The Senate on Tuesday failed to advance the Paycheck Fairness Act, legislation intended to address the gender pay gap.

The big picture: The 49-50 vote saw Democrats in support and Republicans opposed. At least 60 votes were required to end the filibuster and move the measure to the floor for a vote.

The bill would “provide more effective remedies to victims of discrimination in the payment of wages on the basis of sex.”

  • Pennsylvania Rep. Brian Fitzpatrick was the only republican to vote in favor.
  • Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell said Monday that Democrats’ agenda is up against GOP resistance, and is “transparently designed to fail,” CNN writes.
  • Most Republicans support the Wage Equity Act, introduced by Rep. Elise Stefanik (R-N.Y.), which would encourage companies to voluntarily analyze employee pay and direct GAO, an independent government agency, to study the impacts of women leaving the workforce for family-related reasons.

What they’re saying: “[T]he only way that a bill to provide equal pay to women is designed to fail is if Senate Republicans block it,” Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said, per CNN.

  • “If the Republican leader wants to talk about radical positions, I’d say that opposing legislation to provide equal pay for women supported by a solid majority of voters is a radical position.”
  • “We’ve been talking about the wage gap for years now with no action taken by the Senate. Women with the same jobs, the same degree, sometimes even better degrees than their male colleagues, are making less money. For women of color, the gap between them and their male colleagues is even wider,” he said.

Background: The legislation passed the House 217-210 in April along party lines, making it the fourth time Democrats have attempted to pass the act. It previously passed the House in 2008, 2009 and 2019.

Source Article from https://www.axios.com/senate-fail-paycheck-fairness-act-5c21ef09-0a3d-48b6-b06a-791a5e47daf6.html

He said he hit on a winning formula: posing as Trump’s relatives who didn’t have Twitter accounts, and then amassing followings by spreading false claims. The account he set up in Barron Trump’s name, for instance, tweeted that “COVID is a scam” and “Q is real,” the Times reported, a reference to QAnon, the extremist ideology.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/nation/2021/06/09/joshua-hall-trump-imposter-fraud/

In an interview, Manchin said Biden has not leaned on him to support the sweeping elections bill that the moderate Democrat publicly rejected over the weekend. Nor has Biden covertly asked Manchin to support another Democrat-only spending bill focused on jobs and the economy. Yet.

“The president respects the institution so much because he was here and knows it better than everyone else. He does not get involved,” Manchin said on Tuesday in the Capitol. “I already know where he is. I know the challenges he has, and I know basically the pressure he’s receiving all the time. We’re just trying to find a balance for it.”

Despite his jab at Manchin, Biden has largely remained quiet about the senator’s insistence that infrastructure bills be bipartisan and his opposition to both filibuster reform and the sweeping elections bill that expands voting access. Biden and his senior staff are regularly in tough with Manchin, according to a White House aide. And Biden appointed Manchin’s wife, Gayle, to the Appalachian Regional Commission.

Manchin described Biden as “just a good human being, but also an astute politician who understands the process in the Senate.” Still, they don’t see eye-to-eye on everything.

“Biden’s very perplexed by Manchin. He doesn’t know how, or what he thinks. Or what he really wants,” said a lawmaker who has spoken with Biden recently. “That makes it hard for the president to ‘get him,’ so to speak.”

Known inside their party’s caucus as the “Two Joes,” Manchin and Biden’s relationship is the linchpin in the Democratic Party’s success over the next 18 months. Manchin is the squeakiest wheel in a 50-50 Senate that’s incredibly hard to tame, while Biden forged his reputation on cutting deals with lawmakers like Manchin, one of the last conservative Democrats in Washington.

Without Manchin, Biden simply cannot win — and the ever-quotable senator says he’s committed to making the president successful. What’s more, both are back-slapping throwback pols from small states where everyone knows them, and each often harkens back to when the Senate wasn’t a morass of partisanship and gridlock.

It’s all part of what Manchin’s colleagues see as a larger strategy. Biden can win Manchin over when it matters, but the former longtime Democratic senator must be strategic in both timing and substance.

“There’s a personal relationship between the president and Sen. Manchin. I think that can make a difference,” said Sen. Ben Cardin (D-Md.). “He knows that he will have impact on Sen. Manchin. It would not be effective at this particular moment. But I think he’s waiting for that opportunity.”

Bipartisan talks are still playing out on infrastructure, for example, meaning it’s not yet time for Biden to secure Manchin’s vote on a more aggressive, partisan proposal. And the 50-member Senate Democratic majority lacks the votes to change the filibuster rules even if Manchin were to entirely reverse his hard stance against reforming it, making the West Virginian’s support for the sweeping elections bill a far less urgent matter for the White House.

There will come a time, however, when Biden needs Manchin to back him up. And Democratic senators are confident that the president will be far more successful with Manchin than either former Presidents Barack Obama or Donald Trump were.

“Sen. Manchin is strong willed,” said Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.). “But President Biden has dealt with plenty of strong-willed senators.”

Former Obama chief of staff, Bill Daley, said the White House has carefully controlled what is said about Manchin’s outsized influence in the 50-50 Senate.

“You don’t need somebody trashing a politician. [Biden] would be incensed if that happened,” said Daley. “Other politicians may do that, but you have not seen one hint of White House staff disgruntled, mad at Manchin, pissing on him.”

Still, Biden’s comment about Manchin’s record made waves in Democratic circles. Manchin said Biden’s jab about his voting record was “out of context” and shrugged it off. Then, in an elevator ride with Sen. Steve Daines (R-Mont.), Daines said he was Manchin’s “body man” and briefly shielded him from a reporter.

“Joe Manchin is saving our country. Joe is trying to get bipartisanship,” Daines said. Manchin replied: “I need you to help me with that.”

Working with Republicans like Daines, Manchin sees his job “as saving democracy.” But Manchin’s bipartisanship-at-all-costs ethos has drawn the ire of House progressives and activists, particularly for his position against Democrats’ sweeping elections bill and his defense of the filibuster.

When asked about progressive anger toward Manchin and his refusal to back the sweeping legislation to overhaul voting access, White House press secretary Jen Paski said Tuesday ”we’re going to leave the name calling to others.”

“The president considers Sen. Manchin a friend,” Psaki continued. “He disagrees with him on voting rights and the bill the senator has expressed he won’t support … We’ll continue to seek ways we can work with Sen. Manchin even in areas we have disagreement.”

Psaki would not say whether liberal attacks on Manchin worried the White House as they work to ensure Manchin comes along on Biden’s infrastructure proposals and other major agenda items. She said she suspects that Manchin, rather than feeling hurt, has a “stronger backbone” and his colleagues said being filleted by liberals actually helps him in West Virginia.

Democratic senators have held two caucus meetings on the broad elections bill, and Manchin attended only the second one, listening intently the whole time. Just a few days later, however, he came out against his colleagues’ bill — prompting a flood of private conversations with Senate Democrats intended to sway him.

“I don’t think it’s ‘can Joe Biden reach him or not.’ And that’s the end of the conversation,” said a Senate Democrat, who estimated as many as 10 Democrats have spoken to Manchin about voting rights in the past two days. But this senator also said Biden will be a key ingredient to swaying Manchin.

And as one source familiar with the dynamics put it: “Manchin is still getting everything he wants and unless you take something from him, he’s not going to move.” That source said Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer is the one person who can move Manchin, describing Schumer as the person Manchin has the “strongest personal relationship” with and “whom he respects.”

Still, the majority of people who spoke about the relationship between Biden and Manchin said the president is key to moving Democrats forward. Sen. Debbie Stabenow (D-Mich), a member of Democratic leadership, said “President Biden understands West Virginia. I think Joe wants to work with the president.”

Manchin has always marched to his own tune in the caucus, voting more often with Republicans than his colleagues and opposing things like gutting the filibuster on nominations in 2013. But now he’s doing it at a time of total Democratic control and in a split Senate, making him the hardest Democrat to sway on big issues of the day and a pivotal vote that determines the success of Biden’s agenda.

Former Sen. Max Baucus (D-Mont.), who worked alongside both Biden and Manchin, said it’s in Biden’s “DNA” to “try to find agreements. And he’s going to keep trying.”

“Joe Manchin’s the same,” said Baucus.

Sam Stein contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2021/06/09/biden-manchin-democrat-agenda-492193

Some 90 advocacy groups want President Biden and Democratic leaders to abandon bipartisan infrastructure negotiations and instead use the partisan reconciliation process to enact a more progressive package, Axios has learned.

Why it matters: An open letter being released by the group Wednesday morning comes immediately after Biden decided to end talks with Republican senators, led by Shelley Moore Capito (R-W.V.), and turn his attention toward striking a deal with a separate, bipartisan group.

  • Republicans’ “unreasonable demands” have left the White House and Democratic leadership “with no choice but to move forward without them,” the letter states.
  • The signees say the letter is “even more timely” now that the talks between Biden and Capito have ended, noting Republicans in the bipartisan group of 20, commonly referred to as the “G20,” have floated similar provisions and pay-fors as the one Capito led.
  • The letter was organized by Real Recovery Now!, Invest in America Action and the CareCantWait coalition.

Driving the news: The signatories range from progressive organizations like the Center for American Progress and Sunrise Movement to the more moderate Service Employees International Union (SEIU) and the U.S. High Speed Rail Association.

  • “Working families can’t wait any longer for real investment to create good union jobs, especially in fast-growing fields like caregiving,” said Mary Kay Henry, president of SEIU, which represents roughly 2 million labor workers. “True leaders need to seize the moment and take action now.”
  • Zac Petkanas, senior adviser to Invest in America Action, said: Any additional time wasted trying to bridge that unbridgeable gap is just delaying millions of good-paying jobs for American families.”

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer says he and other Democratic leaders are working on a reconciliation bill as a backup plan in case this latest round of negotiations collapse.

  • Schumer told reporters the Senate may end up passing part of Biden’s package in a bipartisan manner and the rest via reconciliation.
  • “But we’re not going to sacrifice the bigness and boldness in this bill. We will just pursue two paths.”

State of play: The G20 group Biden is now focusing on is led by Sens. Bill Cassidy (R-La.), Mitt Romney (R-Utah), Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) and Kyrsten Sinema (D-Ariz.).

  • They met at the Capitol on Tuesday to hash out details of their proposal.
  • So far, the group has floated a larger, $900 billion infrastructure proposal focused on roads, bridges and other traditional projects.
  • White House press secretary Jen Psaki said the president spoke with Manchin, Sinema and Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-La.) on Tuesday and told them he would stay in touch by phone over the next week while he’s in Europe attending the G7 summit.

Source Article from https://www.axios.com/groups-biden-reconciliation-infrastructure-progressives-cac4c149-9046-4301-ad6e-5e39b2a7294b.html

The Maine Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has reported that eight residents who were fully vaccinated against coronavirus have died with COVID-19, including some who were inoculated while receiving end-of-life care. A coronavirus infection acquired 14 days post-final vaccination dose is considered a “breakthrough case.” 

As of June 4, the state had reported 387 such cases. Breakthrough cases are expected, the CDC has previously said, and there may be a small percentage of fully vaccinated people who still get sick, are hospitalized or die from the virus. 

A spokesperson from Maine’s CDC explained that the eight people’s deaths “met the criteria to be COVID-19 related after fully vaccinated,” but noted that these individuals “died with COVID-19, not ‘of COVID-19.’” 

PFIZER LOWERS COVID-19 VACCINE DOSES FOR KIDS IN CLINICAL TRIAL

Nationwide, out of the 135 million people who have received a COVID-19 jab, there have been 3,016 hospitalized or fatal vaccine breakthrough cases reported to the CDC as of June 1. Of those cases, 535 involved deaths, 16% of which were reported as asymptomatic or not related to COVID-19. The CDC reported 23% of the hospitalizations reported were asymptomatic or not related to COVID-19. 

CLICK HERE FOR COMPLETE CORONAVIRUS COVERAGE

“Vaccine breakthrough cases occur in only a small percentage of vaccinated people,” the CDC stated. “To date, no unexpected patterns have been identified in the case demographics or vaccine characteristics among people with reported vaccine breakthrough infections.” 

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/health/maine-8-vaccinated-residents-died-with-covid-19

The US Senate has overwhelmingly approved a bill to boost American semiconductor production and the development of artificial intelligence and other technology in the face of growing international competition, most notably from China.

The 68-32 vote for the bill on Tuesday demonstrates how confronting China economically is an issue that unites both parties in Congress. It is a rare unifying issue in an era of division as pressure grows on Democrats to change Senate rules to push past Republican opposition and gridlock.

The centerpiece of the bill is a $50bn emergency allotment to the US commerce department to boost semiconductor development and manufacturing through research and incentive programs previously authorised by Congress. Overall, the bill would increase spending by about $250bn, with most of the spending occurring in the first five years.

The bill now heads to the House of Representatives, which earlier passed a different version. The two will have to be reconciled into a single bill before it is sent to the White House for the president’s signature.

Joe Biden said he was “encouraged” by the Senate’s passage of the United States Innovation and Competition Act.

“We are in a competition to win the 21st century, and the starting gun has gone off,” Biden said.

“As other countries continue to invest in their own research and development, we cannot risk falling behind. America must maintain its position as the most innovative and productive nation on Earth.”

Supporters described the bill as the biggest investment in scientific research that the country has seen in decades. It comes as the nation’s share of semiconductor manufacturing globally has steadily eroded from 37% in 1990 to about 12% now, and as a chip shortage has exposed vulnerabilities in the US supply chain.

“The premise is simple, if we want American workers and American companies to keep leading the world, the federal government must invest in science, basic research and innovation, just as we did decades after the second world war,” said Senate majority leader, Chuck Schumer.

“Whoever wins the race to the technologies of the future is going to be the global economic leader, with profound consequences for foreign policy and national security as well.

“If we do nothing, our days as the dominant superpower may be ending. We don’t mean to let those days end on our watch. We don’t mean to see America become a middling nation in this century.”

The bill has a number of other China-related provisions, including prohibiting the social media app TikTok from being downloaded on government devices, and would block the purchase of drones manufactured and sold by companies backed by the Chinese government.

It would also allow diplomats and Taiwanese military to display their flag and wear their uniforms while in the US on official businesses, and creates broad new mandatory sanctions on Chinese entities engaged in US cyberattacks or theft of US intellectual property from US firms. It provides for a review of export controls on items that could be used to support human rights abuses.

The Senate minority leader, Mitch McConnell, backed the bill but said it was incomplete because it did not incorporate more Republican-sponsored amendments.

“Needless to say, final passage of this legislation cannot be the Senate’s final word on our competition with China,” he said. “It certainly won’t be mine.”

Senators slogged through days of debates and amendments leading up to Tuesday’s final vote. Schumer’s office said 18 Republican amendments will have received votes as part of passage of the bill. It also said the Senate this year has already held as many roll call votes on amendments than it did in the last Congress, when the Senate was under Republican control.

While the bill enjoys bipartisan support, a core group of Republican senators has reservations about its costs.

One of the bill’s provisions would create a new directorate focused on artificial intelligence and quantum science with the National Science Foundation. The bill would authorize up to $29bn over five years for the new branch within the foundation, with an additional $52bn for its programs.

Rand Paul, a Republican senator for Kentucky, said Congress should be cutting the foundation’s budget, not increasing it. He called the agency “the king of wasteful spending”. The agency finances about a quarter of all federally supported research conducted by America’s colleges and universities.

The lead Republican on the committee also weighed in to support the bill.

“This is an opportunity for the United States to strike a blow on behalf of answering the unfair competition that we are seeing from communist China,” said Roger Wicker.

Senators have tried to strike a balance when calling attention to China’s growing influence. They want to avoid fanning divisive anti-Asian rhetoric when hate crimes against Asian Americans have spiked during the coronavirus pandemic.

Senators added provisions that reflect shifting attitudes toward China’s handling of the Covid-19 outbreak. One would prevent federal money for the Wuhan Institute of Virology as fresh investigations proceed into the origins of the virus and possible connections to the lab’s research. The city registered some of the first coronavirus cases.

  • The Associated Press, Reuters and Agence France-Presse contributed to this report

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/jun/09/us-senate-approves-50bn-boost-for-computer-chip-and-ai-technology-to-counter-china

“He informed Senator Capito today that the latest offer from her group did not, in his view, meet the essential needs of our country to restore our roads and bridges, prepare us for our clean energy future and create jobs,” White House press secretary Jen Psaki said in a statement Tuesday afternoon.

“He offered his gratitude to her for her efforts and good faith conversations, but expressed his disappointment that, while he was willing to reduce his plan by more than $1 trillion, the Republican group had increased their proposed new investments by only $150 billion,” she added.

On Capitol Hill, Capito told ABC News, “We had a robust package that we could’ve made work and I think I could’ve gotten 20-25 Republicans to go with me.”

“They moved the goal posts on me a couple of times and they just decided to walk away,” she added.

Asked what’s next, she said, “You’ll have to ask him.”

The back and forth over infrastructure has gone on for weeks now, with top-line figures for both parties eking gradually toward one another. The sizable cost difference between the two sides was due in part to fundamental disagreements about the scope of the bill. Republicans have argued that things like child care, home care, work training and other “human infrastructure” elements of the White House package have no place in an infrastructure bill.

An administration official said that with the White House moving on from negotiations with Republicans, the president will now turn his focus to engaging with a bipartisan group of senators to find a deal on infrastructure — a group he would welcome Capito to join.

That engagement has already begun — Psaki said Biden spoke with Sens. Kyrsten Sinema, D-Ariz., Bill Cassidy, R-La., and Joe Manchin D-W.Va., on Tuesday.

“He urged them to continue their work with other Democrats and Republicans to develop a bipartisan proposal that he hopes will be more responsive to the country’s pressing infrastructure needs,” Psaki said.

With talks between Biden and Capito now sidelined, attention on the Hill has turned to that bipartisan group that has been meeting behind the scenes to craft a plan for several weeks.

Sinema is leading that group, along with Sen. Rob Portman, R-Ohio. Sources told ABC News their coalition is zeroing in on a proposal with a price tag of roughly $900 billion and the group is planning to share their framework with 20 other centrist-minded senators.

A group of at least 10 moderates met to discuss a possible deal Tuesday evening.

Portman and Sen. Mitt Romney, R-Utah, who is also involved in the talks, each described their negotiations as waiting in the wings until Capito indicated that her effort had reached its end.

Majority Leader Chuck Schumer at a press conference on Tuesday seemed optimistic that the bipartisan negotiations could yield a result, but the senator was clear the package being crafted behind the scenes is not all that Democrats, particularly the White House and progressives, want to do on the infrastructure front.

Biden has proposed sweeping legislation, including funding for child care, elder care, new schools, and electric vehicles that Republicans consider far outside what is traditionally considered infrastructure. Originally, Biden’s proposals were worth roughly $4 trillion.

Schumer, on Tuesday, said that he plans to use a fast-track budget procedure known as reconciliation to push through all of the remaining Democratic infrastructure priorities with just 50 Democratic votes, if a bipartisan deal is obtained.

“That’s not going to be the only answer,” Schumer said of the Sinema-Portman effort. “We all know as a caucus, we will not be able to do all the things that the country needs in a totally bipartisan – in a bipartisan way, and so at the same time we are pursuing the pursuit of reconciliation. And that is going on at the same time, and it may well be that part of the bill that’ll pass will be bipartisan and part of it will be through reconciliation. But we’re not going to sacrifice the bigness and boldness in this bill.”

Biden is preparing to depart on his first foreign trip as president on Wednesday. Psaki said he would stay in contact with members of the bipartisan group working on a deal during his trip in Europe, and tasked members of his Jobs Cabinet and White House aides Steve Ricchetti, Louisa Terrell and Brian Deese to meet with them in person to move the ball forward.

Source Article from https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/biden-capito-infrastructure-negotiations-ended/story?id=78155172

The Senate on Tuesday approved a sweeping effort to fortify the nation’s ability to compete with China’s economic and political ambitions by investing billions of dollars in scientific research and American manufacturing across several industries, including artificial intelligence, robotics and wireless service.

The quarter-trillion-dollar package, approved 68 to 32, earmarks $52 billion to address the domestic manufacturing shortage of semiconductors, which has slowed the production of cars, laptops and video game consoles.

The bill also strengthens the nation’s intellectual property rules, gives the federal government new authority to limit foreign visitors who may be conducting espionage and imposes a “diplomatic” boycott of the Olympic Games scheduled to take place in China next year. Under such an action, American athletes could participate in the Games, but the State Department could not sponsor trips by U.S. government employees.

Called the U.S. Innovation and Competition Act, the legislation marks one of the most significant steps Congress has taken in decades to stand up to the growing power of Beijing.

The rare bipartisan effort comes after the pandemic brought into sharper focus long-simmering concerns about China’s growing manufacturing capabilities and a decline in the domestic production of pivotal goods, such as personal protective equipment and computer chips.

It also underscores how both political parties have come to view China’s threat as a vital national priority.

The bill is a significant agreement for Senate Majority Leader Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.) and Republican Sen. Todd Young of Indiana. One of his party’s earliest China “hawks,” Schumer has been pushing the issue for years in hopes of thwarting China’s economic influence.

He said the U.S. had settled into a complacency “at the top of the global heap,” which allowed China to outpace the country in funding for basic scientific research as a percentage of gross domestic product.

“We have put ourselves in a very precarious position of potentially falling behind the rest of the world in the technologies and industries that will define the next century,” Schumer said on the Senate floor, hailing the bill as a chance to turn the tide.

“It could be a moment in history that future generations look back on as a turning point for American leadership in the 21st century,” he said.

Schumer was able to weave together a political coalition by channeling both parties’ interest in helping U.S. manufacturing and standing up to China.

By involving several different Senate committees, he hoped to give every senator a chance to get skin in the game. To that end, the bill ballooned to 2,400 pages and several extraneous measures made their way into the debate, including funding for NASA, a ban on the sale of some shark fins and labeling requirements for king crab important to Alaskans.

The bill went on a bumpy ride through the Senate, where some Republicans held up action on the bill last month in an attempt to get additional concessions, including new trade policy and unrelated southern border funding. Republicans ultimately got votes on 18 amendments, an unusually high number in a chamber that has operated without many amendment opportunities in recent years.

Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) said the bill has “several smart, targeted measures,” but remains incomplete and an “imperfect approach to an extremely consequential challenge.”

Many senators privately believe the competitiveness bill could be one of the few bipartisan bills enacted this year, particularly as negotiations over policing reform and an infrastructure package slow to a crawl.

“The bill is not perfect,” said Sen. Roger Wicker (R-Miss.). “There are elements that I can do without and there are parts that I wish were included, but on the whole, this is a necessary step to keep our nation competitive.”

Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) and others opposed a provision to fund $10 billion for NASA’s lunar landing program that appears likely to help Amazon founder Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin space company.

The bill now faces an uncertain future in the House, where members are writing their own policy, according to a House Democratic leadership aide. It is unknown how much of the bill would have to change in order to get through both chambers and to the president’s desk.

The Senate bill includes $195 billion in funding for scientific research and development. It provides $10 billion to create 10 technology hubs across the country to connect researchers to develop ideas with manufacturing sectors for products.

It would ban nearly all U.S. involvement in nuclear cooperation with the Chinese government or entities incorporated in the country.

Federal agencies would be prohibited from hosting certain Chinese visitors and many agencies would have to take steps to ensure data, such as intellectual property or biomedical research involving the human genome, are safe from national security risks.

The federal government could prohibit foreign nationals from entering the country if it is determined they are trying to spy on sensitive or emerging technologies.

Source Article from https://www.latimes.com/politics/story/2021-06-08/senate-approves-expansive-bill-to-boost-u-s-competitiveness-with-china

Former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley on Tuesday ripped Kamala Harris for her handling of the border, as the Vice President still has yet to set a date to travel there and has gone nearly 100 days without a press conference on the migrant surge.

“This is embarrassing,” Haley said on “America Reports.”

 “Any leader knows you can’t fix what you can’t see. She hasn’t been on the ground, she hasn’t talked to Border Patrol—she doesn’t know what is happening there.”

KAMALA HARRIS’ MEXICO, GUATEMALA VISIT: EVERYTHING YOU NEED TO KNOW

Haley asserted that Harris and Biden seemed “fearful” of traveling to the border and were in “flat out denial.”

“They think that if they don’t go it won’t be real. It’s very real.”

During an interview with NBC News Tuesday, Harris was asked whether she had any plans to visit the border. 

“I – at some point – you know – we are going to the border. We’ve been to the border,” Harris replied. “So this whole – this whole – this whole thing about the border. We’ve been to the border. We’ve been to the border.” 

Harris was again pressed, with NBC’s Lester Holt reminding the vice president that she, herself, has not been to the border while in office. 

“I – and I haven’t been to Europe. And I mean, I don’t – I don’t understand the point that you’re making,” Harris said, adding “I’m not discounting the importance of the border.”

Haley reacted to the interview bluntly.

“No one has given her the job of Europe. She’s got the job of the border.”

Despite not traveling to the border thus far, Harris traveled to Guatemala and Mexico in the last few days to discuss the “root cause” of migration.

Haley added that she appreciated Harris’ recent trips since both of those countries’ respective presidents were vocal in criticizing the vice president and President Biden for their rhetoric on immigration, which Haley asserted helped to spur South and Central American migration into the U.S. 

During her trip to Guatemala, Kamala urged people in the region not to come to the U.S., a comment which sparked outrage from some Democrats and stood in contrast to many of her previous statements. 

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

“To folks in this region who are thinking about making that dangerous trek to the United States-Mexico Border—do not come. Do not come.” 

But, Harris’ change in messaging did not appear to be enough for Haley. 

“You know what says do not come—when you show up at the border and you really have actions speak louder than words.”

Fox News’ Brooke Singman contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/nikki-haley-kamala-harris-border-crisis-embarrassing-mexico-guatemala-immigration

Former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley on Tuesday ripped Kamala Harris for her handling of the border, as the Vice President still has yet to set a date to travel there and has gone nearly 100 days without a press conference on the migrant surge.

“This is embarrassing,” Haley said on “America Reports.”

 “Any leader knows you can’t fix what you can’t see. She hasn’t been on the ground, she hasn’t talked to Border Patrol—she doesn’t know what is happening there.”

KAMALA HARRIS’ MEXICO, GUATEMALA VISIT: EVERYTHING YOU NEED TO KNOW

Haley asserted that Harris and Biden seemed “fearful” of traveling to the border and were in “flat out denial.”

“They think that if they don’t go it won’t be real. It’s very real.”

During an interview with NBC News Tuesday, Harris was asked whether she had any plans to visit the border. 

“I – at some point – you know – we are going to the border. We’ve been to the border,” Harris replied. “So this whole – this whole – this whole thing about the border. We’ve been to the border. We’ve been to the border.” 

Harris was again pressed, with NBC’s Lester Holt reminding the vice president that she, herself, has not been to the border while in office. 

“I – and I haven’t been to Europe. And I mean, I don’t – I don’t understand the point that you’re making,” Harris said, adding “I’m not discounting the importance of the border.”

Haley reacted to the interview bluntly.

“No one has given her the job of Europe. She’s got the job of the border.”

Despite not traveling to the border thus far, Harris traveled to Guatemala and Mexico in the last few days to discuss the “root cause” of migration.

Haley added that she appreciated Harris’ recent trips since both of those countries’ respective presidents were vocal in criticizing the vice president and President Biden for their rhetoric on immigration, which Haley asserted helped to spur South and Central American migration into the U.S. 

During her trip to Guatemala, Kamala urged people in the region not to come to the U.S., a comment which sparked outrage from some Democrats and stood in contrast to many of her previous statements. 

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

“To folks in this region who are thinking about making that dangerous trek to the United States-Mexico Border—do not come. Do not come.” 

But, Harris’ change in messaging did not appear to be enough for Haley. 

“You know what says do not come—when you show up at the border and you really have actions speak louder than words.”

Fox News’ Brooke Singman contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/nikki-haley-kamala-harris-border-crisis-embarrassing-mexico-guatemala-immigration

In the version that passed the Senate, lawmakers did leave intact a $10 billion authorization for two lunar lander contracts, a provision that could benefit Blue Origin, the space company founded by Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, who owns The Washington Post. Cantwell, whose committee oversees NASA and helped craft the bill, spearheaded the spending as part of a bipartisan amendment adopted earlier in the debate. Her efforts ignited a controversy because Blue Origin is based in her home state.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/us-policy/2021/06/08/senate-china-science-technology/

Prosecutors on Tuesday filed charges against a couple suspected in the road rage shooting death of Aiden Leos, the 6-year-old boy who was killed last month on an Orange freeway. 

Marcus Anthony Eriz, 24, has been charged with murder and shooting at an occupied vehicle, the Orange County District Attorney’s Office said. Eriz’s girlfriend, 23-year-old Wynne Lee, faces counts of being an accessory after the fact and illegally carrying a concealed firearm.

If convicted as charged, Eriz could be sentenced to a maximum of 40 years to life in prison, while Lee may face up to three years in state prison plus one year in Orange County Jail, according to the DA’s office.

“I do want to promise today … that we will get justice for him,” DA Todd Spitzer said at a Monday news conference. “We have to promise him that.”

Eriz and Lee were arrested at their home in Costa Mesa, authorities announced Sunday evening. They were booked into jail, where their bail was each initially set at $1 million.

The couple on Tuesday afternoon made their first appearance in court, where their arraignments were continued to June 18.

In the courtroom, prosecutors asked the judge to increase Eriz’s bail to $2 million and to reduce Lee’s to $500,000. The judge set those provisional bail amounts until June 18, when the matter will be discussed further.

Investigators believe Eriz fired the fatal shot while Lee was driving the vehicle on the northbound 55 Freeway in Orange the morning of May 21.

Aiden, on his way to kindergarten, was in a booster seat in the back of his mother’s car when he was struck by the gunfire during what CHP described as a road rage incident over “a perceived unsafe lane change.”

According to accounts from the mother and other relatives, the suspect’s vehicle had cut her off while she was driving in the carpool lane, and she made a gesture at the other car. The road rage violence unfolded after that.

In an interview with ABC News, Joanna Cloonan described hearing a “really loud noise” as she began to merge away from the suspect’s car.

“And my son said, ‘Ow,’ and I had to pull over. And he got shot,” she said.

Cloonan immediately pulled over and called 911. Aiden was rushed to a local hospital where he succumbed to his injuries a short time later.

“It’s every mother’s worst nightmare,” Alexis Cloonan, Aiden’s older sister, told KTLA. “She had to hold him while he was dying. No mother should have to go through that.”

The suspects fled the scene in what was described as 2018-2019 white Volkswagen Golf SportWagen, a photo of which was released by CHP less than a week after the deadly shooting.

“We have recovered what we believe are the weapon and automobile used in the crime,” Donald Goodbrand, CHP Border Division’s assistant chief, said at a Monday afternoon news conference. The items were not found at the arrest site, he added.

Goodbrand credited tips from the public along with the collaborative work of various law enforcement in helping to lead to the arrests.

At least $500,000 in rewards have been offered for information leading to an arrest in the case, but officials at Monday’s briefing declined to disclose any details about whether anyone would receive the funds.

“Information from the public throughout this process has been extremely helpful,” Goodbrand said, noting investigators had received “hundreds” of tips.

Eriz and Lee were apprehended one day after the funeral service were held for Aiden. CHP Capt. Mike Harris told reporters that he personally called Joanna Cloonan to notify her of the arrests.

“I FaceTimed her,” he said. “I let her know what had taken place. She was very emotional.”

Source Article from https://ktla.com/news/local-news/man-charged-with-murder-in-road-rage-shooting-death-of-6-year-old-aiden-leos-orange-county-prosecutors-say/

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Source Article from https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2021/06/voting-rights-joe-manchin-democrats-stuck.html

Vice President Kamala Harris received a swath of criticism Tuesday following her awkward response to questions about the ongoing border crisis.

Harris was asked by NBC’s Lester Holt when she would be visiting the border, a question asked since she took over management of the border crisis for the Biden administration in March.

HARRIS TELLS GUATEMALAN PRESIDENT THAT MIGRATION IS A TOP PRIORITY, AFTER HE BLAMES US FOR SURGE

Harris claimed “we have been to the border,” seemingly referring to other administration officials, to which Holt responded that Harris, specifically, had not been to the border. 

“And I haven’t been to Europe. I mean, I don’t understand the point you are making,” she replied, laughing.

Harris was excoriated on social media following the response, with some, including Republican members of Congress, telling her it was “not a joke to laugh at,” and criticizing her for making light of the situation at the border. Others noted Harris’ “inability” to answer the question, and pointed out that the discussion was revolving around “a crisis – not a vacation.”

KAMALA HARRIS’ DIPLOMATIC TRIP TO LATIN AMERICA GETS OFF TO BUMPY START AS PLANE FORCED TO TURN AROUND

“Really, really uncomfortable,” “The View” co-host Meghan McCain tweeted.

HARRIS TO MAKE ANTI-CORRUPTION EFFORTS ‘FRONT AND CENTER’ OF VISIT TO GUATEMALA, MEXICO

Harris visited Guatemala and Mexico Monday to address concerns over illegal immigration, holding her first press conference addressing the border since taking over management of the crisis 75 days prior. 

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

The trip followed Guatemalan President Alejandro Giammattei placing blame on the Biden administration a day earlier for the increased number of migrants attempting to make the journey to the U.S. Harris told him migration was a top priority, but in contrast to his claim against the administration, she blamed climate change and the economies of Central America as main drivers of illegal immigration.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/media/kamala-harris-slammed-cringe-response-border-questions-joke-laugh

The CDC said the change came after it revised its criteria for travel health notices. The CDC said it also revised its rating for the United States to “Level 3” from “Level 4.”

The agency said the new criteria for a Level 4 “avoid all travel” recommendation has changed to 500 cases per 100,000 from 100 COVID-19 cases per 100,000.

The agency added that many countries have lower ratings “because of the criteria changes or because their outbreaks are better controlled.” The CDC said it expects more countries to get lower, more favorable travel ratings.

Other countries being lowered to “Level 3” include Honduras, Indonesia, Jordan, Libya, Panama, Poland, Denmark and Malaysia.

Many of the countries that now have lower ratings remain on the U.S. government’s list of countries subject to severe travel restrictions – and most have been subject to the restrictions since early 2020.

The United States bars nearly all non-U.S. citizens who have within the previous 14 days been to China, the United Kingdom, Ireland, India, South Africa, Brazil, Iran and the 26 Schengen nations in Europe without border controls.

Asked why the United States is maintaining the restrictions even though some countries that now have low infection rates are subject to them, while others with high rates are exempt, CDC Director Rochelle Walensky said on Tuesday the issue was subject to “an interagency conversation, and we are looking at the data in real time as to how we should move forward with that.”

Reuters reported on Tuesday the Biden administration is forming expert working groups with Canada, Mexico, the European Union and the UK to determine how best to restart travel safely after 15 months of pandemic restrictions, citing a White House official.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2021/06/08/cdc-eases-travel-recommendations-on-61-countries-including-japan.html

Vaccine doses are in short supply in African countries — and even when they arrive, there may not be a way to get them into people’s arms in a timely fashion. Above: People wait to get vaccinated at a hospital in Thika, Kenya, in March.

Patrick Meinhardt/Bloomberg via Getty Images


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Patrick Meinhardt/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Vaccine doses are in short supply in African countries — and even when they arrive, there may not be a way to get them into people’s arms in a timely fashion. Above: People wait to get vaccinated at a hospital in Thika, Kenya, in March.

Patrick Meinhardt/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Vaccines are now on their way to parts of the world where vaccines are sorely lacking.

The Biden administration is exporting an initial batch of 25 million doses from a promised 80 million for countries in need, part of the president’s pledge on June 3 to “lead the world in the fight to defeat COVID-19.”

The private sector is jumping in as well. On Tuesday, the Mastercard Foundation announced a $1.3 billion donation over the next three years to assist the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention in vaccinating at least 50 million people on the continent.

But is it enough to beat back a virus that has already killed more than 3.7 million people globally and continues to mutate in alarming ways?

The Biden donations are designated for a wide range of countries in Latin America, the Caribbean and parts of Asia and Africa. The remaining 55 million should arrive by the end of June, says White House COVID-19 Response Coordinator Jeff Zients.

It’s a welcome albeit belated sign of shifting U.S. priorities. Foreign leaders and health experts say the 80 million doses must be swiftly followed with substantially more vaccines and assistance.

“It’s a good start, but we could be contributing a lot more,” says Dr. Denise Garrett, vice president of Applied Epidemiology at the Sabin Vaccine Institute.

“We have a lot of vaccines that are sitting somewhere in a warehouse, and they need to be in people’s arms,” she says.

The U.S. alone has purchased about 1.1 billion doses of COVID-19 vaccines from manufacturers and, with a total population of 328 million, will have hundreds of millions of excess doses. Meanwhile, about 2 billion shots have been administered worldwide — more than 80% in either high income or upper middle income countries.

This 80 million is about priming the pump for much more supply that needs to come in to make a meaningful impact over the next weeks to months,” says Dr. Krishna Udayakumar, director of the Duke Global Health Innovation Center.

The U.S could have 300 million excess doses by the end of July and the European Union and G7 countries could have anywhere from 1 to 2 billion excess doses available in 2021, according to two analyses by Udayakumar and his colleagues.

“Timing is really critical here. Doses in December or next year are going to be much less meaningful than sharing doses this summer,” he says.

COVAX — the global vaccination initiative co-led by the World Health Organization (WHO) — is distributing 75% of the doses from the U.S., although White House officials say they will ultimately decide which countries receive them.

As the world’s largest vaccine distributor, COVAX set out to ensure that 20% of the world’s population was vaccinated by the end of the year but has struggled to secure enough shots to stay on track.

“COVAX has been sort of an underperformer,” says Dr. Ingrid Katz, associate faculty director of the Harvard Global Health Institute. “It has the potential to be a very important piece at this moment, but it hasn’t lived up to that as of yet.”

In fact, COVAX faces a shortfall of 100 million doses in June and July and will need another 250 million doses by September — in part because India, where the majority of vaccines are manufactured, has diverted those doses for its own population in response to the country’s horrific surge in infections.

Last week, nearly 40 countries committed about $2.4 billion to fund the COVAX program, which will help pay for about 1.8 billion doses and eventually cover 30% of the adult population in lower income countries.

Despite the burst of global generosity, many countries are still desperate for more shots.

This week, WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus called on nations in the G7, slated to meet in the U.K. later this week for the annual summit, to commit to share hundreds of millions of doses in June and July.

“COVAX is the best way to distribute vaccines quickly and equitably,” Tedros told reporters, “sharing vaccines now is essential for ending the acute phase of the pandemic.”

The initial allotment of 80 million doses represents just the “beginning” of America’s contribution and part of a broader strategy to end the pandemic, which will also include helping countries deliver vaccines and curb the spread of the virus, said Gayle Smith, the U.S. State Department coordinator for Global COVID-19 Response and Health Security.

“We’re not doing this to curry any political favor,” Smith told reporters on Friday.

Meanwhile, there are many outstanding questions about the U.S. global plan.

“We need a proper strategy — what are the goals going to be? What’s going to happen in three months? In six months?” says Dr Junaid Nabi, a fellow at the Aspen Institute and senior researcher at Harvard Business School.

Even the calculus behind how the U.S. is divvying up the doses is still somewhat murky.

For example, the U.S. is not sending all of its doses to COVAX but is instead setting aside 25% to be used in a “flexible” way, sending the vaccine directly to regions with “immediate needs” like India and the West Bank and Gaza.

“We really need to be able to see what the rationale is behind these kinds of decisions because the person you didn’t give to is going to be mad,” says Amanda Glassman, chief executive officer at the Center for Global Development.

“Many of these countries have purchased enough vaccines to cover 60% or more of their populations, but the issue is the delivery date because they’re at different places in the line.”

Udayakumar says the U.S. needs to go beyond the current framework used by COVAX — one based purely on population vaccine coverage — and factor in where the doses will have the greatest impact, like in India and Brazil.

“We should be using some clear and transparent criteria, including where we can avert the most deaths and suffering, where the health systems are most fragile or at risk of collapsing, and where we can stop transmission, especially of variants of concern,” he says.

And Dr. Nabi says the focus on giving away doses in a piecemeal fashion — what can have connotations of “charity” — also misses other key ways the U.S. can support the global vaccination campaign. This includes helping “countries develop capacity to produce the raw materials” and “transfer technology,” so local manufacturers can produce vaccines.

“That would go a long way so countries don’t have to constantly depend on, ‘OK, we received 20 million this month, but are we going to receive 20 million the next month?’ “

Some countries that ordered vaccines are stuck waiting for their deliveries from COVAX. Others have the vaccines only to run into problems getting them into peoples’ arms. Malawi ended up destroying thousands of vaccines because they had expired. The Democratic Republic of Congo returned more than 1 million doses after realizing it would not be able to use them before their expiration date.

“That’s what’s going to start happening everywhere unless we are thinking of doses and delivery at the same time,” says Ritu Sharma, vice president for U.S. programs and policy at CARE USA.

Sharma’s organization estimates that globally for every one dollar spent on actual vaccines, five dollars needs to be invested in getting those vaccines to the people who need them.

That means transportation. That means the community health workers who will need training to give those shots. That means education for community members so that they are willing to get vaccinated,” she says.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/sections/goatsandsoda/2021/06/08/1004462494/why-millions-of-doses-from-biden-and-a-billion-bucks-from-mastercard-arent-enoug

The progressive New York representative Alexandria Oscasio-Cortez has criticized Vice-President Kamala Harris, for saying undocumented migrants from Guatemala should not come to the US.

On her first foreign trip as vice-president, Harris visited Guatemala on Monday. At a press conference with Guatemala’s president, Alejandro Giammattei, the former California senator spoke about investigating corruption and human trafficking in Central America, and described a future where Guatemalans could find “hope at home”.

But she also had a clear message that undocumented Guatemalan migrants would not find solace at the US border under the Biden administration.

“I want to be clear to folks in the region who are thinking about making that dangerous trek to the United States-Mexico border,” she said. “Do not come. Do not come.”

Later on Monday, Oscasio-Cortez condemned Harris on Twitter, calling her comments “disappointing to see”.

“First, seeking asylum at any US border is a 100% legal method of arrival,” said the congresswoman, an influential voice on the Democratic left since her upset win in a 2018 primary and widely known as AOC.

“Second, the US spent decades contributing to regime change and destabilization in Latin America. We can’t help set someone’s house on fire and then blame them for fleeing.”

Several human rights groups also spoke out.

Rachel Schmidtke, Latin America advocate at the non-profit Refugees International, said: “We continue to urge the Biden administration to build policies that recognize that many Guatemalans will need to seek protection until the longstanding drivers of forced displacement are addressed and realign its message to the Guatemalan people to reflect America’s commitment to the right to seek protection internationally.”

The Asylum Seeker Advocacy Project, a non-profit that works with asylum seekers, tweeted: “Kamala Harris, seeking asylum is legal. Turning back asylum seekers is illegal, dangerous, & oftentimes sends them back to their deaths. Seeking asylum is a right under US and international law.”

Despite Joe Biden moving to undo Trump-era restrictions at the border, including instituting changes to the asylum process, Harris’s speech underlined a continued stance of turning back undocumented migrants.

Central America has long been affected by poverty and violence, amid entrenched cycles of political instability partly caused by criminal elites. Experts contend the US has often aided oppressive regimes. Despite the litany of dangers migrants often face when traveling north, the journey is often safer than remaining at home.

“People are leaving because the corrupt governments (supported by the US) have tolerated and encouraged the growth of these criminal organizations,” said Jeff Faux, founder of the Economic Policy Institute, in an interview with USA Today.

In April, according to CNN, more than 178,000 migrants arrived at the US-Mexico border, the highest one-month total in two decades.

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/jun/08/aoc-kamala-harris-guatemalan-migrants-comments