“This country is counting on it because it’s very interesting. … I won everything but Georgia, you know, and I won Georgia — I know that — by a lot, and the people know it, and you know, something happened there. I mean, something bad happened,” Trump told the chief investigator, Frances Watson, according to the recording of the six-minute call.

The former president goes on to tell Watson, “When the right answer comes out, you’ll be praised. … People will say, great, because that’s — that’s what it’s about, that ability to check it, and to make it right because everyone knows it’s wrong.”

The existence of this new audio recording comes amid a criminal probe of Trump’s efforts to overturn the results of the November election in Georgia, which he lost by 11,779 votes. At the center of that investigation, which was launched by the Fulton County district attorney’s office last month, is an hour-long phone call Trump had with Raffensperger on Jan. 2. In that call, Trump spewed baseless conspiracy theories and falsehoods about the election and pleaded with Raffensperger to “find” the exact number of votes he needed to win Georgia. Trump has denied wrongdoing, and his impeachment attorneys disputed he “acted improperly in that telephone call in any way.”

A spokesperson for Trump has not responded to ABC News’ request for comment.

Raffensperger announced on Dec. 14 that investigators in his office, in coordination with the Georgia Bureau of Investigation (GBI), would conduct a signature match audit of absentee ballot envelopes, saying there were specific and credible allegations that signature matching wasn’t done properly by election officials in the June primary. A total of 15,118 absentee ballot oath envelopes, which is where voters sign, were randomly selected to be audited.

The audit was completed on Dec. 29, and investigators only discovered two ballots that should not have been accepted as they were and should have undergone the “cure” process. But the GBI director also made clear that neither of those two ballots were fraudulently cast.

According to the recording, Watson assured Trump that her team and the GBI are “only interested in the truth and finding, you know, finding the information that’s based on the facts.”

ABC News previously reported on this call’s existence in January. At that time, a source familiar with the matter said Trump had told Watson to “find the fraud” and that she would be a “national hero” for it. Those exact words are not spoken in the audio recording of the call. In a follow-up conversation, that source told ABC News that that was how Watson had interpreted the president’s words and how she described the call to this source.

When the call was first reported on, ABC News did not identify the investigator because the source sharing the call’s details asked Watson remain unnamed due to the threat environment election officials were facing. In this recording, however, Trump identifies her by name.

ABC News has reached out to Watson for comment about the call and audio recording, but has not heard back. However, ABC’s Atlanta affiliate, WSB, also obtained the recording and spoke exclusively with Watson.

“It is something that is not expected, and as I mentioned in the call, I was shocked that he would take the time to do that,” Watson told WSB’s Mark Winne.

She also said she didn’t feel she was being pressured and that the investigative agency had requested the phone call.

In a statement, Raffensperger’s spokesperson, Ari Schaffer, said, “This phone call is just one more example of how Secretary Raffensperger’s office’s public comments also reflect what was said in one-on-one conversations: We would follow the law, count every legal vote and investigate any allegations of fraud. That’s exactly what we did, and how we arrived at the accurate final vote tally.”

In the recording of the call, Trump references Watson meeting with his chief of staff, Mark Meadows, and Watson indicates that happened a day prior to the call. ABC News previously confirmed Meadows was in Cobb County attempting to observe the audit taking place on Dec. 22. Raffensperger’s deputy, Jordan Fuchs, said at the time that she did not allow Meadows to enter the room where investigators were working, but did allow him to stand in the doorway.

Trump does much of the talking throughout this call, rambling at times about his electoral victories in other states, like Florida, Ohio, Alabama and Texas, implying those wins are evidence that his loss in Georgia was impossible.

“Whatever you can do, Frances, it would be — it’s a great thing. It’s an important thing for the country, so important. You have no idea, so important. And I very much appreciate it,” he said, according to the recording.

Near the end of the call, Trump asked Watson whether investigators will be working through Christmas, saying, “Because you know we have that date of the 6th, which is a very important day.”

Jan. 6 was the day Congress counted the electoral votes, the last step in the certification process of President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris’s victory.

That morning, Trump told a crowd of supporters at a rally, “I know that everyone here will soon be marching over to the Capitol building to peacefully and patriotically make your voices heard. … We fight like hell. And if you don’t fight like hell, you’re not going to have a country anymore.”

It wasn’t long after that when a mob of Trump supporters and violent extremists descended upon the U.S. Capitol, overcoming police to infiltrate the nation’s seat of government, forcing lawmakers and then-Vice President Mike Pence to seek safety as insurrectionists attempted to obstruct Congress and Pence from following through with their constitutional duty to affirm Biden’s win.

Source Article from https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/trump-insists-bad-happened-ga-election-call-investigator/story?id=76376706

Republicans are framing the situation as a crisis of Mr. Biden’s making, signaling an aim to use his immigration agenda as a political weapon against him in 2022. Representative Kevin McCarthy of California, the minority leader, is planning to lead other Republicans on a trip to the border to highlight the issue. Representative James R. Comer, Republican of Kentucky, on Wednesday called the increase in migration a signal “to the world that our immigration laws can be violated with little, if any, consequence.”

Mr. Biden, however, has continued to use a Trump-era rule to rapidly turn away most migrants at the border, with the exception of unaccompanied minors. The administration last week directed the shelters designed to hold the children to return to their normal capacity, despite the coronavirus pandemic.

In the scramble to find additional space for the children, the Biden administration is considering housing them at unused school buildings, military bases and even a NASA site, Moffett Federal Airfield in Mountain View, Calif., according to a memo obtained by The Times. The NASA site would “remain unoccupied but available for use if H.H.S. has an urgent need for additional shelter space,” the memo said.

Darryl Waller, a spokesman for NASA, confirmed in a statement that the administration was considering sheltering migrant children at “currently vacant property” at the site. “This effort will have no impact on NASA’s ability to conduct its primary missions,” he said.

The Health and Human Services Department did not respond to requests for comment.

Mr. Biden campaigned on a more humane approach to immigration at the border, one that would prioritize investing in Central America to deter illegal immigration. But it has had the effect of drawing those fleeing poverty and persecution who see a better chance to enter the United States than they had under the Trump administration.

“One of the things I think is important is we’ve seen surges before,” Ms. Jacobson said. “Surges tend to respond to hope. And there was a significant hope for a more humane policy.”

One part of the Obama administration’s response was creating the program that allowed Central American children to apply for protection from their home countries.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2021/03/10/us/politics/biden-border-migrant-children.html

The US House on Wednesday passed the huge $1.9tn coronavirus relief and economic stimulus package that represents Joe Biden’s first major legislative victory.

The massive legislation, a broadly popular bill with the public, received no Republican support. It aims to fulfill Democrats’ campaign promise to combat the coronavirus and revive a pummeled economy. It also includes sweeping anti-poverty measures that attempt to tackle deep-seated racial and gender inequalities in the American economy.

Here are the main elements of the bill:

$1,400 stimulus checks: A majority of Americans – as many as 85% of US households, according to Democrats – will receive direct payments of $1,400 per person. Individuals making less than $75,000 and married couples making less than $150,000 collectively would receive the checks. The payments would gradually decrease for those earning more than those income levels, with the benefit capped at $80,000 for individuals and $160,000 for married couples, who won’t receive checks. The threshold is lower than Biden had initially proposed, and was changed to accommodate objections from moderate Democrats in the Senate.

Unemployment benefits: The bill extends through early September the $300-a-week federal unemployment benefits approved in a previous aid package. Biden proposed expanding the supplement to $400 a week through August, but the Senate kept it at $300, while extending the benefit through September. It also included a provision to make the first $10,200 of unemployment benefits received in 2020 tax-free for households earning less than $150,000.

Child tax credit: The legislation significantly increases – and expands eligibility for – the child tax credit, a longtime progressive priority that Democrats are hoping to make permanent after the pandemic. Under the bill, the tax credit would jump from $2,000 a child under 17 to $3,600 for children up to age five and $3,000 for children aged between six and 17. Taken together with other benefits, it is estimated the expansion will halve the number of children living in poverty in America.

Health insurance subsidies: The bill would temporarily increase financial assistance for health coverage purchased through marketplaces established by the Obama administration’s Affordable Care Act, known as Obamacare. It also aims to help those who are unemployed keep their health coverage, as well as provides additional funding for military veterans’ healthcare and other health programs.

Vaccine distribution and testing: The bill provides tens of billions of dollars to speed up vaccine distribution and administration, as well as increase coronavirus testing and enhance contact tracing and genomic sequencing.

Pandemic response: The bill sends $350bn to state, local and tribal governments, to help offset deep budget shortfalls as a result of efforts to combat the pandemic. It also includes $130bn to help schools reopen safely by reducing class sizes and modifying classrooms to improve ventilation and social distancing. Colleges and universities would receive $40bn to help cover the cost of pandemic-related expenses. Businesses would also get funding, including under a new program to help bars and restaurants hurt by Covid lockdowns.

Rental, mortgage and food assistance: The legislation also includes a number of other provisions that would provide assistance for food and housing, including money for low-income Americans to afford rent and pay their utilities, and aid to homeowners struggling to pay their mortgages because of the pandemic.

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/mar/10/us-covid-stimulus-relief-bill-biden-package

Sen. Rob Portman, R-Ohio, joined “Your World” Wednesday to discuss the state of the Republican Party after former President Donald Trump fired off a cease-and-desist letter to the Republican National Committee to quit using his name on behalf of candidates that he said are “RINOS.”

PORTMAN: People will use his name in their solicitations and I’m sure many will. He is very popular among the Republican base … As a party, we have to get back to the policy, the issues where the American people generally agree with us. This is where the Republicans did well in 2020, except at the top.

NEIL CAVUTO: But you’re not on the same page, right? These battles between you and the former president keep happening. And given the enmity between Trump and [the] Senate [Republican] leader, you have to wonder whether Mitch McConnell is in a separate universe and Trump’s backers are in a separate universe from him. I’m wondering, where is this going? Are you worried about it?

PORTMAN: With all due respect, I disagree with you that it’s about policy. Mitch McConnell and President [Trump] differed very little on policy. It’s not a policy debate. This is a personality issue. 

CAVUTO: Do you think it’s hurting your party?

PORTMAN: It has the potential to hurt the party. It’s already making it more divided. But let’s get back to the policies. That’s where we agree, that’s where the American people want us to focus. Our job as a party is to help organize the democracy around certain ideas. You have organizers on the left and the right of our democracy. We’re the ones that should be saying the deficit does matter. Tax reform is important to drive jobs and tax cuts hurt jobs. We’re the ones that say energy independence is a good thing, not a bad thing.

CLICK HERE FOR THE FULL INTERVIEW

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/rob-portman-gop-divide-policy-personality

“I would not have taken this job if I thought that politics would have any influence over prosecutions and investigations,” Garland told lawmakers at his hearing. He said that he and Biden had not discussed an ongoing investigation into the tax affairs of Hunter Biden, the president’s son.

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., cheered Garland’s nomination ahead of the vote on Wednesday.

“America can breathe a sigh of relief that we’re finally going to have someone like Merrick Garland leading the Justice Department. Someone with integrity, independence, respect for the rule of law and credibility on both sides of the aisle,” Schumer said from the Senate floor. “He understands that the job of the attorney general is one to protect rule of law, unlike the previous attorneys general under President Trump.”

Before Biden tapped Garland to be attorney general, the centrist lawyer was nominated by former President Barack Obama to a seat on the Supreme Court in 2016 to replace the late Justice Antonin Scalia. Republicans at the time controlled the Senate and refused to hold a hearing on his nomination.

Several other top Justice Department nominees are still being considered by the Senate, including Vanita Gupta, Kristen Clarke and Lisa Monaco. Gupta and Monaco faced questions from senators Tuesday.

Gupta, who led the Justice Department’s civil rights division under Obama, is nominated to become associate attorney general. Clarke is nominated to be the head of the civil rights division. Biden nominated Monaco to be deputy attorney general.

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Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2021/03/10/merrick-garland-confirmed-as-us-attorney-general-by-senate.html

A massive $1.9 trillion coronavirus stimulus bill containing $1,400 checks for most Americans along with money for vaccines, testing, schools, states and lower-income families passed the U.S. House Wednesday, its final stop before reaching President Joe Biden’s desk.

Biden, who made the stimulus bill his first major legislative initiative since taking office in January, said he would sign the measure on Friday.

“For weeks now, an overwhelming percentage of Americans – Democrats, independents, and Republicans – have made it clear they support the American Rescue Plan,” Biden said in a statement after the vote. “Today, with final passage in the House of Representatives, their voice has been heard.”

During the debate, Rep. Bill Pascrell Jr., D-9th Dist., said he had heard from constituents asking for assistance to get through the coronavirus-induced economic downturn.

“It’s up to us to help Americans who can’t buy their groceries or pay the rent and are not in prison,” Pascrell said on the House floor. “It’s up to us to protect seniors in nursing homes. It’s up to us to ensure that every American has quality health insurance and is able to get vaccinated.”

“Americans are crying out for help,” he said. “Can you hear them? They have given us the burden to act.”

The bill, which the House needed to take up again after the Senate amended it over the weekend, passed along party lines, 220-211. Only one Democrat, Rep. Jared Golden of Maine, opposed the legislation.

No Republicans in either chamber voted for the measure, which included funds to curb the spread of the virus through vaccines and testing, and to pump billions of dollars into an American economy ravaged by the pandemic.

“This isn’t a rescue bill,” said House Republican Leader Kevin McCarthy of California. “It isn’t a relief bill. It’s a laundry list of leftwing priorities that predate the pandemic and do not meet the needs of American families.”

Rep. Frank Pallone Jr., chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, said the Republicans got it wrong.

“If you want to fight the virus, you should be voting yes on this bill,” said Pallone, D-6th Dist., during the debate. “Unlike under President Trump when we had no national plan to fight the virus, under President Biden, for the first time, we have a national plan to fight the virus that does not force state and local governments to compete against each other.”

The $1,400 direct payments would go to individuals making up to $75,000 and $2,800 to couples filing jointly making up to $150,000. They would phase out and end for individuals making more than $80,000 and couples making more than $160,000.

Those on unemployment would receive an extra $300 a week through Sept. 6, and those making less than $150,000 would not have to pay federal income taxes on the first $10,200 of unemployment benefits for individuals and $20,400 for married couples. New Jersey does not tax unemployment insurance benefits.

White House press secretary Jen Psaki said the payments should go out by the end of the month, and they will not contain Biden’s signature, unlike the earlier checks that bore the name of Donald Trump.

“We are doing everything in our power to expedite the payments and not delay them, which is why the president’s name will not appear on the memo line of this round of stimulus checks,” Psaki said Tuesday at her daily press briefing. “He didn’t think that was a priority or a necessary step. His focus was on getting them out as quickly as possible.”

Thanks in part to the expanded tax credits for lower-income households with or without children, the legislation would lift an estimated 16 million Americans out of poverty, according to the Urban Institute, a research group.

The expanded child tax credit alone would bring more than 4 million children of poverty, including 89,000 in New Jersey, according to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, a progressive research group.

CORONAVIRUS RESOURCES: Live map tracker | Newsletter | Homepage

The legislation would provide $350 billion in long-sought aid for state and local governments, including $10.2 billion for New Jersey and its municipalities.

“This is a big positive deal for New Jersey,” Gov. Phil Murphy said Wednesday at his coronavirus press briefing. “There’s no other way to put it.”

The president and chief executive of the New Jersey Chamber of Commerce, Tom Bracken, also applauded the House action.

“It helps New Jersey in many ways, providing vital aid to those impacted by the pandemic,”  Bracken said.

Studies by the Brookings Institution and S&P Global said the legislation would return the economy to pre-pandemic levels this summer, and Moody’s Analytics said the plan would help create 7.5 million jobs this year and another 2.5 million next year, fully recovering all the jobs lost due to the coronavirus. More than 150 business leaders endorsed the spending plan.

Republicans objected to the Democrats’ decision to use a procedure known as reconciliation to consider the bill, allowing the majority to pass the legislation on a party-line vote without the threat of a filibuster.

The Republicans used the same procedure in 2017 to spend the same $1.9 trillion to cut taxes. That bill, called the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, also targeted New Jersey and other high-tax Democratic-run states by capping the federal deduction for state and local taxes.

“The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act cut taxes for everybody but mostly for high-income people and corporations,” said Howard Gleckman, a senior fellow with the Tax Policy Center, a research group. “This one cuts taxes mostly for low and moderate-income people.”

The unanimous GOP opposition on Capitol Hill contrasted with the bill’s strong support among Americans. In a CNN poll released Wednesday as the House prepared to vote, 61% backed the stimulus bill while 37% opposed it. The $1,400 stimulus checks were supported, 76%-23%.

Among Republicans, 55% supported the checks and 45% opposed them, and among those who leaned Republican, 59% were in favor and 40% were against the direct payments. The poll of 1,009 adults was conducted March 3-8 and had a margin of error of plus or minus 3.6 percentage points.

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Jonathan D. Salant may be reached at jsalant@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him at @JDSalant.

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Source Article from https://www.nj.com/coronavirus/2021/03/stimulus-check-update-us-house-passes-coronavirus-relief-bill-with-1400-payments-and-sends-it-to-biden.html

The aide never filed a formal complaint about the encounter; the governor’s counsel learned about the allegation earlier this week from other employees in the office, according to The Times Union.

The newspaper has based its reporting on an anonymous source with knowledge of the allegation.

The new allegation is certain to aggravate the most tumultuous crisis of Mr. Cuomo’s political career. The governor is facing intense scrutiny of his conduct toward women and is under escalating pressure to resign after two former aides, Lindsey Boylan and Charlotte Bennett, accused him last month of sexually harassing them.

Ms. Boylan, who is running for Manhattan borough president, published an essay on Feb. 24 outlining a series of unsettling experiences with Mr. Cuomo, including a time in which she said he kissed her on the lips without her consent after a private meeting in his New York City office in 2018. Mr. Cuomo’s office has denied the allegations.

Shortly after, Ms. Bennett told The New York Times that Mr. Cuomo, 63, made sexual overtures during a one-on-one meeting in his State Capitol office in June amid the pandemic. Ms. Bennett, now 25, said the governor asked her whether she had sex with older men and whether she had intimacy issues because of her experience as a sexual assault survivor.

Disturbed by the remarks, Ms. Bennett told the governor’s chief of staff about the encounter and provided a lengthy statement to a special counsel to the governor. She was transferred to another job farther away from the governor’s office before quitting in November.

The allegations — and those of other women who have since described other inappropriate conduct from the governor — have rocked Albany, leading a growing number of Democrats to join Republicans in calling for the governor to be impeached or to step down. On Sunday, Andrea Stewart-Cousins, the majority leader in the State Senate, became the most powerful Democrat in the state to call on Mr. Cuomo to resign, leading many others in her conference to follow suit.

The governor, a third-term Democrat, has apologized for workplace remarks that he says may have hurt or offended women, insisting he never meant to make anyone feel uncomfortable and never touched anyone inappropriately.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2021/03/10/nyregion/cuomo-sexual-harassment.html

Texas mayor Don McLaughlin Jr. said the crisis at the U.S.-Mexico border is going to get bad fast and warned the 2019 immigration surge will seem like a “cakewalk” compared to what will happen under President Biden.

McLaughlin Jr. said Wednesday during an appearance on “America Reports” that his city of Uvalde is experiencing a dramatic surge in immigrant-related apprehensions and crimes, including an increase in high-speed car chases between police and smugglers.

“We’re having 10 to 12 chases, high-speed chases, through our communities a week now,” McLaughlin said. “We’ve never seen this before.”

BIDEN ADVISER ADMITS IMMIGRATION POLICY ‘MAY HAVE DRIVEN’ MIGRANT SURGE, ENCOURAGED ‘SMUGGLERS’

McLaughlin added the chases ranged anywhere from 95 to 105 miles an hour and also noted an increase in break-ins throughout the region by illegal immigrants. He said fault lies with the federal government for failing to anticipate and handle the rise in migrant crossings.

McLaughlin added the Biden administration needs to shut down the border immediately and have people enter the country through legal processes, or local governments in Texas will continue to deal with the fallout, including an influx of COVID-positive migrants.

Despite this, the Biden administration continues to reject calling the situation a “crisis.”

Asked about the issue during her press conference Tuesday, White House press secretary Jen Psaki pushed back on adding labels to the “challenging” situation.

Psaki has maintained the administration sought to abide by COVID-19 protocols, but it’s unclear how much authorities were screening migrants for the virus.

According to Rep. Henry Cuellar, D-Texas, last week, thousands of migrants haven’t been tested. 

“Over 10,000 people have come in through the lower Rio Grande Valley,” Cuellar said to KTXS 12. “Those folks are not being tested.”

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Border agents disagreed, telling the outlet that “CBP personnel conduct initial inspections for symptoms or risk factors associated with COVID-19 and consult with onsite medical personnel, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, or local health systems as appropriate.”

Fox News’ Sam Dorman contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/us/texas-mayor-border-bad-fast-biden-immigration

With the House and Senate both approving the $1.9 trillion coronavirus relief bill, the only thing separating Americans from a $1,400 stimulus check is a signature from President Joe Biden.

The American Rescue Plan Act is expected to be signed by President Biden on Friday, and stimulus payments could start being sent out within days of him signing. That means Americans could start seeing the money as early as next week.

The first people to receive the checks are likely those who have direct deposit set up with the IRS. That’s because the government already has their account information on file and doesn’t need to go through the process of printing, sorting and mailing physical checks or pre-paid debit cards.

Americans who don’t have direct deposit will have to wait for the payments to be produced and sent, a process that can be time consuming.

Other issues have cropped up in the past, too. The last round of checks saw taxpayers complaining that payments had been deposited into the wrong bank accounts, which resulted in a delay in receiving the funds.

To be eligible for the full $1,400, individuals must have an adjusted gross income (AGI) below $75,000. Married couples filing jointly must have an AGI under $150,000 to receive the full $2,800.

The payments are based on either 2019 or 2020 income, depending on when a taxpayer files their 2020 tax return.

Check out: Use this calculator to see exactly how much your third coronavirus stimulus check could be worth

Don’t miss: The best credit cards for building credit of 2021

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2021/03/10/when-will-irs-send-1400-dollar-stimulus-check.html

White House coordinator for the Southern Border Ambassador Roberta Jacobson outlined a plan to provide $4 billion in relief to Central America and tamp down corruption amid a fresh surge in migration. She stressed, in English and Spanish, “The border is not open.”

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White House coordinator for the Southern Border Ambassador Roberta Jacobson outlined a plan to provide $4 billion in relief to Central America and tamp down corruption amid a fresh surge in migration. She stressed, in English and Spanish, “The border is not open.”

Alex Wong/Getty Images

The Biden administration is making a new push to address the causes of migration from Central America as it faces a surge at the southern border.

President Biden wants “explicit commitments” from Central American governments that they are fighting corruption as part of that effort. Therefore, his administration’s proposed $4 billion in U.S. aid to the region wouldn’t go to government leaders if approved by Congress, but to communities and international organizations to address economic opportunity, climate change mitigation, inequality and violence.

Amb. Roberta Jacobson, the White House coordinator for the Southern Border, made the announcement on Wednesday as the administration has been under increasing pressure – especially from the right – to do something to stem the thousands of migrants rushing to the United States border fleeing violence and poverty.

Customs and Border Protection senior official Troy Miller told reporters Wednesday that border crossings spiked by 28 percent last month to more than 100,400 people.

The number of unaccompanied children stopped along the border has tripled in the last two weeks, according to multiple outlets.

President Biden was briefed on the border situation Wednesday by officials who visited some of these facilities where minors are being held, according to press secretary Jen Psaki. She said they mostly discussed steps to expedite the process of getting kids out of U.S. Customs and Border Protection facilities, into shelters with better accommodations and welfare services and eventually into homes that have been vetted.

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, a Republican, has accused the Biden administration of downplaying a growing “border crisis.” He said he will deploy 500 National Guard troops “to fill the gap” left by the federal government.

After four years of Trump’s enforcement-focused policies, the Biden administration is focused on “changing to a more humane and efficient system,” Jacobson said. But that has drawn criticism that the administration’s policies are drawing people to the border.

“When you look at the issue of mixed messages, it is difficult at times to convey both hope in the future and the danger that is now,” she said. “And that is what we’re trying to do. I will certainly agree that we are trying to walk and chew gum at the same time. We are trying to convey to everybody in the region that we will have legal processes for people in the future.”

One of those ways is to develop more legal avenues to seek asylum so that migrants don’t feel they have to choose the “irregular route.” Jacobson said, for example, that the Biden administration is re-starting the Central American Minors program to reunite children with a parent who is legally in the United States. She says when the Trump administration ended the program there were around 3,000 children approved for travel left stranded.

But Jacobson stressed that people should not try and migrate to the United States across the border, for now.

“La frontera no esta abierta,” she said, repeating multiple times in Spanish that “the border is not open.”

The steps being taken are not expected to have an immediate impact, but Theresa Cardinal Brown, a former senior adviser on immigration in both the Bush and Obama administrations, said that if the administration wants fewer migrants to come, they must help them be able to stay where they are.

“You can’t just look at immigration as either push or pull factors, and which is more important,” she said. “The answer is, it’s all part of a decision that a migrant makes. They have agency. They go on the information they have and their hopes and dreams.”

But she said their first decision is, “I have to leave.”

The problems in Central America are far reaching. Chronic poverty in Guatemala Honduras and El Salvador has only worsened amid the pandemic and two devastating hurricanes that left hundreds of thousands displaced last year.

Leon Fresco, a former deputy assistant attorney general during the Obama administration, called the moves announced Wednesday a “first draft” to try to explain a long term plan for how the administration is going to address individuals trying to enter the United States through the southern border.

He noted that Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas will be on Capitol Hill next week to testify before lawmakers and will likely want to have a more defined answer as to their processes.

“The absolute challenge this administration is facing is whether there is a way to mitigate the numbers of people who will seek to enter the U.S. through the southern border while humanely processing people and not simply excluding them or otherwise making the process overly draconian,” Fresco said.

The move also marks a dramatic shift from the Trump administration policies toward the leaders of the Northern Triangle, including El Salvador, Honduras and Guatemala. President Trump, in line with his “America First” policies, paid little attention to the ongoing issues of corruption in the region.

“We also think it’s really important that these countries make commitments, really explicit commitments to advancing on anti-corruption, and in some places that will be hard to do,” Jacobson said.

The Honduran and Guatemalan governments undercut international anti-corruption efforts, and Guatemala forced into exile a former attorney general running for president on an anti-corruption platform.

Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernandez is suspected of drug trafficking, and the president of El Salvador, Nayib Bukele, has repeatedly ignored supreme court rulings for exceeding the limits of his power.

Benjamin Gedan, who served as National Security Council director for Latin America during the Obama administration, said it will be impossible to improve the investment climate in Central America and create jobs without controlling corruption.

“Central American leaders got a free pass from the Trump administration, and that legacy is plain to see,” he said. “Foreign aid is not bags of cash handed to foreign leaders.”

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2021/03/10/975758760/the-border-is-not-open-biden-administration-seeks-foreign-aid-to-slow-migration

Merrick Garland has been confirmed as America’s top law enforcement officer, a boost for Joe Biden’s drive against racial discrimination in the criminal justice system.

Garland’s rise to attorney general, approved 70-30 by the US Senate in a strongly bipartisan vote, turns the page on former president Donald Trump’s harsh “law and order” rhetoric and efforts to bend the justice department to his will.

It also marks a poignant second chance for the 68-year-old judge who, nominated to the supreme court by then president Barack Obama in 2016, was denied a hearing by Senate Republicans on the pretext that it was an election year.

This time around his confirmation had been widely expected, especially after a relatively uneventful hearing where Republicans landed few punches. Mitch McConnell, who was Garland’s nemesis in 2016, told reporters last Tuesday that he would back him for attorney general.

“After Donald Trump spent four years – four long years – subverting the powers of the justice department for his own political benefit, treating the attorney general like his own personal defense lawyer, America can breathe a sigh of relief that we’re going to have someone like Merrick Garland leading the justice department,” said the majority leader, Chuck Schumer, ahead of the vote. “Someone with integrity, independence, respect for the rule of law and credibility on both sides of the aisle.”

McConnell said he was voting to confirm Garland because of “his long reputation as a straight shooter and a legal expert” and that his “left-of-center perspective” was still within the legal mainstream.

“Let’s hope our incoming attorney general applies that no-nonsense approach to the serious challenges facing the Department of Justice and our nation,” McConnell said.

Garland faces a daunting inbox at a justice department that critics say was left in tatters by Trump and his own attorney general, William Barr. He must attempt to restore morale while addressing demands for racial justice in the wake of last year’s police killing of George Floyd and widespread Black Lives Matter protests.

At last week’s confirmation hearing in Washington, Garland stressed his commitment to combating racial discrimination in policing, arguing that America does not “yet have equal justice” as well as confronting the rise in extremist violence and domestic terror threats.

He said his first briefing as attorney general would be focused on the insurrection at the US Capitol on 6 January. He told the committee he fears that the riots were “not necessarily a one-off” and pledged to provide prosecutors with all the resources they need to bring charges over the mob violence.

“We must do everything in the power of the justice department to prevent this kind of interference with policies of American democratic institutions,” he said.

Born in Chicago and educated at Harvard, Garland is a federal appellate judge and former prosecutor. He held senior positions at the justice department including as a supervisor in the prosecution of the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing, which killed 168 people and led to the execution of Timothy McVeigh.

Last week, reflecting on the rise in hate crimes and extremist groups, he said: “I certainly agree that we are facing a more dangerous period than we faced in Oklahoma City.”

Garland assured senators that the justice department would remain politically independent – a line that often became blurred under Trump and Barr. He emphasized that he had never spoken to Biden about a federal tax investigation into the president’s son, Hunter Biden, and that he did not expect interference from anyone.

“The president nominates the attorney general to be the lawyer, not for any individual, but for the people of the United States,” he said.

At one point in the hearing, Garland fought back tears after Cory Booker of New Jersey asked him about his own family’s experience of hateful extremism.

“I come from a family where my grandparents fled antisemitism and persecution,” the judge said. “The country took us in, and protected us, and I feel an obligation to the country to pay back, and this is the highest, best use of my own set of skills to pay back.

“So I very much want to be the kind of attorney general that you’re saying I could become, and I’ll do my best to become that kind of attorney general.”

Associated Press contributed to this report

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/mar/10/merrick-garland-confirmed-attorney-general

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2021/03/10/covid-stimulus-bill-passes-house-heads-joe-biden-signature/4622954001/

Massachusetts is preparing to make a big change to how appointments are booked at the state’s seven COVID-19 mass vaccination sites.

Thursday will be the last time that the current system is used. State officials said that more than 40,000 new first-dose appointments and 40,000 second-dose appointments will be posted Thursday morning, but this will be the final time that eligible residents will need to rush to the website to snatch those appointments.

In past weeks, the available appointments have filled quickly and users have reported crashes or extreme wait times in the “digital waiting room.”

Starting Friday, the state’s seven mass vaccination sites will be switched to a new system.

All residents will be able to preregister for vaccinations on a system that state officials say will be built on a platform powered by Google.

Expected to launch mid-morning on Friday, the new system will ask residents to supply their contact information and attest to the various factors considered for eligibility, including age, medical conditions and occupation. Individuals will then be added to a queue and will be contacted when it is their turn.

State officials said individuals will be contacted once to confirm their preregistration and then weekly to confirm whether they want to remain in the queue. Anyone who gets vaccinated outside the state mass vaccination sites will be asked to remove themselves from the preregistration list.

When someone becomes eligible for a vaccine under state guidelines, they will be contacted by the system based on the order in which they preregistered and on dose availability at the nearest mass vaccination site. Officials said that individuals will get one notification on the day before they can sign up and then will get a link good for 24 hours that can be used to book an appointment for the following week.

Anyone who does not utilize their link will be returned to the preregistration queue, officials said.

While the system will launch only for the state’s mass vaccination sites, officials said other vaccination clinics may be added to the system in April.

Officials said the system will allow residents to help someone else get in the queue and the state’s 2-1-1 hotline will continue to assist those who cannot use the internet to access the system.

The new system will be used to connect teachers and school staff with vaccination appointments on four upcoming days which will be designated for educators. Up to 25,000 first doses are expected to be available at mass vaccination sites for them on March 27, April 3, April 10 and April 11.

Massachusetts will receive about 155,000 first doses of the authorized vaccines this week, and the size of weekly shipments are not expected to increase this month. The state redistributes those doses among mass vaccination sites, hospitals, regional health collaboratives, community health centers and local boards of health.

The federal government also distributes about 95,000 doses directly to retail pharmacies and another 19,000 to certain community health centers. Those doses are not accounted for in the state’s weekly shipment and the appointments are not booked through the state system.

Massachusetts vaccination progress:

Source Article from https://www.wcvb.com/article/massachusetts-covid-vaccine-preregistration-system-announcement-march-10-2021/35794895

The Biden administration should be “embarrassed” about their immigration policies after “inheriting the most secure border” in decades, Fox News contributor Tom Homan said on Wednesday.

“They should be embarrassed. The American people can do the math. The apprehensions are over 100,000, that’s triple of what it was a year ago under Trump policies. Actions speak louder than words,” the former acting ICE director told “Fox & Friends.”

“They can say anything they want to say. But when you release thousands of people in the United States, some even have COVID and you don’t want to detain them. This is a clear message to the world.”

TEXAS DEMOCRAT KNOCKS BIDEN OVER IMMIGRATION POLICY, SENDING DELEGATION TO THE STATE WITHOUT NOTICE

Biden’s administration has wound down the Migrant Protection Protocols (MPP), ended construction of the border wall, and restarted catch-and-release – by which migrants are released into the U.S. interior. That practice was ended by the Trump administration in 2019. 

It has kept in place Title 42 protections – which allow for migrants to be turned around quickly due to the coronavirus pandemic – but it has so far not sought to apply them to unaccompanied children.

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, R., along with the Department of Public Safety (DPS) announced Saturday it will begin “Operation Lone Star” in response to what they claim is a lack of response and loosening of immigration policy from the federal government. The program will send law enforcement personnel and resources to “high threat areas” along the border “to deny Mexican Cartels and other smugglers the ability to move drugs and people into Texas.”

Homan said that the Biden administration “inherited” the most secure border he’s seen in his 35-year career.

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“So they’re lying to the American people,” Homan said.

Homan slammed the Biden administration for “crippling ICE.”

“Look, it doesn’t take a genius to realize when you make promises that we’re going to have amnesty. We’re going to fix DACA. We’ll give you free health care. They already crippled ICE. 90% of their authority has been taken away because there’s no interior enforcement. They’re being released as quickly as possible from the border.”

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/homan-biden-embarrassed-border-crisis-trump-secure