At one particularly tense moment, in October 2020, American intelligence reports detailed how Chinese leaders had become worried that President Trump was preparing an attack. Those concerns, which could have been misread, prompted Gen. Mark A. Milley, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, to call his counterpart in Beijing to assure otherwise.

“The Taiwan issue has ceased to be a sort of narrow, boutique issue, and it’s become a central theater — if not the central drama — in U.S.-China strategic competition,” said Evan Medeiros, who served on President Obama’s National Security Council.

China’s ambitious leader, Xi Jinping, now presides over what is arguably the country’s most potent military in history. Some argue that Mr. Xi, who has set the stage to rule for a third term starting in 2022, could feel compelled to conquer Taiwan to crown his era in power.

Mr. Xi said Saturday in Beijing that Taiwan independence “was a grave lurking threat to national rejuvenation.” China wanted peaceful unification, he said, but added: “Nobody should underestimate the staunch determination, firm will and powerful ability of the Chinese people to defend national sovereignty and territorial integrity.”

Few believe a war is imminent or foreordained, in part because the economic and diplomatic aftershocks would be staggering for China. Yet even if the recent flights into Taiwan’s self-declared air identification zone are intended merely as political pressure, not a prelude to war, China’s financial, political and military ascendancy has made preserving the island’s security a gravely complex endeavor.

Until recently, the United States believed it could hold Chinese territorial ambitions in check, but the military superiority it long held may not be enough. When the Pentagon organized a war game in October 2020, an American “blue team” struggled against new Chinese weaponry in a simulated battle over Taiwan.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2021/10/09/world/asia/united-states-china-taiwan.html

Texas will be allowed to temporarily resume its near-total abortion ban, a federal appeals court ruled Friday night — just days after the controversial law was suspended by a judge.

The 5th US Court of Appeals granted Texas’ request to set aside the Wednesday order by US District Judge Robert Pitman while the case is reviewed.

Many clinics in the Lone Star State had scrambled to reopen and serve patients following Pitman’s order — in anticipation of the Friday appeals court decision.

Pitman, an appointee of President Barack Obama, wrote in his 113-page ruling that Texas Republicans had “contrived an unprecedented and transparent statutory scheme” to deny patients the right to an abortion, cemented in the landmark 1973 Supreme Court decision Roe v. Wade.

It came in response to a lawsuit from the Biden administration challenging the state’s “heartbeat law,” which was signed Gov. Greg Abbott in May and went into effect last month.

The New Orleans-based appeals court ordered the Justice Department to respond by Tuesday.

Known as Senate Bill 8, or SB8, the legislation bans abortion after cardiac activity is detected, around six weeks, and leaves enforcement up to private citizens, using civil lawsuits instead of criminal prosecution. It authorizes payment of $10,000 or more to anyone who successfully accuses a person in court of performing or aiding an abortion.

People attend the Women’s March ATX rally, at the Texas State Capitol in Austin, Texas, on Oct. 2, 2021.
Stephen Spillman, File/AP

Before the law went into effect on Sept. 1, there were about two dozen abortion clinics operating in the state. 

The US Supreme Court effectively allowed the law to remain in place after failing to grant an emergency appeal from abortion providers that sought to block the legislation.

With Post wires

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2021/10/08/texas-to-temporarily-resume-abortion-ban-federal-appeals-court/

BEIJING, Oct 9 (Reuters) – Chinese President Xi Jinping vowed on Saturday to realise peaceful “reunification” with Taiwan, though did not directly mention the use of force after a week of tensions with the Chinese-claimed island that sparked international concern.

Taiwan responded shortly after by calling on Beijing to abandon its coercion, reiterating that only Taiwan’s people could decide their future.

Democratically ruled Taiwan has come under increased military and political pressure from Beijing to accept its sovereignty, but Taipei has pledged to defend their freedom.

Speaking at Beijing’s Great Hall of the People, Xi said the Chinese people have a “glorious tradition” of opposing separatism.

“Taiwan independence separatism is the biggest obstacle to achieving the reunification of the motherland, and the most serious hidden danger to national rejuvenation,” he said on the anniversary of the revolution that overthrew the last imperial dynasty in 1911.

Peaceful “reunification” best meets the overall interests of the Taiwanese people, but China will protect its sovereignty and unity, he added.

“No one should underestimate the Chinese people’s staunch determination, firm will, and strong ability to defend national sovereignty and territorial integrity,” Xi said. “The historical task of the complete reunification of the motherland must be fulfilled, and will definitely be fulfilled.”

He struck a slightly softer than in July, his last major speech mentioning Taiwan, in which he vowed to “smash” any attempts at formal independence. In 2019, he directly threatened to use force to bring the island under Beijing’s control.

Still, the speech was poorly received in Taiwan.

The presidential office said they were a sovereign independent country, not part of the People’s Republic of China, and had clearly rejected China’s offer of “one country, two systems” to rule the island.

“The nation’s future rests in the hands of Taiwan’s people,” the office said.

In a separate statement, Taiwan’s China-policy making Mainland Affairs Council called on Beijing to “abandon its provocative steps of intrusion, harassment and destruction” and return to talks.

China’s air force mounted four straight days of incursions into Taiwan’s air defence identification zone from Oct. 1, involving close to 150 aircraft, though those missions have since ended. Xi made no mention of those flights.

Taiwan says it is an independent country called the Republic of China, its formal name. The Republic of China was established in 1912 and its government fled to Taiwan in 1949 after losing a civil war with the Communists, who set up today’s People’s Republic.

Taiwan marks Oct. 10, when the anti-imperial revolution began in China, as its national day, and President Tsai Ing-wen will give a keynote address in Taipei on Sunday.

China commemorates the revolution by harking back to republican leader Sun Yat-sen’s calls for patriotism, national rejuvenation and good governance.

Xi used the speech to underscore the need for “a strong force to lead the country, and this strong force is the Chinese Communist Party”.

“Without the Chinese Communist Party, there would not be a New China, and therefore no rejuvenation of the Chinese people,” he said.

Xi has tightened party control in all aspects of life and is almost certain to break protocol and stay on as Communist Party boss for a third term late next year, when a congress will elect a new leadership for the following five years.

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Source Article from https://www.reuters.com/world/china/chinas-xi-says-reunification-with-taiwan-must-will-be-realised-2021-10-09/

Several top members of the Biden administration were in Mexico City on Friday for a meeting with Mexican officials regarding security along the U.S.-Mexico border. But Vice President Kamala Harris wasn’t among them.

Harris, whom President Biden appointed in March to manage the U.S. response to the migrant crisis along the border, went to New Jersey instead.

Attending Friday’s high-level talks in Mexico’s capital were Secretary of State Antony Blinken, Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas and U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland. 

Ken Salazar, a former U.S. senator from Colorado who now serves as the U.S. ambassador to Mexico, also attended.

‘IMPEACH MAYORKAS’: DHS CHIEF CANCELS BORDER WALL CONTRACT DURING CRISIS, GOP CALLS HIM OUT

“Today’s High-Level Security Dialogue marks an important new phase in the US-Mexico security partnership,” Mayorkas tweeted Friday. “We will work together under a new framework to guide our joint efforts, and work toward our shared goals of security and prosperity for our two nations.”

Harris, meanwhile, traveled to the Garden State, visiting a daycare center at Montclair State University in Little Falls and a vaccination site at Essex County Community College in Newark to promote the Biden administration’s agenda. 

The vice president last visited the border in June, spending several hours in El Paso, Texas, while on her way to her home in California. It’s the only time she’s been to the border since taking office. 

U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris plays bingo with children at Ben Samuels Children’s Center at Montclair State University in Little Falls, New Jersey, U.S., on Friday, Oct. 8, 2021. 
(Getty Images)

She then traveled to Los Angeles again the very next weekend, spending the July 4 holiday at her home.

Harris has faced relentless criticism from Republicans, who say her avoidance of the border region has deprived her of valuable first-hand knowledge of border-related issues. 

MSNBC’S RUHLE DINGS KAMALA HARRIS ON THE BORDER: ‘SHE WAS SUPPOSED TO BE IN CHARGE’

“Vice President Harris is ignoring the real problem areas along our southern border that are not protected by the border wall and are being overrun by the federal government’s ill-thought-out, open border policies,” Texas Gov. Greg Abbott said in a statement ahead of her late June trip.

Harris and her spokespeople have countered that she has focused on behind-the-scenes discussions with Latin American leaders regarding the “root causes” of migration, such as poverty and political corruption in countries such as Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador.

Likely in reaction to GOP criticism, Harris told potential migrants, “Do not come” to the U.S. when she visited Guatemala in early June.

Vice President Kamala Harris boards Air Force Two in Newark, N.J., Friday, Oct. 8, 2021, to return to Washington.
(Associated Press)

She also raised eyebrows for faltering on questions asked by reporters about the border at the time.

“I haven’t been to Europe. I mean, I don’t understand the point you are making,” Harris laughed off a question from “NBC Nightly News” anchor Lester Holt about whether she planned to go to the border before her June visit toTexas was scheduled. 

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“Since March, Vice President Kamala Harris has been leading the Administration’s diplomatic efforts to address the root causes of migration from El Salvador, Guatemala, and Honduras,” the White House said in a statement during the summer promoting its Root Causes Strategy plan. ” She has worked with bilateral, multilateral, and private sector partners, as well as civil society leaders, to help people from the region find hope at home.”

The White House didn’t immediately return Fox News’ late-night request for comment. 

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/kamala-harris-us-mexico-border-security-new-jersey

A guilty verdict was reached Friday afternoon in the trial of John Wilson and Gamal Abdelaziz, two wealthy fathers charged with paying bribes to secure prestigious college spots for their kids under false pretenses.

Wilson and Abdelaziz were the first defendants among about five dozen to stand trial in Boston for charges stemming from the sweeping Operation Varsity Blues scheme.

They pleaded not guilty to fraud and bribery conspiracy charges in the case.

Abdelaziz, a former casino executive from Las Vegas, allegedly paid $300,000 to get his daughter into the University of Southern California as a basketball recruit even though she didn’t make her high school varsity team.

Wilson, a former Staples executive, allegedly paid $220,000 to have his son designated as a USC water polo recruit and gave an additional $1 million to get his twin daughters into Harvard and Stanford.

While the two men argued they thought their payments to scheme mastermind Rick Singer were legitimate donations, the jury agreed with prosecutors that they amounted to bribes to buy their kids’ way into those schools.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Stephen Frank told jurors during closing arguments: “These parents were not willing to take ‘no’ for an answer, and to get to ‘yes’ they crossed a line. In crossing that line, they broke the law.”

Jurors deliberated for nearly 11 hours over two days. Abdelaziz will be sentenced Feb. 16 and Wilson on Feb. 17.

Abdelaziz and Wilson’s actions were “an affront to hard-working students and parents,” acting U.S. Attorney Nathaniel Mendell said after the verdict. “The verdict today proves that even these defendants, powerful and privileged people, are not above the law.”

The trial featured audio recordings of phone calls between Singer, who pleaded guilty and agreed to cooperate in the investigation, and each of the men. Prosecutors argued the calls showed that the fathers understood they were partaking in a scheme.

On a phone call where Abdelaziz is heard saying, “Sabrina is loving USC!” Singer also is heard saying, “I’m not going to tell the IRS that your $300,000 was paid to Donna Heinel at USC to get Sabrina into school even though she wasn’t a legitimate basketball player at that level.”

“You’re OK with that right?” Singer asked.

“Of course,” Abdelaziz replied.

“I’m going to say your $300,000 payment was made to our foundation to help underserved kids,” Singer said. “I just want to make sure you’re OK with that.”

“I am,” Abdelaziz replied.

Three other parents are expected to face trials in January, and three coaches are scheduled for trails in November.

Four dozen other defendants, including the actresses Lori Loughlin and Felicity Huffman, opted to plead guilty, and many have already served their sentences.

ABC News’ Kate Hodgson contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://abcnews.go.com/US/guilty-verdict-reached-trial-parents-college-admissions-scandal/story?id=80474660

  • After months of relative quietness, Sanders keeps calling out Manchin and Sinema by name.
  • In his latest press conference, he implied their policies were linked to donations from pharmas.
  • Sinema opposed drug-pricing reform, and Manchin is pushing for a lower social-spending price tag.

Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont has been letting loose lately.

With the moderate Democratic Sens. Joe Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema opposing the passage of President Joe Biden’s $3.5 trillion social-spending package, Sanders has held several press conferences, venting his frustration at the slow movement of a bill he shepherded as chairman of the budget committee.

On Friday, he went so far as to imply that their resistance to the spending bill came from the prescription-drug overhaul he wants to see included.

“Take a hard look at those people who are opposed to strong legislation to lower the cost of prescription drugs, and take a look at their campaign-finance reports,” Sanders said during a briefing with reporters. “See where they get their money, how many of them get their money from the pharmaceutical industry, and the executives there. And I think there will be a direct correlation.”

Insider previously reported that Manchin wanted a $1.5 trillion top line for spending, and while Sinema has not asked for a specific number, she has told the White House she’s opposed to the drug-pricing proposals in the Democrats’ bill.

Though Manchin has expressed support for lower drug prices, his $1.5 trillion top line would make it hard for Democrats to deliver on that reform.

“I am going to fight for the strongest piece of legislation that we can,” Sanders said. “I think I’m going to begin calling out some of those members of Congress.”

During his Wednesday press conference, Sanders criticized Manchin and Sinema for using “vague phraseology,” saying, “It’s not good enough to be vague.” Two days later, he seemed to draw his own conclusion: Their vagueness was connected to the pharmaceutical lobby.

Sanders said he would “absolutely” like to hear more details from Sinema on her demands, saying he has “heard that she is opposed to having Medicare negotiate prescription-drug prices with the pharmaceutical industry and lowering prescription-drug prices.”

Insider’s Kimberly Leonard previously reported on the healthcare provisions in the social-spending bill. It would allow the federal government to negotiate the price tags of at least 50 of the most used and highest-priced prescription drugs, including insulin. And people on Medicare would pay no more than $2,000 a year for their medicines. 

On Wednesday, Sanders appealed to the two moderates to essentially fall in line with their caucus, saying, “Two people do not have the right to sabotage what 48 want, what the president of the United States wants.” 

By his next appearance, Sanders’ attitude was hardening on negotiating with Manchin and Sinema face-to-face: “It’s not a movie. I don’t know if you are a movie writer. This is not a movie,” he said.

Source Article from https://www.businessinsider.com/bernie-sanders-sinema-manchin-big-pharma-infrastructure-campaign-donations-2021-10

A federal appeals court on Friday night allowed Texas to temporarily resume banning most abortions, just one day after clinics across the state began rushing to serve patients again for the first time since early September.

Abortion providers in Texas had been bracing for the 5th US court of appeals to act quickly, even as they booked new appointments and reopened their doors during a brief reprieve from the law known as Senate Bill 8, which bans abortions once cardiac activity is detected, usually around six weeks.

On Wednesday, the US district judge Robert Pitman, an appointee of Barack Obama, issued an order suspending the Texas law, which he called an “offensive deprivation” of the constitutional right to an abortion. It came in response to a lawsuit filed by the Biden administration, which warned that other GOP-controlled states could rush to adopt similar measures.

“From the moment SB8 went into effect, women have been unlawfully prevented from exercising control over their lives in ways that are protected by the constitution,” wrote Pitman.

But the New Orleans-based appeals court quickly granted Texas’s request to set aside Pitman’s order for now while the case is reviewed. It ordered the justice department to respond by Tuesday.

Texas had roughly two dozen abortion clinics before the law took effect on 1 September, and not all Texas abortion providers resumed services while it was on hold. Many physicians had feared a swift reversal from the appeals court that risked putting them back in legal jeopardy.

The new law threatens Texas abortion providers – and anyone else who aids in an abortion – with lawsuits from private citizens, who are entitled to collect at least $10,000 in damages if successful. That novel approach is the reason courts had not blocked the law prior to Pitman’s ruling: it leaves enforcement to private citizens, not prosecutors, which critics say amounts to a bounty.

Pitman’s order amounted to the first legal blow to SB8. In the weeks since the restrictions took effect, Texas abortion providers said the impact had been “exactly what we feared”.

Planned Parenthood says the number of patients from Texas at its clinics in the state decreased by nearly 80% in the two weeks after the law took effect.

Some providers have said Texas clinics are now in danger of closing while neighboring states struggle to keep up with a surge of patients who must drive hundreds of miles for an abortion. Others, they say, are being forced to carry pregnancies to term.

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/oct/08/texas-abortion-ban-temporarily-reinstated-latest

A worker cleans oil-contaminated sand in Newport Beach, Calif., this week.

Ringo H.W. Chiu/AP


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A worker cleans oil-contaminated sand in Newport Beach, Calif., this week.

Ringo H.W. Chiu/AP

HUNTINGTON BEACH, Calif. — A Southern California underwater oil pipeline was likely struck by an anchor several months to a year before a leak spilled tens of thousands of gallons of crude, the U.S. Coast Guard announced Friday.

A large vessel of some kind may have struck the massive pipeline, shattering the concrete casing but not necessarily causing the slender crack from which oil spewed last weekend, said Capt. Jason Neubauer, chief of the Coast Guard’s office of investigation and analysis.

The longer timeline was partly based on marine growth that was spotted on the pipe in an underwater survey.

The pipe, which was found to be intact last October, may also have been struck several other times by other ships’ anchors over the course of the period, he added.

No ships have been identified, however.

“We’re going to be looking at every vessel movement over that pipeline, and every close encroachment from the anchor just for the entire course of the year,” the captain said.

The pipeline was dragged along the sea floor as much as 105 feet, Neubauer said.

That indicates a large vessel was involved, he said. Cargo ships with multiton anchors routinely move through the area from the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach.

The oil spill as seen in Newport Beach, Calif., this week.

Ringo H.W. Chiu/AP


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Ringo H.W. Chiu/AP

The oil spill as seen in Newport Beach, Calif., this week.

Ringo H.W. Chiu/AP

The leak fouled beaches and killed seabirds.

At least 17 accidents on pipelines carrying crude oil or other hazardous liquids have been linked to anchor strikes or suspected anchor strikes since 1986, according to an Associated Press review of more than 10,000 reports submitted to federal regulators.

According to federal records, in some cases an anchor strike is never conclusively proven, such as 2012 leak from an ExxonMobil pipeline in Louisiana’s shallow Barataria Bay, where a direct strike by a barge or other boat also were considered possibilities.

In others the evidence of an anchor strike was obvious. During 1992’s Hurricane Andrew, a 30,000-pound anchor was dragged by a drifting drilling rig over a Texaco pipeline in the Gulf of Mexico, causing a dent that broke open when the line was later re-started.

In 2003, a 7,000 pound anchor was found about 10 feet from a small spill on a Shell Oil pipeline in the Gulf.

A Coast Guard video released Thursday appears to show a trench in the sandy seafloor leading to a bend in the submerged line, but experts offered varied opinions of the significance of the brief, grainy shots. An earlier video showcased a thin, 13-inch long rupture in the line.

Robert Bea, an engineering professor at the University of California, Berkeley and former Shell Oil engineer, said the second video appears to show a furrow in the seabed created by a dragging anchor leading to the damaged pipeline.

Investigators, however, are expected to consider other forces that could have moved and damaged the pipe, including water currents of movement in the seabed.

It will take time.

“The results from the analyses need to be validated — corroborated. This process can bring even more questions,” Bea said. “The shape of the crack indicates that it was caused by internal pressures in the pipeline. But, if that is true, why didn’t the pipeline leak” earlier?

Frank G. Adams, president of Houston-based Interface Consulting International, said in an email that the slight bow in the line displayed in one video “doesn’t necessarily look like anchor damage.”

When a pipeline is hit by an anchor or other heavy object “that typically results in physical damage that may lead to a fracture,” he said.

Reports of a possible spill off Huntington Beach were first coming out Friday evening but the leak wasn’t discovered until Saturday morning. While the size of the spill isn’t known, the Coast Guard on Thursday slightly revised the parameters of the estimates to at least about 25,000 gallons and no more than 132,000 gallons.

The Coast Guard said about 5,500 gallons of crude have been recovered from the ocean. The oil has spread southeast along the coast with reports of small amounts coming ashore in San Diego County, some 50 miles from the original site.

Local health officials said Friday that air samples from areas where oil potentially spread are within background levels — in other words, similar to air quality on a typical day — and below California health standards for the pollutants that were measured.

So far the impact on wildfire has been minimal — 10 dead birds and another 25 recovered alive and treated — but environmentalists caution the long-term impacts could be much greater. As cleanup continued on the shore, some beaches in Laguna Beach reopened Friday, though the public still can’t go in the water.

Investigators are trying to determine what happened in the crucial early hours after reports of a possible oil spill first came in.

The narrow gash seen in one video could explain why signs of an oil slick were seen Friday night, but the spill eluded detection by the pipeline operator for more than 12 hours.

“My experience suggests this would be a darned hard leak to remotely determine quickly,” said Richard Kuprewicz, a private pipeline accident investigator and consultant. “An opening of this type, on a 17-mile-long underwater pipe is very hard to spot by remote indications. These crack-type releases are lower rate and can go for quite a while.”

When pipes experience a catastrophic failure, the breach typically is much bigger, what’s referred to in the industry as a “fish mouth” rupture because it gapes wide like the mouth of a fish, he said.

Amplify Energy, a Houston-based company that owns and operates three offshore oil platforms and the pipeline south of Los Angeles, said it didn’t know there had been a spill until its workers detected an oil sheen on the water Saturday at 8:09 a.m.

The leak occurred about 5 miles offshore at a depth of about 98 feet, investigators said. A 4,000-foot section of the pipeline was dislodged 105 feet , bent back like the string on a bow, Amplify’s CEO Martyn Willsher has said.

Jonathan Stewart, a professor of civil and environmental engineering at the University of California, Los Angeles, said moving a large section of pipe that far would have caused “bending deformations” – tension on the side that was stretched into a semicircle, with compression on the other, as it was bent inward, Stewart said.

It’s possible such pressure alone could result in a break, though Stewart said there is too little information to make a conclusion about the cause. It’s possible a sharp section of anchor could pierce the pipeline but “you could still have damage just from the bending.”

“Because it’s pulling on the pipe, you create these bending stresses in the pipe, which could eventually become large enough that they rupture it,” he said.

Questions also remain about when the oil company knew it had a problem and a potential delay in reporting the spill.

A foreign ship anchored in the waters off Huntington Beach reported to the Coast Guard that it saw a sheen longer than 2 miles just after 6 p.m. on Oct. 1, and that evening a satellite image from the European Space Agency also indicated a likely oil slick, which was reported to the Coast Guard at 2:06 a.m. Saturday, after being reviewed by a National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration analyst.

Federal pipeline safety regulators have put the time of the incident at 2:30 a.m. Saturday but say the company didn’t shut down the pipeline until 6:01 a.m. — more than three hours after a low-pressure alarm had gone off indicating a possible problem — and didn’t report the leak to the Coast Guard until 9:07 a.m. Federal and state rules require immediate notification of spills.

Amplify said the line already had been shut down by 6 a.m., then restarted for five minutes for a “meter reading” and again shut down. A meter reading shows how much oil is flowing into and out of the line. The company could have been using that information to confirm if the pressure-change alarm was set off because the line was leaking, said Kuprewicz and Ramanan Krishnamoorti, a professor of petroleum engineering at the University of Houston.

The company said a boat discovered oil on the water at 8:09 a.m.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2021/10/08/1044644445/oil-pipeline-damage-may-have-happened-months-before-the-massive-oil-spill

The determination on the documents only applied to a set of records provided to the White House on Sept. 8, and Remus wrote: “We continue to review materials you provided to the White House after that date and will respond at an appropriate time.”

Biden’s decision triggers a window of at least 30 days for Trump to challenge the determination in court before the National Archives releases them to the Jan. 6 panel, experts have told POLITICO. It mirrors a similar decision made by Biden and his DOJ earlier this year to waive privilege and and allow former Trump DOJ officials to testify before congressional committees about the former president’s attempt to overturn the 2020 election.

In a Friday letter addressed to Ferriero obtained by POLITICO, Trump said the records sought by the committee would contain information shielded by “executive and other privileges, including but not limited to the presidential communications, deliberative process, and attorney-client privileges.”

Trump indicated that he wished to assert privilege over 45 specific documents identified by the National Archives as responsive to the committee’s request. Those documents, Trump said in the two-page letter, included protected “presidential communications,” as well as deliberative process materials and attorney-client privileged materials.

Trump also indicated he wants to preemptively declare future requests by the panel, “potentially numbering in the millions,” as presumptively barred from release.

“Should the committee persist in seeking other privileged information, I will take all necessary and appropriate steps to defend the Office of the Presidency,” Trump wrote.

The White House’s statement comes after the House select panel investigating the attack announced two close allies of former President Donald Trump — former White House chief of staff Mark Meadows and former Pentagon aide Kash Patel — were “engaging with” it on their subpoenas, the panel’s top two lawmakers said Friday.

Panel Chair Bennie Thompson (D-Miss.) and Vice Chair Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.) confirmed in a statement that the two Trump associates had been in touch with the panel. Thompson and Cheney also threatened criminal contempt for former Trump campaign chief Steve Bannon, who had informed the committee he wouldn’t cooperate with their inquiry into the Jan. 6 Capitol attack.

“Though the Select Committee welcomes good-faith engagement with witnesses seeking to cooperate with our investigation, we will not allow any witness to defy a lawful subpoena or attempt to run out the clock, and we will swiftly consider advancing a criminal contempt of Congress referral,” Thompson and Cheney said.

A lawyer for Bannon, Robert Costello, told the committee on Thursday that Bannon would refuse to comply because of Trump’s claim that he can invoke executive privilege to block Bannon’s testimony.

“Until these issues are resolved, we are unable to respond to your request for documents and testimony,” Costello wrote to the Jan. 6 committee. Costello’s letter was first reported by The New York Times; POLITICO reported on Thursday that Trump had instructed Bannon and other former aides subpoenaed by the select panel not to comply with lawmakers’ demands.

It’s a questionable claim from Bannon’s lawyer, because the ex-Trump aide was years removed from the White House by the time the former president’s attempt to overturn the 2020 election — the subject of the committee’s subpoena — began in earnest. Executive privilege is typically reserved for a president’s closest advisers and not meant to be a broad shield for testimony requests.

Any move by the Jan. 6 committee to hold a witness in criminal contempt would first require the panel to vote on a contempt resolution. That resolution would then move to the House floor for a vote.

The select panel investigating the insurrection by Trump supporters had subpoenaed four onetime aides to the former president: former White House chief of staff Mark Meadows, longtime Trump adviser Dan Scavino, former Trump Pentagon aide Kash Patel and Bannon. All were asked to provide documents by Thursday, and the panel is also seeking to depose the four men next week.

A lawyer for Meadows didn’t immediately return a request for comment on the subpoena deadline.

Patel said in a statement Thursday that “I will continue to tell the American people the truth about January 6, and I am putting our country and freedoms first through my Fight with Kash initiative.”

Scavino was served with his subpoena Friday, according to two sources familiar with the situation. He was served in New York, according to one of the sources, who noted this was the first time service was attempted, as Scavino has been out in public since the subpoenas were issued.

The Jan. 6 committee declined to comment on the status of the subpoena to Scavino, who was not mentioned in Thompson and Cheney’s statement.

If any of the foursome don’t comply, the committee could seek criminal contempt referrals, which would require the House to take a full floor vote when it returns to session later this month. That move, if taken, would send the matter to the Justice Department for review. It’s unclear whether DOJ would act quickly on any prospective referrals, but members of the Jan. 6 panel have expressed hope that the Biden administration would act urgently.

Next week’s deadline for depositions from the subpoenaed former Trump aides would be more significant, according to sources close to the committee, given that the foursome still has time to comply. If they didn’t show up in the coming weeks, the committee could meet to consider a referral, then vote and send it to the full House for consideration.

Rep. Thompson has indicated he wants to complete its investigation by the spring. That time frame, if the nine-member bipartisan panel wants to stick to it, does not allow for protracted legal battles over enforcing subpoenas or litigating against recalcitrant witnesses.

Heather Caygle and Natasha Korecki contributed to this report

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2021/10/08/bannon-jan-6-subpoena-515681

President Biden today restored the boundaries of Bears Ears and Grand Staircase Escalante national monuments in Utah that were dramatically reduced under former President Trump. He also reimposed fishing restrictions at a third monument off the coast of New England.

Former President Barack Obama created Bears Ears National Monument in 2017 just before he left office but the Trump administration cut down the size of the protected area by 85%. Now with Biden’s restoration and a slight increase that includes 11,200 acres that were added during the Trump-era changes, the monument will be approximately 1.3 million acres.

Native American tribes are marking today as a victory in a long-fought battle to protect Bears Ears.

Here is Interior Secretary Deb Haaland, the nation’s first indigenous cabinet member, commenting today at the White House.

“Bears Ears is a living landscape,” Haaland said. “When I’ve been there, I’ve felt the warmth and joy of ancestors who have cared for this special place since time immemorial.”

The rugged desert terrain in Southeast Utah is filled with towering red rock formations, significant Native American archeological sites, sprawling fields of sage-colored scrub brush, and of course its namesake, the Bears Ears buttes.

Here are some photos from NPR photographer Claire Harbage who visited the area on a reporting trip in July 2021:

The Bears Ears buttes at Bears Ear National Monument in San Juan County, Utah in July. Biden also restored Grand Staircase-Escalante and Northeast Canyons and Seamounts national monuments on Friday.

Claire Harbage/NPR


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Claire Harbage/NPR

The Bears Ears buttes at Bears Ear National Monument in San Juan County, Utah in July. Biden also restored Grand Staircase-Escalante and Northeast Canyons and Seamounts national monuments on Friday.

Claire Harbage/NPR

A view of one of the Bears Ears with a cow grazing in front in July.

Claire Harbage/NPR


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Claire Harbage/NPR

A view of one of the Bears Ears with a cow grazing in front in July.

Claire Harbage/NPR

A view of one of the Bears Ears in July.

Claire Harbage/NPR


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Claire Harbage/NPR

A view of one of the Bears Ears in July.

Claire Harbage/NPR

Mule Canyon Ruin an ancient Anasazi site in Bears Ears. The land holds great importance to several Native American tribes.

Claire Harbage/NPR


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Mule Canyon Ruin an ancient Anasazi site in Bears Ears. The land holds great importance to several Native American tribes.

Claire Harbage/NPR

A view in The Valley of the Gods, part of the area that was removed from the national monument when Trump reduced it’s size by 85% in 2017.

Claire Harbage/NPR


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Claire Harbage/NPR

A view in The Valley of the Gods, part of the area that was removed from the national monument when Trump reduced it’s size by 85% in 2017.

Claire Harbage/NPR

The view from Moki Dugway Scenic Highway in Southeast Utah an area that will be included in the Bears Ears National Monument with Biden’s restoration.

Claire Harbage/NPR


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The view from Moki Dugway Scenic Highway in Southeast Utah an area that will be included in the Bears Ears National Monument with Biden’s restoration.

Claire Harbage/NPR

A view of a rock formation in The Valley of the Gods. Deb Haaland, interior secretary advised Biden to restore the monument in June.

Claire Harbage/NPR


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A view of a rock formation in The Valley of the Gods. Deb Haaland, interior secretary advised Biden to restore the monument in June.

Claire Harbage/NPR

Left: Flowers growing near the Mule Canyon ruins in July. Right: A small lizard blends into a hiking path, also near Mule Canyon.

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Left: Flowers growing near the Mule Canyon ruins in July. Right: A small lizard blends into a hiking path, also near Mule Canyon.

Claire Harbage/NPR

Moki Dugway, a scenic gravel road that is cut into a cliff in Southeast Utah and winds it’s way down 1,200 feet to the valley below.

Claire Harbage/NPR


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Moki Dugway, a scenic gravel road that is cut into a cliff in Southeast Utah and winds it’s way down 1,200 feet to the valley below.

Claire Harbage/NPR

Dusk settles over The Valley of the Gods. The new boundary of Bears Ears not only restores Obama’s original boundaries but also include 11,200 acres that were added during the Trump-era changes.

Claire Harbage/NPR


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Dusk settles over The Valley of the Gods. The new boundary of Bears Ears not only restores Obama’s original boundaries but also include 11,200 acres that were added during the Trump-era changes.

Claire Harbage/NPR

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/sections/pictureshow/2021/10/08/1044366934/from-valley-of-the-gods-to-an-ancient-anasazi-site-see-the-grandeur-of-bears-ear

Federal prosecutors will not file charges against a white police officer who shot and paralyzed a Black man, Jacob Blake, in Kenosha, Wisconsin, last year.

Officer Rusten Sheskey shot Blake during a domestic disturbance in August 2020. The shooting, which left Blake paralyzed from the waist down, sparked several nights of protests.

Kyle Rittenhouse, an Illinois man, shot three people, killing two, during one of the demonstrations.

Rittenhouse, who is white, faces two charges of felony murder and one charge of attempted felony murder.

Blake has said Rittenhouse’s actions left him “furious”.

“For the reasons [police] said they shot me, they had every reason to shoot him, but they didn’t,” Blake told CNN in August.

“Honestly, if his skin color was different – and I’m not prejudiced or a racist – he probably would have been labeled a terrorist.”

At a pre-trial hearing this week, an expert called by lawyers for Rittenhouse said he had been justified because the men he shot confronted him and two tried to wrestle his gun away. Rittenhouse’s trial begins next month.

State prosecutors decided not to file charges against Sheskey in January, after video showed Blake had been armed with a knife. The US Department of Justice launched its own investigation days after the shooting.

In a statement on Friday, the DoJ said “experienced federal prosecutors from the civil rights division and the US attorney’s office reviewed evidence obtained by the FBI and state investigators to determine whether the police officer violated any federal laws, focusing on the application of deprivation of rights under color of law, a federal criminal civil rights statute that prohibits certain types of official misconduct.

“They conducted a detailed and lengthy analysis of numerous materials, including police reports, law enforcement accounts, witness statements, affidavits of witnesses, dispatch logs, physical evidence reports, photographs and videos of some portions of the incident.”

The statement concluded by saying the department would not pursue charges against Sheskey, as there was not enough evidence to prove he had used excessive force or violated Blake’s federal rights.

Blake has said he will walk again.

“Yeah, I’m here,” he said in August this year, “and yeah, I’m about to be walking, but I really don’t feel like I have survived because it could happen to me again.

“I have not survived until something has changed.”

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/oct/08/jacob-blake-police-shooting-kenosha-charges

California Gov. Gavin Newsom has signed into law Friday afternoon a bill requiring students to take ethnic studies classes in order to graduate. Critics contend the controversial bill opens the door to teaching critical race theory in the classroom. 

“This bill would add the completion of a one-semester course in ethnic studies, meeting specified requirements, to the graduation requirements commencing with pupils graduating in the 2029–30 school year, including for pupils enrolled in a charter school,” The bill, known as A.B. 101 states. “The bill would expressly authorize local educational agencies, including charter schools, to require a full-year course in ethnic studies at their discretion.”

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One of the bill’s authors, Democrat Assembly Member Jose Medina, said the bill is necessary in public schools.

“The inclusion of ethnic studies in the high school curriculum is long overdue,” Medina said. “Students cannot have a full understanding of the history of our state and nation without the inclusion of the contributions and struggles of Native Americans, African Americans, Latinos, and Asian Americans.”

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According to Cal Matters, specific lessons provided in a sample of the curriculum include, “Migration Stories and Oral History,” “#BlackLivesMatter and Social Change,” “Afrofuturism: Reimagining Black Futures and Science Fiction,” “US Undocumented Immigrants from Mexico and Beyond,” “The Immigration Experience of Lao Americans” and “This is Indian Land: The Purpose, Politics, and Practice of Land Acknowledgment.”

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The bill was opposed by the Los Angeles Times editorial board, which argued it provided too much flexibility to the schools. Thousands in the Southern California Jewish community opposed the bills because they deemed previous versions to be antisemitic.

Others have accused the bill of opening the door for critical race theory, the controversial curriculum showing up in schools across the country that contends the United States is systemically racist. 

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/newsom-signs-ab101-requiring-ethnic-studies-all-california-students

But Ms. Sinema’s demand to cut spending on climate provisions in the budget bill could force Democrats to cut or shrink programs designed to help poor communities adapt to climate change as well as to help companies adjust as the economy transitions away from fossil fuels to clean energy.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi insisted in a letter to colleagues this week that the climate programs would remain. “The climate crisis is a health issue, jobs issue, national security issue and a moral issue to pass the planet on to future generations in a responsible way,” Ms. Pelosi wrote. “This challenge must be addressed with justice for vulnerable communities, who have been hit first and hardest by the climate crisis.”

A spokesman for Ms. Sinema, John LaBombard, forcefully denied that Ms. Sinema requested the cuts. “Neither Senator Sinema nor our office have requested or demanded such cuts, nor have we even heard of any such demands,” he wrote in an email.

The people familiar with her request, who asked to speak anonymously because they were not authorized to speak on the record, said that she had asked for a cut to the climate program as part of a larger effort by Democrats to hunt for ways to lower the price tag of the broader spending legislation. Mr. Biden had initially envisioned a spending package of about $3.5 trillion, but Democrats are now trying to cut that to $2 trillion, in order to win support from Ms. Sinema and Senator Joe Manchin of West Virginia, without whose votes the measure will not pass.

As Democrats try to slice $1.5 trillion from the overall bill, party leaders have vowed to protect at least two major climate change programs, which together total about $450 billion.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2021/10/08/climate/arizona-senator-sinema.html

The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development on Friday announced a major breakthrough on corporate tax rates, after years of disagreement.

The group of developed nations agreed to a global minimum corporate tax rate of 15%. This marks a huge shift for smaller economies, such as the Republic of Ireland, which have attracted international firms — to a large extent — via a lower tax rate.

“The landmark deal, agreed by 136 countries and jurisdictions representing more than 90% of global GDP, will also reallocate more than USD 125 billion of profits from around 100 of the world’s largest and most profitable MNEs to countries worldwide, ensuring that these firms pay a fair share of tax wherever they operate and generate profits,” the OECD said in a statement Friday.

The breakthrough comes after some changes were made to the original text, notably that the rate of 15% will not be increased at a later date, and that small businesses will not be hit with the new rates.

This helped Ireland — a longtime opponent of raising corporate tax rates — to get on board with the plan.

Hungary, another long-term skeptic about a global tax deal, also changed its mind after receiving reassurances there will be a lengthy implementation period.

Countries now have to work out some outstanding details so the new deal is ready to kick in during 2023.

The agreement is “a once-in-a-generation accomplishment for economic diplomacy,” U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said in a statement.

Yellen applauded the many nations who “decided to end the race to the bottom on corporate taxation,” and expressed hope that Congress will use the reconciliation process to quickly put the deal into practice in the U.S.

“International tax policymaking is a complex issue, but the arcane language of today’s agreement belies how simple and sweeping the stakes are: When this deal is enacted, Americans will find the global economy a much easier place to land a job, earn a living, or scale a business,” Yellen’s statement said.

What is in the agreement?

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2021/10/08/oecd-reaches-deal-on-corporate-tax-after-ireland-agrees.html