Most Viewed Videos

Widgets Magazine <!–

–>

En las noticias más leías del día, la delegada en Tlalpan, Claudia Sheinbaum, informó que el Colegio Enrique Rébsamen estaba bien construido y tenía todos los papeles en regla. La mañana de este lunes se desalojó a todo el personal que labora en la Torre de Pemex tras recibir una amenaza de bomba, por protocolo de seguridad se procedió a evacuar para realizar la revisión correspondiente y Trump pidió a los dueños de los equipos que cuando alguno de sus jugadores se arrodille durante el himno, como protesta por el racismo, lo despida… pero sólo encontró rebeldía.

1. Las noticias falsas que cuentan otro terremoto del 19 de septiembre

El terremoto que colapsó el centro de México se ha convertido en una buena oportunidad para divulgar noticias documentos, videos o imágenes alteradas o falsas sobre el sismo y sus consecuencias, además de rumores que no corresponden a la realidad.

Estas noticias falsas han generado psicosis entre una sociedad que ya se encuentra apabullada por los resultados del temblor más mortífero sufrido por México desde 1985. Te decimos algunas noticias que resultaron ser falsas.

2. La NFL planta cara a Donald Trump

Las reacciones en las ligas deportivas más importantes de Estados Unidos como la NFL, NBA y MLB, no se hicieron esperar y protestaron contra las soeces críticas del presidente Donald Trump.

El mandatario pidió a los dueños de equipos de la NFL que despidan a los jugadores que se arrodillen durante el himno nacional y en la NBA, los actuales campeones Golden State Warriors, cancelaron su visita a la Casa Blanca. La MLB tuvo también su primera reacción cuando el pelotero de los Atléticos de Oakland se arrodilló durante la entonación del himno previo al duelo contra los Rangers.

3. Evacuan Torre de Pemex tras amenaza de bomba

Hoy por la mañana se desalojó a todo el personal que labora en la Torre de Pemex tras recibir una amenaza de bomba, por protocolo de seguridad se procedió a evacuar para realizar la revisión correspondiente.

Horas después la situación en el edificio ubicado en Marina Nacional 329, colonia Verónica Anzures, en la delegación Miguel Hidalgo fue aclarada y se informó que se trató de una falsa alarma.

4. Norcorea asegura que Trump les declaró la guerra

Corea del Norte, afirmó este lunes que Estados Unidosle declaró la guerrar y amenazó con derribar bombarderos estadounidenses.

“Trump proclamó que nuestro liderazgo no iba a permanecer mucho tiempo”, dijo el ministro norcoreano a la prensa afuera del hotel donde se hospeda en Nueva York. “Le declaró la guerra a nuestro país”, aseveró.
“Todos los Estados miembro y el mundo entero deberían recordar claramente que fue Estados Unidos el primero en declarar la guerra a nuestro país”, dijo Ri Yong Ho.

5. Colegio Rébsamen operaba con legalidad: Sheinbaum

Claudia Sheinbaum, delegada en Tlalpan, informó que el Colegio Enrique Rébsamen, que se colapsó por el sismo del martes pasado, estaba bien construido y tenía todos los papeles en regla, y que la atribución del uso de suelo le corresponde a la Secretaría de Desarrollo Urbano y Vivienda del gobierno capitalino.

Señaló que de acuerdo a la norma para la construcción de escuelas, el edificio del colegio que se colapsó tuvo una falla en términos estructurales, dado que el sismo en la zona tuvo una intensidad de 90.
Aclaró que la seguridad estructural de edificio es responsabilidad de un director de Obras y de un corresponsable de seguridad estructural.

@davee_son

Source Article from http://eleconomista.com.mx/politica/2017/09/25/5-noticias-dia-25-septiembre

El último acto masivo de Kirchner fue en diciembre, con la fiesta del aniversario de la Democracia.

La presidenta de Argentina, Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, siempre hizo de las apariciones públicas una de sus grandes aliadas en política.

Su elocuencia en los discursos, sus guiños a los jóvenes y los baños de masas siempre sirvieron a la mandataria para ganarse la confianza de sus seguidores.

Por eso a muchos extraña que lleve casi un mes sin participar de un acto público.

La última vez que se la vio en un evento oficial fue el 19 de diciembre, cuando presidió el ascenso del nuevo jefe del ejército, César Milani.

Unos días antes había encabezado las multitudinarias celebraciones por el 30 aniversario del retorno de la democracia al país, con una fiesta en la Plaza de Mayo.

Desde entonces, no se ha visto ni siquiera un tuit de la presidenta -conocida por su pasión por comunicarse a menudo por esta red social-, lo que ha generado una ola de especulaciones y despertado la crítica de algunos adversarios políticos.

clic

Incertidumbre económica y tensión política en Argentina

Pero ¿dónde está la mandataria argentina?

Fernández de Kirchner pasa estos días a camino entre la quinta de Olivos, la residencia presidencial, y el Sanatorio Otamendi de Buenos Aires.

Allí se encuentra internada su madre, Ofelia Wilhelm, quien fue operada de un tumor en el útero.

La presidenta incluso ha celebrado en la clínica una reunión con su ministro de Economía, Axel Kicillof, dentro de sus encuentros periódicos con los miembros de su gabinete, según informó la Casa Rosada.

Turbulencia económica

Me parece que tenemos que tomar conciencia que hay quienes quieren generar inestabilidad institucional y económica cuando dicen que no hay presidenta, cuando Cristina está activa y conduciendo, como siempre

Daniel Scioli, gobernador de Buenos Aires

Funcionarios oficialistas y simpatizantes del ejecutivo usan esta reunión como ejemplo de que Fernández de Kirchner sigue atenta a la situación del país y con las riendas del gobierno, en respuesta a quienes denuncian que Argentina tiene una “líder ausente”.

“Yo veo a la presidenta activa, conduciendo”, afirmó el gobernador de la provincia de Buenos Aires y uno de los aspirantes a sucederla en 2015, Daniel Scioli.

“Me parece que tenemos que tomar conciencia que hay quienes quieren generar inestabilidad institucional y económica cuando dicen que no hay presidenta, cuando Cristina está activa y conduciendo, como siempre”, aseguró.

Es precisamente la economía uno de los asuntos que más preocupación despierta estos días entre los argentinos.

De ahí que muchos reclamen mayor presencia pública de la jefa de Estado.

Las nuevas cifras oficiales de inflación -uno de los principales desafíos para la gestión kirchnerista- apuntan a un crecimiento de los precios de casi el 11% anual, aunque las consultoras privadas, que volvieron a publicar estos días sus resultados, hablan de más de un 28%.

La publicación de estos datos coincide con una caída de las reservas del país -que bajaron a los US$29.858 millones- hasta niveles no vistos desde hace siete años, lo que el gobierno atribuye al pago de la deuda pública.

Mientras, la cotización del dólar en el mercado negro, conocido como dólar blue y utilizado por argentinos que quieren viajar al exterior o atesorar dólares para el ahorro, alcanzó un récord de 11,55 pesos, cerca del doble de su valor oficial de 6,7.

Y esto a apenas unas semanas de que se discutan los aumentos de salarios entre sindicatos y empresarios para equiparar los sueldos al alza de la inflación.

“La ausencia de la presidenta hace que haya una cantidad de especulaciones, no sabemos qué es lo que está pasando”, dijo el líder sindicalista opositor Hugo Moyano, uno de los principales adversarios de la mandataria y con fuerte poder de movilización social.

Reposo

La mandataria fue operada en octubre de un hematoma en el cráneo.

En los últimos meses, Fernández redujo el ritmo de sus apariciones públicas, sobre todo desde que tuvo que ser operada por un hematoma en la cabeza en octubre, lo que la mantuvo en reposo durante varias semanas.

Después se vio obligada a reducir la intensidad de sus actos públicos por consejo médico.

La presidenta pasó luego sus vacaciones de Navidad con su familia en El Calafate, en la Patagonia, donde suele acudir a descansar.

Su ausencia de la capital en una de las peores olas de calor de la historia del país, coincidiendo con protestas sociales por los prolongados cortes de luz en numerosos barrios, alimentó la crítica de sus opositores.

Los medios argentinos especulan con la posibilidad de que Cristina Fernández de Kirchner vuelva al primer plano de la vida pública a finales de mes con una gira internacional que la lleve a Cuba, donde se celebrará una cumbre de la Comunidad de Estados Latinoamericanos y Caribeños, y después a Venezuela, sede de la reunión del Mercosur.

Kirchner, que tiene fama de resurgir aún con más fuerza de sus momentos de crisis, tendrá que enfrentarse esta vez al tramo final de su mandato, mientras sus aliados juegan sus cartas de cara a 2015 y sus críticos le recuerdan que la situación económica ya no es la misma que aquella con la que asumió el poder en 2007.

Source Article from http://www.bbc.co.uk/mundo/noticias/2014/01/140117_argentina_cristina_fernandez_kirchner_ausente_irm.shtml

A Mariló Montero ya no le hace tanta gracia ser Trending Topic, sobre todo cuando se pone en tela de juicio no sólo su profesionalidad sino también sus aptitudes y cualidades intelectuales. Por esa razón ha llamado al programa radiofónico de Carlos Alsina, La brújula, en el que un colaborador ha manifestado su ‘queja’ por que la cadena pública tenga presentadoras tan “incultas” en su plantilla, capaces de confundir el río Miño con el Nilo o no saber qué significan las siglas Q.E.P.D.

“Entro por alusiones, ya que se me ha llamado inculta. Yo reconozco que me equivoco, pero de ahí a llamarme inculta, no”, ha defendido con rotundidad. “He trabajado durante 30 años y jamás me han dicho eso. Os puedo desmontar todas y cada una de las cosas que se han dicho sobre mí y todos los TT cuando lo he sido”, ha declarado Montero, que también aclara que no es catedrática y que no le “ponen” los catedráticos.

Mariló Montero: Me han convertido en el bufón de España

“Probablemente sea una inculta para muchos y que no merezco estar en los medios de comunicación para otros, pero a veces hay que confirmar las cosas y no fiarse de los titulares de Twitter”, ha argumentado la presentadora de La mañana de La 1.

Mariló Montero tiene claro que han visto en ella un tirón mediático “y me han convertido en el bufón de España, y yo lo llevo bien y hasta me río de eso, pero que no se olvide de dónde vengo, los problemas que he tenido para llegar hasta aquí”.

En un momento dado de la entrevista, el colaborador que la ha llamado inculta ha vuelto a incomodar a Montero cuando ha sacado a colación un tema delicado: “¿Te acuerdas cuando murió Rafael Martínez Simancas y diste las condolencias a la Federación Socialista madrileña? Es que…”. Y la comunicadora lo ha negado en redondo: “Jamás he dicho yo eso, nunca”. Ha zanjado la entrevista pidiendo comprensión, sobre todo “cuando llevas horas y horas de televisión en directo y te despistas por algo”. 

Source Article from http://www.vanitatis.elconfidencial.com/cine-tv/2014-09-27/marilo-montero-me-han-convertido-en-el-bufon-de-espana_216784/

Mr. Tusk’s plan would need the backing of the leaders of European Union member states.

In asking for an extension until June 30 — the same date she once asked for but which the European Union previously rejected — Mrs. May was bowing to pressure from within her Conservative Party not to be seen as forcing the country into a longer delay. But she was also laying the ground for a more protracted extension by agreeing that Britain was prepared to participate in European elections in May. That was seen in Brussels as a condition for another Brexit postponement.

Mrs. May has sought over the past week to break months of deadlock by meeting with the leader of the opposition Labour Party, Jeremy Corbyn, to try to reach an agreement. But she said in her letter to Mr. Tusk that if those talks did not produce a compromise, she would hold a series of votes in Parliament on alternative paths in the hopes that lawmakers would eventually settle on one.

“This impasse cannot be allowed to continue,” Mrs. May wrote. “In the U.K. it is creating uncertainty and doing damage to faith in politics, while the European Union has a legitimate desire to move on to decisions about its own future.”

The prime minister’s Brexit deal has already been rejected three times by British lawmakers, and there is likely to be a lively debate in Brussels on whether — or more particularly, on what terms — to grant a second extension. Britain was originally scheduled to leave the bloc on March 29, but European leaders granted a short extension to give Parliament more time to approve the withdrawal deal.

Mrs. May and Mr. Corbyn met on Wednesday, and teams from both sides continued the discussions on Thursday. The session ended with neither breakthroughs nor breakdowns.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/04/05/world/europe/brexit-extension-may-eu.html

“Nunca en estos cuatro años este congreso votó en contra de los intereses del pueblo argentino. De eso podemos sentirnos orgullosos”, celebró el presidente de la Cámara Baja, Julián Domínguez, al dar por cerrada la sesión en su despedida, luego de la votación de un paquete de más de 90 leyes.

La novela legislativa comenzó tras votar el primer punto del temario, que era la creación de YCF, los diputados continuaron a analizar el resto de las iniciativas, aunque luego la sesión se quedó sin quórum, por la ida de cuatro diputados del bloque: tres riojanos, que responde al gobernador Luis Beder Herrera (Javier Tineo, Griselda Herrera y Teresita Madera), y la bonaerense Dulce Granados, esposa del secretario de Seguridad bonaerense, Alejandro Granados. También hubo ausentes, como el santafesino Omar Perotti.

Di Tullio estuvo obligada a pedir dos cuartos intermedios para alcanzar el número necesario de 130 legisladores para sesionar. Después de las 18, con la aparición del diputado del FpV por Tucumás, Isaac Bromberg, se recuperó el quórum.

El diputado Claudio Lozano, presidente del bloque UP, sostuvo que “Unidad Popular participa y da quórum en la sesión del día de hoy con el objeto de aprobar un proyecto que repara las necesidades, la lucha y el compromiso de los trabajadores y la comunidad de Río Turbio al crear la Sociedad del Estado de Yacimientos Carboníferos Fiscales”.

Durante la espera para alcanzar el número de legisladores necesarios para continuar la sesión, Lozano señaló: “No tiene que haber lugar a la hipocresía, lo que no están acá no quieren expropiar el Bauen, porque no quieren la democracia de los trabajadores porque no quieren participación en las ganancias, por eso nos quedamos acá, por eso peleamos el quórum”.

La diputada Victoria Donda fue otras de las que se presentó para dar quórum, como firmante del proyecto de expropiación del BAUEN. “Los trabajadores que lo recuperaron en el momento de mayor crisis que atravesó nuestro país. Es una alegría que después de tantos años de resistencia por fin el Estado tome nota de que hay que legalizar la situación”, destacó.

Respecto de los legisladores ausentes, Donde señaló: “Los diputados y diputadas que hoy no participaron en la sesión, en una enorme mayoría no estuvieron porque se oponen a estos proyectos que son el resultado de años de lucha de los trabajadores argentinos, como ha pasado en todas las sesiones de la Cámara durante esta gestión nacional, y así seguirá siendo durante la que comienza el 10 de diciembre”.

Las bancadas del radicalismo, el PRO, la Coalición Cívica, el Frente Renovador, el socialismo y Compromiso Federal decidieron no concurrir con el argumento que no fue consensuada la agenda legislativa.

La sesión comenzó con el tratamiento del proyecto para crear la empresa Yacimientos Carboníferos Fiscales Sociedad del Estado (YCFSE), a cuyo cargo estará la administración de los complejos de explotación de ese mineral ubicados en Río Turbio, Santa Cruz. El debate fue abierto por el presidente de la comisión de Energía, Mario Metaza, quien aseguró que esta iniciativa “es una recuperación de nuestros patrimonio” y destacó la presencia de los trabajadores y del intendente de Rio Turbio, Matias Mazú.

Source Article from http://www.pagina12.com.ar/diario/ultimas/20-286995-2015-11-26.html

La prueba se realizó, además de Eslovaquia, en Bolivia, Guatemala, Serbia, Sri Lanka y Camboya. Se extenderá por “meses, probablemente, porque a la gente le puede llevar tiempo adaptarse”, según Mosseri.

Source Article from https://www.infobae.com/america/tecno/2017/10/24/facebook-cobraria-a-los-medios-para-que-los-usuarios-vean-las-noticias/

President Donald Trump directed his outrage at Puerto Rico on Monday night, calling the U.S. territory “a mess” and its politicians “incompetent or corrupt,” after Senate Democrats clashed with their Republican counterparts over sending more disaster aid money.

Senators took test votes on two competing measures — one drafted by Senate Republicans and another passed by Democratic-led House of Representatives earlier this year — that would allocate billions of dollars in aid to U.S. states and territories ravaged by hurricanes, flooding, wildfires and other natural disasters in recent months. But neither piece of legislation got the support required to advance to a full floor vote. Democrats shot down the GOP legislation while Republicans rejected the House-passed bill, which proposes more aid for Puerto Rico than the Republican version.

No one can discern where he’s getting that figure, which is many times higher than the actual number.

Democrats said they wanted the federal government to release the money already appropriated to Puerto Rico in a previous relief package, in addition to hundreds of millions of dollars more. Republicans echoed Trump’s claims that Puerto Puerto Rico has been given much more than disaster-hit states and hasn’t spent the money wisely.

“The Democrats today killed a Bill that would have provided great relief to Farmers and yet more money to Puerto Rico despite the fact that Puerto Rico has already been scheduled to receive more hurricane relief funding than any ‘place’ in history. The people of Puerto Rico,” Trump posted on Twitter, “are GREAT, but the politicians are incompetent or corrupt. Puerto Rico got far more money than Texas & Florida combined, yet their government can’t do anything right, the place is a mess – nothing works.”

“FEMA & The Military worked emergency miracles but politicians like,” Trump continued. “the crazed and incompetent Mayor of San Juan have done such a poor job of bringing the Island back to health. 91 Billion Dollars to Puerto Rico, and now the Dems want to give them more, taking dollars away from our Farmers and so many others. Disgraceful!”

Carmen Yulin Cruz, the mayor of San Juan, the capital, responded to Trump’s remarks in her own tweets. She called the president “unhinged” and accused him of lying about the inadequate response to Puerto Rico in the aftermath of Hurricane Maria, a Category 4 hurricane that made landfall on the island in September 2017 and caused some $100 billion in damage.

“Pres Trump continues to embarrass himself & the Office he holds. He is unhinged & thus lies about the $ received by PR. HE KNOWS HIS RESPONSE was innefficient [sic] at best. He can huff & puff all he wants but he cannot escape the death of 3,000 on his watch. SHAME ON YOU!” Cruz tweeted.

“Mr President I am right here ready to call you on every lie, every hypocrisy and every ill fated action against the people of Puerto Rico. My voice,and the voices of the people of Puerto Rico, will continue to unmask your insentive [sic], incapable & vindictive ways. SHAME ON YOU!” Cruz tweeted again.

The storm struck as Puerto Ricans still were recovering from Hurricane Irma, which unleashed heavy rain and high winds just two weeks earlier.

Though 64 people died as a direct result of Hurricane Maria, an estimated 2,975 died as a result of its aftermath, according to Puerto Rico’s most recent official counts based on a study, published in August of 2018, conducted by George Washington University and the University of Puerto Rico.

(Ricardo Arduengo/AFP/Getty Images) A car drives on a damaged road in the aftermath of Hurricane Maria in Humacao, Puerto Rico on Oct. 2, 2017.

Jeremy Kirkland, general counsel to the Inspector General’s Office at the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, announced last Tuesday that his office has launched an internal investigation at the request of Congress to investigate whether there was any “interference” in the distribution of aid money to Puerto Rico.

Over the weekend, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer penned an op-ed in The New York Daily News, saying the Trump administration “has yet to disperse nearly $20 billion in long-term recovery and mitigation funds for Puerto Rico, more than a year after they were approved by Congress and a year-and-a-half after the historic hurricanes made landfall.”

“[The president] claims that Puerto Rico is getting $91 billion in disaster relief,” Schumer wrote, “but no one can discern where he’s getting that figure, which is many times higher than the actual number.”

ABC News’ Stephanie Ebbs, Anne Flaherty, Joshua Hoyos and Trish Turner contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://abcnews.go.com/US/trump-lashes-puerto-ricos-incompetent-corrupt-politicians-senate/story?id=62107652

There would be no chance of a scoop of stracciatella at Frio Gelato on Clark Street (not that anyone would want it), or Wiener schnitzel at the Berghoff Cafe downtown.

[You could get frostbite in a matter of minutes. Here’s what to do.]

Commerce slowed throughout the Midwest but the frigid conditions were unlikely to exact a lingering economic toll. In a 2015 report, the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago concluded that winter weather had “a significant, but short-lived effect on economic activity.”

But economists, the report suggested, have long struggled to pinpoint the financial consequences of events like this week’s polar vortex, especially because regional and national economies are shaped by so many factors.

Still, plenty of businesses were not running as usual on Wednesday, suggesting that locally felt consequences might not surface in long-range data. Even “Disney on Ice,” which was scheduled to run on Wednesday night at Chicago’s United Center, was canceled.

[Read more here about how the deep freeze is hitting the homeless.]

Through it all, some restaurants pressed on.

At Huck Finn, a diner on the Southwest Side, there were fewer patrons than usual, said Demetri Hiotis, the general manager. But the people who did come in were cheerful, almost exuberant.

“It’s like they’re living through some kind of weather history — everyone else stayed in, and we’re here doing our thing,” Mr. Hiotis said. “There’s a sense of pride. It’s 22 below but I still went to work, got my breakfast, got my coffee and doughnut.”

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/01/30/us/extreme-cold-weather.html

WASHINGTON (AP) — After President Joe Biden’s giant COVID-19 relief bill passed Congress, he made a prime-time address to the nation and presided over a Rose Garden ceremony.

But there wasn’t so much as a statement from the White House after the House passed legislation that would require background checks for gun purchases, a signature Democratic issue for decades.

Biden’s views on gun regulation have evolved along with his party — at one point reluctant to impose too many restrictions that blue-collar Democrats opposed — to a near-unanimous call to do something about gun violence after a spate of mass shootings.

In the early months of Biden’s presidency, even popular proposals like background checks are lower on his list of priorities and their prospects in the Senate cloudy.

The two bills that passed the House last week would expand background checks on gun purchases, the first significant movement on gun control since Democrats took control of both chambers of Congress and the White House.

They are among a number of major bills House Democrats have pushed through in recent weeks, including legislation to expand voting rights and support union organizing, that now face an uncertain fate in the Senate. Supporters of the background check bills are hoping to see Biden become more actively involved.

“I hope and I expect that President Biden will be willing to get engaged in hand to hand advocacy in the Senate on background checks,” said Sen. Chris Murphy, a Connecticut Democrat who has led the push for gun control in the Senate.

While Biden was more conservative on gun issues early in his Senate career, in the mid-1990s he helped pass the Brady bill, which mandated federal background checks for gun purchases, and he wrote the 1994 crime bill that included a 10-year assault weapons ban.

During his presidential campaign, Biden embraced an expansive gun-control agenda, backing an assault weapons ban and buyback program that was once seen as highly controversial and won’t see action in a divided Congress.

On the third anniversary of the Parkland, Florida, school shooting last month, Biden issued a statement reiterating his support for such measures, prompting the National Rifle Association to label him “increasingly hostile” towards gun rights.

“Today, I am calling on Congress to enact commonsense gun law reforms, including requiring background checks on all gun sales, banning assault weapons and high-capacity magazines, and eliminating immunity for gun manufacturers who knowingly put weapons of war on our streets,” Biden said in the statement.

But the bills that just passed the House received meager GOP support there and face a much tougher road in the Senate, where 10 Republicans would have to join all 50 Democrats and independents for them to move toward passage.

Rep. Jim Clyburn, D-S.C., who sponsored one of the bills, suggested Democrats would have to eliminate the 60-vote threshold for passing legislation to move them along.

“I think it’s about time for us to get rid of the filibuster,” Clyburn said in an interview.

But multiple Democrats have expressed opposition to reforming the filibuster, as has Biden himself. That leaves gun-control advocates hoping that the politics of gun control have shifted enough that more Republicans may be open to legislation that advocates argue is widely popular with the American public.

With Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., promising to give the background check bills a vote on the floor, Democrats are hopeful Republicans will step up when they’re put on the spot.

They’re also heartened by the declining influence of the NRA, which filed for bankruptcy this year after being outspent by gun-control groups for the first time during the 2018 election.

“I think the implosion of the NRA, the growing support among the American people and the inevitability of increased support gives us an opportunity we haven’t had before,” Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., said last week. He added: “What’s changed is we now have a president who can put pressure on our colleagues.”

While much of Biden’s gun-control agenda is unlikely to win passage in an evenly divided Senate, some of his proposals can be achieved by prioritizing resources within the federal government. Biden has proposed, for instance, directing the FBI to ensure state and local law enforcement agencies are notified if someone who tries to buy a gun fails a background check. He has also said he’ll ask his attorney general to look for ways to better enforce gun laws.

But the Biden administration has yet to signal how the president himself will get engaged. White House press secretary Jen Psaki said Biden is looking forward to working with Congress “to advance priorities, including repealing gun manufacturers’ liability shields.” She added that he “will look for opportunities to be engaged” on the background check bills.

Democrats still face political headwinds. A Gallup poll last November found that while 57% of Americans want stricter gun laws, that marked the lowest number in favor since 2016. And gun sales hit a new record high in January, continuing a surge over the past year.

Republican Sen. Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania and Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia, a moderate, have worked together for years to find compromise on background checks.

In a statement, Toomey’s office said the senator remains supportive of a previous bipartisan proposal with Manchin but believes “progress is only possible on this issue if the measure in question is narrow and protects the rights of law-abiding gun owners.”

Still, advocates say with a largely unified Democratic Party and the president on their side, they hope to finally see some movement.

John Feinblatt, president of Everytown for Gun Safety, pointed in particular to Democratic wins in the 2018 midterms while running openly for gun control as evidence the politics are changing.

“Democrats are in control of the White House and both chambers of Congress. The NRA is in the weakest shape it’s ever been,” he said. “It’s become clear that gun-safety laws aren’t only good life-saving policies, they’re good politics.”

___

Associated Press writer Mary Clare Jalonick contributed to this report.

___

This story has been corrected to show that Feinblatt is the president of Everytown for Gun Safety, not Everytown USA.

Source Article from https://apnews.com/article/joe-biden-gun-bills-background-checks-631ad363c97e5ff483f631713f92b1b8

In a CNN interview with Anderson Cooper on Tuesday, Sims said that while his book Team of Vipers describes Washington as “the most cutthroat, toxic, mean-spirited, draining work environment” he’d ever encountered, he himself was a player in the bloodsport.

Source Article from https://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/cliff-sims-team-of-vipers_us_5c5128dde4b0f43e410c2b10

  • Sen. Joe Manchin dug in on his proposal to require people work for the Biden child tax credit.
  • “Tax credits are based around people that have tax liabilities,” Manchin told Insider.
  • Early research indicates that advance payments helped cut hunger among families, including those in Manchin’s state of West Virginia.

Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia dug in on pushing a new requirement that parents work in order to receive the child tax credit on Tuesday as Democrats struggled to get the $3.5 trillion social spending plan over the finish line.

“They know I feel very strongly about that. Tax credits are based around people that have tax liabilities,” Manchin told Insider on Tuesday. “I’m even willing to go as long as they have a W-2 and showing they’re working, we’ve talked about that.”

It comes two days after Manchin first suggested requiring people to work and file taxes as a condition to get the advance monthly payments. He said in a CNN interview that tying the child tax credit to those with jobs would ensure federal assistance would flow to “the right people.” He maintained he supports child tax credits.

Democrats in the House and Senate, including Sens. Bernie Sanders of Vermont and Sherrod Brown of Ohio, on Monday poured cold water on the idea. Opposition to the idea on Tuesday grew from other Democrats as well. The party is laboring to assemble a party-line package that can garner the support of nearly every Democratic lawmaker and turn it into law this month.

“Adding a work requirement or other stipulations to the Child Tax Credit would hurt middle-class families,” Rep. Suzan DelBene of Washington, chair of the 95-member moderate New Democrat coalition, said in a statement to Insider. “The Child Tax Credit is an important tax cut for middle-class families and in only two months is already having an incredible impact on American children.”

She added the New Democrat group was “all-in” on extending the benefit. 

Meanwhile, Brown told reporters on Tuesday, “I think that raising children is work.”

Other lawmakers expressed different qualms about the program. Sen. Angus King, a Maine independent who caucuses with Democrats, told Insider he was “concerned” about the cash benefit flowing to high-earning Americans, but said families shouldn’t have to pay taxes to access the program, known as refundability.

“This should be refundable,” he told Insider.

The Democratic stimulus law in March turned the credit into a one-year cash benefit issued in monthly checks to the vast majority of families. Individuals who earn $75,000 or less are eligible for up to either a $250 or $300 direct payment per child depending on their age. Couples earning a combined $150,000 or less also qualify for the total check amount.

House Democrats are pushing to extend the revamped credit until 2025, and ensuring that low-income families who don’t have to file taxes can permanently get the benefit. The current child allowance does not require individuals to have a job to obtain federal assistance.

But its unclear whether Senate Democrats will extend it with the same length and structure, given early resistance from Manchin.

Early research indicates the first month of payments kept three million children out of poverty and helped feed two million kids in July. Food insecurity dropped among West Virginian families as well, per an analysis last month from the West Virginia Center on Budget and Policy.

Source Article from https://www.businessinsider.com/manchin-work-requirements-biden-child-tax-credit-sparking-democrat-2021-9

WASHINGTON — The Biden administration announced additional sanctions against Russia’s central bank on Monday, a move that effectively prohibits Americans from doing any business with the bank as well as freezes its assets within the United States.

The new measures will also target the National Wealth Fund of the Russian Federation and the Ministry of Finance of the Russian Federation.

A senior Biden administration official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity in order to share Washington’s thinking, said the new sanctions will take effect immediately.

“We wanted to put these actions in place before our markets open because what we learned over the course of the weekend from our allies and partners was the Russian Central Bank was attempting to move assets and there would be a great deal of asset flight starting on Monday morning from institutions around the world,” the official said, on a conference call with reporters.

“Our strategy to put it simply is to make sure that the Russian economy goes backward. As long as President Putin decides to go forward with his invasion of Ukraine,” the official added.

The U.S. is also adding Kirill Dmitriev, another ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin, to the sanctions list as well as the direct investment fund Dmitriev heads. The Russian Direct Investment Fund, or RDIF, is officially a sovereign wealth fund but is widely considered a slush fund for Putin.

The official said the U.S. expects its allies to take similar steps in the coming days.

This comes after the U.S. and its allies announced over the weekend that they will impose restrictive measures aimed at preventing Russia’s central bank from deploying its international reserves in ways that may undermine sanctions.

“No country is sanctions-proof and Putin’s war chest of $630 billion in reserves only matters if he can use it to defend his currency,” a second senior administration official said Monday.

The U.S. and its allies have imposed a deluge of severe sanctions on Russia in recent weeks in a unified effort to keep economic pressure on the Kremlin.

Those penalties – imposed by the U.S. departments of the Treasury and Commerce – have sent the Russian markets sideways. The Russian ruble fell as low as 111 on Monday to the U.S. dollar from 83 on Friday, a drop of more than 20%. If that weakening holds, it would represent one of the largest single-day declines in the value of Moscow’s currency ever recorded.

The Bank of Russia, the nation’s central bank, stepped in to stanch the ruble’s swoon by more than doubling the country’s benchmark interest rate to 20% from 9.5%. The hike in rates is designed to tempt savers to keep cash in Russian banks since the West and its allies have moved to isolate Moscow’s biggest lenders from international markets.

The major market-based upheaval prompted the Russian central bank to keep the country’s stock exchange, the Moscow Exchange, closed Monday.

On Saturday, the U.S., European allies and Canada agreed to remove key Russian banks from the interbank messaging system, SWIFT, an extraordinary step that will sever the country from much of the global financial system.

Moscow’s exclusion from SWIFT, which stands for the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication, means Russian banks won’t be able to communicate securely with banks beyond their border. Iran was removed from SWIFT in 2014 after developments to Tehran’s nuclear program.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2022/02/28/biden-administration-expands-russia-sanctions-cuts-off-us-transactions-with-central-bank.html

 

NEW YORK (AP) — Gunfire at a large, outdoor event in Brooklyn killed one man and injured at least 11 others late Saturday night, police said.

Mayor Bill de Blasio tweeted early Sunday that the shooting in east Brooklyn’s Brownsville neighborhood “shattered a peaceful neighborhood event.” Twelve people were shot, including a 38-year-old man who was dead on arrival at a local hospital, a New York City police spokesman said around 3:30 a.m. Sunday.

The police spokesman said he did not know the identity of the man, who was shot once in the head.

No arrests have been made, and police did not offer details about a possible suspect or whether there was more than one gunman at the park where the event took place. As of 6:30 a.m., police said they did not have details about the conditions of the other 11 people wounded and that the investigation as ongoing.

RELATED: New York Police Department

NEW YORK, NY – DECEMBER 27: Maritza Ramos, wife of the victim, holds the colors as she is joined by her sons Justin, left, and Jaden, right, during the funeral of slain New York Police Department (NYPD) officer Rafael Ramos at the Christ Tabernacle Church on December 27, 2014 in the Glenwood section of the Queens borough of New York City. Ramos was shot, along with Police Officer Wenjian Liu while sitting in their patrol car in an ambush attack in Brooklyn on December 20. Thousands of fellow officers, family, friends and Vice President Joseph Biden arrived at the church for the funeral. (Photo by Kevin Hagen/Getty Images)




At least six people had been transported to local hospitals by just after midnight, with some in serious condition, a New York City fire department spokesman said earlier. He described the scene at the time as “fluid.”

De Blasio’s tweet didn’t include details about the community event referenced, but a notice on the NYC Parks website said other programming at the Brownsville Recreation Center by the playground was canceled over the weekend because of the annual Old Timers Event.

A 2010 newsletter from the parks department described it as a celebration of “former members of the center who went on to success and fame in sports and other endeavors” that’s grown to include concerts and other events. A flyer for the dayslong celebration said Saturday’s event was to begin at 6 p.m. on Hegeman Avenue, in the vicinity of the site of the shooting.

Calls and emails to the offices of council members organizing the celebration were not immediately returned, but Council Member Alicka Amprey-Samuel shared de Blasio’s tweet and added comments of her own.

“One of the worst experiences of my life,” the council member for the 41st District tweeted. “How does such a beautiful and peaceful event become overshadowed by tragedy in seconds?”

A man who answered a phone number listed online for one of Saturday’s scheduled performers, The Legendary Intruders, identified himself as band member Khalil Shabazz. He told The Associated Press that his band had already performed and departed the venue by the time of the shooting.

Videos posted on social media showed police clearing large groups of people out of the area around the recreation center following the shooting. Photos from local news outlets showed several people taken from the scene on stretchers, including some with what appeared to be minor wounds.

Brownsville is a neighborhood that’s continued to struggle with gun violence, even as New York streets become safer than they have been in decades.

“We will do everything in our power to keep this community safe and get guns off our streets,” de Blasio tweeted.

State Sen. Roxanne J. Persaud echoed de Blasio, adding the hashtags “#StopTheViolence” and “#PutDownTheGuns” to her tweets expressing frustration with the shooting, which she called “unacceptable” and “cowardly.”

“Our community mourns again. We should be able to have fun in open spaces without fear of violence,” tweeted Persaud, whose district includes Brownsville. “Respect your community. We are better than the violence.”

Source Article from https://www.aol.com/article/news/2019/07/28/1-dead-11-others-shot-at-community-event-in-brooklyn-park/23780754/

The Trump administration intends to announce Wednesday that it will allow U.S. citizens to sue companies doing business in Cuba, according to a senior administration official.

Marking another break from Trump’s predecessors that threatens to upend relations with allies, the administration plans to enforce a provision of a 1996 law known as Helms-Burton that allows Cubans who fled Fidel Castro’s regime to sue companies that have used their former property on the island.

CUBA CITES LACK OF EVIDENCE IN MYSTERIOUS SONIC ATTACKS ON DIPLOMATS

Every president since Bill Clinton has suspended the section of the act that would allow such lawsuits because they could snarl companies from U.S.-allied countries – like the U.K., France and Spain – in years of complicated litigation that could prompt international trade claims against the United States.

The senior administration official said going forward, there will be no more waivers. The official spoke on condition of anonymity ahead of the official announcement.

The Trump administration has signaled plans to end the waivers. It’s taking the step in retaliation for Cuba’s support of embattled Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, whom the U.S. is trying to oust in favor of opposition leader Juan Guaido.

CLICK TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

White House National Security Adviser John Bolton plans to deliver a speech in Miami — home to thousands of exiles and immigrants from Cuba, Venezuela and Nicaragua – criticizing those governments as a “troika of tyranny.”

The speech at the Bay of Pigs Veterans Association is being delivered on the 58th anniversary of the United States’ failed 1961 invasion of the island, an attempt to overthrow the Cuban government.

Fox News’ Kellianne Jones and The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/trump-administration-to-allow-lawsuits-over-seizures-of-us-property-in-cuba

The county medical examiner who conducted George Floyd’s autopsy testified Friday that the actions of police officers were the main cause of his death, although drugs and underlying heart conditions played a role.

Hennepin County Medical Examiner Andrew Baker said his opinion on what killed Floyd remained unchanged from what he listed in the death certificate last June.

“That’s cardiopulmonary arrest complicating law enforcement subdual, restraint, and neck compression. That was my top line then. It would stay my top line now,” Baker said.

Floyd’s use of methamphetamine and fentanyl and his preexisting heart conditions were “not the direct causes of his death,” he said.

His testimony during Derek Chauvin’s murder trial came after prosecutors called several medical experts to support their argument that the former Minneapolis police officer’s actions, including pressing his knee on Floyd’s neck, were fatal.

The presence of methamphetamine and fentanyl in Floyd’s system at the time of his death is central to the defense’s argument that those drugs and underlying heart conditions caused his death. Floyd had 11 nanograms of fentanyl per milliliter and a low level of meth in his system.

While the defense has yet to present its case, Chauvin’s attorney, Eric Nelson, has frequently mentioned fentanyl overdose deaths and the effects of methamphetamine on the heart during his cross-examination of the state’s medical experts. Nelson is expected to call his own medical experts to testify.

Baker said Floyd’s enlarged heart already needed more oxygen than normally required due to his “severe underlying heart disease” and a history of hypertension.

Floyd’s interaction with the officers would have caused him to release stress hormones like adrenaline, Baker said, which would cause his heart to beat faster and require more oxygen.

According to Baker, Floyd’s encounter with Chauvin and three other officers “tipped him over the edge” given his heart’s condition.

The prosecution’s medical experts suggested that Floyd’s chronic drug use over the years could have built up his tolerance to higher levels of fentanyl. They also said that the level of meth in his system was too low to be a significant factor in his death.

Bill Smock, a police surgeon who said he frequently deals with fentanyl overdose cases, told the jury Thursday that Floyd showed no signs of suffering from a fentanyl overdose.

“We watch those videos, he’s breathing, he’s talking, he’s not snoring, he’s saying, ‘Please get off me, I can’t breathe.’ That is not a fentanyl overdose, that is someone begging to breathe,” Smock said.

Lindsey Thomas, a forensic pathologist who previously worked at the Hennepin County Medical Examiner’s office and was involved in training Baker, testified that the “mechanism” of Floyd’s death was asphyxia or low oxygen to the brain.

Martin Tobin, a pulmonary and critical medicine doctor with 45 years of experience, ruled out both drugs and Floyd’s heart conditions as the cause of his death, echoing testimony that Floyd died of asphyxia or low oxygen to the brain.

The medical experts also said asphyxia is not typically listed on autopsies because, as Tobin said, “it doesn’t leave a fingerprint.”

Source Article from https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/tasneemnashrulla/george-floyd-medical-examiner-cause-of-death