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Showing posts with label MADISON CAWTHORN. Show all posts
Showing posts with label MADISON CAWTHORN. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 9, 2022

Biden takes public stand against DeSantis' bigotry

 

Today's Top Stories:

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Biden slams Florida's "Don't Say Gay" bill as hateful, vows to defend LGBTQ+ youths

The White House is taking a stand against the discriminatory bill after Governor DeSantis championed it.


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VIDEO OF THE DAY: McConnell ignites feud among Republicans with "bombshell" 1/6 declaration

How sad a state is the Republican Party that this comment by McConnell is considered courageous?



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BOMBSHELL: Democrats score HUGE win ahead of midterms

No Lie with Brian Tyler Cohen: WOW.


Second gentleman evacuated from DC high school after bomb threat
A Black History month event was disrupted by yet another hateful act.



North Carolina elections board says it has power to disqualify Rep. Cawthorn from running over actions on 1/6
Cawthorn's role in the insurrection may have serious consequences for his political future.


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Starbucks fires union organizers at Memphis store

The coffee juggernaut claims the workers had "violated policy" but it's impossible to see this as anything but retaliation.



Hipster couple arrested for stealing $3.6 billion in BitCoin
An extremely untalented rapper and her startup bro husband are in custody for laundering enormous amounts of hacked crypto.


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BACKFIRE: MTG faces challengers on both sides of the aisle

United Rural Democrats: Let's get rid of this extremist AND flip a seat blue! Could you spare $5 to fuel our grassroots rural organizing project today?


Jill Biden admits her free community college program is dead
Joe Manchin, Krysten Sinema and their Republican buddies have made sure a basic public service is denied to the American people.



Canadian truckers briefly shut down major bridge into the United States
American businesses are alarmed as the Canadian anti-vaxx trucker protests snarled traffic at the border.


Black leaders urge Justice Department to take "aggressive" action to protect voting rights
More than 40 members of the Congressional Black Caucus issued a strongly worded letter to the DOJ in the wake of the right-wing Supreme Court's latest attack on Black voting rights.


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Seriously?

Seriously.

Hope...






Wednesday, February 2, 2022

1/6 panel pounces on new evidence against Trump

 

Pfizer seeks authorization for COVID-19 vax for kids younger than 5

Today's Top Stories:

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1/6 House committee investigating Trump’s plan to seize voting machines

At this point, there's no credible way to deny the reality that the former president was trying to carry out a coup.



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Tucker Carlson loses it over Supreme Court opening

President Biden hasn't even selected his nominee yet, but his vow to pick a Black woman already has right-wingers melting down.


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Top Arizona congressman on PRIMARYING Sinema

No Lie with Brian Tyler Cohen: This could be huge.


Democratic Senator Ben Ray Luján suffers stroke, undergoes surgery
Luján, 49, underwent decompressive surgery to ease swelling after he was found to have suffered a stroke in his cerebellum that affected his balance. While he is expected to make a full recovery, Luján's health scare highlights the precariousness of advancing the Democratic Party's agenda in a 50-50 Senate.



Key Senate Democrat considering a scaled-back version of the child tax credit to appease Joe Manchin
Biden's Build Back Better bill might not be dead just yet...



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Trump throws Mike Pence under the bus with investigation demand

The disgraced ex-president raged that Pence should be actually investigated for refusing to help him overturn this 2020 election defeat.


Pentagon dismisses Republican governors' objections to National Guard vaccine mandate
Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin asserted his authority to set military medical requirements for the entire armed forces, including guard units.


Rep. Madison Cawthorn sues North Carolina election board over candidacy challenge
The first-term congressman is suing members of the North Carolina State Board of Elections after voters alleged that he is ineligible for reelection because of his involvement at Trump's rally on Jan. 6, 2021, that "amounted to an insurrection."



Texas butterfly park to close indefinitely as conspiracy theorists intensify attacks
Trump-allied operatives have baselessly accused the National Butterfly Center of being involved with child trafficking.


ABC News suspends "The View" host Whoopi Goldberg
The prominent actress ignited a firestorm of controversy with her wildly off-base remarks about the Holocaust and race.


Trump attacks lackey Lindsey Graham over latest 1/6 remarks
The former president wasn't pleased with his toadie's observation that pardoning MAGA insurrectionists would be "inappropriate," calling the South Carolina senator a RINO (Republican in name only).


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This is America...

Seriously?

Yes. Seriously.

Hope...




Tuesday, February 1, 2022

POLITICO NIGHTLY: Good news for the biggest unvaxxed group

 


 
POLITICO Nightly logo

BY RENUKA RAYASAM

With help from Tyler Weyant

Two girls read a book together during a lesson at Carter Traditional Elementary School in Louisville, Ky.

Two girls read a book together during a lesson at a school in Louisville, Ky. | Jon Cherry/Getty Images

THE WHEELS ON THE BUS COME OFF AND OFF — As I type this, I am silently praying that my 2-year-old, asleep in the next room, doesn’t wake up from his midday nap. He’s home from day care because, for the second time in less than three weeks, another child in his classroom tested positive for Covid. That triggered a mandatory five-day quarantine period for the entire group, per the latest CDC guidelines.

Before this past month, during almost two years of a pandemic, neither of my kids had to quarantine — not even during the early days, when childcare providers didn’t have access to vaccines nor when Delta swept through the country. There were relatively few Covid cases in their day care and none in their classrooms. Then Omicron came along. Now my 2-year-old has spent a good part of his January mornings watching “ The Stinky & Dirty Show” at home on the sofa.

The under-5 set is the biggest group of people not yet eligible for a vaccine — at least not for another few weeks. Pfizer and BioNTech asked the FDA today to authorize a vaccine for kids from six months to 5 years old. But the immune response in clinical trials has been lackluster. If approval comes, it would still take months before this group would be considered fully vaccinated.

Until then, Covid protocols for the under-5 set are proving to be the trickiest terrain yet in the pandemic. CDC protocols for my sons are still stricter than those for older kids even though risks are generally lower.

“What the U.S. preschoolers went through this winter was hell,” said Monica Gandhi, an infectious disease specialist from the University of California, San Francisco, about early childhood centers shutting down during the Omicron surge.

About a dozen states have moved to a test-to-stay approach for elementary schools and high schools, following the CDC guidance for school-age children, which allows K-12 students to stay in schools after exposure as long as they test negative. Massachusetts is rolling out test-to-stay for child care centers , too, but in most states early childhood centers are on their own to procure tests and navigate guidance.

A vaccine for younger kids might lead more states to change their guidance. With vaccines not yet available, it’s been harder to design Covid rules for younger kids, said Ibukun Kalu, a pediatric infectious diseases specialist at Duke University Medical Center.

Test-to-stay works in the K-12 setting, she said, and it could work in day cares and preschools, with the caveats that toddlers aren’t exactly the most diligent maskers. In any case, flexibility is key. “We do not want our youngest children bearing the burden of society as they are trying to grow up,” Kalu said.

The pandemic protocols for day care are far stricter than what is required for other dangerous and scary respiratory illnesses, said C. Buddy Creech, a pediatric infectious diseases expert at the Vanderbilt University School of Medicine. “For influenza or RSV, we know that we are sending them back to day care with virus in their nose,” Creech said. “We have done that for every single respiratory virus, even those with devastating effects.”

Our day care doesn’t quarantine a class if a kid has a runny nose or fever, but tests negative for Covid. They are allowed to come back once they are fever free for 24 hours.

And as long as hospital systems and health care providers continue to be overwhelmed with Covid cases, these stricter protocols still make sense, Creech said. Younger kids can be a source of asymptomatic spread to vulnerable adults, even though they aren’t really a huge risk to one another. “I have not yet admitted a classroom of preschoolers that all got Covid,” Creech said.

But Gandhi argues that young kids should be allowed to stay in their classes if they show no Covid symptoms, just like they do with other illnesses. Even a test-to-stay strategy would be expensive and burdensome, she argues. Vaccines are available to protect teachers and older adults. The CDC changed its guidance on kids older than 5 even though vaccine uptake among the group is low, she points out. Less than 20 percent of U.S. kids aged 5 to 11 have been fully vaccinated, according to a Kaiser Family Foundation review of federal data.

“It doesn’t change anything to keep a two-year-old at home,” Gandhi said, meaning that closing day care centers when young kids test positive isn’t going to make a dent in the pandemic trajectory.

Well, it may not make a dent in El Paso case counts, but it certainly upended our lives this week. At some point this afternoon, our 2-year-old did wake up. We had lunch together and then my mother-in-law came back for the second time today to watch him.

Welcome to POLITICO Nightly. Reach out with news, tips and ideas at nightly@politico.com. Or contact tonight’s author at rrayasam@politico.com, or on Twitter at @RenuRayasam.

WHAT'D I MISS?

— New Mexico’s Luján suffers stroke: Sen. Ben Ray Luján (D-N.M.) suffered a stroke last Thursday while home in New Mexico , according to his chief of staff Carlos Sanchez. He then “underwent decompressive surgery to ease swelling” but is resting comfortably and expected to make a full recovery.

— Former Alabama Sen. Doug Jones to help guide Biden’s SCOTUS nominee through Senate: Former Sen. Doug Jones (D-Ala.) has been tapped to help guide President Joe Biden’s first Supreme Court nominee through the confirmation process, according to a source familiar with the matter. “We intend to have that team in place before the president makes that [Supreme Court] selection,” White House press secretary Jen Psaki said during her press briefing. “And it won’t just be one person.” Jones served in the Senate from 2018 to 2021 and is now a political commentator for CNN.

— DeSantis asks Florida supreme court to weigh in on congressional map: Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, in another sign that he may veto a new congressional map being drawn by the state Legislature, asked the state’s highest court today to tell him whether or not a 200-mile congressional district linking Black neighborhoods must be kept intact. DeSantis recently submitted his own proposed map that throws out the district now held by Rep. Al Lawson, a Black Democrat from Tallahassee.

— Wray denies FBI tougher on Jan. 6 than 2020 protests: FBI Director Christopher Wray is rejecting claims that his agency’s aggressive investigation of the storming of the Capitol on Jan. 6 contrasts with a lackluster response to violence and unrest that accompanied some Black Lives Matter protests across the country during the spring and summer of 2020. Speaking in California, Wray offered his most detailed public rebuttal yet to critiques of the bureau put forward in recent months by some Republican lawmakers and other allies of former President Donald Trump, as well as attorneys for those charged with crimes related to the Capitol riot.

— Cawthorn sues N.C. election board over reelection challenge: Rep. Madison Cawthorn is suing members of the North Carolina State Board of Elections who allege that he is ineligible for reelection because his involvement at a Jan. 6, 2021, White House rally that “amounted to an insurrection.” Cawthorn (R-N.C.), who filed for candidacy in the state’s 13th Congressional District last month, spoke at a rally on Jan. 6 in front of the White House before rioters stormed the Capitol. Trump, whose speech headlined that rally, urged attendees to march on the Capitol, told them to “be strong” and said that “you’ll never take back our country with weakness.”

FROM THE EDUCATION DESK

An entrance sign near the main gate at Howard University.

An entrance sign near the main gate at Howard University. | Drew Angerer/Getty Images

‘A MIX OF FEAR AND CONFUSION’ — Nightly deputy editor Tyler Weyant emails:

For the second day this week, and the third time in 2022, historically Black colleges and universities across the country were subject to bomb threats. More than a dozen HBCUs received threats todayafter at least six received threatening messages Monday. At many schools, classes were canceled and students and staff sheltered in place until given the all-clear from authorities.

The FBI, in a statement, said the agency “is aware of the series of bomb threats around the country and we are working with our law enforcement partners to address any potential threats.” The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives is also involved.

Education Secretary Miguel Cardona and Department of Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas met last week with more than 40 HBCU presidents on campus safety and security following a series of bomb threats.

The incidents have created a tense atmosphere on HBCU campuses, said Ivory Toldson, a Howard University professor and Obama-era executive director of the White House Initiative on Historically Black Colleges and Universities. “There’s a mix of fear and confusion, but knowing that, we have to make sure that we stay strong ourselves through it,” he said.

“We all know that domestic terrorism is real and that there there are people out there with different capacities,” Toldson said. “You just never know. You always have that threat looming in the back of your mind that, what if this really is real, what if it is being orchestrated by people who can actually pull it off. So it’s a real fear.”

Toldson also said that the added expense of sweeping campuses due to these threats could be a “pretty heavy burden for a lot of HBCUs,” a concern that was echoed by House Homeland Security Chair Bennie Thompson (D-Miss.). “This rash of threats against HBCUs put further strain on campuses and communities that were already under great stress, as they try to operate safely during the pandemic,” Thompson said in a statement.

AROUND THE WORLD

PUTIN STEPS TO THE MIC — Russian President Vladimir Putin accused the United States of “ignoring” his security demands in a written document delivered to Moscow last week, but he appeared open to continuing talks with Washington and its allies aimed at resolving the worsening security crisis on the Russia-Ukraine border, Quint Forgey writes.

Appearing at a joint news conference in Moscow with Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, Putin said Russian officials had “analyzed the response given in writing” by the United States, “but now, it’s already clear … that Russian concerns were basically ignored.”

“We didn’t see an adequate response to our key concerns: non-expanse of NATO, the refusal to deploy [an] offensive weapon next to the Russian borders and bringing back the military infrastructure of the alliance to the status quo of 1997, when the Russia-NATO treaty was signed,” Putin said.

In his first public remarks on the U.S. written response, Putin fiercely attacked the United States, claiming that U.S. officials “don’t care that much about Ukrainian security” and are merely using Ukraine as a “tool” to “hinder the development of Russia.”

Still, Putin sounded somewhat optimistic about the potential for a diplomatic outcome to the Russia-Ukraine crisis, saying, “I hope that eventually we will find a solution, even though it’s not going to be easy. We understand that. But I’m not ready to talk [about] what kind of solution it will be.”

NIGHTLY NUMBER

$30,012,386,059,238.29

The United States’ total public debt outstanding as of Monday, according to Treasury Department data. This is the first time the national debt has topped $30 trillion.

PARTING WORDS

Decorations for the upcoming Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics and Paralympics are seen on a road.

Decorations for the upcoming Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics and Paralympics are seen on a road. | Andrea Verdelli/Getty Images

AN OLYMPIC PRELIM — Join our colleague and China Watcher author Phelim Kine on Wednesday at 9 a.m. Eastern (10 p.m. Beijing) for a Twitter Spaces event where he and a panel will take your questions and dig into the key issues roiling the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics. Panelists include Sen. Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.), the co-chair of the Congressional Executive Committee on China; Sophie Richardson, China director, Human Rights Watch; Noah Hoffman, U.S. winter Olympian and a board member of Global Athlete; and Melissa Chan, a contributor for Global Reporting Center.


 

Follow us on Twitter

Chris Suellentrop @suellentrop

Tyler Weyant @tweyant

Renuka Rayasam @renurayasam

Myah Ward @myahward

 

FOLLOW US


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Tuesday, January 11, 2022

Trump trashes "jerk" senator as GOP feud explodes

 

Today's Top Stories:

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GOP "jerk" senator hits back at Trump as "Big Lie" feud explodes into public

Senator Mike Rounds' feud with the former president escalated after some incredibly petty comments.



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VIDEO OF THE DAY: Jen Psaki torches Fox News' Peter Doocy on his first day back

The right-wing reporter recovered from COVID-19 and immediately returned to spreading misinformation about the virus.


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Prosecutor talks Trump getting charged for January 6

No Lie with Brian Tyler Cohen: Don't miss this.


Joe Biden to back filibuster rule change in voting rights speech in Georgia
President Biden is set to throw his support behind changing the Senate’s filibuster rules to allow action on voting rights legislation, calling it a moment to choose "democracy over autocracy."



Mitt Romney defends Biden's 2020 win against Trump's lies
After Trump lashed out at a fellow Republican for stating the obvious and denying the Big Lie, the Utah senator and former presidential nominee took a rare stand against the disgraced ex-president.


North Carolina voters dispute GOP Rep. Cawthorn candidacy over Jan. 6
A group of voters told state officials they want Rep. Madison Cawthorn disqualified as a congressional candidate, citing his involvement in the "Stop the Steal" rally that led to the MAGA insurrection at the Capitol.



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Michelle Obama unveils plans to register one million voters by the 2022 midterms

The former first lady said the the idea is "to vote like the future of our democracy depends on it."



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Marjorie Taylor Greene, Madison Cawthorn, and Lauren Boebert's extremism costing them support from their voters

United Rural Democrats: New extremists in Congress are taking their districts for granted while delivering nothing for them. United Rural Democrats are organizing on the ground to shock Republicans by winning back Middle America. But they need your help!


President Biden issues rules requiring private health insurers to cover the cost of 8 at-home COVID-19 tests every month
The bold move is aimed at curbing the explosion of the omicron variant.


United Nations experts urge US to close "ugly" Guantanamo
The reviled Cuban military prison has become a site of "unrelenting human rights violations" over its twenty-year history.


Kevin McCarthy vows to remove Adam Schiff, Eric Swalwell, and Ilhan Omar from committees if Republicans win House
The anti-democratic move would be revenge for Democrats removing Marjorie Taylor Greene and Paul Gosar from their committees for legitimate reasons.


Nebraska announces $500 million plan to claim water from Colorado
The battle for precious natural resources in 2022 tracks like a dystopian harbinger of things to come.


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Seriously?

Yes. Seriously.

Hope...






"Look Me In The Eye" | Lucas Kunce for Missouri

  Help Lucas Kunce defeat Josh Hawley in November: https://LucasKunce.com/chip-in/ Josh Hawley has been a proud leader in the fight to ...