Some Democrats say the idea of trying to predict electability and casting Mr. Trump as an “aberration” was tried by Mrs. Clinton in 2016 — and it failed.

“I feel like the party went through this and the 2016 election showed that Trumpism isn’t just Donald Trump — it’s the entire Republican Congress, too,” said Rebecca Katz, a progressive Democratic strategist unaligned in the 2020 contest. “Until there is someone in the Republican Party who can stand up to Trump, then none of them are better than Trump.”

Republicans aligned with Mr. Trump say that, whatever the president’s failings, he has overseen a growing economy, the appointment of a vast array of conservative judges and a huge tax cut. They note that they offer dissent when they disagree with his policies; Mr. Trump recently suffered setbacks on his desired nominations to the Federal Reserve, for example, because of Republican opposition.

In a 21-candidate Democratic field, Mr. Biden, of course, is not the only candidate running as a potential healer. Senator Cory Booker has described seeking “to channel our common pain into common purpose.” Senator Amy Klobuchar talks up her bipartisan credentials. And Senator Michael Bennet entered the race this past week making the case for moderation as a “pragmatic idealist.”

But Mr. Biden is, by far, the most prominent.

At an Iowa City brewery, as Anne Spencer considered whether she would support the former vice president, she wondered what ever happened to all of Mr. Trump’s Republican critics in 2016. “The ones who spoke out against him are now with him,” she said. “It just makes one question our system.”

“We hope,” she added of Mr. Trump, “he’s an aberration.”

A few minutes later, Mr. Biden was onstage plugging the need to work together. “We have to unify this country,” he said. “It’s not just about — the other side is not my enemy, it’s my opposition. And folks, we’ve got to take it on, we’ve got to take it on in a real way.”

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/05/04/us/politics/biden-trump-republicans-2020.html

North Korea has fired several unidentified short-range projectiles from its eastern coast, the South Korean Joint Chiefs of Staff said Saturday. South Korean and U.S. authorities are “analyzing the details of the missile,” the South Korean Joint Chiefs of Staff told state-run news site Yonhap. 

The firing Saturday comes amid a diplomatic breakdown that has followed the failed summit earlier this year between President  Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un over the North’s pursuit of a nuclear arsenal that can target the U.S. mainland.

The Joint Chiefs of Staff said the projectiles were fired from Wonsan on the east coast. 

White House spokeswoman Sarah Sanders said in a statement that they are aware of North Korea’s actions and will “continue to monitor as necessary.” 

Japanese Foreign Minister Taro Kono and U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo have held telephone talks after North Korea launched several unidentified short-range projectiles into the sea, said Japan’s Foreign Ministry.

Kono, who is currently visiting Angola, and Pompeo talked for about 10 minutes Saturday and confirmed the two sides will share information on the development and stay in close contact.

The two ministers also agreed to cooperate with South Korea.

Japan’s Defense Ministry says the projectiles weren’t a security threat and didn’t reach anywhere near the country’s coast.

Source Article from https://www.cbsnews.com/news/north-korea-fires-short-range-missile-toward-the-ocean-says-south-korean-military/

A Boeing jetliner with 143 people aboard from the U.S. outpost at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, slid off a runway into a shallow river in Jacksonville, Florida, on Friday while attempting to land at a military base there during a thunderstorm, injuring 21 people.

There were no reports of fatalities or critical injuries. The Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office said on Twitter that all 21 of the injured were taken to a hospital, where they were listed in good condition.

The plane, a chartered Boeing 737-800 arriving from Naval Station Guantanamo Bay in Cuba with 136 passengers and seven crew members, crashed into the St. Johns river at the end of the runway at Naval Air Station Jacksonville at about 9:40 p.m. local time, a spokesman for the Florida air base said.

“The plane was not submerged. Every person is alive and accounted for,” the sheriff’s office said on Twitter.

The sheriff’s tweet was accompanied by two photographs showing the plane, bearing the logo of Miami Air International, resting in shallow water and fully intact.

The mayor of Jacksonville, Lenny Curry, said on Twitter that U.S. President Donald Trump had called him to offer help.

“No fatalities reported. We are all in this together,” Curry said in a separate tweet.

A passenger on board the plane, attorney Cheryl Bormann, told CNN in an interview that the flight, which had been four hours late in departing, made a “really hard landing” in Jacksonville amid thunder and lightning.

“We came down, the plane literally hit the ground and bounced. It was clear the pilot did not have total control of the plane. It bounced again,” she said, adding that the experience was “terrifying.”

Bormann said she hit her head on a plastic tray on the seat in front of her as the plane veered sideways and off the runway. “We were in the water, we couldn’t tell where we were, whether it was a river or an ocean.”

The military base is situated on the western bank of the St. Johns River about 8 miles south of central Jacksonville, in the northeastern corner of Florida about 350 miles north of Miami.

Bormann described emerging from the plane onto the wing as oxygen masks deployed and smelling the jet fuel that she said was apparently leaking into the water.

Bormann, from Chicago, said that most of the passengers were connected to the military and helped each other out of their seats and onto a wing, where they were assisted after some time into a raft.

Miami Air International is a charter airline operating a fleet of the Boeing 737-800, different from the 737 MAX 8 aircraft that has been grounded following two fatal crashes involving that plane. Representatives for the airline could not immediately be reached for comment by Reuters on Friday evening.

The charter company is contracted by the military for its twice-weekly “rotator” roundtrip service between the U.S. mainland and Guantanamo Bay, said Bill Dougherty, a spokesman for the Jacksonville base.

It flies every Tuesday and Friday from the Naval Station Norfolk in Virginia to the Jacksonville air station and on to Cuba. It then flies back to Virginia with a stop again at Jacksonville, he said.

The rotator service typically flies military personnel, family members, contractors and other civilians traveling from the United States to Guantanamo Bay. But officials said the mix of civilians and military personnel on the plane that crash-landed was not immediately known.

A Boeing spokesman said that the company was aware of the incident and was gathering information.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2019/05/04/boeing-737-slides-off-runway-into-florida-river-21-hurt.html

Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerrold Nadler, D-N.Y., left, laughs with Rep. Steve Cohen, D-Tenn., right, after Cohen arrived with a bucket of fried chicken and a prop chicken because Attorney General William Barr did not appear before the committee as requested.

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Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerrold Nadler, D-N.Y., left, laughs with Rep. Steve Cohen, D-Tenn., right, after Cohen arrived with a bucket of fried chicken and a prop chicken because Attorney General William Barr did not appear before the committee as requested.

Andrew Harnik/AP

Attorney General William Barr’s refusal to appear before the House Judiciary Committee did accomplish one thing, according to Rep. Jaime Raskin, D-Md.

“They have succeeded in building a near unanimous sense in the Democratic Caucus that the executive branch of government is in defiance of the Constitution and the rule of law,” said Raskin, a former constitutional law professor who sits on both the House Judiciary and Oversight committees.

Barr, already under steady attack from Democrats in both the House and Senate, declined to appear Thursday before the House Judiciary Committee because he did not want to be questioned by committee lawyers, only members. Democrats refused to accommodate Barr because Raskin said there’s a bigger constitutional principle at stake. “He doesn’t dictate to us how we conduct hearings in Congress,” he said.

The Trump administration has made clear they’re not going to play nice with Democrats’ demands. White House Press Secretary Sarah Sanders said Judiciary Chairman Jerry Nadler requesting staff lawyers question the attorney general was a “pathetic” moment for the committee. “Look, we lost confidence in Jerry Nadler a long time ago, but it’s surprising to find out he’s lost confidence in himself,” Sanders said.

Democrats need to decide what to do now. Nadler wants to give Barr another shot. “We will make one more good faith attempt to negotiate and to get access to the report that we need and then if we don’t get that, we will proceed to hold the attorney general in contempt and we’ll go from there,” Nadler said Thursday.

On Friday, Nadler made good on that promise. He sent a letter to Barr requesting an unredacted Mueller report by Monday, May 6. If Barr does not comply, Nadler says Barr will face contempt proceedings “and seek further legal recourse.”

“Lastly, it cannot go unremarked that, in refusing to comply with congressional oversight requests, the department has repeatedly asserted that Congress’s requests do not serve ‘legitimate’ purposes,” Nadler wrote. “This is not the department’s judgment to make. Congress’s constitutional, oversight and legislative interest in investigating misconduct by the president and his associates cannot be disputed.”

Democrats say they are considering all options. Pockets of Democrats are already calling for Barr’s impeachment, including Rep. Eric Swalwell, D-Calif., who is running for president. Others, including many of the 2020 Democratic presidential hopefuls, have called on him to resign.

There’s talk of censure, a type of public reprimand that has little practical effect. Lawmakers are also digging up research on Congress’s long dormant “inherent contempt” powers, which haven’t been triggered in nearly a century. Taken to the extreme, those powers allow Congress to detain, order arrests and levy punishments. “We’re going to use every means at our disposal in order to do our jobs,” Raskin said.

Even Speaker Pelosi, who has repeatedly thrown cold water on impeachment talk since Democrats won the majority, reminded reporters Thursday that ignoring Congress had consequences for another president. “As you probably know, in the Articles of Impeachment for President Nixon, Article 3 was that he ignored the subpoenas of Congress, that he did not honor the subpoenas of Congress. This is very, very serious,” she said.

She also attacked Barr for what she said was conflicting testimony to Congress about his communications with Mueller, over Barr’s handling of the initial summary of the report. A March 27 letter from Mueller revealed this week called in to question Barr’s account. “But what is deadly serious about it is the Attorney General of the United States of America was not telling the truth to the Congress of the United States. That’s a crime,” she said.

A spokesman for Barr called the speaker’s comments “reckless, irresponsible, and false.”

Not every reaction has been as serious. Rep. Steve Cohen, D-Tenn., brought a bucket of KFC to the empty hearing room Thursday to make a theatrical point. “Chicken Barr should have shown up today and answered questions,” Cohen said. Perhaps sending a message to the administration about what happens when you ignore Congress, Cohen devoured the chicken in front of the cameras.

Increasingly, Democrats like Rep. Pramila Jayapal, D-Wash., who sits on Judiciary panel, say they’re not interested in hearing from Barr anymore. “At this point, I don’t believe anything Barr says. So I’d rather have Mueller,” she told NPR.

Nadler has invited Mueller to testify on May 15. It’s not locked in, but Barr has said publicly that he has no objection to that.

Forecasting another anticipated clash still to come, Democrats also want to hear from former White House Counsel Don McGahn, but President Trump is indicating that he will invoke executive privilege to block any request. “Congress shouldn’t be looking anymore. This is all. It’s done,” Trump told Fox News on Thursday.

Democrats say they are just getting started.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2019/05/04/720022902/barr-standoff-escalates-confrontation-between-white-house-and-congress

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Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2019/05/04/us/illinois-plant-explosion/index.html

Former independent counsel Ken Starr weighed in Friday on a new report that alleges an FBI informant probed former Trump adviser George Papadopoulos in the lead-up to the 2016 presidential election.

“I think there is a lot that is potentially troubling, especially for the FBI to be surveilling, spying, whatever term you want to use, on a presidential political campaign. Was that authorized at the highest levels of the FBI? Did the FBI leadership consult with the department of justice?” Starr said on “Outnumbered Overtime with Harris Faulkner.” “Was there consideration of actually notifying the campaign? There were a lot of questions that need to be answered.”

CLINTON-UKRAINE COLLUSION EVIDENCE IS ‘BIG,’ WILL BE REVIEWED, TRUMP TELLS FOX NEWS

According to a report Thursday, an informant working for U.S. intelligence posed as a Cambridge University research assistant in September 2016 to try to probe Papadopoulos, then a Trump foreign policy adviser, on the campaign’s possible ties to Russia.

And, Papadopoulos told Fox News on Thursday, the informant tried to “seduce” him as part of the “bizarre” episode.

The New York Times report cited individuals familiar with the Justice Department’s ongoing Inspector General (IG) review of the intelligence community’s actions in the run-up to Donald Trump’s election as president. Attorney General William Barr received harsh partisan blowback for suggesting that “spying did occur” during the presidential race, but doubled down at a testy Senate hearing on Wednesday.

WATCH: BARR DOUBLES DOWN ON ‘SPYING’ CLAIM IN HEATED EXCHANGE

Starr also weighed in on the dispute over “spying” versus “authorized surveillance” saying they were one in the same.

Barr is “an alumnus of the CIA. So, to him spying by any other name is still spying,” Starr said.  “It’s still spying. Think of a person who is being surveilled or spied upon. He or she has no idea what’s going on.”

Fox News’ Gregg Re and Brooke Singman contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/ken-starr-authorized-surveillance-is-spying

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Reuters

Thailand’s King Maha Vajiralongkorn has been crowned on the first of three days of coronation rites.

King Vajiralongkorn inherited the throne in 2016 when his long-reigning father Bhumibol Adulyadej died.

Days ago in a surprise announcement the palace said the king had married his long-term partner and royal consort who would now be Queen Suthida.

Thailand has a constitutional monarchy, but the royal family is highly revered by Thais and wields considerable power.

Thailand also has strict laws, called lese majeste, which ban criticism of the monarchy. The laws have shielded the royal family from public view and scrutiny.

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AFP

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The monarchy commands widespread reverence in Thailand

During Saturday’s ceremony the 66-year-old king was handed the 7.3kg (16lbs) Great Crown of Victory, which he placed on his head.

He then issued his first royal command, promising to reign with righteousness, as his father had done at his coronation 69 years ago.

The coronation comes at a time of political uncertainty. A general election was held on 24 March, the first since the army took control in a coup in 2014, but a new government has yet to be declared.

Who is the king?

King Vajiralongkorn is the second child, and first son, of Queen Sirikit and Bhumibol Adulyadej.

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Getty Images

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King Vajiralongkorn’s father was the longest-reigning monarch in the world

He was educated in the UK and Australia and has been trained at the Royal Military College in Canberra. He went on to become an officer in the Thai armed forces and is a qualified civilian and fighter pilot.

He became crown prince and official heir to the throne in 1972. He is now known as Rama X, or the 10th King of the Chakri dynasty.

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AFP/Getty Images

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Thai TV showed the wedding ceremony of King Vajiralongkorn and Queen Suthida

Queen Suthida, who is his fourth wife, is the deputy commander of his personal security unit. She was made a full general in the army in December 2016.

What are the coronation ceremonies?

The coronation rituals began at 10:09 (03:09 GMT), an auspicious time, when King Vajiralongkorn changed into a white robe to go through purification and anointment ceremonies using sacred water that has been collected from more than 100 locations around the country.

He is receiving the five Royal Regalia – the symbols of kingship – which includes the Great Crown of Victory.

Most of the main Brahmin and Buddhist rituals take place on Saturday, and the coronation continues until Monday.

While King Vajiralongkorn has been on the throne since 2016, in Thai tradition he cannot be considered a divine representative on Earth nor the main patron of Buddhism until he is consecrated.

How are Thais marking the occasion?

On Sunday, King Vajiralongkorn will take part in a procession around the capital, Bangkok, giving people a chance to celebrate.

Large crowds are expected for this event as well as when he makes a public appearance on a balcony at the Grand Palace on Monday.

King Vajiralongkorn spends most of his time abroad and is not as well known to the public as his father.

But huge portraits of him can now be seen at many buildings after it was made mandatory for state offices to erect them in the weeks leading up to the celebration.

Civil servants were also asked to wear yellow – the colour associated with the king. Many ordinary Thais will also be wearing yellow to show their loyalty to the monarch.

Key events

Saturday 4 May

  • The Royal Purification and Anointment – sacred water is poured over the king
  • Royal Regalia – the king is presented with the crown, sword and other items
  • Temple of the Emerald Buddha – the king proclaims himself the Royal Patron of Buddhism
  • Assumption of the Royal Residence – he symbolically moves into the official residence with a housewarming ceremony

Sunday 5 May

  • Royal Procession on Land – the king rides the Royal Palanquin encircling the city allowing people to pay homage

Monday 6 May

  • The king grants a public audience on a balcony in the Grand Palace. Later he grants an audience to international diplomats.

Source Article from https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-48101877

In a surprise move, North Korea launched a “barrage” of unidentified short-range missiles into the Sea of Japan, American and South Korean military officials confirmed to ABC News on Friday evening.

The missiles were launched at about 9 a.m. local time on Saturday in North Korea from a peninsula on North Korea’s eastern shores, South Korean officials said.

In a statement, South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said that “our military is strengthening its surveillance and border in preparation for further launch of North Korea.”

“Korea and the United States are working closely together to maintain their ready preparedness,” the statement continued.

Korean Central News Agency via AFP/Getty Images, FILE
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un watches a launching drill of the medium-and-long range strategic ballistic rocket Hwasong-12 at an undisclosed location, in a photo released on Sept. 16, 2017 by the Korean Central News Agency.

South Korean and U.S. officials said they were in the process of analyzing the missile launches.

“We are aware of North Korea’s actions tonight. We will continue to monitor as necessary,” White House press secretary Sarah Sanders said.

South Korean officials initially reported a single missile was fired, according to The Associated Press, but later issued a statement that said “several projectiles” had been launched and that they flew up to 200 kilometers (125 miles) before splashing into the sea toward the northeast.

If it’s confirmed that the North fired banned ballistic missiles, it will be the first such launch since the North’s November 2017 test of an intercontinental ballistic missile.

Andrew Harnik/AP
President Donald Trump speaks at the South Korean National Assembly, Nov. 8, 2017, in Seoul, South Korea.

A senior Trump administration official told ABC News that National Security Adviser John Bolton has briefed President Donald Trump on the launch.

North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un and Trump met at a summit in February in Vietnam, but were unable to hammer out a deal to denuclearize North Korea. The summit was considered a disappointment following a much-friendlier meeting between the two leaders in Singapore in the summer of 2018.

Former State Department official Stephen Ganyard, an ABC News contributor, said that long-range missiles are the most concerning threats from North Korea.

“I don’t think we should get too excited about a short range test unless someone can tell us that it was a long range test that failed,” Ganyard said late Friday.

“A short range test is Kim demanding attention, not making a statement … and likely working on improving some tactical weapon he can sell for hard cash to his Iranian and Syrian clients.”

The missile launch was the first for North Korea since Nov. 28, 2017, however, that was a long-range missile.

ABC News’ Martha Raddatz, Lana Zak, Cindy Smith, Elizabeth McLaughlin and Chris Francescani contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://abcnews.go.com/International/korea-launches-barrage-short-range-missiles-sea-japan/story?id=62815723

Source Article from https://www.bostonglobe.com/news/nation/2019/05/03/plane-rests-river-jacksonville-fla/AJKfCOcmd0HRT3mwmwJvIK/story.html

“Clearly, Pyongyang is frustrated with the conclusion of the recent summit with Washington in Vietnam that did not produce any breakthrough,” said Harry J. Kazianis, the director of the Washington-based Center for the National Interest. “It also seems clear that North Korea is angry over what appears to be a lack of flexibility in the Trump administration’s position on relieving sanctions, sticking to a policy of ‘maximum pressure.’”

After the Hanoi negotiations collapsed, Mr. Kim and Mr. Trump went home empty-handed but agreed to keep talking. Mr. Kim later said he would give the United States until the end of this year to come up with viable terms. Mr. Trump and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo have both said a third summit meeting would be possible. (The first summit talks were held in Singapore in June 2018 and ended with vague, broad promises.)

Mr. Kim has pushed for a gradual, step-by-step approach to denuclearization, where each nation would make a concession that would be met with one of similar weight by the opposing side. But Mr. Trump’s top foreign policy officials — John R. Bolton, the national security adviser, and Mr. Pompeo — have argued that that approach is flawed because previous administrations had tried it, only to see North Korea continue its development of nuclear weapons. North Korean officials say they do not want Mr. Bolton or Mr. Pompeo involved in future negotiations.

American experts estimate that North Korea has 30 to 60 nuclear warheads, and they say it might have an intercontinental ballistic missile capable of hitting the continental United States. Its conventional artillery weapons could also decimate Seoul, the capital of South Korea.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/05/03/world/asia/north-korea-missile.html

CNN anchor Jake Tapper slammed President Trump over the phone conversation he had with Russian President Vladimir Putin this week, telling a panel that Trump shares Putin’s perspective as if he’s “the spokesman for the Kremlin.”

During their wide-ranging hourlong conversation, both leaders discussed the ongoing crisis in Venezuela, tensions with North Korea, trade negotiations, and the Mueller Report, which Trump referred to as a “Russian hoax” on Twitter.

Trump told reporters that Putin is “not looking at all to get involved” in Venezuela, which contradicts Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and National Security Adviser John Bolton, who’ve said Russia has been propping up Venezuelan President Nicholás Maduro.

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“We’ve done stories on this show about how there are Russian troops in Venezuela right now!” Tapper exclaimed. “Just to be clear, this is not the president saying, ‘Well, this is what Putin claims.’ He is giving Putin’s point of view almost as if he is the spokesman for the Kremlin. ‘He is not looking to get involved in Venezuela.’ There are Russian troops in Venezuela!”

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/entertainment/cnns-jake-tapper-trump-gives-putins-pov-like-the-spokesman-for-the-kremlin


Sen. Kamala Harris cited her exchange with Attorney General William Barr at a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing earlier this week. | Win McNamee/Getty Images

Justice Department

Sen. Kamala Harris called on the Justice Department inspector general to look into whether Attorney General William Barr had received or complied with any requests from the White House to investigate President Donald Trump’s “perceived enemies.”

In a letter sent Friday to Inspector General Michael Horowitz, the California Democrat, who is also running for president, wrote she had “grave concern about the independence of the Department of Justice under the leadership of Attorney General William Barr.”

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Harris cited her exchange with the attorney general at a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing earlier this week, in which Barr did not explicitly answer her question about whether Trump or anyone in he White House asked to or suggested the DOJ investigate someone.

“I’m trying to grapple with the word ‘suggest,’” Barr said at the hearing. “I mean there have been discussions of, of matters out there that uh … they have not asked me to open an investigation.”

When Harris asked whether the White House had hinted at an investigation, Barr responded: “I don’t know.”

In her letter, Harris described Barr’s response as “alarming” and noted that “such inappropriate requests by the President have been well documented.”

Harris’ letter is the second this week from Senate Democrats asking the Inspector General to investigate Barr. Sen. Mazie Hirono, a member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, sent a letter Tuesday to the inspector general, asking that he investigate Barr’s handling of the Mueller report.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/story/2019/05/03/kamala-harris-barr-trump-1301502

Former White House chief of staff John Kelly has joined the board of directors for a company that operates shelters for undocumented migrant children.

Kelly was a top aide to President Donald Trump when he enacted his “zero-tolerance” policy at the border which forced the separation of some 2,700 children from their families in a matter of weeks and sent them to privately run shelters across the U.S.

The Trump administration has since abandoned forced family separations and reunited almost all of those families under a court order. But the government says some 12,650 children remain in shelters as of this week – mostly older children and teens who arrived at the border alone and are waiting to be placed with sponsors.

Caliburn International, the parent company of Comprehensive Health Services – which oversees one of the largest shelters for migrant children – announced Friday that Kelly would join the board with several other retired military brass. CBS News first reported the appointment.

Bloomberg via Getty Images, FILE
John Kelly, White House chief of staff, listens as President Donald Trump, not pictured, speaks at the White House in Washington, April 9, 2018

“With four decades of military and humanitarian leadership, in-depth understanding of international affairs and knowledge of current economic drivers around the world, General Kelly is a strong strategic addition to our team,” according to a statement by James Van Duse, CEO of Caliburn International.

Comprehensive Health Services operates the Homestead “temporary influx facility” in Florida, which currently cares for 2,200 minors. The company also has three other facilities in Texas.

Trump’s critics, including some Democrats in Congress, have called to close down Homestead and other shelters and allow children to be placed with sponsors immediately. The federal government has countered that some time is needed to ensure kids aren’t being placed in dangerous situations.

Andres Leighton/AP, FILE
An agent with the Department of Homeland Security closes the exterior gate of the holding facility for immigrant children in Tornillo, Texas, near the Mexican border, June 12, 2018.

“Our board remains acutely focused on advising on the safety and welfare of unaccompanied minors who have been entrusted to our care and custody by the Department of Health and Human Services to address a very urgent need in caring for and helping to find appropriate sponsors for these unaccompanied minors,” Van Duse said in his statement.

U.S. border officials have insisted that it no longer separates families at the border except in rare circumstances, such as when there is evidence of a serious crime. They say the large number of minors is part of a broader influx of migrants arriving at the border from Central America seeking asylum.

Source Article from https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/white-house-chief-staff-joins-unaccompanied-migrant-children/story?id=62811977

Vice President Mike Pence was candid in what he thought about Rep. Ilhan Omar’s, D-Minn., recent comments on the escalating situation in Venezuela, during his interview with Fox News that aired on Friday.

Omar blamed the violence and deteriorating living conditions on the United States “bullying” Venezuela. Pence responded to a clip of her remarks that was posted on Twitter.

During the Fox News interview, Pence was asked why he spoke out against Omar.

“Well, because the congresswoman doesn’t know what she is talking about,” Pence said. “Nicolás Maduro is a socialist dictator who has taken what was once one of the most prosperous nations in this hemisphere and brought it literally to a level of deprivation and oppression and poverty that we have never seen. Nine out of 10 people in Venezuela live in poverty. Three million people have fled Venezuela. That’s not a result of U.S. policies, that’s a result of the dictatorship and socialism that has been imposed on the people of Venezuela by Nicolás Maduro.”

Pence revealed President Trump’s administration is in regular contact with the recognized president of Venezuela, Juan Guaidó. On Monday, Guaidó called for the people of Venezuela to rise up and take the country back from Maduro’s regime. Many people have been injured as forces loyal to Maduro have fought back.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/pence-hits-back-at-ilhan-omars-venezuela-comments-she-doesnt-know-what-shes-talking-about

A statue of explorers Lewis and Clark is surrounded by floodwaters along the St. Louis riverfront on Thursday.

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A statue of explorers Lewis and Clark is surrounded by floodwaters along the St. Louis riverfront on Thursday.

Jim Salter/AP

Update3d at 9:08 p.m. ET

The Mississippi River has been at major flood stage for 41 days and counting, and this week a temporary wall failed, sending water rushing into several blocks of downtown Davenport, Iowa.

In that same area — the Quad Cities area of Iowa and Illinois — the river crested at a new record height. The National Weather Service says a new record appears to have been set at Rock Island, Ill.

The previous area record was set during the Great Flood of 1993 — and as NPR’s Rebecca Hersher has reported, that flood caused some $15 billion in damage.

Davenport Mayor Frank Klipsch says the city had placed temporary barriers to protect against rising water, and a small section of those barriers eventually was breached on Tuesday after holding for weeks.

“We evacuated about 30 to 40 residents in that area who lived in some condo areas there,” he tells NPR’s Here & Now. “We deal with [flooding] every year, but this was an unexpected breach and a lot of water got into that area.”

The upper Mississippi was inundated with massive amounts of rain earlier this week, exacerbating the already high river level. “The state of Iowa has received more precipitation in the last 12 months than any recorded period in 124 years of data,” Bob Gallagher, the mayor of the upriver town of Bettendorf, told reporters Friday. “When you get as much rain as we have this year there’s just no way to avoid this situation.”

Some Davenport businesses are having a hard time, even if they aren’t flooded, reports Benjamin Payne of member station WVIK. “It’s slowed things down. The detours have made it more difficult to get downtown,” Tiphanie Cannon, who has kept her bakery open, tells Payne. “So I’ve had customers call me and say, ‘We have trucks; we have sandbags. Tell me what you need.’ “

According to WVIK, residents and businesses in the flooded area had received warnings about the possibility that the temporary wall could fail, “but still had little time, only about one hour, to protect their buildings and evacuate.”

The local minor league team’s stadium is surrounded by water, Payne adds, and the team is now referring to it as “baseball island.”

Meanwhile, communities downriver are bracing for the high waters to arrive, and farming communities along the Mississippi are at risk.

John Roach, the city administrator of La Grange, Mo., tells reporters that the town is already experiencing its third-highest level of historic flooding.

“The post office has moved out; the Head Start day care has moved out; our mechanic’s garage — they’ve moved out,” Roach says. “We’ve got water up and down Main Street, the whole length of town. It’s impacting just about every aspect that you can imagine. … We’re in pretty bad shape.”

In March, the National Weather Service predicted that the potential for flooding this spring was “above to well above normal,” owing to a large snowpack high in the Mississippi River’s basin and saturated soil.

“Snowmelt alone will cause rivers to rise near or above flood stage,” NWS said. Lower-than-usual temperatures in January and February, and higher snowfall, contributed to the large snowpack.

And as NPR’s Hersher reported, the intense rain that exacerbated this flooding has a link to climate change. “Such intense rain has gotten more frequent as the climate changes, in part because warmer air can hold more moisture,” she said. “That means Midwestern communities can expect more years like this one.”

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2019/05/03/720043317/the-mississippi-river-has-been-flooding-for-41-days-now

Late-night host Jimmy Kimmel mocked House Democrats for using chicken to taunt Attorney General William Barr, hinting that President Trump will win again with these kinds of “sick burns.”

Barr was a no-show for his House Judiciary Committee appearance after he and Democratic lawmakers couldn’t agree on the terms of the hearing. Barr’s decision prompted Rep. Steve Cohen, D-Tenn., to bring a bucket of Kentucky Fried Chicken and a toy chicken to the session and branded the attorney general as “Chicken Barr.”

The ABC funnyman wasn’t entirely impressed.

“Wow, what a sick burn that is,” Kimmel sarcastically said to his audience. “Trump’s gonna win again with stuff like that, isn’t he?”

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Kimmel wasn’t the only late-night comedian to poke fun at the chicken-filled Congress. “Daily Show” host Trevor Noah insisted that the “stunt” wasn’t going to bring back Barr but perhaps someone else.

“It will get Donald Trump to come and see Congress,” Noah said. “He saw that KFC bucket and was like, ‘fuel up Air Force One. We’re going to Congress.'”

“Late Night” host Seth Meyers mocked Cohen for his overly obvious message that Barr was a “chicken.”

“Dude, if you want KFC, just order KFC. It’s fine,” Meyers told the Democratic congressman. “You don’t need to tie it into the hearing.”

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/entertainment/kimmel-knocks-dems-for-mocking-barr-with-chicken-trumps-gonna-win-again

David Niven, a professor of political science at the University of Cincinnati holds a map demonstrating a gerrymandered Ohio district.

John Minchillo/AP


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John Minchillo/AP

David Niven, a professor of political science at the University of Cincinnati holds a map demonstrating a gerrymandered Ohio district.

John Minchillo/AP

A federal court has ruled that Ohio’s congressional map is an “unconstitutional partisan gerrymander” and must be redrawn by the 2020 election.

In their ruling Friday, a three-judge panel from the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Ohio argue that the map was intentionally drawn “to disadvantage Democratic voters and entrench Republican representatives in power.” The court argues the map violates voters’ constitutional right to choose their representatives and exceeds the state’s powers under Article I of the Constitution.

“Accordingly, we declare Ohio’s 2012 map an unconstitutional partisan gerrymander, enjoin its use in the 2020 election, and order the enactment of a constitutionally viable replacement,” the judges wrote in their decision.

The decision is likely to be appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court, which is currently deliberating challenges to congressional maps from Maryland and North Carolina.

The League of Women Voters, ACLU and other voting rights groups sued Ohio last year, saying Republicans redrew the state’s congressional map in 2011 with intention of maintaining their three-to-one advantage. Since the map came into effect in 2012, Ohio’s congressional delegation has been locked in at 12 Republicans and four Democrats.

The judges agree with voting rights groups in their argument that Ohio’s districts were “intended to burden Plaintiffs’ constitutional rights, had that effect, and the effect is not explained by other legitimate justifications.”

Ohio’s current map was drawn in 2011 by Republican state lawmakers, with input from party consultants in a Columbus hotel room. Democrats argue they were shut out of the process completely.

“These national Republicans generated some of the key strategic ideas for the map, maximizing its likely pro-Republican performance, and had the authority to approve changes to the map before their Ohio counterparts implemented them,” the judge write. “Throughout the process, the Ohio and national map drawers made decisions based on their likely partisan effects.”

The judges also ruled that Ohio’s map has proven to advantage Republicans in every election. The decision says experts “demonstrated that levels of voter support for Democrats can and have changed, but the map’s partisan output remains stubbornly undisturbed.”

A ballot issue overwhelmingly passed in May 2018 to place new requirements on Ohio’s map-drawing process, but the new map wouldn’t be created until after the 2020 Census. No congressional election would be affected until 2022.

Under the amendment, a congressional map that lasts 10 years must win 50 percent support from the state’s minority party. If it fails to do so, the map would be drawn instead by a bipartisan commission. If that map doesn’t get enough support, a 10-year map could then pass with just one-third of the minority party’s support, or a four-year map could be passed without minority support but with stricter rules.

The ruling against Ohio comes just over one week after a federal court in Michigan struck down that map as unconstitutional. The judges said Republicans drew the map to unfairly disadvantage Democrats, and the state must redraw its district lines by August 1.

You can view the complete ruling below or at this link.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2019/05/03/720047669/federal-court-throws-out-ohios-congressional-map

When an American president speaks with President Vladimir Putin of Russia on major international issues of disagreement, it should be a forthright discussion. Or some variation on that theme of diplomatic disagreement.

The White House should not reference, as it did on Friday, a “very positive” call. After all, the White House says the two leaders discussed North Korea, Ukraine, Venezuela, nuclear arms control, and the Mueller report. And Putin’s interests are very much in conflict with our own on each of those issues.

On North Korea, Putin is undercutting Trump’s effort to persuade Kim Jong Un to abandon his nuclear and long-range ballistic missile programs. Putin sees North Korea as an opportunity to destabilize U.S. security, and Russia’s pathway towards a South Korean port network. The Russian leader has little concern over Kim’s retention of nuclear weapons. Indeed, as those weapons threaten America, Putin’s government finds it funny.

On Ukraine, Putin wants to sever Crimea and two other southeastern provinces from the Ukrainian government. Pursuing that objective, Putin mixes a combination of irregular warfare, temporary cease fires (as in Syria), and intelligence action to control the highways between Mariupol, Donetsk, and Luhansk. Trump has actively countered these efforts, but it is impossible that Putin had anything good to say about the issue on Friday, because Putin is not quitting in Ukraine.

On Venezuela, Putin has taken advantage of Trump’s hesitation to consolidate Nicolás Maduro’s illegitimate regime. This has damaged U.S. foreign policy credibility in Latin America.

On nuclear weapons, Putin is developing next-generation weapons that boost Russia’s first strike capability. While Putin might be inclined to reduce his nuclear warhead stockpile, his recent destruction of the INF treaty and his forward deployment of nuclear strike forces indicate his desire to degrade U.S. security. Trump should thus have had only one message for Putin on Friday: if you keep boosting your nuclear strike efforts, America will keep ensuring we can defeat you in a nuclear war.

On the Mueller report, White House press secretary Sarah Sanders noted that Trump and Putin welcomed the end of that investigation. That’s understandable from Trump’s point of view. Still, the U.S. president should not be having a pleasant conversation with Putin over this issue. The Russian leader is directly responsible for targeting the 2016 elections and the 2018 elections. Either in favor of, or against Trump, Putin will conduct that same aggression in 2020 unless deterred.

This is not to say that Trump and Putin shouldn’t speak or even be civil. But no American president should regard a phone call with Putin as “very positive” when it goes over issues where there is an irreconcilable difference in views. To do so is to delude oneself that Putin has an interest in shared compromise. On the matters of consequence, he does not. Putin is a KGB officer who never truly left the KGB. He lives to weaken America.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/how-on-earth-could-trump-have-just-had-a-positive-conversation-with-putin

President Donald Trump said he didn’t want the former White House counsel Don McGahn to testify before Congress, telling Fox News’ Catherine Herridge, “It’s done.”

Congress “shouldn’t be looking anymore,” Trump said in an interview on Thursday night.

“Nobody has ever done what I’ve done,” he said. “I’ve given total transparency. It’s never happened before like this. They shouldn’t be looking anymore. This is all. It’s done.”

McGahn, who spent 30 hours testifying before the special counsel Robert Mueller’s team, featured largely in Mueller’s findings on whether the president obstructed justice — which made up one of two volumes in Mueller’s full report on the Russia investigation.

The report says McGahn said that Trump had asked him to fire Mueller and that later, after news reports that Trump had made that request, the president asked McGahn to write a memo denying it “for our records.” McGahn did not fire Mueller and threatened to resign. He also refused to write the memo.

In his report, Mueller did not make a determination on whether to charge Trump with obstructing justice.

“If we had confidence after a thorough investigation of the facts that the President clearly did not commit obstruction of justice, we would so state,” the report says. “Based on the facts and the applicable legal standards, we are unable to reach that judgment.”

It continued: “Accordingly, while this report does not conclude that the President committed a crime, it also does not exonerate him.”

Though Mueller’s investigation has ended, congressional inquiries have not. Some have argued that Mueller was leaving the obstruction-of-justice question up to Congress to sort out and not the Department of Justice, which declared shortly after the report was released in March that it showed that the president had not committed a crime.

Congress wants key players to testify, including McGahn and Mueller. Last week, the chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, Rep. Jerry Nadler, issued a subpoena for McGahn.

Read more: Trump raged at former White House counsel Don McGahn for taking notes about their conversations

“Mr. McGahn is a critical witness to many of the alleged instances of obstruction of justice and other misconduct described in the Mueller report,” Nadler said in a statement. “His testimony will help shed further light on the President’s attacks on the rule of law, and his attempts to cover up those actions by lying to the American people and requesting others do the same.”

After testifying before the Senate Judiciary Committee on Wednesday, Attorney General William Barr refused an invitation to testify before the House Judiciary Committee on Thursday, and he did not produce an unredacted copy of the report for Congress.

Though senior Democratic lawmakers have not put impeachment on the table, lawmakers are investigating the Trump Organization’s finances, as well as accusations of obstruction of justice, reports of improper issuance of security clearances, and more.

The Trump administration, however, does not seem likely to cooperate.

“We’re fighting all the subpoenas — these aren’t, like, impartial people,” Trump said last week. “The Democrats are trying to win 2020. They’re not going to win with the people that I see. And they’re not going to win against me.”

Source Article from https://www.businessinsider.com/trump-fox-news-don-mcgahn-should-not-testify-2019-5

An enormous tropical cyclone made landfall in eastern India Friday near the coastal city of Puri, impacting an area that’s home to tens of millions of people.

It’s believed the storm, called Cyclone Fani (pronounced “Foni”), struck the coast with winds in excess of 115 miles per hour (equivalent to a Category 3 hurricane). That makes it the strongest storm to hit India in 20 years.

The storm has since weakened but will remain a dangerous system as it moves up India’s east coast toward Bangladesh, where 2.1 million people are expected to be evacuated, according to CNN. Flash flooding and potentially deadly landslides may occur. So far, three deaths have been reported due to the storm. Overall, the United Nations warns that 28 million people live in the path of the storm.

As New Delhi Television notes:

A teenager was killed when a tree came crashing down on him in Puri. Flying debris from a concrete structure hit a woman in Nayagarh district. In Kendrapara, a 65-year-old woman died after suspected heart attack at a cyclone shelter.


Fani strengthened over ideal conditions for cyclone formation.
NASA Earth Observatory

Tropical cyclones are the exact same weather phenomenon as hurricanes. And the winds are just one of the risks they bring.

This monster storm also brought with it a storm surge of 13 feet in some areas, according to the Weather Channel. Storm surge is a literal wall of water a cyclone pushes onshore, and it tends to be the deadliest feature of a cyclone. It can also be very destructive (as we saw with Hurricane Sandy in 2012).

In preparation for Cyclone Fani, more than a million people were evacuated in coastal areas in the Indian state Odisha, where the storm hit. Some 4,000 shelters were set up in the region. Train stations and airports were closed.

The evacuations were justified. In 1999, a similar sized storm hit Odisha and killed nearly 10,000 people.


The Indian state Odisha is in red.
Wikimedia Commons

Source Article from https://www.vox.com/energy-and-environment/2019/5/3/18528079/cyclone-fani-what-we-know-category-4