Most Viewed Videos

President Donald Trump’s tweets about voter fraud following a Friday meeting with two Michigan Republican leaders seem to contradict their joint statement.

House Speaker Lee Chatfield, R-Levering, and Senate Majority Leader Mike Shirkey, R-Clarklake, were invited to meet with Trump at the White House.

They did so and, following the meeting, issued a statement later Friday that suggested a significant part of the meeting was focused on getting more federal funds targeted at Michigan for coronavirus aid.

Related: Michigan legislative leaders after meeting with Trump: ‘we will follow the law’

They went on to say that “We have not yet been made aware of any information that would change the outcome of the election in Michigan and as legislative leaders, we will follow the law and follow the normal process regarding Michigan’s electors, just as we have said throughout this election.”

But Trump, in two tweets Saturday, Nov. 21, re-posted the joint statement from Shirkey and Chatfield and added his own comments.

“This is true, but much different than reported by the media. We will show massive and unprecedented fraud!” he wrote in one tweet.

In the next, he said “Massive voter fraud will be shown!”

Related: Michigan’s Republican leaders are meeting with Trump. Experts call any attempt to sway the election ‘absolute chaos’

Shirkey and Chatfield, in their statement, wrote:

“Michigan’s certification process should be a deliberate process free from threats and intimidation. Allegations of fraudulent behavior should be taken seriously, thoroughly investigated, and if proven, prosecuted to the full extent of the law. And the candidates who win the most votes win elections and Michigan’s electoral votes. These are simple truths that should provide confidence in our elections.”

For many, there was widespread speculation the state’s Republican leaders would discuss with the president intervening in the process of selecting electors. They have no role in that process under Michigan law.

Other than the description in the joint statement, the exact details of Friday’s discussion are not known.

More from MLive

Michigan jail escapee on run for 8 days captured after two vehicle chases

Health leaders working with legal counsel over Michigan restaurant’s refusal to stop dine-in service

Source Article from https://www.mlive.com/public-interest/2020/11/trumps-tweets-appear-to-contradict-michigan-legislators-statements-on-voter-fraud.html

A sample of the new warning notices that Twitter users will see before clicking to see tweets by government officials and political figures that violate Twitter’s rules.



Twitter

Twitter is creating a warning label to flag and suppress political tweets that break the platform’s rules on acceptable speech. It’s a bold step for the company, which has come under sharp criticism for its handling of tweets by major political figures including President Trump.

The company will not delete the offensive, bullying or hateful tweets of politicians. But, it announced in a blog post Thursday, it will begin marking them up. When a politician’s tweet breaks the rules, it will get hidden under a warning label that says:

“The Twitter Rules about abusive behavior apply to this Tweet. However, Twitter has determined it may be in the public’s interest for the Tweet to remain available.”

A user will have to click or tap to view.

The new measure applies to verified political leaders and candidates who have more than 100,000 followers. The abusive tweets will be ranked down by algorithms as well, thereby getting fewer views.

Twitter leadership once referred to the company as “the free speech wing of the free speech party.”

Those days are long gone. Following the massacre in Christchurch, New Zealand, which was livestreamed on Facebook, Twitter entered a compact with other social media giants to more aggressively track down violent or extremist content. Meanwhile, Republican leaders have repeatedly accused Twitter and others of having an anti-conservative bias.

Last year, Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey said in congressional testimony: “Twitter does not use political ideology to make any decisions, whether related to ranking content on our service or how we enforce our rules.”

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2019/06/27/736668003/twitter-adds-warning-label-for-offensive-political-tweets

“A frigid arctic air mass is expected to spread across much of the north central and northeastern US this week. These are the coldest wind chill values expected over the next several days. Check forecasts from your local NWS office for details specific to your area,” the NWS warned Monday, referring to the polar vortex: cold air high up in the atmosphere that usually lies over the North Pole, but which is moving down from the Arctic Circle over parts of the US this week.

​The upper Midwest could be hit by —60 degrees Farenheit wind chills, and the upper Mississippi Valley could see chills as brutally cold as —55 degrees Fahrenheit.

On Monday, the NWS Weather Prediction Center issued warnings stating that temperatures in the upper Great Lakes and upper Mississippi Valley will be 10 to 20 degrees below average this week, marking the “coldest air mass in years,” according to the weather service.

​The majority of New England is under a winter storm watch, while most of the Great Lakes region is under a winter storm warning. Areas of Missouri, Illinois, Indiana and Ohio are under a wind chill watch, while parts of Louisiana, Tennessee, Alabama, Kentucky and West Virginia have been placed under winter weather advisories. The western parts of Minnesota and Illinois, as well as North and South Dakota, are under wind chill warnings, the NWS also reported.

“A couple inches of snow can fall in Jackson, Mississippi; Birmingham, Alabama; and Chattanooga, Tennessee,” AccuWeather meteorologist Kristina Pydynowski said. “Travel can become slippery and treacherous as roads rapidly turn from wet to slushy and icy.”

​It will start snowing in the Chicago area on Sunday night (January 27); the extreme cold marked by record low temperatures is expected to last until Friday.

“I cannot stress how dangerously cold it will be,” said Mike Doll, a senior meteorologist at AccuWeather. “An entire generation has gone by without experiencing this type of cold in the Chicago area.”

On Sunday, temperatures dropped to negative 44 degrees Fahrenheit in Minnesota, breaking the previous record for the most frigid weather ever experienced there by 8 degrees, according to the NWS, while “dangerous, life-threatening cold air” will envelop Iowa from Tuesday through Friday. The Des Moines, Iowa, branch of the NWS warned residents that “this is the coldest air many of us will have ever experienced,” cautioning people to “avoid taking deep breaths, and minimize talking” if outdoors.

Eleven major airlines, including American, Delta, United and Southwest, have issued travel warnings for multiple airports throughout the US affected by the polar vortex, allowing travelers to change their trips with no fee if their flight plans are affected “by severe weather or other uncontrollable events.”

Source Article from https://sputniknews.com/environment/201901281071899208-polar-vortex-engulf-midwest-great-lakes/

David — a onetime lawyer in the governor’s office who called for his former boss to resign this week — suggested changes to the never-released Boylan letter, which was later leaked to reporters, according to the investigation. He later made an effort to get signatures for it, even though he told Cuomo advisers he would not sign it himself, David told investigators. He also provided Cuomo advisers with an internal memo about Boylan, which he had retained after leaving the governor’s office, the report said.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/cuomo-harassment-allegations–advocacy-groups/2021/08/04/57103eee-f51f-11eb-9738-8395ec2a44e7_story.html

En 1950, hace solo 60 años, el movimiento de turistas a nivel global ascendía a 25 millones y hoy tenemos 1,135 millones alrededor del mundo. El turismo impacta en la diversificación económica de un país y su presencia es importante en la agenda de los medios de comunicación. Por eso, el Ministerio de Comercio Exterior y Turismo (Mincetur) y la Organización Mundial del Turismo (OMT) organizaron el pasado sábado el Primer Seminario Internacional para periodistas “Turismo es Noticia”.


El expositor fue Marcelo Risi, Jefe de Prensa de la OMT con amplia trayectoria en el sector turismo, quien expuso sobre la trascendencia de la labor informativa y de difusión de noticias vinculadas al turismo, como actividad que aporta al crecimiento económico y desarrollo de un país.


El turismo como noticia


‘;

botonera.appendChild(reload);
botonera.appendChild(share)

var conte = 0;
for(var e = 0; e

‘;
for (var e2 = conte; e2

‘+rel[e2].titulo+’

‘;
conte++;
if (conte%6 == 0) {
break;
};
};
htm += ‘

‘;
}

orbit.innerHTML = ”;

rldv.style.background = “url(” + player.item.promo + “) no-repeat”;
rldv.appendChild(shadowbox);
rldv.appendChild(botonera);
rldv.appendChild(orbit);
rldv.appendChild(shdv);
elP.appendChild(rldv);

if(typeof $ == “function” && typeof $.fn.orbit == “function”) new gec.ui.orbit(orbit);
});

player.mb.subscribe(OO.EVENTS.WILL_PLAY_ADS, ‘keynote’, function(a, b) {
publicidad = true;
elPl.appendChild(cls);
track(“Publicidad”);
if(!iOS){
cls.innerHTML = ‘Omitir publicidad en: ‘ + timerAdd;
var intev = setInterval(function() {
cls.innerHTML = ‘Omitir publicidad en: ‘ + timerAdd;
if (timerAdd == 0) {
cls.style.display = “none”;
clearInterval(intev);
} else if (timerAdd > 0){
if(!adpause){
timerAdd–;
}
}
}, 1000);
}else{
cls.style.display = “none”;
}
});

player.mb.subscribe(OO.EVENTS.ADS_PLAYED, “keynote”, function() {
publicidad = false;
cls.style.display = “none”;
});

player.mb.subscribe(‘*’,’keynote’, function(eventName) {
if(eventName==’adsClicked’){
track(“Click en publicidad”);
}
});
}
});
});


Para Risi, la noticia turística va más allá de un tema especializado y que merece estar presente de forma más creativa y con otra narrativa en los medios de comunicación. “El turismo no es solo playas, monumentos, destinos y experiencias turísticas. El turismo es infraestructura, implementación de servicios, es recurso humano, es diversificación económica y por eso es noticia”, señaló.


Además, Risi enfatizó que el turismo crea empleo, brinda conocimientos, reduce la desigualdad y es generador de inversiones que debemos facilitarla.


Mincetur en concordancia con la OMT


La Ministra de Comercio Exterior y Turismo, Magali Silva -quien inauguró el Seminario Internacional-, dijo que su sector, en concordancia con los planteamientos de la OMT, está desarrollando una mayor oferta turística con diversidad de destinos y mercados, ejecución de infraestructura y facilitación de inversiones, para consolidar el crecimiento del turismo en el Perú.


“Nuestras líneas estratégicas contemplan el fortalecimiento de las capacidades de gestión y entrenamiento del recurso humano para ofrecer mejores servicios al turista”, indicó.


Primero conoce el Perú


Señaló se trabaja en una nueva imagen del turismo interno y receptivo. En el primer caso a través del Programa Y tú ¿qué planes?, con lo cual, se busca generar cultura turística en las familias peruanas, otorgándoles la información necesaria y promocionando los destinos que mejor les acomoda.


“En turismo receptivo estamos creciendo 11% en los dos primeros meses del año. Si bien, tenemos a Machu Picchu como nuestro principal atractivo, es importante diversificar la oferta turística, mostrando las bondades de nuestra Cordillera de los Andes en la sierra, del turismo de Selva y el turismo de frontera, con la meta de llegar a ser potencia”, manifestó.


Sobre la OMT


La Organización Mundial del Turismo (OMT) es el organismo de las Naciones Unidas encargado de la promoción de un turismo responsable, sostenible y accesible para todos. Como principal organización internacional en el ámbito turístico, trabaja por un turismo que contribuya al crecimiento económico, a un desarrollo incluyente y a la sostenibilidad ambiental, y ofrece liderazgo y apoyo al sector para expandir por el mundo sus conocimientos y políticas turísticas.


Entre sus miembros figuran 156 países (entre ellos el Perú), 6 miembros asociados y más de 400 Miembros Afiliados que representan al sector privado, a instituciones de enseñanza, a asociaciones de turismo y a autoridades turísticas locales. ‎

Source Article from http://elcomercio.pe/vamos/noticias/turismo-y-comunicacion-mincetur-y-omt-organizaron-seminario-noticia-1807476

Copyright 2014 by NewBay Media, LLC. All Rights Reserved. 28 East 28th Street, 12th floor, New York, NY 10016 T (212) 378-0400 F (212) 378-0470

Source Article from http://www.multichannel.com/twc-noticias-ny1-launches-series-honoring-new-yorks-latin-american-communities/374437

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2021/03/02/covid-stimulus-15-minimum-wage-unlikely-part-bidens-bill/6872251002/

Hotel owner Gordon Sondland, who is scheduled to testify before Congress on Wednesday, is a pivotal witness in the impeachment inquiry.

Carlos Jasso/Reuters


hide caption

toggle caption

Carlos Jasso/Reuters

Hotel owner Gordon Sondland, who is scheduled to testify before Congress on Wednesday, is a pivotal witness in the impeachment inquiry.

Carlos Jasso/Reuters

When Gordon Sondland arrived at the Capitol last month to provide what would be pivotal testimony in the Trump impeachment inquiry, a reporter asked the U.S. ambassador to the European Union, “Are you here to salvage your reputation?”

“I don’t have a reputation to salvage,” Sondland shot back.

Until recently, Sondland, 62, had a pretty low profile outside his hometown of Portland, Ore., where he and his wife, Katy Durant, are big Republican donors and contributors to numerous arts and civic organizations.

Now, as Sondland prepares to testify publicly before congressional investigators Wednesday, he finds himself in the middle of a Category 5 political storm.

Congressional investigators are looking into whether President Trump withheld security assistance from Ukraine to pressure the government to say it was investigating former Vice President Joe Biden’s son Hunter, who served on the board of a Ukrainian gas company.

Sondland, who helped reach out to the Ukrainian government on Trump’s behalf, first told Congress that the president was simply interested in battling corruption. He had demanded no favors in exchange for security assistance, he claimed.

But Sondland later amended his testimony, saying the aid package was in fact contingent on an investigation into the Bidens.

A strive for prominence

The impeachment inquiry has given Sondland a notoriety he never bargained for when he became EU ambassador.

The son of Holocaust survivors, Sondland dropped out of college early and got into commercial real estate. At just 28, he bought and renovated the bankrupt Roosevelt Hotel in Seattle, where he was born.

Today, his company, Provenance Hotels, owns 14 hotels, including six in Portland.

“He sees a good property that’s kind of in the right location and makes enough of an investment in it to make it a highly desirable place to stay,” says Len Bergstein, a public affairs consultant who has worked with Sondland.

Sondland has worked hard to be seen as a civic leader and cares a lot about how he is seen, Bergstein says. When Sondland worked out a deal with local government to acquire some land for a hotel, he insisted that he be referred to as a “pillar of the community” in the press release the city put out, Bergstein says.

“He was in many ways exercising his political muscles to try and up his profile, to take him from a kind of a noted and successful businessperson in a relatively narrow sense to much larger circles of prominence in the community,” Bergstein says.

According to Oregon Business, Sondland is a big fan of Ayn Rand, whose books promoting free market capitalism are popular with many libertarian conservatives.

But he has mainly donated to moderate Republicans like Jeb Bush and even a few Democrats, according to Sheila Krumholz, executive director of the Center for Responsive Politics.

A complicated relationship with Trump

His relationship with Trump is complicated. Sondland publicly broke with him following the then-presidential candidate’s attack on a Gold Star Muslim family. Yet Sondland also became a “bundler” for Trump, using his network of Portland political donors to help Trump get elected.

“In that election he gave nothing to Trump but he was listed as one of Trump’s bundlers in 2016, and of course being a bundler gives you more clout than just giving a single donation,” Krumholz says.

Sondland also donated $1 million to Trump’s inauguration through four companies Sondland controls.

A lot of people in liberal Portland have been taken aback by Sondland’s willingness to work in the Trump administration, Bergstein says.

“It was a surprise when Gordon found Donald Trump as an acceptable candidate. That wasn’t his type of Republican that he supported,” he says.

And Sondland has already paid a price for that support.

He is sometimes confronted by demonstrators when he goes out in public. And Democratic Rep. Earl Blumenauer, who represents the Portland area, has called for a boycott of his hotels.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2019/11/19/780937794/gordon-sondland-was-a-low-profile-hotel-owner-until-he-went-to-work-for-trump

In L.A. County, people are urged to “avoid swimming, surfing, and playing in ocean waters around discharging storm drains, creeks, and rivers” because of pollution runoff during heavy rains.

Source Article from https://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-storm-stay-home-alert-20190201-story.html

Some Senate Republicans endorsed the administration’s position on Thursday, arguing that rejecting the arms sales would be overly blunt with unintended consequences at a time when tensions with Iran have escalated.

The question the Senate will consider, Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the majority leader said, “is whether we’ll lash out at an imperfect partner and undercut our own efforts to build cooperation, check Iran, and achieve other important goals, or whether we’ll keep our imperfect partners close and use our influence.”

But the administration’s argument ultimately fell flat even for some of the president’s closest allies, like Senator Lindsey Graham, Republican of South Carolina, who co-sponsored the legislation with Mr. Menendez.

“While I understand that Saudi Arabia is a strategic ally, the behavior of Mohammed bin Salman cannot be ignored,” Mr. Graham said. “Now is not the time to do business as usual with Saudi Arabia. I am also very concerned about the precedent these arms sales would set by having the administration go around legitimate concerns of the Congress.”

The original legislation Mr. Menendez and Mr. Graham introduced would have forced senators to vote on 22 separate resolutions of disapproval, one vote for each arms sale. But a deal struck with Mr. McConnell narrowed that number down to three — and also ensured that the Foreign Relations Committee will take up a bill sponsored by Mr. Menendez that would curtail the ability of the president to use emergency authority to sell arms.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/06/20/us/politics/saudi-arms-sales.html

Source Article from https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/politics-news/samantha-bee-roasts-trump-second-not-white-house-correspondents-dinner-n999116

Alcalde explicó que edificación tenía “licencia falsa de construcción”. Cuatro obreros de una misma familia murieron.

El colapso de un edificio en construcción en el Cartagena deja hasta el momento 17 muertos, informaron este sábado las autoridades, que continúan en los operativos de rescate de posibles personas atrapadas bajo los escombros.

Estas son las personas que fallecieron:

1.    Omar Mendoza Bello
2.    Javier González Salas
3.    Esteban Salas Correa
4.    Rafael Hernán Mendoza Díaz
5.    Manuel Quintana Martínez
6.    Edgardo Antonio García Quintana
7.    Yesid Cantillo Suárez
8.    Jaime Bánquez Navas
9.    Elvis Macklin Barroso Pitalúa
10.    Wilmar Leonardo Tirado Paternina
11.    Ezequiel Burriel Santana
12.    Over Daniel Pastrana Llanes
13.    José David Pastrana Llanes
14.    Ledys Antonio Padilla
15.    Apolinar Aguilar
16.    Manuel Mendivil
17.    Ermey Viloria
18.    Adalberto Enrique Ortega Pérez
19.    Régulo Marín 
20.    N.N. 

Por el desplome de un edificio en el barrio Blas de Lezo, en la caribeña Cartagena de Indias, se reportan 23 heridos, de los cuales 16 están hospitalizados, informó la alcaldía de la ciudad en su cuenta en Twitter.

Alcaldía Cartagena on Twitter

Hasta el momento las autoridades han rescatado a 40 personas tras el derrumbe el jueves de la estructura, que tenía una “licencia falsa de construcción”, según explicó la víspera el alcalde de la ciudad, Manolo Duque.

¿Nadie se dio cuenta? Edificio desplomado en Cartagena no tenía…

Hasta el viernes, las autoridades locales habían informado de la muerte de diez personas en el accidente, dos de las cuales serían obreros de nacionalidad venezolana, y de otras seis que posiblemente estaban atrapadas bajo los escombros.

La Fiscalía ordenó el viernes la apertura de una investigación para establecer las causas del colapso de la estructura de seis pisos, de los cuales los dos primeros estaban habitados, explicó el jueves a el director de Socorro de la Cruz Roja Colombiana, César Urueña.

Cuatro personas fueron rescatadas vivas bajo los escombros del…

La alcaldía convocó a una misa este sábado en la tarde en el lugar de la tragedia en honor a las víctimas.

Source Article from http://noticias.caracoltv.com/colombia/ya-son-17-los-muertos-por-colapso-de-edificio-en-cartagena

As southeast Australia burned Saturday, the word carried on the wind was “unprecedented.” The continent has seen massive wildfire outbreaks before, but this one has been different. There are so many fires in so many places — about 200 at last count — and many are in novel terrain, including rainforests and the suburbs of Sydney.

The flames have taken the lives of a dozen people in the past week, killed untold numbers of koalas and other animals, destroyed more than a thousand structures, forced tens of thousands of people to evacuate, choked cities with smoke and rendered the famed Sydney Opera House nearly invisible on the city’s harbor. The smoke has reached the lower stratosphere and crossed 9,000 miles of ocean to pollute the skies of South America.

Saturday was one of the worst days yet in a stretch of dangerous fire weather — blazing heat, parched brush and winds that topped 60 miles per hour. It was the hottest day on record in metropolitan Sydney, with the town of Penrith hitting 120 degrees, according to the Australian Bureau of Meteorology. The national capital, Canberra, set a record high with a temperature of 110 degrees.

The national government on Saturday began calling up 3,000 army reservists to conduct evacuations and help people in remote areas affected by the wildfire emergency. But the chief firefighter in New South Wales, Shane Fitzsimmons, complained Sunday that he didn’t know about the deployment until he saw the news on TV. He said he called the prime minister’s office for details.

“It is disappointing that on one of our worst days this season, to hear that announcement, then have to try to work through on top of everything else what it means and how it is going to operate,” he said in a television interview.

Roads have closed, and many residents and summer vacationers have been trapped in coastal towns and told to flee the flames by boat if there is no other option. More than 1,000 people and 113 dogs reached Melbourne on Saturday on two Navy ships, the Sycamore and the Choules, which evacuated them from seaside towns ringed by fires.

In southern New South Wales state, people in a 70-mile coastal stretch were warned it was too late to leave the area and told to seek shelter, as an out-of-control blaze that had consumed more than 1,000 square miles of forest and farmland — more than 40 times the size of Manhattan — burned toward the Pacific Ocean and threatened to cut off escape routes. This season’s fires have burned through an area at least the size of West Virginia.

At Sanctuary Point, a normally bustling vacation town, 13 of the 18 shops on the main street were closed Saturday. Shopkeepers said the staff and owners had either left town or were preparing to defend their houses. Those who remained waited anxiously for a southerly change that could whip up the fire, and they kept watch for embers, which fire officials have said can ignite trees, leaves and grass up to seven miles ahead of a fire front.

Around midday, Helen Bowerman was pouring water into the guttering on her concrete-block and metal-roof house. With the air smelling of smoke, the 66-year-old said she was worried that tall trees on an adjacent property could catch fire and collapse.

Should the fire reach her, Bowerman said, she planned to dive into a large estuary next to her house. A neighbor had kayaks ready to go. “We all look out for each other and help each other out,” she said.

Farrugia Sammut, 82, said she had not been as scared since her childhood home in Malta was bombed during World War II. “We’re surrounded” by wildfires, the former factory worker said. “I can’t sleep at night for the worry.”

On Sunday, the Aussies got a break meteorologically. The cold front that blasted through Saturday brought more comfortable temperatures and the promise of a few calmer days.

But that same cold front had also delivered high winds through Saturday night, creating fresh emergencies as it pushed the conflagrations northward into new terrain. Four firefighters were injured overnight — three from smoke inhalation and a fourth from burns to his hands. Hundreds more houses had been destroyed, according to a fire brigade spokesman.

Despite the improved conditions, fire authorities said it wasn’t safe for people in many coastal towns to leave by road. The main highway south from Sydney to the coast was cut off by flames and smoke overnight in several locations. The highway linking Sydney and Melbourne — Australia’s two largest cities — was also closed.

More than 1,000 people spent the night at an emergency shelter in Bega, a town in southern New South Wales surrounded by national parks, according to the Australian Broadcasting Corp.

This past year was the hottest on record in Australia — and also the driest. The lethal combination has underwritten a fire season that started early, in September, and shows no sign of abating. The death toll since the fire season began stands at 23. The fires are so extreme that the weather bureau has warned of lightning strikes from what are called pyro-cumulonimbus clouds — fire-spawned thunderheads built of smoke, towering to 45,000 feet and generating ground-level convection that makes firefighting harder.

Forecasters do not anticipate any significant rain in the scorched regions for months.

This natural disaster is also a political flash point. The fires are a vivid signal of the global crisis of climate change, which can make ecological conditions more suitable to the ignition and intensification of wildfires. Climate change has been a divisive topic in Australia for years, a wedge issue that has decided elections.

In the past, Prime Minister Scott Morrison has downplayed the importance of tackling climate change and has offered full-throated support for coal mining. The fires have created the biggest test of that position, and of Morrison’s leadership, since his conservatives unexpectedly won a general election in May.

Even on a dry continent accustomed to fatal wildfires, footage of hundreds of civilians being evacuated by sea triggered a sense among many Australians that climate change poses an immediate threat to the nation, one of the world’s largest coal exporters. Three weeks ago, the country recorded its highest nationally averaged temperatures — twice in two days.

Already, the devastation has fueled calls for Morrison — who once brandished a lump of coal in Parliament to underline his support for mining — to take more concerted action on climate change. Australia’s share of global carbon dioxide emissions from domestic use of fossil fuels is about 1.4 percent, according to Climate Analytics, but the country is one of the highest emitters per capita.

“The best response I can provide to people who are feeling angry and isolated, people who are feeling afraid, is what I can do today,” Morrison said at a news briefing in Canberra, flanked by the minister of defense and the chief of the defense forces. “We’ll continue to take action on climate change.”

The fires have also undermined Morrison’s reputation as a man in touch with middle Australia.

The prime minister, who was snubbed and heckled by exhausted and angry firefighters and survivors in recent days, ordered what the government said was the first major use of military reserves to respond to this type of natural disaster. He also touted, in a promotional video, an Australian navy ship that has been ordered to the border between the states of New South Wales and Victoria to help evacuate people.

These moves followed criticism of Morrison’s decision to vacation in Hawaii after the fires began, and there is a perception that state-based firefighting services have been overwhelmed by blazes that have destroyed more than 1,300 homes.

“He deserves it,” said Geoff Monkhouse, a 76-year-old retired electrical contractor who was drinking beer at a Sanctuary Point country club on Saturday. “He should not go smiling around people that are suffering.”

Australia’s deadliest wildfire disaster was in February 2009, when 173 people were killed.

On Saturday, Andrew Constance, a conservative lawmaker from southern New South Wales, compared the fires in his region to “an atomic bomb.”

“It’s indescribable the hell it’s caused and the devastation it’s caused,” he told Australian Broadcasting Corp. radio.

Volunteer brigades of the Rural Fire Service are being widely lauded as heroes. The government’s Fires Near Me website lists the status of the distinct fires: the Currowan (695,000 acres, “out of control”), the Green Wattle Creek (671,000, “out of control”), the Dunns Road (582,000, “out of control”), the Badja Forest Road (494,000, “out of control”) — and the tally goes on.

Radio host Richard Glover, presenter of “Drive” on ABC Radio Sydney, said he took a bucket to the studio Saturday in case he became nauseous from the toxic air. His listeners told tales of retching as they drove around the city. The fires are right up against the Sydney suburbs, an unfamiliar experience for residents.

In an email, Glover described the nature of the disaster, with office workers wearing breathing masks and senior citizens pressing hankies to their mouths as they walk the streets:

“There are the unprecedented fish deaths in our inland rivers; the unprecedented level-one fire warning for Sydney; the unprecedented day of blazes in every state and territory.”

He summed up the mood: “Gnawing anxiety is everywhere, together with enormous gratitude and admiration for the ‘thin yellow line’ of volunteer fire-fighters who are standing in the way of the flames.”

Achenbach and Freedman reported from Washington.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/asia_pacific/australia-fires-intensify-as-prime-minister-calls-up-army-reservists-to-help-contain-crisis/2020/01/04/1ade9670-2e54-11ea-bffe-020c88b3f120_story.html

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2021/08/24/caldor-fire-lake-tahoe-california-nevada-resources/5579388001/

An exhausted Senate narrowly approved a $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief bill Saturday as President Joe Biden and his Democratic allies notched a victory they called crucial for hoisting the country out of the pandemic and economic doldrums.

After laboring all night on a mountain of amendments — nearly all from Republicans and rejected — bleary-eyed senators approved the sprawling package on a 50-49 party-line vote. That sets up final congressional approval by the House next week so lawmakers can whisk it to Biden for his signature.

Biden said Saturday that the plan means $1,400 checks to individuals would be sent out this month.

Under the Senate bill, individuals earning less than $75,000 a year and married couples earning less than $150,000 will receive $1,400 per person, including children. That will get money to about 90% of households.

Under the Senate version, that amount would be gradually reduced until it reaches zero for people earning $80,000 and couples making $160,000. Those ceilings were higher in the House version.

The huge measure — its cost is nearly one-tenth the size of the entire U.S. economy — is Biden’s biggest early priority. It stands as his formula for addressing the deadly virus and a limping economy, twin crises that have afflicted the country for a year.

“This nation has suffered too much for much too long,” Biden told reporters at the White House after the vote. “And everything in this package is designed to relieve the suffering and to meet the most urgent needs of the nation, and put us in a better position to prevail.”

Saturday’s vote was also a crucial political moment for Biden and Democrats, who need nothing short of party unanimity in a 50-50 Senate they run with Vice President Kamala Harris’ tiebreaking vote. They hold a slim 10-vote House edge.

Not one Republican backed the bill in the Senate or when it initially passed the House, underscoring the barbed partisan environment that’s characterized the early days of Biden’s presidency.

CNN contributed.

Source Article from https://www.kcra.com/article/president-biden-says-covid-19-stimulus-plan-means-dollar1400-checks-being-sent-this-month/35753408

After months of leading the White House coronavirus task force, overseeing an ineffectual response to the pandemic that has killed more than 310,000 people to date, Vice President Mike Pence became among the first people in the nation to receive the first Pfizer vaccine dose on Friday morning.

Along with his wife, Karen Pence, and Surgeon General Jerome Adams, Pence was vaccinated in an event broadcast on live TV as part of the Trump administration’s mixed effort to instill public confidence in the vaccine.

He is the first top Trump administration official to receive the vaccine.

“Karen and I are more than happy to step forward before this week was up, to take the safe and effective coronavirus vaccine that we have secured and produced for the American people,” he said after receiving the first shot in his left arm, in a speech applauding the nationwide mobilization to deliver and administer the vaccine.

“From early on, President Trump gave the White House coronavirus task force one mission and that was to save lives,” he continued. “And in the midst of one of the most challenging years in the life of this nation, I truly do believe that despite the heartbreak and hardship that we have endured as a nation that we have done just that.”

The Pences join thousands of healthcare workers to receive the first doses of the vaccine this week as the pandemic reaches staggering new heights. On Wednesday, Johns Hopkins University reported more than 247,000 new COVID cases in the country and more than 3,600 deaths, the highest single-day count to date.

The vice president himself has dismissed concerns about the severity of the pandemic. In June, as case counts increased in parts of the country, Pence wrote an op-ed insisting there was no second wave of the virus in the US and praising Trump’s leadership for the “great progress” the administration has made.

“The media has tried to scare the American people every step of the way, and these grim predictions of a second wave are no different,” he wrote. “The truth is, whatever the media says, our whole-of-America approach has been a success.”

The administration also passed on Pfizer’s offer to secure more doses of the vaccine back in the summer, the New York Times reported.

Pence has publicly displayed indifference to safety measures as well. In October, after several of his close aides tested positive for the coronavirus, he continued to show up at election campaign events, flouting the recommendations of public health experts.

Days before he received the vaccine, Pence also reportedly hosted a holiday party at his house, where guests were photographed without masks on and spent time in an outdoor area.

Now in December, with the country well into its third and most brutal wave of the pandemic, the administration is struggling to deliver a unified front on encouraging Americans to get the vaccine despite securing priority vaccinations for its staffers.

The White House has said that Trump, who was hospitalized in October after testing positive for the coronavirus, will not get vaccinated yet. An aide to Melania Trump also told a reporter that whether or not the first lady gets the vaccine “is not something she’ll likely share.”

The Biden transition team, however, has said that President-elect Joe Biden and Vice President–elect Kamala Harris will be vaccinated next week, also in public.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell both separately announced that they received the vaccine on Friday afternoon.

Kathy Arberg, a spokesperson for the US Supreme Court, confirmed in an email on Friday that Congress’s Office of the Attending Physician informed the court that the justices “are eligible to receive the vaccine in the coming days.” The justices have been working remotely during the pandemic, including hearing arguments and issuing opinions.

Zoe Tillman contributed reporting.

Source Article from https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/clarissajanlim/mike-karen-pence-pfizer-covid-19-vaccine