Caitlyn Jenner, seen here speaking at the Women’s March LA in January 2020, has announced she is running for governor of California in a recall election that could happen this year.

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Caitlyn Jenner, seen here speaking at the Women’s March LA in January 2020, has announced she is running for governor of California in a recall election that could happen this year.

Chelsea Guglielmino/Getty Images

Caitlyn Jenner, the Olympic gold medalist with a reality-show family, announced Friday that she will run for governor of California. The state’s Democratic governor, Gavin Newsom, is likely to face a recall election this year.

Jenner, a 71-year-old Republican, said she had filed paperwork to run for the office.

“Californians want better and need better from their politicians,” she wrote on Twitter.

“Taking on entrenched Sacramento politicians and the special interests that fund them requires a fighter who isn’t afraid to do what is right. I am a proven winner and the only outsider who can put an end to Gavin Newsom’s disastrous time as governor.”

Jenner criticized Newsom’s handling of the coronavirus pandemic, which has been unpopular with many in the state.

“Small businesses have been devastated because of the over-restrictive lockdown. An entire generation of children have lost a year of education and have been prevented from going back to school, participating in activities, or socializing with their friends,” she wrote.

If the recall effort gathers enough signatures to trigger an election, as Newsom says he expects it will, Californians will be asked to cast two votes: whether to remove the governor and to choose a replacement from a list of candidates.

There have been several gubernatorial recall efforts in recent years, but only one reached the signature threshold. In 2003, Democratic Gov. Gray Davis was recalled, and Republican Arnold Schwarzenegger replaced him.

A Politico analysis of Jenner’s voting record found that she did not vote in the 2016 election won by former President Donald Trump, and voted only nine times in California’s 26 statewide elections since 2000.

The Los Angeles Times noted that the GOP has not won a statewide election in California since 2006 — but it can take far fewer votes to win the governorship through a recall than a normal election. There can be scores of replacement candidates on the ballot (as there were in 2003); Newsom can’t appear on the replacement ballot, and it’s possible no prominent Democrat will run. And unlike a regular election, there is no primary.

Though Jenner is among the most prominent transgender people in the U.S., other LGBTQ activists weren’t necessarily cheering her entry into the race.

“Caitlyn Jenner has no real support,” LGBTQ activist Charlotte Clymer tweeted. “I don’t care about her candidacy. I do care about the ways in which her asinine views will be weaponized against trans people and the ways in which transphobia will go unchecked. This is purely a vanity campaign, and it’s incredibly selfish.”

Jenner won the gold medal in the decathlon at the 1976 Olympics. Jenner’s daughters with Kris Jenner — Kendall and Kylie Jenner — are part of the famous family on the long-running reality series Keeping Up With the Kardashians, alongside Kris Jenner’s children with the late attorney Robert Kardashian.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2021/04/23/990230017/caitlyn-jenner-announces-run-for-california-governor

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Source Article from https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2021-04-23/biden-tells-erdogan-he-will-call-armenian-massacre-a-genocide

A special review panel says independent judge advocates, not commanding officers, should decide whether to pursue legal charges in sexual assault cases in what would be a break with longstanding policy. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin is now reviewing the findings.

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A special review panel says independent judge advocates, not commanding officers, should decide whether to pursue legal charges in sexual assault cases in what would be a break with longstanding policy. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin is now reviewing the findings.

Saul Loeb/AFP via Getty Images

A special Pentagon panel is recommending a seismic shift in how the U.S. military handles sexual assault cases, saying independent judge advocates, not commanding officers, should decide whether to pursue legal charges in such cases.

Such a shift would run counter to years of military practice. The Pentagon has long resisted the idea of taking sexual assault cases outside of the normal chain of command.

The decision of whether to put the panel’s recommendations into practice now rests with Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin, who created the Independent Review Commission on Sexual Assault in the Military on President Biden’s orders.

News of the recommendations emerged just 30 days into the panel’s 90-day investigation. It was first reported by The Associated Press; a Pentagon official then confirmed the details of the report to NPR.

“Sexual assault and harassment remain persistent and corrosive problems across the total force,” Austin said when he created the panel. “I expect every member of our total force to be part of the solution and leaders — both civilian and military — across the Department to take direct accountability to drive meaningful change.”

Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, D-N.Y., and other lawmakers have pushed the Defense Department to change the way it approaches sexual assault within its ranks, saying that the existing approaches have not worked.

The number of sexual assaults reported in the military has persistently risen over the years. The problem reached crisis proportions in 2019 when the Pentagon reported that around 20,500 service members — 13,000 women and 7,500 men — had experienced some form of sexual assault. The figure was 37% higher from the previous full report two years earlier.

Gillibrand is now the chair of the Senate Armed Services Personnel Subcommittee, which has jurisdiction over matters relating to active and reserve military personnel, including military justice.

When she gained that assignment earlier this year, the senator promised to reform the military justice system “in order to end the ongoing epidemic of sexual assault in the military.”

As Biden ordered a review in February, Gillibrand and Rep. Jackie Speier, D-Calif., who heads the Senate subcommittee’s House counterpart, urged the president to ensure the panel would be organized and run by the Executive Office of the President, rather than the Pentagon. In the past, the lawmakers said, the military had “routinely stacked similar panels with members who will toe the Department’s line.”

Accountability for sexual assault in the military “is vanishingly rare,” Gillibrand and Speier said in a letter to Biden. They also noted that despite the high number of cases, fewer than 670 courts-martial were initiated for sex-related offenses in 2018, with 203 resulting in convictions.

“This is a broken system that punishes victims while allowing most perpetrators to escape any consequences for their actions,” the lawmakers said.

The Pentagon’s independent commission was asked to come up with what the Defense Department described as “bold action” to improve the way the military approaches sexual assault and harassment, hoping to prevent incidents and boost accountability for following the rules.

The Pentagon review panel is led by Lynn Rosenthal, who was the White House adviser on violence against women during the Obama administration.

On a broader scale, the commission will also identify ways to improve the support and care given to victims of sexual assault as well as changes in military culture.

NPR’s Tom Bowman contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2021/04/23/990174459/military-panel-urges-taking-sexual-assault-cases-out-of-commanders-control

Former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin is scheduled to be sentenced June 16 after his conviction this week on charges including second-degree unintentional murder in the death of George Floyd, a Minnesota court said Friday.

Chauvin’s sentencing will take place at 1:30 p.m. CT, according to the court schedule, NBC News reported.

The calendar update came three days after a jury found Chauvin, 45, guilty on charges of second-degree murder, third-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter, all related to Floyd’s death.

Chauvin’s attorneys will have 60 days to appeal the outcome, NBC reported.

Floyd, a 46-year-old Black man, died after Chauvin kneeled on his neck for more than nine minutes. Video of the incident sparked a nationwide protest movement against police brutality and systemic racism.

The most serious charge against Chauvin carries a maximum sentence of 40 years in prison, though sentencing guidelines often call for much less prison time than the maximum.

Chauvin’s sentencing date is scheduled to come more than eight weeks after the anonymous 12-member jury delivered its verdict, following about 10 hours of deliberation at the end of the three-week trial in Minnesota.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2021/04/23/derek-chauvin-sentencing-date-set-for-june-after-murder-conviction.html

Before the Nanggala, only two submarines have gone missing for extended periods of time in recent memory, one from Argentina and the other from North Korea.

In another case, in 2000, a Russian Navy submarine, the Kursk, sank to the seabed after an explosion on board. All 118 people died after rescue teams took days to gain access to the submarine, and oxygen ran out for the 23 sailors who had survived the blast.

On Monday, an Indian ship, which is outfitted with a mini submersible that can conduct underwater rescues, should arrive in the Bali Sea to help with the search effort. If the backup air filtration system is fully operational, Indonesian defense experts said that any surviving sailors may be able to last until then.

“I am optimistic,” said Ms. Bakrie, who is friends with some of the crew on board the Nanggala. “But, again, if it’s 700 meters, forget it. Nothing can help.”

John Ismay contributed reporting.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2021/04/23/world/asia/indonesia-submarine-missing.html

Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny, shown here in a February court session, reportedly has lost more than 30 pounds since his arrest.

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Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny, shown here in a February court session, reportedly has lost more than 30 pounds since his arrest.

Alexander Zemlianichenko/AP

Russian jailed opposition leader Alexei Navalny said Friday he is calling off a more than three-week prison hunger strike that doctors say left him near death.

Navalny, a fierce critic of Russian President Vladimir Putin who began refusing food on March 31 to demand medical care for leg and back pain, said in an Instagram post that on advice from doctors, he would take 24 days — about the same amount of time as the actual strike — to reverse it gradually.

He thanked the “good people” in Russia and internationally.

“My heart is full of love and gratitude for you,” he said, thanking “good, not indifferent people around the world.”

Navalny, 44, has been jailed since January when he was taken into custody after returning from Germany, where he received treatment for a nerve-agent poisoning that he says was ordered by Putin.

A judge later sent Navalny to prison, saying he broke the terms of an old conviction that many saw as politically motivated. Since his arrest, he has reportedly lost more than 15 kilograms (33 pounds) in prison.

“I am not withdrawing my request to allow the necessary specialist to see me,” the opposition leader said. “I’m losing sensation in parts of my arms and legs, and I want to understand what it is and how to treat it.”

“But considering the progress made and all the circumstances, I’m beginning to come out of my hunger strike,” he added.

He said that public pressure had helped get him examined by civilian doctors twice in recent days, the second time right before nationwide protests of support on Wednesday.

On Sunday, Navalny’s doctor said he could die “at any minute” if the hunger strike continued.

Physician Yaroslav Ashikhmin said test results that Navalny’s family shared with him revealed the risk of cardiac arrest and damage to the kidneys.

On Monday, Navalny was transferred to an infirmary in a different prison from where he is normally housed to undergo what prison authorities described as “vitamin therapy.”

Navalny’s condition has been met with concern by world leaders, including President Biden, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Emmanuel Macron.

In the August poisoning of Navlany, toxicology tests in Germany identified the substance used as the Soviet-era Novichok, a nerve agent that most experts agree could only be obtained through a state actor. It is the same poison used in an attack on former Russian intelligence agent Sergei Skripal, who was surreptitiously poisoned along with his daughter, Yulia, in the U.K. in 2018.

The Kremlin has denied any role in either the poisoning of Navalny or the Skripals.

Last month, in response to Navalny’s poisoning, the Biden administration imposed sanctions on Russian intelligence services, the FSB and GRU, and several key Kremlin officials that the White House says are implicated in the nerve-agent attack.

In a statement, Secretary of State Antony Blinken said that the administration’s actions were aimed at sending “a clear signal that Russia’s use of chemical weapons and abuse of human rights have severe consequences. Any use of chemical weapons is unacceptable and contravenes international norms.”

NPR’s Lucian Kim in Moscow contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2021/04/23/990133615/kremlin-critic-navalny-says-he-will-end-prison-hunger-strike

Authorities have not yet identified the 911 caller who alerted Columbus, Ohio police that someone was “trying to stab us” before the fatal officer-involved shooting of 16-year-old Ma’Khia Bryant, but the recording raises new questions that could “change everything,” Fox Nation host Nancy Grace said Thursday.

Police released new information about the shooting on Wednesday, including two 911 calls, body camera footage from three officers who responded to the call and the identity of the officer who pulled the trigger when he found Bryant attempting to attack two other females with a knife on Tuesday.

The first 911 call came in at 4:32 p.m. The caller, who has not been identified by police, said amid a commotion in the background, “[indistinguishable]…trying to fight us, trying to stab us, trying to put their hands on our grandma. Get here now.” 

Ma’Khia Bryant’s mother Paula told 10TV that her daughter called 911 because people were threatening her. The Columbus Police Department did not identify the caller and deferred to the Ohio Bureau of Criminal Investigation, who told Fox News they cannot share that information right now.

While the public continues to demand answers, identifying the 911 caller could be the first clue to understanding what transpired prior to the shooting, Grace said in Thursday’s episode of Fox Nation’s “Crime Stories.”

“If the girl Ma’Khia Bryant is the one that made that 911 call, that changes everything because that tells me that at some point she was afraid of a knife attack if in fact, that was her making the call … where she’s begging an officer to come to the scene because someone has a knife and is attacking her and others,” the former prosecutor explained.

“That really changes everything because that takes her away from being the original aggressor,” Grace emphasized.

Ashley Willcott, a judge and trial attorney who joined Grace for the segment, agreed.

“Absolutely that changes everything because she’s not the original aggressor,” Willcott said. “She, therefore, was initially the victim and there’s a very good argument then [that she was] defending herself.”

That said, Grace underscored that whether or not Bryant feared for her safety and made the 911 call to police, she would still legally be considered “the aggressor because that girl [who she appeared to attack] was unarmed.”

For more episodes of “Crime Stories with Nancy Grace” visit Fox Nation and join today.

CLICK HERE TO WATCH THE LATEST ‘CRIME STORIES’

Fox Nation programs are viewable on-demand and from your mobile device app, but only for Fox Nation subscribers. Go to Fox Nation to start a free trial and watch the extensive library from your favorite Fox News personalities.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/media/nancy-grace-makhia-bryant-columbus-police-shooting-911-call

Christensen: It did not impact me as far as the trial went. However, only being about six blocks from the police department, I could hear everything. When I came home, I could hear the helicopters flying over my house… I could hear the flash bangs going off. If I stepped outside, I could see the smoke from the grenades. One day, the trial ran a little late, and I had trouble getting to my house, because the protesters were blocking the interstate, so I had to go way around. I was aware, but it did not affect me at all.

Source Article from https://www.kare11.com/article/news/local/george-floyd/derek-chauvin-trial-alternate-juror-lisa-christensen/89-97b74eb1-c875-4ed5-93ad-5c72620b9f18

  • A new threat has emerged in India’s fight against COVID — a triple-mutant variant of the virus.
  • The new strain was found in samples in Bengal, and may have evolved from existing double mutations.
  • Researchers in India say the new threat may affect vaccine efficacy, but more studies are needed.
  • See more stories on Insider’s business page.

As India contends with its second major wave of COVID cases and a double-mutated variant of the virus, it now faces a new threat — a triple-mutant variant.

Scientists found two triple-mutant varieties in patient samples in four states: Maharashtra, Delhi, West Bengal, and Chhattisgarh. Researchers in the country have dubbed it the “Bengal strain” and say it has the potential to be even more infectious than the double-mutant variant.

This is because three COVID variants have merged to form a new, possibly deadlier variant.

The Times of India spoke to Vinod Scaria, a researcher at the CSIR-Institute of Genomics and Integrative Biology in India, who said the triple-mutant was also an “immune escape variant” — a strain that helps the virus attach to human cells and hide from the immune system.

He added that it could have evolved from the double-mutant variant — which experts say is likely behind the recent surge of COVID in the country.

Sreedhar Chinnaswamy, a researcher from the National Institute of Biomedical Genomics in India, told the Times of India that the variant also carried the E484K mutation, a characteristic found in the variants first identified in South Africa and Brazil.

“In other words, you may not be safe from this variant even if you were previously infected by another strain, or even if you have been vaccinated,” Chinnaswamy said.

Paul Tambyah, a professor of medicine at the National University of Singapore, said the good news is that there is no concrete evidence that the triple mutation is deadlier or more transmissible.

“Singapore researchers have done some work trying to link the mutations with clinical outcomes and transmissibility and have found no link between more severity or more transmissibility with newer mutants compared with the original lineages of SARS-CoV2,” Tambyah said.

Other scientists studying COVID have detected quadruple- and quintuple-mutants in samples as well, he said, without it necessarily affecting how well vaccines work.

“There is good data suggesting that the immune system, not just antibodies, can respond to multiple different mutants,” Tambyah said.

But this new threat is still worrying, as India’s healthcare system has already reached a breaking point as it grapples with the second wave of COVID cases. Hospitals across the country are dealing with critical shortages of medical oxygen supplies. Yesterday, six hospitals in the country reportedly ran out of oxygen as the country grappled with a sudden surge in patients.

Oxygen supplies have been diverted from shipbreaking facilities and steel plants. Still, hospitals remain overwhelmed — with some desperate families even resorting to stealing oxygen cylinders from hospitals to keep their family members alive.

India recorded a daily high of 314,835 COVID cases on Thursday, but that worldwide record was broken within 24 hours when the country announced that it recorded 332,730 new cases and 2,263 deaths on Friday. The country now has over 16 million COVID cases, second only to the US’ record of 32 million cases.

Source Article from https://www.businessinsider.com/covid-triple-mutant-in-india-could-be-much-more-deadly-2021-4

Authorities have not yet identified the 911 caller who alerted Columbus, Ohio police that someone was “trying to stab us” before the fatal officer-involved shooting of 16-year-old Ma’Khia Bryant, but the recording raises new questions that could “change everything,” Fox Nation host Nancy Grace said Thursday.

Police released new information about the shooting on Wednesday, including two 911 calls, body camera footage from three officers who responded to the call and the identity of the officer who pulled the trigger when he found Bryant attempting to attack two other females with a knife on Tuesday.

The first 911 call came in at 4:32 p.m. The caller, who has not been identified by police, said amid a commotion in the background, “[indistinguishable]…trying to fight us, trying to stab us, trying to put their hands on our grandma. Get here now.” 

Ma’Khia Bryant’s mother Paula told 10TV that her daughter called 911 because people were threatening her. The Columbus Police Department did not identify the caller and deferred to the Ohio Bureau of Criminal Investigation, who told Fox News they cannot share that information right now.

While the public continues to demand answers, identifying the 911 caller could be the first clue to understanding what transpired prior to the shooting, Grace said in Thursday’s episode of Fox Nation’s “Crime Stories.”

“If the girl Ma’Khia Bryant is the one that made that 911 call, that changes everything because that tells me that at some point she was afraid of a knife attack if in fact, that was her making the call … where she’s begging an officer to come to the scene because someone has a knife and is attacking her and others,” the former prosecutor explained.

“That really changes everything because that takes her away from being the original aggressor,” Grace emphasized.

Ashley Willcott, a judge and trial attorney who joined Grace for the segment, agreed.

“Absolutely that changes everything because she’s not the original aggressor,” Willcott said. “She, therefore, was initially the victim and there’s a very good argument then [that she was] defending herself.”

That said, Grace underscored that whether or not Bryant feared for her safety and made the 911 call to police, she would still legally be considered “the aggressor because that girl [who she appeared to attack] was unarmed.”

For more episodes of “Crime Stories with Nancy Grace” visit Fox Nation and join today.

CLICK HERE TO WATCH THE LATEST ‘CRIME STORIES’

Fox Nation programs are viewable on-demand and from your mobile device app, but only for Fox Nation subscribers. Go to Fox Nation to start a free trial and watch the extensive library from your favorite Fox News personalities.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/media/nancy-grace-makhia-bryant-columbus-police-shooting-911-call

Transporting oxygen cylinders to a filling station at a Covid-19 hospital in Ahmedabad, India, on Monday.Credit…Amit Dave/Reuters

NEW DELHI — A catastrophic second wave of the coronavirus is battering India, which is reporting the world’s highest number of new infections as hospitals and patients beg for fast-diminishing oxygen supplies and other emergency aid.

India recorded more than 330,000 coronavirus cases in 24 hours, the health ministry said on Friday, the second consecutive day that the country has set a global record for daily infections.

Canada has joined Britain, Hong Kong, Singapore and New Zealand in barring travelers coming from India. And the U.S. State Department advised people against going to India after the Centers for Disease Control raised the risk level to its highest measure.

Facing a barrage of criticism for his government’s handling of the second wave, Prime Minister Narendra Modi canceled plans to travel to West Bengal for a campaign rally as an election takes place in that state.

Even as cases have climbed, Mr. Modi’s governing Bharatiya Janata Party and other parties have continued to hold mass rallies with thousands of people unmasked. The government has also allowed an enormous Hindu festival to draw millions of pilgrims despite signs that it has become a superspreader event.

The catastrophe in India is playing out vividly on social media, with Twitter feeds and WhatsApp groups broadcasting hospitals’ pleas for oxygen and medicines, and families’ desperate searches for beds in overwhelmed Covid-19 wards. With many hospitals short of ventilators, television reports have shown patients lying inside ambulances parked outside emergency rooms, struggling to breathe.

Swati Maliwal, an activist and politician in Delhi, tweeted that her grandmother had died while waiting to be admitted outside a hospital in Greater Noida near New Delhi.

“I kept standing there for half hour and pleading for admission and nothing happened,” she wrote. “Shame! Pathetic!”

The death toll from the virus rose more than 2,200 on Friday, a new high.

On Thursday, Fortis Healthcare, one of India’s top hospital chains, tweeted an S.O.S. message to Mr. Modi and his chief deputy, Amit Shah, the minister for home affairs, appealing for more oxygen at a hospital in Haryana State on the Delhi border.

“Fortis Hospital in #Haryana has only 45 minutes of oxygen left,” the company wrote, asking government officials “to act immediately and help us save patients’ lives.”

Four hours later, the hospital received a tanker, the company tweeted.

At AIIMS Hospital in Delhi, India’s premier research hospital, contact tracing among health care workers was suspended because there weren’t enough personnel to spare for the exercise, according to Srinivas Rajkumar, a representative for the resident doctors’ association.

In Maharashtra, which includes Mumbai and is one of India’s worst-hit states, a hospital fire blamed on a faulty air-conditioning unit killed at least 13 Covid-19 patients on Friday, the second Covid hospital tragedy in the state this week. At least 22 patients were killed in a hospital in the city of Nashik on Wednesday after a leak cut off their oxygen supplies.

Beginning on Saturday, Indians age 18 or older can register for a Covid-19 vaccine, but demand is expected to far outstrip supply. So far, more than 135 million people have received at least one dose, about a tenth of India’s population of nearly 1.4 billion. Two vaccines have received emergency use authorization, with at least five others in the pipeline.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/live/2021/04/23/world/covid-vaccine-coronavirus-cases

“NBC Nightly News” appeared to listen Thursday to the intense backlash it received for omitting key details of the events that led to the fatal police-involved shooting of 16-year-old Ma’Khia Bryant in Columbus, Ohio.

On Wednesday, Media Research Center news analyst Nicholas Fondacaro called out NBC News for editing out a portion of a frantic 911 call in which a woman is heard saying: “It’s these grown girls over here trying to fight us, trying to stab us.”

Fondacaro also drew attention to the portion of the police bodycam footage shown by NBC, which he noted did not “show viewers the knife in the attacker’s hand just before the shots.”

However, during Thursday’s broadcast, the Peacock Network did include both elements, playing a lengthier audio clip of the 911 call that included the “stab” reference and a zoomed-in still image of the knife in Bryant’s hand as she was shot. 

‘NBC NIGHTLY NEWS’ UNDER FIRE FOR EDITING OUT KEY PART OF 911 CALL BEFORE MA’KHIA BRYANT SHOOTING

As Fondacaro noted, NBC News did not acknowledge the omissions in Wednesday’s report that drew fierce criticism. 

While the Wednesday report was slammed on social media, it did not hide the fact that Bryant had a knife.

‘THE VIEW’ PUSHES BACK AGAINST CNN’S DON LEMON OVER MA’KHIA BRYANT SHOOTING: HE’S ‘WRONG ABOUT THIS’

“A police officer shot and killed a 16-year-old Black girl in Columbus, Ohio saying she was threatening others with a knife,” NBC anchor Lester Holt began. 

Throughout the report, a graphic at the bottom of the screen read, “POLICE FATALLY SHOOT 16-YEAR-OLD BLACK GIRL HOLDING KNIFE” and a still image from the bodycam footage showed a knife on the ground.

CLICK HERE FOR THE FOX NEWS APP

However, as Fondacaro pointed out, ABC’s “World News Tonight” and the “CBS Evening News” both aired the portion of the 911 call that included the stabbing reference and both zoomed in on the bodycam footage, showing clearly that Bryant was holding a knife during the altercation. That comparison fueled the viral backlash against NBC.  

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/media/nbc-nightly-news-show-makhia-bryant-knife-stabbing-police-shooting

The administration has steered clear of discussing stricter environmental regulations that could scare off the largely conservative farm sector, as well as the rural lawmakers that Biden will need to advance many of his environmental goals. Farmers have been slow to wake up to the reality of climate change, though increasingly extreme weather of late has hammered farm country and forced a reckoning.

A summary of Biden’s climate pledge notes that agriculture is both a source of greenhouse gases and potentially a key piece of the solution by capturing and storing heat-trapping carbon dioxide in forests and farmland. Environmental advocates, like the left-leaning Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy, say the White House needs to address both sides of that equation to make a dent in global warming.

“It’s difficult to make concrete pledges in terms of using ag as a carbon sink,” said Ben Lilliston, the institute’s director of rural strategies and climate change. “You can be more concrete around reducing fertilizer use [and] trying to address emissions around these large-scale hog and dairy operations.”

So far, the Biden administration is leaning heavily toward awarding financial bonuses for farmers, ranchers and foresters who retool their operations to suck carbon from the atmosphere. The White House blueprint specifically calls for “incentives” to reduce methane and nitrous oxide emissions through new farm practices and technologies.

“We are making an aggressive reduction target for the country,” Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack said on Thursday during a briefing with reporters. “Part of our effort will focus on enhancing climate-smart agricultural practices, the development of biofuels, carbon capture and sequestration, better forest management and reforestation.”

An especially thorny topic that could draw huge resistance from farmers and ranchers is what to do about methane emissions from cows and other livestock. The industry and many farm-state lawmakers have slammed efforts by politicians to promote “Meatless Mondays” or other programs aimed at reducing meat consumption for environmental reasons.

Vilsack hinted at the carbon footprint of meat and dairy production on Thursday, suggesting that methane emissions can be addressed by helping livestock producers adopt innovations, such as feed additives that cut the amount of methane belched out by cows, or technology to capture noxious gases from manure pits and convert them into an energy source.

The Biden administration’s cautious rhetoric is a product of the tenuous partnership between environmentalists and major farm industry groups that are increasingly open to taking on climate change through voluntary efforts and incentives.

It’s also in Biden’s political interest to stay in the good graces of the powerful ag sector. While farmers and ranchers make up a small fraction of the population, agriculture remains central to the rural economy and politics. That’s especially true in key battleground states such as Iowa, North Carolina and Wisconsin, which are home to massive livestock and dairy operations.

Farmers made up a central piece of former President Donald Trump’s base, and he frequently bragged about repaying his supporters by flooding the industry with unprecedented taxpayer subsidies. Biden has tried to make inroads in rural communities, but his climate agenda remains a source of skepticism.

“They really have been very careful in the language they use,” Lilliston said. “They’re definitely taking a non-confrontational, non-regulatory approach.”

Lilliston also doubts that carbon sequestration or methane capture technologies will be as effective as Vilsack and other officials hope. “It’s going to be hard to shift U.S. agriculture when you have one particular model — we would call it a factory farm model — that is dominant and is allowed to evade a lot of regulations,” he said.

Industry groups say farmers are stepping up efforts to limit the climate impact of their operations. For example, the National Pork Producers Council in January launched a “Farming Today for Tomorrow” campaign to tout the sector’s shrinking carbon footprint compared with previous decades. The American Farm Bureau Federation marked Earth Day on Thursday by promoting farmers and ranchers “leading the way in climate-smart practices that reduce emissions, enrich the soil and protect our water and air.”

Pingree, who sits on the House Agriculture Committee and the appropriations panel that oversees USDA’s budget, has called for a balanced approach to nudging the industry toward more climate-friendly practices.

“I really don’t think it’s either/or,” she said. “USDA is interested in finding ways to combine these, so that we aren’t just pointing our fingers at farmers and saying, ‘It’s all your fault. You fix the problem.’ We’re saying, ‘Hey, we could be great partners in helping reduce the amount of carbon in the atmosphere as well as upgrading your practices.’”

Ximena Bustillo contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2021/04/22/climate-change-biden-agriculture-484351

Mourners filled a north Minneapolis church Thursday to honor the life of 20-year-old Daunte Wright and demand justice for an ever-growing list of Black people who have lost their lives at the hands of law enforcement.

Hundreds of people, including the state’s top political leaders and the relatives and partners of George Floyd, Philando Castile, Jamar Clark, Breonna Taylor, Oscar Grant and Emmett Till, attended the funeral service for Wright, a Black man who was shot by a Brooklyn Center police officer during a traffic stop. Throughout the two-hour service, prayer, music and memories echoed alongside calls for police reform in Minnesota and at the federal level, including the passage of the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act.

National civil rights leader the Rev. Al Sharpton delivered the eulogy, noting that some compared Wright’s funeral procession to that of Prince.

“You thought he was just some kid with an air freshener,” Sharpton said, referencing the reason Wright believed police pulled him over moments before his death. “He was a prince. All of Minneapolis has stopped today to honor the prince of Brooklyn Center.”

Matt Gillmer
Video (26:25): National civil rights leader Rev. Al Sharpton delivered the eulogy for the 20-year-old father, noting that some compared Wright’s funeral procession to that of Prince.

Wright’s funeral came two days after people poured into the streets of Minneapolis in elation following the murder conviction of former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin in Floyd’s death — the first time in Minnesota history that a white officer has been convicted in the murder of a Black person. Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison, whose office prosecuted the case, attended the service and received repeated thanks from speakers and applause from mourners.

“As we make the pleas for justice in the court of public opinion, we pray Attorney General Keith Ellison will allow us to get full justice in the court of law,” said attorney Ben Crump, who is representing the Wright family.

Also in attendance were Gov. Tim Walz, Lt. Gov. Peggy Flanagan, U.S. Sen. Amy Klobuchar, U.S. Sen. Tina Smith, U.S. Rep. Ilhan Omar, Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey, St. Paul Mayor Melvin Carter and Brooklyn Center Mayor Mike Elliott.

Wright was shot and killed by former Brooklyn Center police officer Kimberly Potter during a traffic stop in Brooklyn Center on April 11, sparking days of protests, civil unrest and dozens of arrests in the suburb of 31,000.

Potter, who is white, is a 26-year veteran of the Brooklyn Center Police Department. She faces one charge of second-degree manslaughter in the death of Wright. She has resigned from the department.

Wright’s family said he had left the house with his girlfriend, heading to a car wash. Wright phoned his mother moments before the deadly encounter, telling her he believed police were stopping him for having an air freshener hanging next to the windshield. Police later said he was stopped for expired tabs.

The city’s police chief, who has since resigned, said it appeared from body camera video that Potter used her handgun when she meant to use her Taser.

On Thursday, large photos of a smiling Wright flanked his white coffin, which was covered in dozens of red roses.

A choir and band performed gospel music, and professional jazz trumpeter Keyon Harrold performed “Amazing Grace” and “We Shall Overcome” as painter Ange Hillz completed a portrait of Wright.

Dressed up in all white and in the arms of a relative, 1-year-old Daunte Wright Jr. looked wide-eyed at the crowd gathered to honor his father. Wright’s parents and siblings spoke briefly, describing their son and brother’s “million-dollar” smile and joyful personality.

“I was so proud of the man that he was becoming,” said brother Dallas. “And he was going to make an amazing father to Junior.”

Mother Katie Wright, her husband Arbuey at her side, said she’d been awake until the early hours of the morning, “so nervous and scared about what I was going to stand up here and say.”

“I never imagined I’d be standing here,” she said. “The roles should be completely reversed. My son should be burying me.”

Walz, who spoke briefly at the service, issued a proclamation Thursday morning calling for a statewide moment of silence during the first two minutes of Wright’s funeral, from noon to 12:02 p.m.

“While nothing can bring Daunte Wright back to his loved ones, we must continue to work to enact real, meaningful change at the local, state, and national levels to fight systemic racism so that every person in Minnesota — Black, Indigenous, Brown, or White — can be safe and thrive,” the proclamation said.

Walz presented the proclamation to Wright’s family, and Omar, who also spoke, presented them with a flag that had flown over the U.S. Capitol.

Klobuchar, in the last remarks before mourners filed out, delivered an impassioned call for federal police reform. She described Wright as an outgoing young man who was “lovingly voted class clown” his freshman year of high school and a basketball fan “whose left-handed shot would make any coach proud.”

“Racism in this country is not isolated. It is systemic,” Klobuchar said. “And so when we ask ourselves why Daunte Jr. has to grow up without a dad, when we think about what could possibly fill this hole Daunte left in the world, we come up empty. Instead, we find a much bigger hole where justice should be.”

After the service, members of Floyd’s family said they plan to support the Wright family as they begin a journey through grief and the legal system that they now know well.

“To be there for them, that’s our main focus now,” said Angela Harrelson, Floyd’s aunt.

Selwyn Jones, Floyd’s uncle, said he was moved by the funeral service. The Black Lives Matter movement has made gains in the past year to slow police killings of Black people, he said, but he doesn’t believe the job will ever be done.

“They’ll never stop,” he said. “This has been happening for a long time. It will never stop.”

Staff writer Katie Galioto contributed to this report.

Shannon Prather • 612-673-4804, Kim Hyatt • 612-673-4751, Matt McKinney • 612-673-7329

Source Article from https://www.startribune.com/amid-grief-for-daunte-wright-in-minneapolis-a-firm-resolve-for-lasting-change/600048860/

The US Senate passed a bill aimed at tracking anti-Asian hate crimes Thursday by an overwhelming majority of 94-1 — with Sen. Josh Hawley the lone “no” vote.

The COVID-19 Hate Crimes Act would direct the Justice Department to expedite its review of anti-Asian racist harassment and attacks — which have spiked nationwide during the coronavirus pandemic — and to coordinate with local law enforcement to bolster reporting of those incidents. The House is expected to vote on the bill next month. 

In a statement, Hawley (R-MO) criticized the bill as “too broad.”

“As a former prosecutor, my view is it’s dangerous to simply give the federal government open-ended authority to define a whole new class of federal hate crime incidents,” he said.

In a referendum on the bill last week, 92 senators voted for it and six Republicans voted against, Hawley among them.

Sen. Mazie Hirono (D-HI), who authored and introduced the bill, said in a statement Thursday, “We will send a powerful message of solidarity to the AAPI community that the Senate won’t be a bystander as anti-Asian violence surges in our country.”

Reports of Anti-Asian hate crimes have surged across the United State in the past year. In New York City, at least two Asian people reported racist incidents to the police just this week.

On Tuesday, a man on the subway screamed at a 28-year-old Asian woman, “F–k you, you Asian b—h! Don’t f–k with me! I’m gonna slap you!’” And on Monday, a 31-year-old man was punched in the face unprovoked in Midtown around 11:30 p.m., according to the NYPD.

Hawley on Thursday appeared focused on other aspects of the coronavirus.

Hours earlier, the Missouri Republican and Sen. Mike Braun (R-IN) introduced the COVID-19 Origin Act of 2021 to the Senate. Hawley says the act requires the Biden administration to “declassify intelligence related to any potential links between the Wuhan Institute of Virology and the origins of the COVID pandemic.”

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2021/04/22/hawley-lone-no-vote-on-anti-asian-hate-crimes-bill/