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Author Topic: U.S. Politics  (Read 192888 times)

Offline Rick Plant

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Re: U.S. Politics
« Reply #1176 on: September 10, 2022, 06:25:32 AM »
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Ohio welcomes Biden, Intel for $20 billion groundbreaking



West Coast technology officially came together Friday with Midwest manufacturing prowess to create the Silicon Heartland.

Under a sun-splashed late summer day, President Joe Biden joined Ohio political, educational, union and business leaders to break ground on Intel's $20 billion project in Licking County to create the world's most advanced semiconductor factories. It is the state's largest economic development prize.

Friday's groundbreaking also served as a celebration of the recently enacted CHIPS and Science Act that is meant to restore U.S. production of the tiny devices that power everything from cellphones to computers to cars to military equipment that has been largely shipped overseas. Biden signed the legislation into law last month, and Intel has said the legislation will play a meaningful role in how it develops the site in Ohio.

Shortages of the chips have plagued the economy since the pandemic and have contributed to the rising cost of cars and other products.

President Biden gives speech on site of Intel microchip factory project groundbreaking

"Folks, we need to make these chips right here in America to bring down everyday costs and create good jobs,’’ Biden told about 700 people who gathered at the site.

Intel has been working for about two months at the site, and not even Friday's ceremony stopped the earth moving work taking place behind the temporary stage where Biden, political leaders, educational leaders, Intel executives and others spoke.

"The Rust Belt is dead and the Silicon Heartland begins," Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger said.

"This idea of Silicon Heartland (is) an epicenter of leading-edge technology, and Intel's factories right here will produce the most advanced process technologies in the world," he said. "Our customers .... need the best stuff for their products, everything from high-performance mobile, artificial intelligence, advance computing, cloud, all of that will be a result of these factories behind us."

Gelsinger called the CHIPS Act the most significant piece of industrial legislation since World War II. Intel has said it is too soon to determine how much benefit it will get from the legislation.

The CHIPS Act provides $52.7 billion in incentives, plus tax incentives, for companies to research, design and manufacture semiconductors and to help with workforce development.

As he did in his State of the Union speech in March, Biden said the 1,000-acre New Albany site is a "field of dreams where America's future will be built."

American production of semiconductors has stumbled from 37% in 1990 to about 12% today, and that has put the country at risk as other countries offer billions of dollars to lure semiconductors, Biden said.

The legislation has triggered a series of announcements by companies across the country to build semiconductor operations, Biden said.

"The future of the chip industry is going to be made in America," he said

The groundbreaking caps a frenzied eight months since Intel picked Licking County from a nationwide search as its spot for what could become the world's largest semiconductor operation with as many as eight plants - called "fabs" in the industry - and a total investment of $100 billion.

The plants will employ 3,000 workers, earning an average of $135,000. There will be 7,000 construction workers at the site as well. The plants also are expected to be a draw for Intel suppliers who will create thousands more jobs.

The Licking County plants are expected to start producing semiconductors in 2025.

"We can, we must and we will make them here," Gov. Mike DeWine said.

DeWine called the groundbreaking an historic moment for the state.

"We celebrate a great victory for Ohio, but an even greater victory for our country," he said.

What will Intel's plants in New Albany make?

Intel has said the campus in New Albany will be among its most advanced, turning out semiconductors with a variety of applications for cars, cellphones, computers, and other devices critical to a modern economy.

"It is a very important site. ... This will be a top-notch fab, the most advanced fab in the country and the planet," Intel Senior Vice President Randhir Thakur said in an interview with The Dispatch.

Beyond that, the plants are expected to play a key role in Intel's new foundry business that was launched last year and is being led by Thakur.

Foundry work comes from companies that design their own semiconductors, but use other companies to make them. Until now, it's been a tiny part of Intel's business, but Gelsinger has pledged to make it a much bigger part of Intel's business, and that includes the new plants in Ohio.

As part of this foundry work, Thakur said the New Albany plants will manufacture chips for the military and military contractors. Intel has said it expects the market for foundry work to grow from $90 billion a year to $200 billion a year by 2030.

Exactly how much of that business will be done in Ohio will be determined over time, Thakur said.

Groundbreaking receives bipartisan support

Politicians from both sides of the aisles have rallied around the Intel project. A host of state legislative leaders praised the project as did Sens. Rob Portman, a Republican, and Sherrod Brown, a Democrat, during Friday's ceremonies that ran for more than two hours.

"Today as we acknowledge all the hard work that went into bringing Intel to Ohio, we also acknowledge the hard work before us that now begins as we begin to close America's competitiveness gap that has grown dangerously wide in regard to semiconductor manufacturing," Portman said. "I'm really proud Ohioans will play an important role in closing this gap."

Brown said in January when he flew to Ohio for the Intel announcement that the news marked a major change for the Ohio economy.

"I remember looking out the window of the plane at all the places that have been long been ignored by Wall Street and passed over by corporate America and forgotten by our government, and I thought about how from that day forward we're going to change that," Brown recalled telling Portman and others on the flight, "Today we're burying the term Rust Belt."

Industry leaders welcome Intel project

"It's hard to state how important this is," said Jay Timmons, president and CEO of the National Association of Manufacturers and a native of Circleville, who attended Friday's groundbreaking.

"We see what happens when we depend on critical products coming from overseas, especially during the pandemic," Timmons said, noting how hard the shortage of semiconductors has made it to buy cars, for example.

The CHIPS Act demonstrates how indispensable technology is in today's economy, and the law is critical to help ensure that shortages don't happen again, said Jason Oxman, CEO of the Information Technology Industry Council, a global advocate for technology.

"For both economic reasons and national security reasons, growing semiconductor manufacturing in the U.S. is vitally important," Oxman said. "We don't have to speculate on what a shortage of semiconductors means to the U.S. economy."

https://www.dispatch.com/story/news/local/2022/09/09/ohio-intel-biden-speech-microchip-factory-groundbreaking-project/66009387007/

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Re: U.S. Politics
« Reply #1176 on: September 10, 2022, 06:25:32 AM »


Offline Rick Plant

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Re: U.S. Politics
« Reply #1177 on: September 11, 2022, 01:06:13 AM »
GOP 'drama is spiraling' in Senate races — scaring off big donors: report



Republicans are in disarray less than 60 days before the 2020 midterms election, according to report published online SaPersonay evening by The Washington Post.

"Republican leaders are scrambling to shore up their chances to win back both the House and Senate as inflation concerns fade, Democratic enthusiasm for protecting abortion rights surges and new fundraising challenges emerge in the crucial final months of the campaign," the newspaper reported. "Leaders have also been working, with mixed success, to cool down intraparty squabbles over their own strategic missteps and the quality of candidates in pivotal Senate races."

First-time candidates backed by Trump in GOP primaries have been struggling in general elections, including Blake Masters in Arizona, Hershel Walker in Georgia, J.D. Vance in Ohio, and Doug Mastriano in Pennsylvania.

"Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell (Ky.) put out calls this past week for his fellow GOP senators to unify and focus on fundraising, after spending much of the last month on the phone with donors attempting to make up for party shortfalls," the newspaper reported. "The messages of unity were meant to dampen distracting divisions that have emerged within the party over controversial Senate candidates backed by former president Donald Trump and the ability of the party to fully fund campaigns in the face of an enormous Democratic financial advantage in key states."

Sen. Rick Scott (R-FL), who runs the National Republican Senatorial Committee, publicly clashed with GOP Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) over the summer.

"Now the committee’s drama is spiraling as the loss of confidence keeps many big donors away," the newspaper reported. "Inside the NRSC, the mood has been defiant in recent weeks, with senior staff and Scott projecting defiance, and little sign that either Scott or McConnell plans a public reconciliation."

Scott's travels have been a source of controversy.

"Scott, who is not up for reelection, continues to feed frustration by traveling the country, even in these final months, to support his own political ambitions. He attended a $1,000-per-seat fundraising luncheon in Tampa on Friday for his personal political committees, which he has been using to raise his public profile ahead of a potential 2024 presidential campaign, according to an invitation obtained by The Washington Post. On SaPersonay, he was booked to travel to Iowa — the first-in-the-nation presidential caucus state, where the Senate contest in not considered competitive — to attend a tailgate event before the annual football game between the University of Iowa and Iowa State University," the newspaper reported. "His critics were also enraged last month when, days after the NRSC changed ad reservations in Nevada, Arizona and Pennsylvania, Scott flew on his private plane via Dublin for a week-long vacation in Italy, according to flight records. Word soon leaked that he was on a yacht."

Read More Here: https://www.washingtonpost.com/elections/2022/09/10/republicans-midterms-inflation-abortion/

Offline Rick Plant

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Re: U.S. Politics
« Reply #1178 on: September 11, 2022, 09:44:25 AM »
President Biden @POTUS

My first two years in office spurred the strongest economic recovery in recent history. Today, I'm releasing my Economic Blueprint, a look at how our wins are rebuilding an economy that works for working families.

https://whitehouse.gov/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/Biden-Economic-Blueprint-Report-720PM-MASTER-DOC.pdf

It's long. So here are the big things:

My economic plan and this Administration's COVID response have driven the strongest, most equitable job market recovery in recent history.

We'll build on that by continuing to create good-paying jobs and empowering workers to have unionization opportunities and dignity at work.





My policies are encouraging businesses to invest in America.
 
By investing in infrastructure, clean energy, and domestic manufacturing, we are making and building in America again.

We're getting families who need it the most some breathing room.

My Administration took on special interests and won, lowering prescription drug and health care costs. We've also expanded access to high-speed internet, education, child care and long-term care, housing, and more.

I've made American industry more competitive and resilient by taking on corporate concentration, promoting small businesses and entrepreneurs – including minority- and women-owned businesses – and supporting resilient supply chains.

With the passage of the Inflation Reduction Act, my economic plan is delivering a fairer tax code where the wealthy and largest, most profitable corporations pay their fair share.





We're delivering. And over time, my Economic Blueprint will build on our progress, allowing us to tackle the tough economic challenges that I ran for office to address.

Together, we'll build an innovative, resilient, and fair economy that grows from the bottom up and middle out.


Read all 50 pages of it here: https://whitehouse.gov/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/Biden-Economic-Blueprint-Report-720PM-MASTER-DOC.pdf

https://twitter.com/POTUS/status/1568208770030833670

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Re: U.S. Politics
« Reply #1178 on: September 11, 2022, 09:44:25 AM »


Offline Rick Plant

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Re: U.S. Politics
« Reply #1179 on: September 11, 2022, 09:51:45 AM »
President Joe Biden speaks after groundbreaking for Intel’s $20 billion semiconductor plant

Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger praised the CHIPS and Science Act



President Joe Biden traveled to Ohio on Friday to celebrate the groundbreaking of Intel’s new $20 billion semiconductor plant, one of the first domestic chip-making facilities to come out of the recently passed CHIPS and Science Act.

Intel’s Friday groundbreaking ceremony kicked off construction of what the company has called the “largest silicon manufacturing location on the planet.” It’s part of Intel’s plans to invest $100 billion in Ohio over the next 10 years. The company has said that the project could take more than 7,000 workers to build the facility that is expected to house two separate factories and, once finished, employ 3,000 workers.

Intel had previously delayed the plant’s July groundbreaking ceremony because its plans largely relied “on funding from the CHIPS Act,” which Congress had yet to pass. But after a summer of negotiations, Biden signed the $280 billion tech and science bill last month, calling it “a once in a generation investment in America itself.”

The bipartisan deal to boost American innovation in opposition to growing Chinese competition in the tech industry hopes to protect US economic and national security interests following a global semiconductor shortage. The start of the coronavirus pandemic in 2020 fractured global chip supply chains, making it more difficult for device makers to source semiconductors for their products. At the same time, demand for these goods surged as offices closed and people started working from home.

“As we saw during the pandemic, when the factories that make these chips shut down, chips shut down. The global economy comes to a halt,” Biden said at the Intel site Friday. “We need to make these chips right here in America to bring down everyday costs and create good jobs.”

Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger joined Biden for the ceremony he said marked the end of the Rust Belt and the beginnings of a “Silicon Heartland.” Other major chip manufacturers have announced plans for new domestic semiconductor facilities following the bill’s passage. Earlier this month, Micron said that it would invest $15 billion to build a new plant in Idaho. On Friday, Wolfspeed announced a $5 billion investment to build a new semiconductor facility in North Carolina.

“Today we broke ground on a future that every Ohioan can be proud of,” Rep. Tim Ryan (D-OH), Ohio candidate for US Senate, said in a statement on Friday. “This multi-billion-dollar investment is a culmination of an unprecedented collaboration between federal, state, and private sector leaders that will transform Ohio’s economy and provide future generations an opportunity to build a stable middle-class life right here at home.”

https://www.theverge.com/2022/9/9/23344834/semiconductor-joe-biden-ohio-intel-gelsinger-chips-science-subsidies



President Joe Biden visits Ohio for Intel's groundbreaking ceremony

President Joe Biden is visiting Ohio for Intel's groundbreaking ceremony.

A groundbreaking ceremony is being held for Intel, nine months after the company announced its plans to invest $20 billion into the central Ohio area and build multiple factories in Licking County.

President Joe Biden is expected to deliver remarks on the occasion. Gov. Mike DeWine and other state and local officials will also be in attendance.

Intel and the governor announced in January the technology company would build two state-of-the-art chip factories by 2025 just outside of New Albany.

The project is expected to bring 20,000 jobs to the state.

The groundbreaking ceremony was scheduled to happen in July, but was pushed back until the CHIPS Act was passed.

Watch:

WKYC Channel 3


Offline Rick Plant

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Re: U.S. Politics
« Reply #1180 on: September 11, 2022, 10:26:10 PM »
Biden's inflation law offers up to $14,000 for home upgrades. Here's how to qualify.

President Biden's Inflation Reduction Act takes on climate change by helping Americans reduce their carbon footprint. A key element in that push is offering up to $14,000 in rebates and tax credits for people to make their homes more energy-efficient.

Those benefits can be used to lower the cost of home upgrades, ranging from installing heat pumps to buying new electric appliances like stoves and dryers. About 40% of carbon emissions stems from buildings, so such incentives could help the U.S. achieve its goal of lowering fossil-fuel emissions, said Lauren Urbanek, senior energy policy advocate at the nonprofit Natural Resources Defense League.

"This gives people some very concrete and generous incentives to do that, both in the form of tax credits and direct cash rebates," Urbanek told CBS MoneyWatch. "This is the biggest federal investment in buildings ever, at least one that is specified for climate change."

Here's what to know about the incentives.

What rebates can I get?

There are two separate rebate programs, according to the NRDC.

The HOMES Rebate Program: This provides more than $4 billion to states to help residents make their entire home more energy-efficient. The program provides rebates based on the energy savings their upgraded home will achieve. For instance, homeowners that make changes that cut their energy usage by at least 35% can get up to $4,000 in rebates. That amount is doubled for low- and middle-income households, who can get up to $8,000 in rebates.

High-Efficiency Electric Home Rebate Act (HEEHRA): This provides rebates for low- and middle-income families to electrify their homes, such as by installing heat pumps or electric clothes dryers. The per household rebate is capped at $14,000, and households can't receive two rebates for the same upgrade. For instance, if they claim a HOMES Rebate program for a heat pump, they can't also get a rebate through the HEEHRA.

What types of upgrades are covered?

The HOMES Rebate program would cover upgrades, from solar panels to new windows, that help your home become more energy-efficient.

The HEEHRA program designates rebates for specific appliance purchases and other upgrades. One of the most appealing rebates is a provision offering up to $8,000 for heat pumps, which despite their name provide both air conditioning as well as heating.

When it comes to energy consumption, these devices are often better alternatives to furnaces because they rely on electricity rather than gas or oil to warm a home. Compared with electric resistance heating like baseboard heaters, they can reduce electricity use by about 50%, according to the Department of Energy.

Ranging from $4,000 to more than $7,000 each, heat pumps can cost a pretty penny. The two rebate programs may help offset part or even all of the cost of these devices for many consumers.

Here are the caps on rebates for other upgrades made via the HEEHRA program:

- $1,750 for a heat pump water heater
- $8,000 for a heat pump for space heating and cooling
- $840 for electric stoves, cooktops, ranges, ovens and electric heat pump clothes dryers
- $4,000 for an electric load service center upgrade
- $1,600 for insulation, air sealing and ventilation
- $2,500 for electric wiring


There's a $14,000 cap on the dollar amount of rebates offered under the program. For instance, low-income homeowners can get up to 100% of electrification projects covered — up to the cap of $14,000 in rebates — while middle-income consumers can get up to 50% of their costs covered by the rebates (also up to that $14,000 cap).

What types of tax credits can I get?

Tax credits are different from rebates because consumers receive them when they file their taxes. Rebates, on the other hand, are often applied when someone buys an item. The HEEHRA rebates are slated to be available at the point-of-sale, such as when a consumer buys a heat pump through a home supply store.

The Inflation Reduction Act expands a homeowner efficiency tax credit, called the Energy Efficient Home Improvement Credit. This covers up to 30% of the cost of energy upgrades, with a cap of $1,200 per year.

This tax credit was previously available to homeowners, but it was a lifetime credit, meaning you could claim it only once. But the IRA makes the credit an annual incentive, which means that homeowners could claim the credit for upgrading windows one year and buying a heat pump the next.

How can I enroll in these programs?

You can't claim the rebates or tax credits just yet, Urbanek noted.

"We are probably still a number of months for the programs to be live," she said, adding that the HOMES rebate program will be operated by states, which are likely working on implementing their plans now.

Likewise, the point-of-sale rebates aren't yet available to consumers, but stores should have details later this year, according to trade publication Clean Technica.

What should I do now to prepare?

There are two steps homeowners can take now to get ready, experts say. First, schedule an energy audit of your home, which typically costs about $400 and which can offer guidance on how to make your home more efficient, according to Home Advisor.

Second, start talking with contractors to line them up for projects when the rebates and tax credit become available, Urbanek noted.

"Educating yourself about the types of equipment and what might be necessary for your own house can give people an idea of how to act as soon as this is available," she said.

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/inflation-reduction-act-joe-biden-climate-energy-home-upgrades/

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Re: U.S. Politics
« Reply #1180 on: September 11, 2022, 10:26:10 PM »


Offline Rick Plant

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Re: U.S. Politics
« Reply #1181 on: September 12, 2022, 10:33:44 AM »
Ron Johnson swears he never lies — then attacks 'the left' demanding they should be kicked 'out' of churches



Sen. Ron Johnson (R-WI) is having a difficult reelection back home as he's being forced to answer questions from voters about his role in ongoing concerns over Russia and involvement in the attempt to overthrow the 2020 election.

Johnson is dealing with the controversy and his lies around his role in the 2020 election overthrow attempt. At one point, hours prior to officials being at the Capitol, Johnson was given an envelope with the fake electors for at least two states inside. He was to give it to Vice President Mike Pence. Instead, a top Johnson aide didn't seem to know what to do with it and reached out to a Pence aide, who said not to hand the envelope over. The fake electors' scandal is now an investigation by the Justice Department. One of those fake electors works for Johnson.

Johnson was asked by reporters about it and pretended to be on a phone call. The reporters called him out on it and Johnson tried to pawn it off on an "intern" acting alone. It turned out to be his chief of staff. Johnson then lied a second time that he didn't know who gave them the envelope. It turned out to be a member of Congress.

Johnson also has been attacked over the past six years about his close relationship with Russia. In a Fox interview last month, Johnson admitted that people in his state think he's a "tool for Vladimir Putin" because he spent Jan. 4 Independence Day in the country as well as other issues.

Johnson did a personal investigation into Trump's call with Ukraine in which he asked for a "favor" that the country announce an investigation into Joe Biden ahead of the election. Johnson, along with Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-IA), who is also up for reelection, published an 11-page defense of his actions that turned out to be products of Russian disinformation.

Johnson tried to defend himself by saying that he used two Ukrainian sources for his"investigation," but left out that there were direct quotes pulled from Russian state media in the text, Just Security explained.

After Johnson's Russia trip in 2018, he “shocked” Republican colleagues by questioning U.S.'s stance on Russia and saying, “We need to take a look at sanctions—are they actually changing Russia's behavior?"

Johnson has been cagy about the issue ever since, but did take a moment to brag that it was his fake investigation that would get Trump elected in 2020. Now that Russia has attacked Ukraine, it brings up questions about whether such a major leader in the Senate could be serving the interest of someone other than the United States and its allies.

The second issue Johnson voiced was his opposition to the so-called "left," which he doesn't define, but could reasonably be assumed to mean anyone who voted for Democrats. Johnson said that the "left" wanted to destroy the "nuclear family," which is a right-wing rallying cry that goes back to Dan Quayle's attack on a television character who had a baby without being married. The show ultimately wrote it into the show bringing on families like single mothers, grandparents raising their grandchildren, single fathers and other family units.

Johnson went on to lambast liberals, saying that they have no business being part of churches. As part of a rant that liberals had "infiltrated" all institutions like law, journalism, education and other institutions, he included the church as his gripe. Christianity generally revolves around embracing any and everyone, but in what Johnson told Fox he'd just Democrats be shoved "out."

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Offline Rick Plant

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Re: U.S. Politics
« Reply #1182 on: September 12, 2022, 10:23:49 PM »
Biden Gets Big Bounce After Legislative Wins

A new IBD/TIPP poll finds President Biden’s approval rating jumped 6.6 points to 49%, the highest since April.

https://www.investors.com/politics/biden-approval-rating-gets-big-bounce-from-young-americans/

Offline Rick Plant

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Re: U.S. Politics
« Reply #1183 on: September 12, 2022, 11:32:04 PM »
CBS News @CBSNews

"Imagine the possibilities: vaccines that could prevent cancer," says Pres. Biden discussing potential cancer research innovations while delivering remarks on his "Cancer Moonshot" initiative.

"Imagine getting a simple shot instead of a grueling chemo."


Watch: https://twitter.com/i/status/1569429653856653313

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Re: U.S. Politics
« Reply #1183 on: September 12, 2022, 11:32:04 PM »