Congressman James Clyburn, D-S.C., defended freshman Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn., Wednesday by saying her experience was “more personal” than Jews whose parents survived the Holocaust.

Clyburn argued Omar’s experience “is much more empirical — and powerful — than that of people who are generations removed from the Holocaust, Japanese internment camps during WWII and the other violent episodes that have marked history,” according to a report in The Hill.

“I’m serious about that. There are people who tell me, ‘Well, my parents are Holocaust survivors.’ ‘My parents did this.’ It’s more personal with her,” Clyburn said.

HOUSE EXPECTED TO VOTE ON UPDATED ANTI-SEMITISM RESOLUTION TODAY, AFTER DEM INFIGHTING

“I’ve talked to her, and I can tell you she is living through a lot of pain.”

Omar has been condemned by members of both parties for alleged anti-Semitic comments during her time in Congress while addressing Israel.

Democrats had delayed a resolution Wednesday that would have denounced anti-Semitism. One is expected to be introduced Thursday, with one senior House Democratic source telling Fox News the anti-Semitism resolution is expected to be introduced and voted on, but said the text is still being finalized. Fox News is told the resolution is being drafted by Maryland Rep. Jamie Raskin and Louisiana Rep. Cedric Richmond, both Democrats.

BERNIE SANDERS DEFENDS REP. ILHAN OMAR, BACKS ‘LEGITIMATE CRITICISM’ OF ISRAEL

Rep. James Clyburn, D-S.C., walks to a closed Democratic Caucus meeting on Capitol Hill in Washington, Friday, Jan. 4, 2019. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

The resolution, although it did not include Omar’s name, was aimed at her and her controversial comments before Democrats softened their stance and decided to include other forms of hate including Islamophobia and Xenophobia.

The Hill also reported that Clyburn said he spoke with former California congressman Norman Mineta, a Japanese-American interned during WWII, who gave him a “special appreciation” for Omar’s experience.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

“She won’t be targeted. We’re going to target those people who had her picture on the Twin Towers,” Clyburn said. “This resolution is going to be inclusive; it’s going to be expansive.”

Clyburn was referencing an anti-Muslim group’s display last month at the West Virginia statehouse that featured a picture of Omar under a burning Twin Towers during the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/ilhan-omars-experience-more-personal-than-jews-whose-parents-survived-the-holocaust-dem-congressman

The charges against Manafort

In August, Manafort was found guilty on five counts of tax fraud, one count of failing to disclose his foreign bank accounts and two counts of bank fraud.

The jury was unable to reach consensus on 10 of the 18 counts in the bank fraud trial. Judge T.S. Ellis III declared a mistrial on the 10 unresolved counts but accepted the jury’s verdict on the remaining eight counts.

Of the 18 counts, five counts were related to false income tax returns, four counts of failing to file foreign bank account reports, four counts of bank fraud and five counts of bank fraud conspiracy. The government alleged Manafort hid tens of millions of dollars in income and falsified records to enrich himself and live a life of luxury.

The Manafort trial was the first to stem from special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation into Russian election meddling and any ties to Trump associates, although the trial did not involve charges related to work on the campaign — something Mr. Trump and his allies have been careful to note.

The president has distanced himself from Manafort, claiming he “came into the campaign very late and was with us for a short period of time,” but hasn’t criticized the former Trump campaign manager publicly and has suggested the situation is unfair.

Emily Tillett and Kathryn Watson contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.cbsnews.com/live-news/paul-manafort-sentencing-former-trump-campaign-chairman-in-court-live-updates-2019-03-07/

A political crisis is brewing inside the halls of Congress. A few freshman Democrats have drawn the ire from both sides about their position on the U.S.’s relationship with Israel.

In the lead up to the 2018 midterm election, then-congressional candidates Ilhan Omar, D-Minn., and Rashida Tlaib, D-Mich., — the first Muslim women to be elected to Congress — were criticized for a series of troubling remarks about Israel that were rooted in anti-Semitism. It all began with an escalation of violence in November 2012 initially provoked by Hamas militants. Omar, who was then active in Minnesota politics, tweeted, “Israel has hypnotized the world, may Allah awaken the people and help them see the evil doings of Israel.”

That tweet came back to haunt Omar during her 2018 congressional run, as it dredges out an old anti-Semitic trope that Jews are somehow conspiring to take over the world.

As members of Congress, both Tlaib and Omar have faced criticism for rolling out another anti-Semitic trope, the suggestion that Jewish Americans have dual loyalties. In January 2019, Tlaib, responding to a Senate bill that would combat the boycott, divestment, and sanctions movement against Israel, tweeted, “They forgot what country they represent.”

In February 2019, Omar came under heavy criticism from her Democratic colleagues that the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (better known as AIPAC) was paying members of Congress for their support of Jewish state, even tweeting, “It’s All About the Benjamins.” During an event later that month, Omar said, “I want to talk about the political influence in this country that says it is OK for people to push for allegiance to a foreign country.”

Supporters of Omar have argued that the congresswoman has been singled out for bringing up this point about American allegiance to Israel, where House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., and a number of Democrats are debating a resolution to condemn anti-Semitism. But the progressive wing of the party, led by Freshman Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., has been quite vocal in its opposition.

Ocasio-Cortez has attempted to defend Omar by making a broader statement that nothing is done when other communities are supposedly slandered for dual loyalties saying, “One of the things that is hurtful about the extent to which reprimand is sought of Ilhan is that no one seeks this level of reprimand when members make statements about Latinx + other communities.”

However Democrats choose to respond to anti-Semitism going forward will say a lot about the direction of the party and where it’s heading. And if this issue persists in the national conversation, it could mean that Pelosi’s influence over her caucus is waning.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/heres-whats-going-on-in-the-war-between-ilhan-omar-and-nancy-pelosi

Foreign leaders heaped nearly $140,000 worth of gifts on President Trump and his family in 2017, according to a new report by the State Department’s Office of the Chief of Protocol.

In other words, Trump got the same treatment as every other U.S. president dating back to at least Herbert Hoover. Weirdly enough, the Associated Press’ write-up of the State Department report makes no mention of that part. It turns out that the world did not begin in January 2017, and that there is a history of world leaders showering U.S. presidents and their families with flattering and expensive tributes.

The AP report begin first by focusing on the gifts from China and the Saudi and Gulf Arab states: A calligraphy box valued at $14,400 and a porcelain dinnerware set worth $16,250, a $6,400 ruby and emerald necklace, a gold-plated model of a fighter jet valued at around $4,850, a $3,700 bronze statue, $1,610 worth of gold-plated Kuwaiti coins, and “royal” perfume valued at around $1,260.

The report also includes this curious passage [emphasis added]:

Other lines in this putatively objective AP report seem designed to cast shade, such as, “Some gifts seemed designed to appeal to the president’s ego.” The supposedly flattering gifts include a portrait of Trump from Vietnam’s prime minister and a photo album of Trump and Trump Tower in New York City from Poland’s president.

Because it’s an AP story, it was soon aggregated and cross-posted at other news websites, including NBC News’. The reaction on social media was about you’d expect from a story framed the way the AP did with this one: “While Americans struggle to make ends meet, getting screwed by the #TrumpTaxScam, Foreign leaders, including from Saudi Arabia and China, lavish Trump with $140,000 in gifts,” complained Miami Herald columnist Lesley Abravanel.

This sort of reaction seems almost reasonable — so long as you know nothing about the history and context of gifts to U.S. presidents from foreign heads of state. And if all you read were the AP report, you really wouldn’t know anything about it.

You wouldn’t know, for example, that the Obamas received nearly $1.3 million in gifts from the Saudis in 2014, including a set of wristwatches valued at more than $43,000 and a diamond and emerald jewelry set for first lady Michelle Obama valued at around $560,000. You wouldn’t know about the thousands and thousands of dollars in gifts the Clintons received, some of which they reportedly absconded with when they left the White House. You wouldn’t know that Ronald Reagan was gifted an actual baby elephant in 1984 by Sri Lanka’s president. You wouldn’t know that John F. Kennedy was given, among many other things, a chair made of hand-carved 400-year-old mahogany taken from a Santo Domingo castle by the Dominican Republic’s Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, while Jackie Kennedy was given a horse by the governor of Pakistan.

As for the AP, why not add at least one line noting the history for foreign leaders showering presidents with gifts? USA Today had no problem doing it.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/ap-story-on-pricey-gifts-to-trump-white-house-never-once-mentions-precedent-for-such-gifts

Huawei Rotating Chairman Guo Ping (center) speaks in front of other executives during a press conference in Shenzhen, in China’s Guangdong province, on Thursday.

Kin Cheung/AP


hide caption

toggle caption

Kin Cheung/AP

Huawei Rotating Chairman Guo Ping (center) speaks in front of other executives during a press conference in Shenzhen, in China’s Guangdong province, on Thursday.

Kin Cheung/AP

Chinese telecom manufacturer Huawei is suing the U.S. government, arguing that Congress violated the Constitution when it banned government agencies from purchasing Huawei equipment.

In the 2019 National Defense Authorization Act, Congress prohibited U.S. government agencies from contracting with Huawei or companies that use Huawei equipment. The U.S. government has alleged that Huawei is closely allied with the Chinese government and that its equipment could be used to spy on Americans. Huawei has denied the allegation and said it’s a privately owned company with no interest in spying.

In a lawsuit filed Wednesday in a federal court in Texas, Huawei argued that when Congress called it out by name, that violated the Constitution’s Bill of Attainder clause, which prohibits Congress from singling out a company or individual for punishment without a trial.

“The U.S. Congress has repeatedly failed to produce any evidence to support its restrictions on Huawei products,” Huawei’s Rotating Chairman Guo Ping said at a press conference announcing the lawsuit. “We are left with no choice but to challenge the law in court.”

By “blacklisting” Huawei, the company argued in its suit, Congress impugned “both its general reputation and its specific commitment to honoring the laws of the United States.” Such a widespread ban on Huawei products will seriously damage its U.S. business, the company said. Huawei alleged that Congress illegally deprived the company of due process, “stigmatizing it by effectively branding it a tool of the Chinese government and a risk to U.S. security.”

Mark Natkin, founder and managing director of Marbridge Consulting in Beijing, told NPR’s Shanghai correspondent Rob Schmitz that U.S. intelligence agencies have identified Huawei as a clear threat to national security. “I think the chance that Huawei would win this case is tiny, if not almost zero,” Natkin said.

Natkin said the lawsuit is part of a legal and public relations offensive waged by the company to try to fight back against the perception that it’s beholden to the Chinese government.

In its suit, Huawei argued that Americans will suffer if they don’t have access to its technologies. “Without Huawei equipment and services, consumers in the United States (particularly in rural and poor areas) will be deprived of access to the most advanced technologies, and will face higher prices and a significantly less competitive market,” the company wrote. “In the area of 5G mobile service in particular, American consumers will have reduced access to state-of-the art networks and suffer from inferior service.”

Hofstra University constitutional law professor Julian Ku told The Washington Post that U.S. courts might not be receptive to Huawei’s claims, given that “doing business with the U.S. government doesn’t seem to be a fundamental right, and there are reasonable grounds for Congress to act against Huawei.”

The lawsuit ratchets up tensions in a relationship that is already strained, as the United States has sought the extradition from Canada of the chief financial officer of the company, which the U.S. Department of Justice has accused of violating sanctions on Iran.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2019/03/07/700989603/huawei-sues-u-s-after-congress-bans-government-purchase-of-its-equipment

ROCKFORD, Ill. (WIFR) — One U.S. Marshal was shot, but his exact condition is unknown, according to Rockford Police.

The suspect was identified Floyd E. Brown, 45, of Springfield. He was believed to be driving a light blue or silver Grand Marquis car, according to police.

Police say Brown is at large. He was wanted for warrants. Officers say he used a rifle.

——

Police are responding to an “active shooter situation” near Extended Stay America on North Bell School Road.

Drivers are asked to avoid Bell School Road.

We will update as more information becomes available.












Source Article from https://www.wifr.com/content/news/Police-responding-to-active-situation-in-Rockford-avoid-Bell-School-Road-506821101.html

That Michael Cohen is proudly declaring he doesn’t want a pardon from federal prison time doesn’t make him the hero he thinks it does.

The only reason anyone would say that, as Cohen did during his embarrassing testimony in front of Congress last week, is that he knew a pardon from President Trump was never in the cards. And that’s what the Wall Street Journal reported Wednesday.

Cohen’s current attorney, Lanny Davis, confirmed to the Journal that after Cohen’s New York office was raided by the FBI last spring, he directed his then-lawyer Stephen Ryan to consult Trump’s attorneys about a possible pardon, should he face charges.

The report contradicts Cohen’s congressional testimony, wherein he boasted that he “never asked for, nor would I accept, a pardon from Mr. Trump.”

It’s was a dramatic moment in American history only paralleled by George Washington as a child vowing that he could not tell a lie.

Cohen could have stopped at the “I never asked for” and it would have been sufficient, if not truthful. But he had to go the extra mile and express his dedication to imprisonment.

The Journal’s report says that lawyers for Trump all rebuffed Cohen’s initial overture for a pardon, though one of the lawyers, Rudy Giuliani, didn’t completely shut the door on the possibility of it in the future.

Cohen wanted a pardon and when it wasn’t offered, he decided he’d say on national television that he didn’t want it anyway. Davis, his lawyer, said as far back as mid-December in an interview on CBS that Cohen “wouldn’t take a pardon from Donald Trump if it was handed to him.” Here are other things Cohen will under no circumstance accept from Donald Trump: $1 billion dollars, a chest of diamonds, and a hug.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/michael-cohen-cant-wait-for-prison-so-hes-rejecting-pardons-he-was-never-offered

In the days since President Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un ended their talks in Hanoi, Vietnam, the after-action reports and commentary have fallen back on the lack of a nuclear agreement between Washington and Pyongyang. Trump administration officials have spent the preceding week defining the summit as a success due to Trump’s willingness to walk away from the table. South Korean President Moon Jae-in, meanwhile, is doing everything in his power to keep the U.S.-North Korea diplomatic track alive.

All of the coverage about who won and lost in Hanoi, however, is nothing but a substance-free Washington, D.C., parlor-game. The real takeaway of the summit is that the Kim regime will not denuclearize regardless of what the United States offers at the negotiating table. The sooner Washington finally comes to this realization, the sooner the White House can shift its concentration on the paramount U.S. national security objective: the avoidance of a war and the ushering of a peace on the Korean Peninsula.

America’s superior military capacity has kept the United States secure from a North Korean attack ever since the Korean War concluded more than 65 years ago. Deterrence and the certainty of an overwhelming, forceful U.S. response has deterred the Kim regime from even thinking about utilizing its nuclear weapons for offensive purposes. Successive U.S. administrations, however, have continued to underestimate their deterrent power and ability to keep Pyongyang in check.

U.S. policy on North Korea over the last 25 years has been based on the lofty idea that Pyongyang’s unilateral nuclear disarmament is possible. American presidents as far back as Bill Clinton have engaged the North Koreans in bilateral and multilateral diplomacy for exactly this purpose. Clinton offered political and economic normalization to North Korea as rewards for the Kim regime’s nuclear dismantlement. The George W. Bush administration did much the same thing, promising to “take steps to normalize [U.S.-North Korean] relations” in the event of Pyongyang’s denuclearization. Trump’s approach in Vietnam was in many ways a reaffirmation of previous U.S. policy — start dismantling your nukes, and you will see economic profits beyond your wildest dreams.

Predictably, the North Koreans weren’t buying it. At the end of two days of talks, the result wasn’t the one the president was looking for.

It’s time for a fresh approach. As the parties conduct an assessment of the latest summit, Washington needs to come to the unvarnished reality that Kim Jong Un is absolutely not going to eliminate his nuclear weapons arsenal — certainly not now, probably not ever.

With the exception of South Africa in the last years of apartheid, no country has spent untold billions of dollars over decades building an indigenous nuclear weapons program with tens of nuclear warheads in the stockpile, only to get rid of it for the promise of sanctions relief. Kim doesn’t appear like the kind of man who will be the first.

Just because it’s uncomfortable for the foreign policy establishment to admit doesn’t make it any less true.

If Trump hopes to make any forward progress on the North Korea issue, he must set his sights on what is realistic and most important: tranquility on the Korean Peninsula and non-adversarial relations between Washington and Pyongyang. The United States has had constructive relations with nuclear adversaries in the past, from the Soviet Union in the 1950s to Pakistan in the 1990s. U.S. officials may not have found it particularly attractive, but they recognized diplomatic communication was a necessary part of conducting effective, principled statecraft in a highly complicated and multidimensional world.

While North Korea’s denuclearization could remain a long-term aspiration, Washington should not preface the opportunity of a peace regime on the Korean Peninsula on accomplishing this ideal. Indeed, insisting on it is hardwired for the same floundering inertia that has guided Washington’s North Korea policy for more than a generation.

Before U.S. and North Korean diplomats come back to the negotiating table, Trump should radically change his strategy. Instead of re-submitting a grand denuclearization-for-normalization deal that demands a total dismantlement of Pyongyang’s weapons of mass destruction and missile programs in its entirety (one Kim Jong Un will again reject) the president should deliver a message to Kim that he is willing to explore better diplomatic relations and open to supporting specific inter-Korean economic projects if his regime ceases threatening the U.S. and its allies and stops selling weapons of mass destruction technology around the world.

Critics will harshly condemn this change-of-approach as an undeserved, U.S. reward to one of the most vile regimes on the planet. Yet many of these critics are the same people who were intricately involved in the decades of policy failure that has produced neither peace on the Korean Peninsula or a rollback of North Korea’s nuclear capability.

The Washington policy community should no longer fall into the trap of seeing peace as a leverage point or a chip to be used in exchange for concessions from the other side. This is especially the case when the concession Washington is hoping for (a North Korea stripped of its entire nuclear infrastructure) is completely unrealistic.

There may come a time in Kim’s later years when he begins to believe that a nuclear weapons deterrent is no longer required for his country’s security. Stranger things have happened in history. Yet Kim is nowhere near this point today, and it’s highly unlikely he will be anytime soon.

Trump campaigned on being a president who would speak hard-truths to the public and shake the policy establishment out of its bad habits. A policy evolution on North Korea would be a chance for him to do both.

The North Korean nuclear weapons program is not a problem to be solved. At best, it’s one to be managed. With a decision by the president to embrace courageous diplomacy with more realistic goals, the United States will have the tools to more effectively manage it and keep the public secure.

Daniel DePetris (@DanDePetris) is a contributor to the Washington Examiner’s Beltway Confidential blog. He is a fellow at Defense Priorities.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/on-north-korea-trump-needs-to-go-back-to-the-drawing-board

<!– –>

Paul Manafort faces the first of two sentencing hearings Thursday — and special counsel Robert Mueller says President Donald Trump‘s ex-campaign chairman deserves significant prison time.

A federal judge in Alexandria, Virginia, could give the 69-year-old Manafort a sentence of 19 to 24 years in prison, along with millions of dollars in fines, as federal guidelines suggest. In a separate case in federal court in Washington, Manafort could receive a maximum sentence of 10 years in prison.

Manafort’s sentencing dates, scheduled for Thursday at 3:30 p.m.ET in Virginia and Wednesday in Washington, mark the end of a long, steep and very public fall for the formerly high-powered political operative.

Manafort was convicted last year in Virginia on eight counts, including tax fraud, bank fraud and failing to file a foreign bank account report. The charges, lodged by Mueller as part of his probe of Russia’s interference in the 2016 election and possible collusion with the Trump campaign, mostly related to work Manafort did years earlier as a consultant for a pro-Russia political party in Ukraine.

On the eve of his second trial in Washington, Manafort cut a plea agreement to cooperate with Mueller’s team. But that deal fell apart months later when Manafort was accused of lying to the prosecutors.

Attorneys for Manafort argued Friday that their client deserved a much lighter sentence than the one calculated by federal sentencing guidelines. Manafort is a first-time offender, they said, and “the Special Counsel’s attempt to vilify Mr. Manafort as a lifelong and irredeemable felon is beyond the pale and grossly overstates the facts.”

Mueller pushed back in a Tuesday night filing in the Virginia court, laying out a multipronged argument for why the request for leniency from the former political operative’s attorneys should be ignored at his sentencing.

The special counsel accused Manafort of failing to take responsibility for his crimes, and for the additional wrongdoing he is alleged to have done since his initial indictment. Mueller said in that filing that Manafort tampered with witnesses while on bail — a charge that landed him in jail pending trial — and lied to the government and Mueller’s grand jury on a variety of subjects after agreeing to cooperate with its investigations.

Based on this, Mueller, argued, “there is no reason to believe” that Manafort does not pose a risk of committing more crimes in the future.

“Manafort’s effort to shift the blame to others — as he did at trial — is not consistent with acceptance of responsibility or a mitigating factor. Manafort has failed to accept that he is responsible for the criminal choices that bring him to this Court for sentencing,” Mueller wrote.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2019/03/07/trumps-ex-campaign-boss-paul-manafort-to-be-sentenced-in-mueller-case.html

Has the Democratic Party reduced its chances of denying President Trump a second term by continuing to concentrate on throwing him out before the end of his first? You can make a good case that it has.

Democrats have been itching to oust Trump since the days before he took the oath of office. Obama administration law enforcement and intelligence agencies launched investigations into candidate Trump’s campaign, contrary to the general rule that such agencies avoid interfering with electoral politics.

Astonishingly, they relied primarily (if not exclusively) on information bought and paid for by the Clinton campaign, the Steele dossier. FBI Director James Comey briefed its most salacious allegation to the incoming president, an act he presumably considered a form of blackmail.

The supposition, breathlessly reported almost daily by certain cable news channels, is that candidate Trump was in criminal collusion with Vladimir Putin’s Russia. But the air has fizzled out of that balloon. Special counsel Robert Mueller, after nearly two years, has produced no indictments pointing to such collusion.

The only collusion that has had a political effect is the belief, held by many Democratic voters, that the Russians somehow switched hundreds of thousands of votes by computer hacking or through a handful of diabolically clever Facebook ads. Many such people bitterly cling to their belief that Trump’s impeachment and removal from office is imminent.

Democratic politicians evidently feel compelled to cater to this delusion, even as it becomes apparent that the Mueller investigation will soon end without any recommendation or basis for it.

Incoming House Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam Schiff, D-Calif., promises that he will conduct extensive hearings. “There is an abundance of evidence of collusion,” Schiff has said, but he has not set it out. House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerry Nadler was not much more forthcoming on ABC News last weekend. “We do not have the evidence all sorted out and everything to do — to do an impeachment,” he said.

“Before you impeach somebody, you have to persuade the American public that it ought to happen. You have to persuade enough of the — of the opposition party voters, Trump voters, that you’re not just trying to — that you’re not just trying to steal the last — to reverse the results of the last election.” My Washington Examiner colleague Byron York takes that to mean that “Democrats have decided to impeach Trump and are now simply doing the legwork involved.” The Federalist’s Mollie Hemingway reached the same conclusion listening to a Nadler Acela cellphone chat the day after last November’s election.

If so, they’d be moving on shaky ground. Nadler says it’s “very clear” Trump has obstructed justice, but his first example — referring to the Mueller investigation as a “witch hunt” — is unpersuasive. That’s probably not an impeachable offense, even to many of the 35 percent who told Quinnipiac this month that Congress should start impeachment proceedings now.

It’s now 28 months since the last presidential election, and only 20 months until the next one. In April 2007, after Democrats had just won congressional majorities, Nadler brushed aside calls to impeach President George W. Bush. “The timing is all wrong,” he told the Washington Times back then. “If this were the first two years of his administration I would advocate impeachment. A lot of people at home say impeachment, and I’m sure he committed a lot of impeachable offenses, but think about it practically.”

“At home” for Nadler is upscale parts of Manhattan and Brooklyn — areas thick with the urban white college graduates who, with blacks and Hispanics, are Democrats’ strongest constituencies. On many issues these days, even on racial issues, they’re the party’s most left-wing bloc. And probably the voters most determined to oust and humiliate the vulgar arriviste Donald Trump.

Urban, white college grads have had the highest turnout rates in mayoral elections in New York two years ago and in Chicago this year; blacks and Hispanics, in contrast to past decades, were less interested. Urban whites also were the chief group surging Democratic in 2018 elections in Florida and Texas, according to Republican analyst Patrick Ruffini.

It was young, white college grads and gentrifiers who elected Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez in her Queens-Bronx upset last June, and her Green New Deal proposals, such as the move toward eliminating beef and private cars, appeal more to that group than to blacks and Hispanics.

The pursuit of impeachment looks like one more example of Democrats letting AOC types set their agenda. It will distract them from developing policies that will enthuse minorities and appeal to suburbanites whose votes they’ll need next year.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/columnists/impeachment-quest-lets-aoc-types-set-the-democrats-agenda

“);var a = g[r.size_id].split(“x”).map((function(e) {return Number(e)})), s = u(a, 2);o.width = s[0],o.height = s[1]}o.rubiconTargeting = (Array.isArray(r.targeting) ? r.targeting : []).reduce((function(e, r) {return e[r.key] = r.values[0],e}), {rpfl_elemid: n.adUnitCode}),e.push(o)} else l.logError(“Rubicon bid adapter Error: bidRequest undefined at index position:” + t, c, d);return e}), []).sort((function(e, r) {return (r.cpm || 0) – (e.cpm || 0)}))},getUserSyncs: function(e, r, t) {if (!A && e.iframeEnabled) {var i = “”;return t && “string” == typeof t.consentString && (“boolean” == typeof t.gdprApplies ? i += “?gdpr=” + Number(t.gdprApplies) + “&gdpr_consent=” + t.consentString : i += “?gdpr_consent=” + t.consentString),A = !0,{type: “iframe”,url: n + i}}},transformBidParams: function(e, r) {return l.convertTypes({accountId: “number”,siteId: “number”,zoneId: “number”}, e)}};function m() {return [window.screen.width, window.screen.height].join(“x”)}function b(e, r) {var t = f.config.getConfig(“pageUrl”);return e.params.referrer ? t = e.params.referrer : t || (t = r.refererInfo.referer),e.params.secure ? t.replace(/^http:/i, “https:”) : t}function _(e, r) {var t = e.params;if (“video” === r) {var i = [];return t.video && t.video.playerWidth && t.video.playerHeight ? i = [t.video.playerWidth, t.video.playerHeight] : Array.isArray(l.deepAccess(e, “mediaTypes.video.playerSize”)) && 1 === e.mediaTypes.video.playerSize.length ? i = e.mediaTypes.video.playerSize[0] : Array.isArray(e.sizes) && 0

Shenzhen, China (CNN Business)Embattled Chinese tech giant Huawei is suing the US government in its most aggressive move yet to fight back against accusations that its technology poses a global security threat.

    Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2019/03/06/tech/huawei-suing-united-states/index.html

    House Speaker Nancy Pelosi is “taken aback” by the growing dissent and anger among rank-and-file Democrats over a possible resolution to formally condemn anti-Semitism, a Democratic source told Fox News on Wednesday — highlighting Pelosi’s tenuous grip on control over the House and underscoring the growing power of the party’s nascent far-left progressive wing.

    Pelosi even reportedly walked out of a meeting Wednesday with Democrat House members, setting down her microphone and telling attendees, “Well if you’re not going to listen to me, I’m done talking.”

    The stalled resolution originated after freshman Democratic Rep. Ilhan Omar of Minnesota, for at least the second time in recent months, ignited an uproar for echoing tropes critics have deemed anti-Semitic. In February, she suggested on Twitter that supporters of Israel have been bought. The congresswoman then accused American supporters of Israel of pushing people to have “allegiance to a foreign country.”

    Omar — who also tweeted in 2012 that “Israel has hypnotized the world, may Allah awaken the people and help them see the evil doings of Israel” — refused to address questions on Wednesday about accusations that she’s anti-Semitic.

    Meanwhile, debate over how to address her latest remarks has overtaken House Democrats in recent days.

    A frustrated senior House Democratic aide told Fox News on Tuesday: “Here we are again, fighting with ourselves. I’ve spent another week dealing with this and not on policy.”

    ON THE STREETS IN OMAR’S DISTRICT: SOMALI GANGS, LITTLE COMMUNICATING WITH COPS

    A vote on the resolution, which was originally planned for earlier this week, did not appear on the House’s official docket for Thursday.

    President Trump, turning to Twitter on Wednesday, highlighted Democrats’ troubles getting the resolution passed. He wrote that their failure to “take a stronger stand” against anti-Semitism was “shameful.”

    Fox News has been told that the Democratic caucus is trying to get the language of the proposed anti-Semitism language “right,” and that there is concern about mentioning Omar by name — a non-starter for many members of the Congressional Black Caucus.

    Two knowledgable sources said such a scenario could increase security threats against Omar, who is a Muslim.

    DEMS BLOCK BILL TO CRIMINALIZE KILLING INFANTS WHO SURVIVE ABORTIONS, CLAIM IT’S A STUNT

    Republicans did not specifically name Rep. Steve King, R-Iowa, in a bipartisan disapproval measure that followed comments that seemingly defended white nationalism earlier this year. But GOP leaders stripped King of his committee assignments as punishment — while Omar remains on the House Foreign Affairs Committee, and Democrats say they have no plans to oust her.

    Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., departs after talking with reporters during her weekly news conference on Capitol Hill on Feb. 7. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

    By the same token, Fox is told Democrats are also concerned about making “a martyr” out of Omar if they don’t address some of her controversial comments.

    TRUMP, WHO MOVED US EMBASSY TO JERUSALEM, CALLS OMAR’S COMMENTS ‘SHAMEFUL’ AND SAYS SHE NEEDS TO GO

    “I’ve spent another week dealing with this and not on policy.”

    — Frustrated House Democratic aide

    Pelosi, for her part, was stunned by criticism among some Democratic members who complained they weren’t informed in detail about the resolution; freshman Rep. Jahana Hayes, D-Conn., for example, asserted the Democratic leadership team failed in its duty to inform members about the resolution’s details.

    But senior leadership sources scofffed at that assertion, saying Pelosi spoke with multiple lawmakers all weekend long about the measure.

    TLAIB — ACCUSED OF HER OWN ANTI-SEMITIC SMEARS — TO INTRODUCE IMPEACHMENT ARTICLES AGAINST TRUMP

    Fox News was also told one senior House Democratic lawmaker expressed concern about the influence pro-Israel interest groups have over the Democratic caucus, prompting debate about a resolution to condemn anti-Semitism in the first place. Their complaints came in contrast to the push by a trio of Jewish lawmakers who have pushed hardest for the resolution: House Ethics Committee Chairman Ted Deutch, D-Fla., House Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Eliot Engel, D-N.Y., and House Appropriations Committee Chairwoman Nita Lowey, D-N.Y.

    One senior House Democrat even suggested the rift in the caucus was emblematic of age-old tensions between Pelosi and House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, D-Md.

    “He’s more AIPAC,” said the Democrat. “She’s more J Street. The caucus is more J Street these days.” That’s a reference to two major, pro-Israel lobbying organizations in Washington.

    FARRAKHAN TELLS ‘SWEETHEART’ OMAR NOT TO APOLOGIZE FOR SAYING JEWISH POLITICAL SUPPORT IS ALL ABOUT MONEY

    The apparent tension comes as freshman Democratic Rep. Rashida Tlaib — who herself has been accused of recent anti-Semitic comments — also clashed with party leadership on Wednesday, after joining protesters to say she’d introduce a resolution this month urging the Judiciary Committee to move forward with impeachment proceedings against President Trump. Pelosi has consistently resisted calls to impeach Trump, saying such an effort would be premature.

    A senior House Democratic leadership aide, however, disputed the divide between Pelosi and Hoyer.

    Lawmakers are also buzzing about if they should even address the comments by Omar at all. There’s a concern about precedent.

    “Should the House condemn [House Minority Leader] Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., for what he said about George Soros?” asked one lawmaker who requested to not be identified. In 2018, McCarthy tweeted: “We cannot allow Soros, Steyer and Bloomberg to BUY this election! Get out and vote Republican November 6th. #MAGA.” (Soros, Steyer and Bloomberg all are of Jewish heritage.

    Rep. Rashida Tlaib joined protesters with CREDO Action and By the People, a new advocacy group pushing for the impeachment of President Trump. Together they urged members of Congress to begin impeachment proceedings. (Congresswoman Rashida Tlaib)

    CLICK TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    McCarthy has since deleted the tweet.

    One source questioned if House Democrats ever attempted to rebuke former Rep. Cynthia McKinney, D-Ga., who was known for questioning if President George W. Bush knew of the 9/11 attacks ahead of time. She also questioned U.S. support for Israel and demanded a more balanced approach when dealing with the Palestinians.

    The prolonged delay in passing an anti-Semitism resolution — which threatens to become a public-relations headache for Democrats with each passing day — spilled over into the 2020 presidential race as well on Wednesday, as White House contender Bernie Sanders, who is Jewish, defended Omar in a statement.

    “Anti-Semitism is a hateful and dangerous ideology which must be vigorously opposed in the United States and around the world,” Sanders wrote. “We must not, however, equate anti-Semitism with legitimate criticism of the right-wing, Netanyahu government in Israel. Rather, we must develop an even-handed Middle East policy which brings Israelis and Palestinians together for a lasting peace. What I fear is going on in the House now is an effort to target Congresswoman Omar as a way of stifling that debate. That’s wrong.”

    Added Elizabeth Warren: “Branding criticism of Israel as automatically anti-Semitic has had a chilling effect on our public discourse and makes it harder to achieve a peaceful solution between Israelis and Palestinians.”

    Fox News’ Chad Pergram and Alex Pappas contributed to this report.

    Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/rank-and-file-dems-revolt-against-pelosi-over-resolution-to-condemn-anti-semitism

    President Trump proclaimed in a freewheeling speech to a conference of conservatives last weekend that “America is winning again.” But his administration has been on a pronounced losing streak over the past week.

    Trump is losing ground on top priorities to curb illegal immigration, cut the trade deficit and blunt North Korea’s nuclear threat — setbacks that complicate his planned reelection message as a can-do president who is making historic progress.

    Late last week, Trump flew home empty-handed from a summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un in Hanoi — and, within days, new satellite images appeared to show that the North was secretly rebuilding a rocket-launching site.

    On Tuesday, the Department of Homeland Security announced that unauthorized border crossings have spiked to the highest pace in 12 years — despite Trump’s hard-line rhetoric and new policies aimed at deterring migrants.

    And on Wednesday, the Commerce Department said that the nation’s trade deficit is at a record high — in part due to punitive tariffs Trump imposed on allies and adversaries. Trump vowed throughout his 2016 campaign and during his presidency to shrink the trade deficit, which he views as a measure of other nations taking advantage of the United States.

    “The president hasn’t shown much of an ability to cut good deals with Congress or anyone else,” said Rep. Joaquin Castro (D-Tex.), who is mulling a Senate run in 2020. “Almost the only time he has been successful at one of his goals is when he can set the terms unilaterally. That’s why he’s done a lot of executive orders, executive actions, like the travel ban, deregulations, emergency declaration. Those are things that don’t require any negotiation at all.”

    Trump took office on a pledge to buck conventional wisdom, sideline Washington’s political class and tackle long-standing problems with a mix of outside-the-box improvisation and dealmaking skills honed during his real estate career. “I alone can fix it,” he declared at the Republican National Convention in 2016.

    Yet as he has struggled to fulfill some of his signature campaign promises, Trump has consistently blamed others for his woes.

    He has criticized the administrations of President Barack Obama and President George W. Bush for not reforming the immigration system or reining in North Korea. He has railed at Democrats for failing to support his proposed border wall and implored them to ratify new trade deals. And he has even attacked fellow Republicans, obliquely slamming former House speaker Paul D. Ryan (Wis.) during a Rose Garden news conference last month for not having pushed faster to get a deal on the wall.

    White House officials argued that rather than being a setback, the immigration trends could bolster Trump’s argument that he is justified in taking unilateral action on the border. Federal authorities detained 76,103 migrants at the southern border in February, up from 58,207 a month earlier.

    Press secretary Sarah Sanders said Wednesday that the numbers were clear evidence that Trump was right to declare a national emergency last month.

    “If that doesn’t define crisis, I don’t know what does,” she said. “Congress should have fixed this problem. The president tried multiple times to get Congress to work with him to address the crisis. They failed to do so, and now the president has to do what is absolutely necessary.”

    Republican allies praised the president for eliminating business regulations, helping pass a major tax cut in 2017, appointing two conservative Supreme Court justices and scores of lower-level judges, and nurturing an economy with low unemployment.

    They emphasized that challenges such as North Korea will take time and chided Democrats for blocking Trump’s agenda.

    “The House is just involved in investigations and really not concerned about legislation,” said Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.).

    Sen. David Perdue (R-Ga.) said Trump is “very frustrated right now with all of us. He wants to get results and we’re looking at a two-year period where it’s pretty obvious the other side doesn’t want to do anything.”

    But Trump’s critics said his policies have made things worse.

    On immigration, the administration has sought to block asylum seekers at legal ports of entry along the border, prompting them to try to find alternative pathways into the country. The president shut down parts of the federal government for 35 days — the longest such closure in U.S. history — in an ill-fated fight for border wall funding, even though experts said the surge of migrant families is not a threat to national security and that a wall would do little to curb it.

    On trade, Trump’s tariff war with China has harmed U.S. farmers as Beijing slashed agricultural imports. Although the president has signaled that a trade deal is close, analysts said an accord would not fundamentally alter the U.S. trade relationship with the world’s second-largest economy.

    And on North Korea, officials have said, the president’s decision to rush forward with bilateral summits with Kim have led to difficulties for U.S. negotiators engaging with their counterparts over technical and complicated nuclear matters, as Kim has preferred to deal directly with Trump.

    Simon Rosenberg, founder of NDN, a liberal think tank, noted that the tax cut has not met GOP projections for economic growth and could add significantly to the ballooning federal deficit.

    “The reality is he can’t point to a single thing that’s better today than when he came to office,” Rosenberg said.

    Although he has projected confidence, Trump has fretted in private over his difficulties. During the government shutdown, the president’s approval ratings dipped to 37 percent in a Washington Post/ABC News poll, one of the lowest marks of his tenure.

    Since then, his numbers have fluctuated. This week, a Wall Street Journal/NBC News poll put his approval at 46 percent, while a Quinnipiac University survey pegged it at 38 percent.

    During a marathon speech Saturday to the Conservative Political Action Committee, Trump veered off script, spending much of the time attacking his rivals, including congressional Democrats, special counsel Robert S. Mueller III and news organizations. Trump spent less time on his governing record.

    On trade, he defended his use of tariffs and suggested the United States had accrued large trade deficits because past administrations were afraid to use that tool as leverage. On North Korea, he blamed the Obama administration for allowing the Kim regime to send “rockets flying all over the place” and said his team was “making a lot of progress.” On immigration, Trump called current U.S. laws “crazy” and said he felt empowered to declare a national emergency “because our Congress can’t act.”

    “Not my fault I inherited this mess, but we’re fixing it,” he said during the speech.

    Trump at times also appears determined to prove that he is making progress. He publicly contradicted his own intelligence chiefs, who testified to Congress in January that there is no evidence that North Korea is willing to give up its nuclear program.

    Asked by a reporter Wednesday about the satellite images that showed construction work at the ­Sohae Satellite Launching Station, Trump said he would be “very disappointed” if the news is confirmed, but he added that it was “a very early report.”

    Senior White House aides have sought to cast the Hanoi summit as a sign of Trump’s negotiating fortitude and unwillingness to settle for a bad deal. Yet Trump has grown frustrated by the largely negative coverage of the summit, a senior White House official said, and his aides briefed lawmakers this week to explain his goals. The official spoke on the condition of anonymity to characterize internal discussions.

    “He thought they closed the gap on some issues,” Sen. Lindsey O. Graham (R-S.C.) said. “He just said, ‘North Korea isn’t ready to make a deal.’ ”

    Last year, Trump berated Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen over the rising border crossings. Though he no longer blames Nielsen, aides said, Trump told his staff that the shutdown dispute sent an important message to his conservative base that he is fighting for them.

    On trade, Trump postponed a March 1 deadline to impose another round of tariffs on China in hopes of a deal. White House aides are planning events for Trump and Vice President Pence in the Midwest this spring to tout an updated trade deal reached last year with Canada and Mexico that Congress has yet to ratify.

    Sen. Mike Rounds (R-S.D.) said in an interview that farmers support Trump but are growing antsy.

    “These folks are with you, they want to see you be successful,” Rounds said, speaking as if he was sending a message to Trump. “But you’re going to have to deliver some results.”

    Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/not-my-fault-trump-struggles-to-defend-his-record-amid-setbacks-on-immigration-trade-north-korea/2019/03/06/19ab2ca4-4026-11e9-a0d3-1210e58a94cf_story.html

    DURHAM, N.C. — Former White House chief of staff John Kelly said he disagreed with some Trump administration policies — particularly on immigration — but dodged questions Wednesday about the president reportedly intervening to secure top-secret security clearances for his daughter Ivanka Trump and son–in–law, Jared Kushner.

    Kelly, in an appearance at Duke University, did not deny reports that President Donald Trump circumvented the usual process to grant the security clearances or that he later wrote a memo outlining his concerns about it. He simply said he believes any such conversations with the president would be privileged and that he’s not at liberty to discuss security clearances.

    It was a notable contrast to Kelly’s aggressive pushback on news reports while in the White House about his actions and relationship with Trump. On Wednesday he even stressed several times the importance of a free press.

    Relatively subdued and cautious, Kelly landed some gloved swipes on his former boss — at one point saying if Trump’s former Democratic rival had won the presidency and asked him to serve, he would have worked for her.

    “If Hillary Clinton had called me, I would have done it,” Kelly said.

    The wide-ranging question-and-answer session before several hundred people marked the first time Kelly, who left the White House at the end of 2018 after a rocky tenure, has publicly addressed the president’s role in his family members’ security clearances.

    A retired four-star general, Kelly initially served as Trump’s Homeland Security secretary. But it was the chief of staff job he took in July 2017 that he said was “the least enjoyable job I’ve ever had.”

    “But it was he most important job I’ve ever had,” he said.

    Kelly, though diplomatic, showed repeatedly where he disagreed with Trump on immigration issues.

    On the administration’s handling of children at the southern border, he was critical, though he blamed then-Attorney General Jeff Sessions for catching the White House by surprise with the adoption of a “zero tolerance” policy.

    Contrary to Trump’s comments that many immigrants coming to the U.S. border are criminals, Kelly added: “And by the way, they’re overwhelmingly not criminals. They’re people coming up here for economic purposes. I don’t blame them for that.”

    He didn’t defend Trump’s decision to declare a national emergency to get funding for a border wall and said: “We don’t need a wall from sea to shining sea.”

    Kelly also expressed disagreement with deploying U.S. troops, even National Guard troops, to the border, as Trump did last fall before the midterm elections.

    “Generally speaking I would always look for another way to do it,” Kelly said.

    Asked about Trump’s executive order establishing a travel ban just days after taking office — while Kelly was Homeland Security secretary — he said it was a mistake made by inexperienced White House staff who didn’t run the policy through the usual process-gathering process for input from relevant government agencies.

    The White House staff “got a little bit maybe out in front if their skis,” he said.

    Kelly also defended the cost of maintaining the NATO alliance, the merits of which Trump has repeatedly questioned. And he took credit for initially organizing a series of briefings that convinced Trump not to withdraw U.S. troops from Afghanistan and Syria.

    When Trump tapped Kelly as his chief of staff the White House had little internal structure and was largely seen as chaotic. Kelly didn’t seem eager for the job and spent his initial weeks trying to install process and order to the West Wing.

    Despite reports by NBC News and others that Kelly saw himself as the “adult in the room,” he denied taking that view.

    “In my view everyone in the room was an adult,” he said.

    When he decided it was time to leave, saying the job exhausted him, he joked that the advice he gave to his successor, acting chief of staff Mick Mulvaney, was: “Run for it.”

    Source Article from https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/white-house/john-kelly-differs-trump-immigration-mum-security-clearances-n980326

    Ms. McSally’s testimony was met with an outpouring of support from her fellow lawmakers, including her female colleagues who have pushed the Pentagon to more forcefully address the issue of sexual assault.

    Senator Kirsten Gillibrand, Democrat of New York, who is running for president and who has made curbing sexual assault in the military one of her central policy goals, said she was grateful that Ms. McSally was present “and spoke that truth.”

    Ms. Gillibrand, the top Democrat on the Senate Armed Services Subcommittee on Personnel that Ms. McSally addressed, offered a measure in 2013 that would have taken sexual assault cases outside of the military chain of command and given military prosecutors, rather than accusers’ commanders, the power to decide which cases to try, a potential sea change to the military justice system.

    That attempt failed, but in recent years, lawmakers have made changes to the military’s legal system, including ending the statute of limitations on assault and rape cases, making it a crime to retaliate against victims who report assaults and requiring the dishonorable discharge or the dismissal of anyone convicted of sexual assault or rape.

    In a Congress with historic numbers of women, Ms. McSally’s revelation was another instance of a female lawmaker stepping forward to share a personal experience of trauma.

    Senator Joni Ernst, Republican of Iowa, came forward in January to say that she had been sexually assaulted by her husband. Representative Katie Porter, Democrat of California and a single mother of three, has spoken openly about the domestic abuse she said she suffered in her marriage.

    Ms. Ernst said she sent Ms. McSally a message after her testimony, saying, “I love you and I support you.”

    Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/03/06/us/politics/martha-mcsally-sexual-assault.html

    ‘:””},t.getDefinedParams=function(e,t){return t.filter(function(t){return e[t]}).reduce(function(t,n){return l(t,function(e,t,n){return t in e?Object.defineProperty(e,t,{value:n,enumerable:!0,configurable:!0,writable:!0}):e[t]=n,e}({},n,e[n]))},{})},t.isValidMediaTypes=function(e){var t=[“banner”,”native”,”video”];return!!Object.keys(e).every(function(e){return(0,b.default)(t,e)})&&(!e.video||!e.video.context||(0,b.default)([“instream”,”outstream”],e.video.context))},t.getBidderRequest=function(e,t,n){return(0,v.default)(e,function(e){return e.bids.filter(function(e){return e.bidder===t&&e.adUnitCode===n}).length>0})||{start:null,auctionId:null}},t.getUserConfiguredParams=function(e,t,n){return e.filter(function(e){return e.code===t}).map(function(e){return e.bids}).reduce(s,[]).filter(function(e){return e.bidder===n}).map(function(e){return e.params||{}})},t.getOrigin=function(){return window.location.origin?window.location.origin:window.location.protocol+”//”+window.location.hostname+(window.location.port?”:”+window.location.port:””)},t.getDNT=function(){return”1″===navigator.doNotTrack||”1″===window.doNotTrack||”1″===navigator.msDoNotTrack||”yes”===navigator.doNotTrack},t.isAdUnitCodeMatchingSlot=function(e){return function(t){return B(e,t)}},t.isSlotMatchingAdUnitCode=function(e){return function(t){return B(t,e)}},t.unsupportedBidderMessage=function(e,t){var n=Object.keys(e.mediaTypes||{banner:”banner”}).join(“, “);return”\n “+e.code+” is a “+n+” ad unit\n containing bidders that don’t support “+n+”: “+t+”.\n This bidder won’t fetch demand.\n “},t.deletePropertyFromObject=function(e,t){var n=l({},e);return delete n[t],n},t.removeRequestId=function(e){return t.deletePropertyFromObject(e,”requestId”)},t.isInteger=function(e){return Number.isInteger?Number.isInteger(e):”number”==typeof e&&isFinite(e)&&Math.floor(e)===e},t.convertCamelToUnderscore=function(e){return e.replace(/(?:^|\.?)([A-Z])/g,function(e,t){return”_”+t.toLowerCase()}).replace(/^_/,””)},t.transformBidderParamKeywords=function(e){var n=arguments.length>1&&void 0!==arguments[1]?arguments[1]:”keywords”,r=[];return t._each(e,function(e,i){if(t.isArray(e)){var o=[];t._each(e,function(e){(e=t.getValueString(n+”.”+i,e))&&o.push(e)}),e=o}else{if(e=t.getValueString(n+”.”+i,e),!t.isStr(e))return;e=[e]}r.push({key:i,value:e})}),r},t.convertTypes=function(e,n){return Object.keys(e).forEach(function(r){var i,o;n[r]&&(t.isFn(e[r])?n[r]=e[r](n[r]):n[r]=(i=e[r],o=n[r],”string”===i?o&&o.toString():”number”===i?Number(o):o),
    isNaN(n[r])&&delete n.key)}),n};var g=n(3),h=r(n(63)),v=r(n(10)),b=r(n(5)),y=n(11),m=n(4),_=!1,A=Object.prototype.toString,E=Boolean(window.console),w=Boolean(E&&window.console.log),S=Boolean(E&&window.console.info),I=Boolean(E&&window.console.warn),T=Boolean(E&&window.console.error);t.replaceTokenInString=function(e,n,r){return t._each(n,function(t,n){t=void 0===t?””:t;var i=r+n.toUpperCase()+r,o=new RegExp(i,”g”);e=e.replace(o,t)}),e};var x,j=(x=0,function(){return++x});t.getUniqueIdentifierStr=i,t.generateUUID=function e(t){return t?(t^16*Math.random()>>t/4).toString(16):([1e7]+-1e3+-4e3+-8e3+-1e11).replace(/[018]/g,e)},t.getBidIdParameter=function(e,t){return t&&t[e]?t[e]:””},t.tryAppendQueryString=function(e,t,n){return n?e+(t+”=”)+encodeURIComponent(n)+”&”:e},t.parseQueryStringParameters=function(e){var t=””;for(var n in e)e.hasOwnProperty(n)&&(t+=n+”=”+encodeURIComponent(e[n])+”&”);return t},t.transformAdServerTargetingObj=function(e){return e&&Object.getOwnPropertyNames(e).length>0?c(e).map(function(t){return t+”=”+encodeURIComponent(d(e,t))}).join(“&”):””},t.getTopWindowLocation=function(){if(t.inIframe()){var e=void 0;try{e=t.getAncestorOrigins()||t.getTopFrameReferrer()}catch(e){logInfo(“could not obtain top window location”,e)}if(e)return(0,y.parse)(e,{decodeSearchAsString:!0})}return t.getWindowLocation()},t.getTopFrameReferrer=function(){try{window.top.location.toString();for(var e=””,t=void 0;(t=t?t.parent:window).document&&t.document.referrer&&(e=t.document.referrer),t!==window.top;);return e}catch(e){return window.document.referrer}},t.getAncestorOrigins=function(){if(window.document.location&&window.document.location.ancestorOrigins&&window.document.location.ancestorOrigins.length>=1)return window.document.location.ancestorOrigins[window.document.location.ancestorOrigins.length-1]},t.getWindowTop=function(){return window.top},t.getWindowSelf=function(){return window.self},t.getWindowLocation=function(){return window.location},t.getTopWindowUrl=function(){var e=void 0;try{e=t.getTopWindowLocation().href}catch(t){e=””}return e},t.getTopWindowReferrer=function(){try{return window.top.document.referrer}catch(e){return document.referrer}},t.logMessage=function(){C()&&w&&console.log.apply(console,a(arguments,”MESSAGE:”))},t.logInfo=function(){C()&&S&&console.info.apply(console,a(arguments,”INFO:”))},t.logWarn=function(){C()&&I&&console.warn.apply(console,a(arguments,”WARNING:”))},t.logError=function(){C()&&T&&console.error.apply(console,a(arguments,”ERROR:”))},t.hasConsoleLogger=function(){return w};var C=function(){if(!1===g.config.getConfig(“debug”)&&!1===_){var e=”TRUE”===O(m.DEBUG_MODE).toUpperCase();g.config.setConfig({debug:e}),_=!0}return!!g.config.getConfig(“debug”)};t.debugTurnedOn=C,t.createInvisibleIframe=function(){var e=document.createElement(“iframe”);return e.id=i(),e.height=0,e.width=0,e.border=”0px”,e.hspace=”0″,e.vspace=”0″,e.marginWidth=”0″,e.marginHeight=”0″,e.style.border=”0″,e.scrolling=”no”,e.frameBorder=”0″,e.src=”about:blank”,e.style.display=”none”,e};var O=function(e){var t=new RegExp(“[\\?&]”+e+”=([^]*)”).exec(window.location.search);return null===t?””:decodeURIComponent(t[1].replace(/\+/g,” “))};t.getParameterByName=O,t.hasValidBidRequest=function(e,n,r){function i(e,t){t===n[a]&&(o=!0)}for(var o=!1,a=0;a0);for(var n in e)if(hasOwnProperty.call(e,n))return!1;return!0},t.isEmptyStr=function(e){return t.isStr(e)&&(!e||0===e.length)},t._each=function(e,n){if(!t.isEmpty(e)){if(t.isFn(e.forEach))return e.forEach(n,this);var r=0,i=e.length;if(i>0)for(;r‘},t.createTrackPixelIframeHtml=function(e){var n=!(arguments.length>1&&void 0!==arguments[1])||arguments[1],r=arguments.length>2&&void 0!==arguments[2]?arguments[2]:””;return e?(n&&(e=encodeURI(e)),r&&(r=’sandbox=”‘+r+'”‘),”‘):””},t.getIframeDocument=function(e){if(e){var n=void 0;try{n=e.contentWindow?e.contentWindow.document:e.contentDocument.document?e.contentDocument.document:e.contentDocument}catch(e){t.logError(“Cannot get iframe document”,e)}return n}},t.getValueString=function(e,n,r){return null==n?r:t.isStr(n)?n:t.isNumber(n)?n.toString():void t.logWarn(“Unsuported type for param: “+e+” required type: String”)},t.getHighestCpm=f(“timeToRespond”,function(e,t){return e>t}),t.getOldestHighestCpmBid=f(“responseTimestamp”,function(e,t){return e>t}),t.getLatestHighestCpmBid=f(“responseTimestamp”,function(e,t){return e1?arguments[1]:void 0)}}),n(27)(o)},11:function(e,t,n){“use strict”;function r(e){return e?e.replace(/^\?/,””).split(“&”).reduce(function(e,t){var n=t.split(“=”),r=o(n,2),i=r[0],a=r[1];return/\[\]$/.test(i)?(e[i=i.replace(“[]”,””)]=e[i]||[],e[i].push(a)):e[i]=a||””,e},{}):{}}function i(e){return Object.keys(e).map(function(t){return Array.isArray(e[t])?e[t].map(function(e){return t+”[]=”+e}).join(“&”):t+”=”+e[t]}).join(“&”)}Object.defineProperty(t,”__esModule”,{value:!0});var o=function(){return function(e,t){if(Array.isArray(e))return e;if(Symbol.iterator in Object(e))return function(e,t){var n=[],r=!0,i=!1,o=void 0;try{for(var a,u=e[Symbol.iterator]();!(r=(a=u.next()).done)&&(n.push(a.value),!t||n.length!==t);r=!0);}catch(e){i=!0,o=e}finally{try{!r&&u.return&&u.return()}finally{if(i)throw o}}return n}(e,t);throw new TypeError(“Invalid attempt to destructure non-iterable instance”)}}();t.parseQS=r,t.formatQS=i,t.parse=function(e,t){var n=document.createElement(“a”);t&&”noDecodeWholeURL”in t&&t.noDecodeWholeURL?n.href=e:n.href=decodeURIComponent(e);var i=t&&”decodeSearchAsString”in t&&t.decodeSearchAsString;return{href:n.href,protocol:(n.protocol||””).replace(/:$/,””),hostname:n.hostname,port:+n.port,pathname:n.pathname.replace(/^(?!\/)/,”/”),search:i?n.search:r(n.search||””),hash:(n.hash||””).replace(/^#/,””),host:n.host||window.location.host}},t.format=function(e){return(e.protocol||”http”)+”://”+(e.host||e.hostname+(e.port?”:”+e.port:””))+(e.pathname||””)+(e.search?”?”+i(e.search||””):””)+(e.hash?”#”+e.hash:””)}},12:function(e,t,n){“use strict”;function r(e){var t=this,n=e.url,r=e.config,a=e.id,u=e.callback,s=e.loaded;this.url=n,this.config=r,this.handlers={},this.id=a,this.loaded=s,this.cmd=[],this.push=function(e){“function”==typeof e?t.loaded?e.call():t.cmd.push(e):o.logError(“Commands given to Renderer.push must be wrapped in a function”)},this.callback=u||function(){t.loaded=!0,t.process()},(0,i.loadScript)(n,this.callback,!0)}Object.defineProperty(t,”__esModule”,{value:!0}),t.Renderer=r;var i=n(22),o=function(e){if(e&&e.__esModule)return e;var t={};if(null!=e)for(var n in e)Object.prototype.hasOwnProperty.call(e,n)&&(t[n]=e[n]);return t.default=e,t}(n(0));r.install=function(e){return new r({url:e.url,config:e.config,id:e.id,callback:e.callback,loaded:e.loaded})},r.prototype.getConfig=function(){return this.config},r.prototype.setRender=function(e){this.render=e},r.prototype.setEventHandlers=function(e){this.handlers=e},r.prototype.handleVideoEvent=function(e){var t=e.id,n=e.eventName;”function”==typeof this.handlers[n]&&this.handlers[n](),o.logMessage(“Prebid Renderer event for id “+t+” type “+n)},r.prototype.process=function(){for(;this.cmd.length>0;)try{this.cmd.shift().call()}catch(e){o.logError(“Error processing Renderer command: “,e)}}},13:function(e,t){var n=e.exports={version:”2.5.3″};”number”==typeof __e&&(__e=n)},14:function(e,t,n){var r=n(19),i=n(13),o=n(32),a=n(47),u=”prototype”,s=function e(t,n,s){var c,d,f,l=t&e.F,p=t&e.G,g=t&e.S,h=t&e.P,v=t&e.B,b=t&e.W,y=p?i:i[n]||(i[n]={}),m=y[u],_=p?r:g?r[n]:(r[n]||{})[u];for(c in p&&(s=n),s)(d=!l&&_&&void 0!==_[c])&&c in y||(f=d?_[c]:s[c],y[c]=p&&”function”!=typeof _[c]?s[c]:v&&d?o(f,r):b&&_[c]==f?function(e){var t=function(t,n,r){if(this instanceof e){switch(arguments.length){case 0:return new e;case 1:return new e(t);case 2:return new e(t,n)}return new e(t,n,r)}return e.apply(this,arguments)};return t[u]=e[u],t}(f):h&&”function”==typeof f?o(Function.call,f):f,h&&((y.virtual||(y.virtual={}))[c]=f,t&e.R&&m&&!m[c]&&a(m,c,f)))};s.F=1,s.G=2,s.S=4,s.P=8,s.B=16,s.W=32,s.U=64,s.R=128,e.exports=s},15:function(e,t){e.exports=function(e){return”object”==(void 0===e?”undefined”:_typeof(e))?null!==e:”function”==typeof e}},16:function(e,t,n){“use strict”;var r=n(0);t.createBid=function(e,t){return new function(e,t){var n=t&&t.bidId||r.getUniqueIdentifierStr(),i=t&&t.src||”client”,o=e||0;this.bidderCode=t&&t.bidder||””,this.width=0,this.height=0,this.statusMessage=function(){switch(o){case 0:return”Pending”;case 1:return”Bid available”;case 2:return”Bid returned empty or error response”;case 3:return”Bid timed out”}}(),this.adId=n,this.mediaType=”banner”,this.source=i,this.getStatusCode=function(){return o},this.getSize=function(){return this.width+”x”+this.height}}(e,t)}},17:function(e,t,n){“use strict”;function r(e){function t(){if(l.syncEnabled&&e.browserSupportsCookies&&!a){try{!function(){(l.pixelEnabled||f.image)&&u.shuffle(r.image).forEach(function(e){var t=i(e,2),n=t[0],r=t[1];u.logMessage(“Invoking image pixel user sync for bidder: “+n),u.triggerPixel(r)})}(),function(){(l.iframeEnabled||f.iframe)&&u.shuffle(r.iframe).forEach(function(e){var t=i(e,2),n=t[0],r=t[1];u.logMessage(“Invoking iframe user sync for bidder: “+n),u.insertUserSyncIframe(r)})}()}catch(e){return u.logError(“Error firing user syncs”,e)}r={image:[],iframe:[]},a=!0}}var n={},r={image:[],iframe:[]},a=!1,c={},f={image:!1,iframe:!1},l=e.config;return s.config.getConfig(“userSync”,function(e){l=o(l,e.userSync)}),n.registerSync=function(e,t,n){if(!l.syncEnabled||!u.isArray(r[e]))return u.logWarn(‘User sync type “‘+e+'” not supported’);if(!t)return u.logWarn(“Bidder is required for registering sync”);if(Number(c[t])>=l.syncsPerBidder)return u.logWarn(‘Number of user syncs exceeded for “‘+t+'”‘);if(l.filterSettings){if(function(e,t){var n=l.filterSettings;if(function(e,t){if(e.all&&e[t])return u.logWarn(‘Detected presence of the “filterSettings.all” and “filterSettings.’+t+'” in userSync config. You cannot mix “all” with “iframe/image” configs; they are mutually exclusive.’),!1;var n=e.all?e.all:e[t],r=e.all?”all”:t;if(!n)return!1;var i=n.filter,o=n.bidders;return i&&”include”!==i&&”exclude”!==i?(u.logWarn(‘UserSync “filterSettings.’+r+”.filter\” setting ‘”+i+”‘ is not a valid option; use either ‘include’ or ‘exclude’.”),!1):!!(“*”===o||Array.isArray(o)&&o.length>0&&o.every(function(e){return u.isStr(e)&&”*”!==e}))||(u.logWarn(‘Detected an invalid setup in userSync “filterSettings.’+r+”.bidders\”; use either ‘*’ (to represent all bidders) or an array of bidders.”),!1)}(n,e)){f[e]=!0;var r=n.all?n.all:n[e],i=”*”===r.bidders?[t]:r.bidders,o=r.filter||”include”;return{include:function(e,t){return!(0,d.default)(e,t)},exclude:function(e,t){return(0,d.default)(e,t)}}[o](i,t)}return!1}(e,t))return u.logWarn(“Bidder ‘”+t+”‘ is not permitted to register their userSync “+e+” pixels as per filterSettings config.”)}else if(l.enabledBidders&&l.enabledBidders.length&&l.enabledBidders.indexOf(t)0&&void 0!==arguments[0]?arguments[0]:0;if(e)return setTimeout(t,Number(e));t()},n.triggerUserSyncs=function(){l.enableOverride&&n.syncUsers()},n}Object.defineProperty(t,”__esModule”,{value:!0}),t.userSync=void 0;var i=function(){return function(e,t){if(Array.isArray(e))return e;if(Symbol.iterator in Object(e))return function(e,t){var n=[],r=!0,i=!1,o=void 0;try{for(var a,u=e[Symbol.iterator]();!(r=(a=u.next()).done)&&(n.push(a.value),!t||n.length!==t);r=!0);}catch(e){i=!0,o=e}finally{try{!r&&u.return&&u.return()}finally{if(i)throw o}}return n}(e,t);throw new TypeError(“Invalid attempt to destructure non-iterable instance”)}}(),o=Object.assign||function(e){for(var t=1;t1&&void 0!==arguments[1]?arguments[1]:10;”function”==typeof e&&(a.push({fn:e,priority:t}),a.sort(function(e,t){return t.priority-e.priority}))},removeHook:function(e){a=a.filter(function(n){return n.fn===t||n.fn!==e})},hasHook:function(e){return a.some(function(t){return t.fn===e})}};return”string”==typeof n&&(o[n]=s),r(function(){for(var n=arguments.length,r=Array(n),i=0;i\n \n \n prebid.org wrapper\n \n “+(n?””:””)+”\n \n \n \n “)}}Object.defineProperty(t,”__esModule”,{value:!0}),t.store=function(e,t){var n={puts:e.map(r)};(0,i.ajax)(o.config.getConfig(“cache.url”),(a=t,{success:function(e){var t=void 0;try{t=JSON.parse(e).responses}catch(e){return void a(e,[])}t?a(null,t):a(new Error(“The cache server didn’t respond with a responses property.”),[])},error:function(e,t){a(new Error(“Error storing video ad in the cache: “+e+”: “+JSON.stringify(t)),[])}}),JSON.stringify(n),{contentType:”text/plain”,withCredentials:!0});var a},t.getCacheUrl=function(e){return o.config.getConfig(“cache.url”)+”?uuid=”+e};var i=n(7),o=n(3)},21:function(e,t,n){n(102),e.exports=n(13).Array.findIndex},22:function(e,t,n){“use strict”;function r(e,t){var n=document.createElement(“script”);n.type=”text/javascript”,n.async=!0,t&&”function”==typeof t&&(n.readyState?n.onreadystatechange=function(){“loaded”!==n.readyState&&”complete”!==n.readyState||(n.onreadystatechange=null,t())}:n.onload=function(){t()}),n.src=e;var r=document.getElementsByTagName(“head”);(r=r.length?r:document.getElementsByTagName(“body”)).length&&(r=r[0]).insertBefore(n,r.firstChild)}var i,o=n(5),a=(i=o)&&i.__esModule?i:{default:i},u=function(e){if(e&&e.__esModule)return e;var t={};if(null!=e)for(var n in e)Object.prototype.hasOwnProperty.call(e,n)&&(t[n]=e[n]);return t.default=e,t}(n(0)),s={},c=[“criteo”];t.loadExternalScript=function(e,t){if(t&&e)if((0,a.default)(c,t)){if(!s[e]){u.logWarn(“module “+t+” is loading external JavaScript”);var n=document.createElement(“script”);n.type=”text/javascript”,n.async=!0,n.src=e,u.insertElement(n),s[e]=!0}}else u.logError(t+” not whitelisted for loading external JavaScript”);else u.logError(“cannot load external script without url and moduleCode”)},t.loadScript=function(e,t,n){e?n?s[e]?t&&”function”==typeof t&&(s[e].loaded?t():s[e].callbacks.push(t)):(s[e]={loaded:!1,callbacks:[]},t&&”function”==typeof t&&s[e].callbacks.push(t),r(e,function(){s[e].loaded=!0;try{for(var t=0;tt.max?e:t},{max:0}),b=(0,u.default)(t.buckets,function(t){if(e>v.max*n){var i=t.precision;void 0===i&&(i=c),r=(t.max*n).toFixed(i)}else if(e=t.min*n)return t});return b&&(o=e,s=n,d=void 0!==(a=b).precision?a.precision:c,f=a.increment*s,l=a.min*s,p=Math.pow(10,d+2),g=(o*p-l*p)/(f*p),h=Math.floor(g)*f+l,r=(h=Number(h.toFixed(10))).toFixed(d)),r}function i(e){if(s.isEmpty(e)||!e.buckets||!Array.isArray(e.buckets))return!1;var t=!0;return e.buckets.forEach(function(e){void 0!==e.min&&e.max&&e.increment||(t=!1)}),t}Object.defineProperty(t,”__esModule”,{value:!0}),t.isValidPriceConfig=t.getPriceBucketString=void 0;var o,a=n(10),u=(o=a)&&o.__esModule?o:{default:o},s=n(0),c=2,d={buckets:[{min:0,max:5,increment:.5}]},f={buckets:[{min:0,max:20,increment:.1}]},l={buckets:[{min:0,max:20,increment:.01}]},p={buckets:[{min:0,max:3,increment:.01},{min:3,max:8,increment:.05},{min:8,max:20,increment:.5}]},g={buckets:[{min:0,max:5,increment:.05},{min:5,max:10,increment:.1},{min:10,max:20,increment:.5}]};t.getPriceBucketString=function(e,t){var n=arguments.length>2&&void 0!==arguments[2]?arguments[2]:1,i=parseFloat(e);return isNaN(i)&&(i=””),{low:””===i?””:r(e,d,n),med:””===i?””:r(e,f,n),high:””===i?””:r(e,l,n),auto:””===i?””:r(e,g,n),dense:””===i?””:r(e,p,n),custom:””===i?””:r(e,t,n)}},t.isValidPriceConfig=i},32:function(e,t,n){var r=n(46);e.exports=function(e,t,n){if(r(e),void 0===t)return e;switch(n){case 1:return function(n){return e.call(t,n)};case 2:return function(n,r){return e.call(t,n,r)};case 3:return function(n,r,i){return e.call(t,n,r,i)}}return function(){return e.apply(t,arguments)}}},33:function(e,t){e.exports=function(e){try{return!!e()}catch(e){return!0}}},34:function(e,t,n){var r=n(32),i=n(35),o=n(54),a=n(36),u=n(55);e.exports=function(e,t){var n=1==e,s=2==e,c=3==e,d=4==e,f=6==e,l=5==e||f,p=t||u;return function(t,u,g){for(var h,v,b=o(t),y=i(b),m=r(u,g,3),_=a(y.length),A=0,E=n?p(t,_):s?p(t,0):void 0;_>A;A++)if((l||A in y)&&(v=m(h=y[A],A,b),e))if(n)E[A]=v;else if(v)switch(e){case 3:return!0;case 5:return h;case 6:return A;case 2:E.push(h)}else if(d)return!1;return f?-1:c||d?d:E}}},35:function(e,t,n){var r=n(24);e.exports=Object(“z”).propertyIsEnumerable(0)?Object:function(e){return”String”==r(e)?e.split(“”):Object(e)}},36:function(e,t,n){var r=n(37),i=Math.min;e.exports=function(e){return e>0?i(r(e),9007199254740991):0}},37:function(e,t){var n=Math.ceil,r=Math.floor;e.exports=function(e){return isNaN(e=+e)?0:(e>0?r:n)(e)}},38:function(e,t,n){var r=n(24);e.exports=Array.isArray||function(e){return”Array”==r(e)}},39:function(e,t,n){“use strict”;Object.defineProperty(t,”__esModule”,{value:!0}),t.adunitCounter=void 0;var r=n(0),i={},o={incrementCounter:function(e){return i[e]=i[e]||{},i[e].counter=(0,r.deepAccess)(i,e+”.counter”)+1||1,i[e].counter},getCounter:function(e){return(0,r.deepAccess)(i,e+”.counter”)||0}};t.adunitCounter=o},4:function(e,t){e.exports={JSON_MAPPING:{PL_CODE:”code”,PL_SIZE:”sizes”,PL_BIDS:”bids”,BD_BIDDER:”bidder”,BD_ID:”paramsd”,BD_PL_ID:”placementId”,ADSERVER_TARGETING:”adserverTargeting”,BD_SETTING_STANDARD:”standard”},REPO_AND_VERSION:”prebid_prebid_1.22.0″,DEBUG_MODE:”pbjs_debug”,STATUS:{GOOD:1,NO_BID:2},CB:{TYPE:{ALL_BIDS_BACK:”allRequestedBidsBack”,AD_UNIT_BIDS_BACK:”adUnitBidsBack”,BID_WON:”bidWon”,REQUEST_BIDS:”requestBids”}},EVENTS:{AUCTION_INIT:”auctionInit”,AUCTION_END:”auctionEnd”,BID_ADJUSTMENT:”bidAdjustment”,BID_TIMEOUT:”bidTimeout”,BID_REQUESTED:”bidRequested”,BID_RESPONSE:”bidResponse”,BID_WON:”bidWon”,BIDDER_DONE:”bidderDone”,SET_TARGETING:”setTargeting”,REQUEST_BIDS:”requestBids”,ADD_AD_UNITS:”addAdUnits”,AD_RENDER_FAILED:”adRenderFailed”},AD_RENDER_FAILED_REASON:{PREVENT_WRITING_ON_MAIN_DOCUMENT:”preventWritingOnMainDocuemnt”,NO_AD:”noAd”,EXCEPTION:”exception”,CANNOT_FIND_AD:”cannotFindAd”,MISSING_DOC_OR_ADID:”missingDocOrAdid”},EVENT_ID_PATHS:{bidWon:”adUnitCode”},GRANULARITY_OPTIONS:{LOW:”low”,MEDIUM:”medium”,HIGH:”high”,AUTO:”auto”,DENSE:”dense”,CUSTOM:”custom”},TARGETING_KEYS:[“hb_bidder”,”hb_adid”,”hb_pb”,”hb_size”,”hb_deal”,”hb_source”,”hb_format”],S2S:{SRC:”s2s”,DEFAULT_ENDPOINT:”https://prebid.adnxs.com/pbs/v1/openrtb2/auction”,SYNCED_BIDDERS_KEY:”pbjsSyncs”}}},40:function(e,t,n){“use strict”;Object.defineProperty(t,”__esModule”,{value:!0}),t.getGlobal=function(){return window.pbjs},window.pbjs=window.pbjs||{},window.pbjs.cmd=window.pbjs.cmd||[],window.pbjs.que=window.pbjs.que||[]},41:function(e,t,n){“use strict”;function r(e,t,n){return t in e?Object.defineProperty(e,t,{value:n,enumerable:!0,configurable:!0,writable:!0}):e[t]=n,e}function i(e,t){var n=[],r=(0,c.groupBy)(e,”adUnitCode”);return Object.keys(r).forEach(function(e){var i=(0,c.groupBy)(r[e],”bidderCode”);Object.keys(i).forEach(function(e){return n.push(i[e].reduce(t,o()))})}),n}function o(e){return{adUnitCode:e,cpm:0,adserverTargeting:{},timeToRespond:0}}function a(e){function n(t){return”string”==typeof t?[t]:h.isArray(t)?t:e.getAdUnitCodes()||[]}function a(){return i(e.getBidsReceived().filter(A).filter(t.isBidNotExpired),c.getOldestHighestCpmBid)}function s(){return e.getStandardBidderAdServerTargeting().map(function(e){return e.key}).concat(v.TARGETING_KEYS).filter(c.uniques)}function l(e,t,n,r){return Object.keys(t.adserverTargeting).filter(p()).forEach(function(n){var r,i;e.length&&e.filter((i=n,function(e){return e.adUnitCode===t.adUnitCode&&e.adserverTargeting[i]})).forEach((r=n,function(e){h.isArray(e.adserverTargeting[r])||(e.adserverTargeting[r]=[e.adserverTargeting[r]]),e.adserverTargeting[r]=e.adserverTargeting[r].concat(t.adserverTargeting[r]).filter(c.uniques),delete t.adserverTargeting[r]}))}),e.push(t),e}function p(){var e=s();return function(t){return-1===e.indexOf(t)}}function y(e){return r({},e.adUnitCode,Object.keys(e.adserverTargeting).filter(p()).map(function(t){return r({},t.substring(0,_),[e.adserverTargeting[t]])}))}var m={};return m.resetPresetTargeting=function(t){if((0,c.isGptPubadsDefined)()){var r=n(t),i=e.getAdUnits().filter(function(e){return(0,g.default)(r,e.code)});window.googletag.pubads().getSlots().forEach(function(e){b.forEach(function(t){i.forEach(function(n){n.code!==e.getAdUnitPath()&&n.code!==e.getSlotElementId()||e.setTargeting(t,null)})})})}},m.getAllTargeting=function(e){var t,o,p,A,E,w,S,I,T,x=arguments.length>1&&void 0!==arguments[1]?arguments[1]:a(),j=n(e),C=(w=j,S=x,I=m.getWinningBids(w,S),T=s(),I=I.map(function(e){return r({},e.adUnitCode,Object.keys(e.adserverTargeting).filter(function(t){return void 0===e.sendStandardTargeting||e.sendStandardTargeting||-1===T.indexOf(t)}).map(function(t){return r({},”hb_deal”===t?(t+”_”+e.bidderCode).substring(0,_):t.substring(0,_),[e.adserverTargeting[t]])}))})).concat((A=j,E=x,E.filter(function(e){return(0,g.default)(A,e.adUnitCode)}).map(function(e){return u({},e)}).reduce(l,[]).map(y).filter(function(e){return e}))).concat(d.config.getConfig(“enableSendAllBids”)?(t=j,o=x,p=v.TARGETING_KEYS.concat(f.NATIVE_TARGETING_KEYS),i(o,c.getHighestCpm).map(function(e){if(e.adserverTargeting&&t&&(h.isArray(t)&&(0,g.default)(t,e.adUnitCode)||”string”==typeof t&&e.adUnitCode===t))return r({},e.adUnitCode,(n=e,p.filter(function(t){return void 0!==e.adserverTargeting[t]}).map(function(e){return r({},(e+”_”+n.bidderCode).substring(0,_),[n.adserverTargeting[e]])})));var n}).filter(function(e){return e})):[]);return C.map(function(e){Object.keys(e).map(function(t){e[t].map(function(e){-1===b.indexOf(Object.keys(e)[0])&&(b=Object.keys(e).concat(b))})})}),C=C.map(function(e){return r({},Object.keys(e)[0],e[Object.keys(e)[0]].map(function(e){return r({},Object.keys(e)[0],e[Object.keys(e)[0]].join(“, “))}).reduce(function(e,t){return u(t,e)},{}))}).reduce(function(e,t){var n=Object.keys(t)[0];return e[n]=u({},e[n],t[n]),e},{}),j.forEach(function(e){C[e]||(C[e]={})}),C},m.setTargetingForGPT=function(e,t){window.googletag.pubads().getSlots().forEach(function(n){Object.keys(e).filter(t?t(n):(0,c.isAdUnitCodeMatchingSlot)(n)).forEach(function(t){return Object.keys(e[t]).forEach(function(r){var i=e[t][r].split(“,”);(i=i.length>1?[i]:i).map(function(e){return h.logMessage(“Attempting to set key value for slot: “+n.getSlotElementId()+” key: “+r+” value: “+e),e}).forEach(function(e){n.setTargeting(r,e)})})})})},m.getWinningBids=function(e){var t=arguments.length>1&&void 0!==arguments[1]?arguments[1]:a(),r=n(e);return t.filter(function(e){return(0,g.default)(r,e.adUnitCode)}).filter(function(e){return e.cpm>0}).map(function(e){return e.adUnitCode}).filter(c.uniques).map(function(e){return t.filter(function(t){return t.adUnitCode===e?t:null}).reduce(c.getHighestCpm,o(e))})},m.setTargetingForAst=function(){var e=m.getAllTargeting();Object.keys(e).forEach(function(t){return Object.keys(e[t]).forEach(function(n){if(h.logMessage(“Attempting to set targeting for targetId: “+t+” key: “+n+” value: “+e[t][n]),h.isStr(e[t][n])||h.isArray(e[t][n])){var r={};n.search(/pt[0-9]/)(0,c.timestamp)()},function(e){return e&&(e.status&&!(0,g.default)([y,m],e.status)||!e.status)});t.targeting=a(l.auctionManager)},42:function(e,t,n){“use strict”;function r(e){return e&&e.__esModule?e:{default:e}}function i(e,t){t.timeToRespond>e.getTimeout()+y.config.getConfig(“timeoutBuffer”)&&e.executeCallback(!0)}function o(e,t){T.emit(x.EVENTS.BID_RESPONSE,t),e.addBidReceived(t),i(e,t)}function a(e){var t=y.config.getConfig(“mediaTypePriceGranularity.”+e),n=”string”==typeof e&&t?”string”==typeof t?t:”custom”:y.config.getConfig(“priceGranularity”),r=pbjs.bidderSettings;return r[x.JSON_MAPPING.BD_SETTING_STANDARD]||(r[x.JSON_MAPPING.BD_SETTING_STANDARD]={}),r[x.JSON_MAPPING.BD_SETTING_STANDARD][x.JSON_MAPPING.ADSERVER_TARGETING]||(r[x.JSON_MAPPING.BD_SETTING_STANDARD][x.JSON_MAPPING.ADSERVER_TARGETING]=[{key:”hb_bidder”,val:function(e){return e.bidderCode}},{key:”hb_adid”,val:function(e){return e.adId}},{key:”hb_pb”,val:function(e){return n===x.GRANULARITY_OPTIONS.AUTO?e.pbAg:n===x.GRANULARITY_OPTIONS.DENSE?e.pbDg:n===x.GRANULARITY_OPTIONS.LOW?e.pbLg:n===x.GRANULARITY_OPTIONS.MEDIUM?e.pbMg:n===x.GRANULARITY_OPTIONS.HIGH?e.pbHg:n===x.GRANULARITY_OPTIONS.CUSTOM?e.pbCg:void 0}},{key:”hb_size”,val:function(e){return e.size}},{key:”hb_deal”,val:function(e){return e.dealId}},{key:”hb_source”,val:function(e){return e.source}},{key:”hb_format”,val:function(e){return e.mediaType}}]),r[x.JSON_MAPPING.BD_SETTING_STANDARD]}function u(e,t){if(!t)return{};var n={},r=pbjs.bidderSettings;return r&&(s(n,a(t.mediaType),t),e&&r[e]&&r[e][x.JSON_MAPPING.ADSERVER_TARGETING]&&(s(n,r[e],t),t.sendStandardTargeting=r[e].sendStandardTargeting)),t.native&&(n=l({},n,(0,h.getNativeTargeting)(t))),n}function s(e,t,n){var r=t[x.JSON_MAPPING.ADSERVER_TARGETING];return n.size=n.getSize(),S._each(r,function(r){var i=r.key,o=r.val;if(e[i]&&S.logWarn(“The key: “+i+” is getting ovewritten”),S.isFn(o))try{o=o(n)}catch(e){S.logError(“bidmanager”,”ERROR”,e)}(void 0===t.suppressEmptyKeys||!0!==t.suppressEmptyKeys)&&”hb_deal”!==i||!S.isEmptyStr(o)&&null!=o?e[i]=o:S.logInfo(“suppressing empty key ‘”+i+”‘ from adserver targeting”)}),e}function c(e){var t=e.bidderCode,n=e.cpm,r=void 0;if(pbjs.bidderSettings&&(t&&pbjs.bidderSettings[t]&&”function”==typeof pbjs.bidderSettings[t].bidCpmAdjustment?r=pbjs.bidderSettings[t].bidCpmAdjustment:pbjs.bidderSettings[x.JSON_MAPPING.BD_SETTING_STANDARD]&&”function”==typeof pbjs.bidderSettings[x.JSON_MAPPING.BD_SETTING_STANDARD].bidCpmAdjustment&&(r=pbjs.bidderSettings[x.JSON_MAPPING.BD_SETTING_STANDARD].bidCpmAdjustment),r))try{n=r(e.cpm,l({},e))}catch(e){S.logError(“Error during bid adjustment”,”bidmanager.js”,e)}n>=0&&(e.cpm=n)}function d(e,t){return e[t.adUnitCode]||(e[t.adUnitCode]={bids:[]}),e[t.adUnitCode].bids.push(t),e}Object.defineProperty(t,”__esModule”,{value:!0}),t.addBidResponse=t.AUCTION_COMPLETED=t.AUCTION_IN_PROGRESS=t.AUCTION_STARTED=void 0;var f=”function”==typeof Symbol&&”symbol”==_typeof(Symbol.iterator)?function(e){return void 0===e?”undefined”:_typeof(e)}:function(e){return e&&”function”==typeof Symbol&&e.constructor===Symbol&&e!==Symbol.prototype?”symbol”:void 0===e?”undefined”:_typeof(e)},l=Object.assign||function(e){for(var t=1;t=1})&&(S.logInfo(“Bids Received for Auction with id: “+v,g),b=O,t(!1,!0))}var r=e.adUnits,i=e.adUnitCodes,o=e.callback,a=e.cbTimeout,u=e.labels,s=r,c=u,f=i,l=[],g=[],h=void 0,v=S.generateUUID(),b=void 0,m=o,_=void 0,P=a,U=[];return{addBidReceived:function(e){g=g.concat(e)},executeCallback:t,callBids:function(){function e(e){var t=!0,n=y.config.getConfig(“maxRequestsPerOrigin”)||R;return e.bidRequests.some(function(e){var r=1,i=void 0!==e.src&&e.src===x.S2S.SRC?”s2s”:e.bidderCode;return k[i]&&(!1===k[i].SRA&&(r=Math.min(e.bids.length,n)),B[k[i].origin]+r>n&&(t=!1)),!t}),t&&e.run(),t}function r(e,t){void 0===e[t]?e[t]=1:e[t]++}var i=this;b=j,h=Date.now();var o=I.makeBidRequests(s,h,v,P,c);S.logInfo(“Bids Requested for Auction with id: “+v,o),o.forEach(function(e){var t;t=e,l=l.concat(t)});var a={},u={bidRequests:o,run:function(){var u,c;u=t.bind(null,!0),c=setTimeout(u,P),_=c,b=C;var d={timestamp:h,auctionId:v,timeout:P};T.emit(x.EVENTS.AUCTION_INIT,d),I.callBids(s,o,D.bind(i),function(e){var t=e;return(0,p.delayExecution)(function(){(0,A.default)(l,function(e){return t===e.bidderRequestId}).doneCbCallCount+=1,n()},1)}.bind(i),{request:function(e,t){r(B,t),r(a,e),k[e]||(k[e]={SRA:!0,origin:t}),a[e]>1&&(k[e].SRA=!1)},done:function(t){B[t]–,N[0]&&e(N[0])&&N.shift()}},P)}};e(u)||(S.logWarn(“queueing auction due to limited endpoint capacity”),N.push(u))},bidsBackAll:n,addWinningBid:function(e){U=U.concat(e),I.callBidWonBidder(e.bidder,e)},getWinningBids:function(){return U},getTimeout:function(){return P},getAuctionId:function(){return v},getAuctionStatus:function(){return b},getAdUnits:function(){return s},getAdUnitCodes:function(){return f},getBidRequests:function(){return l},getBidsReceived:function(){return g}}},t.getStandardBidderSettings=a,t.getKeyValueTargetingPairs=u,t.adjustBids=c;var p=n(0),g=n(31),h=n(18),v=n(203),b=n(12),y=n(3),m=n(17),_=n(20),A=r(n(10)),E=r(n(5)),w=m.userSync.syncUsers,S=n(0),I=n(8),T=n(9),x=n(4),j=t.AUCTION_STARTED=”started”,C=t.AUCTION_IN_PROGRESS=”inProgress”,O=t.AUCTION_COMPLETED=”completed”;T.on(x.EVENTS.BID_ADJUSTMENT,function(e){c(e)});var R=4,B={},k={},N=[],D=t.addBidResponse=(0,_.createHook)(“asyncSeries”,function(e,t){var n,r,a,s,c=this.getBidRequests(),d=this.getAuctionId(),h=(0,p.getBidderRequest)(c,t.bidderCode,e),m=function(e){var t=e.adUnitCode,n=e.bid,r=e.bidRequest,i=e.auctionId,o=r.start,a=l({},n,{auctionId:i,responseTimestamp:(0,p.timestamp)(),requestTimestamp:o,cpm:parseFloat(n.cpm)||0,bidder:n.bidderCode,adUnitCode:t});a.timeToRespond=a.responseTimestamp-a.requestTimestamp,T.emit(x.EVENTS.BID_ADJUSTMENT,a);var s=r.bids&&(0,A.default)(r.bids,function(e){return e.adUnitCode==t}),c=s&&s.renderer;c&&c.url&&(a.renderer=b.Renderer.install({url:c.url}),a.renderer.setRender(c.render));var d,h=y.config.getConfig(“mediaTypePriceGranularity.”+n.mediaType),v=(0,g.getPriceBucketString)(a.cpm,”object”===(void 0===h?”undefined”:f(h))?h:y.config.getConfig(“customPriceBucket”),y.config.getConfig(“currency.granularityMultiplier”));return a.pbLg=v.low,a.pbMg=v.med,a.pbHg=v.high,a.pbAg=v.auto,a.pbDg=v.dense,a.pbCg=v.custom,a.bidderCode&&(a.cpm>0||a.dealId)&&(d=u(a.bidderCode,a)),a.adserverTargeting=l(a.adserverTargeting||{},d),a}({adUnitCode:e,bid:t,bidRequest:h,auctionId:d});”video”===m.mediaType?(n=this,r=m,a=h,s=!0,y.config.getConfig(“cache.url”)&&(r.videoCacheKey?r.vastUrl||(S.logError(“videoCacheKey specified but not required vastUrl for video bid”),s=!1):(s=!1,(0,v.store)([r],function(e,t){e?(S.logWarn(“Failed to save to the video cache: “+e+”. Video bid must be discarded.”),i(n,r)):(r.videoCacheKey=t[0].uuid,r.vastUrl||(r.vastUrl=(0,v.getCacheUrl)(r.videoCacheKey)),a.doneCbCallCount+=1,o(n,r),n.bidsBackAll())}))),s&&o(n,r)):o(this,m)},”addBidResponse”)},45:function(e,t,n){“use strict”;var r=n(14),i=n(34)(5),o=”find”,a=!0;o in[]&&Array(1)[o](function(){a=!1}),r(r.P+r.F*a,”Array”,{find:function(e){return i(this,e,arguments.length>1?arguments[1]:void 0)}}),n(27)(o)},46:function(e,t){e.exports=function(e){if(“function”!=typeof e)throw TypeError(e+” is not a function!”);return e}},47:function(e,t,n){var r=n(48),i=n(53);e.exports=n(23)?function(e,t,n){return r.f(e,t,i(1,n))}:function(e,t,n){return e[t]=n,e}},48:function(e,t,n){var r=n(49),i=n(50),o=n(52),a=Object.defineProperty;t.f=n(23)?Object.defineProperty:function(e,t,n){if(r(e),t=o(t,!0),r(n),i)try{return a(e,t,n)}catch(e){}if(“get”in n||”set”in n)throw TypeError(“Accessors not supported!”);return”value”in n&&(e[t]=n.value),e}},49:function(e,t,n){var r=n(15);e.exports=function(e){if(!r(e))throw TypeError(e+” is not an object!”);return e}},5:function(e,t,n){n(59),e.exports=n(13).Array.includes},50:function(e,t,n){e.exports=!n(23)&&!n(33)(function(){return 7!=Object.defineProperty(n(51)(“div”),”a”,{get:function(){return 7}}).a})},51:function(e,t,n){var r=n(15),i=n(19).document,o=r(i)&&r(i.createElement);e.exports=function(e){return o?i.createElement(e):{}}},52:function(e,t,n){var r=n(15);e.exports=function(e,t){if(!r(e))return e;var n,i;if(t&&”function”==typeof(n=e.toString)&&!r(i=n.call(e)))return i;if(“function”==typeof(n=e.valueOf)&&!r(i=n.call(e)))return i;if(!t&&”function”==typeof(n=e.toString)&&!r(i=n.call(e)))return i;throw TypeError(“Can’t convert object to primitive value”)}},53:function(e,t){e.exports=function(e,t){return{enumerable:!(1&e),configurable:!(2&e),writable:!(4&e),value:t}}},54:function(e,t,n){var r=n(25);e.exports=function(e){return Object(r(e))}},55:function(e,t,n){var r=n(56);e.exports=function(e,t){return new(r(e))(t)}},555:function(e,t,n){e.exports=n(556)},556:function(e,t,n){“use strict”;function r(e,t,n){e.defaultView&&e.defaultView.frameElement&&(e.defaultView.frameElement.width=t,e.defaultView.frameElement.height=n)}function i(e,t,n){var r={};r.reason=e,r.message=t,n&&(r.bid=n),S.logError(t),x.emit(N,r)}function o(e){e.forEach(function(e){if(void 0===e.called)try{e.call(),e.called=!0}catch(e){S.logError(“Error processing command :”,”prebid.js”,e)}})}var a,u=”function”==typeof Symbol&&”symbol”==_typeof(Symbol.iterator)?function(e){return void 0===e?”undefined”:_typeof(e)}:function(e){return e&&”function”==typeof Symbol&&e.constructor===Symbol&&e!==Symbol.prototype?”symbol”:void 0===e?”undefined”:_typeof(e)},s=Object.assign||function(e){for(var t=1;t0&&void 0!==arguments[0]?arguments[0]:{},t=e.bidsBackHandler,n=e.timeout,r=e.adUnits,i=e.adUnitCodes,o=e.labels;x.emit(B);var a=n||g.config.getConfig(“bidderTimeout”);if(r=r||E.adUnits,S.logInfo(“Invoking pbjs.requestBids”,arguments),i&&i.length?r=r.filter(function(e){return(0,_.default)(i,e.code)}):i=r&&r.map(function(e){return e.code}),r.forEach(function(e){var t=Object.keys(e.mediaTypes||{banner:”banner”}),n=e.bids.map(function(e){return e.bidder}),r=I.bidderRegistry,i=g.config.getConfig(“s2sConfig”),o=i&&i.bidders,a=o?n.filter(function(e){return!(0,_.default)(o,e)}):n;e.transactionId||(e.transactionId=S.generateUUID()),a.forEach(function(n){var i=r[n],o=i&&i.getSpec&&i.getSpec(),a=o&&o.supportedMediaTypes||[“banner”];t.some(function(e){return(0,_.default)(a,e)})||(S.logWarn(S.unsupportedBidderMessage(e,n)),e.bids=e.bids.filter(function(e){return e.bidder!==n}))}),A.adunitCounter.incrementCounter(e.code)}),r&&0!==r.length){var u=h.auctionManager.createAuction({adUnits:r,adUnitCodes:i,callback:t,cbTimeout:a,labels:o});return u.callBids(),u}if(S.logMessage(“No adUnits configured. No bids requested.”),”function”==typeof t)try{t()}catch(e){S.logError(“Error executing bidsBackHandler”,null,e)}}),E.addAdUnits=function(e){S.logInfo(“Invoking pbjs.addAdUnits”,arguments),S.isArray(e)?E.adUnits.push.apply(E.adUnits,e):”object”===(void 0===e?”undefined”:u(e))&&E.adUnits.push(e),x.emit(O)},E.onEvent=function(e,t,n){S.logInfo(“Invoking pbjs.onEvent”,arguments),S.isFn(t)?!n||W[e].call(null,n)?x.on(e,t,n):S.logError(‘The id provided is not valid for event “‘+e+'” and no handler was set.’):S.logError(‘The event handler provided is not a function and was not set on event “‘+e+'”.’)},E.offEvent=function(e,t,n){S.logInfo(“Invoking pbjs.offEvent”,arguments),n&&!W[e].call(null,n)||x.off(e,t,n)},E.registerBidAdapter=function(e,t){S.logInfo(“Invoking pbjs.registerBidAdapter”,arguments);try{I.registerBidAdapter(e(),t)}catch(e){S.logError(“Error registering bidder adapter : “+e.message)}},E.registerAnalyticsAdapter=function(e){S.logInfo(“Invoking pbjs.registerAnalyticsAdapter”,arguments);try{I.registerAnalyticsAdapter(e)}catch(e){S.logError(“Error registering analytics adapter : “+e.message)}},E.createBid=function(e){return S.logInfo(“Invoking pbjs.createBid”,arguments),T.createBid(e)},E.loadScript=function(e,t,n){S.logInfo(“Invoking pbjs.loadScript”,arguments),(0,p.loadScript)(e,t,n)},E.enableAnalytics=function(e){e&&!S.isEmpty(e)?(S.logInfo(“Invoking pbjs.enableAnalytics for: “,e),I.enableAnalytics(e)):S.logError(“pbjs.enableAnalytics should be called with option {}”)},E.aliasBidder=function(e,t){S.logInfo(“Invoking pbjs.aliasBidder”,arguments),e&&t?I.aliasBidAdapter(e,t):S.logError(“bidderCode and alias must be passed as arguments”,”pbjs.aliasBidder”)},E.getAllWinningBids=function(){return h.auctionManager.getAllWinningBids().map(d.removeRequestId)},E.getAllPrebidWinningBids=function(){return h.auctionManager.getBidsReceived().filter(function(e){return e.status===v.BID_TARGETING_SET}).map(d.removeRequestId)},E.getHighestCpmBids=function(e){return v.targeting.getWinningBids(e).map(d.removeRequestId)},E.markWinningBidAsUsed=function(e){var t=[];e.adUnitCode&&e.adId?t=h.auctionManager.getBidsReceived().filter(function(t){return t.adId===e.adId&&t.adUnitCode===e.adUnitCode}):e.adUnitCode?t=v.targeting.getWinningBids(e.adUnitCode):e.adId?t=h.auctionManager.getBidsReceived().filter(function(t){return t.adId===e.adId}):S.logWarn(“Inproper usage of markWinningBidAsUsed. It’ll need an adUnitCode and/or adId to function.”),t.length>0&&(t[0].status=v.RENDERED)},E.getConfig=g.config.getConfig,E.setConfig=g.config.setConfig,E.que.push(function(){return(0,f.listenMessagesFromCreative)()}),E.cmd.push=function(e){if(“function”==typeof e)try{e.call()}catch(e){S.logError(“Error processing command :”,e.message,e.stack)}else S.logError(“Commands written into pbjs.cmd.push must be wrapped in a function”)},E.que.push=E.cmd.push,E.processQueue=function(){o(E.que),o(E.cmd)}},557:function(e,t,n){“use strict”;function r(e){return e&&e.__esModule?e:{default:e}}function i(e){var t,n,r,i,u,l,p,g,h,v,b,y,m=e.message?”message”:”data”,_={};try{_=JSON.parse(e[m])}catch(e){return}if(_&&_.adId){var A=(0,d.default)(c.auctionManager.getBidsReceived(),function(e){return e.adId===_.adId});”Prebid Request”===_.message&&(u=A,l=_.adServerDomain,p=e.source,g=u.adId,h=u.ad,v=u.adUrl,b=u.width,y=u.height,g&&(n=(t=u).adUnitCode,r=t.width,i=t.height,[“div”,”iframe”].forEach(function(e){var t,o=(t=e,document.getElementById((0,
    d.default)(window.googletag.pubads().getSlots().filter((0,s.isSlotMatchingAdUnitCode)(n)),function(e){return e}).getSlotElementId()).querySelector(t)).style;o.width=r,o.height=i}),p.postMessage(JSON.stringify({message:”Prebid Response”,ad:h,adUrl:v,adId:g,width:b,height:y}),l)),c.auctionManager.addWinningBid(A),o.default.emit(f,A)),”Prebid Native”===_.message&&((0,a.fireNativeTrackers)(_,A),c.auctionManager.addWinningBid(A),o.default.emit(f,A))}}Object.defineProperty(t,”__esModule”,{value:!0}),t.listenMessagesFromCreative=function(){addEventListener(“message”,i,!1)};var o=r(n(9)),a=n(18),u=n(4),s=n(0),c=n(29),d=r(n(10)),f=u.EVENTS.BID_WON},558:function(e,t,n){“use strict”;function r(e){(0,d.logMessage)(“DEBUG: “+e)}function i(e){var n=arguments.length>1&&void 0!==arguments[1]&&arguments[1];c.config.setConfig({debug:!0}),r(“bidder overrides enabled”+(n?” from session”:””)),p&&f.addBidResponse.removeHook(p),t.boundHook=p=a.bind(null,e),f.addBidResponse.addHook(p,5)}function o(){p&&(f.addBidResponse.removeHook(p),r(“bidder overrides disabled”))}function a(e,t,n,i){if(Array.isArray(e.bidders)&&-1===e.bidders.indexOf(n.bidderCode))return o=”bidder ‘”+n.bidderCode+”‘ excluded from auction by bidder overrides”,void(0,d.logWarn)(“DEBUG: “+o);var o;Array.isArray(e.bids)&&e.bids.forEach(function(e){e.bidder&&e.bidder!==n.bidderCode||e.adUnitCode&&e.adUnitCode!==t||(n=s({},n),Object.keys(e).filter(function(e){return-1===[“bidder”,”adUnitCode”].indexOf(e)}).forEach(function(i){var o=e[i];r(“bidder overrides changed ‘”+t+”/”+n.bidderCode+”‘ bid.”+i+” from ‘”+n[i]+”‘ to ‘”+o+”‘”),n[i]=o}))}),i(t,n)}function u(e){if(e.enabled){try{window.sessionStorage.setItem(l,JSON.stringify(e))}catch(e){}i(e)}else{o();try{window.sessionStorage.removeItem(l)}catch(e){}}}Object.defineProperty(t,”__esModule”,{value:!0}),t.boundHook=void 0;var s=Object.assign||function(e){for(var t=1;t1?arguments[1]:void 0)}}),n(27)(“includes”)},60:function(e,t,n){var r=n(61),i=n(36),o=n(62);e.exports=function(e){return function(t,n,a){var u,s=r(t),c=i(s.length),d=o(a,c);if(e&&n!=n){for(;c>d;)if((u=s[d++])!=u)return!0}else for(;c>d;d++)if((e||d in s)&&s[d]===n)return e||d||0;return!e&&-1}}},61:function(e,t,n){var r=n(35),i=n(25);e.exports=function(e){return r(i(e))}},62:function(e,t,n){var r=n(37),i=Math.max,o=Math.min;e.exports=function(e,t){return(e=r(e))0&&void 0!==arguments[0]?arguments[0]:{},n=t.labels,r=void 0===n?[]:n,o=t.labelAll,a=void 0!==o&&o,s=t.activeLabels,f=void 0===s?[]:s,l=arguments.length>1&&void 0!==arguments[1]?arguments[1]:[],p=(e=arguments.length>2&&void 0!==arguments[2]?arguments[2]:d,e.reduce(function(e,t){return”object”===(void 0===t?”undefined”:i(t))&&”string”==typeof t.mediaQuery?matchMedia(t.mediaQuery).matches&&(Array.isArray(t.sizesSupported)&&(e.shouldFilter=!0),[“labels”,”sizesSupported”].forEach(function(n){return(t[n]||[]).forEach(function(t){return e[n][t]=!0})})):(0,u.logWarn)(‘sizeConfig rule missing required property “mediaQuery”‘),e},{labels:{},sizesSupported:{},shouldFilter:!1})),g=void 0;return g=p.shouldFilter?l.filter(function(e){return p.sizesSupported[e]}):l,{active:g.length>0&&(0===r.length||!a&&(r.some(function(e){return p.labels[e]})||r.some(function(e){return(0,c.default)(f,e)}))||a&&r.reduce(function(e,t){return e?p.labels[t]||(0,c.default)(f,t):e},!0)),sizes:g}};var o,a=n(3),u=n(0),s=n(5),c=(o=s)&&o.__esModule?o:{default:o},d=[];a.config.getConfig(“sizeConfig”,function(e){return r(e.sizeConfig)})},65:function(e,t,n){“use strict”;Object.defineProperty(t,”__esModule”,{value:!0}),t.hasNonVideoBidder=t.videoBidder=t.videoAdUnit=void 0,t.isValidVideoBid=function(e,t){var n=(0,o.getBidRequest)(e.adId,t),r=n&&(0,o.deepAccess)(n,”mediaTypes.video”),i=r&&(0,o.deepAccess)(r,”context”);return!n||r&&i!==c?a.config.getConfig(“cache.url”)||!e.vastXml||e.vastUrl?!(!e.vastUrl&&!e.vastXml):((0,o.logError)(‘\n This bid contains only vastXml and will not work when a prebid cache url is not specified.\n Try enabling prebid cache with pbjs.setConfig({ cache: {url: “…”} });\n ‘),!1):i!==c||!(!e.renderer&&!n.renderer)};var r,i=n(8),o=n(0),a=n(3),u=n(5),s=(r=u)&&r.__esModule?r:{default:r},c=”outstream”,d=(t.videoAdUnit=function(e){var t=”video”===e.mediaType,n=(0,o.deepAccess)(e,”mediaTypes.video”);return t||n},t.videoBidder=function(e){return(0,s.default)(i.videoAdapters,e.bidder)});t.hasNonVideoBidder=function(e){return e.bids.filter(function(e){return!d(e)}).length}},7:function(e,t,n){“use strict”;function r(){var e=arguments.length>0&&void 0!==arguments[0]?arguments[0]:3e3,t=arguments.length>1&&void 0!==arguments[1]?arguments[1]:{},n=t.request,r=t.done;return function(t,d,f){var l=arguments.length>3&&void 0!==arguments[3]?arguments[3]:{};try{var p=void 0,g=l.method||(f?”POST”:”GET”),h=document.createElement(“a”);h.href=t;var v=”object”===(void 0===d?”undefined”:o(d))&&null!==d?d:{success:function(){s.logMessage(“xhr success”)},error:function(e){s.logError(“xhr error”,null,e)}};if(“function”==typeof d&&(v.success=d),(p=new window.XMLHttpRequest).onreadystatechange=function(){if(p.readyState===c){“function”==typeof r&&r(h.origin);var e=p.status;e>=200&&e0})})}var x,j,C=(x=e,(j=m.deepClone(x)).forEach(function(e){e.bids=e.bids.filter(function(e){return!a()||e.finalSource!==E.SERVER})}),j=j.filter(function(e){return 0!==e.bids.length}));return g.forEach(function(e){var t=m.getUniqueIdentifierStr(),a={bidderCode:e,auctionId:r,bidderRequestId:t,bids:o({bidderCode:e,auctionId:r,bidderRequestId:t,adUnits:C,labels:u}),auctionStart:n,timeout:i},c=w[e];c||m.logError(“Trying to make a request for bidder that does not exist: “+e),c&&a.bids&&0!==a.bids.length&&s.push(a)}),t.gdprDataHandler.getConsentData()&&s.forEach(function(e){e.gdprConsent=t.gdprDataHandler.getConsentData()}),s},t.checkBidRequestSizes=function(e){function t(e){return Array.isArray(e)&&2===e.length&&m.isInteger(e[0])&&m.isInteger(e[1])}return e.forEach(function(e){var n=e.mediaTypes,r=m.getAdUnitSizes(e);if(n&&n.banner){var i=n.banner;i.sizes?(i.sizes=r,e.sizes=r):(m.logError(“Detected a mediaTypes.banner object did not include sizes. This is a required field for the mediaTypes.banner object. Removing invalid mediaTypes.banner object from request.”),delete e.mediaTypes.banner)}else e.sizes&&(m.logWarn(“Usage of adUnits.sizes will eventually be deprecated. Please define size dimensions within the corresponding area of the mediaTypes.

    Source Article from https://slate.com/business/2019/03/trumps-trade-policy-is-an-utter-failure.html

    The Trump administration has instructed border agents running an asylum program to target Spanish speakers and Latin American migrants, according to memos obtained by The Associated Press.

    The program was launched in late January to handle the cases of immigrants seeking asylum in the U.S. and initially only was applicable to those turning themselves in at border crossings.

    According to The Associated Press, a memo from a top Border Patrol official says the program expanded last week to include those illegally crossing the border.

    The memo also reportedly laid out instructions on who to allow through the traditional asylum process and who to send back to Mexico. Those allowed to go through traditional processes include LGBT migrants, pregnant women, Mexican asylum seekers, children traveling alone, and those in medical distress, according to the AP.

    Another directive in the memo reportedly orders border officials to check if those seeking asylum are convicted of any felonies and to notify Mexico at least 12 hours prior to their return. 

    Critics have pointed out that the program’s guidelines almost solely target Central Americans. 

    A second memo sent to top Border Patrol officials on Tuesday reportedly revealed that the agency is being pressured to employ the program as much as possible. Another memo obtained by the AP showed that the program is being expanded to include people who cross the border illegally between crossing points. 

    The news of the reported memos comes as the southwest border saw a significant jump last month in apprehensions and denials of people attempting to enter the United States.

    U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) data shows that 66,450 people were apprehended after crossing the border between ports of entry in February, compared to 47,986 the previous month.

    The sharp increase in apprehensions was led by a continuing upward trend in crossings by family units, according to figures released by the administration.

    It’s unclear to what extent the higher numbers are due to a sustained increase in migrants fleeing Central America, or if the data are skewed by the behavioral changes of migrants, such as traveling in caravans and generally surrendering to authorities rather than sneaking in. 

    Source Article from https://thehill.com/latino/432975-trump-admin-has-directed-border-agents-to-target-spanish-speakers-latin-americans-ap

    Longtime host of the game show “Jeopardy!” Alex Trebek has been diagnosed with stage 4 pancreatic cancer but vowed to fight the disease and continue to host the show as long as he can.

    “Just like 50,000 other people in the United States each year, this week I was diagnosed with stage 4 pancreatic cancer,” Trebek said in a video announcement. “Now normally, the prognosis for this is not very encouraging, but I’m going to fight this, and I’m going to keep working and with the love and support of my family and friends and with the help of your prayers also, I plan to beat the low survival rate statistics for this disease. Truth told, I have to, because under the terms of my contract, I have to host ‘Jeopardy’ for three more years. So, help me, keep the faith, and we’ll win. We’ll get it done. Thank you.”

    The 78-year-old Trebek said he wanted to publicly announce his diagnosis to keep with the spirit of transparency of the show and to avoid the spread of misinformation.

    The Canadian-American has hosted game shows in the U.S. since 1973 and began hosting the “Jeopardy!” reboot in 1984. He has helmed the show ever since.

    Trebek holds the record for the most game show episodes hosted by the same presenter from the Guinness Book of World Records. Trebek has recorded more than 7,000 episodes.

    Source Article from https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/jeopardys-alex-trebek-diagnosed-with-late-stage-pancreatic-cancer

    Hillary Clinton rolled out new excuses for her loss, disenfranchisement in particular, but also promised not to run again. If Democrats are smart, they’ll ignore her excuses and take to heart the real lessons of 2016.

    The most important lesson from Hillary’s loss is this: Don’t hate the swing voters.

    Donald Trump won the White House by swinging tens of thousands or hundred of thousands of voters from Obama, and by bringing many other prior nonvoters out of the woodwork. Also, millions of Obama voters stayed home — a group that included hundreds thousands of working-class whites.

    With all these swings, Trump swung working-class counties in Pennsylvania, Michigan, Ohio, and Wisconsin, enough to win all four states and the White House.

    Trump, at the same time, underperformed earlier Republicans in the wealthier parts of America.

    Hillary showed her true colors when she declared this result some sort of a victory. “If you look at the map of the United States,” she explained to an overseas audience, “there’s all that red in the middle where Trump won. I win the coast, I win, you know, Illinois and Minnesota, places like that.”

    What are the “places like that”?

    “I won the places that represent two-thirds of America’s gross domestic product,” she explained. “So I won the places that are optimistic, diverse, dynamic, moving forward. And his whole campaign, ‘Make America Great Again,’ was looking backwards.”

    The 2018 election furthered this division. Democrats took over the House of Representatives in part by picking up dozens of seats in upper-middle-class suburban districts. The new bragging point for Democrats is that they are the party of the highly educated and the successful. It allows for the self-serving explanation that people who know the real deal vote Democratic, and only the clueless bitter clingers vote Republican.

    The choice for 2020 is: Do Democrats prefer the pride of being the party of the elites, or are they willing to sully themselves by trying to win over the “backwards” places full of deplorable bitter clingers?

    If they want to win, they need to tune out Hillary and the commentators who insist that Trump’s base was purely racists —the folks who declare “ There’s no such thing as a good Trump voter.”

    This will involve accepting that working-class suffering is real — even for white people.

    The data tell the story clearly. Life expectancy in the U.S. is falling, driven by a sharp decline among working-class whites. Labor-force participation remains low, and the rates of men on disability remains high. Working-class marriage rates are falling, and out-of-wedlock births are rising among the working class.

    Behind all of this are decades of stagnating wages. But there’s something more important at play here: the collapse of community cohesion and local institutions of civil society.

    Too many liberal critics wave away the nostalgic-sounding laments about how America used to be great. To them, this is just the revanchist griping of old, straight, white dudes who are upset that their privilege is eroding. But when the population of your town is shrinking, when the churches and coffee shops are closing down, when the Memorial Day Parade has disappeared, there’s a real loss.

    Trump exploited that loss by promising he could bring back what used to be. Of course he can’t — in fact, turning to a strongman just exacerbates the problem of community erosion by drawing power and attention away from the human level. But Hillary played into Trump’s hands by trying to deny that the suffering was real, and by portraying all the changes as progress.

    Can any 2020 Democrats do better? Maybe. But right now it appears doubtful. Sen. Sherrod Brown of Ohio is reaching out for the working class, and willing to talk about the “dignity of work” — a concept many on the Left like to mock. But even he demeans the importance of community connections. He penned a snarky retort to an insightful David Brooks column recently.

    “Brooks, in ‘ It’s Not the Economy, Stupid’, writes: ‘It’s not jobs, jobs, jobs anymore. It’s relationships, relationships, relationships,’” Brown wrote. “Actually it’s wages, wages, wages.”

    This denial that social dissolution is a problem is the same sort of coldness that sunk Hillary.

    The suffering is real. The condescension is both heartless and politically destructive. Can the Democrats have enough heart to have a chance at beating Trump?

    Source Article from https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/columnists/can-democrats-love-the-voters-hillary-hated

    “);var a = g[r.size_id].split(“x”).map((function(e) {return Number(e)})), s = u(a, 2);o.width = s[0],o.height = s[1]}o.rubiconTargeting = (Array.isArray(r.targeting) ? r.targeting : []).reduce((function(e, r) {return e[r.key] = r.values[0],e}), {rpfl_elemid: n.adUnitCode}),e.push(o)} else l.logError(“Rubicon bid adapter Error: bidRequest undefined at index position:” + t, c, d);return e}), []).sort((function(e, r) {return (r.cpm || 0) – (e.cpm || 0)}))},getUserSyncs: function(e, r, t) {if (!A && e.iframeEnabled) {var i = “”;return t && “string” == typeof t.consentString && (“boolean” == typeof t.gdprApplies ? i += “?gdpr=” + Number(t.gdprApplies) + “&gdpr_consent=” + t.consentString : i += “?gdpr_consent=” + t.consentString),A = !0,{type: “iframe”,url: n + i}}},transformBidParams: function(e, r) {return l.convertTypes({accountId: “number”,siteId: “number”,zoneId: “number”}, e)}};function m() {return [window.screen.width, window.screen.height].join(“x”)}function b(e, r) {var t = f.config.getConfig(“pageUrl”);return e.params.referrer ? t = e.params.referrer : t || (t = r.refererInfo.referer),e.params.secure ? t.replace(/^http:/i, “https:”) : t}function _(e, r) {var t = e.params;if (“video” === r) {var i = [];return t.video && t.video.playerWidth && t.video.playerHeight ? i = [t.video.playerWidth, t.video.playerHeight] : Array.isArray(l.deepAccess(e, “mediaTypes.video.playerSize”)) && 1 === e.mediaTypes.video.playerSize.length ? i = e.mediaTypes.video.playerSize[0] : Array.isArray(e.sizes) && 0

    (CNN)Freshman Sen. Martha McSally of Arizona revealed Wednesday that she was raped while she served in the military.

      Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2019/03/06/politics/martha-mcsally-rape-sexual-assault-survivor/index.html

      Following a report about the close relationship between the network and the Trump White House, DNC Chairman Tom Perez said the party will not allow Fox News to host any of its primary debates in 2020.

      Charles Dharapak/AP


      hide caption

      toggle caption

      Charles Dharapak/AP

      Following a report about the close relationship between the network and the Trump White House, DNC Chairman Tom Perez said the party will not allow Fox News to host any of its primary debates in 2020.

      Charles Dharapak/AP

      Updated at 3 p.m. ET

      The Democratic National Committee will not allow Fox News to broadcast any of its 2020 presidential primary debates, citing a recent report about the close relationship between the Trump administration and the conservative cable network.

      “I believe that a key pathway to victory is to continue to expand our electorate and reach all voters. That is why I have made it a priority to talk to a broad array of potential media partners, including FOX News,” DNC Chairman Tom Perez said in a statement Wednesday.

      “Recent reporting in the New Yorker on the inappropriate relationship between President Trump, his administration and FOX News has led me to conclude that the network is not in a position to host a fair and neutral debate for our candidates. Therefore, FOX News will not serve as a media partner for the 2020 Democratic primary debates,” the statement adds.

      The decision comes after a lengthy article by Jane Mayer in The New Yorker detailed the increasing coziness between President Trump and the network, which has long had a conservative tilt but that one source in the piece calls simply “propaganda” and effectively Trump’s “own press organization.”

      Former Fox News President Bill Shine is now the White House communications director, and Trump has given dozens of exclusive interviews to Fox while eschewing other networks, often deriding them as “fake news.” Host Sean Hannity has appeared as a special guest at Trump rallies, and in the New Yorker story, he is referred to as essentially “a West Wing adviser.”

      Among many other details in The New Yorker article, Mayer also writes that former Fox News Chairman and CEO Roger Ailes, who died in 2017, had tipped Trump off to some debate questions during the 2016 cycle. This includes a now-infamous clash with then-Fox News anchor Megyn Kelly over his past comments about women, though Kelly has said she does not believe Trump received the question in advance. Another source had allegedly alerted Trump there would be a question about whether he would eventually support the GOP nominee.

      In a statement, Fox News Senior Vice President Bill Sammon pointed to the network’s intent to have a debate hosted by its news anchors, as opposed to its prime-time opinion hosts, as evidence of why Democratic Party leadership should rethink the decision. Fox News was set to host one Democratic primary debate in 2016, but it was late in the primary campaign and never happened.

      “We hope the DNC will reconsider its decision to bar Chris Wallace, Bret Baier and Martha MacCallum, all of whom embody the ultimate journalistic integrity and professionalism, from moderating a Democratic presidential debate,” Sammon said. “They’re the best debate team in the business, and they offer candidates an important opportunity to make their case to the largest TV news audience in America, which includes many persuadable voters.”

      Wallace, who also hosts Fox News Sunday, has often pushed back on the Trump administration, including a recent inaccurate talking point over how many terrorists were coming through the Southern border.

      Party committees expressing their frustration over news coverage by denying networks debates is nothing new. In 2015, the Republican National Committee announced they were suspending NBC News from hosting any future debates, citing “inaccurate or downright offensive” questions from a CNBC primary debate.

      Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2019/03/06/700807729/dnc-bars-fox-news-from-hosting-2020-primary-debates