• Two sources from the Secret Service anonymously backed up much of Cassidy Hutchinson’s testimony.
  • Speaking to CNN, the sources said the incident was discussed within the agency.
  • Neither of them said they heard about Trump trying to grab the steering wheel. 

Two Secret Service sources told CNN on Friday that they heard about former President Donald Trump lunging at the driver of his presidential SUV on January 6, 2021.

The pair of sources, who spoke under the condition of anonymity, backed up much of former Trump aide Cassidy Hutchinson’s explosive testimony on the altercation in the motorcade vehicle known as “the Beast” after Trump found out he wouldn’t be driven to join his supporters at the Capitol.

“He had sort of lunged forward – it was unclear from the conversations I had that he actually made physical contact, but he might have. I don’t know,” one of the Secret Service sources told CNN. “Nobody said Trump assaulted him; they said he tried to lunge over the seat – for what reason, nobody had any idea.”

The other source, who said they had spoken directly with Trump’s driver from that day, said they did not hear anything about Trump trying to grab the steering wheel, in line with the other agency member’s recollection of conversations about the incident.

The first source said they had heard about Trump’s altercation with the driver going back to February 2021.

Hutchinson’s account, which she gave under oath, came from a discussion with Tony Ornato, the White House deputy chief of staff at the time.

“I noticed the head of Mr. Trump’s security detail sitting in a chair, looking somewhat discombobulated, a little lost,” Hutchinson testified. “I looked at Tony, he said, ‘Did you effing hear what happened in the Beast?’ I said, ‘No, Tony, I just got back, what happened?’

“Tony proceeded to tell me that when the president got in the Beast, he was under the impression from Mr. Meadows that the off-the-record movement to the Capitol was still possible and likely to happen but that Bobby had more information,” Hutchinson continued. “As the president had gotten into the vehicle with Bobby, he thought that they were going up to the Capitol. And when Bobby had relayed to him that we’re not; we don’t have the assets to do it; it’s not secure; we’re going back to the West Wing, the president had a very strong, very angry response to that.”

 

Source Article from https://www.businessinsider.com/trump-secret-service-car-incident-cnn-anonymous-sources-cassidy-hutchinson-2022-7

President Joe Biden speaks as New York Gov. Kathy Hochul appears on a screen during a virtual meeting with Democratic governors on abortion rights on Friday.

Evan Vucci/AP


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President Joe Biden on Friday said he thinks a Republican-controlled Congress would try to pass a national ban on abortion, reiterating his push to make abortion an election issue in the November midterms.

“I predict — if we don’t keep the Senate and increase [Democratic control] in the House, we’re going to be in a situation where the Republicans are going to pass a nationwide prohibition, consistent with what the Supreme Court ruled,” Biden said during a discussion with nine Democratic governors.

Biden told the governors he wants to find new ways to protect abortion rights and access after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade one week ago.

“I share the public outrage of this extremist court that’s committed to moving America backward, with fewer rights and less autonomy,” Biden said in opening comments. The president reiterated that the attorney general’s office will work to protect the ability to cross state lines for abortion services and protect access to contraceptives and abortion medication.

Joining the president for the roundtable were New York’s Kathy Hochul, New Mexico’s Michelle Lujan Grisham, Illinois’ JB Pritzker, Colorado’s Jared Polis, Connecticut’s Ned Lamont, North Carolina’s Roy Cooper, Oregon’s Kate Brown, Rhode Island’s Daniel McKee and Washington’s Jay Inslee — many whose states border others that have trigger laws going into effect this summer that limit or outlaw abortion after the Supreme Court’s action.

Hochul said she hopes her state will be a “safe harbor” for those seeking abortion services. New York has allocated $35 million to providers to hire more staff and increase protections and resources for their staff.

“The rights of millions of women across this country are now falling on the shoulders of just a handful of states,” Hochul said, asking Biden to allow people in states that limit abortion to utilize federal buildings for services.

Cooper and Lujan Grisham noted that their states are already seeing an influx of patients who are seeking services from other states.

“Part of the conversation needs to be what resources are being given to states that will have abortion access so that they can support the influx of people and support the people in their own state who will need care,” Lupe Rodriguez, executive director of National Latina Institute for Reproductive Justice and one of the advocates meeting with the White House, told NPR ahead of the event.

Currently, it is not illegal for those seeking abortion services to travel to other states. But some abortion opponents are looking to implement laws that could lead to limitations or legal battles against those who sought or facilitated an abortion.

Biden’s actions so far

In recent days, the Health and Human Services Department announced $3 million in new funding to increase training and technical assistance for family planning providers. The money will help Title X grantees increase training and technical assistance to address the challenges that the recent Supreme Court decision could have on their Title X Family planning service delivery, according to the department.

HHS Secretary Xavier Becerra has also met with governors this week — Michigan’s Gretchen Whitmer, Oregon’s Brown and Maine’s Janet Mills — to go over efforts in their states. And Becerra, along with Labor Secretary Marty Walsh, met with health insurers and employee benefit plan leaders to discuss their obligations to ensuring access to contraception medications in employee plans.

The pair, along with Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen, sent a letter to insurance industry leaders, reminding them of their obligations to provide access and coverage of birth control and contraceptive counseling.

Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris have also continued to push for voters to take the Supreme Court’s decision into account when voting in the remaining primaries and general midterm election this November.

On Thursday, Biden spoke out in favor of throwing out the filibuster in the Senate for key exceptions like voting rights and abortion measures. Democrats have been unable to round up 10 Republicans needed to help clear the 60-vote hurdle on a bill to codify abortion protections in the Senate.

However, only 50 votes are needed to change the filibuster rules. But some Democrats, namely Sens. Joe Manchin of West Virginia and Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona, have consistently opposed any effort to rid the filibuster, including over abortion.

Biden acknowledged during the event that Democrats don’t have the votes in the Senate, urging voters to turn out for candidates who could support a bill to codify abortion rights following the midterms.

Barbara Sprunt contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2022/07/01/1109319734/biden-warns-democratic-governors-a-gop-congress-would-try-to-ban-abortion-nation

Los Angeles County officially finalized the list of candidates who will go head to head in the Nov. 8 runoff election, setting the stage for nearly a dozen bruising contests, including the mayoral showdown between U.S. Rep. Karen Bass and real estate developer Rick Caruso.

Nearly a month after the June 7 election, officials from the Los Angeles County Registrar-Recorder/County Clerk on Friday certified the results in races for L.A. mayor, City Council, school board, supervisor and sheriff, identifying the outright winners in many cases and paving the way for the final round.

County officials spent weeks reviewing and tabulating late-arriving mail-in ballots, which offered results that were sharply different from the first snapshot on election night. The election, which saw more than 84% of ballots cast by mail, revealed the expanding political might of L.A.’s left, which succeeded in unseating a councilman and securing big gains for several other candidates.

Bass is now firmly the front-runner in the race to replace L.A. Mayor Eric Garcetti, finishing the primary with a seven-point lead despite an onslaught of expensive campaign ads from Caruso. In other contests, candidates who appeared to be trailing on election night are now in the lead or in much stronger positions for the runoff.

Bass is already deep into runoff mode, reminding supporters that Caruso registered as a Democrat only at the start of the year.

“You don’t become a Democrat to check a box,” she said this week at an event for her campaign’s gay, lesbian and transgender allies. “A Democrat is about a set of values, and there’s only one Democrat in this race.”

The billionaire businessman is eclipsing the field with ads fueled by a $35-million outlay, spending likely to grow substantially in an anticipated November runoff.

Caruso has been tending to his base in the San Fernando Valley, meeting in recent days with firefighters in Sunland-Tujunga and restaurant patrons in Porter Ranch — both neighborhoods that are among the city’s more conservative. The businessman, who spent tens of millions of dollars on his campaign, faces a much tougher time building support among elected Democrats, who might have “defected” had Caruso arrived in first place, said political consultant Eric Hacopian.

“By any measure, he underperformed, given his advantages,” said Hacopian, who is not involved in city races this year.

Caruso’s team disputed that notion and remains confident about his prospects.

“Rick went from single digits to a runoff in just a few months on the strength of his message around dealing with homelessness, crime and corruption,” said spokesman Peter Ragone. “This fall, voters will have a clear choice between a politician who says she can’t fix homelessness anytime soon and a civic leader who can lower crime and clean up L.A.”

Nevertheless, Caruso faces questions about how much headway he can make in a city where progressive Democrats and, in some races, Democratic Socialists made trailblazing gains in down-ballot contests.

In the race to replace Controller Ron Galperin, accountant Kenneth Mejia maintained a nearly 20-point lead over his opponent, Councilman Paul Koretz. Mejia, whose campaign is energizing young voters, has called for deep cuts to law enforcement, a concept opposed by Koretz, a 13-year veteran at City Hall. Mejia had 43% of the vote; Koretz had nearly 24%.

In the campaign for city attorney, civil rights lawyer Faisal Gill led attorney Hydee Feldstein Soto by a four-point margin. Gill has promised to impose a 100-day moratorium on misdemeanor criminal filings, a move Feldstein Soto opposes.

Both of those contests now head to a runoff.

Meanwhile, L.A.’s chapter of the Democratic Socialists of America scored an outright victory on the Eastside, where its favored candidate unseated Councilman Gil Cedillo, a 24-year political veteran who served in Sacramento and at City Hall.

Cedillo lost to community activist Eunisses Hernandez, who will become the council’s first abolitionist — an advocate for dismantling prison systems, jail facilities and law enforcement agencies and funneling the savings into mental healthcare, addiction services, affordable housing and antipoverty programs. During the campaign, she said she would vote against the hiring of police officers, including recruits who would replace those who retire or resign.

Councilman Gil Cedillo faces a major challenge from activist Eunisses Hernandez, in a race focused on housing prices and calls to eliminate police.

In his concession statement, Cedillo said he had dedicated his life to public service and is grateful to have worked with “so many incredible people” to improve the lives of Angelenos.

The councilman — who tested positive for the coronavirus Sunday — said he is proud to have worked in Sacramento to ensure that residents, regardless of immigration status, have access to driver’s licenses. He also touted his work at City Hall, helping constituents weather the pandemic and building “housing of all types” across his district, which stretches from Highland Park to Pico-Union.

“I look forward to closing out my time on City Council, finishing projects and preparing to serve in a new way,” he said.

Hernandez, who had already declared victory, will be sworn in at the end of the year. In an interview, she thanked her supporters and said she will spend the coming months mapping out her strategy for the district. She promised to build on Cedillo’s accomplishments.

“We’re going to continue a lot of the amazing work that they’re doing and take it to another level, so that we get care and access to health services in our communities and deeply affordable housing,” she said. “I’m grateful to the incumbent for all the work that he’s done and all the groundwork he’s laid for someone like me to be able to run for office.”

The ouster of Cedillo was not the only success for L.A.’s left. In a district that stretches from Echo Park to Hollywood, labor organizer Hugo Soto-Martinez held a nine-point lead over Councilman Mitch O’Farrell. The contest now heads to a runoff. Activists with Democratic Socialists of America had campaigned heavily for Soto-Martinez.

In coastal neighborhoods, civil rights lawyer Erin Darling held a nearly six-point lead over municipal law attorney Traci Park in the race to replace Councilman Mike Bonin. Those two candidates, who sharply disagree on approaches to homelessness and public safety, now head to a runoff.

Those first-place finishes have been celebrated for weeks by activists who have opposed plans for hiring more police and assailed councilmembers over their decision to prohibit homeless encampments near certain facilities, such as public schools and daycare centers.

Josh Androsky, a consultant who worked on the campaigns of Hernandez and Soto-Martinez, said the primary results show that L.A.’s left “had its biggest electoral victory ever.”

“To me, the most important and necessary outcome of this election cycle is that we are building a real progressive base,” he said. “I’ve lived here my whole life, and I’ve never seen anything like this.”

If the runoff follows the same pattern, L.A. will show that it is a progressive stronghold, protecting Angelenos at a time when the Supreme Court is “stripping away their rights,” he said.

Androsky said progressive activists could become even more active in two other council contests in the run-up to Nov. 8.

On the Westside, political aide Katy Yaroslavsky will face attorney Sam Yebri in the race to replace Koretz. And in communities near the Port of Los Angeles, attorney Tim McOsker will face off against neighborhood leader Danielle Sandoval in the contest to replace Councilman Joe Buscaino.

In the county contests, Supervisor Hilda Solis and Assessor Jeffrey Prang won outright, securing more than 50% of the vote. But Sheriff Alex Villanueva has been forced into a runoff, facing retired Long Beach Police Chief Robert Luna.

Meanwhile, State Sen. Bob Hertzberg will face West Hollywood Councilwoman Lindsey Horvath in the race to replace County Supervisor Sheila Kuehl, in a district that takes in parts of the Westside and San Fernando Valley.

L.A. school board elections have been nasty and expensive, but not so much this time. Still, mega-donor Bill Bloomfield isn’t taking any chances.

At the Los Angeles Unified School District, two of this year’s three board races are heading to a runoff as well.

In the San Fernando Valley, L.A. Board of Education President Kelly Gonez failed to stave off a runoff and will face a challenge from high school Spanish teacher Marvin Rodriguez. Gonez, who had the backing of charter school supporters and district employee unions, was leading Rodriguez 48% to 31%.

On the eastern end of L.A. Unified, Rocío Rivas, an aide to board member Jackie Goldberg, will compete in the runoff against Maria Brenes, a nonprofit leader. Brenes had the backing of several union organizations, including the L.A. County Federation of Labor, and departing board member Monica Garcia. Rivas, who was leading Brenes 44% to 30%, was endorsed by the teachers union.

On the Westside, board member Nick Melvoin coasted to an outright victory, avoiding a runoff and earning a second term in office.

Staff writers Howard Blume and Julia Wick contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2022-07-01/2022-los-angeles-election-results-karen-bass-frontrunner

WASHINGTON, July 1 (Reuters) – President Joe Biden predicted on Friday that some U.S. states will try to arrest women for crossing state lines to get abortions after the Supreme Court overturned the constitutional right to the procedures nationwide.

Thirteen Republican-led states banned or severely restricted the procedure under so-called “trigger laws” after the court struck down the landmark 1973 Roe v. Wade ruling last week. Women in those states seeking an abortion may have to travel to states where it remains legal.

Convening a virtual meeting on abortion rights with Democratic state governors on Friday, Biden said he thinks “people are gonna be shocked when the first state … tries to arrest a woman for crossing a state line to get health services.”

He added: “And I don’t think people believe that’s gonna happen. But it’s gonna happen, and it’s gonna telegraph to the whole country that this is a gigantic deal that goes beyond; I mean, it affects all your basic rights”.

Biden said the federal government will act to protect women who need to cross state lines to get an abortion and ensure their access to medication in states where it’s banned.

New Mexico’s governor, Michelle Lujan Grisham, told the meeting her state “will not cooperate” on any attempts to track down women who have had abortions to punish them. “We will not extradite,” she said.

Abortion rights groups have filed legislation in multiple states seeking to preserve the ability of women to terminate pregnancies.

Judges in Florida, Louisiana, Texas and Utah have since issued decisions preventing those states from enforcing new restrictive abortion laws, while Ohio’s top court on Friday declined to block the Republican-led state from enforcing an abortion ban. read more

New York Governor Kathy Hochul told the group that “just a handful of states” are going to have to take care of health of women across the country.

“There is such stress out there,” Hochul said. “It is a matter of life and death for American women,” she added.

Biden also told the group there were not enough votes in the Senate to scrap a supermajority rule known as the filibuster to codify Roe v. Wade’s protections into law.

He had proposed that senators remove the filibuster but the suggestion was shot down by aides to key Democratic lawmakers. read more

“(The) filibuster should not stand in the way of us being able to (codify Roe),” Biden said.

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Source Article from https://www.reuters.com/world/americas/biden-not-enough-votes-change-filibuster-abortion-rights-2022-07-01/

The lead attorney on the brief, David B. Rivkin Jr., a lawyer who served in the administrations of Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush, said the theory, if embraced by the Supreme Court, would not shield state electoral maps from challenges based on racial discrimination or other claims rooted in the U.S. Constitution or federal statute. But it would nullify other grounds for rejecting state maps, including claims of partisan gerrymandering. The Supreme Court in 2019 ruled that federal courts had no jurisdiction over claims of partisan gerrymandering, leaving that issue to state courts.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2022/07/01/democracy-advocates-raise-alarm-after-supreme-court-takes-election-case/

In the last days of New York’s 2022 legislative session, lawmakers passed a package of bills aimed at protecting abortion seekers and providers. But after the Supreme Court issued decisions on abortion and concealed weapons, Gov. Kathy Hochul, a Democrat, ordered the Legislature to return to Albany on Thursday for an extraordinary session.

Following a long night of negotiations, the measure passed the Senate without debate. The Assembly voted to pass it late Friday evening.

Still, no changes will happen right away.

Amending the State Constitution is a yearslong process in New York, requiring passage by two separately elected Legislatures, and then approval by voters in a referendum. By passing it this year, Democratic leaders hope that they can win approval next year and get it to voters in 2024, when a high turnout is expected in a presidential election year.

Though Ms. Hochul has no formal role in approving such an amendment, she has been a vocal champion of the measure and has included the effort in campaign ads.

Proponents had hoped to pass the amendment at the end of the 2022 session, which concluded in early June. But the effort got bogged down after several leading religious groups, including the Catholic Conference and the Jewish Community Relations Council, opposed the measure for a variety reasons.

One key issue was whether the act of enshrining new protected classes into the State Constitution would in any way downgrade existing religious protections.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2022/07/01/nyregion/abortion-ny-state-law.html

Days after the Secret Service pushed back on the stunning testimony that former President Donald Trump violently freaked out during a Jan. 6 presidential SUV ride, CNN reported on Friday that accounts of Trump lunging at his Secret Service agents have spread around the agency for the past year.

According to two Secret Service sources, stories similar to ex-Trump aide Cassidy Hutchinson’s account—which she testified under oath was told to her by former Trump staffer and current Secret Service official Tony Ornato—circulated among agents in the months following the incident. One source, for instance, relayed that Trump profanely demanded to be driven to the Capitol and even “lunged forward” at one point.

“It was unclear from the conversations I had that he actually made physical contact, but he might have. I don’t know,” the source told CNN. “Nobody said Trump assaulted him; they said he tried to lunge over the seat— for what reason, nobody had any idea.”

Another source who spoke to the SUV’s driver, meanwhile, said that while he didn’t hear about any physical altercation, he was told that Trump verbally berated his Secret Service detail after his Jan. 6 speech. According to Hutchinson, Trump yelled at his detail: “I’m the f-ing President. Take me up to the Capitol now!”

While not disputing that Trump demanded agents take him to the Capitol, a Secret Service official said earlier this week that Ornato denied telling Hutchinson the story, and Secret Service agent Bobby Engel—who was in the vehicle—refuted that Trump lunged at an agent or tried to grab the steering wheel.

The agency has also said that Engel and the driver are prepared to testify before the Jan. 6 House committee under oath. The credibility of Engel and Ornato, however, has come under question recently, as they’ve been described as Trump’s “yes men” and at least one former Trump aide has called Ornato a known liar.

Source Article from https://www.thedailybeast.com/secret-service-have-been-gossiping-about-trumps-suv-outburst-for-a-year-cnn

Mr Zamorano, 45, and alleged conspirator Christian Martínez, 28, are accused of sending text messages to each other about the smuggling operation both before and after the truck was discovered in sweltering temperatures.

Source Article from https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-62018517

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Source Article from https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-07-01/jpmorgan-sees-stratospheric-380-oil-on-worst-case-russian-cut

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/climate-environment/2022/07/01/biden-offshore-drilling-climate/

White House economic adviser Brian Deese suggested the pain at the pump was a price Americans had to pay for the “future of the liberal world order,” in a CNN interview on Thursday.

“CNN Newsroom” host Victor Blackwell played a clip of President Biden telling a reporter at Thursday’s NATO Summit that Americans can continue to pay a premium for gas “as long as it takes” to win the war in Ukraine.

Blackwell asked Deese how the White House would respond to Americans worried that they won’t be able to survive paying close to or over $5 a gallon, potentially for “years” to come.

“The military analysts, the Director of National Intelligence say this can be a long war measured in years. I think everybody understands why this is happening. But is it sustainable? What do you say to those families that say, ‘Listen, we can’t afford to pay $4.85  a gallon for months, if not years. This is just not sustainable,'” Blackwell questioned.

The Post found the stickers on gas pumps at a Shell Station.
(J.C. Rice/New York Post)

PRESIDENT BIDEN SEEMS TO PRAISE HIGH GAS PRICES AS ‘INCREDIBLE TRANSITION’ AMERICANS MUST GO THROUGH

Deese initially responded, “What you heard from the president today was a clear articulation of the stakes. This is about the future of the liberal world order, and we have to stand firm.” The comment caused a stir on social media.

Afterwards, the White House official praised President Biden’s actions to lower gas prices as the “good news.”

“Good news, over the last two weeks, we’ve seen the price of gas at the pump come down about twenty cents but still unacceptably high,” he remarked. 

Deese explained the temporary federal gas tax holiday, pressure on oil companies, and a potential price cap on Russian oil were measures the president was taking to continue to “bring those prices down.”

White House economic adviser Brian Deese was asked about the Biden administration’s plan to combat high gas prices during “CNN Newsroom” on Thursday. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque 

WASHINGTON POST REPORTER LAMENTS THE ENERGY CRISIS AND HIGH GAS PRICES ‘AREN’T SPURRING A GREEN REVOLUTION’

But Blackwell continued to press the Biden adviser on Americans’ dissatisfaction with the administration. He cited an AP-NORC poll finding 69% of Americans disapprove of the job the president is doing on the economy and 85% are unhappy with the direction the country is going.

Deese responded that he sympathized with Americans’ “frustrations” but said they needed to remember the Biden administration had made “historic economic progress” and this was a “transition.”

“And also remind the American people that even as we go through this challenging period, even while we move through this transition, we also have made historic economic progress and that’s not to suggest that people shouldn’t feel the anxiety that they feel,” he began. The Biden official touted how the United States was “better and stronger positioned” to tackle these problems.

U.S. President Joe Biden speaks about inflation and the economy in the South Court Auditorium on the White House campus May 10, 2022 in Washington, DC.

MSNBC, WAPO, ABC FIGURES WARN VOTERS AGAINST GAS PRICES INFLUENCING THEIR VOTE IN NOVEMBER

When asked what he meant by “transition,” Deese said the administration wanted to return the economy to a much better place than it was under the Trump administration.

“The economy pre-pandemic was not working for a lot of middle class families,” the economics adviser claimed.

A Fox News poll from June found more voters trust Republicans to handle inflation.

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Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/media/high-gas-prices-worth-future-liberal-world-order-white-house-economics-adviser-tells-cnn

Californians contending with the highest gas prices in the nation will pay another 3 cents per gallon starting Friday due to the state’s annual gas tax increase.

Yes, you read that right: Gas prices will go up due to the state’s excise tax on gasoline, which is adjusted each year.

Golden State drivers on Thursday were already paying an average of $6.289 for a gallon of regular gas, far more than the national average of $4.857 and the most of any state, according to the American Automobile Assn.

But the number had represented something of a relief as it inched down from the record high of $6.438 a couple of weeks ago, dropping on Thursday for the 16th consecutive day.

Now, the excise tax will see prices go up again. The tax is increasing from 51.1 cents to 53.9 cents per gallon, the second highest such charge in the nation, with only Pennsylvania’s excise tax clocking in higher.

Gov. Gavin Newsom and leaders of the California Legislature have agreed to provide more than $9 billion in refunds to taxpayers to offset high gas prices and inflation. The deal comes after months of slow negotiations at the state Capitol and disagreement between Democrats over how much relief to offer.

The hike comes just hours after Gov. Gavin Newsom and state Democrats signed into law a budget deal for gas tax relief, which will be delivered in the form of refunds to the state’s residents.

But several state leaders, including many in the GOP, had been pushing for the state to temporarily suspend the gas tax altogether.

“The Governor and the Legislature could have suspended the state’s gas tax and stopped this,” Assemblyman Vince Fong (R-Bakersfield), vice chair of the Assembly Budget Committee, said in a statement about the increase. “But by choice, the ruling party in Sacramento is choosing not to do so. The result will be more rising costs on practically everything.”

Newsom and other Democratic leaders ultimately rejected the idea of suspending the gas tax increase, with some arguing that doing so would cut off funding for much-needed infrastructure projects and cost jobs.

Others said there was no guarantee that the oil companies would pass the savings on to consumers, with Democratic Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon announcing a legislative inquiry to determine whether oil companies are “ripping off” drivers.

However, President Biden in June asked Congress to suspend the federal gas tax through September, a move that he said could shave off 18 cents per gallon.

In a letter to Newsom on Monday, nearly a dozen Republican members of Congress asked the governor to follow Biden’s lead. They also called on Newsom to support a repeal of the state’s policy of indexing the gas tax to inflation.

“Amidst historic uncertainty in global energy markets and California’s unique vulnerability to supply shocks, California families deserve tax relief that reflects the severity of the economic realities they face,” said the letter, signed by Jay Obernolte, Kevin McCarthy, David Valadao and other GOP leaders.

The suspension could shave off 18 cents per gallon as Americans face record gas prices.

Severin Borenstein, an energy economist at UC Berkeley, said he didn’t think pausing the gas tax without a clear path for restoration made sense, but he also disagreed with the argument that it would cut spending.

“The Legislature could shift revenues from other parts of the budget to fill that in, as they’re doing right now to pay these rebates,” he said. “I think the reality is that neither side views the three cents as a big deal.”

In fact, he said many consumers might not even notice the extra three cents “compared to all the ups and downs of crude prices,” which have been highly volatile lately. The price of crude oil dropped from about $120 per barrel to $110 per barrel in recent weeks, he said, translating to a savings of about 25 cents a gallon.

Borenstein cautioned that suspending the tax without raising it to a “reasonably high level” later would encourage people to go back to driving gas-guzzling cars when the price drops again.

“The problem would be, how to do we get people to continue to choose [electric vehicles] when gasoline is so cheap,” he said.

He said a bigger priority for the Legislature should be what he called the state’s “mystery gasoline surcharge,” which has for years seen Californians inexplicably paying more at the pump.

“Obviously, 3 cents lower would be better than higher, but compared to the other factors driving gas prices, this isn’t the major one,” he said of the excise tax.

Gas prices seem to have little logic, especially since Russia invaded Ukraine. Culprits? A combination of market forces, the “mystery gas surcharge” and more.

Friday’s increase also arrives ahead of the Fourth of July weekend, which AAA said will be the third-busiest Independence Day on record for Southern California when it comes to holiday travel. About 2.7 million Southern Californians are expected to travel by car.

“People are ready for a break, and despite things costing more, they are finding ways to take that much-needed vacation,” said Doug Shupe, spokesman for AAA Southern California.

Las Vegas, San Diego, the Grand Canyon, Mexico and Yosemite National Park are the top destinations for Southern Californians hitting the road, according to AAA.

Nationwide, more than 42 million people are expected to travel by car this weekend, the organization said.

Source Article from https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2022-07-01/california-gas-prices-finally-declining-will-be-hit-with-new-tax-this-week

LIVE UPDATES

This is CNBC’s live blog tracking developments on the war in Ukraine. See below for the latest updates. 

U.S. President Joe Biden has pledged to provide financial and military aid for as long as necessary to prevent Ukraine’s defeat, he told reporters at the conclusion of the NATO summit in Madrid.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy thanked Ukrainian troops following Russia’s withdrawal from the strategic Snake Island in the Black Sea, which it captured in the early days of the war. Ukrainian forces say they drove the Russians out, while Moscow insists it was a voluntary act of goodwill.

Meanwhile, NATO states plan to send hundreds of thousands more troops to Eastern Europe to bolster the region’s security.

Top U.S. military officer speaks with Ukrainian counterpart

America’s highest military officer spoke to his Ukrainian counterpart on the heels of the NATO leader summit in Madrid.

The call between Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Mark Milley and Commander-in-Chief of the Ukrainian Armed Forces Gen. Valery Zaluzhny is the second known discussion this week.

“They discussed the unprovoked and ongoing Russian invasion of Ukraine and exchanged perspectives and assessments,” wrote Joint Staff spokesperson U.S. Army Col. Dave Butler in a readout of the call.

“The Chairman once again reaffirmed unwavering support for Ukraine’s sovereignty and territorial integrity,” Butler added.

— Amanda Macias

Vast majority of debris cleared from shopping mall hit by Russian missile

Ukraine’s emergency services said on the Telegram messaging platform that approximately 88% of the debris from a Russian rocket attack on a shopping mall in the city of Kremenchuk has been cleared.

The service said that 19 people were killed in the strike on Amstor shopping mall, 64 people were injured and 26 people were hospitalized.

On Monday, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said on Telegram that more than 1,000 people were inside at the time of the Russian rocket attack, according to an NBC News report.

“This is not an off-target missile strike, this is a calculated Russian strike — exactly at this shopping mall,” Zelenskyy said during his Monday evening address.

— Amanda Macias

Ukraine foreign minister says Kyiv filed claim with world court over Russia’s war

Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba said that Kyiv submitted a filing to the International Court of Justice related to Russia’s ongoing war in Ukraine.

“Ukraine submitted a major filing at the ICJ. We prove that Russia violated the Genocide Convention by justifying its aggression with a false pretext of a ‘genocide’ that never was,” Kuleba wrote on Twitter.

“A critical step to hold Russia accountable and make Russia pay for the harm it has inflicted,” he added.

The UN’s 1948 Genocide Convention, to which Russia is a signatory, aims to prevent genocide and other atrocities committed during the Second World War.

 — Amanda Macias

More than 8.4 million people have fled Ukraine since Russia’s war began

Since Russia invaded Ukraine in late February, more than 8.4 million people have fled across the country’s borders.

More than 5.4 million people have registered for temporary refugee protection or similar safeguards in Europe, according to the latest data complied by the United Nations.

“Millions of refugees from Ukraine have crossed borders into neighboring countries and many more have been forced to move inside the country,” UN researchers wrote in a report.

Here’s a look at where Ukrainian refugees have fled:

 — Amanda Macias

NATO members are increasing investment to the alliance

NATO members are increasing their investment in the military alliance following Russia’s late-February invasion of Ukraine.

In July 2018, only five NATO allies met the 2% GDP spending goal set at the 2014 NATO summit in Wales.

Today, nine allies meet those terms.

The alliance’s newest members, Sweden and Finland, are currently not included in the latest defense expenditure data compiled by NATO.

 — Amanda Macias

Schools in Kyiv will reopen for classes in September, city officials say

Schools in the capital city of Kyiv will reopen for students on September 1, the city’s authorities said, the first return to in-person teaching since Russian forces invaded Ukraine on February 24. Classes since then had switched to being online and then stopped for the summer break.

The most important priority is “the safety of students and teachers,” said Olena Fidanyan, the head of Kyiv’s education and science department, quoted by AFP.

Areas around the schools will be inspected for bombs, and school bomb shelters will be restocked with basic provisions like water and medicine, she said. Schools will also carry out training for both students and teachers on air-raid alert procedures. Students who fled Kyiv and are unable to return can still attend classes remotely, education officials said.

— Natasha Turak

Russian farmers create giant “Z” symbol in a field in support of Russian military

Farmers operating combines create symbols “Z” and “V” in a field in support of the Russian armed forces involved in a military conflict in Ukraine, during the start of wheat harvesting in the Rostov region.

-Reuters

Ukraine’s grain exports have fallen 43% year-on-year, agriculture ministry says

Ukraine’s grain exports have fallen by almost half, the country’s agricultural ministry said, having crashed since its Black Sea ports were blocked due to Russia’s invasion.

Just 1.41 million tons of grain were exported from the country in June, a 43% decrease from the prior year, dealing a blow to the major agricultural exporter as well as to the many countries that buy its produce, particularly in the Middle East and Africa, which are now facing potential food crises.

Kyiv has said that Ukraine’s grain and oilseeds harvest, which amounted to 106 million tons in 2021, would likely only reach up to 65 million tons this year, due to land lost to Russian forces and lower crop yields.

Moscow blames Ukraine for the lack of exports, saying it’s caused by Ukrainian forces mining their waters against Russian ships. Kyiv and its allies maintain that Russia’s invasion and the Russian navy’s control over crucial Black Sea shipping lanes is to blame.

— Natasha Turak

Boris Johnson pledges to increase U.K. defense spending to 2.5% GDP by end of decade

The U.K. will spend 2.5% of its gross domestic product (GDP) on defense by 2030, Prime Minister Boris Johnson said.

“We need to invest for the long term in vital capabilities like future combat air, whilst simultaneously adapting to a more dangerous and more competitive world,” Johnson said at a news conference.

“The logical conclusion of the investments on which we propose to embark, these decisions, is that we’ll reach 2.5% of GDP on defense by the end of the decade.”

NATO member states are supposed to spend at least 2% of their annual GDP on defense, though not all states have followed this rule. Johnson has previously said he sees that 2% as a “floor” rather than a “ceiling.”

Britain’s defense spending is expected to reach 2.3% of GDP for 2022 because of its military support for Ukraine.

— Natasha Turak

Putin says pressure from West is pushing Russia and Belarus to integrate faster

Russia and its ally Belarus are furthering their economic and political integration as a result of Western sanctions and isolation, Russian President Vladimir Putin said via video message at a forum for the two countries.

“Russia and Belarus continue to grow in their cooperation in the political, trade, economic, cultural and humanitarian spheres,” Putin said. “The unprecedented political and social pressure from the so-called collective West is pushing us to speed up the unification process.”

“Together it is easier to minimize the damage from the illegal sanctions, it is easier to set up the production of demanded products, develop new competencies and expand cooperation with friendly countries,” he said.

Russian troops have used Belarus as a staging ground for incursions into Ukraine, although Belarus says it has not sent any of its own troops into Ukraine. Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko, while supported by Moscow and a close ally of Putin, has previously said he is against the war and that he did not expect it to “drag on” for so long.

— Natasha Turak

EU flag is hoisted in Ukraine’s parliament in Kyiv

The EU flag was brought to the floor of the Ukrainian parliament in Kyiv and hoisted following a video address by European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen.

“You have gained the endorsement and respect of all EU member states,” she said. “Ukraine now has a very clear European perspective, it is a candidate country for the EU.”

Ukraine formally became a candidate country for the EU last week, a major step in joining the bloc as part of a process that President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said “should not take years or decades.”

Matti Maasikas, ambassador of the European Union to Ukraine, tweeted a video of the flag-raising, writing, “Moving to tears – the EU flag is been brought to the plenary hall of @ua_parliament. To stay.”

— Natasha Turak

At least 18 people dead after Russian strike on Odesa

A Russian missile strike in Ukraine’s southern Odesa region killed at least 18 people, among them two children, the local governor said.

“As a result of a night missile strike by Tu-22 strategic aircraft from the Black Sea in the Belgorod-Dniester district of Odesa region, three X-22 missiles hit an apartment building and a recreation center,” Odesa regional governor Maksym Marchenko wrote on his Telegram channel, according to a Google translation.

“As of 9am, 18 victims were identified, including 2 children, and 31 people were hospitalized, including 4 children and a pregnant woman. Another 8 sought medical help. 8 people were rescued from the rubble, including 3 children. Rescue work continues.” he added.

CNBC has not been able to independently verify the information. Moscow has denied responsibility for the strike.

Odesa is a strategically important port city whereby much of Ukraine’s exports are shipped out via the Black Sea. Those food exports have been paralyzed by Russia’s navy which is controlling and blocking vital shipping routes, sending global food prices soaring.

— Natasha Turak

Russian trial for American basketball player Brittney Griner begins

American basketball player Brittney Griner, who has been detained in Russia since Feb. 17, arrived at a Moscow court for her trial. The Olympic gold medalist was accused by Russian authorities of having cannabis oil in her luggage and smuggling the narcotic material, a crime that could draw a 10-year jail sentence.

U.S. officials argue that Griner is being wrongfully detained. U.S. national security advisor Jake Sullivan said this week that the athlete is being “wrongfully detained, unjustly detained, and we have made that clear as an official determination of the U.S. government.”

— Natasha Turak

An iron curtain is ‘already descending’ between Russia and the West, Russia says

An iron curtain between Russia and the West is essentially already here, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said, describing the political and economic wall that has formed following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

“As far as an iron curtain is concerned, essentially it is already descending,” Lavrov said after talks with Belarus’s foreign minister, according to a translation by AFP.

He added that the EU made no effort to understand Russia’s interests, saying it’s “interested in what has been decided in Brussels. And what has been decided in Washington has been decided in Brussels.”

Since early March and the imposition of numerous sanctions on Russia by the West, which cut off many travel, finance and business ties, many historians have invoked the so-called “iron curtain” in describing international relations.

The term was first popularized by former British Prime Minister Winston Churchill in 1946 to describe the political, military, and ideological barrier erected by the Soviet Union under Joseph Stalin to seal itself off from the West.

— Natasha Turak

Biden says U.S. will stick with Ukraine for ‘as long as it takes’

U.S. President Joe Biden has pledged to support Ukraine for as long as necessary. He was speaking at the end of a NATO summit in Madrid that saw the alliance agree to massively ramp up its troop presence in eastern Europe.

When asked during a new conference Thursday if there was any limit to U.S. spending on aid for Kyiv, Biden replied, “We’re gonna stick with Ukraine, and all of the allies will stick with Ukraine, as long as it takes, and in fact make sure they are not defeated.”

Biden also announced a new $800 million military aid package for the country as the war enters its fifth month.

— Natasha Turak

Zelenskyy thanks Ukrainian troops following Russian withdrawal from Snake Island

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy thanked Ukrainian forces following the liberation of Snake Island, a remote island off the south of Ukraine.

“Undoubtedly, the main word today is ‘Snake.’ Apparently, there was just as much talk about Zmiinyi (Snake) Island only on the day when the Russian ship arrived there. Then the ship left forever and now the island is free again,” Zelenskyy said via the Telegram messaging platform, according to an NBC News translation.

Ukrainian officials said earlier that Russian troops evacuated Snake Island, which was taken by Russian forces on the first day of the invasion. Russia’s Ministry of Defense also confirmed the withdrawal.

 — Amanda Macias

Trudeau says Canada will increase its troop presence in Latvia

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says his government will increase Canada’s troop presence in Latvia as part of NATO’s commitment to strengthen its deterrence measures along Russia’s border.

Trudeau made the announcement at the close of the three-day NATO summit in Madrid. He did not give specific numbers.

Canada leads NATO’s battlegroup in Latvia of around 2,000 soldiers in total. Albania, the Czech Republic, Italy, Montenegro, Poland, Slovakia, Slovenia and Spain also provide troops to the group.

“We will be bolstering our military deployment in Latvia and work with other allies to be able to rapidly augment our current strength to our combat capable brigade when required,” Trudeau said.

Trudeau said his government also wants to send up to 39 armored combat support vehicles to Ukraine along with six additional drone cameras to help fight the Russian invasion.

— Associated Press

Read CNBC’s previous live coverage here:

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2022/07/01/russia-ukraine-live-updates.html

WASHINGTON – Today, President Biden named seventeen recipients of the Presidential Medal of Freedom.

The Presidential Medal of Freedom is the Nation’s highest civilian honor, presented to individuals who have made exemplary contributions to the prosperity, values, or security of the United States, world peace, or other significant societal, public or private endeavors.

President Biden has long said that America can be defined by one word: possibilities. These seventeen Americans demonstrate the power of possibilities and embody the soul of the nation – hard work, perseverance, and faith. They have overcome significant obstacles to achieve impressive accomplishments in the arts and sciences, dedicated their lives to advocating for the most vulnerable among us, and acted with bravery to drive change in their communities – and across the world – while blazing trails for generations to come.

The awards will be presented at the White House on July 7, 2022.

The following individuals will be awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom:

Simone Biles

Simone Biles is the most decorated American gymnast in history, with a combined total of 32 Olympic and World Championship medals. Biles is also a prominent advocate for athletes’ mental health and safety, children in the foster care system, and victims of sexual assault.

Sister Simone Campbell

Sister Simone Campbellis a member of the Sisters of Social Service and former Executive Director of NETWORK, a Catholic social justice organization. She is also a prominent advocate for economic justice, immigration reform, and healthcare policy.

Julieta García

Dr. Julieta García is the former president of The University of Texas at Brownsville, where she was named one of Time magazine’s best college presidents. Dr. García was the first Hispanic woman to serve as a college president and dedicated her career to serving students from the Southwest Border region.

Gabrielle Giffords

Former Congresswoman Gabby Giffords was the youngest woman ever elected to the Arizona State Senate, serving first in the Arizona legislature and later in the U.S. Congress. A survivor of gun violence, she co-founded Giffords, a nonprofit organization dedicated to gun violence prevention.

Fred Gray

Fred Gray was one of the first black members of the Alabama State legislature since Reconstruction. As an attorney, he represented Rosa Parks, the NAACP, and Martin Luther King, who called him “the chief counsel for the protest movement.”

Steve Jobs (posthumous)

Steve Jobs (d. 2011) was the co-founder, chief executive, and chair of Apple, Inc., CEO of Pixar and held a leading role at the Walt Disney Company. His vision, imagination and creativity led to inventions that have, and continue to, change the way the world communicates, as well as transforming the computer, music, film and wireless industries.

Father Alexander Karloutsos

Father Alexander Karloutsos is the former Vicar General of the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America. After over 50 years as a priest, providing counsel to several U.S. presidents, he was named by His All Holiness Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew as a Protopresbyter of the Ecumenical Patriarchate.

Khizr Khan

Khizr Khanis a Gold Star father and founder of the Constitution Literacy and National Unity Center. He is a prominent advocate for the rule of law and religious freedom and served on the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom under President Biden.

Sandra Lindsay

Sandra Lindsayis a New York critical care nurse who served on the front lines of the COVID-19 pandemic response. She was the first American to receive a COVID-19 vaccine outside of clinical trials and is a prominent advocate for vaccines and mental health for health care workers.

John McCain (posthumous)

John McCain (d. 2018) was a public servant who was awarded a Purple Heart with one gold star for his service in the U.S. Navy in Vietnam. He also served the people of Arizona for decades in the U.S. House of Representatives and U.S. Senate and was the Republican nominee for president in 2008.

Diane Nash

Diane Nash is a founding member of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee who organized some of the most important civil rights campaigns of the 20th century. Nash worked closely with Martin Luther King, who described her as the “driving spirit in the nonviolent assault on segregation at lunch counters.”

Megan Rapinoe

Megan Rapinoeis an Olympic gold medalist and two-time Women’s World Cup champion. She also captains OL Reign in the National Women’s Soccer League. She is a prominent advocate for gender pay equality, racial justice, and LGBTQI+ rights.

Alan Simpson

Alan Simpson served as a U.S. Senator from Wyoming for 18 years. During his public service, he has been a prominent advocate on issues including campaign finance reform, responsible governance, and marriage equality.

Richard Trumka (posthumous)

Richard Trumka (d. 2021)was president of the 12.5-million-member AFL-CIO for more than a decade, president of the United Mine Workers, and secretary-treasurer of the AFL-CIO. Throughout his career, he was an outspoken advocate for social and economic justice.

Wilma Vaught

Brigadier General Wilma Vaughtis one of the most decorated women in the history of the U.S. military, repeatedly breaking gender barriers as she rose through the ranks. When she retired in 1985, she was one of only seven women generals in the Armed Forces.

Denzel Washington

Denzel Washington is an actor, director, and producer who has won two Academy Awards, a Tony Award, two Golden Globes, and the 2016 Cecil B. DeMille Lifetime Achievement Award. He has also served as National Spokesman for the Boys & Girls Clubs of America for over 25 years.

Raúl Yzaguirre

Raúl Yzaguirre is a civil rights advocate who served as CEO and president of National Council of La Raza for thirty years. He also served as U.S. Ambassador to the Dominican Republic under President Barack Obama.

###

Source Article from https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/statements-releases/2022/07/01/president-biden-announces-recipients-of-the-presidential-medal-of-freedom/

“The majority has overruled Roe and Casey for one and only one reason: because it has always despised them, and now it has the votes to discard them,” they wrote. “The majority thereby substitutes a rule by judges for the rule of law.”

The court decided 58 cases, a slight uptick from the last two terms, which had been affected by the pandemic. But the number of signed decisions in argued cases was nonetheless the third lowest since 1937.

Nineteen decisions were decided by 6-to-3 votes, and in 13 of them all three Democratic appointees dissented. Those cases included ones on abortion, gun rights, climate change, school prayer, government aid to religious schools, the death penalty, campaign finance and limits on suits against government officials.

“The Supreme Court went a lot farther a lot faster than I expected it to this term,” said Tara Leigh Grove, a law professor at the University of Texas at Austin.

There were, however, some divisions on the right. “The conservative wing of the court is not a monolith,” said Roman Martinez, a Supreme Court specialist with Latham & Watkins, “and there are real and significant differences between how far to push the law in a more originalist direction, and how fast.”

The most significant example of this was Chief Justice Roberts’s opinion in the abortion case, which would have upheld the restrictive Mississippi law at issue but would have stopped short of overruling Roe in so many words. The chief justice’s failure to attract a single vote for that approach was telling, Professor Epstein said.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2022/07/01/us/supreme-court-term-roe-guns-epa-decisions.html

Good morning.

Donald Trump’s former aide Cassidy Hutchinson was told by an associate of the former White House chief of staff Mark Meadows not to cooperate with the House January 6 select committee, two sources familiar with the matter have said.

Hutchinson received a message from an associate of Meadows saying: “[A person] let me know you have your deposition tomorrow. He wants me to let you know that he’s thinking about you. He knows you’re loyal, and you’re going to do the right thing when you go in for your deposition.” The redaction was Meadows, the sources said, but the associate’s identity could not be confirmed on Thursday night.

Hutchinson also told the House investigators about a call from a Trump ally. “What they said to me is, as long as I continue to be a team player, they know that I’m on the team, I’m doing the right thing, I’m protecting who I need to protect, you know, I’ll continue to stay in the good graces in Trump World,” she said, adding that she was told to “bear in mind” that Trump will be reading the hearing’s transcripts.

  • What did the panel say? Vice-chair Liz Cheney described the message from Meadows’ associate as improper pressure on a witness that could extend to illegal witness tampering or intimidation.

Russian missile strikes in Odesa kill 17, Ukraine says

Emergency crews at work after Russian missiles hit an apartment building in Odesa, Ukraine, early on Friday. Photograph: Ukraine emergency services

Russian strikes on an apartment building and a recreation centre in the southern Ukrainian city of Odesa killed at least 17 in the early hours of Friday, officials in Ukraine have said.

The state emergency services (SES) said that by 6am on Friday, 14 people had been killed and 30 injured, including three children, in the attack on the nine-storey residential building. Three others, including one child, were killed in an attack on the strike on the recreation centre, with one injured, said the SES.

The Guardian could not immediately confirm details of the incident. It comes after:

Outrage as US supreme court climate ruling ‘condemns everyone alive’

The ruling essentially jeopardizes the federal government’s ability to regulate emissions.
Photograph: Radius Images/Alamy

Climate scientists, lawyers and activists have described the supreme court’s ruling to curb the Environmental Protection Agency’s regulatory power as “devastating”.

The court’s conservative majority voted 6-3 for leading coal producer West Virginia, which sued for the EPA to have less regulatory power over fossil fuel-fired power plants without express authorization from Congress under the Clean Air Act.

The result means it may now be impossible for the US to achieve its target of halving greenhouse gas emissions by 2030 through available avenues.

  • What did the ruling determine? The court’s said the Clean Air Act does not authorize anything other than direct regulation of power plants.

  • What did Joe Biden say? “The supreme court’s ruling in West Virginia v EPA is another devastating decision that aims to take our country backwards.” He added that he would “not relent” in using his lawful authorities to tackle the climate emergency.

In other news …

Emergency personnel work to put out a forest fire in Machu Picchu.
Photograph: Ministry of Culture of Peru/Reuters
  • Peruvian firefighters are battling a blaze that is threatening to close in on the Incan ruins of Machu Picchu. The fire was started on Tuesday by farmers burning grass to sow crops.

  • New Zealand’s government has designated the American far-right groups the Proud Boys and the Base as terrorist organisations, joining a list of 18 others, including Islamic State. The move makes it illegal to fund, recruit or participate in the groups.

  • A Texas woman suspected in the fatal shooting of the professional cyclist Anna Moriah Wilson has been arrested in Costa Rica, the US Marshals Service said. Wilson, 25, was found dead on 11 May, and Austin police on 19 May issued a murder warrant for Kaitlin Marie Armstrong, 34.

  • The personal information of hundreds of thousands of California gun owners has been exposed in a data breach, the state’s department of justice has said, conceding the leak was far wider than it initially reported. The attorney general has ordered an inquiry.

Stat of the day: small-scale fishing communities catch more than half of the world’s fish for human consumption

A salmon farm in Puerto Montt, Chile. Small fisheries say marine wildlife is suffering because of fish farming. Photograph: Francisco Negroni/Alamy

Despite hauling in more than half of the world’s fish caught for human consumption, small-scale fishing communities say their voices are being ignored in favor of corporate interests. “We see the damage to the fish breeding grounds. We are the ones who fight malnutrition. We need more practitioners here to tell their stories,” said the vice-president of the African Women Fish Processors and Traders Network.

Don’t miss this: ‘An old strain of English magic had returned’: stars on why they fell in love with Kate Bush

Kate Bush. Photograph: Official Charts Company/OfficialCharts.com/PA

A new generation has discovered Kate Bush’s music after Running Up that Hill appeared in an episode of Stranger Things – 37 years after its release. Here, artists share how the singer changed their lives and influenced them musically, with Placebo’s Brian Molko explaining what led the band to cover the track. “Kate created her own emotional universe,” he says.

Last Thing: You be the judge: should my girlfriend’s dog stop sleeping in our bed?

You be the judge. Illustration: Joren Joshua/The Guardian

New homeowner Ronnie is happy for his girlfriend, Tilda, to bring her jack russell terrier along when she comes over – but draws the line at letting the dog into his bed. While Tilda wants her inside the duvet, claiming she’s “super clean”, Ronnie can’t get a decent night’s sleep with the dog lying on him. Who’s in the wrong?

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Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2022/jul/01/first-thing-mark-meadows-associate-threatened-ex-white-house-aide

The Supreme Court ruled on Thursday to limit the Environmental Protection Agency’s ability to strictly regulate emissions from power plants, a move that signals a major setback in the fight against the climate crisis.

In a 6-3 opinion along ideological lines, the nation’s highest court ruled in West Virginia v. EPA that the federal agency does not have the authority to regulate industry greenhouse gas emissions. The case stems from former President Obama’s Clean Power Plan, which would have enforced mandates for how much emissions power plants could emit. The plan was never officially implemented as it faced legal challenges and was rolled back under the Trump administration.

The court’s opinion states that when it comes to capping carbon dioxide emissions, “is not plausible that Congress gave EPA the authority to adopt on its own such a regulatory scheme.” It also said that a “decision of such magnitude and consequence” should reside with Congress. 

In a statement, President Biden called it a “devastating decision” that “risks damaging our nation’s ability to keep our air clean and combat climate change.”

He added, “I will not relent in using my lawful authorities to protect public health and tackle the climate crisis.”

Some Republicans, including Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, applauded the decision, but supporters of climate action quickly condemned it. 

Climate and health behavioral scientist Sweta Chakraborty, president of the climate solutions group We Don’t Have Time, told CBS News the court “took a sledgehammer to one of EPA’s most important tools.”

“We’re talking about increased air pollution that has impacts on human health, the environment, and generally our future trajectory towards planet warming, which we desperately need to veer off of,” she said, adding later, “The fossil fuel interests behind this case claiming victory today are taking us back 50 years to when Big Oil and other corporations could pump deadly pollution into our air and water without any limits.”

And it’s not just carbon emissions. The Supreme Court’s decision also sets a “dangerous precedent” that other EPA regulations can be dismissed, she said.

“This is really going against all of the evidence and science that we know is requiring more regulation,” Chakraborty said. “Having this type of ruling is actually saying … we can actually unapologetically support the polluting of our communities in the United States. And that’s an extremely dangerous path to go down.”

A “real setback” in tackling climate change

Power plants and smokestacks are “one of the single largest sources” of national and global climate pollution, according to Environmental Defense Fund general counsel Vickie Patton. That’s what the regulations at issue in this case sought to address.

“Today’s Supreme Court ruling undermines EPA’s authority to protect people from smokestack climate pollution at a time when all evidence shows we must take action with great urgency,” she said on Thursday. “This is judicial overreach.” 

While the case was still undergoing review by the Supreme Court, Patton told CBS News, the EPA was “quite clear” that any regulations would come from a clean slate and involved all stakeholders to develop pollution standards. “A number of” power companies also expressed support for the EPA’s authority, as well as the American Medical Association and American Academy of Pediatrics, among others, she said.

The industry sector, according to the EPA, accounts for 24% of greenhouse gas emissions in the U.S. — most of which is from the burning of fossil fuels. Greenhouse gases, primarily carbon dioxide, trap heat in the atmosphere, increasing global temperatures.

The United Nations and scientists around the world have warned for years that failing to significantly reduce greenhouse gas emissions will result in “extreme” and “unprecedented” impacts around the world, including more catastrophic storm damage, devastating droughts, and threats to health and the global economy

“Decisions like today’s … make it harder to meet the goals of the Paris Agreement, for a healthy, liveable planet,” Stéphane Dujarric, a spokesperson for the U.N. Secretary General, said in a statement, CBS News correspondent Pamela Falk reports. “But we also need to remember that an emergency as global in nature as climate change requires a global response, and the actions of a single nation should not and cannot make or break whether we reach our climate objectives.” 

A danger to human health 

The U.N. has warned that the world needs to stay below 1.5 degrees Celsius of global warming, compared to pre-industrial levels, to minimize the worst impacts of climate change. Doing so is critical, Chakraborty said, as “human health and the warming of the planet is inextricably linked.” 

“If we actually discuss this in terms of human health impacts, the more we increase the temperature of the planet, the more we’re increasing air pollution, as well, which has negative detrimental health outcomes,” she said, adding, “those that are most likely to experience it first and foremost, our vulnerable communities.”

A 2021 study found that fossil fuel air pollution is responsible for causing nearly 1 in 5 deaths worldwide every year. This year, the World Health Organization found that 99% of the world is breathing poor-quality air, mostly because of fossil fuel emissions. 

In the U.S., the impacts of climate change have historically impacted low-income communities and people of color the most. Industrial facilities are often located in these areas, polluting the air and causing health problems for people who live nearby. 

Along with experiencing poorer air quality, people in these areas are also more likely to bear the brunt of higher global temperatures, Chakraborty said. And an increase in fossil fuel emissions in the absence of federal regulation will only amplify those conditions.

“These districts that have been redlined, on average, experience higher temperatures by a few degrees to five or six degrees than their more affluent communities. And that is dangerous for human health,” she said. “…These communities will continue to suffer. We are seeing a continued legacy of environmental racism with the Supreme Court decision.” 

For Michele Roberts, co-coordinator for the Environmental Justice and Health Alliance for Chemical Policy Reform, this is an issue that hits home. CBS News spoke with her as she was with her family in Wilmington, Delaware, where people of color have long felt the effects of a lack of climate resiliency. 

Housing segregation and redlining has resulted in communities with majority Black and Brown populations suffering from flooding and other weather- and health-related issues. Without adequate steps to reduce rising temperatures, those problems will only heighten. 

“For me, as a Black woman, post-Freddie Gray and ‘I can’t breathe” and Black Lives Matter and all of these things, I hope that this is the push that this entire country needs,” she said of the Supreme Court’s decision. “My father died a week ago knowing these things were happening. My father was 87 years old and said ‘It’s on you now.’ But he said, ‘the good news is, if you all have the sense to work together, you can get it done.'”

“Self-regulation doesn’t exist” 

Without federal oversight, many experts have little faith that industries will reduce their greenhouse gas emissions. Chakraborty said the efforts being made to do so are “too few and too far in between.” 

“Self-regulation doesn’t exist in the fossil fuel industry,” she said. “…I think it’s very clear that the primary motivation for oil and gas executives is to continue to line their pockets to continue to get the support of shareholders so that conservatives in Congress can put forward legislation that continues to allow for oil and gas drilling.” 

The only way to ensure emissions are reduced is to enforce strict regulations, Chakraborty said, noting that revamped policies, including clean energy tax credits and ending oil and gas subsidies, are essential in tackling the crisis. 

“With this ruling coming out of the Supreme Court, we’re actually going back to supporting dirty energy. … We are allowing for a free-for-all,” she said. “And it couldn’t be a worse time. We are in a climate emergency.”

Patton said the response requires “all hands on deck,” particularly when it comes to the Biden administration’s plans, and the president’s pledge to cut climate pollution in half by 2030.

“That’s the commitment that we all have a stake in working toward, to save lives and to build a stronger clean energy economy for all,” she said.

Roberts said she hopes the setback from the court will be an “extra push” for change. 

“We came together because of the failures and the inconsistencies with the climate and with the climate polices that really were not impacting everyone,” she said. “…After decisions like the one have been made, now it’s time for us to organize, educate, mobilize and take action. And that’s what we’re ready to do.” 

Source Article from https://www.cbsnews.com/news/supreme-court-epa-decision-climate-change-greenhouse-gas-emissions/

In addition to overturning a nearly half-century-long federal right to an abortion, the court struck down gun-licensing laws in the most populous states, expanded state funding for religious schools, broadened the rights of public-school employees to pray publicly at work and halted lower court orders requiring two states to redraw congressional boundaries to give minority voters a better chance of electing candidates of their choice.

“What the court did just on abortion, guns and congressional power in the last eight days—that alone is momentous [but] if these justices stay together over the next few years, I don’t even think the first shoe has dropped,” University of California at Irvine Law Professor Rick Hasen said. “There’s so much more the Supreme Court could do to change American society.”

On Thursday, minutes after dealing a severe blow to President Joe Biden’s plan to reduce power-plant emissions to combat climate change, the high court announced it will take up a case from North Carolina next term that could give state legislatures vast power to draw district lines and set election rules even if state courts, commissions or executive officials disagree.

The so-called independent state legislature theory has lingered at the fringes of election-law debates for years, but was seized upon by former President Donald Trump in 2020 in his unsuccessful efforts to overturn Biden’s win.

“It’s kind of uncharted territory,” Hasen said. “It could have some far-reaching and unintended consequences.”

A sweeping Supreme Court ruling on the state-legislature issue might give state lawmakers the authority to appoint presidential electors, regardless of what state courts say or how a majority of a state’s voters cast their ballots.

In the 30 states with Republican legislatures, a ruling upholding the theory could give the GOP a big leg up in more routine House and Senate elections. But the effect in Democratic-run states could also be polarizing, with a redistricting commission in California put out of business and efforts by New York courts to limit gerrymandering reversed.

That case will join other polarizing issues already on the docket for next term: a new Voting Rights Act challenge from Alabama, a pair of cases challenging race-based affirmative action programs in higher education and a case brought by a web designer claiming that she should be able to ignore a Colorado law barring discrimination against same-sex couples.

As with many of the cases the Supreme Court decided in recent weeks, any of those cases could qualify as the most significant of an ordinary court term, but the justices have decided to hear them all.

Conservatives are almost giddy with the results of the first full court-term with six conservative justices since the court struck down much of President Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal in the 1930s.

“This was the most successful term in my memory for the Constitution and the rule of law,” said Carrie Severino, president of the Judicial Crisis Network and a former law clerk to Justice Clarence Thomas. “We now clearly have a majority of the court that’s willing to enforce the Constitution as written, even when under unprecedented outside pressure, threats and intimidation—even an attempted assassination.”

A statistical analysis by Adam Feldman of the Empirical SCOTUS website found conservative victories in close cases at the highest level since the 2017 term. Feldman said the arrival of Justice Amy Coney Barrett has also made it easier for conservatives to get the four votes needed to take a case.

“I think the big story is that the court was able to pick up cases that could push policy in a much more rightward direction now,” he said.

The string of sweeping, far-reaching decisions this term has led many Democrats to charge that the court is losing its legitimacy with the public, but a former Senate Judiciary Committee counsel Mike Davis said that is simply sour grapes over the outcome.

“The Supreme Court is not supposed to be democratically representative by design,” said Davis, former nominations counsel to Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa). “They’re supposed to protect minority rights and us from government, whether it’s tyranny or anarchy….The Democrats, the left, are trying to delegitimize the Supreme Court because they lost control of it.”

Many on the left have seized on Thomas’ musings in the abortion case about the court revisiting rights to same-sex marriage or contraception, abortion-rights opponents said they don’t see the court having the appetite to delve into those issues anytime soon.

James Bopp Jr, general counsel for National Right to Life and a prominent litigator on life and campaign finance issues, said he was elated about the abortion ruling.

“I couldn’t be more thrilled this was culmination of the life’s work. I’ve been waiting for this day since I was a senior in law school,” Bopp said.

However, the conservative lawyer said he thinks Thomas’ thoughts about same-sex marriage and contraception precedents are no indication that those are issues the court plans to dive into.

“I learned a long time ago it takes five votes. You will notice that no other justice joined his concurrence,” Bopp said.

Severino agreed, saying she expects major legal battles over abortion at the state level, while the Supreme Court remains focused on other issues like expanding rights to religious expression. The court did just that this term in the so-called praying coach case out of Washington state and is poised to grapple with similar questions this fall in the case about the religious, Colorado web designer who is asserting a right to refuse to serve same-sex couples.

“Freedom of conscience is an area that is likely to continue to be really significant,” she said.

The high court and the conservative legal movement also seem intent on keeping up pressure to chop back the power of federal agencies to regulate everything from automobiles to marketing to pollution.

One of the Supreme Court’s final rulings Thursday, delivered 6-3 along the usual ideological lines, rejected the Biden administration’s plan to try to limit climate change by reducing greenhouse cases from power plants. The ruling was not as hostile to agency authority as some expected, but still left little leeway for the administration to implement carbon-emission limits without Congress.

Other cases that could be more damaging to federal agency power are looming. One case decided last month by the New Orleans-based 5th Circuit could upend the Securities and Exchange Commission’s enforcement efforts by requiring all such cases be brought in federal district courts, rather than in front of administrative law judges. That decision could wind up at the Supreme Court within a year or two, prompting the justices to consider whether Congress went too far in delegating power to the SEC.

“Anything that relies on a very general mandate from Congress is at risk,” Fordham University Law Professor Jed Shugerman said.

As more pitched battles loom, Severino also vowed that the enormous victory for the conservative legal movement in the abortion case after decades of strategizing, litigating, fundraising and organizing doesn’t mean that those advocates are going to declare victory and go home.

“It’s not about that one case. It’s about an approach to judging,” she said. “No one’s going to throw up their hands and say, ‘OK, we’re done.’”

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2022/06/30/the-conservative-supreme-court-is-just-getting-warmed-up-00043656

SAN ANTONIO (AP) — The tractor-trailer at the center of a human-smuggling attempt that left 53 people dead had passed through an inland U.S. Border Patrol checkpoint with migrants inside the sweltering rig earlier in its journey, a U.S. official said Thursday.

The truck went through the checkpoint on Interstate 35 located 26 miles (42 kilometers) northeast of the border city of Laredo, Texas.

The official, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss an ongoing investigation, said there were 73 people in the truck when it was discovered Monday in San Antonio, including the 53 who died. It was unclear if agents stopped the driver for questioning at the inland checkpoint or if the truck went through unimpeded.

The disclosure brings new attention to an old policy question of whether the roughly 110 inland highway checkpoints along the Mexican and Canadian borders are sufficiently effective at spotting people in cars and trucks who enter the United States illegally. They are generally located up to 100 miles (160 kilometers) from the border.

Texas state police also announced they would operate their own inland checkpoints for tractor-trailers on the orders of Gov. Greg Abbott, who considers the Biden administration’s efforts insufficient. It was unclear how many trucks they would be stopping.

Also Thursday, Homero Zamorano Jr., 45, the alleged driver of the tractor-trailer, made his initial appearance in San Antonio federal court. During a hearing that lasted about five minutes, Zamorano, wearing a white T-shirt and gray sweatpants, said very little, giving yes and no answers to questions from U.S. Magistrate Judge Elizabeth Chestney about his rights and the charges against him.

The judge appointed a federal public defender for Zamorano as well as a second attorney since the smuggling charge he faces carries a possible death sentence. She scheduled a hearing next week to determine if he is eligible for bail.

It remained unclear just how long the migrants were in the trailer on the sweltering day and whether having their cell phones confiscated by the smugglers before being placed inside contributed to the extremely high death toll. Emergency calls from trapped migrants have not emerged in this case as they have in earlier incidents.

On Thursday, José Santos Bueso of El Progreso, Honduras said his daughter, 37-year-old Jazmín Nayarith Bueso Núñez, told him in their last conversation that she was in Laredo, that the smugglers were going to take their phones and she would not be able to communicate for a time. She last messaged her 15-year-old son around midday Monday, saying they were about to head to San Antonio and she would be out of contact.

The U.S. Supreme Court ruled in 1976 that Border Patrol agents may stop vehicles at inland checkpoints for brief questioning without a warrant, even if there is no reason to believe that they are carrying people in the country illegally. Still, the practice has galvanized immigration advocates and civil libertarians who consider checkpoints ripe for racial profiling and abuse of authority. Some motorists post videos to social media accusing agents of heavy-handed, inappropriate questioning.

The Laredo-area checkpoint is on one of the busiest highways along the border, particularly for trucks, raising the possibility of choking commerce and creating havoc if every motorist is stopped and questioned.

Border Patrol officials call the checkpoints an imperfect but effective second line of defense after the border, acknowledging that agents must balance law enforcement interests with disrupting legitimate commerce and travel.

Volume and configuration vary widely among checkpoints, but agents generally have five to seven seconds to decide whether to question a driver, said Roy Villareal, former chief of the Border Patrol’s Tucson, Arizona, sector.

“Ultimately, it’s very difficult to ascertain with crime in general. It’s hard to say whether you’re 100% effective, 50%, 10%.”

U.S. Rep. Henry Cuellar, who drives through the checkpoint almost weekly, said investigators believe the migrants boarded the truck in or around Laredo, though that is unconfirmed. That would be consistent with smuggling patterns: migrants cross the border on foot and hide in a house or in shrubbery on U.S. soil before getting picked up and taken to the nearest major city.

Even if the truck were empty, it would raise questions about the checkpoints. Migrants often perish trying to circumvent them, getting dropped off before reaching them with plans to get picked up on the other side. In Rio Grande Valley, the busiest corridor for illegal crossings, migrants walk through sweltering ranches to avoid a checkpoint in Falfurrias, Texas, about 70 miles (112 kilometers) north of the border.

The Government Accountability Office reported this month that agents at inland checkpoints detained about 35,700 people believed to be in the U.S. illegally from the 2016 to 2020 fiscal years, only about 2% of all Border Patrol arrests. Agents seized drugs nearly 18,000 times during that period with more than nine of 10 arrests involving U.S. citizens.

They have been a trap for U.S. citizens carrying even small bags of marijuana. About 40% of pot seizures at Border Patrol checkpoints from fiscal years 2013 to 2016 were an ounce (28 grams) or less from U.S. citizens, according to an earlier GAO report.

Abbott did not provide details on the extent of Texas’ new inland inspections announced Thursday. Lt. Chris Olivarez, a spokesman for the Texas Department of Public Safety, said troopers would take a “more aggressive stance.” Asked if that meant stopping every truck, Olivarez said he did not know and that it would partly depend on staffing.

“It’s going to be inspecting more than what we usually inspect,” Olivarez said.

In April, Abbott gridlocked Texas’ border for a week after issuing orders that troopers inspect every tractor-trailer entering from Mexico as part of his ongoing fight with the Biden administration over immigration policy. Those inspections, which were mechanical and safety inspections, did not turn up any migrants or drugs.

___

Spagat reported from San Diego. Paul Weber in Austin, Texas and Delmer Martínez in El Progreso, Honduras contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://apnews.com/article/texas-united-states-san-antonio-laredo-f80721c90620e40124adad62e684519b