Hundreds of fires are raging across California, forcing tens of thousands of residents – who were already facing blackouts and the coronavirus pandemic – to flee their homes. The flames, sparked by lightning and stoked by a searing heatwave and ferocious winds, have been moving quickly, overwhelming the state’s firefighters and first responders.

“It’s kind of an overwhelming fire siege,” said Daniel Swain, a climate scientist at UCLA’s Institute of the Environment and Sustainability.

The state is currently battling 367 known fires, Gavin Newsom reported at a press conference on Wednesday. “We are challenged right now,” the governor said. The state was struck by lightning 10,849 times over the course of 72 hours, he said. The unusual lightning storm and a historic heatwave have led to an especially fierce fire season this year, officials said.

Asked how officials will manage the overlapping crises of heat, fire and the pandemic all at once, Newsom responded: “The future happens here first.”

A cluster of wildfires in Napa, Sonoma and Solano counties now covers an estimated 46,225 acres, according to Cal Fire, the state’s fire agency. The flames have destroyed at least 50 buildings and structures and remain largely uncontained, and come just three years after devastating fires killed 22 and destroyed many wineries in the region.

At dawn on Wednesday, firefighters and police officers went door-to-door in Vacaville, in Solano county, rushing to evacuate residents. At least 50 structures were destroyed and four people were injured, according to officials. Television reporters and local residents shared images of roads, fully flanked by flames, blackened land and columns of smoke swirling through neighborhoods. Ash sprinkled swaths of the state, dusting cities in gray.

The night before, the sky had been glowing red and clouds of smoke were raining ash down Valerie Arbelaez Brown’s street. So when a neighbor knocked on her door at 4.30am, urging her to evacuate, she told her four kids to grab their most precious possessions – “the things money can’t buy” – and tucked the whole family into the car.

Arbelaez Brown, who had worked as a disaster relief responder for the Red Cross, said she’d been trained to keep her wits about but was nonetheless shaken by the fire’s ferocity. “The fire was moving so fast – and it was engulfing everything around us,” she said. “My 14-year-old was freaking out, crying. But I explained to the kids we can replace things, we can rebuild the house. As long as we’re safe.”



An airplane drops fire retardant over homes in the Spanish Flat area of Napa, California, as flames rage through on 18 August 2020. Photograph: Josh Edelson/AFP/Getty Images

Terilyn Steverson, 28, said she felt helpless much of Wednesday as she waited to hear about the fate of the Vacaville home she grew up in – a home that has been in her family since the 1970s. She described driving into a hellscape of fire with her sister overnight, as they raced to collect their uncle, who is mentally disabled and requires care, from a friend’s home in Vacaville. “At three, four in the morning, the sky was just orange,” she said.

“There was just this glow of orange and red. We hit Vallejo and there’s this light ash falling from the sky. We get closer and closer and the closer we get to Vacaville, the thicker the smoke is and the thicker the ash is that is falling from the sky. It was so scary.”

Fires were burning in every Bay Area county but urban San Francisco. “So basically, everywhere there’s land to burn, there’s land burning in the Bay Area,” Swain said.

As a result, the San Francisco Bay Area was experiencing the worst air quality in the world on Wednesday. Smoke hung heavy over the region and residents reported ash falling from the sky.

Wldfyre
(@TwitchWldfyre)

What it’s like to live in California right now.

My car was JUST washed and all of this is ash from the wildfires surround us. ITS LITERALLY RAINING ASHES!!!! pic.twitter.com/XB4iLaG9l5


August 19, 2020

The ash and soot, which have permeated through the state are especially concerning amid the coronavirus pandemic.

The American Lung Association urged people to take greater caution, saying the poor air quality could exacerbate breathing problems for people at-risk of contracting Covid-19.

“The combination of uncontained wildfires and extreme heat has created conditions that put even healthy individuals at risk,” Afif El-Hasan, an association spokesman, told the Los Angeles Times. “The ongoing Covid-19 pandemic only makes these potential effects more serious.”

In southern California, the Lake fire north-east of Los Angeles has been raging for more than a week, spreading across more than 21,000 acres. The Dome fire has eaten through more than 43,000 acres including the Mojave national preserve near the California-Nevada border – scorching ancient Joshua trees.

On Tuesday, Newsom, the California governor, declared a state of emergency, looking to mobilize help from within and outside California. “We are deploying every resource available to keep communities safe as California battles fires across the state during these extreme conditions,” Newsom said. “California and its federal and local partners are working in lock step to meet the challenge and remain vigilant in the face of continued dangerous weather conditions.”

The heatwave that began this weekend and the rare lightning storms that spawned even rarer fire tornadoes, “really set the stage for something that can be truly catastrophic”, he said.

Nearly 7,000 firefighters are currently on the frontlines but the state has still been forced to call in for backing, requesting 375 fire engines from neighboring states. Arizona and Nevada have sent equipment to California and Texas has offered to send firefighting crews, Newsom said.

“Throughout the state of California right now, we are stretched thin for crews,” Will Powers, a state fire spokesman told the AP. “Air resources have been stretched thin throughout the whole state.”



Firefighters attempt to extinguish the Hennessey fire. There are currently more than 300 known fires in the state. Photograph: Neal Waters/EPA

The difficult job of fighting fires has been made even harder this year by the ongoing Covid-19 pandemic. Many of the incarcerated laborers relied upon to fight fires are out of commission due to outbreaks in prisons across the state. Prisoners are crucial in the state’s fire response plan, fighting fires in exchange for wages as low as $2 per hour and reduced sentences.

Non-incarcerated firefighters who are able to work risk contracting Covid-19 themselves. Most firefighters stay in makeshift communities near the hot zones, sleeping close together. A Covid-19 outbreak could quickly sweep through such camps, and exposure to wildfire smoke can worsen Covid-19 symptoms and outcomes, according to the Centers for Disease Control and prevention.

“The problem that we face now is that there’s no obvious way to control these fires,” Chris Field, the director of the Stanford Woods Institute for the Environment, said – because they are burning through areas replete with dry wood and brush. “It’s just really hard to stop them once they’ve picked up.”

The National Interagency Fire Center had warned of a higher potential for fires across much of America’s west and south-west, with 2020 on track to be one of the hottest and driest years on record. This winter, not a single drop of rain fell on San Francisco and Sacramento in February – and a hot spring dried out fire-fueling vegetation through much of the state.

“We’re in an era in California and in the west where wildfires risk increasing year on year, increasing dramatically because of climate change,” Field said. “This is going to be our new reality.”

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/aug/19/california-fires-lake-dome-evacuations

Fox News host Trace Gallagher asked ex-Obama spokesperson-turned-Joe Biden surrogate Zach Friend if it was “very confusing” when Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez nominated Sen. Bernie Sanders during her Democratic National Convention speech

Gallagher played a clip of Ocasio-Cortez seconding the nomination of Sanders during her speech on Tuesday, which is a longstanding procedural tradition. However, many were left confused and NBC News was scolded by Ocasio-Cortez when it tweeted she “did not endorse Joe Biden.”

AOC RIPS NBC NEWS OVER ‘MALICIOUS’ CLAIM SHE ‘DID NOT ENDORSE JOE BIDEN’ 

“I know it was symbolic, Zach, … this nomination of Bernie Sanders, but it was also very confusing. NBC News was confused, they tweeted out a big headline,” Gallagher said. “This cannot, Zach, be the message that the Biden campaign was hoping for.”

Friend admitted that the procedural moment could have confused some people but added that it’s “not without precedent,” noting Republicans have done the exact same thing. The former Obama spokesperson then spun the situation into a positive for the Biden campaign.

AOC CALLS OUT ‘RACIAL INJUSTICE, COLONIZATION, MISOGYNY’ IN MINUTE-LONG DNC SPEECH

“I actually think it was a good thing that early on, the Biden camp recognized the need to partner with Sen. Sanders and his team, we received a number votes during the primary and gave them an opportunity not just to speak at the convention but also have their delegates cast their votes,” Friend said.

“The DNC specifically asked Congresswoman Ocasio-Cortez to do this, so procedurally it is, um, actually what had it intended to be and a good show of unity to have her and others have the opportunity to say these things,” he added.

Gallagher countered that the party could have provided more “clarity” before Ocasio-Cortez’s remarks – in which she did not mention Biden – so viewers were not left confused about her support.

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NBC News eventually deleted the misleading tweet and added an editor’s note explaining the situation, but Ocasio-Cortez wasn’t happy.

“You waited several hours to correct your obvious and blatantly misleading tweet,” Ocasio-Cortez tweeted with a retweet of NBC’s clarification that appeared about three hours after its initial message. “It sparked an enormous amount of hatred and vitriol, & now the misinfo you created is circulating on other networks.

Fox News’ Dom Calicchio contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/biden-surrogate-friend-aoc-bernie-sanders-confusing-dnc-remarks


President Donald Trump and New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy. | Doug Mills/The New York Times/Pool/Getty Images

New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy on Wednesday accused President Donald Trump’s campaign of “full-throated propaganda” for filing a lawsuit against the state’s plan to hold a mostly vote-by-mail election in November.

Murphy said during a press conference in Trenton that the state will fight the lawsuit.

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“As the president and his team try to delegitimize our election and impact the health and safety of millions of New Jerseyans, we will defend our rights vigorously, and we will not back down,” Murphy said. “So as they say, ‘Bring it on.‘”

The Trump campaign filed the lawsuit Tuesday night, arguing that the plan — which largely repeats how New Jersey’s July 7 primary was conducted — violates the U.S. Constitution’s Electors and Elections Clauses as well as the 14th Amendment. It also argues that only the state Legislature can enact sweeping changes to elections, and that Murphy is bypassing it through an executive order.

The lawsuit cites several cases of voter fraud conducted through mail-in ballots in New Jersey over the years, most recently in Paterson’s May municipal elections.

“The Governor’s inconsistencies, coupled with the Order’s timing amid a nationwide push by the Democratic Party for the same measures, reveal that the Order is less about protecting the health of New Jerseyans and more about protecting the electoral prospects of the Governor’s political party,” the lawsuit states.

Murphy, citing the coronavirus pandemic, signed an executive order last week under which New Jersey’s 6.2 million registered voters will be sent mail-in ballots. Voters will also be able to go to polling places to cast provisional ballots in-person or hand poll workers their already-filled out mail-in ballots.

The lawsuit filed by the Trump campaign challenges Murphy’s health concern justification for the election plans, noting that he has allowed retail stores, hair salons and swimming pools to reopen.

Murphy said his plans “will move forward,” then referred to the president’s own vote by mail-in ballot in Florida.

“If vote-by-mail is good enough for our president, it is good enough for all of us,” said Murphy, a Democrat who in recent months has been reluctant to criticize the Republican president.

Context: The lawsuit comes as Republicans, led by Trump, have sought to clamp down on universal mail-in voting, and as the president has fought against supplemental funding for the U.S. Postal Service in an effort to stop states from expanding mail-in elections.

While there have been several cases of mail-in ballot fraud in New Jersey, it is not known to be widespread. The lawsuit and an accompanying Wall Street Journal op-ed from a Trump campaign official also cite an Asbury Park Press story about dead voters still on the voting rolls, with some having cast ballots after their death.

However, it leaves out the part of the article that found those instances were clerical errors.

New Jersey is not a battleground state for Trump, as it has a million more registered Democrats than Republicans and has voted blue in every presidential election since 1992. However, there are several competitive congressional elections, and Republican House candidates’ fortunes are expected to be tied to the president’s performance.

Impact: With the election less than three months away, a reversal of the governor’s plans could lead to election officials scrambling to staff polling places. Many poll workers are elderly, making them more susceptible to Covid-19. Some Republicans have called for instituting in-person early voting, but Murphy administration officials have said that would be difficult if not impossible to implement at this late stage.

What’s next? Since the lawsuit, which seeks an injunction, was just filed, the Murphy administration has not responded yet. But the courts will be under pressure to act fast in order to give the state as much time as possible to prepare or the election.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/states/new-jersey/story/2020/08/19/murphy-to-trump-administration-on-vote-by-mail-lawsuit-bring-it-on-1310374

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Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2020/08/19/media/aoc-nbc-news-tweet/index.html

California’s governor has declared a state of emergency as the state battles dozens of wildfires amid a historic heatwave.

“We are deploying every resource available to keep communities safe as California battles fires across the state during these extreme conditions,” said Gavin Newsom, the state governor, on Tuesday. “California and its federal and local partners are working in lockstep to meet the challenge and remain vigilant in the face of continued dangerous weather conditions.”

Fires of varying size are currently burning across the state including in Sonoma, San Mateo, Napa, Butte, Nevada and Monterey counties. Evacuations were in effect or growing in the Napa county wine country north of San Francisco Bay, near Salinas in Monterey county, around Oroville Dam north of Sacramento and near the Nevada state line north of Lake Tahoe.

Several fires had been sparked by lightening strikes during unusual thunderstorms prompted by the extreme heatwave, which has sent temperatures soaring into the triple digits.

One of the largest – the SCU Lightning Complex fire, comprised of fires burning in several Bay Area counties – has so far consumed 25,000 acres and remains 0% contained.

A fire in Napa county was burning close to remote grape-growing properties owned by Villa Del Lago Winery.

“Our vineyard workers had to evacuate very quickly. And we heard this morning that there was zero containment, so that’s scary. It’s very steep, so I know it’s hard for firefighters to get up there,” said Dawn Phillips, who works in customer service for the winery.

Firefighters toiled in oppressive heat as the fires burned, posing threats to homes, forcing evacuations and fouling the air with smoke far beyond the largely rural or wilderness areas where flames fed on very dry vegetation.

Michelle Leopold, co-owner of six Ace hardware stores in the San Francisco Bay Area, said she sold 56 wading pools, two air conditioning units and a number of generators Saturday. She said she’s grateful her employees have not contracted the coronavirus and her stores are even hiring.

“You look at the blessings in this crazy time because there’s not much else to look at,” she said, laughing.

In southern California, evacuations continued for a week-old fire in the mountains of northern Los Angeles county. Dynamic weather churned up thunderstorms bringing the double threat of more lightning-sparked fires and flash floods.

Flames approach a home as a wildfire rages near Lake Berryessa in Napa, California on 18 August. Photograph: Josh Edelson/AFP/Getty Images

Meanwhile, California’s power grid operators are under pressure to avoid more power blackouts as an ongoing heat wave stresses the electrical system. Thousands lost electricity over the weekend as the system strained under high demand, a situation Newsom described as “unacceptable”.

The California Independent System Operator had warned Monday that as many as 3.3m homes and businesses would be affected by an evening emergency order that would have required utilities to stage rotating, two-hour outages. But the order never was issued and the warning was canceled.

Pleas for people to leave their air conditioners at higher temperatures and avoid using washing machines and other major appliances seemed to have worked. “Thank you for conserving,” California ISO said in a tweet.

However, grid managers warned that the threat of outages remained as temperatures were expected to hit triple digits again in many areas of the state. The National Weather Service said it may take until Friday or Saturday before excess heat watches and warnings ease.

Scorching weather has hit other western states, making it harder for California to import extra power.

“What we have is a situation where the entire region is more than hot, it’s extremely hot,” said Steve Berberich, California ISO’s president and CEO. “We can’t get the energy that we would normally get from out of state because it’s being used to serve loads natively. That would probably account for another 4,000 to 5,000 megawatts and could have very well have closed the gap.”

California ISO has struggled to reduce the electrical demand since last Friday, when it issued the first rolling blackouts in nearly 20 years. The three biggest utilities – Pacific Gas & Electric, Southern California Edison and San Diego Gas & Electric – turned off power to more than 410,000 homes and businesses for about an hour at a time. A second but shorter outage hit Saturday evening, affecting more than 200,000 customers.

Bonnie Wikler, 66, worried about her husband, who is recovering from open heart surgery. She said it was very stressful to lose power twice over the weekend at their home in Coalinga, a city in central California where temperatures reached 109F (43C).

They thought about driving somewhere but were too afraid of coronavirus exposure, so they stayed home and cooled off with ice water, she said.

“If there was a fire or an earthquake, I would understand, but to cut power without letting you know, it just seems outlandish to me,” Wikler said.

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/aug/18/california-wildfires-governor-declares-state-of-emergency

Far-right activist Laura Loomer won the GOP House primary in Florida’s 21st Congressional District, handing the Republican Party a controversial nominee in a safe blue district.

Loomer pulled in front of a crowded field of Republicans to win the nomination in the heavily blue southeast Florida district, according to The Associated Press. She will face off against Rep. Lois FrankelLois Jane FrankelFar-right activist Laura Loomer wins Florida GOP primary Matt Gaetz, Roger Stone back far-right activist Laura Loomer in congressional bid Former cop Demings faces progressive pushback in veepstakes MORE (D), who ran unopposed in 2018 and won with more than 60 percent of the vote in 2016.

Loomer becomes the Republican nominee in a district that includes President TrumpDonald John TrumpThe Memo: Democrats pitch Biden as the back-to-normal candidate Obama congratulates Biden on formal nomination Jill Biden gives personal portrait of husband Joe MORE‘s Mar-a-Lago club. The president and first lady Melania TrumpMelania TrumpFar-right activist Laura Loomer wins Florida GOP primary Trump submits vote-by-mail ballot in Florida The Hill’s 12:30 Report: Sights and sounds from night 1 of Dem’s virtual convention MORE are registered voters in Palm Beach Country, and both submitted vote-by-mail ballots for Tuesday’s primary.

Trump congratulated Loomer in a tweet late Tuesday, asserting she has “a great chance” in November’s general election.

The controversial candidate has the endorsements of right-wing figures such as Roger StoneRoger Jason StoneFar-right activist Laura Loomer wins Florida GOP primary Roger Stone drops appeal of felony convictions How would a Biden Justice Department be different? MORE and Rep. Matt GaetzMatthew (Matt) GaetzLiz Cheney wins Wyoming GOP primary in reelection bid Far-right activist Laura Loomer wins Florida GOP primary Rep. Ross Spano loses Florida GOP primary amid campaign finance scrutiny MORE (R-Fla.). She has been banned from several social media and other technology platforms in recent years after making anti-Muslim comments. In 2017, she was banned from Uber after she tweeted that “someone needs to create a non Islamic form of @uber or @lyft,” and she has also been banned from platforms such as TwitterPayPal and GoFundMe.

Loomer drew outrage for tweeting that she couldn’t find a “non-Muslim” cab or Uber driver and handcuffing herself to Twitter’s office in New York to protest what she said was discrimination against conservatives online. 

“I’m going to win,” she told The Hill earlier this month, claiming her victory will mark the “first time a deplatformed candidate will get a party nomination.”

While Loomer faces an uphill climb to unseat Frankel, she still hands Democrats another line of attack against the GOP as Republicans face questions over some of their more controversial House candidates.

Earlier this month, Marjorie Taylor Greene, a supporter of the QAnon conspiracy theory who has made a litany of Islamophobic and anti-Semitic comments, won her Republican primary in Georgia, putting her on track to win a congressional seat in November.

Updated on Aug. 19 at 12:02 a.m.

Source Article from https://thehill.com/homenews/campaign/512254-far-right-activist-laura-loomer-wins-florida-gop-house-primary

As fires burn throughout eight of the nine counties in the San Francisco Bay Area, the region is being blanketed by smoke and ash, creating dangerous breathing conditions in a time of pandemic, when healthy lungs matter more than ever.

The smoke comes as the typically cool and dry Bay Area roasts under a prolonged, record-breaking heat wave, forcing residents without air conditioning either to swelter in their homes or venture to public cooling centers. More than 22,000 people have been ordered to evacuate in and around the Santa Cruz Mountains.

Erin DeMerritt, spokeswoman for the Bay Area Air Quality Management District, said people should seek public cooling centers if their homes became too hot, even if it means being exposed to the wildfire smoke. “Heat takes precedence,” she said.

She said the poor air quality resulting from the smoke would likely continue until the fires were mostly contained. A Cal Fire status report on the LNU Lightning Complex fire on Wednesday suggests conditions may not improve until Sept. 1.

She also noted that although most cloth masks, including bandannas, helped protect against the spread of COVID-19, they do not protect against particulate matter from the smoke.

Northern California’s coastal areas generally have some of the state’s cleanest air, thanks to offshore breezes. But on Tuesday evening, fires burned throughout the Bay Area — from Point Reyes in the north, to Monterey and Big Sur in the south — and towns such as Bonny Doon were experiencing severely polluted air. Smoke drifted down into the Bay Area, settling thickest atop the cities of the San Francisco peninsula, including Mountain View, Palo Alto and Burlingame.

DeMerritt said southward winds were blowing the Marin fire smoke into south San Francisco all the way down to San Jose, while winds along the coast were bringing in smoke from the Lightning Complex fire in the Santa Cruz Mountains, as well as the River and Carmel fires in Monterey County.

On Wednesday morning, cars that had been parked outside along the peninsula were covered in ash and dust, as were windows and outdoor furniture. The air was visibly hazy, and the smell of campfire was sharp.

Air Quality Index readings ranged from the mid-100 levels along the San Francisco Bay to 413 in Redwood City’s hills, according to the website PurpleAir.

The Air Quality Index is the yardstick the Environmental Protection Agency uses for reporting air quality. Levels ranging from 151 to 200 are considered unhealthy; from 201 to 300, very unhealthy; and 301 and above, hazardous.

In and around Los Angeles, the South Coast Air Quality Management District continued an advisory for ozone pollution, stating that “extremely high temperatures are expected to persist over the next several days … increasing the likelihood of Unhealthy to Very Unhealthy air quality in many areas.”

But problems with wildfire smoke in the region have diminished markedly in recent days, partly because of the near-containment of the massive Apple fire in the San Bernardino National Forest.

By contrast, the city of Hillsborough, just south of San Francisco, had the nation’s worst air quality Wednesday morning, according to IQAir.

The LNU Lightning Complex fire has burned more than 46,000 acres in Napa, Sonoma and Solano counties. Evacuations are ordered in western Vacaville.

More Coverage

Northern and Central California began experiencing an unusually active sequence of largely dry lightning strikes Sunday morning, the most widespread and violent in recent memory in the Bay Area on one of the hottest nights in years, according to Daniel Swain, a climate scientist with UCLA and the National Center for Atmospheric Research.

Solano County was facing serious threat Wednesday morning after fire caused residents to flee overnight and burned homes and other structures.

Officials have ordered the evacuation of the western edge of Vacaville — a city of 100,000 residents about halfway between San Francisco and Sacramento — in the area of Alamo Drive north of Interstate 5 and west of North Orchard Avenue, according to a Facebook post by Vacaville police. The Vacaville Fire District also ordered evacuations of Pleasants Valley Road, which lies west of the city, and the English Hills area north of the city.

Smoke and ash were also a problem far to the east of the Bay Area, especially downwind of a fire near Nevada City, northeast of Sacramento, and in areas downwind of the Solano fires. On Wednesday morning, ash swirled in the air in Sacramento. Thick smoke cast a haze and left many wearing their pandemic masks outside to fend off the pollution.

Staff writers Anita Chabria, Rong-Gong Lin II , Luke Money, Leila Miller and Colleen Shalby contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2020-08-19/wildfires-california-bay-area-bad-air-quality

Protesters gather in front of the Minsk Tractor Works Plant to support workers leaving the plant after their work shift in Minsk, Belarus, on Wednesday.

Dmitri Lovetsky/AP


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Dmitri Lovetsky/AP

Protesters gather in front of the Minsk Tractor Works Plant to support workers leaving the plant after their work shift in Minsk, Belarus, on Wednesday.

Dmitri Lovetsky/AP

Updated at 11:20 a.m. ET

The European Union on Wednesday said it does not recognize the results of Belarus’ Aug. 9 presidential election, calling the poll fraudulent and promising to sanction individuals responsible for the violence that has followed.

“These elections were neither free nor fair and did not meet international standards,” Charles Michel, the president of the European Council, said at the end of an emergency summit on Belarus held by teleconference.

“The EU will impose shortly sanctions on a substantial number of individuals responsible for violence, repression and election fraud,” he said.

“The protests in Belarus are not about geopolitics,” he said. “This is in the first place a national crisis. This is about the right of the people to freely elect their leadership.”

“We stand firmly behind the right of the Belarusian people to determine their own fate,” he added.

The vote in Belarus earlier this month, in which longtime President Alexander Lukashenko claimed an overwhelming victory amid accusations of massive election fraud, has sparked nationwide protests and a brutal crackdown by security forces.

Hundreds of thousands of Belarusians from across the country have taken part and the protests continue to grow with workers at giant state-owned factories walking off their jobs to join the demonstrations.

“The people of Belarus want change and they want it now,” EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said at a news conference following the meeting.

“We are impressed by the courage of the people of Belarus. For exactly 10 days since the presidential election took place, the people of Belarus have taken to the streets in unprecedented numbers,” she said.

Lukashenko’s main opponent in the race, Svetlana Tikhanovskaya, was forced to flee the country after the results were announced. She initially conceded defeat from exile but has since since called for international mediation to resolve the political standoff.

The EU is eager to avoid a repeat of what happened in Ukraine in 2014 when the ousting of a pro-Kremlin leader led to Russian military intervention.

In recent days, Russian President Vladimir Putin has offered unspecified “security assistance” to Lukashenko’s government, even as his security forces were denounced at home and abroad for violently quashing peaceful protests.

Russia on Wednesday called the external pressure from EU countries “unacceptable.”

“We consider that Belarusians will iron out their own problems in the framework of dialogue, within the legal framework and without any foreign meddling,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters in Moscow.

Speaking in Berlin after the meeting, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, whose country currently holds the rotating six-month EU presidency, echoed her fellow EU leaders’ remarks, saying that there is “no doubt” of “massive rule violations” in the Belarus election.

“For us, it is clear that Belarus must find its own path, that must happen via dialog in the country and there must be no intervention from outside,” Merkel said.

Lukashenko also announced on Tuesday that Belarusian forces were being deployed on the western borders in response to criticism from Belarus’ NATO-member neighbors there — Poland, Lithuania and Latvia.

Following Wednesday’s EU meeting, Poland’s Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki said he was not concerned by troop movements.

“As part of normal, routine actions we are looking at what is happening behind our border and at the moment there are no reasons for concern,” Morawiecki said at a news conference.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2020/08/19/903831072/eu-blasts-belarus-elections-readies-sanctions-against-lukashenko-government

Media captionJill Biden: Joe will “keep the promise of America”

Standing in an empty classroom where she taught English in the 1990s, Jill Biden delivered the headline address at the Democratic Party’s convention on Tuesday after her husband was officially named presidential candidate.

After making the case for Joe Biden to be elected, she was joined by her husband who lauded her qualities as a potential first lady.

“For all of you out there across the country, just think of your favourite educator who gave you the confidence to believe in yourself. That’s the kind of first lady… Jill Biden will be,” he said.

But what do we know about the woman who could soon be joining her husband in the White House?

Personal life

Jill Jacobs was born in June 1951 in the US state of New Jersey. The oldest of five sisters, she grew up in the Philadelphia suburb of Willow Grove.

Prior to marrying Joe, she was married to former college football player Bill Stevenson.

Joe Biden lost his first wife and his one-year-old daughter in a car accident in 1972. His sons Beau and Hunter both survived the accident.

Jill says she was introduced to Joe through his brother in 1975. At that time, he was a senator, while she was still in college.

“I was a senior, and I had been dating guys in jeans and clogs and T-shirts, he came to the door and he had a sport coat and loafers, and I thought: ‘God, this is never going to work, not in a million years.’ He was nine years older than I am!

“But we went out to see A Man and a Woman at the movie theatre in Philadelphia, and we really hit it off,” she told Vogue of the couple’s first date.

She said Joe proposed to her five times before she accepted.

“I couldn’t have them [Joe’s children] lose another mother. So I had to be 100% sure,” she explained.

The couple married in New York City in 1977. Their daughter, Ashley, was born in 1981.

Beau Biden died of brain cancer in May 2015, at the age of 46.

Mrs Biden talked about her family and the struggles they have faced as she endorsed her husband for president on Tuesday.

“I know that if we entrust this nation to Joe, he will do for your family what he did for ours – bring us together and make us whole, carry us forward in our time of need, keep the promise of America for all of us,” she said.

Teaching career

Mrs Biden, 69, has spent decades working as a teacher.

She has a bachelor’s degree and two master’s degrees, and earned a doctorate of education from the University of Delaware in 2007.

Prior to moving to Washington, DC, she taught at a community college in the US state of Delaware, at a public high school and at a psychiatric hospital for adolescents.

She gave her address on Tuesday at her old classroom at Delaware’s Brandywine High School, where she taught English from 1991 to 1993.

Mrs Biden was professor of English at Northern Virginia Community College while her husband served as vice-president.

“Teaching is not what I do. It’s who I am,” she tweeted ahead of Tuesday’s address.

Politics

Mrs Biden previously held the title of second lady, while her husband served as vice-president from 2009 to 2017.

During this period, her work included promoting community colleges, advocating for military families and raising awareness about breast cancer prevention.

In 2010, she hosted the White House Summit on Community Colleges, which sought to “highlight community colleges’ role in developing America’s workforce”.

She also launched the Joining Forces initiative with Michelle Obama, which included helping military veterans and their families access education programmes and employment resources.

In 2012, she published a children’s book called Don’t Forget, God Bless Our Troops based on her granddaughter’s experience of being in a military family.

She has been a prominent supporter of her husband during the 2020 campaign, appearing alongside him and holding events and fundraisers.

Source Article from https://www.bbc.com/news/election-us-2020-53833061

Representative Alexandrio Ocasio-Cortez’s Democratic National Convention speech sparked some confusion on Tuesday night when she nominated Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders for the party’s presidential candidacy.

The freshman congresswoman used her 90-second speaking slot on the second day of the DNC to praise the “mass people’s movement working to establish 21st-century social, economic and human rights,” and formally nominate Joe Biden’s leading primary rival.

Delivering remarks in a pre-recorded speech, Ocasio-Cortez said: “In a time when millions of people in the United States are looking for deep systemic solutions to our crisis of mass evictions, unemployment, and lack of health care.

“En el espíritu del pueblo, and out of a love for all people, I hereby second the nomination of Senator Bernard Sanders of Vermont for president of the United States of America.”

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The progressive lawmaker’s formal nomination of Sanders triggered inaccurate claims that she had somehow snubbed Biden, the presumptive nominee who officially became the Democratic presidential candidate after winning more than 3,500 delegates.

Ocasio-Cortez was asked by the DNC to officially nominate the Vermont senator under convention rules that require every primary candidate who passed a threshold of 300 delegates to be backed in the roll call.

“If you were confused, no worries! Convention rules require roll call & nominations for every candidate that passes the delegate threshold,” the congresswoman explained on Twitter. “I was asked to 2nd the nom for Sen. Sanders for roll call. I extend my deepest congratulations to Joe Biden – let’s go win in November.”

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Sanders himself made it clear on Monday night that he was in no way contesting Biden’s candidacy, delivering a keynote speech in support of the former vice president on the DNC’s opening day.

“I say to you, to everyone who supported other candidates in the primary, and to those who may have voted for Donald Trump in the last election, the future of our democracy is at stake, the future of our economy is at stake, the future of our planet is at stake” the senator said.

“We must come together, defeat Donald Trump, and elect Joe Biden and Kamala Harris as our next president and vice president.”

Biden was officially nominated as the Democratic presidential candidate on Tuesday after winning convention delegate counts in 57 states and territories amid largely virtual celebrations.

Accepting the party’s nomination, the former vice president said: “Thank you very, very much. From the bottom of my heart, thank you all.”

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Source Article from https://www.newsweek.com/why-did-aoc-nominate-bernie-sanders-explained-1526055

Flames from the LNU Lightning Complex Fire are forced some Vacaville, California, residents to flee from their homes in the wee early of the morning.

An exact number of evacuees could not be provided at this time as the emergency process is ongoing, Solano Sheriff spokesperson Le’Ron Cummings told CNN.

Homes have burned in the fire, Cummings said, but it is unclear how many. 

About the fire: The LNU Lightning Complex is a force of at least seven separate fires affecting areas of Solano, Sonoma and Napa Counties. More than 32,000 acres have burned, according to Cal Fire.

Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/us/live-news/california-wildfires-08-19-2020/index.html

U.S. Postmaster General Louis Dejoy arrives for a meeting at the office of Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi at the U.S. Capitol earlier this month.

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U.S. Postmaster General Louis Dejoy arrives for a meeting at the office of Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi at the U.S. Capitol earlier this month.

Alex Wong/Getty Images

Postmaster General Louis DeJoy backed off planned changes to the Postal Service on Tuesday that critics had worried might threaten voting by mail this year, but Democrats say they aren’t satisfied and want more answers.

Michigan’s Gary Peters, the ranking Democrat on the Senate committee that had scheduled a hearing with DeJoy on Friday to discuss the planned Postal Service changes, said he wants the session to go ahead and he wants to press DeJoy about what led to this flap.

While Peters and other Democrats welcomed DeJoy’s announcement that he’ll postpone alterations to Postal Service practices until after the November election, they also said they want to know whether the system as it stands today can be restored to the level of capacity it was at before DeJoy’s arrival.

“The American people deserve to know whether he will be returning sorting machines he already removed from facilities across the country, the details of any changes he is leaving in place and any future changes he plans to enact that could continue to harm the millions of Americans who count on the Postal Service for reliable, timely delivery,” Peters said in a statement.

DeJoy ordered an “operational pivot” for the Postal Service’s practices earlier this year that advocates warned would delay mail and deliveries at a time when demand has grown because of the coronavirus crisis.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., said she would not accept the alterations DeJoy has made thus far as the new baseline.

Pelosi said she intends to go ahead with plans to return the House from its summer recess on Saturday to take up a measure that would authorize $25 billion for the Postal Service and prohibit it from conducting operations below the level of service it had in place on Jan. 1.

Pelosi echoed Democrats’ sustained message that the Postal Service must preserve or improve its capacity given the expected surge of mailed ballots this election year. Many more voters than usual are expected to try to vote by mail to avoid going to polling places in person in an effort to minimize social contact.

“During a pandemic, the Postal Service is election central,” Pelosi said. “No one should be forced to choose between their health and their vote.”

DeJoy is also due to appear before the House Oversight Committee on Monday in a hearing that was added to the schedule amid concern by Democrats about capacity reductions within the Postal Service.

GOP donor now in spotlight

The postmaster general, who has been in his job since the spring, is a Republican fundraiser and supporter of President Trump, but he said on Tuesday that he wanted to freeze the service alterations he had ordered to avoid the appearance that he was attempting to interfere with the election.

The Postal Service can handle the work this election is expected to require, DeJoy vowed.

“The Postal Service is ready today to handle whatever volume of election mail it receives this fall,” he said. “Even with the challenges of keeping our employees and customers safe and healthy as they operate amid a pandemic, we will deliver the nation’s election mail on time and within our well-established service standards.”

White House chief of staff Mark Meadows, meanwhile, told reporters on Wednesday that DeJoy had initiated the changes within the Postal Service on his own, not after an instruction from the president.

The chief of staff observed that the agency has experienced declining volumes and financial difficulties for years and that the need to reform the Postal Service is clear.

“The business model for the postal system is not one that’s sustainable,” Meadows said.

Some political figures argue the Postal Service should operate more like a private business; agency supporters argue that it was conceived as — and must remain — a “service.”

Trump himself said on Tuesday that as far as he is concerned, the Postal Service “is running as well as it has in a long time.”

President faults election integrity

Trump has spent weeks raising doubts about the integrity of the election, focusing criticism on voting by mail.

Although he and others in his camp vote by mail themselves, the president has repeated unfounded claims about its susceptibility to fraud or foreign interference. Trump has made inaccurate claims about voting and elections for years, claims that a panel he appointed to investigate the issue could not substantiate.

Anecdotal reports from across the country about late or missed deliveries have grown lately, but it isn’t precisely clear from the Postal Service how its throughput locally or nationally might have been reduced.

Critics, however, have linked the changes within the Postal Service to Trump’s rhetoric and say the administration was caught red-handed trying to slow down mail service for its own political purposes.

Democratic National Committee Chairman Tom Perez said as much to NPR on Monday, and on Tuesday, Sen. Maggie Hassan, D-N.H., argued that because so many Americans rely on the Postal Service, they would reject DeJoy’s program.

Hassan vowed that she would question DeJoy at the hearing on Friday about the broader issues she said are caused by service disruptions or reductions.

“The American people spoke out loudly and clearly against the Trump administration’s changes to the Postal Service. Granite Staters – especially those in rural communities – rely on USPS to get their medication and to run their small businesses,” Hassan said.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2020/08/19/903710638/postmaster-general-climbs-down-but-democrats-press-for-answers-and-assurances

After he rose to campaign chairman, Mr. Manafort also instructed his deputy, Rick Gates, to periodically share confidential Trump campaign polling data with Mr. Kilimnik, including surveys showing what voters most disliked about Hillary Clinton, Mr. Trump’s Democratic opponent. Mr. Gates “understood that Kilimnik would share the information with Deripaska,” the report said.

The transfer of internal campaign data to a known Russian agent is “about as clear a coordination or cooperation between two entities as could be established,” said Senator Angus King, a Maine independent on the Senate Intelligence Committee who votes with Democrats.

The committee said it found evidence — redacted for national security reasons — that Mr. Kilimnik may have been involved in the covert effort by the Russian government to hack into the computer networks of Democratic organizations and funnel damaging emails to the rogue website WikiLeaks, which released them just before the election.

The report also cited but did not reveal information it said potentially links Mr. Manafort to that operation, which was by far Russia’s most significant effort to disrupt the American election.

Mr. Manafort was forced to resign from the Trump campaign in August 2016 amid a growing scandal over his work in Ukraine. He later told the F.B.I. that he had briefed Mr. Trump on his Ukraine work, but “did not go into detail because Trump was not interested.”

Even after he was ousted, Mr. Manafort stayed in touch with campaign officials and with Mr. Kilimnik, who believed Mr. Manafort could still influence the new administration’s foreign policy, the report said.

Together, the men also promoted the false, Kremlin-backed story that Ukraine, not Russia, interfered in the 2016 election. The report stated the similarities in their efforts suggested coordination.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2020/08/18/us/politics/paul-manafort-konstantin-kilimnik.html

Security guard Jacquelyn Brittany was standing in an elevator when she blurted “I love you” to Joe Biden. Wearing big smiles, they took a photo together, and video of the interaction went viral online.

Tuesday, in a video shown at the Democratic National Convention, she stood in what looked like the entrance to an elevator and nominated him as the Democratic Party presidential nominee.

“In the short time I spent with Joe Biden, I could tell he really saw me, that he actually cared, that my life meant something to him,” she said. “And I knew, even when he went into his important meeting, he’d take my story in there with him.”

Brittany was escorting the former vice president to a meeting with the editorial board of the New York Times when they met; the video went viral in January. On Tuesday, she called him her friend. She was identified by her first and middle names, according to the Washington Post, which first reported she would appear.

She noted that she meets important people all the time who head straight from the airport to their meetings. But Biden was someone who had room in his heart for someone other than himself, she said. In a video of their interaction, Jacquelyn tells Biden he is her favorite. The two later take a selfie together.

“We’ve been through a lot. And we have tough days ahead. But nominating someone like that to be in the White House is a good place to start,” she said before officially nominating Biden.

Source Article from https://www.latimes.com/politics/story/2020-08-18/democratic-convention-security-guard-biden-jacquelyn-brittany

One proposal being floated by several Democrats is a package of economic measures that would automatically extend jobless benefits to millions of Americans if the economic and health crises continue. The push has been led for months by the centrist New Democrat Coalition, which plans to send a letter to Speaker Nancy Pelosi and House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer on Monday night. So far, over 75 Democrats have signed onto the letter. It has also won support from Rep. Pramila Jayapal of Washington, a co-leader of the influential Congressional Progressive Caucus.

Another idea up for discussion is to hold a floor vote on a roughly $2 trillion relief bill — a pared-down version of what Democrats passed in May. That proposal would flesh out the compromise offer made by Pelosi and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer of New York during unsuccessful negotiations with White House officials. Rep. Cedric Richmond of Louisiana, who serves as the liaison between House Democrats and the Biden campaign suggested such a move on a Democratic caucus call on Monday, according to multiple sources.

“I think if we need to pass a bill that says, ‘This is what we’re willing to do,’ then I’m all for that,” Cisneros said, voicing support for Richmond’s proposal. Cisneros, who is a member of the New Democrats, said he also supports the automatic stabilizers plan. “I think it’s a great idea as far as having them in place so we don’t have to come back and vote, so that things don’t run out.”

The push from some Democrats to vote on more to rescue the nation’s sputtering economy — even after the House passed its own $3.5 trillion package in May — comes as millions of out-of-work Americans have grown increasingly desperate after the recent lapse in federal safety net programs.

Federal unemployment payments expired at the end of July, as did a federal evictions moratorium. President Donald Trump issued several executive actions to try to address the unemployment and eviction concerns, but even White House officials acknowledged that they fall far short of a legislative solution. A number of business groups, including the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, said Tuesday that Trump’s move to defer payroll taxes is “unworkable.”

Meanwhile, talks on a bipartisan recovery package remain at a standstill. Pelosi and Schumer haven’t had an in-person meeting with the Trump administration’s lead negotiators, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and White House chief of staff Mark Meadows, since Aug. 7.

Pelosi and Schumer have opened the door to a slightly less costly package, telling Republicans that they are willing to pass a package that costs roughly $2 trillion, instead of nearly $3.5 trillion. Senate Republicans are floating their own package this week, though it will still fall far short of Democratic demands — offering little hope of restarting negotiations.

Pelosi boasted Tuesday that public pressure on Postmaster General Louis DeJoy forced him to suspend his overhaul of the Postal Service but said the House still needs to act Saturday to provide more funds.

Many of those Democrats pushing for more economic relief measures are facing tough races this fall in which voters have grown frustrated watching Congress fumble for months on partisan bills, according to multiple lawmakers and aides. Most also represent districts that have been heavily battered by the public health and economic crises.

“I’d like to see us do something economic-related while we’re there,” Rep. Susie Lee (D-Nev.), a freshman who sits in a swing district in Nevada, where she said the local economy is “on the brink of serious, serious collapse.”

“I think we’re all frustrated, but you have to look at what Democrats have proposed, and what Republicans have proposed,” Lee said. “We did our job, the Senate failed to do its job.”

Horsford said his district has confronted not only record caseloads and deaths but also a cratered economy as Nevada’s tourism industry has all but vanished. The state’s unemployment rate, once at an all-time low of 3.6 percent, at one point surged to 30 percent during the peak of the crisis.

“People are really at a breaking point,” Horsford said.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2020/08/18/nancy-pelosi-coronavirus-aid-397944

WASHINGTON — Former President Bill Clinton laid out a stark choice Tuesday night for voters during the second night of the virtual Democratic National Convention: Either elect a “go-to-work president” in Democrat Joe Biden or reelect incumbent Donald Trump, who would use a second term to “blame, bully and belittle.” 

“If you want a president who defines the job as spending hours a day watching TV and zapping people on social media, he’s your man,” said Clinton. “Denying, distracting, and demeaning works great if you’re trying to entertain and inflame. But in a real crisis, it collapses like a house of cards.”

By contrast, said Clinton, Democrats are “united in offering you a very different choice: a go-to-work president. A down-to-earth, get-the-job-done guy. A man with a mission: to take responsibility, not shift the blame; concentrate, not distract; unite, not divide.” 

It was vintage Bill Clinton, both a spirited endorsement of Biden and a withering, mocking critique of Trump.

“Donald Trump says we’re leading the world. Well, we are the only major industrial economy to have its unemployment rate triple,” Clinton deadpanned.

“At a time like this, the Oval Office should be a command center. Instead, it’s a storm center. There’s only chaos. Just one thing never changes—his determination to deny responsibility and shift the blame. The buck never stops there.”

Clinton framed November’s election as a hiring decision, the same way he did in his memorable 2012 convention speech in support of then-President Barack Obama.

“In this job interview, the difference is stark,” said Clinton in his pre-recorded remarks. “You know what Donald Trump will do with four more years: blame, bully, and belittle. And you know what Joe Biden will do: build back better.”

Ever since Clinton’s speaking role was announced earlier this summer, some in the party have questioned whether Clinton’s “New Democrat” vision of America still belongs in today’s increasingly progressive Democratic party.

Clinton’s speech Tuesday, though brief, should satisfy those doubters. 

The former president showed once again that he can deliver a compelling message about economic opportunity and a strong social safety net, the same message that has carried Democrats to victory in presidential elections since the Great Depression. 

“Joe Biden wants to build an economy far better suited to our changing world. Better for young peopleBetter for families, working and raising their kids. Better for people who lost jobs and need new ones. Better for farmers tired of being collateral damage in trade wars,” said Clinton.

“Joe won’t just put his signature on a check and try to fool you into thinking it came from him. He’ll work to make sure that your paycheck reflects your contribution to, and your stake in, a growing economy.” 

Still, there was no ignoring Clinton’s diminished status among Democrats. For the first time in 30 years, the former president was not given a key speaking slot at the convention, a decision which reflects his tarnished legacy in the Me Too era. 

Former secretary of state Hillary Clinton is scheduled to speak on Wednesday night. 

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2020/08/18/bill-clintons-dnc-speech-lays-out-stark-choice.html