• The Taliban announced an interim government on Tuesday. 
  • Sirajuddin Haqqani, who is wanted by the FBI, was named Afghanistan’s interior minister.
  • The group did not include any women in the government and has cracked down on protests.

The Taliban on Tuesday announced an interim government in Afghanistan that excludes women and includes the head of a militant group who’s wanted by the FBI.

Mullah Mohammad Hassan Akhund, one of the Taliban’s founders, was named prime minister. He’s on a United Nations blacklist.

And Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar, a Taliban cofounder, has been tapped as deputy prime minister.

Baradar was captured in a US-Pakistani operation in 2010 and imprisoned in Pakistan until 2018. He was released under the urging of the Trump administration amid peace talks between the US and Taliban. He went on to lead the Taliban delegation in the negotiations.

The Taliban named Sirajuddin Haqqani interior minister. Haqqani is the head of the Haqqani Network — a US-designated terror group in Pakistan and Afghanistan with close ties to al-Qaida — and there’s a $10 million US bounty on his head. 

The FBI’s most wanted list says Haqqani is wanted for “questioning in connection with the January 2008 attack on a hotel in Kabul, Afghanistan, that killed six people, including an American citizen.”

“He is believed to have coordinated and participated in cross-border attacks against US and coalition forces in Afghanistan,” the FBI said. “Haqqani also allegedly was involved in the planning of the assassination attempt on Afghan President Hamid Karzai in 2008.”

The Taliban have sought to be known as moderates since marching into Kabul, Afghanistan’s capital, in mid-August, and vowed to establish an inclusive government. But the militant group did not include any women in the interim government and has been cracking down on protests, NBC reported.

Mullah Yaqoob, son of the late Taliban founder and supreme commander Mullah Omar, has been named minister of defense. And Amir Khan Muttaqi, a senior Taliban leader, was made foreign minister.

White House press secretary Jen Psaki on Monday told reporters there was “no rush” for the US to formally recognize the new government in Afghanistan. Psaki said the Biden administration did not have a timeline on this matter but said the “world will be watching” the Taliban’s behavior moving forward.

Source Article from https://www.businessinsider.com/afghanistan-new-interior-minister-heads-a-us-designated-terror-group-2021-9

President Biden was heckled for stranding Americans in Afghanistan while he surveyed the damage from Hurricane Ida in New Jersey on Tuesday.

Biden was visiting a neighborhood in Manville and speaking to police when onlookers erupted over the president’s handling of the U.S. military withdrawal from Afghanistan.

DEM SEN. BLUMENTHAL ‘FURIOUS’ OVER BIDEN ADMIN DELAYING AMERICANS TRYING TO LEAVE AFGHANISTAN

“My country is going to s— and you’re allowing it!” one woman yelled off camera, according to C-SPAN’s footage of the encounter. “And I’m an immigrant and I’m proud of this country! I’d give my life for this country. You guys should be ashamed of yourselves.”

“All this for a f— photo-op?” one man scoffed off camera. “You ain’t gonna do s—!”

“My best friend died in 2011 in Afghanistan for what?” a man asked angrily. “For this guy to pull this s—? You leave them in ruins and leave Americans behind!” 

“He will leave you behind – you guys protecting him,” he said to the police officers assisting Biden.

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“Leave no American behind!” the first woman screamed.

Biden appeared to pay no attention to the hecklers. 

The president has repeatedly defended his handling of the Afghanistan withdrawal despite breaking his promise to keep troops in the now-Taliban-led country until every American was out. The State Department now estimates there are roughly 100 Americans still trying to flee.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/biden-heckled-new-jersey-americans-afghanistan

President BidenJoe BidenSpotlight turns to GOP’s McCarthy in Jan. 6 probe Biden visits union hall to mark Labor Day Biden approves disaster funds for NJ, NY after Ida flooding MORE on Tuesday expressed confidence Sen. Joe ManchinJoe ManchinThe Hill’s Morning Report – Presented by Facebook – Questions on Biden agenda; unemployment benefits to end Supreme Court ruling on Texas abortion law rattles lawmakers Sunday shows – Biden domestic agenda, Texas abortion law dominate MORE (D-W.Va.) will get on board with Democrats’ plans for a multitrillion-dollar reconciliation bill after the centrist senator called for lawmakers to hit “pause” on the package.

“Joe at the end has always been there. He’s always been with me. I think we can work something out. I look forward to speaking with him,” Biden told reporters after returning from touring storm damage in New Jersey and New York.

Asked about the timing of the reconciliation bill moving forward given the administration’s new push for supplemental funding for Afghan refugees and storm recovery, Biden said he’s “comfortable proceeding the way we’ve proceeded so far.”

Manchin, during remarks last week at a West Virginia Chamber of Commerce event, pointed to concerns about “runaway inflation,” the delta variant of the coronavirus and a botched withdrawal from Afghanistan to float slowing down Democrats’ plans for a $3.5 trillion reconciliation bill that contains Biden’s priorities on health care, child care and climate change.

“If the country is facing what we’re facing now … I would ask my colleagues and all of the Senate to hit the pause button on the $3.5 [trillion],” Manchin said at the event. “Let’s sit back. Let’s see what happens. We have so much on our plate. We really have an awful lot. I think that would be the prudent, wise thing to do.” 

Democrats are negotiating and drafting the $3.5 trillion bill, which would require the support of all 50 of the party’s senators to pass. Senate Majority Leader Charles SchumerChuck SchumerBudget reconciliation: Calling it a ‘.5 trillion spending bill’ isn’t quite right Schumer calls for action on climate after Ida flooding House Democrats urge Pelosi to prioritize aid for gyms MORE (D-N.Y.) has given Senate committees until Sept. 15 to finalize their parts of the package so discussions can take place among the rest of the caucus.

Congressional Democratic leaders are also navigating how to pass a $1 trillion bipartisan infrastructure bill alongside the reconciliation package. Progressives have called to prioritize the partisan reconciliation package, while moderate members of the party have urged the House to move forward with the bipartisan bill first.

Source Article from https://thehill.com/homenews/administration/571187-biden-predicts-he-can-work-something-out-with-manchin

Mr. Garland said in his statement on Monday that the federal government would beef up its enforcement of a 1994 law designed to protect women from harassment and intimidation as they sought abortions.

“The department will provide support from federal law enforcement when an abortion clinic or reproductive health center is under attack,” Mr. Garland said. “We have reached out to U.S. Attorneys’ Offices and F.B.I. field offices in Texas and across the country to discuss our enforcement authorities.”

In the face of the calls by Democrats for the administration to do more, the White House and the Justice Department declined to say on Tuesday what else they might have in store.

“The White House Counsel’s Office, the Justice Department, the Department of Health and Human Services are continuing to look for ways to expand women’s access to health care,” the White House press secretary, Jen Psaki, told reporters.

Senator Sheldon Whitehouse, Democrat of Rhode Island, also called on Democrats to investigate whether the Texas law was part of a national campaign being waged by conservative groups and funded by unnamed donors that was intended to push certain legislation, like voter suppression laws.

“We have done a rotten job at exposing that,” Mr. Whitehouse said. “We have been negligent, not just weak, in letting this transpire and not doing the work to tell the American public about it.”

The idea of using the prosecutorial powers of the Justice Department to take on the Texas law gained traction this weekend through an opinion essay in The Washington Post by the constitutional scholar Laurence H. Tribe. The best way for Democrats to protect abortion rights is for Congress to pass a law, Mr. Tribe argued. But he said that Democrats likely do not have enough votes in Congress and warned that the Supreme Court could overturn such a law anyway.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2021/09/07/us/politics/democrats-texas-abortion-law.html

President Biden takes part in a briefing Tuesday with New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy and other local leaders in the aftermath of Hurricane Ida.

Mandel Ngan/AFP via Getty Images


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President Biden takes part in a briefing Tuesday with New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy and other local leaders in the aftermath of Hurricane Ida.

Mandel Ngan/AFP via Getty Images

President Biden on Tuesday spoke in stark terms about the reality of climate change during a visit to the northeast United States, which experienced deadly flooding and catastrophic infrastructure damage last week from Hurricane Ida.

“For decades, scientists have warned that extreme weather would be more extreme and climate change was here. And we’re living through it now,” Biden said during public remarks with New Jersey officials on the fallout from last week’s storm.

“We don’t have any more time.”

New Jersey was among the states hit hardest by the deadly storm, which made landfall in Louisiana and swept to the northeast, bringing with it historic rainfall, gale-force winds and sprinkling several tornadoes in its path.

Ida was New Jersey’s fourth hundred-year storm in just two decades, Somerset County Commissioner Director Shanel Robinson said during the briefing. And experts have warned that such natural disasters will only get more common and more powerful as human-influenced global warming continues.

Dozens of people died from Ida’s wrath alone, while on the other side of the country, deadly wildfires continue to burn out of control, eating away miles of landscape and infrastructure and threatening the air quality for residents of the West Coast.

“Every part of the country is getting hit by extreme weather. And we’re now living in real time what the country’s going to look like,” Biden said.

“We can’t turn it back very much, but we can prevent it from getting worse.”

Since taking office, Biden has vowed to tackle climate change while boosting the nation’s middle class by funding green jobs initiatives as part of his “Build Back Better” agenda.

Climate change has also taken center-stage in Democrats’ historic $3.5 trillion congressional budget plan, which has seen Senate Republicans — and some Democrats — outraged at the plan’s hefty price tag.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2021/09/07/1034848457/biden-sounds-alarm-on-climate-change-in-visit-to-hurricane-wracked-new-jersey

Immigrants from Eastern Europe have flocked to Manville, and its Polish population is one of the state’s largest: One downtown church, Sacred Heart Catholic Church, holds two Polish Masses on Sunday, and there are two delis that sell Eastern European food like pierogies and stuffed cabbage. Immigrants from Central and South America have made Manville more diverse.

Mauro Rojas and Karla Licano, who are from Costa Rica, moved to Manville two years ago. They looked at 30 houses but bought the one on Boesel Avenue, in the Lost Valley. The house was near a vast park and close to a river, and had a backyard with a big porch and an aboveground pool. It was perfect for a family with a young daughter and dog.

The couple had heard that the house had a 1 percent chance of flooding, and even knew that several surrounding lots were empty because the government had bought and demolished flood-prone homes. They took a chance. But the night the floodwaters rose, they saw their dream house — and all of the items in it — disappear.

When water began to leak into their first floor from the basement and front door, Mr. Rojas, who runs a painting business, grabbed a ladder and led his family, including their Beagle mix, to the roof.

Their daughter, Elena, snuggled into her blanket. The dog shook. In tears and with disbelief, the family watched their 1,200-gallon pool rise from the ground, lifted by the water below it.

In the morning, after climbing into a rescuer’s boat, Elena began to weep when she saw the 27 rainbow-colored bags she and her mother had filled with lighted eyeglasses, hair bows, chocolates and other treats the night before. They were floating down the street. It was her sixth birthday.

“She said, ‘Mom, my birthday bags! No!’ and my heart broke,” Ms. Licano, a secretary, said on Tuesday as she stood crying on a muddied floor.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2021/09/07/us/manville-nj-ida-biden.html

Troubles are mounting for a Texas website used to report violators of the state’s extreme anti-abortion legislation after the site was forced offline by two different web hosting platforms.

The site ProLifeWhistleblower.com was removed from its original web host by the provider GoDaddy on Friday before being suspended by its new host, an agency known for providing services to far-right groups.

“For all intents and purposes it is offline,” Ronald Guilmette, a web infrastructure expert, told the Guardian. “They are having technical difficulties. My personal speculation is that they are going to have trouble keeping it online moving forward.”

As of Tuesday, ProLifeWhistleblower.com redirects to Texas Right to Life’s main website.

Created by Texas Right to Life, an evangelical Christian group, the site allowed people to anonymously submit information about potential violations of the new law – which makes it illegal to help women in Texas access abortion after the sixth week of pregnancy.

In recent days, internet users have protested against the site by flooding it with false reports, memes and even porn in the hopes of rendering it less effective.

The website’s difficulties were compounded when GoDaddy, which provides the servers where the website lives, said the site had violated its privacy policies that bar the sharing of third-party personal information including data related to medical issues such as abortion.

The site was then moved to Epik, according to domain registration data first reported by Ars Technica. Epik is known for its “anything goes” attitude towards web hosting, servicing sites that other companies have deplatformed elsewhere for hate speech and other content violations – including 8chan, Gab and Parler.

According to reports from the Daily Beast, Epik contacted the website about potential violation of its own rules concerning the collection of medical data about people obtaining abortions.

“We contacted the owner of the domain, who agreed to disable the collection of user submissions on this domain,” it said in a statement to the Daily Beast.

Epik representatives did not respond to a message seeking comment on Tuesday. As of the time of publishing at 2pm PST on Tuesday, Epik remained the host for ProLifeWhistleblower.com, according to domain registration data available online, although the site does not appear to be operational.

A Texas Right to Life spokeswoman, Kimberlyn Schwartz, said on Tuesday that the website was in the process of moving to a new host, but was not yet disclosing which one.

The original website allowed anyone to submit an anonymous “report” of someone illegally obtaining an abortion, including a section where images can be uploaded for proof.

“Any Texan can bring a lawsuit against an abortionist or someone aiding and abetting an abortion after six weeks,” the website reads, and those proved to be violating the law liable for a minimum of $10,000 in damages.

Schwartz said they were working to get the tipster website back up but noted that in many ways it was symbolic since anyone can report a violation. And, she said, abortion clinics appear to be complying with the law.

“I think that people see the whistleblower website as a symbol of the law but the law is still enforced, with or without our website,” Schwartz said, adding, “It’s not the only way that people can report violations of the law.”

Rebecca Parma, Texas Right to Life’s senior legislative associate, said they expected people to try to overwhelm the site with fake tips, adding “we’re thankful for the publicity to the website that’s coming from all of this chatter about it.”

The Associated Press contributed to this report

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/sep/07/texas-abortion-whistleblower-website-forced-offline

Guantanamo Bay, Cuba (CNN)Five alleged 9/11 plotters, including Khalid Sheikh Mohammed who has been called the mastermind behind the September 11 terrorist attacks, appeared in a military court for a pretrial hearing in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, on Tuesday. All five are accused of having some involvement with planning and executing the 2001 terror attacks.

Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2021/09/07/politics/alleged-9-11-plotters-trial-day-1/index.html

The FDA, CDC and American Medical Association have all warned against the use of ivermectin (shown here in India) in treating COVID-19 patients.

Soumyabrata Roy/NurPhoto/Getty Images


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The FDA, CDC and American Medical Association have all warned against the use of ivermectin (shown here in India) in treating COVID-19 patients.

Soumyabrata Roy/NurPhoto/Getty Images

A judge in Ohio has reversed an earlier emergency order that required a hospital to administer ivermectin to a COVID-19 patient against the hospital’s wishes. The anti-parasitic drug is most commonly used in the U.S. as a dewormer in animals.

Federal agencies and medical associations alike have cautioned against the use of ivermectin to treat COVID-19, as there is little evidence it is effective. But prescriptions — and related calls to poison control centers — have skyrocketed in 2021 as right-wing media have hyped it as a treatment for COVID-19.

A previous ruling by a different judge had ordered the hospital, West Chester Hospital near Cincinnati, to administer the drug to a patient after his wife brought suit over the hospital’s refusal to administer a prescription written by an outside doctor.

“After considering all of the evidence presented in this case, there can be no doubt that the medical and scientific communities do not support the use of ivermectin as a treatment for COVID-19,” Judge Michael A. Oster wrote in the new ruling, issued Monday.

Ivermectin is used in humans to treat parasites such as lice and the worms that cause river blindness. It is also approved by the Food and Drug Administration for similar use in animals, including as a livestock dewormer and a heartworm preventative for dogs and cats.

But the FDA, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and American Medical Association have all warned against using ivermectin as a COVID-19 treatment until additional clinical trials can be completed. The National Institutes of Health, which has not issued a formal recommendation, says most existing studies about the drug’s ability to fight COVID-19 “had incomplete information and significant methodological limitations.”

At the center of the lawsuit affected by Monday’s order is Jeffrey Smith, who tested positive for the coronavirus in July, court records say.

After Smith was admitted to West Chester Hospital, his condition deteriorated steadily. In mid-July, he was transferred to the intensive care unit. On Aug. 1, he was placed on a ventilator. By Aug. 20, doctors put him in a medically induced coma.

His wife, Julie Smith, contacted Dr. Fred Wagshul, affiliated with the Front Line COVID-19 Critical Care Alliance, which has lobbied for the use of ivermectin in COVID-19 patients. He is not board certified within any specialty and has not worked at a hospital in 10 years, according to his own testimony.

Wagshul provided a prescription for ivermectin, doing so without having seen Smith and despite lacking medical privileges at West Chester Hospital, court records say.

The hospital refused to administer the drug, saying it would interfere with other medications.

When Julie Smith filed suit, a different judge granted an emergency injunction on Aug. 23 that ordered West Chester Hospital to begin administering 30 milligrams daily for 21 days. The Smiths’ attorney say that Jeffrey Smith’s condition has since improved.

But in another hearing last week, doctors from West Chester Hospital told the court that ivermectin had not helped their patient. Wagshul, testifying on behalf of the Smiths, did not convince the judge otherwise.

“Plaintiff’s own witness … testified that ‘I honestly don’t know’ if continued use of ivermectin will benefit Jeff Smith,” Oster wrote in the ruling.

“While this court is sympathetic to the Plaintiff and understands the idea of wanting to do anything to help her loved one, public policy should not and does not support allowing a physician to try ‘any’ type of treatment on human beings,” the judge wrote.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2021/09/07/1034947315/ivermectin-ohio-hospital-order-judge

Top image: A man crossing a deserted street during a nationwide lockdown imposed to curb the spread of Covid-19 coronavirus in Sri Lanka’s capital, Colombo, on August 21. Photo by Ishara S. Kodikara.

CNN’s Kristen Rogers and Marnie Hunter contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/travel/article/cdc-very-high-risk-travel-destinations-september-7/index.html

The new abortion law in Texas is roiling the business community, prompting some firms to directly interfere with the controversial enforcement mechanism and putting pressure on others to publicly denounce the measure.

Texas-based dating platforms Match and Bumble set up relief funds to help people affected by the law, while ride-hailing platforms Uber and Lyft decried the statute and said they would cover all legal costs for any of their drivers who get sued for driving a customer to an abortion clinic.

“This law is incompatible with people’s basic rights to privacy, our community guidelines, the spirit of rideshare, and our values as a company,” Lyft wrote in a message to drivers, adding that it will also donate $1 million to Planned Parenthood.

Other companies are taking steps to thwart private enforcement of the law.

Web hosting company GoDaddy dropped an abortion tracking website that was launched to help enforce the six-week abortion ban, saying it violated the firm’s terms of service. The anti-abortion activists moved the site to another web hosting company, Epik, which promptly shut it down as well.

The Texas law, considered the most restrictive in the country, bans abortion as early as six weeks, before most women know they’re pregnant. Under the law, individuals can sue anyone who provides or “aids or abets” an abortion after six weeks for up to $10,000 plus legal fees, a provision that has drawn widespread criticism, including from Republican lawmakers.

Still, as of Tuesday afternoon, only a handful of companies have spoken out against the law. Corporate America has mostly remained silent, despite its vocal opposition to Texas’s restrictive voting bill that was signed into law by Gov. Greg Abbott (R) Tuesday.

“It’s not surprising because this is harder than a number of other issues,” said Sandra Sucher, a professor of management at Harvard Business School. “Abortion is particularly contentious because we know that it relates to people’s religious views, which is kind of a no-go zone for companies.”

Some major companies with large workforces in Texas, including American Airlines, Dell Technologies, AT&T, Google and Amazon, have not publicly commented on the abortion law after speaking out against the voting bill. Those firms criticized the GOP-backed voting bill, which Dell CEO Michael Dell slammed as undemocratic.

Houston-based Hewlett Packard Enterprise did not address the abortion issue in a statement to reporters, saying only that it “encourages our team members to engage in the political process where they live and work and make their voices heard through advocacy and at the voting booth.”

Amid pressure from employees, investors and customers, corporate America has increasingly delved into social justice issues in recent years. But corporations have long stayed away from abortion even as they waded into other political battles.

“We’re seeing the limits of how far corporations are willing to go to express some kind of viewpoint,” said Douglas Chia, a corporate governance consultant. “This issue has been such a lightning rod for decades now and evokes such an emotional response. Certain issues are just too sensitive to comment on.”

Corporate governance experts said that companies are waiting to see what others in their industry do and how public opinion forms around the Texas law.

They’re monitoring new developments, such as Attorney General Merrick GarlandMerrick GarlandDOJ says it will ‘protect’ women seeking abortions in Texas Abortion rights groups want Biden to use bully pulpit after Texas law Senate Committee to hold hearing on FBI’s ‘dereliction of duty’ in Nassar case on Sept. 15 MORE’s Monday statement that the Justice Department will protect women who are seeking abortions in Texas from potential violence.

“Figuring out if this has become sufficiently politically dangerous for them not to say something about, I think, is the calculus they are trying to make,” Sucher said.

Abortion rights activists have called on companies and the general public to boycott Texas over the abortion law. The Portland, Ore., City Council will consider banning trading goods and services with Texas.

In some industries, praising the anti-abortion law is far riskier than condemning it. John Gibson, the CEO of video game developer TripWire, stepped down Monday after tweeting that he was “proud” of the Supreme Court for upholding the law. His tweet sparked intense backlash from the gaming community, including his own co-workers.

Public opinion polls on abortion show varying results depending on how the questions are worded.

Gallup released a poll in June showing that 58 percent of Americans do not want the Supreme Court to overturn the landmark 1973 Roe v. Wade decision that protects the right to an abortion. Just 19 percent of respondents said that abortion should be illegal in all circumstances.

However, Gallup also found that 47 percent of Americans consider themselves to be “pro-life,” compared to 49 percent who are “pro-choice,” a significantly smaller margin.

Corporate America typically backs measures with more clear-cut support. Still, it’s unclear how much of a difference their statements would even make. Corporations’ influence with Republicans has waned as the two forces grow further apart on social justice issues.

Georgia Gov. Brian KempBrian KempAlyssa Milano blasts ‘Texas Taliban’ over new abortion law Georgia anti-vaxxers shut down mobile vaccine event Trump to hold rallies in Iowa, Georgia MORE (R) signed legislation to tighten voting restrictions and take control of local election administration despite outcry from major corporations. The state’s largest employer, Delta Air Lines, called the bill “unacceptable,” and MLB moved its All-Star Game out of Atlanta in protest.

More than 150 corporations that together employ 4 million workers, including Target, PepsiCo and Google, urged Congress to pass the John LewisJohn LewisWhite House says ball is in Congress’s court on voting rights, abortion H.R. 4 carries forward the legacy of Congressman John Lewis What the chaos in Afghanistan can remind us about the importance of protecting democracy at home MORE Voting Rights Advancement Act. The voting measure passed the House with zero GOP votes.

Major corporations unsuccessfully pushed Republicans to back a popular measure to provide a pathway to citizenship for undocumented immigrants. The Equality Act, a bill to codify discrimination protections for LGBTQ individuals, also has the backing of corporate America but drew little support from Republican lawmakers.

Source Article from https://thehill.com/business-a-lobbying/business-a-lobbying/571154-texas-abortion-law-roils-business-community

President Biden’s approval numbers have taken a hit in seven Democrat-controlled swing districts, according to a new poll commissioned by conservative advocacy group American Action Network released on Tuesday. 

The survey — conducted by Remington Research Group — showed the president underwater by an average of 7 percentage points on the economy and 9 percent on foreign policy in the areas polled, which include California’s 10th Congressional District, Florida’s 7th Congressional District, Iowa’s 3rd Congressional District, Michigan’s 8th and 11th Congressional Districts, Virginia’s 2nd Congressional District and Washington’s 8th Congressional District. 

The surveys found that Biden and the Democrats’ plan to move forward with a $3.5 trillion social spending could prove to be a liability for the party’s members that serve in the battleground districts, with an average of just 36 percent approving on average to the 55 percent that said they disapprove of the proposal. 

A new poll shows President Biden’s approval numbers have dropped in seven Democrat-controlled swing districts.
REUTERS/Elizabeth Frantz

According to the poll, when asked whether they believed the $3.5 trillion in spending is “unnecessary and wasteful … in addition to the $6 trillion that has already been passed for COVID recovery and other programs,” just 35 percent of respondents said they believed the spending is necessary while 55 percent said they feel it is unnecessary.

The polling was conducted from Aug. 28-Aug. 30 in the seven districts, with 800 likely voters participating. 

As House Republicans grow more optimistic about their odds of flipping the majority in the House in 2022, the poll found that Democratic representatives are also trailing behind generic Republican challengers by an average of 6 percent.

President Joe Biden’s handling of Afghanistan received criticism from both Democrats and Republicans.
ZUMAPRESS.com

The numbers come shortly after Biden received criticism from both sides of the aisle on his handling of the withdrawal from Afghanistan, and the GOP making inflation and lower-than-expected job growth central components of their messaging strategy as they look toward the 2022 midterm election cycle. 

Rep. Elissa Slotkin (D-Mich.) — who represents an R+4 district on the Cook Partisan Voting Index scale — and Rep. Cindy Axne (D-Iowa) —who holds an R+3 seat — are shown to be hit the hardest, with the poll showing them at a 9 percent disadvantage when matched up against a generic GOP candidate, with Biden receiving the lowest marks in their districts out of the seven surveyed. 

A Taliban fighter stands guard as people move past him at a market with shops dealing with currency exchange in Kabul on Sept. 5, 2021.
AFP via Getty Images

The poll found Rep. Josh Harder (D-Calif.) down by 7 percent, Rep. Haley Stevens (D-Mich.) trailing by 6 percent, Rep. Kim Schrier (D-Wash.) down by 4 percent and a Republican leading by 3 percent in both Reps. Stephanie Murphy (D-Fla.) and Elaine Luria’s (D-Va.) districts. 

Members with named challengers fared slightly better in the polls, showing them within the three-point margin of error, with Murphy up by 3 percent, Luria up one percent, Axne trailing by 2 percent and Schrier down by 1 percent. 

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2021/09/07/biden-tanks-in-7-democratic-districts-as-poll-says-3-5t-spending-too-big/


Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis attends the flag raising ceremony prior to The Walker Cup at Seminole Golf Club in Juno Beach, Fla. | Cliff Hawkins/Getty Images

TALLAHASSEE — Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis on Tuesday brushed aside any talk of running for president in 2024 even though he’s just days away from joining several potential contenders at a Nebraska Republican event.

His comments also come as former President Donald Trump has intensified fundraising and public appearances ahead of a potential 2024 presidential campaign.

“All the speculation about me is purely manufactured,” said DeSantis during a press conference he held to tout a Covid-19 treatment unit in St. Cloud, Fla. “I just do my job and we work hard… I hear all this stuff and honestly it’s nonsense.”

DeSantis has built his brand by linking himself to Trump, who gave him a key endorsement when he was running against then-Agriculture Commissioner Adam Putnam in the 2018 GOP primary. Trump hasn’t said if he will seek reelection in 2024, but the former president has engaged in a flurry of activity that signals a renewed interest in reclaiming the White House.

A Trump candidacy would likely derail any talk of a DeSantis bid. Trump in April even suggested he would consider DeSantis as his vice president should be run for the White House again.

DeSantis has become a GOP star due to his antagonism with the press, President Joe Biden and those opposed to his anti-lockdown, anti-mandate positions on battling Covid-19. His political committee has already raised more than $40 million since the beginning of the year for his reelection bid, with more than $4 million of those funds in July coming from donors in every state of the country.

In the last few months DeSantis has traveled to California, Utah, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, Indiana and Texas. Most of those trips have been confined to fundraising for his political committee, but he has appeared at events designed to raise his profile, including a national police convention, a national legislative conference and headlined a Pittsburgh GOP fundraising dinner.

He’s avoided stepping foot in early primary states such as Iowa and New Hampshire and scrapped a scheduled trip to Nevada last month due to a tropical storm that was threatening the state.

DeSantis is scheduled to appear this Sunday at Gov. Pete Ricketts’ 5th annual Nebraska Steak-Fry along with former Vice President Mike Pence and Texas GOP Sen. Ted Cruz.

But the governor’s continued insistence that he is not contemplating a 2024 run — he’s up for re-election next year — hasn’t convinced his critics who see view the ongoing national fundraising effort as evidence of his growing ambitions. Democratic rivals such as Agriculture Commissioner Nikki Fried and Rep. Charlie Crist (D-Fla.) are routinely painting DeSantis as someone who is more interested in pleasing potential GOP primary voters than what’s happening in his home state.

Those trips have also come under fire since Florida has seen a massive surge in Covid-19 cases this summer that overwhelmed many hospitals and caused a spike in Covid-19 related deaths. Fried lashed into DeSantis for a late August trip to New Jersey by tweeting out a photo of it and saying: “This is where Florida’s governor is during peak pandemic deaths…Laughing it up at a campaign fundraiser in New Jersey. Remember this in November.”

A recent poll done by Morning Consult Political Intelligence showed that DeSantis’ net approval rating in Florida had dropped 14 points between early July and late August. The poll at the start of the summer showed that 54 percent approved of the job DeSantis was doing while 40 percent disapproved. Now his approval ratings are split evenly with 48 percent approving and 48 percent disapproving of his job performance.

The governor is planning on spending time on in-state political appearances this fall. DeSantis has agreed to headline fundraising dinners hosted by a handful of local GOP executive committees, a move that guarantees a sellout for those county parties. The kickoff event is this Friday in Pasco County, a key GOP stronghold located in the Tampa Bay region.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/states/florida/story/2021/09/07/desantis-calls-talk-of-a-2024-presidential-bid-nonsense-1390768

President Biden takes part in a briefing with New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy and other local leaders in the aftermath of Hurricane Ida on Tuesday.

Mandel Ngan/AFP via Getty Images


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Mandel Ngan/AFP via Getty Images

President Biden takes part in a briefing with New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy and other local leaders in the aftermath of Hurricane Ida on Tuesday.

Mandel Ngan/AFP via Getty Images

President Biden on Tuesday spoke in stark terms about the reality of climate change during a visit to the northeast United States, which experienced deadly flooding and catastrophic infrastructure damage last week from Hurricane Ida.

“For decades, scientists have warned that extreme weather would be more extreme and climate change was here. And we’re living through it now,” Biden said during public remarks with New Jersey officials on the fallout from last week’s storm.

“We don’t have any more time.”

New Jersey was among the states hardest hit by the deadly storm, which made landfall in Louisiana and swept to the northeast, bringing with it historic rainfall, gale-force winds and sprinkling several tornadoes in its path.

Ida was New Jersey’s fourth hundred-year storm in just two decades, Somerset County Commissioner Director Shanel Robinson said during the briefing. And experts have warned that such natural disasters will only get more common and more powerful as human-influenced global warming continues.

Dozens of people died from Ida’s wrath alone, while on the other side of the country, deadly wildfires continue to burn out of control, eating away miles of landscape and infrastructure and threatening the air quality for residents of the West Coast.

“Every part of the country is getting hit by extreme weather. And we’re now living in real time what the country’s going to look like,” Biden said.

“We can’t turn it back very much, but we can prevent it from getting worse.”

Since taking office, Biden has vowed to tackle climate change while boosting the nation’s middle class by funding green jobs initiatives as part of his “Build Back Better” agenda.

Climate change has also taken center-stage in Democrats’ historic $3.5 trillion congressional budget plan, which has seen Senate Republicans — and some Democrats — outraged at the plan’s hefty price tag.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2021/09/07/1034848457/biden-sounds-alarm-on-climate-change-in-visit-to-hurricane-wracked-new-jersey

With one week to go until ballots must be postmarked, deposited in drop boxes, or handed in in-person in California’s gubernatorial recall election,  Gov. Gavin Newsom is making his closing pitch to save his job steering the nation’s most populous state.

And the embattled Democratic governor is giving a helping hand.

President Biden‘s expected to head to California next week, just ahead of the Sept. 14 recall election.

White House press secretary Jen Psaki told reporters Tuesday that the president would travel to California “early next week.”

“He will be, I expect we’ll have more to report to all of you, or announce, on a trip he’ll take early next week,” Psaki told reporters aboard Air Force as Biden traveled to New York and New Jersey to survey storm damage.

The visit by Biden, who won California’s whopping 55 electoral votes by nearly 30 points over then-President Trump last November, will follow that of  Vice President Kamala Harris.

The former California attorney general and Golden State senator, who ran for the 2020 Democratic presidential nomination, will team up with the governor at a rally in the Bay Area on Wednesday. 

NEWSOM SPOTLIGHTS TRUMP AS HE FIGHTS TO SURVIVE CALIFORNIA RECALL

Harris will be the latest high profile national Democratic surrogate to team up with Newsom, after the governor was joined on Saturday in Culver City, California, by Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts, a progressive leader who also unsuccessfully ran for the White House in 2020, and on Sunday in Santa Ana by Sen. Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota, another Democratic presidential contender last cycle. 

California Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom, left, campaigns with Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., against the California recall election at Culver City High School in Culver City, Calif., Saturday, Sept. 4, 2021.  (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes)
(AP)

Former two-term San Diego Mayor Kevin Faulconer, one of the better known GOP replacement candidates on the ballot, charged in a statement to Fox News that Newsom is “hiding behind national political leaders.”

It’s not just on the campaign trail where the governor’s getting a lift from top surrogates.

BERNIE SANDERS SLAMS CALIFORNIA RECALL IN AD BACKING GAVIN NEWSOM 

“At this unprecedented moment in American history, when we’re trying to address the crisis of climate change, guarantee health care for all, and pass real immigration reform, the last thing we need is to have some right-wing Republican governor in California,” longtime Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont says in a TV commercial supporting Newsom that’s currently running statewide in California.

“The Sept. 14 recall of Gov. Newsom is a bold-faced Republican power grab,” the progressive rock star and runner-up to Biden in last year’s Democratic presidential nomination race charges in the ad. “Don’t let it happen. Please, return your ballot or vote no in person by Sept. 14.”

Thanks to unusual campaign finance laws for recall elections – California treats the question of whether to remove the governor as a ballot issue, rather than a candidate race – Newsom can raise unlimited amounts of money as he fights to keep his job. 

NEWSOM SPOTLIGHTS ‘CONSEQUENTIAL DECISION’ OVER COVID IN RECALL ELECTION

And that’s what he’s been doing – hauling in and spending big bucks and lapping the leading GOP replacement candidates when it comes to fundraising. Newsom’s massive advantage is allowing him to dominate the airwaves.

The governor’s “Stop the Republican Recall” campaign has spent nearly $33 million dollars to run TV, digital and radio ads – with the bulk of it being dished out since mid-July – according to AdImpact, a leading national ad buying firm. 

That’s leagues ahead of 2018 Republican gubernatorial nominee John Cox, who’s spent $7 million to run ads for his recall election campaign. And conservative talk radio host Larry Elder, the polling front runner among the 46 replacement candidates on the recall ballot, has spent $4.8 million to run ads since launching his campaign in mid-July, according to figures from AdImpact.

HERE’S WHO’S AIMING TO SUCCEED NEWSOM IN CALIFORNIA’S RECALL ELECTION

Voters are being asked two questions on the Newsom recall ballots. The first question is whether the governor should be removed from office. If more than 50% support removing Newsom, the second question offers a list of candidates running to replace the governor. If the governor is recalled, the candidate who wins the most votes on the second question – regardless of whether it’s a majority or just a small plurality – would succeed Newsom in steering California. 

Newsom’s strategy is simple: In the very blue state of California – where he won election by 24 points over Cox in 2018 – he needs to get Democratic voters to cast their ballots, to make up for energized Republican voters hoping to oust the governor from office.

Newsom’s strategy may be working.

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Most public opinion polls conducted in July and August indicated that likely voters were divided on whether to recall Newsom. 

But the latest surveys, including one conducted Aug. 20-29 by the Public Policy Institute of California , suggest a majority of likely recall election voters support keeping the governor in office. 

Fox News’ Samuel Dorman contributed to this report

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/newsom-spends-big-bucks-teams-up-with-big-names-in-california-recall-election-closing-push

Many Democrats are determined to tax the wealth of America’s fabulously rich, much of which goes untaxed for decades before being passed along to heirs. Currently, for instance, when large estates are passed on at death, heirs are allowed to value the stocks, real estate and other assets at the price they would fetch at the time of the original owner’s death. They pay taxes only on the gain in value from that point once the assets are sold. If the assets are not sold, they are not taxed at all.

Mr. Biden wants to have heirs to large fortunes pay taxes when the original owner dies. Those taxes would be levied on inherited assets based on the gain in value from when those assets were initially purchased.

Ms. Heitkamp, who said she was recruited to the opposition campaign by the Democratic former senator-turned-superlobbyist John Breaux, is adamant that taxation upon death, regardless of wealth, is deadly politics. Ms. Heitkamp said she was finding a receptive audience among potential swing voters in rural areas, especially owners of family farms, even though Democrats say such voters would never be affected by the changes under consideration. Lobbyists already expect this piece of the estate tax changes to wash out in the lobbying deluge.

“This is very consistent with my concern about revitalizing the Democratic Party in rural America,” Ms. Heitkamp said. “You may want to do this,” she said she had counseled her former colleagues, “but understand there will be risk, and risk is the entire agenda.”

Even more significantly, the Finance Committee is looking at taxing the accumulated wealth of billionaires, regardless of whether it is sold. Extremely wealthy Americans like the Amazon founder Jeff Bezos would have a decade to pay a one-time tax on the value of assets like stocks that have been accruing value for years. They would then pay taxes each year on the annual gain in value of their stocks, bonds and other assets, much like many Americans pay property taxes on the annually assessed value of their homes.

Another key component is the international tax code. The Biden administration has called for doubling the tax that companies pay on foreign earnings to 21 percent, so the United States complies with an international tax deal that the administration is brokering, which would usher in a global corporate minimum tax of at least 15 percent.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2021/09/07/us/politics/biden-tax-increases.html