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Supreme Court Justices Finally Get Together Behind Closed Doors With A Long To-Do List KVIA
Supreme Court Justices Finally Get Together Behind Closed Doors With A Long To-Do List KVIA
Supreme Court Justices Finally Get Together Behind Closed Doors With A Long To-Do List – KVIA https://digitalalaskanews.com/supreme-court-justices-finally-get-together-behind-closed-doors-with-a-long-to-do-list-kvia/ By Ariane de Vogue, CNN Supreme Court Reporter After a three-month respite from last term’s divisive decisions, Supreme Court justices will return to Washington on Wednesday for the first closed-door conference of the new term. The justices have a lot to discuss, from new cases to consider, to how to re-open the court amid Covid-19 and what, if anything, there is to say about the investigation into the leak of the draft opinion to reverse Roe v. Wade. The so-called “long conference” comes amidst renewed questions concerning the legitimacy of the court, and as the abortion decision has placed the justices at the epicenter of the upcoming midterms. Public approval of the court has plummeted. Retired Justice Stephen Breyer, on the sidelines now after almost 30 years on the bench, warned his colleagues in an exclusive talk with CNN’s Chris Wallace about decisions written “too rigidly” that could “bite you in the back.” It remains to be seen if the bad feelings of the previous term continue into the new session. Earlier this month, Chief Justice John Roberts acknowledged during a talk in Colorado that the justices don’t always see eye to eye at the closed-door conference meetings. But he called the discussions respectful. “There is no sappy façade of fake affection,” he said, just “direct explanations” of individual positions. Only justices are allowed in the room and as per tradition, if there is a knock at the door Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, as the court’s newest justice, will rise to address the inquiry. On Wednesday, the nine judges will go around the table and speak in order of seniority, starting with Roberts and ending with Jackson. Although she won’t get to speak until all her other colleagues have made their positions known, she will benefit from an unwritten rule: no one talks twice until everyone has spoken once. Before they even get to the reams of cases that have piled up during the summer recess, the court still has to make several decisions related to the public’s access to their deliberations. Justice Elena Kagan told an audience in New York on September 12 that those decisions will be made by the end of the month. She also said her colleagues planned to address the elephant in the room: the status of the investigation that was launched last term to identify the person who leaked a draft of the abortion decision that became public in May. At the very least, Kagan noted, even if a “perpetrator” hasn’t been found, the court is likely to take up new security procedures to ensure that such a leak never happens again. New rules could transform the flow of the decision-making process, changing the way the justices communicate internally about the cases. Roberts has also announced that after more than two years of Covid restrictions, members of the public will be allowed back into the courtroom, although he has yet to lay out any details. Before October, the justices will also likely discuss whether the court will continue to allow a live audio feed of oral arguments, a practice that began during the pandemic that enables the public to follow along in real time. Shaping the new term The bulk of the justices’ time Wednesday will be spent shaping the new term. There are several high-profile petitions pending, including a handful of challenges related to the long-term conservative effort to weaken so-called administrative state. Conservatives, including Justice Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh, believe that federal agencies have become too powerful and are comprised of unelected officials who are unaccountable to the public. Last term, the court moved to scale back the authority of the Environmental Protection Agency, triggering an angry dissent from Kagan. “The Court appoints itself — instead of Congress or the expert agency — the decision-maker on climate policy,” she wrote. “I cannot think of many things more frightening.” Two pending petitions target the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives decision to ban bump stocks — devices that essentially allow shooters to fire semiautomatic rifles continuously with one pull of the trigger. The attachments were banned during the Trump administration in the wake of a mass shooting in 2017. In a similar dispute, a veteran is challenging regulations put forward by the Department of Veterans Affairs related to certain disability benefits. Air Force veteran Thomas Buffington was diagnosed with a disability and became eligible to receive disability benefits in 2000. In 2003, he was recalled to active duty in the Air National Guard. Following the law, he discontinued receiving the benefits for that period of time so he wouldn’t be paid double. When he ended active duty service in 2005, Buffington waited a couple of years then asked for his retroactive disability benefits to be paid back for the periods of time he had not received active-duty pay. But the Department of Veterans Affairs said that it had enacted a regulation with the requirement that such a request has to be made within a year and that he had waited too long. Buffington says the actions are “arbitrary” and not grounded in the statutory text that governs disability payments. The justices are also scheduled to consider a case concerning the scope of a federal law that internet companies say protects them from lawsuits stemming from third-party content posted on their sites. The law at issue — section 230 of the Communications Decency Act — has attracted the attention of Justice Clarence Thomas in the past. He has called into question lower court decisions that have construed the law to confer sweeping immunity to some of the biggest tech companies in the world including Google, Facebook and Twitter. Others have questioned whether the law only protects the companies from traditional decisions such as deciding when to publish or alter content, but it does not cover activities that promote or recommend content. Although there are no cases directly related to abortion on the conference list, South Carolina is seeking to exclude a Planned Parenthood affiliate from Medicaid funding for non-abortion health services because the organization also offers abortion. A lower court ruled in favor of Planned Parenthood. “This case is not about abortion,” Judge J. Harvie Wilkinson wrote for a panel of judges on the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit. “It is about Congress’s desire that Medicaid recipients have their choice of qualified Medicaid providers.” The court held that to allow a state to disqualify Planned Parenthood would “nullify Congress’ manifest intent to provide our less fortunate citizens the opportunity to select a medical provider of their choice.” And while the midterms will play out this fall, the justices have already decided to take up a case out of North Carolina concerning an obscure legal doctrine that could change the way elections are decided going forward. Now challengers making similar claims about Pennsylvania maps want the justices to consider the same issue as it applies to their case. The justices could decide to consolidate the two cases or put the latest petition on hold for now. And while the court is lifting Covid restrictions and opening its doors, lawyers for 10 states are returning to the justices in an effort to lift a vaccine mandate for workers in most federally funded healthcare facilities that receive Medicare or Medicaid funds. In January, the court allowed the mandates to remain in effect pending legal challenges over the dissent of conservative Justices Samuel Alito, Amy Coney Barrett, Thomas and Gorsuch. The-CNN-Wire & © 2022 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Supreme Court Justices Finally Get Together Behind Closed Doors With A Long To-Do List KVIA
CT Insider-WFSB Poll: Blumenthal Has Double-Digit Lead Over Trump-Endorsed Leora Levy In Senate Race
CT Insider-WFSB Poll: Blumenthal Has Double-Digit Lead Over Trump-Endorsed Leora Levy In Senate Race
CT Insider-WFSB Poll: Blumenthal Has Double-Digit Lead Over Trump-Endorsed Leora Levy In Senate Race https://digitalalaskanews.com/ct-insider-wfsb-poll-blumenthal-has-double-digit-lead-over-trump-endorsed-leora-levy-in-senate-race/ Sep. 28, 2022 This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate 1of6 Second-term U.S. Sen. Richard Blumenthal has a 53 to 40-point lead over Republican challenger Leora Levy, according to a new CT Insider/Channel 3 Eyewitness News/Western New England University Poll. Lisa Backus / Hearst Connecticut MediaShow MoreShow Less 2of6 Republican candidate for U.S. Senate Leora Levy is 13 points behind U.S. Sen. Richard Blumenthal, according to a new survey of more than 750 state residents. Annelise Hanshaw / Hearst Connecticut MediaShow MoreShow Less 3of6 4of6 Sacred Heart University Professor Gary Rose, center, during a 2018 debate for governor. Brian A. Pounds / Hearst Connecticut MediaShow MoreShow Less 5of6 Gayle Alberda, associate professor of politics in the Department of Arts and Sciences at Fairfield University. Fairfield University / ContributedShow MoreShow Less 6of6 Second-term U.S. Sen. Richard Blumenthal, riding two-to-one support among women and college graduates, has a 53-to-40 percent lead over Republican challenger Leora Levy with six weeks to go before Election Day. A new CT Insider/Channel 3 Eyewitness News/Western New England University poll of more than 750 people indicates that Levy has an under-water favorability rating of 18 percent. However,  the Trump-endorsed Levy has a narrow 47-to-44 percent edge over Blumenthal in support among male voters; 49 to 43 percent among voters with a high school diploma or less; and a 50 percent to 43 percent edge among 55 to 64-year-olds. Blumenthal, a Democrat who is the state’s former longtime attorney general, dominates in almost every other category in the statewide phone and online survey that occurred between Sept. 15 and 21. He has a 62 to 32-point lead among women and an identical 62 to 32 percent edge among those with college degrees. Blumenthal is ahead by 20 points, 55 to 35 percent, among 18 to 39-year-olds; a 56 to 40 percent lead among 40 to 54-year-olds and a 57 to 36-point margin among those 65 and older. Blumenthal, a sharp critic of Donald Trump, has a neutral 46-percent favorability rating among Connecticut voters, with an unfavorability rating of 42 percent. The Western New England University Polling Institute asked respondents their voting preferences “if the election were held today.” “Senator Blumenthal is working to be Connecticut’s choice for the Senate while his opponent is Donald Trump’s choice,” campaign spokesman Ty McEachern said. “As always, he’s focused on his job, delivering results for the people of Connecticut. He will continue to work like he’s 10 points behind.” Levy campaign spokesman Tim Saler disputed the findings of the survey. “Despite these errors, the facts of this race are clear: Dishonest Dick is vulnerable, even after spending more than $3 million on advertising and having his friend Chuck Schumer’s shady dark money super PAC come in with six figures worth of attack ads against Leora Levy,” Saler said in a statement. “Once voters learn about his support for the open borders that flood our communities with fentanyl, how he stole valor from our veterans, his soft-on-crime record supporting the defunding of our police, and his vote to send our hard-earned tax dollars to build luxury resorts and hotels in other states, Dick will be in even deeper trouble.” Among Republicans, Levy gets a 46-percent favorable rating, with 30 percent of GOP voters say they haven’t heard enough about her, and 12 percent of GOP members said they had no opinion on her. Veteran state political scientist Gary L. Rose, chairman of the Department of Government at Sacred Heart University, said that if Levy wants to make it closer on Nov. 8, her campaign had better change tactics soon. “She’s become a phantom candidate,” Rose said in a Tuesday interview. “She has clearly receded from the campaign. Blumenthal’s approval ratings are not great but they are not awful, and you would think that she would use that, at this point. I have never seen anything like this.” Rose speculated that Levy might have a shortage of money. “She was visible on TV and active when she was competing in the primary, but after she won, she disappeared,” Rose said. “To me this is unprecedented that a candidate would just vanish like this after staging an upset against (former state House Minority Leader Themis) Klarides. I know she’s low on cash. Maybe she’s marshaling all of her resources for the last stretch of the campaign. I have a feeling it’s a resource issue.” Rose acknowledged that it was Trump’s endorsement in the days before the campaign that resulted in the primary win. “It makes you wonder what the people who voted for her are thinking right now,” Rose said. “To challenge Blumenthal, you’ve got to really step up your campaign. This is without a doubt the most poorly run Senate campaign I have ever seen.” “I haven’t seen any pressing-of-the-flesh type of events that Leora Levy has been involved in,” said Gayle Alberda, a professor of political science at Fairfield University, who stressed that Blumenthal has been a formidable candidate for decades. “It’s kind of Blumenthal’s to lose. I don’t see the race as super-competitive.” Less money in a campaign means fewer campaign workers knocking on doors, as well as phone-banking  and advertising. She noted that with 36 percent of voters not knowing enough about her to establish a favorable rating, plus 21 percent with no opinion, is bad news. “It’s not a good place to be in when you are in the last few weeks of an election especially against an incumbent,” Alberda said, adding that Levy might have failed to do the traditional post-primary pivot from attracting the party base, to moving toward the middle occupied by most voters. “She doesn’t have a lot of name recognition, which means it’s a struggle beyond her core base.” “As the campaign heads into the final six weeks, Leora Levy’s top priority has to be building her profile among voters,” added Tim Vercellotti, professor of political science and director of the Polling Institute at Western New England University. “With the electorate almost evenly divided over Blumenthal’s favorability, Levy could gain some ground if she becomes better known.” Blumenthal’s edge is slightly less than a recent Quinnipiac University Poll where Blumenthal led Levy 57 – 40 percent, but identical to an Emerson College Poll from mid-month, when Blumenthal had a 13-point lead. “It’s clear they are making this seat a target,” Blumenthal said in a fundraising email on Monday night, noting that the change of one Senate seat to Republican would lose the Democrats’ their two-year-old majority. “It’s clear that in the final, most crucial weeks of the election, we must be in a position of strength to fight back.” “Three skewed public polls in a row now all show the same thing, that Dishonest Dick Blumenthal is badly upside-down among independents, even in a survey that has comically over-represented college-educated voters,” said Saler from the Levy campaign. “Perhaps from the ivory tower it may look like 62 percent of Connecticut voters have a college degree, but in fact that number is much, much lower. This dramatically affects the results of the survey, as does the balance of partisanship. Unaffiliated voters, who are unfavorable to Dishonest Dick by ten points, are also under-represented in this survey, even compared to the blue wave midterm in 2018.” The CT Insider/Channel 3 Eyewitness News/Western New England University poll carries a margin of error of 3.3 percentage points based on the sample size. In addition, Vercellotti added 1.5 percentage points of error margin to account for sampling error under industry transparency principles, for a total of 4.8 percentage points – rounded up to a margin of error of plus or minus 5 points. Smaller sub-samples such as men or women, Democrats or Republicans, carry a larger margin of error.   The voter reaction to Blumenthal in the new poll is similar to Gov. Ned Lamont, whom the poll found to have a 55 percent to 40 percent lead over GOP challenger Bob Stefanowski.  Tune in to WFSB-Channel 3 for more coverage of the debate including Eyewitness News chief political reporter Susan Raff at 6 p.m. and Dan Haar of Hearst CT Insider at 5:30 p.m. kdixon@ctpost.com   Twitter: @KenDixonCT Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
CT Insider-WFSB Poll: Blumenthal Has Double-Digit Lead Over Trump-Endorsed Leora Levy In Senate Race
Gen X Is Late To The Leadership Table In US Politics Prompting The Question: Will It Ever Produce A President?
Gen X Is Late To The Leadership Table In US Politics Prompting The Question: Will It Ever Produce A President?
Gen X Is Late To The Leadership Table In US Politics, Prompting The Question: Will It Ever Produce A President? https://digitalalaskanews.com/gen-x-is-late-to-the-leadership-table-in-us-politics-prompting-the-question-will-it-ever-produce-a-president/ By historical standards, Gen X should be in charge of the US by now.  Boomers (and the Silent Generation) still hold prime positions of power, including the presidency.  Loading Something is loading. Gen X has yet to secure a majority of seats in Congress and the Supreme Court. Read more from Insider’s “Red, White, and Gray” series. Generation X’s tardiness on the biggest of political stages explains a good deal about why the United States is mired in gerontocracy. By historical standards, today’s middle-agers should be right there, right now, in the most important positions of power — like the presidency. But the best they have to show so far are a handful of consolation prizes: Paul Ryan’s tumultuous three-year run as House speaker, four seats on a divisive US Supreme Court, and a spirited debate over whether Barack Obama even is a Gen Xer (he’s not, but we’ll get to that later). A big part of Gen X’s leadership impediment: finding the winning message in a country that for most of the past 30 years has been led by baby boomers. President Joe Biden represents an even earlier cohort — he’s a member of the Silent Generation, born less than a year after the country he now leads entered World War II under President Franklin D. Roosevelt. “I thought that the country wanted, you know, a generational candidate,” Rep. Eric Swalwell, the 41-year old California Democrat who barely made it onto the 2020 presidential-primary debate stage because of low polling numbers, told me earlier this summer. “But what I found when I actually talked to people in Iowa, and New Hampshire, and South Carolina, was that the voters, especially with Trump as president, were so risk-averse to a younger candidate that they saw in Biden a seasoned hand, someone who kind of just, could like, restore sanity in governing,” Swalwell said. Moving aside any blame toward Donald Trump and Biden, Gen Xers are making some inroads.  Should things break their way in November’s 2022 midterms, the group born between the start of 1965 and the end of 1980 could finally make up the majority of members in the US House. It’s taken way longer than many thought, with nearly a decade of prognostications that this important torch-passing moment in history was just about to happen with each coming election cycle. If Republicans score a majority in 2023, Rep. Kevin McCarthy is also next in line to be the country’s second Gen X speaker following Ryan’s brief tenure that got consumed in the chaos of the Trump presidency. And should Biden and Trump opt against running again in 2024, the presidential field for both parties is expected to be packed with Gen X governors and members of Congress. They won’t be shoo-ins. But Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida, as just one example, would be the fourth-youngest president in US history, at age 46, behind Bill Clinton, John F. Kennedy, and Theodore Roosevelt, were he to run for and win the White House. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, shown here in April 2021 at a press conference for a UFC event in Jacksonville, Florida, would be 46 years old upon his inauguration should he run and win the White House in 2024. Josh Hedges/Zuffa LLC As they make their calculations about seeking the most powerful job on the planet, some Gen Xers are eager to shed their reputation as the “Slacker Generation.” They say the US needs a new approach to politics and policy. “Look, we’ve seen a whole series of presidential leaders who were baby boomers, and they had a particular set of policies and a style of governing,” said Sen. Ted Cruz, the 51-year old Texas Republican, during a chat this summer while walking through the US Capitol. Echoing a line I heard often from Republicans about the septuagenarian president who was in office when many Gen Xers came of age, Cruz continued, “I do think the country would benefit from leadership that embodies what I described as the children of Reagan, that embodies a commitment to being happy warriors and to appealing to our better angels.” But the Gen Xers also know they are late. The oldest members of their group could have first been running for president back in 2000, when the dot-com bubble had yet to burst and September 11 was just a date on the calendar. The boomers George W. Bush and Al Gore had something to say about that, and there’s hardly been much of a serious peep from Gen X in the five ensuing presidential races. The nation isn’t in the final two years of the Martin O’Malley administration. President Beto O’Rourke isn’t about to launch his White House reelection campaign. But “it’s inevitable that it’s going to happen,” Sen. Cory Booker, a 53-year old who made his own ill-fated 2020 presidential bid, told me in a conversation about when he thought a fellow Gen Xer might finally make it to the White House. “Unless, of course,” the New Jersey Democrat added, with a reference to the 40-year-old transportation secretary, Pete Buttigieg, “we get a millennial president.” Democratic Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey ran for president in 2020. He told Insider it’s “inevitable” a fellow Gen Xer like him will make it to the White House, but added a millennial could make it their first. Pat Greenhouse/The Boston Globe via Getty Images Biden made generational history — very late Insider’s “Red, White, and Gray” series explores the costs, benefits, and dangers of life in a democracy helmed by those of advanced age, where issues of profound importance to the nation’s youth and future — technology, civil rights, energy, the environment — are largely in the hands of those whose primes have passed. Gen Xers — now roughly 41 to 57 years old — are ripe to be president considering the ages of those who have held the job. Of the 45 people who have served as US president, almost three in four fit smack in that age range upon taking office, including George Washington (57), Abraham Lincoln (52), and John F. Kennedy (43).  Of course, no generation can automatically stake a claim to the presidency. But the presidential historian Douglas Brinkley argues it is also uncommon and unhealthy for the country’s growth if one age group does get skipped. “Each generation deserves to have a president from their ranks,” he said. “It shows the maturation of life in America. There’s a semblance of one generation passing it on to the next. That’s the seamless quality of the United States.” A missing generation in the White House is nearly what happened before Biden finally won in 2020 — after unsuccessful bids in 1988 and 2008. By the time he did make it, at age 78, Biden was the oldest president in US history to be sworn into office and the first member of the Silent Generation to get there. His senior citizenry is apparent not just in the ever-present question of whether he’ll run for a second term, but also in the number of funerals he’s attended as president where he grieves and often eulogizes friends and political contemporaries who helped shape his career. Then-President Barack Obama in May 2009 wearing his famous dad jeans while on the sidelines at his daughter Sasha’s soccer game. Mandel Ngan/AFP Obama, ‘Generation Jones’ One important thing we are going to dispense with: Obama doesn’t really count as a Gen Xer. We know this is subject to intense debate. And yes, his personal background has some common characteristics with Generation X, like being the mixed-race son of divorced parents who embraced technology to win the presidency. He was also born in 1961, the same year as Douglas Coupland, the author of the book responsible for coining the phrase “Generation X.” But have we all seen the future president in those dad jeans? The social commentator Jonathan Pontell said Obama told him back in 2007 that he identified with what’s known as “Generation Jones,” a micro generation consisting of people born between 1954 and 1965 who don’t quite fit as the archetypal boomer or Gen Xer. Think of them as the godparents of the “Xennials” — those born in the late 1970s or early 1980s who aren’t fully Gen X or millennial. “I remember reading his original autobiography, ‘Dreams from My Father,’ and thinking this guy is Generation Jones through and through,” Pontell, who invented the term, told me in recounting his brief conversation with Obama during a Los Angeles fundraiser emceed by Cedric the Entertainer. Please just don’t call me Gen X Generational boundaries are also anything but an exact science or official. There’s plenty of debate and competing visions about when one cohort ends and another begins. Swalwell, for instance, wants nothing to do with Gen Xers even though he was born on November 16, 1980 — six weeks away from what many demographic experts say is the dawn of millennials. “I’ll humor you with your questions. I want it reflected in the story that I don’t accept your premise,” he told me in an interview in which he described himself as “a pioneer of the millennials.” No matter whether you deny the 61-year-old Obama is a boomer, Gen X is starting to get up there in age. Sen. Tim Scott, as just one example, is the Senate’s oldest Gen Xer and someone who’s been mentioned as a possible 2024 White House candidate. He’d be the country’s 13th-oldest president if he were to win the next election and get sworn in — at age 59 — in January 2025. South Carolina GOP Sen. Tim Scott, shown here in February 2020 with then-President Donald Trump, is the oldest member of Gen X in the Senate. He’s been mentioned as a possible future White House candidate. Saul Loeb/ AFP via Getty Images Whether Scott or any other Gen Xer gets to make a serious run in 2024 will depend largely on the decisions of a late-vintage Silent and early-blooming boomer. Both Biden and Tru...
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Gen X Is Late To The Leadership Table In US Politics Prompting The Question: Will It Ever Produce A President?
Letter To The Editor: Democrats Behind Lies
Letter To The Editor: Democrats Behind Lies
Letter To The Editor: Democrats Behind Lies https://digitalalaskanews.com/letter-to-the-editor-democrats-behind-lies/ I am writing this letter to all of you Trump haters. I understand it goes so deep you have TDS (Trump Derangement Syndrome). TDS causes you to not listen to what you know is true. You watch one news channel and believe it, because you hate Trump. You don’t want to hear anything positive, or research the truth, you just accept it. The Democrats have brainwashed you that they are all good and righteous. I am here to help with your research. It is a fact that the Democratic Party is behind all the lies you believe about Trump. Remember Ross Perot, a Republican running for president, he was good, but the only way the Dems could make him quit is by threatening his family, which they did. It worked; he quit. Herman Cain, a Republican businessman, the Dems ran him out with lies about his business. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Letter To The Editor: Democrats Behind Lies
Opinion: Political Tolerance Leads To More Productive Conversation
Opinion: Political Tolerance Leads To More Productive Conversation
Opinion: Political Tolerance Leads To More Productive Conversation https://digitalalaskanews.com/opinion-political-tolerance-leads-to-more-productive-conversation/ Our society is notoriously a no nuance zone and political association is certainly no exception to this. There’s an ongoing battle between red and blue. It is imperative that we do our part as a generation to realize that there is purple and find solutions to whatever issues are thrown at us.  I can’t help but think of the story of the founding fathers original fear of political parties. According to  history.com, after seeing how the then called factions “… ripped England apart in the bloody civil wars of the 17th century,” the founding fathers desperately wanted to avoid any possible division to form the most democratic government possible.   In this time of high tension between political parties, we as a country have accomplished the first step towards a more democratic government like the one our founding fathers hoped for, by increasing our political participation. It seems as though everyone has some sort of opinion on current issues. You can see it in the hallways when students have a pro-choice pin on their backpack or a Daily Wire sticker on their water bottle.  Distracted by how people choose to label themselves, the common ground is often ignored. When the parties do work together, real and significant progress can be made. A recent example of a bipartisan bill signed into law was on June 25, the “Keep Kids Fed Act of 2022,” which extends flexibility for nutrition programs for school meals and childcare centers.   Even though there are commonalities, the competition between conservatives and liberals is comparable to America in the 1790s, when according to  history.com,, Democratic-Republicans and Federalists were “bitterly attacking each other” in newspapers about administrative policies, similar to the smear campaigns that dominate our screens in the modern era. Br According to thehill.com, in regard to President Donald Trump’s election campaign, “Between social media, doctored videos and his rallies this will be a tear down campaign like nobody has ever seen.” Both today and in the 1790s the disagreements within politics are black and white. One party is wrong, one is right and the overlap is ignored. The difference now is that politicians are able to spread abhorrent information quickly due to social media. It is crucial to recognize the importance of sharing your opinion in a beneficial way. This means using logic and research to inform others not only what your opinion is, but how you came to that conclusion. Informing people is not always going to convince them to change their opinions. However, it  gives them another perspective to weigh against their own.  In those controversial conversations it is too common to see someone’s ideas being shut down because it does not align with the popular opinion. It leaves people intimidated to share their perspective out of fear of being shut down.  In order to prevent people from feeling unheard and unrepresented, political tolerance needs to be practiced. Contrary to popular belief, political tolerance is not limited to not calling the other person names. It also includes simply listening. Because at the end of the day, no matter who you are or what political party you are associated with, your ideas and thoughts are not more important than your peers. For this reason it is important to go into every conversation with an open mind and a willingness to listen.  Ultimately, a better world is a bipartisan goal. The best thing about that is, a better world means something different to every person. Therefore, political tolerance allows us to create and vote on the best solution for our nation, based on a diversity of ideologies from good conversation.  (Visited 4 times, 4 visits today) About the Contributors Luci Guess, JagWire reporter/photographer This is sophomore Luci Guess’s first year on the JagWire staff. As she ventures into journalism, she is undertaking the role of a reporter for the newspaper. In addition to journalism, Luci is involved with Policy Debate, Forensics, DECA and is the co-secretary for Youth for Refugees. Outside of school, Luci enjoys learning about history, doing puzzles and volunteering at her church. Grace Brookshire, Social media editor This is Grace Brookshire’s second year on the JagWire. This year she has taken on being an assistant editor and one of the two Social Media Editors for the Mill Valley Newspaper. At Mill Valley she participates in JagPride, Blue Crew, and French NHS. When Grace is not working on the Newspaper she is playing soccer, golfing, and Coaching Gymnastics at Pinnacle Gymnastics, babysitting, and volunteering. She loves to be with friends and family, Snowboard,… Julia Shumaker, JagWire design editor This is junior Julia Shumaker’s second year on the JagWire staff and is excited to take on the role of design editor for the newspaper this year. Outside of Journalism, she is a part of NHS and English NHS. Julia spends her free time drawing, painting and reading, all while usually listening to loud music, as well as watching shows on Netflix. She also volunteers at HOBY Kansas, part of an international non-profit. She is looking forward to another… Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Opinion: Political Tolerance Leads To More Productive Conversation
Biden Keeps US Target For Refugee Admissions At 125000
Biden Keeps US Target For Refugee Admissions At 125000
Biden Keeps US Target For Refugee Admissions At 125,000 https://digitalalaskanews.com/biden-keeps-us-target-for-refugee-admissions-at-125000/ Biden keeps US target for refugee admissions at 125,000 Posted: September 28, 2022 – 3:02am SAN DIEGO (AP) — President Joe Biden on Tuesday kept the nation’s cap on refugee admissions at 125,000 for the 2023 budget year, despite pressure from advocates to raise it even higher to meet the need after falling far short of that target this year. Refugees advocates have been pushing the Biden administration to do more to restore the U.S. Refugee Admissions Program. The more than four-decade-old program suffered deep cuts under the Trump administration, which slashed admissions to a record low of 15,000. Biden raised the cap to four times that amount, but so far fewer than 20,000 refugees have been admitted this budget year, which ends Sept. 30. That number excludes the roughly 180,000 Ukrainians and Afghans who came to the United States via a legal process called humanitarian parole that got them into the country more quickly than the traditional refugee program but allows for stays of only up to two years. Refugees are provided a path to permanent residency. Their admissions are determined by the president each year, and federal funding for resettlement agencies is based on the number of people they resettle in a given year. Africa gets most slots The 125,000 target “is justified by humanitarian concerns or is otherwise in the national interest,” Biden stated in his presidential determination. Historically, the average has been 95,000 under both Republican and Democratic administrations. Biden earmarked 5,000 more slots for people from Europe and Central Asia for the 2023 budget year, making room to accommodate those fleeing the war in Ukraine. The largest number of slots — 40,000 — was set aside for refugees from Africa, followed by 35,000 from South Asia and 15,000 each from East Asia, Europe and Latin America. Biden has struggled to restore the U.S. Refugee Program despite raising the numbers and removing bureaucratic barriers put in place by his predecessor, which slowed the process and led to a massive backlog. UN: 100 million displaced Krish O’Mara Vignarajah, head of Lutheran Immigration and Refugee Service, said the Biden administration must act now to improve the refugee program with the United Nations reporting a record 100 million people being displaced from their homes. “It must ramp up and streamline overseas processing of refugee applications if this lifesaving program is to remain relevant amid an unprecedented global displacement crisis,” she said in a statement. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said in a statement that “this ambitious target demonstrates that the United States is committed to rebuilding and strengthening the U.S. Refugee Admissions Program” through various means. He pointed to plans for a pilot program that is expected to get underway by the end of the year that will allow regular Americans to sign up to resettle refugees in their communities, much like U.S. citizens did in stepping up to help Afghans and Ukrainians over the past year. Traditionally refugees are placed in communities by nine refugee resettlement agencies. “Our refugee admissions program embodies the best of American values and the will to help those in need, and it will continue to provide access to resettlement as a lifesaving, durable solution,” Blinken said. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Biden Keeps US Target For Refugee Admissions At 125000
Cuba Suffers Total Electrical Outage As Hurricane Ian Roars Through
Cuba Suffers Total Electrical Outage As Hurricane Ian Roars Through
Cuba Suffers Total Electrical Outage As Hurricane Ian Roars Through https://digitalalaskanews.com/cuba-suffers-total-electrical-outage-as-hurricane-ian-roars-through/ Government crews in Cuba were working to restore electricity Tuesday night after Hurricane Ian knocked out power to the entire island, authorities said. At least two people died in the cyclone, which crossed western Cuba as a Category 3 hurricane Tuesday en route to Florida, authorities said. Buildings and infrastructure in the western province of Pinar del Rio, where Ian made landfall early in the day, suffered major damage. The U.S. National Hurricane Center said the region experienced “significant wind and storm surge impacts,” with top sustained winds of 125 mph. Authorities initially reported 1 million people without power. Later Tuesday, they said the entire island of 11 million was out. “The SEN has an exceptional condition, 0 electricity generation (the country without electrical service), associated with the complex weather system,” the Ministry of Energy and Mines tweeted at 8:42 p.m., using the Spanish acronym for the national power grid. The Electrical Union of Cuba said crews would work through the night to restore power. Failures appeared in the western, central and eastern links. “It’s a process that is going to take a while,” union chief Lázaro Guerra Hernández told state television. Yamilé Ramos Cordero, president of the Provincial Defense Council of Pinar del Río, confirmed at least two deaths from collapsing buildings. A woman in the Pinar del Río municipality of San Luis was killed when a wall fell in her home, he said. A man in a different municipality died when a roof collapsed. Cuban President Miguel Díaz Canel visited Pinar del Río after the storm passed. “The damages are great, although they have not yet been accounted,” he tweeted. “Aid is already pouring in from all over the country.” Estuvimos en #PinarDelRío. Los daños son grandes, aunque aún no se han podido contabilizar. Ya está saliendo ayuda de todo el país. Confiamos en los pinareños, pueblo noble, trabajador y con mucha experiencia en estas situaciones. Tengan la certeza de que nos vamos a recuperar. pic.twitter.com/zg5VNKA9sN — Miguel Díaz-Canel Bermúdez (@DiazCanelB) September 27, 2022 Eleazar Moreno Ricardo, the electrical union’s network director, told the Communist Party newspaper Granma that brigades from throughout the island began moving to the western provinces to begin restoring power as soon as the weather permitted. “The work of evaluating the damage has already begun, and in some areas of the Isla de la Juventud, the first territory to feel the force of the hurricane, it has already been possible to reestablish electrical service,” Granma reported shortly after 9 p.m. Isla de la Juventud — the Island of Youth — lies some 30 miles off the Cuban mainland. “The most complex situation is in Pinar del Río, where all transmission networks are out of service, and there is much damage to transformers and secondary networks,” Granma reported. CNN Havana bureau chief Patrick Oppmann tweeted a video of himself driving down the Malecón, Havana’s storied waterfront esplanade, now flooded. Some lights were visible in the distance. Before Ian made landfall, officials in Pinar del Rio set up 55 shelters, evacuated 50,000 people, and took steps to protect crops in the nation’s main tobacco-growing region. Cuba has long experience preparing for hurricanes, but it’s also suffering food and electricity shortages. The economy has been hobbled in part by the lingering effects of the coronavirus pandemic and in part by new U.S. sanctions imposed by the Trump administration and partially maintained by the Biden administration. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Cuba Suffers Total Electrical Outage As Hurricane Ian Roars Through
The U.S. And Europe Are Running Out Of Weapons To Send To Ukraine
The U.S. And Europe Are Running Out Of Weapons To Send To Ukraine
The U.S. And Europe Are Running Out Of Weapons To Send To Ukraine https://digitalalaskanews.com/the-u-s-and-europe-are-running-out-of-weapons-to-send-to-ukraine/ Ukrainian servicemen fire an M777 howitzer, Kharkiv Region, northeastern Ukraine. This photo cannot be distributed in the Russian Federation. Vyacheslav Madiyevskyy | Future Publishing | Getty Images In the U.S. weapons industry, the normal production level for artillery rounds for the 155 millimeter howitzer — a long-range heavy artillery weapon currently used on the battlefields of Ukraine — is about 30,000 rounds per year in peacetime. The Ukrainian soldiers fighting invading Russian forces go through that amount in roughly two weeks. That’s according to Dave Des Roches, an associate professor and senior military fellow at the U.S. National Defense University. And he’s worried.  “I’m greatly concerned. Unless we have new production, which takes months to ramp up, we’re not going to have the ability to supply the Ukrainians,” Des Roches told CNBC.  Europe is running low too. “The military stocks of most [European NATO] member states have been, I wouldn’t say exhausted, but depleted in a high proportion, because we have been providing a lot of capacity to the Ukrainians,” Josep Borrell, the EU’s high representative for foreign affairs and security policy, said earlier this month.  NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg held a special meeting of the alliance’s arms directors on Tuesday to discuss ways to refill member nations’ weapons stockpiles. Military analysts point to a root issue: Western nations have been producing arms at much smaller volumes during peacetime, with governments opting to slim down very expensive manufacturing and only producing weapons as needed. Some of the weapons that are running low are no longer being produced, and highly-skilled labor and experience are required for their production — things that have been in short supply across the U.S. manufacturing sector for years.    A US M142 High Mobility Artillery Rocket System (HIMARS) firing salvoes during a military exercise on June 30, 2022. The U.S. Department of Defense has announced that the U.S. will be sending Ukraine another $270 million in security assistance, a package which will include high mobility artillery rocket systems and a significant number of tactical drones. Fadel Senna | Afp | Getty Images Indeed, Stoltenberg said during last week’s U.N. General Assembly that NATO members need to re-invest in their industrial bases in the arms sector.  “We are now working with industry to increase production of weapons and ammunition,” Stoltenberg told the New York Times, adding that countries needed to encourage arms makers to expand their capacity longer term by putting in more weapons orders.  But ramping up defense production is no quick or easy feat.  Is the U.S.’s ability to defend itself at risk?  The short answer: no.  The U.S. has been by far the largest supplier of military aid to Ukraine in its war with Russia, providing $15.2 billion in weapons packages to date since Moscow invaded its neighbor in late February. Several of the American-made weapons have been game changers for the Ukrainians; particularly the 155 mm howitzers and long-range heavy artillery like the Lockheed Martin-made HIMARS. And the Biden administration has said it will support its ally Ukraine for “as long as it takes” to defeat Russia.  That means a whole lot more weapons.  The U.S. has essentially run out of the 155 mm howitzers to give to Ukraine; to send any more, it would have to dip into its own stocks reserved for U.S. military units that use them for training and readiness. But that’s a no-go for the Pentagon, military analysts say, meaning the supplies reserved for U.S. operations are highly unlikely to be affected. We need to put our defense industrial base on a wartime footing. And I don’t see any indication that we have. Dave Des Roches Senior military fellow, U.S. National Defense University “There are a number of systems where I think the Department of Defense has reached the levels where it’s not willing to provide more of that particular system to Ukraine,” said Mark Cancian, a former U.S. Marine Corps Colonel and a senior advisor at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.   That’s because “the United States needs to maintain stockpiles to support war plans,” Cancian said. “For some munitions, the driving war plan would be a conflict with China over Taiwan or in the South China Sea; for others, particularly ground systems, the driving war plan would be North Korea or Europe.”  Javelins, HIMARs and howitzers What this means for Ukrainian forces is that some of their most crucial battlefield equipment – like the 155 mm howitzer – is having to be replaced with older and less optimum weaponry like the 105 mm howitzer, which has a smaller payload and a shorter range.  “And that’s a problem for the Ukrainians,” Des Roches says, because “range is critical in this war. This is an artillery war.” A boy walks past a graffiti on a wall depicting a Ukrainian serviceman making a shot with a US-made Javelin portable anti-tank missile system, in Kyiv, on July 29, 2022. Sergei Supinsky | AFP | Getty Images Other weapons Ukraine relies on that are now classified as “limited” in the U.S. inventory include HIMARS launchers, Javelin missiles, Stinger missiles, the M777 Howitzer and 155 mm ammunition.  The Javelin, produced by Raytheon and Lockheed Martin, has gained an iconic role in Ukraine — the shoulder-fired, precision-guided anti-tank missile has been indispensable in combating Russian tanks. But production in the U.S. is low at a rate of around 800 per year, and Washington has now sent some 8,500 to Ukraine, according to the CSIS — more than a decades’ worth of production.   Ukrainian soldiers take pictures of a mural titled ‘Saint Javelin’ dedicated to the British portable surface-to-air missile has been unveiled on the side of a Kyiv apartment block on May 25, 2022 in Kyiv, Ukraine. The artwork by illustrator and artist Chris Shaw is in reference to the Javelin missile donated to Ukrainian troops to battle against the Russian invasion. Christopher Furlong | Getty Images President Joe Biden visited a Javelin plant in Alabama in May, saying he would “make sure the United States and our allies can replenish our own stocks of weapons to replace what we’ve sent to Ukraine.” But, he added, “this fight is not going to be cheap.”  The Pentagon has ordered hundreds of millions of dollars’ worth of new Javelins, but ramping up takes time — the numerous suppliers that provide the chemicals and computer chips for each missile can’t all be sufficiently sped up. And hiring, vetting and training people to build the technology also takes time. It could take between one and four years for the U.S. to boost overall weapons production significantly, Cancian said. “We need to put our defense industrial base on a wartime footing,” Des Roches said. “And I don’t see any indication that we have.” A Lockheed Martin spokesman, when contacted for comment, referenced an April interview during which Lockheed CEO Jim Taiclet told CNBC: “We’ve got to get our supply chain ramped up, we’ve got to have some capacity, which we’re already investing to do. And then the deliveries happen, say, six, 12,18 months down the road.” Raytheon and the U.S. Department of Defense did not respond to CNBC requests for comment.  What are Ukraine’s options?  In the meantime, Ukraine can look elsewhere for suppliers — for instance South Korea, which has a formidable weapons sector and in August inked a sale to Poland for $5.7 billion worth of tanks and howitzers. Ukrainian forces will also have to work with replacement weapons that are often less optimal. A Ukrainian serviceman mans a position in a trench on the front line near Avdiivka, Donetsk region on June 18, 2022 amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Anatolii Stepanov | AFP | Getty Images Jack Watling, an expert on land warfare at the Royal United Services Institute in London, believes there is still ample scope for Ukraine to supply itself with many of the weapons it needs.  “There is sufficient time to resolve that problem before it becomes critical in terms of stepping up manufacture,” Watling said, noting that Kyiv can source certain ammunition from countries that don’t immediately need theirs, or whose stocks are about to expire. “So we can continue to supply Ukraine,” Watling said, “but there is a point where especially with certain critical natures, the Ukrainians will need to be cautious about their rate of expenditure and where they prioritize those munitions, because there isn’t an infinite supply.” Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
The U.S. And Europe Are Running Out Of Weapons To Send To Ukraine
Empowering Local Research Ethics Review Of Antibacterial Mass Administration Research Infectious Diseases Of Poverty
Empowering Local Research Ethics Review Of Antibacterial Mass Administration Research Infectious Diseases Of Poverty
Empowering Local Research Ethics Review Of Antibacterial Mass Administration Research – Infectious Diseases Of Poverty https://digitalalaskanews.com/empowering-local-research-ethics-review-of-antibacterial-mass-administration-research-infectious-diseases-of-poverty/ Abstract Background Recent studies using mass drug administration (MDA) of antibiotics to entire communities have focused global attention on the unique ethical challenges of MDA of antibiotics in research and public health interventions. However, there is no specific guidance for Research Ethics Committees (RECs) or Institutional Review Boards (IRBs) to review such trials. We surveyed the literature to identify the unique ethical challenges and to strengthen the competencies of RECs or IRBs in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) in their ethical reviews of these trials. Methods We employed a desk review. We searched PubMed, Web of Science, and Google Scholar, combining terms for “mass drug administration” with terms for “research ethics committees,” “institutional review boards,” and “ethics.” We reviewed citations of search results to retrieve additional articles. Only articles published and indexed in the above databases up to 6 January 2022 in English were included. Abstracts (without full articles), books and articles that had exclusive veterinary and environmental focus were excluded. We synthesized the literature to identify particularly challenging ethical issues relevant to antibacterial MDA trials in LMICs. Results The most challenging ethical issues can be categorised into four broad domains: determining the social value of MDA, assessing risks and benefits, engaging all stakeholders meaningfully, and study design-related ethical challenges. These four domains interact and impact each other. Together, they reveal the need for RECs/IRBs to review MDA studies through a broader lens than that of clinical trials per se. From our findings, we propose a framework to guide the RECs and IRBs in LMICs to perform the initial and continuing review of antibiotic MDA trials. We also recommend strengthening the competencies of LMIC RECs or IRBs through ongoing training and collaboration with RECs or IRBs from high-income countries. Conclusions REC/IRB review of research using MDA of antibiotics plays a critical role in assuring the ethical conduct of MDA studies. Local RECs/IRBs should be empowered to review MDA studies comprehensively and competently in order to advance scientific knowledge about MDA and promote improved global health. Background Ethics review in health research is the assessment of the ethical quality and processes of proposed, ongoing, and completed studies. Research Ethics Committees (RECs)—also known as Institutional Review Boards (IRBs)—play a key role in the oversight of research; they engage in research ethics review, monitoring, and regulation aimed at protecting individual research participants and the integrity of the research enterprise. Since their inception in the 1950s [1], the research ecosystem has been evolving, including the emergence of new trial designs and methods [2,3,4,5,6,7]. These developments pose both theoretical and practical novel challenges for ethical review because of the increased complexity of expertise required by RECs to perform their duties optimally [2,3,4,5,6,7,8]. Mass drug administration (MDA) trials represent one such development. MDA is not new. The control and elimination of some helminthic, parasitic, and bacterial diseases in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) hinge on MDA use [9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17]. It is widely recognized that antimicrobial use (which target microorganism generally)—most especially of antibiotics (which target bacteria specifically)—must be judicious to prevent or minimize the development and spread of anti-microbial resistance and other unintended consequences [18,19,20]. The placebo-controlled, cluster-randomised Macrolides Oraux pour Reduire les Deces avec un Oeil sur la Resistance (MORDOR)-I trial, which showed a significant reduction in mortality among children aged less than 5 years given azithromycin MDA in one (Niger) of the three study countries (Mali and Tanzania were the others) [19], has focused new attention on MDA trials. Although the drug’s mechanism of reducing childhood mortality is unknown, largely on the basis of MORDOR, the World Health Organization (WHO) provisionally recommended universal biannual mass administration of azithromycin for children aged 1–11 months in countries with high child mortality and where existing child survival interventions are also strengthened [21]. Mass administration of this antibiotic has begun to inspire ethical debate [22], but MORDOR is not the only relevant MDA study. Other azithromycin MDA trials are ongoing, such as the Azithromycin Pour la Vie Des Enfants au Niger—Implémentation et Recherche (AVENIR) study in Niger [23] and the Large-scale Assessment of the Key health-promoting Activities of two New mass drug administration regimens with Azithromycin (LAKANA) [24] and the Sauver Avec l’Azithromycine en Traitant Les Femmes Enceintes et Les Enfant (SANTE) studies in Mali [25], to elucidate further the safety, efficacy, mechanism, and long-term effects of azithromycin MDA. The scope of these studies is impressive. The AVENIR study is a double-masked cluster-randomized placebo-controlled response-adaptive large sample trial that targeted 3350 communities in Niger [23]. The LAKANA study planned to include 100,000 infants in 830 villages to date [24] and is a cluster-randomized placebo-controlled, double-blinded, parallel-group, three-arm trial with adaptive design. The azithromycin intervention is delivered in the context of a seasonal malaria chemoprevention (SMC) program. AVENIR and LAKANA are also examples of the adoption of alternative trial designs in MDA research by combining intervention delivery with implementation science. Additionally in Mali the SANTE trial is conducted to determine the effectiveness of oral azithromycin in preventing stillbirths and infant mortality [25]. Recognizing the key role RECs/IRBs play in research review, we reviewed the literature to provide practical guidance for REC reviews of MDA research in LMICs. Although MDA research shares many research ethics concepts and issues with global health research generally, we intentionally focus only on those issues that have special relevance and are particularly challenging in antibiotic MDA research proposals. Method Data for this review were identified using a search of PubMed, Web of Science and Google Scholar, combining terms for “mass drug administration” with terms for “research ethics committees,” “institutional review boards,” and “ethics.” We also did a citation search of returned articles and retrieved additional articles. Only articles published and indexed in the above databases up to 6 January 2022 in English were included and there was no beginning date cutoff. The inclusion criteria were: (i) original empirical research articles, editorials, and commentaries that (ii) addressed antibacterial MDA for human health and that (iii) discussed the ethics review of such studies by RECs or IRBs. We excluded abstracts (without full articles), books and articles that had exclusive veterinary and environmental focus. The azithromycin MDA literature was central to this study. We synthesized the literature to identify the ethical issues uniquely relevant to antibacterial MDA trials in LMICs and to which RECs should pay particular attention beyond the usual review processes. Each of the two researchers NKS and PK independently reviewed the articles from the search and identified the most commonly cited ethical challenges which the authors considered to be most important and of greatest impact on society and the environment and either how they can be identified and prevented to become major challenges or addressed when they occurred/identified. We met over several weeks and compared our individual findings and four domains of ethical issues emerged and are the focus of this paper. Results Our review revealed that antibiotic MDA research is characterised by complex ethical issues which can be difficult to resolve because of value conflicts, uncertainty surrounding the societal impact and implications of research, environmental concerns, and persistent unknowns about antibiotic MDA, among other issues. In general, for review of antibiotic MDA research, RECs should conduct scheduled annual reviews, and in addition they should consider reviewing these studies more frequently. Depending on the study specifics and timeline, for example, RECs can require continuing review every 3–6 months, after a set number of subjects are enrolled or doses given, or on an ad hoc basis. RECs should also follow the same approach as they do for any other health research proposals using the principles for protection of human research participants. Like for all studies, for example, RECs should ensure that MDA is “responsive” to the health needs or priorities of the communities or populations where the research will be conducted [26]. In addition, RECs must assess whether the trial design adequately justified both scientifically and ethically to answer the study question. Frameworks exist to help RECs do this, but these frameworks have not been applied to the unique issues of MDA [27]. They should increase their attention to the alternative trial designs that are increasingly adopted by researchers [28,29,30,31]. Whether or not ethical issues are unique to MDA studies, some take on unique dimensions or may be more salient in the antibiotic MDA context. Before presenting our main findings, we wish to make a special note regarding informed consent. Informed consent can be challenging in MDA studies at both the individual and community levels. Individually, participants must be informed of the risks and benefits of participation, bot...
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Empowering Local Research Ethics Review Of Antibacterial Mass Administration Research Infectious Diseases Of Poverty
Manchin Pulls Permitting Reform Language
Manchin Pulls Permitting Reform Language
Manchin Pulls Permitting Reform Language https://digitalalaskanews.com/manchin-pulls-permitting-reform-language/ photo by: AP Photo Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., announced Tuesday that he was pulling his permitting reform language from the continuing resolution to fund the government. CHARLESTON — Unable to get all 50 members of the Democratic caucus on board and with Republicans unwilling to throw him a lifeline, U.S. Sen. Joe Manchin asked that his permitting reform language be pulled from a bill to keep the federal government funded. In a statement released Tuesday evening, Manchin, D-W.Va., said he requested that Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., remove his permitting reform package from the continuing resolution that Senators planned to vote for later that evening to fund the government past a Sept. 30 deadline. “It is unfortunate that members of the United States Senate are allowing politics to put the energy security of our nation at risk,” Manchin said. “Over the last several weeks there has been broad consensus on the urgent need to address our nation’s flawed permitting system. I stand ready to work with my colleagues to move forward on this critical legislation to meet the challenges of delivering affordable reliable energy Americans desperately need.” Manchin released the language for the permitting reform deal last week that he secured from Schumer and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., that was part of a larger deal that secured Manchin’s support from the $737 billion Inflation Reduction Act – the latest rendition of President Joe Biden’s $1.75 trillion Build Back Better social spending bill that Manchin rejected nearly a year ago. Manchin’s permitting reform plan, called the Energy Independence and Security Act of 2022, would have streamlined the process for federal authorizations of energy and natural resources projects, such as oil and natural gas drilling and pipeline projects. It also would have lifted impediments to completing the Mountain Valley Pipeline from the top of West Virginia to the coast of Virginia. Citing the recent spike in oil and gasoline prices and the war in Ukraine started by Russian President Vladimir Putin affecting international energy markets, Manchin said the Energy Independent and Security Act would have helped spur domestic energy production. But a number of members of Manchin’s own party – including U.S. Sen. Tim Kaine, D-Va. – said they could not support it, leaving Manchin scrambling to find the votes to get to 60 and avoid a filibuster. “A failed vote on something as critical as comprehensive permitting reform only serves to embolden leaders like Putin who wish to see America fail,” Manchin said Tuesday. “For that reason and my firmly held belief that we should never come to the brink of a government shutdown over politics, I have asked Majority Leader Schumer to remove the permitting language from the Continuing Resolution we will vote on this evening.” Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., was whipping Republicans to oppose the bill as well. U.S. Sen. Shelley Moore Capito, R-W.Va., announced her support last Thursday for Manchin’s bill. She had introduced her own permitting reform bill that had near total support from Senate Republicans that would have done much of the same as Manchin’s bill, codified some permitting regulations out in place by former president Donald Trump, and expedited completion of the Mountain Valley Pipeline. “… When legislating is done via backroom deals and with input from only one party, it is extremely difficult to garner broad support,” Capito said in a statement Tuesday evening. “That’s exactly why I called for permitting reform to be crafted, negotiated, and passed in a transparent way months ago and laid down real legislative solutions that unite Republicans to begin that process.” Both Manchin and Capito said they were committed to pushing for permitting reform and completing the Mountain Valley Pipeline. Today’s breaking news and more in your inbox Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Manchin Pulls Permitting Reform Language
Kansas Race Tests Which Matters More: Economy Or Abortion?
Kansas Race Tests Which Matters More: Economy Or Abortion?
Kansas Race Tests Which Matters More: Economy Or Abortion? https://digitalalaskanews.com/kansas-race-tests-which-matters-more-economy-or-abortion/ KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — Republicans redrew Democratic Rep. Sharice Davids ‘ suburban Kansas City, Kansas-area district this year to make a third term harder for her to win, adding rural areas where former President Donald Trump did well and removing urban areas that Davids had carried handily. But the dynamic changed in June, when the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade. Kansas voters responded in August by overwhelmingly rejecting a ballot measure expected to lead to more restrictions or a ban on abortion. The magnitude of that vote has left Davids and other Democrats optimistic. That’s why she is spending the final stretch of the campaign focused on abortion, attempting to keep the same abortion-rights supporters who turned out to vote in August energized to do so again in November. It’s a delicate task, asking voters who may fault Democrats for rising housing and grocery prices to nonetheless support Davids for Congress. “I think this has more to do with control and limiting people’s rights,” said swing voter Tanner Klingzell, a 42-year-old from the suburb of Prairie Village who says he is fiscally conservative but socially progressive. He supports abortion rights and says, “I just don’t feel comfortable voting for Republicans.” The Supreme Court’s abortion ruling has rewritten the script in districts around the country, and both Davids and Republican challenger Amanda Adkins must win over independents and GOP moderates to win the one swing congressional district in an otherwise red state. Davids became the first lesbian Native American in Congress when she rode suburban anti-Trump sentiment to office in the 2018 election. Her background as a mixed martial arts fighter drew national interest, and Republicans initially tried to group her with “The Squad” of new liberal House members. Those efforts fell flat as she focused on such non-divisive issues as road projects, prescription drug prices and high-speed internet for rural areas. Adkins, a former corporate executive and Kansas GOP chair, is hitting Davids hard on pocketbook issues, a tactic Republicans nationally expect to carry them back to a House majority. She’s also started highlighting crime and border security. She held a news conference on those issues Monday, days after House Republican leader Kevin McCarthy released Republicans’ “Commitment to America” agenda, which promises to fight inflation but also to “protect the lives of unborn children.” The two have faced off before. Davids defeated Adkins in 2020 by 10 percentage points, but that was before redistricting after the 2020 census. While Democrat Joe Biden would have prevailed in the new district in 2020, his margin would have been roughly half the 10 percentage points he racked up in the old district — and that’s likely true for Davids as well. If Adkins’ percentage of the vote in the suburbs is a few points higher this year than in 2020, she can win. In suburban Overland Park, Andrea Calvo, a 33-year-old freight-company accounts manager, is hoping Republicans emerge a little stronger from the November election because, in her view, “they have proven to be able to handle the economy better.” While Calvo, a Republican, doesn’t see herself as a moderate, she voted in August against the proposed anti-abortion amendment to the Kansas Constitution. She sees Adkins’ support for it as “definitely a problem.” But it’s not a deal-breaker. “It’s all about the economy at the end of the day for me,” she said. The two campaigns, the parties and political groups are now on track to spend about $8 million on television ads. Davids’ ads attack Adkins for her long association with former Republican Gov. Sam Brownback, whose nationally notorious 2012-13 experiment in cutting taxes was followed by huge, persistent state budget shortfalls. Davids on Saturday launched an ad attacking Adkins on abortion that follows up on multiple Kansas Democratic Party mailings, including to Republicans. Davids and her backers are painting Adkins as an extremist for supporting the proposed amendment that voters rejected in August. It would have removed protections for abortion from the state Constitution, which would have allowed the state Legislature, dominated by abortion opponents, to greatly restrict or ban abortion. Davids’ strong, public opposition to the Kansas anti-abortion measure contrasts with three decades of Democratic candidates soft-pedaling their support for abortion rights in most areas of the state. Abortion has been a dominant issue in Kansas politics since the 1991 anti-abortion “Summer of Mercy” protests outside Dr. George Tiller’s clinic in Wichita. Tiller was among the few doctors known to perform abortions late in pregnancy and was shot to death in 2009 by an anti-abortion zealot. Anti-abortion groups have been powerful forces in state politics. Even with the 3rd District’s new, more Republican leanings, 67.5% of its voters opposed the Kansas anti-abortion measure in the August abortion referendum. “They were very engaged and sent a strong message about us not wanting to have politicians making our decisions for us,” Davids said. Adkins describes herself as a Catholic who has “always been pro-life” and “100% committed to protecting life at every stage.” But Adkins said she respects the August vote and opposes federal laws on abortion, saying the issue should be decided at the state level. “It should not be a federal issue, and Sharice Davids still is focusing on it as a federal issue,” Adkins said after a recent suburban meet-and-greet. Davids voted last year for a Democratic measure to guarantee abortion rights across the U.S. and override state restrictions. Adkins has not been specific about how far she thinks abortion law should go in Kansas, which bans most abortions at the 22nd week, but said Monday that she would favor any new, incremental state measures that would reduce the number of abortions. In the new, rural parts of the 3rd District, Democrats say the abortion ruling means volunteers are energized. But Republican state Rep. Samantha Poetter Parshall said that Davids is an “extremely hard sell,” especially with conservative farmers. Even Democrats tend to take more conservative positions on issues such as gun rights, she said. “Also, taxes — people are extremely upset with how high their taxes are right now,” she said. But about 85% of the district’s voters still live in the suburbs, where centrist and conservative Republicans have feuded for decades, and voters have been electing more Democrats in recent years. Former U.S. Rep. Kevin Yoder, the four-term GOP incumbent ousted by Davids in 2018, praised Adkins as a candidate, but he pointed to the dominance of those suburbs in the district as the reason the race remains challenging for the GOP. “It’s still a Biden district,” he said. _____ Hollingsworth reported from multiple cities in Johnson County, Kansas. ___ Follow John Hanna on Twitter: https://twitter.com/apjdhanna Copyright © The Associated Press. All rights reserved. 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Kansas Race Tests Which Matters More: Economy Or Abortion?
Are You looked Down Upon? Do You Care?
Are You looked Down Upon? Do You Care?
Are You ‘looked Down Upon’? Do You Care? https://digitalalaskanews.com/are-you-looked-down-upon-do-you-care/ It’s a commonplace gripe in Trump world and aligned planets that “elites look down on me.” The elites are usually described as college-educated liberals living in big cities. The complainers are not always wrong, but they exaggerate how much their alleged “betters” are even thinking about them. When they do, they’re more likely scratching their heads in bewilderment rather than looking downward. They see whiners swimming in self-pity. These alleged salts-of-the-earth are kept going by the Affordable Care Act, Medicare and checks from Social Security — but keep voting for those who would threaten these comforts. Not only do Democratic parts of the country support such programs; their richer residents pay for them. I know several very well-to-do liberals who don’t buy into a single item on the Republican menu of social resentments, but come Election Day, they vote for Republicans to cut their taxes — then drive off to join their liberal friends at the country club. There was the interesting case of Gary Cohn. Although he was a lifelong Democrat, Donald Trump made him chief economic adviser. (Cohn had been president of Goldman Sachs, so all was forgiven.) Cohn pushed through the 2017 tax cut bill that mainly enriched the already rich, while adding something like $1.5 trillion to the deficit. The ink had barely dried when Cohn was out the door and back in New York. Florida Sen. Rick Scott, chair of the National Republican Senatorial Committee, is now terribly worried about deficits. As a remedy, he’s calling for all federal legislation to be sunsetted in five years. That would include Medicare and Social Security. “If a law is worth keeping,” Scott said, “Congress can pass it again.” As for these two programs, Scott says he just wants to “fix” them. What can you say to those who depend on Social Security and Medicare or expect to depend on them? “Don’t make long-term plans.” Just about anyone can build a case for being looked down upon. Lower-level lawyers at big firms may feel lorded over by the partners. Book editors at fancy publishing houses have senior editors breathing down their necks. A small shopkeeper might feel judged as inferior by the superstore operator down the road. In some expensive urban centers, people with $3 million in assets are referred to as the “merely affluent.” As financial writer William Cohan wrote in Vanity Fair, “In the circles that Cohn travels, a $250 million fortune is merely the table stakes necessary to catapult oneself into the land of the billionaires.” There’s no denying that people who are rich are often fawned upon, and it helps greatly if they’re famous, as well. But look at their lives and you often find personal tragedies that no amount of money or privilege can overcome. Children’s drug overdoses. Deadly disease. Loneliness. When big money is involved, you often see messy divorces leading to loveless marriages with a “trophy wife.” Sociologists have long held that the key to happiness is community — having friends and family who care about you. Past a certain level of subsistence, wealth doesn’t make much of a difference. That’s assuming one has the security that comes with guaranteed health care. It helps to avoid politicians who rub salt into wounds we should not have. Stoking anger, resentment and jealousy doesn’t cost them anything. But it does distract the public from their plan to cut real valued services. As one of the dukes in Shakespeare’s “Henry VIII” advised another duke, “Heat not a furnace for your foe so hot that it do singe yourself.” And a related piece of advice: Keep an eye on what matters, not what you imagine others think of you. Follow Froma Harrop on Twitter @FromaHarrop. She can be reached at fharrop@gmail.com. Today’s breaking news and more in your inbox Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Are You looked Down Upon? Do You Care?
Trump
Trump
Trump https://digitalalaskanews.com/trump-3/ A few weeks after the FBI searched former President Donald Trump’s residence at his Palm Beach, Florida, resort, Fox News host Steve Doocy, a longtime ally of the former president, posed a question that remains unanswered. “Why did he have all that secret stuff at Mar-a-Lago?” Doocy wondered during an interview with South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem. Trump’s response — that the “secret stuff” was not really secret because he declassified it before he left office — is both implausible and, in the context of the potential crimes that the FBI is investigating, legally irrelevant. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit underlined both points last week. Trump brought more than 300 records marked as classified to Mar-a-Lago, including 184 discovered in 15 boxes he gave the National Archives in January, 38 that his lawyers surrendered in June in response to a federal subpoena and more than 100 seized during the FBI’s Aug. 8 search. The documents ranged from “confidential” to “top secret” and included “sensitive compartmented information” about intelligence sources and methods. It is still not clear that storing those records at Mar-a-Lago posed a threat to national security grave and imminent enough to justify the unprecedented search of a former president’s home. At the same time, Trump’s justification for keeping them is hard to fathom. Trump initially claimed he had a “standing order” as president that automatically declassified any documents he removed from the Oval Office. That policy was news to national security officials who should have known about it, and it would have been a haphazard and cavalier way to treat sensitive records. William Barr, Trump’s former attorney general, thinks it is “highly improbable” that Trump ever issued such an order. But if he did, Barr says, it “would be such an abuse and show such recklessness that it’s almost worse than taking the documents.” In a Fox News interview with Sean Hannity last week, Trump himself cast doubt on his initial explanation, saying the president can declassify documents simply “by thinking about it.” That means such decisions do not have to be communicated to anyone, even though the whole point is to change how records are stored and handled. Even that explanation seems inconsistent with what Trump lawyer Evan Corcoran said in a May 25 letter to Justice Department official Jay Bratt. Corcoran told Bratt that documents “purportedly marked as classified” were “once in the White House and unknowingly included among the boxes brought to Mar-a-Lago by the movers.” According to Corcoran, those records ended up at Mar-a-Lago by accident. If Trump did not know what was in the boxes, it is hard to see how he could have declassified the documents even “by thinking about it.” Last week, a unanimous 11th Circuit panel, including two judges appointed by Trump, noted that he had presented “no evidence that any of these records were declassified.” And even if they were, the appeals court said, Trump had offered no reason to think he had “an individual interest” in them, that he “has a need-to-know the information” they contain, or that “he is entitled to them.” Thanks to the 11th Circuit’s stay, the FBI can continue to use those 100-plus records in its criminal investigation, which likewise does not hinge on their current classification status. The FBI’s search warrant cited three possible felonies: mishandling of government records, obstruction of a federal investigation and improper retention of “defense information” that “could be used to the injury of the United States or to the advantage of any foreign nation.” If the Justice Department ultimately decides to prosecute Trump for any of those offenses, it may have difficulty proving the requisite intent, since his conduct can plausibly be attributed to some combination of ignorance, arrogance, laziness and sloppiness. But to obtain convictions, prosecutors would not have to refute Trump’s assertion that the classification status of any given document is contingent on his fleeting thoughts or acquisitive impulses. Photo credit: WikiImages at Pixabay Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Trump
Progressive Democrats Frustrated With 2022 Primary Losses
Progressive Democrats Frustrated With 2022 Primary Losses
Progressive Democrats Frustrated With 2022 Primary Losses https://digitalalaskanews.com/progressive-democrats-frustrated-with-2022-primary-losses/ NEW YORK – With less than two months until the midterm elections, progressive Democrats are facing a test of their power. Their party is heading into the final stretch of the campaign with a robust set of legislative accomplishments that include long-term progressive priorities on issues ranging from prescription drug prices to climate change. But the left has also faced a series of disappointments as Democratic voters from Ohio to Illinois to Texas rejected high-profile progressive challengers to moderates or incumbent members of Congress during the primary season. The frustration is particularly acute in New York, where Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez defeated one of the highest-ranking congressional Democrats four years ago, injecting fresh energy among the party’s most liberal voters. This year, however, New York City Democrats chose Dan Goldman, a former federal prosecutor who is more of a centrist, over several progressive rivals, including freshman Rep. Mondaire Jones. About 30 miles north in the Hudson River Valley, a powerful establishment candidate, Rep. Sean Patrick Maloney, defeated a state lawmaker running to his left and backed by Ocasio-Cortez. Those setbacks have raised fresh questions about the progressive movement’s standing among Democrats. Progressive leaders urge against reading too much into those losses, particularly in New York, where repeated elections this summer after a redistricting battle left some voters disoriented or disengaged. “New York was just a mess,” said Washington Rep. Pramila Jayapal, chair of the Congressional Progressive Caucus. “It was like the timing of the redistricting maps. I mean, that’s not a situation that’s going to get repeated a lot.” Progressives have notched notable victories this year. In Oregon, Jamie McLeod-Skinner ousted moderate Rep. Kurt Schrader. Activist Maxwell Alejandro Frost topped a crowded field of Democrats in Florida and is poised to become the youngest member of Congress. And labor organizer Summer Lee edged out an establishment-backed candidate in Pennsylvania. But those wins risk becoming the exception rather than the rule as moderates have repeatedly asserted their strength in recent years. President Joe Biden won his party’s nomination in 2020 after overcoming challenges from more liberal contenders including Sens. Bernie Sanders of Vermont and Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts. In New York City, Eric Adams defeated several rivals from the left for the party’s mayoral nomination last year with an explicit critique of progressives, including Ocasio-Cortez. And New York Gov. Kathy Hochul easily dispatched a more liberal rival during this summer’s primary. “Progressive” has long been a squishy label for Democrats. It generally refers to the party’s left flank but has been embraced by rank-and-file liberals as well as those much further left on the spectrum, including self-described democratic socialists like Ocasio-Cortez and Sanders. The term “progressive” was even the subject of the first 2016 Democratic presidential debate between Sanders and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, with Sanders suggesting Clinton was not sufficiently progressive and Clinton disputing that and calling him the “self-proclaimed gatekeeper for progressivism.” Some candidates championed by progressives have grappled with the label this year. “No, I’m just a Democrat,” left-leaning Pennsylvania Senate candidate John Fetterman said in a May interview with NBC when he was asked if he is a progressive. He said his positions were considered progressive six years ago but “now there isn’t a single Democrat in this race or any race that I’m aware of that’s running on anything different. So that’s not really progressive. That’s just where the party is.” Texas Rep. Jasmine Crockett, who won a Democratic congressional primary in May and was endorsed by the Congressional Progressive Caucus, told Politico that she’d been labeled a progressive but knows most of the Democratic voters in the Dallas-area seat where she’s running identify as moderates or conservatives. Crockett said that means she won’t align with members of the further-left subset of progressives in the House known as the “Squad,” which includes Ocasio-Cortez and has been known for challenging the party’s establishment. “I’ve got to be very cognizant. Honestly, I love so many members of the ‘Squad’ and I think that they do right by their districts,” Crockett said. “I think in my district, while they don’t self-identify as progressive, they love a lot of the things that I stand for.” New York Rep. Hakeem Jeffries, the chair of the House Democratic caucus and a member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, said “there’s a difference between the socialist machine and mainstream progressives.” Jeffries, speaking to reporters in a roundtable interview a few days before New York’s August primaries, said Democrats whose legislative records are “deeply progressive” still face criticism from “online virtue signalers” because they are not further left. “There are some forces on the left that want to define ‘progressive’ as ‘You bend the knee and we tell you what to do, and if you fail to fall in line, you’re a machine Democrat or a corporate sellout.’ That’s a joke,” he said. Jeffries said the left had some success taking out more traditional Democrats in 2018 and 2020 as Democratic frustrations with President Donald Trump translated into energy for insurgent campaigns. But Jeffries said that once Biden won the White House and his Democratic-controlled Congress began passing legislation, Democratic voters were no longer looking for insurgency. “At a certain point in time, voters want results, particularly when Democrats have been entrusted with majorities,” he said. “And that is what we have been delivering.” Bill Neidhardt, a progressive Democratic strategist who worked for liberal former New York Mayor Bill de Blasio, said that while there have been noted losses in recent contests, the Democratic Party’s left flank has seen bright spots. “It’s not a perfect record, but it never is in elections. I would challenge anyone to show me one of those,” Neidhardt said. Neidhardt said progressives in Congress can point to growing political power, such as Biden’s recent student loan debt forgiveness plan or Democrats’ new law, the Inflation Reduction Act, tackling climate change and capping prescription drug costs. “That’s got the progressives’ fingerprints all over it,” he said. Though Fetterman has shrugged off the progressive label, Neidhardt said the Pennsylvanian opposing Republican Mehmet Oz might help progressives see one of their biggest coups yet. Fetterman and Wisconsin Senate candidate Mandela Barnes are running in two hotly contested U.S. Senate seats that Democrats hope to flip while hanging onto their thin majority in that chamber. “Who’s going to defeat Ron Johnson? Who’s going to defeat Dr. Oz? It’s going to be progressives,” he said. ___ Associated Press writer Farnoush Amiri in Washington 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·
Progressive Democrats Frustrated With 2022 Primary Losses
Brad Raffensperger And Chris Carr Are Too Partisan Flagpole
Brad Raffensperger And Chris Carr Are Too Partisan Flagpole
Brad Raffensperger And Chris Carr Are Too Partisan – Flagpole https://digitalalaskanews.com/brad-raffensperger-and-chris-carr-are-too-partisan-flagpole/ by Jacqueline Elsner September 28, 2022 Thanks to President Biden’s CHIPS Act, a semiconductor manufacturing factory in a heavily Republican part of Ohio is going to be built. The residents of Licking County, Ohio, will benefit from the well-paying jobs it will bring to their community. The fact that it is being built in an area where few voted for Biden is immaterial. I wish that Georgia’s Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger and Attorney General Chris Carr had the same attitude. The Fulton County elections office and elections board have been under investigation by the secretary of state for maleficence since the 2020 election. Nothing has been found. However, in Coffee County, an election denier group was given access to the county’s voting equipment to copy data from its election server, ballot scanners and memory cards that store votes. The aforementioned is not in dispute. A serious review of Coffee County’s election breach hasn’t been forthcoming, even though Raffensperger and Carr have known about it since January 2021. It took a lawsuit this year by private citizens to find documents showing that allies of then-President Trump and their computer experts gained access to sensitive voting files. Could Coffee and Fulton be examples of uneven enforcement because Fulton County is reliably Democratic and Coffee County is reliably Republican? Our president doesn’t care that heavily Republican areas benefit from legislation passed by a Democrat-controlled Congress. It’s about fairness and the right thing to do, not about party. We should expect the same from Raffensperger and Carr. Like what you just read? Support Flagpole by making a donation today. Every dollar you give helps fund our ongoing mission to provide Athens with quality, independent journalism. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Brad Raffensperger And Chris Carr Are Too Partisan Flagpole
Major Asia Markets Slump More Than 2%; Chinese Yuan At Weakest Since 2008
Major Asia Markets Slump More Than 2%; Chinese Yuan At Weakest Since 2008
Major Asia Markets Slump More Than 2%; Chinese Yuan At Weakest Since 2008 https://digitalalaskanews.com/major-asia-markets-slump-more-than-2-chinese-yuan-at-weakest-since-2008/ China’s yuan is likely to return to a ‘reasonable range’ soon The yuan will likely return to a “reasonable range” between six and seven versus the U.S. dollar — as soon as next year, said Han Baojiang, director of the department of economics, Party School of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China. That’s according to a CNBC translation of his Mandarin-language remarks at a virtual event held by the All-China Journalists Association.  He said that in his view, the yuan’s depreciation is tied, to a certain extent, to China’s economic difficulties right now. Next month’s 20th National Congress of China’s Communist Party is set to provide a clearer description of policy, which will help expectations, he said.  Han said in response to a separate question that Chinese President Xi Jinping’s message of opening up further will be prevalent in the congress’ report, and that after the congress, he expects China will open up more than ever before. — Evelyn Cheng Indian rupee hits record 81.94 against the U.S. dollar The Indian rupee weakened to a record against the U.S. dollar, hitting 81.940 per dollar. It last traded at 81.905 against the greenback. The buoyant U.S. dollar has strengthened nearly 10% against the Indian rupee so far this year. — Abigail Ng U.S. 10-year Treasury yield breaches 4% for the first time since 2010 –Jihye Lee CNBC Pro: Credit Suisse says now’s the time to buy two green hydrogen stocks — and gives one over 200% upside Credit Suisse says it’s time to enter the green hydrogen sector, with a number of catalysts set to drive the clean energy powerhouse. “Green hydrogen is a growth market — we increase our 2030 market estimates by [over] 4x,” the bank said, forecasting that green hydrogen production will expand by around 40 times by 2030. It names two stocks to play the boom — giving one upside of more than 200%. CNBC Pro subscribers can read more here. — Weizhen Tan Chinese yuan at weakest since 2008, dollar index strengthens The offshore and onshore Chinese yuan breached 7.2 against the dollar, hovering at weakest levels since early 2008. The U.S. dollar index also strengthened by 0.33%, trading at 114.47. –Jihye Lee Consumer inflation in Japan could decline in 2023: BOJ meeting minutes Consumer inflation excluding fresh food is likely to rise this year, but the rate of increase will slow thereafter on energy prices, minutes from Bank of Japan’s July meeting said. A few members also said inflation, excluding fresh food and energy, is unlikely to reach 2% within its projection period. That CPI reading was 1.6% in August. “These members expressed the view that, unless commodity prices continued to rise, the CPI inflation rate was expected to decline from fiscal 2023 onward,” the minutes said. On the yen, one BOJ board member said downward pressure on the currency could be alleviated if a slowdown in the global economy led to a decline in inflation and interest rates worldwide. Another member said the yen could even appreciate if the global economy faces shocks. — Abigail Ng CNBC Pro: Asset manager reveals what’s next for stocks — and shares how he’s trading the market Neil Veitch, investment director at Edinburgh-based SVM Asset Management, says he expects the macro landscape to remain “quite difficult” for the remainder of the year.   Speaking to CNBC Pro Talks last week, Veitch named the key drivers that could help the stock market to turn “more constructive” and shared his take on growth versus value. CNBC Subscribers can read more here. — Zavier Ong Earnings questions, potential recession mean more selling could be ahead The Dow and S&P 500 have fallen for six straight days, with many of those seeing broad selling typical of so-called “washout” days. That can sometimes be a contrarian buy signal on Wall Street, but many investment professionals are skeptical that the selling is over. One reason is that earnings expectations for next year still show solid growth, which would be unlikely in the event of a recession. “We know that if we start seeing a turnaround in the 2-year yields … and if we start seeing a turnaround in the dollar, that gives us the ability to bounce from these extremely oversold conditions,” said Andrew Smith, chief investment strategist of Delos Capital Advisors in Dallas. “But I have a hard time reconciling in my mind that the earnings story is going to be as good as we expect.” Additionally, the dramatic moves in the bond and currency markets means that “something broke” and it may be smart to wait for that information to shake out, Smith said. On the positive side, Smith pointed to a strong labor market and signs of continued spending on travel as a sign that the U.S. economy may be able to avoid a major recession. — Jesse Pound U.S. 10-year yield closes in on key 4% level The 10-year Treasury yield is edging close to 4%, a level it has not touched since 2010. The U.S. 10-year is the benchmark yield that sets the course for home mortgage rates and other consumer and business loans. It has bounded higher this week, as U.K. gilt yields race higher and on expectations of an aggressive Federal Reserve. The yield was at 3.96% in afternoon trading. The 10-year yield reversed an earlier decline and gained about basis points. (A basis point equals 0.01 of a percentage point) “It’s definitely been impressive, and I just think no one is yet willing to step in and catch the falling knife,” said Ben Jeffery of BMO. He added a lack of liquidity has also been pushing up yields, which move opposite price. Jeffery said the yield was also moving higher ahead of the 1 p.m. auction of 5-year notes. He said the 10-year tested the 4% level in 2010. “The last time we were sustainably above 4% was 2008. There’s another technical level at 4.10% and then there’s not much of note until 4.25%,” he said. — Patti Domm Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Major Asia Markets Slump More Than 2%; Chinese Yuan At Weakest Since 2008
Live Updates: Hurricane Ian Strengthens To Category 3 On Course To Hit Florida
Live Updates: Hurricane Ian Strengthens To Category 3 On Course To Hit Florida
Live Updates: Hurricane Ian Strengthens To Category 3 On Course To Hit Florida https://digitalalaskanews.com/live-updates-hurricane-ian-strengthens-to-category-3-on-course-to-hit-florida/   1m ago Water levels in Key West rising Water levels in Key West, Florida, have already risen more than 2 feet above normal high tide, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.    11:08 PM Hurricane position and strength as of 11 p.m. ET At 11 p.m. ET, Hurricane Ian was located about 110 miles southwest of Naples, Florida, according to the National Hurricane Center. It was moving north-northeast at 10 mph and had maximum sustained winds of 120 mph, making it a Category 3 storm.   10:22 PM Storm location and strength as of 10 p.m. ET As of 10 p.m. ET, Hurricane Ian was located about 175 miles south-southwest of Punta Gorda, Florida, and about 5 miles south of The Dry Tortugas. It was moving north-northeast at 10 mph and had maximum sustained winds of 120 mph.   10:00 PM Hurricane Ian lashes Cuba as it heads for Florida coast Hurricane Ian tore into western Cuba as a major hurricane Tuesday and left 1 million people without electricity, then churned on a collision course with Florida over warm Gulf waters amid expectations it would strengthen into a catastrophic Category 4 storm. Ian made landfall in Cuba’s Pinar del Rio province, where officials set up 55 shelters, evacuated 50,000 people, and took steps to protect crops in the nation’s main tobacco-growing region. The U.S. National Hurricane Center said Cuba suffered “significant wind and storm surge impacts” when the hurricane struck with top sustained winds of 125 mph (205 kmh). A vintage car passes by debris caused by the Hurricane Ian as it passed in Pinar del Rio, Cuba, September 27, 2022. Alexandre Meneghini / REUTERS Read more here.   9:09 PM Tampa fire chief discusses Hurricane Ian preparations   8:40 PM Location and speed of Ian as of 8 p.m. ET At 8 p.m. ET, Hurricane Ian was located about 180 miles south-southwest of Punta Gorda, Florida, and 20 miles south-southwest of the Dry Tortugas, according to the National Hurricane Center. The storm was moving north-northeast at 10 mph and had maximum sustained winds of 120 mph.   8:14 PM “You can hide from the wind, but you need to run from that water”: Tampa mayor on Hurricane Ian threat Tampa mayor discusses dangers posed by Hurricane Ian 01:39 Tampa Mayor Jane Castor urged those who have not evacuated the area as Hurricane Ian approaches to do so, predicting that the city will lose power and could see a tidal surge.  “We used to have the old ‘Well, we can just wait this out and see what happens,'” Castor told “CBS Evening News” anchor and managing editor Norah O’Donnell on Tuesday. “We’re talking 10- to 15-foot tidal surge. Nobody can withstand that. There’s no waiting that out.”  “We always use the adage, you can hide from the wind, but you need to run from that water,” Castor said.  Read more here.    6:20 PM / September 27, 2022 Disney World closing theme and water parks Disney World announced that it is closing all theme and water parks on Wednesday and Thursday as it braces for Hurricane Ian. ESPN’s Wide World of Sports Complex will also be closed and any Star Wars: Galactic Starcruiser “voyages” that were scheduled to begin Tuesday or Thursday have been canceled, the park announced. Disney hotels and resorts will remain open, however, guests must check in by 3 p.m. Wednesday and will be required to shelter in place “for the duration of the storm.” Cancellation fees will be waived for guests who wish to rebook their stays or cancel outright, the park said. Disney World also warned that dining options for hotel guests “will vary, and in some cases may be very limited.” Read more here.   7:57 PM / September 27, 2022 Biden speaks with DeSantis President Biden spoke with Florida Governor Ron DeSantis “to discuss the steps the federal government is taking to help Florida prepare for Hurricane Ian,” White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said. Details of the conversation were not released, but both “commited to continued close coordination,” Jean-Pierre said. President Biden spoke this evening with Governor DeSantis of Florida to discuss the steps the Federal government is taking to help Florida prepare for Hurricane Ian. The President and the Governor committed to continued close coordination. — Karine Jean-Pierre (@PressSec) September 27, 2022   7:39 PM / September 27, 2022 Tracking Hurricane Ian’s expected landfall   7:11 PM / September 27, 2022 Evacuations underway as Hurricane Ian barrels toward Florida   5:43 PM / September 27, 2022 Piney Point under 24-hour supervision ahead of Hurricane Ian Piney Point, a former phosphate mining facility in Manatee County, Florida, is undergoing 24-hour surveillance ahead of Hurricane Ian, CBS News has learned. The site made headlines last year when a massive leak was detected in the liner of a gypsum stack. The issue resulted in millions of gallons of wastewater ending up in Tampa Bay and helped contribute to a devastating months-long red tide event.  Florida Agricultural Commissioner Nikki Fried told CBS News on Tuesday that she had spoken with Florida’s Department of Environmental Protection earlier in the day and that they do not foresee Hurricane Ian being “a huge problem,” given its current forecasts.  “Based on the water that is currently in Piney Point, they can sustain about 25 inches of rain. And thinking that we’re supposed to get 12 to 15 inches of rain, they are not seeing this to be a huge problem,” Fried said.  Fried said the department informed her that the water has been partially treated, so that even if there is an overflow, “it won’t be of issue.”  However, the treatment of that water, she told CBS News, is something she “never had full trust and confidence in.”   The site is undergoing 24-hour monitoring, Fried said.  The state’s dedicated site for Piney Point updates last provided information on Friday, saying that preparations also include staging backup pumps and adjusting water management levels. There are roughly 268 million gallons in the site’s reservoir.  According to Manatee County’s evacuation maps, Piney Point is in evacuation zone B, meaning that the area could see a potential surge inundation of 14 feet.  The county issued mandatory evacuations for those in zones A and B on Tuesday. Those in zone C have been recommended to evacuate. The state is more concerned with construction equipment on site, which the department is in the process of “hunkering down” and moving offsite to avoid heavy winds turning the equioment into projectiles. A deep injection well, approved in December, is under construction to hold the water that is in the reservoir, and the site is currently in the initial process of closing its south compartment, according to the website. Part of the process involves grading and shaping the area so it doesn’t accumulate rainwater.  “The secretary seems to be pretty confident that they should be OK with the amount of rain,” Fried said. “Of course, if it was to be head-on with 140 mph sustained wind, that would be an issue. But with this just potentially being a rain event more than anything else in that Piney point area, he felt confident that they could sustain the rain.”   5:14 PM / September 27, 2022 Hurricane warning extended south The National Hurricane Center extended a hurricane warning southward along Florida’s west coast. The warning now stretches from the Anclote River down to Chokoloskee.  In addition, the storm surge watch from Marineland to the Flagler/Volusia County Line has been upgraded to a storm surge warning, the NHC said.   5:06 PM / September 27, 2022 Hurricane location as of 5 p.m. ET As of 5 p.m. ET, Hurricane Ian was located roughly 230 miles south of Sarasota, Florida, and about 50 miles south-southwest of the Dry Tortugas, the National Hurricane Center said. The storm had maximum sustained winds of 120 mph and was moving north at 10 mph.   3:44 PM / September 27, 2022 House Jan. 6 panel postpones hearing due to Ian The House committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol has postponed a hearing scheduled for Wednesday due to Hurricane Ian. “In light of Hurricane Ian bearing down on parts of Florida, we have decided to postpone tomorrow’s proceedings. We’re praying for the safety of all those in the storm’s path,” the committee said in a statement. “The Select Committee’s investigation goes forward and we will soon announce a date for the postponed proceedings.” Read more here   3:25 PM / September 27, 2022 College football games moved because of Ian Florida‘s home football game against Eastern Washington has been moved from Saturday to Sunday because of Hurricane Ian. The Gators and Eagles will kick off at noon in Gainesville shortly before NFL games around the country. Also, South Florida and East Carolina, which had been slated to play in Tampa on Saturday night, will instead play in Boca Raton. The game will now kick off at 2:30 p.m. at Florida Atlantic’s stadium. The University of Florida canceled classes and all student-related activities Wednesday through Friday in anticipation of Ian’s predicted landfall. Meanwhile, South Carolina‘s home game with South Carolina State has been moved from Saturday to Thursday night due to Ian’s track.   Updated 2:48 PM / September 27, 2022 Warning and watches as of 2 p.m. ET The National Hurricane Center said in its 2 p.m. advisory that the following warnings and watches are in effect: A hurricane warning is in effect for: Cuban provinces of Isla de Juventud, Pinar del Rio, and Artemisa Bonita Beach to Anclote River, including Tampa Bay Dry Tortugas A storm surge warning is in effect for: Suwanee River southward to Flamingo Tampa Bay Dry Tortugas Marineland to the mouth of the St. Mary’s River St. Johns River A tropical storm warning i...
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Live Updates: Hurricane Ian Strengthens To Category 3 On Course To Hit Florida
Leaks In Undersea Gas Pipelines After Explosions Point To Sabotage Officials Say
Leaks In Undersea Gas Pipelines After Explosions Point To Sabotage Officials Say
Leaks In Undersea Gas Pipelines After Explosions Point To Sabotage, Officials Say https://digitalalaskanews.com/leaks-in-undersea-gas-pipelines-after-explosions-point-to-sabotage-officials-say/ Image The land portion of the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline in Lubmin, Germany, last week.Credit…Fabrizio Bensch/Reuters Explosions under the Baltic Sea and the rupture of major natural gas pipelines from Russia to Germany appeared to be a deliberate attack, officials across Europe said on Tuesday, deepening uncertainty about European energy security amid soaring prices and fears of running short of fuel over the winter. Three separate leaks erupted from the Nord Stream 1 and 2 pipelines, which were already caught up in the conflict over Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, sending swirling streams of methane to the surface of waters off Denmark and Sweden. Top Polish and Ukrainian leaders blamed Moscow, while Russian state media suggested U.S. or Ukrainian involvement. NORWAY Finland Vyborg Ust-Luga Sweden ESTONIA Russia Nord Stream pipelines 1 and 2 (approx. route) Denmark Greifswald Belarus Germany Poland “It’s hard to imagine that it’s accidental,” Denmark’s prime minister, Mette Frederiksen, told reporters while on a trip to Poland to open a new undersea pipeline to carry Norwegian gas — a judgment echoed by officials in several countries. Swedish seismologists reported detecting the underwater explosions on Monday, and pipeline monitors in Germany registered a swift drop in the conduits’ pressure. Later, patches of sea surface in the same areas as the explosions began roiling with dangerously combustible gas, forcing shipping to steer clear. Several countries said they were investigating the cause. The apparent attack had no immediate effect on European energy supplies; Nord Stream 2 has never gone into service, and Nord Stream 1 has been shut down since August. But it raises the stakes — and European jitters — in a simmering energy war between Russia and the West prompted by the war in Ukraine. Mateusz Morawiecki, Poland’s prime minister, blamed Russia for the leaks, saying they were an attempt to further destabilize Europe’s energy security. He spoke at the launch of a new undersea pipeline that connects Poland to Norway through Denmark. “We do not know the details of what happened yet, but we can clearly see that it is an act of sabotage,” Mr. Morawiecki said. “An act that probably marks the next stage in the escalation of this situation in Ukraine.” Denmark’s prime minister, Mette Frederiksen, said that sabotage could not be ruled out. “It is too early to conclude yet, but it is an extraordinary situation,” she said during a visit to Poland to inaugurate the pipeline from Norway. “There is talk of three leaks, and therefore it is difficult to imagine that it could be accidental,” she said. Mykhailo Podolyak, a senior adviser to President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine, said on Twitter that the leaks were “a terrorist attack planned by Russia and an act of aggression towards E.U.” Speaking at a news conference in Washington, Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken said Tuesday, “There are initial reports indicating that this may be the result of an attack or some kind of sabotage, but these are initial reports and we haven’t confirmed that yet.” “My understanding is the leaks will not have a significant impact on Europe’s energy resilience,” he added. The Kremlin’s spokesman, Dmitri S. Peskov, said of the leaks that “no possibility can be ruled out,” but the Russian state media sought to blame the United States and Ukraine. The state-run RIA Novosti news agency reported that Washington “is an active opponent of Russian gas supplies to Europe,” and said that Ukraine opposed Nord Stream 2 because it “was afraid of losing revenues from the transit of Russian gas.” Image A satellite image showing a leak at the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline 13 nautical miles southeast of Bornholm Island, Denmark, on Tuesday.Credit…Planet Labs It was not immediately clear who would benefit from ruptures in the pipelines, which were not in operation. The pipelines have been a focal point of the broader confrontation between Russia and Europe. After the European Union imposed economic sanctions on Russia to penalize it for invading Ukraine in February, Russia began withholding the natural gas that for decades it had sent to Europe, threatening the continent’s energy supply as winter looms. Monika Pronczuk, Oleg Matsnev, Torben Brooks and Richard Pérez-Peña contributed reporting. Image Karine Jean-Pierre, the White House press secretary, said the Biden administration would not speculate on the cause of the pipeline damage.Credit…Sarah Silbiger for The New York Times The C.I.A. issued a vague warning in June to a number of European nations, including Germany, that the two Nord Stream gas pipelines that carry natural gas from Russia could be targeted in forthcoming attacks, three senior officials familiar with the intelligence said on Tuesday. The warning was not specific, the officials said, and they declined to say whether Russia itself was identified as a possible attacker. American officials said that while it appeared likely that the damage to the pipelines was the result of sabotage, they had reached no conclusion about who might have been responsible. Both pipelines suffered a sudden loss of pressure and released gas into the sea, European officials reported, and the chances that both suffered accidents nearly simultaneously seem low. The German publication Der Spiegel was the first to report that the U.S. had provided what intelligence officials call “strategic warning” of a possible attack — a warning that came with no specifics about the likely time or place or manner of a potential strike. The C.I.A. declined to comment on the warning. The Biden administration, which in the run-up to the war often accused Russia of planning attacks on Ukraine, was careful on Tuesday not to blame Moscow — or anyone else. At a White House news briefing on Tuesday, Karine Jean-Pierre, the press secretary, said she was not going to “speculate on the cause of this.” “Our partners are investigating this, so we stand ready to provide support to their efforts once they have completed their investigation,” she said. Several officials cautioned that because the warning was three months old, it may not be connected to the most recent incidents. Ms. Jean-Pierre noted that the pipelines were not actively pumping gas into Europe when the pressure loss occurred. The older pipeline, Nord Stream 1, has not moved gas into Europe for weeks, with the Russians claiming they needed to do maintenance and repair work. That was widely seen in Europe as a warning that President Vladimir V. Putin could turn gas off as winter approaches, depending on whether Europe abandons the Western-led sanctions imposed after the Feb. 24 invasion of Ukraine. The newer pipeline, Nord Stream 2, has never been operational and Germany said it was canceling its part of the project shortly after the invasion. Officials cautioned that it would be premature to conclude that Russia was behind the episode. Precisely because Mr. Putin seeks to show he has his finger on the gas valve, they noted, he may well want to keep the pipeline in good working order. A breach of the pipelines, if hard to repair, could hamper how he can control his leverage. While some European governments were quick to charge Russian sabotage, American government officials said other possibilities also existed that could explain what happened. Mr. Putin’s government could have been trying to manipulate the pipeline somehow and inadvertently caused an accident, or, potentially, another country could have caused the leak in order to prevent Russia from profiting from the elevated energy prices. Nongovernmental actors could be behind the sabotage. It also remains possible, even if unlikely, that no sabotage was involved and a pure accident caused the leak. Earlier this week, the main directorate of the Ukrainian intelligence service posted a warning on Facebook that “the Kremlin is planning to carry out massive cyberattacks on the critical infrastructure facilities of Ukrainian enterprises and critical infrastructure institutions of Ukraine’s allies. Attacks will be aimed at energy sector enterprises.” But it noted that those could also be combined with physical attacks. Image This handout picture released on Tuesday by the Danish Defense Command showed the leak at the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline off the island of Bornholm, Denmark.Credit…Danish Defense Command, via Getty Images As investigators from several countries look into gas leaks at Nord Stream 1 and 2, Sweden’s public broadcaster said on Tuesday that monitoring stations in Sweden and Denmark had recorded heavy underwater explosions in the same area as the gas leaks on Monday. “There is no doubt that there were blasts,” said Björn Lund, an associate professor of seismology at the Swedish National Seismic Network. The Swedish National Seismic Network said it had detected two distinct blasts in the area on Monday. One had a magnitude of 2.3 and was recorded at as many as 30 monitoring stations in southern Sweden. The first explosion was recorded at 2:03 a.m. on Monday, and the second at 7:04 p.m. The warnings about the gas leaks came from the Swedish Maritime Administration on Monday afternoon and evening after ships detected bubbles on the surface. — Christina Anderson Image The pro-Russian proxy mayor of Mariupol visited a polling station on Tuesday.Credit…Agence France-Presse — Getty Images KYIV, Ukraine — The four days of stage-managed referendums on joining Russia in occupied parts of Ukraine wrapped up on Tuesday, as pro-Moscow officials used raw intimidation tactics, including armed men in ski masks at polling stations, Orwellian messaging and thinly attended festivities to influence the vote. The referendums were in...
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Leaks In Undersea Gas Pipelines After Explosions Point To Sabotage Officials Say
Major Asia Markets Down 2%; Chinese Yuan At Weakest Since 2008
Major Asia Markets Down 2%; Chinese Yuan At Weakest Since 2008
Major Asia Markets Down 2%; Chinese Yuan At Weakest Since 2008 https://digitalalaskanews.com/major-asia-markets-down-2-chinese-yuan-at-weakest-since-2008/ The logo of the Tokyo Stock Exchange (TSE), operated by Japan Exchange Group Inc. (JPX), is displayed at the bourse in Tokyo, Japan, on Friday, Oct. 2, 2020. Akio Kon | Bloomberg via Getty Images The Dow Jones Industrial Average gave up earlier gains of around 400 points to fall 125.82 points, or 0.43%, to 29,134.99 at the end of the session. The Nasdaq Composite was up 0.25% to 10,829.50. — CNBC’s Sarah Min and Jesse Pound contributed to this report. CNBC Pro: Credit Suisse says now’s the time to buy two green hydrogen stocks — and gives one over 200% upside Credit Suisse says it’s time to enter the green hydrogen sector, with a number of catalysts set to drive the clean energy powerhouse. “Green hydrogen is a growth market — we increase our 2030 market estimates by [over] 4x,” the bank said, forecasting that green hydrogen production will expand by around 40 times by 2030. It names two stocks to play the boom — giving one upside of more than 200%. CNBC Pro subscribers can read more here. — Weizhen Tan Chinese yuan at weakest since 2008, dollar index strengthens The offshore and onshore Chinese yuan breached 7.2 against the dollar, hovering at weakest levels since early 2008. The U.S. dollar index also strengthened by 0.33%, trading at 114.47. –Jihye Lee Consumer inflation in Japan could decline in 2023: BOJ meeting minutes Consumer inflation excluding fresh food is likely to rise this year, but the rate of increase will slow thereafter on energy prices, minutes from Bank of Japan’s July meeting said. A few members also said inflation, excluding fresh food and energy, is unlikely to reach 2% within its projection period. That CPI reading was 1.6% in August. “These members expressed the view that, unless commodity prices continued to rise, the CPI inflation rate was expected to decline from fiscal 2023 onward,” the minutes said. On the yen, one BOJ board member said downward pressure on the currency could be alleviated if a slowdown in the global economy led to a decline in inflation and interest rates worldwide. Another member said the yen could even appreciate if the global economy faces shocks. — Abigail Ng CNBC Pro: Asset manager reveals what’s next for stocks — and shares how he’s trading the market Neil Veitch, investment director at Edinburgh-based SVM Asset Management, says he expects the macro landscape to remain “quite difficult” for the remainder of the year.   Speaking to CNBC Pro Talks last week, Veitch named the key drivers that could help the stock market to turn “more constructive” and shared his take on growth versus value. CNBC Subscribers can read more here. — Zavier Ong Earnings questions, potential recession mean more selling could be ahead The Dow and S&P 500 have fallen for six straight days, with many of those seeing broad selling typical of so-called “washout” days. That can sometimes be a contrarian buy signal on Wall Street, but many investment professionals are skeptical that the selling is over. One reason is that earnings expectations for next year still show solid growth, which would be unlikely in the event of a recession. “We know that if we start seeing a turnaround in the 2-year yields … and if we start seeing a turnaround in the dollar, that gives us the ability to bounce from these extremely oversold conditions,” said Andrew Smith, chief investment strategist of Delos Capital Advisors in Dallas. “But I have a hard time reconciling in my mind that the earnings story is going to be as good as we expect.” Additionally, the dramatic moves in the bond and currency markets means that “something broke” and it may be smart to wait for that information to shake out, Smith said. On the positive side, Smith pointed to a strong labor market and signs of continued spending on travel as a sign that the U.S. economy may be able to avoid a major recession. — Jesse Pound U.S. 10-year yield closes in on key 4% level The 10-year Treasury yield is edging close to 4%, a level it has not touched since 2010. The U.S. 10-year is the benchmark yield that sets the course for home mortgage rates and other consumer and business loans. It has bounded higher this week, as U.K. gilt yields race higher and on expectations of an aggressive Federal Reserve. The yield was at 3.96% in afternoon trading. The 10-year yield reversed an earlier decline and gained about basis points. (A basis point equals 0.01 of a percentage point) “It’s definitely been impressive, and I just think no one is yet willing to step in and catch the falling knife,” said Ben Jeffery of BMO. He added a lack of liquidity has also been pushing up yields, which move opposite price. Jeffery said the yield was also moving higher ahead of the 1 p.m. auction of 5-year notes. He said the 10-year tested the 4% level in 2010. “The last time we were sustainably above 4% was 2008. There’s another technical level at 4.10% and then there’s not much of note until 4.25%,” he said. — Patti Domm Read More Here
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Major Asia Markets Down 2%; Chinese Yuan At Weakest Since 2008
New Poll Reveals Arizona Governors Race Nearly Tied Weeks Before Early Voting
New Poll Reveals Arizona Governors Race Nearly Tied Weeks Before Early Voting
New Poll Reveals Arizona Governor’s Race Nearly Tied Weeks Before Early Voting https://digitalalaskanews.com/new-poll-reveals-arizona-governors-race-nearly-tied-weeks-before-early-voting/ PHOENIX (3TV/CBS 5) — With just a couple of weeks away from the start of early voting in Arizona, a new poll by the Arizona Republic and Suffolk University shows the governor’s race is a virtual tie. Despite being outspent by Democrat Katie Hobbs in television ads, Republican Kari Lake now has her own ad, focusing on her life growing up. “You’ve heard a lot of lies about me this past year, but here’s the truth,” Lake begins the video. “I was raised by a big family in Iowa, dad was a teacher, and mom was a nurse.” The 30-second ad focuses on Lake’s background but doesn’t mention the issues that propelled her to victory in the August primary, such as claims of voter fraud, her stance on immigration and her crucial endorsement from former President Donald Trump. The commercial dropped on the same day as the new poll. The poll reveals the governor’s race is neck-and-neck, with Lake trailing Hobbs by just a single point. However, part of the survey didn’t reflect last week’s abortion ruling. Republican political consultant Marcus Dell’Artino says Friday’s abortion ruling could significantly impact the outcomes of nearly every statewide race. “Polls are a snapshot in time for that day. They’re good for about 24 hours until the news cycle changes, and this was a dramatic moment that’s going to be ongoing. Polls conducted prior to this probably are not accurate today,” he explained. Hobbs has consistently said she backs legal access to abortion, while Lake opposes abortion. However, Lake hasn’t specifically voiced her position on the near-total abortion ban reinstated by a Pima County judge. “Today we’re operating in a different environment, under a different state statute. People are very emotionally charged and passionate about it and I would argue polls now would be reflective of today’s attitude,” said Dell’Artino. The poll also shows Democrat Mark Kelly has a seven-point lead over Republican opponent Blake Masters. Copyright 2022 KTVK/KPHO. All rights reserved. Read More Here
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New Poll Reveals Arizona Governors Race Nearly Tied Weeks Before Early Voting
Hurricane Ian Approaches Florida Threatens Tampa Bay
Hurricane Ian Approaches Florida Threatens Tampa Bay
Hurricane Ian Approaches Florida, Threatens Tampa Bay https://digitalalaskanews.com/hurricane-ian-approaches-florida-threatens-tampa-bay/ Some 2.5 million people in Florida were under evacuation orders Tuesday, as residents prepared for the arrival of Hurricane Ian. The Category 3 storm is expected to strengthen and make landfall between Tampa and Ft. Myers, according to FEMA. Photo: Ricardo Arduengo/AFP/Getty Images Updated Sept. 27, 2022 10:04 pm ET ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.—Hurricane Ian bore down on southwest Florida Tuesday after pummeling Cuba, with a swath of the state’s Gulf Coast in harm’s way, including the vulnerable Tampa Bay area. The storm’s center is forecast to approach the west coast of Florida on Wednesday afternoon and into Wednesday night, according to the National Hurricane Center. Rain from the storm began drenching parts of the state Tuesday. Hurricane conditions are expected along the state’s Gulf Coast by Wednesday morning. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Hurricane Ian Approaches Florida Threatens Tampa Bay
AP News Summary At 10:17 P.m. EDT
AP News Summary At 10:17 P.m. EDT
AP News Summary At 10:17 P.m. EDT https://digitalalaskanews.com/ap-news-summary-at-1017-p-m-edt/ Cuba without electricity after hurricane hammers power grid HAVANA (AP) — Hurricane has Ian knocked out power across all of Cuba and devastated some of the country’s most important tobacco farms when it slammed into the island’s western tip as a major hurricane. Cuba’s Electric Union says work is underway to gradually restore service to the country’s 11 million people overnight. Ian hit a Cuba that has been struggling with an economic crisis and has faced frequent power outages in recent months. It made landfall as a Category 3 storm Tuesday and devastated Pinar del Río province, where much of the tobacco for Cuba’s iconic cigars is grown. Tens of thousands of people had evacuated ahead of the arrival of Ian. Authorities are still assessing the damage, although no fatalities have been reported. Hurricane Ian strikes Cuba, Florida braces for winds, floods HAVANA (AP) — Hurricane Ian tore into western Cuba as a major hurricane, knocking out power to the entire country and leaving 11 million people without electricity. Now it’s on a collision course with Florida over warm Gulf waters and forecasters say it may strengthen into a catastrophic Category 4 storm. Ian made landfall early Tuesday in Cuba’s Pinar del Rio province, where officials set up 55 shelters, evacuated 50,000 people and took steps to protect crops in the nation’s main tobacco-growing region. Ian was expected to get even stronger over the warm Gulf of Mexico. In Florida, 2.5 million people were ordered to evacuate. Kremlin announces vote, paves way to annex part of Ukraine KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — Pro-Moscow officials say that residents in all four occupied areas of Ukraine voted to join Russia. The Kremlin-orchestrated votes have been dismissed by the U.S. and its Western allies as illegitimate. According to Russia-installed election officials, 93% of the ballots case in the Zaporizhzhia region were in support of annexation, as were 87% of ballots in the southern Kherson region and 98% in Luhansk. The preordained outcome sets the stage for a dangerous new phase in Russia’s seven-month war in Ukraine because it is expected to serve as a pretext for Moscow to annex the four areas. That could happen within days. Blasts precede Baltic pipeline leaks, sabotage seen likely WARSAW, Poland (AP) — Denmark believes “deliberate actions” caused big leaks in two natural gas pipelines that run under the Baltic Sea from Russia to Germany, and seismologists said powerful explosions preceded the leaks. European leaders and experts pointed to possible sabotage amid the energy standoff with Russia provoked by the war in Ukraine. Although filled with gas, neither pipeline is currently supplying it to Europe. Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen said Tuesday that “it is the authorities’ clear assessment that these are deliberate actions -– not accidents.” The incident overshadowed the inauguration of a long-awaited pipeline that will bring Norwegian gas to Poland to bolster the continent’s energy independence from Moscow. Millions of Americans will save on Medicare fees next year WASHINGTON (AP) — For the first time in a decade, Americans will pay less next year on monthly premiums for Medicare’s Part B plan, which covers routine doctors’ visits and other outpatient care. The rare 3% decrease in monthly premiums — a savings of $5.20 for most — comes after millions of Medicare beneficiaries endured a tough year of high inflation and a dramatic increase in those premiums this year. Most people on Medicare will pay $164.90 monthly for Part B coverage starting next year. The decrease in Medicare fees comes as many older people await news about big increases next year to their Social Security checks, which are often used to pay for Medicare premiums. California murder suspect, teen daughter killed in shootout LOS ANGELES (AP) — California authorities say an abducted 15-year-old girl and her father — a fugitive wanted in the death of the teen’s mother — were killed in a shootout with law enforcement. San Bernardino County Sheriff Shannon Dicus says the teenager, Savannah Graziano, was wearing tactical gear as she ran toward sheriff’s deputies during the firefight on a highway in the high desert. She was shot and was taken to the hospital, where she was pronounced dead shortly before noon. Her father, 45-year-old Anthony John Graziano, was pronounced dead at the scene in Hesperia. He allegedly killed his estranged wife in a domestic violence incident on Monday in the city of Fontana. Biden keeps US target for refugee admissions at 125,000 SAN DIEGO (AP) — President Joe Biden is formally keeping the nation’s cap on refugee admissions at 125,000 for the 2023 budget year, despite pressure from advocates to raise it even higher to meet the need after falling far short of that target this year. Refugees advocates had been pushing the Biden administration to do more to restore the U.S. Refugee Admissions Program. The program suffered deep cuts under the Trump administration, which slashed admissions to a record low of 15,000. Biden has raised the cap to four times that amount this year, but so far fewer than 20,000 refugees have been admitted. Jan. 6 panel delays hearing as Hurricane Ian aims at Florida WASHINGTON (AP) — The House Jan. 6 committee has postponed a hearing scheduled for Wednesday as a hurricane hurtles toward the Florida coast. The committee had planned to hold what was likely to be its final investigative hearing Wednesday afternoon. But lawmakers decided at the last minute to delay it as it became clear that Hurricane Ian was churning on a collision course toward Florida, where it is expected to strengthen into a catastrophic Category 4 storm. The committee had not yet provided a specific agenda for the Wednesday hearing, but Rep. Adam Schiff said over the weekend it would “tell the story about a key element of Donald Trump’s plot to overturn the election.” Families testify of confrontations with Sandy Hook deniers WATERBURY, Conn. (AP) — Nicole Hockley lost one son in the 2012 Sandy Hook massacre. She testified Tuesday that her biggest fear is that people who believe the shooting never happened will harm her other son, who survived the attack at his school. Hockle, her former husband, Ian Hockley, and the sister of another victim were the latest family members of the 26 victims of the school shooting to testify at the defamation trial of Alex Jones, where a jury is deciding how much the conspiracy theorist must pay for spreading the lie that the shooting was a hoax. Defense attorney Norm Pattis is arguing that any damages should be limited and accused the victims’ relatives of exaggerating the harm the lies caused them. Senators push to reform police’s cellphone tracking tools NEW YORK (AP) — Civil rights lawyers and Democratic senators are pushing for legislation that would limit U.S. law enforcement agencies’ ability to buy cellphone tracking tools to follow people’s whereabouts, including back years in time, and sometimes without a search warrant. Concerns about police use of the tool known as “Fog Reveal” raised in an investigation by The Associated Press published earlier this month also surfaced in a Federal Trade Commission hearing three weeks ago. Police agencies have been using the platform to search hundreds of billions of records gathered from 250 million mobile devices, and hoover up people’s geolocation data to assemble so-called “patterns of life,” according to thousands of pages of records about the company. Copyright 2022 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
AP News Summary At 10:17 P.m. EDT
Hurricane Ian On Path To Florida Live
Hurricane Ian On Path To Florida Live
Hurricane Ian On Path To Florida – Live https://digitalalaskanews.com/hurricane-ian-on-path-to-florida-live/ Florida bracing for Hurricane Ian Hurricane Ian is gathering strength and bearing down on Florida as the state races to finalize storm preparations and evacuate its most at-risk people ahead of expected landfall on Wednesday. The enormous, Category 3 storm was already bringing impacts to Key West on Tuesday after it lashed Cuba with heavy rain and winds overnight and threatened storm surge, flash flooding and landslides. The hurricane is causing maximum sustained winds of 120 miles per hour, according to the National Hurricane Center. Governor Ron DeSantis urged Floridians to heed warnings to evacuate to higher ground due to potential for “‘catastrophic flooding and life-threatening storm surge”. As of Tuesday, 2.5 million people in Florida were under evacuation orders. The most recent weather models have the hurricane projected to make landfall south of Tampa Bay where storm surge could reach up to 12 ft (3.7 metres). Up to 24 inches (61cm) of rain is expected in some areas and wind speeds of 130 miles per hour (209km/h). Emergency officials were warning that the life-threatening conditions would limit the potential for rescues once the storm arrived. “You will be on your own,” St Petersburg Mayor Ken Welch warned. 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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Hurricane Ian On Path To Florida Live
Secret Service Seizes 24 Phones From Agents In Jan. 6 Probe Report Says
Secret Service Seizes 24 Phones From Agents In Jan. 6 Probe Report Says
Secret Service Seizes 24 Phones From Agents In Jan. 6 Probe, Report Says https://digitalalaskanews.com/secret-service-seizes-24-phones-from-agents-in-jan-6-probe-report-says/ The Secret Service has reportedly seized 24 phones from agents in connection with a controversial investigation by the Department of Homeland Security inspector general into the storming of the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6. The two dozen agents’ phones, which are not believed to include messages from Jan. 6, were handed over to Homeland Security Inspector General Joseph Cuffari in July shortly after he opened a probe into missing text messages from the day of the attack, NBC News reported Tuesday. It’s not clear what information if any Cuffari, a Trump appointee who previously worked for Republican officials in Arizona, has gleaned from the agents’ phones, which are government property. The revelation about the phone seizures does little to clear up puzzling questions about Cuffari’s probe and his oversight of the Secret Service in the months since the attack. He revealed over the summer that text messages from Secret Service agents involved in the response to the Jan. 6 attack were mostly scrubbed in what the agency has described as a preplanned tech upgrade coinciding with the incoming administration of President Joe Biden. Cuffari’s office apparently knew about the lost messages for more than a year before notifying the congressional committee investigating the attack, a delay that has infuriated lawmakers. Any texts sent by agents on Jan. 6 and in the run-up to the attack on the Capitol are of obvious interest to investigators, raising serious questions about the decision by Secret Service brass to scrub the phones just days after the historic effort to prevent the peaceful transfer of power to Biden from former President Donald Trump. The messages took on even greater importance in June when former White House aide Cassidy Hutchinson told a Jan. 6 committee hearing that Trump physically accosted a Secret Service agent when he refused to drive Trump to the Capitol to lead the insurrection in person. Hutchinson said she was told about the incident, which Trump has denied, by deputy White House chief of staff Tony Ornato and the agent who was leading presidential security that day. Ornato, a staunch Trump loyalist and former veteran Secret Service agent, insisted he would contradict Hutchinson’s account under oath, but has since refused to do so. He recently announced his retirement but insisted it was long planned. ——— ©2022 New York Daily News. Visit nydailynews.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC. Recent Stories You Might Have Missed Read More Here
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Secret Service Seizes 24 Phones From Agents In Jan. 6 Probe Report Says
US Forecast
US Forecast
US Forecast https://digitalalaskanews.com/us-forecast-94/ City/Town, State;Yesterday’s High Temp (F);Yesterday’s Low Temp (F);Today’s High Temp (F);Today’s Low Temp (F);Weather Condition;Wind Direction;Wind Speed (MPH);Humidity (%);Chance of Precip. (%);UV Index Albany, NY;66;49;65;48;A shower in spots;NW;6;71%;60%;2 Albuquerque, NM;81;58;82;56;Mostly sunny;S;8;34%;0%;6 Anchorage, AK;54;42;52;42;A touch of rain;NE;7;73%;99%;1 Asheville, NC;67;39;65;39;Partly sunny;NNW;9;45%;3%;6 Atlanta, GA;75;49;74;50;Clouds and sun, nice;NE;8;35%;0%;6 Atlantic City, NJ;75;52;72;53;Some sun, pleasant;NNW;9;52%;12%;5 Austin, TX;91;60;91;60;Plenty of sunshine;SSE;5;30%;2%;7 Baltimore, MD;73;52;70;53;Clouds and sun;NNW;8;49%;6%;4 Baton Rouge, LA;85;56;83;53;Sunny and nice;NNE;9;41%;3%;7 Billings, MT;86;55;91;57;Very warm;SSW;9;28%;4%;4 Birmingham, AL;76;50;74;49;Sunny and nice;NNE;10;32%;0%;6 Bismarck, ND;68;42;77;50;Partly sunny, breezy;SE;14;46%;2%;4 Boise, ID;96;63;91;56;Very warm;ESE;8;19%;3%;4 Boston, MA;73;55;72;55;Some sun;NW;9;52%;30%;4 Bridgeport, CT;70;51;70;51;Clouds and sun;NNW;8;52%;7%;4 Buffalo, NY;62;52;57;45;A morning shower;NNW;9;79%;62%;1 Burlington, VT;61;52;62;48;A shower or two;NW;7;77%;78%;2 Caribou, ME;67;48;62;44;A shower or two;WNW;7;73%;83%;1 Casper, WY;81;46;84;50;Breezy in the a.m.;SW;13;23%;5%;5 Charleston, SC;82;57;74;59;Not as warm;NNE;10;44%;27%;5 Charleston, WV;65;42;63;47;Partly sunny, cool;N;5;68%;4%;5 Charlotte, NC;78;47;71;48;Partly sunny;NNE;8;39%;0%;5 Cheyenne, WY;75;47;80;53;Partly sunny, warm;SSW;10;28%;3%;5 Chicago, IL;58;47;58;48;A cool breeze;NNE;15;61%;4%;2 Cleveland, OH;59;53;59;53;A couple of showers;NNE;13;72%;85%;1 Columbia, SC;82;51;75;52;Partly sunny, nice;NNE;7;33%;2%;6 Columbus, OH;60;44;61;46;Clouds and sun, cool;N;8;64%;25%;2 Concord, NH;72;48;67;46;Clouds and sun;NW;8;67%;36%;3 Dallas-Ft. Worth, TX;88;64;90;63;Plenty of sunshine;SE;9;30%;2%;6 Denver, CO;78;53;84;57;Partly sunny;S;5;30%;4%;5 Des Moines, IA;70;39;64;40;Plenty of sunshine;SE;7;47%;4%;4 Detroit, MI;62;48;59;45;Clouds and sunshine;N;10;71%;27%;2 Dodge City, KS;87;50;78;51;Partly sunny;ESE;13;38%;55%;5 Duluth, MN;55;36;54;41;Mostly sunny;SSW;6;65%;1%;4 El Paso, TX;86;61;85;58;Mostly sunny;ESE;9;27%;0%;7 Fairbanks, AK;45;31;53;34;Partly sunny;NE;7;60%;11%;1 Fargo, ND;61;35;66;49;Partly sunny, breezy;SSE;14;42%;17%;4 Grand Junction, CO;85;57;81;57;A stray t-shower;SE;9;34%;43%;5 Grand Rapids, MI;56;45;58;40;Rather cloudy, cool;N;9;67%;27%;1 Hartford, CT;73;50;70;50;Some sun;NW;7;58%;8%;4 Helena, MT;84;47;86;53;Very warm;SSE;5;34%;10%;4 Honolulu, HI;89;75;87;75;A morning shower;NE;12;55%;44%;9 Houston, TX;88;62;88;63;Plenty of sunshine;ENE;7;38%;4%;7 Indianapolis, IN;65;45;64;45;Partly sunny;NE;8;59%;2%;2 Jackson, MS;81;53;80;50;Sunny and nice;NNE;9;40%;3%;6 Jacksonville, FL;85;69;77;69;Rain and wind;NE;14;68%;100%;2 Juneau, AK;57;41;54;51;Rain and drizzle;ESE;9;85%;99%;1 Kansas City, MO;82;48;71;46;Sunny, not as warm;E;8;37%;6%;5 Knoxville, TN;72;43;69;45;Sunny and pleasant;NNE;7;48%;2%;5 Las Vegas, NV;99;73;97;73;Partly sunny;NNE;7;28%;8%;5 Lexington, KY;67;41;63;44;Partly sunny, cool;NNE;8;63%;3%;4 Little Rock, AR;84;53;80;48;Sunny and pleasant;NE;9;39%;3%;6 Long Beach, CA;92;67;87;66;Mostly sunny, warm;S;7;59%;0%;6 Los Angeles, CA;88;68;96;66;Sunny and hot;SSE;7;49%;0%;6 Louisville, KY;70;43;66;46;Partly sunny;NNE;7;55%;1%;4 Madison, WI;56;36;58;36;Sunny and breezy;ESE;15;58%;2%;4 Memphis, TN;80;55;77;50;Sunny and pleasant;NE;11;32%;1%;5 Miami, FL;82;79;85;79;Some wind and rain;SSW;23;82%;97%;2 Milwaukee, WI;58;44;56;43;Breezy;NNE;15;65%;5%;3 Minneapolis-St. Paul, MN;60;38;62;42;Partly sunny;SSE;7;43%;2%;4 Mobile, AL;82;58;82;54;Sunny, breezy, nice;N;14;33%;1%;7 Montgomery, AL;80;52;77;51;Mostly sunny;NNE;9;34%;0%;6 Mt. Washington, NH;40;33;39;29;Windy with a shower;NW;28;98%;85%;1 Nashville, TN;76;44;70;46;Sunny and pleasant;NNE;9;39%;0%;5 New Orleans, LA;84;65;82;61;Sunny, breezy, nice;NNE;15;39%;2%;7 New York, NY;70;55;71;54;Clouds and sun;NNW;9;47%;6%;5 Newark, NJ;71;51;71;52;Partly sunny;NNW;8;49%;8%;4 Norfolk, VA;80;56;71;58;Not as warm;N;9;43%;15%;5 Oklahoma City, OK;91;61;90;59;Plenty of sun;SE;10;34%;3%;5 Olympia, WA;77;52;66;53;A shower or two;SSE;6;78%;90%;1 Omaha, NE;80;40;68;43;Sunny, not as warm;SE;8;43%;3%;5 Orlando, FL;84;73;77;74;Rain and wind;E;19;93%;100%;2 Philadelphia, PA;72;53;71;54;Partly sunny;NNW;9;49%;10%;5 Phoenix, AZ;102;82;101;79;Clouds and sun, warm;ESE;8;23%;16%;5 Pittsburgh, PA;61;47;59;47;A passing shower;NNW;7;73%;81%;1 Portland, ME;71;52;67;50;Some sun;NW;7;66%;31%;4 Portland, OR;79;56;68;58;A shower or two;S;7;72%;88%;1 Providence, RI;74;50;71;50;Partly sunny;NW;7;55%;8%;4 Raleigh, NC;79;49;71;50;High clouds and nice;NNE;7;40%;3%;5 Reno, NV;88;53;84;49;Breezy in the p.m.;W;12;23%;0%;5 Richmond, VA;75;48;71;51;Some sun;NNW;7;48%;10%;5 Roswell, NM;89;56;87;54;Plenty of sun;SSW;8;35%;3%;6 Sacramento, CA;84;55;84;57;Sunshine;S;7;48%;3%;5 Salt Lake City, UT;90;61;86;62;A stray t-shower;SSE;15;27%;64%;5 San Antonio, TX;91;59;92;60;Plenty of sunshine;SSE;8;32%;3%;7 San Diego, CA;82;68;80;68;Partly sunny, humid;SW;7;72%;0%;6 San Francisco, CA;64;58;72;58;Clouds, then sun;W;13;65%;3%;5 Savannah, GA;82;61;76;60;Breezy, not as warm;NNE;14;49%;58%;6 Seattle-Tacoma, WA;76;55;66;57;A shower or two;SSW;7;77%;86%;1 Sioux Falls, SD;72;35;67;46;Mostly sunny;SSE;9;41%;0%;4 Spokane, WA;90;54;83;53;Periods of sun, warm;SW;7;34%;26%;4 Springfield, IL;70;37;64;41;Mostly sunny, cool;ENE;6;53%;1%;5 St. Louis, MO;73;42;67;44;Sunny, but cool;NE;7;49%;2%;5 Tampa, FL;84;73;78;73;Rain and wind;ENE;40;89%;100%;1 Toledo, OH;60;46;58;42;Mostly cloudy, cool;N;8;75%;26%;1 Tucson, AZ;96;73;94;68;Partly sunny;E;10;33%;26%;6 Tulsa, OK;90;58;87;55;Sunshine;E;8;38%;5%;5 Vero Beach, FL;79;76;84;79;Rain and wind;SSE;18;85%;100%;2 Washington, DC;73;51;69;53;Clouds and sunshine;NNW;8;50%;4%;4 Wichita, KS;88;56;81;53;Mostly sunny, breezy;E;15;39%;3%;5 Wilmington, DE;72;51;70;52;Partly sunny;NNW;9;53%;8%;5 _____ Copyright 2022 AccuWeather Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
US Forecast
Youngkin Is 'hugging Everyone' As He Tries To Build A Brand As The GOP's Great Unifier | News Channel 3-12
Youngkin Is 'hugging Everyone' As He Tries To Build A Brand As The GOP's Great Unifier | News Channel 3-12
Youngkin Is 'hugging Everyone' As He Tries To Build A Brand As The GOP's Great Unifier | News Channel 3-12 https://digitalalaskanews.com/youngkin-is-hugging-everyone-as-he-tries-to-build-a-brand-as-the-gops-great-unifier-news-channel-3-12/ By Michael Warren and Eva McKend, CNN Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin is crisscrossing the country this fall to stump for the whole gamut of Republican gubernatorial hopefuls — from ardent pro-Trumpers like Kari Lake of Arizona and Tudor Dixon of Michigan to establishmentarians like Jim Pillen of Nebraska. And on Tuesday, Youngkin joined the GOP governor Donald Trump hates the most, Georgia’s Brian Kemp. In a GOP often plagued by factionalism, Youngkin is “hugging everyone,” said a person close to the governor. “No one else in the party is doing that.” As a result, the governor who flipped a Biden state last year has become a sought-after surrogate for Republicans. By November, Youngkin will have campaigned for at least 10 gubernatorial candidates, including in many of what the Republican Governors Association considers top target races. Having kept the former President at a distance during his own campaign, Youngkin is now stumping for nominees who have been boosted by Trump and those, like Kemp and Pillen, who have defied Trump-backed primary challengers. Republicans currently control a majority of governorships, with 36 total seats up this year and more than a dozen competitive. In Georgia, which is home to a competitive rematch for the state’s top job, Youngkin rallied with Kemp while wearing his signature red vest, handing his fellow governor a matching zip-up on stage. (Each candidate he appears with gets a personalized Youngkin-like red vest.) “This is about coming together,” Youngkin said. “Let’s make sure you make a very large Georgia statement that we are going to make sure Brian Kemp has four more years.” Youngkin’s campaign efforts this year come as the Republican Party seeks a path for the future — and the Virginia Republican is putting himself out there as a potential champion. The party’s base remains enamored with Trump, who is moving closer to a potential third White House run, and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis appears to be waiting in the wings should the former President decline to run or stumble along the way. But where both Trump and DeSantis employ a combative approach to winning the hearts of GOP voters, Youngkin tries to strike an ecumenical tone in order to appeal to all stripes of Republican. That’s how he characterizes his 2-point win last year in Virginia, a state that voted for Joe Biden over Trump by 10 points in 2020. “We brought people together that had never been in the same room together: forever Trumpers, Never Trumpers, Tea Party, libertarians, independent moderate voters, and a lot of Democrats,” Youngkin told journalist David Drucker onstage last week in Austin at the Texas Tribune Festival — another out-of-state appearance that suggests the relatively new governor may already have national ambitions. Some Republicans have started to take notice. “One person I don’t think gets enough credit if Trump doesn’t run is Glenn Youngkin in Virginia,” said Terry Schilling, the president of the American Principles Project, a social conservative group. “He’s a red governor in a purple state, who won a tough election against [Terry] McAuliffe, and is doing a lot under the radar on these issues that families and conservatives and Americans care so much about.” On the trail this year, Youngkin’s pitch for a winning Republican message is that voters reward the party for responding to “kitchen-table” issues — not just economic concerns over inflation and taxes but also cultural issues around public schools. Drawing on his winning message last year, he hits the theme consistently as he stumps for Republican candidates — some of whom are better known for pandering to those who deny Biden won the 2020 election or outright repeat election lies themselves. Dixon won her primary in Michigan after expressing her “concerns” about the conduct of the 2020 election and earning an endorsement from Trump. And while Youngkin has not waded knee deep into related conspiracies, he did characterize “election integrity” as a top issue when campaigning last year and also called for an audit of voting machines in Virginia, mirroring a broader Republican push to interrogate the 2020 election results. But when Youngkin spoke on Dixon’s behalf last month at the state GOP convention in Lansing, he avoided touching the false claims and instead focused on his familiar themes about the economy and education. “We are on the side of strong families, low taxes, safe communities,” Youngkin said. “We are on the side of small government, low inflation, American-made products. We are on the side of patriotism, God-given liberties and the limitless opportunities that can lift up all Americans. We are on the side of teaching our children how to think, not what to think. We are on the side of parents — because guess what? Parents matter.” The refrain has become familiar for Youngkin’s political speeches, and it’s one Republicans say speaks to the concerns of their voters. “He’s more conservative than you think, being governor of Virginia,” said one GOP operative who requested anonymity to speak freely. “He can talk really well about parental rights in education, culture creep. Voters want to hear about it. That’s the bread and butter right now.” Governing as a conservative in Virginia Virginia’s unique law that bars governors from serving consecutive terms has tended to limit the state’s chief executives’ national ambitions. But Youngkin has turned that disadvantage on its head, embracing a more conservative agenda than might be expected in a Democratic-leaning state to remain in the national conversation. In particular, Youngkin has become a conservative-movement hero in the fights over the teaching of racial and gender identity concepts in Virginia’s public schools. During his campaign for governor, the Republican successfully rode a broad range of frustration on education from some voters — from Covid-related school closures to curriculum that addressed the legacy of racism in America. And Youngkin’s most recent policy to thrill the right are new draft guidelines from Virginia’s education department requiring parental approval and documentation for schools to recognize a child’s preferred name or pronoun and requiring transgender students to use school facilities that match the sex listed on their birth certificates. The guidelines, which still have to be adopted by individual districts, have prompted backlash from transgender-rights advocates and Virginia students, thousands of whom organized student walkouts this week in protest. Between the national attention to these issues and his appearances in other states, Youngkin has Democrats calling foul. “He is not focused on his day job that he was elected to last November. He was governor for about three seconds before he decided to travel the country to support other right wing cultural warriors,” said Susan Swecker, chairperson of the Democratic Party of Virginia, who blasted Youngkin as having “a mean spirited edge to everything that he does.” Raising questions about 2024 All of this activity has helped Youngkin remain a frequent presence on Fox News, where he is often portrayed as a leader for the Republican Party. In one appearance on the network this week, Youngkin was asked about the GOP’s campaign to win majorities in Congress. The chyron at the bottom of the screen read, “GOP EYES YOUNGKIN’S PLAYBOOK TO TAKE CONGRESS,” as Youngkin hit his talking points. “Voters are really focusing on those issues that they care most about,” he said, listing off inflation, crime and education as top priorities. His ability to command attention has put Youngkin on the radar of those Republicans looking for presidential options outside the Trump-DeSantis dynamic. “Right now, it is Trump vs. DeSantis and, just maybe, Youngkin is the dark horse who could possibly come out of the blue,” said one senior official at a prominent conservative organization in Washington. Kristin Davison, a top political aide to Youngkin, swatted away suggestions this current tour of the country in support of Republican governors and candidates is an early campaign for 2024, arguing Youngkin’s name is “in the mix” because of “the movement” he started in Virginia and the swift way he’s delivered on campaign promises after becoming governor in January. Youngkin himself has also dismissed questions about his presidential ambitions, including when he was asked last week in Austin. “When I see folks step back and ask this humbling question about 2024, it’s just very easy to really, very candidly say, we’re not thinking about 2024,” he said. “We’re focused on 2022.” The-CNN-Wire & © 2022 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved. Gabby Orr contributed to this report. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Youngkin Is 'hugging Everyone' As He Tries To Build A Brand As The GOP's Great Unifier | News Channel 3-12
Youngkin Is 'hugging Everyone' As He Tries To Build A Brand As The GOP's Great Unifier KVIA
Youngkin Is 'hugging Everyone' As He Tries To Build A Brand As The GOP's Great Unifier KVIA
Youngkin Is 'hugging Everyone' As He Tries To Build A Brand As The GOP's Great Unifier – KVIA https://digitalalaskanews.com/youngkin-is-hugging-everyone-as-he-tries-to-build-a-brand-as-the-gops-great-unifier-kvia/ By Michael Warren and Eva McKend, CNN Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin is crisscrossing the country this fall to stump for the whole gamut of Republican gubernatorial hopefuls — from ardent pro-Trumpers like Kari Lake of Arizona and Tudor Dixon of Michigan to establishmentarians like Jim Pillen of Nebraska. And on Tuesday, Youngkin joined the GOP governor Donald Trump hates the most, Georgia’s Brian Kemp. In a GOP often plagued by factionalism, Youngkin is “hugging everyone,” said a person close to the governor. “No one else in the party is doing that.” As a result, the governor who flipped a Biden state last year has become a sought-after surrogate for Republicans. By November, Youngkin will have campaigned for at least 10 gubernatorial candidates, including in many of what the Republican Governors Association considers top target races. Having kept the former President at a distance during his own campaign, Youngkin is now stumping for nominees who have been boosted by Trump and those, like Kemp and Pillen, who have defied Trump-backed primary challengers. Republicans currently control a majority of governorships, with 36 total seats up this year and more than a dozen competitive. In Georgia, which is home to a competitive rematch for the state’s top job, Youngkin rallied with Kemp while wearing his signature red vest, handing his fellow governor a matching zip-up on stage. (Each candidate he appears with gets a personalized Youngkin-like red vest.) “This is about coming together,” Youngkin said. “Let’s make sure you make a very large Georgia statement that we are going to make sure Brian Kemp has four more years.” Youngkin’s campaign efforts this year come as the Republican Party seeks a path for the future — and the Virginia Republican is putting himself out there as a potential champion. The party’s base remains enamored with Trump, who is moving closer to a potential third White House run, and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis appears to be waiting in the wings should the former President decline to run or stumble along the way. But where both Trump and DeSantis employ a combative approach to winning the hearts of GOP voters, Youngkin tries to strike an ecumenical tone in order to appeal to all stripes of Republican. That’s how he characterizes his 2-point win last year in Virginia, a state that voted for Joe Biden over Trump by 10 points in 2020. “We brought people together that had never been in the same room together: forever Trumpers, Never Trumpers, Tea Party, libertarians, independent moderate voters, and a lot of Democrats,” Youngkin told journalist David Drucker onstage last week in Austin at the Texas Tribune Festival — another out-of-state appearance that suggests the relatively new governor may already have national ambitions. Some Republicans have started to take notice. “One person I don’t think gets enough credit if Trump doesn’t run is Glenn Youngkin in Virginia,” said Terry Schilling, the president of the American Principles Project, a social conservative group. “He’s a red governor in a purple state, who won a tough election against [Terry] McAuliffe, and is doing a lot under the radar on these issues that families and conservatives and Americans care so much about.” On the trail this year, Youngkin’s pitch for a winning Republican message is that voters reward the party for responding to “kitchen-table” issues — not just economic concerns over inflation and taxes but also cultural issues around public schools. Drawing on his winning message last year, he hits the theme consistently as he stumps for Republican candidates — some of whom are better known for pandering to those who deny Biden won the 2020 election or outright repeat election lies themselves. Dixon won her primary in Michigan after expressing her “concerns” about the conduct of the 2020 election and earning an endorsement from Trump. And while Youngkin has not waded knee deep into related conspiracies, he did characterize “election integrity” as a top issue when campaigning last year and also called for an audit of voting machines in Virginia, mirroring a broader Republican push to interrogate the 2020 election results. But when Youngkin spoke on Dixon’s behalf last month at the state GOP convention in Lansing, he avoided touching the false claims and instead focused on his familiar themes about the economy and education. “We are on the side of strong families, low taxes, safe communities,” Youngkin said. “We are on the side of small government, low inflation, American-made products. We are on the side of patriotism, God-given liberties and the limitless opportunities that can lift up all Americans. We are on the side of teaching our children how to think, not what to think. We are on the side of parents — because guess what? Parents matter.” The refrain has become familiar for Youngkin’s political speeches, and it’s one Republicans say speaks to the concerns of their voters. “He’s more conservative than you think, being governor of Virginia,” said one GOP operative who requested anonymity to speak freely. “He can talk really well about parental rights in education, culture creep. Voters want to hear about it. That’s the bread and butter right now.” Governing as a conservative in Virginia Virginia’s unique law that bars governors from serving consecutive terms has tended to limit the state’s chief executives’ national ambitions. But Youngkin has turned that disadvantage on its head, embracing a more conservative agenda than might be expected in a Democratic-leaning state to remain in the national conversation. In particular, Youngkin has become a conservative-movement hero in the fights over the teaching of racial and gender identity concepts in Virginia’s public schools. During his campaign for governor, the Republican successfully rode a broad range of frustration on education from some voters — from Covid-related school closures to curriculum that addressed the legacy of racism in America. And Youngkin’s most recent policy to thrill the right are new draft guidelines from Virginia’s education department requiring parental approval and documentation for schools to recognize a child’s preferred name or pronoun and requiring transgender students to use school facilities that match the sex listed on their birth certificates. The guidelines, which still have to be adopted by individual districts, have prompted backlash from transgender-rights advocates and Virginia students, thousands of whom organized student walkouts this week in protest. Between the national attention to these issues and his appearances in other states, Youngkin has Democrats calling foul. “He is not focused on his day job that he was elected to last November. He was governor for about three seconds before he decided to travel the country to support other right wing cultural warriors,” said Susan Swecker, chairperson of the Democratic Party of Virginia, who blasted Youngkin as having “a mean spirited edge to everything that he does.” Raising questions about 2024 All of this activity has helped Youngkin remain a frequent presence on Fox News, where he is often portrayed as a leader for the Republican Party. In one appearance on the network this week, Youngkin was asked about the GOP’s campaign to win majorities in Congress. The chyron at the bottom of the screen read, “GOP EYES YOUNGKIN’S PLAYBOOK TO TAKE CONGRESS,” as Youngkin hit his talking points. “Voters are really focusing on those issues that they care most about,” he said, listing off inflation, crime and education as top priorities. His ability to command attention has put Youngkin on the radar of those Republicans looking for presidential options outside the Trump-DeSantis dynamic. “Right now, it is Trump vs. DeSantis and, just maybe, Youngkin is the dark horse who could possibly come out of the blue,” said one senior official at a prominent conservative organization in Washington. Kristin Davison, a top political aide to Youngkin, swatted away suggestions this current tour of the country in support of Republican governors and candidates is an early campaign for 2024, arguing Youngkin’s name is “in the mix” because of “the movement” he started in Virginia and the swift way he’s delivered on campaign promises after becoming governor in January. Youngkin himself has also dismissed questions about his presidential ambitions, including when he was asked last week in Austin. “When I see folks step back and ask this humbling question about 2024, it’s just very easy to really, very candidly say, we’re not thinking about 2024,” he said. “We’re focused on 2022.” The-CNN-Wire & © 2022 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved. Gabby Orr contributed to this report. Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Youngkin Is 'hugging Everyone' As He Tries To Build A Brand As The GOP's Great Unifier KVIA
Youngkin Stumps With Kemp In Georgia Urging Conservatives To Vote
Youngkin Stumps With Kemp In Georgia Urging Conservatives To Vote
Youngkin Stumps With Kemp In Georgia, Urging Conservatives To Vote https://digitalalaskanews.com/youngkin-stumps-with-kemp-in-georgia-urging-conservatives-to-vote/ Brian Kemp’s re-election campaign has drawn a string of Republicans who have kept Donald Trump at a relative arm’s length. Send any friend a story As a subscriber, you have 10 gift articles to give each month. Anyone can read what you share. This article is part of our Midterms 2022 Daily Briefing Gov. Glenn Youngkin of Virginia emphasized turnout and issues like education and the economy at a rally on Tuesday in Alpharetta, Ga., for Gov. Brian Kemp.Credit…Audra Melton for The New York Times Sept. 27, 2022, 9:11 p.m. ET ALPHARETTA, Ga. — Gov. Glenn Youngkin of Virginia appeared at a campaign event on Tuesday afternoon for his counterpart in Georgia, Brian Kemp, helping to bolster Governor Kemp’s re-election pitch to voters. The event, in Alpharetta’s idyllic town center, brought out more than 200 conservative voters from around Georgia, several with hats, T-shirts and signs bearing Mr. Kemp’s campaign logo. In his speech, Mr. Youngkin pressed for conservative voters to turn out en masse on Election Day and pointed out the competitive politics of the two Republican governors’ states. Mr. Youngkin also focused on the issues that helped him get elected. Education and the economy, he said, represent “the failed policy of the progressive liberals.” “We all know that it has failed,” Mr. Youngkin said. “This is not a Republican view. This is an American view.” Mr. Kemp, too, underlined the parties’ differences in policy, championing his decision to defy public health guidance during the earliest waves of the Covid-19 pandemic to keep businesses open in Georgia. In addition, he laid out a policy plan for a second term that would include using surplus funds from the state budget to cut property and income taxes. Georgia has played host to a parade of Republicans who have kept former President Donald J. Trump at arm’s length. Mr. Kemp in 2020 resisted Mr. Trump’s efforts to overturn his loss in the election in Georgia, and this year he easily fended off a Trump-backed challenger in the primary, former Senator David Perdue. In early September, Mr. Kemp campaigned with former Gov. Nikki Haley of South Carolina. And before Mr. Kemp’s primary, former Vice President Mike Pence headlined a Kemp campaign event. How Times reporters cover politics. We rely on our journalists to be independent observers. So while Times staff members may vote, they are not allowed to endorse or campaign for candidates or political causes. This includes participating in marches or rallies in support of a movement or giving money to, or raising money for, any political candidate or election cause. Mr. Youngkin, a former private equity executive who defeated Terry McAuliffe, a former governor, in the November 2021 election for Virginia governor, has traveled across the country in recent weeks on behalf of Republican candidates for state office. In late August he campaigned with Tudor Dixon, the Republican running to unseat Gov. Gretchen Whitmer of Michigan. In early September, Mr. Youngkin appeared alongside Joe Lombardo, the Republican candidate for governor in Nevada. Mr. Youngkin’s tours have only fueled speculation that he is angling for a spot in a future Republican presidential primary. However, in a news conference after the rally on Tuesday, Mr. Youngkin downplayed such talk. “I don’t really think about it,” he said. “I’m focused on 2022, being the best governor I can possibly be in the Commonwealth of Virginia.” Mr. Kemp leads his Democratic opponent, Stacey Abrams, by more than five percentage points in a majority of polls of the race. Even so, Mr. Kemp has implored his supporters to consider the network of Democratic organizers and party leaders who had worked to turn out the vote and powered the party’s gains in the 2020 presidential election and 2021 U.S. Senate runoffs. When asked by The New York Times during a news conference if he still had concerns about Republicans’ ability to match Democrats’ grass-roots turnout efforts, Mr. Kemp replied, “Damn right.” “I would tell all those people out there: Don’t believe any of these polls,” he said, turning his attention to his Democratic rivals. “You cannot underestimate their ground game.” He then underlined the millions of dollars that Democrats and their allies have poured on to the airwaves in recent weeks. “We’re never going to outspend them,” he said. “But I do believe we’re going to outwork them.” Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Youngkin Stumps With Kemp In Georgia Urging Conservatives To Vote
Mitch McConnell Gives Big Boost To Electoral Bill In Response To January 6 Attack KVIA
Mitch McConnell Gives Big Boost To Electoral Bill In Response To January 6 Attack KVIA
Mitch McConnell Gives Big Boost To Electoral Bill In Response To January 6 Attack – KVIA https://digitalalaskanews.com/mitch-mcconnell-gives-big-boost-to-electoral-bill-in-response-to-january-6-attack-kvia/ By Alex Rogers and Manu Raju, CNN Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell announced Tuesday he would support legislation that would make it harder to overturn a certified presidential election, an endorsement that will bolster its chances for passage in his chamber and puts him at sharp odds with former President Donald Trump, who has called on GOP senators to sink the plan. McConnell said the “chaos” of the pro-Trump attack on the Capitol last year “certainly underscored the need for an update.” “I strongly support the modest changes that our colleagues in the working group have fleshed out after literally months of detailed discussions,” McConnell said. “I’ll proudly support the legislation, provided that nothing more than technical changes are made to its current form.” “Congress’ process for counting the presidential electors’ votes was written 135 years ago. The chaos that came to a head on January 6th of last year certainly underscored the need for an update,” added McConnell. “So did Januaries 2001, 2005 and 2017. In each of which, Democrats tried to challenge the lawful election of a Republican president.” Last week, House GOP Leader Kevin McCarthy and the vast majority of House Republicans opposed their chamber’s version of the bill that would amend the Electoral Count Act of 1887. While the House bill has a number of similarities with the Senate’s version, including ensuring the vice president only has a ministerial role in overseeing a joint session of Congress approving state-certified electoral results, it differs in some of its details. Among the differences: The number of lawmakers who would be required to force the House and Senate to vote to overturn a state’s certified electoral results and the procedures for resolving election disputes in federal courts. Maine Republican Sen. Susan Collins and West Virginia Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin have already lined up 10 Republican co-sponsors for their so-called Electoral Count Reform and Presidential Transition Improvement Act, enough support to surpass a filibuster with 50 Democratic votes. The Senate bill would make a number of changes to the Electoral Count Act, and the Presidential Transition Act of 1963, in an attempt to address ambiguity in electoral law that Trump tried to exploit. It would increase the number of House and Senate members required to raise an objection to election results when a joint session of Congress meets to certify them. One House member and one senator can currently object to electoral votes, sending them to a vote in Congress; If either chamber rejects the objection, the votes are counted. The Senate bill would require the support of one-fifth of each chamber to raise an objection. The House bill would raise the threshold even higher — to one-third of each chamber — to force both chambers to vote on whether to throw out a state’s electoral results. In an effort to respond to Trump allies who tried to send fake electors to Congress, both bills try to make it harder for there to be any confusion over the electors themselves. In the Senate bill, it states that each state’s governor would be responsible for submission of a certificate that identifies electors, eliminating the potential for multiple state officials sending multiple slates of electors. But the bills differ in how lawsuits challenging election results can be taken up in federal court, with the House bill offering new avenues to sue, something some key Senate Republicans oppose. In a clear response to Trump’s efforts to get then-Vice President Mike Pence to reject the electoral results of states that President Joe Biden won, both bills establish the vice president’s role as purely ceremonial. The Senate bill would deny the vice president the power to “solely determine, accept, reject, or otherwise adjudicate or resolve disputes over the proper list of electors, the validity of electors, or the votes of electors.” While constitutional experts say the vice president currently can’t disregard a state-certified electoral result, Trump pushed Pence to obstruct the Electoral College certification in Congress. But Pence refused to do so and, as a result, became a target of the former President and his mob of supporters who stormed the Capitol on January 6, 2021. The Senate’s bill has been split into two separate proposals, one of which will be voted on by the Senate Rules Committee on Tuesday. The other package will go before the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs, which has yet to consider the measure. The full Senate is unlikely to act before the November midterms, punting the issue until a lame-duck session of Congress at year’s end. It remains uncertain if both chambers can reconcile their differences or if the House will be forced to simply accept the Senate’s version. Some House Republicans who opposed their chamber’s bill — drafted by California Democratic Rep. Zoe Lofgren and Wyoming Republican Rep. Liz Cheney — objected to how it did not go through the committee process and signaled they could support the Senate’s plan instead. “The resulting product — this bill, as introduced — is the only chance to get an outcome and to actually make law,” said McConnell on Tuesday. “It keeps what’s worked well and modestly updates what has not.” The-CNN-Wire & © 2022 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved. Read More Here
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Mitch McConnell Gives Big Boost To Electoral Bill In Response To January 6 Attack KVIA
Opinion: Luria's Lies Lure Shore Daily News
Opinion: Luria's Lies Lure Shore Daily News
Opinion: Luria's Lies Lure – Shore Daily News https://digitalalaskanews.com/opinion-lurias-lies-lure-shore-daily-news/ This  responds to letters published by ES News over past several months relating to  Luria’s bid  for  reelection. The lure of Luria, is , as she has declaimed as  spokesperson/propagandist for January 6 Committee is  that she is faithful to her oath  of office and duties thereof. Cloaked In that costume,  she asks all to believe she and the Committee are in  pursuit of that  fidelity. This commentary argues that Luria and the January 6 Committee have not been truthful or honest about their fidelity to oath of office and duties, And so should she  be judged. Freedom of speech and  assembly is a fundamental Constitutional right which was exactly the  purpose of the rally on January 6.  Those assembled were protesting the unconstitutional (federal and state)  activities of election officials, governors and  third party interpositions including censorship by media and deep state actors in election process Of this there is an abundance  of evidence. In days preceding the rally, Speaker Pelosi and Capital police were informed by the FBI and  others that certain individuals and provocateurs intended to attach to the rally and violence may occur at the Capitol. Trump offered security protection if  requested, but this was declined. It is necessary to understand the President (executive branch) cannot order Nationa1 Guard or any armed force to enter the Capital or the Supreme Court unless requested. This goes to the fundamental predicate of the Constitution of separation of powers. Luria viscously attacked Trump for not doing what the Constitution  prohibits him from doing when Pelosi refuses to request. Thus it is Luria and Jan 6 Com that is not faithful to oath of  office and duties… not Trump. In her oath of office Luria also promises to  faithfully perform the duties of her office.  Important among these is duty under Electoral Vote Count Act. This sets the protocol when electoral votes of a state(s) are contested. In brief, when a state’s electoral votes are presented  to the Vice President in joint session, a representative and a senator may contest certification.  This puts in motion other provisions of the Act and possibly the Presidential Succession Act and the 12th Amendment to end of decision .  This is what Trump was trying to do and is testament to fidelity to his oath of office. Unfortunately, after contesting  Arizona’s electoral votes  certification, proceedings were interrupted by rioting, which Pelosi could have prevented by request to Trump for security. Luria, however, fabricates a narrative that Trump summoned a mob to Washington with intent to overturn a free and fair election by violently attacking members of Congress, including murder of Vice President. Either by ignorance of or ignoring duties of her office,  Luria is not faithful to her oath of office and duties. At root to cause of discontent of those who protest the election is as Democrat party is want to say… “never let a crisis go to waste”. They simply took advantage of Covid concerns  and use of mail in balloting, which was known to be most subject to fraud and abuse. Whereas the Constitution mandates state legislatures determine rules  for elections, Luria has voted for disregarding the Constitution and transferring from the state legislatures  to a Federal commission appointed by the President and perpetuate the abuses protested. Thus, again, Luria is not faithful to oath of office. Luria is no more than a card carrying Biden bidding woke Democrat  socialist. A vote for Luria is a vote for more of that. Res Publica. Charles A. Landis Onancock Read More Here
·digitalalaskanews.com·
Opinion: Luria's Lies Lure Shore Daily News