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Author Topic: U.S. Politics  (Read 195359 times)

Offline Rick Plant

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Re: U.S. Politics
« Reply #904 on: July 20, 2022, 06:22:28 AM »
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Uvalde parents say they have not heard from Gov. Abbott, other Texas Lawmakers

25 News obtained Gov. Abbott's schedule showing he didn't attend funerals in Uvalde



UVALDE, Texas — Family members said they are struggling to hear from many Texas Lawmakers including the Governor of Texas.

"For everybody out there getting ready to vote, since this has happened Governor Greg Abbott has yet to reach out," said Angel Garza father of 10-year-old Amerie Jo Garza.

25 News obtained the Governor's schedule from May 25 to June 14 through an open records request. The Governor's schedule shows his last visit on June 5th.

“Governor Abbott and First Lady Abbott join all Texans in mourning every single innocent life lost that tragic day, and we pray for the families who are suffering from the loss of a loved one. Governor Abbott has been to the community multiple times, visiting with every family who requested a meeting and joining his fellow Texans to grieve and worship at events into June. Many families requested private funerals, and the Governor and First Lady instead sent flowers and condolences to let the loved ones know they remain in their prayers.

The Governor and his office remain in regular contact with Mayor McLaughlin and Uvalde leaders, speaking on an almost daily basis to ensure the Uvalde community is receiving the support and all available resources needed to heal. Every request made so far by the victims’ families and local leaders have been met, including providing a $5 million grant [gov.texas.gov] to be used at the discretion of local leaders for the long-term Family Resiliency Center.”


The Governor's schedule does show while in Uvalde he did attend multiple public vigils but no mentions of attending funerals.

We did reach out to Governor Abbott's campaign and his office.

"The Governor’s State office should answer these questions. It’s not appropriate for the campaign to be involved. You should direct your questions to the Governor’s state press office," said Mark Miner from the Governor's campaign.

We reached out to Beto Beto O'Rourke's office. They didn't want to confirm how many funerals the Democratic candidate attended but family members confirm he has attended some.

On Sunday O'Rourke was in Uvalde marching with hundreds asking for a change in gun laws.

We requested a comment from Governor Greg Abbott and have not heard back.

Garza said he hasn't heard from Senator Ted Cruz as well on Tuesday.

According to Ted Cruz's office, a meeting was scheduled for Wednesday but was canceled by family members.

“Senator Cruz had a meeting with Uvalde family members scheduled for today. Unfortunately, they ended up having to cancel it," said Darin Miller from Cruz's office.

What Ted Cruz has purposed in the past is far from what families said they are asking for.

"These guys don't have compassion for us, they don't care," said Garza.

Senator Ted Cruz was also in attendance at public vigils.

Family members in DC are asking lawmakers to change laws when it comes to buying AR-style rifles for individuals 18 to 21. The family said they haven't been able to meet with lawmakers from Texas, just staff.



The Uvalde County commissioners passed a resolution calling for a special session, raising age to buy AR-15s.

On Tuesday at a city council meeting the Uvalde Mayor said he's in favor of raising the age and requiring a class.

"This isn't some plot or anything, this is real life, this is hurting all of us,"said Garza.

Lawmakers from around the country are joining family members at the rally in DC.

On Sunday hundreds gathered in hot temperatures in Uvalde marching for change.

https://www.kxxv.com/news/in-depth/uvalde-parents-say-they-have-not-heard-from-gov-abbott-other-texas-lawmakers

JFK Assassination Forum

Re: U.S. Politics
« Reply #904 on: July 20, 2022, 06:22:28 AM »


Offline Rick Plant

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Re: U.S. Politics
« Reply #905 on: July 20, 2022, 06:26:16 AM »
President Biden @POTUS

When Putin further invaded Ukraine and oil prices went up, the industry was quick to increase prices at the pump.

But now that oil is lower, Americans haven’t seen those savings.

I want lower prices to benefit consumers – not prop up profits.

I’ve been releasing about 1 million barrels of oil a day from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve and rallied our global partners to release a combined 240 million barrels of oil onto the market.

Our actions are working, and prices are coming down.


https://twitter.com/i/status/1549403917439700995

Offline Rick Plant

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Re: U.S. Politics
« Reply #906 on: July 20, 2022, 06:31:48 AM »
Ohio Supreme Court strikes down congressional maps for second time



For the second time, the Ohio Supreme Court rejected a map for congressional districts in the state.

The court ruled that the map violated the constitution by favoring one political party over another irrespective of election results across the state.

“We hold that the March 2 plan unduly favors the Republican Party and disfavors the Democratic Party in violation of the (Ohio Constitution),” the majority decision reads.

The 4-3 decision reflected the other decisions the court has made on redistricting: Chief Justice Maureen O’Connor voted to reject the maps, along with Justice Michael Donnelly, Justice Melody Stewart and Justice Jennifer Brunner. Justices Sharon Kennedy, Patrick DeWine and Patrick Fischer all dissented in the case.

In ruling against the partisanship in the congressional map, the court called out the commission for creating Democratic districts with razor-thin advantages, while the Republican-leaning seats “comfortably favor Republican candidates.”

In the most recent congressional map, only three Democratic-leaning seats have more than 52% Dem advantage, whereas all Republican-leaning seats have more than 53% GOP advantage.

“Considering that Democratic candidates have received about 47% of the vote in recent statewide elections, this probable outcome represents only a modest improvement over the (previously) invalidated plan,” according to the court decision.

The court pushed back against arguments made by Ohio Redistricting Commission members, including Senate President Matt Huffman and House Speaker Bob Cupp, both of whom have left the commission since then, replaced by state Sen. Rob McColley and state Rep. Jeff LaRe.

The legislative leaders and their replacements on the commission tried to argue they were not obligated to correct “legal defects” in the original congressional plan while revising the plan.

“The commission’s constitutional duty is to adopt a congressional district plan to replace the original, invalidated plan,” the court majority wrote. “Indeed, the commission has a constitutional duty to remedy the defects in the previous plan.”

Huffman, Cupp, McColley and LaRe said fixing the “defects” would “incentivize” Democrats to vote against the plan, and called the article setting forth anti-gerrymandering rules a “safety valve of sorts” for the ORC to adopt a plan that didn’t have to align with the same redistricting rules as the General Assembly.

“No constitutional language suggests that the voters who approved Article XIX intended to allow the prohibitions against partisan favoritism and unduly splitting governmental units to be avoided so easily,” the majority ruled.

The lawsuit was filed in March, after the Ohio Supreme Court turned down calls to reject the maps in a previous lawsuit on congressional redistricting. The court said because its previous decision to reject the first congressional map was final, challengers had to file a new lawsuit to challenge the second version.

The supreme court rejected the first map on the same grounds as the second rejection: partisan favoritism.

In their dissent to the majority decision, Kennedy and Patrick DeWine said they would have left the plan in place as constitutional and allow its use for the 2024 primary and general elections.

Kennedy and DeWine said because they would have held that the first congressional map “did not unduly favor Republicans and was constitutional,” they would have done the same for the second plan.

DeWine, who is Gov. Mike DeWine’s son, has recused himself from any court cases regarding holding the ORC members in contempt of court due to his father’s participation as a commission member. However, he has refused calls for his recusal in all redistricting cases because of his father’s involvement in the process.

Fischer joined the dissent, but wrote separately to argue that map challengers “do not even meet the lower clear-and-convincing evidence burden of proof or the even lower preponderance-of-the-evidence burden of proof” that the second congressional map unduly favored Republicans.

He also criticized the process conducted by the state supreme court, saying a lack of hearings “undoubtedly raises concerns among the public regarding this court’s lack of transparency.”

“This court’s misguided rush to decide these cases has resulted in an unnecessary and truncated procedure that has effectively tied this court’s hands and rendered it unable to make a fully informed decision,” Fischer wrote.

The court gave the General Assembly 30 days to pass a new map, and if they can’t, the Ohio Redistricting Commission will have another 30 days to do so.

Since the May primary, which included congressional races, already occurred, a new congressional plan’s impact will go forward to 2024 elections.

The legislature is currently on summer break, set to come back in the fall. Huffman’s spokesperson did not respond to a request for comment on the ruling, or if they would be reconvening the GA early to deal with the issue.

A spokesperson for Cupp said the office was reviewing the decision.

The ORC’s co-chair, Democratic state Sen. Vernon Sykes joined Senate Minority Leader Kenny Yuko in saying the court “made it clear that Republicans have repeatedly used the redistricting process to give themselves an unfair advantage.”

“Once again, we are ready to follow the law and give Ohioans the fair maps they demanded,” Sykes and Yuko said in a statement. “We hope this time our Republican colleagues will join us, instead of trying to run out the clock.”

A spokesperson Ohio Secretary of State Frank LaRose, the state’s chief elections officer and a member of the redistricting commission, said LaRose’s office had received the ruling and had a legal team reviewing the decision.

The League of Women Voters, one of the two parties who challenged the congressional maps, praised the decision and hoped for swift and public action to adopt new congressional maps.

“We agree that the congressional map is beyond a reasonable doubt gerrymandered, and we stand ready to work with the mapmakers to see a map produced that truly upholds the will of the voters for a free and fair election,” said Jen Miller, executive director of the LWV of Ohio.

https://ohiocapitaljournal.com/2022/07/19/ohio-supreme-court-strikes-down-congressional-maps-for-second-time/

JFK Assassination Forum

Re: U.S. Politics
« Reply #906 on: July 20, 2022, 06:31:48 AM »


Offline Rick Plant

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Re: U.S. Politics
« Reply #907 on: July 21, 2022, 12:34:49 AM »
Adam Schiff @RepAdamSchiff

Today, House Dems will pass legislation to:
 
- Fund clean energy
- Invest in rural economies
- Create thousands of good jobs
- Expand safe, affordable housing
- Support veterans and military families

And Republicans will spend their day trying to stop us.


https://twitter.com/RepAdamSchiff/status/1549761410816778240

Offline Rick Plant

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Re: U.S. Politics
« Reply #908 on: July 21, 2022, 03:13:18 AM »
Biden-Harris Administration Announces $56 Million to Advance U.S. Solar Manufacturing and Lower Energy Costs

New Investments Will Build on Bipartisan Infrastructure Law Funding to Bolster Clean Energy Supply Chains, Increase Energy Security, and Lower Electricity Bills

WASHINGTON, D.C.— The Biden-Harris Administration, through the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE), today announced a slate of new initiatives and $56 million in funding, including $10 million from President Biden’s Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, to spur innovation in solar manufacturing and recycling. Together, the funding will help make clean energy more affordable and reliable, create good-paying jobs, and enhance U.S. economic growth and competitiveness. Developing more solar power, the cheapest form of new electricity supply, is key to achieving President Biden’s goal of 100% clean electricity by 2035.

“This administration wants to seize U.S. leadership in solar energy, from manufacturing to recycling, and that means making the right investments to ensure these technologies are made right here at home,” said U.S. Secretary of Energy Jennifer M. Granholm. “Thanks to President Biden’s Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, DOE is able to invest in our nation’s innovators so they can improve manufacturing and strengthen the domestic solar supply chain—lowering energy bills for Americans and businesses and driving toward an equitable clean energy future.”

According to DOE’s Solar Supply Chain Review Report, developing more domestic solar manufacturing can lead to benefits to the climate and environment as well as for American workers, employers, national security, while lowering energy bills for American families. The new programs announced today are designed to drive innovation in solar technology and manufacturing, supporting opportunities for the U.S. to expand production of thin-film modules, which do not rely on foreign-dominated supply chains, as well as supporting newer technologies like perovskite solar cells.

DOE’s New Solar Innovation Funding Opportunities

The $29 million FY22 Photovoltaics (PV) Research and Development funding opportunity includes $10 million from the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law to support projects that increase the reuse and recycling of solar technologies. The funding opportunity also supports projects to develop PV module designs that reduce manufacturing costs, as well as those that advance the manufacturing of PV cells made from perovskites, a family of materials that show potential for durability, high performance, and low production costs. 

The FY22 Solar Manufacturing Incubator funding opportunity will provide $27 million for projects aimed at commercializing new technologies that can expand private investment in U.S. solar manufacturing. Funding is available for projects that ready new technologies and manufacturing processes for commercialization and demonstrate solutions that can boost domestic manufacturing of thin-film PV made from cadmium telluride, the second-most common PV technology on the market, behind silicon.

DOE’s Continued Commitment to Solar Energy

Today, DOE also announced $18 million in funding through the Technology Commercialization Fund for seven proposed National Laboratory projects designed to tackle commercialization challenges DOE-funded technologies face.

DOE is also issuing a Request for Information on challenges and opportunities for vehicle-integrated PV, which would enable solar energy to provide power to vehicles, including cars, recreational vehicles, trains, boats, and planes. The solar and transportation industries and other stakeholders are encouraged to submit feedback by August 22 at 5 p.m. ET.

Earlier this week, DOE announced $8 million will go to seven small solar companies to perform research and development in concentrating solar-thermal power, power electronics, and solar-powered water technologies.

Learn more about DOE’s Solar Energy Technologies Office and its research priorities in PV manufacturing and competitiveness and attend a webinar on the incubator funding opportunity on August 3 at 3 p.m. ET.

https://www.energy.gov/articles/biden-harris-administration-announces-56-million-advance-us-solar-manufacturing-and-lower

JFK Assassination Forum

Re: U.S. Politics
« Reply #908 on: July 21, 2022, 03:13:18 AM »


Offline Rick Plant

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Re: U.S. Politics
« Reply #909 on: July 22, 2022, 04:38:58 AM »
Michigan Democrats push DOJ to investigate 11 GOP lawmakers for 'seditious conspiracy'

On Wednesday, The Detroit News reported that Democratic state lawmakers in Michigan have introduced a resolution calling on the Justice Department to investigate 11 of their GOP counterparts for "seditious conspiracy."

"Sponsored by state Rep. Joe Tate, D-Detroit, the proposal is extremely unlikely to gain traction in the GOP-controlled House but underscores Democrats' beliefs that federal authorities should probe the actions that high-ranking Michigan Republicans took in the wake of Donald Trump's loss to Joe Biden," said the report. "Biden won Michigan by 154,000 votes or 3 percentage points, a result that's been upheld by a series of court rulings, more than 200 audits and an investigation by the Republican-run Michigan Senate's oversight committee. But some of the former president's supporters have maintained unproven claims that widespread fraud swung the race."

"An essential element of being a legislator is accepting the peaceful transition of power when the people choose different leaders, and these members failed to faithfully discharge the duties of their office by acting to undermine this basic tenet of democracy," stated the resolution. "Michigan residents deserve better leaders than people who would subvert their own government to remain in power."

Michigan was one of several states targeted by former President Donald Trump and his allies as part of a plot to throw out election results. Like many other states Biden narrowly won, several Republican operatives declared themselves to be "alternate" electors for Trump, with the idea being either the legislature could submit them instead of the lawfully certified electors won by Joe Biden, or that former Vice President Mike Pence could use them as pretext to throw out the votes of Michigan altogether. The DOJ is investigating this plot.

"Five of the Republican lawmakers — state Reps. Julie Alexander of Hanover, Beth Griffin of Mattawan, Matt Maddock of Milford, John Reilly of Oakland Township and Daire Rendon of Lake City — were entangled in a plot to advance a false slate of Republican presidential electors, claiming Trump won Michigan, according to the resolution," noted the report. The lawmakers themselves didn't sign the false electors certificate, contending Trump got Michigan's 16 electoral votes, but were involved in the effort, including the GOP electors' unsuccessful attempts to gain access on Dec. 14, 2020, to the Michigan Capitol.

Sen. Ron Johnson (R-WI) has also come under scrutiny after his office forwarded lists of fake electors from Michigan, as well as his home state of Wisconsin, to Pence's office.

© The Detroit News

Offline Rick Plant

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Re: U.S. Politics
« Reply #910 on: July 22, 2022, 05:05:51 AM »
Radical Republicans want to ban birth control in America. Their "NO" vote just confirmed it. Republicans want to control your lives and take away more of your freedoms. If Republicans ever gain control of Congress they will ban condoms, because under their "religious beliefs", they feel Americans should not have access to them. The GOP is no longer a political party, they are a religious cult.   

Bill Pascrell, Jr. @ BillPascrell

We just voted to keep birth control legal in America and 96% of republicans voted no. 96%!



https://twitter.com/BillPascrell/status/1550146164217061377

Offline Rick Plant

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Re: U.S. Politics
« Reply #911 on: July 23, 2022, 09:12:37 AM »
This is what Republicans are against. What are they for?




House Republicans voted against capping insulin at $35. They voted against their own diabetic constituents.

Republicans want diabetics to be gouged by Big Pharma taking advantage of these people who need their life saving medication. Otherwise they would have voted "YES" to cap these outrageous insulin prices. 

Democrats voted to cap insulin at $35 and now Republicans in the Senate are blocking this bill from becoming law. 


JFK Assassination Forum

Re: U.S. Politics
« Reply #911 on: July 23, 2022, 09:12:37 AM »