Texas Gov. Greg Abbott signed a bill into law that allows kids to run lemonade stands without fear of being shut down.

The law goes into effect in September and prohibits cities and neighborhood associations from implementing rules that block or regulate children trying to sell nonalcoholic drinks such as lemonade on private property, according to the Texas Tribune.

Republican state Rep. Matt Krause introduced the bill after police shut down a lemonade stand that was run by two daughters trying to raise money for a Father’s Day gift in 2015. The bill was unanimously passed in both chambers and Abbott signed the bill on Monday.

“Here’s a common sense law,” Abbott said as he signed the bill.

Abbott has signed multiple bills in recent days, such as one protecting free speech on college campuses and another allowing beer and wine to be delivered to a person’s residence.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/texas-gov-abbott-signs-law-allowing-kids-to-run-lemonade-stands


Border watchers say they have no idea how Mexico will handle the joint demands. | Sarah Silbiger/Bloomberg via Getty Images

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Neither the U.S. nor Mexico has offered a detailed plan for how the counter-migration strategy will be implemented.

06/11/2019 05:54 PM EDT

Updated 06/11/2019 08:35 PM EDT


President Donald Trump’s deal with Mexico faces such huge logistical hurdles that neither country may be able to carry out its promises.

One key part of the deal is Mexico’s agreement to deploy its newly formed national guard to intercept and possibly deport migrants who cross its southern border. But Mexico may not have that force trained and ready to deal with a population of asylum seekers.

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The deal will also expand the Trump administration’s policy of keeping migrants waiting in Mexico while their asylum applications are processed in the U.S. But Mexico is already struggling to handle more than 11,000 migrants who the U.S. has dumped back into that country since Trump rolled out the program in January.

Neither the U.S. nor Mexico has offered a detailed plan for how the counter-migration strategy will be implemented, even as both countries face a tight timeline to produce results. Officials from the two countries are expected to meet in 45 days to evaluate the effect on migrant flows, and the U.S. will monitor results daily.

But border watchers say they have no idea how Mexico will handle the joint demands, particularly as the massive case backloads in U.S. immigration courts could keep migrants waiting south of the U.S. border for months or even years.

“To try to imagine how they’re going to double or even triple those numbers over the next few months is kind of mind boggling,” said Chris Wilson, deputy director of the Wilson Center’s Mexico Institute. “I just literally don’t know where all those people are going to go.”

Here’s a closer look at obstacles to implementing the agreement:

1. Mexico’s capacity to absorb migrants

The most immediate pressure point will be on Mexican border communities. As part of the deal reached Friday, the U.S. vowed unilaterally to expand its “remain in Mexico” program — formally known as the Migrant Protection Protocols — from targeted areas to the entire southwest border.

More than 11,000 migrants have been forced to wait in Mexico under the program since its launch in January, according to the Mexican government. But that’s just with it operating in Border Patrol’s San Diego and El Centro sectors in California, and its El Paso sector in Texas and New Mexico.

That number is poised to skyrocket in the coming weeks, even as U.S. immigration courts already face a massive case backlog that has worsened in recent years.

The Hope Border Institute, a pro-migrant group operating around El Paso, Texas, and across the border in Ciudad Juárez, has encountered migrants sent to Juárez with U.S. court hearings scheduled for April 2020 — nearly one year ahead.

“How do you house and feed and potentially gainfully employ those people if they’ve got a very long time to wait?” said Roberta Jacobson, a former U.S. ambassador to Mexico who resigned in May 2018. “I have no idea to what extent Mexican border cities and crossings are ready for that, although I suspect they’re not.”

Several Mexican officials — including the governors of Sonora and Chihuahua — have said they don’t have the resources to care for migrants.

2. Scaling up “remain in Mexico”

The Trump administration, too, will need to scramble to expand “remain in Mexico.”

The initiative currently operates out of border sectors and ports with courts and temporary holding facilities nearby. At more remote border outposts, the agency may need to procure space for courts and erect tents to house migrants. The U.S. also could face difficulties communicating with migrants forced to stay in Mexico during asylum proceedings.

Resolving those issues won’t be “an overnight kind of thing,” according to a Homeland Security Department official familiar with the program. “The system wasn’t meant to work this way.”

At the same time, Justice Department attorneys will be tasked with defending the program in court. In May the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit allowed federal immigration officials to continue returning migrants pending its ruling on a challenge brought by the American Civil Liberties Union.

3. Mexico’s nascent National Guard

The second core component of the deal — Mexico’s deployment of its national guard to stem migration — could easily backfire.

It was only in February that Mexico’s Congress approved the creation of a national guard, and the legal framework to permit its operation was finalized just last month.

The initial force — which is set to reach 83,000 members by the end of the year — will consist of Mexican federal and military police officers, but it isn’t clear they will be trained adequately to deal with migrant families.

“Historically, we’ve seen in Mexico that the priority has been to detain and deport people, over ensuring that they are informed of their rights, including the right to seek protection,” said Maureen Meyer, director of the Mexico program at the Washington Office on Latin America.

The Mexican government pledged to deploy 6,000 guard members to its southern border and throughout the country.

Getting the numbers shouldn’t be a problem, since Mexico can draw on the Federal Police and Army and Navy police units. The greater difficulty will be whether the guard members will have the skills necessary to deal with migrant children, and to follow proper asylum procedures.

4. A sketchy aid commitment to Central America

The Mexican government considers funding for Central American development a major priority, but the agreement struck Friday doesn’t commit any new funds to the effort.

The Trump administration in March said it would slash hundreds of millions in aid to El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras over the inability of those countries’ governments to halt the outward flow of migrants. The agreement doesn’t restore those funds, either.

A joint statement issued by the U.S. and Mexico Friday spoke of addressing the root causes of migration only in general terms — with no funding commitments. The document said the two countries were devoted to “promoting development and economic growth in southern Mexico and the success of promoting prosperity, good governance and security in Central America.”

Speaking to reporters Monday, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said the U.S. didn’t agree to provide any aid money as part of the deal.

5. A complicated asylum deal

Mexico’s Foreign Secretary Marcelo Ebrard said Monday that if the current set of measures fails to stem the northward flow of migrants within 45 days, the Mexican government will need to begin discussions over a regional asylum pact.

He said discussions would involve Guatemala, Panama and Brazil, three nations that are transit points or destinations for migrants.

Ebrard reiterated that aspect of the deal during a news conference Tuesday in Mexico City. Notably, he also said the U.S. — following a consultation with Mexican officials — would decide whether Mexico’s counter-migration efforts had been sufficient.

The task of finalizing a regional asylum agreement could be enormously complicated and require the approval of legislative bodies in multiple countries, including Mexico.

But a slow-moving process could benefit the Mexican government in its negotiations with Trump, who faces reelection next year.

“It diversifies and spreads the risk, and certainly slows the calendar,” said Jacobson, the former ambassador, “which is what they want to do.”

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/story/2019/06/11/trump-mexico-immigration-deal-1522776

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Source Article from https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2019-06-11/trump-says-he-s-holding-up-trade-deal-with-china-ahead-of-g20

Fox News anchor Shep Smith told viewers Tuesday that “everyone in America” should read special counsel Robert MuellerRobert (Bob) Swan MuellerSchiff says Intel panel will hold ‘series’ of hearings on Mueller report Schiff says Intel panel will hold ‘series’ of hearings on Mueller report Key House panel faces pivotal week on Trump MORE’s report in full.

Speaking on his show Tuesday afternoon, Smith specially pointed out that Mueller’s report did not exonerate President TrumpDonald John TrumpTop Armed Services Republican plots push for 0B defense budget Amash exits House Freedom Caucus in wake of Trump impeachment stance Amash exits House Freedom Caucus in wake of Trump impeachment stance MORE.

“Remember, in his 400-plus page report that everyone in America should read, everyone, Robert Mueller laid out 10 instances of apparent obstruction of justice, criminal obstruction of justice, potentially, by President Trump,” Smith said.

“The special counsel did not exonerate the president,” he added.

Mueller last month in his first public statement since the completion of his report said if his office “had confidence that the president clearly did not commit a crime we would have said so.”

The special counsel pointed to current Department of Justice guidance that says a sitting president cannot be indicted, but noted in his report that Congress has the authority to conduct obstruction investigations.

Smith’s comments on the report Tuesday came as he was discussing the showdown between the Justice Department and House Democrats as the chamber voted along party lines to hold former White House counsel Don McGahn and Attorney General William BarrWilliam Pelham BarrAmash exits House Freedom Caucus in wake of Trump impeachment stance Tensions between Democrats, Justice cool for a day Tensions between Democrats, Justice cool for a day MORE in “civil contempt” for not complying with congressional subpoenas.

Source Article from https://thehill.com/homenews/media/448051-fox-news-shep-smith-tells-viewers-everyone-in-america-should-read-mueller

Jon Stewart called on lawmakers to back up their words with actions on the 9/11 victims’ compensation fund and help American heroes who are still suffering today.

Stewart made the comments in an interview Tuesday on “Shepard Smith Reporting,” telling host Shepard Smith 9/11 first responders and victims should be viewed as a priority beyond tweets and well-wishes.

“That drove me nuts,” the comedian said after being asked by Smith about the empty seats he saw on the Hill. “They kept saying it’s a ‘sub-subcommittee.’ There’s still people on the sub-subcommittee that aren’t here.

“Either 9/11 was a priority or it wasn’t. But, your deeds have to at some point match your tweets and your words. Today it didn’t.

“No amount of money is going to end the suffering and the grieving that these men and women have to endure. But they can stop making it worse. They can stop adding uncertainty and stress and financial hardship to the lives of these folks.”

JON STEWART LASHES OUT AT CONGRESS OVER 9/11 VICTIMS FUND

The sparse attendance by lawmakers was “an embarrassment to the country and a stain on the institution” of Congress, Stewart said during the hearing, adding the “disrespect” shown to first responders now suffering from respiratory ailments and other illnesses, “is utterly unacceptable.”

Lawmakers from both parties said they support the bill and were monitoring the hearing amid other congressional business.

Ranking member Rep. Mike Johnson, R-La., predicted the bill will pass with overwhelming support and said lawmakers meant no disrespect as they moved in and out of the subcommittee hearing, a common occurrence on Capitol Hill.

Stewart was unconvinced. Pointing to rows of uniformed firefighters and police officers behind him, he said the hearing “should be flipped,” so first responders were on the dais, with members of Congress “down here” in witness chairs answering their questions.

“Why is this so damn hard and takes so damn long?” he asked Johnson and the other lawmakers.

The Justice Department said in February the victims’ compensation fund is being depleted and benefit payments are being cut by up to 70 percent.

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In his interview with Smith, the former “Daily Show” host said Congress can “stop making it worse” by removing future uncertainty and properly funding the victims’ compensation fund.

“I would say it’s the so-called fiscal hawks,” Stewart responded when asked who he believed is holding up proper funding.

“It’s irresponsible, it’s disingenuous.”

A spokesman for the subcommittee told Fox News all but two of its members attended today’s hearing, with Reps Eric Swalwell, D-Calif., and Guy Reschenthaler, R-Pa., those who were missing. The spokesman added that other empty seats seen could have been on account of members coming and going during the course of a hearing.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/jon-stewart-blasts-congress-over-9-11-fund-hearing-drove-me-nuts-there-were-empty-seats

Former Obama advisor David Axelrod expressed his concerns that former Vice President Joe Biden is “playing into the the caricature” made by President Trump that has questioned the Democratic frontrunner’s fitness to lead.

Both Trump and Biden exchanged harsh attacks between one another on Tuesday as they both made campaign stops in Iowa, with the president telling reporters outside the White House that the former VP is “weak mentally.”

Appearing on CNN, Axelrod cautioned that Biden’s light campaign schedule, when compared to those of other competitors in the Democratic field, left him open to such criticisms.

“The thing that I think is important for Biden is to run an energetic campaign that dispels any of these caricatures,” Axelrod told CNN anchor Anderson Cooper. “He hasn’t had a very heavy campaign schedule. He has sort of played into the caricature and I think he is going to have to come forward… with ideas and he going to have to campaign energetically.”

BIDEN TO SLAM TRUMP AS ‘EXISTENTIAL THREAT’ DURING DUELING IOWA STOPS

Axelrod, who is now a CNN host and political analyst, explained that ahead of the Iowa Caucus, people “expect to see you” and “want to interact with you,” stressing that candidates “have to be there.”

“You can’t do drop-bys and use them as a backdrop to attack the president,” Axelrod added. “You got to do much more than that so I think that’s very important.”

The comments came after Biden returned fire at Trump Tuesday.

In what could be a preview of next year’s general election campaign for the White House, Biden is set to blast the Republican president for threatening tariffs on global trading partners. Warning of the impact it’s had on American farmers and manufacturers, Biden plans to call Trump an “existential threat” to the nation.

AS TRUMP LIKENS BIDEN TO ‘CROOKED HILLARY,’ BIDEN SAYS TRUMP ERA ‘HAS GOT TO END’

“You know, Donald Trump and I are both in Iowa today. It wasn’t planned that way, but I hope Trump’s presence here will be a clarifying event,” Biden will say during an evening speech in Davenport, according to prepared remarks.

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The former vice president’s remarks, released early Tuesday morning by his campaign, contain more than 40 mentions of Trump by name, including some of Biden’s most blistering attacks to date on the president.

Fox News’ Paul Steinhauser contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/entertainment/david-axelrod-weak-mentally-caricature-trump

June 11 at 5:35 PM

President Trump has threatened to take legal action if Democrats try to impeach him, musing that he’ll “sue.” He has peppered confidants and advisers with questions about how an impeachment inquiry might unfold. And he has coined his own cheeky term — “the I-word” — to refer to the legal and political morass that threatens to overshadow his presidency as he heads into his 2020 reelection campaign.

As Democrats struggle with how to handle calls from their liberal flank to impeach the president, Trump himself is eager to avoid such proceedings — while also fixated on his belief that Democrats can’t impeach him because he has done nothing wrong, according to interviews with 15 White House aides, outside advisers, Republican lawmakers and friends, many of whom spoke on the condition of anonymity to share candid conversations.

The president is intrigued by the notion of impeachment but wary of its practical dangers, one outside adviser said. Trump remembers how Republican impeachment proceedings in the late 1990s against President Bill Clinton seemed to boost Clinton’s approval ratings, and Trump is at his best when battling a perceived foe, several advisers added.

Yet he also views impeachment in deeply personal terms. He is less concerned about the potential historical stain on his legacy — Clinton and Andrew Johnson are the only presidents to have been impeached — and more about what he sees as yet another Democratic attack on the legitimacy of his presidency, according to an outside adviser and a White House aide.

The focus on impeachment comes as Democrats on Tuesday escalated their fight with Trump over congressional oversight, voting to go to court in an attempt to force Attorney General William P. Barr and former White House counsel Donald McGahn to comply with subpoenas. Both are being sought for testimony related to special counsel Robert S. Mueller III’s report, which many Democrats believe provides a road map for how to proceed in impeaching Trump for as many as 10 potential instances of obstruction of justice.

Those close to Trump are offering him advice on impeachment that one outside adviser close to the president described as “truly binary.” 

On one side are those loyalists, mainly outside the White House, who are telling the president that impeachment could be a political blessing for him and his party — that one road to reelection runs through impeachment. 

On the other is a larger contingent warning that impeachment, even under the rosiest scenarios, would be a grueling gantlet that would leave him politically bruised, with an asterisk forever marring his presidency. 

Many Trump allies also agree that while impeachment might ultimately prove beneficial for the president — allowing him to cast Democrats as overzealous sore losers — the actual process would plunge the White House and the nation into chaos. There is no broad strategy within the White House to encourage Democrats to pursue articles of impeachment against Trump, two senior administration officials said.

“Even though it would be politically advantageous to the president and likely guarantee his reelection, it’s terrible for the country, and I’d be saying the same thing even if the shoe was on the other foot and Republicans were talking about impeaching a Democratic president,” said Jason Miller, a senior adviser to Trump’s 2016 campaign. 

The topic is so sensitive that Trump often refers to impeachment as “the I-word,” though one senior White House official said he is being playful. Aides have heard him use the phrase privately in meetings, and he has also used it publicly. 

Last month, Trump scrapped a planned infrastructure meeting with Democrats at the last minute after learning that House Democrats had recently met to discuss impeachment — calling an impromptu news conference in the Rose Garden to blast them for entertaining “the big ‘I-word,’ ” as he put it.

“All of a sudden, I hear last night, they’re going to have a meeting, right before this meeting, to talk about the ‘I-word,’ ” Trump said. “The ‘I-word.’ Can you imagine?”

Just over a week later, speaking to reporters on the White House South Lawn, Trump was similarly outraged by the mere mention of impeachment. “To me, it’s a dirty word — the word ‘impeach,’ ” he said. “It’s a dirty, filthy, disgusting word.” 

Trump has also griped privately that if Democrats tried to impeach him, he would simply sue — a sentiment he has also occasionally expressed publicly. 

In April, Trump wrote on Twitter, “I DID NOTHING WRONG” and warned, “If the partisan Dems ever tried to Impeach, I would first head to the U.S. Supreme Court.”

And in late May, asked by a reporter whether he thought the Democrats were going to move forward with impeachment, Trump also invoked the legal system. “I don’t see how they can,” the president said. “Because they’re possibly allowed, although I can’t imagine the courts allowing it.”

Trump’s assertions that he would sue to prevent impeachment have prompted some criticism in the legal community, with Laurence Tribe, a constitutional law professor at Harvard who has called for Trump’s impeachment, describing the idea as “idiocy” in a tweet. “Not even a SCOTUS filled with Trump appointees would get in the way of the House or Senate,” Tribe wrote.

But Alan Dershowitz, an emeritus professor at Harvard Law School and a frequent Trump ally, says the Supreme Court could intervene to avoid a constitutional crisis if it thought Congress had acted unconstitutionally in impeaching the president. 

The process starts in the House, which can impeach a president with a simple majority vote. The president can be removed from office, however, only if the Senate then votes by a two-thirds majority to convict. 

Dershowitz said in an interview that the status quo — Democrats pushing an impeachment message without actually moving ahead with proceedings — could be optimal for the president. 

“The best-case scenario for the president both politically and legally is for the Democrats to continue impeachment talk, for 60 or 70 Democratic congressmen to demand impeachment and for, in the end, there to be no impeachment by the House,” Dershowitz said. “In that way, he gets the political benefit without the stigma. It’s a win-win.”

Some who argue the benefits of impeachment still ultimately oppose it. Senior policy adviser Stephen Miller, for instance, has expressed his belief to the president that Democrats would be viewed as leftist extremists if they proceeded down that path and would be punished by voters, a senior White House official said. 

Trump campaign manager Brad Parscale has publicly said that impeachment talk has not hurt the president’s polling numbers, an assessment that he has also conveyed to Trump in private briefings, one person familiar with their conversations said.

“The more they beat that drum for impeachment, the more this emboldens our campaign,” Parscale told CBS in a recent interview. 

According to recent polling, more than half of Americans do not support impeaching the president, and those sentiments are more pronounced among the Republicans and independents Trump will have to hold on to to win reelection. A recent CNN poll found that, overall, 54 percent of Americans opposed impeachment, including 59 percent of independents and 93 percent of Republicans. 

Rep. Mark Meadows (R-N.C.), chairman of the conservative House Freedom Caucus and a Trump ally, said that “any impeachment effort would probably cause a tremendous backlash among undecided voters.”

“Impeachment, I think, is widely viewed as being harmful to our democratic process — that’s on Capitol Hill and at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue,” Meadows said. “It’s widely shared that impeachment, regardless of an acquittal, is not something that would be good for America.” 

Nonetheless, questions of impeachment — both existential and shouted — continue to dog the president. On Monday, while greeting the champions of the Indianapolis 500 at the White House, Trump was asked again whether an impeachment inquiry might help his reelection prospects.

He acknowledged the theory (“I hear that, too”) before promptly dismissing the premise of the question (“You can’t impeach somebody when there has never been anything done wrong”).

Then, referring to President Richard M. Nixon, who resigned rather than face likely impeachment, Trump struck a defiant note. 

“He left. I don’t leave,” Trump said. “There’s a big difference. I don’t leave.” 

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/trump-doesnt-want-to-be-impeached–but-he-is-fascinated-by-the-i-word/2019/06/11/1a230480-8b95-11e9-b162-8f6f41ec3c04_story.html

Protestors with umbrellas gather near the Legislative Council in Hong Kong. Kin Cheung/AP

With thousands of well-organized young people taking to the streets, many with umbrellas and masks, there are echoes of the 2014 mass democracy protests that became known as the Umbrella Movement.

For 79 days parts of the city were brought to a standstill as protesters, mainly students, occupied key areas including Harcourt Road — the site of today’s protest.

Since it was used to shield protesters from the tear gas and pepper spray deployed by police on the first day of the 2014 protests, the umbrella has became a ubiquitous sight on the frontlines, and gave the movement its name.

The protest sites were also known for how organized they were, with volunteers handing out food, water, medical supplies, and translation services for media.

Similarities with those protests can be seen in today’s gathering, with the use of umbrellas, a supply camp being set up, and protesters reportedly directing foot traffic to help those trying to get to work.

Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/asia/live-news/hong-kong-protests-june-12-intl-hnk/index.html

Jon Stewart testifies during a House Judiciary subcommittee hearing on the reauthorization of the September 11th Victim Compensation Fund.

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Jon Stewart testifies during a House Judiciary subcommittee hearing on the reauthorization of the September 11th Victim Compensation Fund.

Zach Gibson/Getty Images

Updated at 3:11 p.m. EST

Comedian Jon Stewart slammed representatives on Tuesday at a House Judiciary subcommittee hearing on funding for the September 11th Victim Compensation Fund, saying it was “shameful” that more of them did not attend.

“As I sit here today, I can’t help but think what an incredible metaphor this room is for the entire process that getting health care and benefits for 9/11 first responders has come to,” Stewart said in his statement. “Behind me, a filled room of 9/11 first responders; and in front of me, a nearly empty Congress.”

Rep. Steve Cohen noted that the hearing was held before the Judiciary Subcommittee on the Constitution, Civil Rights, and Civil Liberties and not the full committee.

“All these empty chairs, that’s because it’s for the full committee. It’s not because of disrespect or lack of attention to you,” the Tennessee Democrat said.

The hearing came just hours before the full House was set to vote on a civil contempt resolution against Attorney General William Barr and former White House counsel Don McGahn.

Stewart spoke alongside Luis Alvarez, a retired detective and 9/11 responder from the New York Police Department who has cancer linked to the 9/11 attacks and the aftermath.

“Less than 24 hours from now, I will be serving my 69th round of chemotherapy,” Alvarez said. “I should not be here with you, but you made me come. You made me come because I will not stand by and watch as my friends with cancer from 9/11, like me, are valued less than anyone else.”

The fund has faced recent financial problems, including a spike in the number of claims ahead of its December 2020 expiration date.

In February, the fund’s administrator, Rupa Bhattacharyya, announced there was “insufficient funding” to “pay all current and projected claims at the same levels as under current policies and procedures” and said future claims would only be paid a fraction of their prior value.

Local, state and federal officials have rallied around the Never Forget the Heroes Act, which would provide funding for the victim fund through fiscal year 2090. The bill was introduced by Rep. Carolyn Maloney, D-N.Y., in October 2018, and reintroduced this year, but has since languished in the House.

When asked about the legislation, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-KY., sidestepped the issue, saying he would have to look at the bill.

Stewart, the former host of Comedy Central’s The Daily Show, lambasted lawmakers for not showing up to the hearing, calling it “a stain on this institution.”

“You should be ashamed of yourselves, for those that aren’t here,” he said. “But you won’t be, because accountability doesn’t appear to be something that occurs in this chamber.”

Later in the hearing, subcommittee Chairman Cohen defended lawmakers’ attendance.

“My subcommittee, every single member on my side, which is eight of us, have been here today,” Cohen said, adding that other committee members were present in other committee meetings or visiting with constituents.

Stewart has been a longtime advocate for Sept. 11 victims and first responders, frequently appearing on Capitol Hill to push lawmakers to increase funding to aid those who suffered illnesses following the attacks.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2019/06/11/731706492/jon-stewart-blasts-lawmakers-in-hearing-for-sept-11-victim-compensation

Image copyright
Reuters

Image caption

President Trump brandished a sheet of paper that had details of the deal written on it

US President Donald Trump has inadvertently revealed some details of his immigration deal with Mexico.

He refused to discuss the plans with reporters, saying they were “secret”.

But he said this while waving around a sheet of paper that had the specifics of the deal written on it – which was then photographed by news media.

It described a plan to designate Mexico a “safe third country”, among other plans that had already been revealed by Mexico’s foreign minister on Monday.

If Mexico were to be a safe third country, migrants’ asylum applications would be processed there rather than in the US.

Image copyright
Reuters

Image caption

Some of the details of the deal could be read on the sheet of paper

The document said Mexico had committed to immediately examining its laws in order to enable it to become a safe third country if need be.

It also contained references to a regional asylum plan, which would involve several Latin American countries processing migrants’ asylum claims in order to stave off US tariffs, and to “45 days”.

What has Mexico said about the deal?

Mr Ebrard said that Mexico had 45 days to show it was able to stem the flow of US-bound migrants by strengthening its southern border.

It is now deploying 6,000 National Guard personnel to the border with Guatemala.

“You go to the south and the first thing you ask yourself is, ‘Right, where’s the border?’ There’s nothing,” he said on Tuesday. “The idea is to make the south like the north as far as possible.”

Media captionA look at the steps Mexico is taking to deal with migrants

If this plan fails, the foreign minister said, Mexico has agreed to be designated a safe third country – something that has been demanded by the US before, but has long been rejected by Mexico.

Mr Ebrard earlier said the US had been insistent on this measure, and that they had wanted this to be implemented straight away.

But he said: “We told them – I think it was the most important achievement of the negotiations – ‘let’s set a time period to see if what Mexico is proposing will work, and if not, we’ll sit down and see what additional measures [are needed]’.”

“They wanted something else totally different to be signed. But that is what there is here. There is no other thing,” he said.

Image copyright
Reuters

Image caption

Migrants from Honduras attempting to cross the Rio Bravo river in order to request asylum in El Paso, Texas

If Mexico fails to curb migration in 45 days, other countries will be drawn into the matter.

Discussions would take place with Brazil, Panama and Guatemala – the countries currently used by migrants as transit points – to see if they could share the burden of processing asylum claims.

Mr Ebrard also said US negotiators had wanted Mexico to commit to “zero migrants” crossing its territory, but that was “mission impossible”.

Source Article from https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-48604023

President Donald Trump continued to insist Tuesday that there is a secret component of his migration deal with Mexico, even flashing a piece of paper to reporters that he claimed spelled out the undisclosed portion.

“In here is the agreement,” Trump said, pulling the paper from a coat pocket and repeatedly holding it up as he spoke to reporters. “Right here is the agreement, it’s very simple. In here is everything you want to talk about, it’s right here,” he said, without opening it up.

Leah Millis/Reuters
President Donald Trump holds up what he described as proof of a deal with Mexico on immigration and trade as he speaks to the news media prior to departing for travel to Iowa from the South Lawn of the White House, June 11, 2019.

“This is one page. This is one page of a very long and very good agreement for both Mexico and the United States,” Trump said.

“Without the tariffs, we would have had nothing,” the president said.

“Two weeks ago, I’ll tell you what we had: We had nothing. And the reason we had nothing is because Mexico felt that they didn’t have to give us anything. I don’t blame them. But this is actually ultimately going to be good for Mexico, too. And it’s good for the relationship of Mexico with us,” he continued.

Trump said he couldn’t show reporters what was on the paper. “I would love to do it, but you will freeze action it. You will stop it. You will analyze it, every single letter. You’ll see. But in here is the agreement.”

The president said that it’s his “option” as to whether the undisclosed agreement will go into effect.

“It’s not Mexico’s, but it will go into effect when Mexico tells me it’s okay to release,” Trump said, adding that first Mexico has to ratify whatever agreement they’ve made. “It goes into effect at my option.”

Washington Post photographer Jabin Botsford captured and tweeted a photo of the piece of paper, a portion of which can be read to say “the Government of Mexico will take all necessary steps under domestic law to bring the agreement into force with a view to ensuring that the agreement will enter into force within 45 days.”

Despite the president’s insistence that there is a secret deal, the Mexican government has denied that there are any undisclosed parts of the U.S.- Mexico deal.

“Outside of what I have just explained, there is no agreement,” Mexico’s Foreign Affairs Minister Marcelo Ebrard said on Monday.

Source Article from https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/trump-repeatedly-flashes-piece-paper-claims-part-secret/story?id=63639120

Despite earlier threats and a recommendation from the Judiciary Committee, Democrats stopped short of formally holding either Mr. Barr or Mr. McGahn in contempt of Congress for now, forgoing an accusation of a crime in favor of what they hope is continued leverage to force cooperation. The decision appears to be based, at least in part, on new signs of compromise from the Justice Department, which on Monday agreed after weeks of hostilities to begin sharing key evidence collected in Mr. Mueller’s obstruction of justice investigation.

[Read the House’s resolution.]

The committee had demanded that Mr. Barr and the Justice Department hand over the full text of the special counsel’s report and the evidence underlying it, and that Mr. McGahn testify in public and produce evidence that he had given Mr. Mueller.

Neither the Justice Department nor lawyers for Mr. McGahn immediately commented on the vote.

The House Democratic leaders called the vote a vital step in their methodical march to expose Mr. Trump’s behavior and pressure the Trump administration to cooperate with congressional oversight requests. They also clearly saw it as a means of holding off calls within their ranks to quickly move to impeach the president, arguing that it showed there are other ways of using their power to hold him accountable.

“The responsibility the speaker and I have is to try to move ahead in a measured, focused, effective way to garner the information that the American people need to make determinations, and for us to make determinations, and I think we’re doing that,” said Representative Steny H. Hoyer of Maryland, the House majority leader.

Speaker Nancy Pelosi, addressing lawmakers on the House floor shortly before the vote, framed the court authorizations as a step toward upholding the principle that Congress was “constitutionally obligated and legally entitled to access and review materials from the executive branch.”

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/06/11/us/politics/barr-mcgahn-subpoena.html

(CNN)Former late night host and 9/11 first responders advocate Jon Stewart choked up Tuesday while slamming Congress over health care for responders to the September 11 terrorist attacks.

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Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2019/06/11/politics/jon-stewart-9-11-crying/index.html

Joe Biden is a man with a plan in Iowa, and while it’s working for him at the moment, there could yet be a sting in the tail.

Fox News Senior Political Analyst Brit Hume offered up that assessment during an appearance on “America’s Newsroom” on Tuesday, saying the former Veep’s strong support might not last all the way into 2020.

“He’s ahead in the polls. He has held the most senior office of anybody in the field having been vice president,” Hume said.

“So, he’s going around acting like he’s the nominee and is engaged in a general election campaign in the fall against President Trump. It’s, I guess, nice work if you can get it. I don’t know how long it can last.

WARNING SIGNS FOR TRUMP AS NEW POLL SHOWS BIDEN, OTHER DEMS WITH 2020 EDGE

TRUMP SLAMS BIDEN AS ‘WEAK MENTALLY’ AS POTENTIAL 2020 FOES STORM IOWA

“My sense is he can’t go on forever ignoring the rest of the Democratic field, but I don’t blame him for trying to make it last as long as he can.”

Biden and President Trump will both duke it out in Iowa in separate speeches — an agricultural state the president won handily in the 2016 election. This after he skipped an event with other Democratic contenders this weekend.

A copy of Biden’s prepared remarks in Davenport, Iowa, was released to Fox News from a source at his campaign. He said farmers have been “crushed” by the president’s tariff war with China. Biden also says that the president makes the wrong choices and is “motivated by the wrong thing.”

“He thinks he’s being tough. Well, it’s easy to be tough when someone else is feeling the pain,” Biden said.

CNN CRITICIZED FOR CHYRON CLAIMING BIDEN WILL ‘EVISCERATE’ TRUMP IN CAMPAIGN SPEECH

BIDEN TO SLAM TRUMP AS ‘EXISTENTIAL THREAT’ DURING DUELING IOWA STOPS

On the way to Air Force One on Tuesday afternoon, the president called Biden the “weakest mentally” on the Democratic candidates, a “dummy” on China, and a loser. “When a man has to mention my name 76 times, he’s in trouble,” he mused.

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The president predicted he would win Iowa, Texas, and Pennsylvania by “a lot.” He won Iowa in the 2016 election. He plans to respond to Biden’s remarks in his speech in West Des Moines later Tuesday evening.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/brit-hume-joe-biden-plan-working-right-now-but-might-not-last-until-2020

The pilot killed Monday when his helicopter slammed into the roof of a New York City skyscraper was not authorized to fly in limited visibility, according to his pilot certification, raising questions about why he took off in fog and steady rain. Tim McCormack, 58, was only certified to fly under regulations known as visual flight rules, which require generally good weather and clear conditions, according to the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA).

The rules require at least 3 miles of visibility and that the sky is clear of clouds for daytime flights. The visibility at the time of Monday’s crash was about 1 1/4 miles at nearby Central Park, with low clouds blanketing the skyline.

McCormack was not certified to use instruments to help fly through cloudy or bad weather, the FAA said.

The crash in the tightly controlled airspace of midtown Manhattan shook the 750-foot AXA Equitable building, obliterated the Agusta A109E helicopter, sparked a fire and forced office workers to flee.

It briefly triggered memories of 9/11 and fears of a terrorist attack, but authorities said there is no indication the crash was deliberate. At a National Transportation Safety Board briefing Tuesday, air safety investigator Doug Brazy said that McCormack had arrived at a heliport on New York City’s East River after a trip carrying one passenger from nearby Westchester County.

The passenger told investigators there was nothing out of the ordinary about the 15-minute flight, Brazy said.

Firemen are seen after a helicopter crash-landed on top of a building in midtown Manhattan in New York on June 10, 2019.

Johannes Eisele / AFP/Getty


McCormack waited at the heliport for about two hours and reviewed the weather before taking off on what was supposed to be a trip to the helicopter’s home airport in Linden, New Jersey, Brazy said.

That trip would have taken the helicopter south, over the city’s harbor and past the Statue of Liberty.

Investigators were reviewing video posted on social media Monday afternoon showing a helicopter that investigators believe is the doomed chopper pausing and hovering a short distance south of the heliport, then turning and making an erratic flight back north through rain and clouds.

The helicopter hit the Manhattan tower about 11 minutes after taking off, in an area where flights aren’t supposed to take place.

A flight restriction in effect since President Trump took office prohibits aircraft from flying below 3,000 feet within a 1-mile radius of Trump Tower, only a few blocks from the crash site.

Helicopters going in and out of the heliport, on East 34th Street, are only allowed to fly in the restricted area if they have permission and are in constant communication with air traffic control.

Brazy said the pilot never made such a request and didn’t contact air traffic control, although investigators were trying to verify reports that McCormack had made radio calls to someone just before the crash. Brazy said McCormack’s planned route to Linden wouldn’t have required him to contact air traffic control.

Asked if the weather may have played a factor, Brazy said “it is certainly one of the most interesting concerns we have.”

“Should the helicopter have been flying? I do not know yet,” he said.

Brazy said the helicopter was not equipped with a flight data recorder or a cockpit voice recorder.

McCormack was a former fire chief in upstate Clinton Corners, New York. With 15 years of experience flying helicopters and single-engine airplanes, he was certified as a flight instructor last year, according to FAA records.

The East Clinton Volunteer Fire Department posted on Facebook that McCormack’s “technical knowledge and ability to command an emergency were exceptional.”

Linden airport director Paul Dudley described McCormack as “a highly seasoned” and “very well regarded” pilot.

Brazy said a salvage crew expected to start removing the wreckage from the roof by Tuesday evening, possibly by taking pieces down the stairs and elevator. It will be moved to a secure location for further examination, he said.

“The location — within the city and on top of the roof of a building — is probably the biggest challenge in the investigation,” Brazy said.

Source Article from https://www.cbsnews.com/news/helicopter-crash-nyc-pilot-tim-mccormack-was-not-certified-to-fly-bad-weather-2019-06-11/

President Donald Trump’s restrictions on Chinese telecom giant Huawei are comparable to “murder,” the president of the U.S.-China Business Council said Tuesday.

The administration blacklisted Huawei last month amid the escalated trade war, effectively halting its ability to purchase American-made chips and forcing U.S. companies to cut ties with the Chinese giant.

“If we want to keep it out of our network, it’s easy to do. Let’s just ban them. But putting them on the entity list and prohibiting U.S. companies from dealing with them, it’s more like murder. It’s trying to put an end to them,” said Craig Allen, president of the council, at CNBC’s Capital Exchange summit. The council represents about 200 American companies that do business with China.

He added, “If a stranger knocks at your door, you don’t have to let them in, but do you have the right to take a gun and shoot them?”

The trade conflict between the world’s two largest economies has continued to intensify after both sides slapped tariffs on billions of dollars worth of each other’s goods. China has threatened to cut off its rare earth mineral supply to the U.S. and reportedly stopped ordering U.S. soybeans.

“We are paying a short-term cost but the long-term cost would be yet greater,” Allen said. “Will China not invest in soybeans in Brazil, Argentina and Ukraine? Of course they will. Not everything is a transaction. We have to consider this over the long term. … At the end of the day, we have to deal with the Chinese if we want to get there.”

On the same panel, Thea Lee, president of the Economic Policy Institute, strongly condemned Trump’s use of tariffs in negotiating a trade deal.

“Trump is using that tool (tariffs) too haphazardly, and in a way he’s not sending clear messages to either business communities or to trading partners,” Lee said at the summit. She added, “He’s burning bridges with a lot of trading partners, which is going to cost us over the long run.”

“If a tariff is used strategically and surgically to address an unfair trade practice, you have this short-term disruption and short-term inconvenience and higher prices along the way, but ultimately in service of addressing a problem. That’s what I don’t see this current administration doing … it’s more like a battle of egos and a battle of wills,” she added.

Trump has not only used tariffs in the trade war with China, but he also threatened to slap tariffs on Mexican imports unless that country took action to control migration across the border with the U.S. The Mexico tariffs were eventually avoided after the U.S. and Mexico reached an agreement on immigration issues.

For more on the convergence of business and politics, join CNBC at our upcoming Capital Exchange summits in Washington DC (for candid conversation featuring business and government leaders exploring how they can work together to spur growth).

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2019/06/11/trump-trying-to-murder-huawei-instead-of-ban-us-china-group-head.html

Border officials from October to May have documented 4,800 members of families in which an adult who claimed to be related to a child in his or her possession was not the parent, just under 1.5% of the 332,981 total illegally entering family members, according to the Department of Homeland Security.

“We have identified now more than 4,800 family units that were fraudulent as they presented at the border,” acting DHS Secretary Kevin McAleenan told the Senate Judiciary Committee Tuesday. The family units tally represents the number of individuals, either a child under 18 years old, parent, or legal guardian, apprehended with a family member by the U.S. Border Patrol, according to the DHS.

The new DHS chief said some migrants seeking to gain entry into the U.S. are paying smugglers to rent a child because families from countries other than Mexico and Canada cannot be held in federal custody more than 20 days.

However, the percentage of migrants using unrelated children to avoid immediate deportation is very low compared to the number of related families.

McAleenan also said the department has “uncovered multiple child smuggling rings” but did not share additional information.

Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the DHS agency that takes custody of people after Border Patrol have initially processed them, said it found more than 400 “fraudulent” family members over the most recent six week span measured, from mid-April to May 31. That figure is included in the overall DHS 4,800 figure.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/trump-official-4-800-members-of-fake-families-identified-at-border-1-5-of-migrant-families

A man believed to be Kim Jong Nam is surrounded by journalists upon his arrival at a Beijing airport in February 2007.

Japan Pool via Jiji Press/AFP/Getty Images


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Japan Pool via Jiji Press/AFP/Getty Images

A man believed to be Kim Jong Nam is surrounded by journalists upon his arrival at a Beijing airport in February 2007.

Japan Pool via Jiji Press/AFP/Getty Images

Kim Jong Nam, the half-brother of the North Korean leader who was killed in a nerve-agent attack allegedly ordered by the North Korean government, had been working with the CIA prior to his death, according to The Wall Street Journal and a new book by a Washington Post reporter.

The Journal, in a story published Monday, cites “a person knowledgeable about the matter” as saying that Kim Jong Nam, who was living in the semi-autonomous Chinese territory of Macau in the years before his death, had “met on several occasions with [CIA] operatives.”

Washington Post correspondent Anna Fifield, in a book published Tuesday, makes a similar assertion, citing “someone with knowledge of the intelligence who spoke on condition of anonymity.”

Although a link between Kim Jong Nam and the CIA has been previously rumored, the Journal and the new book offer more concrete evidence and specificity.

The North Korean leader “would have considered [Kim Jong Nam] talking to American spies a treacherous act,” Fifield writes in The Great Successor, “but Kim Jong Nam provided information to them, meeting his handlers in Singapore and Malaysia.”

In February 2017, Kim Jong Nam was attacked by two women in an airport in the Malaysian capital, Kuala Lumpur, who smeared VX nerve agent on his face. The women, one an Indonesian national and another from Vietnam, said after their arrest that they had been paid for the attack, which they thought was part of a television show prank.

According to the Journal, “Police testified during the trial of the two women that Mr. Kim had spent several days on the resort island of Langkawi, where he met with an unknown Korean-American man at a hotel.”

“Mr. Kim traveled to Malaysia in February 2017 to meet his CIA contact, although that may not have been the sole purpose of the trip,” the newspaper said, citing its anonymous source.

Fifield writes that on his last trip to Malaysia, Kim Jong Nam was seen on security footage in a hotel elevator “with an Asian-looking man who was reported to be an American intelligence agent.” After the attack, the backpack Kim Jong Nam had been carrying was found to contain $120,000 in cash, according to Fifield.

As the first-born son of North Korean leader Kim Jong Il, who died in 2011, Kim Jong Nam was once thought to be next in line in the dynastic succession. However, he reportedly fell out of favor with his father.

In his final years, Kim Jong Nam reportedly lived a playboy lifestyle and developed a passion for gambling that was fueled by the many casinos in his adopted home of Macau, known as “Asia’s Las Vegas.”

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2019/06/11/731539543/north-korean-leaders-slain-brother-was-reportedly-working-with-the-cia