Mr. Kemp doubled down on his support for a bill that prohibits teaching of “divisive concepts” on race and history, saying that Republicans in the state “passed this piece of legislation to make sure that our kids are not going to be indoctrinated in our schools,” and that curriculums should focus on “the facts, not somebody’s ideology.”

But Mr. Perdue accused Mr. Kemp of abrogating his responsibility to protect students, parents and teachers alike. “They need to make sure that the woke mob’s not taking over the schools, and you’ve left them high and dry,” he said, asserting that the Atlanta schools were “teaching kids that voter ID is racist.”

Answering a question about Latino voters, Mr. Perdue criticized Mr. Kemp’s record on immigration, recalling a 2018 campaign ad in which Mr. Kemp promised to use his own pickup truck to “round up illegals.”

“Governor, what happened? Your pickup break down?” Mr. Perdue asked.

Mr. Kemp said that the Covid-19 pandemic had intervened, saying that “picking up” people would only have helped spread infection in the state — and then reminded voters, for the umpteenth time, of Mr. Perdue’s defeat last year.

“The fact is, if you hadn’t lost your race to Jon Ossoff, we wouldn’t have lost control of the Senate, and we wouldn’t have the disaster that we have in Washington right now,” Mr. Kemp said.

A few clear-cut policy rifts did come into view over Georgia-specific issues.

The two took opposite views of a new factory to produce electric trucks that is being built by Rivian Automotive in the state. Mr. Kemp exalted the project for the thousands of jobs it is expected to create, while Mr. Perdue cited an investment by the Democratic megadonor George Soros to dismiss Rivian as a “woke company,” saying that the project would redirect Georgians’ tax dollars into Mr. Soros’s pocket.

Mr. Perdue attacked Mr. Kemp from several angles over rising crime in Atlanta, saying the governor had shrunk the size of the Georgia State Patrol and faulting him for failing to get behind an effort by some residents of Atlanta’s wealthy Buckhead neighborhood, alarmed about the surge in violent crime, to secede from the city.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2022/04/24/us/elections/kemp-perdue-debate-georgia.html

SANTA FE, N.M. (AP) — New Mexico Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham has signed emergency declarations as 20 wildfires continued to burn Sunday in nearly half of the state’s drought-stricken 33 counties.

One wildfire in northern New Mexico that started April 6 merged with a newer fire Saturday to form the largest blaze in the state, leading to widespread evacuations in Mora and San Miguel counties. That fire was at 84 square miles (217 square kilometers) Sunday and 12% contained.

An uncontained wind-driven wildfire in northern New Mexico that began April 17 had charred 81 square miles (209 square kilometers) of ponderosa pine, oak brush and grass by Sunday morning north of Ocate, an unincorporated community in Mora County.

Meanwhile in Arizona, some residents forced to evacuate due to a wildfire near Flagstaff were allowed to return home Sunday morning.

In Nebraska, authorities said wind-driven wildfires sweeping through parts of the state killed a retired Cambridge fire chief and injured at least 11 firefighters.

Winds and temperatures in New Mexico diminished Saturday but remained strong enough to still fan fires. Dozens of evacuation orders remained in place.

Fire officials were expecting the northern wildfires to slow Sunday as cloud and smoke cover moves in, allowing the forests to retain more moisture. But they added that the interior portions of the fires could show moderate to extreme behavior, which could threaten structures in those areas.

More than 200 structures have been charred by the wildfires thus far and an additional 900 remain threatened, Lujan Grisham said.

Fire management officials said an exact damage count was unclear because it’s still too dangerous for crews to go in and look at all the homes that have been lost.

“We do not know the magnitude of the structure loss. We don’t even know the areas where most homes made it through the fire, where homes haven’t been damaged or anything like that,” said operation sections chief Jayson Coil.

Some 1,000 firefighters were battling the wildfires across New Mexico, which already has secured about $3 million in grants to help with the fires.

Lujan Grisham said she has asked the White House for more federal resources and she’s calling for a ban of fireworks statewide.

“We need more federal bodies for firefighting, fire mitigation, public safety support on the ground in New Mexico,” she said. “It’s going to be a tough summer. So that’s why we are banning fires. And that is why on Monday I will be asking every local government to be thinking about ways to ban the sales of fireworks.”

Wildfire has become a year-round threat in the West given changing conditions that include earlier snowmelt and rain coming later in the fall, scientist have said. The problems have been exacerbated by decades of fire suppression and poor management along with a more than 20-year megadrought that studies link to human-caused climate change.

In Arizona, two large wildfires continued to burn Sunday 10 miles (16 kilometers) south of Prescott and 14 miles (22 kilometers) northeast of Flagstaff.

Coconino County authorities lifted the evacuation order Sunday morning for residents living in neighborhoods along Highway 89 after fire management officials determined the Flagstaff-area wildfire no longer posed a threat.

The fire near Flagstaff was at 33 square miles (85 square kilometers) as of Sunday with 3% containment. It forced the evacuation of 766 homes and burned down 30 homes and two dozen other structures since it began a week ago, according to county authorities.

Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey declared the fire a state of emergency Thursday for Coconino County to free up recovery aid to affected communities.

The wildfire near Prescott began last Monday and was at 4.8 square miles (12.4 square kilometers) and 15% contained as of Sunday morning as helicopters and air tankers dropped water and retardant to slow the fire’s growth.

The cause of the wildfires in New Mexico and Arizona remain under investigation.

Nebraska Emergency Management Agency officials said John P. Trumble, of Arapahoe, was overcome by smoke and fire after his vehicle left the road Friday night because of poor visibility from smoke and dust.

Trumble, 66, was working with firefighters as a spotter in Red Willow County in the southwestern corner of the state and his body was found early Saturday, authorities said.

Wildfires were still burning Saturday night in five Nebraska counties. The Nebraska National Guard deployed three helicopters and several support trucks to help battle the blazes.

Source Article from https://apnews.com/article/wildfires-environment-new-mexico-arizona-evacuations-cfd7e79e80c6e9f37c9c21a0297ca529

CANARSIE, Brooklyn (WABC) — FDNY Firefighter Timothy Klein died while battling flames at a fire in Brooklyn on Sunday.

Firefighters ran into a dangerous residential blaze in Canarsie, Brooklyn around 3 p.m. There were two attached houses on Avenue N by East 108th Street. Both houses quickly became engulfed and the fire jumped to three alarms.

“Timothy Klein was on the nozzle team that went into the right side building, on the second floor, talking to members at the scene. They were extinguishing the fire. Everything seemed to be going routine, when suddenly, the entire second floor became engulfed in flames,” said FDNY Acting Chief of Department John Hodgens.

The floor then collapsed, trapping four firefighters.

Three of the firefighters were able to escape, but 31-year-old Klein couldn’t be reached by other FDNY members.

Investigators discovered another body at the scene late Sunday night. Authorities have not yet released the identity.

“It gives us great pain and sorrow to announce that New York City has lost one of its bravest, Timothy Klein,” Mayor Eric Adams said at Brookdale Hospital. “A six and a half years as a firefighter, 31-years-old, coming from a rich tradition of dad and other relatives who are firefighters.”

WATCH: Mayor Adams, FDNY officials hold update at Brookdale Hospital

“I cannot describe the heartbreak of the FDNY today to have lost a member doing what our members do best,” Acting FDNY Commissioner Laura Kavanagh said. “Putting their lives on the line to save others.”

A total of 33 units and 106 FDNY members worked to put out the flames.

Eight firefighters were transported to local hospitals for their injuries. One resident was treated on scene and refused to be transported to a hospital.

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Source Article from https://abc7ny.com/fire-canarsie-brooklyn-firefighters/11786107/

PARIS (AP) — French President Emmanuel Macron comfortably won a second term Sunday, triggering relief among allies that the nuclear-armed power won’t abruptly shift course in the midst of the war in Ukraine from European Union and NATO efforts to punish and contain Russia’s military expansionism.

The second five-year term for the 44-year-old centrist spared France and Europe from the seismic upheaval of having firebrand populist Marine Le Pen at the helm, Macron’s presidential runoff challenger who quickly conceded defeat but still scored her best-ever electoral showing.

Acknowledging that “numerous” voters cast ballots for him simply to keep out the fiercely nationalist far-right Le Pen, Macron pledged to reunite the country that is “filled with so many doubts, so many divisions” and work to assuage the anger of French voters that fed Le Pen’s campaign.

“No one will be left by the side of the road,” Macron said in a victory speech against the backdrop of the Eiffel Tower and a projection of the blue-white-and-red tricolor French flag. He was cheered by several hundred supporters who happily waved French and EU flags.

“We have a lot to do and the war in Ukraine reminds us that we are going through tragic times where France must make its voice heard,” Macron said.

During her campaign, Le Pen pledged to dilute French ties with the 27-nation EU, NATO and Germany, moves that would have shaken Europe’s security architecture as the continent deals with its worst conflict since World War II. Le Pen also spoke against EU sanctions on Russian energy supplies and faced scrutiny during the campaign over her previous friendliness with the Kremlin.

A chorus of European leaders hailed Macron’s victory, since France has played a leading role in international efforts to punish Russia with sanctions and is supplying weapons to Ukraine.

“Democracy wins, Europe wins,” said Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez.

“Together we will make France and Europe advance,” tweeted European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen.

Italian Premier Mario Draghi called Macron’s victory “splendid news for all of Europe” and a boost to the EU “being a protagonist in the greatest challenges of our times, starting with the war in Ukraine.”

Macron won with 58.5% of the vote to Le Pen’s 41.5% — significantly closer than when they first faced off in 2017.

Macron is the first French president in 20 years to win reelection, since incumbent Jacques Chirac trounced Le Pen’s father in 2002.

Le Pen called her result “a shining victory,” saying that “in this defeat, I can’t help but feel a form of hope.”

Breaking through the threshold of 40% of the vote is unprecedented for the French far-right. Le Pen was beaten 66% to 34% by Macron in 2017 and her father got less than 20% against Chirac.

She and hard-left leader Jean-Luc Melenchon, one of 10 candidates eliminated in the first round on April 10, both quickly pitched forward Sunday night to France’s legislative election in June, urging voters to give them a parliamentary majority to hamstring Macron.

Le Pen’s score this time rewarded her years-long efforts to make her far-right politics more palatable to voters. Campaigning hard on cost-of-living issues, she made deep inroads among blue-collar voters in disaffected rural communities and in former industrial centers.

Le Pen voter Jean-Marie Cornic, 78, said he cast his ballot for her because he wanted a president who would prioritize “our daily lives — salaries, taxes, pensions.”

The drop in support for Macron compared to five years ago points to a tough battle ahead for the president to rally people behind him in his second term. Many French voters found the 2022 presidential rematch less compelling than in 2017, when Macron was an unknown factor.

Leftist voters — unable to identify with either the centrist president or Le Pen — agonized with Sunday’s choice. Some trooped reluctantly to polling stations solely to stop Le Pen, casting joyless votes for Macron.

“It was the least worst choice,” said Stephanie David, a transport logistics worker who backed a communist candidate in round one.

It was an impossible choice for retiree Jean-Pierre Roux. Having also voted communist in round one, he dropped an empty envelope into the ballot box on Sunday, repelled both by Le Pen’s politics and what he saw as Macron’s arrogance.

“I am not against his ideas but I cannot stand the person,” Roux said.

In contrast, Marian Arbre, voting in Paris, cast his ballot for Macron “to avoid a government that finds itself with fascists, racists.”

“There’s a real risk,” the 29-year-old fretted.

Macron went into the vote as the firm favorite but faced a fractured, anxious and tired electorate. The war in Ukraine and the COVID-19 pandemic battered Macron’s first term, as did months of violent protests against his economic policies.

In celebrating victory, Macron acknowledged a debt to voters who helped get him over the line, “not to support the ideas I hold, but to block those of the extreme right.”

“I want to thank them and tell them that I am aware that their vote obliges me for the years to come,” he said. “I am the custodian of their sense of duty, of their attachment to the Republic.”

___

Associated Press journalists Sylvie Corbet, Elaine Ganley, Angela Charlton and Thomas Adamson in Paris, Sam Petrequin in Brussels Michel Spingler in Henin-Beaumont, and Alex Turnbull in Le Touquet, contributed.

___

Follow AP’s coverage of the French election at https://apnews.com/hub/french-election-2022

Source Article from https://apnews.com/f5b549e3b99930ee05bed17a9d3870b6

Emmanuel Macron will win France’s presidential election, pollsters project, fending off a historic challenge from far-right candidate Marine Le Pen during Sunday’s runoff vote.

Macron is projected to take 58.8% of the vote, according to an analysis of voting data by pollsters Ipsos & Sopra Steria conducted for broadcasters France Televisions and Radio, making him the first French leader to be reelected in 20 years.

While the contest was a rematch of the 2017 French presidential runoff, much of Europe watched the election with unease. A Le Pen presidency would have fundamentally changed France’s relationship with the European Union and the West, at a time when the bloc and its allies rely on Paris to take a leading role in confronting some of the world’s biggest challenges – most notably, the war in Ukraine.

And though Macron’s pitch to voters of a globalized, economically liberal France at the head of a muscular European Union won out over Le Pen’s vision for a radical shift inward, the 41.2% of people who voted for her put the French far right closer to the presidency than ever before.

Le Pen’s performance is the latest indication that the French public is turning to extremist politicians to voice their dissatisfaction with the status quo. In the first round, far-left and far-right candidates accounted for more than 57% of the ballots cast.

Many of those unsatisfied with the final two candidates stayed home. Voter turnout was on track to be the lowest for a runoff since 2002, according to government data released late afternoon local time.

Official results are expected on Monday. French pollsters typically release projections at 8 p.m. local time, when the polls close in major cities and several hours before the French Interior Ministry releases the official results. These projections, which are based on data from voting stations that close at 7 p.m. in the rest of the country, are usually used by the candidates and French media to declare a winner.

Macron’s supporters, gathered on Champs de Mars in the shadow of the Eiffel Tower in central Paris, broke out in massive cheers when the news was announced. The celebration was significantly lower-key than after Macron’s victory in 2017, though he did once again walk to deliver his speech to the European anthem, commonly referred to as the “Ode to Joy.”

In his victory speech, Macron vowed to be the “president for each and every one of you.” He then thanked his supporters and acknowledged that many, like in 2017, voted for him simply to block the extreme right.

Macron said that his second term would not be a continuation of his first, committing to address all of France’s current problems.

He also addressed those who supported Le Pen directly, saying that he, as president, must find an answer to “the anger and disagreements” that led them to vote for the far right.

“It will be my responsibility and that of those who surround me,” Macron said.

Le Pen delivered a concession speech within a half hour of the first projection, speaking to her backers gathered at a pavilion in western Paris’ Bois de Boulogne.

“A great wind of freedom could have blown over our country, but the ballot box decided otherwise,” Le Pen said.

Still, Le Pen acknowledged the fact that the far right had never performed so well in a presidential election. She called the result “historic” and a “shining victory” that put her political party, National Rally, “in an excellent position” for June’s parliamentary elections.

“The game is not quite over,” she said.

Macron and Le Pen advanced to the runoff after finishing in first and second place, respectively, among 12 candidates who ran in the first round on April 10. They spent the next two weeks crisscrossing the country to woo those who did not vote for them in the first round.

Macron had to convince voters to back him again despite a mixed record on domestic issues, like his handling of the yellow vest protests and the Covid-19 pandemic.

Le Pen’s campaign attempted to tap into public anger over a cost-of-living squeeze by campaigning hard on helping people cope with inflation and rising energy prices – a major concern for the French electorate – rather than relying on the anti-Islamist, anti-immigration and Euroskeptic positions that dominated her first two attempts at winning the presidency in 2017 and 2012.

She presented herself as a more mainstream and less radical candidate, even though much of her manifesto remained the same as five years ago. “Stopping uncontrolled immigration” and “eradicating Islamist ideologies” were her manifesto’s two priorities, and analysts said many of her policies on the EU would have put France at odds with the bloc.

Though Le Pen had abandoned some of her most controversial policy proposals, like leaving the European Union and the euro, her views on immigration and her position on Islam in France – she wants to make it illegal for women to wear headscarves in public – did not change.

“I think that the headscarf is a uniform imposed by the Islamists,” she said during the one and only presidential debate Wednesday. “I think that the great majority of the women who wear one can’t do otherwise in reality, even if they don’t dare say so.”

But Vladimir Putin was perhaps her biggest political liability. Before Russia invaded Ukraine, Le Pen was a vocal supporter of the Russian President, even visiting him during her 2017 campaign. Her party also took out a loan from a Russian-Czech bank several years ago that it is still repaying.

Though she has since condemned Moscow’s invasion, Macron attacked Le Pen on her previous positions during the debate. He argued that she could not be trusted to represent France when dealing with the Kremlin.

“You’re speaking to your banker when you’re talking to Russia. That’s the problem,” Macron said during the debate. “You cannot properly defend the interests of France on this subject because your interests are linked to people close to the Russian power.”

Le Pen said her party was forced to seek funding abroad because no French bank would approve the loan request, but the defense seemingly failed to resonate.

CNN’s Simon Bouvier, Xiaofei Xu, Camille Knight and Elias Lemercier contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2022/04/24/europe/french-election-results-macron-le-pen-intl/index.html

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2022/04/24/ukraine-russia-invasion-live-updates/7424003001/

Wind-driven wildfires sweeping through parts of Nebraska contributed to the death of one person and injured at least three firefighters, authorities said Sunday.

The person who died was in Red Willow County, in the southwest corner of the state, Nebraska Emergency Management Agency spokeswoman Jodie Fawl said. She said she did not have details about that person or where the firefighters were injured, though she said their injuries were not believed to be life-threatening.

The Nebraska national guard deployed three helicopters and several support trucks to help battle the blazes.

The death came as wind-driven wildfires destroyed hundreds of structures in northern New Mexico and forced thousands to flee mountain villages as blazes burned unusually early in the year in the parched US south-west.

Two wildfires merged north-west of Las Vegas, New Mexico, and raced through 15 miles (24km) of forest driven by winds over 75mph (121km/h), destroying more than 200 buildings, state authorities said.

To the north-east, a fire about 35 miles east of Taos doubled in size to become the largest burning in the United States, forcing the evacuation of a scout ranch and threatening several villages.

The wildfires are the most severe of nearly two dozen in the US south-west and raised concerns the region was in for a brutal fire year as a decades-long drought combined with abundant dry vegetation.

By Saturday, five counties in New Mexico were under a state of emergency after the governor, Michelle Lujan Grisham, issued one for Mora county. She had declared states of emergency for Colfax, Lincoln, San Miguel and Valencia counties on Friday.

Today I’ve declared a state of emergency for Mora County, following similar declarations yesterday for Colfax, Lincoln, San Miguel, and Valencia Counties.

This executive order makes funding and state resources available for communities battling ongoing wildfires.

— Governor Michelle Lujan Grisham (@GovMLG) April 23, 2022

“We have a longer, more dangerous and more dramatic fire season ahead of us,” Lujan Grisham told reporters, adding that the state had 20 active fires following Friday’s “unprecedented” wind storm.

Winds and temperatures in New Mexico diminished on Saturday but remained strong enough to still fan fires, and dozens of evacuation orders remained in place.

Over 200 structures have burned, Lujan Grisham said, not providing specifics on locations or the numbers of homes included in that count.

She appealed to residents to refrain from using fireworks or burning trash and to evacuate when fire warnings are issued. “You need to leave. The risks are too great,” she said.

The Calf Canyon and Hermits Peak fires near Las Vegas combined to burn 42,341 acres (171 sq km), an area larger than Florida’s Disney World. Evacuations expanded to half a dozen more communities, including the village of Mora, the governor said.

Climate change has lowered winter snowpacks and allowed larger and more extreme fires to start earlier in the year, according to scientists.

East of Taos, the Cooks Peak fire nearly doubled in size to 48,672 acres, forcing the evacuation of the Philmont Scout Ranch and threatening the village of Cimarron.

New Mexico as of Saturday had the most major wildfires burning of any state, though neighbouring Arizona also had large fires, where flames stretching 100ft (30 meters) raced through rural neighbourhoods near Flagstaff this week.

Elsewhere in the region, the fire danger in the Denver area on Friday was the highest it had been in over a decade, according to the National Weather Service, because of unseasonable temperatures in the 80s (26C-32C) combined with strong winds and very dry conditions.

Reuters and Associated Press contributed to this report

This article was amended on 24 April 2022. The Cooks Peak fire is to the east of Taos, not to the west, as an earlier version said.

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2022/apr/24/thousands-forced-to-flee-as-wildfires-sweep-through-new-mexico

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2022/04/24/photos-orthodox-easter-ukraine-russia-putin/

U.S. Air Force Maj. Gen. William T. Cooley speaks during a press conference inside the National Museum of the United States Air Force on Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in 2019.

Wesley Farnsworth/AP


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U.S. Air Force Maj. Gen. William T. Cooley speaks during a press conference inside the National Museum of the United States Air Force on Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in 2019.

Wesley Farnsworth/AP

A historic trial within the ranks of the U.S. military has ended with the first-ever conviction of an Air Force general in a court martial.

Maj. Gen. William T. Cooley was found guilty on Saturday of abusive sexual contact for forcibly kissing his sister-in-law after a barbecue in 2018. He was acquitted on two other “specifications” of the sexual assault charge — specifically that he allegedly caused the victim to touch him over his clothes and that Cooley touched the victim’s breasts and genitals through her clothes.

Cooley had pleaded not guilty. Sentencing is scheduled to begin Monday, and the two-star general faces dismissal from the military and up to seven years in prison, according to WYSO reporter Leila Goldstein.

Cooley was commander of the Air Force Research Laboratory, but he was relieved of command in early 2020 during the investigation into the allegations against him.

At trial at the Wright-Patterson Air Force Base near Dayton, Ohio, Cooley’s sister-in-law said Cooley requested a ride after a 2018 barbecue where he drank alcohol. (Cooley’s sister-in-law consented to having her relationship to Cooley disclosed by the media, but not to be named.)

She testified that, in the car, Cooley said he fantasized about having sex with her and pinned her against the driver’s side door, kissing her and touching her breast and groin without her consent. She also said Cooley yanked her hand and touched it to his crotch.

The assault was like an “F5 tornado,” Cooley’s sister-in-law testified, “ruining everything in its path.”

After the verdict, she said she hoped the next sexual assault survivor would have an easier time coming forward than she did, Goldstein reported.

“The price for peace in my extended family was my silence, and that price was too high,” Cooley’s sister-in-law said in a statement read by her attorney, Ryan Guilds. “Doing the right thing, speaking up, telling the truth, shouldn’t be this hard.”

She also referenced the story of Army Spc. Vanessa Guillén, who was sexually harassed and then murdered by a fellow soldier in 2020.

“While this process has been incredibly invasive, not only for me, but also my immediate family and closest friends, I know there are countless other people who have been silenced forever, like Vanessa,” Cooley’s sister-in-law added, according to the Air Force Times.

She intends to read a victim impact statement at the sentencing hearing, Goldstein reported.

Rachel VanLandingham, a former judge advocate in the Air Force, told WYSO that Cooley’s trial highlights the branch’s willingness to hold its service members accountable – even those at the highest levels of leadership.

“This case strongly demonstrates that rank in the Air Force is no longer a shield for criminality and that there will no longer be impunity for general officer misconduct – and not just sexual assault but any type of misconduct,” VanLandingham said.

Still, the number of U.S. military court martials for sexual assault pales in comparison to the thousands of service members who have experienced some form of sexual assault in the military, according to Pentagon data. Last year Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, D-N.Y., called accountability for sexual assault in the military “vanishingly rare.”

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2022/04/24/1094545002/air-force-general-sexual-assault-conviction-court-martial

The Utah Democratic Party on Saturday threw its support behind the independent candidacy of former presidential contender Evan McMullin to take on GOP Sen. Mike Lee.

The decision to get behind McMullin could help bolster his Senate bid at a time when Lee is on the defensive over newly revealed text messages showing he communicated for weeks with then-White House chief of staff Mark Meadows about the effort to overturn the 2020 election.

Party delegates voted 57% to 43% Saturday at their convention in Murray, Utah, to not nominate a candidate of their own. Former State Department official Kael Weston had been seeking the Democratic endorsement for US Senate.

“Today Utah Democrats voted to join Evan McMullin’s cross-partisan coalition and not to nominate a candidate into the 2022 midterm US Senate race,” McMullin’s campaign said in a statement Saturday. “This marks the first time in Utah’s history that the Democratic Party has not put forward a candidate for a statewide race choosing instead to put country over party.”

Weston said he respected the decision. “Let’s all help get other Democrats elected this year. And let’s all help defeat Mike Lee – the sooner the better,” he said on Twitter.

Lee, who is seeking a third term in November, remains the favorite in deep-red Utah, which backed then-President Donald Trump by over 20 points in 2020. Democrats have not won a US Senate election in Utah since 1970.

Lee also has a strong cash-on-hand advantage over McMullin, according to their most recent filings with the Federal Election Commission. The senator faces a June primary against two Republicans, former state Rep. Becky Edwards and former state government official Ally Isom, who qualified for the ballot by submitting the required number of signatures.

McMullin, a former CIA officer and onetime House GOP aide, ran for president in 2016 as an anti-Trump conservative. While he got less than 1% of the popular vote, his candidacy earned about 22% of the vote in Utah, his best showing of any state.

“I’m humbled and grateful to the Democratic delegates today for their decision to support this growing cross-partisan coalition,” McMullin said Saturday. “Today, and moving forward, this coalition represents a majority of Utahns who want to replace Senator Mike Lee. He is a threat to the republic and consistently fails to represent our interests and our values.”

Former Utah Rep. Ben McAdams, who lost reelection in 2020 after serving one term, was among the state Democrats actively engaged in trying to get his party to not nominate a candidate at the convention. He wrote in a Facebook post on Sunday that he was “proud to be part of Evan’s growing coalition of independents, Democrats and Republicans. Together we can win this race and defeat Senator Mike Lee.”

McAdams had looked at running for the Senate seat himself, but he said he ultimately decided against it after seeing his own polling on how hard it would be to win as a Democrat in a longtime Republican state.

CNN reported earlier this month that texts between Lee and Meadows show a series of communications beginning just days after the 2020 election in which Lee initially expressed support for challenging the election results. In early December 2020, the senator began texting Meadows about the idea that states could submit alternate slates of pro-Trump electors to Congress on January 6, 2021.

But in statements since the insurrection, Lee has given the impression that he was simply monitoring activity from states, as opposed to promoting the idea of separate electors to Meadows.

In an interview last week with the Utah-based Deseret News, Lee defended himself and attempted to dismiss the narrative that he was working to overturn the election or that he was working on behalf of the White House. “At no point in any of those was I engaging in advocacy,” Lee said in reference to calls he made to states about whether they were submitting alternate slates of electors.

“I wasn’t in any way encouraging them to do that. I just asked them a yes or no question,” he told the Deseret News.

CNN’s Dan Merica, Annie Grayer and Lauren Fox contributed this report.

Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2022/04/24/politics/utah-democrats-evan-mcmullin-mike-lee/index.html

People pray during an Orthodox Easter church service at St. Michael’s Golden-Domed Cathedral on Sunday in Kyiv.

Alexey Furman/Getty Images


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People pray during an Orthodox Easter church service at St. Michael’s Golden-Domed Cathedral on Sunday in Kyiv.

Alexey Furman/Getty Images

As Sunday draws to a close in Kyiv and in Moscow, here are the key developments of the day:

Ukraine’s deputy prime minister announced plans for an evacuation corridor from the besieged city of Mariupol. Iryna Vereshchuk announced the attempt to evacuate women, children and the elderly. The push to evacuate Mariupol follows the Kremlin’s claim that the military has captured the port city, but Russian forces have continued to face resistance.

Sunday was Orthodox Easter, and many Ukrainians marked the day with prayers for those who are trapped in places like Mariupol. At a service in the capital city of Kyiv, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy urged people not to let anger at the war overwhelm them.

Russian forces called in airstrikes on the besieged Azovstal steel factory in Mariupol to try to dislodge the last Ukrainian troops holding out there, Ukrainian officials said. If Mariupol were captured, it would deprive Ukraine of a vital port, free up Russian troops to fight elsewhere, and establish a land corridor to the Crimean Peninsula.

In-depth

NPR’s Eyder Peralta followed a Ukrainian outfit searching for cluster munitions in the hopes of neutralizing them.

Earlier developments

You can read more daily recaps here. For context and more in-depth stories, you can find NPR’s full coverage here. Also, listen and subscribe to NPR’s State of Ukraine podcast for updates throughout the day.

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Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2022/04/24/1094559551/russia-ukraine-war-what-happened-today-april-24

France’s Emmanuel Macron looks set for a second term as president, with exit polls predicting he will comfortably beat his far-right rival Marine Le Pen in Sunday’s election.

Centrist Macron of the La République En Marche party looks set to gain 58.2% in the second and final round of voting, according to a projection by polling firm Ipsos-Sopra Steria, with Marine Le Pen of the nationalist and far-right National Rally party on 41.8%.

Immediately after the projections, Le Pen spoke to her supporters in Paris and accepted defeat. She said her result was a “victory” for her political movement and pointed to parliamentary elections which take place in June.

“The French showed this evening a desire for a strong counterweight against Emmanuel Macron, for an opposition that will continue to defend and protect them,” she said, according to a Reuters translation.

Despite the predicted victory for Macron, the margin represents a smaller gap between the two candidates in comparison with the 2017 election, when Macron won with 66.1% of the vote.

Voter apathy

The 2022 campaign was set against the backdrop of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, a cost of living crisis in France, a surge in support for the far-left among younger generations and suggestions of widespread voter apathy. Turnout on Sunday was 2 percentage points lower than the 2017 election, according to the Interior Ministry.

At the start of the campaign trail, 44-year-old Macron benefitted from his attitude and diplomatic efforts toward the Russia-Ukraine war. But that support dissipated in the days prior to the first round of voting on Apr. 10, as French citizens focused heavily on domestic affairs and soaring inflation.

Marine Le Pen — who has now run for France’s presidency three times — chose to distance herself from her previous rhetoric on the European Union and euro integration and instead concentrate on the economic struggles of French voters.

Putin links

Nonetheless, as the second round of voting approached, scrutiny over the two individuals and their policies intensified. In a two-hour TV debate Wednesday, Macron called out Le Pen’s previous ties with Russia and President Vladimir Putin, accusing her of being dependent on Moscow.

Macron said Friday that Le Pen’s plans to ban Muslim women from wearing headscarves in public would trigger a “civil war.”

If Macron’s win is confirmed then it would make him the first French president in two decades to win a second term. He’ll look to continue his reformist agenda, recently promising to help France reach full employment and change the country’s retirement age from 62 to 65.

Frederic Leroux, head of the cross asset team at French fund manager Carmignac, said Macron’s clear victory is likely to reassure markets.

“In the short term, the main logical beneficiary of this election could be the euro, which was still flirting last Friday with two-year lows against the dollar,” he said in a flash research note after the projections.

“The negative aspect for the markets of this rather comfortable election could however come from a quick decision in favour of a Russian oil embargo which would exacerbate inflationary pressures and economic slowdown (stagflation scenario) in Europe,” he added.

Holger Schmieding, chief economist at Berenberg, said the result was “among the best news for Europe since the European Central Bank stopped the euro crisis almost 10 years ago in July 2012.”

“As a second term for Macron has been widely expected, the result may not move markets much,” he said in a research note, adding that France will now “most likely remain an engine of growth and progress in Europe for the next five years.”

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2022/04/24/france-election-2022-result-emmanuel-macron-vs-marine-le-pen.html

The geopolitical landscape following the Ukraine invasion has often been likened to that of a new Cold War. While the main antagonists may be the same — the United States, Russia and, increasingly, China — the roles played by much of the rest of the world have changed, reshaping a global order that held for more than three-quarters of a century.

Governments representing more than half of humanity have refused to take a side, avoiding the binary accounting of us-versus-them that characterized most of the post-World War II era. In a United Nations General Assembly vote this month to suspend Russia from the Human Rights Council, dozens of countries abstained, including Thailand, Brazil, South Africa, Mexico and Singapore. (The resolution succeeded anyway.)

U.S. Marines gather after the joint Cobra Gold exercise in the coastal Thai province of Rayong in 2020.Credit…Lillian Suwanrumpha/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Once proxy battlegrounds for superpowers, swaths of Africa, Asia and Latin America are staking their independence. The return of a bloc of nonaligned nations harks back to a period in which leaders of the post-colonial movement resisted having their destinies shaped by imperialism. It also points to the confidence of smaller countries, no longer dependent on a single ideological or economic patron, to go their own way.

“Without a doubt, the countries of Southeast Asia don’t want to be pulled into a new Cold War or be forced to take sides in any great power competition,” said Zachary Abuza, a security specialist at the National War College in Washington. “As they say in Southeast Asia, when the elephants fight, the grass gets trampled.”

Having to align themselves with one power or another, Mr. Abuza added, left many nations around the world “desperately poor and underdeveloped at the end of the Cold War.”

As a result, even the United States, the Cold War’s victor, cannot count on the support of some of its traditional partners in vocally condemning Russia for its attack on a sovereign, democratic nation. The NATO-led intervention in Libya in 2011 and the American invasion of Iraq in 2003 have only heightened mistrust of the West. Both military actions left countries in those regions struggling with the political fallout for years after.

“The crux of the matter is that African countries feel infantilized and neglected by Western countries, which are also accused of not living up to their soaring moral rhetoric on sovereignty and territorial sanctity,” said Ebenezer Obadare, senior fellow for Africa studies at the Council on Foreign Relations.

Indonesia, a sprawling democracy once ruled by a dictator favored by the United States for his anti-communist stance, has said that it will welcome President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia when the country hosts the Group of 20 meetings this year. It, too, abstained in the U.N. vote to remove Russia from the Human Rights Council.

American troops watched as the Ministry of Transportation burned in Baghdad in April 2003.Credit…Tyler Hicks/The New York Times

“Our government has adopted the questionable strategy of trying to ignore the biggest geopolitical earthquake in 70 years in our agenda as this year’s G-20 President, which kind of blows my mind,” said Tom Lembong, a former trade minister.

Other U.S. allies have characterized their decision to diversify as a function of American absenteeism. Last year, as China spread its vaccine diplomacy around the world, the United States was seen initially as hoarding its pandemic supplies.

Before that, during Donald J. Trump’s presidency, the United States pulled out of the Trans-Pacific Partnership, an expansive trade pact that was meant to counter China’s way of doing business. Countries like Vietnam that had staked their reputations on joining felt betrayed, once again, by Washington.

Mexico, a longtime U.S. ally, has emphasized its neutrality, and President Andrés Manuel López Obrador has rejected sanctions on Russia.

“Mexico’s neutrality is not neutral,” said Tony Payan of Rice University’s Baker Institute for Public Policy. “Mexico is poking Washington in the eye.”

About one-third of American ambassadorships in Latin America and the Caribbean remain unfilled. The vacancies include Brazil, the largest regional economy, and the Organization of American States.

At the United Nations headquarters in New York on April 7, the U.N. General Assembly passed a resolution to suspend Russia from the Human Rights Council.Credit…Jason Szenes/EPA, via Shutterstock

“Many Latin Americans were realizing that the United States was abandoning them,” said Vladimir Rouvinski, a professor at Icesi University in Cali, Colombia.

Russia cannot count on automatic allegiance from its historical allies, either. Apart from a sense of autocratic camaraderie, ideology is no longer part of Moscow’s allure. Russia has neither the patronage cash nor the geopolitical clout of the Soviet Union.

Venezuela, Russia’s staunchest supporter in Latin America, received a high-level American delegation on the heels of the Ukraine invasion. Nicaragua, which became one of the first countries to back Russia’s recognition of separatist regions in eastern Ukraine, has since tempered its enthusiasm.

During a March U.N. vote condemning Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, Cuba abstained, rather than backing Moscow, although it and Nicaragua later rejected the effort to kick Russia off the Human Rights Council.

“They’re trying to walk a fine line between certainly not celebrating the invasion, but also not clearly condemning it, arguing in favor of peace,” said Renata Keller, a Cuba expert at the University of Nevada, Reno.

The most noticeable hedging has come from Africa, which accounted for nearly half the countries that abstained in the March U.N. vote.

“We don’t know why they are fighting,” President Samia Suluhu Hassan of Tanzania said in an interview, referring to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

She added that she was “not sure” there was a clear aggressor in the conflict.

For Thailand, the decision to train with the American, Russian and Chinese militaries, as well as to buy weaponry from each country, is part of its long history of balancing between great powers. Deft diplomacy allowed Thailand to emerge as the only nation in the region not to be colonized.

President Trump signing a presidential memoranda withdrawing from the Trans-Pacific Partnership in the Oval Office, in January 2017.Credit…Doug Mills/The New York Times

The current drift away from the United States, which used Thailand as a staging ground for the Vietnam War, also stems from the political pedigree of Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha, who came to power in a military coup eight years ago.

“Though Thailand may currently appear as a democracy, it is at heart an autocracy,” said Paul Chambers, a lecturer in international affairs at Naresuan University in Thailand. “A regime such as this will have autocratic bedfellows, including in Moscow.”

The same holds in Uganda, which receives almost a billion dollars in American aid and is a key Western ally in the fight against regional militancy. Yet the government of President Yoweri Museveni of Uganda has been criticized by the United States and the European Union for a pattern of human rights violations.

Mr. Museveni has responded by assailing the West’s interference in Libya and Iraq. The president’s son, who also commands the country’s land forces, tweeted that a “majority of mankind (that are non-white) support Russia’s stand in Ukraine.”

Uganda, like dozens of other countries, can afford to speak up because of a new top trading partner: China. This economic reality, even if Beijing promises more than it delivers, has shielded nations once dependent on other superpowers from stark geopolitical choices.

Strategically located countries like Djibouti, host to Camp Lemonnier, the largest permanent U.S. base on the African continent, have diversified. A few years ago, after President Ismail Omar Guelleh’s invitation, Beijing established its first overseas military outpost in Djibouti. Mr. Guelleh also secured loans from the Chinese to help develop ports, free trade zones and a railway.

Chinese People’s Liberation Army troops at the opening ceremony for China’s new military base in Djibouti in August 2017.Credit…Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Growing Chinese engagement has provided African countries with “alternative investment, alternative markets and alternative ideas of development,” said Cobus van Staden, at the South African Institute of International Affairs.

But if the world feels more comfortably multipolar these days, the ripple effects of the fighting in Ukraine are a reminder that globalization quickly links far-flung nations.

Escalating global prices for fuel, food and fertilizer, all a result of war in Ukraine, have heightened hardship in Africa and Asia. Already contending with a devastating drought, East Africa now has at least 13 million people facing severe hunger.

And populations outside of Europe know too well that their refugees — such as Syrians, Venezuelans, Afghans, South Sudanese and the Rohingya of Myanmar — cannot expect the welcome given to displaced Ukrainians. In a race for finite reserves of care, aid groups have warned of the perils of donor fatigue for the world’s most vulnerable.

“The whole world,” President Hassan of Tanzania said, referring to Russia and Ukraine, “is affected when these countries are fighting.”

Hannah Beech reported from Bangkok, Abdi Latif Dahir from Nairobi, Kenya, and Oscar Lopez from Mexico City. Muktita Suhartono contributed reporting from Jakarta, Indonesia.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/live/2022/04/24/world/ukraine-russia-war-news

LIVE UPDATES

This was CNBC’s live blog tracking developments on the war in Ukraine. Click here for the latest updates. 

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin will visit Ukraine on Sunday to discuss military aid, Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy told reporters in Kyiv. Should the visit take place, it would be the first time high-ranking U.S. officials have visited the nation’s capital since the war began.

The Pentagon would not comment on Zelenskyy’s claim, according to two defense officials. The White House and the State Department also had no comment.

A 3-month old infant girl was among eight people killed in a Russian missile attack on Odesa, the Ukrainian president said during his nightly address. “How did she threaten Russia?” he asked rhetorically.

Meanwhile, Ukrainian Finance Minister Sergii Marchenko said any European embargo on Russian energy would boost prices, thus increasing Russia’s earnings, according to a Wall Street Journal report.

Ahead of Easter Sunday, internally displaced Ukrainians are seen gathering at the Greek-Catholic church in Nadyby, Lviv to celebrate the traditional Easter food basket blessing.

UN chief to head to Turkey before meeting Putin and Zelenskyy

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres will visit Turkey on Monday, before heading to Moscow and Kyiv, the United Nations said.

“We need urgent steps to save lives, end the human suffering and bring about peace in Ukraine,” the UN chief said in a tweet on Saturday.

Turkey has been a key mediator between Russia and Ukraine.

On Tuesday, the UN chief will meet Russian President Vladimir Putin and Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov in Moscow.

He will then visit the embattled Ukrainian capital of Kyiv, where President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba will see him.

Guterres will also be visiting UN staff on the ground to talk about how to increase humanitarian aid to the people of Ukraine.

Joanna Tan

Pictures of Ukrainians in Lviv celebrating Easter food basket blessing

Orthodox Christians celebrate Easter Sunday on April 24. A day before, internally displaced Ukrainians are seen gathering at the Greek-Catholic church in Nadyby, Lviv to celebrate the traditional Easter food basket blessing on Saturday.

Many have fled from their homes and are taking temporary shelter at the church.

The UN’s migration agency says that one in six people in Ukraine have been internally displaced.

In its latest report, the International Organization for Migration said more than 7.7 million people in Ukraine have been internally displaced since the war started in late February — that’s some 17% of the country’s population.

“Women and children, the elderly, and people with disabilities have been disproportionately affected as they all represent a highly vulnerable group of people,” said Antonio Vitorino, director general of the agency.

The city of Lviv in western Ukraine has largely escaped from the worst of Russia’s invasion though it has not been completely spared.

Joanna Tan

Ukraine says Moscow plans to conscript civilians in Russian occupied territories: UK intelligence

Ukraine has accused Moscow of planning to conscript Ukrainian civilians from the Russian-occupied regions of Kherson and Zaporizhzhia, according to the latest U.K. intelligence.

Moscow previously did the same in the Russian-occupied Donbas and Crimea, according to the report by the U.K. Defense Ministry. If true, it will be a violation of the Fourth Geneva Convention.

“Any enlistment of Ukrainian civilians into the Russian armed forces, even if presented by Russia as being voluntary or military service in accordance with Russian law, would constitute a violation of Article 51 of the Fourth Geneva Convention,” the U.K. said in a tweet.

The article states that “the Occupying Power may not compel protected persons to serve in its armed or auxiliary forces,” and “no pressure or propaganda which aims at securing voluntary enlistment is permitted.”

Joanna Tan

Russia missile strike on Odesa kills 8, including 3-month-old baby girl, Zelenskyy says

A Russian missile attack on the southern port city of Odesa killed 8 people and wounded at least 18, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said in his evening address on Saturday.

“Among those killed was a 3-month-old baby girl. How did she threaten Russia?” he said.

The missiles were launched by Russian strategic aircraft from the Caspian Sea region, he said. Ukrainian forces were able to shoot down two missiles, but five others hit the city, including an apartment building, the president added. CNBC was not able to independently confirm those claims.

“We will identify all those responsible for this strike. Those responsible for Russia’s missile terror,” he added.

Zelenzkyy also said new findings about Russian atrocities against Mariupol residents were emerging. “New graves of people killed by the occupiers are being found. We are talking about tens of thousands of dead Mariupol residents,” he said.

Joanna Tan

Germany to reportedly buy 60 heavy transport helicopters from Boeing

Germany will buy 60 CH-47F Chinook heavy transport helicopters from Boeing worth around 5 billion euros ($5.40 billion) as it upgrades its military armour, Bild am Sonntag newspaper reported, citing government sources.

The helicopters will be financed from the 100 billion euros planned special fund for the military which Chancellor Olaf Scholz announced in the wake of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, the paper said.

The helicopters could be delivered in 2025/26 at the earliest and would replace the roughly 50-year-old CH-53G helicopters made by the Sikorsky unit of U.S. arms makers Lockheed Martin, it said.

Defence Minister Christine Lambrecht will inform the parliament of the decision next week, the newspaper said.

Competitors for the deal included Lockheed Martin’s CH-53K King Stallion. But the cheaper Boeing model and the fact that many NATO allies also fly the Chinook were the reasons for deciding on the CH-47F, Bild said.

A spokesperson for the Defence Ministry said no decision on helicopter purchases has been made yet.

Reuters

Ukraine’s finance minister reportedly warns a Russian energy embargo would mean more oil earnings for it

Ukrainian Finance Minister Sergii Marchenko said a potential European embargo on Russian energy would significantly raise prices and thus increase Russia’s earnings, according to a Wall Street Journal report.

Marchenko said that an embargo would raise prices so high that Russia could still earn significant revenue from oil and gas sales elsewhere.

“A full embargo only gives Russia additional money because I believe that the price of oil and gas will surge to enormous levels,” Mr. Marchenko said, according to the Journal. “This is why they try to use more sophisticated tools like taxation.”

It comes as the European Union and the U.S. discuss how to reduce Russia’s earnings from oil and gas sales to Europe.

Jennifer Elias

Warsaw is reportedly ‘at capacity,’ mayor says

Poland’s capital is preparing for an influx of Ukrainian refugees as Russia starts its second wave of fighting. But the city, which has increased its population by nearly 20% in just a few weeks, could become strained beyond its means, Warsaw’s mayor Rafal Trzaskowski said in an interview with the New York Times.

“Warsaw is at capacity,” Trzaskowski told the news outlet. “We accepted more than 300,000 people but we cannot accept more. With the escalation by Russia in eastern Ukraine we could have a second wave.”

Poland, including Warsaw, has welcomed Ukrainians with open arms. But the sudden influx of people has strained city services such as education, sanitation and public transportation. “These costs run to hundreds of millions of dollars,” he told the Times. Trzaskowski is set to visit Washington, D.C., in the coming days to ask for aid.

After Russian troops withdrew from Kyiv and its surrounding area, some Ukrainians were encouraged to travel home. But as the Kremlin ramps up its offense, that trend will likely change.

Since Russia began its full-scale invasion, more than 2.9 million people have fled to Poland from Ukraine, the Polish Border Guard said in a tweet.

Read the full report from the New York Times here.

—Jessica Bursztynsky

Special Monitoring Mission members have been detained in eastern Ukraine, says OSCE

The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe said on Saturday it was working to secure the release of a number of Special Monitoring Mission, or SMM, members who had been detained in eastern Ukraine.

The mission was first established in 2014, and its members observe the situation on the ground in Ukraine, carry out patrols and interact with civilians.

“The OSCE is extremely concerned that a number of SMM national mission members have been deprived of their liberty in Donetsk and Luhansk. The OSCE is using all available channels to facilitate the release of its staff,” it said in response to a query, adding it was unable to give more details at this stage.

Reuters

Zelenskyy says Austin, Blinken will visit Ukraine on Sunday

Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin will visit Ukraine on April 24 to discuss military aid, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy told reporters in Kyiv. It would mark the first time high-ranking U.S. officials have visited the nation’s capital since the war began.

The Pentagon will not speak to the claim from Zelenskyy, according to two defense officials. The White House and the State Department had no comment.

Zelenskyy also reiterated calls for President Joe Biden to visit Ukraine. “We will also wait for security to allow the U.S. president to come and support the Ukrainian people,” Zelenskyy said, according to a rough transcript of the news conference.

Top officials from other nations, including the U.K.’s Boris Johnson, have traveled to Ukraine to show support for Zelenskyy. The U.S. had reportedly been considering sending a top U.S. official to Ukraine in recent days.

—Jessica Bursztynsky

Kharkiv Easter Services cancelled

Governor of Kharkiv Oleh Syniehubov told Kharkiv residents that Easter services in the region would be cancelled and curfews would be put in place amid Russia’s ongoing attack on the country.

Houses and warehouses in Northern Saltivka and Saltivka districts were shelled, Syniehubov said. Six people were injured in Kharkiv and three people died in neighboring Chuguiv and Dergachiv districts, he said on his Telegram channel.

Syniehubov said he has received credible potential threats that Russians could continue to strike on Easter. The Orthodox Easter holiday is on April 24, and Syniehubov said churches have agreed to not hold services.

“I urge you not to go outside unnecessarily even after the curfew, despite the holiday,” he said. “Let’s spend these holidays at home and in safe places.”

Jennifer Elias

UK is helping to gather evidence of Russian war crimes, Boris Johnson tells Zelenskyy

The United Kingdom is helping Ukraine collect evidence of war crimes by Russia, Prime Minster Boris Johnson told President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, according to the UK.

Johnson also confirmed to Zelenskyy that the UK will provide “more defensive military aid, including protected mobility vehicles, drones and anti-tank weapons,” to Ukraine, a No. 10 spokesperson said in a statement.

Both leaders condemned Russia’s latest reported attacks, including a deadly missile strike in Odesa, and agreed on establishing a humanitarian corridor for civilians fleeing the besieged city of Mariupol, according to the spokesperson.

“The Prime Minister said that Russia would be held to account for its actions and that the UK government was helping collect evidence of war crimes,” the statement said.

Johnson also told Zelenskyy about new UK sanctions aimed at Russian military figures, and confirmed that the UK planned to reopen its embassy in Kyiv next week, the spokesperson said.

Kevin Breuninger

Russian military resumes strikes on Mariupol factory shielding Ukrainian soldiers, Zelenskyy aide reportedly says

The Russian military has resumed attacks on a steel plant in Mariupol where the city’s last remaining Ukrainian forces have holed up, an advisor to Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said in a televised address, NBC News reported.

“The enemy is trying to strangle the final resistance of the defenders of Mariupol in the Azovstal area,” said the presidential aide, Oleskiy Arestovych, according to NBC.

“They resumed air strikes on the territory of the plant … Our defenders hold on despite the very difficult situation and even make counter-attacks,” Arestovych reportedly said.

NBC said it could not verify Arestovych’s claims.

Kevin Breuninger

Ukraine president spoke with UK’s Johnson about ‘new phase’ of military aid

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy has spoken with British Prime Minister Boris Johnson about a “new phase” of military aid, including the provision of heavy weapons, the president’s deputy chief of staff Andriy Sybiga said on Saturday.

Speaking on national television, Sybiga said the pair also talked about further financial support for Ukraine on the call.

—Reuters

Russian missile strike in Odesa leaves at least 5 dead, 18 wounded, top Ukraine official says

A Russian missile strike in the Ukrainian port city of Odesa has killed at least five people and wounded 18 others, according to Andriy Yermak, head of Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s office.

“Most likely, there will be more,” Yermak said on Twitter.

“Among those killed was a three-month-old baby. A child who was about to celebrate the first Easter with his parents,” Yermak wrote. “Nothing sacred. Absolutely. Evil will be punished.”

CNBC has not independently confirmed the report.

Kevin Breuninger

Fighting continues during Orthodox Easter after Ukraine says Russia rejected call for pause

Russia’s invasion has colored the Orthodox Easter period for Ukrainians around the world, with worshippers still in the war-torn country being warned that observing the traditional services could be dangerous.

“We must understand that the gathering of civilians at a predetermined time of all-night service can be a target for missiles, aircraft and artillery of the occupiers,” Ukraine’s Defense Ministry said Friday, according to a translation of its statement.

“We urge priests and the faithful to follow such decisions and choose an alternative time of night for liturgies,” the Defense Ministry said.

Russia rejected a proposal from Ukraine, which has an overwhelmingly Orthodox Christian population, for a ceasefire during Orthodox Easter, Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said Thursday. The Orthodox church celebrates Easter a week later than most other Christian denominations.

Earlier Saturday, Ukraine reported a Russian missile striking the port city of Odesa. As the fighting continued, Ukrainian leaders put curfews in place in major cities including Lviv and Kharkiv, NBC News reported.

The destruction and violence has gripped the minds of Ukrainians in other countries, including the U.S., the Associated Press reported.

Kevin Breuninger

Ukraine accuses Russia of thwarting new evacuation push from Mariupol

A new attempt to evacuate Ukrainian civilians from war-torn Mariupol failed on Saturday, an aide to the city’s mayor said on his Telegram channel, blaming Russian forces.

The official said 200 residents of Mariupol had gathered to be evacuated, but that the Russian military told them to disperse and warned of possible shelling.

Russia and Ukraine have blamed each other for repeated failures to evacuate people from Mariupol.

—Reuters

Russian missile strikes port city of Odesa, Ukraine foreign minister says

A Russian missile has struck the Ukrainian port city of Odesa, Ukraine Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba said.

“The only aim of Russian missile strikes on Odesa is terror,” Kuleba wrote on Twitter.

Odesa is a city with a population of nearly one million located on the Black Sea in southern Ukraine near the country’s border with Moldova.

Kuleba’s tweet came after local authorities first announced that infrastructure in Odesa had been hit by a missile strike, Reuters reported.

“Russia must be designated a state sponsor of terrorism and treated accordingly. No business, no contacts, no cultural projects. We need a wall between civilization and barbarians striking peaceful cities with missiles,” Kuleba tweeted.

Kevin Breuninger

Russia resumes Azovstal offensive, says Ukraine presidential advisor

Ukrainian presidential advisor Oleksiy Arestovych said Saturday that Russia has resumed its offensive against forces in Azovstal, a steelworks and the last Ukrainian stronghold in the besieged city of Mariupol.

“The enemy is trying to strangle the final resistance of the defenders of Mariupol in the Azovstal area,” Arestovych said on national television, according to Reuters.

Russian President Vladimir Putin earlier this week ordered his military to ditch a plan to storm the Azovstal steel plant, where several thousand Ukrainian troops as well as civilians are encamped, opting instead to continue to seal off the facility via blockade.

— Matt Clinch

Evacuations from Mariupol to start at midday, deputy PM says

Iryna Vereshchuk, Ukraine’s deputy prime minister, said Saturday that evacuations from the besieged city of Mariupol would commence at midday local time if all went to plan, according to Reuters.

“Today, we again will be trying to evacuate women, children and the elderly,” she said in a social media post.

Matt Clinch

Moldova expresses deep concern over Russian military commander comments

Moldova’s Foreign Ministry says it has summoned its Moscow ambassador and has expressed deep concern about comments made by a top Russian military commander.

Russia’s Maj. Gen. Rustam Minnekayev had claimed, without evidence, that the Russian-speaking population in Transnistria was being oppressed. Transnistria is an unrecognized breakaway state that is officially part of Moldova, which borders Ukraine to the south. Russian forces have been stationed in Transnistria since the 1990s, and Kyiv has warned that Moscow could stage false flag operations there to justify an invasion.

Moldova’s Foreign Ministry updated a statement onto its website saying “these statements are unfounded and contradict the position of the Russian Federation supporting the sovereignty and territorial integrity of the Republic of Moldova, within its internationally recognized borders.”

— Matt Clinch

Zelenskyy says Ukraine invasion ‘only the beginning’

In his regular nightly address, Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy addressed comments made by a Russian military official on Friday.

Russia’s Maj. Gen. Rustam Minnekayev had earlier disclosed that Moscow’s goal is to fully control Ukraine’s eastern Donbas region as well as southern Ukraine as part of the second phase of the invasion. It was, however, unclear if the comments reflected official policy from Russia.

Minnekayev claimed, without evidence, that the Russian-speaking population in Transnistria was being oppressed. Transnistria is an unrecognized breakaway state that is officially part of Moldova, which borders Ukraine to the south. Russian forces have been stationed in Transnistria since the 1990s, and Kyiv has warned that Moscow could stage false flag operations there to justify an invasion.

Zelenskyy said late Friday that the comments meant that Russia had ambitions to invade other nearby nations. “The invasion of Ukraine is only the beginning. Then they want to invade other countries,” he said, according to a NBC News translation. 

“Of course, we will defend ourselves for as long as necessary in order to break this ambition of the Russian Federation. But all the peoples that believe in the victory of life over death like we do, have to fight alongside us, have to help us,” he added.

“Because it’s us who became the first ones on this path. But who is next? If those who can be next want to remain neutral today in order to not lose something, in reality it is the riskiest bet, because you will lose everything.” 

— Matt Clinch and Natasha Turak

Ukrainian officials say another mass grave was discovered near Mariupol

Ukrainian officials say another mass grave has been discovered near the devastated southern port city of Mariupol.

Petro Andriushchenko, an advisor to Mariupol’s mayor, said in a Telegram post that there was “new information about the mass burial of dead Mariupol residents” in Vynohradne — a village about 7 miles east of Mariupol.

“This confirms again that the occupiers arrange the collection / burial / cremation of the dead Mariupol residents in every district of the city,” he said, accusing Russia of trying to “hide the consequences of war crimes.”

Separately, U.S. defense contractor Maxar said that high-resolution satellite imagery of the Mariupol area “reveals the existence of a second cemetery that has expanded over the past month and includes several long trenches that are/will likely become new grave sites.”

CNBC and NBC were not able to independently confirm those claims, and Russian officials have yet to respond to CNBC queries about those allegations.

— Joanna Tan

Russia will continue bombardment until ‘new methods of warfare’ are introduced, UK says

Russia will likely “continue to be frustrated” by its inability to overcome Ukrainian defenses quickly, according to British intelligence.

Russia’s Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu has said he will introduce “new methods of warfare” — a “tacit admission” that the war is not progressing as intended, the U.K. Defense Ministry said in a tweet.

Moscow new plans will take time to implement, and until then, “there is likely to be a continued reliance on bombardment as a means of trying to suppress Ukrainian opposition,” the report said.

Joanna Tan

Zelenskyy says allies are delivering the weapons Ukraine wanted

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said allies were finally delivering the weapons that Kyiv had asked for, adding the arms would help save the lives of thousands of people.

— Reuters

Read CNBC’s previous live coverage here:

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2022/04/23/russia-ukraine-live-updates.html

Orrin Hatch, the longest-serving Republican senator in history who was a fixture in Utah politics for more than four decades, died Saturday at 88.

His death was announced in a statement from his foundation, which did not specify a cause.

A staunch conservative on most economic and social issues, he also teamed with Democrats several times during his long career on issues ranging from stem cell research to rights for people with disabilities to expanding children’s health insurance. He also formed friendships across the aisle, particularly with the late Edward Kennedy.

Hatch also championed Republican issues like abortion limits and helped shape the US supreme court, including defending Justice Clarence Thomas against sexual harassment allegations during confirmation hearings.

He later became an ally of Donald Trump, using his role as chairman of the powerful Senate finance committee to get a major rewrite of the US tax codes to the president’s desk. In return, Trump helped Hatch deliver on a key issue for Republicans in Utah with a contentious move to drastically downsize two national monuments that had been declared by past presidents.

Hatch retired in 2019 and was noted for his side career as a singer and recording artist of music with themes of his religious faith, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

He is survived by his wife, Elaine, and their six children.

One issue Hatch returned to over the course of his career was limiting or outlawing abortion, a position that put him at the center of one of the nation’s most controversial issues. He was the author of a variety of “Hatch amendments” to the Constitution aimed at diminishing the availability of abortions.

In 1991, he became known as one of Thomas’s most vocal defenders against sexual harassment allegations from law professor Anita Hill. Hatch read aloud at the confirmation hearings from “The Exorcist,” and he suggested that Hill stole details from the book.

Hatch also helped usher through legislation toughening child pornography laws and making illegally downloading music a prosecutable crime.

For Hatch, the music-download issue was a personal one. A member of the faith widely known as Mormon, he frequently wrote religious songs and recorded music in his spare time as a way to relax from the stresses of life in Washington. Hatch earned about $39,000 in royalties from his songs in 2005.

One of his songs, “Unspoken,” went platinum after appearing on “WOW Hits 2005,” a compilation of Christian pop music.

Unafraid to fight politically, he said he always made a point to quickly become friends with those he had arguments with. Hatch was used to playing tough _ he learned to box as a child in Pittsburgh to fend off the attacks of older, larger students.

When Hatch announced he would not seek re-election in 2018, he said “every good fighter knows when to hang up the gloves.”

After moving to Utah in the early 1970s, Hatch _ a former bishop in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints _ ran for his first public office in 1976 and narrowly upset Democratic senator Frank Moss.

In 1982, he held off challenger Ted Wilson, the Democratic mayor of Salt Lake City, to win a second term by a solid margin.

He was never seriously challenged again.

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2022/apr/24/orrin-hatch-republican-senator-utah-dies

Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2022/04/24/europe/ukraine-orthodox-easter-celebrations-intl-cmd/index.html

HARDECOURT-AUX-BOIS, France — Marine Le Pen spent the last two days of her campaign in the deindustrialized, economically struggling areas in the north of France that, along with a Mediterranean stretch in the south, form her strongholds.

Exhorting her core supporters to vote on Sunday, Ms. Le Pen held events in the Somme department, home to towns and villages where her attacks against her rival, Emmanuel Macron, as an “arrogant” president full of “disdain” for ordinary people resonated powerfully.

“To me, Emmanuel Macron is a president who has made the rich richer,” said Gaëtan François, 40, a construction tractor operator and a village councilor, outside the City Hall in Hardecourt-aux-Bois. “Marine Le Pen is the only one to defend the workers.”

In Hardecourt-aux-Bois, a village of 85 people in the Somme, only three people voted for Mr. Macron in the first round earlier this month. Ms. Le Pen got 78 percent of the votes, her highest score nationwide.

The village, like the rest of the region, has drifted rightward in the past decade.

Maurice Clément, 82, a retired truck driver, said he had voted for Socialists most of his life. In 2017, he voted for Ms. Le Pen in the first round, but for Mr. Macron in the runoff because he was worried about the extreme right.

This time, he had no such worries. Mr. Macron’s policies, he said, had plunged France in a “hole,” citing the record government debt accumulated during his presidency. He was angry about Mr. Macron’s proposal to raise the retirement age to 65 from 62 as part of his plans to overhaul the pension system. For those who had done hard manual labor all their lives, retiring at 65 was the equivalent of retiring in “crutches,” he said.

Ms. Le Pen, he said, “is the only choice.”

About 24 miles away, Ham, a town of about 5,000 people, has also shifted rightward in recent years. In the 2012 presidential election, people in Ham voted like the rest of the nation by choosing François Hollande, the Socialist Party candidate, over the center-right Nicolas Sarkozy.

But in 2017, Ham picked Ms. Le Pen over Mr. Macron. Ms. Le Pen won 56 percent of the votes in Ham, compared with only 34 percent nationwide.

On Sunday, Ms. Le Pen was expected to handily defeat Mr. Macron in Ham once again. In the first round of voting two weeks ago, she had 41 percent of the votes, with Mr. Macron getting only 24 percent.

Beyond Ms. Le Pen’s focus on the working class, her longstanding tough talk on crime and immigration appealed to voters like Hubert Bekaert, 68, a retired optician.

“I’m sick of using taxpayer money to house terrorists in prison,” he said, adding that he wanted the death penalty restored. “Marine Le Pen is the only one who’s tough on crime.”

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/live/2022/04/24/world/french-election-runoff-results

The victim in the case, the wife of Cooley’s brother, is a civilian woman who is not a Department of Defense employee. Cooley’s brother works for the Air Force in New Mexico as a civilian employee.

Cooley had faced loss of rank, pay and benefits and up to 21 months of confinement. And he may have to register as a sexual offender.

Now after Saturday’s verdict, in terms of confinement, the maximum possible sentence is seven years per charge. An Air Force spokeswoman said Saturday that Cooley does not face loss of rank. It was not immediately clear Saturday what impact the conviction will have on Cooley’s career.

This is the first time a court-martial of an Air Force general reached trial.

“Today marks the first time an Air Force general officer has been held responsible for his heinous actions,” the victim in the case said in a statement from her personal attorney, Ryan Guilds.

“Sometimes family members are the abusers, abusers who count on silence in order to wield their extensive power.”

Cooley’s sister-in-law cited Vanessa Guillén, an Army soldier who was murdered by a fellow soldier in 2020 while she was stationed in at Ford Hood, Texas, as an inspiration for her to pursue the charges.

“Hopefully,” Guilds said, continuing with his client’s statement, “this will not be as difficult for the next survivor.”

Speaking for himself, Guilds said: “At the end of the day, he (Cooley) was found guilty.”

“If that can be achieved for her, it can be achieved for others. That doesn’t mean it’s easy,” he added.

Cooley has worked as an assistant to Gen. Arnold Bunch, the commander of Air Force Materiel Command (AFMC), in an AFMC administrative job since an Air Force investigation into the charges against him in late 2019 and early 2020. His brother and sister-in-law brought the matter to the Air Force Office of Special Investigations in December 2019. Bunch fired Cooley from his AFRL job in January 2020.

No jury was empaneled in the trial, which started April 18. A sentencing phase starts Monday morning at the base.

“Whatever the sentence is, it doesn’t erase what happens,” Guilds said.

“I implicitly trust our military judicial system, and respect the decision of the judge,” Bunch said in a statement Saturday. “As an institution, we are committed to holding all Airmen accountable, regardless of rank, when their actions don’t meet Air Force standards.

“This entire process has demonstrated the Air Force’s commitment to prevent sexual assault, protect victims and take appropriate action against offenders when it occurs. The trial was impartial, fair and transparent. I appreciate everyone who supported this process for their due diligence in the pursuit of justice, and for doing everything possible to protect both the victim’s rights and the rights of the accused to a fair trial.”

The Dayton Daily News does not name victims of sexual crimes.

Don Christensen, a former chief prosecutor of the Air Force and head of the organization Protect Our Defenders, believes this likely marks the effective end of Cooley’s Air Force career. Christensen expects a commander will begin initiating a discharge process at some point in the future.

Officers cannot be reduced in rank in a court-martial sentencing, Christensen said. But he said the secretary of the Air Force can reduce Cooley in rank down one star, to brigadier general.

And while the sentence might impose a dismissal from the Air Force, which would deprive Cooley of pay and benefits, Christensen said Saturday he would be surprised if the judge took that route.

“When they’ve had a long career like this, you usually don’t see a punitive discharge,” he said.

Air Force Secretary Frank Kendall can deny Cooley retirement benefits, Christensen said.

Source Article from https://www.daytondailynews.com/local/just-in-verdict-announced-in-court-martial-of-ex-afrl-commander/MR46PDESSBB57PJKZQWN5ZET3M/

Laurie’s mother, Stephanie, 75, died of COVID-19 in December. “I don’t believe she was supposed to die,” Laurie says. “I blame the misinformation.” Stephanie had been wrapped up in a world of conspiracy theories online, which led her to refuse treatments for COVID.

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Laurie’s mother, Stephanie, 75, died of COVID-19 in December. “I don’t believe she was supposed to die,” Laurie says. “I blame the misinformation.” Stephanie had been wrapped up in a world of conspiracy theories online, which led her to refuse treatments for COVID.

Meredith Rizzo/NPR

One thing everyone agrees on is that Stephanie didn’t have to die. Even months after it happened, her family is struggling to figure out why.

“There is no perfect puzzle piece,” says Stephanie’s daughter Laurie. “I literally go through this all the time.”

Stephanie was 75 when she succumbed to COVID-19 this past December. But Laurie says it wasn’t just COVID that killed her mother. In the years leading up to her death, Stephanie had become embroiled in conspiracy theories. Her belief in those far-out ideas caused her to avoid vaccination and led her to delay and even refuse some of the most effective treatments after she got sick.

“I don’t believe she was supposed to die,” Laurie says. “I blame the misinformation.”

As America approaches a million deaths from COVID-19, many thousands of families have been left wondering whether available treatments and vaccines could have saved their loved ones. According to the Kaiser Family Foundation, more than 230,000 deaths could have been avoided if individuals had gotten vaccinated.

Not everyone who refuses a vaccine believes in elaborate conspiracy theories, but many likely do. Anti-vaccine advocates have leveraged the pandemic to sow mistrust and fear about the vaccines. Local papers across the country are dotted with stories of those who refused vaccination, only to find themselves fighting for their very lives against the disease.

Stephanie’s family wanted to share what happened to her in the hope their story can help others. NPR agreed to use only family members’ first names to allow them their privacy as they continue to grieve.

“I know we’re not alone,” says Laurie. “I know this is happening all over the place.”

From vaccine supporter to skeptic

Stephanie was a native of the Bronx, and for almost 55 years she was married to a man named Arnold. They met shortly after he returned from the war in Vietnam. Her family’s dry cleaning shop was just a few blocks from his parents’ house.

Parking in the Bronx was always tricky, Arnold quips. “So I said, ‘You know, this isn’t bad — she’s very attractive, she’s pleasant to be with — maybe I’ll start dating her and I won’t lose my parking spot.”

Arnold and Stephanie met in the Bronx in the late 1960s. Arnold had just returned from military service in Vietnam. One month later, they were engaged.

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They got engaged after just one month. After a few years of marriage, they moved to Long Island and bought a fixer-upper home. They had two daughters, Laurie and Vikki, who Stephanie stayed home to raise. Vikki remembers Stephanie had an unwavering belief in her children’s ability to achieve whatever they wanted.

“She just believed we could do anything, and I think that’s really powerful as a parent,” she recalls.

When the daughters reached high school, Stephanie began to get into astrology and tarot. She did readings to advise people about things like houses, kids and jobs. It was quirky, but Laurie says that Stephanie brought a lot of positivity and optimism to her sessions.

“Everybody loved it, because everybody is always trying to figure out their lives. There’s always the struggles,” she says. “She spread hope with people.”

For all her star charts and spiritual ideas, Stephanie was practical when it came to her health. She went for regular checkups, and she was a big believer in vaccines. “She made sure I took the flu shots, we took the shingles shot, we took the pneumonia shot,” Arnold recalls. “I mean, I was like a pincushion.”

The family lived for many happy years this way. The daughters grew and started families of their own. Arnold retired from a job working for the gas company.

Then, just before the pandemic began, there was a change in Stephanie. Nobody can exactly pinpoint when it happened. Part of it was physical. Throughout her life, she had played tennis. But it had taken a toll on her knees. She was finding it hard to walk and had to have a stair lift installed in her house.

Stephanie and Arnold raised their two daughters, Vikki and Laurie, in Long Island. The daughters grew up and started families of their own. Life was good, the family says.

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Stephanie and Arnold raised their two daughters, Vikki and Laurie, in Long Island. The daughters grew up and started families of their own. Life was good, the family says.

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The loss of tennis from her life also had a psychological impact, says Vikki. “It was her everything. It’s where she felt really valued and strong and important.”

Perhaps partially because she was isolated and feeling down, Stephanie got into watching strange videos and sending them to the rest of the family. Vikki says it was Laurie who was really the first to notice.

“She called me up one day and was like, ‘All right, have you been watching these videos that Mom is sending us?'”

The videos covered a wide range of far-fetched conspiracy theories: JFK Jr. is still alive; reptilian aliens control the government. Arnold says he wouldn’t even look at them: “Watching them, to my way of thinking, would have reinforced that they were valid. Even if I’d argued against them, she wouldn’t have accepted my argument.”

Stephanie’s fringe ideas were troubling, but the family still hung out. Laurie says sometimes they fought over her beliefs, but often they kept the conversation on things like the grandkids.

Then came the pandemic, and everything changed. Stephanie’s videos told her COVID was a hoax. But Laurie and Vikki took it seriously. They were worried about giving their parents the virus. So they stayed away, trying to keep them safe.

“We just stopped seeing each other as a family,” Laurie says. “We didn’t do Thanksgiving that first year.”

While the family stayed away, others did not. Through her astrology, Stephanie had formed a spiritual group that met weekly at her house. And like Stephanie, other members of that group didn’t believe the virus was real.

The more time they spent together, the more Stephanie became invested in her beliefs. Arnold says it was “tribal”: “Staying in the same clique, reinforcing each other, and not getting outside opinions.”

“A couple of times I tried to speak to her on an analytical basis,” Arnold says. “But I could see she was getting defensive, and I didn’t want to alienate myself from her.”

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“A couple of times I tried to speak to her on an analytical basis,” Arnold says. “But I could see she was getting defensive, and I didn’t want to alienate myself from her.”

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When the COVID vaccines came along, Stephanie absolutely refused to get one because she falsely thought the shots contained tiny microchips. Moreover, she began avoiding her daughters, who had gotten vaccinated, because she believed false information that vaccinated people could somehow spread COVID.

Arnold didn’t get vaccinated, to try and keep the peace.

Good vs. evil

The family felt stuck. They didn’t know how to shake Stephanie out of her beliefs. And they are hardly alone. Diane Benscoter runs a nonprofit called Antidote, which seeks to help families whose loved ones have been taken over by cults and conspiratorial thinking. She says she’s inundated with emails from families facing the same struggles.

“My inbox,” she says. “It’s horrible.”

Much of the public conversation around misinformation focuses on fact-checking and flagging false posts online. But these methods don’t provide much help for people like Stephanie, says Sander van der Linden, a professor of social psychology at the University of Cambridge in the U.K.

“Most people who are really into disinformation and conspiracy theories don’t believe in a single conspiracy theory,” he says. Rather, they’re drawn into a self-reinforcing conspiratorial worldview in which conspiracies build on one another. While the theories can seem disparate, they often have unifying themes: They feed distrust in sources of authority; they claim insider knowledge that makes the believer feel valuable; and frequently, that knowledge includes a secret plan to defeat the forces of evil.

Van der Linden says there are three major reasons why people are drawn into this world in the first place: fear and anxiety about the future, a desire to have a simple explanation for complex or seemingly random events, and the social support that communities around conspiracy theories can provide.

Stephanie got into astrology as a hobby when Vikki and Laurie were in high school. Over the years, her interest turned more professional — she gave tarot readings to hundreds of clients who turned to her for insight on houses, jobs and kids.

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Stephanie got into astrology as a hobby when Vikki and Laurie were in high school. Over the years, her interest turned more professional — she gave tarot readings to hundreds of clients who turned to her for insight on houses, jobs and kids.

Meredith Rizzo/NPR

While it’s impossible to say exactly what drove Stephanie, her daughters identify several things that seem to roughly correspond to those broad categories of motivations. First, they say Stephanie suffered from a lot of anxiety throughout her life. With her tennis days behind her, much of her self-esteem now lay with her astrology work and her spiritual group. And that group was clearly playing the role of echo chamber, reinforcing her ideas and beliefs.

Benscoter thinks the pandemic has also pushed many people further into the shadows of conspiracies. “The pandemic increases fear, and fear is a really hard emotion. And isolation is a really hard place to be,” she says.

Benscoter herself is a former cult member. She says the conspiracy narratives provide reassurance. Even if the facts seem crazy, they can provide emotional stability. Speaking of her own past, she says these tales gave clarity because they turned complex problems into simple questions of good versus evil.

“It feels so good; I never felt so secure. I mean I knew what was right and wrong. There was no question,” she says.

Stephanie’s interest in star charts, numerology, tarot and singing bowls (right) were quirky but her sessions gave people a lot of hope and positivity, Laurie says.

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Stephanie’s interest in star charts, numerology, tarot and singing bowls (right) were quirky but her sessions gave people a lot of hope and positivity, Laurie says.

Meredith Rizzo/NPR

Because those motivations are all about psychological needs, arguing the facts around individual conspiracies will do little to shake people out of their beliefs. Moreover, “when you try to pull on one, the whole thing collapses for people,” van der Linden says. “So the resistance becomes much stronger.”

Efforts to dissuade Stephanie from her beliefs were frequently met with outbursts of rage, her family says. “She was angry that we weren’t listening to her and believing what she believed,” Vikki says. “A couple of times I tried to speak to her on an analytical basis,” Arnold says. “But I could see she was getting defensive, and I didn’t want to alienate myself from her.”

Both Benscoter and van der Linden say there is no surefire way to get someone from abandoning conspiratorial thinking. They also say one of the best strategies is to try and get a person to question the messenger, not the message. “People, especially these kinds of people, don’t want to feel like they’re being manipulated,” van der Linden says. He says it’s good to ask questions like: “Do you think it’s possible that other people are profiting off you?”

It was a strategy Stephanie’s family said they tried a few times. But even then, van der Linden says, these interventions take time. People can’t change their thinking instantly, and often will backslide as they talk again to their fellow conspiracy theorists.

“It’s an extensive process,” he says.

Out of time

Unfortunately for Stephanie, she did not have time. In November of 2021, just before Thanksgiving, Arnold and Stephanie met two other couples for dinner at a popular local restaurant.

“Afterwards, she started developing symptoms,” Arnold says.

But she refused to get tested. Instead, she ordered drugs online from a natural healer in Florida. Two of the drugs, ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine, are ineffective against COVID, but many conspiracy theorists believe they work. Stephanie waited for the pills to come.

“She was waiting for the pills and I said, ‘Why wait? You could go to the doctor right now. You have amazing health insurance. You don’t have to wait,'” Laurie says.

All the while, she was getting sicker and sicker. The daughters got her a device to check her blood-oxygen level: It was at just 77%.

Vikki called a friend who was a nurse: “She said, ’77?! You need to get your mom to the hospital. She could die!’ And I said, ‘Really?'”

Stephanie still didn’t want to go, but after hearing she could die, she eventually gave in. Arnold drove her to the hospital.

The pills Stephanie received in the mail were labeled as ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine. They appeared to come from manufacturers in India.

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The pills Stephanie received in the mail were labeled as ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine. They appeared to come from manufacturers in India.

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Even after she was admitted, she turned down some effective treatments for COVID. One drug, called remdesivir, has been proven to reduce the severity of COVID, but Stephanie believed conspiracy theories claiming the drug was actually being used to kill COVID patients. Stephanie also refused another treatment shown to be very effective for patients with COVID-19: monoclonal antibodies. Laurie remembers how one doctor responded when he learned that Stephanie had refused the drugs:

“He was like, ‘Why didn’t you take any of the treatments Stephanie?’ She found every little piece of energy in her and yelled back at him, ‘BECAUSE IT’LL KILL ME!'”

Meanwhile, Arnold had developed symptoms and was getting sicker and weaker. He eventually asked his daughters for help.

Vikki drove him to get monoclonal antibodies. He worsened overnight, and the next day, he was admitted to the same hospital that Stephanie was staying in. Unlike his wife, Arnold accepted every treatment he was offered.

“He said yes to everything. He said yes to every treatment they were willing to give him,” says Vikki. “My Mom said no.”

He was discharged after just five days.

“I felt hopeful, because I told her I was going home. I told her, ‘I’ll be waiting for you.’ And then, everything started deteriorating,” Arnold recalls.

“She was fighting a fight without any defenses,” says Perihan El Shanawany, a doctor with Northwell Health, who was part of the team that cared for Stephanie. As Stephanie grew sicker, she started developing blood clots on her lungs. El Shanawany knew that as things progressed, Stephanie would only suffer more.

“Patients at that point feel like they’re suffocating, they’re drowning,” El Shanawany says. “It’s a horrible way to die.”

The only option Stephanie had left was to go on a ventilator. So Dr. El Shanawany sat down with her and asked her what she wanted.

“She did say that she’s had enough. That’s her words, ‘I’ve had enough. This is not a life. I can’t live like this anymore’,” El Shanawany says.

During a video call, Laurie heard her mother’s wishes. She had been urging Stephanie to fight because she felt it wasn’t her time. But hearing those words, “I can’t live like this anymore,” something changed. For years they had been battling over the lies and conspiracies. Laurie knew it was time to make peace with the mother she loved.

And that meant helping Stephanie to die comfortably. “My whole mission after hearing that was to help her get her wishes,” she says.

Laurie stayed by her mother’s side, reading text messages from friends and relatives who wanted to say goodbye. At one point, seeing she was suffering, Laurie played her some music written by a family member: “She gave me a thumbs up,” Laurie recalls. “She was there.”

“We all said goodbye and told her she was the best,” Laurie says.

Stephanie died the next day. It was Dec. 28, a few days after Christmas.

At the funeral, Arnold heard from scores of people whom Stephanie had helped over the years, through her astrology, and just her advice and friendship.

“They all said, ‘She changed my life,’ ” he says tearfully.

Laurie says she’s “a lot less angry” now. But she still thinks about those who continue to make the kinds of videos her mother watched. In the months since Stephanie’s death, she’s moved closer to her father and sister.

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Laurie says she’s “a lot less angry” now. But she still thinks about those who continue to make the kinds of videos her mother watched. In the months since Stephanie’s death, she’s moved closer to her father and sister.

Meredith Rizzo/NPR

In the months since Stephanie died, the family has begun the long road to healing. Arnold has received the COVID vaccine. And Laurie recently bought a home closer to her father and sister. “We’ll be able to be in each other’s lives more,” she says.

She also says she’s slowly making her peace with Stephanie’s death.

“I’m a lot less angry,” she says.

But she still thinks about the people who make the paranoia-laced videos that her mother consumed day after day. She understands that something inside her mother drew her to those voices, but Laurie still sees Stephanie mainly as a victim of the grifters and attention-seekers who generate many hours of falsehoods every day to grab money, likes and shares.

“Whoever is creating all this content, is on some level waging a war — here in America — inside of every family,” she says. “I think people need to wake up to that.”

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2022/04/24/1089786147/covid-conspiracy-theories