Washington — Judge Amy Coney Barrett returned Wednesday to the Senate Judiciary Committee for the second day of questioning in her Supreme Court confirmation hearings. The second round of questioning lasted around nine hours, and was significantly shorter than the marathon nearly 12-hour day of questioning on Tuesday.

Each of the 22 senators on the committee were allotted 20 minutes to pose their questions, rather than the 30 minutes they had on Tuesday. Democrats have pressed Barrett to explain her views on challenges to the Affordable Care Act, Roe v. Wade and the upcoming election, should the Supreme Court have to weigh in.

Barrett has refused to indicate how she might judge cases that come before the high court, a time-honored tactic that has been deployed by Supreme Court nominees of both parties. She has been careful to say that declining to answer “doesn’t suggest disagreement or agreement” with how a ruling was made.

Democrats pushed Barrett on how closely her jurisprudence would follow that of her mentor, Justice Antonin Scalia, since Barrett has said they share the same judicial philosophy. She reiterated that while both believe in the theory of originalism, interpreting the Constitution based on the Founders’ intentions, she would not necessarily decide cases in the same manner.

“I assure you I have my own mind. Everything that he said is not necessarily what I would agree with or what I would do if I was Justice Barrett,” Barrett said of Scalia.

Barrett also declined to directly answer questions on hot-button topics, such as whether the president could unilaterally deny the right to vote, whether racial discrimination existed in voting, or whether climate change existed.

Latest updates:

Source Article from https://www.cbsnews.com/live-updates/amy-coney-barrett-confirmation-hearings-day-3-recap/

  • Facebook and Twitter on Wednesday limited the spread of a dubious New York Post story about Hunter Biden.
  • President Donald Trump tweeted it was “so terrible” that the platforms “took down the story,” which they did not do.
  • He threatened the companies, saying “it is only the beginning for them,” as he called again for the repeal of Section 230, the part of US law that lets tech platforms moderate their own content.
  • Visit Business Insider’s homepage for more stories.

US President Donald Trump expressed outrage Wednesday when Facebook and Twitter decided to limit the spread of a dubious New York Post story about Hunter Biden, the son of Trump’s presidential rival Joe Biden.

“So terrible that Facebook and Twitter took down the story of ‘Smoking Gun’ emails related to Sleepy Joe Biden and his son, Hunter, in the @NYPost,” Trump tweeted Wednesday.

Neither Facebook nor Twitter took down the New York Post article.

The Facebook spokesman Andy Stone on Wednesday said the platform was “reducing its distribution” of the story while it gave its third-party fact-checkers time to look over the piece. The article appeared to be riddled with holes and red flags.

Twitter blocked users from tweeting links to the story, and a spokesman said this was because the article broke its “Hacked Materials Policy.” Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey later said that the platform’s communication about its actions “was not great” and that blocking users from sharing the article without any context was “unacceptable.”

Trump added a threat to the tech platforms in his tweet, saying: “It is only the beginning for them. There is nothing worse than a corrupt politician. REPEAL SECTION 230!!!”

Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act of 1996 is a part of US law that gives tech companies broad protections to moderate their own platforms. It also protects them from liability for the content posted by users.

This isn’t the first time Trump has attacked Section 230. He signed an executive order in May threatening to roll back these protections, two days after Twitter added fact-checking labels to two of his tweets.

Though legal experts at the time told Business Insider that Trump’s order was most likely illegal, and it has faced two legal challenges on the grounds it breaks the First Amendment, Trump has been trying to push it through.

In September, he nominated a new commissioner for the Federal Communications Commission to replace the Republican Mike O’Rielly, who has expressed opposition to the order.

Attorney General William Barr announced during a White House event on September 23 that the Department of Justice had submitted legislation to Congress that would alter Section 230. Barr said the proposed changes would address “concerns about online censorship by requiring greater transparency and accountability when platforms remove lawful speech.”

At the same White House event, Trump said his goal was to protect American citizens from “censorship, cancel culture, and consumer abuses inflicted by big tech companies.”

Source Article from https://www.businessinsider.com/new-york-post-hunter-biden-trump-facebook-twitter-section-230-2020-10

POLITICO Dispatch: October 15

The new season of the Bachelorette is here — and coronavirus safety is front and center with contestants tested several times in an isolated bubble. POLITICO’s Dan Diamond breaks down the show’s health protocols and how they stack up against the White House.

“Our concern on some of this is that the rules are unclear and some of the relief the Democrats are asking for in court could realistically allow for ballots to be voted after Election Day,” said Justin Riemer, chief counsel at the Republican National Committee. “Who’s to say the ballot was actually voted on Nov. 3? Reasonable minds can differ about some of these issues, but I think we can all agree ballots shouldn’t be voted after the election.”

A record number of voters — more than half — are expected to cast their ballot by mail this year as Americans avoid the polls during a global pandemic. About 15 million people have already voted early, according to the United States Elections Project, which compiles early voting data.

Already this year, voters have lodged complaints about the delay in receiving ballots from the Postal Service in their state’s primaries. And voting experts caution that returning ballots too close to Election Day could cause problems.

“There are going to be millions of people voting by mail for the first time ever,” said Barry Burden, founding director of the Elections Research Center at the University of Wisconsin, Madison. “They will mostly be unfamiliar with the process. … A lot of voters may not realize how early they need to begin in order to get their ballot in by Election Day.”

Since the spring, Trump has been trying to link mail-in voting to fraud — with scant evidence — as he searched for a strategy to help his reelection prospects amid faltering poll numbers. It’s more likely, however, that human error will lead to problems: Ballots could be sent to the wrong address or get lost in the mail, or voters may have their ballot tossed out by election officials for a variety of reasons — like having a signature or name that doesn’t exactly match the information on file.

While Trump has had no success in stopping the 10 states that send absentee ballots to all voters, he is managing to limit the time frame for counting those ballots when they are returned.

The Trump campaign and Republican National Committee have tried to tighten pandemic-extended deadlines in at least 10 states as part of a broader push to halt or roll back measures intended to expand remote voting during the pandemic. In recent weeks, Republicans have declared victory in half a dozen cases on the ballot deadline issue, even if they have lost on other issues.

Some states have long-standing laws that allow ballots arriving after Election Day to be counted. Ohio, for example, accepts ballots 10 days later if they are postmarked no later than the day before the election. States also accept military and provisional ballots after Election Day.

Republicans argue local election officials and judges are changing these rules too close to an election, noting the Constitution gives state legislatures the authority to regulate federal elections.

“What’s going on in most of these states is that it’s not the state legislatures changing these rules, it’s judges coming in and saying laws set by the state legislature are not good enough,” said Hans von Spakovsky, who manages the conservative Heritage Foundation’s Election Law Reform Initiative. “You have judges … suddenly extending the deadline for absentee ballots. Judges can’t do that.”

But Sean Morales-Doyle, deputy director of voting rights, elections and democracy at the Brennan Center for Justice, said that in some cases, Republicans are actually challenging deadlines that legislatures have set.

“The particulars of deadlines for mailing and receipt are set by the legislatures in the first instance, but our system is set up to allow the courts to step in as needed to protect and preserve the right to vote,” he said.

To counter Republicans, Biden and the Democrats have launched a $100 million education program using texts, mailers and digital apps focused on explaining to Americans how to vote by mail and in person and pushing them to vote as early as possible, according to a Biden campaign official. About 2,500 staffers across the country are helping in the effort.

There are signs Democrats may be making inroads of their own. Recent polling shows Democrats are more likely to vote by mail and that Democrats are outpacing Republican requests for absentee ballots in some swing states.

“We’re confident that the voting process will go smoothly this November, and we’ve built the largest voter protection program in history to ensure that’s the case,” said Biden spokesman Michael Gwin. “Republicans may futilely try to restrict voting access, but Americans will have more options this year on how to cast a ballot than ever before, and we’ve put in place a massive voter education and organizing program to help them navigate the process.”

Still, Trump’s campaign and the RNC are spending $20 million to challenge moves to expand mail-in voting and lengthen absentee ballot-counting deadlines. They are also recruiting thousands of attorneys to dispute results on Election Day.

Republicans have had successes in some lawsuits over everything from the location and number of ballot drop boxes to whether absentee ballots require witness signatures, in addition to the deadlines for counting remote ballots. Since 2006, the Supreme Court has repeatedly warned courts not to allow significant voting changes close to Election Day, in one case citing 75 days out as a deadline.

The RNC counts wins — at least on the deadline issue — in Wisconsin, New Hampshire, Georgia, Maine, South Carolina and Florida. And in a case the RNC was not even involved with, the Montana Supreme Court overturned an appeals court decision that would have allowed votes to be counted until the Monday after Election Day.

“An Election Day exists for a reason,” said RNC national press secretary Mandi Merritt. “Democrats are diminishing the integrity of the process by trying to force states to count ballots for days, and even weeks, after Election Day. Voters reasonably expect timely results, and moving the goal posts for late-arriving ballots to continue to be counted only dilutes confidence in the outcome.”

Republicans have not won all their challenges to ballot-counting extensions. They’re asking the U.S. Supreme Court to reject the Pennsylvania Supreme Court’s ruling that allowed a three-day extension. In swing-state Michigan, a judge ruled that ballots postmarked before Election Day can be counted if they arrive within two weeks of Election Day. In Nevada, a state Trump is hoping to pick off, a judge ruled the Trump campaign lacked standing to contest a change allowing ballots to be counted as long as they are received up to three days after the election. And in North Carolina, a judge declined on Wednesday to block state election officials’ policy extending the deadline for ballots to Nov. 12. Democrats are also appealing some of the Republican wins, such as in Wisconsin.

But conservatives are anticipating the actual election could give them legal standing to launch further challenges.

“A lot of times when you are doing pre-election litigation you might fail because what you’re alleging is not yet real,” said Jason Snead, executive director at the conservative Honest Elections Project. “Once you have a single rejected ballot or a ballot you say is invalid, then that harm is real and concrete and you can bring some additional litigation.”

Josh Gerstein contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2020/10/15/trump-restricting-mail-in-ballots-429545

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/elections/2020/10/15/2020-election-what-know-joe-biden-donald-trumps-town-halls/3653523001/

White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany told “Hannity” Wednesday that Twitter‘s administrators “essentially have me at gunpoint” and won’t allow her to access to her personal account until she deletes a link to the explosive New York Post report on Hunter Biden that she shared with her one million followers earlier Wednesday.

“It’s not a temporary blockage,” McEnany told host Sean Hannity. “When I log on to my Twitter account,  it says I’m permanently banned. They essentially have me at gunpoint and said unless you delete this story, a news story by the New York Post, I cannot regain access to my account.”

McEnany was locked out of her account after she shared the Post report, which contained a purported email between Hunter Biden and an adviser to Ukrainian energy company Burisma Holdings, who thanked the younger Biden for “giving an opportunity” to meet then-Vice President Joe Biden.

“This was a news story with emails, pictures of the emails … even the Biden campaign does not dispute the authenticity of the emails,” McEnany said of the report. “Meanwhile … the ayatollah of Iran [is] tweeting ‘death to Israel’. This is permitted on Twitter, but an email that is reported … by the New York Post, a credible outlet, you are not allowed share that information.”

MEDIA MEMBERS PRESSURE SOCIAL MEDIA USERS NOT TO SHARE NEW YORK POST’S HUNTER BIDEN REPORT

McEnany’s tweet that was flagged by the tech giant read, “**NEW** Email from Ukrainian executive to Hunter Biden asks Hunter to ‘use his influence’ on behalf of the firm paying him $50K/mo in email with subject ‘urgent issue’ obtained by @nypost Father @JoeBiden was in charge of Ukraine relations at time.!!”

The Trump campaign shared what appears to be a screenshot of an email McEnany received from Twitter, alerting her that her account “has been locked” for “Violating our rules against distribution of hacked material.”

 

Twitter also locked several other accounts, including that of the Post itself, as well as others who shared the article, including NewsBusters managing editor Curtis Houck. Facebook also limited the distribution of the story, claiming that they would rely on its fact-checking partners to determine its legitimacy.

“This is not the American way,” McEnany said. ” This is not how a freedom-loving democracy operates. We have to have to hold Twitter accountable, and Facebook too, who is banning the transmission of this story simply because ideologically it hurts the side of the aisle that Silicon Valley prefers. It’s sad, it’s censorship, [and] this is not America.”

FACEBOOK, TWITTER LIMIT DISTRIBUTION OF NY POST HUNTER BIDEN STORY

“And,” she concluded, “make no mistake, if they can ban the press secretary of the United States for President Trump, they can ban you, as a citizen, and that is pathetic.”

Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey addressed the controversy late Wednesday, calling his company’s actions “unacceptable.” 

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

“Our communication around our actions on the @nypost article was not great,” he tweeted. “And blocking URL sharing via tweet or DM with zero context as to why we’re blocking: unacceptable.”

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/mcenany-twitter-account-locked-hunter-biden-report

Supreme Court nominee Amy Coney Barrett fielded questions from 22 Senators over two days before the Senate Judiciary Committee.

Susan Walsh/AP


hide caption

toggle caption

Susan Walsh/AP

Supreme Court nominee Amy Coney Barrett fielded questions from 22 Senators over two days before the Senate Judiciary Committee.

Susan Walsh/AP

Amy Coney Barrett, President Trump’s nominee to the Supreme Court, sat for nearly 20 hours of questioning by 22 members of the Senate Judiciary Committee over two days. At the outset of the process Judiciary Chairman Lindsey Graham acknowledged her confirmation by the panel was all but guaranteed.

“This is probably not about persuading each other. Unless something really dramatic happens, all Republicans will vote yes and all Democrats will vote no and that will be the way the breakout of the vote,” Graham said. But he added that the hearings give the American people the chance to “find out about Judge Barrett.”

The hearings revealed little about Barrett’s views on major legal issues like health care, abortion rights, voting rights or gun rights. Instead those watching learned about her overarching approach to the law as an originalist, who believed the role of a justice was to adhere to the text of statutes rather than interpret or make policy from the bench. She skillfully parried back and forth with Democrats who were frustrated she wouldn’t be pinned down, and kept a cool, calm demeanor, even as many warned her addition to the court could adversely impact millions of Americans. At one point Texas GOP Sen. John Cornyn asked her to show what notes she was using to prep for answers and she held up a blank notepad, demonstrating that she was capable of talking for hours on end about a broad range of legal issues without any notes.

With a nationally televised audience and wall-to-wall news coverage, members on both sides of the dais used their time to make political arguments. The election loomed large over the proceedings. Several GOP senators, including Graham, are in increasingly tight re-election bids, and as the prospects for Democrats to retake control of the chamber increased, even over the course of the hearings. The incentive to wrap up the confirmation review and get the Barrett vote to the Senate floor before Nov. 3 was palpable, as two GOP members of the panel who tested positive for the coronavirus after attending an event unveiling Barrett’s nomination released letters clearing them to participate in person without posing any health risks to others.

Barrett declined to answer many questions, citing precedent of earlier nominees

Nominees for the high court in modern times have deliberately avoided directly responding to questions. They point out that judicial ethics rules require that judges should not weigh in on any issue that could come before them.

Barrett cited the woman whose seat she would take — the late Ruth Bader Ginsburg — who established what became known as “Ginsburg rule.” At several points Barrett reiterated that this meant “no hints, no previews, no forecasts.”

Democrats were, not surprisingly, not satisfied with that response, or Barrett’s stream of non-answers on a range of issues. They said that President Trump publicly vowed to appoint judges that would overturn Obamacare and that recently he pushed for speedy confirmation of his nominee to the high court in the event that the 2020 election results ended up before the court. GOP senators argued they were making leaps and suggesting some kind of back-room deal.

“Read the tweets!” Illinois Sen. Dick Durbin said about the president’s regular statements on these issues.

Barrett also refused to say whether she believed climate change was a threat, or whether the administration’s policy on separating children from their parents at the southwest border was appropriate, saying she would not opine on contentious public policy issues.

As soon as Barrett was nominated, the president and others portrayed her as a female version of her mentor, the late Justice Antonin Scalia, for whom she clerked. Democrats reminded the audience of that, but Barrett made a point of downplaying the comparison, and insisting she would chart her own path.

“If I were confirmed, you’d be getting Justice Barrett, not Justice Scalia,” she said.

Democrats zeroed in on health care

The Supreme Court is slated to hear a case involving the Affordable Care Act just a week after the November election. Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden’s strategy over the last several months has been to run against the president’s handling of the coronavirus pandemic and to tie that to his pledge to undo Obamacare. For the most part, Democrats tried to turn the hearings into a forum on the health care law. During their opening statements many sat next to large posters of constituents who they said were struggling with severe health issues and worried about their coverage. They argued that Barrett’s writings and selection by the president could mean she would be a vote on the court to dismantle the law.

Over and over Barrett said she had no agenda, and that she never made any deal or discussed the issue with the president before her nomination.

She was pressed multiple times by Democrats about a January 2017 law journal article in which she critiqued Chief Justice John Roberts’ reasoning for upholding the law in a key decision.

But she maintained, “I’m not here on a mission to destroy the Affordable Care Act.”

The pending case has to do with the issue of “severability,” whether a key provision of the law — the individual mandate requiring insurance — is legally sound, and whether pulling it out would undermine the entire law. GOP briefs filed by the administration argue for invalidating the statute. But Barrett, under questioning, said the presumption “is always in favor of severability.”

Pressed about her writings by Minnesota Sen. Amy Klobuchar, Barrett insisted there was no deliberate pitch to show she was open to GOP attempts to legally take down the law that they have been unable to do with legislation. “I have no animus or agenda for the Affordable Care Act.”

But Durbin again reminded those watching that the president who appointed her was clear on the issue and that was the “orange cloud” over her nomination.

Abortion and debate over “super-precedents”

The issue of abortion rights is always a flashpoint in Supreme Court confirmation hearings. Democrats repeatedly attempted to pin Barrett down on whether she viewed the landmark case providing protections for women who elect to have abortions, Roe v. Wade, was settled law, but she sidestepped the issue. She maintained that if she signaled one way or another it would invite litigants to frame legal strategies around her comments.

But in an exchange with Klobuchar, Barrett stated that she viewed a half a dozen cases as “super-precedents” — cases that could not be overturned because they are established law.

She pointed to a case outlawing school segregation, but did not include Roe in that group, explaining that there continues to be litigation on the issue.

Roe is not a super-precedent because calls for its overruling have never ceased, but that doesn’t mean that Roe should be overruled.” That led Klobuchar and other Democrats to conclude that she was open to considering a challenge to abortion laws. Klobuchar lamented that without answers one was left to “follow the tracks” based on Barrett’s writings.

Election results disputes and presidential pardons

With the presidential election mere weeks away and concerns about close contests or legal challenges, Barrett was asked if she would recuse herself if such a case came before the high court. She assured the committee she would go through the traditional process justices use to determine whether it’s appropriate for them to rule a case.

But she also pushed back at the notion she was being rushed on the court to tip the scales. “I certainly hope that all members of the committee have more confidence in my integrity than to think I would allow myself to be used as a pawn to decide this election for the American people.”

Democrats also tried to get her to explain what should happen if the president fails to accept a ruling. Barrett said no person was above the law, but also said “the Supreme Court can’t control whether or not the president obeys.”

Barrett also said she can’t answer a question about whether the president has an absolute right to pardon himself because it hasn’t been tested in court and is a question that calls for legal analysis.

Republicans defended Barrett, argued judges were not policymakers

GOP Senators chided Democrats for playing politics with the hearing. One after another they praised Barrett’s ability to balance a large family with seven children and a successful legal career.

Iowa Sen. Joni Ernst, one of two female Republicans on the committee, touted the historic moment of adding a woman to the court in the same year women were marking 100 years of getting the right to vote.

Republicans also went into the hearings spoiling for a fight with Democrats over Barrett’s religious views, but that didn’t materialize.

During her 2017 confirmation hearing for her current circuit court post, the top Democrat on the panel, Sen. Dianne Feinstein, remarked about Barrett’s Catholic faith, “the dogma lives loudly within you.” Republicans accused Democrats of an anti-religious bias and some used their opening statements to chastise any who would suggest that Barrett’s religious views would interfere with her job as a judge.

Ernst told Barrett that opponents were “attacking your faith and your precious family … attacking you as a mom and a woman of faith.” But Democrats, disciplined on keeping the focus on health care, largely steered clear of raising the issue. Some outside liberal groups did contend that some conservative tenets of Catholicism would impact on cases. But when Democrats raised questions about contraception or abortion they worked to keep the questioning lines to writings or speeches by Barrett, not any commentary on her faith.

Still Republicans periodically argued the Democrats’ line of questioning was unfair or condescending toward the accomplished jurist. Tennessee Republican Sen. Marsha Blackburn said Democrats were using the hearings to “spread some fear and misinformation” about health care. She complained that they were trying to paint Barrett as “a monster with an agenda.”

Debate mostly civil, confirmation on track

Technical issues periodically interrupted the hearings and the coronavirus pandemic made some senators decide to participate remotely. But the hearings overall were far more civil than the raucous and testy exchanges witnessed during the committee’s consideration of Brett Kavanaugh’s nomination in 2018.

Graham admitted he was worried, given the unpredictable nature of 2020, that things could go awry. Closing out the questioning period he concluded while the hearings didn’t change anyone’s minds they showed the committee could function. He also said that Kavanaugh’s confirmation forever changed the ability to garner large bipartisan votes on nominees to the high court.

“In another time, in another place, you would get everybody’s vote,” Graham told Barrett.

Barrett’s ability to maneuver through complicated legal questions and not raise any vetting issues ensured that the process would move forward at a quick pace, despite the controversy over whether or not it should be happening at all when 40 states are already voting in the presidential election.

Graham celebrated Barrett’s place in history on Wednesday, saying, “this is the first time in American history that we’ve nominated a woman who is unashamedly pro-life and embraces her faith without apology, and she is going to the court.”

The committee will hear from an outside panel of supporters and opponents of Barrett’s nomination on Thursday, but is expected to approve her nomination on a party line on Oct. 22. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., is expected to move for a full Senate vote the week before the election.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2020/10/15/923637375/takeaways-from-amy-coney-barretts-judiciary-confirmation-hearings

Mr. Trump also hosted a large gathering in the Rose Garden for his Supreme Court nominee, Judge Amy Coney Barrett, where at least eight people, including the president, may have become infected. The White House has chosen not to trace the contacts of guests and staff members from that event.

Mrs. Trump has generally taken a more cautious approach than her husband to the virus and has not minimized its effects the way her husband has.

Mr. Trump has downplayed his symptoms, including a shortness of breath, and focused only on trying to demonstrate that he has recovered. Mrs. Trump, on the other hand, described the “roller coaster” symptoms she experienced in a statement on Wednesday titled “My Personal Experience With Covid-19,” her first extensive update on her health since the announcement that she had tested positive.

“I experienced body aches, a cough and headaches, and felt extremely tired most of the time,” she said.

Mrs. Trump, who had not been seen or heard from since the positive test announcement, said that she had spent her recovery “reflecting on my family,” and that she hoped “to resume my duties as soon as I can.”

She added, “I also thought about the hundreds of thousands of people across our country who have been impacted by this illness that infects people with no discrimination.”

Just as she did during her speech at the Republican National Convention, Mrs. Trump acknowledged the effects of the virus on Americans across the country. Mr. Trump, in contrast, emerged from his own hospitalization for the coronavirus with a less empathetic message: “Don’t let it dominate your life.”

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2020/10/14/us/politics/barron-trump-coronavirus.html

White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany told “Hannity” Wednesday that Twitter‘s administrators “essentially have me at gunpoint” and won’t allow her to access to her personal account until she deletes a link to the explosive New York Post report on Hunter Biden that she shared with her one million followers earlier Wednesday.

“It’s not a temporary blockage,” McEnany told host Sean Hannity. “When I log on to my Twitter account,  it says I’m permanently banned. They essentially have me at gunpoint and said unless you delete this story, a news story by the New York Post, I cannot regain access to my account.”

McEnany was locked out of her account after she shared the Post report, which contained a purported email between Hunter Biden and an adviser to Ukrainian energy company Burisma Holdings, who thanked the younger Biden for “giving an opportunity” to meet then-Vice President Joe Biden.

“This was a news story with emails, pictures of the emails … even the Biden campaign does not dispute the authenticity of the emails,” McEnany said of the report. “Meanwhile … the ayatollah of Iran [is] tweeting ‘death to Israel’. This is permitted on Twitter, but an email that is reported … by the New York Post, a credible outlet, you are not allowed share that information.”

MEDIA MEMBERS PRESSURE SOCIAL MEDIA USERS NOT TO SHARE NEW YORK POST’S HUNTER BIDEN REPORT

McEnany’s tweet that was flagged by the tech giant read, “**NEW** Email from Ukrainian executive to Hunter Biden asks Hunter to ‘use his influence’ on behalf of the firm paying him $50K/mo in email with subject ‘urgent issue’ obtained by @nypost Father @JoeBiden was in charge of Ukraine relations at time.!!”

The Trump campaign shared what appears to be a screenshot of an email McEnany received from Twitter, alerting her that her account “has been locked” for “Violating our rules against distribution of hacked material.”

 

Twitter also locked several other accounts, including that of the Post itself, as well as others who shared the article, including NewsBusters managing editor Curtis Houck. Facebook also limited the distribution of the story, claiming that they would rely on its fact-checking partners to determine its legitimacy.

“This is not the American way,” McEnany said. ” This is not how a freedom-loving democracy operates. We have to have to hold Twitter accountable, and Facebook too, who is banning the transmission of this story simply because ideologically it hurts the side of the aisle that Silicon Valley prefers. It’s sad, it’s censorship, [and] this is not America.”

FACEBOOK, TWITTER LIMIT DISTRIBUTION OF NY POST HUNTER BIDEN STORY

“And,” she concluded, “make no mistake, if they can ban the press secretary of the United States for President Trump, they can ban you, as a citizen, and that is pathetic.”

Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey addressed the controversy late Wednesday, calling his company’s actions “unacceptable.” 

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

“Our communication around our actions on the @nypost article was not great,” he tweeted. “And blocking URL sharing via tweet or DM with zero context as to why we’re blocking: unacceptable.”

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/mcenany-twitter-account-locked-hunter-biden-report

During Tuesday’s Senate confirmation hearing for Supreme Court nominee Amy Coney Barrett, Louisiana Republican Senator John Kennedy asked Barrett, “Do you hate little warm puppies?”

His question was meant to mock Democratic California Senator Kamala Harris for asking Barrett whether she believes COVID-19 is infectious, that cigarettes cause cancer and that climate change is both real and a threat to clean air and drinking water.

“If a case that comes before you would require you to consider scientific evidence, my question is will you defer to scientists and those with expertise in the relevant issues before rendering a judgment?” Harris asked Barrett.

Barrett answered, “If a case comes before me involving environmental regulation, I will certainly apply all applicable law deferring when the law requires me to.”

Harris then asked the aforementioned questions, ending by asking, “Do you believe that climate change is happening and is threatening the air we breathe and the water we drink?”

Barrett responded, “You have asked me a series of questions that are completely uncontroversial, like whether COVID-19 is infectious, whether smoking causes cancer and then trying to analogize that to eliciting an opinion from me that is a very contentious matter of public debate… I will not do that, I will not express a view on a matter of public policy, especially when it’s politically controversial, cause that’s inconsistent with the judicial role.”

Harris replied, “Thank you, Judge Barrett. You have made your point clear that you believe [climate change] is a debatable point.”

When it was Kennedy’s turn to ask questions, he began by saying that he wanted to clear up some of Harris’ “accusations.” He asked Barrett if she was racist, if she always ruled in favor of corporations over working people and if she was “against clean air, bright water and environmental justice.”

Barrett said that she is not racist, has a judicial record showing her past rulings against corporations and is in favor of clean air, bright water and environmental justice, adding, “Those are policies that the Congress has pursued in many statutes and I think we all reap the benefits of when those statutes work.”

Kennedy then asked in succession, “Do you support science?”, “Do you support children and prosperity?” and “Do you hate little warm puppies?”

Barrett said yes to the first two questions and laughed at the last one.

Kennedy seemed to take particular offense at Harris’ earlier questions implying that Barrett’s seat on the Supreme Court would threaten voting access for people of color.

In a monologue following his questions, Kennedy said, “We disagree. [Harris] thinks America is systemically racist, I don’t…. I think we’re a country that has some racists in it…. [Harris] suggested that some states are wicked and others are pristine (when it comes to racist policies).”

He then said that California has a “deep history of discrimination” against Asian-Americans and Hispanics and added that Harris’ own record as a former prosecutor in the state had its own racial disparities.

Black Californians represent less than 6 percent of California’s population, but make up 29 percent of its prison inmates, according to the state Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation.

While Harris didn’t craft the laws that have disproportionately incarcerated Black Californians—and she actually worked as state attorney general to implement implicit-bias training for law enforcement and has, as a senator, co-sponsored police reform legislation following the May 25 murder of black Minneapolis man George Floyd by a white police officer—her racial record as a prosecutor is under greater scrutiny now that she’s running for vice president.

Last year, Kennedy said he didn’t believe Republican President Donald Trump had made a racist statement when Trump said that four congresswomen of non-white ethnicities should “go back and help fix the totally broken and crime-infested places from which they came.”

Newsweek contacted Kennedy’s office for comment.

p:last-of-type::after, .node-type-slideshow .article-body > p:last-of-type::after {
content: none
}]]>

Source Article from https://www.newsweek.com/gop-senator-asks-amy-coney-barrett-do-you-hate-little-warm-puppies-1539283

Show More

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/trump-biden-campaign-message/2020/10/14/846c82b6-0e2b-11eb-b1e8-16b59b92b36d_story.html

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/elections/2020/10/14/trump-holds-iowa-campaign-rally-state-faces-uptick-covid-19-cases/3652124001/

Melania Trump revealed on Wednesday that Barron, her 14-year-old son with the president, had at one point tested positive for the coronavirus, but has subsequently tested negative.

The first lady’s disclosure was in a statement about her own experience with the coronavirus. Donald Trump announced nearly two weeks ago that both he and the first lady had tested positive.

In the statement on Wednesday, the first lady said: “To our great relief he [at first] tested negative, but again, as so many parents have thought over the past several months, I couldn’t help but think, ‘What about tomorrow or the next day?’

“My fear came true when he was tested again and it came up positive. Luckily he is a strong teenager and exhibited no symptoms.”

Melania Trump described her own experience with coronavirus as like “a rollercoaster of symptoms in the days after” she was diagnosed.

After his diagnosis, the president was admitted to Walter Reed national military medical center for treatment, and has since returned to the White House and to the campaign trail. The first lady quarantined at the White House.

President Trump was widely criticized for returning to the White House when still contagious, potentially putting staff at risk. He is behind rival Joe Biden in the polls in the run-up to next month’s presidential election.

On Sunday, Trump claimed he was now “immune” to the virus. On Tuesday the White House physician said Trump had tested negative for Covid-19 and was not infectious to others.

The first lady said in her statement that, in one way, she was glad “the three of us went through this at the same time, so we could take care of one another and spend time together”.

She said she hoped to resume her duties as soon as she can. She added: “Along with this good news, I want people to know that I understand just how fortunate my family is to have received the kind of care that we did.”

More than 216,000 people in America have died from Covid-19.

The Associated Press contributed to this report

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/oct/14/barron-trump-coronavirus-covid-melania-trump

“Short everything,” was the reaction of the investor, using the Wall Street term for betting on the idea that the stock prices of companies would soon fall.

That investor, and a second who was briefed on the Hoover meetings, said that aspects of the readout from Washington informed their trading that week, in one case adding to existing short positions in a way that amplified his profits. Other investors, upon reading or hearing about the memo, stocked up on toilet paper and other household essentials.

The memo was written by William Callanan, a hedge fund veteran and member of the Hoover board. A research institution at Stanford University that studies the economy, national security and other issues, Hoover has been directed since September by Condoleezza Rice, the secretary of state under President George W. Bush. Its board includes the media mogul Rupert Murdoch and the venture capitalist Mary Meeker, neither of whom attended the meetings in February, which were a series of informal, off-the-record discussions with Trump administration officials and Republican lawmakers.

Mr. Callanan described the Hoover briefings in a lengthy email he wrote to David Tepper, the founder of the well-known hedge fund Appaloosa Management, and one of his senior lieutenants about the level of concern among American officials over the spread of the virus domestically. In the email, he also touched on how ill-prepared health agencies appeared to be to combat a pandemic.

Inside Appaloosa, the email circulated among employees, who in turn briefed at least two outside investors on the more worrisome parts of Mr. Callanan’s email, according to people who received those briefings.

Those investors in turn passed the information to their own contacts, ultimately delivering aspects of the readout to at least seven investors in at least four money-management firms around the country within 24 hours. By late afternoon on Feb. 26, the day the email bounced from Appaloosa to other trading firms, U.S. stock markets had fallen close to 300 points from their high the previous week.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2020/10/14/us/politics/stock-market-coronavirus-trump.html

Facebook and Twitter took steps on Wednesday to limit the spread of a controversial New York Post article critical of Joe Biden, sparking outrage among conservatives and stoking debate over how social media platforms should tackle misinformation ahead of the US election.

In an unprecedented step against a major news publication, Twitter blocked users from posting links to the Post story or photos from the unconfirmed report. Users attempting to share the story were shown a notice saying: “We can’t complete this request because this link has been identified by Twitter or our partners as being potentially harmful.” Users clicking or retweeting a link already posted to Twitter are shown a warning the “link may be unsafe”.

Twitter said it was limiting the article’s spread due to questions about “the origins of the materials” included in the article, which contained material supposedly pulled from a computer that had been left by Hunter Biden at a Delaware computer repair shop in April 2019. Twitter policies prohibit “directly distribut[ing] content obtained through hacking that contains private information”.

The company further explained the decision in a series of tweets on Wednesday, saying some of the images in the article contained personal and private information. Twitter’s policy against posting hacked material was established in 2018. Jack Dorsey, the CEO of Twitter, said the company’s communication about the decision to limit the article’s spread was “not great”, saying the team should have shared more context publicly.

jack
(@jack)

Our communication around our actions on the @nypost article was not great. And blocking URL sharing via tweet or DM with zero context as to why we’re blocking: unacceptable. https://t.co/v55vDVVlgt


October 14, 2020

Facebook, meanwhile, placed restrictions on linking to the article, saying there were questions about its validity. “This is part of our standard process to reduce the spread of misinformation,” said a Facebook spokesperson, Andy Stone.

The move marks the first time Twitter has directly limited the spread of information from a news website, as it continues to implement stricter rules around misinformation ahead of the 2020 elections. On Wednesday evening Twitter also reportedly locked the personal account of the White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany for sharing the article.

In recent weeks Twitter announced it would warn users who attempt to retweet a link without first clicking on it for more context. It has also started to take action against misinformation and calls to violence posted by Donald Trump and other public figures.

Wednesday’s actions around the New York Post article drew swift backlash from figures on the political right, who accused Facebook and Twitter of protecting Biden, who is leading Trump in national polls.

The New York Post blasted the companies, saying they were trying to help Biden’s election campaign and falsely claiming no one had disputed the story’s veracity. “Facebook and Twitter are not media platforms. They’re propaganda machines,” it wrote in an editorial.

Meanwhile, the Republican senator Ted Cruz wrote a letter to Dorsey, saying: “Twitter’s censorship of this story is quite hypocritical, given its willingness to allow users to share less-well-sourced reporting critical of other candidates.”

Trump’s campaign director, Jake Schneider, called the blocking of McEnany “absolutely unacceptable” and McEnany herself tweeted: “Censorship should be condemned.”

Trump tweeted that it was “terrible” that the social media companies “took down” the article – in fact, it was restricted, not removed – and renewed his calls to “repeal section 230”, a measure that keeps website hosts from being held responsible for content posted. Ironically, repealing section 230 would require Twitter to take down more content, including many of Trump’s tweets.

Even non-conservatives criticized the choice to limit the spread of the article as one that will play into the rightwing narrative that big tech firms censor conservative views. The decision was indeed quickly politicized – with House Republicans publishing the text of the story on their website in order to share the link without censorship.

The article implicates the former vice-president in connection with his son Hunter’s Ukraine business and was headlined: “Smoking-gun email reveals how Hunter Biden introduced Ukrainian businessman to VP dad.”

The unnamed owner of the computer repair shop told the newspaper he passed a copy of the hard drive on the seemingly abandoned computer to Rudy Giuliani, Trump’s personal lawyer.

The story focused on one email from April 2015, in which a Burisma board adviser thanked Hunter for inviting him to a Washington meeting with his father. But there was no indication of when the meeting was scheduled or whether it ever happened.

“Investigations by the press, during impeachment, and even by two Republican-led Senate committees whose work was decried as ‘not legitimate’ and political by a GOP colleague, have all reached the same conclusion: that Joe Biden carried out official US policy toward Ukraine and engaged in no wrongdoing,” said Andrew Bates, a spokesman for the Biden campaign. “Trump administration officials have attested to these facts under oath.”

The campaign said it was not told by Facebook or Twitter that any action would be taken regarding the article.

“We have reviewed Joe Biden’s official schedules from the time and no meeting, as alleged by the New York Post, ever took place,” the Biden campaign added.

Others cast also doubt on the report, citing Giuliani’s record of producing disinformation and making bogus claims about both Bidens and Ukraine.

AFP contributed reporting

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2020/oct/14/facebook-twitter-new-york-post-hunter-biden

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/elections/2020/10/14/trump-holds-iowa-campaign-rally-state-faces-uptick-covid-19-cases/3652124001/

Early voting is underway in a number of states ahead of Election Day and four states—Georgia, Texas, Ohio and Illinois—have already set records outpacing voter turnout in 2016.

With less than three weeks before November 3, more than 13.8 million voters have already cast their ballots for this year’s upcoming general election, according to data from the U.S. Elections Project. This same time four years ago, the number of ballots already cast was much closer to 1.4 million.

Due to the coronavirus pandemic, health and safety concerns coupled by the efforts of some Democrats to expand mail-in voting have led to unprecedented levels of early voting.

Georgia and Texas, which both began early voting this week, set records on their first days as thousands of residents waited hours to cast their ballots.

Voters in Georgia reported on social media that lines at polling sites were lasting nearly ten hours on the state’s first day of early voting. Georgia’s secretary of state’s office said more than 128,000 Georgians hit the polls on Monday, surpassing the nearly 91,000 votes cast on the first day of early voting in 2016.

Texas also shattered records for the state’s first day of early voting before polls even closed on Tuesday.

Harris County officials announced that by the time voting sites closed for the night, more than 128,000 residents had voted across the county. Nine hours into the first day of early voting, the state surpassed the previous record set in 2016 when 100,005 people cast their vote on the last day of early voting.

Records from Texas’ secretary of state’s office currently shows that more than 900,000 ballots have been cast in the state’s early voting, surpassing the 394,280 votes cast on the first day of early voting in the 2016 election cycle.

In Ohio, early in-person voting tripled the state’s voter turnout four years ago. According to Ohio’s secretary of state, more than 193,000 Ohioans voted in the first week of early voting, which began on October 6, compared to the roughly 64,000 ballots cast at the same time as in 2016.

State officials in Illinois also announced that the state shattered previous records for advance voting with more than 600,000 ballots already cast.

On Tuesday, the Illinois State Board of Elections said on its website that nearly 176,000 voters had cast ballots at in-person early voting sites—a number roughly double that of early in-person votes cast at the same point in 2016.

The U.S. Elections Project, created by University of Florida associate professor Dr. Michael McDonald, aims to “provide timely and accurate election statistics, electoral laws, research reports, and other useful information regarding the United States electoral system.”

According to McDonald, voting pace in Virginia, Minnesota, South Dakota, Vermont and Wisconsin has already reached 20 percent or greater than their 2016 total vote.

However, he has also warned in his weekly analyses that these votes have been heavily Democratic, which may misleadingly show Democratic nominee Joe Biden to have secured the presidency.

“Even if the in-person early vote is more Republican than usual, I still expect Democrats to dominate the sum of the mail and in-person early votes because of the lopsided numbers of Democrats voting by mail,” McDonald wrote. “Election Day should be bright ruby-red, and we’ll see where the balance tilts when all is said and done.”

Newsweek reached out to McDonald for comment but did not hear back before publication.

p:last-of-type::after, .node-type-slideshow .article-body > p:last-of-type::after {
content: none
}]]>

Source Article from https://www.newsweek.com/these-4-states-have-already-set-early-voting-records-3-weeks-till-election-1539102