Washington (CNN)The Transportation Security Administration said one in 10 of its employees scheduled to work Sunday took the day off, with many employees citing “financial limitations” preventing them from working.
Rudy Giuliani vs Chris Cuomo again on CNN…this time it’s over collusion. Veuer’s Nick Cardona has that story.
Buzz60
Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2019/01/21/rudy-giuliani-clarifies-comments-trump-tower-moscow/2641077002/
Booker spoke in aspirational terms about the civil rights leader and progress of African-Americans. Sanders bluntly called the president a racist.
COLUMBIA, S.C. — Sens. Cory Booker and Bernie Sanders took two starkly different approaches Monday as they spoke to hundreds of mostly black rally-goers in the first Southern state to vote in 2020.
At Columbia’s Martin Luther King Jr. Day rally at the state capitol, Sanders talked explicitly about the racial wealth gap, black infant mortality rates and voter suppression among people of color. He also called President Donald Trump a “racist.”
Story Continued Below
“We have a president of the United States who has done something that no other president in modern history has done,” Sanders said. “What a president is supposed to do is to bring us together. And we have a president [who] intentionally, purposely, is trying to divide us up by the color of our skin, by our gender, by the country we came from, by our religion.”
Booker acknowledged that the country has a justice system that works better for the “rich and guilty” than the “poor and innocent.” But he largely echoed King’s message, speaking in more general terms about the importance of unity and having what he called “courageous empathy” and acting on dissatisfaction, a term King stressed in his 1967 “Where Do We Go From Here?” address.
“We live in a society that’s getting seduced by celebrity and forgets that significance is more important than celebrity, that purpose is more important than popularity, that we cannot be a nation that loves power more than it loves people,” Booker said. “We are dissatisfied. This is not a time for us to rest in our country. The work is not done.”
Their different appeals reflected how far along their potential campaigns are in this state, where 60 percent of Democratic primary voters are African-American. “Booker, who was billed as the main attraction of the rally, seemed to be trying to address a broader swath of the electorate than was represented in the crowd, speaking in more aspirational terms. Sanders was more blunt, declaring at one point: “It gives me no pleasure to tell you that we now have a president of the United States who is a racist.”
Democratic state Rep. Jerry Govan said Monday’s appearance was easier for Booker but more important for Sanders, who held more public events and is staying in the state longer than his Senate colleague.
“I think both of their messages struck a chord with the audience,” said Govan, chairman of the South Carolina Legislative Black Caucus. “I think both of them were well received. I think it’s too early on to say whether there was a winner or a loser because I think both of them were winners based on the simple fact that they showed up. I know that I appreciated hearing from them both.”
If he runs for president for a second time, Sanders will need to do a better job winning over black voters in the state after his dismal performance here in 2016. He won only 26 percent of the vote in the South Carolina primary, a weakness that went on to be repeated across the South.
Neither Sanders nor Booker have said whether they are running for president. But Sanders addressed the question head on during a roundtable discussion. He recognized that some current candidates are friends of his, including Sens. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), Kamala Harris (D-Calif.) and Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.).
“This is not easy stuff. Is there a willingness to do this?” Sanders asked, sharing his mindset as he questions whether to mount another campaign for president. The crowd answered with a resounding “yes!”
Still, a presidential campaign is “tough stuff,” he said. “I’m gonna be going around the country and I’m gonna be talking to people and see whether there is that willingness because if we go forward … we’re gonna take on every powerful special interest in this country.”
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Source Article from https://www.politico.com/story/2019/01/21/cory-booker-bernie-sanders-2020-south-carolina-1116639
LOS ANGELES — Teachers in the nation’s second-largest school district are expected to strike for a sixth school day Tuesday as talks between Los Angeles Unified and United Teachers Los Angeles continue.
The union said Monday that teachers are due back at picket lines Tuesday morning even if an agreement is reached Monday, saying it takes time to mobilize a ratification vote of a deal.
Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti remained upbeat as he mediated the fifth day of marathon negotiations at City Hall on Monday.
“The parties are still at the table, and I am optimistic that we have the momentum to take those final steps toward bringing our teachers and young people back into their classrooms,” he said in a statement.
Tens of thousands of educators walked off the job and onto picket lines Jan. 14 for the first time in 30 years. The union and LA Unified School District are at odds over issues including salary, class size and support staff.
Teachers have complained about overcrowded classrooms where students sit on window sills or on the floor.
The district has about 600,000 students in K-12. Schools have stayed open during the strike with a skeleton staff.
More than 1,000 firefighters from across the U.S. and Canada who are in Los Angeles as part of an international conference are scheduled to march on behalf of striking educators on Tuesday.
Source Article from https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/los-angeles-teachers-strike-go-second-week-even-if-agreement-n961086
ORLAND PARK, IL — Authorities say a man was shot and killed at a suburban Chicago mall and the suspect remains at large.
Orland Park Deputy Police Chief Joseph Mitchell says the 19-year-old was shot in the center of Orland Square Mall and ran away before collapsing outside a clothing store Monday evening. The man later died at the hospital.
Mitchell says security video showed the shooter fleeing the mall but it’s unclear if the suspect continued on foot or got into a vehicle. He calls the shooting an “isolated incident,” saying video shows the two people involved knew each other and that the victim was “targeted.”
Police departments from several neighboring towns responded to the mall about 20 miles (32.2 kilometers) southwest of Chicago
Source Article from https://www.abc15.com/national/police-1-person-killed-at-illinois-mall-shooter-at-large
President Trump made a brief stop to lay a wreath at the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial in Washington.
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On Saturday, Mr. Trump proposed to end the partial government shutdown after Democrats extended a proposal of their own on Friday, having added $1 billion in border spending to their offer. If he got $5.7 billion for a border wall, Mr. Trump said, he would restore for three years the protections known as Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, or DACA, and Temporary Protected Status, or T.P.S.
Republicans had hoped his plan would put Democrats in a corner, but Democrats called it a nonstarter, prompting attacks from the president on the House speaker, Nancy Pelosi. And her relationship with her counterpart in the Senate, Mitch McConnell, who presumably would need to make a deal with her, is fraught. Immigrants in Texas are skeptical of the president’s proposal.
While Mr. Trump has projected confidence in public, he has expressed private frustration over what he views as negative coverage. Many Republicans concede, also in private, that he has made strategic errors and allowed dysfunction to continue.
Last week things got personal, too: Ms. Pelosi threatened to cancel the president’s State of the Union address; Mr. Trump retaliated by denying her military transport to Afghanistan. And then she accused the Trump administration of leaking her plans to fly commercial, prompting her to postpone the trip, citing security concerns.
Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/01/21/us/politics/government-shutdown-update.html
Days after the White House announced plans for a second nuclear summit between the United States and North Korea, a think tank report has identified a secret North Korean ballistic missile base about 160 miles northwest of Seoul that is reportedly the headquarters of the country’s strategic missile force.
The report, released Monday by the Center for Strategic and International Studies, said the base is one of approximately 20 undeclared missile operating bases, part of Pyongyang’s ongoing ballistic missile program. Researchers at the center’s Beyond Parallel project said the latest report provides more evidence that North Korea is not dismantling its weapons facilities.
“While diplomacy is critical, and should be the primary way to resolve the North Korean nuclear problem, any future agreement must take account of all of the operational missile base facilities that are a threat to U.S. and South Korean security,” the report said.
“North Korea is not supposed to have these ballistic missile bases,” said Victor Cha, one of the report’s authors. “And of course they have them and have not disclosed them.”
After President Trump’s historic summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un in June, Trump wrote on Twitter that there was “no longer a nuclear threat from North Korea.”
The White House announced Friday that Trump would hold a second summit with Kim next month as the two sides seek to jump-start nuclear talks that have bogged down.
[Trump-Kim summit: Trump says after historic meeting, ‘We have developed a very special bond’]
“North Korea basically wants to trade away things they won’t do in the future, or to give up things from the past they don’t need anymore, while not negotiating over things like this, their actual capabilities,” Cha, a former National Security Council official focused on Asian affairs, said in an interview.
Trump has said his own negotiating skills can bypass stalled talks among lower-level diplomats to strike a deal for North Korea to relinquish a nuclear weapons program that analysts said can now reliably strike the United States.
Experts have said there has been no demonstrable progress since the first summit in Singapore in June. Trump’s claims that North Korea is a diminished threat have been contradicted by the Pentagon and U.S. intelligence agencies. The White House declined to comment.
[U.S. spy agencies: North Korea is working on new missiles]
Of the 20 or so undeclared missile bases, CSIS researchers have been able to locate 13. In November, researchers released a report on the first of the 13 bases; Monday’s report describes the second.
The Sino-ri base is about 130 miles north of the demilitarized zone, the report said. It served as one of the first bases for the country’s most widely deployed ballistic missile, the Nodong medium-range ballistic missile. The base may also have played a role in the development of the country’s newest ballistic missile, first tested or unveiled in February 2017, shortly after Trump was inaugurated.
The base is most often referred to as a missile operating base. But “it has fulfilled broader missions” as an operational test and development site and training facility subordinate to the “Strategic Force of the Korean People’s Army,” the report said. The KPA Strategic Force is responsible for all ballistic missile tests.
Unlike other known North Korean ballistic missile operating bases, which are “nestled within narrow and steep mountain valleys,” the main parts of this base are “distributed within a shallow valley and rolling hills,” the report said. The base’s four square miles include several small villages, one for which the facility is named.
Read more
Trump to meet with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un in late February, White House says
North Korea working to conceal key aspects of its nuclear program, U.S. officials say
Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/report-identifies-another-secret-north-korea-missile-site-one-of-20/2019/01/21/4066aeec-1db0-11e9-9145-3f74070bbdb9_story.html
Metro Atlantans celebrated Martin Luther King Jr. Day with parades, services and talks around the region, including a service at Ebenezer Baptist Church with remarks by Rev. Dr. Bernice King, King’s daughter.
Some volunteered as part of the MLK Day of Service, participated in parades or joined in the MLK March in downtown Atlanta that ended with a rally at Ebenezer.
Others braved temperatures that started out in the 20s to visit the Martin Luther King Jr. National Historical Park, which reopened over the weekend through Feb. 3 after a closure due to the partial federal shutdown. The reopening was funded with the help of a $83,500 grant from Atlanta-based Delta Air Lines.
At the Ebenezer Baptist Church commemorative service marking what would have been Martin Luther King Jr.’s 90th birthday, speakers called attention to divisiveness and called people to action to help those less fortunate.
Bernice King in her remarks criticized the Trump administration for misquoting her father’s works “to suit our own purposes.”
King’s remarks were aimed at Trump’s border wall push and comments by Vice President Mike Pence, who during an appearance on CBS’ “Face the Nation” on Sunday, said: “One of my favorite quotes from Dr. King was ‘Now is the time to make real the promises of democracy.”
“You think of how he changed America. He inspired us to change through the legislative process to become a more perfect union,” Pence said on the show. “That’s exactly what President Trump is calling on the Congress to do. Come to the table in the spirit of good faith. We’ll secure our border, we’ll reopen the government and we’ll move our nation forward,” he said.
On Monday, Bernice King said: “If we really want to make real the promises of democracy, now is the time on this King holiday to stop quoting King out of context and misquoting him to suit our own purposes.”
The Ebenezer audience applauded warmly. In Washington, President Trump and Pence placed a wreath beneath King’s statue in an unscheduled visit to the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial.
Bernice King also called for action on problems facing the country ranging from the partial government shutdown to the resurgence of white supremacist ideologies and voter access problems.
“We are in a state of emergency because of our humanitarian crises, and it’s not at our southern borders,” she said. “The concern and compassion for human welfare across the board is being threatened.”
“When our schools continue to be unsafe spaces for learning because of impotent gun control laws…When there’s assault on voter integrity and voter access in some of our democratic elections… when a government shutdown persists to the point that it affects the livelihood of individuals and those in dire need of critical social services, this is a humanitarian crisis and we are all in a state of emergency,” King said.
The service also featured remarks from U.S. Sen. David Perdue, R-Ga., and GOP Attorney General Chris Carr.
Perdue called for reflection on King’s words, saying: “He often reminded us that what unites us is far greater than what divides us.”
Keynote speaker Bryan Stevenson, a public interest lawyer and founder of the Equal Justice Initiative in Montgomery, Ala., criticized the mass incarceration of those are addicted to drugs.
“We have mass incarceration in this country because we decided to declare people who are drug addicted and drug dependent, we said those people are criminals. Now we didn’t have to say that. We could have said that drug addiction and drug dependence is a health problem and we need our health care system to respond to that problem,” he said. “Underneath that choice, that misguided war on drugs, is what I call the politics of fear and anger.”
Stevenson called on people to “get proximate to the poor.”
“We cannot stay in places surrounded by the powerful and the privileged and the talented,” Stevenson said. “We’ve got to make a commitment now to do something about the millions living under the federal poverty level.” He urged people to remain hopeful, saying “Injustice prevails where hopelessness persists.”
Bernice King called that message particularly valuable because “right now, a lot of people do feel hopeless with the divisive climate that we’re in.”
Source Article from https://www.ajc.com/news/breaking-news/ebenezer-service-caps-day-service-reflection-for-mlk/G6MYCyvMdK5zvSV55Si1AO/
Global wealth inequality widened last year as billionaires increased their fortunes by $2.5 billion per day, anti-poverty campaigner Oxfam said in a new report.
While the poorest half of humanity saw their wealth dwindle by 11%, billionaires’ riches increased by 12%. The mega-wealthy have also become a more concentrated bunch. Last year, the top 26 wealthiest people owned $1.4 trillion, or as much as the 3.8 billion poorest people. The year before, it was the top 43 people.
Oxfam’s annual study, released as political and business leaders prepare to descend on Davos for the World Economic Forum, emphasized that this growing inequality is compromising the fight against poverty.
“The size of your bank account should not dictate how many years your children spend in school, or how long you live – yet this is the reality in too many countries across the globe,”said Winnie Byanyima, Executive Director of Oxfam International.
Since the financial crisis almost a decade ago, the number of billionaires has nearly doubled, with a new one created every two days between 2017 and 2018. At the same time, the mega-rich and wealthy corporations are enjoying lower tax rates than they have in decades, the report said.
“Governments are exacerbating inequality by underfunding public services, such as healthcare and education, on the one hand, while under taxing corporations and the wealthy,” Oxfam said.
Women and girls are hit hardest by the growing wealth gap, according to Oxfam. “Girls are pulled out of school first when the money isn’t available to pay fees, and women clock up hours of unpaid work looking after sick relatives when healthcare systems fail,” it said.
To address many of these ills, Oxfam advocated raising taxes. It estimated that a 1% wealth tax would be enough to educate 262 million out of school children and to save 3.3 million lives. As of 2015 returns, Oxfam says that only four cents in every tax dollar collected globally came from tariffs on wealth, such as inheritance or property. The report also claims that the rich are hiding $7.6 trillion in offshore accounts
The world’s wealthiest man, Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, has a $112 billion fortune. Just 1% of his total wealth is roughly equivalent to the health budget of Ethiopia, a country with a population of 105 million people, Oxfam said.
“People across the globe are angry and frustrated,” said Byanyima. “Governments must now deliver real change by ensuring corporations and wealthy individuals pay their fair share of tax and investing this money in free healthcare and education.”
In last year’s wealth report, Oxfam found that the richest 1% took in 82% of wealth created in 2017.
Source Article from http://time.com/5508393/global-wealth-inequality-widens-oxfam/
With nearly two years to go, almost anything in the realm of the 2020 presidential election could change from now until Election Day. The one thing that won’t, however, is math.
Any Democrat seeking to unseat President Trump will have to achieve at least one of the following: mobilize the base to achieve Obama-level turnout and enthuse the Left, or successfully splinter off ideological agnostics and the suburbs that defected from the GOP in the midterm elections.
Candidates like Julian Castro or Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., will probably focus on the former, while Sens. Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, or Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn., would emphasize the latter. But most candidates will likely require a blend of both to beat Trump.
This is where Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif., will have a problem.
To much left-wing fanfare, she’s running. By historical standards, she’s a weak presidential contender, if only for her lack of experience on the national stage, but given our current president’s resume, two years as a grandstanding senator hardly disqualifies her from the job.
Harris fits the intersectional bill of the Left to a T: half-black, half-Indian, a woman, and as an added bonus, fairly young and attractive. She carries herself well and although her national record would be considered extremely weak tea in a normal election cycle, compared to failed Senate candidate and former Texas Rep. Beto O’Rourke and even President Trump, she’s practically a political veteran. Harris passes the likeability test that killed Democrats in 2016, beating Hillary Clinton in that contest multiple times over. If she stops trying to out-cool her competitors as Beto and Warren have embarrassed themselves doing, she could amass popularity based on personal appeal alone.
But Harris has billed herself as a left-wing candidate. Her presence on the national stage has been marked by fervent opposition to Trump and leaning into the identity politics heralded by the Democrats’ more extreme base. That’s where her entire career prior to entering the national arena becomes a problem.
Although Harris has positioned herself on the national stage as the paragon of leftism, her tenures as district attorney and California attorney general were more evocative of Jeff Sessions than Bernie Sanders. Harris was an active proponent of civil asset forfeiture in California, fighting a state bill which would have curbed the questionable practice, and as early as 2015, she sponsored a bill to empower prosecutors to seize assets from people prior to criminal proceedings.
Harris’ past of passivity on the death penalty and “hard on crime” approach has already spent years under careful examination by the hardcore Bernie base, but the lazier agents of the Left have remained largely ignorant of her policing. In a hypothetical universe, Trump, who somehow signed the most significant prison reform bill of a generation into law, could use serious missteps in her past, such as a California Superior Court ruling against Harris, finding that she had violated defendants’ rights by hiding potential exculpatory evidence from them.
The socialist wing of the party has already decided Harris is a cop. The moniker may be extreme, but it raises the legitimate issue of a former prosecutor running for a Democratic nomination post-Black Lives Matter. As Dave Weigel at the Washington Post notes, her invocation of “For the people,” a motto she used to use in the courtroom, now in her campaign announcement shows that she’s not shying away from her prosecutorial past. But that hasn’t halted the growing refrain among the Left: Kamala is a cop.
Harris can afford to lose soccer moms and barbecue dads, but if her tough on crime past costs her the base? Well, Trump may very well live to see another term.
Source Article from https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/the-left-decides-kamala-harris-is-a-cop-but-shes-running-anyways
It had all the makings of the perfect 21st century crime. A seemingly incriminating social media video. That red hat. A victim from perhaps the single most oppressed class in American history, a Native American. A villain from its most privileged, a white male. And most damning, that incorrigible and unrelenting smile.
But as it turns out, hundreds of thousands or even millions of retweets of an encounter following the March for Life told the wrong story. Nick Sandmann, a junior from Covington Catholic High School, didn’t impede on the personal space of a Native American veteran and activist, Nathan Phillips. He didn’t gloat and glimmer with centuries of white privilege held over the head of a man whose people faced genocide at the hands of the colonizer. So it seems, the student with the now infamous smirk committed only one crime: existing.
The original scandal wasn’t a story. It was a series of photos and uninstructive video clips of the Covington student in a MAGA hat smiling shamelessly at Phillips. Most everyone, yours truly included, assumed the worst, namely that the student intruded on a Native American rally just to be a jerk. It fit a narrative of white supremacy, white colonization, and white shamelessness, so the media pounced.
But stories like these aren’t just snapshots in time. They have a beginning and an end. In this case, the truth changed everything.
[Read: Rush to judgment? New details emerge on Native American elder’s standoff with MAGA-hat-wearing teens]
Thanks to hours of video and a torrent of witness testimonies, the greater story unfolded. Phillips, painted as the victim in the narrative, was actually the one who impinged on the Covington student’s space, where they had been instructed to wait to be picked up following the anti-abortion march. Prior to Phillips encountering Sandmann, a group of “Black Israelites,” a well-known hate group, had been barraging the Covington students with homophobic slurs and racially charged smears. Phillips then intervened — on behalf of the hate group! He got in Sandmann’s face, banging his drum.
Phillips, whose been on a media blitz since the narrative went viral, has happily claimed the mantle of victimhood. He told the Detroit Free Press that he entered the situation because the Covington children “were in the process of attacking these four black individuals” and that he merely confronted Sandmann to de-escalate the situation. As video evidence now demonstrates, this was a lie. The Black Israelites had been verbally attacking the students for some significant amount of time, and the students had not attacked them.
Sandmann, whose serenely smirking face has gone viral as a poster child for hate — celebrities from Chris Evans to Alyssa Milano have tried to shame the minor, and the hashtag, #ExposeChristianSchools began trending shortly thereafter — emerged on Sunday with a statement issued by a public relations firm. His family has been doxxed, his school publicly smeared, and his very identity turned into a crime itself.
“I never interacted with this protestor. I did not speak to him. I did not make any hand gestures or other aggressive moves. To be honest, I was startled and confused as to why he has approached me. We had already been yelled at by another group of protestors, and when the second group approached I was worried that a situation was getting out of control where adults were attempting to provoke teenagers,” wrote Sandmann. “I believed that by remaining motionless and calm, I was helping to diffuse the situation.”
Sandmann committed the crime of not being ashamed of his own existence. Without facts, a progressive lynch mob pounced on a single image based on its biases about perceived power in America. Now we know that Sandmann was accosted. But to be clear: He was supposed to submit.
The trick of social justice is to eradicate individual justice — real justice. Because white men spent the better part of a century killing Native Americans out of existence with guns and germs, an innocent child being provoked by adults — both in his face and online — must now pay, hundreds of years later. He wasn’t supposed to smile. He was supposed to confess to his original sin of whiteness.
The Left has equated Sandmann with Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh. The comparison is largely correct. Both were accused, without any credible evidence, of something terrible, with no room for gray area or misunderstanding.
“This kid and his behavior is a symptom of something much larger. I don’t think focuses on him, specifically, does much — and also leads to the current narrative of his victimhood,” wrote BuzzFeed’s Anne Helen Peterson of Sandmann. “I have watched all of the videos. You can understand that the situation was more complex than the first video and still recognize why the sight of that face caused a visceral reaction in so many.”
There you have it: Even though the truth is out, Peterson will still blame the victim as the villain. You see, his crime was his exact attempt to diffuse the situation. He wasn’t supposed to do that. He wasn’t supposed to remain calm and smile. He was supposed to submit. He was supposed to pay for his whiteness, pay for that damned hat he insisted on wearing.
For Peterson and others, Sandmann’s innocence in this matter doesn’t change anything. He deserves to be punished for for the crimes of white slaveholders and colonizers who lived hundreds of years before he was born. Serenity is now smugness. A smile is no longer a call to detente; it’s a call to arms.
You can blame the media, which embraced “social justice” over truth-telling long ago. More damning is the indictment of ourselves.
I retweeted the initial narrative. I had no evidence, just an image that fit a story I’ve been told a thousand times before. So I shared it and baselessly smeared a child. I now know that I was wrong. I am sorry. I apologize to Nick Sandmann, and I hope that those so quick to share the initial images will now learn the truth and make their own apologies if need be.
But make no mistake. For a disquieting portion of the American mob, the facts won’t matter, even once they are aware of them. For them, Sandmann, standing with that godforsaken smirk, was crime enough.
Source Article from https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/covington-catholic-and-how-social-justice-is-the-death-of-real-justice
LONDON — Last week, Theresa May’s Brexit plan suffered the largest parliamentary defeat of any British prime minister. Her solution? To press ahead with largely the same plan — albeit with a few tweaks around the edges.
There are 67 days left until the U.K. is due to leave the European Union on March 29, and no agreement among lawmakers on how or even whether the country should leave.
The one certainty at the moment is that if lawmakers fail to agree to a plan, Britain will crash out of the bloc with no agreement on its trading relationship. In the event of a chaotic “no-deal” Brexit, the Bank of England has warned the economy could shrink by as much as 8 percent in about a year. It also estimated that the country’s GDP could be up to 10.5 percent lower by the end of 2023 than how the economy appeared to be heading before the 2016 referendum.
On Monday afternoon, May struck a more inclusive tone when she returned to Parliament to set out her way forward on Brexit. She said that any deal would protect worker’s rights and the environment — a key concern of the opposition Labour Party. She also said that the government would waive a fee for the new settled status that E.U. citizens in Britain would need after Brexit.
On the stickiest point of the agreement — a guarantee to keep open the border between Northern Ireland, which is part of the U.K., and the Republic of Ireland, a separate country that is part of the E.U. — she said she would hold further consultations to “find the broadest possible consensus”.
May said that a new motion would be debated and voted on next week.
Despite the unprecedented opposition to her plan — her deal was crushed 432 to 202 on Tuesday — some analysts believe May could eventually manage to get it through Parliament.
“The closer we get to the 29th of March, [lawmakers] might swing behind her. It is head-spinningly messy,” said Anand Menon, a professor of European politics and foreign affairs at King’s College London.
After the deal was thrown out last week, May said she would consult with lawmakers from all parties to find a new way forward. That hasn’t exactly worked out as planned, and she is also seeking to win over pro-Brexit hardliners within her party — who thought her proposal didn’t provide enough of a break from the E.U. — as well as members of the Democratic Unionist Party, a small group of Northern Irish politician which props up the government.
More than one-third of lawmakers from May’s Conservative Party voted against her divorce proposal last week.
Meanwhile, other lawmakers are exploring ways to use parliamentary rules to wrestle control of the Brexit process away from May.
“No one here pays attention to procedure until you end up with this crunch and suddenly it matters a lot,” said David Howarth, a professor of law and public policy at the University of Cambridge, and a former member of Parliament.
Even if May wins support in Parliament for her plan B, the E.U. has consistently refused to renegotiate the withdrawal agreement.
The E.U.’s chief negotiator Michel Barnier reiterated in an interview with Irish news station RTE on Monday that the agreement is the “best deal possible.”
The E.U. is now “waiting for the next step” from the U.K. However, he confirmed that the E.U. would be willing to make changes to the political declaration that accompanied the agreement, though these changes would likely not be legally binding.
May has staunchly stuck to the line that it is her responsibility to see the U.K. out of the E.U. However, support for staying in the E.U. surged to its highest level since the last referendum, and now has a 12 point lead over leaving the bloc, according to a YouGov poll conducted last Wednesday.
In the June 2016 referendum, 52 percent of voters backed leaving the E.U. while 48 percent backed staying.
If the U.K. fails to decide on a course of action, it will face a “no-deal” scenario that most experts say would be a nightmare scenario.
Shortages of food and medicine, civil unrest, chaos at ports and airports have all been forecast as possibilities under a “no-deal” Brexit.
There are also concerns for what Brexit means for the border between Northern Ireland. The border is currently more or less invisible and there are no checkpoints. Some fear the reinstatement of a physical boundary risks a return to “The Troubles,” rekindling tensions that might spill over into violence. A 1998 peace deal ended decades of conflict.
Source Article from https://www.nbcnews.com/storyline/brexit-referendum/theresa-may-s-brexit-plan-b-expected-be-tweaked-version-n960881
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Source Article from https://thehill.com/policy/defense/426282-researchers-find-undisclosed-missile-site-in-north-korea
Madame Speaker, we’re waiting.
Over the weekend, President Trump did what he should have done four weeks ago and issued a televised announcement to offer a concession for his wall. In exchange for $5.7 billion in border security funding — mind you, the whole wall will likely cost five times that — the president is prepared to issue three years of legal protections for DACA recipients and Temporary Protected Status holders.
Democrats can gripe at the length of the extension or the fact that it’s temporary. But Trump’s turn no doubt demonstrates a good faith effort to end the shutdown with a compromise and put nearly a million federal employees back to work with pay.
It’s Nancy Pelosi’s move now. She has the ability to secure safety for over a million Dreamers and TPS recipients throughout her guaranteed term as speaker of the House and Trump’s guaranteed term as president. It’s not permanent amnesty by any means, but it gives Dreamers and TPS holders, long in legal limbo, some stability for now to buy time as Congress debates long-term solutions on how to keep illegal immigrants out and what to do with the ones already here.
So far, Pelosi, D-Calif., won’t budge. And Democrats in both chambers of Congress are following suit. Not even Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., seems willing to budge, following the party line of emphasizing the importance of immediately ending the shutdown, without compromise, and revisiting border talks later.
Trump’s wall demands may seem petty, but the Democrats’ outright refusal to even consider offering a couple billion — couch change in the multi-trillion dollar federal budget — is even more so. And Trump’s willingness to offer Democrats one of their key campaign promises — protection for Dreamers — shows how seriously he’s taking the shutdown. Angry tweets from Ann Coulter surely aren’t boding well in the president’s mind, but he knows that sooner or later the government must reopen.
All of this raises the question of why Democrats are refusing even to make a counteroffer. Why not ask for six years instead of three? Why not ask for the full, permanent protection of the Dream Act? Why not make a tangible demand of what is essentially a blank check to congressional Democrats from the Oval Office?
It’s either one of two things, both equally terrible. The first is the Republican talking point, that Democrats are open-borders extremists. While it sounds conspiratorial on its face, Nancy Pelosi literally called a border wall “immoral” and Democrats seem to impugn the very notion of stronger border security itself. That doesn’t bode well for their image as the reasonable voices in the the room. Then there’s the more likely and more cynical option: that it’s all kabuki theater to Democrats. They don’t care about the federal employees or the Dreamers, they’re just here to stick it to Trump.
Were Dreamers always pawns for the Democrats? Was former President Barack Obama’s refusal to push the Dream Act when his party controlled both chambers of Congress intentional, as a means of keeping more people engaged in politics? Were Dreamers always meant to remain in legal limbo until Democrats win the next election?
Pelosi and her children better have answers, and fast. As long as they refuse to answer Trump with a real explanation for their refusal instead of petty posturing, these questions will enter the mainstream and the minds of voters.
Source Article from https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/if-they-care-about-their-country-democrats-need-to-make-a-counteroffer
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Washington (CNN)The Transportation Security Administration said one in 10 of its employees scheduled to work Sunday took the day off, with many employees citing “financial limitations” preventing them from working.
Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2019/01/21/politics/tsa-absences-shutdown/index.html
Described by the historian Philip Foner as “probably the most moving passage” in all of Frederick Douglass’s speeches, Mr. Douglass asked a crowd in Rochester, N.Y., on July 5, 1852, “What, to the American slave, is your …” what?
Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2019/01/21/opinion/mlk-civil-rights-quiz.html
The Native American elder at the center of the viral video, Nathan Phillips, comes into view shortly thereafter, the short encounter that has become a viral moment. Phillips is quickly surrounded by the teenagers in the clip, during which he said he felt intimidated when some began jeering and one student in particular stood staring in front of him.
Source Article from https://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/native-american-make-america-great-again-student_us_5c455270e4b0bfa693c4d1e1
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(CNN)It should be good news that both President Donald Trump’s Republicans and Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s Democrats plan to vote to reopen the government this week.
Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2019/01/20/politics/donald-trump-nancy-pelosi-government-shutdown/index.html
The Israeli military said early on Monday that it had started attacking Iranian military targets in Syria, in another apparent sign of Israel’s growing willingness to acknowledge specific attacks on the country after years of ambiguity.
“We have started striking Iranian Quds targets in Syrian territory,” the military said in a statement, referring to the branch of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps that is responsible for foreign operations, The Associated Press reported. “We warn the Syrian Armed Forces against attempting to harm Israeli forces or territory.”
The attacks near Damascus, Syria’s capital, which came within hours of Israel intercepting an incoming missile over the Golan Heights, occurred a week after Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel acknowledged that Israeli forces had just attacked Iranian weapons warehouses in Syria.
Israeli officials have previously acknowledged carrying out hundreds of strikes against weapons convoys and Iranian targets in Syria. But Mr. Netanyahu’s comments last week were a milestone because Israeli officials normally refuse to confirm responsibility for specific attacks immediately after they take place to avoid pushing the other side into having to retaliate.
Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/01/20/world/middleeast/israel-attack-syria-iran.html
BuzzFeed News investigative reporter Anthony Cormier on Sunday declined to explain why his colleague Jason Leopold claimed to have seen documents proving that President Trump had ordered his former lawyer Michael Cohen to lie to Congress — contradicting Cormier’s insistence that he had not personally seen the documents.
“We can’t get into, like, the details there,” Cormier, sitting next to BuzzFeed News Editor-in-Chief Ben Smith, told CNN’s “Reliable Sources” host Brian Stelter. “We really can’t go any further at all, in order not to jeopardize our sources.”
Leopold did not appear for the interview, which occassionally became tense as Stelter openly criticized BuzzFeed’s journalistic practices. Smith claimed Leopold, who has been out of the public view since Friday, was busy “reporting.”
Leopold has been involved in numerous scandals during his career related to his false reports, including one in 2002 for Salon.com about Enron that the outlet said was “riddled with inaccuracies and misrepresentations,” and another incorrect story in 2006 for Truthout.org about supposedly pending indictments against former George W. Bush aide Karl Rove.
Cormier and Leopold authored a bombshell, discredited report on Thursday, citing two law enforcement officials who said Cohen acknowledged to Special Counsel Mueller’s office that Trump told him to lie to Congress about a potential real-estate deal in Moscow, and claim that the negotiations ended months before they did so as to conceal Trump’s involvement.
The article, which prompted Democrats to call for Trump’s impeachment if it turned out to be true, said that Cohen’s testimony “marks a significant new frontier: It is the first known example of Trump explicitly telling a subordinate to lie directly about his own dealings with Russia.”
But Mueller issued his first public statement in more than a year to repudiate the BuzzFeed report the next day, flatly asserting that BuzzFeed’s story was “not accurate.” The Washington Post has since reported that Mueller intended his rare denial to mean that the story was “almost entirely incorrect,” and that the special counsel’s office immediately “reviewed evidence to determine if there were any documents or witness interviews like those described, reaching out to those they thought might have a stake in the case. They found none.”
In an interview on Friday, Cormier told CNN, “No, I’ve not seen it personally,” when asked if he had seen the documents mentioned in the story — including “internal company emails, text messages, and a cache of other documents” — that purportedly showed Trump told Cohen to lie.
Cormier only claimed that the two sources he cited were “fully, 100 percent read-in to that aspect of the special counsel’s investigation.”
“We can’t get into, like, the details there.”
However, Leopold, speaking separately to MSNBC, remarked that, “I don’t think we’ve said we haven’t seen [the documents]” and clarified, “I’ll say we’ve seen documents and been briefed.”
Leopold has since suggested that he meant to say that he has seen the documents, but that Cormier has not, telling Mediaite, “Yes. Anthony said HE had not personally seen the documents.”
BuzzFeed has not identified the documents, and has said only that it stands by its reporting, without offering additional details.
TRUMP SAYS HE APPRECIATE’S MUELLER’S RARE STATEMENT REPUDIATING BUZZFEED REPORT
“As we’ve re-confirmed our reporting, we’ve seen no indication that any specific aspect of our story is inaccurate. We remain confident in what we’ve reported, and will share more as we are able,” BuzzFeed said in a statement.
Cormier added in the interview with Stelter on Sunday: “I have further confirmation that this is right. We are being told to stand our ground … The same sources that we used in that story are standing behind it, as are we.”
Bizarrely, Smith and Cormier also acknowledged they were not aware of the precise language Trump would have used in instructing Cohen to lie.
“We are eager to understand which characterizations Mueller is talking about there, and obviously we take that incredibly seriously,” Smith added.
Cormier also suggested he should not be fired for authoring the discredited report, because he has worked in the news industry for more than 20 years and built up substantial “skills” that help him divine accurate information from misleading sources.
“The same fundamentals that I learned covering city hall, covering the police, covering court houses — that stands today. I use those same skills, the same rigor to cover the White House. This is going to be borne out. This story is accurate,” Cormier said.
Asked how Mueller’s rebuke felt, Cormier responded, “Never great.”
At one point in the interview, Stelter lit into Leopold’s brief request for comment to Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s team just hours before the story was published. “But come on, one paragraph?” Stelter asked Smith. “That’s a dereliction of duty, to send a three-sentence email.”
Leopold wrote to the special counsel’s spokesman Thursday afternoon: “Peter, Hope all is well. Anthony and I have a story coming stating that Michael Cohen was directed by President Trump himself to lie to Congress about his negotiations related to the Trump Moscow project. Assume no comment from you but just wanted to check. Best, Jason.”
Mueller’s team, according to The Washington Post, has since suggested it would have offered more than a simple “no comment” if Leopold had outlined more details in his request for comment about the allegation that Trump had instructed Cohen to lie.
Smith countered that Mueller’s team had not been forthcoming. “He could have said, ‘That’s quite a statement. Tell me more,” Smith said.
But Stelter pushed back by arguing that wasn’t Mueller’s responsibility.
“But you’re putting the onus on him, I’m putting the onus on you and Jason,” Stelter retorted. “I’m concerned that in this case there wasn’t enough request for comment, enough detailed conversation with the special counsel’s office.”
Speaking to “Fox News Sunday,” Vice President Pence decried the “obsession of many in the national media to attack this president for any reason, for any allegation” and asserted that the problem was bigger than BuzzFeed.
“It was remarkable what we saw happening for 24 hours in the media, on the basis of the report that appeared in BuzzFeed,” Pence told anchor Chris Wallace. “It’s one of the reasons why people are so frustrated with many in the national media.”
But, speaking later to “Fox News Sunday,” South Carolina Democratic Rep. Jim Clyburn defended Democrats’ response to the BuzzFeed report, including some who called for Trump’s impeachment if the story proved accurate.
“I don’t think that my Democratic friends are in any way rushing to judgment because they qualified right up front [by saying], ‘If this is true,'” Clyburn argued. “When you preface your statement with ‘If this is true,’ that, to me, gives you all the cover you need.”
Separately on Sunday, House Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam Schiff said Democrats will “absolutely” investigate the report, despite Mueller’s statement.
Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/buzzfeed-reporter-after-rebuke-by-mueller-declines-to-explain-discrepancies-we-cant-get-into-like-the-details-there
Vice President Mike Pence was harshly criticized on Sunday for quoting the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. in his most famous speech in defending President Donald Trump’s efforts to persuade Congress to fund construction of a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border.
Appearing on CBS’ “Face the Nation” on Sunday — a day before the federal holiday honoring King — Pence quoted a passage from King’s “I Have a Dream” speech at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington on Aug. 28, 1963: “One of my favorite quotes from Dr. King was ‘Now is the time to make real the promises of democracy.'”
Speaking of King, the vice president went on: “You think of how he changed America. He inspired us to change through the legislative process, to become a more perfect union.
“That’s exactly what President Trump is calling on Congress to do — come to the table in the spirit of good faith,” Pence said. “We’ll secure our border. We’ll reopen the government, and we’ll move our nation forward, as the president said yesterday, to even a broader discussion about immigration reform in the months ahead.”
Left unnoted was that, barely a year later, in a speech in East Berlin, King specifically addressed the subject of the Berlin Wall, which divided Berlin from 1961 to 1989.
“Here on either side of the wall are God’s children, and no manmade barrier can obliterate that fact,” he said at St. Mary’s Church on Sept. 13, 1964.
Reaction was swift and sharp.
Eleanor Holmes Norton, the District of Columbia’s Democratic non-voting delegate to Congress, tweeted: “We can’t allow Vice President Pence to get away with cleansing the president on Martin Luther King’s birthday.”
The NAACP, which King served as an executive board member in Montgomery, Alabama, called the remarks “an insult to Dr. King’s legacy.”
Rep. Jackie Speier, D-Calif., likewise called Pence’s use of King’s words “beyond disgraceful.”
Meanwhile, Ibram X. Kendi, founder and director of the Antiracist Research & Policy Center at American University in Washington, noted Pence’s comments and tweeted: “They ‘honor’ MLK every year by assassinating who he was.”
Source Article from https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/pence-slammed-quoting-king-defend-wall-proposal-n960826
House Majority Whip James Clyburn defends Democrats who jumped on Thursday’s Buzzfeed story that was debunked by special counsel Robert Mueller’s office by noting that they all qualified their statements with, “if this is true.”
“When you preface your statement with ‘if this is true,’ that, to me, gives you all the cover you need,” Clyburn said on FOX News Sunday. “If they had said something as if it were true, then that would be one thing to be concerned about, but they’ve all said, ‘if this is true.'”
CHRIS WALLACE, FOX NEWS SUNDAY: Congressman, I want to switch to two other subjects before we let you go. First, “BuzzFeed”. Special counsel Robert Mueller, as I just discussed with the vice president, knocked down the “BuzzFeed” story that the special counsel had evidence that the president directed Michael Cohen to lie to Congress.
Now, as soon — before he did, before he knocked the story down, House Democrats jumped on the story.
I want to read a couple of the quotes from what they said. Jamie Raskin, Democrat of Maryland, said: We don’t know if it’s true, of course, but already, people of course are saying this is the matter of the gravest urgency.
David Cicilline said, congressman from Rhode Island: If true, this is I think the most serious threat to the Trump presidency that we’ve seen so far.
Should your members be more cautious, because it almost seemed in this rush to judgment as if there were a lot of House Democrats that want to impeach the president.
REP. JAMES CLYBURN: Well, Chris, when you preface your statement with ‘if this is true,’ that, to me, gives you all the cover you need. And I would say that. If it is true — now, if they had said something as if it were true then that would be one thing to be concerned about, but they’ve all said if this is true. There are a lot of things that I hear daily. If it were true I would be concerned about it.
Sometimes, you would preface it with that and sometimes you just don’t say anything.
So I don’t think that my Democratic friends in any way rushing to judgment because the qualified right upfront, if this is true.
Source Article from https://www.realclearpolitics.com/video/2019/01/20/clyburn_if_you_preface_statement_with_if_this_is_true_that_gives_you_all_the_cover_you_need.html