The proposed legislation — which passed Texas’ House earlier this month — would restrict Sunday voting, when many Black worshipers vote, bar drive-thru voting and 24-hour voting locations and give more access to partisan poll watchers, among other things. The Republican-controlled Senate is expected to pass the legislation, and Republican Gov. Greg Abbott has said he will sign it.

The moves come after Harris County, home to Houston and a swath of Democratic voters, added drive-thru polls and 24-hour polling places in 2020 for an election with record turnout in a state that has trended more Democratic in recent years.

Biden has been sharply critical of Republicans’ “election integrity” legislation, particularly new Georgia voting legislation, which he called 21st-century “Jim Crow.” In his statement Saturday, Biden called for Congress to take action on the “For the People Act,” which has passed the House and would reform ballot access and campaign finance. It would also require states to have two weeks of early voting, among other things. The legislation faces long odds in the Senate amid staunch GOP opposition.

Biden also called on Congress to pass the John Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act, which would reinstate Voting Rights Act protections that the Supreme Court took down.

“In the 21st century, we should be making it easier, not harder, for every eligible voter to vote,” Biden said in his statement Saturday. “I continue to call on all Americans, of every party and persuasion, to stand up for our democracy and protect the right to vote and the integrity of our elections.”

Abbott has touted the bill, saying it will make it “easier to vote and harder to cheat.”

Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas) slammed Biden’s statement Saturday.

“Like his ‘Neanderthal thinking’ comment on masking protocols, President Biden is wrong, overtly partisan, and increasingly out of touch with reality,” Cornyn tweeted.

Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) has previously praised the legislation, saying it will make elections “more accessible and more secure.”

Marc Elias, a prominent Democratic elections lawyer, said Saturday in a tweet that “Texas will be sued” if the bill becomes law.

Before the Texas legislation passed the House, it came under fire from a group of dozens of businesses and organizations, including Microsoft and Texas-based American Airlines.

“We stand together, as a nonpartisan coalition, calling on all elected leaders in Texas to support reforms that make democracy more accessible and oppose any changes that would restrict eligible voters’ access to the ballot,” the businesses wrote in an open letter.

Georgia also received intense blowback over its new law, with MLB pulling its All-Star Game out of Atlanta and major Atlanta-based companies, including Delta Airlines and Coca-Cola, criticizing the legislation.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2021/05/29/biden-texas-voting-restrictions-491415

Days before the Senate voted down the creation of a 9/11-style commission to investigate the Capitol attack, the Senate Republican leader, Mitch McConnell, was adamant: he would oppose the bill, regardless of any amendments – and he expected his colleagues to follow suit.

The commission that would have likely found Donald Trump and some Republicans responsible for the insurrection posed an existential threat to the GOP ahead of the midterms, he said, and would complicate efforts to regain the majority in Congress.

McConnell’s sharp warning at a closed-door meeting had the desired effect on Friday, when Senate Republicans largely opted to stick with the Senate minority leader. All but six of them voted to block the commission and prevent a full accounting into the events of 6 January.

But it also underscored the alarm that gripped McConnell and Senate Republican leadership in the fraught political moments leading up to the vote, and how they exploited fears within the GOP of crossing a mercurial former president to galvanize opposition to the commission.

The story of how Republicans undermined an inquiry into one of the darkest days for American democracy – five people died as a pro-Trump mob stormed the Capitol and sought to hang Mike Pence – is informed by eight House aides, who spoke on the condition of anonymity.

The prospect of a commission unravels

Surrounded by shards of broken glass in the Capitol on the night of 6 January, and as House Democrats drew up draft articles of impeachment against Trump, Nancy Pelosi, the speaker of the House, made her first outreach to canvas the prospect of a commission to investigate the attack.

In the immediate aftermath of the insurrection, Pelosi had reason to be hopeful. Spurred on by the threat felt by many Republicans to their personal safety, a swelling group of lawmakers had started to agitate for an inquiry to reveal how Trump did nothing to stop the riot.

But what was once heralded as a necessary step to “investigate and report” on the attack and interference in election proceedings unravelled soon after, with the commission swiftly reduced to an acrimonious point of partisan contention in a deeply divided Capitol.

Mike Pence and Nancy Pelosi preside over a joint session of Congress to certify the 2020 electoral college results after a mob stormed the US Capitol on 6 January. Photograph: Erin Schaff/AFP/Getty Images

The main objection from House and Senate Republicans, at first, centered on the lopsided structure of Pelosi’s initial proposal, that would have seen a majority of members appointed by Democrats, who would have also held unilateral subpoena power.

And only weeks after the riot, the House minority leader, Kevin McCarthy, was already advancing the complaint for his ultimate opposition: that the scope of the commission did not include unrelated far-left violence from last summer, a political priority that stalled talks.

With little progress three months after the Capitol attack, Pelosi made a renewed effort to establish a commission on 16 April, floating a revised proposal that mirrored the original 9/11 commission with the panel evenly split between Democrats and Republicans.

Pelosi briefed her leadership team that included the House majority leader, Steny Hoyer, the House majority whip, Jim Clyburn, the assistant speaker, Katherine Clark, and notably, the chair of the House homeland security committee, Bennie Thompson, about the proposal the following Monday.

During that meeting, Hoyer first raised the prospect of also extending equal subpoena power to Republicans – a concession that would allow Democrats to meet all of Republicans’ demands about the structure of the commission – which Pelosi adopted a few days later.

By the penultimate week of April, Pelosi had deputized Thompson to lead talks as she felt the homeland security committee was an appropriate venue, and because the top Republican on the committee, John Katko, was one of only three House GOP members to impeach Trump.

With the House on recess, Thompson made enough progress in negotiations to brief Pelosi and her leadership team on 8 May that he secured a tentative deal on the commission, though Katko wanted to wait on an announcement until Liz Cheney was ousted as GOP conference chair.

Tensions within the House Republican conference had reached new highs the previous week after Cheney continued her months-long criticism of Trump’s lies about a stolen election at a party retreat in Florida, and Katko was wary of injecting the commission into the charged moment.

“As soon as the vote on Liz Cheney is taken, he will be prepared to do a joint statement,” Thompson said in remarks first reported by CNN.

Minutes after House Republicans elevated Elise Stefanik to become the new GOP conference chair on 14 May, Thompson and Katko unveiled their proposal for a bipartisan 9/11-style commission.

McConnell cracks down on the bill

The ouster of Cheney solidified Tump’s outsize influence on the Republican party, and set the scene for the weeks to come.

McCarthy almost immediately sought to distance himself from the commission and was non-committal about offering his endorsement. Asked whether he had signed off on the deal, McCarthy was direct: “No, no, no,” he told reporters in the basement of the Capitol.

By the following Tuesday, top House Republicans were urging their colleagues to oppose the commission bill, with McCarthy positioned against an inquiry on the basis that its scope focused narrowly on the Capitol attack.

As Hoyer had anticipated when he suggested that Pelosi also offer equal subpoena power to Republicans, McCarthy struggled to demonize the commission, and several House Republicans told the Guardian that they found his complaints about the scope unconvincing.

Kevin McCarthy on Capitol Hill on 20 May. Photograph: Ken Cedeno/Reuters

The Senate minority leader, meanwhile, had until then denounced Trump, who he faulted for inciting the insurrection, and publicly seemed open to a commission. But as it became clear the scores of House Republicans would vote for the bill, his calculus quickly changed.

Two days after the Senate returned for votes on 17 May McConnell informed Senate Republicans at a private breakfast event that he was opposed to the commission as envisioned by the House, and made clear that he would embark on a concerted campaign to sink the bill.

Underpinning McConnell’s alarm was the fact that Democrats needed 10 Senate Republicans to vote in favor of the commission, and seven had already voted to impeach Trump during his second Senate trial – a far more controversial vote than supporting an inquiry into 6 January.

Cognizant that Senate Democrats may find three or four more allies in uncertain Republicans, McConnell cracked down.

After announcing at the breakfast event that he would oppose the commission, McConnell railed against the bill as being “slanted and unbalanced” on the Senate floor, in biting remarks that represented a clear warning as to his expectations.

He kept up the pressure all afternoon on that Wednesday, so that by the evening, McConnell had a major victory when Senator Richard Burr, who voted to impeach Trump only four months before, abruptly reversed course to say that he would reject the commission.

In the end, only six Senate Republicans – Mitt Romney, Susan Collins, Bill Cassidy, Rob Portman, Lisa Murkowski and Ben Sasse – voted to move forward on the commission.

As the final vote hurtled towards its expected finale, the Senate minority whip, John Thune, who also switched his position to side with McConnell, acknowledged McConnell’s arguments about a commission jeopardising Republican chances to retake majorities in the House and Senate.

Summarising his concerns, Thune said: “Anything that gets us rehashing the 2020 elections I think is a day lost on being able to draw a contrast between us and the Democrats’ very radical leftwing agenda.”

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/may/29/mitch-mcconnell-us-capitol-attack-commission-senate-republicans

“I’m speaking from experience,” said Jamaal Dyer, senior pastor of Friendship Church in North Tulsa, who resigned from the Tulsa Race Massacre Centennial Commission in 2019. “I was very vocal: ‘If we are going to do this for the community, we need to allow them to be part of the decision-making body.’ That was not welcomed. A year or two later, they went to them, but they had already started making decisions. They are still trying to control the narrative.”

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/history/2021/05/29/tulsa-race-massacre-centennial-reparations-tensions/

Voters head to the polls in Ohio’s Licking County in 2018. Former President Donald Trump won 63% of the vote in the county in last year’s presidential election, en route to easily carrying the state for the second time.

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Voters head to the polls in Ohio’s Licking County in 2018. Former President Donald Trump won 63% of the vote in the county in last year’s presidential election, en route to easily carrying the state for the second time.

Justin Merriman/Getty Images

In Licking County, Ohio, east of the capital city of Columbus, bumper stickers on pickup trucks make it clear it is Trump Country.

And at a recent meeting of the county’s Republican women’s group, 66-year-old retiree Geraldine Jacobs made it clear that she’s a Trump supporter.

“It’s a shame that we went from the best president to now really the worst president,” she says.

Trump won 63% of the vote in Licking County in last year’s presidential election, en route to easily carrying the state for the second time. The result seemed to prove that Ohio is not the perennial battleground state many had still thought it was.

Republican politics in Ohio has also changed in the era of Trump. And with the retirement of U.S. Sen. Rob Portman — a fixture of the GOP establishment — more change is coming. As the Republican field to replace him begins to take shape in these very early days, it’s clear Trump retains an outsized influence in the state.

Trump lost. His influence among the GOP remains strong

Polls since Trump left office show an overwhelming number of Republicans still view him as the leader of the party. Those same polls show that a solid majority of Republicans also say — falsely — that Trump won in 2020. He did not.

Licking County’s Jacobs is in that category. She says that President Biden did not win in November, making allegations of vote counting being stopped on election night, even suggesting that Fox News was somehow in on it. When pressed, she provided no evidence to support her claims, saying, “I watched what happened on election night. And I couldn’t believe Fox News. I mean, that was the end of Fox News for me.”

Trump’s influence in Ohio — even after defeat — so far has showed no signs of decline.

In the Ohio legislature, where the GOP controls the agenda with a super-majority, Republicans are looking to enact new restrictions on voting, following Trump’s baseless claims of fraud in the 2020 elections. There have even been proposals to rename a state park after Trump and to honor him with a state holiday. U.S. Senate hopefuls are jockeying to be the most pro-Trump Republican candidate. And the fact that a Cleveland area GOP congressman, Anthony Gonzalez, voted to impeach Trump in January has made him a handy target for Republicans looking to catch Trump’s eye, and maybe an endorsement.

But even at the Licking County GOP gathering, there were a number of opinions about the former president and the role he should play going forward in Republican politics.

The guest speaker at the event was GOP consultant Matt Dole, whose remarks offered a bit of consolation to audience members who may have loved Trump but were far less fond of his Twitter habit.

“We had to defend whatever Donald Trump did on a day in and day out basis,” Dole told his audience of about 50 Republican Party members. He added that they were all for Trump’s policies, “but sometimes his tweets got in the way.”

Now, he says, the focus for GOP activists needs to be winning in next year’s midterms, and holding onto Portman’s U.S. Senate seat in Ohio. That’s crucial to the party’s goal of winning back control of both houses of Congress in 2022.

Republicans wish Trump were still in office, but according to Dole, they are now free to go on offense and focus on attacking the policies of Biden and the Democrats.

Looking for new GOP leaders to emerge

There are Trump voters who seem ready to move on. Tricia Moore is an attorney and the president of the Licking County GOP women’s group. Asked if Trump remains the leader of the party, she starts her answer by giving the former president his due: “Trump is a bigger-than-life figure. I think he is not afraid to say what he believes in, not afraid to say things that are unpopular.”

But she then makes it clear that she’s already looking to others as the future of the party: “I think that there are other Republicans that are coming out strong and standing for these conservative values that are going to step forward.” Moore notes that she’s been watching Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis closely and likes what she sees.

Still, it’s hard to get past Trump’s dominance, something he’ll deploy to influence next year’s midterms.

And that complicates things, according to Ohio Tea Party activist Tom Zawistowski. He says Trump’s time as president is to be applauded, but he also says Trump could have won reelection if he’d been better organized, more disciplined and had surrounded himself with better people.

Now Zawistowski wonders about Trump’s next phase. “What’s Trump 2.0 really look like?” he asks. “How much did he learn from this experience?”

Zawistowski has a practical request of Trump. If he’s going to get involved in GOP primaries in upcoming local and state elections, Trump should be sure he does his homework. Consult with activists on the ground about whom to endorse.

“The problem there is that Trump’s like the big elephant in the room,” Zawistowski says. “If he says, ‘I’m endorsing this person,’ well, I got news for you: That’s probably who’s going to win.”

The Tea Party leader warns that picking the wrong person could leave some excellent hopefuls on the sidelines. He says he offers this unsolicited advice because he knows just how much clout Trump has with Republican voters in a state like Ohio.

Then-President Donald Trump speaks during a rally at Dayton International Airport on Sept. 20, 2020.

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Then-President Donald Trump speaks during a rally at Dayton International Airport on Sept. 20, 2020.

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Democrats battle historic midterm trends

For Democrats in Ohio it’s a very different situation. They are pushing back against the storyline that it is now a solidly red state.

Rep. Monique Smith, a Democratic state House member who actually flipped her suburban Cleveland district from red to blue last year, says it’s been tough seeing Trump carry her home state twice.

“It was heartbreaking because part of it is about identity,” Smith says. “If you’re an Ohioan, what do you think that means? I think that means that we’re pretty moderate and pretty commonsense. So it remains shocking to me.”

Meanwhile, Ohio Democratic Party Chair Elizabeth Walters seems to relish Trump’s ongoing influence on the state GOP. And she predicts that in next year’s U.S Senate race, Democrats will do well with voters who see how Biden has tackled the pandemic and the economy.

“There’s no better argument than reality,” she says. “I think it’s meaningful that not a single Ohio Republican voted to support the American Recovery Plan.” Walters describes it as “a clear and simple decision on who’s on your side, who cares about you and your family, and who doesn’t.”

She says Democrats have a case to make in Ohio, and Trump’s involvement in state races makes it easier to convince voters what the stakes are for anyone who doesn’t hold Trump’s worldview.

Still, long-term historic trends would also indicate that the first midterm after a presidential election is always tough for the party of a new president.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2021/05/29/1001214706/much-of-ohio-is-trump-country-and-that-complicates-things-for-the-gop

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2021/05/28/takeaways-bidens-budget-include-record-debt-improved-deficits/5247246001/

In a surprise move, Sen. James Lankford has stepped down from the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre Centennial Commission.

This comes just months after he faced criticism and calls to step down from the commission due to his plans regarding a challenge to President Biden’s Electoral College win.

In January, Lankford said that he was planning to challenge the Electoral College votes because he wanted a commission to be formed to provide a 10-day audit of former President Trump’s claims of voter fraud.

However, those claims have been debunked multiple times in courts across the country and even at the U.S. Supreme Court.

As he was speaking on the floor, lawmakers were instructed to leave and head to safe locations in the Capitol. They soon learned that the Capitol had been breached by a violent mob of pro-Trump supporters.

When Lankford was able to resume his comments on the floor, he said he would no longer challenge the results.

FILE – Sen. James Lankford, R-Okla., speaks a hearing with the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Labor, Health and Human Services, Education, and Related Agencies, on Capitol Hill in Washington, Wednesday, Sept. 16, 2020. (Anna Moneymaker/New York Times, Pool via AP)

“In Oklahoma, we would say, ‘Why in God’s name would someone think attacking law enforcement and occupying the U.S. Capitol is the best way in showing you are right?’” Lankford said.

He then encouraged Congress to come together and certify the election results.

“We must stand together as Americans. We must defend our Constitution and the rule of law,” Sen. James Lankford said in a statement.

After the vote, Black leaders in Tulsa called for Lankford’s removal or resignation from the 1921 Race Massacre Centennial Committeeaccording to the Tulsa World.

Tulsa Race Massacre, Courtesy: Oklahoma Historical Society

Organizers said they felt that Lankford’s support for the false claims provided credence to those who have consistently worked to prevent Black voices from being heard.

“This is a great example of Black people voting in record numbers, with a coalition of people who look different, who are being told, ‘No, their votes didn’t count,’” said state Rep. Monroe Nichols, D-Tulsa.

Sen. Lankford then apologized to Black constituents, saying he didn’t realize that his criticism of the Electoral College votes could have a racial undertone.

Lankford says he had no idea that people would view the his actions as questioning the legitimacy of Black voters.

“What I did not realize was all of the national conversation about states like Georgia, Pennsylvania, and Michigan, was seen as casting doubt on the validity of votes coming out of predominantly Black communities like Atlanta, Philadelphia, and Detroit.”

SEN. JAMES LANKFORD

“After decades of fighting for voting rights, many Black friends in Oklahoma saw this as a direct attack on their right to vote, for their vote to matter, and even a belief that their votes made an election in our country illegitimate,” he wrote.

Lankford says it was never his intent to take away the voice of any Black American.

Despite that apology, some in the community still called for Lankford’s resignation.

Tulsa Race Massacre. Courtesy: Oklahoma Historical Society

In January, the Centennial Commission released a statement, saying that Lankford would remain a member of the organization.

“At its core, the Centennial Commission is about reconciliation. For the purpose of achieving that
goal, we must continue to harness our connective tissue – even when we are not in absolute
agreement. Senator Lankford, despite clear differences (some of them profound), stands on
common ground with us in terms of the importance of reconciliation as well as educating all United States citizens about Tulsa’s Historic Greenwood District, the storied “Black Wall Street,” including the massacre and its impact on Oklahoma and the nation.

The Centennial Commission believes deeply in racial reconciliation and inter-generational healing. To that end, we must continue to extend an olive branch. It is our inherent duty to show our partners the way.

For those reasons, we choose not to request Senator Lankford’s removal from the Centennial
Commission, but instead, accept his apology and embrace his desire to reaffirm his commitment to help bring vital resources and opportunities to the Greenwood District, Black Tulsans, and Black Americans from coast to coast.”

In a surprising twist, officials say that Lankford has stepped down from from the commission shortly before the 100th anniversary of the Tulsa Race Massacre.

According to KTUL his resignation came last week.

In a statement to SBGTV, Lankford’s office says that he did not support the path the commission was taking.

“Lankford saw a drift from the original goals of the Commission to a more partisan political agenda, and as a result, he notified the Commission he could no longer serve as a member,” the statement read.

Source Article from https://kfor.com/news/local/sen-lankford-steps-down-from-tulsa-race-massacre-centennial-commission-in-surprise-move/

Russian President Vladimir PutinVladimir Vladimirovich PutinPutin backs up Belarus’s Lukashenko amid international pressure Russia warns Disney against distributing short film with gay character The Hill’s Morning Report – Presented by Uber – Jan. 6 commission vote delayed; infrastructure debate lingers into June MORE offered support to Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko as he faces a flood of criticism from Western nations over his detention of an opposition activist.

In a meeting with Lukashenko, Putin praised the strong economic ties between Russia and Belarus and called the criticism of Minsk “an outburst of emotions.”

“We have things to discuss even without these events. I mean to say that in the first quarter of this year, our trade grew by a considerable 18.4 percent, and Russia remains a key trade and economic partner of Belarus. This is a good trend, and it is important to keep it going along with the Government’s active work,” Putin said in a Kremlin readout of the bilateral talk.

The support from Putin, the leader of Belarus’s main ally, comes as Belarus faces an avalanche of new sanctions over its brazen detention of Rama Pratasevich, a 26-year-old opposition activist and journalist.

The U.S. Friday announced it would reimpose full blocking sanctions against nine state-owned enterprises in Belarus. The Treasury Department is also crafting an executive order to give President BidenJoe BidenPutin backs up Belarus’s Lukashenko amid international pressure Biden administration to reimpose sanctions on Belarus over diverted flight Senate passes resolution urging probe into COVID-19 origins MORE the power to slap additional punishments on Lukashenko.

The European Union has already imposed new economic sanctions on the Eastern European country.

Lukashenko drew international ire this week when Belarus reportedly called in a bomb threat and scrambled a fighter jet to force a Ryanair flight traveling from Greece to Lithuania, which Pratasevich was on, to land once it was in Belarusian airspace. The opposition activist was promptly arrested once the plane was on the ground. 

Lukashenko this week defended Pratasevich’s detention, saying he “acted lawfully and was protecting the people according to all international rules.” 

Source Article from https://thehill.com/policy/international/556073-putin-backs-up-belaruss-lukashenko-amid-increasing-pressure-from-the

It’s like we’re stepping backward two months today. Tomorrow might not be much better. There is good news for Monday, as sunshine and warmer temperatures seem more likely. Daytime temperatures below 60 this time of year are very unusual, so if we get two such days at least we can say we lived through some weather history. Probably not the best news as overall, given this weekend is the unofficial kick off to summer. Of course, around here, you never have to wait too long for heat in summer.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/weather/2021/05/29/dc-area-forecast-unusually-chilly-with-occasional-rain-through-sunday-then-nicer-memorial-day/

Mr. Schumer and Speaker Nancy Pelosi are now planning their own committee investigations into the attack, how it was coordinated and why the government failed to prevent an assault that left several dead, the Capitol ransacked and those inside at risk.

Ms. Pelosi could also set up a select committee focused solely on the attack, handing Democrats unilateral subpoena power and a much longer timeline to investigate whatever they want. Mr. Schumer seemingly endorsed the idea on Friday afternoon, saying that it was “better to investigate with a select committee than not investigate.”

Progressives seized on Republicans’ opposition to the commission as new justification to press their case for invoking the so-called nuclear option to rewrite the filibuster rule and allow bills to pass on simple majority votes. Activists have pressed Democratic leaders to do so, and then skirt Republican opposition to enact pressing liberal priorities, like a sweeping voting rights measure, gun control legislation, legalization of undocumented immigrants and more.

“If the Republicans can’t agree to an independent commission investigating the first armed insurrection at the Capitol in our nation’s history, then something is bad wrong,” said Senator Elizabeth Warren, Democrat of Massachusetts. “And that something is the filibuster.”

But changing the rules would require the agreement of all 50 Democrats, and at least two oppose the move. One of them, Senator Joe Manchin III of West Virginia, said that his position was unchanged.

“I’m not willing to destroy our government, no,” he said.

Still, after an 11th-hour scramble with Senator Susan Collins, Republican of Maine, to draft a compromise to address some of her party’s stated concerns about the legislation, Mr. Manchin concluded that most would not support it and were simply cycling through disingenuous reasons to vote no.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2021/05/28/us/politics/capitol-riot-commission-republicans.html

The media appeared to have downplayed the migrant status of the murderer who was convicted in the brutal 2018 killing of 20-year-old college student Mollie Tibbetts. 

Cristhian Bahena Rivera was found guilty of first-degree murder on Friday after a two-week trial in Davenport, Iowa, in a case that drew national attention because of the suspect’s immigration status. 

However, media outlets are burying the fact that Rivera was in the country illegally when he murdered Tibbetts. 

MOLLIE TIBBETTS MURDER TRIAL: JURY FINDS CRISTHIAN BAHENA RIVERA GUILTY

“Farm worker found guilty of killing University of Iowa student Mollie Tibbetts,” CNN wrote in its headline.

CNN’s report didn’t mention that the convicted murderer was an “undocumented immigrant” from Mexico until the fifth paragraph. 

The AP similarly ran the headline, “Farm laborer convicted in 2018 stabbing death of Iowa runner.” 

“The verdict came after a two-week trial at the Scott County Courthouse in Davenport, in a case that fueled public anger against illegal immigration and concerns about random violence against women,” the AP reported in the fourth paragraph. 

MOLLIE TIBBETS MURDER: KEY HOME SURVEILLANCE VIDEO OF JOGGER, VEHICLE SHOW AT TRIAL FOR MEXICAN NATIONAL

The report concluded by taking a swipe at Republicans, including former President Trump, for pointing to Tibbett’s murder in the immigration debate, writing “Then-President Donald Trump, Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds and other Republicans had cited the vicious crime ahead of the 2018 midterm elections to call for harsher policies to deter illegal immigration. But their efforts eventually stopped after Tibbetts’ parents said the slaying should not be used to advance a political agenda that Tibbetts would have opposed.”

The Daily Beast also headlined “Iowa Farmworker Found Guilty of Murdering Mollie Tibbetts” and buried the mention that he entered the U.S. illegally to the sixth paragraph. 

The New York Times, meanwhile, put out a tweet that read, “Cristhian Bahena Rivera, a 26-year-old farmworker, was found guilty of first-degree murder on Friday in the killing of Mollie Tibbetts, a University of Iowa student who had vanished while jogging in 2018.”

The Times’ report later mentioned in the fourth paragraph of its report that he was an “undocumented” immigrant.

Bahena Rivera, who came to the U.S. illegally from Mexico as a teenager, will be sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole, which is a mandatory sentence upon conviction. He will be held without bond pending a July 15 sentencing hearing.

Defense attorneys Chad and Jennifer Frese said they plan to appeal the jury’s decision on their client’s behalf. 

During closing arguments, prosecutors urged the jury to convict Bahena Rivera, 26, for the death of the University of Iowa student, citing “overwhelming evidence” that tied him to the killing.

The defense rested its case Wednesday after Bahena Rivera testified that two men killed Tibbetts and forced him to transport her body in his car. 

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Prosecutor Scott Brown called Bahena Rivera’s testimony “a figment of his imagination.” He argued that Bahena Rivera drove past Tibbetts as she was running on July 18, 2018 in Brooklyn, Iowa and made advances towards her. 

When she rebuffed him, he got angry, Brown said. 

“The way he reacts with that anger is to stab this young woman to death and to dump her body in a cornfield,” he told the jury. 

Fox News’ Louis Casiano and Stephanie Pagones contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/media/cnn-associated-press-daily-beast-mollie-tibbetts-farm-worker

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2021/05/28/takeaways-bidens-budget-include-record-debt-improved-deficits/5247246001/

A photo taken on Sunday shows a Ryanair passenger plane that was intercepted and diverted to Minsk by Belarus authorities. Minsk diverted the flight so that it could arrest opposition activist Roman Protasevich.

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A photo taken on Sunday shows a Ryanair passenger plane that was intercepted and diverted to Minsk by Belarus authorities. Minsk diverted the flight so that it could arrest opposition activist Roman Protasevich.

Petras Malukas/AFP via Getty Images

The White House on Friday night announced a series of sanctions against Belarus for its forced landing of a Ryanair commercial flight and the subsequent removal and arrest of opposition journalist Roman Protasevich.

In a statement, White House press secretary Jen Psaki called the country’s action “a direct affront to international norms.”

The Sunday flight diversion, made under the false pretense of a bomb being onboard the aircraft, comes as the government of Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko faces growing outcry from the West for the nation’s recent crackdowns on free speech and public dissent.

“These events took place amid an escalating wave of repression by the Lukashenka regime against the aspirations of the people of Belarus for democracy and human rights,” Psaki said in a statement.

In response to Protasevich’s arrest, Psaki said the United States had issued a travel advisory urging U.S. citizens not to travel to Belarus, would reimpose sanctions on nine Belarusian state-owned enterprises, and would develop increased sanctions against the Eastern European nation’s government, among other actions.

“We take these measures, together with our partners and Allies, to hold the regime accountable for its actions and to demonstrate our commitment to the aspirations of the people of Belarus,” Psaki said. “We call on Lukashenka to allow a credible international investigation into the events of May 23, immediately release all political prisoners, and enter into a comprehensive and genuine political dialogue with the leaders of the democratic opposition and civil society groups that leads to the conduct of free and fair Presidential elections under [Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe] auspices and monitoring.”

The 26-year-old Protasevich became a political activist as a teenager. During widespread anti-government protests last year, Protasevich became a key figure among opposition activists, utilizing the encrypted messaging app Telegram to organize demonstrations.

Lukashenko, a six-term authoritarian whose most recent election win was marred by accusations of ballot rigging, has fashioned himself as an international strongman and is often referred to as Europe’s last dictator. In last year’s Belarusian presidential election, Lukashenko declared himself the winner of the race, claiming a landslide victory with a jaw-dropping 80% of the vote.

His widely disputed reelection sparked international outrage and was the impetus of massive protests on the streets of Minsk. Thousands of protesters were arrested for their involvement in the civil unrest and others were exiled from the state.

While a number of developed nations have sharply criticized Lukashenko’s harsh rejection of fundamental democratic principles like free speech, Lukashenko has found allyship in fellow a authoritarian leader, Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2021/05/28/1001479529/white-house-slaps-sanctions-on-belarus-following-brazen-arrest-of-opposition-fig?ft=nprml&f=

President Joe Biden proposed a 39.6% top tax rate on capital gains and dividends for millionaires when he released his fiscal 2022 budget request to Congress on Friday.

That’s in line with the top rate the administration outlined in April as part of tax increases on the rich to help fund the American Families Plan.

Capital gains tax is owed on assets like stocks, bonds, mutual funds and homes that have appreciated in value.

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The wealthiest Americans currently pay a top federal tax rate of 20% on those returns, if the asset is held for more than a year. (They also pay a 3.8% Medicare surtax on investment earnings, bringing the top rate to a total 23.8%.)

Biden’s proposal aims to bring that capital gains tax rate more in line with that of their job income.

The White House plan creates a top rate of 43.4%, when factoring in a Medicare surtax on investment earnings. That’s a bit higher than the 39.6% top tax rate on ordinary income Biden proposed.

It would apply to taxpayers whose income exceeds $1 million (or $500,000 for couples filing separate tax returns).

The capital gains rate would be retroactive to the “date of announcement,” according to the Treasury document. It’s unclear whether that means Friday’s announcement or perhaps Biden’s outline of the American Families Plan in April.

That would effectively mean millionaires who sell appreciated assets going forward would be subject to the 43.4% rate.

Of course, the plan must still be approved by Congress, which isn’t assured.

Biden also proposed eliminating an existing tax break at death (the “step-up” in basis) that allows appreciated assets to pass to heirs tax-free. Investors therefore can’t necessarily avoid capital gains tax outright by holding until death.

Reforms to the capital gains tax will raise about $322 billion over a decade, according to the White House.

Correction: President Biden proposed a 39.6% top capital gains tax rate in his fiscal 2022 budget request to Congress. An earlier version misstated the figure.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2021/05/28/biden-budget-reiterates-top-capital-gains-tax-rate.html

House Democrats are actively considering mounting a probe of their own into the January 6 US Capitol attack, signaling they don’t plan to let the issue go away in the aftermath of Senate Republicans derailing the creation of an outside commission to probe the deadly insurrection.

Speaker Nancy Pelosi has made clear repeatedly that moving to create a select committee has always remained a fallback option – something that would require the support of a majority of the Democratic-led House to create. And a number of Democrats said on Friday that they believe Pelosi will indeed create the new committee – and that the caucus would strongly support such an effort.

“That’s her next move,” one senior House Democrat said Friday.

Rep. Joaquin Castro, a Texas Democrat who served as an impeachment manager in former President Donald Trump’s second trial, said the Senate should pass a bill creating an outside commission.

“However, in the event that it fails, the Congress should create a select committee to fully investigate the causes and consequences of the insurrection on January 6,” Castro told CNN.

If the House creates such a panel, it would give Democrats the power to issue subpoenas and schedule hearings and to drive an investigation into the causes of the attack and Trump’s role behind it. And it would prompt a backlash from Republicans, who are already trying to paint such an effort as a partisan endeavor, despite their own role in scuttling a bipartisan outside panel composed of 10 commissioners equally divided between the two parties.

“I don’t think a select committee is the proper way to go,” House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy told CNN last week, calling it a “Pelosi select committee.”

Pelosi’s office would not discuss her plans, but the California Democrat has repeatedly indicated her preference would be to create a bipartisan outside commission and that a select committee remained a clear option on the table. Doing so might create a turf war with existing House committee chairs, but Democratic lawmakers on Friday downplayed that likelihood given the desire among their caucus to mount a sprawling investigation into what happened.

In a statement on Friday after Republicans successfully filibustered the bill to create the commission, Pelosi signaled the job wasn’t done.

“Honoring our responsibility to the Congress in which we serve and the Country which we love, Democrats will proceed to find the truth,” Pelosi said.

Republicans on Friday said they recognized this was a likely next step. Senate Republicans who opposed the commission said that if Pelosi goes that route, it would be easier to contend that such a probe would be geared at helping Democrats in the 2022 midterm elections.

Yet other Republicans said they were perplexed that their colleagues wouldn’t endorse a bipartisan commission, arguing their party is ceding control to Democrats, who are almost certain to mount a headline-generating probe into everything that happened on January 6.

“Without this commission, there will still be an investigation,” said Sen. Bill Cassidy, a Louisiana Republican who voted with five other Senate Republicans to bring the measure forward for debate. “But it will be a House-select committee set up by Speaker Pelosi – the nature of which will be dictated by Democrats and would stretch on for years.”

In the Senate, two separate committees – the Rules Committee and Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee – are conducting probes about the lack of security preparedness on January 6 and will issue a report the week of June 7. But those investigations are narrowly focused on the response effort that day, rather than the causes behind the insurrection.

On Friday, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer would not say if he believes his committee chairmen should mount their own investigation into the attack.

But the New York Democrat made clear that he thinks the House should move ahead.

“We preferred to do it bipartisan,” Schumer said. “Every Democrat voted for bipartisan, but facts must come out,” he said when asked whether the findings from a Democrat-led committee would be credible.

Ali Zaslav contributed to this story.

Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2021/05/28/politics/house-democrats-select-committee-january-6-attack/index.html

“We are seeing waves of the virus continue globally, and in that world forecasting becomes highly uncertain,” said Constance Hunter, chief economist at KPMG. Hunter added that the uncertain state of congressional negotiations over the administration’s priorities further cloud the projections. “There are still many negotiations between now and the point we have legislation, and those negotiations will contract this plan, not expand it.”

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/us-policy/2021/05/28/biden-budget-economy-2022/