What Mr. McCarthy Said

“All you have to do as an American is spend $28 and the I.R.S. is going to knock on your door.”

This is misleading. This was a reference to a proposal by the Treasury Department requiring banks to report aggregate annual flows of $10,000 or more in customer accounts to better tackle tax evasion. (A previous version of the proposal suggested monitoring flows of $600.) Wages and federal benefits are exempt from the reporting requirement, and banks will not report individual transactions. But this proposal did not make its way into the social spending bill.

In a fact sheet, the Treasury Department said it was a “misconception” that all Americans would face greater scrutiny under the proposal.

Michelle Nessa, an accounting professor at Michigan State University and expert on tax audits, said that the bank reporting requirement was “unlikely to meaningfully increase audit risk for most people.”

What Mr. McCarthy Said

“We’re going to take taxes from you so somebody who makes $800,000 can get a tax break to buy a Tesla.”

False. The Democrats’ bill would increase tax credits for electric vehicles to $12,500 from $7,500 if the car is made in the United States with union labor and if its battery is also produced domestically. The credits cover sedans that cost up to $55,000 and zero-emission vans, SUVs and trucks that cost up to $80,000, so the Tesla Model 3, which starts in the mid-$40,000s, would qualify.

But the hypothetical almost-millionaire in Mr. McCarthy’s example would not qualify, as only individuals making $250,000 or less (and joint filers making $500,000 or less) can claim the credits under the bill.

What Mr. McCarthy Said

“More than one million people who lost their job after President Biden was sworn in because he shut down a pipeline. ”

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2021/11/19/us/politics/kevin-mccarthy-speech-fact-check.html

Traffic in North County San Diego came to a standstill Friday morning when drivers discovered money all over Interstate 5.

Travelers jumped out of their vehicles in both directions in Carlsbad near Cannon Road around 9:30 a.m. to scoop up what appears to be bills all over the freeway.

An armored car had somehow opened, allowing cash to fall out, according to the CHP.

“One of the doors popped open and some bags of cash fell out,” CHP Officer Curtis Martin said. “Some of the bags broke apart in the lanes and there was cash across all the lanes.”

Local



Officials said an investigation is underway to determine why the money fell out of the vehicle. The amount of money that went flying is not yet known, nor has it been determined how much has been recovered.

It’s not clear yet what denomination the bills were, but Instagram user @DemiBagby posted herself with fistfuls of ones. It appears Bagby is the same woman who did a flip when she threw out the first pitch at a Padres game in August.

An armored car is visible in her IG post, stopped and appearing unoccupied.

“This is the most insane thing I’ve ever seen,” Bagby said while people darted around behind her on the video, grabbing bills. “Someone dropped money all over the freeway.”

Showing more restraint than some, Bagby and her friend left the money behind and drove down the empty freeway, traffic still stopped in Carlsbad.

The CHP said several people picking up money gave bills to officers, while others were seen driving away with stolen money.

“The CHP would like to thank those motorists who have already returned money to their local CHP office and remind the public to do the right thing and return any money they found on the freeway. To return money, please contact the CHP Dispatch Center at (858) 637-3800,” the CHP said.

Those who picked up the cash can avoid potential criminal charges if they return it within 48 hours, the CHP said. Investigators are working with the FBI to identify people and license plates spotted at the scene.

What Happens to the Cash?

Law enforcement officials told NBC 7 that by 11 a.m., two arrests had been made in connection with the incident. The people who were taken into custody had taken some of the cash, officials said.

Anyone who did pick up cash and left the scene is being urged to return it to police, a CHP spokesman told NBC 7, saying that taking money in a situation of this nature is a criminal offense.

“I know that cash floating around is a tempting thing for a lot of people but it’s not their money, so it needs to go back to the bank and back to the FDIC,” Officer Martin said.

Martin added that they have obtained video evidence showing the faces and license plate numbers of people who stopped to pick up the cash — and suggested investigators will be tracking people down.

“So I highly suggest anybody who picked up cash — it’s not your cash — so turn it into a CHP officer,” Martin said, adding that both the CHP and the FBI in San Diego are investigating the case.

People who turn in cash should explain that the money was recovered in connection to Friday’s incident on the I-5.

One driver named Jasmin who spoke with NBC 7 said she pulled over to see if “she could get lucky, too, but good thing I didn’t get lucky ’cause I found out it’s illegal.”

Remarkably, this is not the first time such a thing happened in San Diego: In 2009, some people hoping to elude police tossed cash out of their SUV during a chase.

Source Article from https://www.nbcsandiego.com/news/local/traffic-stops-on-i-5-in-carlsbad-for-cash-dash/2797602/

Austria is to become the first European country to make vaccinations against Covid 19 mandatory, and will go into its third nationwide lockdown for at least 10 days from Monday, the chancellor, Alexander Schallenberg, has announced.

The government said it was preparing the legal groundwork for a general vaccine mandate to come into effect from 1 February, with exemptions for those unable to receive a jab on medical grounds.

The age from which people will be required to be vaccinated has not yet been determined, the government said.

Those refusing to be vaccinated are likely to face administrative fines, which can be converted into a prison sentence if the fine cannot be recovered.

“For a long time the consensus in this country was that we don’t want a vaccine mandate,” Schallenberg said after a meeting with the Alpine republic’s heads of state. “In spite of months of persuasion, we have not managed to convince enough people to be vaccinated”.

Tightening vaccine pass controls and testing requirements had started to make a difference but it “hasn’t convinced enough”, said Schallenberg, who took over as chancellor last month from his party ally Sebastian Kurz. “We don’t want a fifth wave, we don’t want a sixth or a seventh wave.”

Austria is weathering its most powerful wave of Covid, with authorities on Friday reporting 990 cases per 100,000 people over seven days. It recorded another 15,809 new infections on Friday.

The country has the lowest vaccination rate in western Europe, with 66% of its population fully vaccinated. Over the past two weeks, the conservative green coalition government has tried to prevent a collapse of the health system by making it mandatory for citizens to show proof of vaccination or recovery at restaurants and bars, and then announcing a “lockdown for the unvaccinated”.

Austria cases

The national lockdown is expected to last until 12 December but could be reevaluated after 10 days if the Covid situation has improved. Nurseries and schools will stay open but mask-wearing is mandatory in classrooms and pupils can choose to study remotely without a note from a doctor.

Lockdown rules would end for vaccinated people from 12 December but stay in place for those who declined to take the jab.

Those who have got their second jab will in the future only be considered fully immunised for seven rather than nine months, and can get their booster shot after four months.

The former chancellor Kurz, who resigned amid a corruption inquiry in mid-October, had assured the public in July that “for everyone who is vaccinated, the pandemic is now over”.

“No one wants a lockdown, it is a crude instrument,” said Austria’s Green health minister, Wolfgang Mückstein, on Friday. “But it is the most effective instrument that we have available”.

In particular, the planned general vaccine mandate drew heavy criticism from the opposition benches in parliament. “From this day Austria is a dictatorship,” said Herbert Kickl of the far-right Freedom party, which has advocated scientifically unproven alternative treatments against coronavirus infections, such as the anti-parasite drug ivermectin.

While countries including Italy and France have made vaccination against Covid-19 mandatory for health workers, Austria will be the first country in Europe to apply such a requirement for the society at large. Outside the continent, Indonesia, Micronesia and Turkmenistan have a vaccine mandate for adults.

Unlike other federalised countries like Germany, Austria has a centralised national database of vaccination, which the government could check against those registered as living in the country to determine who has not yet got a jab.

Mandatory vaccination is not unprecedented in Austria. In 1948 the postwar government made vaccination against smallpox compulsory by law. In 1980 the World Health Organization declared smallpox the first disease to have been defeated through vaccination.

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/nov/19/austria-plans-compulsory-covid-vaccination-for-all

(CNN)Kyle Rittenhouse, the teenager who killed two people and shot another during unrest in Kenosha, Wisconsin, was acquitted Friday of first-degree intentional homicide and four other felony charges.

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    Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2021/11/19/us/kyle-rittenhouse-trial-friday/index.html

    House Democrats on Friday celebrated the passage of a sweeping $1.75 trillion tax and spending plan that makes up the bulk of President Biden’s economic agenda, billing the measure as “transformational,” even as it faces an uphill battle – and looming changes – in the Senate. 

    The bill is “monumental, it’s historic, it’s transformative, it’s bigger than anything we’ve ever done,” House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said during a press conference shortly after the bill’s passage, 220 to 213, on Friday morning. She was accompanied by six fellow House Democrats, including Rep. Richard Neal, chair of the tax-writing Ways and Means Committee. 

    CBO: BIDEN SPENDING BILL ADDS $367B TO DEFICIT, NOT COUNTING IRS TAX ENFORCEMENT

    But the legislation still has a difficult road ahead in the 50-50 Senate, where Democratic leaders must ensure that every member of the caucus votes in lockstep. 

    President Joe Biden speaks about his infrastructure plan and his domestic agenda during a visit to the Electric City Trolley Museum in Scranton, Pa., Wednesday, Oct. 20, 2021. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh / AP Newsroom)

    The specifics of the bill are almost guaranteed to change in the upper chamber, where two Democratic centrists – Joe Manchin of West Virginia and Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona – have not explicitly endorsed it. With the narrowest possible majority, it would be possible for one lawmaker to sink the spending bill.

    The bill must also comply with a review by the Senate parliamentarian, a non-partisan referee who will determine whether it adheres to the complicated rules of budget reconciliation, the tactic that Democrats are using to pass the bill with a simple majority.

    Pelosi downplayed concerns about changes in the Senate, insisting the “biggest challenge was to meet the vision of President Biden.”

    “We had so much agreement within the bill,” she said. “And then whatever comes out in the Senate, we’ll be working together with them so that we have agreement when it comes back to us.” The California Democrat had previously insisted that she would not bring the reconciliation package to the House floor for a vote until it was clear it could also pass in the Senate. 

    Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., talks to reporters during her weekly news conference in the U.S. Capitol Visitors Center on November 18, 2021 in Washington, D.C.  (Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images / Getty Images)

    Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer has said he wants to pass the bill – known as the Build Back Better Act – by Christmas. But he will need to get all 50 members of his caucus across the political spectrum to back the same sweeping plan, a feat that seems increasingly challenging. 

    Manchin has sounded the alarm about rising inflation (the government reported last week that prices have risen 6.2% over the past year, a 31-year high), while Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., has questioned House Democrats’ repeal of a Trump-era limit on the state and local tax deduction, a policy that predominantly benefits wealthy Americans in coastal states.

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    “As soon as the necessary technical and procedural work with the Senate Parliamentarian has been completed, the Senate will take up this legislation,” Schumer said. 

    The House bill imagines spending $1.75 trillion over the next decade on child-care subsidies, a one-year extension of the boosted child tax credit, universal pre-kindergarten, expanded Medicaid, a five-year repeal of the $10,000 SALT deduction cap and programs designed to combat climate change. It would be funded largely by higher taxes on wealthy Americans and corporations.

    Source Article from https://www.foxbusiness.com/politics/democrats-biden-spending-plan-pelosi-senate-changes

    WASHINGTON — President Biden underwent his first physical as president on Friday, becoming the oldest commander in chief to receive a full medical evaluation while in office. He briefly transferred power to Vice President Kamala Harris while he underwent a colonoscopy.

    “As was the case when President George W. Bush had the same procedure in 2002 and 2007, and following the process set out in the Constitution, President Biden will transfer power to the vice president for the brief period of time when he is under anesthesia,” Jen Psaki, the White House press secretary said. “The vice president will work from her office in the West Wing during this time.”

    While the procedure was performed, Ms. Harris became the first woman to hold acting presidential powers, for roughly 85 minutes. Mr. Biden, who is 78, resumed his duties around 11:35 a.m., Ms. Psaki said in a tweet, and was “in good spirits” after the procedure.

    Mr. Biden used Section 3 of the 25th Amendment to temporarily transfer power, the administration said. Under that provision, the president was required to notify the president pro tempore of the Senate, Democrat of Vermont, and Nancy Pelosi, the speaker of the House, that he was temporarily unable to carry out his presidential duties. Those letters were transmitted to both at 10:10 a.m.

    Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2021/11/19/us/politics/biden-harris-power-transfer.html

    In recent weeks, state after state has moved to allow booster shots for all adults, including Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Kansas, Kentucky, Maine, Vermont, Arkansas, California, Colorado and New Mexico.

    A host of other countries have taken the same approach, including Australia, Brazil, Canada, Germany, Hungary, Israel, Japan, Norway and Saudi Arabia. Regulators for the European Union have authorized booster doses of both Moderna and Pfizer-BioNTech for all adults.

    Kitty Bennett contributed research.

    Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2021/11/19/us/politics/coronavirus-boosters-fda.html

    House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy unleashed a marathon tirade overnight in opposition to President Biden’s social spending bill, ranting for more than eight hours on the House floor and breaking a record for the chamber’s longest continuous speech in modern history.

    McCarthy (R-Calif.) spoke for 8 hours and 33 minutes and ripped the nearly $2 trillion Build Back Better package as the “single most reckless and irresponsible spending bill in our nation’s history.”

    “Let me be clear: Never in American history has so much been spent at one time — at one time,” McCarthy seethed in his monologue, which began at 8:38 p.m. Thursday and finished at 5:11 a.m. Friday.

    “Never in American history will so many taxes be raised and so much borrowing to be needed to pay for all this reckless spending.”

    Kevin McCarthy, who spoke for 8 hours and 33 minutes, ripped President Biden’s $1.75 trillion Build Back Better agenda.
    AP

    The House GOP leader attacked almost every proposal included in the legislation, which Republicans insist will cause long-term damage to the US economy, before railing against other policies of the Biden administration and calling Democrats “out of touch” with the needs and wishes of ordinary Americans.  

    “If I sound angry, I am. I’m just getting geared up, go just sit,” McCarthy said after several hours. “I know you don’t like me, but that’s OK.”

    “I know some of you are mad at me, think I spoke too long,” he said at another point in his remarks. “But I’ve had enough. America has had enough.”

    Kevin McCarthy spent over eight hours speaking against Biden’s plan.
    EPA

    Among the topics McCarthy touched on in his soliloquy were inflation, immigration, the threat of a rising China, his childhood in California, the Lincoln presidency, the Jim Crow era, even the influence of the movie “Red Dawn” on his politics.

    Throughout the night, McCarthy sparred with heckling Democrats who repeatedly interrupted him. At one point, he warned them, “that’s all right, I got all night” before announcing his plan to go through the 2,000-page bill section by section.  

    Typically, floor speeches last one minute during House debates, but McCarthy took advantage of the prerogative granted party leaders to speak as long as they wish.

    At around midnight, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) came into the House chamber and indicated to the dozen or so Democrats who had not already left that there would not be a vote when McCarthy gave up the floor due to the late hour.

    Kevin McCarthy ripped almost every proposal included in the Build Back Better Act, which Republicans insist will cause damage to the US economy.
    REUTERS

    As he began to wrap up his speech, McCarthy joked, “this one minute feels almost like eight hours now.”

    “This is the longest one minute I’ve ever given, it’s the longest one minute ever given in this body,” he added. “There’s a reason why.”

    “This is a tipping point, this is a point of not coming back from,” McCarthy went on. “The American people have spoken, but unfortunately the Democrats have not listened.”

    Prior to McCarthy’s monologue, the modern-day record for the longest speech in the House was held by Pelosi, who delivered her own eight-hour floor remarks back in 2018 in support of immigration law changes.

    The House is expected to vote on the spending bill Friday.

    With Post wires

    Source Article from https://nypost.com/2021/11/19/mccarthy-blasts-democrats-stalls-biden-bill-in-8-hour-tirade-on-house-floor/

    People wearing face mask to protect against the coronavirus as they walk in front of St. Stephen’s Cathedral on Wednesday in Vienna, Austria.

    Michael Gruber/AP


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    Michael Gruber/AP

    VIENNA — Austria will go into a national lockdown to contain a fourth wave of coronavirus cases, Chancellor Alexander Schallenberg announced Friday, as new COVID-19 infections hit a record high amid a pandemic surge across Europe.

    The lockdown will start Monday and initially will last for 10 days, Schallenberg said.

    And starting Feb. 1, the country will also make vaccinations mandatory.

    Most stores will close, and cultural events will be canceled next week. People will be able to leave their homes only for certain specific reasons, including buying groceries, going to the doctor or exercising.

    Wolfgang Mueckstein, the country’s health minister, said that kindergartens and schools would remain open for those who needed to go there but all parents were asked to keep their children at home if possible.

    “We do not want a fifth wave,” Schallenberg said, according to ORF. “Nor do we want a sixth or seventh wave.”

    The full lockdown is the latest effort to control rapidly rising case numbers. It’s the fourth nationwide lockdown since the outbreak of the pandemic last year. On Friday, the country reported 15,809 new infections, an all-time high.

    Earlier this month, Austria introduced rules that barred unvaccinated people from restaurants, hotels and large events.

    And starting Monday, the government is imposing a national lockdown only for the unvaccinated.

    Government officials had long promised that vaccinated people would no longer face lockdown restrictions: Over the summer, then-Chancellor Sebastian Kurz declared the pandemic “over” for those who had received the vaccine. But as virus cases continued to skyrocket, the government said it had no choice but to extend it to everyone.

    “This is very painful,” Schallenberg said.

    Mueckstein, the health minister, said many factors contributed to the current situation, including Austria’s lower-than-expected vaccination rate and the seasonal impact of the virus. But he also apologized for state and federal leaders’ initial reluctance to implement stronger measures.

    “Unfortunately, even we as the federal government have fallen short of our standards in some areas,” he said. “I want to apologize for that.”

    After 10 days, the lockdown’s effects will be assessed. If virus cases have not gone down sufficiently, it can be extended to a maximum of 20 days.

    Austria’s intensive care doctors welcomed the government’s decision.

    “The record infection figures that we have now experienced day after day will only be reflected in normal and intensive care units with a time lag. It really is high time for a full stop,” Walter Hasibeder, the president of the Society for Anesthesiology, Resuscitation and Intensive Care Medicine, told Austrian news agency APA.

    “Given the current infection developments, we believe there are no alternatives to even greater contact restriction than recently, so any measures that help curb the momentum are welcome,” he added.

    For the past seven days, the country has reported more than 10,000 new infection cases daily. Hospitals have been overwhelmed with many new COVID-19 patients, and deaths have been rising again, too. So far, 11,951 people have died of the virus in Austria.

    The situation is especially dire in the regions of Salzburg and Upper Austria, which have been particularly hard hit by the rising case numbers. In Salzburg, for example, the seven-day rate of new infections is nearly twice the national average.

    Hospitals in both states have warned in recent days that their ICUs were reaching capacity, and hospitals in Salzburg had begun discussing potential triage procedures to take only the worst cases.

    Austria, a country of 8.9 million, has one of the lowest vaccination rates in Western Europe — only 65.7% of the population are fully vaccinated.

    Despite all the persuasion and campaigns, too few people have decided to get vaccinated, Schallenberg said, leaving the country no other choice but to introduce mandatory vaccinations in February.

    The chancellor said the details would be finalized in the coming weeks but those who continued to refuse to get vaccinated would have to expect to be fined. In addition, booster shots are now available to all vaccinated individuals starting four months after their second dose.

    “For a long time, the consensus in this country was that we didn’t want mandatory vaccination,” Schallenberg said. “For a long time, perhaps too long.”

    Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2021/11/19/1057182839/austria-lockdown-covid-vaccination-mandatory-mandate

    Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2021/11/19/kyle-rittenhouse-trial-there-mistrial-and-what-mean/8675086002/

    President Biden’s Build Back Better socioeconomic spending bill is a misnomer, two former White House Chiefs of Staff said Thursday, telling Fox News that moderate Democrats in the House essentially folded to party leadership after the Congressional Budget Office scored the legislation they say won’t do what it is advertised to.

    “They’ll have the votes tonight [to pass the bill],” Mark Meadows told “Hannity“. “The moderates were already falling all over themselves when they got the CBO Score.”

    Meadows, a former North Carolina congressman added that Biden believes the best way to raise offsetting revenues is to hire more Internal Revenue Service agents to predictably engage in more comprehensive audits of the American people.

    Several moderate Democrats including Problem Solvers Caucus co-chair Josh Gottheimer of New Jersey and Rep. Stephanie Murphy of Florida have been awaiting analysis from the CBO, which announced Thursday afternoon the bill will add about $367 billion to the deficit.

    Murphy, who co-chairs the centrist Blue Dog Coalition with Rep. Ed Case of Hawaii and Tom O’Halleran of Arizona and whose Sanford district is a key swing constituency in the 2022 midterms – said in public remarks that “despite its flaws, the Build Back Better Act has a lot of positive elements.”

    U.S. Rep. Stephanie Murphy, a Florida Democrat, left, and House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, a Maryland Democrat, right, wait to speak during a news conference on the Raise the Wage Act (H.R. 582) at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C., U.S., on Thursday, July 18, 2019. Photographer: Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg via Getty Images

    Later, Meadows added that Biden has no connection to the average American taxpayer let alone the American worker:

    “The four areas that Joe Biden actually are polling the worst in are the ones that actually Donald Trump fixed and had a plan for, so all the Joe Biden has to do is run back and actually do what Donald Trump did for four years,” he said.

    Joe Biden is used to signing the back of a paycheck, not the front of a paycheck, so he doesn’t even understand what it takes — because he is used to a government paycheck for 40 years.”

    CLEVELAND, OHIO – SEPTEMBER 30: Democratic U.S. presidential nominee Joe Biden embarks on a train campaign tour at the Cleveland Amtrak Station September 30, 2020 in Cleveland, Ohio. (Photo by Alex Wong/Getty Images)

    Former White House Chief of Staff Reince Priebus later added that the onetime moderate Delaware Democrat now however has “no power over his own party” – and that like-minded colleagues including Obama-era Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers, warned against the inflationary nature of Build Back Better.

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    Priebus and host Sean Hannity further discussed how the bill could likely be changed by the Senate due to the presence of apprehensive lawmakers like Sen. Joe Manchin III of West Virginia – forcing an edited version to later return to the House for another final vote.

    Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/media/bidens-socialist-build-back-better-overhaul-meadows-priebus-hannity

    Despite leaving the immediate vicinity of the border to take shelter from the biting cold in the warehouse, many migrants held out hope they might still get to Europe and, failing that, settle in Belarus rather than being forced to return home, which for many is Iraq.

    Yuri Karayev, an aide to Mr. Lukashenko representing the surrounding border region of Grodno, declined to answer questions about what lies in store for the migrants now that they have given up their hold on the patch of forested border land they had occupied for weeks — but not their desire to get to Europe.

    Poland, backed by fellow members of the European Union, shows no sign of relenting on its hard-line stand against migrants trying to enter the country. Poland’s prime minister told a German newspaper that “by defending our border, we defend the whole of Europe.”

    Under the gray gloom of the November sky, phalanxes of Polish soldiers remained in formation Thursday around the Bruzgi border crossing, still flanked by water cannons — used on Tuesday to repel a push by migrants toward Poland from Belarus. The government in Warsaw had repeatedly portrayed the migrants as an invading horde, but they had now suddenly vanished, at least from view.

    Polish officials said Thursday that they had recorded 501 attempts to cross the border from Belarus in the previous 24 hours and, repeating a claim made daily by Warsaw, accused Belarusian security officials of leading groups of migrants to try to breach the frontier. Migrants give contradictory accounts of whether their forays into Poland, nearly all unsuccessful, had been aided by Belarus.

    Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2021/11/18/world/europe/belarus-poland-migrant-camp.html

    But after Moderna filed a similar request on Wednesday, officials began debating whether to speed that authorization along as well, the people with knowledge of the matter said.

    The FDA declined to comment.

    Moderna reported earlier this summer that its booster is 93 percent effective when given six months after the second dose, and the company has been in close touch with the FDA since then about an eventual authorization of its shot for all adults.

    With Covid-19 cases up more than 20 percent in the U.S. over the past two weeks, some administration officials also argued that clearing the shot prior to Thanksgiving would allow all adults to quickly seek a booster no matter which vaccine they originally received.

    The FDA is now expected to finalize authorization for both vaccines on Friday morning, ahead of an afternoon meeting of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s vaccine advisory panel, according to the people with knowledge of the matter.

    Still, it’s unclear how the CDC panel will react to the rapid authorization of Moderna’s booster shot. The outside advisers — who are charged with recommending who should receive the vaccines — were originally scheduled only to consider expanded eligibility for Pfizer’s booster. The FDA’s move could raise concerns among some advisers that they’re being asked to endorse the distribution of a second vaccine on a more accelerated timetable than they originally planned.

    The CDC is not required to follow the panel’s advice on how vaccines should be rolled out, but it has traditionally followed its recommendations.

    Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2021/11/18/fda-ready-to-endorse-pfizer-moderna-boosters-covid-523002

    India will scrap three laws that farmers have protested against since last year, Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced Friday.

    “Today, I am here to tell you, and the whole country, that we have decided to take back, to repeal, the three agriculture laws,” Modi said, according to a CNBC translation of his remarks in Hindi.

    He added that the government will begin the constitutional process in parliament later this month to repeal the laws. Modi also urged protesters to return home in his address to the nation.

    India’s main opposition party, the Indian National Congress, described Friday’s announcement as “a historic victory for our farmers, our people & our democracy.”

    The Indian parliament passed those laws in September 2020. The reforms would have chipped away at some of the rules that have protected India’s farmers for decades and would subject them to unfettered free-market mechanisms where competition would be high.

    Agriculture is the primary source of livelihood for about half of India’s 1.3 billion population but accounts for only around 15% of GDP. Economists generally agree that India’s agricultural sector needs reforms, in part to promote faster growth and deploy more sustainable use of scarce resources like water.

    But farm reform policies also tend to be politically sensitive in nature.

    Indian farmers have been struggling for years due to low crop prices, rising costs, demonetization and widespread droughts even though there have been generous government subsidies and income tax exemptions. Many farmers have fallen into debt and that’s led to a rise in farmer suicides in recent years.

    Since last year, the Indian government has met farmer representatives several times to try and resolve their concerns, but the negotiations did not lead to any breakthroughs.

    Thousands of farmers have protested the measures for more than a year. Media reports say many demonstrators from northern states like Punjab, Haryana, Uttar Pradesh and others have been camping in the outskirts of Delhi since November 2020 — despite a harsh winter and the coronavirus pandemic.

    Farmers argue that the new laws would have lowered crop prices and hurt their earnings.

    Protesters clashed with the police on multiple occasions.

    According to Indian media reports, farmers have said that hundreds of demonstrators and activists have died during the protests.

    Last month, nine people reportedly died in Uttar Pradesh after a car owned by a politician allegedly ran over protesting farmers.

    India’s supreme court stayed the implementation of the farm laws this year.

    Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party will be contesting in local elections next year in places like Uttar Pradesh and Punjab, which are some of the country’s biggest farming states. This year, the national ruling party failed to win the state election in West Bengal — another top agrarian state.

    Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2021/11/19/india-will-scrap-three-controversial-farm-laws-prime-minister-narendra-modi-says.html

    Jurors are set to start their fourth day of deliverations in the Kyle Rittenhouse trial.

    It comes after Thursday ended without a verdict on Thursday, when jurors were sent home following more than 24 hours of deliberation across three days this week.

    They jury will reconvene at 9am CT on Friday.

    On Thursday, Judge Bruce Schroeder barred MSNBC from covering the trial inside the courthouse for the remainder of the trial, after a freelancer journalist was stopped by the Kenosha Police Department for allegedly running a traffic signal behind a bus used to transport jurors to the courthouse. Police said they believed the man tried to photograph the bus.

    NBC News said in a statement that the journalist did not intend to contact or photograph the jurors and is cooperating with authorities. Police said “there was no breach of security regarding the jury, nor were there any photographs obtained”.

    Mr Rittenhouse, 18, is facing five felony charges for shooting three men in the aftermath of police brutality protests in Kenosha, Wisconsin on 25 August 2020. The most serious charges are first-degree homicide for the deaths of Joseph Rosenbaum and Anthony Huber.

    Follow the latest updates live:

    To receive our free breaking news alerts direct to your inbox click here

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    Protesters outside court

    While jurors were deliberating yesterday, protesters remained outside the court.

    Here are some images of the scenes from yesterday.

    A small group of protestors continue to demonstrate on the third day of jury deliberations

    A man holds a peace symbol outside the courthouse

    Protesters over Kyle Rittenhouse case

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    Fourth day of deliberations

    The jury is set to enter its fourth day of deliberations later today.

    So far, jurors have deliberated for around 24 hours over three days.

    Here is a look at whether we can predict when a decision will come through:

    When will the Kyle Rittenhouse verdict be announced?

    Closing arguments took place on Monday

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    Sheriff tried to defuse tensions outside court by handing out cookies

    Sheriff David Beth tried to break the tension outside court by distributing coffee and cookies to protesters during the third day of Kyle Rittenhouse trial.

    The Kenosha County sheriff set up a small counter outside the courthouse with a signboard that said “Cookies for peace” on Thursday.

    Read the detailed report:

    Sheriff hands out cookies outside court to ease tension during Kyle Rittenhouse trial

    Fact that sheriff is walking around handing cookies to people is ‘breaking a little bit of the ice and a little bit of tension’, David Beth says

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    Rudy Giuliani: Rittenhouse case ‘has become a travesty’

    Appearing on Newsmax, former New York City mayor Rudy Giuliani claimed Kyle Rittenhouse has not had a fair trial.

    “Particularly when you consider all the errors in this case, we’re at a point judges will be justified in throwing the case out. Meaning there are so many errors, any one of which could normally reverse a case,” the former Donald Trump lawyer said.

    “The case has become a travesty,” he added. “They commented on the 5th amendment privilege which never gets done. I ran the US attorney’s office for five years. [I was] the third ranking officer in the Justice Department for three years and I don’t remember how many cases I have tried. I don’t remember a prosecutor doing it,” he added.

    Giuliani said the judge has the ability to give a not guilty verdict in this case saying the verdict was not supported by evidence.

    1637299857

    Former Missouri house speaker calls MSNBC ‘domestic terror group’

    Former Missouri House Speaker Tim Jones described MSNBC as a “domestic terror group” after judge Bruce Schroeder banned the broadcaster from the Rittenhouse trial courthouse.

    It was after the police suggested that a freelance MSNBC journalist was following or trying to photograph jurors.

    He was stopped by the Kenosha police for allegedly running a traffic signal behind a bus used to transport the jurors.

    MSNBC has denied any wrongdoing.

    “Last night, a freelancer received a traffic citation. While the traffic violation took place near the jury van, the freelancer never contacted or intended to contact the jurors during deliberations, and never photographed or intended to photograph them,” NBC News said in a statement to CNN.

    “We regret the incident and will fully cooperate with the authorities on any investigation.”

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    Most unbelievable moments from Kyle Rittenhouse trial so far

    From confusion over an iPad camera’s ‘pinch to zoom’ technology to the prosecutor pointing Rittenhouse’s rifle at the jury, this trial has been full of dramatic and unexpected scenes unfolding inside the courtroom.

    Read the full report by Megan Sheets:

    The most unbelievable moments from the chaotic Kyle Rittenhouse trial

    Viewers of the Rittenhouse trial have come to expect the unexpected after a series of dramatic scenes inside the courtroom in Kenosha, Wisconsin

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    BLM and Kyle Rittenhouse supporters share pizza together outside trial court

    As Kyle Rittenhouse’s fate was being decided, protesters from both the “guilty” and “not guilty” camps outside Wisconsin courthouse displayed unusual bonhomie.

    The supporters of Black Lives Matter and those of Rittenhouse shared pizza together and spoke of unity as they withstood the bitter cold together despite their opposing views.

    But shortly after that, a protester allegedly assaulted and was caught body-slamming a journalist. A man wearing a a “f*** Kyle Rittenhouse” t-shirt was captured on camera hitting a journalist’s camera, forcing him to back down.

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    Republican senator Wendy Rogers says self defence is human right

    Arizona senator Wendy Rogers has joined the growing list of Republican candidates, elected officials, and other influential conservatives who have backed Kyle Rittenhouse.

    Rogers tweeted on Friday: “Pray for Kyle Rittenhouse and that decency prevails. Self defense is a human right.”

    It comes after Republican Florida Rep. Matt Gaetz said he might offer Rittenhouse an internship.

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    Who is Judge Bruce Schroeder?

    As the nation’s eyes remain glued to the double homicide trial of Kyle Rittenhouse, viewers have scrutinised the judge presiding over the high-profile case.

    His courtroom manner and arguments with prosecutors have drawn significant attention as the trial draws to a close.

    Read more here:

    Who is the judge in Kyle Rittenhouse’s homicide trial?

    Longtime Wisconsin trial judge has been at the centre of the closely watched case

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    Man who carried AR-15 outside Rittenhouse trial was fired police officer

    A man who was confronted by police for carrying a rifle without a permit and hurled obscenities about Black Lives Matter protests confirmed he was a fired Ferguson police officer.

    The man, who first identified himself as “Maserati Mike”, is Jesse Kline, who was a member in a police department of Missouri for three years.

    He has been protesting outside the Kenosha County Courthouse for the past three days as Kyle Rittenhouse jury deliberation continues.

    He first brought a rifle to the court and returned with a rifle bag and a dog the next day.

    Source Article from https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/crime/kyle-rittenhouse-trial-verdict-jury-news-live-b1960549.html