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Showing posts with label TED CRUZ. Show all posts
Showing posts with label TED CRUZ. Show all posts

Saturday, February 5, 2022

Pence throws Trump under the bus

 


COVID-19 deaths surpass 900,000 in the US

Today's Top Stories:

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Mike Pence undermines Trump's Big Lie, rebukes GOP version of 1/6

The disgraced ex-president's former accomplice leveled his strongest condemnation yet of his boss's plot to overturn the 2020 election.


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VIDEO OF THE DAY: Jen Psaki humiliates Ted Cruz with the perfect swipe

The pathetic senator from Texas stuck his foot in his mouth again, and Psaki wasn't going to let him off the hook.



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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 is organizing on the ground to shock Republicans by winning back Middle America. But they need your help!


One person dead, two wounded in tragic church shooting
Police confirm woman killed at Iglesia Faro de Luz in Aurora, Colorado; two adult males are being treated at a local hospital and are expected to recover from bullet wounds. Suspect still at large.


Hate crimes trial to proceed for one of Ahmaud Arbery's murderers
Convicted killer Travis McMichael pleaded not guilty to federal hate crimes after the judge rejected the plea deal filed earlier this week.


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Confirmed: Jim Jordan spoke to Trump morning of 1/6 insurrection

The Republican firebrand and accused rape enabler has skirted questions about his communications with the former president for months. Now CNN has confirmed at least one conversation just hours before the Capitol was attacked.



Virginia court shoots down GOP governor's anti-mask executive order
Glenn Youngkin's first act as governor was to endanger his state's children, but the courts have intervened to stop him.


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Top Arizona congressman on PRIMARYING Sinema

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


NC Supreme Court strikes down GOP's gerrymandered election map
Another Republican scheme to deny the will of the people has been stopped.



Atlanta-area DA outlines case against Trump for trying to steal election
Fani Willis tells Atlanta Journal Constitution, "We realize that we’re coming to a place that there are enough people that will require a subpoena for us to speak to or for us to be able to get information."



Republicans turn on each other over censure of Cheney and Kinzinger
The RNC has officially declared the insurrection "legitimate political discourse" and punished members trying to get the truth, but that isn't sitting well with the few within the party who are brave enough to speak out.


State GOP leader sinks own party's Big Lie legislation
Rusty Bowers, the Republican Speaker of the Arizona State House of Representatives, used a parliamentary procedure to kill a GOP bill that would have given the legislature the power to reject election results.


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Seriously?

Yes. Seriously.

Hope...








Thursday, February 3, 2022

RSN: FOCUS: Adam Serwer | Republicans Seem to Think Putting a Black Woman on the Supreme Court Is the Real Racism

 

 

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03 February 22

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U.S. Supreme Court building in Washington, D.C. (photo: Eric Baradat/Getty)
FOCUS: Adam Serwer | Republicans Seem to Think Putting a Black Woman on the Supreme Court Is the Real Racism
Adam Serwer, The Atlantic
Serwer writes: "Joe Biden hasn't yet picked a nominee to fill the seat of retiring Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer, but conservatives already know that the nominee is unqualified. After all, Biden has vowed to nominate a Black woman."

Biden hasn’t even named his nominee yet, and already conservatives are saying she’s undeserving.


Joe Biden hasn’t yet picked a nominee to fill the seat of retiring Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer, but conservatives already know that the nominee is unqualified. After all, Biden has vowed to nominate a Black woman.

As New York magazine’s Jonathan Chait writes, conservative outlets are lamenting that Biden has elevated “skin color over qualifications,” accusing Biden of trying to foment “tribal warfare” and of engaging in “discrimination,” and insisting that the eventual nominee would be “an affirmative-action hire, a kind of a trophy in a display case. The token Black woman.” One conservative legal commenter sneered that instead of his preferred choice, the president would be appointing a “lesser black woman.” Republican senators have already indicated that they will not support anyone Biden nominates, so it’s not like the nominee’s qualifications would actually make a difference to them.

If this all sounds somewhat familiar, it’s because the last time a Democratic president nominated a woman of color to the Court, legal elites on the right and the left insisted that Sonia Sotomayor was an unqualified affirmative-action pick who was chosen only because she is of Puerto Rican descent. The idea that conservatives would not be making such arguments if Biden had not announced in advance that he would be appointing a Black woman is nonsense; Barack Obama did not announce any such criteria before nominating Sotomayor, and they said virtually the same things about her—conservatives attacked her as a “quota pick” who was chosen “because she’s a woman and Hispanic, not because she was the best qualified.” At the time, Sotomayor had more judicial experience before being nominated than any other sitting justice, and that remains the case today, with the appointment of three new justices by Donald Trump.

Now, I could point out that, like Sotomayor, every person on the shortlist of potential nominees has impeccable credentials. I could note that Supreme Court seats have long been about ethnic-coalition politics and patronage, as Slate’s Dahlia Lithwick and Mark Joseph Stern have written. I could point out that Ronald Reagan promised to appoint a woman to the bench during his campaign, because it was “time for a woman to sit among our highest jurists” and because such “appointments can carry enormous symbolic significance”; he ultimately nominated Sandra Day O’Connor. I could point out Reagan’s ongoing concern with representation when he nominated Antonin Scalia because he wanted a candidate of Italian “extraction.” I might note that George H. W. Bush’s nomination of Clarence Thomas to replace Thurgood Marshall, the first Black justice on the Court, was in keeping with previous eras’ tradition of having “Jewish” and “Catholic” seats. I might argue that under Trump, who similarly pledged to appoint a woman before selecting Amy Coney Barrett, having a law degree and a crank blog was sufficient qualification for the federal bench. And I could point out the absurdity of arguing that racism is when you first nominate a Black woman to the Supreme Court after more than 200 years, not when you exclude Black women from the nation’s highest court for more than 200 years.

These are all relevant points, but none of them would change anything, because the coordinated attack on the qualifications of a nominee who has not yet been named is not about preventing her from being confirmed. This is a relatively low-stakes judicial battle, because Biden’s choice will not alter the 6–3 conservative majority on the Court, and the Democrats’ slim Senate majority will likely be sufficient to confirm the nominee, barring unforeseen complications. This is not an argument that can be won by facts and logic, because it is not about winning an argument at all.

Rather, these attacks are meant to reiterate the narrative that liberals elevate unqualified Black Americans at the expense of others who are truly deserving, as part of a larger backlash narrative, one that echoes past eras in American history, in which advocacy for equal rights is turning white conservatives into an oppressed class. Republicans will likely be unable to block the nominee, but they can extract a political price, motivate their own voters, and dull the historic significance of Biden’s choice by orienting the political conversation around the idea that another shiftless Negro is getting free stuff at others’ expense.

“Black women are, what, 6 percent of the U.S. population?” Senator Ted Cruz of Texas helpfully summarized on his podcast. “He’s saying to 94 percent of Americans, ‘I don’t give a damn about you.’” Cruz continued, “He’s saying, ‘If you’re a white guy, tough luck. If you’re a white woman, tough luck. You don’t qualify.’” All of the nonwhite justices in American history would fill a third of the current Court. For Cruz, this is apparently far too many.

This kind of political narrative predates affirmative action by more than a century. During Reconstruction, President Andrew Johnson complained that Congress’s attempt to defend the rights of the emancipated as the white South tried to force them back into conditions of near slavery amounted to establishing “for the security of the colored race safeguards which go infinitely beyond any that the General Government has ever provided for the white race.” Running for president in 1868, a few short years after abolition, Horatio Seymour, the Democratic nominee, argued that the “laborers at the North” had been made to “feed and clothe these idle Africans,” as though all the South’s wealth had not been built on their labor. The Supreme Court justices who struck down a law in 1888 barring discrimination on the basis of race, helping pave the way for Jim Crow, argued that the time had come for Black Americans to cease being a “special favorite of the laws.” The idea that Black people are getting something they have not earned by gaining access to something white people have long had began the second that slavery was abolished.

Of course, Black Americans are not the only ethnic minority that has been attacked in this way in Court confirmation battles. Sotomayor is far from the first or only example. In his history of the Thurgood Marshall confirmation fight, the journalist Wil Haygood recounts that the patrician nativist Senator Henry Cabot Lodge attacked the first Jewish nominee, Louis Brandeis, in similar terms. “If it were not that Brandeis is a Jew, and a German Jew,” Lodge insisted, “he would never have been appointed and he would not have a baker’s dozen of votes in the Senate. This seems to be in the highest degree un-American and wrong.” The segregationist Strom Thurmond accused Marshall, by then a judge, former solicitor general, and litigator of great renown, of lacking “an elementary knowledge of basic constitutional principles.”

As the above examples show, the initial appointment of a member of an underrepresented minority to the Court has frequently been met with the insistence that he or she does not deserve the position. Attacks on a nominee’s qualifications, especially when a nominee has extensive legal experience, or in this case, when she has not yet been named, tend to be proxies for ideological objections. Republicans would have few concerns about nominating some baby-faced Federalist Society ideologue who had been shoveled onto the federal bench a few months prior. Thurmond objected to Marshall both because he was Black and because Marshall had spent his life fighting for racial equality, a principle Thurmond had spent his life opposing. Questioning Marshall’s qualifications was a way to register those objections in the language of constitutional fidelity rather than mere prejudice.

Marshall’s opponents failed to block his nomination, but they nevertheless used it as a platform for their own narrative, which was that the civil-rights movement and a liberal Supreme Court, rather than centuries of discrimination and exclusion, were responsible for the riots erupting across the nation, and that confirming Marshall would make such problems worse. Marshall’s opponents, Wil Haygood writes, “figured it a potent time to bring up issues of crime and security, which they imagined would greatly weaken Marshall given his reputation as an attorney who had fought to give the accused equal rights.”

Those objecting to Biden fulfilling his pledge to nominate a Black woman in this manner are similarly using this opportunity to put forth a familiar narrative, that liberals elevate unworthy Black candidates at the expense of those more deserving.

Appeals to meritocracy in this context are not about merit; they are a means to diminish people whom these critics would see as undeserving no matter what they achieve. If the Republicans seeking to stoke resentment over this appointment can successfully turn the story of the first Black woman on the Supreme Court into another example of Black people getting free stuff they haven’t earned, they will be perfectly satisfied, even if she is confirmed. The important battles over the future of the Court have already taken place, and the right has already won them.

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Tuesday, February 1, 2022

Ted Cruz embarrasses himself trashing Biden SCOTUS pick

 

COVID-19 vaccine for young kids could be ready this month

Today's Top Stories:

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Ted Cruz calls Biden's promise to nominate the first Black woman to Supreme Court "offensive" and "insulting"

The Texas senator seemingly suggested that every American should be under consideration for the Supreme Court.


Trump pressed for Homeland Security to seize voting machines, according to new report
The disgraced ex-president asked Rudy Giuliani to call the Department of Homeland Security to see if they could legally take control of voting machines in key states in December 2020, six weeks after the election, The New York Times reported.


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Top Arizona congressman on PRIMARYING Sinema

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


Pence chief of staff Marc Short questioned by 1/6 committee
Several key players close to Trump are quietly cooperating.



Some Trump White House records handed over to 1/6 committee had been ripped up
Sure, that's not suspicious at all.


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Books on race and sexuality are disappearing from Texas schools in record numbers

School libraries in Texas have become battlegrounds in an unprecedented campaign by parents and conservative politicians to ban books dealing with race, sexuality and gender.



Liz Cheney says Trump's offer to pardon 1/6 rioters shows "he'd do it all again"
The former president's Republican nemesis is sounding the alarm bells ahead of 2024.



Georgetown Law puts administrator on leave over "appalling" SCOTUS tweets
Ilya Shapiro, the incoming executive director of the school’s Center for the Constitution, complained that Biden is going to overlook his preferred Supreme Court nominee in favor of a "lesser black woman."


Michigan GOP candidate for governor says rape victims shouldn’t abort because any fetus could become POTUS
Garrett Soldano claimed women who become pregnant from sexual assault were put "in this moment" by God and argued against abortions because, theoretically, a victim's unborn baby could one day become president.


Judge rejects plea deal for man who killed Ahmaud Arbery in federal hate crime trial
A federal judge rejected a plea agreement Monday that would have averted a hate crimes trial for the man convicted of murdering Ahmaud Arbery.


Republican candidate tells voters to bring their guns to polling places
Trump-endorsed Ryan Kelley also urged conservatives to unplug voting machines.


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Seriously?

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Hope...









Tuesday, January 25, 2022

POLITICO NIGHTLY: Why the partisan Putin split persists

 


 
POLITICO Nightly logo

BY ELANA SCHOR

Presented by AT&T

With help from Renuka Rayasam

A view of the U.S. Capitol at sunset.

A view of the U.S. Capitol at sunset. | Drew Angerer/Getty Images

FROM RUSSIA WITH BITTERNESS— When geopolitical tensions flare, they sometimes spark unexpected moments of bipartisanship on the Hill. Lawmakers often, though not always, align broadly behind presidential displays of overseas power.

That doesn’t look like it’s going to happen with U.S.-Russia policy this week, even after President Vladimir Putin’s government spent weeks moving troops near its border with Ukraine.

The first reason is painfully simple: Five years of partisan scuffling over Russian interference in the 2016 election, to the benefit of Donald Trump’s presidential campaign, has hurt lawmakers’ ability to forge credible cooperation on U.S.-Russia policy . After Democrats blasted Trump for his moments of apparent coziness with Putin, they’re now facing an attempted role-reversal moment with a GOP that wants to get as tough as possible, pressing for strong Russia sanctions to take effect immediately.

In a way, that’s just Washington: The party out of power always looks to turn the tables, rhetorically, on the one with control. But in this case, Dems are also trying not to lose the political upper hand on Russia after their rhetoric during the Trump years.

About that dynamic: Senators may be able to agree on a package of strong Russia sanctions, but they’re currently mired in debate over whether to hinge that financial punishment on a Russian invasion of Ukraine (as Dems would prefer) or pursue it immediately (as the GOP wants to do).

“Even if Congress can cobble together and pass a bipartisan sanctions deal, don’t expect Republicans to get behind Biden’s Russia strategy,” POLITICO’s Hill foreign policy specialist, Andrew Desiderio, told Nightly.

“Democrats spent enormous political capital bludgeoning Donald Trump for his deferential posture toward Putin, and Republicans are turning the tables on Biden,” Andrew added. “Look no further than the near- party-line split over Sen. Ted Cruz’s Nord Stream 2 sanctions bill, and what Republicans see as Biden’s fatal error in refusing to immediately impose sanctions as a deterrent to an invasion.”

Sen. Joni Ernst (R-Iowa) put it this way to Andrew today: “President Biden has really subscribed to a doctrine of appeasement. And that doesn’t deter an autocrat or a dictator like Putin.”

The second reason we shouldn’t expect Russian aggression toward Ukraine to prompt much cross-aisle unity is the political hangover from the chaotic Afghanistan withdrawal that Biden presided over in August. Just as they did after the fall of Kabul, Republicans are readying a message that tries to turn a foreign crisis into a political weak spot for a president who staked his campaign in part on his ability to rebuild America’s reputation abroad.

“When Americans were rushing to evacuate the American embassy in Afghanistan, Biden was on vacation,” the Republican National Committee tweeted amid reports of evacuations of U.S. embassy employees’ family members in Ukraine. “This weekend, he’s on vacation again.”

And the third reason Biden shouldn’t expect politics to end at the water’s edge with the GOP on his approach to Moscow is simply that the current situation in Ukraine doesn’t resemble the last two major occasions when presidents won support — albeit measured and short-lived support — for targeted actions overseas.

When then-Presidents Trump and Obama pursued airstrikes in Syria, those were limited operations with a professed goal of punishing a regime that built a chemical weapons program and eventually used it against its citizens.

Biden’s administration is facing a problem with a complex array of possible solutions. The sheer scope of his options, militarily and diplomatically, doesn’t lend itself easily to rifle-shot statements of congressional support for specific aspects of his Russia policy.

Biden has made clear he won’t directly bring troops into Ukraine. Rather, his goal is to support and protect neighboring NATO powers.

And just as top Democrats followed Trump’s Syria strikes with clear insistence on a comprehensive plan to follow through, so will Republicans seek a longer-term strategy from Biden — even as they look for potential failings in anything they hear from him.

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

 

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ON THE ECONOMY

Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) on January 24, 2022 in New York City.

Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange in New York City. | Spencer Platt/Getty Images

THE MARKET BETS ON REOPENING — The stock market ended the day up for the first time in a week. But the longer-term trend has been sharply negative for the stay-at-home stocks that thrived in 2020 — including Zoom, Netflix, Peloton and DocuSign. These quarantine favorites have all seen their share prices decline drastically in recent months. Investors seem to have soured on the companies that were once the darlings of the pandemic market.

It’s a selloff within the broader selloff that has pushed markets into the sharpest drops in nearly a year. Stock market indices entered correction territory — a 10 percent drop from the highs they reached earlier in the year — today before recovering.

Nightly’s Renuka Rayasam chatted with wealth manager Barry Ritholtz, who also writes a Bloomberg column, hosts its “Masters in Business” podcast and was one of the earliest finance bloggers, about whether the market is over the pandemic. This conversation has been edited.

I keep hearing that the market trajectory is going to follow the pandemic trajectory. Is that still the case?

That is backward. The market is telling you where we’re going to go. The market collapsed when we were pretty early in the pandemic process. Long before there was any confirmation vaccines would be widely available, the market began to recover. We passed the CARES Act, which was a $2 trillion dollar bill. The market said, “Oh this is going to go a long way to getting us towards a healthy recovery.”

It’s very much a forward indicator and more often than not, it’s right.

What does the collapse of the stay-at-home stocks tell us about how the market is thinking about the pandemic?

This is the market’s way of telling us that we are much closer to the end of the pandemic, and a return to a more normal lifestyle, than we are to the beginning of it. These corrections started quite a while ago.

Normally we’re about a 61 percent service, 39 percent goods economy. During the lockdown we probably moved closer to 45 percent/ 55 percent. Peloton or Netflix are both perfect examples of that.

The market is seemingly telling you that the low-hanging fruit with both of these stocks have been picked off. Anybody who wanted a Peloton ordered it. With Netflix, there is now a whole lot more competition.

Is the market anticipating a return to 2019, to a pre-pandemic “normal”?

As things normalize and we’re no longer stuck at home, we’ll go back to that sort of 60/40 services to goods ratio.

But I don’t think it’s going to quite go back to exactly how it was. We’re going to be in a new post-pandemic era, post-normal economy.

I think that there is enough pandemic fatigue that people are now increasingly willing to go about their lives and assume a little more risk in being out in the world. That bodes better for movie theaters and weaker for Netflix. It bodes better for gyms and weaker for Pelotons.

 

JOIN NEXT FRIDAY TO HEAR FROM GOVERNORS ACROSS AMERICA : As we head into the third year of the pandemic, state governors are taking varying approaches to public health measures including vaccine and mask mandates. "The Fifty: America's Governors" is a series of live conversations featuring various governors on the unique challenges they face as they take the lead and command the national spotlight in historic ways. Learn what is working and what is not from the governors on the front lines, REGISTER HERE.

 
 
WHAT'D I MISS?

— Capitol Police examines backgrounds, social media feeds of some who meet with lawmakers: After the Jan. 6 insurrection, the Capitol Police’s intelligence unit quietly started scrutinizing the backgrounds of people who meet with lawmakers, according to three people familiar with the matter. POLITICO also viewed written communications describing the new approach, part of a host of changes that the department implemented after the Capitol attack. Several Capitol Police intelligence analysts have already raised concerns about the practice to the department’s inspector general, according to one of the people who spoke for this story.

— Supreme Court will take up Harvard, UNC affirmative action challenge:The Supreme Court agreed to hear two cases that could have broad ramifications for how colleges and universities consider race in their admissions process. In the lawsuit Students for Fair Admissions v. Harvard, SFFA asked the high court to overturn its ruling in a landmark affirmative action case — Grutter v. Bollinger — that has shaped college admissions policies for nearly two decades. SFFA, which represents about 20,000 students, alleges the Ivy League school intentionally discriminates against Asian American students in admissions.

— California lawmaker proposes Covid vaccine mandate for all schoolchildren: A California state senator is proposing to require that all schoolchildren receive a Covid-19 vaccine starting in 2023, a law that would be the nation’s strictest student mandate if approved. As detailed by state Sen. Richard Pan (D-Sacramento), the bill would not be contingent on a vaccine receiving full approval by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, nor would it allow for personal or religious exemptions. That would go beyond a previous order that Gov. Gavin Newsom issued in October.

— Palin’s positive Covid test postpones libel case against New York Times: The start of Sarah Palin’s libel suit against the New York Times was postponed today after the former Alaska governor tested positive for Covid-19. Judge Jed Rakoff pushed back jury selection until at least Feb. 3, though he warned the delay could extend further. At the outset of the day’s hearing the judge said he was informed over the weekend that Palin, who the judge noted is unvaccinated, tested positive via two rapid, at-home tests. In December, Palin said at a conservative event that she would get vaccinated “over my dead body,” and previously tested positive for Covid-19 in March 2021.

 

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AROUND THE WORLD

EU DIPLOMATS STAYING PUT IN KYIV — The EU does not plan to withdraw the families of diplomats from Ukraine , the bloc’s foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said today.

Speaking in Brussels ahead of talks with European foreign affairs ministers and U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken, Borrell told reporters that America’s top diplomat will “explain us the reasons” for Washington’s decision to pull out families of U.S. personnel from Ukraine, Lili Bayer and Louis Westendarp write.

Washington has authorized the departure of some government employees and ordered the exit of all family members of government employees at its Kyiv embassy.

The U.K. followed Washington’s lead today, saying it was withdrawing some “embassy staff and dependents” in response to the “growing threat from Russia.”

Borrell, however, said that for now the EU is not following suit. “We are not going to do the same thing, because we don’t know any specific reasons,” Borrell said, adding that “negotiations are going on.”

 

STEP INSIDE THE WEST WING: What's really happening in West Wing offices? Find out who's up, who's down, and who really has the president’s ear in our West Wing Playbook newsletter, the insider's guide to the Biden White House and Cabinet. For buzzy nuggets and details that you won't find anywhere else, subscribe today.

 
 
NIGHTLY NUMBER

About 8,500

The number of U.S. military personnel Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin has placed on heightened alert to potentially deploy to Eastern Europe, the Pentagon announced today. The move comes as NATO weighs a possible activation of its response force to beat back a Russian invasion of Ukraine, which the West fears is imminent.

PARTING WORDS

DEFENSIVE SHIFT — The nation’s top financial regulators will soon embark on a controversial, first-of-its-kind mission: forcing banks and other industry players to prepare for potential threats to the U.S. financial system from climate changeVictoria Guida writes.

But they’re facing a maze of obstacles, including blowback from Republicans, before they’ve taken their first steps.

All the leading agencies will be headed by progressive regulators who will seek to push the administration’s agenda forward even as Biden has failed to get broader climate-related legislation through Congress.

Among other moves, regulators are likely to press banks to prepare for the fallout from a warming planet by stepping up scrutiny of fossil fuel financing. They will make the lenders undergo regular tests to measure how their investments could be threatened by flooding, wildfires and other growing risks. And they could rewrite the rules against the discriminatory practice known as redlining to push lenders to put money into disadvantaged communities most vulnerable to climate change.

That will set up a clash with Republican lawmakers, who argue that the banks are capable of assessing their own risks and that the regulators are far overstepping their bounds. And banks themselves are nervously eyeing how aggressively the Democrat-controlled agencies will lean into measures that discourage investment in oil and gas.

 

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"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 ...