Firefighters in Southern California are battling more than flames and smoke — they also have to worry about thrill-seeking drones that could collide with first responders’ helicopters.

The pilot flying a firefighting helicopter in Ventura County north of Los Angeles spotted a drone hovering above the flames at 3:19 a.m. Friday, apparently trying to take a photo or video of the fire below, forcing air operations to stop for at least 45 minutes. At 4:05 a.m., another drone appeared, the Los Angeles Times reported.

The drones grounded aerial firefighting for another hour while the Maria fire continued to spread.

Crews are still fighting that blaze, the last large wildfire in Southern California, according to the Associated Press. It has burned about 15 square miles and prompted evacuation orders for nearly 11,000 people since it began Thursday evening, but was 0 percent contained early Saturday.

This blaze may be another that could be attributed to electric lines, despite massive power shutdowns to hundreds of thousands of homes and businesses aimed at preventing new fires.

Winds have died down after near hurricane-strength gusts fanned flames of multiple fires in both the LA and San Francisco areas during the past week, but there are still 12 wildfires burning in the state.

In Northern California, the largest blaze, the 77,758-acre Kincade Fire in Sonoma County wine country was 70 percent contained, and more residents were returning after mass evacuations. At least 174 homes and 11 businesses were destroyed and 59 structures damaged, according to Cal Fire.

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2019/11/02/drones-are-grounding-firefighting-helicopters-amid-maria-fire-battle-in-california/

Democratic presidential candidates sparred over health care at the Iowa Democratic Party’s annual Liberty and Justice Celebration, a big event for Democrats and supporters that filled a basketball arena in downtown Des Moines. The fundraiser marked the beginning of the final three-month stretch leading up to the Iowa caucus, and was an opportunity for top-tier candidates to see their campaigns launch like Barack Obama’s did in 2008.

The event came after Senator Elizabeth Warren unveiled her much-anticipated proposal to pay for Medicare for All earlier on Friday. She claims she can fund the plan without raising taxes on middle-class Americans “by one penny.”

After accusing Warren of “mathematical gymnastics” in a campaign email on Friday, former Vice President Joe Biden did not address Warren’s plan directly in his speech Friday evening, although he took a swipe at her and Senator Bernie Sanders by saying his health care plan would not take “four years or five years or ten years to happen.”

“There will be no increases in taxes for the middle class. None. None. None,” Biden said about paying for health care reform, in an oblique reference to Warren and Sanders. Biden has emphasized the need to build upon and preserve the Affordable Care Act, which was signed into law by President Obama while he was vice president.

Warren responded with an indirect swipe at Biden, saying in her speech that “it’s easy to give up on a big idea, but when we give up on a big idea, we give up on the people whose lives would be touched by that big idea.”

“Anyone who comes on this stage and tells you to dream small and give up early is not going to lead our party to victory,” Warren said.

Meanwhile, Sanders — the architect of a Medicare for All proposal in Congress — promised supporters at the event: “We will pass, whether the insurance companies like it or not, Medicare for All.”

Senator Kamala Harris struck a balance by promising Medicare for All with the option to keep private insurance.

“I am running for president to make sure there is Medicare for All to bring down costs, and to ensure that you also get choice,” Harris said.

A New York Times/Siena College poll published on Friday showed Warren leading in Iowa in a tight race, with Sanders, Mayor Pete Buttigieg, and Biden close behind. However, the margin of error in the poll was plus or minus 4.7%, meaning that the top three candidates — Warren, Sanders, and Buttigieg — are virtually tied.

Although her frontrunner position in Iowa may be tenuous, enthusiasm for Warren could be seen at the event on Friday. CBS News’ Caitlin Huey-Burns reported that the section of the stadium seating Warren supporters unfurled a banner during her speech, saying: “Win with Warren.”

Musadiq Bidar contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.cbsnews.com/news/iowa-dinner-candidates-spar-over-health-care-2019-11-02/

When President Donald Trump appeared at a Tupelo, Mississippi rally Friday held to energize voters for the state’s Republican Lt. Gov. Tate Reeves — who is facing a tight race for governor against Democratic Attorney General Jim Hood on November 5 — it didn’t take long for the president to start stumping for himself instead.

In his first rally since the House of Representatives’ Thursday vote on the impeachment inquiry, the president did find some time to ask voters to support Reeves, who he brought onstage, but spent the majority of his address attacking lawmakers, the press, and political opponents to defend himself against growing scrutiny.

A day before the rally, the House voted to endorse an impeachment inquiry into the president’s efforts to pressure Ukraine into opening an investigation against his political opponent, former Vice President Joe Biden, and Biden’s son, Hunter.

As the House’s hearings with state officials are bringing potentially damaging information to light, Trump was eager to paint the investigation as a “hoax.” Proclaiming his innocence, he attacked Democratic leadership and threw a question back at the crowd: “How do you impeach a president who didn’t do anything wrong?”

“The [Democratic Party] leadership, they have no clue,” Trump continued. “They’re just very vicious people — actually, they’re sort of mentally violent people. But we’ve got it under control. It always help when you didn’t do anything wrong.”

After spending time attacking his usual foils, including former President Barack Obama, his former presidential rival Hillary Clinton (whose mention was greeted by chants of “Lock her up”), and Republican Sen. Mitt Romney (who has said he has some concerns about Trump and Ukraine), Trump told the crowd he doesn’t fear his critics or impeachment, because he believes he will come out on top.

“They figured they could take us out a different way, very dishonestly: with the lying and the spying and the leaking,” Trump said. “And we are kicking their ass, I tell you.”

Recent revelations from the House’s closed-door hearings indicate a different story, however.

On Tuesday Alexander Vindman, a National Security Council staffer and a US Army lieutenant colonel, said he had expressed concerns internally over Trump’s push for Ukraine’s investigation into the Biden family. Adding credence to his words was the fact that he was party to the now infamous July 25 call in which Trump explicitly asked Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky to investigate both the Bidens and the Democratic Party.

On Thursday, Tim Morrison, the top White House aide for Europe and Russia policy, also testified, confirming Trump offered Zelensky a quid pro quo arrangement.

This didn’t stop Trump from placing the blame for the impeachment inquiry elsewhere Friday, including the press. He blamed the media for framing his phone call with Zelensky as improper. And despite the fact the public record of the call came from the White House, said journalists intentionally removed the sarcasm and laughter from the call “because they’re dishonorable people.”

The president also colored the investigation as not only an attack against him, but a threat to democracy itself.

“The Democrats voted to potentially nullify the votes of 63 million Americans, disgracing themselves and bringing shame upon the House of Representatives,” Trump said, according to Politico. “Make no mistake they are coming after the Republican Party and me because I’m fighting for you.”

Thursday’s impeachment vote has put Trump on edge

The House’s vote on Thursday wasn’t about whether or not Trump should be impeached —we’re still far away from that vote. It did, however, set guidelines on how the impeachment inquiry will be handled from now on.

The resolution passed almost entirely on party lines: all but two Democrats voted yes — Minnesota Rep. Collin Peterson and New Jersey Rep. Jeff Van Drew broke from their party — while all Republicans voted no. Independent Rep. Justin Amash of Michigan, who is a former Republican, joined Democrats on the issue.

In response to the vote, Trump lashed out on Twitter, calling the investigation a “witch hunt” and claiming it was hurting the stock market.

Although the vote didn’t really change the status quo of the investigation, Vox’s Andrew Prokop explains it has interesting political implications:

Thursday’s vote is intriguing politically for two reasons. First, this is a vote that Pelosi has spent all year trying to stave off thanks to fear of putting vulnerable House Democrats from Trump-friendly districts in a tough spot.

Second, and relatedly, Republicans have spent weeks making the lack of this vote a key talking point in their criticisms of Democrats’ impeachment inquiry. In fact, House rules do not require a vote to start such an inquiry, nor does the Constitution, as Vox’s Ella Nilsen explained. But now that Democrats have decided to hold one anyway, Trump’s defenders will have to find some other process complaint to gripe about.

Under the new resolution, Rep. Adam Schiff (D-CA), the chair of the House Intelligence Committe and a close ally of Speaker Nancy Pelosi, will hold open hearings. The inquiry has reached a new phase — one where the public will be more closely involved.

Support for impeachment is growing, even in battleground states Trump won

Early on, Democratic leadership had been wary of pursuing an impeachment inquiry due to concerns over potential political consequences. And while impeachment remains to be a partisan issue, recent polling is showing growing support for an investigation.

Polling from New York Times/Siena College last week showed that a majority of voters in Arizona, Michigan, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin — five battleground states that Trump won in 2016 and will heavily rely on in 2020 — support an impeachment inquiry.

The same poll indicates that these voters are still against removing Trump from office. As Vox’s Aaron Rupar explains, however, open hearings could change their mind:

That same poll indicates that majorities in each of those states currently oppose Trump’s removal from office. But as the Nixon Watergate hearings taught us, public hearings laying out the evidence that Trump abused his office during his dealings with the new Ukrainian government could change that in a hurry, and those hearings are likely to begin as soon as later this month.

Trump should also be worried that his overall approval rating among Republicans has also dropped to a record low at 74 percent, according to a a Washington Post/ABC poll released on Friday.

And even the support of Senate Republicans, who had been staunch supporters of Trump through thick and thin, is beginning to show signs of weakening. Thursday, Sen. Tim Scott (R-SC) told reporters, “There’s lot of things that concern me” when asked about the allegations of wrongdoing Trump faces. And Scott, while in the minority, is not alone. Other senators, from Romney to Sen. Susan Collins have expressed concern.

“Everybody wants us to do the right thing,” Scott said. “In order to do the right thing, we want to see all that there is.”

Source Article from https://www.vox.com/policy-and-politics/2019/11/2/20944985/trump-impeachment-mississippi-rally-governors-race-tate-reeves

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – U.S. President Donald Trump on Friday suggested he could sign a long-awaited trade agreement with China in the farm state of Iowa, which has been hard hit by tariffs in a nearly 16-month trade war between the world’s largest economies.

Trump said on Friday evening that negotiations about a “phase one” agreement were going well and he hoped to sign the deal with Chinese President Xi Jinping at a U.S. location when work on the agreement was completed.

“We’re looking at a different couple of locations. It could even be in Iowa,” he told reporters at the White House. “We’re discussing locations, but I like to get deals done first.”

Trump and Xi had been expected to ink the agreement at the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation summit in Santiago, Chile from Nov. 16-17, but those plans were thrown into disarray on Wednesday when Chile withdrew as host of the meeting.

Trump said he would prefer to sign the agreement in the United States. “I would do it in the U.S.,” he said. Asked if Xi would too, Trump said: “He would too.”

He said Iowa, a key state in the 2020 presidential election in early February, would be a good location.

“We’re thinking about Iowa, you know why, because it would be the largest order in history for farmers. So to me, Iowa makes sense. I love Iowa. It’s a possibility,” Trump said.

Trump won the 2016 presidential election in Iowa with 51.1% of the vote, compared to 41.7% for Democrat Hillary Clinton.

The president carried Iowa by the largest margin of any Republican candidate since Ronald Reagan in 1980.

It was not immediately clear whether China would agree to sign the trade deal in the United States.

Xi is no stranger to the farm state.

He first visited Iowa in 1985, when he was leading a government agricultural research delegation. At the time he met with first-time governor Terry Branstad, who is now Trump’s envoy to Beijing.

When he was vice president in 2012, Xi returned to the eastern Iowa town of Muscatine to meet his host family from the 1985 trip.

While the U.S.-China trade war has slashed exports of U.S. soybeans and other crops, Trump has sought to offset the harm to farmers through $28 billion in trade aid support over the past two years, and his support among farmers remains strong.

Trump’s approval rating was 71% as of Aug. 23, down from 79% in July, according to trade publication Farm Journal Pulse’s poll of 1,153 farmers.

Reporting by Makini Brice, Eric Beech and Andrea Shalal; Editing by Daniel Wallis

Source Article from https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-trade-china-iowa/president-xi-goes-to-iowa-trump-floats-farm-state-to-seal-trade-deal-idUSKBN1XB57D

Here’s what you need to know to understand the impeachment inquiry into President Trump.

How we got here: House Speaker Nancy Pelosi announced the beginning of an official impeachment inquiry against President Trump on Sept. 24, 2019. Here’s what has happened since then.

What’s happening now: Lawmakers are conducting an inquiry, which could lead to impeachment. An impeachment would mean the U.S. House thinks the president is no longer fit to serve and should be removed from office. Here’s a guide to how impeachment works.

What’s happening next: House committees conducting the investigation have scheduled hearings and subpoenaed documents from dozens of witnesses relating to the president’s July 25 phone call with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky. Here are key dates and what’s next.

Stay informed: Read the latest reporting and analysis on the impeachment inquiry here.

Get email updates: Get a guide to the latest on the inquiry in your inbox every weekday. Sign up for the 5-Minute Fix.

Listen: Follow The Post’s coverage with daily updates from across our podcasts.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/national-security/a-presidential-loathing-for-ukraine-is-at-the-heart-of-the-impeachment-inquiry/2019/11/02/8280ee60-fcc5-11e9-ac8c-8eced29ca6ef_story.html

House Republican Conference Chairwoman Liz CheneyElizabeth (Liz) Lynn CheneyNostalgia for the GOP of old Democrats, GOP dig in for public phase of impeachment battle Republicans blast Pelosi following vote on impeachment resolution MORE (R-Wyo.) is calling on Speaker Nancy PelosiNancy PelosiTrump at rally says impeachment an ‘attack on democracy itself’ GOP lawmaker says House impeachment rules vote ‘doesn’t change anything for me’ Overnight Health Care: Warren unveils ‘Medicare for All’ funding plan | Warren says plan won’t raise middle class taxes | Rivals question claims | Biden camp says plan will hit ‘American workers’ | Trump taps cancer doctor Stephen Hahn for FDA chief MORE (D-Calif.) to immediately release the transcripts of the hearings and depositions that have taken place behind closed doors as part of the impeachment inquiry.

Cheney argued in a letter sent to Pelosi on Friday that the vote on a resolution laying out the procedures for impeachment does not bring transparency to the process. The measure passed mostly along party lines the previous day.

“Despite the vote in the House on October 31, House Democrats continue to conduct the partisan effort to impeach the President in secret,” Cheney wrote.

“Your duty to the Constitution and the American people, as well as fundamental fairness, requires that you immediately release the full transcripts of all depositions taken since you pronounced the beginning of an impeachment inquiry on September 24, 2019,” she added.

The push from Cheney, the No. 3 House Republican, comes as GOP lawmakers have worked to amplify their defense of President TrumpDonald John TrumpTrump singles in on ‘Sleepy Joe Biden’ at campaign rally Trump at rally says impeachment an ‘attack on democracy itself’ GOP lawmaker says House impeachment rules vote ‘doesn’t change anything for me’ MORE amid an accelerating investigation into his dealings with Ukraine and efforts to get a foreign government to investigate a political rival.

House Republicans have repeatedly blasted the way House Democrats have conducted the impeachment investigation, with Republicans bemoaning that access to the hearings is limited to members of the three panels leading the probe: the House Intelligence, Oversight and Reform, and Foreign Affairs committees.

GOP lawmakers have also repeatedly accused Democrats of selectively leaking information in an attempt to spin the narrative, with some going as far as attempting to storm a secure area in the Capitol late last month to gain access to the hearings and transcripts.

“The selective leaking in which the House Intelligence Committee has been engaged must end immediately and the full and complete record must be provided for the American people to see,” Cheney, who leads the House GOP conference’s messaging efforts, wrote to Pelosi on Friday.

“In addition, to the extent that you make any redactions in any of the transcripts, all Members of the House must be supplied copies of the full and unredacted transcripts,” she added.

One senior GOP House source told The Hill that “you can expect a bunch of our members to be sending similar letters in the coming days.”

House Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam SchiffAdam Bennett SchiffTrump at rally says impeachment an ‘attack on democracy itself’ Pelosi suggests impeachment inquiry could expand beyond Ukraine Schiff: Trump helped House Republicans plan to storm SCIF MORE (D-Calif.) told CNN on Thursday that transcripts of witness testimonies could be released as soon as next week.

Pelosi also told Bloomberg on Friday that she expects the chamber to begin holding public hearings in the inquiry as soon as this month.

Source Article from https://thehill.com/homenews/house/468664-cheney-calls-for-democrats-to-release-impeachment-probe-transcripts

WASHINGTON —The war over “Medicare for All” is only getting started, but by putting out a plan Friday that she says will pay for it, Democratic presidential candidate Elizabeth Warren may be better positioned to head off some of the more immediate political threats it poses to her campaign.

Whether it’s an effective blueprint for governing is another story, and policy experts on both the left and right are debating that side of it intensely as they digest the details. But her opponents will have to find at least one new line of political attack come November’s debate, unable to say she hasn’t come forward with the details.

Warren’s lack of a policy on a crucial issue had threatened to undermine her brand as the candidate with a plan for everything, a weakness that South Bend, Indiana, Mayor Pete Buttigieg — who increasingly looks like a threat to her in Iowa — exploited in the last match-up.

Her newly minted front-runner status made her a target on the issue, and she danced around repeated questions about whether Medicare for All would increase taxes on the middle class, despite having endorsed the bill written by Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., who has acknowledged there would be a tax hike while arguing the costs would be offset by overall savings.

Now, having released the revenue and cost estimates her opponents criticized her for omitting, it’s a much more complicated fight, which will center on competing estimates and expert analysis and nuanced arguments about what counts as a tax on which people. That could make it harder to litigate on a crowded debate stage.

“Very few people really understand what’s going on in these proposals, certainly not regular people, so the whole thing turns on what the media is willing to say to the masses on all of this,” Matt Bruenig, founder of the socialist People’s Policy Project, told NBC News.

Another threat her proposal attempts to neutralize is the way her Medicare for All bill tests her political coalition, which is effectively an alliance between the middle and upper-middle class against the ultra-rich. Her signature wealth tax starts at fortunes over $50 million and uses its revenue to fund broad benefits in education and child care. It’s not so much the 99 percent versus the 1 percent, as it is the 0.1 percent or 0.01 percent.

Medicare for All’s benefits, by contrast, are more nuanced when it comes to class. While it’s possible most Americans would see their overall costs go down, individual results could vary and it’s not clear at which point in the income ladder people go from relative winners to losers without knowing its price tag, structure, and financing.

Warren’s plan doesn’t fully eliminate these concerns, but through great effort and some optimistic assumptions, she arguably did structure it to avoid a widespread direct tax increase on the middle class.

But there are also serious arguments about whether Warren’s plan is politically viable, technically workable, or meets its stated goals. (And that’s beyond the political problem she faces in eliminating private insurance, which is opposed by many centrist Democrats.)

Opponents are already challenging Warren’s claim that there will be “not one penny” in middle-class tax increases, as well as her broader math. Former Vice President Joe Biden’s campaign points out that Warren’s proposal creates an $8.8 trillion payroll tax on employers that experts say is passed on to workers — and they have some backup from tax experts.

Warren’s campaign, with backing of her own from some health policy experts, argues it’s an unfair comparison, because it replaces an estimated $9 trillion employers were already expected to pay in health care.

Critics also argue her plan relies on very generous assumptions to make the numbers add up: Raising more than $2 trillion in revenue from better tax enforcement alone, for example, or demanding deeper health care savings than some outside studies argue is possible. Like other single-payer proposals, her plan calls for significant savings from health care providers and drug companies that are likely to meet fierce opposition from industry groups. Some tax experts on the right argue the additional taxes on corporations and investors would slow the economy.

“The math is magical, the middle class will be on the hook, and some of the proposals are landmines,” Jim Kessler, executive vice president at the centrist Third Way, said in a memo.

On the pro-single payer left, Bruenig has argued the plan was less progressive than it would be if it used a simple payroll tax, which would land on the middle class but force higher earners to pay more than her tax on employers.

“The main purpose of the proposal appears to be to find a plan that you can message as ‘not increasing middle class taxes,’” he wrote in a blog post.

In the meantime, it’s possible Warren’s careful positioning could come with some real political upsides.

Sean McElwee, founder of the left-wing polling firm Data for Progress, said the data suggests there’s value to denying opponents a damaging sound bite on taxes. Respondents to a survey his group conducted with YouGov Blue said they backed a Medicare for All plan that does not raise taxes on the middle class by a 57-30 margin, a much higher show of support than other surveys that acknowledged higher taxes.

If one believes House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., and the many Democrats who have suggested single-payer health care like Medicare for All has virtually no chance of passing anytime soon, a plan that gets Warren through an election cycle may be more valuable than one that could credibly go into effect tomorrow.

“To some extent, I take the ‘campaign in poetry/govern in prose’ philosophy,” McElwee said. “Questions of [budget] scores and stuff will become a problem when we have to move this through the House and Senate, but that will occur after the 2020 election.”

Source Article from https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/2020-election/how-warren-s-plan-changes-terms-medicare-all-debate-n1075391

WASHINGTON – As the impeachment inquiry into President Donald Trump’s dealings with Ukraine moves into the public phase, House Republicans have demanded Democrats “immediately release” transcripts from the closed-door interviews with witnesses. House Democrats say the release of transcripts may come next week. 

In a letter sent to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s office dated Friday, Rep. Liz Cheney, R-Wyo., the third-ranking House Republican, said Democrats were continuing to “conduct the partisan effort to impeach the president” in secret. 

“Your duty to the Constitution and the American people, as well as fundamental fairness, requires that you immediately release the full transcripts of all depositions taken since you pronounced the beginning of an impeachment inquiry on September 24, 2019,” Cheney wrote. 

In the six weeks since Pelosi announced the formal inquiry, House Democrats have held numerous closed-door hearings with witnesses. Democrats say the hearings behind closed doors allow witnesses to speak more candidly than they would in a public setting, but Republicans have denounced the format as a “Soviet-style” and “secret” process.

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2019/11/02/trump-impeachment-inquiry-cheney-gop-demand-transcripts-release/4138364002/

Yet Ms. Warren has managed to assemble an ideologically diverse coalition. Though her supporters generally skew liberal, most of them don’t feel strongly about eliminating college tuition, and almost half don’t express strong support for breaking up banks and tech companies.

Health care has been the most discussed issue of the primary season, with Mr. Sanders and Ms. Warren advocating a “Medicare for all” bill and more moderate candidates calling for a public option. The poll found that most Democratic voters in Iowa are open to a single payer-type plan, but a majority would prefer a candidate who seeks to strengthen the Affordable Care Act and add a public option.

While Mr. Sanders’ Iowa supporters are united in their desire for a single-payer health care system, Ms. Warren brings together a broader spectrum: Barely over half of her voters feel strongly about getting rid of private insurance. This suggests that Ms. Warren has room to grow among the substantial share of voters who are less interested in Medicare for all, and who have not yet settled on a final candidate choice.

It is impossible to say just how many voters will actually turn out in a primary, or which groups will vote in the greatest numbers. At caucuses, which are more sparsely attended, it’s especially hard to know.

So, remember that like all the pre-election surveys that you’ll see in the coming months, the results of this one were dictated in part by how our team defined the probable electorate.

Add in the complex set of rules governing the Iowa caucuses — where backers of less-popular candidates will eventually have to throw their support to someone else on the night of the election — and it all adds up to a lot of uncertainty. This poll is nothing more than our attempt at a snapshot of where things are at, three months out.

Besides that, Iowa’s voters are more than 90 percent white, so the results of this poll carry only the faintest of implications about how the race will play out in the rest of the country. After Iowa’s caucuses and the first primary a week later, in heavily white New Hampshire, the importance of the party’s nonwhite electorate — particularly black and Hispanic voters — will come back into the foreground.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/11/02/us/politics/iowa-poll-highlights.html

The sun shines over the U.S. Capitol Building on Friday.

Eric Baradat/AFP via Getty Images


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Eric Baradat/AFP via Getty Images

The sun shines over the U.S. Capitol Building on Friday.

Eric Baradat/AFP via Getty Images

House Democrats crossed the Rubicon this week and committed, for the record, to their impeachment inquiry. Although they said impeachment isn’t a foregone conclusion, they tried to underscore again that this is serious.

Meanwhile, more confirmations of the facts of the Ukraine affair meant the end of the investigation process may now be in view — and public hearings could be coming next.

Here’s what you need to know about the events of an historic week in Washington and what may be around the corner.

Lt. Col. Vindman and Mr. Morrison

House investigators heard from two more witnesses who confirmed the underlying facts of the Ukraine story: President Trump sought to pressure the Ukrainian government to launch investigations that he believed would help him in the 2020 election.

Lt. Col. Alexander Vindman and, later, Timothy Morrison — two top White House policy officials — are believed to have told investigators about the parallel foreign policy run by Rudy Giuliani; the use of hand-picked diplomats, including the U.S. ambassador to the European Union, Gordon Sondland; and the discomfiture of career professionals about what was taking place.

Both men listened to Trump’s now-famous July 25 phone call with Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskiy. Their subjective impressions about what they observed, however, were different.

Vindman thought almost immediately that what he’d heard was problematic.

He pushed for Trump to reinstate the military assistance to Ukraine during the time it was frozen and also for the White House to add back terms that Vindman remembered Trump using, including references to the investigation that Trump wanted into the family of former Vice President Joe Biden.

Morrison told House investigators he didn’t think Trump had done anything illegal, but he opposed the Ukraine pressure strategy on its merits because it helped Russia — and he also realized that there would be political blowback both in Kyiv and Washington if details of the call were revealed.

The vote

Meanwhile, the House voted on Thursday to make its impeachment inquiry formal.

The measure passed 232 to 196 with no Republican support and, in fact, two Democrats joined Republicans in opposing the impeachment inquiry.

Trump and Republicans had complained that House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s announcement about an inquiry didn’t carry the same legal weight as an actual vote, and accordingly that it was illegitimate.

That was one reason why White House counsel Pat Cipollone vowed that the administration would not cooperate with witnesses or evidence.

But that firewall hasn’t actually stopped several currently serving administration witnesses. The House vote also didn’t change the minds of Republicans either. They rejected the framework set out in the legislation as still too unfair to them and the due process they say they and Trump are owed.

‘Legitimate actions’

House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., also offered a substantive defense of Trump.

In a floor speech opposing the impeachment inquiry, McCarthy said that Democrats were abusing “secret process and selective leaks to portray the president’s legitimate actions as an impeachable offense.”

Translation: Trump had the power and was within his rights to expect concessions from Ukraine in the way he did and should not be impeached, for McCarthy.

Other supporters, including Sen. Rob Portman, R-Ohio, have reached that conclusion by traveling a different route, arguing that although they believe Trump’s actions weren’t appropriate, the president shouldn’t be impeached.

Pelosi, who arrived late herself to Democrats’ impeachment bandwagon, was unfazed.

“This is a solemn occasion,” she said. “The times have found every one of us in this room.”

Trump, in her telling, has abused his powers so badly and rejected Congress so flagrantly that, for Pelosi, the House has no alternative but to consider impeachment.

Then she said something important: “That decision has not been made … that is what this inquiry will determine.”

Collision course

Members of Congress in both the House and the Senate appear to expect an old-fashioned impeachment; Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., has circulated plans for how an eventual trial might run later this year, as NPR’s Susan Davis and Claudia Grisales reported.

The concession by Pelosi this week, however, holds open the possibility that she and Democrats might wave off before they got there. Impeachment is an indictment by the House that would spark a trial in the Senate.

The upper chamber is controlled by McConnell and the president’s allies, and unless there’s a major change in the political atmosphere, Trump seems likely to be acquitted and keep his office.

That’s why Trump and supporters have long calculated that impeachment might wind up being a political asset for them. The Trump campaign says impeachment already is helping its fundraising.

Democrats can see this situation as clearly as anyone else. That’s why it was telling that Pelosi said Thursday impeachment isn’t necessarily automatic. All she has done is commit the chamber to an inquiry. If the political headwinds pick up, it raises the possibility that Democrats might try to find some other outcome besides a Senate trial in which Trump prevails.

Going active

If Pelosi and her lieutenants have been encouraged by public polls that suggest support from many Americans — albeit almost no Republicans — the final test may come after the next phase in the inquiry.

Democrats have invited another slate of White House witnesses for closed-door depositions next week, including former national security adviser John Bolton. They may not appear, citing Cipollone’s instructions not to cooperate. Energy Secretary Rick Perry has also been invited, but his department says he will not participate.

There may not be many more closed-door sessions and instead, Democrats may prepare to shift from the inside game to the outside game.

For one thing, investigators are expected to release hundreds of pages worth of depositions, like those from Vindman and Morrison and many others.

Democrats also are expected to convene open hearings in which some witnesses who’ve already testified, including, potentially, Ambassador William Taylor, could tell their stories in the open.

Republicans would have some privileges in these proceedings, including the ability to call witnesses of their own with the assent of the committee chairman.

The impeachment inquiry resolution also directs the publication of a final report about the committees’ findings, which likely would form the basis for any eventual articles of impeachment.

The House Judiciary Committee has jurisdiction over that legislation and that process, as NPR’s Deirdre Walsh wrote, and it would be under the aegis of its chairman, Jerry Nadler of New York, that impeachment could move to the House floor and a final vote.

McConnell has said that if he receives impeachment articles from the House, the Senate will convene a trial as designated under the Constitution.

The trial

The 100 members of the Senate would be the jury; they’d be expected to sit in their seats without speaking — a spectacle rarely glimpsed — while impeachment managers from the House made the case for and against removing Trump.

John Roberts, the chief justice of the United States, would preside and manage the by-play on the Senate floor as his predecessor, William Rehnquist, did when President Bill Clinton was impeached in 1998.

So far, so familiar. And if present dynamics hold, Trump, like Clinton, would be acquitted and preserve his office.

If the Senate were to vote to remove Trump, however, Washington would go from an already seldom-seen practice in impeachment and truly sail off the map completely.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2019/11/02/775490647/impeachment-inquiry-catch-up-a-vote-by-house-democrats-makes-it-official

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Source Article from https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2019-11-02/nancy-pelosi-is-worried-2020-candidates-are-on-wrong-track

Media captionPresident Trump mocked Beto O’Rourke at a rally in Mississippi

US President Donald Trump has ridiculed Beto O’Rourke just hours after the Democratic presidential hopeful ended his campaign.

The president used a profanity to describe his rival and said he “quit like a dog”.

Mr O’Rourke, a former Texas congressman, was highly critical of Mr Trump after a mass shooting in his hometown of El Paso in August.

He called the bloodshed a “consequence” of Mr Trump’s anti-immigrant rhetoric.

On Friday Mr O’Rourke said he was quitting the race for the White House as his campaign did not have “the means to move forward successfully”.

Mr Trump’s response came days after he said Islamic State (IS) leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi had “died like a dog” during a US military operation in north-western Syria.

Media captionBeto O’Rourke: “We do not have the means to pursue this campaign successfully”

Speaking at a rally in Tupelo, Mississippi, the president branded Mr O’Rourke a “poor, pathetic guy”.

What did Trump say?

“He came out of Texas a very hot political property, and he went back as cold as you can be,” Mr Trump declared.

He had earlier mocked Mr O’Rourke on Twitter.

He also described former Vice-President Joe Biden, a frontrunner in the race for the Democratic nomination, as mentally deficient, and said he was “dropping like a rock”.

Turning to the impeachment inquiry against him, the president said he believed an “angry majority” of American voters would support him.

The investigation was launched over allegations that Mr Trump improperly sought help from Ukraine to boost his chances of re-election, which he denies.

How did Mr O’Rourke quit?

Announcing the end of his campaign, Mr O’Rourke tweeted: “Our campaign has always been about seeing clearly, speaking honestly, and acting decisively.

“In that spirit: I am announcing that my service to the country will not be as a candidate or as the nominee.”

In a blog post thanking supporters, he wrote: “We confronted institutional, systemic racism and called out Donald Trump for his white supremacy and the violence that he’s encouraged against communities that don’t look like, pray like or love like the majority in this country.”

Democratic frontrunners tweeted their tributes to Mr O’Rourke after he stood aside.

Mr Biden said he had inspired many.

Elizabeth Warren commended his “commitment to ending gun violence”, while Bernie Sanders thanked him “for running a campaign to bring millions of people together”.

Who is Beto O’Rourke?

Mr O’Rourke, 47, ran for president in March after losing his 2018 bid to oust Texas Republican Senator Ted Cruz.

In that Senate race, he did better than any Democrat had in Texas for decades, running a campaign that invigorated the party nationwide and drew comparisons with former President Barack Obama.

Media captionWho is Beto O’Rourke?

His passionate delivery along with his good looks and background as a skateboarder and a punk rocker endeared him to liberals across the country.

But Mr O’Rourke struggled to carry that energy into a White House race crowded with more than 20 Democratic candidates.

As the initial buzz over his campaign began to subside, the former congressman tried to reboot his candidacy.

He began to focus on gun control, and vowed to remove assault-style weapons from private ownership, saying in one televised debate: “Hell yes, we’re going to take your AR-15s.”

But he could not catch up with front-runners like former Vice-President Joe Biden, Massachusetts Senator Elizabeth Warren and Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders.

As he launched his campaign, he posed on the cover of Vanity Fair, telling the magazine about the White House race: “Man, I’m just born to be in it.”

He later said he regretted that move because it reinforced a “perception of privilege.”

From rock star to rock bottom

In just about 12 months, Beto O’Rourke went from Democratic rock star to political rock bottom.

During his 2018 Senate race, the former Texas congressman was fundraising like a top-tier presidential candidate. Beloved by Democrats across the country for his youthful energy, his passionate stump speeches became viral sensations.

His obvious political skills in his home state did not translate on to the national stage, however, where a lack of campaign organisation and an inability to stand out on a crowded debate stage cost him dearly.

Mr O’Rourke’s relatively thin CV, which wasn’t a concern for Democrats when he was facing conservative stalwart Ted Cruz in Texas, was also a liability in a match-up against senators and a former vice-president with extensive experience and in-depth policy knowledge.

Some presidential hopefuls can run unsuccessful campaigns and end up with an elevated stature among party faithful – with more political prospects than when they began. Mr O’Rourke, whose campaign started high and trended only downward, was not so fortunate. He may have a second act in national politics, but his 2019 effort will be an experience he will have to overcome, not build on.

Source Article from https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-50272171

As fires continue to burn across the state, a new blaze in Ventura County exploded to more than 8,000 acres Friday, prompting more evacuations and damaging at least two structures.

The Maria fire broke out atop South Mountain, just south of Santa Paula, about 6:14 p.m. Thursday and was quickly burning toward the small agricultural towns of Somis and Saticoy. Fire officials say 1,800 structures are threatened by the growing blaze.

The Times is offering fire coverage for free today. Please consider a subscription to support our journalism.

Authorities issued mandatory evacuations for 7,500 people, according to the Ventura County Fire Department. The Camarillo Community Center opened as an emergency shelter.

Several school districts announced their schools would close Friday because of the fire.

Elsewhere in the state, firefighters began to make significant progress in containing other blazes. Most evacuation orders were lifted, and containment numbers began to increase after numerous harsh wind events.

In Northern California, Pacific Gas & Electric Co. has restored power to 99% of its customers whose electricity was turned off during public safety power outages. At least 1,000 customers remain without power in Southern California Edison’s jurisdiction.

Here are details on the remaining major fires burning across California:

Kincade fire

The largest California fire burning right now started the evening of Oct. 23 near John Kincade Road and Burned Mountain Road, east of Geyserville and spread quickly toward homes in the town.

Acreage: 77,758
Containment: 68%
Evacuations: Most evacuations have been lifted, including for the cities of Calistoga, Windsor, Healdsburg, Santa Rosa and Napa County.
Damage: At least 352 structures were destroyed and 55 were damaged. Four civilians and firefighters were injured, but no deaths have been reported.
Schools: Sonoma County school districts are closed Friday.

Easy fire

The Easy fire ignited Wednesday near West Easy Street and West Los Angeles Avenue in Simi Valley, threatening the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library and surrounding homes. The library was not damaged in the blaze.

Acreage: 1,860
Containment: 80%
Evacuations: All evacuation orders have been lifted.
Damage: At least two structures were destroyed. Three firefighters have been injured.
Schools: Several schools in Ventura County remained closed Friday because of the Maria fire.

Getty fire

The Getty fire broke out along the 405 Freeway by Getty Center Drive around 1:30 a.m. Monday and blew up under Santa Ana winds. Thousands of people were ordered to evacuate some of the priciest enclaves on Earth, while the people who worked for them — housekeepers and gardners — reported for work despite the flames.

Acreage: 745
Containment: 66%
Evacuations: All evacuation orders have been lifted.
Damage: At least 10 homes have been destroyed and 15 were damaged. More than 7,000 houses remain threatened. Two firefighters were injured in the blaze, and no deaths have been reported.
Schools: The L.A. Unified School District said all schools were in session Friday.

Hill fire

The Hill fire started Wednesday morning near Granite Valley and Pyrite Street in Jurupa Valley. A day later, the 46 fire ignited nearby after a car chase came to a fiery end.

Acreage: 628
Containment: 80%
Evacuations: All evacuation orders have been lifted.
Damage: Two homes were damaged. One civilian was hurt.
Schools: All schools in the Jurupa Unified School District, except Granite Hill and Peralta Elementary schools, were open Friday.

Hillside fire

The Hillside fire in San Bernardino sparked early Thursday near Highway 18 at Waterman Canyon after fierce winds whipped up the destructive blaze and pushed it into neighborhoods.

Acreage: About 200 acres
Containment: 70%
Evacuations: All evacuation orders have been lifted.
Damage: Six homes were destroyed and 18 were damaged.
Schools: All San Bernardino County Unified School District schools were open Friday and Cal State San Bernardino reopened to students at 10 a.m.

46 fire:

The 46 fire broke out just after midnight Thursday near the 5300 block of 46th Avenue in Jurupa Valley, after a police pursuit ended in a crash that authorities say sparked the blaze. The fire threatened an animal shelter and sent ranch hands scrambling to evacuate horses amid a burning backdrop.

Acreage: 300
Containment: 70%
Evacuations: All evacuation orders have been lifted.
Damage: Several structures were damaged. One person was hospitalized with breathing problems from the smoke.
Schools: All schools in the Jurupa Unified School District, except Granite Hill and Peralta Elementary schools, were open Friday.

Times staff writer Hannah Fry contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2019-11-01/lost-track-of-all-the-california-fires-heres-what-you-need-to-know

Even on “The Late Show with Stephen Colbert,” House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) maintained a serious tone Oct. 31 while discussing the impeachment inquiry. Read more: https://wapo.st/32djSUE. Subscribe to The Washington Post on YouTube: https://wapo.st/2QOdcqK

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Source Article from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8Q8e4cu_V4k

The tumult has even extended to the White House’s search to find a leader for a sprawling agency of more than 240,000 employees, a search that does not appear to be over. Even when Mr. Wolf is officially named as acting secretary, he is not expected to be nominated to the position, according to two administration officials.

Some in the administration have pushed for an acting secretary who displays the same aggressive messaging that Mr. Trump looks for when choosing officials to lead the agencies in the Department of Homeland Security, which is responsible for enforcing Mr. Trump’s immigration agenda.

While Mark Morgan, the acting commissioner of Customs and Border Protection, and Ken Cuccinelli II, who oversees legal immigration, have taken that tack, the Justice Department’s Office of Legal Counsel recommended that appointing either of them would violate a federal statute that determines the rules of succession for cabinet positions.

The White House had explored a way to work around the statute by appointing a potential candidate for the top job to lead homeland security’s Countering Weapons of Mass Destruction Office, which is waived from the same Senate approval requirements. But reports of the move prompted backlash from Republicans and Democrats in Congress.

The president’s aides have told him that Mr. Wolf would be a legally safer pick.

As Ms. Nielsen’s chief of staff, Mr. Wolf helped enforce the administration’s “zero tolerance” policy to prosecute families who crossed the border illegally, which led to thousands of children being separated from their parents. Many of those children are still separated from their families.

Mr. Wolf is viewed by Stephen Miller, the White House adviser and the chief architect of the president’s border policies, as someone who can reliably put into effect his immigration agenda, according to administration officials.

Before joining the Department of Homeland Security, Mr. Wolf worked as a lobbyist representing companies aiming to sell products to the Department of Homeland Security.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/11/01/us/politics/trump-chad-wolf-dhs.html

Image copyright
Getty Images

Image caption

President Trump mocked Beto O’Rourke at a rally in Mississippi

US President Donald Trump has ridiculed Beto O’Rourke just hours after the Democratic presidential hopeful ended his campaign.

The president used a profanity to describe his rival and said he “quit like a dog”.

Mr O’Rourke, a former Texas congressman, was highly critical of Mr Trump after a mass shooting in his hometown of El Paso in August.

He called the bloodshed a “consequence” of Mr Trump’s anti-immigrant rhetoric.

On Friday Mr O’Rourke said he was quitting the race for the White House as his campaign did not have “the means to move forward successfully”.

Mr Trump’s response came days after he said Islamic State (IS) leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi had “died like a dog” during a US military operation in north-western Syria.

Media captionBeto O’Rourke: “We do not have the means to pursue this campaign successfully”

Speaking at a rally in Tupelo, Mississippi, the president branded Mr O’Rourke a “poor, pathetic guy”.

What did Trump say?

“He came out of Texas a very hot political property, and he went back as cold as you can be,” Mr Trump declared.

He had earlier mocked Mr O’Rourke on Twitter.

He also described former Vice-President Joe Biden, a frontrunner in the race for the Democratic nomination, as mentally deficient, and said he was “dropping like a rock”.

Turning to the impeachment inquiry against him, the president said he believed an “angry majority” of American voters would support him.

The investigation was launched over allegations that Mr Trump improperly sought help from Ukraine to boost his chances of re-election, which he denies.

How did Mr O’Rourke quit?

Announcing the end of his campaign, Mr O’Rourke tweeted: “Our campaign has always been about seeing clearly, speaking honestly, and acting decisively.

“In that spirit: I am announcing that my service to the country will not be as a candidate or as the nominee.”

In a blog post thanking supporters, he wrote: “We confronted institutional, systemic racism and called out Donald Trump for his white supremacy and the violence that he’s encouraged against communities that don’t look like, pray like or love like the majority in this country.”

Democratic frontrunners tweeted their tributes to Mr O’Rourke after he stood aside.

Mr Biden said he had inspired many.

Elizabeth Warren commended his “commitment to ending gun violence”, while Bernie Sanders thanked him “for running a campaign to bring millions of people together”.

Who is Beto O’Rourke?

Mr O’Rourke, 47, ran for president in March after losing his 2018 bid to oust Texas Republican Senator Ted Cruz.

In that Senate race, he did better than any Democrat had in Texas for decades, running a campaign that invigorated the party nationwide and drew comparisons with former President Barack Obama.

Media captionWho is Beto O’Rourke?

His passionate delivery along with his good looks and background as a skateboarder and a punk rocker endeared him to liberals across the country.

But Mr O’Rourke struggled to carry that energy into a White House race crowded with more than 20 Democratic candidates.

As the initial buzz over his campaign began to subside, the former congressman tried to reboot his candidacy.

He began to focus on gun control, and vowed to remove assault-style weapons from private ownership, saying in one televised debate: “Hell yes, we’re going to take your AR-15s.”

But he could not catch up with front-runners like former Vice-President Joe Biden, Massachusetts Senator Elizabeth Warren and Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders.

As he launched his campaign, he posed on the cover of Vanity Fair, telling the magazine about the White House race: “Man, I’m just born to be in it.”

He later said he regretted that move because it reinforced a “perception of privilege.”

From rock star to rock bottom

In just about 12 months, Beto O’Rourke went from Democratic rock star to political rock bottom.

During his 2018 Senate race, the former Texas congressman was fundraising like a top-tier presidential candidate. Beloved by Democrats across the country for his youthful energy, his passionate stump speeches became viral sensations.

His obvious political skills in his home state did not translate on to the national stage, however, where a lack of campaign organisation and an inability to stand out on a crowded debate stage cost him dearly.

Mr O’Rourke’s relatively thin CV, which wasn’t a concern for Democrats when he was facing conservative stalwart Ted Cruz in Texas, was also a liability in a match-up against senators and a former vice-president with extensive experience and in-depth policy knowledge.

Some presidential hopefuls can run unsuccessful campaigns and end up with an elevated stature among party faithful – with more political prospects than when they began. Mr O’Rourke, whose campaign started high and trended only downward, was not so fortunate. He may have a second act in national politics, but his 2019 effort will be an experience he will have to overcome, not build on.

Source Article from https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-50272171

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Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2019/11/02/politics/iowa-democratic-dinner-takeaways/index.html

President Donald Trump went after Democrats on Friday, claiming that the House impeachment inquiry was part of a planned attempt to illegitimately remove the president from office, attacking his 2020 rivals in his first campaign rally since the House voted to formalize the impeachment inquiry.

“First they engineered the Russia hoax,” Trump said, “then the Mueller witch hunt,” he continued, speaking to a crowd of supporters at the BancorpSouth Arena in Tupelo, Mississippi. “That didn’t work out too well, did it? That fizzled.”

“And now corrupt politicians Nancy Pelosi and ‘Shifty’ Adam Schiff and the media are continuing with the deranged impeachment witch hunt,” Trump said, again mocking Rep. Adam Schiff’s last name.

Trump called this week’s House vote a move to “nullify” the votes of millions of Americans in the 2016 election and claimed that the Democratic Party had been plotting to “overthrow the election” results since the moment he was elected.

“I never thought I would be involved with the word ‘impeachment,’” Trump said, saying he considered it “a dirty word.”

While the House vote on Thursday was largely split on party lines, some members of the president’s party, including Senate Republicans, have been slow to come to the president’s full defense.

But Trump assured his supporters on Friday night that “the Republicans are really strong, the strongest I’ve ever seen them, the most unified I have ever seen them.”

The impeachment inquiry, he said, was not only a means to discredit his 2016 victory, but an effort to keep him from winning re-election: “It’s all a phony deal, this whole impeachment scam to try and undermine the 2020 election and to de-legitimatize one of the greatest elections,” he said.

“They know they can’t win, so let’s try and impeach him,” Trump added. “We got to impeach him ’cause we can beat him.”

Addressing 2020 Democratic candidates, Trump ridiculed rivals, saying he had a new nickname for Vice President Joe Biden — “very slow, sleepy Joe” — and continuing to attack Biden’s son, Hunter, over discredited claims of improper business relationships with a Ukrainian energy company.

Trump also went after former Rep. Beto O’Rourke of Texas, who just hours before announced he was dropping out of the 2020 Democratic primary. Trump and O’Rourke had been critical of each other on the campaign trail, and even held competing rallies in El Paso, Texas, O’Rourke’s hometown, earlier this year.

“Beto, did you hear? Ah, that poor bastard. Poor, pathetic guy,” Trump said. “Anybody who says they’re born for this, they’re in trouble,” Trump said, mocking an interview O’Rourke did with Vanity Fair.

Trump also accused President Barack Obama of working harder than Hillary Clinton to beat him, stating it is the “only time I’ve seen him work hard.” He added that Democrats tried to take him down with with “the lying and the spying and the leaking” but “we are kicking their ass.”

Trump continued to attack the former president, lamenting that he did not receive as much positive coverage after he announced the death of Islamic State militant group’s leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi as Obama did after the death of Bin Laden.

“I didn’t do it for the story, I did it ’cause it was the right thing to do,” Trump said. “Conan, the dog, got more publicity than me,” he added, promising that the dog would be visiting the White House in the coming weeks.

Trump stopped in Mississippi as part of a last-minute push in several competitive gubernatorial races in deep red states before they vote next week. The president is expected to visit Kentucky on Monday to aid incumbent GOP Gov. Matt Bevin, and then to Louisiana for a second time to help Eddie Rispone unseat the current governor in a runoff election.

While Mississippi should be a shoo-in for Republicans, this year’s race is proving competitive, with Republican Lt. Gov. Tate Reeves running against state Attorney General Jim Hood, who has served in that post since 2004 and is the only statewide elected Democrat.

While Trump’s political fate isn’t tied to what happens in either of those races, he is looking to get wins on the board that he can take credit for — showing he is still a force in the Republican Party despite the negative headlines surrounding impeachment.

“You know, I can’t believe that this is a competitive race,” Trump told the rally crowd Friday night. “It’s embarrassing.”

The president took credit for forcing the runoff in the Louisiana race after holding a rally on the eve of the state’s primary, where Democratic candidate Edwards fell short of claiming the 50 percent of the vote needed to avoid the contest.

Source Article from https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/donald-trump/trump-impeachment-move-nullify-2016-undermine-re-election-n1075576

In a season of flames and blackouts across California, yet another intense wildfire has broken out outside Los Angeles.

The Maria Fire, which is mostly affecting residents in Ventura County, has burned more than 8,000 acres so far since exploding on Thursday night. By this morning, however, the flames had spread dramatically. Mandatory evacuations are in place. So far, firefighters are having a tough time containing the fire, but the winds may finally shift in their favor Friday.

“We’re seeing a marked reduction in the wind speeds,” National Weather Service senior meteorologist Patrick Burke told Reuters. “We’ll see steady winds of 15-20 mph through Friday, so that still doesn’t help, but it’s way down from what it was. We’ll continue to see a marked reduction through the weekend. I’d say this wind event is about over.”

That’s a relief. These wild-ass hot and dry winds—dubbed Santa Ana winds in the south and Diablo winds in the north of the state—have been helping fuel the hellscape that’s taken over California. The Maria Fire is only the latest blaze. The Getty Fire continues to rage just southeast of the Maria Fire where evacuation orders remain in place. The Easy Fire is also burning in Ventura County and only remains 10 percent contained. Meanwhile, the Kincade Fire continues to burn north in Wine Country though officials have finally been able to contain it to nearly 70 percent. The fire has already burned over more than 77,000 acres, though, injuring four people and damaging or destroying 352 structures along the way.

The Maria Fire is not playing.
Photo: AP

Firefighters are having to contend with flames and smoke, but officials have also raised the alarm about another, non-fire related threat: unauthorized drone usage. A drone caused helicopters to stop dropping water during firefighting efforts for the Maria Fire. If there’s a drone in the air, firefighting aircraft gotta land to ensure there’s no collisions.

“This is a major issue for us, and we work hard to get the word out about the dangers of flying drones near wildfires,” Ian Gregor, a public affairs manager for the Federal Aviation Administration, said in an email to Earther.

In 2019, firefighting efforts from the sky were disrupted nine times due to drones. Most have been in California, but firefighting efforts have also been disrupted in Arizona, Nevada, Utah, and Washington. And it seems more and more people are sending their drones into the air above wildfires. That puts firefighters at-risk and by slowing down firefighting operations, also opens the door for fires to do more damage.

The spate of California wildfires in recent years have really messed with people’s lives. The state’s largest utility, PG&E, has been in a constant state of shutting people’s power off in Northern California since the wildfire season hit full swing in October in an effort to cut down on blazes sparked by down power lines. On Thursday, the utility finally began restoring power to some customers who had been without power since the weekend.

Source Article from https://earther.gizmodo.com/another-day-another-wildfire-1839538710

ORINDA — A mansion rented through Airbnb for a Halloween party turned into a chaotic scene Thursday evening, when gunfire broke out, killing five people, injuring several others and sending more than 100 frightened partygoers fleeing from the posh neighborhood of this affluent city where violent crime is rare.

After confirming the deaths of four men in their 20s earlier in the day, police announced late Friday night that a fifth shooting victim, a 19-year-old woman, died at a local hospital.

Police still don’t know whether more than one shooter was involved or have any motives.

The Contra Costa County Sheriff’s Office and Orinda Police Department released the names of the dead victims — Tiyon Farley, 22, of Antioch; Omar Taylor, 24, of Pittsburg; Ramon Hill Jr., 23, of San Francisco/Oakland; and Javin County, 29, of Sausalito/Richmond. Hours later, the sheriff’s office said a fifth victim had been pronounced dead at a hospital and identified her as Oshiana Tompkins, 19, of Vallejo/Hercules. They said several injured victims were transported by ambulance, and others took themselves, to hospitals. They either suffered from gunshot wounds or were injured while fleeing the scene. No other information was immediately available.

According to authorities, the Contra Costa County Sheriff’s Office crime lab is analyzing two firearms retrieved from the house to determine whether they were used in the shooting or any other crimes. Numerous shell casings found there are also being processed and analyzed.

Romand Reynolds, of Vallejo, told this news organization that his 24-year-old son Armani mentioned that he was going to a Halloween party on Thursday night “and the next thing I know he was shot” three or four times. He said his son is now in a coma.

Police went to the four-bedroom home at 114 Lucille Way after getting a report at 10:45 p.m. of gunshots being fired inside a short-term rental. Dozens of partygoers were running away from the property when officers arrived, and three people were pronounced dead at the scene.

“There was a lot of noise and yelling and people running,” Orinda police Chief David Cook said.

Warning: The video contains graphic images and profanity.

The fourth victim was pronounced dead at John Muir Medical Center in Walnut Creek, said hospital spokesman Ben Drew. Some eyewitnesses were interviewed by police, but no suspects had been arrested by Friday evening. Police had not publicly confirmed whether there was more than one shooter. “We’re still trying to wrap our arms around what exactly transpired,” Cook said.

Friends drove Armani Reynolds to a local hospital, and he later was transferred to Highland Hospital in Oakland, where he remained in a coma Friday morning, his father said that morning. Romand Reynolds came to the blocked-off crime scene on Lucille Way on Friday morning to try to retrieve his son’s car.

“As far as I know, he was a victim,” Reynolds said. “He was just at the wrong place at the wrong time.”

The property had been reported by neighbors for having large parties before but had not been on the city’s radar for months, officials said. City regulations on short-term rentals prohibit more than 13 people from occupying a property, City Manager Steve Salomon said. The owner had been cooperative with city officials after the reports of large gatherings — including one in February that resulted in a violation notice for the owner — and said he would comply with the regulations, Salomon said.

“Up until last night, it appeared they had complied,” Salomon said. City officials said someone had emailed a complaint to the city at 9:35 p.m. Halloween night about a large party underway at the home, and Salomon added that he believed the person also had called police. Neither police nor the city would say whether police responded to that complaint.

Several hours after the violence, the streets were in darkness as a group of cars wound their way up and parked on a street as close as possible to the crime scene. People in the cars got out and huddled together, some crying. They appeared to have been at the party or to know some of the victims. A woman in the group told a reporter they did not want to talk. The group left a short time later.

The killings represent the largest number of homicides in the city in recent memory: Orinda’s last homicide was in 2012, Orinda Mayor Inga Miller said, when a man hacked his longtime girlfriend to death with a machete.

“We are focused on the four people who have lost their lives, their families and the other victims of this tragedy, including the four other people who have been wounded,” Miller said. “Our Orinda police are focused on finding the parties responsible. This is a tragedy of unimaginable gravity.”

The party home is accessed via narrow, twisting streets lined with multimillion-dollar homes on a hill southwest of downtown Orinda. The city of around 19,000 in central Contra Costa County is known as a quiet bedroom community.

But area residents said the Lucille Way house was known for hosting large, rowdy parties. Once there was a hit-and-run, and another time a liquor bottle was thrown into an adjacent property, according to two residents who did not want their names used.

Property records list the owner of the 3,972-square-foot home as Michael Young Wang and show a 2005 purchase price of $1.25 million. Residents from four homes in the neighborhood said he never appeared to move in or live there. Records show that Wang’s primary residence is in Concord. At the Concord home Friday, a Subaru SUV sat in the driveway, and although someone could be seen moving behind the curtains of a window, no one answered the door.

Police Chief Cook said that on Halloween the Lucille Way house was being rented by people “not from Orinda.” He declined to elaborate.

A screenshot of the Airbnb listing for the home, provided by Airbnb, showed that the owner specified there should be no weapons, smoking or marijuana, and warned that “neighbors are close” so the time between 10 p.m. and 8 a.m. was supposed to be quiet.

“We are horrified by this tragedy and are in close communication with Chief David Cook of Orinda Police to offer our support with his investigation into who committed this senseless violence,” Airbnb spokesperson Ben Breit said.

The company now has banned the person who booked the house from its platform, Breit said, adding that parties were specifically prohibited in the property listing.

Mayor Miller said the City Council would “discuss the issue of short-term rentals” at its next meeting, an indication the city might consider additional restrictions.

According to social media posts, an “AirBNB mansion party” had been advertised for Halloween night. The flier was adorned with crime-scene tape and told attendees to send a direct message to obtain the location and to “BYOB” and “BYOW” (Bring Your Own Weed).

This is a flyer advertising the “Air BNB Mansion Party” that ended with a shooting that killed five people. The Instagram account of the person who posted the flyer has since been deleted. (Instagram screen shot) 

Neighborhood resident Willie Yee said he was watching the news Halloween night when he heard “dozens” of people running in a panic for their cars.

“I knew right away this wasn’t anything ordinary going on,” Yee said.

The town is generally so quiet, Yee said, that people call it “Bor-inda.”

Even so, it’s not the first time an Airbnb party has made headlines in Orinda. In 2016, a party at a short-term rental on Camino Encinas led to a brawl, leaving one man in critical condition. The following year, the City Council adopted an ordinance requiring residents to register with the city and abide by various regulations if they wished to offer their homes as vacation rentals through Airbnb and other services.

Halloween parties, often festive affairs, have seen striking upticks of fatal violence last year and this year. In Long Beach this week, three men died and nine others were injured late Wednesday during a joint birthday-Halloween party. In an off-campus college party Sunday in Greenville, Texas, two people were fatally shot and 12 others injured. Last year, a private Halloween party in East Palo Alto left two men dead and two others critically injured.

Staff writers Angela Ruggiero, Jon Kawamoto, Levi Sumagaysay, George Kelly Alejandra Armstrong and Martha Ross contributed to this report.

Source Article from http://www.mercurynews.com/police-id-four-killed-at-orinda-halloween-party-in-rented-mansion