Police have arrested one suspect and seized one gun at the Capital Pride Parade in Washington, D.C., after rumors of an active shooter sparked mass panic and people running for cover at around 7:30 p.m. on Saturday.

No shots were fired, but at least 10 people were injured after being trampled in the crowd.

A police offer told the Washington Examiner that two people were fighting in Dupont Circle, and one of the people involved in the altercation showed a gun. When people who had gathered at the scene saw the gun they began to flee.

The identity of the suspect has not been released.

Kevin Donahue, the D.C. deputy mayor for public safety and justice, tweeted at around 8 p.m. that there is no active shooter after people heard loud pops that some witnesses described as sounding like gunshots.

The Metropolitan Police Department retweeted his message.

“In all my years I have never seen this level of panic for something that didn’t occur,” a police officer who has been with the city for over a decade told the Washington Examiner.

The Capital Pride Alliance, which produces the gay pride celebration in the nation’s capital, said there was a “reported incident in Dupont Circle during the Capital Pride Parade” and that police were assessing the situation.

Fifteen minutes earlier the Twitter account warned people to “stay calm and get to safety.”

Video shared on social media shows people running through the streets of downtown D.C.

Capital Pride Alliance said the parade had ended and that police were on site and “the threat has been contained.” City workers began running street cleaners around 8 p.m.

After the incident, Capital Pride Alliance encouraged people to attend a block party on 15th And P Streets in Northwest D.C.

Police have not commented on what the loud sounds people heard might have been. One witness told ABC7 that he thinks it could have been a gate falling over.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/panic-at-capital-pride-parade-in-dc-over-active-shooter-scare

A lucky Mega Millions player in Southern California woke up a lot richer on Saturday. A ticket sold at a San Diego liquor store matched all six numbers in Friday’s $530 million Mega Millions jackpot, CBS Los Angeles reported. 

If the winner chooses the cash option, they will walk away with about $345 million.

The California Lottery said another ticket matched five numbers, but missed the Mega number. That ticket was sold at a Seal Beach gas station and is worth a little more than $1 million.

Mega Millions winning numbers

  • 17, 19, 27, 40, 68
  • Mega Ball: 2
  • Megaplier: 3X

Mega Millions tickets are $2 and are sold in 44 states, Washington, D.C., and the U.S. Virgin Islands. 

Odds of winning

The odds of winning a jackpot remain abysmal at 1 in 302.5 million for Mega Millions *(and 1 in 292.2 million for Powerball).

Who buys lotto tickets?

About two-thirds of Americans gamble. Last year, they spent $72.97 billion on traditional lottery tickets, according to Gallup.

On average, that’s $206.69 per person. “Our obsession with lotteries, with gambling, is that unicorn feeling of, like, ‘maybe it’ll be me,'” CBS News business analyst Jill Schlesinger said. She points out that some people don’t necessarily play to win.

“They just want to take a moment out of their day to consider how to dream big,” Schlesinger said.

The average American spends about $223 per year on lottery tickets, according to a survey from LENDedu. Massachusetts residents have the biggest taste for playing the odds, spending almost $763 per year on lottery tickets, the study found. 

North Dakotans are on the opposite end of the spectrum, spending about $44 per year on the lottery, or the lowest average figure among residents of all 50 states.

Source Article from https://www.cbsnews.com/news/mega-millions-numbers-530-million-winning-ticket-sold-san-diego-today-2019-06-08/

The mobile library travels on one of its routes on the Outer Hebrides island of Lewis and Harris. For isolated residents, seeing the mobile librarian is sometimes the only human contact they may have for days.

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The mobile library travels on one of its routes on the Outer Hebrides island of Lewis and Harris. For isolated residents, seeing the mobile librarian is sometimes the only human contact they may have for days.

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In Stornoway, the biggest town in Scotland’s Outer Hebrides islands, a yellow van sits on a narrow, one-way street. The Gaelic word leabharlann is painted on the front, back and sides, with its English translation, “library,” on the front and sides.

Driver Iain Mackenzie has loaded his books in the van, organized his customers’ orders and is preparing for his last run of the week on the island of Lewis and Harris. The 16-year-old van runs three days a week, covering more than 800 miles of rugged roads to deliver books to more than 800 residents.

Left: Driver Iain Mackenzie knows his route so well that before driving to customer Donald John’s property, he opens the side door to prevent John’s dog from chewing at the bottom of the doors. Right: Iain Mackenzie checking out books for a customer on the Bernera route.

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Left: Driver Iain Mackenzie knows his route so well that before driving to customer Donald John’s property, he opens the side door to prevent John’s dog from chewing at the bottom of the doors. Right: Iain Mackenzie checking out books for a customer on the Bernera route.

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Mackenzie and fellow mobile librarian Steven Bryden, who handles the Harris part of the island route, have been driving the library van for seven and 13 years, respectively. They know their hundreds of customers so well that they’ve memorized their reading preferences and quirks.

Bryden knows to deliver audiobooks to Douglas Neal’s front door because Neal is mostly housebound and appreciates the opportunity to socialize. Mackenzie knows that Donald John loves murder mysteries — and he knows to keep the van doors open when driving up to John’s house, so John’s dog won’t chew on the rubber insulation that protrudes when the doors are closed.

The Outer Hebrides, also known as the Western Isles, began its mobile library service in 1952. The places it serves are home to Scotland’s highest concentration of “very remote rural” residents. Stornoway has a population of 8,000, but 73% of the Hebridean population qualifies as very rural remote, defined as “areas with a population of less than 3,000 people, and with a drive time of over 60 minutes to a settlement of 10,000 or more.”

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Off the coast of northwest Scotland, the Outer Hebrides encompass mountains and moorlands, rugged coasts and pristine, sandy beaches. The islands’ scattered villages have grown quieter as people have moved away, in search of greater opportunity.

Colleen Macleod reads to children at Pairc Playgroup in South Lochs. The childcare center offers bilingual learning and says the mobile library is critical for access to Gaelic children’s books. “As educators, we use it for resources and that keeps the culture alive as well,” says teacher Kayleigh Makillop.

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Colleen Macleod reads to children at Pairc Playgroup in South Lochs. The childcare center offers bilingual learning and says the mobile library is critical for access to Gaelic children’s books. “As educators, we use it for resources and that keeps the culture alive as well,” says teacher Kayleigh Makillop.

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When the mobile libraries began operating three generations ago as a local council service, they were the main source of books for Outer Hebrides crofters — livestock and vegetable farmers who shared land spread out around the islands. Then, as now, residents had limited access to transport and the wider world.

“We couldn’t afford to buy books and the books came in the [mobile] library and… wow,” recalls Agnes Matheson, 77, who grew up in Lochs, on the Lewis part of the island just before it becomes Harris.

Even now, “The main thing is knowing that it’s a lifeline to culture. That sounds awfully grand and overstated, but it’s the truth,” says Douglas Neal, 69, the housebound Harris resident who has audiobooks delivered to his door. He is disabled and relies on the service because getting to his local library is a physical hardship.

Left: Douglas Neal relies on the mobile service for audiobooks. “The main thing is knowing that it’s a lifeline to culture. That sounds awfully grand and overstated, but it’s the truth,” he says. Right: Anne MacConnell, a retired schoolteacher, with the books she’s received from the mobile library van.

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Left: Douglas Neal relies on the mobile service for audiobooks. “The main thing is knowing that it’s a lifeline to culture. That sounds awfully grand and overstated, but it’s the truth,” he says. Right: Anne MacConnell, a retired schoolteacher, with the books she’s received from the mobile library van.

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The mobile libraries also serve as a lifeline to other people. In an increasingly distant, digital age, the service has made a difference in declining communities whose residents seek personal contact. Without the mobile libraries, some residents would be more than an hour’s drive from their nearest library branch. Others, even if living less than a mile away, would still be unable to visit because of physical hardships.

Mobile libraries remain integral to these communities. Visits by drivers like Mackenzie and Bryden are sometimes the only regular face-to-face contact customers can count on in any given week. “A man in the [Harris] bays once told me, ‘The last person I saw was you,'” says Bryden.

Students at the Sgoil an Taobh Siar primary school in Barvas choose books from the mobile library van. Most school libraries have limited and outdated stock, and the mobile van provides more options.

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Students at the Sgoil an Taobh Siar primary school in Barvas choose books from the mobile library van. Most school libraries have limited and outdated stock, and the mobile van provides more options.

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As rural high streets — the centers of local businesses — begin to disappear, and schools, jobs and other opportunities have seeped away to large cities, villages across the isles are facing depopulation and a decrease in resources. A 2007 Outer Hebrides Migration Study reported a 43% population decline between 1901 and 2001, as well as a long-term decline in the number of women of childbearing age, resulting in more deaths than births each year. “The key drivers of population change are the limited job opportunities available,” the study said.

Donald MacLeod, 71, waits for the mobile library. It is his second time using the service. He suffers from a sore leg that makes it difficult for him to walk. The mobile library service was recommended to him by the National Health Service.

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Donald MacLeod, 71, waits for the mobile library. It is his second time using the service. He suffers from a sore leg that makes it difficult for him to walk. The mobile library service was recommended to him by the National Health Service.

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And as the islands’ populations have shrunk, services have declined. In more remote areas, when school is not in session, public transport is available only once a week. “The further away you get from the largest population, the less money they spend. We don’t have services: [garbage collection] every fortnight, no street lights” and inadequate drainage that sometimes floods houses, says Susan MacVicar, a resident of Harris.

Despite frequent threats to slash its funding, the mobile library is one service that has remained. Last year, the local council voted down a proposed $231,000 cut for the vans. Still, there are worries about the mobile libraries’ future.

In this archival photo provided by Leabharlannan nan Eilean Siar, Donald J. Macdonald exits one of the mobile library vehicles. Macdonald served as the Uist mobile librarian from 1988 to 2003. The Outer Hebrides originally had three vans: two for Lewis and Harris, and one for North and South Uist.

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In this archival photo provided by Leabharlannan nan Eilean Siar, Donald J. Macdonald exits one of the mobile library vehicles. Macdonald served as the Uist mobile librarian from 1988 to 2003. The Outer Hebrides originally had three vans: two for Lewis and Harris, and one for North and South Uist.

Courtesy of Leabharlannan nan Eilean Siar

“Though we have had a reprieve, it is likely that this might be the last decade of this kind of service,” says senior librarian Kathleen Milne, referring to the arduous process it’s taken to replace the existing, aging vans.

Agnes Matheson, 77, a resident of the Kirk Care Home in Stornoway, remembers using the mobile library van when she was 12 years old. Now the Stornoway library is half-a-mile away, but she’s unable to go and relies on books the mobile service delivers to her care home. “Some people think it’s a waste of time. I think reading is a passing of time,” she says.

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Agnes Matheson, 77, a resident of the Kirk Care Home in Stornoway, remembers using the mobile library van when she was 12 years old. Now the Stornoway library is half-a-mile away, but she’s unable to go and relies on books the mobile service delivers to her care home. “Some people think it’s a waste of time. I think reading is a passing of time,” she says.

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Library cutbacks have become an epidemic in Scotland, with 30 branch libraries closing in 2017 — double the number that had shut the year before, despite an increase in the number of library users in the same period. In the past four years, two libraries have closed in the Western Isles, with four remaining.

The Outer Hebrides originally had three library vans: two for Lewis and Harris, and one for North and South Uist. When the Lewis mobile library van broke down in 2015, the Harris vehicle began to serve both Lewis and Harris, but less frequently: customers now receive visits once every six weeks instead of every three. The van Mackenzie and Bryden share was due to be replaced six years ago.

Left: Annabel Mackinnon reads the bimonthly Uig newspaper in Ardroil, Uig. Mackinnon has used the library service since it began in 1952. Right: Marion Litterick, a retired social worker, at her home in Leverburgh. “The importance of the library is not just the books,” she says. “It’s human contact.”

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Left: Annabel Mackinnon reads the bimonthly Uig newspaper in Ardroil, Uig. Mackinnon has used the library service since it began in 1952. Right: Marion Litterick, a retired social worker, at her home in Leverburgh. “The importance of the library is not just the books,” she says. “It’s human contact.”

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Although most mobile library customers are elderly or disabled, or both, younger readers use the service as well. The mobile libraries function as a resource for primary schools and senior living centers, offering a regular rotation of reading materials.

While mobile library vans aren’t unique to the Outer Hebrides and serve communities all around Scotland and the United Kingdom, the Leabharlannan nan Eilean Siar — Western Isles Libraries — provide something special: Gaelic-language resources to a region that is home to Scotland’s highest density of Gaelic speakers.

Budget-saving proposals have offered to substitute the mobile libraries with online books and volunteer-run community hubs, but residents say these don’t come close to the personal experience of physically choosing books, and none offered access to the limited Gaelic resources available.

The mobile library arrives in Hushinish, which lies at the end of a 12-mile, single-track road. When school is not in session, public transport is only available on Fridays.

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The mobile library arrives in Hushinish, which lies at the end of a 12-mile, single-track road. When school is not in session, public transport is only available on Fridays.

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For Annabel Mackinnon, a retired schoolteacher in her 70s, the mobile library provides Gaelic books that are not available on her e-reader. Born and raised in Uig, part of Lewis, she grew up speaking both Gaelic and English. Her mother, she says, believed “English was the passport” for opportunity.

Today, she rarely hears Gaelic. “In 2005, when I retired,” she says, “I would go into the shops speaking Gaelic and they’d tell me, ‘There’s no use for speaking that anymore,’ to which I was horrified. And carried on anyway.”

Mobile librarian Steven Bryden watches gusts of rain sweep across west Harris while on the road back from Hushinish. Inclement weather and aging vehicles are the most frequent causes of service disruption.

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Mobile librarian Steven Bryden watches gusts of rain sweep across west Harris while on the road back from Hushinish. Inclement weather and aging vehicles are the most frequent causes of service disruption.

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Mackinnon writes a Gaelic article in every issue of the bimonthly Uig newsletter, and makes a point to borrow Gaelic books from the mobile service to continue her own practice.

Further north on the island, toward the community of Ness, Mairi Coxon, a mother of two, was also raised speaking Gaelic, but she isn’t fluent in the written language. She can access Gaelic-language books online, but says the mobile service is especially helpful because it allows her to flip through the texts and confirm that they’re within her reading level before she borrows them.

When the mobile library service was at risk of being cut, the Outer Hebrides communities rallied to save it. In December, the local council approved two new vans, one for Lewis and Harris and the other for North and South Uist.

It isn’t clear when the replacement vans will be delivered. But for longtime drivers Mackenzie and Bryden, who have navigated their aging vehicles through the islands’ rough roads and unpredictable weather — including gales and storms — the approval for replacement vans marks a victory. “There’s a perception in [small villages] where everybody knows everybody, but it isn’t always the case,” says Bryden. “There are a lot of people on their own who are just missed. It’s just keeping an eye out on people.”

“If you don’t keep fighting for your services, they’ll just keep getting cut and cut,” says Mackenzie. “And once they’re gone, they won’t come back.”

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2019/06/08/719954225/for-remote-communities-in-scotlands-outer-hebrides-mobile-libraries-are-a-lifeli

A local Democrat introduced Beto O’Rourke as a “blank slate” at a campaign stop in Iowa on Friday.

“Beto is here because he wants to hear what rural Iowa and rural America is standing for. He is going from city to city. He wants to hear what we want. He is a blank slate that is waiting to be filled by our hopes and dreams for the United States,” the woman said, introducing O’Rourke to the crowd.

O’Rourke was joined by his wife Amy at the town hall meeting at Peace Tree Brewing in Knoxville.

The 2020 Democratic presidential contender is polling ahead of most other Democrats in the running, but is significantly behind the primary leaders. O’Rourke is polling at 3.8%, according to the latest RealClearPolitics average of polls.

That puts the former Texas congressman in sixth place in a crowded field of 23 Democrats, far behind former Vice President Joe Biden, the front-runner at 33.5%. O’Rourke is several points down from South Bend, Ind., Mayor Pete Buttigieg, who is in fifth at 6.8%.

Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren, and California Sen. Kamala Harris round out second, third, and fourth place, respectively.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/campaigns/beto-orourke-described-as-blank-slate-by-iowa-democrat-introducing-him

But there remains deep skepticism among some American officials — and even Mr. Trump himself — about whether the Mexicans have agreed to do enough, whether they will follow through on their promises, and whether, even if they do, that will reduce the flow of migrants at the southwestern border.

In addition, the Migrant Protection Protocols already face legal challenges by immigrant rights groups who say they violate the migrants’ right to lawyers. A federal judge blocked the Trump administration from implementing the plan, but an appeals court later said it could move forward while the legal challenge proceeds.

During a phone call Friday evening when he was briefed on the agreement, Mr. Trump quizzed his lawyers, diplomats and immigration officials about whether they thought the deal would work. His aides said yes, but admitted that they were also realistic that the surge of immigration might continue.

“We’ll see if it works,” the president told them, approving the deal before sending out his tweet announcing it.

Mr. Trump’s decision to use trade as a bludgeon against Mexico was driven in part by his obsession with stopping what he falsely calls an invasion of the country and in part by a desire to satisfy his core supporters, many of who have grown angry at his inability to build his promised border wall.

Many of his top advisers, including those who oversee his political and economic agendas, were opposed to the tariff threat. But the president’s ire is regularly stoked by the daily reports he receives on how many migrants have crossed the border in the previous 24 hours.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/06/08/us/politics/trump-mexico-deal-tariffs.html

Oberlin College in Ohio will have to pay a nearby bakery more than $11 million in damages because it libeled the store, tagging it as racist, and interfered with its business, a jury said on Friday.

Gibson’s Bakery came under fire after Allyn Gibson, the owners’ son, got into a physical altercation with a black student who reportedly tried shoplifting and using a fake ID at the store, The Chronicle-Telegram said. Two other black students got involved, appearing to prompt accusations of racial profiling.

The three students eventually pleaded guilty to misdemeanor charges and read statements defending Allyn Gibson’s right to detain them. They also read statements claiming that his actions weren’t racially motivated, but within days of the incident, students were turning out for protests fueled by accusations of racist intent.

The jury found the school and Oberlin’s vice president and dean of students, Meredith Raimondo, guilty of libel after Raimondo allegedly helped pass out flyers claiming that the bakery was “racist” and had a history of “racial profiling and discrimination.”

RACIAL DISPUTE AT BELOVED BAKERY ROILS LIBERAL COLLEGE TOWN

The jury also found that the college (not Raimondo) was guilty of intentional infliction of emotional distress for the owner, David Gibson, as well as libel and intentional infliction of emotional distress on his son.

Donica Thomas Varner, the college’s general counsel, said he was disappointed with the verdict and denied the college had defamed the bakery or its owners.

“Neither Oberlin College nor Dean Meredith Raimondo defamed a local business or its owners, and they never endorsed statements made by others,” Varner reportedly said.

“Rather, the college and Dr. Raimondo worked to ensure that students’ freedom of speech was protected and that the student demonstrations were safe and lawful, and they attempted to help the plaintiffs repair any harm caused by the student protests.”

AS OBERLIN ACTIVISM FLARED, STUDENTS PUSHED TO BANISH GRADES BELOW ‘C’

According to one of the bakery’s attorneys, the verdict sends a clear message to other educational institutions.

“I think part of what we did here today is answer the question as to, ‘What are we going to tolerate in our society?’” attorney Owen Rarric said.  “We’re hopeful that this is a sign that not only Oberlin College, but in the future, powerful institutions, will hesitate before trying to crush the little guy.”

In a letter, Varner said that his team would review the ruling, which, according to the New York Post, could result in triple the damages in a hearing next week on punitive damages.

The lawsuit was yet another flashpoint in the nationwide controversy surrounding universities and political correctness. Oberlin, in particular, has provoked conservatives’ ire for its apparent deference to politically correct ideas.

CITY IN OHIO SAYS COLUMBUS DAY MUST GO

Back in 2016, for example, actress and Oberlin alumnus Lena Dunham drew attention to an incident in which students complained that the college had engaged in cultural appropriation by serving sushi and other food.

Other colleges, like the University of Illinois, faced lawsuits as they imposed what some considered to be politically correct speech codes and chilled students’ First Amendment rights through regimes known as “Bias Response Teams.”

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President Trump seemed to address bias on college campuses when he issued an executive order in March that threatened to withhold funding from universities if they refused to protect students’ rights.

“Under the guise of speech codes, safe spaces and trigger warnings, these universities have tried to restrict free thought, impose total conformity and shut down the voices of great young Americans like those here today,” Trump said at a signing ceremony.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/oberlin-college-to-pay-bakery-over-11-m-after-accusing-it-of-racial-profiling

Democratic presidential hopeful Beto O’Rourke found out on Friday that there is truth to the old adage “with friends like these, who needs enemies?” after a supporter introduced him as a “blank slate” at a campaign stop in Iowa.

The remark, flagged first by The Washington Examiner, came in Knoxville, Iowa when a local Democrat who was tasked with introducing the former Texas congressman explained why she was introducing him to the stage.

BETO O’ROURKE PLEDGES TO DECRIMINALIZE TRUANCY, ADDRESS FINES ON PARENTS

She noted that he had almost beaten Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, in the 2018 Senate race, and also praised O’Rourke’s charisma: “He has a divining quality, he can command a crowd.”

“The last thing is that Beto is here because he wants to hear what rural Iowa and rural America is standing for. He is going from city to city. He wants to hear what we want,” she said. “He is a blank slate that is waiting to be filled by our hopes and dreams for the United States.”

The remark was met by a brief silence, then a smattering of applause.

NEW DOC SHOWS BETO ADMITTING HE’S A ‘GIANT A**HOLE’ TO HIS STAFF

O’Rourke has struggled in the polls in recent months as he has proposed a wave of policies on everything from immigration to decriminalizing truancy

A May Fox News Poll found O’Rourke in sixth place with 4 percent support. While that puts him ahead of the majority of declared candidates, it puts him far behind frontrunners such as former Vice President Joe Biden (35 percent) and Bernie Sanders (17 percent.)

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

Last month he tried to reboot his campaign and admitted that his campaign made a series of missteps since it launched.

O’Rourke specifically indicated he regretted saying he “sometimes” raised his son, and that a Vanity Fair cover “reinforced” the perception that he was privileged.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/beto-orourke-blank-slate-iowa

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

President Donald Trump has hailed a deal reached with Mexico to help stem the flow of migrants to the US after he threatened to impose trade tariffs.

Under the deal, in which Mexico agreed to take “unprecedented steps”, the duties that were due to come into effect on Monday have been suspended.

“Mexico will try very hard, and if they do that, this will be a very successful agreement,” said Mr Trump.

There were fears that the tariffs could hurt US businesses and consumers.

Under Mr Trump’s proposal, duties would have risen by 5% every month on goods including cars, beer, tequila, fruit and vegetables until they hit 25% in October.

The deal was reached at the end of three days of negotiations which saw Washington demand a crackdown on Central American migrants.

What do we know about the deal?

In a joint declaration released by the US state department, the two countries said Mexico would take “unprecedented steps” to curb irregular migration and human trafficking.

But it seems the US did not get one of its reported key demands, which would have required Mexico to take in asylum seekers heading for the US and process their claims on its own soil.

Under the deal, Mexico agreed to:

  • Deploy its National Guard throughout the country from Monday, pledging up to 6,000 additional troops along Mexico’s southern border with Guatemala
  • Take “decisive action” to tackle human smuggling networks

The US agreed to:

  • Expand its programme of sending asylum seekers back to Mexico while they await reviews of their claims. In return, the US will “work to accelerate” the adjudication process

Both countries pledged to “strengthen bilateral co-operation” over border security, including “co-ordinated actions” and information sharing.

Media captionFive numbers that explain why the current US border situation is different

The declaration added that discussions would continue, and final terms would be accepted and announced within 90 days.

Should Mexico’s actions “not have the expected results”, the agreement warned that additional measures could be taken but did not specify what these would be.

In one of a series of tweets about the deal, Mr Trump quoted National Border Patrol Council president Brandon Judd as saying: “That’s going to be a huge deal because Mexico will be using their strong Immigration Laws – A game changer. People no longer will be released into the U.S.”

Mexican Foreign Secretary Marcelo Ebrard told journalists: “I think it was a fair balance, because they have more drastic measures and proposals at the start, and we have reached some middle point.”

Speaking at a separate news conference, US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said “we couldn’t be more pleased with the agreement”.

Mr Trump caught members of his own party unaware when he announced the proposed tariffs last week.

Trump tariff threat recedes – for now

By Will Grant, BBC Mexico and Central America correspondent

It’s still unclear whether it was internal pressure within his party or the measures being offered by Mexico that dissuaded Mr Trump from implementing the plan, or perhaps simply an appreciation of its potential consequences.

It became apparent during the talks just how intertwined the two neighbouring economies are, and many argued that a 5% tax on all Mexican goods would hurt US suppliers and customers too. Furthermore, damaging the already fragile Mexican economy could have pushed it into a full recession and created more migrants heading north in search of work.

Still, some considered the bilateral meetings were useful, in part to recognise that both nations are facing a steep rise in undocumented immigration.

The plan to deploy military personnel to Mexico’s southern border may well have helped bring this dispute to an end. However, President Trump has now tied immigration to bilateral trade and could easily do so again in the future should the situation fail to improve.

What is the reaction in Mexico?

Mexico is currently one of the largest trading partners of the US, just behind China and Canada – two countries also locked in trade disputes with the US.

President Andrés Manuel López Obrador ran for office vowing to stand up to the US and once said he would not allow Mexico to be Mr Trump’s “whipping boy”.

But some Mexican politicians felt he had given too much, too quickly, and they demanded to see details of the deal.

Ángel Ávila Romero, a senior member of the left-wing PRD party, said the agreement was “not a negotiation, it was a surrender”.

“Mexico should not militarise its southern border. We are not the backyard of Donald Trump,” he tweeted.

Media captionWhy are Africans in Mexico heading to US?

Marko Cortés, leader of the conservative National Action Party (PAN), said the sovereignty and dignity of Mexico had been damaged, newspaper El Universal reported.

Mr López Obrador said on Twitter that a rally in the border city of Tijuana on Saturday to celebrate Mexican sovereignty would go ahead.

What’s the situation on the US-Mexico border?

On Wednesday, US Customs and Border Protection said migrant detentions had surged in May to the highest level in more than a decade – 132,887 arrests, a 33% increase from April.

The detentions were the highest monthly total since Mr Trump took office.

Official figures show illegal border crossings had been in decline since 2000. In 2000, 1.6 million people were apprehended trying to cross the border illegally – that number was just under 400,000 in 2018.

In 2017, Mr Trump’s first year in office, the figures were the lowest they had been since 1971. But the number of arrests has been rising again, especially in recent months.

In February, Mr Trump declared an emergency on the US-Mexico border, saying it was necessary in order to tackle what he claimed was a crisis.

Source Article from https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-48568389

NYC to Shanghai in 40 minutes: SpaceX’s goal for point-to-point…

UBS believes that, if the obstacles to point-to-point space travel can be overcome, the service would represent an annual market of more than $20 billion.

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Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2019/06/08/mnuchin-trump-can-still-impose-tariffs-if-mexico-does-not-abide-by-deal.html

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Source Article from https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2019/06/joe-biden-hyde-amendment-plagiarism.html

President Trump has a 41% approval rating, according to a new NPR/PBS NewsHour/Marist Poll.

Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty Images


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Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty Images

President Trump has a 41% approval rating, according to a new NPR/PBS NewsHour/Marist Poll.

Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty Images

There is a growing desire for impeachment proceedings to begin against President Trump, but Americans are still split overall on what to do after the release of the Mueller report, an NPR/PBS NewsHour/Marist Poll finds.

A slim majority of Americans (52%) want one of the following: to begin impeachment proceedings (22%), to continue investigations into potential political wrongdoing of Trump (25%) or to publicly reprimand him — that is, censure (5%).

Thirty-nine percent say no further action should be taken and that the current investigations should end. That is largely reflective of Trump’s base, as Trump maintains a 41% approval rating in the poll. (Trump’s approval rating in Marist’s polling has never been lower than 35%, which it hit right after the racist violence in Charlottesville, Va., in August 2017; or higher than 43%, which it reached in February 2019 as the unemployment rate dipped below 4%.)

“Right now, there’s a growing appetite [for impeachment], but still not at the full-course meal,” said Lee Miringoff, director of the Marist Institute for Public Opinion, which conducted the poll.

Shifts and splits in support for impeachment

The share that supports beginning impeachment proceedings is up from 16% a month ago — before former special counsel Robert Mueller spoke out about his probe into 2016 Russian election interference and the Trump campaign, but after the release of his report. The growth in support comes from a near doubling of the number of independents who say they want impeachment rather than continuing investigations, publicly reprimanding Trump or taking no further action.

Democrats are split as to whether impeachment should begin (36%) or investigations should continue (37%). House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., continues to try to hold the line against impeachment proceedings, saying she favors another I-word — investigations.

A growing number — but still a minority — of Democrats in the House are calling for impeachment proceedings. The number, by Axios’ count, is up to 60 members of Congress, including one Republican.

“So what you have is a unified base [of Trump supporters who want] to move on, and a splintered group … moving more in the direction of impeachment,” Miringoff said.

It’s worth noting that while less than a quarter support beginning impeachment proceedings, the results of the investigations could change those numbers, depending on what is revealed.

Take Watergate, for example: In May 1973 when the Watergate hearings began, Gallup found that just 19% said Nixon should be impeached. But 15 months later, by August 1974 — after edited transcripts of the Nixon tapes were released, the Supreme Court ruled that Nixon had to hand the tapes over and a House committee recommended impeachment hearings — 57% were in favor of removing Nixon from office.

Bright spots for Trump

In addition to relatively low support for impeachment proceedings, there are other hints of good news in the poll for Trump. With Americans’ improving views of the economy, fewer are saying they will “definitely vote against” Trump in next year’s presidential election. In this poll, 51% say they will definitely vote against him, a proportion that has consistently ticked down since the beginning of 2019. In January, the number of Americans saying they would definitely vote against the president hit a high of 57%.

Remember, 54% of Americans did not vote for Trump in 2016. Trump won almost 63 million votes, just shy of 46% of the vote. Democrat Hillary Clinton won almost 3 million more votes, or 48% of the vote.

And in another sign that it will take Democrats some time to get on the same page, a whopping 84% of Democrats and Democratic-leaning independents say they have not made up their mind yet as to which Democratic candidate they will support in the 2020 presidential election.

“You have [former Vice President Joe] Biden as a front-runner, but most people are still really just shopping,” Miringoff said. “It really puts an awful lot up on the debates, not just for the people who need to get known but [for] the people who are better known who haven’t tied down the real estate yet. This suggests [the Democratic presidential field is] even more wide open than the fact that there’s 24 candidates.”

The telephone survey of 944 adults was conducted by live callers from May 31 through June 4. The margin of error is plus or minus 4.5 percentage points. There are 783 registered voters in the poll with a margin of error of plus or minus 5 percentage points. There are 339 Democrats and Democratic-leaning independents for a margin of error of plus or minus 7.6 percentage points.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2019/06/08/730697885/poll-support-for-impeachment-hearings-grows-but-americans-split-on-way-forward

When Pete Buttigieg stood before thousands in the heart of South Bend, Indiana, to formally announce his entrance into the 2020 race in mid-April, the 37-year-old mayor embraced the historic nature of his quest: if elected, he would be the first openly gay president to occupy the White House.

“The forces of change in our country today are tectonic,” he told the crowd. “Forces that help to explain what made this current presidency even possible. That’s why, this time, it’s not just about winning an election — it’s about winning an era.”

Two months into his bid, in the midst of Pride Month, a celebration of the LGBTQ community, Buttigieg is among the higher polling candidates – often right behind frontrunners former Vice President Joe Biden and Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders – in a sign of those shifting forces within the party this cycle.

Tom Uhlman/AP, FILE
Former Vice President, and democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden speaks during the Human Rights Campaign Columbus, Ohio Dinner at Ohio State University, June 1, 2019.

Buttigieg’s candidacy as an openly-gay man shows just how far Democrats have come on the issue from more than a decade ago. In 2004, then-Democratic presidential nominee and Massachusetts Sen. John Kerry opposed gay marriage throughout his campaign, favoring civil unions instead.

But in 2019, with three-quarters of Democrats and Democratic-leaning independents supporting same-sex marriage, according to a May Pew Research poll, voters are seeing near-universal support across the expansive field of 23 candidates on key issues for the LGBTQ community, such as, the Equality Act, a landmark bill that prohibits discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity in workplaces, schools, etc.; marriage equality; nondiscrimination provisions of the Affordable Care Act, federal civil rights laws and protections; and transgender rights.

In the early months of the 2020 contest, in one of the most visible signals that the party is more openly embracing the rights of a historically marginalized community, a slate of the 19 presidential contenders speaking at Sunday’s Iowa Democratic Party Hall of Fame Celebration, the largest gathering of candidates ahead of the first debate in Miami at the end of this month, are attending Capital City Pride’s “Meet the Candidates” forum on Saturday.

On the eve of the forum, New York Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, one of the most out-front defenders of LGBTQ rights in the current field, headed to the oldest gay bar still operating in the Midwest, The Blazing Saddle, which opened its doors in 1983.

“I was one of the founders of [Iowa] pride,” the owner of the bar, Bob Eikleberry told ABC News in an interview on “The Briefing Room” on ABC News Live Friday. “One of our very first, the five of us walked up to the capitol and turned around and walked back. That was pride. And now we’re talking 10, 20 thousand people – gay, straight, black, white, Asian. A total embrace of all of God’s kids.”

And at the onset of this month, a parade of presidential hopefuls shared messages touting equality for all – part of more widespread embrace of gay rights among Democrats that reflects the broader shift in attitudes toward LGBTQ people – and as a rebuke of the conservative movement’s efforts, often led by President Donald Trump’s administration, to fortify discriminatory policies against the community.

“#PrideMonth is a time to proudly celebrate who you are. As we recognize the rich history and contributions of the LGBTQ+ community, let’s renew our commitment to dignity, acceptance, and equal rights for everyone,” California Sen. Kamala Harris wrote in a tweet.

Dustin Chambers/Getty Images
Democratic presidential candidate Mayor Pete Buttigieg speaks to a crowd at the African American Leadership Council, June 6, 2019, in Atlanta.

“We just saw the President try to make it harder for transgender Americans to get health care,” former Texas Congressman Beto O’Rourke tweeted. “As Pride begins — 50 years from Stonewall — we know there is so much progress to celebrate, but so much more to fight for. The work continues, the march goes on, but equality will win.”

Washington Gov. Jay Inslee sent an email to supporters to unveil his pride collection, sandwiched between “shamazing” gifs from the Netflix shows, Queer Eye.

On Vice President Mike Pence’s birthday, former Maryland Congressman John Delaney, a more moderate voice in the 2020 field, declared he is donating money to the Human Rights Campaign, one of the most prominent LGBTQ advocacy groups in the country.

Beyond the celebratory tweets, and despite the near-universal alignment policy-wise on LGBTQ rights, Democrats vying for the party’s presidential nomination are still seeking to emphasize the issue on the campaign trail to a greater degree than previous cycles.

At the Human Rights Campaign’s annual Ohio gala, Biden said that enshrining the Equality Act will be his top legislative priority in his keynote address, according to the Associated Press.

“It will be the first thing I ask to be done,” he said, before calling the Trump administration’s efforts to curtail LGBTQ rights, such as barring transgender troops from serving in the U.S. military “wrong” and “immoral.”

Biden’s evolution on the issue is notable, since in 2008, alongside then-Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama, Biden opposed nationwide gay marriage. But in 2012, Biden publicly announced his support for same-sex marriage ahead of his boss, and then Obama, in turn, supporting the issue telling ABC’s Robin Roberts that “I’ve been going through an evolution on this issue.”

Gillibrand released her LGBTQ rights agenda on June 1, to coincide with the beginning of pride month.

“As president, I would undo Trump’s harmful policies and defend the civil rights of LGBTQ Americans,” she writes in a Medium post. “I’ll push for proactive policies to ensure all Americans can live free from discrimination and bigotry based on their gender identity or sexual orientation.”

Bryan R. Smith/AFP/Getty Images, FILE
NY Senator Kirsten Gillibrand speaks as Mayor Bill de Blasio joins elected officials, advocates and New Yorkers in designating Stonewall Inn a National Monument, June 27, 2016, in New York.

Among the key planks of her platform, Gillibrand includes: signing the Equality Act, rescinding Trump’s ban on transgender troops, directing the Department of Justice to consider gender identity and sexual orientation as a protected class, and federally recognize a third gender in identification documents, with an “X” gender designation.

On his campaign website, Buttigieg cites a list of policies that form his platform on LGBTQ rights, that span from the Equality Act to the transgender military ban to criminal justice reform for members of the LGBTQ community.

“Pete knows that our families, communities, and nation are stronger when we allow all individuals to be true to who they are,” the mayor’s website states. “A person’s sexual orientation or gender identity should not limit them from pursuing their dreams and realizing their full potential — to work, live, and go to school where they want; to love whom they choose, and to live safe, healthy lives.”

Ahead of this weekend’s events, the Human Rights Campaign praised the field for their overtures to garner support among the LGBTQ community, a significant slice of the electorate needed to win the nomination.

“We couldn’t be more happy to see the most pro-equality group of potential presidential nominees in U.S. history,” national press secretary for campaigns, Lucas Acosta, said in a statement to ABC News Friday. “Presidential candidates are actively courting the 10 million LGBTQ voters nationwide, speaking to our issues and directly to our community. Candidates know that LGBTQ voters and our allies are among the most highly active and engaged voting blocs in the nation, consistently outperforming our presence in the electorate. In great part, this nomination runs through the LGBTQ community.”

Source Article from https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/2020-democrats-flock-iowas-pride-fest-amid-heightened/story?id=63564247

Democratic Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., suggested in a tweet Friday that “powerful people” are attempting to bribe President Trump into war with Iran.

Rep. Ocasio-Cortez quoted a tweet by Washington Post reporter David Fahrenthold which linked to an article that revealed documents obtained from Trump hotels. According to the Post’s report, an Iraqi sheik reportedly stayed at a suite in Trump’s hotel in Washington D.C. for 26 days after urging the Trump administration to take a “hard-line” approach towards Iran in July 2018.

“Sure looks like powerful people are trying to bribe the President into war,” Rep. Ocasio-Cortez wrote.

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Rep. Ocasio-Cortez’s tweet garnered more than 30,000 likes and 7,000 retweets in under five hours, but responses to her statement were varied.

Concerns about escalating tensions between the United States and Iran prompted Secretary of State Mike Pompeo to proclaim that the Trump administration is ready to sit down with Iran’s leaders for a conversation with “no preconditions.”

He added, however, that “the American effort to fundamentally reverse the malign activity of this Islamic Republic, this revolutionary force, is going to continue.”

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President Trump has consistently maintained that he does not want to resort to military intervention to respond to “credible threats” from Iran but will do so if it becomes necessary.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/ocasio-cortez-trump-bribe-war-iran-twitter

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Source Article from https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2019-06-08/trump-gets-mexico-deal-and-once-again-backs-away-from-tariffs

Joe Biden‘s reversal this week on the Hyde Amendment regarding abortion funding was a surrender to the “exceedingly radical” wing of the Democratic Party, American Conservative Union chairman Matt Schlapp argued Friday on Fox News’ “Hannity.”

Biden said Thursday he could “no longer support” the amendment, which he had backed as recently as Wednesday, saying it makes a woman’s right to an abortion “dependent on someone’s ZIP code.”

“The saddest thing of all,” Schlapp told “Hannity” guest host Dan Bongino, “is to watch him stumble through that statement. Clearly, he doesn’t know what to say or what to do.”

BIDEN ADVISER SYMONE SANDERS LASHES OUT AT MEDIA OVER HYDE AMENDMENT COVERAGE

Matt Schlapp, left, had some sharp words to say Friday regarding Joe Biden’s reversal on the Hyde Amendment.

Schlapp added that abortion “is not health care” and said the Supreme Court’s 1973 Roe v. Wade decision, which legalized abortion nationally, doesn’t mean taxpayers should have to pay for abortion services.

Biden, a Roman Catholic, had long supported the Hyde Amendment and has said he personally opposes abortion. So his reversal this week smacked of political expediency, Schlapp argued.

“This is an open-borders, Green New Deal, socialist Democratic Party that believes in post-birth abortion, late-term abortion,” Schlapp said. “They are exceedingly radical and Joe Biden is trying to go along to get that brass ring.”

“This is an open-borders, Green New Deal, socialist Democratic Party that believes in post-birth abortion, late-term abortion. They are exceedingly radical and Joe Biden is trying to go along to get that brass ring.”

— Matt Schlapp, American Conservative Union

Another “Hannity” guest, Trump 2020 campaign national press secretary Kayleigh McEnany, agreed with Schlapp.

“Joe Biden is Puppet Boy,” McEnany said. “There is someone pulling his strings. It’s pathetic. He has no convictions, no principles, no message.”

She said actress Alyssa Milano — who tried to prevent passage of Georgia’s pro-life law — and low-level Biden staffers appeared to have steered the former vice president away from “whatever principles he had left.”

“This is quite a modest thing to be for,” Schlapp added. “They have become radicalized. This is not your grandfather’s Democratic Party.”

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Other 2020 Democrats, like Sens. Elizabeth Warren and Kirsten Gillibrand, have said the Hyde Amendment disproportionately affects poor women who can’t access abortion through government-funded health care.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/joe-biden-caves-to-exceedingly-radical-democratic-party-on-hyde-amendment-matt-schlapp

The United States and China have largely been at a standoff since negotiations broke down last month. The countries were unable to find a compromise on Mr. Trump’s tariffs, with the United States arguing for keeping many of them and Beijing insisting that they must come off as part of any trade deal.

The United States wants China to accelerate the opening of its market, improve protections for intellectual property and commit to big purchases of American products.

But talks faltered at the beginning of May when China made significant alterations to the text of the agreement. The Trump administration had been pushing for any changes to be codified in Chinese law, but Beijing backtracked and refused to make any legal changes as part of the deal, American officials said.

Since then, the two sides have only hardened their positions. China threatened to compile a blacklist of foreign companies and individuals that it considered “unreliable” and published a white paper last weekend arguing that the country would “never give in on major issues of principle.”

The Trump administration also answered harshly. In a statement on June 3, the United States Trade Representative and the Treasury Department accused China of pursuing “a blame game misrepresenting the nature and history of trade negotiations between the two countries.”

“Our negotiating positions have been consistent throughout these talks, and China backpedaled on important elements of what the parties had agreed to,” the American statement said.

Meanwhile, the Trump administration has been moving ahead with plans to impose 25 percent tariffs on the remaining roughly $300 billion of goods from China, and companies are becoming more concerned about the rapid increase in prices on a range of goods, including furniture, toys, mobile phones and sneakers. On June 17, a hearing is to be held in Washington to allow companies to weigh in on the impact of the tariffs.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/06/08/us/politics/mnuchin-g-20-china.html

Democratic Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., suggested in a tweet Friday that “powerful people” are attempting to bribe President Trump into war with Iran.

Rep. Ocasio-Cortez quoted a tweet by Washington Post reporter David Fahrenthold which linked to an article that revealed documents obtained from Trump hotels. According to the Post’s report, an Iraqi sheik reportedly stayed at a suite in Trump’s hotel in Washington D.C. for 26 days after urging the Trump administration to take a “hard-line” approach towards Iran in July 2018.

“Sure looks like powerful people are trying to bribe the President into war,” Rep. Ocasio-Cortez wrote.

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Rep. Ocasio-Cortez’s tweet garnered more than 30,000 likes and 7,000 retweets in under five hours, but responses to her statement were varied.

Concerns about escalating tensions between the United States and Iran prompted Secretary of State Mike Pompeo to proclaim that the Trump administration is ready to sit down with Iran’s leaders for a conversation with “no preconditions.”

He added, however, that “the American effort to fundamentally reverse the malign activity of this Islamic Republic, this revolutionary force, is going to continue.”

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

President Trump has consistently maintained that he does not want to resort to military intervention to respond to “credible threats” from Iran but will do so if it becomes necessary.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/ocasio-cortez-trump-bribe-war-iran-twitter

Two young children were killed Friday when a drunk driver plowed into a horse-drawn buggy on the side of a Michigan highway, authorities said.

A 2-year-old and 6-year-old died when the pickup truck rear-ended the carriage in Marshall, Michigan, just outside Battle Creek, in the central part of the state. Both children died on the scene, Michigan State Police Sgt. Todd Price told ABC News.

There were seven people — two adults and five children — in the buggy at the time of the crash. All of them were thrown from the carriage, police said.

In addition to the two children who died, another child, age 4, was transported to the hospital with life-threatening injuries.

Jesse Bogan/St. Louis Post-Dispatch/TNS via Getty Images
A sign on Shafer Road near Licking, Mo., warns drivers about Amish buggies.

A 3-year-old child and adult woman were also injured, according to CBS affiliate WWMT.

The driver, whose name has not been released, was intoxicated at the time of the accident, Price said. He is being held in Branch County Jail.

The Amish population in Michigan is about 15,465, according to a study by Elizabethtown College’s The Young Center. The school, in Elizabethtown, Pennsylvania, is located in Lancaster County, which has one of the highest concentrations of Amish people in the country.

Michigan has the sixth-highest Amish population in the country, behind Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana, Wisconsin and New York.

Last month, a car hit a horse-drawn carriage in California Township, Michigan, about 40 minutes south of Marshall. The driver fled, but no one in the buggy was seriously injured, state police said.

Source Article from https://abcnews.go.com/US/young-children-killed-drunk-driver-hits-amish-buggy/story?id=63574106