Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2021/02/01/mitch-mcconnell-condemns-marjorie-taylor-greene-defends-liz-cheney/4349663001/

President Biden is set to sign a series of executive actions on immigration — steps mean to unwind some of the actions taken by his predecessor.

Saul Loeb/AFP via Getty Images


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President Biden is set to sign a series of executive actions on immigration — steps mean to unwind some of the actions taken by his predecessor.

Saul Loeb/AFP via Getty Images

President Biden is set to sign a series of executive actions on Tuesday to begin to reunite migrant children separated from their parents after crossing the U.S. border, take steps to restore the asylum system, and review the Trump administration’s changes for the legal immigration system.

The executive actions make clear that rolling back former President Donald Trump’s hardline immigration measures won’t happen overnight. In fact, more actions are almost certain to follow, officials told reporters on a preview call about the measures.

“It takes time to review everything, so we are starting with these right now, but that doesn’t mean it’s the end of it,” one of the officials said.

One of the actions creates a task force to find ways to reunite children in the United States with their parents, deported without them — a job made challenging by a lack of records. Details of how that will happen are still to be determined. The task force will make recommendations on how to do it, working with representatives of families, and other stakeholders, officials said.

A second order looks at how to address the surge of migrants seeking asylum in the United States in recent years, and will look at how to replace the Migrant Protection Protocols program — what Trump referred to as “Remain in Mexico.”

Biden suspended that program on his first day in office. He has vowed to help countries in Central America address the underlying causes of migration. But the administration wants to restore the asylum system, officials said — and do something to help people stuck in camps at the border. The details of how that will happen are not yet clear.

The third order requires agencies to do a “top-to-bottom review of recent regulations, policies and guidance that have set up barriers to our legal immigration system.” The first one to go: Trump’s “public charge” rule, which prevented immigrants from getting permanent resident or “green card” status if they had are were likely to require public benefits such as housing subsidies.

The new administration is under pressure from immigration activists who are worried that reforms will stall as Biden rushes to deal with the response to the health and economic crises caused by the COVID-19 pandemic — as well as climate change and racial equity priorities.

Biden sent a sweeping immigration legislative proposal to Congress the day he was sworn into office, but it’s unclear how quickly the plan will be considered.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/sections/president-biden-takes-office/2021/02/02/962995562/here-are-the-immigration-actions-president-biden-plans-to-sign

PUNXSUTAWNEY, Pa. (AP) — There will be six more weeks of winter, Punxsutawney Phil predicted as he emerged from his burrow on a snowy Tuesday morning to perform his Groundhog Day duties.

Members of Phil’s “inner circle” woke up the furry critter at 7:25 a.m. at Gobbler’s Knob in Punxsutawney, Pennsylvania, to see whether he would see his shadow or not.

Shortly after this year’s prediction was revealed, one of the members of the inner circle shared a message he said Phil had told him earlier in the day: “After winter, you’re looking forward to one of the most beautiful and brightest springs you’ve ever seen.”

Another member of the “inner circle” noted the uniqueness of the past year.

“People have been referencing Groundhog Day. It has felt like at times we’re all living the same day over and over again,” one of the members said. “Groundhog Day also shows us that the monotony ends. The cycle will be broken.”

“Today actually is Groundhog Day, there’s only one,” he added. “There is quite literally a new day coming over the horizon.”

The spectacle that is Groundhog Day still went on, but because of the coronavirus pandemic, revelers weren’t able to see Phil and celebrate in person: This year, it was all virtual and included cardboard cutouts to represent spectators.

A livestream, which had more than 15,000 viewers at one point, played footage from previous Groundhog Day’s ahead of the big reveal.

Then of course, the prognosticator of prognosticators emerged at dawn. The lore goes that if he sees his shadow as he did this year, there will be six more weeks of winter. If he doesn’t, spring comes early.

Wearing top hats, members of the club summoned Phil from a new tree stump.

“You look beautiful,” club president Jeff Lundy told Phil, who directed members to one of two scrolls.

A club member announced, “We have all passed through the darkness of night, but now see hope in morning’s bright light. But now when I turn to see, there’s a perfect shadow cast of me.”

The livestream from Gobbler’s Knob, a tiny hill just outside Punxsutawney about 65 miles (105 kilometers) northeast of Pittsburgh, is made possible by the Pennsylvania Tourism Office’s Holi-stay PA. The event there — always Feb. 2 — dates back to 1887.

Phil this year, like many years in the past, gave his forecast during a major snowstorm that hit the entire Northeast.

The annual event has its origin in a German legend about a furry rodent. Records dating to the late 1800s show Phil has predicted longer winters more than 100 times. The 2020 forecast called for an early spring — however, Phil didn’t say anything about a pandemic.

In its 135-year history, Phil has predicted winter 106 times and spring 20 times, the club said. Ten years were lost because no records were kept.

Punxsutawney Phil may be the most famous groundhog seer but he’s certainly not the only one. There are two other high-profile “imposters,” as the Punxsutawney Groundhog Club calls them, in the region.

Connecticut marked Groundhog Day with a hedgehog making the prediction after the state’s official groundhog, Chuckles X, died last year. Like Phil, Phoebe predicted another six weeks of winter after seeing its shadow at the Lutz Children’s Museum in Manchester.

New York City’s Staten Island Chuck disagreed, predicting an early spring in a video shown on the Staten Island Zoo’s Facebook page.

“We’re going to have an early spring! Spring is coming,” Brian Gomez, of event sponsor Investors Bank said in a video message.

Source Article from https://apnews.com/article/groundhog-day-punxsutawney-prediction-85527080ccef649d2807bfa4804fec25

American businesses have remained “relatively modest players” in the Myanmar economy, and mostly focused on serving the domestic market, said the analysts. That means their withdrawal from the country will mostly harm private citizens — not the military, they added.

Still, the unfolding crisis could be an opportunity for the U.S. to lead international condemnation of the coup and rally support for any resistance movement that arises within Myanmar.

“Regional partners like Japan have emphasized democratic values as part of their strategy to respond to a more assertive China. The Biden administration will need to reiterate that this is no time to retreat from that focus,” CSIS analysts said.

“Those states with greater economic leverage in the country should be prodded to signal that widespread violence against citizens is unacceptable and would lead Myanmar back to international isolation, undoing the economic progress of the last decade,” they added.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2021/02/02/myanmar-coup-tests-bidens-pledge-to-work-with-allies-in-asia.html

“I’m a survivor of sexual assault,” Ocasio-Cortez said, her voice quivering with emotion. “And I haven’t told many people that in my life. But when we go through trauma, trauma compounds on each other.”

In a 90-minute video live-streamed on Instagram that has since garnered over 1 million views, the 31-year-old congresswoman recalled fearing for her life as she and others were forced to take shelter when a violent mob stormed the Capitol building in Washington, D.C, on Jan. 6. At one point, when she was hiding in the bathroom of her office, she said someone banged on the door and entered the room, repeatedly yelling, “Where is she?”

“This was the moment I thought everything was over,” Ocasio-Cortez said. “I mean, I thought I was going to die.”

“I felt that if this was the journey that my life was taking, that, I felt that things were going to be OK and that, you know, I had fulfiled my purpose,” she said, wiping away tears from her eyes.

She ultimately realized that the man was a Capitol police officer who she said looked at her “with a tremendous amount of anger and hostility.”

Ocasio-Cortez said she feared for her life again later that day when she was barricaded in the office of Rep. Katie Porter, D-Calif.

“The weird thing about moments like these is you lose all sense of time,” she said. “We felt completely unsafe.”

Crowds of people then made their way to the Capitol steps, pushing through barricades, officers in riot gear and other security measures that were put in place in anticipation of the protest. An angry mob breached the Capitol building, forcing a lockdown with members of Congress and their staff holed up inside. It took hours for law enforcement to clear the building and establish a perimeter around the area. Five people, including a police officer, died during the rampage.

Ocasio-Cortez said those who argue it is time to move on from what transpired that day are using “the same tactics of abusers.”

“They’re trying to tell us to forget about what happened. They’re trying to tell us it wasn’t a big deal,” she said. “They’re trying to tell us to move on without any accountability, without any truth-telling or without actually confronting the extreme damage, physical harm, loss of life and trauma that was inflicted on not just me as a person, not just other people as individuals, but on all of us as a collective and on many other people. We cannot move on without accountability. We cannot heal without accountability. And so, all of these people who are telling us to move on are doing so at their own convenience.”

Those are the same tactics, she said, “of that man who touched you inappropriately at work, telling you to move on.”

“Are they going to believe you?” she continued. “Or the adult who, you know, if they hurt you when you were a child and you grow up and you confront them about it, and they try to tell you that what happened never happened.”

Ocasio-Cortez said holding those responsible for what occurred on Jan. 6 “is not about the difference of political opinion” or “getting revenge.”

“This is about just, like, basic humanity,” she said. “We are not safe with people who hold positions of power who are willing to endanger the lives of others if they think it will score them a political point.”

She called out Sens. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, and Josh Hawley, R-Miss., who joined Trump in baselessly challenging Biden’s victories in some states.

“We knew that violence was expected,” she added. “We knew that that violence was predicated on someone telling the lie — the big lie — about our elections.”

Source Article from https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/alexandria-ocasio-cortez-sexual-assault-survivor/story?id=75628322

The Black Lives Matter movement on Monday put its weight behind “Squad” member Rep. Cori Bush’s, D-Mo., proposal to investigate and potentially expel Republicans who opposed certifying the 2020 presidential election results following a deadly siege on Capitol Hill carried out by Trump supporters.

“It is not enough to denounce the white supremacy behind the attack,” the group wrote on its website. “We must remove its endorsers from Congress – Ted Cruz, Josh Hawley, Lauren Boebert, Marjorie Taylor Greene, and the over 100 Republicans who voted against certifying the Electoral College.”

Bush introduced a resolution earlier this month that would “initiate investigations for removal” targeting those who attempted to overturn the election results and “incited a White supremacist-attempted coup.”

The proposal is based on the claim that some of these conservatives engaged in sedition against the U.S. – or incited rebellion against the government.

‘SQUAD’ MEMBER CORI BUSH DEFENDED ANTIFA DURING SUMMER RIOTS

More than 140 Republicans in Congress voted to overturn the results of the election, which former President Donald Trump in unproven claims said was “stolen” from him by fraudulent means.

Sens. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., and Ted Cruz, R-Texas, in particular have come under fire for roles Democrats allege they played in inciting the violent pro-Trump riot on Capitol Hill, where several lives were lost.

Hawley and Cruz both made clear in the days leading up to Jan. 6 that they did not intend to certify the results, leaning on Trump’s fraud claims.

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Senate Democrats filed an ethics complaint last week to investigate whether the pair coordinated with rioters.

Both have denied that they were trying to overturn the election or incite riots, saying they were instead seeking to ensure a free and fair election process. Hawley and Cruz have each condemned the events of Jan. 6.

But many Democrats believe that their decision to proceed with planned objections spurred the protesters’ turn to violence.

There have been calls for both to resign from their positions.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/black-lives-matter-backs-squad-members-push-to-expel-over-100-republicans-from-congress

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2021/02/01/mitch-mcconnell-condemns-marjorie-taylor-greene-defends-liz-cheney/4349663001/

As President Biden met with 10 Republican senators Monday to test the waters of bipartisanship on coronavirus relief, Democrats on Capitol Hill took the first step toward fast-tracking the administration’s $1.9-trillion proposal through a legislative procedure that wouldn’t require GOP support.

Although the Oval Office meeting, Biden’s first with lawmakers, appeared cordial, it may amount to a token demonstration by both sides — an opportunity to hear each other out rather than a negotiation to bridge the massive gulf between them.

A group of 10 moderate GOP lawmakers put forth its counterproposal Sunday, outlining a $618-billion measure that would include more limited direct relief targeted to the neediest individuals, an extension of unemployment benefits through June (under Biden’s plan, it would be extended through September) and funding for vaccine distribution, school reopenings and small-business loans, albeit in smaller amounts.

Emerging from the West Wing on Monday evening after a longer-than-expected two-hour conversation, the group’s leader, Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine), expressed appreciation that Biden “chose to spend so much time with us” and called the meeting “excellent,” declining to offer details — or criticism — even as she acknowledged the impasse.

“I wouldn’t say we came together on a package tonight. No one expected that, but what we did agree to do is to follow up and talk further,” said Collins, the only Republican to address reporters outside the White House, before her group departed without responding to questions.

While Biden has vowed to lower the temperature in Washington and restore a greater degree of bipartisanship, he has argued in recent days that the GOP’s scaled-down proposal — one-third the size of the administration’s package — would be grossly inadequate. Confident that his policy goals align with the politics, the president appeared determined to push ahead with his American Rescue Plan, which would deliver more relief to more Americans and, unlike the Republican plan, includes funding for state and local governments and an increase of the federal minimum wage to $15 an hour.

“While there were areas of agreement, the president also reiterated his view that Congress must respond boldly and urgently, and noted many areas which the Republican senators’ proposal does not address,” said Jen Psaki, the White House press secretary, in a statement released after the meeting. Biden, she continued, told GOP lawmakers that “while he is hopeful that the rescue plan can pass with bipartisan support, a reconciliation package is a path to achieve that end. The president also made clear that the American Rescue Plan was carefully designed to meet the stakes of this moment, and any changes in it cannot leave the nation short of its pressing needs.”

In theory, the support of 10 Republicans would give Biden and Democrats 60 votes to overcome a filibuster and pass the legislation without having to resort to budget reconciliation, a maneuver that would enable the Democratic Senate majority to jam through much of the larger package with just 51 votes.

But Democrats appear committed to moving ahead with the larger package, determined to act with urgency and on a scale that is sufficient to overcome the multifaceted crisis, which continues to imperil public health and the economy.

Hours ahead of Biden’s meeting with Republicans, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-San Francisco) and Senate Majority Leader Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.) filed a joint budget resolution, a legislative tool that opens the door to passing Biden’s $1.9-trillion American Rescue Plan using reconciliation.

With an evenly divided Senate, the move would allow Democrats to move forward without support from Republicans.

“The smartest thing we can do is act big, according to Treasury Secretary Yellen. So, that is what the Senate is going to do — act big,” Schumer said on the Senate floor Monday.

Although the process lets Democrats skirt Republicans on COVID relief if needed, Schumer stressed that “there is nothing in this process that would preclude it from being bipartisan.”

Republicans, who have been frustrated that the administration put its package together without their input, are looking to pressure Biden by pointing to his rhetoric about wanting to return Washington to a less hostile place where bipartisanship is once again possible.

“We recognize your calls for unity and want to work in good faith with your Administration to meet the health, economic, and societal challenges of the COVID crisis,” states the letter, orchestrated by Collins. The other signers are: Rob Portman of Ohio, Bill Cassidy of Louisiana, Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, Mitt Romney of Utah, Shelley Moore Capito of West Virginia, Todd Young of Indiana, Jerry Moran of Kansas, Mike Rounds of South Dakota and Thom Tillis of North Carolina.

Nine of the 10 attended Monday’s meeting in person; only Rounds, who called in, was physically absent.

Biden has signaled an openness to at least one component of the GOP’s proposal, limiting direct relief to low- and middle-income individuals.

The GOP proposal calls for checks of up to $1,000 for individuals making $50,000 a year or less and families with a combined income of up to $100,000. Only individuals making less than $40,000 — and families earning less than $80,000 — would receive the full amount of $1,400.

The GOP package would also include $160 billion for vaccine distribution and development, coronavirus testing and the production of personal protective equipment; $20 billion aimed at helping schools reopen; more relief for small businesses; and additional aid to individuals. Unemployment benefits at $300 a week — currently slated to lapse in March — would also be extended through June 30.

But the president and an administration staffed with veterans of the Obama era’s congressional battles are loath to allow the GOP’s promises of their possible support to slow or dictate their response. Moreover, the White House is confident its plan is broadly popular and more likely to be effective than a scaled-down version, pointing to support from more conservative economists and groups, including Kevin Hassett, President Trump’s former economic advisor, and the Chamber of Commerce.

A Monmouth poll showed a majority of Americans — 61% — supporting Biden’s initial policy proposals. And respondents seemed to put the onus on Republicans to work with the new president. According to the survey, 71% of Americans prefer to see the GOP find ways to work with Biden as opposed to just 25% who want Republicans to focus on keeping him in check.

Times staff writer Sarah D. Wire contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.latimes.com/politics/story/2021-02-01/biden-meet-republican-senators-covid19-relief

“Or that, you know, those are additional traumas on top of what you’ve already experienced, right, if you’re a survivor of abuse, of neglect, of verbal abuse, of sexual assault, you know, et cetera, there’s the trauma of going through what you went through.

Source Article from https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-55897922

The 10 GOP senators seek $1,000 checks. They would go to individuals earning less than $40,000 a year and would begin phasing out with a hard cap at $50,000 a year. The payment would increase to $2,000 for couples earning up to $80,000 and phase out with a hard cap at $100,000 a year.

Source Article from https://www.ktvb.com/article/news/nation-world/gop-covid-19-counterproposal-relief-aid-1400-checks/507-2688d344-ed78-4589-a8d1-7544c4b73425

During the social media event, which attracted more than 160,000 viewers, Ocasio-Cortez also disclosed that she was a survivor of sexual assault — an experience that, she said, made her “struggle with the idea of being believed.”

“How I felt was: Not again,” she said. “I’m not going to let this happen again.”

Republicans have been deeply divided in the wake of the Capitol attack, and mistrust across the aisle has been at near unprecedented highs in modern history. Democrats have openly expressed fear for their safety around some members of the GOP, and Republicans continue to battle out the future direction of their party after 10 of their House members voted to impeach Trump following the insurrection.”

Ocasio-Cortez used the live stream to re-up her calls for senators and House members who supported Trump’s challenges against the election results to resign. But if Republicans have been feeling any personal responsibility for the insurrection, they have yet to show it — a point the progressive congresswoman likened to abusive behavior.

“We cannot move on without accountability. We cannot heal without accountability,” Ocasio-Cortez said. “And so all of these people who want to tell us to move on are doing so at their own convenience.”

What they are saying is that “‘I would do it again. I don’t regret it at all.’” she continued. “If that’s their stance, they continue to be a danger for their colleagues.”

Spokespeople for Hawley and Cruz did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Ocasio-Cortez also spoke in detail about how she encountered hostile crowds in the days leading up to the Jan. 6 insurrection, saying she often felt unsafe walking in public. She also described the day of the attack, at times choking up when she recalled hiding in her office as someone appeared to break in.

At one point, she described a man in a black beanie banging on her office doors and screaming, “Where is she?” As she hid in her office bathroom, she said, the man entered her personal office.

“I just thought to myself that they got inside,” she said. “I really just felt like, if this is the plan for me, then people will be able to take it from here.”

“I thought I was going to die,” she continued.

The man turned out to be a Capitol Police officer, but she said that the experience left her shaken and that the officer engaged in a “hostile” manner with her. She also said he gave her vague instructions on where to seek shelter, resulting in her and her staff wondering where to go.

A spokesperson for the U.S. Capitol Police did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

After concluding her live stream, Ocasio-Cortez took to Twitter — where her Instagram appearance was trending — and wrote that her “story isn’t the only story, nor is it the central story of what happened on Jan 6th.“

“It is just one story of many of those whose lives were endangered at the Capitol by the lies, threats, and violence fanned by the cowardice of people who chose personal gain above democracy.”

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2021/02/01/aoc-insurrection-instagram-live-464837

“Waking up to learn your world has been completely turned upside down overnight was not a new feeling, but a feeling that I thought that we had moved on from, and one that I never thought we’d be forced to feel again,” she said, reflecting on her childhood under military rule.

Source Article from https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-55893736

Comedian Adam Carolla said Monday that shows like “Saturday Night Live” were “scared” to attack Democrats like President Joe Biden or New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo for fear of being “cancelled.”

In the first episode since Biden took office, the sketch comedy show largely skipped his administration, instead doing segments or bits celebrating Georgia turning blue, skewering controversial Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., and even rehashing the 2017 assault of Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky.

“Honestly, I get what there is to hate about Donald Trump,” Carolla said on “America’s Newsroom.” “What is there to love about Joe Biden? That’s the bigger question if you’re SNL. OK, you hated Trump, fine. Why do you love Joe Biden? There’s nothing to love about Joe Biden, unless you’re scared of being cancelled, and the fact that this cancel culture has drifted over to comedy is absolutely insane.”

‘SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE’ CRITICS SAY SHOW AVOIDED JOE BIDEN, KAMALA HARRIS IN FIRST SHOW OF 2021

SNL left little doubt during the 2020 election that it preferred Biden to win, and it even referred to his inauguration this month as good news during its “Weekend Update” segment.

Cuomo’s nursing home scandal was also left untouched by the show. Cuomo has come under fire for underreporting nursing home deaths from coronavirus over the past year, according to a report from the state’s Attorney General Letitia James.

“No comedians are saying anything about Governor [Gavin] Newsom or Governor Cuomo. Where are the comedians? They’re scared, and that’s a scary place to be,” Carolla said.

“Unfortunately, their hand is forced now,” he added. “They have to show their hypocrisy … You’ve done 7,000 episodes on what an idiot Trump is, and then you don’t touch the next administration? I would do one even if I loved Biden if I’m SNL, just so I don’t appear hypocritical.”

The first SNL of 2021 was panned by the Los Angeles Times, as critic Lorraine Ali wrote that Donald Trump had potentially killed satire.

“If Trump has had one victory in the the last month, it may be that ‘SNL’ suddenly seems lost without him,” she wrote.

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The show famously mourned Trump’s victory in 2016, having Hillary Clinton impersonator Kate McKinnon do a serious rendition of Leonard Cohen’s “Hallelujah” in its first cold open after the election.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/media/snl-liberal-comedians-scared-criticize-biden-cuomo-carolla

New Yorkers on Monday said “You got nothin’” to Winter Storm Orlena — as they ventured out to exercise, explore or just do their jobs amid a snowy blast that could dump two feet before all is said and done.

Model and tour guide Veronika Dudka left her home early Monday to hit Times Square around 7 a.m. before the conditions got too bad so she could pose for photos and share snaps of the famed tourist hub draped in white for her 93,000 followers. 

“I do online tours right now because all the people can’t come to the USA right now, so I just do online tours on my Instagram on IGTV,” Dudka, 30, explained of her “virtual tourists” who hail from Italy, Ukraine, Russia and “all over” the world. 

The Ukrainian native said she didn’t mind the cold and said the below-freezing temps, 30-mph wind gusts and rapid snowfall made for “a really nice day.” 

Joshua Cheung from Fort Greene decided to use the snowstorm as an opportunity to get some exercise — by offering free snow shoveling services. 

“Need some exercise and an excuse to get it, so I’m offering some help here. You’re welcome to pay me if you want, but I don’t need it,” Cheung wrote on the NextDoor social media platform, a website that connects neighbors. 

“Note, salt not included unless supplied by you,” Cheung wrote. 

The Brooklynite wasn’t the only one out looking for exercise amid the storm: Clips posted to the What Is New York Twitter page show a person jogging through Coney Island … with only their shorts on. 

Other clips show a myriad of bizarre scenes including an NYPD patrol car doing donuts on the fresh, unplowed powder and an apparent musher on a four-wheeled carriage gliding down a snowy street with two sled dogs leading the way. 

One video showed a man decked out in a red suit and top hat rapping in the streets overnight with a portable amp and microphone. 

“You’re probably staying in your home hot chocolate on Clubhouse,” the rapper crooned, referencing an app that’s grown popular amid the pandemic and allows for group video calls. 

Kate Georgiadis, the manager of Hype Gym on Union Square, paid a small tribute to Rocky IV by doing a half hour blizzard workout consisting of squats, deadlifts and medicine ball throws with a colleague. 

“We did them outside in the snow to get the message out that there’s no excuses. No matter what the conditions are, we’re still going to do what we have to do,” Georgiadis, 30, who donned leggings, sweats and snow boots for the workout, said. 

“The guys in the gym were expecting us to come back all frozen, but we came back with a victory.”

Other New Yorkers, like Lan Kwit, 48, were spotted using snowshoes and skis to traverse unplowed sidewalks and get around town, while others used the day to kick back and drink. 

Workers from the Bronx Beer Hall decided to build a bar snow castle when they had to close their doors for the storm and posted a snap on Instagram of them drinking beer outside as the flakes fell. 

People play as snow falls in Wall Street during a winter storm.

KENA BETANCUR/AFP via Getty Images

Subway commuter Elijah Stacks used his new snow shovel to clear a snow covered bench inside the underground Borough Hall station.

Paul Martinka

Veronika Dudka posses in Times Square.

G.N.Miller/NY Post

Pedestrians cross 50th Ave in Long Island City, Queens.

Brian Zak/NY Post

Carolyn Hoover and Take Mami make snow angels in Times Square.

G.N.Miller/NY Post

Naked Cowboy in Times Square during winter storm.

G.N.Miller/NYPost

Dogs play in Central Park.

G.N.Miller/NYPost

Workers clear a crosswalk in Manhattan.

G.N.Miller/NYPost

A man uses skis in Times Square.

G.N.Miller/NYPost

Lan Kwit goes showshoeing in lower Manhattan.

Stephen Yang

Emmy of Park Slope on cross country skies in Brooklyn.

Paul Martinka

A man with his 3 dogs crossing 9th street and Prospect Park West in Park Slope Brooklyn.

Paul Martinka

Commuters at the Church Ave subway station.

Paul Martinka

A jogger in shorts inside Prospect Park in Brooklyn.

Paul Martinka

People make snow angels during a major Nor”easter in New York City.

G.N.Miller/NYPost

A Halal cart worker jumps to push snow off an umbrella covering his food cart.

Alexi Rosenfeld/Getty Images

Luca Hoffman, 14, plays football in Madison Square Park.

Stephen Yang

A snowman in Madison Square Park.

Stephen Yang

A snowball fight in Union Square Park as 14-28 inches of snow are expected over the course of two days, shutting down the city.

Stephen Yang

People go sledding in Brooklyn’s Main Street Park.

AP Photo/Mark Lennihan

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“It’s Monday and The Bronx Beer Hall is C-C-C-C-C-C-C-L-O-S-E-D so we can try to remake the bar with snow. We’ll reopen TOMORROW 12PM – 6PM. Stay healthy & safe!” the post states alongside a photo showing the makeshift bar holding up a keg filled with perfectly crisp brew. 

Rodney Hamlin, a 53-year-old MTA bus driver, spent most of Monday moving buses around the Fresh Pond Depot so workers could add chains to the wheels — a safeguard that’s hardly a match for Orlena’s icy onslaught. 

“It’s not easy. Being a bus operator, you’ve got to have six eyes. You got to look ahead of you, beside you, behind you. You always got to look out for people in front of you that don’t look out, that don’t pay attention,” the 18-year veteran told The Post. 

“You could be going just like 15 miles an hour or 10 miles an hour and you hit the brakes and just keep going. That has happened to me … when you try to stop 40,000 pounds and it’s sliding and you have no control over it, just imagine how fast your heart is beating.”

Hamlin insisted the MTA’s drivers are some of the “best” around because of their intense, military-like training, but “all that comes to pass when you’re out here driving in a snowstorm.”

The record-breaking storm, which is expected to drop as much as 28 inches of snow on the Big Apple, wasn’t even enough to keep the Naked Cowboy at home

The famed performer was spotted in Times Square early Monday afternoon, strumming his guitar with nothing but a hat, boots and undies on as the real-feel temps plunged to 16 degrees.

Additional reporting by David Meyer

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2021/02/01/winter-storm-orlena-no-match-for-hardy-new-yorkers/


In this Sept. 7, 2019, file photo, Kevin Faulconer speaks during the California GOP fall convention in Indian Wells, Calif. | Chris Carlson, File/AP

OAKLAND, Calif. — With the Gov. Gavin Newsom recall movement gaining intensity in California, Republican Kevin Faulconer on Monday said he will become the first major elected official to officially launch a gubernatorial campaign to challenge the Democratic leader.

Faulconer, who was San Diego mayor for more than six years, told POLITICO in an interview Monday he will run in the recall election should the drive qualify by the mid-March deadline. He will formally announce his campaign Tuesday at a Los Angeles campaign event with parents frustrated by school closures.

“It’s time for the California comeback,” Faulconer said. “And I’m excited to be a voice for Californians who are suffering because Sacramento can’t do the basics. This campaign is going to be about restoring balance and common sense to our government.”

As a moderate Republican who ran California’s second largest city, Faulconer is regularly viewed as the most viable Republican for statewide office in solidly blue California. But any GOP candidate would face an uphill climb against Newsom — who won in a landslide in 2018 in a state where Democrats outnumber Republicans in voter registration by an overwhelming 46 percent to 24 percent.

Faulconer, 54, said he has already raised $1 million in the weeks since he launched his 2022 exploratory campaign for governor. He said that his robust fundraising and support has prompted him to launch earlier than he initially intended as proponents of the recall get closer to collecting the 1.5 million valid signatures they need over the next six weeks.

Few would have given Faulconer a chance a year ago. But recall dynamics defy partisan registrations, as former Republican Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger proved in 2003 when he came out atop the list of 135 candidates as voters ousted then-Gov. Gray Davis, a Democrat.

Meanwhile, Californians have grown frustrated as they approach the anniversary of when Newsom first ordered businesses closed to control the spread of coronavirus. While the governor was once praised for his success in locking down the state and avoiding widespread problems last spring, California has since endured unprecedented surges that raised the death toll past 40,000 in the state.

At the same time, most public schoolchildren have not been in classrooms since last March, while churches in most counties cannot hold indoor services. Restaurants cannot offer indoor dining and movie theaters and major attractions are shut. Newsom angered some residents when he admitted to having attended a fancy dinner party in the Napa Valley in November after urging Californians not to congregate.

Newsom’s perceived vulnerability has drawn interest from other political competitors. Republican businessperson John Cox, who lost to Newsom in 2018, texted supporters this week that he has put in $1 million toward the effort and has proclaimed he will run in the recall. And tech billionaire Chamath Palihapitiya has indicated to his million Twitter followers that he intends to run — though he has not to date contributed money toward the recall or made any formal moves indicating he is serious. Palihapitiya has been a Democratic donor in the past.

Faulconer said the fire behind the current recall effort comes because “there’s a real sense of urgency on the need for change” in the midst of a pandemic in which “the governor continues to botch the basics.”

He pointed to “the fact that … our public schools have not been safely reopened. And yet private schools are open and public schools across the country have safely reopened.” Faulconer said Newsom has failed to reach out to teachers unions and address the issue with specifics in a way that serves the needs of California parents.

Faulconer also charged that on the issue of unemployment, “we have hundreds of thousands of Californians who can’t get unemployment relief. And yet we’ve racked up $31 billion worth of fraud,” he said, that reportedly has been funneled to inmates and criminal rings through the the state’s Employment Development Department.

A businessperson, Faulconer said the exodus of top tech executives to Texas and other states has also been a chief failure of Newsom and that he would immediately get out the message that “California is open for business,” by holding direct discussions with business leaders to assure them that the state will not continue to “take California companies for granted.”

Major donors to Faulconer so far include Palos Verdes real estate mogul Gerald Marcil; investor Shawn Shiralian; Kelly Burt, the past chair of the New Majority, San Diego; Rancho Santa Fe builder Douglas Barnhart; and Sacramento real estate executive Philip Oates, according to data on file with the California Secretary of State’s office.

But Faulconer has a serious liability in the form of former President Donald Trump, who was deeply unpopular among California voters even before the deadly Capitol siege last month. Faulconer supported Trump in the last election, and Democrats will be sure to circulate a 2019 Oval Office photo of the former San Diego mayor standing next to the former president. A Faulconer spokesperson soon after that meeting tried to refute Trump’s claim that Faulconer had thanked the president for having built the border wall.

Dan Newman, a political spokesperson for Newsom, dismissed Faulconer’s bid and said “he and all the other GOP Trump supporters” will battle each other while Newsom focuses on vaccine distribution and coronavirus recovery.

“It’s appropriate that he picked Groundhog Day to announce once again that he’s running,” Newman said of Faulconer. “He just keeps doing this at the start of each month, waiting vainly for people to pay attention.”

Faulconer on Monday repeatedly aimed to seize the mantle of bipartisanship — and resolutely sidestepped questions about some of the more incendiary issues facing his party, including the future of President Trump as a candidate, his impending impeachment trial and the whether the party’s leadership should remain loyal to him.

“I’m not focused on President Trump … he’s no longer president,” he said. “I think people are concerned about leadership, and not partisanship,” he said, arguing that “I was proud of … the fact that I won mayor twice in a majority Democrats city. I think that speaks volumes about my approach — and my ability to get results.”

On the current story roiling the Republican Party in Washington, D.C. — whether Georgia Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, a backer of the QAnon conspiracy theories, should be bounced from committee assignments — Faulconer said, “There’s no place for QAnon, period … and I’m focused on what we’re doing as Californians.”

Likewise, Faulconer refused to commit to saying whether, as a Republican governor, he might appoint a Republican to fill the U.S. Senate seat of Dianne Feinstein should she retire before her term ends — a seat that could change the balance of the Senate.

“I made a lot of appointments as mayor of San Diego,” he said. “I appointed Republicans and Democrats and independents … I love to appoint qualified great individuals. That’s always been my philosophy.”

He said he intends to spend the next months introducing himself to voters around the state with an aggressive statewide campaign.

“We are going to raise the money to be competitive … I’ve proven that,” he said. And “I know how to get Republican, Democrat and independent support. That’s what it’s going to take to win the state, and that is what I did as mayor of San Diego.”

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/states/california/story/2021/02/01/former-san-diego-mayor-officially-announces-gop-challenge-to-newsom-1361429

The rosier-than-expected projections were likely to inject even more debate into the discussions over the stimulus measure, emboldening those who have pushed Mr. Biden to scale back his plan. But they also indicated that there was little risk that another substantial package of federal aid could “overheat” the economy, and reflected the prolonged difficulties of shaking off the virus and returning to full levels of economic activity.

The Republicans’ $618 billion proposal would include many of the same elements as Mr. Biden’s plan, with $160 billion for vaccine distribution and development, coronavirus testing and the production of personal protective equipment; $20 billion to help schools reopen; more relief for small businesses; and additional aid to individuals. But it differs in ways large and small, omitting a federal minimum wage increase or direct aid to states and cities.

It would slash the direct payments to Americans, providing $1,000 instead of $1,400 and limiting them to the lowest income earners, excluding individuals who earned more than $50,000. It would also pare back federal jobless aid, which is set to lapse in March, setting weekly payments at $300 through June instead of $400 through September.

On Capitol Hill, top Democrats said they were worried a smaller package would not adequately meet the needs of struggling Americans.

“This proposal is an insult to the millions of workers and families struggling to survive this crisis,” Senator Ron Wyden, Democrat of Oregon and the incoming Finance Committee chairman, said of the Republican plan. “A bill that sets up yet another cliff for jobless workers in a few short months is a nonstarter.”

Hours before Mr. Biden sat down with the Republicans, Democratic leaders began laying the groundwork to move forward on their own, if necessary, with the president’s $1.9 trillion plan through a process known as budget reconciliation, which would allow it to bypass any Republican filibuster with a mere majority vote.

Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senator Chuck Schumer of New York, the majority leader, filed a joint budget resolution to begin the process, with plans for votes in the Senate by week’s end.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2021/02/01/us/politics/republicans-biden-coronavirus-stimulus.html