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U.S. Believes Ukrainians Were Behind An Assassination In Russia
U.S. Believes Ukrainians Were Behind An Assassination In Russia
U.S. Believes Ukrainians Were Behind An Assassination In Russia https://digitalarizonanews.com/u-s-believes-ukrainians-were-behind-an-assassination-in-russia/ American officials said they were not aware of the plan ahead of time for the attack that killed Daria Dugina and that they had admonished Ukraine over it. Send any friend a story As a subscriber, you have 10 gift articles to give each month. Anyone can read what you share. Daria Dugina’s memorial service in Moscow in August. U.S. intelligence agencies believe that parts of the Ukrainian government authorized the attack that killed her.Credit…Kirill Kudryavtsev/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images Oct. 5, 2022Updated 1:59 p.m. ET WASHINGTON — United States intelligence agencies believe parts of the Ukrainian government authorized the car bomb attack near Moscow in August that killed Daria Dugina, the daughter of a prominent Russian nationalist, an element of a covert campaign that U.S. officials fear could widen the conflict. The United States took no part in the attack, either by providing intelligence or other assistance, officials said. American officials also said they were not aware of the operation ahead of time and would have opposed the killing had they been consulted. Afterward, American officials admonished Ukrainian officials over the assassination, they said. The closely held assessment of Ukrainian complicity, which has not been previously reported, was shared within the U.S. government last week. Ukraine denied involvement in the killing immediately after the attack, and senior officials repeated those denials when asked about the American intelligence assessment. While Russia has not retaliated in a specific way for the assassination, the United States is concerned that such attacks — while high in symbolic value — have little direct impact on the battlefield and could provoke Moscow to carry out its own strikes against senior Ukrainian officials. American officials have been frustrated with Ukraine’s lack of transparency about its military and covert plans, especially on Russian soil. Since the beginning of the war, Ukraine’s security services have demonstrated their ability to reach into Russia to conduct sabotage operations. The killing of Ms. Dugina, however, would be one of the boldest operations to date — showing Ukraine can get very close to prominent Russians. Image In a handout photo released by the Investigative Committee of Russia, investigators worked at the scene of the car blast that killed Ms. Dugina.Credit…Investigative Committee Of Russia, via Agence France-Presse/Getty Images Some American officials suspect Ms. Dugina’s father, Aleksandr Dugin, a Russian ultranationalist, was the actual target of the operation, and that the operatives who carried it out believed he would be in the vehicle with his daughter. Mr. Dugin, one of Russia’s most prominent voices urging Moscow to intensify its war on Ukraine, has been a leading proponent of an aggressive, imperialist Russia. The American officials who spoke about the intelligence did not disclose which elements of the Ukrainian government were believed to have authorized the mission, who carried out the attack, or whether President Volodymyr Zelensky had signed off on the mission. United States officials briefed on the Ukrainian action and the American response spoke on the condition of anonymity, in order to discuss secret information and matters of sensitive diplomacy. U.S. officials would not say who in the American government delivered the admonishments or whom in the Ukrainian government they were delivered to. It was not known what Ukraine’s response was. The State of the War Russia’s Retreat: After significant military gains in eastern cities like Lyman, Ukraine is pushing farther into Russian-held territory in the south, expanding its campaign in yet another direction as Moscow struggles to mount a response and hold the line. Annexation Push: After Moscow’s proxies conducted a series of sham referendums in the Ukrainian regions of Zaporizhzhia, Kherson, Luhansk and Donetsk, President Vladimir V. Putin declared the four territories to be part of Russia. Western leaders, including President Biden in the United States, denounced the annexation as illegal. Putin’s Nuclear Threats: For the first time since the Cuban Missile Crisis in 1962, top Russian leaders are making explicit nuclear threats and officials in Washington are gaming out scenarios should Mr. Putin decide to use a tactical nuclear weapon. Fleeing the Draft: Tens of thousands of men have left Russia to avoid being drafted to fight in Ukraine. Kyrgyzstan, a former Soviet territory long seen in Russia as a source of cheap labor and backward ways, has provided a welcoming haven. While the Pentagon and spy agencies have shared sensitive battlefield intelligence with the Ukrainians, helping them zero in on Russian command posts, supply lines and other key targets, the Ukrainians have not always told American officials what they plan to do. The United States has pressed Ukraine to share more about its war plans, with mixed success. Earlier in the war, U.S. officials acknowledged that they often knew more about Russian war plans — thanks to their intense collection efforts — than they did about Kyiv’s intentions. Cooperation has since increased. During the summer, Ukraine shared its plans for its September military counteroffensive with the United States and Britain. U.S. officials also lack a complete picture of the competing power centers within the Ukrainian government, including the military, the security services and Mr. Zelensky’s office, a fact that may explain why some parts of the Ukrainian government may not have been aware of the plot. When asked about the U.S. intelligence assessment, Mykhailo Podolyak, an adviser to Ukraine’s president, reiterated the Ukrainian government’s denials of involvement in Ms. Dugina’s killing. “Again, I’ll underline that any murder during wartime in some country or another must carry with it some kind of practical significance,” Mr. Podolyak told The New York Times in an interview on Tuesday. “It should fulfill some specific purpose, tactical or strategic. Someone like Dugina is not a tactical or a strategic target for Ukraine. “We have other targets on the territory of Ukraine,” he said, “I mean collaborationists and representatives of the Russian command, who might have value for members of our special services working in this program, but certainly not Dugina.” Though details surrounding acts of sabotage in Russian-controlled territory have been shrouded in mystery, the Ukrainian government has quietly acknowledged killing Russian officials in Ukraine and sabotaging Russian arms factories and weapons depots. A senior Ukrainian military official who declined to be identified because of the sensitivity of the topic, said that Ukrainian forces, with the help of local fighters, had carried out assassinations and attacks on accused Ukrainian collaborators and Russian officials in occupied Ukrainian territories. These include the Kremlin-installed head of the Kherson region, who was poisoned in August and had to be evacuated to Moscow for emergency treatment. Countries traditionally do not discuss other nations’ covert actions, for fear of having their own operations revealed, but some American officials believe it is crucial to curb what they see as dangerous adventurism, particularly political assassinations. Still, American officials in recent days have taken pains to insist that relations between the two governments remain strong. U.S. concerns about Ukraine’s aggressive covert operations inside Russia have not prompted any known changes in the provision of intelligence, military and diplomatic support to Mr. Zelensky’s government or to Ukraine’s security services. In a phone call on Saturday, Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken told his Ukrainian counterpart, Dmytro Kuleba, that the Biden administration “will continue to support Ukraine’s efforts to regain control of its territory by strengthening its hand militarily and diplomatically,” according to Ned Price, the State Department’s spokesman. Officials from the State Department, National Security Council, Pentagon and C.I.A. declined to comment on the intelligence assessment. The war in Ukraine is at an especially dangerous moment. The United States has tried carefully to avoid unnecessary escalation with Moscow throughout the conflict — in part by telling Kyiv not to use American equipment or intelligence to conduct attacks inside of Russia. But now, the recent battlefield successes by Ukraine have prompted Russia to respond with a series of escalatory steps, like conducting a partial mobilization and moving to annex swaths of eastern Ukraine. Concern is growing in Washington that Russia may be considering further steps to intensify the war, including by renewing efforts to assassinate prominent Ukrainian leaders. Mr. Zelensky would be the top target of Russian assassination teams, as he was during the Russian assault on Kyiv earlier in the war. But now, American officials said Russia could target a wide variety of Ukrainian leaders, many of whom have less protection than Mr. Zelensky. The United States and Europe had imposed sanctions on Ms. Dugina. She shared her father’s worldview and was accused by the West of spreading Russian propaganda about Ukraine. Russia opened a murder investigation after Ms. Dugina’s assassination, calling the explosion that killed her a terrorist act. Ms. Dugina was killed instantly in the explosion, which occurred in the Odintsovo district, an affluent area in Moscow’s suburbs. After the bombing, speculation centered on whether Ukraine was responsible or if it was a false flag operation meant to pin blame on Ukrainians. The bombing took place after a series of Ukrainian strikes in Crimea, part of Ukraine that Russia seized in 2014. Those strikes had l...
·digitalarizonanews.com·
U.S. Believes Ukrainians Were Behind An Assassination In Russia
Savannah Bananas Baseball Coming To The Valley For Two Games In 2023
Savannah Bananas Baseball Coming To The Valley For Two Games In 2023
Savannah Bananas Baseball Coming To The Valley For Two Games In 2023 https://digitalarizonanews.com/savannah-bananas-baseball-coming-to-the-valley-for-two-games-in-2023/ SCOTTSDALE, AZ — The Savannah Bananas are reportedly bringing their exciting, one-of-a-kind brand of baseball to Arizona in 2023! The Bananas are an independent baseball team from Georgia that, until recently, competed in the independent Coastal Plain League. The team has grown heavily in popularity thanks to viral social media videos and national coverage by sports outlets. Most recently, the team announced it will be going on a “Bananas Ball World Tour” competing in exhibitions across the United States. This week the Bananas announced they will be coming to Scottsdale and Peoria right after Spring Training is complete, to play in two exhibition games. 2023 Banana Ball World Tour Draft Round 2, Pick 4 ARIZONA Scottsdale, AZ Scottsdale Stadium March 31, 2023 Peoria, AZ Peoria Sports Complex April 1, 2023@SFGiants @PeoriaSportsCom — Savannah Bananas (@TheSavBananas) October 4, 2022 The team says it will play at Scottsdale Stadium on March 31, and Peoria Sports Complex on April 1, 2023. If you’ve never heard of the Savannah Bananas, or heard of “Banana Ball”, it’s worth a quick search on any of your social media platforms. The team plays a unique style of baseball with rules that are designed to make the game faster and more enjoyable for fans. For example, if a fan in the stands catches a foul ball, it counts as an out for their team. Players will even be seen wearing stilts, having dance-offs, and interacting with the crowd throughout the game. The score is kept, but the game is focused more on the fun than the actual baseball most of the time. Think, Harlem Globetrotters, but for baseball. It’s unclear who the Bananas will compete against in the two exhibition games in Arizona. If you’d like to see the Savannah Bananas live in action, tickets will be on sale at a later date online here. Copyright 2022 Scripps Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Sign up for the Headlines Newsletter and receive up to date information. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Savannah Bananas Baseball Coming To The Valley For Two Games In 2023
5 Things To Know For October 5: Ukraine Mar-A-Lago Twitter Hurricane Ian NASA KRDO
5 Things To Know For October 5: Ukraine Mar-A-Lago Twitter Hurricane Ian NASA KRDO
5 Things To Know For October 5: Ukraine, Mar-A-Lago, Twitter, Hurricane Ian, NASA – KRDO https://digitalarizonanews.com/5-things-to-know-for-october-5-ukraine-mar-a-lago-twitter-hurricane-ian-nasa-krdo/ By Alexandra Meeks, CNN The application for President Joe Biden’s student loan forgiveness plan is expected to go live as soon as this week. But the nation is divided over the program, flooding social media platforms with praise or criticism. Additionally, ongoing legal challenges and lawsuits aiming to block the plan are creating a few hurdles for the administration. Here’s what else you need to know to Get Up to Speed and On with Your Day. (You can get “5 Things You Need to Know Today” delivered to your inbox daily. Sign up here.) 1. Ukraine Russian President Vladimir Putin has signed into law measures that claim to annex four Ukrainian regions into the Russian Federation, in violation of international law. Western leaders have said the claimed annexations of Donetsk, Luhansk, Zaporizhzhia and Kherson are the result of “sham” referendums, and will never be recognized. This comes as Moscow is losing territory to Ukraine’s military by the day. How Russia plans to hold on to the four regions remains unclear, at least in the short term. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov previously said Russia will attempt to retake the territory at a later date, and that campaign will likely involve some of the 300,000 reservists being called up as part of a “partial mobilization” ordered by Putin last month. 2. Mar-a-Lago Former President Donald Trump asked the Supreme Court on Tuesday to intervene in the dispute over the documents that were seized by the FBI from his Mar-a-Lago estate this summer. Trump is specifically asking the court to ensure that the more than 100 documents marked as classified are part of the special master’s review. The emergency request, if granted, could bolster the former President’s attempt to challenge the search in court. Trump has argued that he may have had a right, as a former president, to possess certain government documents — including material potentially containing the country’s most sensitive secrets. 3. Twitter In a major reversal, Elon Musk is now proposing to buy Twitter at full price after attempting to terminate the $44 billion acquisition agreement, which the company had sued him to complete. According to a securities filing on Tuesday, Musk said he would follow through with the deal at the originally agreed-upon price of $54.20 per share. Twitter stock was halted twice on Tuesday when news of the filing was first reported. After the stock resumed trading, it was up more than 20%, topping $51 a share and approaching the agreed-upon deal price for the first time in months. Such an agreement could bring to an end a contentious, monthslong back and forth between Musk and Twitter that has caused massive uncertainty for employees, investors and users of one of the world’s most influential social media platforms. 4. Hurricane Ian Residents of one of Florida’s barrier islands will be allowed to return to view their homes today for the first time since Hurricane Ian devastated the state last week. Ian wiped out a portion of the causeway connecting Sanibel Island to the mainland, setting the stage for days of evacuations by air and sea as crews searched for people who were stranded. While residents in this area will be given access to their properties today, officials warn the island remains extremely unsafe with “alligators running around” and “snakes all over the place,” Sanibel Fire Chief William Briscoe said. Crews have evacuated approximately 1,000 people from Sanibel since Ian ripped through the island. Meanwhile, President Biden and first lady Jill Biden are scheduled to visit Florida today to see the destruction firsthand. 5. NASA NASA and SpaceX are set to send the first Native American woman into orbit today. The astronaut, NASA’s Nicole Aunapu Mann, will serve as mission commander on the trip scheduled to kick off at 12 p.m. ET. Mann and three crewmates will ride on a SpaceX rocket set to take off from NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida. They’ll travel to the International Space Station for a five-month stay, joining a long list of astronauts to serve as full-time staff aboard the orbiting laboratory, which has hosted humans for nearly 22 years. On her trip, Mann will carry some special mementos: her wedding rings, a surprise gift for her family, and a dream catcher that her mother gave her. THIS JUST IN Three scientists win Nobel Prize for chemistry Carolyn R. Bertozzi, Morten Meldal and K. Barry Sharpless have won the Nobel Prize for chemistry, for work that has produced “an ingenious tool for building molecules.” The trio’s work has “led to a revolution in how chemists think about linking molecules together,” the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences said. BREAKFAST BROWSE Fortune’s Most Powerful Women in Business list for 2022 Check out this impressive list of the top women CEOs in the world, according to Fortune. The world’s best bars for 2022 have been revealed Move over London. Step aside New York. There’s a new cosmopolitan cocktail capital. Liquid Death canned water company sees explosive growth A startup that sells water in beer cans — that’s literally it — is approaching a $1 billion valuation. (This may be a sign to get going on that business idea you’ve been thinking about.) Kanye West called out for dressing in ‘hate slogan’ Criticism of West was swift over his latest fashion statement. Tom Brady and Gisele Bündchen have hired divorce attorneys The two, who married in 2009, have been “living separately” and are “exploring their options” regarding their marriage, sources tell CNN. IN MEMORIAM Loretta Lynn, the “Coal Miner’s Daughter” whose gutsy lyrics and twangy vocals made her a queen of country music for decades, has died. She was 90. Lynn scored hits with fiery songs like “Don’t Come Home A’ Drinkin’ (With Lovin’ On Your Mind)” and “You Ain’t Woman Enough (To Take My Man),” which topped the country charts in 1966 and made her the first female country singer to write a No. 1 hit. TODAY’S NUMBER $31.1 trillion That’s the amount of America’s national debt after reaching a new milestone this week amid historically high inflation. The nation’s borrowing levels have soared in the past decade, particularly at the height of the Covid-19 pandemic. The outstanding public debt was $10.6 trillion when former President Barack Obama took office in 2009; $19.9 trillion when Trump took office in 2017; and $27.8 trillion when Biden took office in 2021, according to data from the Treasury Department. TODAY’S QUOTE “I had a good feeling off the bat. I just didn’t know where it was going to land or what it was going to hit.” — New York Yankees slugger Aaron Judge, after breaking Roger Maris’ single-season American League home run record, hitting his 62nd blast in a game Tuesday against the Texas Rangers. Barry Bonds holds the major league baseball record with 73 home runs in 2001. A fan who caught the ball was escorted from the section of seats by security, according to reporters at the game. Some observers think the ball is worth millions of dollars. TODAY’S WEATHER Check your local forecast here AND FINALLY How rainbow bagels are made Before you enjoy your breakfast, watch this short video to see how “the world’s most beautiful bagel” is made. (Click here to view) The-CNN-Wire & © 2022 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
5 Things To Know For October 5: Ukraine Mar-A-Lago Twitter Hurricane Ian NASA KRDO
Opinion | Youngkins Ambition Points To The Senate Not The White House
Opinion | Youngkins Ambition Points To The Senate Not The White House
Opinion | Youngkin’s Ambition Points To The Senate, Not The White House https://digitalarizonanews.com/opinion-youngkins-ambition-points-to-the-senate-not-the-white-house/ The buzz surrounding Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin’s political future has gotten a little louder in recent days, especially given his non-answer to a question on whether he would serve out his gubernatorial term and a recent meeting with a collection of high-dollar GOP donors. Combine this with his campaign stops on behalf of several Republican gubernatorial candidates, and it sure seems like Youngkin is at least exploring the 2024 presidential waters. All that buzz aside, the hard reality for Youngkin, or any other Republican presidential wannabe, is ex-president Donald Trump has the right of first refusal on the 2024 nomination. And even if Trump decides not to run — or his legal problems prevent it — the Republican Party and its fundraising mechanisms remain firmly in Trump’s sway. In other words, Youngkin can hand out red vests and talk up parental rights to every Republican he meets and still not have the muscle or money — never mind generate a fraction of the emotional response — Trump can muster with a single social media post. Worse for Youngkin, he has failed to seize repeated opportunities to get out from under Trump’s malign shadow. The most recent: his refusal to call out Trump’s screed against Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) and McConnell’s wife, former Trump administration Transportation secretary Elaine Chao. Fox News host Bret Baier pressed Youngkin to say something — anything — about Trump’s outburst. Youngkin said, “Well, you know, I’m not a name-caller. And in fact, what I focused on and continue to focus on is bringing people together around common-sense solutions to these most difficult and oh, by the way, it [is] most difficult issues that are facing people around their kitchen tables every night. And we have great answers for these….” As terrible as that nonresponse was, Youngkin found a way to make it even worse: “I’ve just found that calling people names is not the way to, not the way to put forth a good idea….” It’s a rare day when a politician curls into such a defensive crouch on live TV, but Youngkin did exactly that. And in the process, he showed the Fox audience (Youngkin’s most prized constituency) that he’s both unwilling and incapable of pushing back on Trump — even when the reason for doing so is upholding simple human decency. Forget, then, all the buzz, chatter and “Red Vest Retreats” Youngkin might stage between now and the opening of the 2024 presidential season. He will fold before Trump like the GOP field did in 2016, and most of the rest of the party did once Trump descended on the White House. That doesn’t mean Youngkin can’t audition for the role of vice-presidential nominee. He might be an effective understudy to Trump. Youngkin has the servility Trump requires from his underlings almost down pat. But let’s not forget that Mr. Youngkin’s ambition could still find an outlet in a Senate run — in 2024, perhaps, against Sen. Tim Kaine (D). I wrote back in July that challenging Kaine would make far more sense for Youngkin than a presidential run. And recent polling from Mary Washington University’s Center for Leadership and Media Studies shows a Kaine-Youngkin race “would likely be the closest Senate race in the Commonwealth in a decade.” The UMW poll shows Kaine leading Youngkin 41 percent to 39 percent — well within the 3.1 percentage point margin of error. And while all the usual caveats apply to such hypothetical matchups, the numbers can’t be entirely discounted. We already know Youngkin is a formidable statewide candidate who can raise as much money as he needs to run for Senate. We also know that Kaine, who’s undefeated in statewide contests going back to 2001, has made a habit of dispatching formidable Republicans (Jerry Kilgore in 2005 and George Allen in 2012) and Trumpish populists (Corey Stewart in 2018). There very well may be a 2024 race with national implications in Glenn Youngkin’s future. It’s likely against Tim Kaine. And it could be a barnburner. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Opinion | Youngkins Ambition Points To The Senate Not The White House
Judge Aileen Cannon Treated A Public Letter About Trump's Health As More Sensitive Than America's National Security Emptywheel
Judge Aileen Cannon Treated A Public Letter About Trump's Health As More Sensitive Than America's National Security Emptywheel
Judge Aileen Cannon Treated A Public Letter About Trump's Health As More Sensitive Than America's National Security – Emptywheel https://digitalarizonanews.com/judge-aileen-cannon-treated-a-public-letter-about-trumps-health-as-more-sensitive-than-americas-national-security-emptywheel/ As I have shown, had Judge Aileen Cannon left well enough alone, the government would have handed all Category B documents identified by the filter team back to Trump on September 1. Instead, she deliberately inflicted what she herself deemed to be further harm on Trump to justify intervening in the search of Trump’s beach resort. And now she may have caused even more harm. That’s because, by means that are not yet clear (but are likely due to a fuck-up by one of Cannon’s own staffers), the inventories from both Category A (government documents that deal with a legal issue) and Category B (more personal documents) were briefly posted on the docket. (h/t Zoe Tillman, who snagged a copy) Those inventories not only show Cannon’s claims of injury to Trump were even more hackish than I imagined. But it creates the possibility that DOJ’s filter team will attempt to retain some of the documents included in Category B, notably records pertaining to the Georgia fraud attempts and January 6, they otherwise wouldn’t have. Start with the hackishness. The harm that Cannon sustained to justify intervening consisted of preventing DOJ from returning, “medical documents, correspondence related to taxes, and accounting information” to Trump, “depriv[ing Trump]of potentially significant personal documents.” Cannon made DOJ withhold such documents from Trump for a least two additional weeks and then used it to argue that Trump had a personal interest in what DOJ claims are mostly government documents and press clippings. The single solitary medical document pertaining to Trump (there’s a Blue Cross explanation of benefits that appears to pertain to someone else) is this letter from Trump’s then-personal physician released during the 2016 Presidential campaign. Not only was it publicly released over six years ago, but details of medicines left off the report and Trump’s role in dictating an earlier version of the letter were widely reported in 2017. Aileen Cannon held up a national security investigation into highly sensitive documents stored insecurely at a beach resort targeted by foreign intelligence services, in part, because the FBI seized a public letter than had been released as part of a political campaign six years ago. She personally halted efforts to keep the United States safe, in part, to prevent leaks of a document that Trump released himself six years ago. But that’s not all she did. There are documents in both Category A and Category B that may be responsive to subpoenas from the January 6, the DOJ investigation, and Fani Willis’ Georgia investigation. The December 31, 2020 email from Kurt Hilbert pertaining to Fulton County lawsuits is likely the one investigators turned over to the filter team on September 26 (which Trump’s lawyers claim is privileged). For some unknown reason (probably that it was sent to the White House, which DOJ considers a waiver of privilege), DOJ put it in Category A. There are several uninteresting Georgia-related documents included among Category B documents — the Civil Complaint in Trump v. Kemp, retainer agreements pertaining to various Fulton County lawsuits, a retention agreement with Veen, O’Neill, Hartshorn, and Levin, along with another folder with retention agreements pertaining to Fulton County. But this file, including a letter to Kurt Hilbert with a post-it note from Cleta Mitchell, might be more interesting. There’s also a document pertaining to Joe DiGenova regarding appointing a Special Counsel (as well as might be an effort to get Pat Cipollone to complain about Saturday Night Live’s taunts of Trump). The DiGenova document might pertain to any number of topics, but like Cleta Mitchell, he has been named in DOJ subpoenas on election fraud. Similarly, there are documents that might be responsive to and of interest to Tish James in her investigation of Trump’s fraud. Those include: 5 copies of the same one-page letter from Morgan Lewis about taxes A document about a restrictive covenant agreement A confidential settlement between the PGA and Trump Golf Several IRS Form 872s, including one in a folder marked NYC 8/10 (the date of Trump’s deposition with Tish James) An IRS Form 2858 with Molly’s name on it (almost certainly Molly Michael) A signed tax return disclosure consent form The desk drawer also includes details of Alina Habba’s retention agreements and payments, which she would have found when she searched the drawers to ensure there were not tax documents in there. The tax documents are likely uninteresting. Some (especially the Hilbert documents) may already be in investigators hands. But the point remains: By preventing DOJ from turning over these Category B documents to Trump on September 1 like they requested permission to do, Cannon has now given DOJ an opportunity to argue these document are not privileged, possibly even that they’re responsive to various subpoenas that might be crime-fraud excepted. With the exception of the Hilbert emails to the White House, DOJ may still return these — fighting over them may be more trouble than it’s worth. But because this inventory got released, it will now be clear what Trump’s lawyers are attempting to hide. It may even give James or Willis opportunity to subpoena the documents anew. And it will be clear that Aileen Cannon endangered the United States, in part, based off a claim that a medical record that Trump himself released six years ago is more important than some of the government’s most sensitive documents. As Tillman noted in her piece on the inventory, there are also details of some of the clemency packages Trump reviews. Those include pardons for Rod Blagojevich, what are probably two Border Patrol agents convicted for shooting a drug smuggler, Ignacio Ramos and Jose Compean, and Michael Behanna, a soldier courtmartialed for killing an Iraqi prisoner, as well as the commutation of Ted Suhl. There’s also one for an “RN” that might be Ronen Nahamani, whose clemency a bipartisan group of politicians supported, including Matt Gaetz. The inclusion of all these clemency packages makes it more likely that Roger Stone’s was among them — though by description, Stone’s pardon was in another drawer of a desk in Trump’s office. One of the other main categories of Category A documents are letters to NARA, something likely covered by the part of the warrant authorizing the seizure of communications about classified records. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Judge Aileen Cannon Treated A Public Letter About Trump's Health As More Sensitive Than America's National Security Emptywheel
South Korea U.S. Fire Missiles To Protest 'reckless' North Korean Test
South Korea U.S. Fire Missiles To Protest 'reckless' North Korean Test
South Korea, U.S. Fire Missiles To Protest 'reckless' North Korean Test https://digitalarizonanews.com/south-korea-u-s-fire-missiles-to-protest-reckless-north-korean-test/ SEOUL, Oct 5 (Reuters) – South Korea and the U.S. military conducted rare missile drills and an American supercarrier repositioned east of North Korea after Pyongyang flew a missile over Japan, one of the allies’ sharpest responses since 2017 to a North Korean weapon test. U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken warned that nuclear-armed North Korea risked further condemnation and isolation if it continued its “provocations.” North Korea test-fired an intermediate-range ballistic missile (IRBM) farther than ever before on Tuesday, sending it soaring over Japan for the first time in five years and prompting a warning for residents there to take cover. Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com Washington called the test “dangerous and reckless” and the U.S. military and its allies have stepped up displays of force. South Korean and American troops fired a volley of missiles into the sea in response, South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said on Wednesday, and the allies earlier staged a bombing drill with fighter jets in the Yellow Sea. The aircraft carrier Ronald Reagan, a U.S. Navy ship that made its first stop in South Korea last month for the first time in years, will also return to the sea between Korea and Japan with its strike group of other warships. The South Korean military called it a “highly unusual” move designed to show the allies’ resolve to respond to any threats from North Korea. Speaking during a visit to Chile, Blinken said the United States, South Korea and Japan were working closely together “to demonstrate and strengthen our defensive and deterrent capabilities in light of the threat from North Korea.” He reiterated a U.S. call for Pyonyang to return to dialogue, and added: “If they continue down this road, it will only increase the condemnation, increase the isolation, increase the steps that are taken in response to their actions.” The U.N. Security Council will meet on Wednesday to discuss North Korea at the request of the United States, despite China and Russia telling council counterparts they were opposed to an open meeting of the 15-member body. They argued that the council’s reaction should be conducive to easing the situation on the Korean Peninsula, diplomats said. The top U.S. diplomat for East Asia, Daniel Kritenbrink, accused China and Russia this week of emboldening North Korea by not properly enforcing sanctions. He said a resumption of nuclear weapons testing by North Korea for the first time since 2017 was likely only awaiting a political decision. South Korean officials said North Korea had completed preparations for a nuclear test and might use a smaller weapon meant for operational use, or a big device with a higher yield than in previous tests. A surface-to-surface missile is fired into the sea off the east coast in this handout picture provided by the Defense Ministry, South Korea, October 5, 2022. South Korean Defense Ministry/Handout via REUTERS SOUTH KOREAN MISSILE FAILURE The South Korean military confirmed that one of its Hyunmoo-2C missiles failed shortly after launch and crashed during the exercise, but that no one was hurt. Footage shared on social media by a nearby resident and verified by Reuters showed smoke and flames rising from the military base. South Korea’s military said the fire was caused by burning rocket propellant, and although the missile carried a warhead, it did not explode. It apologised for causing residents to worry. It is not rare for military hardware to fail, and North Korea has suffered several failed missile launches this year as well. However, the South Korean failure threatened to overshadow Seoul’s efforts to demonstrate military prowess in the face of North Korea’s increasing capabilities. The Hyunmoo-2C is one of South Korea’s latest missiles and analysts say its capability as a precision “bunker buster” make it a key part of Seoul’s plans for striking the North in the event of a conflict. In its initial announcement of the drill, the South Korean military made no mention of the Hyunmoo-2C launch or its failure, but later media briefings were dominated by questions about the incident. President Yoon Suk-yeol, who has made such displays of military force a cornerstone of his strategy for countering North Korea, had vowed that the overflight of Japan would bring a decisive response from his country, its allies and the international community. U.S. President Joe Biden and Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida condemned North Korea’s test in the “strongest terms,” the European Union called it a “reckless and deliberately provocative action.” U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres condemned the launch and said it was a violation of Security Council resolutions. It was the first North Korean missile to follow a trajectory over Japan since 2017, and its estimated 4,600-km (2,850-mile) flight was the longest for a North Korean test, which are usually “lofted” into space to avoid flying over neighbouring countries. Analysts and security officials said it may have been a variant of the Hwasong-12 IRBM, which North Korea unveiled in 2017 as part of what it said was a plan to strike U.S. military bases in Guam. Neither North Korea’s government nor its state media have reported on the launch. Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com Reporting by Joori Roh in Seoul, Humeyra Pamuk in Santiago and David Brunnstrom in Washington; Editing by Chris Reese, Sandra Maler, Gerry Doyle and Jonathan Oatis Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
South Korea U.S. Fire Missiles To Protest 'reckless' North Korean Test
A Student Was Killed In A Purdue University Residence Hall. His Roommate Is In Custody.
A Student Was Killed In A Purdue University Residence Hall. His Roommate Is In Custody.
A Student Was Killed In A Purdue University Residence Hall. His Roommate Is In Custody. https://digitalarizonanews.com/a-student-was-killed-in-a-purdue-university-residence-hall-his-roommate-is-in-custody/ A Purdue University student will be charged with murder after his roommate was killed in a residence hall on the Indiana campus, according to the school’s police chief. Ji Min “Jimmy” Sha, a junior cybersecurity major and international student from Korea, called 911 around 12:45 a.m. to alert police about the death, Purdue University Police Chief Lesley Wiete said during a news conference Wednesday morning. Details of that call, including how the victim died in the room on the first floor of McCutcheon Hall, were not disclosed. However, the chief and the Tippecanoe County Coroner Office identified the slain student as Varun Manish Chheda, a 20-year-old senior from Indianapolis who was studying data science. An autopsy was performed at 9:30 a.m. but a cause of death has not been made public. The entrance to the campus of Purdue University in West Lafayette, Ind.Daniel Acker / Bloomberg via Getty Images file Wiete said Sha, 22, was taken into custody minutes after the 911 call and transported to the police station for further investigation. He has not been booked yet, according to the chief. Following the homicide, school officials said there was no threat to the community. Wiete did not discuss a motive or details about potential weapons, but said that the 911 call came from the room and only Chheda and Sha were in it at the time. “I believe this was unprovoked and senseless,” she said, noting neither roommate was asleep when the incident happened. When asked why Sha made the 911 call, Wiete said, “he is the one who made the call and alerted us to the situation.” Chheda’s death marked Purdue’s first on-campus homicide since January 2014, police said. Purdue President Mitch Daniels called the news “as tragic an event as we can imagine happening on our campus and our hearts and thoughts go out to all of those affected by this terrible event.” Purdue has about 50,000 undergraduate and graduate students enrolled for the fall semester, according to its website. Staff at residence halls and clinicians with the school’s counseling and psychological services are providing support to students in need, he said in a statement Wednesday morning. Daniels assured everyone that the campus is a safe. “Compared with cities of Purdue’s population (approximately 60,000 in all), we experience a tiny fraction of violent and property crime that occurs elsewhere,” he said. “Such statistics are of no consolation on a day like this,” he added. “A death on our campus and among our Purdue family affects each of us deeply.” This is a developing story. Please check back for updates. Marlene Lenthang Marlene Lenthang is a breaking news reporter for NBC News Digital. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
A Student Was Killed In A Purdue University Residence Hall. His Roommate Is In Custody.
Stocks Reverse Some Gains After A Sharp Two-Day Rally On Wall Street Dow Falls 150 Points
Stocks Reverse Some Gains After A Sharp Two-Day Rally On Wall Street Dow Falls 150 Points
Stocks Reverse Some Gains After A Sharp Two-Day Rally On Wall Street, Dow Falls 150 Points https://digitalarizonanews.com/stocks-reverse-some-gains-after-a-sharp-two-day-rally-on-wall-street-dow-falls-150-points/ U.S. stocks fell on Wednesday, giving back some of its sharp gains from the last two sessions as Treasury yield rose. The Dow Jones Industrial Average declined 152 points, or 0.5%. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite dipped 0.7% and 1.1%, respectively. “It’s a moment of pause for the market to reflect on how durable the rally the past two days actually could turn out to be,” said Yung-Yu Ma, chief investment strategist for BMO Wealth Management. “The market’s making the assessment that it’s really going to take a lot for the Fed to make a dovish pivot. Yes, the JOLTS number was extremely welcome, no question about that. But that is really the tip of the iceberg in terms of what the Fed needs to actually take a softer tone.” “There’s some reality creeping into the market and that enthusiasm of a good number is starting to fade,” he added. Treasury yields rebounded Wednesday, weighing on stocks. The 10-year rate traded 10 basis points higher at 3.713% after briefly dipping below 3.6% in the previous session. Private payrolls increased by 208,000, ADP said in its latest report, topping a Dow Jones estimate. Traders are looking ahead to Friday’s release of the nonfarm payrolls report. September’s ISM services index also came out Wednesday showing solid growth for the month of September. Some market participants wondered whether those signs could mean markets have finally priced in a bottom after the sharp declines in the prior quarter. “Q3 earnings reporting is not too far away and it’s definitely in the market psychology that the Q2 earnings season helped to stabilize the markets,” Ma said. “There was a lot of pessimism in the market that it was able to rally pretty strongly from for a couple of months. Right now there’s also this hope that the earnings season can stabilize the market and maybe come to the rescue again, the way that it did last quarter.” Oil stocks rise after OPEC+ decision The decision by OPEC+ to cut production has boosted oil prices and energy stocks. The group of oil-producing nations announced on Wednesday that it would reduce daily production by 2 million barrels, ignoring pressure from the U.S. to keep pumping. As a result, energy is the only sector moving higher in the S&P 500 on Wednesday. Shares of Schlumberger are up more than 6%, while Exxon Mobil and Halliburton have gained 3.8% and 2.9%, respectively. Futures for U.S. benchmark West Texas intermediate crude were last at $88.25 per barrel, up 2% for the day. — Jesse Pound Lumen shares drop as Wells Fargo downgrades stock Lumen is down more than 10% after Wells Fargo downgraded the tech company’s rating to equal weight from overweight. Analyst Eric Luebchow said its mass market segment, referred to as RemainCo, was struggling and warned downsides could put dividends at risk. He cut earnings before debt, interest, taxes and amortization forecasts for RemainCo to $5.9 billion, about $600 million below Wall Street estimates. He cut the stock’s price target to $8, which is about 0.5% below where the stock closed Tuesday but more than 56% less than its previous target of $12.50. Lumen shares are down about 42.3% this year. The stock hit a 52-week low during day trading Wednesday. — Alex Harring Higher rates expose market fragilities, TS Lombard says The recent jump in yields and higher rates from central banks around the world are making fragile spots in the market more apparent, TS Lombard said. “After a decade of perma low rates and QE, stress is building up, exposing market fragilities that can feed into the real economy,” wrote the firm’s Skylar Montgomery Koning. “The risk of an accident is increasing, and it will likely be from a vulnerability we are unaware of (because we can protect only against the known risks).” In all, this has led to investors pulling money away from fixed income and equities in favor of cash, Koning said. U.S. stocks were under pressure once again Wednesday, with the Dow losing roughly 400 points. —Fred Imbert Solar stocks under pressure Clean energy stocks are some of the worst performers on Wednesday morning, as investors shed risk after the sharp rally to start the week. The iShares Global Clean Energy ETF (ICLN) and Invesco Solar ETF (TAN) are both down more than 5% for the day. The Clean Energy ETF is on track for its worst day since June 13. The ETFs are being weighed down by shares of Sunrun and Enphase Energy in particular, which are each down more than 9%. — Jesse Pound, Gina Francolla Services measure shows economy is holding up The services sector grew at a solid pace last month, as gains in employment and orders and a decline in prices pointing to a resilient U.S. economy. September’s ISM services index registered a 56.7% reading, indicating the level of companies reporting expansion for the month. Employment rose 2.8 points to 53% while the prices index fell 2.8 points to 68.7%, still a robust reading but continuing to move lower. Economists surveyed by Dow Jones had been looking for a reading of 56%, so the report was slightly better than expectations and just below the August reading of 56.9%. Services account for about 45% of U.S. gross domestic product. —Jeff Cox Stocks open lower, Dow drops 300 points U.S. stocks opened lower on Wednesday, following a big two-day gain for all of the major averages. The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped about 300 points to start the day, while the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite dipped 1.1% and 1.3%, respectively. A rebound in in Treasury yields, with the 10-year rate up 10 basis points higher at 3.713% added pressure to stocks. — Tanaya Macheel Trade deficit fell more than expected in August The U.S. trade deficit fell slightly more than expected in August to its lowest level in more than a year, the Bureau of Economic Analysis reported Wednesday. The trade shortfall declined to $67.4 billion, a $3.1 billion drop from the previous month that was a bit better than the Dow Jones estimate of $67.7 billion. That marked the lowest level since May 2021. In March 2022, the deficit had hit a record $106.9 billion. A drop in the goods deficit of $3.4 billion helped account for most of the decline as the economy shifts back to higher demand for services. —Jeff Cox U.S. labor market showed strength in September, ADP jobs report shows Businesses added 208,000 jobs for the month of September, payroll services firm ADP reported Wednesday. That number is better than the 200,000 Dow Jones estimate and ahead of the upwardly revised 185,000 in August, according to ADP. Trade, transportation and utilities saw a jobs gain of 147,000, while professional and business services and education and health services also posted large increases. ADP’s report comes two days before the closely watched nonfarm payrolls report issued by the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Federal Reserve officials are watching the jobs numbers closely as the central bank looks to stem high inflation. — Jeff Cox Stocks making the biggest moves premarket These companies are making headlines before the bell: Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs – Shares of the two banks slid 1.4% and 1.6%, respectively, after Atlantic Equities downgraded both stocks due to the potential of declining investment banking volume. General Motors – The auto maker’s shares dipped 1.8% after Morgan Stanley lowered its price target on the stock. Bionano Genomics – Shares jumped 11.3% after the company published a study on using optical genome mapping to investigate liver cancer. Check out more premarket movers here. — Alex Harring Two-day huge move in market offers hope for stronger gains ahead The back-to-back huge market moves Monday and Tuesday provide some hope that better days are ahead for the stock market. While single-day bursts often are signs of a bear market bounce, two-day rallies of more than 2% historically have signaled stronger gains in the future. There have been 31 such instances for the S&P 500 since 1953, and the index has averaged a 0.61% gain one week later following those moves, according to Bespoke Investment Group. While gains tend to muddle along shortly after, the 12-month return typically has been 14.6% and the S&P 500 has been higher 80% of the time. Having rallies off that size is highly unusual to start the month — Bespoke reports that there was only one other time, in August 1984, when a month began with consecutive gains of 2%. —Jeff Cox Ford shares move higher on Morgan Stanley upgrade Shares of Ford moved more than 1% higher in premarket trading after Morgan Stanley upgraded them on Wednesday . The auto maker’s stock has been under pressure recently, They lost 18.5% over the past month, after the company warned in late September of an extra $1 billion in supply chain costs for the third quarter. Now, Morgan Stanley says that provides an attractive entry point for investors. Read more about this call on CNBC Pro. — Tanaya Macheel European markets retreat as rally fades European stocks retreated on Wednesday as the positive trend seen in global stocks in recent days faded. The pan-European Stoxx 600 was down 1% in early trade. Autos dropped 2.9% to lead losses as all sectors and major bourses slid into negative territory following the latest PMI reading out of the euro zone, which cemented fears of a recession in the 19-member bloc. – Elliot Smith CNBC Pro: This isn’t the market bottom, Morgan Stanley says, naming 3 things that have to happen first There’s unlikely to be a sustainable market bottom unless three conditions are met, according to Morgan Stanley. “We … remind readers that the last few innings of every bear market are very challenging to trade as volatility becomes extreme,” they wrote. “None of the conditions we have ...
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Stocks Reverse Some Gains After A Sharp Two-Day Rally On Wall Street Dow Falls 150 Points
Phoenix Sky Harbor Will Add A Fourth Taxiway AZ Big Media
Phoenix Sky Harbor Will Add A Fourth Taxiway AZ Big Media
Phoenix Sky Harbor Will Add A Fourth Taxiway – AZ Big Media https://digitalarizonanews.com/phoenix-sky-harbor-will-add-a-fourth-taxiway-az-big-media/ Sky Harbor International Airport is planning upgrades to its runway space with a new taxiway overpass backed by federal funds from the bipartisan infrastructure law enacted last year. The project is funded in part through the $1.2 trillion Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act that President Joe Biden signed in November, which will allocate $194 million to these improvements at Sky Harbor, one of the busiest airports in the country. READ ALSO: Frontier Airlines announces 10 new routes from Phoenix Sky Harbor READ ALSO: 10 Arizona resorts reveal inside tips to create perfect staycation The project has an estimated price tag of $260 million. The rest will be paid by Passenger Facilities Charges, which are $4.50 fees from ticket purchases that Sky Harbor collects from every eligible passenger who goes through the airport. Work is expected to begin next year; a completion timetable has not been released. The 2,000-foot-long taxiway will pass over roads between terminals and connect the north and south airfields, which are bisected by airport roads and terminals. Phoenix Mayor Kate Gallego said the goal of the overpass is to allow traffic on runways to flow more smoothly so planes don’t get stuck on the tarmac. She also said the increased tarmac space will help the airport adapt more easily to inclement weather. Mayor Kate Gallego and state Rep. Reginald Bolding attend a press conference at Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport on Oct. 4, 2022, to celebrate the $194 million federal investment for a new taxiway overpass under the bipartisan Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act. (Photo by Sophie Oppfelt/Cronkite News) “Your planes are likely to take off more quickly, and you’ll spend less time on the tarmac both landing and taking off,” she said in a news conference Tuesday at the airport. “When we have tough storms, like the one we did last night, having a bigger, better tarmac will allow us to adapt and have more ability to keep planes flying. This is a very exciting project for us.” Rep. Greg Stanton, D-Ariz.,said the airport’s location just 5 miles from downtown Phoenix is its biggest plus, but it also makes expansion difficult. “One of the very best qualities and most significant competitive advantages of Sky Harbor is that it’s right at the very center of our region right next to downtown, but that also means that land is a little bit scarce,” he said at the news conference. “Instead of growing larger, we have to grow smarter.” U.S. infrastructure coordinator Mitch Landrieu said the project will create about 3,000 temporary jobs, many of which will be union carpenters, and that union workers hit “every mark” that the infrastructure law requires. “The funding from this law is a new taxiway right next to us, built by union carpenters to support our community and the travelers that come in and out of this airport every day,” said Fabian Sandez of the Carpenters Local 1912. “This project will bring good paying jobs, wages and benefits to members and their families.” The first portion of federal funding – $5.3 million – has gone to preliminary planning. Construction is expected to begin in 2023. A completion timeline and potential impact on travelers are unknown. Sky Harbor was the ninth busiest airport for travelers in the U.S. in 2021, according to the Federal Aviation Administration. It was also the eighth in the world in combined takeoffs and landings in the same year, according to the Airports Council International. Sky Harbor’s website says it has experienced a 20% increase in total passengers from August 2021 to August 2022. Gallego called the airport the “economic engine” of the city and said continuing investments are needed. Potential future Sky Harbor projects include expanding one of the three terminals and expanding the PHX SkyTrain to the rental car center more than a mile away. “With traffic quickly rebounding to pre-pandemic levels, and nearly $6 billion of unmet infrastructure needs at Sky Harbor alone,” Gallego said, “many more improvements are necessary to keep up with our passenger growth and demand.” Story by Shane Brennan, Cronkite News Read More…
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Phoenix Sky Harbor Will Add A Fourth Taxiway AZ Big Media
City Of Tucson Awarded Two Grants From Arizona State Historic Preservation Office To Support Local Historic Preservation Efforts
City Of Tucson Awarded Two Grants From Arizona State Historic Preservation Office To Support Local Historic Preservation Efforts
City Of Tucson Awarded Two Grants From Arizona State Historic Preservation Office To Support Local Historic Preservation Efforts https://digitalarizonanews.com/city-of-tucson-awarded-two-grants-from-arizona-state-historic-preservation-office-to-support-local-historic-preservation-efforts/ The City of Tucson was recently awarded two pass-through grants from the Arizona State Historic Preservation Office. These grants are available to certified local governments on an annual basis to support historic preservation projects. Barrio Kroeger Lane National Register Nomination In 2020, a pass-through grant was awarded to conduct a determination of eligibility for Barrio Kroeger Lane neighborhood, located to the west of downtown Tucson and east of the Santa Cruz river. It was determined eligible for listing in the National Register. HPO staff received a second grant this year to complete a National Register nomination. Staff will have one year to complete the nomination and submit it to the State Historic Preservation Office (SHPO). Once listed, owner-occupied homes would be eligible for a property tax reduction. African American Survey This project will be completed in two phases. The first phase, which this round of grant funding is to support, will focus on archival research, oral history interviews, and a property database of sites, buildings, and structures significant to the African American community in Tucson. The second phase of the survey (which will be the subject of future funding requests) would develop a historic context document and integrate the results of the archival research and inventory from the first phase. The overall intent of the grant is to synthesize existing information, interview members of the African American community, develop a context and identify sites, buildings, and structures. Unlike architecturally significant buildings, properties that are associated with a particular group are not always readily evident. This survey would be inclusive of Tucson’s multiple communities to develop a broad understanding of significant sites, buildings, and structures. To find out more about Historic Preservation in the City of Tucson, please visit: https://www.tucsonaz.gov/historic-preservation Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
City Of Tucson Awarded Two Grants From Arizona State Historic Preservation Office To Support Local Historic Preservation Efforts
Mar-A-Lago Documents: Why Is Donald Trump Asking The Supreme Court To Intervene?
Mar-A-Lago Documents: Why Is Donald Trump Asking The Supreme Court To Intervene?
Mar-A-Lago Documents: Why Is Donald Trump Asking The Supreme Court To Intervene? https://digitalarizonanews.com/mar-a-lago-documents-why-is-donald-trump-asking-the-supreme-court-to-intervene/ Former President Donald Trump has once again brought a fight over documents to the nation’s highest court, though his record on such appeals is spotty at best. Trump filed an emergency appeal Tuesday at the Supreme Court in the dispute over seized documents. The former president wants a special master in the case to review the classified documents. The Supreme Court has given the Justice Department until Tuesday to respond. WASHINGTON – Former President Donald Trump filed an emergency appeal at the Supreme Court in the ongoing dispute over documents seized at his Mar-a-Lago club in early August. The request is narrow, but it has once again thrust the nation’s highest court into a political controversy involving the former president who nominated three of its members. Here’s a look at what we know about the filing and what comes next.  What did Trump file at the Supreme Court? Former President Donald Trump filed what’s known as an emergency application challenging part of a Sept. 21 ruling from the Atlanta-based U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit. That ruling allowed the Justice Department to continue reviewing classified documents seized at Trump’s Florida estate and blocked a lower court’s ruling requiring the government to submit the documents to an independent arbiter, or special master, for review. Trump’s appeal challenges the second part of that ruling and if he wins then the special master, U.S. District Judge Raymond Dearie, would review the documents.  Filing: Trump asks Supreme Court to weigh in on review of classified documents seized from Mar-a-Lago Appeals: Court grants DOJ investigative access to classified seized documents Why did Trump file a Supreme Court appeal?  The 47-page document is pretty technical and it raises questions about whether the 11th Circuit had jurisdiction to rule the way it did. Trump’s ostensible argument is about having an independent entity review the documents, not just the Justice Department. The appeal is sprinkled with references to the “unprecedented circumstances” of the seizure, “an investigation of the Forty-Fifth President of the United States by the administration of his political rival and successor.” Any limit on a transparent review of the documents, Trump’s lawyers told the Supreme Court, “erodes public confidence in our system of justice.” What is Trump’s record at the Supreme Court? Trump’s record at the nation’s highest court is not great. In January, for instance, the Supreme Court refused to block the House committee investigating the Jan. 6 Capitol attack from getting Trump’s administration documents. In 2020, the court ruled that Trump could not keep his tax returns and financial records away from a New York City prosecutor who was pursuing possible hush-money payments during the 2016 White House race. That prosecutor did not seek reelection and two of his deputies who had been leading a criminal probe departed the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office in  February.   Loss: Supreme Court refuses to block House Jan. 6 panel from receiving Trump documents Taxes: Supreme Court says President Trump cannot keep tax, financial records from prosecutors How soon could the Supreme Court act in Trump’s case? The emergency application docket – known colloquially as the “shadow docket” – can move quite quickly. It is often used, for instance, to handle last-minute appeals for people on death row and facing execution in a matter of hours. However, the court seemed to pump the brakes on the case hours after Trump’s filing. Associate Justice Clarence Thomas, who handles such emergency appeals rising from the 11th Circuit, gave the federal government until Tuesday to respond. That’s fast by Supreme Court standards, but it’s not as speedy as these cases sometimes can move.  Redistricting: Alabama redistricting case renews fight among justices Abortion: Texas abortion ruling renews criticism of Supreme Court’s ‘shadow docket’ Who’s the special master in Trump’s case?   On Sept. 15, U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon appointed a semi-retired federal judge in Brooklyn, Raymond Dearie, to review the thousands of documents seized at Trump’s Florida estate. Dearie, 78, was agreed to by both Trump and the Department of Justice. Dearie is reviewing some of the documents FBI agents seized Aug. 8 at Mar-a-Lago for personal records and documents that potentially are protected by attorney-client privilege or executive privilege.  What are experts saying about Trump’s Supreme Court appeal? Steve Vladeck, a law professor at the University of Texas, noted on Twitter that Trump’s “track record in the Supreme Court in cases involving him personally (as opposed to his official actions as president) has been abysmal.” On Thomas’ week-out deadline for the government to respond, Vladeck wrote that “this delay doesn’t help Trump. At all. It’s a pretty big sign from Thomas that even *he* isn’t in a hurry, which does not bode well for Trump’s chances of getting the full court to side with him.” Renato Mariotti, a former federal prosecutor, agreed. “It means that he doesn’t view this as the ’emergency’ that Trump claims it is,” Mariotti posted on Twitter. “This narrow move for Supreme Court review sure looks like an effort by Trump’s attorneys to find an excuse to litigate something to placate their client, even though ‘winning’ would not achieve anything substantial.” Contributing: Bart Jansen, Kevin Johnson, Kevin McCoy  Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Mar-A-Lago Documents: Why Is Donald Trump Asking The Supreme Court To Intervene?
Trump's Legal Team Is In Complete Chaos As Some Lawyers Are In Then Out Then Back In Again: Washington Post Reporter
Trump's Legal Team Is In Complete Chaos As Some Lawyers Are In Then Out Then Back In Again: Washington Post Reporter
Trump's Legal Team Is In Complete Chaos As Some Lawyers Are In, Then Out, Then Back In Again: Washington Post Reporter https://digitalarizonanews.com/trumps-legal-team-is-in-complete-chaos-as-some-lawyers-are-in-then-out-then-back-in-again-washington-post-reporter/ Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Trump's Legal Team Is In Complete Chaos As Some Lawyers Are In Then Out Then Back In Again: Washington Post Reporter
Lawyers: Arizona GOP Chair Pleaded Fifth To Jan. 6 Panel
Lawyers: Arizona GOP Chair Pleaded Fifth To Jan. 6 Panel
Lawyers: Arizona GOP Chair Pleaded Fifth To Jan. 6 Panel https://digitalarizonanews.com/lawyers-arizona-gop-chair-pleaded-fifth-to-jan-6-panel/ Arizona Republican Party Chair Kelli Ward of Lake Havasu City pleaded the Fifth repeatedly when she testified before the congressional Jan. 6 House investigative committee about attempts to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election. (Miner file photo) BOB CHRISTIE, Associated Press Originally Published: October 5, 2022 8:25 a.m. PHOENIX – Arizona Republican Party Chair Kelli Ward refused to answer questions during a deposition of the House committee investigating the Jan. 6 insurrection at the Capitol, an attorney for the panel revealed Tuesday during a court hearing in Phoenix. Attorney Eric Columbus told a federal judge that Ward asserted her Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination when she complied with a subpoena from the House committee. The detail about Ward’s deposition came at a hearing where lawyers urged a federal judge to block the committee from getting her phone records while she appeals. U.S. District Judge Diane Humetewa ruled on Sept. 23 that Ward’s arguments that her phone call records should be secret did not pass legal muster. Ward attorney Laurin Mills cast the phone records fight as one with major implications for democracy, on par if not bigger than the violent insurrection that unfolded at the Capitol. “This is the first time in American history that a select committee of the United State Congress controlled by one party has subpoenaed the records of the state chair of the rival party,” Mills said. He said the outcome will set important precedent, not just for the current case but for others that will come when Republicans ultimately control Congress. The House Committee investigating the attack on the Capitol is seeking phone records from just before the November 2020 election to Jan. 31, 2021. That would include a period where Ward was pushing for former President Donald Trump’s election defeat to be overturned and while Congress was set to certify the results. Kelli Ward and her husband Michael Ward were presidential electors who would have voted for Trump in the Electoral College had he won Arizona. Both signed a document falsely claiming they were Arizona’s true electors, despite Democrat Joe Biden’s victory in the state. Columbus said that investigators get telephone records all the time, and noted that congressional investigators can’t arrest or charge anyone with a crime. And he noted Congress does not know all that is involved with Ward’s action to overturn President Joe Biden’s 2020 win. “Dr. Ward was deposed by the select committee and she declined to answer on every substantive question under her rights under the Fifth Amendment,” he said. “There are other aspects of her involvement that are not at this point fully understood.” Ward is hardly the first witness to refuse the committee’s questions. Others who have asserted their Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination include Trump allies Michael Flynn, Roger Stone and lawyer John Eastman. Conspiracy theorist Alex Jones also asserted his Fifth Amendment rights. The committee has talked to more than 1,000 other witnesses, including many White House aides and several of Trump’s lawyers and confidants. But Mills noted during the hearing that there is a parallel criminal investigation underway, and in the appeal her lawyers noted that she and the other 10 fake Arizona electors received grand jury subpoenas from the Department of Justice. “All I can say is if we do this wrong, we will set a precedent that is worse than the Capitol riot,” Mills said. Mills told the judge that the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals has set a briefing schedule and could decide the case as early as January. Columbus noted that will likely be too late, since the committee dissolves on Jan. 3, when the current congressional session ends. The Wards say the subpoena should be quashed because it violates their First Amendment rights, violates House rules and exceeds the authority of the Jan. 6 committee. Humetewa rejected each argument in turn in her earlier ruling and is considering their request to block access during appeal. Kelli Ward is a staunch Trump ally who has aggressively promoted the false claim that the election was stolen from him. In the days after the election, she pressured Republicans on the Maricopa County Board of Supervisors to investigate unsupported claims of fraud before election results were certified, according to text messages released by the county. A spokesperson for the. 6 committee did not immediately respond Tuesday to a request for comment. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Lawyers: Arizona GOP Chair Pleaded Fifth To Jan. 6 Panel
Democrats Won The Biggest Policy Battle Of Our Time Why Doesn
Democrats Won The Biggest Policy Battle Of Our Time Why Doesn
Democrats Won The Biggest Policy Battle Of Our Time — Why Doesn https://digitalarizonanews.com/democrats-won-the-biggest-policy-battle-of-our-time-why-doesn/ I’m so old I can remember a time before critical race theory, Mr. Potato Head and library books about gay teenagers were the greatest threats to America. I know it’s hard to believe that anything could ever be more dangerous to all we hold dear, but once upon a time millions of people were convinced that affordable health care spelled the end of the republic as we know it. They took to the streets, mobbed town hall meetings and screamed bloody murder when the government proposed a law that would ban insurance companies from refusing to cover sick people and offered government help to people who could not afford the sky-high premiums those companies charged. It seems like ancient history now but just a few years ago the hottest, most contentious issue in America was the passage of the Affordable Care Act (also known, for better or worse, as Obamacare). The Republican Party organized itself for almost a decade solely around a promise to repeal it. In fact, they actually voted to do so 67 times over the course of seven years. As president at the time, Barack Obama would have vetoed any repeal, of course, but the act of voting against it was enough to keep the base in line, outraged and on the march from one election to the next. In the 2016 election, all the Republican candidates had ACA repeal as a top priority. By that time the program was becoming part of people’s lives and broadly gaining in popularity, so the GOP had landed on “repeal and replace” as their slogan — a promise to enact something different but equivalent, the details of which they always failed to spell out. Inevitably, the best they could offer was some kind of vague, voluntary state-by-state insurance plan that would be more expensive and grossly inadequate. Nonetheless, it seemed to animate their voters like no other issue. The American right just hated Obamacare, even more than the ancient shibboleths of “welfare” and “affirmative action.” Donald Trump, as usual, took the “replace” promise to new heights. Just days before the 2016 election, he made this vow: My first day in office, I am going to ask Congress to put a bill on my desk getting rid of this disastrous law and replacing it with reforms that expand choice, freedom, affordability. You’re going to have such great health care at a tiny fraction of the cost. And it’s going to be so easy. Well, it wasn’t so easy. The House passed a terrible replacement bill in 2017 but it failed in the Senate bill by one vote, after that legendary thumbs-down by Sen. John McCain, who was near the end of his life but wanted a final measure of revenge against Trump, perhaps over his spiteful comments about McCain’s record of military service. (I think he was the last Republican, before Liz Cheney, to land a truly damaging blow against Trump.) Trump tried to move on to tax cuts but must have gotten some blowback from the base. In October of that year he tried to have it both ways, tweeting, “As usual the ObamaCare premiums will be up (the Dems own it) but we will Repeal & Replace and have great Healthcare soon — after Tax Cuts!” Want a daily wrap-up of all the news and commentary Salon has to offer? Subscribe to our morning newsletter, Crash Course. By that time, Republicans in Congress were counting on the Supreme Court to gut the Affordable Care Act for them, and kept a lower profile on the issue. Nonetheless, Republican candidates for office still ran on the promise and Trump kept saying the bill was almost ready, so the base was supposedly still excited at the prospect — dampened a bit, no doubt, by GOP losses in 2018. As the 2020 election cycle began, Trump started campaigning on repeal-and-replace again, claiming he would announce a new plan “in two months, maybe less.” That didn’t happen, and as usual he just started saying whatever he thought people wanted to hear: A plan would be “ready in two weeks” or “by the end of the month,” or he was just about to issue an executive order “requiring health insurance companies to cover all preexisting conditions for all customers,” something he claimed had “never been done before.” His crowds cheered deliriously, no doubt believing that just as he’d surely finish his wall he’d get that done in a second term as well. Trump kept promising a new health care plan “in two months” and then “two weeks,” and then vowed to issue an executive order to force insurance companies to cover everything at no cost. Somehow we never got to see this fabulous plan. Trump lost that election — in reality, if not in the collective imagination of his fans — so we never got to see that fabulous health care plan that would cost nothing and cover everything. Still, losing elections had never stopped the Republicans from running on the issue anyway. Repealing Obamacare was their holy grail for almost a decade, until they suddenly stopped talking about it. So what gives? Why haven’t we heard anything at all about it this election cycle? Well, as NBC News reports, the Republican commitment to ensuring that millions of people suffer from unnecessary illness, death and bankruptcy just isn’t sexy anymore: With slightly more than a month before the next election, Republicans in Congress and on the campaign trail aren’t making an issue of Obamacare. None of the Republican Senate nominees running in eight key battleground states have called for unwinding the ACA on their campaign websites, according to an NBC News review. The candidates scarcely mention the 2010 law or health insurance policy in general. And in interviews on Capitol Hill, key GOP lawmakers said the desire for repeal has faded. House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy’s recent “Commitment to America” made no mention of it either, although the chairman of the ultra-conservative Republican Study Committee did put out a plan that included an unspecified reversal of “the ACA’s Washington-centric approach.” When asked about it, however, he told NBC that it would be up to McCarthy, the presumptive incoming House speaker, to put it on the agenda. Interestingly, while it’s true that Obamacare is popular, it’s not all that popular. A Kaiser Family Foundation tracking poll found that 55% of U.S. adults approved of the ACA while 42% disapproved. So it’s not liek the GOP base hasn’t come around. They’re just bored with being angry about it and have been distracted by all the more exciting new grievances of the moment. Kevin McCarthy and Rick Scott don’t talk about Obamacare in 2022 — maybe because the GOP base likes their racism undiluted these days. Repealing government-guaranteed health care has been a fundamental principles of the right wing for as long as I can remember. Medicare and Medicaid (aka “entitlements”) have perennially been on the chopping block. I assume Republicans still hate it for the same reason they’ve always hated it: The wrong people may benefit, and that makes it unacceptable. They’ve got no major problem with government social programs — as long as they’re targeted to “real” Americans, if you know what I mean.  Over the past few years, however, the principles that have always been just below the surface of conservative hostility toward egalitarian government programs have evolved from implicit racial animosity to more explicit demands for racist policies and a full-blown assault on the democratic process. The impulses really haven’t changed but the right is now willing to experiment with extremist tactics to achieve their goals. Still, I would never say they’ve entirely given up on repealing Obamacare. While Sen. Rick Scott of Florida, the Senate Republican campaign chairman, doesn’t specifically mention it in his audacious governing agenda, he still wants to “rein in” Medicare and Social Security (through unspecified cuts in benefits or services). Some things never change. I would imagine that Obamacare will soon be viewed as another “entitlement,” which must be cut for our own good. For the moment, however, let’s take a moment to recognize that Democrats managed to defeat Republicans in one of the biggest policy battles of this generation. The war, needless to say, continues on other fronts.  Read More Here
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Democrats Won The Biggest Policy Battle Of Our Time Why Doesn
World Briefing
World Briefing
World Briefing https://digitalarizonanews.com/world-briefing-2/ Retreating Russians leave their comrades’ bodies behind LYMAN, Ukraine (AP) — Russian troops abandoned a key Ukrainian city so rapidly that they left the bodies of their comrades in the streets, offering more evidence Tuesday of Moscow’s latest military defeat as it struggles to hang on to four regions of Ukraine that it illegally annexed last week. Meanwhile, Russia’s upper house of parliament rubber-stamped the annexations following “referendums” that Ukraine and its Western allies have dismissed as fraudulent. Responding to the move, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy formally ruled out talks with Russia, declaring that negotiations with Russian President Vladimir Putin are impossible after his decision to take over the regions. The Kremlin replied by saying that it will wait for Ukraine to agree to sit down for talks, noting that it may not happen until a new Ukrainian president takes office. “We will wait for the incumbent president to change his position or wait for a future Ukrainian president who would revise his stand in the interests of the Ukrainian people,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said. Deal back on? Elon Musk gets closer to buying Twitter The tumultuous saga of Elon Musk’s on-again off-again purchase of Twitter took a turn toward a conclusion Tuesday after the mercurial Tesla CEO proposed to buy the company at the originally agreed-on price of $44 billion. Musk made the surprising turnaround not on Twitter, as has been his custom, but in a letter to Twitter that the company disclosed in a filing Tuesday with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. It came less than two weeks before a trial between the two parties is scheduled to start in Delaware. In response, Twitter said it intends to close the transaction at $54.20 per share after receiving the letter from Musk. But the company stopped short of saying it’s dropping its lawsuit against the billionaire Tesla CEO. Experts said that makes sense given the contentious relationship and lack of trust between the two parties. “I don’t think Twitter will give up its trial date on just Musk’s word — it’s going to need more certainty about closing,” said Andrew Jennings, professor at Brooklyn Law School, noting that the company may also be worried about Musk’s proposal being a delay tactic. After all, he’s already tried to unsuccessfully postpone the trial twice. Trading in Twitter’s stock, which had been halted for much of the day pending release of the news, resumed trading late Tuesday and soared 22% to close at $52. Loretta Lynn, coal miner’s daughter, country queen, dies NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — Loretta Lynn, the Kentucky coal miner’s daughter whose frank songs about life and love as a woman in Appalachia pulled her out of poverty and made her a pillar of country music, has died. She was 90. In a statement provided to The Associated Press, Lynn’s family said she died Tuesday at her home in Hurricane Mills, Tennessee. “Our precious mom, Loretta Lynn, passed away peacefully this morning, October 4th, in her sleep at home in her beloved ranch in Hurricane Mills,” the family said in a statement. They asked for privacy as they grieve and said a memorial will be announced later. Lynn already had four children before launching her career in the early 1960s, and her songs reflected her pride in her rural Kentucky background. As a songwriter, she crafted a persona of a defiantly tough woman, a contrast to the stereotypical image of most female country singers. The Country Music Hall of Famer wrote fearlessly about sex and love, cheating husbands, divorce and birth control and sometimes got in trouble with radio programmers for material from which even rock performers once shied away. Trump asks Supreme Court to intervene in Mar-a-Lago dispute WASHINGTON (AP) — Lawyers for former President Donald Trump asked the U.S. Supreme Court on Tuesday to step into the legal fight over the classified documents seized during an FBI search of his Florida estate, escalating a dispute over the powers of an independent arbiter appointed to inspect the records. The Trump team asked the justices to overturn a lower court ruling and allow the arbiter, called a special master, to review the roughly 100 documents with classification markings that were taken in the Aug. 8 search of Mar-a-Lago. A three-judge panel from the Atlanta-based U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit last month limited the special master’s review to the much larger tranche of non-classified documents. The judges, including two Trump appointees, sided with the Justice Department, which had argued there was no legal basis for the special master to conduct his own review of the classified records. But Trump’s lawyers said in their application to the Supreme Court that it was essential for the special master to have access to the classified records to “determine whether documents bearing classification markings are in fact classified, and regardless of classification, whether those records are personal records or Presidential records.” “Since President Trump had absolute authority over classification decisions during his Presidency, the current status of any disputed document cannot possibly be determined solely by reference to the markings on that document,” the application states. Haiti at breaking point as economy tanks, violence soars PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (AP) — Daily life in Haiti began to spin out of control last month just hours after Prime Minister Ariel Henry said fuel subsidies would be eliminated, causing prices to double. Gunshots rang out as protesters blocked roads with iron gates and mango trees. Then Haiti’s most powerful gang took a drastic step: It dug trenches to block access to the Caribbean country’s largest fuel terminal, vowing not to budge until Henry resigns and prices for fuel and basic goods go down. The poorest country in the Western hemisphere is in the grips of an inflationary vise that is squeezing its citizenry and exacerbating protests that have brought society to the breaking point. Violence is raging and making parents afraid to send their kids to school; fuel and clean water are scarce; hospitals, banks and grocery stores are struggling to stay open. The president of neighboring Dominican Republic described the situation as a “low-intensity civil war.” Life in Haiti is always extremely difficult, if not downright dysfunctional. But the magnitude of the current paralysis and despair is unprecedented. Political instability has simmered ever since last year’s still-unsolved assassination of Haiti’s president; inflation soaring around 30% has only aggravated the situation. Lawyers: Arizona GOP chair pleaded Fifth to Jan. 6 panel PHOENIX (AP) — Arizona Republican Party Chair Kelli Ward refused to answer questions during a deposition of the House committee investigating the Jan. 6 insurrection at the Capitol, an attorney for the panel revealed Tuesday during a court hearing in Phoenix. Attorney Eric Columbus told a federal judge that Ward asserted her Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination when she complied with a subpoena from the House committee. The detail about Ward’s deposition came at a hearing where lawyers urged a federal judge to block the committee from getting her phone records while she appeals. U.S. District Judge Diane Humetewa ruled on Sept. 23 that Ward’s arguments that her phone call records should be secret did not pass legal muster. Ward attorney Laurin Mills cast the phone records fight as one with major implications for democracy, on par if not bigger than the violent insurrection that unfolded at the Capitol. “This is the first time in American history that a select committee of the United State Congress controlled by one party has subpoenaed the records of the state chair of the rival party,” Mills said. Smacked asteroid’s debris trail more than 6,000 miles long CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — The asteroid that got smacked by a NASA spacecraft is now being trailed by thousands of miles of debris from the impact. Astronomers captured the scene millions of miles away with a telescope in Chile. Their remarkable observation two days after last month’s planetary defense test was recently released a National Science Foundation lab in Arizona. The image shows an expanding, comet-like tail more than 6,000 miles (10,000 kilometers) long, consisting of dust and other material spewed from the impact crater. This plume is accelerating away from the harmless asteroid, in large part, because of pressure on it from solar radiation, said Matthew Knight of the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory, who made the observation along with Lowell Observatory’s Teddy Kareta using the Southern Astrophysical Research Telescope. Scientists expect the tail to get even longer and disperse even more, becoming so tenuous at one point that it’s undetectable. Young deputy in Florida fatally shot by friendly fire POLK CITY, Fla. (AP) — A 21-year deputy appeared to have been fatally shot by friendly fire from deputies with whom he was serving a warrant in central Florida early Tuesday, authorities said. The Polk County Sheriff’s Office said in a statement that Deputy Blane Lane was shot in the left arm and chest at a trailer in Polk City, Florida, while serving a warrant with three other deputies on a suspect wanted for failing to appear on a felony drug charge. Shots were fired after deputies discovered the suspect with what appeared to be a handgun pointed at them but actually was a BB gun. Two of the deputies fired their guns, and “the round that struck Lane came from one of their firearms,” the sheriff’s office statement said. The deputy, who Sheriff Grady Judd described as one of the youngest on the force, was taken to a hospital where he died, “despite valiant efforts,” the sheriff said. The suspect, Cheryl William, also was hit multiple times. She was ta...
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World Briefing
GOP Optimistic About Senate Chances Despite Walker Turmoil
GOP Optimistic About Senate Chances Despite Walker Turmoil
GOP Optimistic About Senate Chances Despite Walker Turmoil https://digitalarizonanews.com/gop-optimistic-about-senate-chances-despite-walker-turmoil/ FILE – Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, of Ky., arrives to speak to reporters Sept. 7, 2022, ahead of a news conference on Capitol Hill in Washington. As the midterm campaign speeds into its final full month, leading Republicans believe the Senate majority remains firmly within their reach. Democratic strategists privately concede that the GOPâ€s mounting challenges may not be enough to overcome their own shortcomings. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin, File) NEW YORK — Leading Republicans are entering the final month of the midterm campaign increasingly optimistic that a Senate majority is within reach even as a dramatic family fight in Georgia clouds one of the party’s biggest pickup opportunities. And as some Democrats crow on social media about apparent Republican setbacks, party strategists privately concede that their own shortcomings may not be outweighed by the GOP’s mounting challenges. The evolving outlook is tied to a blunt reality: Democrats have virtually no margin for error as they confront the weight of history, widespread economic concerns and President Joe Biden’s weak standing. There is broad agreement among both parties that the Democrats’ summertime momentum across states like Nevada, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin has eroded just five weeks before Election Day. “There’s reason to be apprehensive, not reason to be gloomy,” veteran Democratic strategist James Carville said. “It looked like at the end of August we had a little momentum. I don’t know if we’ve regressed any, but we’re not progressing in many places.” That tepid outlook comes even as Republicans confront a series of self-imposed setbacks in the states that matter most in the 2022 midterms, which will decide the balance of power in Congress and statehouses across the nation. None has been more glaring than Herschel Walker’s struggles in Georgia, where the Republican Senate candidate’s own son accused him of lying about his personal challenges — including a report from The Daily Beast alleging that the anti-abortion Walker paid for a girlfriend’s abortion in 2009. Walker called the accusation a “flat-out lie” and said he would sue. Walker had not taken legal action as of late Tuesday, but he repeated his denials Wednesday morning during a Fox News interview, even as he talked generally of a difficult past as a husband and father. Shown an image of the “get well” card the Daily Beast reported that he sent to the girlfriend — which was signed with an “H,” not his full signature — Walker said, he doesn’t sign cards with just an initial. The Republican establishment, including the Sen. Mitch McConnell-aligned Senate Leadership Fund, and former President Donald Trump himself remained staunchly behind Walker on Tuesday in his bid to oust first-term Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock. A Walker campaign adviser said the candidate has raised at least $500,000 since he first responded publicly to The Daily Beast report. “If you’re in a fight, people will come to your aid,” said Steven Law, head of the Senate Leadership Fund and a close ally of McConnell, R-Ky. Law said the Georgia race had grown increasingly competitive despite the Democrats’ focus on Walker’s personal life. And looking beyond Georgia, Law said the political climate was predictably shifting against the party that controls the White House, as is typically the case in midterm elections. “It certainly seems that voters are returning to a more traditional midterm frame of mind,” Law said. Should Republicans gain even one Senate seat in November, they would take control of Congress’ upper chamber — and with it, the power to control judicial nominations and policy debates for the last two years of Biden’s term. Leaders in both parties believe Republicans are likely to take over the House. Even facing such odds, it’s far too soon to predict a Republican-controlled Congress. Democrats remain decidedly on offense and are spending heavily to try to flip Republican-held seats in Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and North Carolina. Voter opposition to the Supreme Court’s decision this summer to strip women of their constitutional right to an abortion has energized the Democratic base and led to a surge in female voter registrations. Republicans are most focused on Democratic incumbents in Arizona, Georgia, New Hampshire and Nevada, although Republican officials believe that underwhelming Trump-backed nominees in Arizona and New Hampshire have dampened the party’s pickup opportunities. “The Republican candidates they’re running are too extreme,” said J.B. Poersch, who leads the pro-Democrat Senate Majority PAC. “I think this is still advantage Democrats.” Meanwhile, conditions in the top battleground states are rapidly evolving. In Pennsylvania, Republican Senate nominee Mehmet Oz faced difficult new questions this week raised by a Washington Post article about the medical products he endorsed as a daytime television star. Another news report by the news site Jezebel detailing how his research caused hundreds of dogs to be killed rippled across social media. Still, Democratic officials acknowledge the race tightened considerably as the calendar shifted to October. And White House officials are concerned about Democratic nominee John Fetterman’s stamina as he recovers from a May stroke. “Senate Republicans had a very bad start to October, but we know each of our races will be tight and we’re going to keep taking nothing for granted,” said Michigan Sen. Gary Peters, who leads the Senate Democrats’ campaign arm. The GOP Senate candidates’ latest challenges in Georgia and Pennsylvania dominated social media Monday and Tuesday, according to data compiled by GQR, a public opinion research firm that works with Democratic organizations. News stories about Walker’s abortion accuser and Oz’s animal research had the first- and second-highest reach of any news stories on Facebook and Twitter since they surfaced Monday, topping content related to the television show “Sons of Anarchy,” another report about Planned Parenthood mobile abortion clinics and news about Kanye West. GQR used the social listening tool NewsWhip, which tracks over 500,000 websites in more than 100 languages roughly in real time. In swing-state Nevada, the rhetoric from Democratic Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto has become increasingly urgent in recent days as she fends off a fierce challenge from former state Attorney General Adam Laxalt. Within the White House, there is real fear that she could lose her reelection bid, giving Republicans the only seat they may need to claim the Senate majority. “We have a big problem, friend,” Cortez Masto wrote in a fundraising appeal Tuesday. “Experts say that our race in Nevada could decide Senate control — and right now, polling shows me 1 point behind my Trump-endorsed opponent.” Democrats and their allies continue to hope that backlash against the Supreme Court’s abortion decision will help them overcome historical trends in which the party controlling the White House almost always loses seats in Congress. Democrats, who control Washington, are also facing deep voter pessimism about the direction of the country and Biden’s relatively weak approval ratings. The traditional rules of politics have often been broken in the Trump era. In past years, Republicans may have abandoned Walker. But on Tuesday, they linked arms behind him. Law, of the Senate Leadership Fund, said he takes Walker at his word that he did not pay for a former girlfriend’s abortion, despite apparent evidence of a “Get Well” card with Walker’s signature and a check receipt. He said voters believe that “Walker may have made mistakes in his personal life that affected him and his family, but Warnock has made mistakes in public life in Washington that affected them and their families.” There were some signs of Republican concern on the ground in Georgia, however. Martha Zoller, a popular Republican radio host in north Georgia and one-time congressional candidate, told her audience Tuesday that the latest allegations require Walker to reset his campaign with a straightforward admission about his “personal demons” and what he’s done to overcome them. “He needs to fall on the sword. ‘I was a dog. … And I have asked forgiveness for it,'” she said, detailing the kind of message she believes Walker must give voters. “It would be so refreshing to have somebody just tell the truth.” Walker attempted his version of that strategy Wednesday on Fox News. “It’s like they’re trying to bring up my past to hurt me,” he said, before quoting Christian New Testament text. “I’m a sinner. We all sin before the glory of God.” Yet Walker insisted his past transgressions don’t include encouraging and paying for an abortion. “Everyone is anonymous, and everyone is leaking, and they want you to confess to something you have no clue about,” he said. Veteran Democratic strategist Josh Schwerin warned his party against writing off the Georgia Republican. “I wouldn’t say Walker is done. Over the last couple of cycles we’ve certainly seen Republican candidates survive things that are not supposed to be survivable,” Schwerin said. “There are a lot of close races, and the dynamics of this election are difficult to predict. Everybody is expecting multiple shifts in momentum between now and Election Day.” Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
GOP Optimistic About Senate Chances Despite Walker Turmoil
As E.U. Seeks To Limit Russias Revenues Oil Producers Could Be An Obstacle
As E.U. Seeks To Limit Russias Revenues Oil Producers Could Be An Obstacle
As E.U. Seeks To Limit Russia’s Revenues, Oil Producers Could Be An Obstacle https://digitalarizonanews.com/as-e-u-seeks-to-limit-russias-revenues-oil-producers-could-be-an-obstacle/ Image A crude oil terminal near the port city of Nakhodka, Russia. With oil prices at a high, Russia is raking in billions of dollars in revenue, even as it sells smaller quantities. Credit…Tatiana Meel/Reuters BRUSSELS — As the European Union pushed ahead on Wednesday with an ambitious but untested plan to limit Russia’s oil revenue, Western efforts to drain funding from President Vladimir V. Putin’s war machine were facing a possible hurdle from OPEC Plus, the group led by Saudi Arabia, which was expected to announce a cut in oil production that could help Moscow by keeping the global price of the commodity higher. OPEC Plus was likely to announce a significant reduction in crude output at a meeting in Vienna. Such a move would reinforce the growing perception that Russia and Saudi Arabia are working closely together to manage oil markets. If the global price of oil remains high, it would complicate the European Union’s effort to impose a price cap on Russian oil that was expected to gain final approval on Wednesday, a day after E.U. negotiators reached an agreement on the measure as part of a fresh package of sanctions against Moscow. Under the plan, a committee including representatives of the European Union, the Group of 7 nations and others that agree to the price cap would meet regularly to decide on the price at which Russian oil should be sold, and that it would change based on the market price. Several diplomats involved in the E.U. talks said that Greece, Malta and Cyprus — maritime nations that would be most affected by the price cap — received assurances that their business interests would be preserved, the diplomats said. The countries had been holding up what would be the eighth sanctions package the European Union has adopted since the Russian invasion of Ukraine because of worries that a price cap on Russian oil exported outside the bloc would affect their shipping, insurance and other industries, the diplomats said. With oil prices at a high, Russia is raking in billions of dollars in revenue, even as it sells smaller quantities. The cap — part of a broad plan pushed by the Biden administration that the G7 agreed to last month — is intended to set the price of Russian oil lower than where it is today, but still above cost. The U.S. Treasury calculates that the cap would deprive the Kremlin of tens of billions of dollars annually. To make the measure effective, and cut Russian revenue, the United States, Europe and their allies would need to convince India and China, which buy substantial quantities of Russian oil, to purchase it only at the agreed upon price. Experts say that even with willing partners, the cap could be hard to implement. Under the new rules, companies involved in the shipping of Russian oil — including shipowners, insurers and underwriters — would be on the hook for ensuring that the oil they are helping to transport is being sold at or below the price cap. If they are caught helping Russia sell at a higher price, they could face lawsuits in their home countries for violating sanctions. Russian crude will come under an embargo in most of the European Union on Dec. 5, and petroleum products will follow in February. The price cap on shipments to non-E.U. countries has been championed by U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen as a necessary complement to the European oil embargo. Under the E.U. deal, Greece, Malta and Cyprus will be permitted to continue shipping Russian oil. Had they not agreed to place their companies at the forefront of applying the price cap, they would have been forbidden from shipping or insuring Russian oil cargo outside the European Union, a huge hit for major industries. More than half of the tankers now shipping Russia’s oil are Greek-owned. And the financial services that underpin that trade — including insurance, reinsurance and letters of credit — are overwhelmingly based in the European Union and Britain. The G7 nations championed the price cap at the United States’ behest. Its member nations that do not belong to the European Union — the United States, Britain, Canada and Japan — are expected to enact laws similar to the European Union’s to enforce it. Image President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia addressed a rally and concert in Red Square last week celebrating Russia’s illegal annexation of four Ukrainian provinces.Credit…Agence France-Presse — Getty Images President Vladimir V. Putin signed more than 400 pages of legislation annexing four Ukrainian regions, the Kremlin said on Wednesday, forging ahead with a parallel reality in which Russia pretends to exercise sovereignty over thousands of square miles of territory that its military does not actually control. Russia’s economy ministry sought to attach real-world benefits to a largely illusory claim, forecasting that the annexation would raise Russia’s production of metallurgy and sunflowers by 20 percent each, while coal production would increase by 6 percent. The state news agency RIA Novosti released a map purporting to show Russia’s new territory, adding in fine print that part of it was “under the control of the Ukrainian Armed Forces.” Russian state television trumpeted the signing on Wednesday as the day’s biggest news story, while playing down or ignoring the fact that Russian forces are in retreat in multiple parts of the front line. “The only currency unit starting Jan. 1, 2023, will be the ruble, and the territorial organs of the federal authorities will be created by June 1,” intoned the anchor on the 12 p.m. news on Channel 1. Four laws spelling out the annexation process — one for each region, each numbering more than 100 pages — were published on a government website on Wednesday, with a Kremlin stamp on the last page, dated Oct. 4, standing in for Mr. Putin’s signature. It was an example of how Mr. Putin has long tried to legitimize his actions — however illegal — with a sheen of legality bestowed by Russia’s rubber-stamp institutions. Later, in a televised videoconference celebrating Teachers’ Day, Mr. Putin pointedly congratulated the teachers “of all the 89 regions of Russia,” a number that includes the newly annexed territories. The Kremlin has declared that it will fight to capture all of Ukraine’s Donetsk and Luhansk regions — Ukraine still holds several Donetsk cities — but it has been more vague about its goals in the other two regions it is attempting to annex, Zaporizhzhia and Kherson. That has sown confusion about what new borders Russia is claiming with its illegal annexation. While Mr. Putin announced the planned annexation last Friday in a bombastic and angry speech at the Kremlin, followed by a signing ceremony, there was no further fanfare involving the president this week. “Our country became bigger, de jure, today,” his spokesman, Dmitri. S. Peskov, told reporters, according to Russia’s state-run Tass news agency. “This is very important.” But even the borders of the annexed territory — an annexation that has only been endorsed by North Korea — remained in flux on Wednesday as Ukrainian troops continued their counteroffensive in their country’s south and east. Mr. Peskov bristled when asked whether the annexation was contradicted by the Russian military’s retreats. “There’s no contradiction here,” Mr. Peskov said. “They will be with Russia forever. They will be returned.” Image A Lukoil refinery in Italy last month. Italy has increased its imports of Russian crude despite the European Union’s efforts to cut ties to Russian energy.Credit…Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times OPEC and its allies, including Russia, are widely expected to approve a sizable cut in oil production in order to bolster prices when officials meet in Vienna on Wednesday. Among those attending the meeting is Russia’s deputy prime minister, Alexander Novak, who has played a key role in fostering cooperation with the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries. The presence of Mr. Novak, who is subject to U.S. sanctions, could come as an embarrassment to European officials when their citizens face what could be a tough winter because of Russia’s war in Ukraine. Analysts say a very large cut on the order of two million barrels a day, or about 2 percent of world supplies, could be on the table. The gathering of the group, known as OPEC Plus, is the first to be held in person since the early days of the pandemic. That signals an intention to make a strong statement to energy markets about the group’s cohesion during the fighting in Ukraine and its willingness to act quickly to defend prices, analysts say. But the meeting also comes amid swirling political intentions and economic factors. In the push for higher oil prices, the Kremlin may be using OPEC’s de facto leader, Saudi Arabia, whose ministers want future cooperation from Moscow on energy matters, to make it more costly for the West to take measures against Russia. “To the extent that prices rise, it will make it that much more challenging for Europe to proceed with its sanctions on Russian oil in December,” said Bhushan Bahree, an executive director of S&P Global Commodity Insights. A substantial cut in production would be a blow to the Biden administration, which has lobbied the Saudis to increase output. Saudi officials have expressed concern that oil demand could weaken because of a flagging world economy. “They are looking for ways to surprise the market or deliver at least as much as the market is anticipating,” said Richard Bronze, the head of geopolitics at Energy Aspects, a research firm in London. Expectations of a big move by the producing countries have in recent days helped lift futures prices of Brent crude, the international benchmark, to about $92 a barrel from about $83. The group may also anno...
·digitalarizonanews.com·
As E.U. Seeks To Limit Russias Revenues Oil Producers Could Be An Obstacle
New Restaurants Opening Daily Across The US. Get The Scoop Before Your Competitors Do! Subscribe To Flhip.com. | RestaurantNews.com
New Restaurants Opening Daily Across The US. Get The Scoop Before Your Competitors Do! Subscribe To Flhip.com. | RestaurantNews.com
New Restaurants Opening Daily Across The US. Get The Scoop Before Your Competitors Do! Subscribe To Flhip.com. | RestaurantNews.com https://digitalarizonanews.com/new-restaurants-opening-daily-across-the-us-get-the-scoop-before-your-competitors-do-subscribe-to-flhip-com-restaurantnews-com/ Click on the map above to see how Flhip.com can get you in the door first ahead of your competitors (RestaurantNews.com)  Flhip.com has released its latest restaurant openings report, providing restaurant vendors with a sampling of fresh sales and marketing leads that can be found on their website. Milford, CT – Fryborg After several delays, it looks like a popular restaurant’s Trumbull location could open in just a few weeks. Jonathan Gibbons, owner of Fryborg – a restaurant best known for its hand-cut fries that already has a Milford location and a food truck named after him – said that, until he did some city inspection. Passes, the restaurant’s Trumbull outpost is set to open in the first week of October. Lewis Center, OH – Yabo’s Tacos Lewis Center is getting a new option for tacos and margaritas. Yabo’s Tacos will open its restaurant in the Evans Farm development Nov. 1. “At our Westerville and Powell restaurants, which are the closest to this one, we get customers every day asking when we’re opening,” owner Scott Boles said. It’s a much-anticipated opening, not just as the first dining and drinking tenant at Evans Farm, but for Boles himself. Dallas, TX – Salata Salata is expecting to open its new location sometime in October at 6464 E. Northwest Hwy., Dallas, with expectations to open mid-October. The restaurant offers different styles of salads and wraps that can be customized with more than 50 different toppings, according to the Salata website. Salata has locations across the nation, including existing stores in other areas of Dallas. Scottsdale, AZ – The Backdoor Restaurant and Lounge The Backdoor Restaurant and Lounge is coming soon to Scottsdale at 7330 E. Main St. Owner Paul Mitchell tells What Now Phoenix that his latest concept should be ready to soft open by December. Doral, FL – Bachour Restaurant and Bar Amid 2020’s wave of pandemic-induced closures across Miami-Dade’s culinary landscape, pastry chef Antonio Bachour has announced that he will drop anchor in Downtown Doral next month with a second location of his Bachour Restaurant and Bar. Downtown Doral Park at 8405 NW 53rd St., Doral; Slated to open early October. Turner, OR – Happy Valley Tasting Room & Restaurant Happy Valley Tasting Room & Restaurant is expected to open in October, designed to maintain the character found at the Willamette Valley Vineyards in the South Salem Hills. Scott Edwards is serving as architect for the vineyard’s expansion into Happy Valley, drawing design inspiration from South Salem’s materials, processes and people. Don’t miss a lead CLICK HERE to keep up to date with Flhip.com offerings. For more information or to view the leads in your area, please visit Flhip.com Contact: Ken Roberts 772-231-5826 ken@flhip.com More from Flhip Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
New Restaurants Opening Daily Across The US. Get The Scoop Before Your Competitors Do! Subscribe To Flhip.com. | RestaurantNews.com
Nobel Prize Awarded To Three Scientists For Work In Click Chemistry Which Links Molecules Quickly
Nobel Prize Awarded To Three Scientists For Work In Click Chemistry Which Links Molecules Quickly
Nobel Prize Awarded To Three Scientists For Work In Click Chemistry, Which Links Molecules Quickly https://digitalarizonanews.com/nobel-prize-awarded-to-three-scientists-for-work-in-click-chemistry-which-links-molecules-quickly/ The 2022 Nobel Prize in chemistry was awarded to three scientists for work in what’s known as click chemistry, which allows molecular building blocks to be snapped together like LEGO pieces to create complex molecules with huge implications for pharmaceutical development, medicine and material sciences. The prize was awarded to two Americans, K. Barry Sharpless of Scripps Research in La Jolla, Calif., and Carolyn R. Bertozzi of Stanford University, and to Danish scientist Morten Meldal at the University of Copenhagen. Sharpless, a second-time Nobel winner, and Meldal developed the field of click chemistry in which molecular building blocks are linked together quickly and efficiently. Bertozzi built on those advances to develop bioorthogonal chemistry, which allows scientists to modify molecules in living organisms without disrupting processes occurring within the cells — a technique that allows the mapping of cells and targeted cancer therapies, among other uses. Reached by telephone by the Nobel committee, Bertozzi said, “I’m absolutely stunned. I’m sitting here and can hardly breathe. I’m still not entirely positive that it’s real.” Johan Aqvist, chair of the Nobel chemistry committee, said in the press briefing in Stockholm that the three scientists were recognized for making extraordinarily complicated processes simple. “Click chemistry is almost like it sounds,” he said. “It’s all about snapping molecules together. Imagine that you could attach small chemical buckles to different types of building blocks. Then, you could link these buckles together and produce molecules of greater complexity and variation. This was the basic idea that Barry Sharpless had about 20 years ago. The problem was to find good chemical buckles.” The scientists solved that problem in stages, he said. Sharpless and Meldal’s research — done independently of one other — used copper as a catalyst to join molecules, which was effective but toxic in higher concentrations. Bertozzi developed a method that allowed scientists to modify molecules in living organisms without disrupting them. “It’s a great choice. This is really elegant chemistry,” said former National Institutes of Health director Francis S. Collins. Click chemistry improves the tumor targeting of cancer drugs, he said, some of which are now in clinical trials. Jon Lorsch, director of the National Institute of General Medical Sciences at the National Institutes of Health, compared Bertozzi’s method to a trap that snaps shut once the animal is inside. “When the partner molecule comes in it snaps shut and it will only act on the partner molecule.” The work of the three award winners has already found “a huge number of applications. It’s used to assemble molecules of different sizes to create huge [chemical] libraries that can be used to screen for drugs,” Lorsch said. The method also allows scientists to attach dye to a molecule and watch where it goes and what it does, for example when a virus infects a cell. The concept of click chemistry has been “transformative” in many areas of chemistry, materials science, biology and medicine, said Tom Brown, professor of Nucleic Acid Chemistry at the University of Oxford. “It has given rise to new highly functional materials, has catalysed important pharmaceutical developments and has been influential in many areas of chemical biology.” Although the work recognized by the award spans at least two decades, “in many regards this is still a technology that is in its infancy,” said Angela K. Wilson, president of the American Chemical Society. “We talk a lot about personalized medicine and I think it’s going to help open the doors to that in the future.” Wilson said the techniques used to link molecules should also have applications to regrow damaged tissue, and read the genetic script of humans, animals and plants in DNA sequencing The breakthroughs achieved by Sharpless, Meldal and Bertozzi also have industrial applications, including the development of ways to prevent corrosion and brighteners used to make plastics and other materials appear cleaner. Although relatively few women have been honored with the Nobel chemistry prize, Bertozzi is the third in three years, Wilson noted. In 2020, the Academy recognized Jennifer A. Doudna of the University of California, Berkeley, and Emmanuelle Charpentier of the Max Planck Research Unit for the Science of Pathogens in Berlin, for development of the genome-editing tool known as CRISPR/Cas9. “There are a lot more women in the field and they’re doing amazing science,” Wilson said. Sharpless, 81, became the fifth person to win two Nobel prizes, joining Marie Curie and Frederick Sanger, the only the other person to win the chemistry prize twice. His previous prize was in 2001 “for his work on chirally catalysed oxidation reactions,” a process that has enabled the manufacture of safer and more effective antibiotics, anti-inflammatory drugs, heart medicines, and agricultural chemicals. “He goes in his own direction,” Miles Fabian, a program manager at the National Institute of General Medical Sciences, said about what sets Sharpless apart as a scientist. “He’s always had a good feel for what’s needed in chemistry.” Michelle Bond, another NIGMS program manager, said Bertozzi “is one of the reasons I went to graduate school. She’s not only an excellent chemist but incredibly good at communicating to the public the importance of [her work] and its future potential.” Bertozzi’s work has advanced the field of glycoscience, which focuses on the carbohydrates on the surface of virtually all cells which are involved in the binding to and communicating with other cells. Those carbohydrates differ when cells are healthy or diseased. Identifying those differences allows researchers to target diseased cells. Glycoscience has proven important to our understanding of cancer, inflammation, diabetes, heart disease and even covid-19. Last year’s prize went to David W.C. MacMillan of Princeton University and Benjamin List of the Max Planck Institute in Germany for their work on organocatalysis, a new more environmentally-friendly method of making molecules with applications in the development of drugs, chemicals and a host of everyday products. This is a developing story. It will be updated. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Nobel Prize Awarded To Three Scientists For Work In Click Chemistry Which Links Molecules Quickly
Businesses Added 208000 Jobs In September Better Than Expected ADP Reports
Businesses Added 208000 Jobs In September Better Than Expected ADP Reports
Businesses Added 208,000 Jobs In September, Better Than Expected, ADP Reports https://digitalarizonanews.com/businesses-added-208000-jobs-in-september-better-than-expected-adp-reports/ The U.S. labor market showed strength in September, with private companies adding more jobs than expected, payroll services firm ADP reported Wednesday. Businesses added 208,000 for the month, better than the 200,000 Dow Jones estimate and ahead of the upwardly revised 185,000 in August. Those gains came even as goods-producing industries reported a loss of 29,000 positions, with manufacturing down 13,000 and natural resources and mining losing 16,000. However, a big jump in trade, transportation and utilities helped offset those losses, as the sector saw a jobs gain of 147,000. Professional and business services added 57,000, while education and health services picked up 38,000 and leisure and hospitality grew by 31,000. There also were losers within the services sector, as information declined by 19,000 and financial activities saw a loss of 16,000 positions. By size, companies employing 50-499 workers led with a 90,000 gain, while large firms added 60,000 and small businesses contributed 58,000. The tight job market saw another month of sizeable pay hikes, with annual pay trending up 7.8% from a year ago, according to ADP, which compiles the report in tandem with the Stanford Digital Economy Lab. Those changing jobs saw a median change in annual pay of 15.7%, down from 16.2% in August for the biggest monthly drop in the three years ADP has been tracking the data. ADP’s report comes two days before the closely watched nonfarm payrolls report issued by the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The estimate for the Friday report is growth of 275,000 jobs. Though ADP revised its methodology over the summer, the August total, which was revised up sharply from the originally reported 132,000, was still well shy of the BLS count of 315,000 added jobs. Federal Reserve officials are watching the jobs numbers closely as the central bank looks to stem high inflation. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Businesses Added 208000 Jobs In September Better Than Expected ADP Reports
Biden Heads To Florida; 3 Chemists Win Nobel Prize; Trump Asks Supreme Court To Intervene | Hot Off The Wire Podcast YakTriNews.com
Biden Heads To Florida; 3 Chemists Win Nobel Prize; Trump Asks Supreme Court To Intervene | Hot Off The Wire Podcast YakTriNews.com
Biden Heads To Florida; 3 Chemists Win Nobel Prize; Trump Asks Supreme Court To Intervene | Hot Off The Wire Podcast – YakTriNews.com https://digitalarizonanews.com/biden-heads-to-florida-3-chemists-win-nobel-prize-trump-asks-supreme-court-to-intervene-hot-off-the-wire-podcast-yaktrinews-com/ October 5, 2022 5:20 AM Lee Digital Content Center, The Associated Press Posted: October 5, 2022 5:20 AM Updated: October 5, 2022 5:36 AM President Joe Biden is traveling to hurricane-ravaged Florida with a pledge that federal, state and local governments will work as one to help rebuild homes, businesses and lives. Biden plans to put politics on mute for now to focus on those in need during his tour Wednesday afternoon of Fort Myers, Florida. Biden plans to meet with residents and small business owners, and to thank government officials providing emergency aid and removing debris. Joining Biden in Florida will be two of his most prominent Republican critics, Gov. Ron DeSantis and Sen. Rick Scott. This year’s Nobel Prize in chemistry has been awarded in equal parts to Americans Carolyn R. Bertozzi and K. Barry Sharpless, and Danish scientist Morten Meldal for developing a way of “snapping molecules together.” that can be used to design better medicines. Russian President Vladimir Putin has signed laws absorbing four Ukrainian regions into Russia, a move that finalizes the annexation carried out in defiance of international law. Earlier this week, both houses of the Russian parliament ratified treaties making the Donetsk, Luhansk, Kherson and Zaporizhzhia regions part of Russia. Iran says an 85-year-old Iranian-American held by Iran has left the country for Oman. The state-run IRNA news agency published video of Baquer Namazi boarding a Royal Oman air force jet in Tehran. “Best before” labels are coming under scrutiny as concerns about food waste grow around the world. The labels have nothing to do with safety, and some worry they encourage consumers to throw away food that’s perfectly fine to eat. Lawyers for former President Donald Trump have asked the U.S. Supreme Court to step into the legal fight over the classified documents seized during an FBI search of his Florida estate. The Trump team asked the court Tuesday to overturn a lower court ruling and permit an independent arbiter, or special master, to review the roughly 100 documents with classified markings that were taken in the Aug. 8 search. In sports, the Yankees and the Rangers traded wins in a doubleheader but Aaron Judge and Gerrit Cole were setting records. The U.S. announced its providing an additional $625 million in military aid to Ukraine, a package that includes additional advanced rocket systems credited with helping the country’s military gain momentum in its war with Russia. Russian troops abandoned a key Ukrainian city so rapidly that they left the bodies of their comrades in the streets. The scene offered more evidence Tuesday of Moscow’s latest military defeat as it struggles to hang on to four regions of Ukraine that it illegally annexed last week.  Some of the Supreme Court’s conservative justices seem sympathetic to Alabama’s arguments in a case seeking to force the state to create a second Black majority congressional district. It’s the latest showdown over the landmark Voting Rights Act. President Joe Biden spoke with Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida to discuss their next steps after North Korea conducted its longest ever test launch by firing nuclear-capable ballistic missile over Japan. As California’s drought deepens, more rural communities are running out of water. Heavy pumping is depleting groundwater supplies that aren’t being replenished by rain and snowmelt. Thrifters who flock to Goodwill stores will now be able to do more of their treasure hunting online. The Goodwill Industries International Inc., the 120 year-old non-profit organization that operates 3,300 stores in the U.S., and Canada, has launched an online business as part of a newly incorporated venture called GoodwillFinds. Elon Musk is offering to go through with his original proposal to buy Twitter for $44 billion. The Tesla CEO said in a regulatory filing Tuesday that he notified Twitter of plans to go through with the deal. The number of available jobs in the U.S. plummeted in August compared with July, a sign that businesses may pull back further on hiring and potentially cool chronically high inflation. Loretta Lynn, the Kentucky coal miner’s daughter who became a pillar of country music, has died. Lynn’s family said she died Tuesday at her home in Tennessee. She was 90. A new report says Georgia Republican Senate nominee Herschel Walker paid for an abortion for his girlfriend in 2009. Walker has vehemently opposed abortion rights and calls the accusation in The Daily Beast a “flat-out lie.” U.S. officials say Russia is working to amplify doubts about the integrity of American elections while China is interested in influencing policy perspectives in favor of Beijing. That concern aligns with unclassified intelligence advisory obtained by The Associated Press that says China is probably seeking to influence select races to “hinder candidates perceived to be particularly adversarial to Beijing.” Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Biden Heads To Florida; 3 Chemists Win Nobel Prize; Trump Asks Supreme Court To Intervene | Hot Off The Wire Podcast YakTriNews.com
Video: Hear What Trump Told Haberman About Ron DeSantis CNN Video
Video: Hear What Trump Told Haberman About Ron DeSantis CNN Video
Video: Hear What Trump Told Haberman About Ron DeSantis – CNN Video https://digitalarizonanews.com/video-hear-what-trump-told-haberman-about-ron-desantis-cnn-video/ Latest Videos (16 Videos) Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Video: Hear What Trump Told Haberman About Ron DeSantis CNN Video
Smarter News Quiz: North Korea Trump Lawsuit And New Government Funding The Florida Star | The Georgia Star
Smarter News Quiz: North Korea Trump Lawsuit And New Government Funding The Florida Star | The Georgia Star
Smarter News Quiz: North Korea, Trump Lawsuit And New Government Funding – The Florida Star | The Georgia Star https://digitalarizonanews.com/smarter-news-quiz-north-korea-trump-lawsuit-and-new-government-funding-the-florida-star-the-georgia-star/ Smarter News Quiz: North Korea, Trump Lawsuit and New Government Funding  The Florida Star Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Smarter News Quiz: North Korea Trump Lawsuit And New Government Funding The Florida Star | The Georgia Star
Two-Thirds Of California Voters Say Trump Should Be Prosecuted If Theres Enough Evidence Poll Shows MsnNOW
Two-Thirds Of California Voters Say Trump Should Be Prosecuted If Theres Enough Evidence Poll Shows MsnNOW
Two-Thirds Of California Voters Say Trump Should Be Prosecuted If There’s Enough Evidence, Poll Shows – MsnNOW https://digitalarizonanews.com/two-thirds-of-california-voters-say-trump-should-be-prosecuted-if-theres-enough-evidence-poll-shows-msnnow/ Two-thirds of California voters say Trump should be prosecuted if there’s enough evidence, poll shows  msnNOW Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Two-Thirds Of California Voters Say Trump Should Be Prosecuted If Theres Enough Evidence Poll Shows MsnNOW
Dow Futures Fall More Than 200 Points Following A Sharp Two-Day Rally On Wall Street
Dow Futures Fall More Than 200 Points Following A Sharp Two-Day Rally On Wall Street
Dow Futures Fall More Than 200 Points Following A Sharp Two-Day Rally On Wall Street https://digitalarizonanews.com/dow-futures-fall-more-than-200-points-following-a-sharp-two-day-rally-on-wall-street/ U.S. stock futures fell on Wednesday, putting Wall Street on track to give back some of its sharp gains from the last two sessions. Dow Jones Industrial Average futures declined by 275 points, or 1%. S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 futures dipped 1% and 0.9%, respectively. The Dow on Tuesday jumped about 825 points, or 2.8%. The S&P 500 gained nearly 3.1%, while the Nasdaq Composite advanced 3.3%. Those gains, which come on the back of falling bond yields, led to the strongest two-day stretch for the S&P 500 since 2020. Meanwhile, a weakening in the most recent job openings data had some investors considering whether the Federal Reserve will slow the pace of interest rate hikes. Market participants wondered whether those signs could mean markets have finally priced in a bottom after the sharp declines in the prior quarter. “I don’t think you have to worry about a recession until the second half of ’23,” Stifel chief equity strategist Barry Bannister said Tuesday on CNBC’s “Closing Bell: Overtime.” “So there is room for a rally as you go into the early part of next year.” Traders are expecting a raft of economic reports on Wednesday. Data on weekly mortgage applications is expected. September’s ADP private payrolls report is due out at 8:15 a.m. ET. The latest international trade reading is due at 8:30 a.m. ET, while the ISM services index is set to be released at 10 a.m. ET. Two-day huge move in market offers hope for stronger gains ahead The back-to-back huge market moves Monday and Tuesday provide some hope that better days are ahead for the stock market. While single-day bursts often are signs of a bear market bounce, two-day rallies of more than 2% historically have signaled stronger gains in the future. There have been 31 such instances for the S&P 500 since 1953, and the index has averaged a 0.61% gain one week later following those moves, according to Bespoke Investment Group. While gains tend to muddle along shortly after, the 12-month return typically has been 14.6% and the S&P 500 has been higher 80% of the time. Having rallies off that size is highly unusual to start the month — Bespoke reports that there was only one other time, in August 1984, when a month began with consecutive gains of 2%. —Jeff Cox Ford shares move higher on Morgan Stanley upgrade Shares of Ford moved more than 1% higher in premarket trading after Morgan Stanley upgraded them on Wednesday . The auto maker’s stock has been under pressure recently, They lost 18.5% over the past month, after the company warned in late September of an extra $1 billion in supply chain costs for the third quarter. Now, Morgan Stanley says that provides an attractive entry point for investors. Read more about this call on CNBC Pro. — Tanaya Macheel European markets retreat as rally fades European stocks retreated on Wednesday as the positive trend seen in global stocks in recent days faded. The pan-European Stoxx 600 was down 1% in early trade. Autos dropped 2.9% to lead losses as all sectors and major bourses slid into negative territory following the latest PMI reading out of the euro zone, which cemented fears of a recession in the 19-member bloc. – Elliot Smith CNBC Pro: This isn’t the market bottom, Morgan Stanley says, naming 3 things that have to happen first There’s unlikely to be a sustainable market bottom unless three conditions are met, according to Morgan Stanley. “We … remind readers that the last few innings of every bear market are very challenging to trade as volatility becomes extreme,” they wrote. “None of the conditions we have been looking for to call an end to this bear market are in place.” Pro subscribers can read more here. — Weizhen Tan Stifel’s Barry Bannister says there is “room for a rally” after two straight days of gains Stifel chief equity strategist Barry Bannister said stocks can advance further after this week’s sharp two-day rally. “I don’t think you have to worry about a recession until the second half of ’23,” Stifel chief equity strategist Barry Bannister said Tuesday on CNBC’s “Closing Bell: Overtime.” “So there is room for a rally as you go into the early part of next year.” The strategist said there could be a “conditional pause” at the December meeting as the Federal Reserve reviews the impact of its interest rate hiking plan on inflation. “Inflation leading indicators are all falling, global liquidity has tightened quite a bit. They don’t want to kill the patient to cure the disease,” Bannister said. “And if the data kept going their way, then the pause would last, and if the data don’t go their way, they would hike again and we would go right back down.” — Sarah Min September private payrolls expected to grow by 200,000 in ADP report September’s ADP private payrolls report is due out Wednesday at 8:15 a.m. ET. Economists are expecting private payrolls to have grown by 200,000 last month, according to estimates from Dow Jones. If the report meets those estimates, it would mean an acceleration from the pace of hiring in August, when private payrolls rose by just 132,000 for the month. — Sarah Min Stock futures open lower U.S. stock futures fell slightly on Tuesday night after the S&P 500 posted its best two-day gain in roughly two years. Dow Jones Industrial Average futures fell by 45 points, or 0.19%. S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 futures dipped 0.15% and 0.13%, respectively. — Sarah Min Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Dow Futures Fall More Than 200 Points Following A Sharp Two-Day Rally On Wall Street
Banana Ball World Tour: 33 Cities Across The United States Will See Savannah Bananas Play In 2023
Banana Ball World Tour: 33 Cities Across The United States Will See Savannah Bananas Play In 2023
Banana Ball World Tour: 33 Cities Across The United States Will See Savannah Bananas Play In 2023 https://digitalarizonanews.com/banana-ball-world-tour-33-cities-across-the-united-states-will-see-savannah-bananas-play-in-2023/ A-L SINGLE SEASON RECORD. THE YANKEES ENTER THE POSTSEASON AS THE NUMBER 2 SEED IN THE AMERICAN LEAGUE. THE SAVANNAH BANANAS ANNOUNCING IT’S 20-23 WORLD TOUR SCHEDULE TUESDAY. THE BUNCH BRINGING THEIR “WORLD FAMOUS BASEBALL CIRCUS” TO 33 CITIES AND 20 STATES IN 2023. OUR PRESTON HARVEY HAS A RECAP FROM HISTORIC GRAYSON STADIUM. THE DAY IS FINALLY HERE. THE SAVANNAH BANANAS ANNOUNCING THEIR 2023 BANANA BALL WORLD TOUR SCHEDULE RIGHT HERE IN GRAYSON STADIUM TUESDAY NIGHT. NATS? THIS WASN’T YOUR AVERAGE ANNOUNCEMENT, MORE LIKE AN N-F-L DRAFT. THE BANANAS NEVER AFRAID TO BE DIFFERENT. ONCE THE CLOCK HIT 7 P.M. IT WAS TIME FOR THE FIRST PICK OF ROUND 1 – *SOT* THAT’S RIGHT. THE BUNCH IS HEADING DOWN TO SUNNY SOUTH FLORIDA FOR THEIR FIRST STOP OF THE WORLD TOUR. THE SAVANNAH BANANAS WILL GO AS FAR NORTH TO SYRACUSE AND AS FAR WEST TO SACRAMENTO, CALIFORNIA. THE BUNCH SHARED THE CITY THEY CANT WAIT TO VISIT, LAS VEGAS SEEMED TO BE THE FAVORITE. SOT? EVEN WITH THE SAVANNAH BANANAS TRAVELING ALL OVER THE NATION, THE BUNCH WILL STILL PLAY MANY GAMES IN SAVANNAH -HOME IS STILL WITH THE FANS IN THE HOSTESS CITY OF THE SOUTH. SOT? THE MOST MEMORABLE GAME WILL BE IN SAVANNAH ON FEBRUARY 25…THE BIRTHDAY OF THE SAVANNAH BANANAS. SOT THE BANANAS WILL MAKE MANY STOP AROUND THE NATION BUT YOU WILL STILL HAVE THE OPPORTUNITY TO CATCH THE Banana Ball World Tour: See all the cities the Savannah Bananas are headed in 2023 The Savannah Bananas are bringing their “World Famous Baseball Circus” to 33 cities and 20 states in 2023. The Savannah Bananas will bring their “World Famous Baseball Circus” to 33 cities and 20 states in 2023. The Bananas say more than 700 cities and 28 countries were nominated by thousands of fans for the 2023 tour. The team narrowed it down to the final 32 cities for the tour in addition to their games in Savannah.“The response has been absolutely Bananas for this world tour,” said owner Jesse Cole. “Everywhere we go we hear from fans begging us to come to their city. We are so grateful for their support and because of their passion for the Bananas and Banana Ball, we knew we had to extend the tour dramatically in 2023. Now, we are bringing the show to almost four times the amount of cities as we did in 2022 to make sure we are able to connect with as many Bananas fans as possible.”RELATED STORIESMeet TikTok’s favorite baseball team: The Savannah BananasSavannah Bananas announce year-round Banana Ball plans, exit Coastal Plain LeagueSavannah Bananas make ESPN+ debutBelow file video: Bananaland to premiere on ESPN+Tour dates include:Feb. 17-18: West Palm Beach, Fla.Feb. 22-23: Daytona Beach, Fla.Feb. 25: SavannahMarch 2: SavannahMarch 4: Jacksonville, Fla.March 10-11: SavannahMarch 13: SavannahMarch 17: Sugarland, TexasMarch 24-25: Montgomery, Ala.March 31: Scottsdale, Az.April 1: Peoria, Az.April 6-7: SavannahApril 13-15: SavannahApril 18: SavannahApril 21: Charleston, WVApril 26: SavannahApril 29: Tampa Bay, Fla.May 5-6: Kansas City, KSMay 11, 13: SavannahMay 15: SavannahMay 19: Las Vegas, NVMay 26: Oklahoma City, OKMay 29: Tulsa, OKJune 2: Nashville, TNJune 8-10: SavannahJune 15, 17: SavannahJune 19: SavannahJune 23-24: Birmingham, Ala.June 30: Indianapolis, INJuly 3: Akron, OHJuly 7-8: SavannahJuly 12: Kannapolis, NCJuly 14: Durham, NCJuly 17: SavannahJuly 21-22: Rancho Cucamonga, CAJuly 25: San Jose, CAJuly 27: Fresno, CAJuly 29: Sacramento, CA August 3, 5: SavannahAugust 9: Trenton, NJAugust 11-12: Staten Island, NYAugust 14: Hartford, CTAugust 16: Brockton, Mass.August 18: Portland, MEAugust 25: Des Moines, IAAugust 30: SavannahSeptember 1-2: Savannah September 4: SavannahSeptember 8-9: Milwaukee, Wis.September 14: Syracuse, NYSeptember 16: Cooperstown, NY The Bananas will face off against their rival, the Party Animals, as well as other professional baseball teams during the tour.Click here for more information. The Savannah Bananas will bring their “World Famous Baseball Circus” to 33 cities and 20 states in 2023. The Bananas say more than 700 cities and 28 countries were nominated by thousands of fans for the 2023 tour. The team narrowed it down to the final 32 cities for the tour in addition to their games in Savannah. “The response has been absolutely Bananas for this world tour,” said owner Jesse Cole. “Everywhere we go we hear from fans begging us to come to their city. We are so grateful for their support and because of their passion for the Bananas and Banana Ball, we knew we had to extend the tour dramatically in 2023. Now, we are bringing the show to almost four times the amount of cities as we did in 2022 to make sure we are able to connect with as many Bananas fans as possible.” RELATED STORIES Meet TikTok’s favorite baseball team: The Savannah Bananas Savannah Bananas announce year-round Banana Ball plans, exit Coastal Plain League Savannah Bananas make ESPN+ debut Below file video: Bananaland to premiere on ESPN+ Tour dates include: Feb. 17-18: West Palm Beach, Fla. Feb. 22-23: Daytona Beach, Fla. Feb. 25: Savannah March 2: Savannah March 4: Jacksonville, Fla. March 10-11: Savannah March 13: Savannah March 17: Sugarland, Texas March 24-25: Montgomery, Ala. March 31: Scottsdale, Az. April 1: Peoria, Az. April 6-7: Savannah April 13-15: Savannah April 18: Savannah April 21: Charleston, WV April 26: Savannah April 29: Tampa Bay, Fla. May 5-6: Kansas City, KS May 11, 13: Savannah May 15: Savannah May 19: Las Vegas, NV May 26: Oklahoma City, OK May 29: Tulsa, OK June 2: Nashville, TN June 8-10: Savannah June 15, 17: Savannah June 19: Savannah June 23-24: Birmingham, Ala. June 30: Indianapolis, IN July 3: Akron, OH July 7-8: Savannah July 12: Kannapolis, NC July 14: Durham, NC July 17: Savannah July 21-22: Rancho Cucamonga, CA July 25: San Jose, CA July 27: Fresno, CA July 29: Sacramento, CA August 3, 5: Savannah August 9: Trenton, NJ August 11-12: Staten Island, NY August 14: Hartford, CT August 16: Brockton, Mass. August 18: Portland, ME August 25: Des Moines, IA August 30: Savannah September 1-2: Savannah September 4: Savannah September 8-9: Milwaukee, Wis. September 14: Syracuse, NY September 16: Cooperstown, NY The Bananas will face off against their rival, the Party Animals, as well as other professional baseball teams during the tour. Click here for more information. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Banana Ball World Tour: 33 Cities Across The United States Will See Savannah Bananas Play In 2023
Trump Adviser Steve Bannons Trial Wont Take Place Until November 2023 Deltaplex News
Trump Adviser Steve Bannons Trial Wont Take Place Until November 2023 Deltaplex News
Trump Adviser Steve Bannon’s Trial Won’t Take Place Until November 2023 – Deltaplex News https://digitalarizonanews.com/trump-adviser-steve-bannons-trial-wont-take-place-until-november-2023-deltaplex-news/ (NEW YORK) — Former Trump White House adviser Steve Bannon will stand trial in November 2023, a judge in New York said Tuesday. Bannon is charged with defrauding donors to the “We Build the Wall” campaign, which was an independent effort intended to raise money for former President Donald Trump’s signature policy project. The Manhattan District Attorney’s Office said Bannon promised 100% of money raised would go toward building a wall along the U.S. southern border. However, he allegedly concealed his role in diverting some of the $15 million in donations toward the campaign’s chief executive, who had pledged to take no salary. Bannon has pleaded not guilty to charges of money laundering, conspiracy and scheming to defraud investors. Prosecutors said during a brief hearing Tuesday they had turned over four terabytes of evidence to Bannon’s defense attorney. “There’s a great deal of it — hundreds of thousands of pages,” defense attorney David Schoen said. “Discovery is very detailed — bank records, witness interviews.” Schoen, who also represented Trump during his second impeachment, asked for 10 months to file motions, a request Judge Juan Merchan said was “not in the realm of reality.” Instead, the judge gave the defense until Feb. 6 to file motions. Prosecutors have until June 6 to reply before the judge’s rulings in September. A few protesters greeted Bannon as he entered and left court. He made no statements. Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved. Read More Here
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Trump Adviser Steve Bannons Trial Wont Take Place Until November 2023 Deltaplex News
Trump Asks Supreme Court To Intervene In Seized Documents Case Deltaplex News
Trump Asks Supreme Court To Intervene In Seized Documents Case Deltaplex News
Trump Asks Supreme Court To Intervene In Seized Documents Case – Deltaplex News https://digitalarizonanews.com/trump-asks-supreme-court-to-intervene-in-seized-documents-case-deltaplex-news/ (WASHINGTON) — Former President Donald Trump, in a limited request, has asked the U.S. Supreme Court to halt part of an 11th Circuit Court of Appeals ruling and restore a special master’s access to classified documents seized from Mar-a-Lago while the Justice Department review continues. “The Eleventh Circuit lacked jurisdiction to review, much less stay, an interlocutory order of the District Court providing for the Special Master to review materials seized from President Trump’s home, including approximately 103 documents the Government contends bear classification markings. This application seeks to vacate only that portion of the Eleventh Circuit’s Stay Order limiting the scope of the Special Master’s review of the documents bearing classification markings,” Trump’s lawyers write. The application was made to Justice Clarence Thomas, circuit justice for the 11th Circuit. He could rule on his own, or refer the matter to the full court. The Justice Department was given a deadline of Oct. 11 at 5 p.m. to respond to Trump’s emergency application. On Sept. 21, a panel of judges on the appeals court granted a request from the Justice Department to stay portions of a ruling by U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon that had effectively paused the government’s investigation into Trump’s potential mishandling of classified records after leaving office. The three-judge panel, comprised of two Trump appointees and a Barack Obama appointee, ruled unanimously that the Justice Department was no longer enjoined from investigating the documents with classification markings that were recovered from Mar-a-Lago and no longer had to submit those materials to special master Ray Dearie for his independent review. “The unprecedented circumstances presented by this case — an investigation of the Forty-Fifth President of the United States by the administration of his political rival and successor — compelled the District Court to acknowledge the significant need for enhanced vigilance and to order the appointment of a Special Master to ensure fairness, transparency, and maintenance of the public trust,” Trump’s lawyers write in their filing. “That appointment order is simply not appealable on an interlocutory basis and was never before the Eleventh Circuit. Nonetheless, the Eleventh Circuit granted a stay of the Special Master Order, effectively compromising the integrity of the well-established policy against piecemeal appellate review and ignoring the District Court’s broad discretion without justification,” they continue. “This unwarranted stay should be vacated as it impairs substantially the ongoing, time-sensitive work of the Special Master. Moreover, any limit on the comprehensive and transparent review of materials seized in the extraordinary raid of a President’s home erodes public confidence in our system of justice,” they say. Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved. Read More Here
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Trump Asks Supreme Court To Intervene In Seized Documents Case Deltaplex News
Trump's Latest Delay Tactic Over Mar-A-Lago Documents May Not Work For Him At The Supreme Court | CNN Politics
Trump's Latest Delay Tactic Over Mar-A-Lago Documents May Not Work For Him At The Supreme Court | CNN Politics
Trump's Latest Delay Tactic Over Mar-A-Lago Documents May Not Work For Him At The Supreme Court | CNN Politics https://digitalarizonanews.com/trumps-latest-delay-tactic-over-mar-a-lago-documents-may-not-work-for-him-at-the-supreme-court-cnn-politics/ CNN  —  If at first you don’t succeed, try, try again. The right wing Supreme Court majority built by ex-President Donald Trump has ruled just as conservatives had hoped on politically charged cases on abortion, climate and religion. Yet it has been far less tolerant of his efforts to block congressional investigators’ access to presidential records as well as prosecutors’ access to tax records and of his spurious election fraud claims. So Trump’s latest appeal to the nine justices in the Mar-a-Lago documents furor – another apparent delaying tactic – may be a long shot and could even backfire. Trump on Tuesday filed an emergency application to the court to step into his dispute with the Justice Department over documents marked classified that he hoarded at the resort in Florida. Unlike his frequently more florid and fantastical legal gambits, this one is narrow and legally nuanced – far smaller than a possible broader attempt to test an ex-president’s scope to claim executive privilege or some kind of claim that the search on his home in August was illegal. Instead, Trump wants the court to ensure that more than 100 documents designated as classified are included in a review by a third party official known as a “special master.” The ex-President has every legal right to take such a step. But it’s also the case that Trump’s team has repeatedly sought to slow down the Justice Department’s classified documents probe in the courts, which reflects his characteristic desire to postpone accountability. In this case, any delays could push it closer to a possible Trump 2024 presidential campaign and fuel his claims of political persecution. But, just as in other recent filings by Trump to the Supreme Court, the tactic may not work, according to legal experts. There is no guarantee that the court, already being dragged deep into politics, will perceive this case as bearing such vital constitutional or legal importance that failing to take it up would be a dereliction of duty. Even if it decides to hear the case, the court may move more swiftly than Trump hopes. Justice Clarence Thomas, for instance, on Tuesday quickly gave the Justice Department until 5 p.m. on October 11 to provide a response to Trump’s appeal. And Trump could simply lose – even if he persuades the justices to take the case – since to get emergency relief he must prove that he’s suffered irreparable harm in the matter, a threshold many legal experts believe is a stretch. “The Supreme Court has not looked very kindly on former President Trump in cases that he’s brought with respect to documents and his personal property both when Congress was the one seeking information from him and other government entities were the ones seeking information from him,” said Elliot Williams, a CNN legal analyst and former Justice Department official. “He’s pretty consistently lost those cases. And it’s not hard to see how either the court just doesn’t take this up or rules against him if they do.” Trump has built a personal record of frustration before the Supreme Court. In January, the court declined to block a handover from the National Archives of 700 documents that the House select committee probing the US Capitol insurrection said that it needed for its investigation. The Supreme Court several times rejected challenges to the 2020 election. The court has also ruled that the then-President was not immune from a New York subpoena in a criminal investigation seeking his tax records. Trump has long appeared to believe that judges he appointed owe him loyalty. He nominated three of the Supreme Court’s nine justices – Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh and Amy Coney Barrett. And he has typically reacted badly to his defeats before the top bench. In December 2020, for instance, he tweeted that the court had let him down and displayed neither wisdom nor courage in dismissing a challenge to the election. But sometimes even humiliating court defeats can bring Trump other benefits. While it is too early to predict how the court will handle this case, just bringing it to them works for Trump in a number of political ways. It keeps him in the news and fuels a sense among his supporters that he is being treated unfairly. As in this case, Trump often substitutes a political or public relations strategy for a strong legal one. And it would be no surprise to see Trump fundraising off of his emergency request. His latest move is also consistent with his habit of using every possible avenue in the legal system to slow a case or fog it up. Taking that a step further, CNN legal analyst Steve Vladeck suggested that the application to the court partly came across as an attempt by his team to placate a highly litigious client. “This is what good lawyers who are stuck do to appease bad clients: The jurisdictional argument is narrow, technical, and non-frivolous. It’s a way of filing *something* in the Supreme Court without going all the way to crazytown and/or acting unethically,” Vladeck, a University of Texas law professor, wrote on Twitter. Specifically, Trump’s emergency request does not ask the Supreme Court to restore a hold that district court Judge Aileen Cannon, whom he nominated, had imposed on the Justice Department accessing those documents marked as classified as it investigates their retention at Mar-a-Lago. He instead wants the classified documents at issue included in a review by the special master after the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals sided with the DOJ and exempted them from the review process. The department had argued that including those documents in the special master review would harm national security. But Trump’s team pushed back, saying in Tuesday’s filing that this position “cannot be reconciled” with the DOJ saying it may want to show those same documents to a grand jury or to witnesses during interviews. And the application opened with a highly political argument – claiming that the “unprecedented circumstances” of the case represented an “investigation of the Forty-Fifth President of the United States by the administration of his political rival and successor” – that took large liberties with the facts of the Mar-a-Lago case. That reasoning struck former White House counsel John Dean as “thin.” “I didn’t see much of an emergency,” Dean, who was at the center of the Watergate scandal that brought down President Richard Nixon, told CNN’s Anderson Cooper on Tuesday. “The arguments are highly technical and not the sort of thing the Supreme Court, I would think, would want to get into given their current standing in public opinion.” Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
Trump's Latest Delay Tactic Over Mar-A-Lago Documents May Not Work For Him At The Supreme Court | CNN Politics
UK's Liz Truss Pledges Tax-Cutting Future In Landmark Speech Plagued By Protest And Political Infighting
UK's Liz Truss Pledges Tax-Cutting Future In Landmark Speech Plagued By Protest And Political Infighting
UK's Liz Truss Pledges Tax-Cutting Future In Landmark Speech Plagued By Protest And Political Infighting https://digitalarizonanews.com/uks-liz-truss-pledges-tax-cutting-future-in-landmark-speech-plagued-by-protest-and-political-infighting/ Prime Minister Liz Truss is seeking to rally MPs around her her tax-cutting policies following political infighting and market turmoil. Jacob King | Pa Images | Getty Images LONDON — British Prime Minister Liz Truss insisted Wednesday that cutting taxes was “the right thing to do morally and economically,” doubling down on a series of debt-funded economic reforms that have sparked in-party fighting and market turmoil. Speaking at the Conservative Party Conference, Truss said she was determined to “level up our country in a Conservative way” in an effort to unite MPs around her tax-cutting plans and shore up her dwindling authority. “Cutting taxes is the right thing to do morally and economically,” Truss said, adding that the Conservative Party “will always be the party of low taxes.” “Cutting taxes helps up face the global economic crisis, putting up a sign that Britain is open for business,” she said in her first conference speech as Conservative Party leader. “For too long, our economy hasn’t grown as strongly as it should have done,” she continued. “We must level up our country in a Conservative way.” “We will keep an iron grip on the country’s finances,” she said, in an apparent nod to her political idol, Margaret Thatcher, otherwise known as the Iron Lady. “I have three priorities for our economy: growth, growth and growth.” Party infighting and dwindling support The four-day conference, hosted in Birmingham, England, has been beset by cabinet infighting and animosity as long-time Tory lawmakers have spoken out against newly-installed Truss’s “growth-focused” economic policies. The latest rebellion has centered on Truss’ resistance to raising welfare benefits in line with inflation — currently running around 9.9% in the U.K. — reneging on a promise laid out by her predecessor Boris Johnson. Instead, she reportedly plans to increase support in line with average earnings growth, which, including bonuses, was around 5.5%, according to the latest figures. Truss has said the proposals would save billions of pounds for the government while “helping more people into work.” But fellow party members, including rightwing supporters, have cautioned the PM against cutting the incomes of Britain’s poorest as the country faces its worst cost-of-living crisis in a generation. Protesters have taken to the streets of the U.K. to demonstrate their anger at the new Conservative government headed by Prime Minister Liz Truss. Mike Kemp | In Pictures | Getty Images The leader of the House of Commons, Penny Mordaunt, who ran against Truss during this summer’s Tory leadership contest, said Tuesday that she supported benefits “keeping pace with inflation,” joining a chorus of MPs who have warned that cuts could spur a party rebellion. Indeed, some Tories have warned that the prime minister — less than a month into the job — is now fighting for her survival amid plunging poll ratings. Grant Shapps, former transport secretary, said Tuesday that it was possible the Conservatives could change leader again if Truss “does badly.” Britain’s opposition Labour Party was seen as having a 33-point lead over the Conservative Party on Thursday, days before the Conservative Party Conference, according to a YouGov poll. Still, Truss remained committed to her policies Wednesday, saying: “Not everyone will be in favor of change, but everyone will benefit from the result.” The prime minister’s speech was disrupted by shouts from environmental protesters, who were escorted from the audience after Truss requested: “Let’s get them removed.” It follows a series of protests in Birmingham over the past week, with members of the public taking to the streets to demonstrate their anger toward the government. Backlash over tax cuts Truss’s government has been plagued by controversy over the announcement last month of a string of debt-funded tax cuts — estimated to total £43 billion ($49 billion) — which critics say disproportionately benefit the wealthy and businesses. The prime minister herself has argued the cuts will spur growth at the top end of the economy, with knock-on effects across society. Amid the backlash, the government on Monday was forced to abandon its plan to abolish the 45% top rate of income tax, in an effort to quell financial markets after the proposals unleashed chaos on U.K. assets. Britain’s Prime Minister Liz Truss has admitted she should have laid the groundwork better for recent “growth-focused” tax cuts that roiled financial markets. Oli Scarff | Afp | Getty Images Announcing the decision in a tweet, Finance Minister Kwasi Kwarteng said “we get it, and we have listened,” adding that the plans had become a “distraction” following rising backlash from both sides of the political aisle. The tax cuts — one of several supply side reforms introduced in a Sept. 23 “mini budget” — sparked turmoil in financial markets, causing the British pound to hit a record low of $1.0382 and U.K. 10-year government bond yields to soar as high as 4.6%. As a result, the Bank of England was forced to step in with a £65 billion bond-buying plan to support U.K. pension funds. Sterling has since recovered marginally and was seen trading at $1.1371 at 11.50 a.m. local time, shortly after the prime minister’s speech. Read More Here
·digitalarizonanews.com·
UK's Liz Truss Pledges Tax-Cutting Future In Landmark Speech Plagued By Protest And Political Infighting