Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said Tuesday evening that Democrats are “grateful” that Luján will make a “full recovery” and that he looks forward to his return to the Senate. He predicted that “the Senate will be able to carry forward with its business.”

Carlos Sanchez, Luján’s chief of staff, said that the senator checked himself into a hospital Thursday afternoon in Santa Fe after experiencing dizziness and fatigue. The senator later learned he had suffered a stroke and had to undergo decompressive surgery.

Luján was elected in 2020. He was previously a member of House leadership and ran the House Democratic campaign arm for two cycles, including 2018 when Democrats won back the House.

Some senators projected optimism about Luján’s trajectory for recovery.

“He should be out pretty quickly,” said Sen. Tammy Duckworth (D-Ill.). “ It shouldn’t affect the agenda too much. … The key thing is that they recognized the symptoms fairly quickly.”

Every few years, health problems can change the composition of the Senate, with the late Sen. John McCain’s (R-Ariz.) long absence just the most recent example. Former Sen. Mark Kirk (R-Ill.) had a stroke in 2012 and didn’t return until 2013. Former Sen. Tim Johnson (D-S.D.) missed eight months after suffering a stroke in 2006. But the stakes are higher here, since none of that happened in an evenly divided Senate, where a long absence could hamstring Schumer’s majority.

Several senators didn’t know about Luján’s diagnosis until reporters asked about when he’d return. Senate Majority Whip Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) responded: “Oh, my God,” when a reporter informed him of the news. Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), meanwhile, said he wasn’t sure most of the Democratic caucus knew.

“Jesus. He had a stroke? First I’ve heard of it,” said Sen. Jon Tester (D-Mont.).”Oh, my God. I’ll find out. I did not know that, wow. It makes me worried about him, he’s too young for that stuff.”

Democrats this week can confirm nominees without Republicans, with GOP Sen. Mitt Romney (R-Utah) absent due to a Covid infection. But Murphy suggested that, in the short-term, Democrats may need to prioritize legislation that can garner Republican votes. Bipartisan groups of senators are currently working on a Russia sanctions package, as well as updates to the Electoral Count Act to make it more difficult for lawmakers to overturn reported election results. Democrats are also trying to reach an agreement with Republicans to fund the government past Feb. 18.

Luján’s stroke is the biggest health scare Democrats have faced this Congress, after more than a year with an evenly divided Senate. Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) was briefly hospitalized six days after Democrats took back the majority last year. And throughout the year, Democratic senators have also been absent due to Covid infections. The lack of wiggle room is one reason Democrats are pushing for the chamber to act quickly on the upcoming Supreme Court confirmation.

“We’re in a 50-50 Senate, for any of us, at any time. We saw when a member gets Covid what happens in terms of the schedule,” said Sen. Debbie Stabenow (D-Mich.). “We’re all human beings, something could happen at any time.”

Several Democratic senators indicated that it was too early to predict how Luján’s absence might affect the agenda, given the uncertainty about his health and recovery.

“I just think it’s too early to say,” said Sen. Tim Kaine (D-Va.) “We just don’t know any more than what is in his statement.”

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2022/02/01/democratic-senate-reels-after-lujan-stroke-00004432

For the first time in its 130-year history, the ChristianaCare health system in Wilmington, Delaware, implemented “crisis standards of care” in January to help it treat an onslaught of patients, as a fresh wave of Covid infections hit the Northeast.

This week, the U.S. Covid death toll hit its highest level in about a year, rising 39% over the past two weeks, according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University.

Though the highly contagious omicron variant generally produces milder infections than previous strains, officials say the pandemic isn’t over, and many health-care systems still struggle to care for patients.

“There’s nothing mild about what’s going on in our hospital and in our ICUs, particularly if you are unvaccinated or unboosted,” said Dr. Ken Silverstein, chief physician executive of ChristianaCare, which has three hospitals and more than 1,200 beds.

Covid deaths rise

The U.S. death toll from Covid rose to an average of more than 2,400 fatalities per day over the previous seven days as of Monday, according to Johns Hopkins data.

Jennifer Nuzzo, head of epidemiology at Johns Hopkins Covid Resource Center, said Covid deaths may rise even more, because states with lower vaccination rates got hit later by omicron and haven’t experienced the full brunt of the variant yet.

“Any time we have deaths after the development of a vaccine — [which] largely takes off the table the possibility of death — is a tragedy,” Nuzzo said. “There’s no way around that this is a bad development for the pandemic.”

Vaccines

Vaccines weren’t widely available the last time Covid deaths were this high in the United States.

Pfizer’s and Moderna’s shots didn’t get emergency approval until December 2020, followed by Johnson & Johnson’s about three months later. Just 28 million Covid shots had been administered by this time last year, with 4.7 million people getting a second dose. As of Monday, almost 250 million Americans have received at least one shot, and more than 88 million of them have received both primary doses and been boosted.

As infections have soared lately, the vaccines have at least prevented serious illness and death from surging at the same rate. Still, with one-quarter of Americans yet to get a single shot, many remain susceptible.

Reported Covid deaths generally lag reported cases. States that have not yet peaked in infections will likely do so within the next two weeks, with peak deaths following about two weeks later, said Dr. Scott Braithwaite, professor of population health and medicine for NYU Langone Health.

Milder omicron

Dr. Shereef Elnahal, CEO of Newark, New Jersey-based University Hospital, said it’s not yet clear if his facility is fully over the hump in Covid-related deaths in this wave. After an increase in deaths over the past couple of weeks, the hospital has seen a plateau in ICU patients and fatalities.

About half as many patients who come in with Covid end up needing intensive care in this wave as compared with previous surges, Elnahal said.

“It’s just so transmissible that the absolute numbers of people needing ventilators looked similar to previous waves,” he said.

Some parts of the country are seeing encouraging signs, and cases and hospitalizations are easing nationwide. Hopkins data shows that U.S. cases surged to a pandemic high of close to 1 million new infections a day in mid-January. The country is now reporting a seven-day average of about 450,000 new cases per day, down 36% over the past two weeks.

Hospitalizations fall

The number of patients currently in U.S. hospitals with Covid — 140,000 — is also down from the recent peak of 159,400 on Jan. 20, according to a seven-day average of Department of Health and Human Services data.

This easing is most evident in the Northeast, where cases rose as the omicron variant spread earlier there than in other parts of the country. Cases and hospitalizations are falling more sharply in that region than others, but it’s now feeling the effects of getting hit first by omicron, with population-adjusted daily deaths higher than anywhere else.

The number of ChristianaCare patients has declined by 33% in recent weeks, but its hospitals were still operating at 99% capacity as of late last week. That includes patients who came to the hospital because of Covid as well as those who were admitted for something else and then tested positive. All patients who test positive for Covid, regardless of why they were admitted, need extra care and resources to isolate them from other patients and staff, which taxes the system, Silverstein said. 

“There are a lot of sick people, with Covid and because of Covid,” he said.

A shortage of monoclonal antibodies, which were standard care for Covid patients before they proved little use against omicron, also has forced ChristianaCare to make “clinical prioritization decisions about who’s most eligible,” Silverstein said. “Not who’s eligible, who’s most eligible.”

Mortality rates

The mortality rates, the percentage of people with Covid who ultimately die from the virus, are lower in the Northeast during this wave than previous surges. But other parts of the country that have lower vaccination rates may not be as lucky, doctors say.

“When you look at the delta period and last winter, as cases increased, hospitalizations and deaths increased in a similar pattern,” Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky told reporters last week.

“Strikingly, when we compare the past month when omicron was the predominant variant, we see a clear separation between cases, hospital admissions and deaths,” she said. She attributed the lower death rates to the vaccines, which have proven to provide good protection against death from Covid.

Cases are five times higher than they were during the delta wave, Walensky said, but hospitalizations and deaths haven’t increased at the same rate.

Immunity

Nuzzo said the current wave of infection, hospitalization and death would have been much worse without the vaccines.

“Part of why omicron looks more mild is because it is finding societies that have already amassed a fair amount of immunity from prior infection or vaccination,” Nuzzo said.

In the New York and New Jersey area, “many of the cases did not become fatal and/or extremely serious because of the high vaccination rates,” said Perry N. Halkitis, dean of the Rutgers School of Public Health. “But in the rest of the country, that may not be the case.”

That’s both because of lower vaccination rates and because of less-robust hospital health care in other parts of the country, he said, which could even mean a peak in total deaths in those areas, surpassing those from last winter’s surge.

The unvaccinated

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2022/02/01/us-covid-fatalities-reach-highest-level-in-a-year-as-omicron-cases-subside.html

“There are 200,000 men and women under arms in Ukraine,” he said. “They will put up a very, very fierce and bloody resistance and I think that parents, mothers, in Russia, should reflect on that fact. And I hope very much that President Putin steps back from the path of conflict and that we engage in dialogue.”

Source Article from https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-60220702

Dalton Tusing, 19, a freshman at Bridgewater, said he was walking to Flory Hall to finish up an art project when he heard “a lot of gun shots” and ran back to his dorm, where he is now sheltering in place.” There were sirens going off in the campus, and there are now police everywhere on campus,” Tusing said in a Twitter direct message.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/dc-md-va/2022/02/01/bridgewater-college-reported-shooting/

“Hitting the $30 trillion mark is clearly an important milestone in our dangerous fiscal trajectory,” said Michael A. Peterson, the chief executive officer of the Peter G. Peterson Foundation, which promotes deficit reduction. “For many years before Covid, America had an unsustainable structural fiscal path because the programs we’ve designed are not sufficiently funded by the revenue we take in.”

The gross national debt represents debt held by the public, such as individuals, businesses and pension funds, as well as liabilities that one part of the federal government owes to another part.

Renewed concerns about debt and deficits in Washington follow years of disregard for the consequences of big spending. During the Trump administration, most Republicans ceased to be fiscal hawks and voted along party lines in 2017 to pass a $1.5 trillion tax cut along with increased federal spending.

While Republican lawmakers helped run up the nation’s debt load, they have since blamed Mr. Biden for putting the nation on a rocky fiscal path by funding his agenda. After a protracted standoff in which Republicans refused to raise America’s borrowing cap, threatening a first-ever federal default, Congress finally agreed in December to raise the nation’s debt limit to about $31.4 trillion.

In January 2020, before the pandemic spread across the United States, the Congressional Budget Office projected that the gross national debt would reach $30 trillion by around the end of 2025. The total debt held by the public outpaced the size of the American economy last year, a decade faster than forecasters projected.

The nonpartisan office warned last year that rising interest costs and growing health spending as the population ages would increase the risk of a “fiscal crisis” and higher inflation, a situation that could undermine confidence in the U.S. dollar.

The Biden administration has said the $1.9 trillion pandemic relief package the Democrats passed last year was a necessary measure to protect the economy from further damage. Treasury Secretary Janet L. Yellen has argued that such large federal investments are affordable because interest costs as a share of gross domestic product are at historically low levels thanks to persistently low interest rates.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2022/02/01/us/politics/national-debt-30-trillion.html

The contours of the new settlement, announced in the U.S. District Court in Cleveland, the seat of the national opioid litigation, are similar to an agreement that the companies struck with state and local governments last summer.

If, as expected, most tribes sign on, the deal would be notable for its size as well as its acknowledgment of the 574 federally recognized tribes as a distinct litigating entity. Their voices have traditionally been excluded or downplayed in earlier national settlements involving the states, such as the landmark settlement with the big tobacco companies in the 1990s.

Roughly 15 percent of the total will go toward legal fees and other litigation costs, but the bulk will be directed to addiction treatment and prevention programs, to be overseen by tribal health care experts.

“My tribe has already committed to use any proceeds to confront the opioid crisis,” said Chairman Aaron Payment of the Sault Ste. Marie tribe of Chippewa in Michigan, which has 45,000 members. “The impact of the opioid epidemic is pervasive, such that tribes need all the resources we can secure to make our tribal communities whole once again.”

A signature development in this deal is the timetable, which is far faster than the one tentatively agreed to last summer with states and local governments. Johnson & Johnson will pay the tribes its $150 million portion over two years, starting as soon as the deal is finalized; the distributors — AmerisourceBergen, Cardinal Health and McKesson — will pay $440 million over six and a half years.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2022/02/01/health/opioids-native-american-tribes.html

A bill that would have created a first-of-its-kind, universal health care system died in the California state legislature on Monday after progressive Democrats failed to secure the necessary support for the legislation. 

Democratic Assemblyman Ash Kalra, the sponsor of Assembly Bill 1400, said he shelved the proposal to establish a government-funded, single-payer health care system after realizing he lacked the 41 votes needed for the bill to advance out of the Assembly– a defeat that comes after moderate Democrats sounded the alarm over the hefty $391 billion-a-year price tag.

WHICH STATES HAVE THE HIGHEST, LOWEST TAX BURDEN?

“It became clear that we did not have the votes necessary for passage, and I decided the best course of action is to not put AB 1400 for a vote today,” Kalra said in a press release. “Although the bill did not pass the Assembly by today’s deadline, this is only a pause for the single-payer movement.”

If the bill passed, California would have become the first state in the country to have a universal, single-payer health care system. 

California Gov. Gavin Newsom leaves a news conference after unveiling his proposed $286 billion 2022-2023 state budget during a news conference in Sacramento, Calif., Monday, Jan. 10, 2022. (AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli / AP Newsroom)

One of the biggest obstacles is cost: A study of a 2017 proposal to establish single-payer health care in California found that it would cost about $331 billion, roughly $356 billion today when adjusted for inflation. California’s entire budget this year, by comparison, is $263 billion. 

Still, the state is already on track to spend $517 billion for health care expenditures this year, according to a separate analysis from the University of California Berkeley Labor Center, including $222 billion in household and employer costs.

In order to fund the measure, lawmakers planned to pair the bill with a separate measure that would dramatically raise taxes on wealthy Californians and well-off corporations in the state. 

A recent analysis from the Tax Foundation, a non-partisan group that generally advocates for lower taxes, found that the proposed constitutional amendment would increase taxes by roughly $12,250 per household in order to fund the government-funded health care system. In all, the tax increases were designed to raise an additional $163 billion per year, which is more than California raised in total tax revenue any year before the pandemic.

The release of 2 million to 4 million gallons of untreated sewage into the Dominguez Channel has forced the closures of some beaches on Friday, Dec. 31, in Los Angeles County Carson, CA. ((Photo by Brittany Murray/MediaNews Group/Long Beach Press-Telegram via Getty Images) / Getty Images)

The proposal included three main revenue raisers, according to Jared Walczak, a fellow at the Tax Foundation: Higher income taxes on wealthy Americans, a payroll tax on certain employees’ wages for large companies, and a new gross receipts tax.

The taxes would have funded government-run health care for all Californians, which supporters say would offset the costs of higher taxes and would save money in the long run.

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Walczak noted the proposed tax increases come as California grapples with a high number of residents who are leaving for red states with lower tax burdens. A separate Tax Foundation analysis based on Census Bureau data shows that California’s population actually declined 0.8% in 2021, even as states with lower taxes saw their populations increase.

“Practically doubling state taxes—even if the burden is partially offset through state-provided health coverage—could send taxpayers racing for the exits,” Walczak wrote.

Source Article from https://www.foxbusiness.com/politics/california-scraps-single-payer-health-care-plan-double-state-taxes

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2022/02/01/ucla-faculty-threats-remote-learning/9301084002/

Seth Meyers

Late-night hosts responded to a shocking if not surprising admission from Donald Trump this weekend, with a Sunday night statement that said the quiet part out loud: that Vice-President Mike Pence could have overturned the election.

“One thing you can always count on with Trump is that eventually he’ll tire himself out and just confess,” said Seth Meyers on Late Night. “He can’t help it. He just blurts it out. He did it with collusion, he did it with Ukraine, and that’s exactly what he did over the weekend with a statement in which he admitted he wanted his vice-president, Mike Pence, to overturn the election.”

In the statement, Trump claimed “fraud and many other irregularities” in the 2020 election (no such fraud has been found) and asked: “How come the Democrats and … Republicans, like Wacky Susan Collins, are desperately trying to pass legislation that will not allow the vice-president to change the results of the election?

“Actually, what they are saying, is that Mike Pence did have the right to change the outcome, and they now want to take that right away. Unfortunately, he didn’t exercise that power. He could have overturned the election!”

“There’s no crime Trump could commit that he wouldn’t later confess to,” said Meyers. “He’d just exhaust all the excuses until he says, screw it, I’m guilty, baby! If it had been him instead of OJ, the quote would’ve been: ‘The gloves don’t fit, but you don’t need gloves to stab a guy.’”

Trump also promised at a rally in Texas on Saturday to pardon those charged with seditious conspiracy for their role in the 6 January attack on the Capitol. “At some point you just have to admit this is a pro-insurrection movement,” Meyers argued. “If you’re at a party, and someone starts doing cocaine and someone else says, ‘hey, can I get some of that cocaine?’ and then someone else says, ‘hey, I went to the bank on the way here to get new hundred dollar bills to snort that cocaine with,’ you might turn to your spouse and say, ‘I think we’re at a cocaine party.’”

Stephen Colbert

On The Late Show, Stephen Colbert acknowledged the retirement of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterback Tom Brady after 22 seasons and seven Super Bowl titles. “So bad news for your dad: there’s a new retiree about to dominate the pickleball league,” Colbert joked.

The 44-year-old QB accomplished more than any other quarterback in the history of the NFL, even though he was drafted 199th overall. “Which just goes to show you that anyone can be successful as long as you’re one of the most gifted and attractive people in human history,” Colbert noted.

“Now that Brady appears to be hanging up the old football skates, the world may finally see what we’ve all longed for: Dad Bod Brady,” he added. “Do it! Give us hope, Tom!”

In other news, “while the January 6 select committee continues to look for the cause of the Capitol riot, the cause admitted to everything and threatened to do it again,” Colbert said, referencing Trump’s rally in Texas this weekend, in which pledged to “treat those people from January 6 fairly” and promised pardons.

“Well, as long as you’re doling out pardons, fuck you,” Colbert retorted.

Trevor Noah

Donald Trump is “basically the ex that America kicked out for throwing an open-house party at the Capitol”, said Trevor Noah on The Daily Show. “And like many exes, he really wants a second chance. But instead of promising to do better next time, he’s threatening to do even worse.”

Noah played clips from Trump’s weekend rally, in which he continued to spread his myths about the “stolen” 2020 election and promised to pardon those who led the 6 January attack on the Capitol.

“When you think about it, it’s really smart what he’s saying,” said Noah. “Because he could’ve pardoned all of his people when January 6 happened. You realize that, right? He was the president. But he didn’t pardon them. He let them get prosecuted, and now they’re all going to jail. He let this happen! But now that his ass is on the line, now he’s like ‘man, if I was president, I’d have never let this happen to you.’

“Trump leans on his supporters really hard,” he continued. “I mean, first they had to storm the Capitol because he lost the election. Then their donations went to his legal fees, because he’s always getting sued. Now they have to protest if he gets charged? Where does it end? If Trump does go to prison, is he going to make these poor people smuggle cigarettes up their butt?”

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/culture/2022/feb/01/seth-meyers-trump-stephen-colbert-trevor-noah

At least one law enforcement officer has been shot in a gun-related incident at Bridgewater College in Bridgewater, Virginia, law enforcement sources told ABC News.

Deputies from the Rockingham County Sheriff’s Office are responding to reports of an active shooter at the college, a law enforcement official told ABC News.

The shooter is in custody, according to a tweet from Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin.

“I have been briefed on the situation at Bridgewater College. The shooter is in custody and state and local police are on the scene. I will continue to monitor the situation in conjunction with law enforcement,” Youngkin said.

The Harrisonburg Police Department has also responded to the scene. The FBI is also sending agents to the scene, according to a spokesperson.

The is a developing story. Check back for updates.

Source Article from https://abcnews.go.com/US/active-shooter-bridgewater-college-campus-authorities-called-scene/story?id=82603576

WASHINGTON — Sen. Joe Manchin declared Tuesday that President Joe Biden’s vast social and environment bill is “dead,” using his strongest language to date to underscore that any revival of Democrats’ top domestic priorities would have to arise from fresh negotiations.

“What Build Back Better bill?” Manchin said Tuesday, using the legislation’s name, when reporters asked about it. “There is no, I mean, I don’t know what you’re all talking about.” Asked if he’d had any talks about it, he added, “No, no, no no. It’s dead.”

That lack of activity, along with Biden’s dismal approval rating in polls, has prompted Democratic worries that the effort could fade away.

“I’m open to talk to everybody, always have been,” he said Monday. “I just want to make sure we find a balance and something we can afford, and do it and do it right.”

And while he expressed support for the original bill’s provisions bolstering renewable energy, he said he also wants to “use all the fossil industry in the cleanest, absolute possible versions that you can.” Manchin’s state is a significant coal producer and he has added clout on the issue as chairman of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee.

In December, Manchin’s abrupt announcement of his opposition to the 10-year, roughly $2 trillion measure, which had already passed the House, snuffed out its prospects in the Senate. His party needs his vote to prevail in that chamber, where every Republican opposes the legislation but Vice President Kamala Harris can vote to break ties.

Manchin, perhaps his party’s most conservative senator, has said the bill could further fuel inflation, is too expensive and finances too many programs.

Source Article from https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/wireStory/manchin-key-dem-build-back-bill-dead-82603192

“We need people to be aware that this virus is continuing to circulate and it’s continuing to evolve,” Van Kerkhove said during a Covid update Tuesday in Geneva. “That’s why it’s really important that we take measures to reduce our exposure to this virus, whatever variant is circulating.”

BA.2 has become the dominant version of omicron in Denmark, outpacing the original version, BA.1. Danish scientists, in a study published this week, found that BA.2 is substantially more transmissible and is more adept at infecting people who are vaccinated or boosted.

However, vaccinated and boosted people are actually less likely to spread BA.2 once infected compared with people who have the BA.1 strain. The unvaccinated, on the other hand, transmit BA.2 more efficiently than the original omicron, likely due to a higher viral load, according to the study.

The Danish scientists said BA.2, like the original omicron, appears to be associated with milder infections than the more severe delta variant. “The combination of high incidence of a relative innocuous subvariant has raised optimism,” they wrote.

The WHO has repeatedly warned that new Covid variants will likely emerge as omicron spreads rapidly around the world. Van Kerkhove said last week the next variant will be more transmissible, but it’s an open question on whether it will be more severe.

The WHO labeled omicron, including its sublineages, a variant of concern in November. The BA.2 subvariant has not been separately categorized as such because it falls under omicron, the organization said.

“BA.2 is one of the sublineages of omicron, so BA.2 is omicron, and it is a variant of concern,” Van Kerkhove said Tuesday. “It’s in the family of the variants of concern around omicron.”

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2022/02/01/who-says-the-new-omicron-subvariant-doesnt-appear-to-be-more-severe-than-the-original.html

The governor of Florida, Ron DeSantis, has pushed back against calls to condemn a series of neo-Nazi protests that took place over the weekend, saying people are attempting to “smear” him.

On Saturday and Sunday, a group of 15 to 20 protesters donned Nazi symbols and chanted antisemitic slurs along the North Alafaya Trail in Orlando. According to videos that quickly circulated across social media, the protesters gave Nazi salutes, yelled “White power!”, waved an anti-Biden banner and at one point got into a brawl with a driver.

The protests have been met with disgust from Democrats and Republicans alike. However, DeSantis did not publicly condemn the marchers until Monday during a press conference, and then largely to deflect blame on to his political opponents.

“So what I’m going to say is these people, these Democrats who are trying to use this as some type of political issue to try to smear me as if I had something to do with that, we’re not playing their game,” he said.

DeSantis also accused the Democrats of fostering antisemitism on Capitol Hill: “I’m not going to have people try to smear me that belong to a party that elevated antisemites to the halls of Congress.”

He called the protesters “some jackasses doing this on the street” and suggested the matter was a police issue. “First of all, state law enforcement is going to hold them accountable because they were doing stuff on the overpass, so they are absolutely going to be doing that and they should do that.”

DeSantis’s comments came a day after his press secretary, Christina Pushaw, drew widespread criticism over a tweet that she posted, then deleted, on Sunday. She wrote: “Do we even know they’re Nazis? Or is this a stunt like the ‘white nationalists’ who crashed the Youngkin rally in Charlottesville and turned out to be Dem staffers? I trust Florida law enforcement to investigate and am awaiting their conclusions.”

The “stunt” Pushaw referred to was an incident last October in which the Lincoln Project, an anti-Trump Republican political action committee, sent a group of people pretending to be white supremacists to an event for the Republican gubernatorial candidate Glenn Youngkin in Charlottesville, Virginia.

In response to Pushaw’s comments, the Anti Defamation League wrote that it was “alarmed that @ChristinaPushaw would first give cover to antisemites rather than immediately and forcefully condemning their revolting, hate-filled rally and assault”.

The Orange county sheriff, John Mina, announced that his office is launching an investigation into the protests, saying: “This hatred has no place in our society. Any reports of criminal activities will be thoroughly investigated.”

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2022/feb/01/ron-desantis-neo-nazi-protests

It was only after several early options were exhausted that Mr. Waldron pitched the idea of using other parts of the federal government to seize the machines to both Mr. Giuliani and members of the Trump legal team, and to Mr. Flynn and his own associates, including Ms. Powell and Patrick Byrne, a wealthy business executive who funded many of the efforts to challenge the election.

Mr. Waldron, who owns a bar and distillery outside Austin, Texas, was previously best known for having circulated a 38-page PowerPoint presentation to lawmakers and White House aides that was filled with extreme plans to overturn the election.

Mr. Giuliani was vehemently opposed to the idea of the military taking part in the seizure of machines, according to two people familiar with the matter. The conflict between him and his legal team, and Mr. Flynn, Ms. Powell and Mr. Byrne came to a dramatic head on Dec. 18, 2020, during a meeting with Mr. Trump in the Oval Office.

At the meeting, Mr. Flynn and Ms. Powell presented Mr. Trump with a copy of the draft executive order authorizing the military to oversee the seizure of machines. After reading it, Mr. Trump summoned Mr. Giuliani to the Oval Office, according to one person familiar with the matter. When Mr. Giuliani read the draft order, he told Mr. Trump that the military could be used only if there was clear-cut evidence of foreign interference in the election.

Ms. Powell, who had spent the past month filing lawsuits claiming that China and other countries had hacked into voting machines, said she had such evidence, the person said. But Mr. Giuliani was adamant that the military should not be mobilized, the person said, and Mr. Trump ultimately heeded his advice.

Shortly after the Oval Office meeting, Mr. Waldron amended the draft executive order, suggesting that if the Defense Department could not oversee the seizure of machines then the Department of Homeland Security could, the person said.

Around that time, Mr. Trump asked Mr. Giuliani to call Kenneth T. Cuccinelli II, the acting deputy secretary at the Department of Homeland Security, to ask about the viability of the proposal, according to two people familiar with the matter. Mr. Cuccinelli said that homeland security officials could not take part in the plan.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2022/01/31/us/politics/donald-trump-election-results-fraud-voting-machines.html

WESTWOOD, LOS ANGELES (KABC) — UCLA announced all classes Tuesday will be held remotely after threats were made toward members of the university’s philosophy department by a former postdoctoral fellow.

Students say Matthew Harris, who is also a former lecturer, sent an email to his former philosophy department threatening to hurt faculty and staff.

Harris posted hundreds of videos online Monday, including one showing video of the mass shooting in Las Vegas and the massacre at Columbine High School.

Students who had Harris as a professor say the trouble began last year and exploded Monday as news of his latest threats spread on social media.

“I’ve been scared about this professor, this guy, for about a year since my girlfriend told me about the stories – how he treated their class, but also the threats he made after he got put on leave,” student Nathan Robbins said.

Late Monday night, UCLA announced all classes would be held remotely.

“We do not have specific information that this individual is in CA,” the university tweeted. “Out of an abundance of caution, all classes will be held remotely Feb 1.”

“UCLA Police Department is aware of a concerning email and posting sent to some members of the UCLA community today and actively engaged with out-of-state law enforcement and federal agencies,” UCLA said in a statement prior to canceling in-person classes.

A statement from the student body president posted to Instagram said that Harris is living on the East Coast and that there is no threat on campus.

Students who have seen the videos posted to Harris’ YouTube channel say his actions are extremely concerning.

“The list just goes on and on about the Mandalay Bay shooting, school shootings, mass shootings, concert shootings,” student Lale Kacharian told Eyewitness News. “I think … he’s a very disturbed guy obviously, and I hope he gets the help he needs and he doesn’t hurt anyone around him.”

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