More Americans in six critical swing states disapprove of the job President Biden is doing than approve as the administration tries to recover from the bungled military pullout in Afghanistan and a resurgence of COVID cases across the country, according to a new poll. 

The president’s approval ratings in Arizona, Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, Pennsylvania and Texas ​lag behind his disapproval ratings by 10 points or more, a Civiqs survey shows. ​

In the 2020 presidential election, Biden won three of the states by narrow margins — Arizona, Georgia and Pennsylvania — ​and former President Donald Trump won the other three by slightly higher margins. 

Texas, which Trump won by more than 5 percentage points, has the largest gap in Biden’s ratings at 26 percent. 

​​Fifty-nine percent of Lone Star State ​residents disapprove of Biden and only 33 percent approve. ​

The next-highest gap of the six states is Georgia with 15 percent — 38 percent approve and 53 percent disapprove.​

A recent poll shows that President Biden’s approval rating has dipped in several states including Arizona, Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, Pennsylvania and Texas.
Shawn Thew/CNP/startraksphoto.co

Biden ​won Georgia by .2 percent following a number of recounts.​

The difference is 13 percent in Florida and North Carolina, both states that Biden lost. 

​In Florida and North Carolina, 40 percent approve and 53 percent say they disapprove of his job performance.​

Several factors including Biden’s chaotic military withdrawal from Afghanistan have contributed to the plummeting numbers.
AFP via Getty Images

In highly contested Pennsylvania, which declared Biden the winner ​three weeks after Election Day because of a series of recounts, the gap is the smallest at 10 percent. 

Voters in the Keystone State approve of Biden by 41 percent and 51 percent disapprove. 

Biden has a net positive approval rating in only 13 of the 50 states. 

The resurgence of COVID-19 cases has also led to a massive increase in Biden’s unpopularity.
Alex Horvath/The Bakersfield Californian via AP

Broken down by party, Democrats approve of Biden by 84 percent to 6 percent, but Republicans disapprove of him by 95 percent to 3 percent.

​Among independents, 59 percent disapprove and 30 percent approve.

Whites disapprove of Biden by 60 percent to 33 percent, but the president has strong support among African Americans (76 to 12 percent) and Hispanics (54 to 35 percent).

​The Civiqs poll is the latest to show Biden’s numbers going in the wrong direction. ​

A survey by Marist, NPR and “PBS NewsHour” found that Biden’s approval rating plunged 10 percentage points between May and September — dropping from 53 percent to 43 percent.

​Biden’s approval ratings hovered in the high 50s or low 60s after he took office, but the mounting crises have taken a toll on his ratings. 

​​And in a poll on a possible rematch between Biden and Trump, the former president would eke out a win.​​

The Emerson College survey released last Friday found that 47 percent of voters would pick Trump while 46 percent would vote for Biden. ​​

And 39 percent of Democrats said they would look for a candidate besides Biden in 2024 — while 67 percent of Republicans would stick with Trump.  ​

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2021/09/08/bidens-approval-rating-down-in-several-swing-states-poll/

Secretary of State Antony Blinken on Wednesday called on the Taliban to stop blocking charter flights containing Americans from departing Afghanistan.

The State Department has come under fire for not doing more to pressure the Taliban to allow planes to leave Afghanistan amid reports several planes carrying Americans have been stuck at Mazar-i-Sharif International Airport in Kabul.

STATE DEPARTMENT OBSTRUCTION OF PRIVATE RESCUE FLIGHTS IN AFGHANISTAN REVEALED IN LEAKED EMAIL

Blinken said during a press conference Wednesday at the Ramstein Air Base in Germany that the U.S. government has “made clear” to the Taliban that “these charters need to be able to depart.”

“Those flights need to be able to leave, and the United States government, State Department – we are doing everything we can to help make that happen,” he said. “Those flights need to move. I pointed out some of the complications that are there, but those flights need to move.”

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Blinken’s comments came after he confirmed Tuesday that the State Department had identified a “relatively” small number of Americans trying to evacuate from Mazar-e-Sharif, but he denied the Taliban was creating “any hostage-like situation.”

“It’s my understanding that the Taliban has not denied exit to anyone holding a valid document, but they have said that those without valid documents at this point can’t leave – but because all of these people are grouped together, that’s meant that flights have not been allowed to go,” he said.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/blinken-taliban-blocking-charter-flights-afghanistan

How will the election work?

All registered California voters are eligible to participate in the special election next week. Mail-in ballots have been sent out to all active registered voters.

The ballots have two parts. The first simply asks whether Newsom should be removed as governor. If more than 50% vote “yes,” it’s the end of the road for Newsom.

The second part of the ballot asks which candidate should succeed Newsom. If the governor is recalled, the replacement candidate who receives the most votes will be elected to the remainder of Newsom’s term, which ends Jan. 2, 2023.

Voters can fill out just one part of the ballot, if they want. They can also select a replacement candidate even if they vote against recalling Newsom.

How did we get here?

Opponents of Newsom gathered the nearly 1.5 million signatures required to trigger the recall election. That threshold equaled 12% of the votes cast in the previous gubernatorial election in 2018.

The petition had been approved in June 2020, and its backers were originally given a deadline of Nov. 17 of last year to collect the signatures. But they received a four-month extension due to the pandemic’s impact on their efforts.

That additional time proved pivotal. Signatures began pouring in in late 2020, after photos emerged of Newsom dining mask-free with lobbyists at the vaunted and extravagantly expensive restaurant, The French Laundry.

At the time, Newsom and the state government were advising Californians to mask up and follow social distancing rules as Covid cases began to surge.

Newsom apologized for attending the dinner, saying he “made a bad mistake” and acknowledging that “the spirit of what I’m preaching all the time was contradicted.”

But the backlash refocused the recall election on Covid — even though the pandemic was not mentioned in the original petition.

Rather, it references homelessness, high taxes and other issues that conservatives have long included among their chief criticisms of California. The petition, brought in February 2020 by Orrin Heatlie, a retired sheriff’s sergeant, was the sixth attempt to recall Newsom, who was inaugurated in 2019.

But the recall campaign’s website now puts The French Laundry incident first on its list of reasons to remove Newsom.

Who’s running?

There are 46 challengers running to unseat Newsom. Like the 2003 recall that made Arnold Schwarzenegger the state’s governor, this year’s election has put a wide variety of personalities on display.

Of the 24 Republican candidates on the ballot, talk radio host Larry Elder has emerged as the clear front-runner among that group.

Elder, a supporter of former President Donald Trump, has reportedly raised more than $13 million, dwarfing most of his recall rivals while still trailing far behind the tens of millions raised by opponents of Newsom’s removal.

Other Republican candidates include John Cox, who has traveled to campaign events with a live Kodiak bear in tow, and Caitlyn Jenner, the former Olympic athlete and reality TV personality.

Among the nine Democrats are Hollywood actor Patrick Kilpatrick and YouTube millionaire Kevin Paffrath, as well as a college student, a free speech lawyer and a “cannabis policy advisor” who is asking Californians to vote against recalling Newsom.

Two members of the Green Party, one Libertarian Party member and 10 unaffiliated candidates are also on the ballot.

Who’s expected to win?

With just days to go before the election, Newsom appears increasingly likely to hold onto his seat.

For most of last month, polls compiled by FiveThirtyEight showed voters favored keeping Newsom as governor, but only by a slight margin.

More recent surveys show the preference to keep Newsom outweighs the option to remove him by more than 10 points, according to FiveThirtyEight’s polling average.

Meanwhile, betting markets show the recall effort losing much of its steam over the past month. Newsom’s odds of staying in power are at their highest point since early July.

How unusual is all this?

Attempts to recall elected officials are not uncommon in California — in fact, there have been 179 of them since 1913.

But a small fraction of those petitions garnered enough signatures to prompt a ballot, and in only six instances has the official in question actually been recalled.

Just one governor, the unpopular Democrat Gray Davis, has ever been recalled in California. That 2003 special election saw 135 candidates vie for Davis’ job, including a comedian, a porn star and others who had never run for office before.

Davis was ultimately replaced by Republican Schwarzenegger, the former champion bodybuilder and action movie megastar, who enjoyed universal name recognition.

How will the recall affect the U.S.?

President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris are both slated to campaign for Newsom this week in California.

A Newsom loss in the recall could have major consequences for Democrats across the country — beyond merely the embarrassment and discouragement of losing control of a deep-blue state a year before the midterm elections.

Control of the U.S. Senate could be at stake at some point.

Democratic Sen. Dianne Feinstein, 88, has held her seat since 1992. The oldest sitting senator in the U.S., her health has come under increasing scrutiny. But she maintained in March that she still intends to serve out the rest of her current term, which ends in early 2025.

If Feinstein does leave office early, the governor will appoint her successor. If Newsom is replaced by a Republican, then that governor could appoint a Republican to fill the vacant Senate seat.

That could upend the razor-thin Democratic majority in the Senate, where the two parties are split 50-50 and the vice president wields the tiebreaking vote. Without that slim advantage, Democrats’ hopes for passing key parts of Biden’s already ambitious agenda would likely fall out of reach.

Republicans are eager to have the GOP’s first U.S. Senate seat from California since John Seymour in the early 1990s.

“They’re afraid I’m going to replace her with a Republican, which I most certainly would do and that would be an earthquake in Washington, D.C.,” Elder, the GOP front-runner, reportedly said on another conservative talk radio show.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2021/09/08/california-recall-election-what-to-know.html

Ms. Pelosi, at her weekly news conference on Wednesday, said emphatically that Democrats would not include a statutory increase in the government’s borrowing authority in a budget bill being drafted this month. That bill, under complicated budget rules, could pass without Republican votes in the Senate.

Instead, Democratic leaders will dare Senate Republicans to filibuster a bill that does raise the debt ceiling.

“We Democrats supported lifting the debt ceiling” during the Trump administration, she said, “because it was the responsible thing to do.” She added, “I would hope that the Republicans would act in a similarly responsible way.”

Democrats have several options they are considering. The government will run out of operating funds at the end of the month, so a debt ceiling increase could be attached to a stopgap spending measure — meaning a Republican filibuster would not only jeopardize the government’s full faith and credit, it could shut down the government.

Democrats could also attach it to a major infrastructure bill that passed the Senate with bipartisan support and is supposed to get a House vote by Sept. 27.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2021/09/08/business/economy/united-states-debt-default.html

FIRST ON FOX: Republicans on the House Homeland Security Committee are warning that the safety of Americans who remain in Afghanistan is “in the hands” of the Taliban’s new interior minister, Sirajuddin Haqqani, the head of a designated terror organization and one of the FBI’s most-wanted terrorist operatives. 

The top Republican on the committee, Rep. John Katko, and the top Republican on the House Subcommittee on Intelligence & Counterterrorism, Rep. August Pfluger, wrote a letter to Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, first obtained by Fox News, laying out their concerns after the Taliban announced the formation of its new government in Afghanistan – including Haqqani as interior minister. 

WHITE HOUSE SAYS ‘NO RUSH’ TO RECOGNIZE NEWLY ANNOUNCED TALIBAN GOVERNMENT IN AFGHANISTAN

“As you are aware, the ongoing crisis in Afghanistan continues to pose increased terrorism risk to Americans both at home and abroad,” they wrote to Mayorkas. 

“With American citizens and our Afghan allies awaiting permission from the Taliban to leave the country on chartered flights – a previously unthinkable scenario that is wholly unacceptable to the American people – we are urgently concerned about the Taliban’s naming of one of the FBI’s most-wanted terrorist operatives, Sirajuddin Haqqani, head of a terrorist group known as the Haqqani network, as the country’s acting interior minister,” they wrote. 

Further, Katko and Pfluger warned that individuals serving as interior ministers often hold authorities “related to policies governing security, border enforcement and transportation,” saying that they are “concerned that the safety of American citizens may now be directly in the hands of a known terrorist operative.” 

Biden administration officials said this week that “just under” 100 Americans remain in Afghanistan. The State Department, on Monday, touted the safe evacuation of four American citizens from the country – without interference from the Taliban. 

The Biden administration completed a full withdrawal of U.S. troops from Afghanistan on Aug. 31, after airlifting more than 124,000 Americans and Afghan allies to safety following the Taliban’s swift takeover of the country. Administration officials have said the mission has shifted from a military one to “diplomatic,” maintaining that they are working with Americans still in Afghanistan to get them out of the country. 

STATE DEPARTMENT ON AFGHAN REFUGEES IN US: ‘WE’RE DOING ACCOUNTINGS ON THE BACK END’

“We are concerned that this newfound power in the hands of the Haqqani Network may further exacerbate circumstances leading to Afghanistan becoming a terrorist safe haven, accelerating plotting against the United States emanating from Afghanistan,” they wrote. 

Haqqani leads the Haqqani network, which has been designated by the U.S. government as a Foreign Terrorist Organization since 2012. The Office of the Director of National Intelligence describes the network as “a Sunni Islamist militant organization” that is “responsible for some of the highest-profile attacks of the Afghan war.”

“The Haqqanis are considered the most lethal and sophisticated insurgent group targeting U.S., Coalition, and Afghan forces in Afghanistan,” according to the DNI report. “They typically conduct coordinated small-arms assaults coupled with rocket attacks, IEDs, suicide attacks and attacks using bomb-laden vehicles.”

U.S. officials have blamed the Haqqani network for numerous high-profile attacks in Afghanistan, including the 2011 attack on the Kabul International Hotel and a pair of suicide bombings at the Indian Embassy. The group had also attacked the U.S. Embassy in Kabul in 2011 and is blamed for “the largest truck bomb ever built,” a 61,500-pound device intercepted by Afghan security forces in 2013.

Haqqani is also known as the head of the Taliban’s military strategy, and was placed in charge of security in Kabul after the militants seized the city last month. His exact age is unclear, but he is believed to have been born in either Afghanistan or Pakistan between 1973 and 1980, according to the FBI, which placed him on its most wanted list and is offering a $5 million reward.

The ‘Seeking Information’ poster issued by the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation for Sirajuddin Haqqani, who is Afghanistan’s newly appointed acting interior minister. FBI/Handout via REUTERS    THIS IMAGE HAS BEEN SUPPLIED BY A THIRD PARTY

His father, Jalaluddin Haqqani, founded their namesake jihadist group and handed over leadership before his death in 2018 at 71.  But in the 1980s, the elder Haqqani was among the U.S.-backed mujahedeen warlords battling a Soviet Union invasion and was a close friend and mentor of the slain al Qaeda terrorist Usama bin Laden, according to the U.S. Director of National Intelligence’s Counterterrorism Guide.

Since 2008, Sirajuddin Haqqani has been wanted for questioning in connection with a Kabul hotel bombing that killed six people, including one American. He is also suspected of coordinating and taking part in attacks against U.S. and allied forces in Afghanistan and playing a role in the failed assassination attempt of former Afghan President Hamid Karzai.

He has a long lists of aliases, according to the FBI: Siraj, Khalifa, Mohammad Siraj, Sarajadin, Cirodjiddin, Seraj, Arkani, Khalifa (Boss) Shahib, Halifa, Ahmed Zia, Sirajuddin Jallaloudine Haqqani, Siraj Haqqani, Serajuddin Haqani, Siraj Haqani and Saraj Haqani.

And he’s not the only member of the Haqqani network with influence within the Taliban.

Sirajuddin Haqqani’s younger brother, Anas Haqqani, was freed as part of a prisoner exchange in 2019 that also secured the release of American Kevin King and Australian Timothy Weeks, who had been held hostage by Taliban fighters for over three years. Then he led a Taliban delegation to meet with ex-officials of the toppled Afghan government last month. After the Taliban seized Kabul last month, Haqqani’s uncle, Khalil Haqqani, delivered public remarks at the city’s largest mosque – receiving cheers in response, according to The New York Times.

The Republicans also pointed to the Aug. 26 suicide bombing in Kabul, which took the lives of 13 U.S. service members, saying that with Haqqani having “known ties to al Qaeda, including supporting similar suicide bombing attacks,” they “struggle to understand how the Biden administration’s reliance on vaguely articulated ‘over-the-horizon’ counterterrorism capabilities will be sufficient in protecting the homeland.”

Republicans also pointed to a recent statement made by Gen. Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, who said “there’s at least a very good probability of a broader civil war and that will then in turn lead to conditions that could, in fact, lead to a reconstitution of al Qaeda or a growth of ISIS or other myriad terrorist groups.” 

Republicans went on to demand answers as to how the Department of Homeland Security is supporting diplomatic efforts to evacuate the remaining Americans in Afghanistan and Afghan allies, amid reports that the Taliban is preventing flights from leaving. 

As for those seeking to leave Afghanistan, including Americans, a Taliban spokesperson said individuals have not been able to leave if they do not have proper documentation, but said the creation of the new government would help to better facilitate departures. 

“Regarding the flights, they have to obey our law,” Zabijullah Mujahid, the Taliban spokesman, said. “They have to have proper documents and if they don’t have documents, we will not allow them to go.” 

He explained that individuals “have to have passports, have to have visas, and we have to have an exit stamp on their passports – from now, we’ve had nothing.” 

“Tomorrow, on, we will definitely restart the work of departments and then people will be able to travel abroad,” he said. “So, the next few days, people will be able to travel abroad.” 

Republicans also asked for any intelligence that DHS has related to the Haqqani network’s operations in Afghanistan and the region, whether the network maintains “external plotting capabilities for terrorist attacks,” and if DHS has assessed Haqqani’s appointment to be a signal of a close relationship between the Taliban and terrorist groups. 

“How will DHS navigate potential interactions with a known terrorist on security issues under control of the Taliban’s interior ministry, including interactions pertinent to DHS efforts to help evacuate American citizens and Afghan allies, such as border enforcement and vetting?” they wrote. 

PENTAGON: ‘NO QUESTION’ AFGHANISTAN WITHDRAWAL MAKES IDENTIFYING TERROR THREATS MORE DIFFICULT

“What impact does having the Haqqani network ingrained with Afghanistan’s senior Taliban leadership have on DHS’s overall assessment of terrorist threats to the United States?” they added. 

Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin this week admitted that there is “no question” it will be “more difficult to identify and engage threats that emanate from the region” after the full withdrawal of U.S. troops, but said the U.S. is “committed to making sure that that threats are not allowed to develop that could create significant challenges for us in the homeland.” 

The Taliban, on Tuesday, formally announced the formation of its new government. The Taliban spokesperson said positions within the government are now in an “acting capacity,” but many members of the old guard are part of the new government. 

The government, according to a report by the BBC, will be led by Mullah Mohammad Hassan Akhund, with Taliban co-founder Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar as deputy. Other appointments include Mullah Yaqoob as acting defense minister and Mullah Abdul Salam Hanafi as a second deputy. 

Despite the Taliban’s announcement of its new government, the White House is in “no rush” to recognize them as legitimate.

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“There’s no rush to recognition, and that will be planned dependent on what steps the Taliban takes,” White House press secretary Jen Psaki said. “The world will be watching whether they allow for American citizens, whether they allow individuals to leave who want to, and how they treat women and girls around the country.” 

She added: “I don’t have a timeline for you.” 

Psaki’s comments come after President Biden, on Monday, said recognition of the Taliban government was “a long way off.” 

“That’s a long way off,” he said again. 

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/house-homeland-gop-taliban-haqqani-fbi-terror-most-wanted

Manchin last week published an op-ed urging his party to slow down its work on the bill it aims to pass along party lines using the budget reconciliation process, which can evade a GOP filibuster but will need every Democratic vote in a 50-50 Senate. Given his concerns about debt and inflation, Manchin wrote in the Wall Street Journal that he “won’t support a $3.5 trillion bill, or anywhere near that level of additional spending, without greater clarity.” Those comments followed a vow from Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (D-Ariz.) that she would not support $3.5 trillion.

Schumer conceded on Wednesday that moderate Democratic senators like Manchin and Sinema don’t see eye-to-eye with progressives like Bernie Sanders of Vermont and Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts. Sanders sought as much as $6 trillion in spending and indicated on Wednesday he would not climb down any further: “That $3.5 trillion is already the result of a major, major compromise.”

Yet with Manchin and Sinema publicly resisting that figure and several other moderate Democrats not yet publicly committed to it, Schumer (D-N.Y.) is under pressure to concoct a compromise on a proposal that most in the party argue cannot be further slimmed. As envisioned now, the jobs and families plan will expand the safety net, take climate action, raise taxes on the wealthy and continue a child tax credit that’s been a linchpin of Democrats’ coronavirus stimulus bill. But those programs won’t last as long as Sanders and other liberals would like them to.

Republicans are reveling in Democrats internal debate, hoping their entreaties to Manchin and Sinema can pay off and narrow Democrats’ ultimate spending ambitions. At an event in Kentucky on Wednesday, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell summed up how the GOP is viewing the two moderates who have veto power over the bill.

“I pray for them every night. I wish them well. We give them lots of love,” McConnell said.

But Schumer enjoys a close relationship with Manchin, and Democrats are not yet alarmed about their internal whip count after Schumer pushed through a $1.9 trillion coronavirus aid law as well as a $550 billion infrastructure bill with lockstep Democratic support. Describing Schumer’s approach, Sen. Tammy Duckworth (D-Ill.) said “he lets that messy process move forward with a real deadline, and he gets us to the end and he gets those votes from all of us.”

“We’re going to all come together to get something big done,” Schumer said Wednesday. “It’s our intention to have every part of the Biden plan in a big and robust way.”

Marianne LeVine contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2021/09/08/schumer-manchin-megabill-510446

The head of the World Health Organization is calling on rich countries with large supplies of coronavirus vaccines to refrain from offering booster shots through the end of the year, expanding a call that has largely fallen on deaf ears.

WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus also said Wednesday he was “appalled” at comments by a leading association of pharmaceutical manufacturers who said vaccine supplies are high enough to allow for both booster shots and vaccinations in countries in dire need of jabs but facing shortages.

COVID-19 BOOSTER SHOTS: FAUCI STRESSES NEED FOR FDA APPROVAL AMID WHITE HOUSE SPAT

“I will not stay silent when companies and countries that control the global supply of vaccines think the world’s poor should be satisfied with leftovers,” he told a news conference.

Tedros had previously called for a “moratorium” on booster shots through the end of September, but the United States and other countries have begun or are considering plans to offer them to their vulnerable people.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/health/who-chief-halt-booster-shots-year

Critics are pushing back against Texas Gov. Greg Abbott for comments he made during a bill signing on Tuesday about the timeline for getting an abortion under new state law.

Montinique Monroe/Getty Images


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Critics are pushing back against Texas Gov. Greg Abbott for comments he made during a bill signing on Tuesday about the timeline for getting an abortion under new state law.

Montinique Monroe/Getty Images

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott is again under fire for his state’s restrictive new abortion law, after falsely claiming it does not force victims of rape or incest to give birth even though it prohibits abortions after about six weeks — which is before many people even know they’re pregnant.

At a bill signing for a different piece of legislation Tuesday, Abbott was asked about forcing a rape or incest victim to carry their pregnancy to term. He misleadingly replied that the law does not require that and went on to say that the state will “work tirelessly” to “eliminate all rapists.”

“Obviously, it provides at least six weeks for a person to be able to get an abortion, and so, for one, it doesn’t provide that,” Abbott said. “That said … rape is a crime, and Texas will work tirelessly to make sure that we eliminate all rapists from the streets of Texas by aggressively going out and arresting them and prosecuting them and getting them off the streets.”

In fact, the countdown for those six weeks starts from the first day of a person’s last period (not the “expected” period that was missed), leaving many with only about one or two weeks to end the pregnancy, if that, under the new law.

When “six weeks” isn’t six weeks

Abbott’s latest comments are drawing a fresh round of criticism from opponents of the law, which bans abortion as soon as cardiac activity is detectable. (More here on so-called fetal heartbeat bills — and why doctors call that term misleading.)

Many people don’t yet know they’re pregnant at that stage, and those who do would have just days to make a decision, attend the state’s requisite two clinic visits and undergo the procedure.

“Oh please,” tweeted Planned Parenthood Action PAC, in response to a video of Abbott’s comments. “If you don’t understand many people don’t even know they’re pregnant until after 6 weeks, then you shouldn’t be restricting their options.” (Planned Parenthood has said only about 10% to 15% of Texans who obtain abortions in the state are fewer than six weeks into pregnancy.)

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., slammed Abbott in an interview with CNN’s Anderson Cooper on Tuesday, saying he lacks basic knowledge of biology.

“I’m sorry we have to break down Biology 101 on national television, but in case no one has informed him before in his life, six weeks pregnant means two weeks late for your period,” Ocasio-Cortez said. “And two weeks late on your period … can happen if you’re stressed, if your diet changes or for really no reason at all. So you don’t have six weeks.”

As The 19th News puts it, “Six weeks of pregnancy does not mean six weeks to get an abortion.”

It explains further: “Gestational age begins at the end of a previous period, and the first sign of pregnancy is often missing one’s period. A typical menstrual cycle lasts 28 days, or about four weeks. A person cannot get pregnant until after they have ovulated, which generally happens halfway through the cycle.”

So if someone has a regular menstrual period, they may know they are pregnant as soon as four weeks into their pregnancy, leaving them two weeks to arrange an abortion. People with irregular periods may not know until later, or should take a test — and many tests can’t detect pregnancy before a missed period. Plus, not all people are actively monitoring to see if they’re pregnant, The 19th adds, with almost half of all pregnancies unplanned.

Backlash over Abbott’s rape comments

Ocasio-Cortez also took issue with Abbott’s comments on rape, noting that the majority of people who are raped or sexually assaulted are assaulted by someone that they know.

The anti-sexual violence nonprofit RAINN says 8 out of 10 rapes are committed by someone known to the victim.

“These aren’t just predators that are walking around the streets at night. They are people’s uncles, they are teachers, they are family friends, and when something like that happens, it takes a very long time, first of all, for any victim to come forward,” Ocasio-Cortez added. “And second of all, when a victim comes forward, they don’t necessarily want to bring their case into the carceral system.”

Rep. Lizzie Fletcher, D-Texas, told MSNBC that Abbott’s talk of eliminating rape is “magical thinking,” saying his actions and priorities say otherwise.

She pointed to the state’s backlog of untested rape kits. However, Abbott did sign legislation in 2019 to tackle that backlog, which one of the legislation’s Democratic sponsors said this year has reduced that number by 80%. State lawmakers passed several bills this year related to rape kit funding and reform.

The Texas Association Against Sexual Assault shared information on how sexual assault survivors can find a crisis center in their area, noting that extensive coverage of the new abortion law “has left many survivors feeling scared, vulnerable, and confused.”

This story originally appeared in the Morning Edition live blog.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2021/09/08/1035119369/fact-check-texas-gov-greg-abbotts-misleading-remarks-on-the-states-abortion-law

Updated 6:06 AM ET, Wed September 8, 2021

(CNN)Former Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger — the only person in California history to win a gubernatorial race in a recall election — is aggressively neutral on the one coming up on September 14.

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Former CA Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger: “It’s very dangerous” for Newsom

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Former Gov. Gray Davis: “No one goes through life without losing an election”

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Bustamante: “I was hoping to be sort of an insurance policy”

    Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2021/09/08/politics/arnold-schwarzenegger-gavin-newsom-california-recall-podcast/index.html

    Anti-abortion rights demonstrators gather in the rotunda at the Capitol while the Senate debated anti-abortion bills in Austin, Texas in March.

    Jay Janner/AP


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    Anti-abortion rights demonstrators gather in the rotunda at the Capitol while the Senate debated anti-abortion bills in Austin, Texas in March.

    Jay Janner/AP

    DALLAS — Texas Gov. Greg Abbott on Tuesday defended a new state law banning most abortions that also does not provide exceptions for cases of rape or incest, saying it does not force victims to give birth even though it prohibits abortions before some women know they’re pregnant.

    Abbott, a Republican, added that Texas would strive to “eliminate all rapists from the streets” while taking questions during his first press conference since the law took effect last week.

    The comments drew new criticism from opponents of the Texas law that is the biggest curb on abortion in the U.S. since they were legalized a half-century ago, prohibiting abortions once medical professionals can detect cardiac activity, which is usually around six weeks. Though abortion providers in Texas say the law is unconstitutional, they say they are abiding by it.

    “His comments are confusing to me because they certainly do not seem to reflect the realities of this law,” said Amy Jones, the chief executive officer of the Dallas Area Rape Crisis Center.

    Recent surveys by the U.S. Department of Justice found that most rapes go unreported to police, including a 2019 survey that found about 1 in 3 victims reporting they were raped or sexually assaulted.

    Abbott signed the measure into law in May. Although other GOP-led states have passed similar measures, they have been blocked by courts. Texas’ version differs significantly because it solely leaves enforcement to private citizens who can sue abortion providers who violate the law.

    Abbott was asked about the new abortion restrictions while signing into law an overhaul of Texas’ election rules.

    “Texas will work tirelessly to make sure that we eliminate all rapists from the streets of Texas by aggressively going out and arresting them and prosecuting them,” Abbott said.

    Jones said Abbott’s statements were both confusing and disheartening. She said she’d “like to hear more” from Abbott on his statement on eliminating rape.

    “Certainly it is in our mission statement to work to end sexual violence, that is why we exist, but we are also very aware that that is an aspirational goal that yes, we do believe that this is a preventable crime, but it if it were that easy, rape would no longer exist,” Jones said.

    The Justice Department has said it will not tolerate violence against anyone who is trying to obtain an abortion in Texas as federal officials explore options to challenge the law.

    Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2021/09/08/1035089278/texas-governor-defends-abortion-law-saying-state-will-eliminate-all-rapists

    For some survivors, a door slamming or a car backfiring may be all it takes.

    Ms. Garnier escaped from the Bataclan uninjured after bursting through an emergency exit. But she wants to see the accused in person and wants the world to understand what victims have been through: the exhausting hyper-vigilance, the endless medical procedures, the administrative obstacle course to get compensation from France’s official victim’s fund, the isolation from friends and family, the broken careers.

    “To measure the real impact that this event had on our lives,” Ms. Garnier said. “So that they really realize that six years later, it’s still very, very close.”

    Stéphanie Zarev, 48, who was also in the Bataclan that night, said that for years she was plagued by panic attacks and flashbacks. She has avoided watching or reading about the attacks.

    “But now,” she said, “I need to know.”

    She hopes that the testimonies will help her understand how the attacks came to be. Her fear is that the trial, delayed by the coronavirus pandemic and coinciding with France’s 2022 presidential election, will be used to score political points.

    While France has avoided a mass casualty attack since a 2016 truck massacre in Nice, a string of smaller-scale stabbings and shootings have kept terrorism fears particularly acute.

    “In France, there was a before and after Nov. 13, 2015, just like in the United States there was a before and after Sept. 11,” said Georges Fenech, a former lawmaker who led a parliamentary inquiry into the 2015 attacks that found failings by French security services.

    In both cases, “we were the victims of new forms of terrorist threats that were previously unknown, and that challenged all of our strategies,” he said, acknowledging that France, which has passed a raft of antiterrorism and anti-extremism bills in recent years, had put in place many of the inquiry’s recommendations.

    Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2021/09/08/world/europe/paris-terror-attacks-trial.html

    A man lights a candle on Sept. 14, 2001 in memoriam of the victims of the September 11th terrorist attacks in New York City.

    Robert F. Bukaty/Associated Press


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    Robert F. Bukaty/Associated Press

    A man lights a candle on Sept. 14, 2001 in memoriam of the victims of the September 11th terrorist attacks in New York City.

    Robert F. Bukaty/Associated Press

    Two more victims of the 9/11 terror attacks at the World Trade Center have been identified in New York City–just days before the nation marks the 20th anniversary of the tragedy.

    Dorothy Morgan of Hempstead, New York, is the 1,646th victim to be identified through ongoing DNA analysis of unidentified remains recovered from the disaster that claimed 2,753 lives. The second person–and the 1,647th victim– is a man whose name is being withheld at his family’s request.

    Morgan and the man were identified by New York City’s Office of Chief Medical Examiner using new forensic technology and advances in DNA science.

    “Twenty years ago, we made a promise to the families of World Trade Center victims to do whatever it takes for as long as it takes to identify their loved ones, and with these two new identifications, we continue to fulfill that sacred obligation,” said Dr. Barbara A. Sampson, Chief Medical Examiner of the City of New York.

    Morgan’s identity was confirmed through DNA testing of remains recovered in 2001, the Office of Chief Medical Examiner said. The unnamed man’s identity was confirmed through remains found in 2001, 2002, and 2006.

    It’s the first time in two years a victim’s remains have been identified. There are still more than 1,100 victims, at least 40% of those who died on 9/11, that remain unidentified.

    According to The New York Times, forensic scientists are testing and retesting more than 22,000 body parts that were recovered from the World Trade Center site. Much of the testing is done using bone fragments the size of a Tic Tac.

    The longtime effort to identify victims of the World Trade Center attacks is considered the largest and most complex forensic investigation in U.S. history, according to the New York City’s Office of Chief Medical Examiner.

    Sampson said, “No matter how much time passes since September 11, 2001, we will never forget, and we pledge to use all the tools at our disposal to make sure all those who were lost can be reunited with their families.”

    Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2021/09/08/1035046778/9-11-victims-identified-using-new-technology

    A towering bronze depiction of General Robert E Lee – one of the largest Confederate statues in the US – has been removed from its pedestal in Richmond, Virginia, the former capital of the Confederacy.

    The 21ft (6m) statue of Lee on a horse had topped a huge granite base twice as tall as that in a prominent residential boulevard named Monument Avenue for more than 130 years. The pedestal was smothered in graffiti during anti-racism protests following George Floyd’s 2020 murder by a white police officer in Minneapolis.

    After years of resistance and a long court battle, Virginia’s governor, Ralph Northam, ordered the statue taken down last summer, citing the pain felt across the country over the death of Floyd. But until a recent court ruling cleared the way, Northam’s plans had been tied up in litigation.

    Crews began work before 8am on Wednesday. Two public viewing areas were set up, with only limited visibility. A crowd of about 200 people chanted “What do we want? Justice. When do we want it? Now!” as the work crew, dwarfed by the size of the statue, strapped red and blue harnesses to the Lee figure and his horse.

    The crew strapped red and blue harnesses to the Lee figure and his horse. Photograph: Jim Lo Scalzo/EPA

    Memorials to the pro-slavery Confederacy – the southern states which revolted against the federal government during the civil war – have long been criticized. Hundreds of statues of famous Confederate figures still exist throughout the US.

    Virginia brought in a deconstruction crew surrounded by a heavy police presence to strap the statue to a crane. State, capitol and city police officers closed streets for blocks around the state-owned traffic circle in Richmond, using heavy equipment and crowd-control barriers to keep crowds away.

    “This is a historic moment for the city of Richmond. The city, the community at large is saying that we’re not going to stand for these symbols of hate in our city any more. And it was important for me to be here to see this historic moment,” said Rachel Smucker, 28, a Richmond resident who was at the viewing site early on Wednesday with her sister.

    Smucker, who is white, said she moved to Richmond around three years ago. It was her first time living in the south, and she found Monument Avenue “jarring”.

    “I’ve always found it to be offensive, as a symbol of protecting slavery and the racism that people of color still face today,” Smucker said.

    The statue had stood among four other large Confederate statues on the avenue, but the city removed the others last summer.

    “We put things on pedestals when we want people to look up,” Northam said in June last year, when he announced the removal plan. “Think about the message that this sends to people coming from around the world to visit the capital city of one of the largest states in our country. Or to young children.”

    Plans called for the statue to be cut into at least two pieces and hauled to an undisclosed state-owned facility until a decision is made about its final disposition. The pedestal is to remain for the time being, although workers are expected to remove decorative plaques and extricate a time capsule on Thursday.

    After Floyd’s death, the area around the statute became a hub for protests and occasional clashes between police and demonstrators. The pedestal has been covered by constantly evolving, colorful graffiti, with many of the hand-painted messages denouncing police and demanding an end to systemic racism and inequality.

    Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/sep/08/robert-e-lee-statue-confederate-general-richmond-virginia

    A 7.0 magnitude earthquake rattled the southwest region of Mexico late Tuesday, killing at least one person, and prompting local leaders to appeal for calm in communities impacted.

    Social media images showed buildings swaying and people standing outside their homes trying to keep their balance during an apparent aftershock. 

    “There are nervous breakdowns, people are worried because there have been aftershocks,” Adela Román, the mayor of Acapulco, told television news outlet Milenio. She said there are “many gas leaks in many places” as well as some landslides and fallen walls. 

    A couple walks past a taxi cab that was damaged by falling debris after a strong earthquake in Acapulco, Mexico, Tuesday, Sept. 7, 2021. (AP Photo/ Bernardino Hernandez)

    Héctor Astudillo, the governor of Guerrero state, said at least one person was killed after being struck by a falling light post in a town northwest of Acapulco, according to the Wall Street Journal

    EXPLAINER: WHY HAITI IS PRONE TO DEVASTATING EARTHQUAKES

    The U.S. Geological Survey said the quake was centered about 10 miles northeast of Román’s city. 

    View of damaged cars outside a hotel after a quake in Acapulco, Guerrero state, Mexico on September 7, 2021. (Photo by FRANCISCO ROBLES/AFP via Getty Images)

    The quake was so powerful, it caused buildings to rock and sway in Mexico City, nearly 200 miles away. The ground shook for nearly a minute in some parts of the capital and some people evacuated their buildings.

    HAITI EARTHQUAKE: TROPICAL DEPRESSION GRACE A CONCERN FOR RECOVERY EFFORTS WITH FORECASTS OF HEAVY RAIN

    People gather outside on the sidewalk after a strong earthquake was felt, in the Roma neighborhood of Mexico City, Tuesday, Sept. 7, 2021.  (AP Photo/Leslie Mazoch)

    Mexico City authorities added there were no early reports of significant damage in the city, though they said electricity was knocked out in some neighborhoods. 

    “We heard loud noise from the building, noise from the windows, things fell inside the house, the power went out,” said Sergio Flores, an Acapulco resident. “We heard leaking water, the water went out of the pool and you heard people screaming, very nervous people.”

    Medical staff move patients out of a hospital after an earthquake in Mexico City, capital of Mexico, on Sept. 7, 2021. (Photo by Sunny Quintero/Xinhua via Getty Images)

    Before the first death was reported, President Andrés Manuel López Obrador said on Twitter that authorities in the four states that most felt the earthquake told him there were no victims or serious damage beyond some collapsed walls and falling rocks.

    Locals sit on a sidewalk after a strong earthquake in Acapulco, Mexico, Tuesday, Sept. 7, 2021. The quake struck southern Mexico near the resort of Acapulco, causing buildings to rock and sway in Mexico City nearly 200 miles away. (AP Photo/ Bernardino Hernandez)

    Around 1.6 million customers were estimated to be without power in Mexico City and the states of Mexico, Guerrero, Oaxaca, and Morelos, the Federal Electricity Commission (CFE) said in a statement.

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP 

    Mexico’s National Civil Defense noted it was conducting reviews in 10 states following the earthquake. The threat of potential waves has passed, according to the Pacific Tsunami Warning Center.

    Tuesday’s earthquake occurred four years to the day after a magnitude-8.2 earthquake that struck off the coast of Mexico’s southern state of Chiapas, largely destroying the town of Juchitan in neighboring Oaxaca state and killing dozens.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report

    Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/world/earthquake-strikes-southwest-mexico

    My “Build Back Better” plan with key investments to fight climate change, cutting emissions and make things more resilient. Each dollar we invest, every dollar — we raise a city block by two feet, flood-proof power stations, sanitations, reduction in the buildup of kindling in our forest, installing electrical lines underground rather than overhead — saves us six dollars for every single dollar we spend to do those things.

    Because the next time disaster strikes, the flood is contained, the fire doesn’t spread as widely, and power stays on. Not to mention those investments save lives, homes and create good-paying union jobs.

    I hosted 56 heads of state in Washington. And I pointed out, we’re talking about climate change, and I said I think of one word when I think of climate change: jobs. Good-paying jobs. Each of these things requires a good-paying job, not $7 or $12 or $15, but $45, $50 an hour plus health care. That’s what is needed. And so, folks — and also, Wall Street, not too far from here, acknowledges that if we spend the money on these things, we’re going to grow the economy, increase employment.

    You know, the fire in Oregon sent smoke all the way to the Atlantic. A storm in the Gulf, as you have now figured out, can reverberate 10 states away. Supply chains and crop production get interrupted, driving up costs, devastating industries all over America. This is everybody’s crisis. Everybody’s crisis.

    And let me just say, again: The fact is that the damage done on the West Coast, which I’ll be heading to, they’ve already burned five million acres to the ground. That’s bigger than the state of New Jersey, if I’m not mistaken. Five million acres. And you see it by the smoke that ends up coming over the East Coast.

    Folks, we’re all in this. It’s about time we stopped the regional fights and understand helping somebody make sure there’s no fewer fires in the West warrants helping people in this alley make sure they’re not flooded.

    And by the way, it’s not just the flooding. I’ll end with this — not just the flooding. Flooding ends up overrunning sanitation systems. And it causes disease. People get sick, and it’s serious, serious business. So we’ve got a lot of work to do.

    Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2021/09/07/us/politics/biden-speech-transcript-hurricane-ida.html

    Updated 6:06 AM ET, Wed September 8, 2021

    (CNN)Former Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger — the only person in California history to win a gubernatorial race in a recall election — is aggressively neutral on the one coming up on September 14.

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    Former CA Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger: “It’s very dangerous” for Newsom

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    Former Gov. Gray Davis: “No one goes through life without losing an election”

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    Bustamante: “I was hoping to be sort of an insurance policy”

      Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2021/09/08/politics/arnold-schwarzenegger-gavin-newsom-california-recall-podcast/index.html

      The U.S. Geological Survey said the 7.0 magnitude quake struck 11 miles northeast of Acapulco. Officials initially issued a tsunami warning, but U.S. and Mexican officials later said such an event was unlikely. Still, the quake was strong enough to be felt by residents of Mexico City, the capital, where the lights went off in some buildings and many residents ran outside, huddling together in the rain.

      Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2021/09/07/mexico-earthquake-7-ucgs/