Former Lebanese Prime Minister Hassan Diab gives a speech in Beirut in March. Diab announced his resignation days after a disastrous explosion rocked Beirut.

Dalati Nohra/AP


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Former Lebanese Prime Minister Hassan Diab gives a speech in Beirut in March. Diab announced his resignation days after a disastrous explosion rocked Beirut.

Dalati Nohra/AP

Updated at 3:25 p.m. ET

Lebanese Prime Minister Hassan Diab announced his cabinet’s resignation Monday, responding to outrage over a catastrophic explosion in Beirut.

“Today I announce the resignation of this government,” Diab said in a national TV address. “May God protect Lebanon.”

Diab’s speech was published by the National News Agency in Lebanon, the state-run media outlet.

His resignation came after last Tuesday’s deadly warehouse explosion — caused by 2,750 tons of ammonium nitrate stored at Beirut’s port — that killed at least 160 people, wounded thousands and left many homeless, destroying a portion of the city.

Public anger mounted after the blast, focusing on the carelessness that led to one of the worst explosions in Lebanon’s history.

The huge trove of dangerous material, which officials say was known about for years, had been allowed to languish in the port since 2013. Intense protests erupted, with many calling for top officials to “resign or hang.”

“We are facing an earthquake that struck the country, with all its humanitarian, social, economic and national repercussions,” Diab said.

With the prime minister’s resignation, it now falls to President Michel Aoun to determine the next steps.

After Diab presented his government’s resignation papers to Aoun late Monday, Aoun asked Diab and his ministers to continue performing their duties until a new government is installed, according the presidency’s Twitter account.

Diab, a 61-year-old professor and former minister of education, has only been in the role since January. When he took over, Diab faced many of the same challenges that forced his predecessor, Saad Hariri, to resign. Even before the recent disaster, Lebanon was seeing widespread and persistent protests over allegations of political corruption, and frustration with a deepening economic crisis.

Lebanon has a power-sharing government structure, where different groups are each represented by an arm of the government. The political system mandates that the presidency must go to a Christian, the prime minister must be a Sunni Muslim and the speaker of parliament must be a Shiite Muslim.

This system has been blamed for the country’s past political instability and division. NPR has reported the split up nature of Lebanon’s system has made it difficult for citizens to organize effectively against leadership — and to secure meaningful political change.

Going forward, one option would be for Lebanon to hold early elections. But Maha Yahya, the director of the Carnegie Middle East Center, said that will not be enough.

“Calling for early elections prior to the explosion on Aug. 4 may have placated people, but not after,” Yahya said. “We are way past that. The scale of the tragedy and the depth of the anger is just too much.”

The best-case scenario for moving forward, according to Yahya, is that an independent prime minister be named who would undertake economic reforms and “put together an economic and financial rescue plan, but also to prepare for elections next year.”

Yahya said the Lebanese people need to have a “roadmap” out of the pain they are experiencing — from the explosion but also from the country’s dismal economy.

“You need to explain to people why they’re going through this. And those that are responsible will be held accountable,” Yahya said. “And you have to show them the way out. You need to show them there’s light at the end of the tunnel.”

“And given all the questions around the political legitimacy of the current political class, you give them a way to vote them out and vote whoever they think now represents them in.”

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2020/08/10/900878730/lebanons-prime-minister-resigns-citing-an-earthquake-of-upheaval

The Trump administration will continue talks to resolve what the next round of stimulus relief should look like—with the goal of finding a resolution soon, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said on Monday. 

“If we can get a fair deal we’re willing to do it this week,” Mnuchin said during an interview with CNBC.

The discussions, led by Mnuchin, White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, (D-CA) and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, (D-NY) so far have not led to an agreement. 

As of last week, Democrats wanted to spend roughly $3 trillion on a rescue package known as the HEROES Act. Republicans, however, have supported their $1 trillion bill called the HEALS Act. Negotiations ground to a halt on Friday.

To circumvent the congressional tug-of-war, President Donald Trump signed a memorandum on Saturday, outlining four distinct areas of action:

  • Extend the federal unemployment benefit, which expired July 31, and reducing it to $400 a week, down from $600. The federal government will pay 75%, with states expected to come up the remaining 25%. This weekly benefit is in addition to regular state unemployment benefits, which vary in amount depending on the state.
  • Pause the payroll tax until the end of the year. This benefit would only apply to those making less than roughly $100,000 per year. 
  • Suspend interest on federal student loans and payments through the end of the year, extending this delay past the current date of Sept. 30. 
  • Call for an extension to the current eviction ban, specifically asking the Department of Health and Human Services and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to “consider” whether an extension to the current eviction ban is needed and to identify “any and all available federal funds” that could be used to prevent renters from eviction.

Next Steps Are Coming … Slowly

Although Trump’s executive actions were intended as a stop-gap measure while talks continue between the administration and Democrats, the two sides don’t appear to be any closer to reaching an agreement and have taken to criticizing each other in media appearances.

On Sunday, Pelosi and Schumer released a joint statement calling the president’s actions “meager” and that they “provide little real help to families.”

In a press conference today, White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany fired back, saying that the “Democrats rejected multiple clean bills to provide relief.” 

Still, negotiations are expected to continue this week, as even with the president’s executive orders, there remains much to be resolved. For example, according to the president’s memorandum, states will have to apply for funding in order to shore up their portion of the required 25% of the $400 weekly unemployment assistance.

And, although there appears to be bipartisan agreement that the Paycheck Protection Program, a forgivable and low-interest loan program created as part of the CARES Act to help aid small businesses struggling to survive the pandemic, should receive additional funding, the exact terms have not yet been agreed upon.

It’s also worth noting that Trump did not outline any provisions for a second stimulus check, something both Democrats and Republicans say they support.

Source Article from https://www.forbes.com/sites/advisor/2020/08/10/does-trumps-executive-order-mean-theres-no-second-stimulus-check-coming/

California workers would see $400 extra in weekly unemployment benefits following an executive order signed by President Donald Trump — but to speed the money to the jobless amid coronavirus-linked economic woes, Gov. Gavin Newsom said Monday the state would have to cough up $700 million a week.

The state also would have to reprogram a primitive EDD computer system that is already haunted by tech gremlins such as freezes and glitches as it reels from a tsunami of claims from workers who have lost their jobs due to business shutdowns ordered by the government to combat the deadly bug.

The president signed a series of executive orders in recent days that included a provision to add $400 a week to the normal state unemployment benefits, but the order also obliged states to pay $100 of that amount.

Newsom, however, said Monday during a regular news briefing to discuss the state’s response to the coronavirus that California is too impoverished to come up with the 25 percent share of the additional $400 payment.

“The state does not have an identified resource of $700 million a week that we haven’t already obliged,” Newsom said. “There is no money sitting in the piggy bank from the previous CARES act.”

The additional $400 would be a huge benefit for California workers who have lost their jobs, adding to the average weekly benefit in the state of $305. The maximum benefit without the supplement is $450.

The governor emphasized that massive cuts would have to be made in other state programs to come up with the California share of the unemployment benefits.

“That would create a burden the likes of which a state even as large as California could not absorb,” Newsom said.

The governor also suggested that the EDD’s archaic computer system — based on a decades-old programming language called Cobol — might stagger beneath additional burdens if it had to be reworked to accommodate a $400 payment.

“We would have to reprogram a system that is well-defined as hardly perfect at EDD,”  Newsom said.

The EDD has estimated that it might require three to four weeks to reprogram its creaky computer systems to shift from adding an extra $400 payment rather than the extra $600 in federal extra payments that ended in late July. The state would also have to scout for an assured funding source.

“All of those burdens would create time delays and enormous consternation for millions of those who would seek those benefits,”  Newsom said.

The EDD, however, has already created considerable consternation on its own because of the state agency’s failure to promptly pay benefits to a huge chunk of the 7.31 million California workers who have filed first-time unemployment claims from mid-March through Aug. 1.

The embattled state agency has spawned a mammoth backlog of unpaid claims that has delayed payments to as many as 1.13 million California workers.

Newsom said California needs federal cash to accomplish the $400 payments. The governor — who has been vowing for months to fix the broken call centers and inadequate computer systems at the EDD — said he didn’t want to launch into a new program that might suffer further glitches.

“I recognize the magnitude of the challenge and the burden that we already have with our unemployment system,” Newsom said.

 

 

 

Source Article from https://www.mercurynews.com/coronavirus-400-unemployment-benefits-california-trump-newsom-economy

“CBS Sunday Morning” ran a glowing feature on Jill Biden on Sunday but Media Research Center news analyst Nicholas Fondacaro called it a “gooey puff piece” and criticized CBS correspondent Rita Braver for a “love fest” that Melania Trump never received when her husband was running for president.

“Between excited fawning over the idea of continuing to teach and playing pranks around the White House, it was obvious that Braver desperately wanted Biden to be her ‘unconventional’ first lady,” Fondacaro wrote.

JILL BIDEN PROMISES HUSBAND WILL DEBATE TRUMP THIS FALL

The segment began with footage of Jill Biden stepping in front of her husband, presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden, to protect him from a heckler who crashed a pre-coronavirus campaign rally. The CBS reporter said “Jill Biden has always stood up for her family,” and the clip was simply another example.

“In that vein, Braver helped Jill protect the media’s presidential candidate by weakly bring up the allegations of inappropriate and unwanted touching against Joe,” Fondacaro said, noting that Braver allowed Jill Biden to sidestep allegations of unwanted touching against her husband and allegations levied by Tara Reade weren’t mentioned whatsoever.

“She let Biden brush it aside as ‘a space issue. They felt that they wanted more space.’ Biden also insisted that Joe had ‘learned from it’ and ‘keeps his distance,’” Fondacaro wrote. Fox News host Mark Levin characterized the piece as showing CBS was “all in” for Biden.

CNN’ BRIAN STELTER CALLED OUT OVER ‘TONE-DEAF’ CRITICISM OF CONSERVATIVE MEDIA FOR QUESTIONING BIDEN’S MENTAL HEALTH

The segment also featured a trip down memory lane, with a story about how excited her grandparents were to first meet Joe Biden decades ago. CBS’ segment then pivoted to praising Biden for her background as a teacher, but Fondacaro found it hypocritical.

“Braver gushed about how her subject ‘got a doctorate in education and has worked as a community college teacher for years, even as second lady,” Fondacaro wrote. “Meanwhile, the opposition press has railed against Second Lady Karen Pence for teaching art at a religious private school.”

Biden said she plans to continue teaching if she becomes first lady, and she would also advocate for free community college in addition to putting an emphasis on cancer research and support for military families.

CLICK HERE FOR THE FOX NEWS APP

“As the segment wrapped up, Braver turned to gush about a prank Biden had played on Air Force 2 as second lady,” Fondacaro wrote, pointing out they joked about having a prankster in the White House “as they stood on a Delaware beach, in the middle of a pandemic, with other people around, and no masks.”

Fondacaro also observed, “When Trump was running for president, there was no ‘CBS Sunday Morning’ puff piece for Melania.”

CBS News did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/media/cbs-puff-piece-jill-biden

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Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2020/08/10/tech/twitter-stock-tiktok/index.html

President Trump signed four executive orders on Saturday, granting Americans financial relief in a number of areas. However, the actions did not provide any funding for a second round of stimulus checks. To get those, Americans may have to wait for Congress to pass its much-debated relief package. 

Saturday’s executive orders defer student loan payments and payroll taxes for many through the end of the year, provide some eviction protections and grant enhanced federal unemployment benefits. Some experts have already noted that these relief measures may be difficult to implement and could face legal challenges

But the orders did not include funding for another round of stimulus checks because generally, funds for federal programs need to be authorized through legislation passed by Congress. “The constitution mandates that only Congress has the power of the purse — the president cannot unilaterally tax and spend,” says Kris Cox, senior tax policy analyst for the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. The authority to spend comes only from legislation passed by Congress, she says. 

The stimulus checks were authorized as a one-time payment through the Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security Act, commonly referred to as the CARES Act, passed by Congress in March. President Trump has no legal authority to extend those payments, Cox tells CNBC Make It. 

It will take a new law to implement a second round of stimulus payments, says Richard Kogan, a CBPP senior fellow. When it comes to relief measures affected by Saturday’s executive orders, those programs may have some flexibility in the existing law that the president can utilize to extend them. “That’s different than what we’re talking about in the case of the stimulus payments where they aren’t existing and ongoing — they’ve expired. Period,” he says. “The legal situation there is black and white.”

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2020/08/10/why-trumps-latest-executive-orders-did-not-approve-more-stimulus-checks.html

Senate Minority Leader Charles SchumerChuck SchumerWhite House officials, Democrats spar over legality, substance of executive orders Schumer declines to say whether Trump executive orders are legal: They don’t ‘do the job’ Schumer: Idea that 0 unemployment benefit keeps workers away from jobs ‘belittles the American people’ MORE (D-N.Y.) on Monday denied that top Democrats had reached out to the White House to restart negotiations on coronavirus aid despite claims from President TrumpDonald John TrumpTrump suggests some states may ‘pay nothing’ as part of unemployment plan Trump denies White House asked about adding him to Mount Rushmore Trump, US face pivotal UN vote on Iran MORE that they had.

“Fables from Donald Trump. Fables. That’s what he seems to specialize in. I didn’t call him. Speaker Pelosi didn’t call him. No, we didn’t call him,” Schumer said on MSNBC’s “Morning Joe” when asked about the president’s assertion.

“He makes these things up or hears from somebody at one of his fundraisers or at his country club,” Schumer continued. “‘Oh, the Democrats are calling you.’ He acts like it’s true.”

A senior Democratic aide also said there had been no contact with Trump from Speaker Nancy PelosiNancy PelosiWhite House officials, Democrats spar over legality, substance of executive orders Sunday shows – Trump coronavirus executive orders reverberate Pelosi: ‘Of course there’s room for compromise’ on 0-per-week unemployment benefit MORE (D-Calif.) or the Senate minority leader.

Trump told reporters late Sunday as he departed New Jersey that the Democrats had reached out with interest about making a deal on coronavirus legislation after he took unilateral action on certain key topics. The president again claimed in a tweet on Monday morning that Democrats had renewed interest in talks.

“So now Schumer and Pelosi want to meet to make a deal. Amazing how it all works, isn’t it,” Trump tweeted. “Where have they been for the last 4 weeks when they were ‘hardliners’, and only wanted BAILOUT MONEY for Democrat run states and cities that are failing badly? They know my phone number!”

Trump on Saturday signed three memos and an executive order at his New Jersey golf club after talks between administration officials and the top Democrats faltered. The orders aim to extend enhanced unemployment benefits, defer collection of the payroll tax and provide relief on evictions and student loans.

Republicans credited Trump with taking action amid congressional gridlock, but Democrats and some experts cast doubt on the efficacy of the orders.

One of the president’s memos would require already cash-strapped states to contribute to enhanced unemployment benefits. Another defers the payroll tax, which does little to assist unemployed Americans. The order on evictions only directs federal agencies to provide assistance but does not explicitly prevent renters from being evicted.

Talks between the White House and congressional Democrats faltered late last week as the two were unable to reach an agreement on providing aid to Americans reeling from the coronavirus pandemic.

Republicans have balked at the price tag of Democrats’ proposal — the House passed a $3.4 trillion measure back in May — and opposed the amount requested to provide relief to state and local governments. Democrats said they offered to reduce the price of their proposal by $1 trillion but were rebuffed by White House chief of staff Mark MeadowsMark Randall MeadowsMeadows says he wants Trump nomination speech ‘miles and miles away’ from White House Pelosi: ‘Of course there’s room for compromise’ on 0-per-week unemployment benefit Pelosi, Schumer slam Trump executive orders, call for GOP to come back to negotiating table MORE and Treasury Secretary Steven MnuchinSteven Terner MnuchinWhite House officials, Democrats spar over legality, substance of executive orders Sunday shows – Trump coronavirus executive orders reverberate Pelosi: ‘Of course there’s room for compromise’ on 0-per-week unemployment benefit MORE.

Schumer expressed confidence in Democrats’ negotiating position on Monday, arguing Republicans have little choice but to come to the table.

“The Republicans, you know, they’re in a pickle,” Schumer said. “You have 20 of them who don’t want any money whatsoever, but then you have 10 or 15, many running for reelection, who are desperate to get a package. And they’re all hanging their hats on this executive order. … Well, now it’s clear that these executive orders are going to be minimal at best.”

Jordain Carney contributed reporting.

Source Article from https://thehill.com/homenews/administration/511297-democrats-deny-outreach-to-trump-since-talks-collapsed

Lebanon’s besieged government has fallen, one week after a cataclysmic explosion destroyed Beirut port, with the country’s prime minister, Hassan Diab, claiming the disaster was the result of endemic corruption.

Diab announced the resignation of the government after more than a third of ministers quit their posts, forcing Diab himself to resign.

Diab, who has been prime minister for nine months, was due to notify the president, Michel Aoun, who was expected to accept his resignation.

“I said that corruption is rooted in every part of the state,” the prime minister said. “But I found out that corruption is greater than the state.

“A political class is using all their dirty tricks to prevent real change. The more we tried to get to them, the bigger the walls became.

“This disaster is the result of chronic corruption,” said Diab, repeating: “The corruption network is bigger than the state.”

He added that he was “heeding people’s demand for real change. Today we will take a step back in order to stand with the people.”

However, the move is unlikely to immediately lead to a clean sweep of the government, with current ministers – including those who have resigned – set to assume a caretaker role and form the backbone of a new administration.

Instead a push is under way for more than a third of sitting MPs to quit parliament, which would force new parliamentary elections and could lead to an injection of new members less tainted by corruption and nepotism.

Lebanon’s leadership has been teetering for the past week since an enormous explosion wiped out Beirut’s port and damaged nearby areas. The death toll from the blasts has risen to 200, according to Beirut’s governor. Up to another 6,000 people were wounded.

Decades of incompetence and graft underpinned a decision to keep a stockpile of close to 2,750 tonnes of ammonium nitrate at the port and store it with combustible substances.

The explosion has cast a spotlight on weak governance in the Mediterranean state, which was already reeling from an economic implosion that threatened the livelihoods of millions of people.

At least five more bodies have been recovered from near the 45-metre crater in the docks where the fireball erupted. Local investigators were due to finish a preliminary inquiry into the cause of the disaster on Tuesday.

The fall of the government failed to quell anger on the streets of central Beirut, where demonstrators again clashed with soldiers and parliamentary guards defending the Lebanese legislature. A caretaker administration made up of many of the same ministers would do little to satisfy those calling for an overhaul of the country’s political system, including the basis on which governments are formed.

A central demand of protesters has been to clean out all entrenched layers of governance that had siphoned off much of the country’s wealth and provided next to nothing in public services. Another is for an international team to take over the investigation, and name political leaders who had allowed such a dangerous stockpile to remain metres from Beirut’s most populous areas for more than six years.

After the end of the civil war in 1990, patronage networks founded by warlords became central instruments of statecraft, with all ministries turned into fiefs. Senior politicians had partnered with oligarchs, taking enormous cuts from development contracts and the supply of essential services, such as fuel importation, and waste management.

The result was a small number of hugely wealthy officials and businessmen running the country with outside patronage. The nepotism had infected all layers of government, making dealing with corruption a fact of life for many Lebanese.

“It can’t go on this way,” said Jad Daher, as he walked to a rally in downtown Beirut. “It’s not just the corruption, but the system that got us to this point. If this government resigns, but a new one settles in answerable to the same people, then what have we achieved? This is all or nothing.”

“They won’t do the same thing again,” said Rita Afif. “They know that they can’t, but they’ll still try to. They’ll be stopped this time.”

Security forces again fired teargas at protesters who neared the parliament square, where large numbers of soldiers and police remained behind tall iron gates and barricades inside.

Some political leaders, meanwhile, called for mass resignations of MPs, in order to force new parliamentary elections. At least 43 members would need to quit their seats for that to happen. A senior member, the former warlord Samir Geagea, said in a tweet: “In addition to the ongoing relief efforts in Beirut, we are currently working on rescuing the republic through ridding it of this parliament.”

At least six MPs have quit their seats, and others were expected to follow. The scramble to replace Diab is expected to be led by former prime minister Saad Hariri, who stood down last November in the wake of street protests following an economic collapse that had electrified the country and paved the way for legislators promising change. A second candidate is the highly regarded former senior diplomat Nawaf Salam.

Ever since taking office, Diab had struggled to govern a country crippled by a fast deepening economic implosion, amplified by the coronavirus. The government he led had failed to come to terms with the IMF over a financial bailout conditional on reforms some Lebanese leaders were refusing to make. The IMF has described talks as fraught.

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/aug/10/lebanese-pm-to-resign-after-more-than-a-third-of-cabinet-quits

The Trump campaign and Republicans need to hold off on lowering expectations for presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden’s performance at debates, Fox News contributor Ari Fleischer said on Monday.

“My former White House colleague Marc Thiessen, a Fox News contributor, pointed this out in a  column weeks ago when he said it’s a mistake by Republicans to point out how bad Joe Biden is. They’re lowering expectations that all Biden has to do is not faint and he’ll win the debate,” the former press secretary for George W. Bush told “America’s Newsroom.”

DEBATE COMMISSION REJECTS TRUMP PUSH FOR EXTRA SHOWDOWN WITH BIDEN

Fleischer said that there is “merit” in the argument, noting that Biden got through the Democratic debates and rose to the top of the field.

“Biden did go through the Democratic debates and he had his stumbly-bumbly moments. Remember when he told parents to play record players for the children when they go to bed? But, overall, he was able to get through the debates and stand. So, it’s a delicate dance Republicans have to do between saying Joe Biden can’t even string together a sentence, without lowering the bar so much that Biden wins all the debates.”

The Commission on Presidential Debates (CPD) is turning down a formal request by President Trump’s reelection campaign that a fourth debate between the president and Biden be added and that the showdown be held early next month, before many states start sending out absentee ballots to voters.

CLICK HERE FOR THE FOX NEWS APP

But the nonpartisan commission – which has organized and conducted the presidential and vice presidential general election debates for more than three decades – added that it would “consider” adding an additional encounter between Trump and Biden to the three that are already scheduled if both candidates agree.

The Trump campaign – responding Thursday evening – said they were “disappointed” in the CPD’s response but  that they appreciated the commission’s “openness to a fourth, or earlier debate.”

Fox News’  Paul Steinhauser contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/ari-fleischer-trump-biden-debate-expectations

People were seen running out of a PNC Bank, its windows smashed, at Huron and State streets. Down the block, other stores, including a Sally Beauty Supply, had been cleaned out by vandals. Other parts of downtown, including around Grand and Wabash avenues, were littered with trash.

Source Article from https://www.chicagotribune.com/news/breaking/ct-chicago-downtown-looting-20200810-3zwa3b7zzrc5vdyb4qjqywrjvu-story.html

If Microsoft were to complete an acquisition of TikTok, it would gain a company with much potential for advertising revenue growth.

But with such a purchase, Microsoft would also take on an entirely new slate of problems. 

Microsoft announced on Aug. 2 that it was in talks to purchase TikTok’s business in the U.S., Australia and New Zealand, with a deadline to complete the deal by Sept. 15. The company is currently owned by Chinese tech company ByteDance and has become a target of the Trump Administration and other governments over privacy and security concerns. Trump also signed an executive order last week that would ban U.S. companies from doing business with TikTok, but it’s unclear how that order could affect a potential acquisition by Microsoft.

In the U.S., TikTok has grown to more than 100 million monthly users, many of whom are teens and young adults. Those users tune in to TikTok to see full-screen videos uploaded to the app by others. These videos often feature lip syncing over songs, flashy video editing and eye-catching, augmented-reality visual effects. 

To say that TikTok represents a business that is radically different than the enterprise software that Microsoft specializes in would be an understatement. 

For Microsoft, TikTok could become an advertising revenue powerhouse, but this potential is not without its own risk. Like other social apps, TikTok is a target for all kinds of problematic content that must be dealt with. This includes basic problems such as spam and scams, but more complicated content could also become headaches for Microsoft. 

This could include content such as misinformation, hoaxes, conspiracy theories, violence, prejudice and pornography, said Yuval Ben-Itzhak, CEO of Socialbakers, a social media marketing company. 

“Microsoft will need to deal with all of that and will be blamed and criticized when they fail to do so,” Ben-Itzhak said. 

Microsoft declined to comment, and TikTok did not respond to a request for comment on this story.

These challenges can be overcome, but they require large investments of capital and technical prowess, two things Microsoft is capable of providing. And already, Microsoft has some experience when it comes to moderating online communities.

In 2016, Microsoft purchased LinkedIn for $26.2 billion, and although the career and professional-centric service does not have the degree of content issues its peers deal with, it is still a social network. Microsoft has also run Xbox Live, the online gaming service, since its launch in 2002. Online gaming and social media are different beasts, but they do share similarities.

“Combating misinformation will need to be a mission critical priority. Microsoft will be new to this as it doesn’t have experience managing a high profile social network at this scale,” said Daniel Elman, an analyst at Nucleus Research. “That said, if any company can acquire or quickly develop the requisite skills and capabilities, it is Microsoft.”

But these are no small challenges, and these types of problems have become major issues for TikTok’s rivals. 

Facebook, for example, was accused of not doing enough to circumvent fake news and Russian misinformation ahead of the 2016 U.S. election, and four years later, the company still comes consistently under criticism about whether it is doing enough to prevent that type of content from appearing on its services. In July, hundreds of advertisers boycotted Facebook over its failure to contain the spread of hate speech and misinformation. 

Twitter, meanwhile, began to lose key users, such as comedian Leslie Jones, after the company let harassment run rampant on its social network. The company has spent the past couple of years building features to reduce the amount of hateful content users have to deal with in their mentions. 

These types of issues have already flared up on TikTok. Far-right activists, white nationalists and neo-Nazis have previously been reported on the app, according to Motherboard and the Huffington Post, which found some users who had already been banned by Facebook and Twitter.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2020/08/10/microsoft-buying-tiktok-could-lead-to-problems-monitoring-social-media-content.html

Over the weekend, President Trump signed four actions meant to provide speedy relief to Americans suffering from the economic consequences of COVID-19.

Included in this new package are as much as $400 in enhanced unemployment benefits for out-of-work Americans, a payroll tax holiday for those earning less than $100,000 per year, additional relief for student borrowers, and assistance for people struggling to make rent or their mortgage payments.

The additional $400 in unemployment benefits may prove especially helpful to those who are still unemployed, as the $600 in weekly additional unemployment benefits included in the CARES Act expired more than 10 days ago on July 31st. 

However, many Americans are still left wondering when they’ll receive their next $1,200 stimulus payment, or whether they will receive another amount instead. Many are also left guessing which version of stimulus payments will ultimately make the cut, whether that includes the $1,200 payment per individual and $500 per dependent suggested in the HEALS Act, or whether each dependent (up to three) will be eligible for a $1,200 payment as was suggested in the HEROES Act. 

MORE FROM FORBESDoes Trump’s Executive Order Mean There’s No Second Stimulus Check Coming?

When to Expect Your Next $1,200 Stimulus Payment

Before you can start the countdown to receiving your next stimulus payment, Congress will need to reach a broad agreement on a full stimulus package. Negotiations were still at a standstill as of Monday, August 10th, yet both Republicans and Democrats appear to be working toward a good halfway point between their respective proposals.

One major point of contention among Republicans and Democrats has been a potential extension of the $600 in additional unemployment benefits that expired last month. Democrats would like to see this benefit last through the end of 2020, but Republicans have argued that added unemployment benefits disincentivize people to get back to work. 

While some uncertainty lingers, it’s still possible you could receive a second $1,200 stimulus check (and checks for your dependents) by the end of August. This is predicated on the idea that Congress reaches an agreement this week, which President Trump can then sign into law.

Keep in mind that the CARES Act passed on March 27, 2020, and the first wave of stimulus payments were deposited into American’s bank accounts by April 13th. Some payments took longer, however, since many requested paper checks and some people owed a stimulus check do not file taxes each year.

It’s reasonable to believe payments could come quicker this time around since the framework that didn’t exist before the CARES Act is already built. For example, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) notes that many people who opted for a paper check from the government got a debit card instead last time, which they had to make plans for. We can presume another round of stimulus payments could use the same system that pumped out those debit cards and got them in the mail in a short amount of time.

Do I Qualify for a Second Stimulus Check?

While nobody knows for sure if any changes will be made in terms of eligibility for stimulus payments, both the HEALS Act and the HEROES Act relied on the same income thresholds included in the CARES Act. Presumably, the same income caps will apply for a second check, although we’ll have to wait and see. 

If thresholds remain the same, individuals could receive a full stimulus payment with an income of $75,000 or less, while that amount is doubled to $150,000 for couples filing joint returns. Meanwhile, heads of household filers can receive a full stimulus payment with an income up to $112,500. 

Note that, last time, stimulus payments were phased out based on income above these amounts with individuals, couples filing jointly and heads of household disqualifying for stimulus payments once they earn an adjusted gross income (AGI) over $99,000, $198,000, and $136,500 respectively. 

The Bottom Line

If you received your first stimulus check promptly, then you don’t have to do anything to receive another payment using the same method. For the first round of stimulus, you didn’t need to take any action if you had already filed your tax returns for 2019. If you hadn’t filed your taxes for 2019 yet but you did file tax returns for 2018, however, the IRS used your 2018 income to determine your stimulus payment amount or eligibility. 

If you have little or no income or you didn’t file a tax return and you haven’t received the first stimulus payment yet, the IRS says you should use their non-filer tool as soon as possible to register for your stimulus payment. 

If you’re counting down the minutes until your next stimulus payment arrives, you’re certainly not alone. But, like the rest of America, all you can do is make sure you’re eligible and wait it out.

Source Article from https://www.forbes.com/sites/jrose/2020/08/10/1200-second-stimulus-check-heres-when-you-can-realistically-expect-to-receive-it/

BALTIMORE (WJZ) — One person is dead, four people were injured and one more person is still trapped under the rubble after a gas explosion in a northwest Baltimore neighborhood Monday morning.

The explosion happened in the 6500 block of Reisterstown Road near Labyrinth Road around 9:54 a.m. Three homes collapsed and the force of the explosion and debris blew out windows and doors in at least 16 nearby homes.

‘It Was Like A Bomb Went Off’ | Residents Say Baltimore Gas Explosion Jolted Their Homes

Baltimore City fire officials said a woman died and at least four others were taken to area hospitals to be treated, some with critical injuries. There are trying to rescue at least one more person trapped and are searching through the rubble for any additional victims.

City councilman Isaac “Yitzy” Schleifer said housing inspectors are on scene to inspect the homes in the area and that there’s been damage reported five blocks away.

The American Red Cross just arrived on scene to help with any displaced residents and to hand out water.

Baltimore County and Howard County fire crews are assisting Baltimore city fire with the search and rescue operation. Baltimore Gas & Electric is on the scene and the gas is being turned off in the immediate area. BGE crews are investigating what caused the explosion.

Tasha Jamerson, with BGE, said residents should continue to report if they smell gas. Call 1-877-685-0123.

ATF Baltimore has also arrived to help with the investigation.

PHOTOS: NW Baltimore Gas Explosion

In a Citizen app video you can see the immediate aftermath of the explosion of the scene. Note: Language is NSFW.

Three Rescued, Additional People Trapped After Three-Home Explosion @CitizenApp

Brookhill Rd & Reisterstown Rd 9:48:20 AM EDThttps://citizen.com/static/scripts/embed.js

Eyewitnesses told WJZ they heard a large boom and felt the ground shake for at least a four block radius. Debris was seen scattered in the roadway and there’s rubble where three homes stood.

“I heard a kaboom and I thought it was a car or something and when I came out, I seen the debris and something’s gone, totally gone,” one man told WJZ’s Paul Gessler.

Another man, Dean Jones, told WJZ when he heard the explosion he ran from his home without any shoes. When he arrived at where the explosion happened he could hear someone saying “help” from under the rubble.

Credit: WJZ/ Chopper 13

“It was catastrophic. It was like a bomb, like you watch things in other countries where they have like bombings and things like that,” Jones said. “It was like watching that in real life. Telephone poles split, I mean, houses down the block, broken glass. When I initially got there, I could hear a voice just saying ‘Help,’ it’s crazy. It’s something I don’t ever wanna see ever again; I don’t want to relive it ever again.”

He said he did all he could to help until first responders arrived. Jones said he smelled smoke and gas at the scene.

From Chopper 13, you can see just how large the explosion area is and you can see how far the debris spread.

Nearby residents are all out of their homes, sitting in the shade, shaken by what they just experienced. People are wearing masks to protect others from COVID-19, trying to stay safe while helping their neighbors.

At this point, they are awaiting word if they can go back inside their homes. Many don’t know what they’ll find once they go back inside.

Employees at the nearby Applebees told WJZ they could feel the explosion a couple of blocks away.

Gov. Larry Hogan thanked first responders and said state officials are monitoring the situation.

Stay with WJZ on this developing story. To get breaking news alerts, download our app now!

 

Source Article from https://baltimore.cbslocal.com/2020/08/10/explosion-rocks-northwest-baltimore-latest/

Bridges that lead into downtown Chicago were raised to limit access after looting and vandalism late Sunday and early Monday. Police made more than 100 arrests during the night of unrest and confiscated five guns.

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Bridges that lead into downtown Chicago were raised to limit access after looting and vandalism late Sunday and early Monday. Police made more than 100 arrests during the night of unrest and confiscated five guns.

Scott Olson/Getty Images

Hundreds of people looted high-end shops on Chicago’s Magnificent Mile overnight and early Monday morning with police officers exchanging gunfire with at least one individual, according to Chicago officials.

Law enforcement officials say the violence was linked to social media calls for looting after police shot and injured a male suspect in Englewood, on the city’s South Side, on Sunday afternoon.

“To be clear, this had nothing to do with legitimate protected First Amendment expression,” Mayor Lori Lightfoot said Monday. “What occurred downtown and in surrounding communities was abject criminal behavior, pure and simple … This was straight-up felony criminal conduct.”

To staunch the unrest, bridges over the Chicago River were lifted to reduce traffic in and out of downtown, and bus and train service were temporarily restricted to the area.

“This was an act of violence against our police officers and against our city,” Police Superintendent David Brown said Monday morning, vowing a heavy police presence would be felt downtown “until further notice.”

Nine officers were injured, including a broken nose and an injury from a thrown bottle, while one security guard and one civilian were shot and hospitalized in critical condition, according to police. Police arrested more than 100 people suspected of theft, disorderly conduct and battery against officers and will examine security footage for more suspects, Brown said.

The scenes in Chicago echoed the unrest in that city and many others in late May and early June after George Floyd was killed by police in Minneapolis.

However, local police and government officials were adamant that the overnight looting and property destruction were not part of a protest.

On Sunday afternoon, police shot and injured a male suspect in Englewood. Police say he had fired a weapon at officers; he has been hospitalized and is expected to survive.

A crowd of residents confronted police officers at the scene, accusing them of shooting a child. Deputy Police Chief Yolanda Talley disputed that characterization on Sunday, calling it “misinformation.” On Monday, Brown said the suspect shot by police is a 20-year-old man.

Brown said shortly after the crowd in Englewood dispersed, police learned of calls on social media for looting downtown, with “car caravans” headed that way in “an incident of pure criminality.” He said 400 officers were sent to the area.

“I pledge to pursue these offenders to the fullest extent of the law,” he said. “[The Chicago Police Department] will not stand by as our beautiful downtown becomes someplace people fear.”

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2020/08/10/900805820/chicagos-magnificent-mile-erupts-in-overnight-looting-violence

In a politically charged speech Saturday delivered from his resort in Bedminster, N.J., Trump said he would pursue one executive order and three presidential memoranda to federal agencies aimed at cutting taxes for workers until the end of the year, extending unemployment benefits at a reduced rate, renewing a moratorium on evictions during the pandemic, and deferring student loan payments and interest until the end of the year.

But Sasse, who emerged as an early GOP critic of the president despite consistently voting in favor of the White House’s legislative priorities, joined with Democratic lawmakers in questioning the legality of Trump’s maneuvers.

“The pen-and-phone theory of executive lawmaking is unconstitutional slop,” Sasse said Saturday night. “President Obama did not have the power to unilaterally rewrite immigration law with DACA, and President Trump does not have the power to unilaterally rewrite the payroll tax law. Under the Constitution, that power belongs to the American people acting through their members of Congress.”

Sasse’s office did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Trump’s tweet Monday.

The president has repeatedly attacked members of his own party in recent months, writing negatively about congressional Republicans on social media whenever they show a willingness to express public disapproval of his actions.

In July, Trump targeted Sens. Mitt Romney of Utah and Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania after the two lawmakers criticized his decision to commute the sentence of his longtime informal political adviser Roger Stone.

Two weeks later, the president lashed out at Rep. Liz Cheney, the third-ranking House Republican, promoting criticism from her conservative colleagues that she hadn’t been sufficiently supportive of the White House agenda.

Sasse has sparred with Trump since the president’s days as the frontrunner in the 2016 Republican primary. He derided then-candidate Trump as a “megalomaniac strongman” during a Senate floor speech in a December 2015, revealed he would not vote for Trump, called him “creepy” in February 2016, and said he did not think Trump had “any core principles” in March 2016.

After Trump’s election, Sasse told POLITICO in May 2017 that the new president “comes out of a reality TV world,” and acknowledged that he had “lots of anxiety about whether or not that kind of world is really what we want for our kids.”

More recently, Sasse condemned the aggressive dispersal of apparently peaceful protesters outside the White House in June so Trump could stage a photo opportunity while posing with a Bible at a nearby church. “There is a fundamental — a constitutional — right to protest, and I’m against clearing out a peaceful protest for a photo op that treats the Word of God as a political prop,” Sasse said.

And later that month, Sasse was among the Republican senators who pressed the White House on the president’s knowledge of reported Russian bounties paid to the Taliban to kill U.S. troops in Afghanistan. “I want to understand how it’s conceivably possible that the president didn’t know. How does that possibly happen?” Sasse said.

Still, Trump formally backed Sasse’s bid for a second term in 2020, tweeting last September that the freshman senator “has done a wonderful job representing the people of Nebraska. He is great with our Vets, the Military, and your very important Second Amendment. Strong on Crime and the Border, Ben has my Complete and Total Endorsement!”

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2020/08/10/trump-sasse-rogue-virus-executive-action-393091

Lebanon’s prime minister announced his government’s resignation on Monday, saying a huge explosion that devastated the capital and stirred public outrage was the result of endemic corruption.

The Aug. 4 detonation at a port warehouse of more than 2,000 tonnes of ammonium nitrate killed at least 163 people, injured more than 6,000 and destroyed swathes of the Mediterranean capital, compounding months of political and economic meltdown.

In a televised address, Prime Minister Hassan Diab said he backed calls by ordinary Lebanese for those responsible for “this crime” to be put on trial.

Diab made the announcement after the cabinet, formed in January with the backing of the powerful Iranian-backed Hezbollah group and its allies, met on Monday, with many ministers wanting to resign, according to ministerial and political sources.

Diab said on Saturday he would request early parliamentary elections.

Demonstrations broke out again in central Beirut, with some protesters hurling rocks at security forces guarding an entrance leading to the parliament building, who responded with tear gas.

“The entire regime needs to change. It will make no difference if there is a new government,” Joe Haddad, a Beirut engineer, told Reuters. “We need quick elections.”

For many ordinary Lebanese, the explosion was the last straw in a protracted crisis over the collapse of the economy, corruption, waste and dysfunctional governance, and they have taken to the streets demanding root-and-branch change.

The information and environment ministers quit on Sunday as well as several lawmakers, and the justice minister followed them out the door on Monday. Finance Minister Ghazi Wazni, a key negotiator with the IMF over a rescue plan to help Lebanon exit a financial crisis, was set to resign, a source close to him said.

Lebanon’s president had previously said explosive material was stored unsafely for years at the port. He later said the investigation would consider whether the cause was external interference as well as negligence or an accident.

The Lebanese army said on Monday that another five bodies were pulled from the rubble, raising the death toll to 163. Search and rescue operations continued.

The cabinet decided to refer the investigation of the blast to the judicial council, the highest legal authority whose rulings cannot be appealed, a ministerial source and state news agency NNA said. The council usually handles top security cases.

Anti-government protests in the past two days have been the biggest since October, when angry demonstrations spread over an economic crisis rooted in pervasive graft, mismanagement and high-level unaccountability.

An international donor conference on Sunday raised pledges worth nearly 253 million euros ($298 million) for immediate humanitarian relief, but foreign countries are demanding transparency over how the aid is used.

Some Lebanese doubt change is possible in a country where sectarian politicians have dominated since the 1975-90 conflict.

“It won’t work, it’s just the same people. It’s a mafia,” said Antoinette Baaklini, an employee of an electricity company that was demolished in the blast.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2020/08/10/lebanon-government-set-to-resign-amid-outrage-over-explosion-minister.html

Hours after Chicago police shot a young man who turned and fired at them, hundreds of people went on a looting and vandalism spree in various parts of the Windy City early Monday, according to reports.

The mayhem began about 2:30 p.m. Sunday, when cops responded to reports of a man with a gun in the Englewood neighborhood on the South Side and located a person who fit the description near Moran Park, the Chicago Tribune reported.

While running away from police, the suspect turned around and fired at them. The officers returned fire, wounding the gunman, who was transported to University of Chicago Hospital in unknown condition, according to the newspaper.

Police and witnesses later said a crowd of about 30 people faced off against cops near 56th and Aberdeen streets.

Authorities said someone spread false information to the group that police had shot and wounded a child.

Scott Olson/Getty Images

The looters and vandals rushed through the city’s Magnificent Mile and other parts of downtown, where they were seen carrying bags full of stolen goods, the Tribune reported.

They repeatedly tried to smash the windows of the Omega watch store at Delaware Place and Michigan Avenue.

“The watch store,” one cop said. “They’re gonna get it eventually.”

Some people were seen running out of a damaged PNC Bank at Huron and State streets, while nearby stores also were cleaned out by looters.

Police officers detain a man who was found inside a Best Buy store.

Scott Olson/Getty Images

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Police arrested several people and recovered at least one gun, officials told the news outlet.

One fleeing woman carrying shopping bags fell on the sidewalk as an officer pursued her, and another woman appeared to have been pepper-sprayed.

“We do have an officer that was maced by someone in the crowd. We do have an officer that sustained a shoulder injury from the incident with the crowd,” Deputy Police Chief Delonda Tally said, Fox 32 reported.

“One of our vehicles, the windows were shattered by a brick,” Tally added.

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2020/08/10/looters-vandals-sweep-through-chicagos-magnificent-mile/

Americans desperately need relief in light of the COVID-19 crisis and the subsequent recession it’s spawned. One such relief measure is boosted unemployment — something jobless workers were privy to earlier on in the year under the CARES Act.

Signed into law in late March, the CARES Act allowed laid-off workers to receive an extra $600 a week in their unemployment benefits, and it was that very boost that enabled so many people without jobs to replace their lost paychecks in full and keep up with their bills. But the CARES Act only called for that boost through July 31, which means it’s now expired. And so far, lawmakers have not managed to come to an agreement on a follow-up boost.

Democratic lawmakers really want to see that extra $600 a week extended through the end of the year. But Republican lawmakers insist that an additional $600 a week is too high, and that retaining it will give workers a disincentive to return to a job once that opportunity becomes available. As such, they’ve instead proposed a $200 weekly boost to unemployment through September, after which benefits would replace 70% of workers’ lost wages.

Image source: Getty Images.

Since both sides can’t seem to come to terms on unemployment — a major sticking point in hammering out a second, much-awaited stimulus deal — President Trump has decided to take matters into his own hands by signing several executive actions, one of which is designed to give unemployed workers an extra $400 a week in benefits for the time being. But jobless workers shouldn’t get too excited about that just yet.

The problem with President Trump’s new order

The fact that the president is taking action to help the jobless is a good thing in theory. But here’s the problem: States must agree to enter into a financial agreement with the federal government for residents to receive this new unemployment boost, and they also need to pick up part of the tab — 25%, to be precise. But many states don’t have that kind of money, nor were they given a heads-up about having to come up with it. If a given state doesn’t have those funds and doesn’t enter into an agreement with the federal government, its residents won’t be privy to an unemployment boost (though those same jobless workers will still be entitled to the standard unemployment benefits they’d otherwise get to collect).

And to be clear, as of now, it won’t be possible for someone to just receive the $300 a week the federal government would be responsible for. First, unemployed individuals must qualify for the $100 in aid from their state, and if that doesn’t happen, they’re completely out of luck.

As such, while the president’s executive action may have come from a place of wanting to help jobless workers, the reality is that it may end up being downright ineffective. And unfortunately, that leaves millions of workers in the same dire position they’ve been in since their $600 weekly boost ran out.

Source Article from https://www.fool.com/investing/2020/08/10/president-trump-has-temporarily-boosted-unemployme.aspx

The Trump and Biden campaigns are battling for every advantage over the air waves and on the ground with less than 90 days to go before the presidential election.

The pandemic has forced the campaigns to get creative in finding new ways to reach voters.

President TrumpDonald John TrumpTrump suggests some states may ‘pay nothing’ as part of unemployment plan Trump denies White House asked about adding him to Mount Rushmore Trump, US face pivotal UN vote on Iran MORE’s campaign and the Republican National Committee (RNC) are undertaking an aggressive ground strategy by sending mask-wearing field staffers to knock on doors to counter Democrat Joe BidenJoe BidenTrump denies White House asked about adding him to Mount Rushmore HuffPost reporter: Biden’s VP shortlist doesn’t suggest progressive economic policies Jill Biden says she plans to continue teaching if she becomes first lady MORE’s onslaught of over-the-air advertisements.

Trump’s campaign has been plowing its money into field staff and ramping up in-person voter contacts. Despite the pandemic, field staffers knocked on 1 million doors across 23 states last week.

Biden’s team and the Democratic National Committee (DNC) are taking a radically different approach.

Biden, who will accept his party’s nomination from Delaware and not travel to Milwaukee for the nominating convention, has made the careful handling of the coronavirus the centerpiece of his campaign.

The Biden campaign recently announced the largest ad reservation in history, a $280 million television and digital investment that nearly doubles the Trump campaign’s current reservations.

Biden’s staffers are not knocking on doors, believing it’s unsafe and a turnoff for voters during the pandemic. Instead, the campaign is focused on ensuring Democrats vote by mail through a fast-growing phone and virtual outreach program they say reached more than 3.5 million people last week.

The different approaches underscore the political divide between the two parties when it comes to dealing with the coronavirus pandemic. 

Trump has pushed for a return to normalcy, even as some states that reopened their economies have experienced new outbreaks.

Democrats have taken a more cautious approach, accusing the president of endangering lives and prolonging the pandemic by moving too fast.

“Sending a masked organizer to knock on a stranger’s door in the middle of a raging pandemic is not a safe or effective use of campaign resources,” said David Bergstein, the DNC’s director of battleground state communications.

The Trump campaign and RNC began reopening offices, holding events and training volunteers in-person in June, culminating with a new push to reach voters on their doorsteps throughout July.

They say everything has been done in line with local reopening guidelines and that they’ve strictly enforced capacity limits, mask-wearing and social distancing measures.

The Trump campaign has spent more than $100,000 on personal protective equipment and office cleaning. All staffers received an eight-page document detailing Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines and other health protocols.

“It’s widely proven that door knocking is the most effective and motivating way to turn out voters,” said Mandi Merritt, the national press secretary for the RNC. “It’s more personal, and while virtual and phone outreach are important avenues too, which is why we continue to do those, nothing can replace the face-to-face connection you can make with someone at the door. We’re doing that and the Biden campaign is not.”

Trump Victory brought on 300 new field staffers last month, giving it 1,500 in total. Another 1,000 will be hired soon to focus on door-knocking and get-out-the-vote efforts.

Staffers are required to read the book “Groundbreakers: How Obama’s 2.2 million volunteers transformed campaigning in America” to take lessons from former President Obama’s community organizing techniques.

Trump Victory says it will surpass Obama’s 2.2 million volunteers and claims its ground efforts have reduced the Democratic voter registration advantage in key battleground states by hundreds of thousands of voters.

The Trump campaign insists it’s not betting it all on in-person contacts, saying it reached out to more than 3 million people by phone last week.

Trump Victory says it has made more than 70 million voter contacts this cycle, more than double its 2016 effort. The campaign says it will have spent $100 million on its ground game by the end of the cycle.

Trump campaign state directors have been on the ground for more than two years in some states, while the Biden campaign only recently filled key positions in the battlegrounds.

“We have the biggest and best ground game operation ever seen,” said Trump campaign spokesman Tim Murtaugh. “Because of our permanent presence in these states and a data-driven approach to our outreach, we’ve built lasting relationships with voters on the ground that will power President Trump to victory in November.”

The Biden campaign says its quick pivot away from in-person contacts to a phone and virtual campaign, along with its relentless focus on mail voting, will push the former vice president over the top in an election defined by the coronavirus pandemic.

The Democrats have designed a strategy they say helped them win an upset victory at the Wisconsin Supreme Court earlier this year, shortly after the pandemic hit and voters turned to mail ballots.

A field organizer will make large numbers of short phone calls to talk about Biden, before passing them off to a customer service-style organizer if they express interest in voting by mail. The second organizer has been trained to help voters navigate their local vote-by-mail protocols, oftentimes sitting on the phone with voters to help them navigate the relevant secretary of state website.

Democrats say this is paying off, helping them to open up a 500,000 vote-by-mail-enrollment advantage in both Florida and North Carolina. Democrats have also requested mail ballots at a far higher rate than Republicans in Pennsylvania.

“Unlike the GOP, the Biden campaign and DNC successfully transitioned our field tactics months ago and that has allowed us to crush Republicans in key metrics, like vote by mail requests across the battlegrounds,” the DNC’s Bergstein said.

The Biden campaign is hiring fast and says it will have more than 2,000 field staff by the end of the month, matching the Trump campaign.

They say the response rates to phone calls and open rates for texts have been off the charts, as more people are stuck working at home during the day.

A recent weekend of action in late July produced more than 500,000 phone calls to voters in Michigan and more than 1 million texts sent to voters in Georgia, Pennsylvania and Florida, urging them to vote by mail.

Democrats say they’re seeing the fruits of that strategy pay off in real time at the primary polls.

Nearly 600,000 Arizona Democrats turned out for the recent primary, beating the previous record set in 2016 by more than 100,000 people.

Democrats also set a primary voting turnout record in Georgia, surging past the 1 million voter mark at the height of the pandemic in an election plagued by confusion and administrative setbacks.

“Vice President Biden is running his campaign the same way he would lead us through this crisis as President — consulting with medical experts, listening to the science, and protecting the health and well-being of the American people — even as our staff and volunteers contact millions of voters in battleground states across the country using both traditional and cutting-edge organizing tactics,” said Michael Gwin, a spokesman for the Biden campaign.

Source Article from https://thehill.com/homenews/campaign/511118-trump-biden-tactical-battle-intensifies

This entire extraordinary year has offered an extended lesson in the age-old truth that apparently contradictory things can both be true — usually because the contradiction is imaginary. 

Consider the apparent confusion within the forces of “resistance” arrayed against Donald Trump, reflected in the unanswerable question afflicting the Democratic Party: Do Americans want a return to “normal,” assuming for the moment that such a state existed in the recent past and can somehow be recovered? Or do they yearn — as the George Floyd protests suggested — for bigger and more ambitious change that goes beyond the paralyzed political duopoly to address America’s enormous economic inequality, structural injustice and disordered national priorities?

In early March, just before the coronavirus began sweeping across the United States (or to be more accurate, just before we began taking it seriously) Democratic primary voters overwhelmingly chose former Vice President Joe Biden over Sen. Bernie Sanders as the party’s presidential nominee. Progressives can mutter and complain about this all they want, and they certainly did: The theory that Biden’s sudden reversal of fortune was engineered by Barack Obama is highly plausible, and the theory that the 2020 primary campaign represented a generational conflict within the Democratic electorate, in which older voters triumphed, is simply true. 

But the outpouring of both white suburban voters and Southern Black voters for Biden, who had run a lackluster campaign that seemed to promise nothing specific beyond a return to a borderline-imaginary pre-2016 politics of decency and moderation, sent an unmistakable signal. By and large, Democratic voters didn’t want the potentially disruptive “political revolution” promised by Sanders. They were eager to return to a “normal” America, more or less defined as a place and time where they didn’t have to obsess about politics constantly and weren’t kept up at night by the fact that the president was an ignorant and dangerous racist buffoon.

Who can blame them, honestly? And yet, and yet: Ever since Biden swept to victory on Super Tuesday and the subsequent primaries, Democratic primary voters in various places have delivered a different and more complicated message. Three more longtime incumbent members of Congress have been primaried out by more progressive opponents this year, including a committee chairman, Rep. Eliot Engel of New York, and the scion of a Black political dynasty in St. Louis, Rep. William Lacy Clay of Missouri. 

Another committee chair, Rep. Carolyn Maloney of New York, survived by an eyelash after a painfully slow six-week vote count. Two other New York progressives — City Councilman Ritchie Torres in the heavily Latino South Bronx, and former Justice Department lawyer Mondaire Jones in the largely-white northern suburbs — defeated establishment-supported Democrats for open House seats, and will become the first two openly gay Black members of Congress. Similar conflicts lie ahead: Rep. Richard Neal of Massachusetts, chair of the House Ways and Means Committee and grateful recipient of Big Pharma and financial industry dollars on a grand scale, faces an intriguing challenge from Alex Morse, openly gay 31-year-old mayor of the working-class city of Holyoke.

As I wrote back in June, the primary race between Engel and Black middle-school principal Jamaal Bowman was without question a proxy war between House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (whose district adjoins Engel’s), and also part of the long tail of the 2016 primary campaign between Sanders and Hillary Clinton, which essentially has never ended. A 30-year incumbent with a long record as a foreign-policy hawk and a supporter of Israel, Engel was endorsed by Pelosi, Clinton and Chuck Schumer, and leading Democratic PACs poured millions into his campaign. Bowman was backed by Sanders, Ocasio-Cortez and Elizabeth Warren, and pulled support from Justice Democrats and similar left-wing groups. In the end, it wasn’t even close.

When you move to down-ticket races, the primary results have been even more startling. As Clay’s defeat in St. Louis by Cori Bush, a registered nurse and Black Lives Matter activist backed by Sanders, AOC and the Justice Democrats, has made clear, this trend is not limited to big coastal cities — although New York is certainly its epicenter. 

In the June 23 New York primary, seven incumbent Democrats in the State Assembly lost to opponents affiliated with either the Democratic Socialists of America, the Working Families Party or both. That result sent shockwaves through the region’s political establishment and provoked wild charges that the challengers (mostly people of color) were part of some sinister racist conspiracy funded by out-of-state white radicals.

Clear across the country in New Mexico, the pattern was just as distinctive: Five powerful State Senate incumbents regarded as moderate or centrist Democrats — including the Senate president pro tem, the chair of the Finance Committee and the former chair of the Judiciary Committee — were defeated by younger progressive challengers in early June. As the Santa Fe New Mexican put it, “the conservative wing within the Democratic caucus in the state Senate is largely gone.”

It’s important to note here that in U.S. Senate races, which by their nature attract more media attention, public interest and donor money, the Democratic establishment has been far more successful in protecting its favored candidates. In virtually every case where Democrats see a realistic opportunity to flip a Republican-held seat — especially now that winning an overall majority seems within reach — the candidate hand-selected by Chuck Schumer and the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee has prevailed. Maine, Colorado, Iowa, Montana, Arizona, North Carolina, South Carolina, Texas and Georgia could all hypothetically elect new Democratic senators (at varying levels of probability), and not a single one of the nominees in those states is even remotely contaminated with the Bernie virus.

Even the solitary exception is instructive: In last week’s Tennessee Senate primary, Black environmental activist Marquita Bradshaw, who ran an all-volunteer campaign on almost no money, staged a major upset over DSCC pick James Mackler, a white military veteran who spent $1.5 million on the race — and finished third. That race attracted virtually no national media and was not a focus of national fundraising, because nobody expects a Democrat to win a major statewide office in Tennessee anytime soon. Mackler was anointed to keep things respectable against Trump-endorsed Republican Bill Hagerty, and perhaps to distract GOP resources away from other races, notably the one between Amy McGrath and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell in neighboring Kentucky.

I’m not suggesting that Bradshaw is more likely to win in November than Mackler would have been. She’s not. But McGrath won’t beat McConnell either, and the liberal voters across the country who keep sending her checks might as well be investing in Nigerian princelings’ online banking schemes. At least Tennessee voters will face a strikingly clear moral and ideological choice — one that’s likely to galvanize Black voters in Memphis, Nashville and Chattanooga and could lead to down-ballot local victories.

As I wrote six weeks ago, it’s high time for “Democrats to quit pretending that the progressive uprising that began with the 2016 Sanders campaign is a delusional and dangerous Marxist white-boy cult, or simply a fluke.” But a distinctive pattern has become clear since then: When establishment Democrats are paying close attention and have a large canvas to work with — as on Super Tuesday, or in a high-visibility statewide campaign — they can control the media messaging, turn out more moderate voters and generally achieve the desired result. At the more granular, retail-politics level of congressional districts, state legislature seats and local races, establishment candidates are highly vulnerable to grassroots activist campaigns.

None of this is a brand new discovery: That’s exactly how evangelical Christians and other right-wing groups built a power base within the Republican Party, eventually driving out the party’s Northeastern country-club “liberals” and forcing the so-called GOP mainstream sharply to the right. For decades, observers have suggested that a similar conflict within the Democratic coalition was inevitable, especially as party leaders sought to split the difference between their own voters and the increasingly intransigent and delusional Republicans.

I don’t think the confusing results of Democratic primaries reflect a fundamental contradiction, exactly. It’s more like a rapidly changing political dynamic, or perhaps a dialectic. In the year of the coronavirus pandemic, the Black Lives Matter uprising and the implosion of the Trump presidency, people view entrenched power with enormous suspicion and yearn for something different — however well or poorly defined. In that sense, the same forces that have positioned Joe Biden and a bunch of mainstream Senate candidates for a sweeping victory this fall have also endangered dug-in down-ballot Democratic incumbents across the country.

For months, politicians and the mainstream media told us there was a contradiction between controlling the coronavirus and “saving” the U.S. economy. As my Salon colleague Amanda Marcotte has repeatedly observed, this was always a bogus dichotomy: Forcing open the doors of Buffalo Wild Wings and Bed Bath & Beyond will not spark any kind of economic recovery amid an uncontrolled pandemic that has now killed — I have grown used to looking up the number every day — more than 162,000 Americans. 

It’s also no contradiction that a year when most Americans have spent most of the last five months inside their homes has also witnessed the biggest explosion of street protest since the Vietnam War. Conservatives have seized on this as evidence of America-hating libtard hypocrisy, but that’s based on the brain-dead assumption that leftists or progressives liked being cooped up indoors, and had some sadomasochistic desire to see that continue indefinitely. In fact, the George Floyd killing and the broader issue of institutional racism triggered an uprising that was only partly about those things, but was also an outpouring of anger at the Trump administration’s tragic mishandling of the pandemic, its rampant bigotry and corruption, and its efforts to undermine democracy and tip the country into discount-store fascism.

So do Americans want to go “back to normal,” whatever that means, or do they want to tear down the entire system and rebuild anew? Well, different people want different things in different contexts, obviously — but on a more global and historical scale the only possible answer to that question is yes. All the contradictions of 2020 have revealed an immense appetite for change: That is both exciting and dangerous, and offers more reasons for hope than we’ve had in decades.

Source Article from https://www.salon.com/2020/08/09/do-voters-want-back-to-normal-or-big-sweeping-change-maybe-its-both-at-once/