President Biden will not be the final word on whether former President Donald Trump continues to receive intelligence briefings, the White House spokeswoman said.

Biden, in a clip from an interview with CBS News released Friday, said Trump should not be privy to US secrets “because of his erratic behavior unrelated to the insurrection,” referring to the Jan. 6 Capitol riot​.

But White House press secretary Jen Psaki said in a statement on Saturday: “The president was expressing his concern about former president Trump receiving access to sensitive intelligence, but he also has deep trust in his own intelligence team to make a determination about how to provide intelligence information if at any point the former president Trump requests a briefing​.”

Asked by anchor Nora O’Donnell on what his worst fear is in allowing Trump continued access to US intelligence, Biden said he’d rather not “speculate out loud.”​

​”​I just think that there is no need for him to have that intelligence briefing. What value is giving him an intelligence briefing? What impact does he have at all, other than the fact he might slip and say something?” Biden said.

Ex-presidents and other former senior officials customarily retain access to classified information.

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2021/02/07/wh-says-biden-cant-dictate-on-refusing-trump-intelligence-briefings/

Republican and Democratic members of Congress on Sunday weighed in on the second impeachment trial of former President TrumpDonald TrumpTwitter permanently suspends Gateway Pundit founder’s account Wyoming Republican Party censures Cheney over Trump impeachment vote Trump access to intelligence briefings will be determined by officials, White House says: report MORE, set to begin in the Senate this week.

While some Republicans laid blame on Trump for encouraging a mob to storm the Capitol last month to contest his 2020 presidential election loss, they continued to question the legality of an impeachment trial of a former president.

Sen. Lindsey GrahamLindsey Olin GrahamSunday shows preview: Budget resolution clears path for .9 trillion stimulus; Senate gears up for impeachment trial Senate Republicans don’t want Trump to testify in impeachment trial McConnell congratulates Cheney on surviving attempted ousting from leadership MORE (R-S.C.), one of Trump’s most vocal supporters during his presidency, affirmed his opposition to a trial, citing Trump’s having left the White House.

“I think I’m ready to move on. I’m ready to end the impeachment trial because I think it’s blatantly unconstitutional,” Graham said on CBS’s “Face the Nation.”

However, the South Carolina senator suggested history would hold Trump responsible for the deadly Jan. 6 insurrection at the U.S. Capitol. In January, the House impeached Trump for a historic second time on charges of inciting the riot. Ten Republican lawmakers voted in favor of impeachment, with many acknowledging that casting such a vote likely meant the end of their political careers.

“He had a consequential presidency. Jan. 6 was a very bad day for America, and he’ll get his share of blame in history,” Graham said.

Graham said after the insurrection that Trump’s presidency had been “tarnished” by his role in the riot but that he did not back the use of the 25th Amendment to remove him from office.

Sen. Chris MurphyChristopher (Chris) Scott MurphySunday shows preview: Budget resolution clears path for .9 trillion stimulus; Senate gears up for impeachment trial Five things to know about Biden’s Yemen move Why school nurses are vital to ending the school-to-prison pipeline MORE (D-Conn.) took the opposite track, telling Fox News host Chris WallaceChristopher (Chris) WallaceWyoming Republican Party censures Cheney over Trump impeachment vote Juan Williams: GOP cowers from QAnon Biden aides signal president is open to talks on COVID-19 relief MORE that “impeachment comes not only with the provision to remove an individual from office but to disqualify them from future office. I don’t think our job ends just because the president has left office.”

Murphy said the chamber was undecided on whether to call witnesses in the trial because, unlike the phone call to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, for which Trump was impeached in 2019, “we saw what happened in real time. President Trump sent that angry mob to the Capitol on live TV, so it’s not as important that we have witnesses.”

Sen. Roger WickerRoger Frederick WickerSunday shows preview: Budget resolution clears path for .9 trillion stimulus; Senate gears up for impeachment trial Bipartisan bill to provide 0B in coronavirus relief for restaurants reintroduced House will have to vote on budget second time as GOP notches wins MORE (R-Miss.), meanwhile, called the trial a “meaningless messaging partisan exercise.” He said impeachment was not meant to be used to hold someone accountable who was no longer in office.

“Now, if there are other ways, in the court of public opinion, or if some criminal charge dawns on some prosecutor, perhaps here’s another avenue there,” wicker told ABC’s George StephanopoulosGeorge Robert StephanopoulosCDC says schools are safe, but Biden continues to ignore science, doctors Pass the rescue bill — with or without Republicans By his own definition, Biden is already governing like a dictator MORE.

Stephanopoulos brought up Wicker’s earlier comments that the impeachment of former President Clinton would “protect the long-term national interest of the United States, to affirm the importance of truth and honesty and to uphold the rule of law in our nation.”

Wicker responded that Clinton had been determined to have committed perjury, whereas “I’m not conceding that President Trump incited an insurrection.”

Seventeen Republicans would need to join all 50 Senate Democrats for the two-thirds majority necessary to convict the former president. Democrats have conceded this outcome is unlikely, particularly after all but five GOP senators joined Sen. Rand PaulRandal (Rand) Howard PaulSunday shows preview: Budget resolution clears path for .9 trillion stimulus; Senate gears up for impeachment trial Five takeaways from the budget marathon Republican 2024 hopefuls draw early battle lines for post-Trump era MORE (R-Ky.) in backing a challenge to the trial’s constitutionality.

On the House side, Republican Conference Chairwoman Liz CheneyElizabeth (Liz) Lynn CheneyWyoming Republican Party censures Cheney over Trump impeachment vote Republicans worry Greene could be drag on party in suburbs Sunday shows preview: Budget resolution clears path for .9 trillion stimulus; Senate gears up for impeachment trial MORE (Wyo.), the highest-ranking Republican to vote to impeach Trump last month immediately following the insurrection, defended her vote  after sharp backlash from her GOP colleagues that nearly cost her the leadership role.

“The oath that I took to the Constitution compelled me to vote for impeachment, and it doesn’t bend to partisanship. It doesn’t bend to political pressure,” Cheney said on “Fox News Sunday.” “It’s the most important oath that we take, and so I will stand by that, and I will continue to fight for all of the issues that matter so much to us all across Wyoming.”

Cheney did not say whether she would vote to convict Trump if she were in the Senate but said Republicans “should not be embracing the former president.”

Source Article from https://thehill.com/homenews/sunday-talk-shows/537726-lawmakers-lay-blame-on-trump-over-riot-as-second-impeachment-trial

“Saturday Night Live” zeroed in on former President TrumpDonald TrumpTwitter permanently suspends Gateway Pundit founder’s account Wyoming Republican Party censures Cheney over Trump impeachment vote Trump access to intelligence briefings will be determined by officials, White House says: report MORE during its latest “Weekend Update” segment, with co-host Colin Jost jokingly pleading for the “former social media influencer” to give the country “one last show” by agreeing to testify at his upcoming impeachment trial.

“He will not testify at his impeachment trial next week and I think I speak for all of us when I say, ‘C’mon please?’” Jost said late Saturday. “Give us one last show, man.”

In his plea to Trump, Jost told the former president to “stop feeling sorry for yourself, put in your extensions and burst into that trial like it’s Maury Povich and you are not the father.” 

“C’mon, think about it. You can yell out all the tweets you haven’t been allowed to post for the last month,” he continued before reading out a series of photoshopped tweets. “You know, like ‘Worst inauguration ever #PoemBarelyRhymed’ or ‘No noms for Tim Allen? #GlobesTooBlack.’”

“Sadly, Trump is not going to be doing that, but he will be defended at the trial by the lawyer who refused to prosecute Bill Cosby and who agreed to represent Jeffrey Epstein before his death, which raises the question, ‘What does Trump think he’s being impeached for?’ ” he asked. 

The House impeachment managers last Thursday formally requested that Trump testify at his Senate impeachment trial. However, Trump’s legal team immediately shot down the request. His impeachment trial in the upper chamber is set to start on Tuesday.

Trump wasn’t the only politician to be roasted during the late-night show’s mock news segment this weekend. Its co-hosts also took shots at President Biden and Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.). 

“President Biden said Friday that he will move ahead with his $1.9 trillion stimulus plan with or without Republican support because this economy needs a massage and Joe BidenJoe BidenTrump access to intelligence briefings will be determined by officials, White House says: report Blinken, Saudi counterpart discuss Yemen in first phone call Author criticizes continued ‘culture of war’ with troops in Iraq, Afghanistan MORE isn’t waiting for permission,” Jost said, prompting laughter from the audience.

“An interview of Biden will air before tomorrow’s Super Bowl between the Bucs and the Chiefs. Incidentally, ‘Buc’ and ‘Chief’ are also what Biden calls his friends when he forgets their names,” he continued. 

Jost and co-host Michael Che then took aim at Greene as the lawmaker takes heat from both sides of the aisle over past controversial remarks and promotion the far-right QAnon conspiracy theory.

“Marjorie Taylor Greene, who looks like the mugshot of a former child star, has supported conspiracy theories about 9/11, school shooting, the deep state and Jewish people. Ugh, I get it lady, you’re my type,” Che said.

“I’m kidding,” he quickly added amid laughter from the audience. “Anybody who believes those crazy conspiracy theories has to be as blind as Stevie Wonder is pretending to be.”

Source Article from https://thehill.com/homenews/media/537703-saturday-night-live-targets-trump-ahead-of-impeachment-trial

After a portion of the Nanda Devi glacier broke off in northern India on Sunday, people inspect a site near a damaged hydropower project at Reni village in Chamoli district in the country’s Uttarakhand state.

AP


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After a portion of the Nanda Devi glacier broke off in northern India on Sunday, people inspect a site near a damaged hydropower project at Reni village in Chamoli district in the country’s Uttarakhand state.

AP

A massive search-and-rescue operation was underway Sunday in northern India for at least 140 people missing after part of a Himalayan glacier broke off, triggering an avalanche of rock, mud, water and debris that swept away a hydroelectric dam.

Video recorded by witnesses from across a valley showed a torrent of water and debris breaking through a dam that’s part of the Rishiganga Hydroelectric Project, more than 300 miles north of New Delhi.

“It came very fast. There was no time to alert anyone,” local resident Sanjay Singh Rana told Reuters. “I felt that even we would be swept away.”

Many of those missing are believed to be workers at the dam. Police say that nine bodies have been recovered so far and that at least 140 people are missing. The chief minister of India’s Uttarakhand state, Trivendra Singh Rawat, told reporters that the figure could rise.

The disaster began around 10:45 a.m. local time when part of the Nanda Devi glacier broke off in an ecologically fragile area of Uttarakhand, an Indian state bordering Nepal and China, high in the Himalayas. Environmentalists have long cautioned against building dams and power plants there, because it’s so prone to landslides and flooding.

In 2013, record monsoon rainfall triggered floods that killed about 6,000 people in what was dubbed the “Himalayan tsunami” because it swept away homes, roads and bridges in Uttarakhand.

It wasn’t immediately clear what caused the glacier to break away early Sunday. While climate change has contributed to the shrinkage of Himalayan glaciers, February is still winter in Uttarakhand and not typically the time of year when its glaciers melt.

There was at least one joyful rescue Sunday: Indian journalists shared footage on social media of disaster relief workers pulling a man out from a tunnel where he’d been buried alive. The victim throws his arms up in the air in celebration and then falls forward into the mud, as people clap and cheer around him.

By nightfall, villages had been evacuated downstream from the broken Rishiganga dam, along tributaries of the mighty Ganges River. The neighboring state of Uttar Pradesh, India’s most populous, also put riverside areas on high alert.

“India stands with Uttarakhand and the nation prays for everyone’s safety there,” Prime Minister Narendra Modi tweeted.

The Nanda Devi glacier lies near a peak of the same name, which at 25,643 feet is India’s second-highest mountain. Its name means “blessed goddess,” and the mountain itself is worshipped in local Hindu and Buddhist traditions. The surrounding Nanda Devi National Park is also a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2021/02/07/965046888/scores-are-feared-dead-in-india-after-himalayan-glacier-breaks-away

After the Nixon years, Shultz moved into the corporate world, becoming an executive at the Bechtel Group, and returned to the academic world, at Stanford University. When Reagan was elected, he installed Alexander Haig as secretary of State, but after a dicey first year, the overreaching Haig left office in July 1982 and Reagan immediately selected Shultz to replace him.

According to H.W. Brands’ “Reagan: The Life,” the president was unwilling to announce Haig’s departure until he had his replacement lined up. Brands wrote that when Reagan reached out to him, Shultz realized he needed to answer immediately. “Mr. President, I’m on board,” he said.

“He has the potential to be one of the greatest secretaries of State of all times,” Illinois Sen. Charles Percy said as Shultz was confirmed 97-0. From the outset, Shultz’s professionalism put the State Department on different footing, and he gave Reagan loyal support.

“Shultz, unlike Haig was courteous and patient,” Diggins wrote in his 2007 book, “the right qualities for a diplomat who prefers negotiation to escalation.”

Shultz needed those qualities when it came to dealing with a fellow member of Reagan’s Cabinet, Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger, a confrontational fellow veteran of the Nixon administration and Bechtel. The Beltway was rife with talk of discord. In December 1984, The New York Times reported the two “are reported at odds on virtually all foreign policy issues, often to the frustration and concern of the White House.” It didn’t help matters that on some issues, Shultz was the more hawkish and on others, Weinberger was. Sometimes the issues over which they fought seemed trivial, such as the question of selling computers to Romania.

Shultz, The Times wrote, “is by nature and training a professor, mediator and private man. He prefers conciliation to confrontation. Often impassive — a colleague described him as ‘sphinxlike’ — Shultz is a man of enormous self-assurance.” The same article noted: “He appears content to stay out of the news.”

His six and a half years atop the State Department left him to deal with situations from the Caribbean to China, but two events stood out. The low point was the 1986 Iran-Contra scandal, which involved the selling of weapons to Iran to fund guerrillas in Nicaragua, neither of which was authorized by Congress. Reagan’s efforts to handle the situation only seemed to make matters worse, and Shultz found himself as one of the few voices in the administration pushing to get the administration back on course. “Reagan thought Shultz was blowing things out of proportion,” according to “Reagan: The Life.”

There were calls for Shultz to resign, but, he would later write, “No successor could function in this job, I felt, unless the terrible situation was put right.” So, Shultz remained, and some of the rogue-policymaking apparatus would end up back in his hands. The scandal would make a household name of Oliver North and bring down a number of leading Washington figures, including Weinberger.

Ultimately, Shultz’s greatest influence with Reagan would come on the subject of arms control. In a March 1983 memo, Shultz listed multiple areas in which he thought talks could lead to better U.S.-Soviet relations, including arms control. This impetus gained steam when Gorbachev rose to power in the Soviet Union, which Reagan had dubbed the “evil empire” at one point.

“It always seemed to me Gorbachev was a genuine realist,” Shultz wrote in his 2016 book, “Learning from Experience,” noting that Gorbachev had come up through the ranks, unlike previous Soviet leaders.

When Shultz first met Gorbachev, Reagan gave Shultz a chance to offer Gorbachev an opportunity to shake up the status quo of the Cold War. According to Brands’ book, Shultz said: “President Reagan told me to look you squarely in the eyes and tell you: ‘Ronald Reagan believes this is a very special moment in the history of mankind.'”

What followed were multiple summits with Gorbachev, leading ultimately to a sharp reduction in nuclear weapons and the Soviet withdrawal from Afghanistan; these occurred at the same time Gorbachev was pursuing a not-unrelated course of liberalization within the Soviet Union — as well as indicating to the Warsaw Pact states that they were on their own. In 1989, less than a year after Reagan left office, the Berlin Wall came down. It was a heady time, marking the end of a Cold War that had lasted decades and scarred many.

In the final moments of Reagan’s presidency, Shultz received the Presidential Medal of Freedom: “For years of public service and his vital part in inaugurating a new era of hope in foreign policy, his countrymen honor him.’’

For the next decades, Shultz would speak on many international issues behind the scenes and serve as an informal adviser, particularly to George W. Bush. He would be in demand as a speaker and writer, someone who could be counted on to offer cogent analysis of world crises. Whenever he stopped speaking for more than a few minutes, it seemed like someone would present him with an award or honorary degree.

Shultz, who also returned to Bechtel and to Stanford, was frank about his fears for the world. “For centuries, we somehow managed to separate war from religion, and now it’s back,” he told the Times of Israel in February 2016. “War with a religious base is much more dangerous, because it has a capacity to spread, which it’s doing.”

Shultz also spoke out on domestic issues, touting, for instance, the legalization of recreational drugs and the benefits of driving a Prius. He urged that climate change be dealt with.

“I’ve always tried to live in the future,” he told the San Jose Mercury News in 2011, “and think about things and how to make things better. If you have great-grandchildren around, and their pictures are looking at you, well, that’s the future.”

And Shultz — who had an opinion article published in The Washington Post at the time of his 100th birthday — never lost his ability to impress others with his ideas.

“I was in a meeting with him a week or so ago,” Perry said on Sunday, “where he was the sharpest and most provocative person in the room.”

Bryan Bender contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2021/02/07/george-shultz-statesman-reagan-nixon-036470

“The current package he’s proposed, the American Rescue Package, is intended to deal with the immediate crisis, the economic crisis and the health-care crisis,” Yellen said. “But beyond that, he looks forward to proposing ideas to address long-standing challenges that our economy has faced, and a leveling off or even decline in women’s labor force participation rate because they don’t have access universally in the United States to paid family and medical leave and child care is certainly something he’s going to want to address.”

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/us-policy/2021/02/07/yellen-biden-paid-family-leave-legislation/

Sen. Brian Schatz (D-Hawaii) compared the situations this way: “Imagine if the Ukraine call were streamed on the Internet.” And given how dug in most members of both parties are, he observed: “It’s not clear to me that there is any evidence that will change anyone’s mind.”

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer and Minority Leader Mitch McConnell are still haggling over how to organize the trial, so it’s not even certain whether the Senate will vote on the witness question at all, or if someone will force one at the start of the trial.

But for the moment, the trial is not expected to last more than a week, though that could change if witnesses are brought in. Some Senate Democrats have called for a prompt trial, citing other priorities like coronavirus relief and the extreme unlikelihood that 17 Republicans will join them in convicting Trump. Meanwhile, most Republicans are coalescing around the argument that impeaching a former president is unconstitutional.

“Both sides would kind of like to wrap it up fairly quickly,” said Senate Minority Whip John Thune (R-S.D.). “If they want to call witnesses, that prolongs it for sure. And I think you’re talking about pushing into the next week, the week after that perhaps, because then both sides will have that option available to them.”

Senate Democrats, however, will largely defer to the House impeachment managers on the question of witnesses. The managers have yet to publicly say whether they want to bring in outside witnesses to make their case against Trump, or whether they will simply rely on video and public comments from the former president as evidence. Lead impeachment manager Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-Md.) called on Trump Thursday to testify but the ex-president rejected the request.

Whether the House impeachment managers push the Senate to hold a vote to subpoena Trump remains to be seen. But some Senate Democrats are already suggesting they don’t have much interest in hearing from him.

“I don’t know what it would add,” said Sen. Angus King (I-Maine.), who caucuses with Democrats.

“A simply terrible idea,” added Sen. Chris Coons (D-Del.). “He will perjure himself, so he’s the one at risk. But I cannot tell you how much I have enjoyed my first full Trump free week of the last five years.”

The witness debate last year consumed Trump’s first impeachment trial, which lasted nearly three weeks. Senate Republicans chose to punt the question of whether to bring in witnesses to the end of the trial. In the end, only two Republicans — Sens. Mitt Romney of Utah and Susan Collins of Maine — joined Democrats in voting to allow officials like John Bolton to testify, leaving Democrats short of the 51 votes needed.

Democratic senators argued that outside witnesses were needed to understand the extent to which Trump pressured Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky to investigate his Democratic rivals, including Joe Biden, in exchange for much-needed aid. This time, they recount how their own lives were put at risk by rioters and watched Trump’s response in real time.

“This is a unique situation in that we are all witnesses as well as victims,” said Sen. Debbie Stabenow (D-Mich.), who added she wants “to listen to how the House wants to present their case.”

The process surrounding the second impeachment trial is also different. The House spent two months between the beginning of its inquiry and the final impeachment vote investigating Trump’s call and his administration’s withholding of aid to Ukraine, holding several hearings and requesting documents from the White House — requests that the Trump administration ignored. For the Jan. 6 insurrection, the House voted to impeach Trump a week later and never conducted a formal inquiry.

Perhaps the most glaring difference is that Trump is no longer in office. The Senate has never held an impeachment trial for a former president — though many legal scholars, including some from the conservative Federalist Society, argue that the chamber can still convict Trump. Democrats say that the Senate needs to hold Trump accountable and bar him from running for public office again. Even if the trial doesn’t result in conviction, Democrats highlight that it will provide the public with a record of Jan. 6.

While hardly anyone is expecting the trial to drag on, Democrats aren’t closing the door on witnesses. In interviews this week, some senators said that they’d support bringing individuals in to testify if they could provide new information. However, they added that it’s not up to them to give advice to the House impeachment managers.

“I am not going to object if they want to bring in witnesses,” said Sen. Jon Tester (D-Mont.). “I think that it isn’t my call though, it’s their call.”

Trump’s legal team, meanwhile, is not expected to push for witnesses. But senators say they’d be open to their request.

“If he and his team think they need it, it’s not a fair trial if you say ‘no you can’t have it,’” said Sen Tim Kaine. (D-Va.). “I thought last year’s trial was a joke because they wouldn’t allow it and they should have but just because the Republicans turned it into a sham a year ago, I’m not going to turn it into a sham now.”

Andrew Desiderio contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2021/02/07/democrats-trump-second-impeachment-466152

The White House on Saturday clarified that intelligence officials will decide if former President Trump will continue to receive customary intelligence briefings given to ex-presidents, according to reports. 

Fast Facts

A day earlier, President Biden said in an interview excerpt aired on CBS he thinks “there’s no need for him to have intelligence briefings.”

“What impact does he have at all, other than the fact he might slip and say something?” Biden told interviewer Norah O’Donnell. 

While Biden has the authority to make the decision himself, he will leave it to the intelligence community, his aides said, according to The Washington Post. 

White House press secretary Jen Psaki said in a statement: “The president was expressing his concern about former president Trump receiving access to sensitive intelligence, but he also has deep trust in his own intelligence team to make a determination about how to provide intelligence information if at any point the former president Trump requests a briefing,” according to the Post

More portions of the Biden interview on CBS were scheduled to air Sunday on “Face the Nation” and later in the day during the network’s coverage of Super Bowl LV.

Follow below for updates on the White House. Mobile users click here

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/live-updates-white-house-trump-2-7-21

    Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2021/02/07/health/us-coronavirus-sunday/index.html

    Republicans are promising a “huge push” to pressure House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., to pay the fine she imposed for bypassing magnetometers installed after the Capitol riot to enter the House floor. 

    Rep. Rodney Davis, R-Ill., detailed to Fox News his firsthand account of watching the speaker enter the House floor from a forbidden entrance on Thursday. 

    “She opened the session on the floor, she came through what is known as the Speaker’s lobby,” Davis said. “We are all told, one Republican was fined for doing this just yesterday, that you cannot walk through those entrances unless you are disabled.”

    Pelosi’s office has not yet denied the account, despite requests for comment. 

    Rep. Louie Gohmert, R-Texas, was slapped with a $5,000 fine Friday for bypassing metal detectors when he said he’d left the House floor to use the bathroom.  

    GOP REP. GOHMERT RIPS DEMS OVER METAL DETECTOR FINE

    Davis called Pelosi’s actions part of a “typical good for thee, not for me type of attitude that comes out of San Francisco.” 

    “Pay the fine Speaker Pelosi,” Rep. Dan Crenshaw, R-Texas, wrote on Twitter. 

    Crenshaw told Fox News Pelosi should pay the fine because her action was “against her own rules.” 

    “Now is this a smart rule? No. Is this a rule that makes sense? No of course not. But that’s not the point, the point is they’re her rules. She’s literally confiscated property in the form of money, which we think is unconstitutional, but in any case they’re doing it,” the Texas Republican continued. 

    “She won’t abide by the rules herself so we’re going to make a huge push for her to actually have to pay that fine,” Crenshaw said. 

    Davis called on Capitol Police to report the violation to the acting Sergeant-at-Arms, Timothy Blodgett, so he could issue the fine. Blodgett said Friday Capitol Police had not reported the incident. 

    GOP LAWMAKERS SAY PELOSI SHOULD BE FINED FOR VIOLATING NEW HOUSE SECURITY MEASURES 

    “Capitol Police cannot only file reports of violations on Republicans and look the other way when the most powerful person in the House, the speaker, flouts her own rules,” Davis said.  

    The House passed a measure Tuesday requiring all members to pass through magnetometers Capitol Hill police erected outside the House chamber following the Capitol riot last month. Democrats had called for the measure after several Republicans had claimed to be armed in the chamber during the Jan. 6 riot. Members of Congress are allowed to carry firearms in the Capitol, but not on the floor. 

    Several Republican lawmakers, including Reps. Lauren Boebert of Colorado and Louie Gohmert of Texas, flatly refused to walk through the metal detectors before entering the chamber — prompting Pelosi to add a penalty for noncompliance.

    Lawmakers are now slapped with a $5,000 fine the first time they violate the new security protocols, followed by a $10,000 fine for each additional violation.

    “It is tragic that this step is necessary, but the chamber of the People’s House must and will be safe,” Pelosi said in a statement. 

    GOP lawmakers on the House Administration Committee sent a letter to Acting Sergeant-at-Arms Timothy Blodgett, requesting she be issued the newly implemented $5,000 fine for failing to complete a security screening before entering the House floor.

    “Yesterday, at approximately 9:59 am, multiple members observed the Speaker of the House entering the House Chamber without completing security screening,” the Republicans wrote on Friday in a letter obtained by Fox News.

    “What was observed was a clear violation of House Resolution 73 and you are required by House Rules to impose this fine. Please inform us once the fine has been assessed,” they continued. “We look forward to a prompt response to this inquiry.”

    Republicans largely have viewed the magnetometers as an ineffective inconvenience, arguing that threats like the one seen on Jan. 6 are not coming from fellow lawmakers. 

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    “When you’re a liberal there’s a propensity for action, even if that action is not effective,” Crenshaw said of the House floor’s new metal detectors and the fine for bypassing them. “There’s a propensity for virtue-signaling even when that signaling is not effective.”

    Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/calls-pelosi-pay-fine-she-imposed-bypass-metal-detector

    The Wyoming Republican Party voted overwhelmingly to censure Rep. Liz Cheney for voting last month to impeach then-President Trump for his role in the Jan. 6 riot at the Capitol.

    Susan Walsh/AP


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    Susan Walsh/AP

    The Wyoming Republican Party voted overwhelmingly to censure Rep. Liz Cheney for voting last month to impeach then-President Trump for his role in the Jan. 6 riot at the Capitol.

    Susan Walsh/AP

    The Wyoming Republican Party voted on Saturday to censure Rep. Liz Cheney and asked her to resign for her vote last month to impeach then-President Donald Trump after the insurrection at the Capitol on Jan. 6.

    Cheney, the third-ranking member of House Republican leadership, was one of just 10 members of her party to support impeaching Trump for a second time.

    She and other party leaders have come under fire from Trump loyalists for siding with Democrats in the impeachment.

    Cheney’s censure by the Cowboy State’s GOP is largely symbolic, and it comes after House Republicans decided this week to let her hold onto her leadership role in Congress.

    The Wyoming Republican Party’s central committee censured Cheney with just 8 of its 74 members opposing the resolution.

    The committee also called on her to “immediately resign,” according to a copy published by Forbes.

    The House vote to impeach Trump, the letter reportedly reads, was done “with no formal hearings held, no quantifiable evidence presented, no witnesses sworn to give testimony, and no right to cross examine the accusers provided.”

    It also said Cheney “violated the trust of her voters, failed to faithfully represent a very large majority of motivated Wyoming voters, and neglected her duty to represent the party” and the will of the state’s voters.

    The resolution also falsely states, according to the letter copy, that there was “ample” video evidence that the riot at the Capitol was “instigated by Antifa and BLM radicals.” Evidence and arrests so far, however, reveal that it was largely far-right groups and pro-Trump extremists who planned and carried out the Capitol attack.

    NPR’s calls to the Wyoming Republican Party were not answered.

    Cheney said in a statement after the censure vote that she remains honored to represent Wyoming and will always fight for issues that matter most to the state.

    But the pressure on her is unlikely to dissipate after the censure. Anthony Bouchard, a state senator planning to run against Cheney in 2022, tweeted a photo of an empty chair with her name on it from Saturday’s meeting.

    “Today’s vote to censure illustrates that Liz Cheney is hopelessly out of touch with Wyoming, Trump’s best state TWICE,” he said.

    Cheney was invited to address the meeting but didn’t attend.

    In late January, Florida Rep. Matt Gaetz ignored calls by the Republican leadership to try to cool tensions within the party and flew to Wyoming to campaign against Cheney.

    Cheney is not the only GOP member to face censure for acting in opposition to Trump.

    South Carolina’s GOP formally censured Rep. Tom Rice over his support for impeachment. And Arizona Republicans rebuked Gov. Doug Ducey, former Sen. Jeff Flake and Cindy McCain — widow of the late longtime Sen. John McCain — for taking positions against Trump.

    Wyoming Public Media’s Bob Beck contributed to this report.

    Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2021/02/06/964933035/wyoming-gop-censures-liz-cheney-for-voting-to-impeach-trump

    Some California churches on Saturday said they planned to reopen their doors this weekend after the U.S. Supreme Court lifted the state’s ban on indoor worship services during the pandemic, ruling that Gov. Gavin Newsom’s strict orders appear to violate the Constitution’s protection of the free exercise of religion.

    Bishop Arthur Hodges, senior pastor of South Bay United Pentecostal Church in the San Diego suburb of Chula Vista, called the ruling “a major victory.”

    “We are thrilled and excited to go back to church without legal threat of fines or arrest,” Hodges said in a television interview broadcast on Fox 5. “And it opens up churches in the entire state of California. So this is a win for every church, every house of worship and every individual of faith that wants to go to their house of worship this Sunday.”

    He said the church would hold indoor services this weekend. It had previously offered online services but they were not an adequate substitute, he said, likening them to a virtual campfire or tele-health medicine.

    “Online can only go so far,” he said. “It really doesn’t satisfy the person of faith who’s needing their church.”

    South Bay United Pentecostal was one of two churches that challenged the state’s ban in separate lawsuits. The other, Harvest Rock Church in Pasadena, said it would also hold indoor services Sunday.

    “While we have come under fire from some community members, we stand firm that the fruit of meeting in person lies in the spiritual, emotional and physical healing that worshipping the Lord Jesus Christ has brought to so many throughout the world,” Ché Ahn, the church’s senior pastor, said in a statement.

    He said the church decided to challenge the ban after it was singled out by “confusing California edicts” that give “first-rate essential preferences to abortion clinics, marijuana dispensaries, and liquor stores.”

    “While it is one thing to lock down based on data, it is an entirely different motive to allow some groups a right that is denied to others,” he said.

    Gov. Newsom’s office said Saturday it will issue revised guidelines for indoor church services.

    “We will continue to enforce the restrictions the Supreme Court left in place and, after reviewing the decision, we will issue revised guidelines for worship services to continue to protect the lives of Californians,” Daniel Lopez, Newsom’s press secretary, said in a statement.

    The justices in a 6-3 decision granted an appeal late Friday evening from South Bay United, which has repeatedly challenged the state restrictions on church services, including its ban on singing and chanting. The ruling set aside decisions by federal judges in San Diego and San Bernardino, and the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco, which upheld the state’s orders despite earlier warnings from the high court.

    But the high court said the state may limit attendance at indoor services to 25% of the building’s capacity, and singing and chanting may be restricted as well.

    California has enforced “the most extreme restriction on worship in the country,” the court was told by the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty. While several states set limits on attendance at church services, the group said, California is “the only state to ban indoor worship” in all but sparsely populated counties.

    The six conservative justices in the majority differed among themselves, but they agreed California had singled out churches for unfair treatment.

    “Since the arrival of COVID-19, California has openly imposed more stringent regulations on religious institutions than on many businesses.” wrote Justice Neil M. Gorsuch in one of three concurring opinions. “California worries that worship brings people together for too much time. Yet, California does not limit its citizens to running in and out of other establishments; no one is barred from lingering in shopping malls, salons, or bus terminals.”

    Gorsuch along with Justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel A. Alito Jr. voted to lift all the restrictions, including limits on attendance and singing.

    Justice Amy Coney Barrett said she was not convinced the ban on singing should be lifted. The state argued that singing in a group indoors will spread the airborne virus, and Barrett said the churches had the burden of “establishing their entitlement to relief from the singing ban. In my view, they did not carry that burden — at least not on this record,” she wrote. Justice Brett M. Kavanaugh agreed with her.

    In May, Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. cast a key vote in a 5-4 decision to reject an early challenge to California’s restrictions on church services. He said then that he believed in deferring to state officials who were coping with the pandemic. But he wrote Friday that he could not accept California’s “present determination that the maximum number of adherents who can safely worship in the most cavernous cathedral is zero. … Deference, though broad, has its limits.”

    Military troops are headed to California to boost the vaccination effort as President Biden uses wartime powers to address the crisis.

    The state’s ban on indoor services was challenged in separate lawsuits by the South Bay United Pentecostal Church and the Harvest Rock Church, and Friday’s order applies directly to them. But its legal logic would block enforcement of a similar ban at other churches.

    The court’s three liberals — Justices Elena Kagan, Stephen G. Breyer and Sonia Sotomayor — dissented.

    “Justices of this court are not scientists. Nor do we know much about public health policy. Yet today the court displaces the judgments of experts about how to respond to a raging pandemic,” Kagan wrote. “The court orders California to weaken its restrictions on public gatherings by making a special exception for worship services.”

    Two months ago, the justices put Newsom and the 9th Circuit on notice that the state’s ban on indoor worship services may have gone too far.

    On the eve of the Thanksgiving holiday, the high court struck down part of New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s COVID-19 rules, which limited gatherings at houses of worship to 25 persons in a few neighborhoods in Brooklyn and Queens where the virus was spreading rapidly. It said the state’s rules “single out houses of worship for especially harsh treatment” compared to retail stores, the court said in Roman Catholic Diocese vs. Cuomo.

    Eight days later, the justices granted an appeal from the California churches and told federal judges to reconsider their decisions that had upheld Newsom’s ban on indoor church services in all of the state’s heavily populated counties. The justices “vacated” or set aside those decisions based on their ruling in the New York case.

    But two district judges and the 9th Circuit Court upheld the state’s restrictions again in late January. They said California was facing a steep rise in COVID-19 cases, and they agreed with the state that worshipers at indoor church services posed “an exceptionally high risk” of spreading the virus because people were gathered together for an hour or more.

    By contrast, “patrons typically have the intention of getting in and out of grocery and retail stores as quickly as possible,” the 9th Circuit said. The state also argued that churches were free to hold services outdoors.

    Lawyers for the churches urged the Supreme Court to grant an emergency appeal and lift the state’s restrictions on worship services. They cited a dissent from one of the 9th Circuit’s senior conservatives.

    As Newsom faces the growing threat of a recall, California Republicans in Congress say he’s wasting taxpayer money in the state unemployment program.

    “A simple, straightforward application of these controlling cases compels what should be the obvious result here: California’s uniquely severe restrictions against religious worship services — including its total ban against indoor worship in nearly the entire state — are patently unconstitutional and should be enjoined,” wrote Judge Diarmuid O’Scannlain in Harvest Rock Church vs. Newsom.

    “California is the only state in the country that imposes such a ban,” he said, “Yet, in exactly the same locales where indoor worship is prohibited, California still allows a vast array of secular facilities to open indoors, including (to name only a few): retail stores, shopping malls, factories, food-processing plants, warehouses, transportation facilities, childcare centers, colleges, libraries, professional sports facilities, and movie studios.”

    The two sides in the case differed on the current situation in Los Angeles County. Lawyers for the churches told the court that in late December, Los Angeles County said it would not enforce the restrictions on church services, citing court rulings. But the state’s lawyers said the county did not have the authority to waive the state’s rules.

    Source Article from https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2021-02-06/some-california-churches-reopen-sunday-supreme-court-lifts-ban-indoor-services

    “These were just very angry, defiant, very violent people that we house at the Justice Center,” the city’s director of public safety, Jimmie Edwards, told reporters after the uprising was brought under control about 10 a.m. “No one at the Justice Center is housed for a misdemeanor, a municipal offense or a low-level felony. Everybody housed at the Justice Center is housed there because of very serious offenses like assault on police officers and homicide and things of that sort.”

    Source Article from https://www.stltoday.com/news/local/crime-and-courts/edwards-inmates-jimmied-locks-escaped-cells-before-mayhem-erupted-at-jail/article_42dda377-67aa-5685-ba3d-e96b83cee8a8.html

    President Joe Biden said this weekend that it is unlikely a $15 federal minimum wage provision makes it into the next Covid-19 relief package, hitting pause on a key campaign promise as Democrats in Congress press ahead to pass $1.9 trillion in stimulus without Republican support.

    Biden said his administration would push for a stand-alone bill to raise the minimum wage.

    “I put it in but I don’t think its going to survive,” Biden told CBS’ Norah O’Donnell in an interview scheduled to air in full on Sunday. “My guess is it will not be in [the stimulus bill].”

    Democrats in Congress have moved to pass the $1.9 trillion stimulus package without Republican support in the Senate using a parliamentary procedure known as reconciliation. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., said Friday that the lower chamber aims to pass the fiscal relief package within two weeks.

    The budget resolution directs committees to write legislation reflecting Biden’s Covid relief package, while staying under the $1.9 trillion target. Democrats plan to pass provisions like $1,400 direct payments, a $400 per week jobless benefit through September, $350 billion in state, local and tribal government relief, a $20 billion national Covid vaccination program, and $50 billion for virus testing.

    The bill is also likely to include $170 billion for K-12 schools and higher educations institutions and $30 billion for rent and utility assistance.

    Republicans oppose including a wage hike in the Covid-19 relief package warning it could put added strain on businesses already grappling with the economic fallout of the pandemic. And West Virginia Democrat Sen. Joe Manchin also opposes the pay increase, meaning Democrats wouldn’t have the votes to pass it even with a simple majority under reconciliation.

    While Biden said the $15 per hour wage provision would be unlikely to make it in the Covid relief bill, he promised to prioritize passing the wage hike in separate legislation.

    “I’m prepared as the president of the United States on a separate negotiation on minimum wage to work my way up from what it is now,” Biden said. “No one should work 40 hours a week and live before the poverty wage and you’re making less than $15 an hour, you’re living below the poverty wage.”

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    Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2021/02/06/biden-says-15-minimum-wage-wont-survive-covid-relief-talks.html