’s top cop, Cortez Masto also accepted more than $61,000 in donor gifts, including a luxury handbag and complimentary tickets to award shows and sporting events. Laxalt swore off the practice when he took over. Cortez Masto often calls herself the “most vulnerable U.S. senator in America” in her fundraising materials, and recent polling supports the sentiment. According to an October CNN poll, Laxalt leads Cortez Masto by 2 points. Read More Here
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Catherine Cortez Masto Ditches 'Latinx' Just In Time For Reelection Bid
Russia Makes Crimea Bridge Arrests; Ukraine Struggles To Restore Water Power Supplies After Strikes
Russia Makes Crimea Bridge Arrests; Ukraine Struggles To Restore Water Power Supplies After Strikes
Russia Makes Crimea Bridge Arrests; Ukraine Struggles To Restore Water, Power Supplies After Strikes https://digitalalaskanews.com/russia-makes-crimea-bridge-arrests-ukraine-struggles-to-restore-water-power-supplies-after-strikes/ Ukraine is dealing with the aftermath of another day of missile attacks,, with power and water supplies still damaged in many locations after critical infrastructure was targeted by Russia. Air raid sirens sounded out across multiple regions in Ukraine again on Tuesday with the emergency services warning of more Russian strikes. Those came early in the day, with both Lviv in the west and Zaporizhzhia in the south hit by missile strikes, giving Ukraine’s authorities more logistical challenges to deal with and causing more casualties, a day after Russian attacks left at least 19 people dead and over 100 injured. Rescuers at work following a missile attack on Zaporizhzhia in southeastern Ukraine on Oct. 11, 2022. Future Publishing | Future Publishing | Getty Images President Zelenskyy said in his nightly address Tuesday that, were it not for the additional strikes during the day, the Ukrainian authorities would have been able to focus on repairing and restoring water and energy supplies. “If it wasn’t for today’s strikes, we would have already restored the energy supply, water supply and communications that the terrorists damaged yesterday. And today, Russia will achieve only one additional thing: it will delay our recovery a little,” Zelenskyy said. Russia’s ramping up of missile strikes comes after it was dealt a blow last weekend when an explosion partially destroyed the Kerch Bridge that links the Russian mainland to Crimea, which Moscow illegally annexed in 2014. On Wednesday, Russia’s security services said it had made arrests in connection to the attack. Kyiv has not said whether it was responsible for the attack on the bridge, although the blast was widely seen as humiliating for Moscow and President Vladimir Putin. Ukraine won’t comment on Russia’s Crimea bridge arrests Ukraine’s intelligence services said it will not respond to Russia’s arrests of eight individuals it alleges are connected to last Saturday’s Crimea bridge blast. “All the activities of the FSB and the Investigative Committee are nonsense. These are fake structures that serve the Putin regime, so we will definitely not comment on their regular statements,” Andrey Yusov, a spokesperson for the Main Intelligence Directorate of the Ministry of Defense, said in a statement provided to CNBC on Wednesday. Russia’s Federal Security Service said Wednesday that it arrested five Russians and three citizens of Ukraine and Armenia that it alleged were connected to the attack, which partially damaged the bridge that Russia uses to access the peninsula it annexed from Ukraine in 2014, and to resupply its troops in southern Ukraine. Ukraine has not claimed responsibility for the bridge attack and Yusov insinuated the arrests (and potentially, the attack) were staged. “It is surprising that no business card has yet been found in the area of ​​​​the Crimean bridge,” he said. That was a reference to an attack on a checkpoint near Sloviansk in Donetsk in eastern Ukraine in 2014 that Russia claimed was led by Ukrainian nationalist Dmytro Yarosh. Ukraine claimed pro-Russian separatists (or Russian special forces) had initiated what it described as a “staged” attack and had planted Yarosh’s business card at the scene in order to blame it on Ukraine. The purported discovery of Yarosh’s business card was widely ridiculed by Ukrainians at the time. — Holly Ellyatt Russia makes arrests in alleged connection to Crimea bridge attack Russia’s security services said it has arrested eight people it alleges are connected to the explosion that damaged the Kerch Strait Bridge connecting Russia and Crimea last Saturday.  Russia’s Federal Security Service said Wednesday that it has arrested five Russians and three citizens of Ukraine and Armenia that it alleged were connected to the attack, which partially damaged the bridge that Russia uses to access the peninsula, that it annexed from Ukraine in 2014, and to resupply its troops in southern Ukraine. The FSB issued a statement alleging that the explosion was organized by the Main Intelligence Directorate of the Ministry of Defense of Ukraine and its director, Kyrylo Budanov.  “At the moment, five citizens of Russia, three citizens of Ukraine and Armenia, who participated in the preparation of the crime, have been detained as part of a criminal case,” the FSB said. “The investigation into the attack continues. All its organizers and accomplices, including foreign citizens, will be held accountable in accordance with Russian law,” it added. Black smoke billows from a fire on the Kerch bridge that links Crimea to Russia, after a truck exploded, near Kerch, on October 8, 2022. – | Afp | Getty Images Ukraine has not claimed responsibility for the bridge attack and is yet to respond to the allegations. CNBC has approached the Ministry of Defense for comment. The FSB detailed how it alleges the plot to blow up the bridge took place, claiming that “the explosive device was camouflaged in rolls with a construction polyethylene film on 22 pallets with a total weight of 22,770 kg.” The FSB claimed the device was shipped from Odesa to Bulgaria and then on to Georgia and Armenia before crossing over the border to Russia and then on its final journey to Crimea. — Holly Ellyatt Russia’s latest attacks on Ukraine are a ‘show of weakness,’ says former U.S. ambassador to NATO A firefighter extinguishes a fire after a flat was hit by a missile strike in Bakhmut, Donetsk region, on Sept. 15, 2022. Juan Barreto | Afp | Getty Images Russia’s latest attacks on Ukraine aren’t a show of strength, but a “show of weakness” that reflects its inability to advance and seize Ukrainian territory, said Kurt Volker, a distinguished fellow at the Center for European Policy Analysis. “Putin’s goal was to take over Ukraine, replace the government, have someone in Ukraine that was subordinate to Moscow. That’s simply not going to happen,” the former U.S. ambassador to NATO (2008-2009) told CNBC’s “Capital Connection” on Tuesday. “Ukrainians have made tremendous inroads taking territory back. This is the kind of thing that Putin has to resort to.” He said Russia’s increasing aggression is an expected reaction to Ukraine’s resistance. Volker added that Putin will have more to lose than gain should he escalate the threat of nuclear weapons. Even the Russian military may not support Putin if he starts a nuclear war, he said. Read more here: Russia’s latest attacks on Ukraine are a ‘show of weakness,’ says former U.S. ambassador to NATO — Natalie Tham Ukraine takes another pummeling from strikes, but its ground forces hold firm Ukrainian soldier Viktor, 35, checks his heavy machine gun at a position along the front line in the Mykolaiv region on October 5, 2022, amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Dimitar Dilkoff | Afp | Getty Images Despite being subject to further Russian missile strikes Tuesday, Ukraine’s counteroffensive in the south continues, with its forces are consolidating gains and holding firm against Russian counterattacks, the army reported. Ukraine’s southern command issued an update on Facebook last night in which it said its forces continue “to control the situation in Southern Buh direction,” referring to the Buh river in the west of the country that flows down to Mykolaiv on the southern coast. Southern command said Ukraine’s forces were “destroying the enemy’s reserves, disrupting the control and logistical support systems of the Russian occupiers” there, as well as gaining a foothold in five liberated settlements. It added that Russian forces had tried to counterattack Ukrainian positions in the Ishchenka area to the east of Mykolaiv “under cover of a massive missile attack across Ukraine” but that “the Russian invaders suffered losses and had to retreat.” “Over the past day, Ukrainian aviation launched nine strikes on the areas of invaders’ manpower, weapons and equipment build-up in Beryslav and Mykolaiv districts,” southern command said, claiming to have destroyed or damaged various Russian positions, vehicles and equipment. It added that “the enemy conducts intensive aerial reconnaissance around 17 settlements along the front line and in the newly liberated territories and continues shelling the positions” of Ukraine’s armed forces. CNBC was unable to verify the information in the report. — Holly Ellyatt Ukraine struggles to restore water and energy supplies after more strikes A cafe without electricity in western Ukrainian city of Lviv, after three Russian missiles fired targeted energy infrastructure on Oct. 11, 2022. Lviv’s mayor said that one-third of homes were without power. Yuriy Dyachyshyn | Afp | Getty Images Ukraine is dealing with the aftermath of another day of missile attacks, with power and water supplies still damaged in many locations after critical infrastructure was targeted by Russia. Air raid sirens sounded out across multiple regions in Ukraine again on Tuesday, with the emergency services warning of more Russian strikes. Those came early in the day, with both Lviv in the west and Zaporizhzhia in the south hit by missile strikes, giving Ukraine’s authorities more logistical challenges to deal with. Smoke rises above the buildings after the Russian missile attack on the critical infrastructure of Lviv on Oct. 10, 2022. Russia launched 15 rockets in the Lviv region, some were shot down by air defense forces, the rest hit energy infrastructure facilities. Due to the rocket attack, Lviv was left without electricity, water and mobile communication. Sopa Images | Lightrocket | Getty Images President Zelenskyy said in his nightly address Tuesday that, were it not for the additional strikes during the day, the Ukrainian authorities would ha...
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Russia Makes Crimea Bridge Arrests; Ukraine Struggles To Restore Water Power Supplies After Strikes
Further 20% Fall In U.S. Stocks certainly Possible Says IMF Director
Further 20% Fall In U.S. Stocks certainly Possible Says IMF Director
Further 20% Fall In U.S. Stocks ‘certainly Possible,’ Says IMF Director https://digitalalaskanews.com/further-20-fall-in-u-s-stocks-certainly-possible-says-imf-director/ A shift in investor sentiment could see a further 20% downside for U.S. stock markets, according to the International Monetary Fund’s director of monetary and capital markets. IMF research found that rising interest rates and future earnings expectations were driving down company valuations in the current market downturn, Tobias Adrian told CNBC’s Geoff Cutmore at the 2022 Annual Meetings of the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank Group in Washington, D.C. Sentiment and risk premia have held up “pretty well” so far, leading to an “orderly tightening,” he said Tuesday. Asked about a recent CNBC interview with Jamie Dimon, in which the JPMorgan chief executive said the S&P 500 could easily fall by another 20%, Adrian said it was “certainly possible.” The benchmark index has fallen by around 25% in the year-to-date. The U.S. Federal Reserve raised its funds rate to 3%-3.25%, the highest it has been since early 2008, in September as it attempts to cool 8.3% year-on-year inflation. The latest U.S. inflation figures are due Thursday. “My belief is that what Jamie Dimon is referring to is that there could be a shift in sentiment as well. And that would, of course, feed back into economic activity,” Adrian said. “Now, as for the 20% number, it’s certainly possible. It’s not our baseline, but that is something that is possible.” Adrian added the IMF had no specific figure for its baseline, but that it was one where financial conditions continue to be tightened, economic activity slows down and markets continue to be under pressure. On Tuesday, the institution published its World Economic Outlook, in which it predicted global growth will slow to 2.7% next year, 0.2 percentage points lower than its July forecast. It also said 2023 would feel like a recession for millions around the world, with about a third of the global economy experiencing a contraction. Crisis risks elevated Adrian told CNBC that despite recent volatility in areas such as U.K. government bonds, the IMF’s baseline continued to be that global credit markets remain “in an orderly manner” and would not tip into a full-blown crisis on the scale of a “Lehman moment.” But, he added, there are a lot of risks to the downside. “[Financial stability risks] are very elevated. They are only higher in times of acute crisis, such as the 2008 crisis, the 2020 Covid crisis or the euro crisis,” he said. “So yes, we are in a very, very stressed moment, we do hope that we will avoid a systemic event. But the likelihood is certainly elevated at this point.” Banks have a lot more capital and liquidity than during the 2008 crisis, when a lot of acute stress was caused by the banking system, he noted — however, an adverse scenario in emerging markets would see 30% of banking assets undercapitalized, and vulnerabilities in the non-bank financial system could spill into the banking system, he warned. Read More Here
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Further 20% Fall In U.S. Stocks certainly Possible Says IMF Director
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Bengaluru: Power Cut In These Areas From 13-15 October. Details Here
Bengaluru: Power Cut In These Areas From 13-15 October. Details Here
Bengaluru: Power Cut In These Areas From 13-15 October. Details Here https://digitalalaskanews.com/bengaluru-power-cut-in-these-areas-from-13-15-october-details-here/ Sign In Subscribe Search My Reads e-paper New Notifications Newsletters IFSC Code Finder New MintGenie For You Top Sections News Companies News Start-ups Company Results People Technology Gadgets Tech Reviews App News Foldable Smartphones 5G Tech Markets Stock Markets Commodities Mark To Market IPO Live Blog Money Personal Finance Q&A Opinion Photos Mutual Funds Mint 50 – Top Mutual Funds News Insurance Lounge Opinion Views Columns Blogs Budget 2022 Budget News Budget Expectations Budget Videos Opinion Auto News Sports Industry Banking Infotech Infrastructure Agriculture Manufacturing Energy Retail Videos India Investment Summit Annual Banking Conclave Mint Explainers Market Analysis Why Not Mint Money Business of Entertainment Long Story Capsule Mint Views Start-Up Diaries Money With Monika Mint Insight Digital Gurus Brand Masters Politics Education Impact Feature Brand Stories Podcast Explore Mint About Us Mint Authors New Contact Us SITEMAP Terms of Use Subscriber – Terms of Use Cookie Policy Print Subscription Privacy Policy Disclaimer Mint Code Code of ethics Mint Apps Copyright © HT Digital Streams Limited All rights reserved. Home / News / India /  Bengaluru: Power cut in these areas from 13-15 October. Details here 5 min read . Updated: 12 Oct 2022, 01:15 PM IST Livemint Premium Bengaluru power cut Several parts of Bengaluru are set to face power cuts for the rest of the week as BESCOM and KPTCL will be undertaking some work Some parts of Bengaluru are likely to witness power cuts from October 13 to October 15. As per a report by Hindustan Times, Livemint’s sister publication, several parts of the city are set to face power cuts for the rest of the week as BESCOM and KPTCL will be undertaking some work. The electricity outage is most likely to happen between 10 am and 4 pm. Here’s a list of areas where power outages might happen: October 13, Thursday KTPCL Divisions affected are HSR Layout, Subramanyapura, Hebbal, Davanagere, and Chitradurga, while BESCOM division affected is Ramanagara with works undertaken under the Bidadi sub-division. Areas affected: Gomathi and surrounding installations, Sobha Forest Apartments, Talaghattapura, HBR 1st Block, 2nd Block, Yasin Nagar, Subhash Layout, Rama Temple Road, Ramdev Garden, Krishnareddy Layout, Teachers Colony, HBR 3rd Block, Shivaramaiah Layout, Ring Road Service Road, K. K. Halli Village, CMR Road, Kamanahalli Main Road, Ramaiah Layout, Lingarajapuram, Janakiram Layout, Kanakadasa Layout, Govindpura Main Raod, Rashad Nagar, Farida Shoe Factory, Arabic College, K. G. Halli, Govindpura Village, Vinobhanagar, BM Layout, Arogyamma Layout, Kaveri Garden And Surrounding Areas, HBR L/o, 4th Block, Yasin Nagar, 5th Block, HBR Nagawara Main Road, Nagawara, NJK Garments, Byrankunte, Kuppuswamy L/o, HKBK College, 4th And 5th Of HBR L/o, Vidya Sagar, Thanisandra, R. K. Hegde Nagar, K. Narayan Pura, N. N. Halli, Balaji L/o, Phase 1 to 3, Railway Mens L/o, BDS L/o, Central Excise, K. K. Halli, Hennur Main Road, HRBR 3rd Block, Oil Mill Road, Aravind Nagara, Nehru Road, Kammanahalli Main Road, Bethal Street, AK Colony, HRBR 1st Block, 80 Feet Road, Karle Hegde Nagar, Nagenahalli, Police Quarters, Kempegowda L/o, Shabarinagara, Kmt L/o, Bharathiya City, Noor Nagar, Bharath Math Layout, Hidayath Nagar, Lidkar Colony, Kukkuwada, Hadadi, Matti, Kalkere, Lokikere, Kolkunte, Giriyapur, Kaidal, Balluru, Kanagondanahalli, Nagarasanahalli, Hoovinamadu, Kalbande, Kolenahalli And surrounding of Kukkuwada village, Mellekatte, Anaji, Bg Halli, Kandanakovi Mallapura and surrounding villages, villages feeding from 66/11 KV Bagur station. October 14, Friday KTPCL divisions affected are Subramanyapura, Somanahally, Hoody, K B Cross, Davanagere, Channagiri, Harihara, Chitradurga, and Hiriyuru, while BESCOM division affected is Ramanagara with works undertaken under the Bidadi sub-division. Areas affected: KIADB 1st Phase Industrial Area, Billekempanahalli, Maruthinagara, Beemenahalli, Ningaianadoddi, Rangegowdanadoddi, Lakshmisagara, 66/11 Kv Bevoor Line, 66/11 Kv Dashawara, 66/11 Kv Sankalagere, 66 Kv Solar Power Plant, Elita Promenade Appartments, K. R Layout, Sharadanagar, Chunchughatta And Area Surronding Sub-station, Huliyurudurga, D Hosahalli, Rajendrapura, Kodavathi, Attigere Surrounding Area, Tholahunase, Kurki, Water Supply, Kabbur, Gopanalu, Bada-kandagal Njy, Bada, Hanumanahalli, Kurki Bullapura Njy, Ranganatha, Ramagondanahalli, Angodu Surrounding Area, Hebbal, Aradhya, Neerthadi, Shivapura, Halavarthi, Ganganakatte, Nerlige, Kogganooru, Water Work, Njy Chinnasamudra, Anagodu Njy, 66kv Honnali And 66kv Nyamathi Lines – Honnali, Kattige, Nyamathi, Savalanga, Chilur And Mallapura Muss, villages feeding from 220/66/11kv Madhure Station, Chillahally, V K Gudda, Hoovinaholehariyabbe, Shravanagere, Dharmapura, Aralikere, Krishnapurachillahally, Eshwaragere, Hoovinahole, Devarakotta, Eshwaragere, Hoovinahole, Devarakotta, Chillahally, Yalagondanahalli, Abbinnahole, T Gollahalli, Mungasavalli, Krishnagiri, Suguru, Burudukunte, Gulya, Saluhunase, Hosahallyharyabbe, Kanajanahally, Bethuru, Beturu Palya, Kuridasanahatti, Mungasavalli, Krishnagiri, Suguru, Saluhunase, Kanajanahally, Bethuru, Beturu Palya, Kuridasanahatti, Shravanagere, Benakanahalli, Sakkara, Hariyabbehariyabbe, Shravanagere, Dharmapura, Aralikere, Krishnapura, Benakanahalli, Sakkara, Hariyabbe, Kanajanahalli, Maddihalli, Halagaladdi, P D Kote, Khandenahally, Khandenahally, Hosakere, Maddihalli, Halagaladdi, Hosakere, Palyamaddihalli. October 15, Saturday KTPCL divisions affected are HSR Layout, Subramanyapura, Somanahally, Hoody, Additional East Shivajinagar division, SRS Peenya, KPTCL, Yerrandanahalli, Davanagere, Channagiri, Harihara, and Hiriyuru, while BESCOM division affected is Ramanagara with works undertaken under the Bidadi sub-division. Areas affected: KIADB 1st phase industrial area, Electronic City Ph-1, Neeladri Road, Hebgodi, Veersandra, Golahalli, Eht Infosys, 66/11kv Hulimangala Station Feeding Areas, Shakambari Nagara, Pipe Line Road, Ragavendra Swamy Matta, J P Nagar 1st Phase, 14th Cross, Salarpuria Appt, Nagarjuna Appt, Puttenahalli Area, Jayangara 8th Block, Jayanagara 5th Block, Jayangara 7th Block , Iti Layout, Sbi Colony, Near R V Dental, College Surroundings, 24th Main, Behind L I C Office , L I C Colony, K R Layout, Venkatadri Layout, J P Nagar 5th Phase, Sai Nursery Road, J P Nagar 6th Phase, 15th Cross, 16th & 12th Cross, Adarsha Residency Apt, Adarsha Garden, Sindhura Convention Hall & Surroundings, J P Nagar Metro And Surrounding, Indira Gandhi Circle, Aster Hospital, 15th Cross Underpass Road, Actor Sudeep House Surrounding, 24th Main, Nandini Hotel Signal Junction, Green City Hospital, Central Mall, K R Layout, Venkatadri Layout, Kalyani Magnum Road, D S Palya, Vaishnavi Terrace Apt, J P Nagar 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th Phase, Marenahalli, Manjunath Colony, Tank Bund Road, Bannerghatta Road, Dollars Layout, Kalyani Magnum Apt, Kalyani Krishna Magnum, J P Nagar 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 6th Phases, Bannerghatta Road, K R Layout 15th Cross, Rose Garden, Sarakki Garden, J P Nagar 1st Phase, Sarakki Gate, Sbi Colony, Sangam Circle 47th Cross, Jayanagar 8th Block, Arya Nagar, Jayanagar 4th & 5th Block, Mantri Apartment, Thalaghattapura, Raghuvanagalli, Gublala, Kuvempu Nagar, V V Nagar, V V Layout, Balaji Layout, Royal Form, Prestige Shantinikean Muss, Reliance Communication, Magna Warehouse, Tikmali, Whitefield Area, Maruthi Sevanagar, Jai Bharath Nagar, Frazer Town, Cox Town, Benson Town, Richards Town, Davis Road, Mosque Road, Biyappana Halli, Nagena Palya, Lingaraj Puram, Halsoor, Jeevana Halli, R K Road, Coles Road Tannery Road, Itc, City Market, Avenue Road, B V K Iyengar Road, R T Street, C T Street, Chikkapet, Nagarathpet, S P Road, Town Hall, J C Road, Minerva Circle, K G Road, Gandhi Nagar, Masidi, Mysore Road Police Quarters, Gori Palya, Binny Pet, New Tharagu Pet, Chamarajpet, Am Road, Kalasipalya, Victoria Hospital, Kims, Shankarpuram, Dental College, Sj Park, Dasarahalli, Chokkasandra, Vijayalaxmi Layout, Msr Layout, Manjunathnagar, Sidedahalli, Anchepalya, 66/11kv Dommasandra Substation Surrounding Areas, Basaveshwara, Trishul, Jayanagara, Ejukola, Maganagara Palike, Durgambhika, Chittanahalli, Kakkaragolla, Avaragolla, Devarahatti, Shivali, Vijayanagara, Yaragunta, Amruthnagara, Neelanahalli, Stp, Kodihalli, All 11kv Feeders From 66/11kv Kv Yaragunta And 66/11 Kv Davanagere Muss, Devarahalli. Neethigere. Ganguru. Yaragattihalli. Gullehalli, 66kv Bhanuvalli And 66kv Kundur Lines – Bhanuvalli, Nandigudi, Eht Cargill, Db Kere, Malegennur And Kundur Muss And Ipp Suzlon And Rohan Solar, 66kv Bhanuvalli And 66kv Kundur Lines – Bhanuvalli, Nandigudi, Eht Cargill, Db Kere, Malegennur And Kundur Muss And Ipp Suzlon And Rohan Solar, Challakere Town Limit, Bellary Road, Budnahatty and Panchayatha Limit. Catch all the Business News, Market News, Breaking News Events and Latest News Updates on Live Mint. Download The Mint News App to get Daily Market Updates. More Less Subscribe to Mint Newsletters * Enter a valid email * Thank you for subscribing to our newsletter. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Bengaluru: Power Cut In These Areas From 13-15 October. Details Here
Shamelessness On Steroids: How Public Figures From Clinton To Trump To Ye Get Away With It
Shamelessness On Steroids: How Public Figures From Clinton To Trump To Ye Get Away With It
Shamelessness On Steroids: How Public Figures From Clinton To Trump To Ye Get Away With It https://digitalalaskanews.com/shamelessness-on-steroids-how-public-figures-from-clinton-to-trump-to-ye-get-away-with-it/ I’ve always thought being in politics required a certain degree of shamelessness. You have to be able to embrace an opponent you just spent the primary campaign trashing as an unfit human being.  You have to be able to flip-flop on an issue when the pressure gets too great while pretending there’s no change at all.  You have to be able to take credit for things you had nothing to do with and deflect scandal by saying there’s nothing to see here. KANYE WEST CLAIMS HE DIDN’T KNOW EX-WIFE KIM KARDASHIAN WAS ‘CLOSE TO THE CLINTONS’ GOP Senate nominee Herschel Walker speaks at a Black business leaders round table discussion, on Sept. 26, 2022, in Atlanta, Georgia.  (Fox News) But lately, we have shamelessness on steroids. The bar just seems to be way lower than ever before on what constitutes acceptable discourse. National Review’s Jay Nordlinger has a riff on this. Bill Clinton “brazened out his scandals,” he reminds us. Who can forget him assuring the country that “I did not have sexual relations with that woman,” or expounding on the meaning of “is” before a grand jury.   Nearly two decades later, it was Donald Trump and the “Access Hollywood” tape, the “grab ’em” language and talk of how “I moved on” a married woman. “If Republican voters blinked, they didn’t blink twice. And Trump was elected. Can a Republican presidential nominee pay hush money to a porn actress, and hush money to a Playboy bunny, and emerge unscathed? Emerge adulated?” Nordlinger’s answer is yes. Then he gets around to Herschel Walker, the Senate nominee in Georgia, for the four children born to four different women, the alleged abortion payment, “the fabrications, etc.” Yet “I’m not sure the revelations about the candidate will affect a single vote.” GOP senators Rick Scott and Tom Cotton campaigned for Walker in Georgia yesterday. Georgia Republican Senate candidate Herschel Walker and rapper/fashion designer Ye have recently come under fire from the Left.  (Michael Zarrilli/Getty Images | Stephane Cardinale – Corbis/Corbis via Getty Images) Nordlinger concedes his concerns may sound a bit old-fashioned. “When you speak of right and wrong — to say nothing of shame — you are apt to be accused of ‘virtue signaling,’ ‘moral preening,’ and whatever else has shown up in the lexicon lately. But accusations are a dime a dozen, and if you can’t stand the accusations, get out of the kitchen.” Or just deny them. Or blame the mendacious media. But shamelessness is not limited to folks in the political realm. It is regularly practiced by tycoons, athletes, big-shot pundits and all manner of celebrities. After posting his “death con 3” attack on “JEWISH PEOPLE,” did the Man Formerly Known As Kanye apologize, soften, explain his ugly rant? Nope, Ye did not.  But Elon Musk posted this: “Talked to ye today & expressed my concerns about his recent tweet, which I think he took to heart.” Is that going to be his approach to content moderation? Could keep him busy. Musk himself, while building several successful companies, provides a world-class example of shamelessness. First he made what he depicted as a transformational bid for Twitter (after texting with a few tech bros, we now know). Then he said he’s backing out, citing the somewhat flimsy reason that the company has too many bots.  Tesla and SpaceX Chief Executive Officer Elon Musk speaks at the SATELLITE Conference and Exhibition in Washington. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh, File) And then, realizing he was going to lose the litigation, Musk says he’ll again buy the social media giant for the original price of $44 billion. It’s kinda dizzying. Now we have Brett Favre, the legendary former quarterback, speaking out for the first time about the scandal that has enveloped him in Mississippi. FROM YE TO THE LA CITY COUNCIL, ANTISEMITISM AND RACISM ARE RUNNING RAMPANT Documents show $5 million in state welfare funds were diverted to a volleyball stadium at the University of Southern Mississippi, where Favre’s daughter played on the team. The ex-NFL star was also paid for speeches he never delivered. The former director of the state welfare agency has pleaded guilty to fraud and conspiracy. In a statement to Fox News Digital, Favre said: “I have been unjustly smeared in the media.” Everyone’s favorite punching back.  Favre said he didn’t know that welfare funds were involved and was told by state officials “that the legal work to ensure that these funds can be accepted by the university was done.” He said he is repaying the money for the speeches, which he blamed on a misunderstanding. The problem for Favre, who has not been charged, are text messages show he wanted to keep his involvement secret. SUBSCRIBE TO HOWIE’S MEDIA BUZZMETER PODCAST, A RIFF ON THE DAY’S HOTTEST STORIES “If you were to pay me is there anyway the media can find out where it came from and how much?” he asked an official at the nonprofit that got the misappropriated money, who has since pleaded guilty. And Favre kept up the pressure even after Phil Bryant, then the state’s governor, told him that it could be illegal to misuse public funds. So it takes a certain degree of shamelessness to blame the whole thing on a media smear.  CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP But, as politicians know all too well, that’s the world we live in today. Howard Kurtz is the host of FOX News Channel’s MediaBuzz (Sundays 11 a.m.-12 p.m. ET). Based in Washington, D.C., he joined the network in July 2013 and regularly appears on Special Report with Bret Baier and other programs. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Shamelessness On Steroids: How Public Figures From Clinton To Trump To Ye Get Away With It
Wednesdays Letters To The Editor
Wednesdays Letters To The Editor
Wednesday’s Letters To The Editor https://digitalalaskanews.com/wednesdays-letters-to-the-editor/ WEDNESDAY’S LETTERS TO THE EDITOR October 12, 2022, 12:06AM Schools need librarians EDITOR: I read Thursday’s guest editorial on teaching students to separate online fact from fiction with great interest. I am a retired high school librarian with a master’s degree in library and information science. A key part of my job was teaching information literacy and critical thinking skills, or higher-level thinking, utilizing Bloom’s taxonomy (Look it up — it’s very interesting). Who created a website? What is their background, credibility, level of expertise? What biases are present? What does the domain — dot-org, dot-gov, dot-com — indicate? As we’ve seen, kids and adults alike tend to believe everything they read on the internet. They sorely need instruction about recognizing misinformation. Unfortunately, California students are unlikely to be taught by a credentialed librarian. In this state, there is one full-time accredited teacher librarian for every 9,667 students. That makes us, along with Washington D.C., worst in the nation. A California student is likely, if their school has a library at all, to be helped by someone without a bachelor’s degree, teaching credential or training in teaching these critical skills. Surely, we can do better. KAY GORDY Sebastopol Old-fashioned governing EDITOR: The purpose of government is to take care of the needs of the country. Why do Republicans in Congress support Donald Trump after he encouraged a mob to take down the government? Like the insurrectionists, Republicans in Congress block the government from functioning. Whether fixing old bridges or making health care affordable, Republicans vote against efforts to improve things. Instead, they line the pockets of the superwealthy. Trump’s first contribution was to pass a huge tax break for those with already-bulging pockets. Trump is now a symbol of lies, boastfulness, racism and theft at the top — government at its worst. Yet Republicans support him. Meanwhile, Joe Biden, in his quiet, reserved way, goes about serving the needs of the people. Biden helped Puerto Rico after Hurricane Fiona; getting water, food and services to the people ASAP. Trump ignored Puerto Rico after the Maria disaster on his watch. Helping people is not socialism, as Republicans would have us believe. It is simply good, old-fashioned governing. Vote for Democrats, and let government do its job. SUSAN JOICE Guerneville Bike lanes blocked EDITOR: I am a recently retired senior. I live in a nice community off West College Avenue in Santa Rosa. I have been riding my bike instead of driving everywhere. Great, right? My issue: Cars and construction cones blocking bike lanes on busy streets such as Stony Point Road and West College. I would like to hear why this happens again and again. MARY WOLFE Santa Rosa Imposing religious beliefs EDITOR: The Constitution is silent on the unborn, except that it does not confer citizenship until birth. Specious arguments about abortion “up to, and perhaps even after, the moment of birth” (how is it even possible after birth?) hold no water (“No on Prop. 1,” Letters, Thursday). It is unlikely that you could find a woman in her third trimester who changes her mind and decides she no longer wishes to carry the pregnancy to birth, much less in the ninth month. It’s unlikely that she could find a physician willing to terminate a pregnancy at such a late date for nonmedical reasons. Hidden in Dean Davis’ letter are personal religious beliefs, which he wishes to apply to others. That is not OK. DONALD ROWELL Santa Rosa Terror in Ukraine EDITOR: As Vladimir Putin threatens to use nuclear weapons, he correctly states that there are terrorists in Ukraine, but fails to recognize how easily they are identified by the white “Z” on their green tanks. MICHAEL SCHWALBENBERG Petaluma Nuclear waste solutions EDITOR: Ed Oberweiser writes, “There has never been a solution for how to safely store nuclear waste from the nuclear weapons industry or nuclear power plants” (“Unsafe nuclear waste,” Letters, Sept. 30) Does he mean a 100% solution? Acceptable risk solution? Or is there no solution? Here are two potential solutions: The Onkalo storage facility under construction in Finland is billed as the “first permanent disposal site for high-level nuclear waste.” It will place thousands of sealed, corrosion- resistant copper canisters, each surrounded by bentonite clay, in stable bedrock. Storage is 430 meters below ground level — an amazing engineering feat. Deep Isolation in Berkeley has demonstrated the use of directional drilling to isolate canisters of high-level nuclear waste deep within suitable rock formations. In January 2019, Deep Isolation demonstrated canister placement. It is now under evaluation by the U.S. Department of Energy. DONALD ESTREICH Sebastopol You can send letters to the editor to letters@pressdemocrat.com. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Wednesdays Letters To The Editor
Trump Supporter Busted For Blowing Up Own Camper Van Claiming It Was Biden Voters
Trump Supporter Busted For Blowing Up Own Camper Van Claiming It Was Biden Voters
Trump Supporter Busted For Blowing Up Own Camper Van, Claiming It Was Biden Voters https://digitalalaskanews.com/trump-supporter-busted-for-blowing-up-own-camper-van-claiming-it-was-biden-voters/ A man in Brooklyn Center, Minnesota, claimed a blaze outside his own home was started because of his support for former President Donald Trump. But, it’s now emerged, he set the fire himself. In September 2020, Denis Molla alleged his camper van was torched and graffiti saying “Biden 2020” and “BLM” was spray-painted on his garage door because of the Trump 2020 flags he had on display. The day after the inferno, Molla appeared on local television in an emotional interview to recall seeing three people running away from his home before the vehicle exploded ― and that in the immediate aftermath he’d just been focused on getting his two children, aged 2 and 5-months, and their puppies safely out of the property. Watch the video here: On Tuesday, Molla pleaded guilty in U.S. District Court to one count of wire fraud after “filing fraudulent insurance claims for a staged arson,” according to a statement from the Department of Justice. “In reality, Molla started his own property on fire and spray painted the graffiti on his own garage,” it said. Molla received around $61,000 in insurance payouts and $17,000 in donations via a GoFundMe crowdfunding page, per the report. His sentencing date has not yet been set. This article originally appeared on HuffPost and has been updated. Related… Lawrence O’Donnell Says Trump ‘Confessed’ With This 1 Rally Line GOP Mayor In Arizona Finds Withering Way To Protest Trump-Backed Kari Lake Meyers Spots The Moment Biden Turned Into The Homer Simpson Meme Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Trump Supporter Busted For Blowing Up Own Camper Van Claiming It Was Biden Voters
Adherence To Secondary Prophylaxis And Associated Factors | RRCC
Adherence To Secondary Prophylaxis And Associated Factors | RRCC
Adherence To Secondary Prophylaxis And Associated Factors | RRCC https://digitalalaskanews.com/adherence-to-secondary-prophylaxis-and-associated-factors-rrcc/ Introduction Acute rheumatic fever (ARF) results from an autoimmune response to pharyngitis caused by a group of streptococcus (GAS) bacterial infections. It involves the joints, brain, skin, and heart muscles. Long-term damage to cardiac valves caused by a single severe episode or multiple recurrent episodes of ARF is known as rheumatic heart disease (RHD).1 Rheumatic fever mostly affects children and adolescents in low- and middle-income countries, especially in areas where poverty is widespread and access to health services is limited. People living in overcrowded and poor conditions, including in Ethiopia, are at risk of developing this disease.2,3 The most effective treatment for preventing further infection is benzantine penicillin G (BPG), which is administered via intramuscular injection every month. Alternatively, daily oral penicillin V can be given to a selected number of patients if compliance is guaranteed.2,4 Secondary prophylaxis is the continuous administration of penicillin to patients with a previous attack of acute rheumatic fever or well-documented RHD. The rational use of secondary prophylaxis is a critical cost-effective intervention for preventing morbidity and mortality related to ARF and RHD. Patients with RHD are expected to receive at least 80% of the annual prescribed injections. Otherwise, there is a higher risk of recurrent ARF and complications.5 Adherence is the extent to which a person’s behavior in taking medication corresponds with the recommendations agreed upon by health-care providers.6 A patient is classified under good adherence when he/she takes was ≥80% of secondary prophylaxis for RHD (if injected more than nine times per year). Whereas, poor adherence is considered when the patient missed secondary prophylaxis for RHD at least three times per year.7 In 2019, an estimated 40.5 million cases of RHD were reported causing 306,000 deaths annually.8 The burden of the problem decreased significantly in the developed world. However, the morbidity and mortality in developing countries due to limited access to cardiac surgery and the cost related to surgical intervention remains high.9 Africa, Southeast Asia, and the Western Pacific regions are the primary victims accounting for 84% of all cases and 80% of estimated deaths in 2015. Socioeconomic and environmental factors such as poor housing, undernutrition, overcrowding, and poverty are contributors to the incidence, magnitude, and severity of ARF and RHD.10 The prevalence of RHD in East Africa is 17.9 cases per 1000 school children.11 Global adherence to treatment of chronic diseases including RHD in developed countries is only 50%, particularly affecting the poor population.6,7 Due to poor levels of adherence to secondary prophylaxis in patients with RHD continues to report high rates (7%) of an advanced stage of heart valve injury.12 Poor adherence to secondary prophylaxis increases ARF recurrence, worsens RHD, and rapidly leads to hospitalization and surgical intervention.13 In the Gambia, poor adherence to secondary prophylaxis leads to recurrence of ARF by 53.3%, worsening of RHD by 25%, and leading to progression to chronic valvular heart disease and increased surgery by 9.9%.14 Only one per cent of the world’s cardiothoracic surgeons are found in Africa with limited surgical intervention settings. Thus, most patients with chronic valvular heart disease die without undergoing cardiac surgery.15 Besides, poor adherence is associated with socioeconomic status, condition-related factors, patient-related factors, therapy-related factors, and health system-related factors.5,6,16,17 In Ethiopia, studies on adherence to secondary prophylaxis and associated factors are limited. There is only one study conducted among 145 adult patients in a single institution in Addis Ababa among them 30.3% were poor adherence and 37% were from Jimma zonal hospitals. The most common secondary prophylaxis medication in Ethiopia.16 This compromises the generalizability of the findings. In addition, all possible factors associated with poor adherence are not uncovered in Ethiopia. Therefore, this study aimed to determine the level of adherence to secondary prophylaxis and risk factors in patients with RHD at selected public hospitals in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. Methods and Materials Study Area and Period The study was conducted in Addis Ababa public hospitals. Addis Ababa is the capital city of Ethiopia. It is also the largest city in the country with a total population of 3,384,569 as reported by the 2007 census.18 There are 12 public hospitals in Addis Ababa to provide cardiac follow-up. Four hospitals were selected using a simple random sampling method, which was Tirunesh Beijing hospital, Zewditu memorial hospital, Yekatit 12 hospital, and Saint Peter Specialized hospital. This included 1883 total RHD patients from the District Health Information Software 2 (DHIS 2) registration who were diagnosed before one year and 917 RHD patients appointed from appointment sheets during the study period. The study was conducted from December 25/2021 to January 22/2022. Study Design and Population A cross-sectional study was conducted to assess the level of adherence to secondary prophylaxis and the risk factors among patients with RHD at public hospitals in AA, Ethiopia. All registered patients at RHD clinic in Addis Ababa public hospitals were the source population and all registered patients at RHD in selected public hospitals of Addis Ababa were the study population. A selected RHD patient who was interviewed at the RHD clinic during the collection period at a selected public hospital in Addis Ababa was the study unit. Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria Patients with RHD who were diagnosed at least one year before the study period were included. However, patients who were critically ill and had no attendants were excluded. Sample Size Determination and Sampling Procedure The required sample size was calculated using the single population proportion formula since there was a previous study in Jimma zone hospitals. Poor adherence to secondary prophylaxis was 37%9 and desired precision of 5% and 95% confidence intervals were used for the calculation; the sample size was 358. With a 10% non-response rate, the final sample size was 394. Sample Size Determination for the Second Objective By using the double population proportion formula, the following sample size calculation was used for each independent variable by open epi info software 95% CI with 5% margin of error, 80% power, and 1 ratio of exposed to non-exposed outcomes. Three hundred and sixty-four is the largest sample size among others; so, by adding a 10% non-response rate it becomes 400 which is higher than 394; therefore, the final sample size of the study was 400. Simple random sampling was used to select four hospitals. Next, the calculated sample size (400) was distributed to four hospitals using probability proportional to the size and the numbers of RHD patients required for the study in four hospitals were determined (Figure 1). Figure 1 The schemes presentation of sampling procedure to select study participants from Addis Ababa governmental hospitals, 2022. Therefore, 400 study participants were sampled from respective Hospitals by a simple random sampling method from a RHD clinic sheet using the patient’s medical registration number sampling frame. Data Collection and Procedures The questionnaire was adapted through reviewing different literature and previous similar studies.5,6,16 The questionnaire was translated to the local language Amharic and data were collected by face-to-face interviews with patients or their attendants/guardians for pediatric patients who came for follow-up during the study period. Medical data were reviewed from patient records. Eight data collectors and one supervisor were recruited among health-care providers who work in cardiac chronic outpatient departments. Data Quality Control and Management One day of training for 8 nurses and one physician was given on data collection methods and a pretest was done using 5% of 60 RHD patients at Alert hospital. The purpose of the pre-test was to ascertain patients ‘understanding of the items asked and the appropriateness of responses and time required to fill out the questionnaire. A reliability estimate was conducted and Cronbach’s alpha was 0.83 for adherence factors to secondary prophylaxis measurement tools. Daily supervision was conducted by the supervisor and principal investigator during data collection and data were checked for completeness on daily basis. Data Analysis Procedure After the data collection is completed, the data were checked for properly collected and recorded, coded, entered, and cleaned into EPI Info version (7.2) and exported to package for social science (SPSS) window version 26 for analysis. Descriptive statistics with including frequency, proportion, and mean of variables were used for reporting the descriptive results. Variables with a p-value 0.25 in the bi-variable logistic regression analysis were fitted to multiple logistic regression analysis. In the multivariate logistic regression model, fitness was tested using the Hosmer-Lemeshow goodness-of-fit. Adjusted odds ratio (AOR) with a 95% confidence interval was estimated to assess the strength of the association with poor adherence to secondary prophylaxis. A p-value less than 0.05 was considered significant. Finally, the processed data will be presented by creating frequency, and percentages with tables, text, and graphs. Ethical Consideration Before data collection, ethical clearance was obtained from St. Paul’s hospital millennium Medical College Institutional Review Board. A permission letter to conduct the study was secured from the Addis Ababa Reg...
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Adherence To Secondary Prophylaxis And Associated Factors | RRCC
China Stocks Recover In Mixed Asia Trade; Yen Weakens Past 146
China Stocks Recover In Mixed Asia Trade; Yen Weakens Past 146
China Stocks Recover In Mixed Asia Trade; Yen Weakens Past 146 https://digitalalaskanews.com/china-stocks-recover-in-mixed-asia-trade-yen-weakens-past-146/ The Tokyo Stock Exchange in Japan. Noriko Hayashi | Bloomberg via Getty Images Asia-Pacific markets were mixed on Wednesday, with some indexes struggling for direction amid concerns over the global economy. Investors are also waiting for inflation data from the U.S. due later this week. The Shanghai Composite in mainland China rose around 1%, and the Shenzhen Component gained 1.535%. Both indexes earlier lost more than 1% each. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index recovered slightly to trade 0.89% lower, with the Hang Seng Tech index falling more than 1%. In Japan, the Nikkei 225 closed fractionally lower at 26,396.83 and Topix lost 0.12% to 1,869. Japan’s yen was hovering around 146 against the dollar. The S&P/ASX 200 in Australia 0.04% higher at 6,647.50. MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan was down 0.1%. South Korea’s Kospi gained 0.47% and the Kosdaq was higher by 0.13%. South Korea’s central bank raised interest rates by 50 basis points to 3% on Wednesday, in line with expectations. The Korean won strengthened and last changed hands at 1,423.78 per dollar. Overnight on Wall Street, the S&P 500 shed 0.65% to close at 3,588.84 after hitting a multiyear low during the session. The Nasdaq Composite dropped 1.10% to 10,426.19, its lowest close since July 2020. The Dow Jones Industrial Average ticked up 36.31 points, or 0.12%, to close at 29,239.19. — CNBC’s Carmen Reinicke and Sarah Min contributed to this report. CNBC Pro: It’s too early to buy the dip, investor says, naming 8 stocks to buy when the time is right One fund manager is cautioning against buying the dip, despite a 25% decline in the S&P 500 this year. Instead, investors should be repositioning toward stocks sensitive to interest rates, John Ricciardi, head of asset allocation and a fund manager at Deuterium Capital, said. He names three stocks in the consumer staples sectors, three in utilities, and two in materials for investors to scoop up when the time is right. CNBC Pro subscribers can read more here. — Ganesh Rao New bank loans in China soared in September, data shows Banks in China extended 2.47 trillion yuan ($344 billion) of new loans in September, compared with 1.25 trillion yuan in August, the country’s central bank said in a statement late Tuesday. That comes after the People’s Bank of China’s efforts to boost credit by lowering interest rates this year. Analysts polled by Reuters expected new loans to come in at 1.8 trillion yuan. — Abigail Ng South Korea’s central bank raises rates by 50 basis points The Bank of Korea raised its policy rate to 3%, an increase of 50 basis points in line with expectations, as the central bank tries to keep inflation under control and limit the plunge in the Korean won. Interest rate differentials have boosted the dollar this year, and the won has fallen around 20% against the greenback since the start of the year. Inflation in South Korea stood at 5.6% in September, above the central bank’s target. — Abigail Ng Japan’s yen weakens to fresh 24-year high The Japanese yen weakened past the level where authorities previously intervened to mark a new 24-year high in Asia’s morning trade. The U.S. dollar bought as much as 146.22 yen at one point, but then retreated to 146.08. Officials in Japan intervened in the foreign exchange market in September when the dollar-yen hit 145.9. — Abigail Ng CNBC Pro: This stock is a better bet than even U.S. Treasurys, fund manager says Nick Griffin, chief investment officer at Munro Partners, is so bullish on one stock, he says it’s a better bet than U.S. Treasurys.       “It’s cheaper than a U.S. Treasury. It grows faster than the U.S. Treasury, and it’s probably got a better balance sheet than the U.S. Treasury. So from our point of view, it’s a fairly safe place to [put your] cash,” he said. Short-term U.S. Treasurys have surged in popularity among investors of late as yields pop. CNBC Pro subscribers can read more here. — Weizhen Tan U.S. economy is doing well amid economic uncertainty, says Treasury Secretary Yellen Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said the U.S. is “doing very well” amid global economic uncertainty. Although the U.S. economy has slowed after a strong recovery, jobs reports indicate a resilient economy, she said in an interview Tuesday with CNBC’s Sara Eisen. She also acknowledged that inflation is too high and that lowering it is a priority for the Biden administration, and emphasized the importance of maintaining a healthy labor market while doing so. — Chelsey Cox, Tanaya Macheel IMF cuts global growth forecast for next year Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
China Stocks Recover In Mixed Asia Trade; Yen Weakens Past 146
Biden Warns Saudi Arabia Will Face consequences Over OPEC Oil Production Cut
Biden Warns Saudi Arabia Will Face consequences Over OPEC Oil Production Cut
Biden Warns Saudi Arabia Will Face “consequences” Over OPEC Oil Production Cut https://digitalalaskanews.com/biden-warns-saudi-arabia-will-face-consequences-over-opec-oil-production-cut/ President Biden with Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman on July 15. Photo: Royal Court of Saudi Arabia/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images President Biden will “continue to re-evaluate” the U.S.’ relationship with Saudi Arabia after a group of international oil exporters and Russia decided to significantly cut oil production in response to falling fuel prices, National Security Council spokesperson John Kirby told CNN on Tuesday. The latest: Biden told CNN in an interview broadcast Tuesday there would be “consequences” for Saudi Arabia over the decision to cut oil output, declining to elaborate further. Driving the news: The White House warned last week that Biden may support legislation aimed at reducing OPEC’s control over energy prices, suggesting Biden is considering a new, escalatory approach with the Saudis, Axios’ Alayna Treene and Hans Nichols report. Kirby reiterated this warning Tuesday, stressing that Biden is “willing” to work with Congress to redefine relations. Why it matters: OPEC+’s decision to slash oil production by 2 million barrels per day starting in November could have a ripple effect around the world. In the US, the move could increase the price of gas again — right before the midterm elections, Axios’ Ben Geman reports. OPEC+’s attempt to prop up oil prices could also benefit Russia’s funding of its brutal and illegal invasion of Ukraine. What they’re saying: “I think the president’s been very clear that this is a relationship that we need to continue to re-evaluate, that we need to be willing to revisit,” Kirby told CNN. “And certainly in light of the OPEC decision, I think that’s where he is, and he’s willing to work with Congress to think through what that relationship ought to look like going forward,” Kirby added. Kirby added later in a call with reporters that OPEC’s move to cut production was “a short-sighted decision and that it benefited Russia, at a time when nobody, in any capacity, should be trying to benefit Vladimir Putin.” For Saudi Arabia’s part, Oil Minister Abdulaziz bin Salman has said OPEC+ was just trying to get ahead of a potential reduction in demand, Axios’ Dave Lawler reports. The big picture: Biden administration officials attempted to dissuade OPEC+ from the decision with a last-minute lobbying effort earlier this month, saying the the cut could be a “total disaster” and may be interpreted as a “hostile act,” according to CNN. Biden faced backlash in the summer for his trip to Saudi Arabia and fist-bump with Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman before a meeting, which was meant to recalibrate U.S.-Saudi ties and bolster U.S. influence in the region. Go deeper: Biden’s new Saudi strategy What OPEC’s 2 million-barrel cut could mean for U.S. gas prices Editor’s note: This article has been updated with new details throughout. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Biden Warns Saudi Arabia Will Face consequences Over OPEC Oil Production Cut
To Hold House Democrats Eye GOP-Held Districts Won By Biden
To Hold House Democrats Eye GOP-Held Districts Won By Biden
To Hold House, Democrats Eye GOP-Held Districts Won By Biden https://digitalalaskanews.com/to-hold-house-democrats-eye-gop-held-districts-won-by-biden/ Hillary Scholten, right, the Democratic nominee for Congress in Michigan’s 3rd District, speaks with business owner Darrell Gordon during a campaign stop, Tuesday, Aug. 9, 2022 in Muskegon, Mich. Scholten, a lawyer from Grand Rapids, in November will face Republican John Gibbs, a businessman and missionary who served in the Trump administration under Housing and Urban Development Secretary Ben Carson. (AP Photo/Mike Householder) GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. (AP) — While preparing to march in a Saturday morning parade through this fast-growing city’s westside, Democratic congressional candidate Hillary Scholten warned her staff that the area was traditionally very conservative and they should brace for possible booing. But the crowd lining Fulton Street to mark the region’s Polish pride was friendly. Only one man bellowed what sounded to the candidate like “Go to hell, Hillary!” as she passed. But he also grinned and flashed a thumbs-up later. He’d actually cried, “Give ’em hell, Hillary!” It’s been 32 years since a Democrat won the House seat where Scholten is competing against Republican John Gibbs. But, its largest city, Grand Rapids, has turned steadily bluer lately, and redrawn congressional maps have converted it from a district that backed Donald Trump for president in 2020 to one that Joe Biden would have carried instead. It’s one of 14 U.S. House seats nationwide that are held by Republicans but that Biden would have won under new maps. As Democrats brace for midterm defeats that could erase their narrow, five-seat control of the House, a chance to limit the damage may lie in flipping Republican-held seats that voted for Biden to stanch the effect of losses elsewhere around the country. Scholten, a former Justice Department attorney and Christian Reform Church deacon, lost the seat to Republican Rep. Peter Meijer in 2020. But Meijer was defeated in his Michigan GOP primary this year by Trump-backed challenger Gibbs, a former software engineer who falsely purports that the 2020 presidential election was stolen. Scholten is trying to become the first Democratic woman elected to the House from western Michigan and isn’t counting on more favorable boundaries to get her there, noting that it’s “hard for people to believe in what they’ve never seen before, and we feel that every day.” But even Gibbs concedes the new maps have Democrats excited. “In a year where they’re expected to have a very difficult time in the midterms,” he said, “for them, a pickup is something that they’re salivating over.” The list of GOP-held Biden districts feature three Los Angeles-area seats and one in California’s Central Valley. Others are the territories of Republican Reps. Don Bacon in Omaha, Nebraska, and Steve Chabot in Cincinnati. Pennsylvania Republican Rep. Brian Fitzpatrick, who represents the moderate swing battleground of Bucks County, north of Philadelphia, faces a similar test. On the other side are a dozen districts that voted for Trump but are held by Democrats. Retirements and redistricting mean many no longer have incumbents running. Still, Democrats see high stakes in their efforts to flip seats won by Biden. When House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer recently predicted that his party would hold the chamber, he mentioned such territory in California and Illinois, as well as Bacon’s and Chabot’s districts, and the Grand Rapids race. Not every incumbent is sweating toss-up races. Chabot says that, during his 26 years running for reelection in southwestern Ohio, he’s “had more challenging races, for sure, than anyone in the House.” But, as he competes for potential crossover voters, Chabot is not emphasizing Trump. “I agree with most of his policies, but I’m running on my own record,” Chabot said. “People can make up their own minds.” Gibbs says that, despite Trump’s endorsement, he’s building appeal among independents and swing voters. He recalled one man approaching him in the lakefront city of Muskegon, northwest of Grand Rapids, and saying: “I voted for you. I’m a Democrat. Is that OK?” “This race is not so much about Democrat vs. Republican. It’s more crazy vs. normal,” said Gibbs, pointing to high gas and food prices and ”what they’re trying to do to kids in school,” with modern curriculums and inappropriate material in campus libraries being especially outlandish. But, echoing Trump, Gibbs left open the possibility that he may object to the results of his own election next month. “If it’s fair and everything’s on the up and up, I’ll accept whatever the result is,” he said. But asked if he could define fair, Gibbs replied, “Not at this point.” “We’ll just have to kind of see how it goes,” he said. A Scholten win would cement this area’s political transformation from red to blue. Booms in health, university and technology jobs are attracting scores of college-educated workers — with new residents often importing Democratic voting preferences. Grand Rapids and its suburbs have also turned more diverse, including notable increases in Hispanic voters. Such a change was long unthinkable in the home city of Gerald Ford and former Trump administration Education Secretary Betsy DeVos, which once epitomized pro-business, country club conservativism. “I love to play golf. We play at public courses,” Scholten said, laughing. “I think that’s a pretty good analogy, actually.” Despite Democrat-friendly lines, national Republicans see the district as a “checks and balances” area where voters might have shunned Trump but want to control Washington’s spending and potential federal overreach. Meijer was one of 10 House Republicans who voted to impeach Trump, prompting the former president to endorse Gibbs. The Democratic House campaign committee even financed a GOP primary ad proclaiming that Gibbs was “hand-picked by Trump to run for Congress,” believing he’d be beatable in November. Trump once nominated Gibbs to head the Office of Personnel Management, but he wasn’t confirmed amid questions about past tweets, including one from 2016 in which Gibbs wrote, “Today’s Dem party: Islam, gender-bending, anti-police, ‘u racist!’” Gibbs says Democrats have posted far more incendiary things. “I don’t apologize. I never have and will not,” he said. Democrats hope that a question on Michigan’s ballot asking voters to put the right to an abortion in the state constitution energizes their base. “The issue of choice is front and center in a way that it wasn’t before,” Scholten said. “It’s changed a lot of minds.” Gibbs counters that his steadfast opposition to abortion is a winner. He’d only allow exceptions if a pregnant woman’s life is endangered. In instances of rape or incest, Gibbs said: “That baby, born in that case, is innocent. So I don’t see why an innocent person should have to perish.” Raised in the Pentecostal church, Gibbs spent seven years as a missionary in Japan. But he converted to Catholicism in 2021 and now tries to go to Mass multiple times per week. He has that in common with Biden, who is also a devout Catholic, though Gibbs isn’t seeking bipartisanship there. He retorted of the president’s frequent Mass attendance, “Yeah, I just wish he would accept the teachings.” “If I ever saw him at Mass, I’d have a nice, frank conversation,” Gibbs said. “Give him a copy of the Catechism of the Catholic Church: ‘You oughta learn this.’” ___ Associated Press writer Joey Cappelletti contributed to this report. Copyright 2022 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
To Hold House Democrats Eye GOP-Held Districts Won By Biden
The North Korean Crisis Around The Corner Stabroek News
The North Korean Crisis Around The Corner Stabroek News
The North Korean Crisis Around The Corner – Stabroek News https://digitalalaskanews.com/the-north-korean-crisis-around-the-corner-stabroek-news/ By Daniel Russel NEW YORK – A new geopolitical crisis is stirring against the backdrop of the war in Ukraine, tensions around Taiwan, and the sharpening US-China rivalry. North Korea, after a three-year pause in nuclear provocations, is gearing up for what intelligence agencies warn could be a seventh nuclear test – possibly before the US midterm elections on November 8. Five years ago, the world faced the prospect of “fire and fury” as North Korean dictator Kim Jong-un and then-US President Donald Trump traded threats of nuclear war. A phony peace followed, as Kim met with several world leaders to gain sanctions relief in exchange for vague promises to scale back parts of his nuclear programme. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
The North Korean Crisis Around The Corner Stabroek News
Erroneous Mailers And Political Tone Sticking Points In Secretary Of State Debate
Erroneous Mailers And Political Tone Sticking Points In Secretary Of State Debate
Erroneous Mailers And Political Tone Sticking Points In Secretary Of State Debate https://digitalalaskanews.com/erroneous-mailers-and-political-tone-sticking-points-in-secretary-of-state-debate/ The two women vying to oversee Colorado’s elections met for a spirited debate at the University of Denver’s Center on American Politics Tuesday evening.  Their exchanges highlighted philosophical differences over how political the job of secretary of state should be and how best to navigate the unprecedented attack on the country’s democratic processes, even while they agreed on fundamental aspects of the job. Democratic incumbent Jena Griswold is running for a second term against Republican Pam Anderson, a former Jefferson County clerk and the former head of the Colorado County Clerks Association. The Colorado Sun and CBS4 hosted the debate, the first televised meeting between the two candidates. In many ways, there’s little difference in how Griswold and Anderson view Colorado’s elections. They both support the all-mail ballot system and more recent innovations, like automatic voter registration and risk limiting audits. Both believe the 2020 presidential election was fair and accurate and say election deniers must be debunked. But the debate also revealed key differences between the candidates.  How political should this office be? When asked whether the state’s top election official should weigh in on political issues outside of the narrow tasks of the office, Anderson is inclined to say no. She said this is a professional office and she used her views on abortion — she said she supports abortion rights — as an example of something she wouldn’t talk about because it’s are not central to the secretary of state’s role. “Nor should we be using polarizing issues that are very likely to come before you as an initiative, because it questions whether or not you can be a fair referee, and even if the perception is that you are putting your thumb on the scale,” said Anderson. Hart Van Denburg/CPR News GOP Secretary of State candidate Pam Anderson at a Republican Party of Colorado campaign event Tuesday, Aug. 9, 2022, in Denver. But Griswold, who barred her staff from traveling to Alabama for work after that state passed a restrictive abortion law, disagrees with that approach. “When the fundamental freedom to choose who to marry, when to have a kid, how to start a family is under attack, I will stand up for people’s rights standing up for fundamental freedom,” she said. “Freedom is not partisan. It is the duty of every elected official.” Griswold also defended herself from criticism that her national media appearances have been too partisan in tone, and that she’s used fears of election deniers like Mesa county clerk Tina Peters to fundraise. “I communicate with people in all different ways,” said Griswold. “We often issue press releases, we tell people what’s happening and I’m so happy to always be able to talk about the Colorado election model because it works. I’m happy to be able to assure Coloradans that their vote is secure, that their access will remain intact and encourage the country to look at our Colorado election model.” Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite Secretary of State Jena Griswold speaks during the Womxn’s March Denver at Civic Center Park. Oct. 8, 2022. In another area of difference, Anderson said she’s open to considering making the secretary of state a nonpartisan office. Griswold didn’t directly answer that question. “Under the Colorado Constitution, the Colorado secretary of state is an elected office and accountable to the people. And I think it’s important that the secretary of state be accountable to the people,” Griswold said.  Anderson wouldn’t directly answer whether she would vote for Donald Trump in 2024 should he be the Republican nominee.  “I won’t tell you if I will support any candidate, and I’ve never endorsed a single candidate on a ballot that I’ve done. But I will tell you, I will stand up to anyone who uses mis- and disinformation, conspiracies or lies against our democratic process. Who would overturn (or) attempt to overturn the vote of the American people, whether it’s Donald Trump or anybody else.” Griswold on election mailer mistake: ‘it was a data glitch’ Colorado’s Secretary of State’s Office made national news in recent days when it was revealed the state erroneously sent 30,000 noncitizens postcards urging them to register to vote. (Safeguards in the registration system prevent people who are not U.S. citizens from becoming voters.) At the debate, Anderson said she understands that mistakes happen but said the situation points to a management problem and a “lack of leadership” from Griswold. “I think it’s because you’ve had three deputy secretaries, four chiefs of staff, at least three comms directors, and at least three legislative liaisons,” said Anderson. “And that turnover results in mistakes, repeated mistakes. What I am concerned about is your lack of accountability.” Griswold said she does hold herself accountable. She noted that her office revealed the error to CPR and has since sent out additional postcards to remind the noncitizens who mistakenly received the original notices of the state’s voter eligibility requirements. “It was a data glitch,” said Griwsold. “I believe this has happened in prior administrations, but now we’re in such a hot political atmosphere that data glitches can fuel major disinformation.” “If we were in a different political atmosphere, this probably wouldn’t get the coverage that it does. But to be very clear, the atmosphere we’re in right now is because the former president of the United States tried to steal the presidency and has continued to push out major disinformation. So I’ll always be transparent, we’ll always make sure that if we see a problem that we’re going to fix it.” Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Erroneous Mailers And Political Tone Sticking Points In Secretary Of State Debate
GOPs Jacobs Doubles Down On Controls For High-Powered Guns
GOPs Jacobs Doubles Down On Controls For High-Powered Guns
GOP’s Jacobs Doubles Down On Controls For High-Powered Guns https://digitalalaskanews.com/gops-jacobs-doubles-down-on-controls-for-high-powered-guns/ CLARENCE, N.Y. (AP) — After back-to-back mass shootings last spring, including one that killed 10 people at a supermarket not far from his suburban Buffalo home, Republican U.S. Rep. Chris Jacobs made a decision. If an assault weapons ban came to the House floor, he would support it, he told voters in his conservative congressional district. “I could have said nothing,” said Jacobs. Silence would have allowed him to cruise through the Republican primary. But after 31 deaths in 10 days, including the slaying of 19 children at a school in Uvalde, Texas, he felt he had an obligation to take a public stance. “Having two young children, it just really — you have a different perspective when, you know, thinking about going home to your kids when those 19 children perished,” Jacobs said. A week later came another decision. With Republicans withdrawing their support for him in droves, Jacobs announced he would not seek reelection. The expiration of his career is another sign of the polarization that is ever-growing in a Congress where, as Jacobs said, “If you stray from a party position, you are annihilated.” “There’s a lot of single-issue voters in the Republican Party on this issue, and on the other side, abortion,” he said in an interview with The Associated Press. “The idea of big tents for parties, I think, is very important. And right now it’s very strident both ways, and I just don’t think that’s good,” he said. “The polarized nature is why you see a lot of frustrated members of Congress and not enough is getting done.” But if there is regret for the decision that abruptly halted his political career, it doesn’t show. On his way out of Congress, the Republican serving his first full term has doubled down on his support for the regulation of certain high-powered firearms, proposing a licensing regimen for people who want to buy them. “Ninety-nine percent of people are very responsible gun owners. Unfortunately, saying it’s only 1% (who are not) gives no solace to someone who lost somebody senselessly in Buffalo or in one of these mass shootings,” Jacobs said. His Federal Assault Weapons Licensing Act would require people to take a safety course, pass an FBI background check and submit fingerprints before buying a “semi-automatic assault weapon.” There are exemptions, including for current owners, active duty military and law enforcement officers. The steps would be similar to those required for the thousands of pistol permits Jacobs issued during five years as Erie County clerk, a process he considers a reasonable balance between Second Amendment protections and responsible ownership. Many of Jacobs’ former supporters see his position as a betrayal. “It’s just not really tolerable,” said the state’s Conservative Party chair, Gerard Kassar. “In terms of single issues, the Second Amendment in parts of upstate New York … is a very, very significant single issue and represents more than just the issue of guns,” Kassar said. “It represents the issue of freedom, represents an issue of constitutionalists. It represents the position of libertarians.” Donald Trump Jr. tweeted that Jacobs had “caved to the gun-grabbers.” Jacobs’ reputation as a moderate has, until now, worked to his advantage. He was the first Republican to be elected Erie County Clerk in 40 years and gained acceptance on the school board in the heavily Democratic county seat of Buffalo. He was serving in the state Senate when, with the endorsement of President Donald Trump, he won a special election to Congress in June 2020. In Congress, Jacobs was endorsed by the National Rifle Association, voted against impeaching Trump and has strongly advocated for completion of the wall begun by the former president along the southern border. But his break with the party on guns began when an 18-year-old shooter killed 10 Black people and wounded three victims at a Tops Friendly Market near where his real estate development business is based. “It was profound to all of us,” said Jacobs, a member of a prominent Buffalo family. His uncle is Jeremy Jacobs, the billionaire owner of the Boston Bruins and chair of concessions giant Delaware North. Two weeks later, another 18-year-old with a similar weapon opened fire at the elementary school in Uvalde, killing 19 students and two teachers. This time, Jacobs’ thoughts turned to his own children, one 3 and the other less than a year old. When the House in July voted to ban certain semi-automatic guns for the first time since 2004, he was one of two Republicans to support the proposal, which had little chance in the U.S. Senate. If Jacobs had decided to run for reelection, he would have been campaigning in a newly drawn district that was even more conservative than the one he now represents in the suburbs and rural areas around Buffalo. The new territory would have included six new mostly rural counties along the Pennsylvania border in which he is largely unknown. “Clearly if I ran — and I thought I could have pulled it off — but I thought the NRA, it would have been outside money galore and I just didn’t think that was good for the district or the party,” Jacobs said, “and I just decided it was not right to do.” The state’s Republican committee chair, Nick Langworthy, ultimately won the primary in the new district and will be the prohibitive favorite against Democrat Max Della Pia in November. Langworthy stepped in after saying he was caught by surprise by Jacobs’ support for a ban on semi-automatic firearms. “I think everybody was caught very flat-footed by his adopting the Democrat position on gun control,” he said at the time. If elected, Langworthy “would not support an assault weapons ban or any other legislation that limits the constitutional rights of law-abiding Americans and has been proven ineffective,” his campaign spokesperson, Chris Grant, said in a statement Tuesday to the AP. Andrea Nikischer, who co-founded a progressive group in Jacobs’ current district, has long criticized the Republican over his politics and pro-Trump votes. Nevertheless, she was disappointed by his decision to leave office after shifting his stance on guns. “I’m sorry he didn’t run,” she said. “I think it would have been a very meaningful discourse, and he could have pushed his party in a more positive direction. The power of incumbency is strong, and I wish he had used that power to push this discussion in his own party further.” Jacobs has not yet found support for his assault weapons licensing proposal and doesn’t expect to see it emerge with the election just weeks away. But he said he’s hopeful more support might emerge after November. “I’m going to put this forward,” he said, “and I hope somebody grabs it.” Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
GOPs Jacobs Doubles Down On Controls For High-Powered Guns
Trump Lawyer Who Vouched For Documents Meets With FBI
Trump Lawyer Who Vouched For Documents Meets With FBI
Trump Lawyer Who Vouched For Documents Meets With FBI https://digitalalaskanews.com/trump-lawyer-who-vouched-for-documents-meets-with-fbi-2/ Wednesday, October 12, 2022 By ERIC TUCKER ~ Associated Press WASHINGTON — A lawyer for former president Donald Trump who signed a letter stating that a “diligent search” for classified records had been conducted and that all such documents had been given back to the government has spoken with the FBI, according to a person familiar with the matter. Subscribe below or log in with your password here. For more than 115 years, the Southeast Missourian has written the first draft of local history. We have aspired to enrich, entertain, educate and inform. Our core values have remained firm: truth, service, quality, integrity and community. Support our mission. Join today Note: Special discounts available to new subscribers only. Print subscriptions may include up to 13 Premium Issues per year, which include special magazines. For each Premium Issue, your account balance will be charged an additional fee in the billing period when the section publishes. This will result in shortening the length of your billing period. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Trump Lawyer Who Vouched For Documents Meets With FBI
DoJ Asks Supreme Court To Stay Out Of Trumps Mar-A-Lago Documents Case Follow Live
DoJ Asks Supreme Court To Stay Out Of Trumps Mar-A-Lago Documents Case Follow Live
DoJ Asks Supreme Court To Stay Out Of Trump’s Mar-A-Lago Documents Case – Follow Live https://digitalalaskanews.com/doj-asks-supreme-court-to-stay-out-of-trumps-mar-a-lago-documents-case-follow-live/ Tim Ryan calls JD Vance an ‘ass-kisser’ after Trump remarks The Department of Justice has asked the Supreme Court to refrain from intervening in an ongoing dispute between the government and former president Donald Trump over classified documents found during the 8 August search of his Mar-a-Lago property. In a brief filed with the high court on Tuesday, the US Solicitor General said Justice Clarence Thomas — the justice responsible for reviewing 11th Circuit Court of Appeals decisions — should keep in place a three-judge panel’s order allowing the government to block “highly sensitive” documents from a special master and use them to further the criminal probe into the twice-impeached ex-president. Meanwhile, a report in The Washington Post reveals that half of the money raised by Mr Trump’s Save America political action committees has been spent on his legal bills and two nonprofits employing former members of his administration rather than Republican congressional campaigns. The group has contributed about $8.4m so far directly to Republican campaigns and committees while devoting $7m to the former president’s lawyers and another $2m to the two nonprofits. Registration is a free and easy way to support our truly independent journalism By registering, you will also enjoy limited access to Premium articles, exclusive newsletters, commenting, and virtual events with our leading journalists Email Please enter a valid email Please enter a valid email Password Must be at least 6 characters, include an upper and lower case character and a number Must be at least 6 characters, include an upper and lower case character and a number Must be at least 6 characters, include an upper and lower case character and a number First name Please enter your first name Special characters aren’t allowed Please enter a name between 1 and 40 characters Last name Please enter your last name Special characters aren’t allowed Please enter a name between 1 and 40 characters You must be over 18 years old to register You must be over 18 years old to register Year of birth I would like to be emailed about offers, events and updates from The Independent.  Read our Privacy notice You can opt-out at any time by signing in to your account to manage your preferences. Each email has a link to unsubscribe. Already have an account? sign in Registration is a free and easy way to support our truly independent journalism By registering, you will also enjoy limited access to Premium articles, exclusive newsletters, commenting, and virtual events with our leading journalists Email Please enter a valid email Please enter a valid email Password Must be at least 6 characters, include an upper and lower case character and a number Must be at least 6 characters, include an upper and lower case character and a number Must be at least 6 characters, include an upper and lower case character and a number First name Please enter your first name Special characters aren’t allowed Please enter a name between 1 and 40 characters Last name Please enter your last name Special characters aren’t allowed Please enter a name between 1 and 40 characters You must be over 18 years old to register You must be over 18 years old to register Year of birth I would like to be emailed about offers, events and updates from The Independent.  Read our Privacy notice You can opt-out at any time by signing in to your account to manage your preferences. Each email has a link to unsubscribe. Already have an account? sign in Read More Here
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DoJ Asks Supreme Court To Stay Out Of Trumps Mar-A-Lago Documents Case Follow Live
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