Top Rated Videos

A spokesman for Nebraska Senator Ben Sasse said the senator is “not going to waste a single minute on tweets” after President Donald Trump questioned Sasse’s value to the Republican Party in a series of tweets Saturday morning.

Trump’s comments about Sasse came just days after a report by The Washington Examiner revealed lengthy criticisms that Sasse levied against the president during a town hall phone call with voters in his state.

During the call, Sasse critiqued Trump’s foreign policy decisions, as well as his handling of the coronavirus pandemic, and suggested that Trump’s leadership put the future of the Republican Party in jeopardy. He also said Trump has “flirted” with white supremacists, “spends like a drunken sailor” and added that he also “kisses dictators’ butts.”

Trump’s comments about Sasse on Saturday began when he called him the “least effective” Republican in the Senate who “doesn’t have what it takes to be great.”

“Little Ben is a liability to the Republican Party, and an embarrassment to the Great State of Nebraska,” Trump’s tweet continued.

About an hour later, Sasse spokesman James Wegmann posted a statement on his Twitter account about the comments that Sasse made during the call with constituents referenced in the Examiner report.

“Ben said the same thing to Nebraskans that he has repeatedly said to the President directly in the Oval Office,” Wegmann said. “Ben is focused on defending the Republican Senate majority, and he’s not going to waste a single minute on tweets.”

Not long after, Trump again took to Twitter and made Sasse the subject of a two-part Twitter thread. In the tweet, Trump suggested that Sasse might soon face approval rating dips that could force him into early retirement. He added at the end of the thread: “Perhaps the Republicans should find a new and more viable candidate?”

Sasse began serving as a senator for Nebraska in 2015 and is currently running for re-election with less than three weeks remaining until Election Day. Though he said during the call with constituents that he tried to establish a working relationship with the president, he campaigned on behalf of other contenders in 2016 before Trump became the party’s official nominee and publicly criticized Trump in recent months about his administration’s handling of peaceful protesters in Washington, D.C., his use of executive orders, and his response to alleged bounties that The New York Times reported Russia placed on U.S. troops in Afghanistan.

Sasse’s comments during the call lasted for about nine minutes after one Nebrasakan asked why Sasse frequently criticizes Trump. Sasse told his listeners that he has been concerned for years that Trump’s leadership might push the U.S. further to the left and warned about the possibility of a “blue tsunami” during the upcoming election.

He pointed to two specific voting groups–young people and women—whom he said could shift away from the Republican Party as a result of Trump’s time in office. If that happens, “the debate is not going to be, ‘Ben Sasse, why were you so mean to Donald Trump,'” Sasse said. “It’s going to be, ‘What the heck were any of us thinking that selling a TV-obsessed, narcissistic individual to the American people was a good idea?’ It is not a good idea.”

Newsweek reached out to Sasse’s office and the White House for further comment, but did not receive a response in time for publication.

p:last-of-type::after, .node-type-slideshow .article-body > p:last-of-type::after {
content: none
}]]>

Source Article from https://www.newsweek.com/gop-senator-not-going-waste-single-minute-tweets-response-trump-attacks-him-1540047

Analysts suspect the so-called “gift” could be a long-range missile test capable of hitting the U.S. as new satellite images appear to show a recently built structure at a military facility.

#NorthKorea #Surveillance #MissileTest #ChristmasGift #Missile #Trump #KimJongUn #LongRangeMissile #MilitaryAsset #Warfare #Politics

WATCH FULL EPISODES OF WORLD NEWS TONIGHT:
http://abc.go.com/shows/world-news-to…

ALSO AVAILABLE TO WATCH ON HULU:
https://hulu.tv/2pW9Vh1

Source Article from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oZ_d9qtgIBk

“);var a = g[r.size_id].split(“x”).map((function(e) {return Number(e)})), s = u(a, 2);o.width = s[0],o.height = s[1]}o.rubiconTargeting = (Array.isArray(r.targeting) ? r.targeting : []).reduce((function(e, r) {return e[r.key] = r.values[0],e}), {rpfl_elemid: n.adUnitCode}),e.push(o)} else l.logError(“Rubicon bid adapter Error: bidRequest undefined at index position:” + t, c, d);return e}), []).sort((function(e, r) {return (r.cpm || 0) – (e.cpm || 0)}))},getUserSyncs: function(e, r, t) {if (!A && e.iframeEnabled) {var i = “”;return t && “string” == typeof t.consentString && (“boolean” == typeof t.gdprApplies ? i += “?gdpr=” + Number(t.gdprApplies) + “&gdpr_consent=” + t.consentString : i += “?gdpr_consent=” + t.consentString),A = !0,{type: “iframe”,url: n + i}}},transformBidParams: function(e, r) {return l.convertTypes({accountId: “number”,siteId: “number”,zoneId: “number”}, e)}};function m() {return [window.screen.width, window.screen.height].join(“x”)}function b(e, r) {var t = f.config.getConfig(“pageUrl”);return e.params.referrer ? t = e.params.referrer : t || (t = r.refererInfo.referer),e.params.secure ? t.replace(/^http:/i, “https:”) : t}function _(e, r) {var t = e.params;if (“video” === r) {var i = [];return t.video && t.video.playerWidth && t.video.playerHeight ? i = [t.video.playerWidth, t.video.playerHeight] : Array.isArray(l.deepAccess(e, “mediaTypes.video.playerSize”)) && 1 === e.mediaTypes.video.playerSize.length ? i = e.mediaTypes.video.playerSize[0] : Array.isArray(e.sizes) && 0

‘);$vidEndSlate.removeClass(‘video__end-slate–inactive’).addClass(‘video__end-slate–active’);}};CNN.autoPlayVideoExist = (CNN.autoPlayVideoExist === true) ? true : false;var configObj = {thumb: ‘none’,video: ‘politics/2019/01/15/steve-king-committee-assignments-cornel-west-sot-ac-vpx.cnn’,width: ‘100%’,height: ‘100%’,section: ‘domestic’,profile: ‘expansion’,network: ‘cnn’,markupId: ‘large-media_0’,adsection: ‘cnn.com_politics_thepoint_videopage’,frameWidth: ‘100%’,frameHeight: ‘100%’,posterImageOverride: {“mini”:{“width”:220,”type”:”jpg”,”uri”:”//cdn.cnn.com/cnnnext/dam/assets/161011151637-steve-king-small-169.jpg”,”height”:124},”xsmall”:{“width”:307,”type”:”jpg”,”uri”:”//cdn.cnn.com/cnnnext/dam/assets/161011151637-steve-king-medium-plus-169.jpg”,”height”:173},”small”:{“width”:460,”type”:”jpg”,”uri”:”//cdn.cnn.com/cnnnext/dam/assets/161011151637-steve-king-large-169.jpg”,”height”:259},”medium”:{“width”:780,”type”:”jpg”,”uri”:”http://www.noticiasdodia.onlinenewsbusiness.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/01/161011151637-steve-king-exlarge-169.jpg”,”height”:438},”large”:{“width”:1100,”type”:”jpg”,”uri”:”//cdn.cnn.com/cnnnext/dam/assets/161011151637-steve-king-super-169.jpg”,”height”:619},”full16x9″:{“width”:1600,”type”:”jpg”,”uri”:”//cdn.cnn.com/cnnnext/dam/assets/161011151637-steve-king-full-169.jpg”,”height”:900},”mini1x1″:{“width”:120,”type”:”jpg”,”uri”:”//cdn.cnn.com/cnnnext/dam/assets/161011151637-steve-king-small-11.jpg”,”height”:120}}},autoStartVideo = false,isVideoReplayClicked = false,callbackObj,containerEl,currentVideoCollection = [],currentVideoCollectionId = ”,isLivePlayer = false,mediaMetadataCallbacks,mobilePinnedView = null,moveToNextTimeout,mutePlayerEnabled = false,nextVideoId = ”,nextVideoUrl = ”,turnOnFlashMessaging = false,videoPinner,videoEndSlateImpl;if (CNN.autoPlayVideoExist === false) {autoStartVideo = true;if (autoStartVideo === true) {if (turnOnFlashMessaging === true) {autoStartVideo = false;containerEl = jQuery(document.getElementById(configObj.markupId));CNN.VideoPlayer.showFlashSlate(containerEl);} else {CNN.autoPlayVideoExist = true;}}}configObj.autostart = CNN.Features.enableAutoplayBlock ? false : autoStartVideo;CNN.VideoPlayer.setPlayerProperties(configObj.markupId, autoStartVideo, isLivePlayer, isVideoReplayClicked, mutePlayerEnabled);CNN.VideoPlayer.setFirstVideoInCollection(currentVideoCollection, configObj.markupId);videoEndSlateImpl = new CNN.VideoEndSlate(‘large-media_0’);function findNextVideo(currentVideoId) {var i,vidObj;if (currentVideoId && jQuery.isArray(currentVideoCollection) && currentVideoCollection.length > 0) {for (i = 0; i 0) {videoEndSlateImpl.showEndSlateForContainer();if (mobilePinnedView) {mobilePinnedView.disable();}}}}callbackObj = {onPlayerReady: function (containerId) {var playerInstance,containerClassId = ‘#’ + containerId;CNN.VideoPlayer.handleInitialExpandableVideoState(containerId);CNN.VideoPlayer.handleAdOnCVPVisibilityChange(containerId, CNN.pageVis.isDocumentVisible());if (CNN.Features.enableMobileWebFloatingPlayer &&Modernizr &&(Modernizr.phone || Modernizr.mobile || Modernizr.tablet) &&CNN.VideoPlayer.getLibraryName(containerId) === ‘fave’ &&jQuery(containerClassId).parents(‘.js-pg-rail-tall__head’).length > 0 &&CNN.contentModel.pageType === ‘article’) {playerInstance = FAVE.player.getInstance(containerId);mobilePinnedView = new CNN.MobilePinnedView({element: jQuery(containerClassId),enabled: false,transition: CNN.MobileWebFloatingPlayer.transition,onPin: function () {playerInstance.hideUI();},onUnpin: function () {playerInstance.showUI();},onPlayerClick: function () {if (mobilePinnedView) {playerInstance.enterFullscreen();playerInstance.showUI();}},onDismiss: function() {CNN.Videx.mobile.pinnedPlayer.disable();playerInstance.pause();}});/* Storing pinned view on CNN.Videx.mobile.pinnedPlayer So that all players can see the single pinned player */CNN.Videx = CNN.Videx || {};CNN.Videx.mobile = CNN.Videx.mobile || {};CNN.Videx.mobile.pinnedPlayer = mobilePinnedView;}if (Modernizr && !Modernizr.phone && !Modernizr.mobile && !Modernizr.tablet) {if (jQuery(containerClassId).parents(‘.js-pg-rail-tall__head’).length) {videoPinner = new CNN.VideoPinner(containerClassId);videoPinner.init();} else {CNN.VideoPlayer.hideThumbnail(containerId);}}},onContentEntryLoad: function(containerId, playerId, contentid, isQueue) {CNN.VideoPlayer.showSpinner(containerId);},onContentPause: function (containerId, playerId, videoId, paused) {if (mobilePinnedView) {CNN.VideoPlayer.handleMobilePinnedPlayerStates(containerId, paused);}},onContentMetadata: function (containerId, playerId, metadata, contentId, duration, width, height) {var endSlateLen = jQuery(document.getElementById(containerId)).parent().find(‘.js-video__end-slate’).eq(0).length;CNN.VideoSourceUtils.updateSource(containerId, metadata);if (endSlateLen > 0) {videoEndSlateImpl.fetchAndShowRecommendedVideos(metadata);}},onAdPlay: function (containerId, cvpId, token, mode, id, duration, blockId, adType) {/* Dismissing the pinnedPlayer if another video players plays an Ad */CNN.VideoPlayer.dismissMobilePinnedPlayer(containerId);clearTimeout(moveToNextTimeout);CNN.VideoPlayer.hideSpinner(containerId);if (Modernizr && !Modernizr.phone && !Modernizr.mobile && !Modernizr.tablet) {if (typeof videoPinner !== ‘undefined’ && videoPinner !== null) {videoPinner.setIsPlaying(true);videoPinner.animateDown();}}},onAdPause: function (containerId, playerId, token, mode, id, duration, blockId, adType, instance, isAdPause) {if (mobilePinnedView) {CNN.VideoPlayer.handleMobilePinnedPlayerStates(containerId, isAdPause);}},onTrackingFullscreen: function (containerId, PlayerId, dataObj) {CNN.VideoPlayer.handleFullscreenChange(containerId, dataObj);if (mobilePinnedView &&typeof dataObj === ‘object’ &&FAVE.Utils.os === ‘iOS’ && !dataObj.fullscreen) {jQuery(document).scrollTop(mobilePinnedView.getScrollPosition());playerInstance.hideUI();}},onContentPlay: function (containerId, cvpId, event) {var playerInstance,prevVideoId;if (CNN.companion && typeof CNN.companion.updateCompanionLayout === ‘function’) {CNN.companion.updateCompanionLayout(‘restoreEpicAds’);}clearTimeout(moveToNextTimeout);CNN.VideoPlayer.hideSpinner(containerId);if (Modernizr && !Modernizr.phone && !Modernizr.mobile && !Modernizr.tablet) {if (typeof videoPinner !== ‘undefined’ && videoPinner !== null) {videoPinner.setIsPlaying(true);videoPinner.animateDown();}}},onContentReplayRequest: function (containerId, cvpId, contentId) {if (Modernizr && !Modernizr.phone && !Modernizr.mobile && !Modernizr.tablet) {if (typeof videoPinner !== ‘undefined’ && videoPinner !== null) {videoPinner.setIsPlaying(true);var $endSlate = jQuery(document.getElementById(containerId)).parent().find(‘.js-video__end-slate’).eq(0);if ($endSlate.length > 0) {$endSlate.removeClass(‘video__end-slate–active’).addClass(‘video__end-slate–inactive’);}}}},onContentBegin: function (containerId, cvpId, contentId) {if (mobilePinnedView) {mobilePinnedView.enable();}/* Dismissing the pinnedPlayer if another video players plays a video. */CNN.VideoPlayer.dismissMobilePinnedPlayer(containerId);CNN.VideoPlayer.mutePlayer(containerId);if (CNN.companion && typeof CNN.companion.updateCompanionLayout === ‘function’) {CNN.companion.updateCompanionLayout(‘removeEpicAds’);}CNN.VideoPlayer.hideSpinner(containerId);clearTimeout(moveToNextTimeout);CNN.VideoSourceUtils.clearSource(containerId);jQuery(document).triggerVideoContentStarted();},onContentComplete: function (containerId, cvpId, contentId) {if (CNN.companion && typeof CNN.companion.updateCompanionLayout === ‘function’) {CNN.companion.updateCompanionLayout(‘restoreFreewheel’);}navigateToNextVideo(contentId, containerId);},onContentEnd: function (containerId, cvpId, contentId) {if (Modernizr && !Modernizr.phone && !Modernizr.mobile && !Modernizr.tablet) {if (typeof videoPinner !== ‘undefined’ && videoPinner !== null) {videoPinner.setIsPlaying(false);}}},onCVPVisibilityChange: function (containerId, cvpId, visible) {CNN.VideoPlayer.handleAdOnCVPVisibilityChange(containerId, visible);}};if (typeof configObj.context !== ‘string’ || configObj.context.length 0) {configObj.adsection = window.ssid;}CNN.autoPlayVideoExist = (CNN.autoPlayVideoExist === true) ? true : false;CNN.VideoPlayer.getLibrary(configObj, callbackObj, isLivePlayer);});CNN.INJECTOR.scriptComplete(‘videodemanddust’);

a>*{vertical-align: top; display: inline-block;}
.duval-3>a>div{display: inline-block; font-size:1.0666667rem;width: 80%; padding-top: 0px; padding-left: 2%;}
.duval-3>a>img{width: 18%; height: auto;}
@media screen and (max-width:640px){
.duval-3>a>*{display:block; margin: auto;}
.duval-3>a>div{width: 100%;}
.duval-3>a>img{width: 50%;}
}
]]>

    Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2019/01/15/politics/steve-king-kevin-mccarthy-white-supremacist/index.html

    WASHINGTON — Taliban fighters began entering the Afghan capital of Kabul on Sunday, the last city to have been thus far spared takeover by the militants amid their rapid sweep of the country in the wake of U.S. forces departing.

    A Taliban spokesperson said the fighters intended to negotiate a “peaceful surrender” of the city.

    “Until a peace agreement is agreed, the security of the city and its residents is the responsibility of the government and they should guarantee it,” Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said in a statement.

    Two U.S. defense officials confirmed to NBC News that the Taliban also seized Bagram Air Base, a development that comes less than two months after the U.S. military handed over the once-stalwart airbase to the Afghan National Security and Defense Force.

    The group began emptying out Parwan prison there which has an estimated 5,000 to 7,000 prisoners, including hardened Taliban and al Qaeda fighters, according to the officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity.

    In 2012, at its peak, Bagram saw more than 100,000 U.S. troops pass through. It was the largest U.S. military installation in Afghanistan.

    Since President Joe Biden’s April decision to withdraw U.S. troops from Afghanistan, the Taliban have made stunning battlefield advances with now nearly the entirety of the nation under their control.

    The group previously captured the strategic city of Ghazni, which had brought their front line within 95 miles of Kabul, a staggering development that spurred the deployment of 5,000 American troops back into the country to help with evacuations.

    Britain and Canada also rushed troops into Kabul to evacuate their embassies.

    The State Department has issued repeated calls for U.S. citizens to leave Afghanistan immediately, warning that its ability to assist citizens is “extremely limited” due to deteriorating security conditions and reduced staffing.

    Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2021/08/15/taliban-fighters-enter-afghanistan-capital-kabul-.html

    WASHINGTON (AP) — To understand how Donald Trump’s desperation and lies became a potent danger to democracy, consider the ginger mints.

    Mints featured in one of the absurdist but toxic episodes fleshed out in the Jan. 6 hearings, which now pause even as the Justice Department presses ahead on a parallel criminal investigation that it calls the most important in its history.

    Here’s how one conspiracy theory, in a dark sea of them, was born:

    A mother-daughter team at a Georgia elections center shared the treat during a long election night. Someone videotaped them and chose to believe the mint mother gave to daughter was a USB port. Trump’s lawyer spread the accusation that the video caught the women using the device to try to corrupt the election against the president.

    Frantic to stay in power, grasping at anything, Trump ran with the lie. He attacked the mother by name, branded her a “professional vote scammer,” and soon vigilantes showed up at a family home intending to execute a “citizens’ arrest,” the committee was told. For the love of mints.

    The episode fed into a web of fabricated stories, melting under scrutiny like snowflakes in a Georgia summer. The hearings illustrated how those stories fueled the anger of Trump’s supporters across the U.S. and especially those who stormed the Capitol, many armed and out for blood.

    Long before the committee called its first witness, scenes of the rampage had been burned into the public consciousness. What new information could possibly come from it? Plenty, it turned out. And as the inquiry continues, with more hearings planned in September, still more evidence is being gathered.

    With seven Democrats working with two Republicans on the outs with their party, the committee did what Trump’s two impeachment trials couldn’t — establish a coherent story out of the chaos instead of two partisan ones clawing at each other.

    “American carnage,” Democratic Rep. Jamie Raskin of Maryland , lead manager of the second Trump impeachment and a committee member on this inquiry, said of the latter’s bottom line. “That’s Donald Trump’s true legacy.” Not the carnage Trump spoke of in his inaugural address.

    In a methodical, even mannerly process rarely seen from Congress, the panel exposed behind-the-scenes machinations laying bare the lengths Trump and his enablers went to keep him in power and the extent to which his inner circle knew his case about a stolen election was bogus. Some told him that to his face; others humored him.

    At every turn the hearings made clear Trump was willing to see the legislative branch of government and democratic processes in state after state consumed in the bonfire of his vanities.

    He was told the rioters were out to find his vice president, Mike Pence, at the Capitol and hang him. Trump’s chief of staff related to another aide the president’s thoughts on the matter, that Pence “deserves it,” according to testimony.

    Trump was told many of his supporters that day bore arms. He didn’t “effing care.”

    “They’re not here to hurt ME,” he said, according to testimony. “Take the effing mags away. Let my people in, they can march to the Capitol from here. Let the people in, take the effing mags away.” It is unlikely he said “effing.”

    He wanted the magnetometers, or metal detectors, removed from security lines so loyalists in town for his rally could pack the space, underscoring a Trump obsession with crowd size that was evident from the first day of his presidency.

    The committee pinpointed a range of renegade if not criminal options that were floated in the White House, which taken together resembled a tin-pot coup in the country Ronald Reagan called democracy’s “shining city upon a hill.”

    A city, Reagan imagined, “built on rocks stronger than oceans, windswept, God-blessed, and teeming with people of all kinds living in harmony and peace.”

    That bedrock convulsed as Trump and his allies contemplated an executive order to seize voting machines and other steps that democracies don’t take.

    “The idea that the federal government could come in and seize election machines, no,” Pat Cipollone, the White House counsel, said as he recounted a White House meeting that devolved into a screaming match. “That — that’s — I don’t understand why we even have to tell you why that’s a bad idea for the country.”

    Trump leaned on Republican-led states to find more votes for him — 11,780 in Georgia would do it, he said. State Republicans were pressed to appoint fake electors. He hectored Pence to do what he didn’t have the power — or the will — to do, when called upon to certify the election.

    When all else failed, Trump told his supporters to “fight like hell’ and encouraged them to march down to the Capitol, saying he’d be joining them.

    Saying no to the boss is never easy. Saying no to the U.S. president you work for is another thing altogether.

    But Trump’s plotting was foiled by Republicans in the states that mattered, conservative aides, bureaucrats and loyalists-to-a-point who ultimately said no, no, no.

    When Trump demanded to be taken to the Capitol on Jan. 6, the committee was told, his Secret Service detail said no.

    When Trump pressed his vice president to derail the certification of Joe Biden’s election, four years of supplication and admiring glances by Pence came to an end. He said no.

    The Republican election official in Georgia said no to cooking the results to deliver Trump the state, never losing his cool on the phone with the president. The Republican House speaker in Arizona, pressed to appoint fake electors, invoked his oath and said no way.

    Two Justice Department leaders in succession said no to him. When he moved to appoint a compliant third, Justice Department officials told him in the Oval Office that if he did so, they would quit en masse and the new man would be left “leading a graveyard.”

    All of that left the president with an inept cadre, mostly of outsiders, to tell him what he wanted to hear. One sells pillows.

    Even Trump’s personal lawyer Rudy Giuliani, perhaps the most loyal of loyalists and a man who voiced plenty of delusional statements on behalf of his client, acknowledged at one point that there was nothing more to Trump’s accusations of a rigged election than speculation.

    “We’ve got lots of theories,” he told Rusty Bowers, Arizona House speaker. “We just don’t have the evidence.”

    Yet the comment — as related to the committee by Bowers — was made in the context of pressing him to appoint fake electors anyway, which Bowers refused to do. And it was Giuliani who stoked the USB conspiracy theory that prompted the FBI to direct the mother into hiding and made her daughter fearful of being out in public.

    The Constitution demands that presidents “take care that the laws be faithfully executed.” Failure to do so can be a crime.

    With the summer hearings over, attention now shifts to the Justice Department, where Attorney General Merrick Garland has vowed to hold wrongdoers “at any level” accountable, whether present at the Capitol or not, and said as recently as this week that “no person is above the law.”

    He’s made no public statements as to whether the department might pursue a criminal case against Trump, noting that the agency does not conduct its investigations in public. Yet he said he regards this one as the “most important” and sweeping it’s ever undertaken.

    Some legal experts have said the hearings identified a range of potential crimes for which the ex-president might conceivably be prosecuted. Corruptly obstructing an official proceeding. Conspiracy to defraud the U.S. Inciting a riot. Even seditious conspiracy.

    But these crimes are easier to casually talk about than to prove beyond a reasonable doubt, especially against a former president and one who might run again.

    As the hearings unfolded, Democrats were surprised to find themselves standing in admiration, if not awe, for the deeply conservative Rep. Liz Cheney, the poker-faced Republican on the committee who, despite her measured words, made clear her icy disdain for Trump and the many Republicans in Congress who appear to remain in thrall to him.

    She did not countenance the Trump defenders who argued he was manipulated by outside “crazies.”

    “President Trump is a 76-year-old man,” she said. “He is not an impressionable child. Just like everyone else in our country, he is responsible for his own actions and his own choices.”

    Facing a Trump-backed primary opponent in August, her congressional seat in deep-red Wyoming in danger, she framed the stakes for fellow Republican lawmakers at the first hearing: “I say this to my Republican colleagues who are defending the indefensible: There will come a day when Donald Trump is gone, but your dishonor will remain.”

    Democrats and liberals nationwide as well as many Republicans are pouring money into her race, which she well could lose.

    From the first hearing, June 9, watched by an estimated 20 million people, to the eighth on Thursday night, the committee told a seamless story stitched from the testimony of sober and evocative witnesses.

    The panel introduced to the nation the harassed and haunted election workers from Georgia, a young White House aide who saw and knew a lot, little-known Justice officials who proved to be a bulwark against Trump’s scheming, and more.

    ___

    LADY RUBY

    Her name is Ruby Freeman, but everyone in the Georgia community where she’s spent her whole life knows her as Lady Ruby, the words on the T-shirt she wore on Election Day.

    She hasn’t worn that shirt since, says she never will. Her explanation for why not, broadcast to America, did more than make for captivating television. It put a human face on the impact of the pressure-and-smear campaigns wielded by the president and his allies.

    For weeks, the country heard from lawyers at the highest echelons of government and campaign aides and White House workers present in the room with Trump for some of his more untethered moments.

    Lady Ruby, and her daughter, Wandrea “Shaye” Moss, were none of those.

    They were election workers in Fulton County, Georgia’s most populated, where Shaye Moss said she took particular pleasure in distributing absentee ballots to the elderly and disabled and helping residents navigate the voter registration page.

    When Giuliani publicized the sham video about a USB handover and Trump jumped on it, the women’s lives took a sharp turn.

    One day, Shaye Moss told the committee she got a call from her grandmother. She was “screaming at the top of her lungs” that strangers had shown at her door trying to force their way in to find her mother and her.

    Since then, she said: “I don’t want anyone knowing my name. I don’t want to go anywhere with my mom because she might yell my name out over the grocery aisle or something. I don’t go to the grocery store at all. I haven’t been anywhere at all.

    “I’ve gained about 60 pounds,” she said. “I second guess everything that I do. It’s affected my life in a — in a major way. In every way. All because of lies.” She spit out that last word.

    Lady Ruby was in the committee room as her daughter spoke and at one point gently held her hand.

    “Now I won’t even introduce myself by my name anymore,” Lady Ruby said in her earlier videotaped testimony. “I’m worried about who’s listening. I get nervous when I have to give my name for food orders. … I’ve lost my name, and I’ve lost my reputation.”

    ___

    CASSIDY HUTCHINSON

    In 1973, the nation was riveted by a young White House lawyer, John Dean , a participant in the Watergate scandal who delivered hours of harmful testimony about the Nixon White House during congressional hearings while fielding the most memorable question of all: “What did the president know and when did he know it?”

    The Jan. 6 hearings delivered another witness whose words will be long remembered even if they may not be as impactful as Dean’s were in the proceedings that helped force a sitting president out of office.

    She was Cassidy Hutchinson, the mid-20s White House staffer and aide to chief of staff Mark Meadows whose age and anonymity were belied by the lasting damage of her fly-on-the-wall testimony June 28. She described witnessing a president unbound.

    In her composed account, the president was prone to fits of rage, heaving a porcelain plate of food against a White House wall when he learned his attorney general had publicly contradicted his claims of vast voter fraud. (She grabbed a towel to help the valet clean up dripping ketchup.)

    In her telling, the president was aware on the morning of Jan. 6 that loyalists in Washington were armed but was so determined to have their support at a rally that he demanded security be eased.

    It was she who heard from her boss, Meadows, that Trump had brushed off the mob’s threat to hang Pence from the makeshift gallows the insurrectionists had erected outside the Capitol — that Trump thought the vice president deserved that fate.

    It was she who was told by the White House counsel, Cipollone, that it was imperative to stay away from the Capitol despite Trump’s desire to go.

    “Keep in touch with me,” Hutchinson quoted Cipollone as telling her. “We’re going to get charged with every crime imaginable if we make that movement happen.”

    She had once recalled in an interview published on her college website being “brought to tears” when she learned she’d been selected for a White House internship.

    Years later, though, she’d recall her disgust on Jan. 6 upon seeing a tweet from Trump saying Pence didn’t have the courage to do what needed to be done — reject electors from the battleground states and help overturn the results.

    “As an American, I was disgusted,” she testified. “It was unpatriotic. It was un-American. We were watching the Capitol building get defaced over a lie.”

    Fiona Hill, a leading witness in Trump’s first impeachment because of her insights as the president’s Russia adviser, said Hutchinson took all sorts of risks to step up and tell what she knew, so early in her career. Despite her junior position in the White House, she exercised the power of listening to the senior people around her, and so will shape history.

    She understood, Hill told The Associated Press, that “the most powerful thing you can do is tell the truth. She will certainly be defined by that. It’s an extraordinarily brave act for her.”

    ___

    SUNDAY NIGHT MASSACRE?

    The hearings laid bare how the Justice Department — if not democracy itself — was brought to the brink not only by Trump’s outside pressure but also by an accomplice from within.

    Jeffrey Clark was a little-known lawyer who joined the department only in 2018, as its chief environmental enforcement official, and by 2020 was leading its civil division.

    He was a prime cheerleader for Trump’s voter fraud claims and the president weighed making him acting attorney general, a position where he could have done real damage. Clark had been stealthily advancing plans to challenge the election results without telling his higher-ups.

    Three senior Justice officials testified to the committee, among them the acting attorney general at the time, Jeffrey Rosen. The men described in granular detail how they presented a united front against Trump’s badgering.

    “Just say that the election was corrupt + leave the rest to me and the R. Congressmen,” according to handwritten notes from Rosen’s deputy, Richard Donoghue, that conveyed what the president told the two men and that were shown at the hearing. “R.” was short for Republican.

    It all culminated in an Oval Office meeting on the Sunday evening three days before the Capitol attack, when the question hanging over the session was whether Trump would fire Rosen and elevate Clark. The plan had already progressed to a point that White House call logs cited by the committee were, by that afternoon, referring to Clark as the acting attorney general.

    The meeting opened, Rosen testified, with Trump telling the group, “One thing we know is you, Rosen, you aren’t going to do anything” to overturn the election.

    You’re right, Mr. President, Rosen said he replied.

    As the meeting continued, Trump was told the Justice officials in the room — except Clark — would resign if Rosen were fired. Potentially hundreds of federal prosecutors would walk out the door, too.

    Such a crisis would eclipse the Saturday Night Massacre of 1973, when the attorney general and his deputy both resigned rather than execute Richard Nixon’s order to fire the Watergate prosecutor.

    Trump backed down. Rosen would keep his job. But Trump had one last question for him: What happens to Clark now? Are you going to fire him?

    No, Rosen said, he didn’t have the authority to — only Trump did. And that wasn’t going to happen.

    “Alright,” Rosen said. “Well, then we should all go back to work.”

    ___

    187 MINUTES

    The last scheduled hearing, in prime time like the first, examined 187 minutes from the time Trump left a rally stage sending his supporters to the Capitol to the time he ultimately appeared in a Rose Garden video to tell the insurrectionists “go home, we love you, you’re very special.”

    Until then he had watched the melee on Fox News, tweeted his displeasure with Pence and resisted the entreaties of his horrified aides and even family members to say something to tamp down the violence. He even spent time calling senators asking them to block the certification of Biden’s election, the committee said.

    The hearing crystallized the degree to which the insurrectionists on their smartphones were tuned into any words from Trump as they assaulted the complex.

    Secret Service radio transmissions described to the committee revealed agents at the Capitol trying to get Pence to safety and passing goodbye messages to their own families. The mob came within 40 feet or 12 meters of Pence.

    The panel made a detailed case that Trump had been derelict in his duties. He did not summon the military or Homeland Security or the FBI. Outtakes from a video Trump recorded Jan. 7 showed him resisting parts of the script prepared for him.

    “I don’t want to say the election is over,” he said. He still doesn’t.

    ___

    The hearings produced enough words for a classic novel of scheming and corruption, longer than George Orwell’s dystopian “1984,” far longer than Niccolò Machiavelli’s 16th century power study, “The Prince,” and in the ballpark of “The Bonfire of the Vanities,” Tom Wolfe’s take on greed and deception from the 1980s era of Trump the New York developer and man about town.

    In that period, Reagan spoke often of America the shining city, a notion handed down from the Puritans, but perhaps most poignantly in his farewell address in 1989. “How stands the city?” he asked rhetorically.

    These days, intact but endangered, the House Select Committee to Investigate the January 6th Attack on the United States Capitol found. Intact because enough of the president’s men and women, public servants and state officials said an emphatic, effing, no.

    ___

    Associated Press writer Amanda Seitz contributed to this report.

    ___

    For a timeline of the findings of the Jan. 6 committee, visit the AP’s YouTube channel.

    Follow AP’s coverage of the Jan. 6 committee hearings at https://apnews.com/hub/capitol-siege.

    Source Article from https://apnews.com/article/Jan-6-hearings-Trump-capitol-10351fe6d555eaee7554379ceed8bb24

    Democratic leaders are warning that Congress is being targeted by a foreign interference campaign geared toward disrupting November’s presidential election. 

    The top two Democrats in Congress and the leaders of the House and Senate intelligence committees released a letter on Monday to FBI Director Christopher Wray saying they are “gravely concerned” that Congress “appears to be the target of a concerted foreign interference campaign.”

    They wrote that the campaign “seeks to launder and amplify disinformation in order to influence congressional activity, public debate, and the presidential election in November.”

    The brief letter, which is marked as unclassified, was sent on July 13 but was not available to the public before Monday. Markings on the letter suggest that it was accompanied by a classified attachment.

    A congressional official, who declined to be named because the attachment was not public, said the document is based in large part on reporting and analysis from the executive branch.

    The letter was signed by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., House Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam Schiff, D-Calif., and Sen. Mark Warner, vice chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee. 

    The Democrats cited the “seriousness and specificity” of the threats and called for a defensive briefing to be provided to all members of Congress as quickly as possible. They asked Wray to outline a plan for the briefing by Monday.

    Carol Cratty, a spokesperson for the FBI, declined to comment beyond confirming that the bureau received the letter.

    Investigations by the U.S. intelligence community and Congress have determined that Russia interfered in the 2016 election with the intention of benefiting President Donald Trump.

    Former special counsel Robert Mueller, who was tasked with investigating Russian interference, found no conspiracy between the Trump campaign and Russia but did find that the Trump campaign expected to benefit from the country’s actions. 

    Presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden said earlier this month that he had begun receiving intelligence briefings and warned that Russia and China were both seeking to meddle in the race. 

    Earlier this year, Sen. Bernie Sanders was reportedly warned by U.S. officials that Russia was seeking to bolster his bid for the Democratic nomination. 

    Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2020/07/20/democrats-say-congress-appears-to-be-target-of-foreign-interference.html

    A mass vaccination site at the Lumen Field Event Center in Seattle had plenty of takers for the COVID-19 vaccine when it opened in mid-March. Though some relatively rare cases of coronavirus infection have been documented despite vaccination, “I don’t see anything that changes our concept of the vaccine and its efficacy,” says Dr. Anthony Fauci of the National Institutes of Health.

    Jason Redmond/AFP via Getty Images


    hide caption

    toggle caption

    Jason Redmond/AFP via Getty Images

    A mass vaccination site at the Lumen Field Event Center in Seattle had plenty of takers for the COVID-19 vaccine when it opened in mid-March. Though some relatively rare cases of coronavirus infection have been documented despite vaccination, “I don’t see anything that changes our concept of the vaccine and its efficacy,” says Dr. Anthony Fauci of the National Institutes of Health.

    Jason Redmond/AFP via Getty Images

    Ginger Eatman thought she was safe after getting her second COVID-19 vaccination in February. But she kept wearing her mask, using hand sanitizer and wiping down the carts at the grocery store anyway. A few weeks later, she noticed a scratchy throat.

    “By Wednesday morning, St. Patrick’s Day, I was sick. I had congestion — a lot of congestion — and some coughing,” says Eatman, 73, of Dallas, Ga.

    Her doctor thought her symptoms might be allergies. But Eatman started feeling sicker. And then she suddenly lost her sense of smell. She even tried her strong perfume. Nothing.

    So Eatman got tested for the coronavirus. It came back positive.

    “I was shocked. I almost cried,” she says. “It was like: No, that can’t be.”

    Eatman isn’t alone in this experience. It’s a long-recognized phenomenon called “vaccine breakthrough.”

    “Essentially, these are cases that you see amongst vaccinated individuals during a period in which you expect the vaccines to work,” says Dr. Saad Omer, a vaccine researcher at Yale University. This incomplete protection that some people experience occurs to some extent with a vaccine against any disease.

    The three vaccines authorized for use against COVID-19 in the United States appear to be at least 94% effective at preventing severe disease and death (starting about two weeks after a person is fully vaccinated), according to data reported so far, and about 80% effective at preventing infection. But that’s not 100%, Omer notes, so a relatively small number of infections despite immunization with these very effective vaccines is to be expected.

    “So the bottom line is: It’s expected. No need to freak out,” Omer says.

    So far, more than 74 million people have gotten fully vaccinated in the United States. It’s unclear how many have later gotten infected with the coronavirus anyway. But Michigan, Washington and other states have reported hundreds of cases. Most people have gotten only mildly ill, but some have gotten very sick. Some have even died.

    Still, at a recent White House briefing, Dr. Anthony Fauci of the National Institutes of Health noted that such cases of lapses in full protection appear to be very rare. And the deaths seem to be happening primarily among frail elderly people who have other health problems.

    “There’s nothing there yet that’s a red flag. We obviously are going to keep an eye on that very, very carefully. But I don’t see anything that changes our concept of the vaccine and its efficacy,” Fauci says.

    And it’s definitely no reason for anyone not to get vaccinated. The opposite is true.

    “It would also appear the rare infections that occur are less severe, so it would also protect us against severe disease, which is great,” says Dr. Francesca Torriani, an infectious disease researcher at the University of California San Diego, who has studied breakthrough infections among health care workers.

    But such cases are a reminder of why it’s important for people to continue being vigilant after getting vaccinated, infectious disease experts say.

    “I would encourage people to continue, once they’re vaccinated, to use all the prevention measures that we’ve been talking about when they’re outside their home, including masking and distancing and whatnot. And all of that should be active in the workplace,” the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s director, Dr. Rochelle Walensky, said during a briefing for the press on Monday.

    “Assuming you take those prevention measures in the office place and outside the home, I think you’re very safe in the home,” Walensky said.

    Meanwhile, scientists are trying to figure out why breakthrough infections occur.

    “Right now we don’t have a great understanding of exactly where we’re open — our sort of Achilles’ heel,” says Dr. Alexander Greninger, an infectious disease researcher at the University of Washington.

    Is the determining factor how much virus someone is exposed to? Or maybe exposure to one of the variants that can evade the immune system?

    “Is it people in the lower part of the vaccine response mixing with the variants? I think it’s a little bit more — honestly — mysterious,” Greninger says.

    Solving that mystery could help scientists improve the vaccines to prevent more breakthrough infections. Booster shots might become part of the answer down the road, they say.

    For her part, Eatman is still glad she got vaccinated. She recovered after about 10 days. But she has friends who weren’t nearly as lucky — friends who hadn’t gotten vaccinated.

    “We’ve had people at our church — a couple of them,” Eatman says. In one case, “once she got COVID, it took her fast. And then another lady, just a little bit older than I am, wound up in the hospital, had the pneumonia, in ICU, out of ICU, back in ICU. And she went home to be with the Lord.”

    Source Article from https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2021/04/13/986411423/a-mystery-under-study-how-why-and-when-covid-vaccines-arent-fully-protective

    Parliament has expressed its objection to leaving the EU without a deal, but hasn’t been able to agree what terms it would find acceptable. While today’s ruling makes it impossible for Johnson to carry out his implied threat to exit even without an agreement by suspending Parliament through Oct. 31, that remains the default outcome if nothing else changes.

    As the prospect of no deal trashing the U.K. economy has grown in recent months, every pound rally has petered out as quickly as it began.

    Small wonder, then, that traders who initially pushed sterling higher in the wake of the court’s announcement quickly lost enthusiasm for chasing the currency higher. While the Supreme Court’s decision is historic and potentially devastating for Johnson, it still leaves investors with absolutely no idea about what happens next — it’s pretty much “as you were” for the markets. 

    “The House of Commons must convene without delay,” Speaker of the House John Bercow said in a statement. That raises the prospect of members of Parliament rushing back to Westminster on Wednesday.But what happens next remains unclear. Will Johnson resign? Can Parliament force him to seek another delay from the EU? Will there be an election? Might the PM even defy the courts and reopen the constitutional crisis the courts have sought to avert?

    Currency traders are sitting on the fence. For once, that’s probably the right place to be.

    To contact the author of this story: Mark Gilbert at magilbert@bloomberg.net

    To contact the editor responsible for this story: James Boxell at jboxell@bloomberg.net

    This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the editorial board or Bloomberg LP and its owners.

    Mark Gilbert is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering asset management. He previously was the London bureau chief for Bloomberg News. He is also the author of “Complicit: How Greed and Collusion Made the Credit Crisis Unstoppable.”

    ©2019 Bloomberg L.P.

    Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/boris-johnsons-nightmare-puts-the-pound-on-road-to-nowhere/2019/09/24/a39b27d6-dec1-11e9-be7f-4cc85017c36f_story.html

    Image copyright
    EPA

    Image caption

    En 2004, Hadid ganó el premio Pritzker, el más importante de la arquitectura.

    La arquitecta iraquí Zaha Hadid, cuyos diseños incluyen el Centro Acuático Olímpico de Londres, murió este jueves en Miami a la edad de 65 años.

    Hadid murió de un ataque cardiaco en un hospital donde era tratada por una bronquitis.

    Este año Hadid se convirtió en la primera mujer en recibir la Medalla de Oro del Instituto Real de Arquitectos Británicos en reconocimiento a su trabajo.

    “Ahora vemos más mujeres arquitectas establecidas”, indicó cuando recibió el premio del cual se sentía orgullosa.

    Image copyright
    Getty

    Image caption

    Hadid decía estar convencida de que los edificios deben alimentar el alma.

    Eso no significa que es fácil. Algunas veces los desafíos son inmensos. En los años recientes ha habido un cambio tremendo y continuaremos este progreso”.

    Hadid, quien también poseía la nacionalidad británica, era considerada una de las arquitectas más destacadas del siglo XXI.

    Decía estar convencida de que los edificios deben alimentar el alma.

    “Las ideas fuertes nunca fallan”, dijo en 2004.

    Internacional

    Sus diseños han sido comisionados en varias partes del mundo.

    Image copyright
    PA

    Image caption

    El Centro Acuático Olímpico de Londres, que abrió sus puertas en las Olimpiadas de 2012, fue diseñado por Hadid.

    Entre los países en que se pueden encontrar están: China, Alemania, Qatar y Azerbaiyán.

    Sus creaciones incluyen: la Serpentine Gallery en Londres, el Museo Riverside en Glasgow y el Opera House de Cantón, China.

    Image copyright
    Reuters

    Image caption

    Hadid cuando recibió la Excelentísima Orden del Imperio Británico en 2012.

    El editor de Arte de la BBC, Will Gompertz, describió su estilo como una mezcla reconocible de curvas sensuales y modernismo geométrico.

    Su estilo también ha sido catalogado como “neofuturista” y se caracteriza por poderosas formas curvas y estructuras alongadas.

    Una diva de la arquitectura

    Fue la primera mujer en recibir el famoso premio Pritzker (considerado el Nobel de la Arquitectura) en 2004 y en 2008 la revista Forbes la incluyó en su lista de las mujeres más poderosas del mundo.

    Image copyright
    AFP

    Image caption

    Zaha Hadid frente a una de sus creaciones, la Serpentine Sackler Gallery en Londres.

    En una entrevista realizada por la BBC en 2004, la periodista Caroline Frost describió a Hadid como una diva de la arquitectura: “su personalidad tiene la fuerza de cualquiera de sus diseños“, dijo entonces.

    Nacida en Bagdad y educada por monjas francesas, Hadid llegó a Inglaterra cuando tenía 20 años. Pero antes pasó por Beirut, donde estudió matemáticas.

    Bajo el auspicio del ambicioso arquitecto holandés Rem Koolhaas, Hadid consiguió crear dibujos con lenguaje propio.

    Cuando se graduó en 1977, Koolhaas la describió como “un planeta en su propia e inimitable órbita“.

    Image copyright
    PA

    Image caption

    Esta es la parte externa del Centro Acuático Olímpico de Londres.

    Hadid diseñó uno de los principales estadios donde se celebrará el Mundial de Fútbol de Qatar 2022, cuyos organizadores han sido acusados de no respetar los derechos humanos de los empleados que trabajan en las construcciones destinadas al evento.

    El año pasado, el gobierno de Japón dejó a un lado su propuesta de diseñar un estadio de apariencia futurista para las Olimpiadas de Tokio 2020 y optó por un diseño menos ambicioso y menos costoso.

    Source Article from http://www.bbc.com/mundo/noticias/2016/03/160331_arquitecta_iraqui_zaha_hadid_mr

    Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/elections/2021/01/13/house-gop-impeachment-trump/6637559002/


    “We’ll see what happens, but we are going to have a good deal and a fair deal or we’re not going to have a deal at all and that’s OK too,” President Donald Trump said at his re-election rally. | Susan Walsh/AP Photo

    G-20

    The president is running for reelection with a major unfulfilled campaign promise — a trade deal with China.

    OSAKA, Japan — President Donald Trump departed a gathering of world leaders Saturday without striking his long-sought trade deal with China, leaving him with a major unfulfilled campaign promise just as he revs up his reelection bid.

    But the leaders of the world’s biggest economies agreed that their teams should resume negotiations that had broken down several weeks ago with Trump pushing off another round of tariffs on $300 billion on Chinese imports.

    Story Continued Below

    That incremental step is far from what he promised Americans when he was on the campaign trail in 2016 pledging to beat China — the so-called “enemy” that cost the U.S. jobs, spied on U.S. businesses and stole U.S. technology.

    Trump will now need to try to persuade supporters — some of whom have been hurt by rising prices due to his many trade disputes — that not accepting a bad deal with China is actually a win.

    “I don’t think they will see this as a failure. I think they will see this as him fighting,” said Jonathan Felts, who worked in the George W. Bush White House and now lives in the swing state of North Carolina and remains close to the Trump White House. “What they see is a man who is doing exactly what he said he would.”

    At a rally kicking off his reelection campaign in Florida earlier this month, Trump, a businessman who prides himself on making shrewd deals, tried to put a positive spin on his failure to secure a deal with China.

    “We’ll see what happens, but we are going to have a good deal and a fair deal or we’re not going to have a deal at all and that’s OK too,” Trump told the crowd.

    Trump held a series of meetings in Japan while he attended the G-20, an annual gathering of the world’s biggest economies, but did not announce any major agreements with those he spoke with, including the leaders of Japan, Germany and Russia.

    Most of the attention, however, was on trade. Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping and their top aides talked for more than an hour at a meeting closely watched by foreign leaders and business executives worried that the trade impasse will continue to hurt the global economy.

    “You know, we’ve never really had a deal with China,” Trump said at a news conference Saturday. “Tremendous amounts of money was put into China — $500 billion a year. And I mean, you know, not just surplus and deficit. I’m talking about real, hard cash. And it should have never, ever been allowed to have happened for all of our presidents over the last number of years.”

    Trump had already hit China with two rounds of tariffs after unsuccessfully pushing Beijing to change longstanding trade practices that he deems unfair. China retaliated with its own set of tariffs.

    “I think you’ve heard the president say publicly on a number of occasions that he’s quite comfortable with where we are, and he’s quite comfortable with any outcome of those talks,” a senior administration official said.

    On Saturday, at least, they agreed to the ceasefire.

    A former Trump adviser who remains close to the White House said Trump still looks engaged on the issue in contrast to lawmakers of both parties who try to tackle tough issues, such as immigration, only to give in when they can’t initially work out a deal. “The minute things got tough, they bailed,” the former adviser said. “He’s going to keep talking.”

    But David Dollar, who served as economic and financial emissary to China for the Treasury secretary and is now a leading expert on China for the center-left Brookings Institution, said Trump was never going to leave his meeting with Xi this week with a win when the two sides hadn’t been talking for weeks.

    “There hasn’t been enough preparation for there to be a really detailed trade deal between China and the United States,” he said.

    Now, after more than two years of negotiations and his reelection campaign looming, Trump faces intense pressure to find a compromise before his yet-to-be-named opponent criticizes his lack of deal-making skills and his tariff threats continue to cost Americans money, including in states that helped him win in 2016.

    And some of Trump’s allies fear that the tariffs could put a dent in the economy — his strongest reelection selling point — though they note the economy has stayed strong despite earlier Trump-imposed tariffs.

    “Exporters are suffering from the retaliatory tariffs from China,” Matthew Goodman, who served as director for international economics on the National Security Council staff and is now senior adviser for Asian economics at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

    “It’s causing some political blowback for the president. His polls in some states that are red states and farm states are not as good as he would like. And so, you know, it’s possible that he has an incentive to do a deal.”

    Scott Jennings, who worked under President George W. Bush and is close to the Trump White House, said Trump still has plenty of time left in his term to make good on this campaign promise.

    “Trump is in a strong political position,” he said. “He’s put so much effort in for them to roll over and accept less is not an option.”

    Source Article from https://www.politico.com/story/2019/06/29/g20-trump-xi-jinping-china-trade-1390734

    Por: Ana Angulo Benavides


    aangulo@hoy.com.ec


    Defensora del Lector


    Como escribía un lector hace varios días, las noticias sobre accidentes de tránsito son “el pan de cada día” en el Ecuador. Prácticamente no hay semana que no se reporte al menos un suceso de esta naturaleza que ocurre ya sea en las calles de las ciudades o en las reconstruidas carreteras del país.


    Lamentablemente los accidentes se han convertido en un hecho tan cotidiano que la mayoría de medios, incluido HOY, los registran como notas secundarias y se olvidan de los casos hasta volver a informar sobre el siguiente, desde luego con los datos de rigor: número de heridos y de fallecidos, el lugar donde se produce, las posibles causas, las placas de los vehículos involucrados, la actuación de los organismos de socorro y algún otro dato adicional. Pero en raras ocasiones estas noticias tienen seguimiento.


    Al igual que en los casos de crímenes violentos, daría la impresión que los seguimientos en este tipo de informaciones depende del número de fallecidos o de su “importancia”. El domingo anterior, en la página de Actualidad se publicó la nota “Pujilí: 4 muertos en un accidente de tránsito”, la cual daba cuenta del volcamiento de un bus que habría rodado unos 400 metros en el sector de Guangaje (Cotopaxi), con un saldo de cuatro fallecidos y 29 heridos.


    El texto incluía la versión de testigos, datos sobre el traslado de los heridos y el número de víctimas mortales, entre otros proporcionados por el ECU-911 de Quito, y una reacción del presidente Rafael Correa quien indicó que las autoridades investigaban las causas para sancionar a los responsables del fatal accidente.


    Ahí acabó todo. Al día siguiente no se volvió a saber del suceso. No se informó sobre el estado de los heridos, no hubo ninguna noticia del conductor, no se supo si el bus había sido remolcado, no se indicó el nombre de la cooperativa, peor aún si tenía vigente la matrícula o el SOAT. Nada. El caso recibió un tratamiento similar a tantos otros que involucran directamente a personas que pierden seres queridos o pasajeros que quedan lesionados de por vida.


    A propósito de una balacera ocurrida hace dos semanas al norte de Quito en la que falleció un policía, un supuesto asaltante y el empleado de un restaurante, un lector escribió que los medios (así, en general) resaltaban la muerte del uniformado pero que las referencias sobre el trabajador eran mínimas. Probablemente esto se debe a que las instancias oficiales influyen de mejor forma para lograr que se reproduzca su información y a una reportería deficiente que solo vio de pasada el otro lado de la noticia, en este caso específico las otras víctimas y las consecuencias para sus familiares.


    No porque los accidentes y crímenes sucedan a diario, podemos verlos como hechos corrientes. Hace falta darles seguimiento, alguna vez llegar a “las últimas consecuencias”.


     

    Source Article from http://www.hoy.com.ec/noticias-ecuador/pan-de-cada-dia-604098.html

    Under federal law, Attorney General William Barr could have taken Special Counsel Robert S. Mueller III’s long-awaited Russiagate report, shoved it in a drawer, and sent the following letter to Capitol Hill:

    “Dear Congress:

    “No collusion. No obstruction.

    “Love,

    “Bill”

    Beyond that, Barr was obligated to do none of what he did on Thursday morning. He held a press conference at Justice Department headquarters, answered journalists’ questions, sent Congress redacted copies of Mueller’s 448-page “Report On The Investigation Into Russian Interference in the 2016 Presidential Election” (on CD-ROMs), made a nearly unredacted copy (minus only legally verboten grand jury material) available for top congressional leaders to inspect, posted the document on DOJ’s public website, and freed Mueller to discuss his findings before Congress, as Democrats have demanded. Barr previously agreed to let the Senate and House judiciary committees grill him on, respectively, May 1 and 2.

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    Democrats have suggested that Barr has something to hide. As House Speaker Nancy Pelosi of California and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer of New York stated Wednesday, “The American people deserve to hear the truth.” In fact, Barr’s behavior has been clearer than a Brooks Brothers storefront window.

    The White House has been equally see-through. While President Donald J. Trump ground his molars through this 22-month-long legal root canal, he let his lawyers hand Mueller some 1.4 million pages of records and allowed administration and campaign personnel to be interrogated. Trump never asserted executive privilege, nor did he request redactions in the report.

    CLICK HERE TO READ THE REST OF THIS OPINION PIECE IN THE NATIONAL REVIEW

    CLICK HERE TO READ MORE BY DEROY MURDOCK

    Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/opinion/murdock-mueller-report