Truck blast downs part of Crimean bridge to Russia, disrupting key connector

Part of a bridge connecting annexed Crimea with Russia sustained heavy damage after a massive explosion on Saturday, disrupting a key route for Russia to supply its forces in its invasion of Ukraine. 

Russia’s Investigative Committee, the main agency responsible for conducting federal probes, said in a Telegram post that a truck blew up from the side of the Taman Peninsula, part of Russia. The explosion ignited seven fuel tanks in a train heading toward the Crimean Peninsula, causing two car spans to collapse. 

The post states that forensic experts are traveling to the scene to investigate. The committee has opened a criminal investigation into the event. 

The bridge was built after Russia illegally annexed Crimea in 2014 following a referendum that was widely condemned by most of the international community as unfree and unfair.

Russia most recently held referendums in four Ukrainian regions in the east late last month, which were also denounced as illegal. Following the votes, Russian President Vladimir Putin announced the regions’ annexation, but shortly afterward, Ukrainian forces made military gains in some of the annexed areas.

Mykhailo Podolyak, a top adviser to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, praised the explosion in a tweet, saying that it was just “the beginning.” 

“Everything illegal must be destroyed, everything stolen must be returned to Ukraine, everything occupied by Russia must be expelled,” he said. 

A spokeswoman for Russia’s Foreign Ministry, Maria Zakharova, criticized Ukrainian officials’ reaction to the blast, saying in a Telegram post that it demonstrates the “terrorist nature” of its government. 

The Moscow Times reported that three people were killed in the explosion. 

Video posted online showed a major fire burning on the bridge and parts of it in the water below. 

The bridge has served as part of a key supply route for Russian troops as the war has continued and its destruction could be a significant setback to Russia providing supplies to Crimea. 

Russian news agencies reported that Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said that the Russian government does not have a timeline for repairing the bridge.

Source: TEST FEED1

The Memo: Biden’s ‘armageddon’ warning raises fresh questions

President Biden’s warning about the possibility of ‘armageddon’ rumbling from the battlefields of Ukraine has scrambled an already complicated picture in the eight-month conflict.

Biden made the sharp warning during an appearance at a Democratic fundraiser on Thursday. 

But White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre, asked Friday if there were any new intelligence assessments that had caused Biden to “ratchet up the level of concern,” responded: “No.”

Jean-Pierre sought to cast the president’s words as a general warning about the dangers of an escalation and as a riposte to Russian President Vladimir Putin’s saber-rattling — not as an actual prediction that there would be a nuclear attack.

“We have not seen any reason to adjust our own strategic nuclear posture, nor do we have indications that Russia is preparing to imminently use nuclear weapons,” the press secretary told reporters on board a short Air Force One flight to Hagerstown, Md.

The debate over Biden’s comments is in many ways a classic Washington back-and-forth, focused on the question of whether the president’s words were out of whack with intelligence assessments and whether the White House will now have to walk them back.

But the bigger picture is more important, and starker.

Ukraine has made startling gains against Russian forces in recent weeks, taking back enormous swathes of territory that Putin’s troops once held. 

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky claimed late Thursday night that his forces had liberated more than 500 square kilometers of territory since the beginning of this month alone, after having run up much bigger gains throughout September.

But the Ukrainian gains have had the grimly ironic effect of making Putin more desperate— and more willing to countenance the kinds of tactics that have not previously been used since the Kremlin launched the invasion in February.

Putin has announced a compulsory mobilization effort that could yield 300,000 troops, and four faux referenda in eastern regions of Ukraine have been held. 

The regions are largely under armed occupation and so the results — which purportedly showed two of the regions voting by 99 percent and 98 percent, respectively, to become part of Russia — were rejected by the international community. 

In tandem, Putin has ramped up fears that he is prepared to use some form of nuclear weapon.

“Our country has various means of destruction,” he said last month. “When the territorial integrity of our country is threatened … we will certainly use all the means at our disposal.” 

The Russian president added, “It’s not a bluff.” 

In a speech last week, he said that the United States had created a “precedent” for the use of nuclear weapons by its atomic bomb attacks on the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki during the Second World War.

The idea that Putin might use nuclear weapons causes outrage for obvious reasons. But it has also stirred discussion as to what the United States and its allies might do in response.

The Biden administration has been adamant that it will not put American “boots on the ground” in Ukraine, even as it backs Kyiv with billions of dollars in military aid. 

National security adviser Jake Sullivan said last month that the U.S. had warned Russia that there would be “catastrophic” consequences in the event of such a move.

But it’s simply not clear what those consequences might be. Experts advance various different ideas, most of which stop short of a direct American military attack.

“I would expect NATO would respond through the Ukrainians,” said Robert Wilkie, who served as under secretary of Defense during the Trump administration and is now a distinguished national security fellow at the America First Policy Institute. 

He suggested this could be done by using weapons supplied by the U.S. and other Western powers “to complete the encirclement of Putin’s troops in Crimea — meaning weapons would be used to take out their lines of retreat there, but NATO forces would never touch the ground in Ukraine.”

Joel Rubin, who served as a deputy assistant secretary of State during the Obama administration, cautioned against the idea that the use of nuclear weapons by Putin would necessarily be expected to bring a symmetrical and instant response.

“There is a narrative from some folks that if he uses nukes, we have to use nukes. But there is no winner in a nuclear war — everyone loses,” Rubin said. 

Instead, he suggested, “all options would be available and nuclear would be one of them, but that is not the preferred choice. There would certainly be new moves to completely cut Russia off from every actor on the planet, whereas now China and Saudi Arabia are still giving oxygen to this leader.”

“Maybe that would be enough,” Rubin added of such isolation. “Who knows?”

The element of uncertainty, however, is one of the most unsettling elements of the current moment.

In some ways, it is the kind of scenario for which Biden is well-prepared. 

He was steeped in foreign policy throughout his decades in the Senate, including a stretch as chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee. His career has been long enough to encompass an era when there were real worries about nuclear war with the Soviet Union.

Biden’s handling of the Russian invasion of Ukraine has won a degree of approval even from some ideological opponents, especially regarding his effectiveness in assembling and maintaining an international coalition.

On the other hand, there is a legitimate question of whether he overstepped with the “armageddon” remark, perhaps raising the very tensions he is seeking to ease.

Wilkie, the Trump administration veteran, called it “very disturbing” that Biden would make such a remark apparently off-the-cuff at a fundraising dinner.

The gravity of the situation, Wilkie argued, “demands going to the American people and explaining what’s at issue and what’s at stake — instead of these off-script, ‘I’m a tough guy’ moments.”

But even Wilkie acknowledged that, for Putin, the nuclear threats were “a sign of desperation.”

The worry, across Washington and the world, is where that desperation might lead.

The Memo is a reported column by Niall Stanage.

Source: TEST FEED1

Sasse’s expected exit shrinks Senate’s anti-Trump wing

Sen. Ben Sasse’s (R-Neb.) expected retirement from the Senate is the latest sign that is it harder to be a Republican critic of former President Trump in Congress than a loyal ally.

Sasse is one of seven Senate Republicans who voted to convict former President Trump last year during his impeachment trial over the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol. He’s the third to retire.

The Nebraskan senator not that long ago was also seen as a rising star in his party and a possible presidential candidate. But that possibility seemed more and more faint as Sasse’s opposition to various Trump actions grew.

Republicans who closely follow Congress say Sasse’s retirement reflects growing polarization in Washington, which has only accelerated since Trump won election to the White House in 2016. And they say there’s less of a political future for GOP lawmakers who won’t embrace Trump.  

“Trump has undermined our party. He’s running a cult and he’s a cultist figure and he’s only concerned about himself, and he’s done fundamental damage to our constitutional electoral process, and so when people who are willing to stand up to him leave the Senate, that hurts because senators should be able to stand up to someone like Trump. That’s why you get a six-year term,” said former Sen. Judd Gregg (R-N.H.), who was a respected fiscal conservative and a member of Minority Leader Mitch McConnell’s (R-Ky.) leadership team during his Senate career.   

Gregg said the departure of so many senior Republicans who were known for both their close relationships with McConnell and their willingness to be pragmatic to get important bills passed for the good of the country is a troubling sign for both the Senate and the nation.  

“It’s not surprising. The Congress has been taken over by a lot of folks who are dominated by the extremes of their party, both the Democratic and Republican, and getting things done if you’re a thoughtful centrist is very difficult,” he said of Sasse’s retirement. “I wouldn’t be surprised if there’s some frustration there.”  

Gregg predicted the departure of so many seasoned legislators will make it tougher for McConnell — or any leader in Congress — to get things done next year.  

“Complex issues … requires people who are willing to cross the aisle and compromise and are substantive, and when you lose like folks like that and you lose the center of the Senate — and the center of the Senate has always been rational, thoughtful doers, versus shouters — it makes it very hard to legislate on complex and difficult issues,” he said.  

Sasse is a finalist to become the University of Florida’s next president — a position he is expected to take. It would end what had been a noteworthy Senate career.

Sasse often decried knee-jerk partisan polarization within the Senate and earlier this year unveiled an ethics reform package to restore public faith in Washington.  

It included a ban on lawmakers trading stocks and making huge salaries in lobbying jobs after leaving Congress as well as requiring presidential candidates to disclose their tax returns and prohibiting foreign nationals from funding state and local ballot initiatives.  

Trump famously refused to make his tax returns public during the 2016 and 2020 campaigns and during his time in the White House.  

“Ben Sasse was one of the people who made the Senate work,” said Republican pollster Whit Ayres. “And there’s a pattern of a lot people who made the Senate work who are leaving the institution, and that’s not good for the country and not good for our democracy.”

Ayres suspects that Sasse and other retiring Senate Republicans are fed up with what he called “the toxic polarization” that’s made it “difficult to do the things that led them to run for the Senate in the first place.”  

Besides Sasse, Sens. Pat Toomey (Pa.) and Richard Burr (N.C.), who also voted to convict Trump in 2021, are retiring. The other four GOP senators who voted to convict Trump are Sens. Mitt Romney (Utah), Lisa Murkowski (Alaska), Susan Collins (Maine) and Bill Cassidy (La.).

Lawmakers in both parties are bracing themselves for standoffs over government funding measures and legislation to raise the debt limit if House Republicans, who are generally more allied with Trump, win control of the lower chamber.  

It’s not yet clear who Nebraska Gov. Pete Ricketts will appoint to replace Sasse, who was reelected to a second term in 2020, but other retiring Republicans may be replaced by Republicans Trump endorsed in the primaries.  

Those Trump-backed candidates, who are either favored to win or have a good chance of being elected, include Rep. Ted Budd (R) in North Carolina, J.D. Vance in Ohio and Eric Schmitt in Missouri. 

Budd has embraced Trump’s claims of election fraud and introduced his Combat Voter Fraud Act, while Vance said in January the election was stolen and Schmitt joined a lawsuit with 17 other state attorneys general to overturn the results of the 2020 election.  

Sasse was an outspoken critic of Trump throughout his Senate career, though he toned down his criticisms in time to win Trump’s endorsement during his 2020 Republican primary.  

But after clinching the Senate GOP nomination for Nebraska, he ripped Trump apart at a telephone town hall a few weeks before the 2020 general election, calling the president’s values “deficient” because of “the way he kisses dictators’ butts” and “mocks evangelicals” and “flirted with white supremacists.”  

When he voted to impeach Trump, he declared the former president had “lied about widespread voter fraud,” spread “conspiracy theories” and fanned those lies when he summoned his supporters to Capitol Hill to “intimidate Vice President Pence” into halting the certification of Joe Biden’s victory.  

Burr and Toomey joined Sasse in voting to convict Trump on the charge of inciting the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection during his second impeachment trial. But several retiring senators who have often been loyal to McConnell were willing to stand up to Trump in significant ways.   

Retiring Sen. Ron Portman (R-Ohio) played a lead role in negotiating last year’s $1 trillion bipartisan infrastructure bill, which 18 other Republicans voted for, including retiring Sen. Roy Blunt (R-Mo.), Burr and McConnell. Trump fiercely opposed the bill, and later said Republicans who voted for it should “be ashamed of themselves” for “helping the Democrats.”   

In October of last year, Blunt, Portman and retiring Sen. Richard Shelby (R-Ala.)  joined McConnell in voting for a procedural motion to circumvent a filibuster on legislation to raise the federal debt ceiling and avoid a national default, again despite Trump’s opposition. Trump at the time accused these Republicans of “folding to the Democrats again.”   

James Wallner, a former Senate Republican aide, predicted that McConnell may have to undergo a tough transition next year when many of his loyal allies will be replaced by pro-Trump Republicans unfamiliar with the arcane procedures of the Senate and the nuances and challenges of getting bills passed.  

“Just look at what happened after the 2010 election; it took Mitch McConnell and Senate Republicans to get a handle on the” conservatives who were elected in the Tea Party revolution, Wallner said. “There was a lot of turmoil and institutional uncertainty after that election.  

“If you have a large number of members on either side of the aisle come in, the potential for disrupting business as usual in the Senate is a lot greater,” he said.  

Source: TEST FEED1

Walker claims he learned identity of woman who says he paid for her abortion for first time Friday

Herschel Walker, the Republican nominee for Senate in Georgia, told NBC News that he learned the identity of the woman who claims he reimbursed her for an abortion in 2009 for the first time on Friday.

Walker said in a brief interview with the outlet that Friday was the first time the woman ever mentioned having an abortion to him or his wife, NBC reported shortly after a report from The Daily Beast that the woman and Walker’s wife, Julie, had engaged in a text conversation on Friday in which the woman made reference to the procedure. 

Walker told NBC that the first he heard of the situation was a reporter asking him if he ever paid for the woman’s abortion. 

“I’m not saying she did or didn’t have one,” he said, referring to an abortion. “I’m saying I don’t know anything about that. I don’t know.” 

The woman has said that Walker sent her a check for $700 to reimburse her for the procedure and a “get well” card, with The Daily Beast and The New York Times each saying she showed them a copy of the check and card. 

Walker told NBC that he does not remember sending the check or the card. He said he could have sent the woman some money or a card, but not for the purposes of her having an abortion. 

The Daily Beast reported that Julie Walker texted the woman at 9:54 a.m. Friday to complain about a reporter investigating the existence of Herschel Walker’s children, three of whom were with women he was not married to. 

The woman texted Julie Walker that Herschel Walker was being “cruel” in continuing to claim “he doesn’t know me or the abortion he paid for,” according to text messages provided to The Daily Beast. 

NBC also obtained copies of text messages between the woman and Julie Walker, dating back to May, that were provided to the outlet by the Walker campaign.

The Daily Beast reported on Wednesday that the woman is the mother of one of Herschel Walker’s children. Herschel Walker faced controversy earlier in the campaign when it was revealed that he has a total of four children, one with his ex-wife and three with women he was not married to. 

“He brought all of this on himself when he decided to get on a platform and denounce abortion and make a mockery of his children who have done NOTHING to deserve this,” the woman texted Julie Walker, according to The Daily Beast.

Herschel Walker has run for Senate on a platform firmly opposed to allowing abortion, saying he does not support any exceptions. 

The woman asked Julie Walker if she was aware of the abortion or that Herschel Walker had told the woman it wasn’t the “right time” to have a child after she became pregnant a second time with his son years after the procedure, according to The Daily Beast and NBC. The Times reported Friday that Herschel Walker urged the woman to have an abortion after she became pregnant the second time, but she refused and they ended their relationship. 

Julie Walker ignored the question and responded that “this makes me incredibly sad” and that she has tried to serve as a “bridge” between the woman and Herschel Walker to put the son they have together first, according to The Daily Beast and NBC. She said Herschel Walker calls and texts with the son regularly and is sad when he does not get a response. 

The woman responded, “Are you kidding me?” and “Stop lying,” per the outlets. 

The Hill has reached out to Herschel Walker’s campaign for comment. 

Herschel Walker has denied the allegations since the original report of the abortion came out on Monday. He had previously said on multiple occasions, including on Hugh Hewitt’s radio show and during a campaign stop, that he did not know the identity of the woman making the allegations. 

The Daily Beast reported that the woman provided photographs supporting her assertion that Herschel Walker has met his son three times, two of them related to child support hearings. The outlet also said the woman shared screenshots of messages Herschel Walker sent to their son.

The outlet reported that Julie Walker has served as the go-between for Herschel Walker and the woman for years. 

NBC reported that the texts it obtained show the woman was supportive of Herschel Walker’s candidacy earlier in the race, texting Julie Walker to congratulate Herschel after he won the GOP primary in May. But the texting relationship between Julie Walker and the woman deteriorated after the woman began receiving phone calls from reporters about the reports of Herschel Walker having multiple children with different women, according to NBC.

The Times reported that the woman was “appalled” by Herschel Walker’s position on abortion. 

Source: TEST FEED1

Five takeaways from the North Carolina Senate debate

North Carolina’s Senate race has emerged as perhaps the year’s most quiet toss-up contest.

But both parties are taking the race — one of a handful that could decide control of the upper chamber — seriously. Democrat Cheri Beasley and Republican Ted Budd met for the first time on Friday night to debate a laundry list of issues that are playing out in key races across the country.

Here are five takeaways from their debate:

Budd and Beasley dodge their parties’ leaders

Neither Beasley nor Budd appeared eager to be tied to their respective parties’ leaders.

Asked whether President Biden should run for a second term in 2024, Beasley brushed off the question, saying simply that it wasn’t her decision to make. She also dodged repeated questions about whether she would want Biden to campaign with her before the midterms.

Likewise, Budd declined to say whether former President Trump should make another run for the White House in two years.

Their answers – or lack thereof – illustrate how both candidates are approaching their parties’ most divisive figures at a critical time in the Senate race. While both Biden and Trump have a loyal following, operatives on both sides are aware that there’s a risk in being tied too closely to either figure.

Still, that didn’t stop Beasley from going after Budd for his ties to Trump. And Budd repeatedly attacked Beasley as a mouthpiece for the Biden administration. 

Abortion plays a starring role

Beasley repeatedly riffed off of what Democrats believe may be their strongest talking point of the year: abortion rights.

While Budd argued time and again that the issue of reproductive rights belongs to the states, Beasley insisted that Republicans were intent on curbing abortion rights, saying the GOP was wading into an issue that should be private.

“There is no place in the exam room for Congressman Budd,” she said.

The debate illustrated just how difficult of a time Republicans have had responding to Democrats’ attacks in the wake of the Supreme Court’s ruling overturning Roe v. Wade, the landmark 1973 abortion rights decision.

The question, however, is whether it’ll be enough to sway enough voters come November.

Biden’s marijuana decision looms over the debate

One of the clearest divides on Friday night was on Biden’s recent decision to pardon people convicted of possession of marijuana at the federal level. 

Beasley was clear in her stance that cannabis should be legalized at the federal level, echoing an opinion that has become increasingly popular, not just in North Carolina, but nationally. 

Budd, meanwhile said Biden’s decision “sends a bad message to children.”

He said that he was willing to have a conversation about whether certain people had a genuine medical need for marijuana. But he slammed the idea of legalizing the drug and then immediately turned the conversation to the issue of illegal immigration and crime.

Budd zeroes in on Biden

If there’s one thing that national Republicans are banking on next month, it’s that Bidens’ unpopularity will propel them back into the majority, not just in the House, but in the Senate.

Budd’s strategy made that clear.

Throughout the debate, Budd sought to tie Beasley to her party’s leader, seeking to cast her as an easy vote in favor of Biden’s agenda in an evenly divided Senate.

And Beasley appeared to recognize the dangers Biden poses to her prospects in November. Asked whether she would join the president if he were to make a campaign stop in North Carolina, Beasley demurred.

“President Biden is certainly welcome to be here,” she said.

The quietest battleground stays quiet

North Carolina has repeatedly hosted some of the closest statewide races in the country. 

But in a year where control of both the House and the Senate are on the line, the state is playing a supportive role for more closely-watched races, like the ones in Arizona, Georgia and Nevada. 

Strategists and political observers say that it’s simply because Budd and Beasley have kept things relatively civil. Both have held elected office before and have been vetted by voters in the past.

Friday’s debate didn’t do much to change that. The messaging was clear: Beasley attacked Budd as a mouthpiece for Trump and a right-wing extremist, while Budd accused Beasley of toeing her party line amid mounting national crises. 

While many political observers have looked past the North Carolina Senate race, strategists have watched it closely, believing that control of the upper chamber could very well come down to who wins retiring Sen. Richard Burr’s (R-N.C.) seat.

Source: TEST FEED1

Five takeaways from the first Barnes-Johnson debate in Wisconsin

Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.) and Democratic candidate Mandela Barnes shared the stage for the first of two scheduled debates on Friday as the candidates simultaneously tried to paint each other as extremist while going on defense on issues like crime and Social Security.

Barnes, the state lieutenant governor who has branded himself as a populist in the race, fielded attacks over the issue of crime and defunding the police. At the same time, Johnson was forced to answer questions about his previous comments on Social Security and his ties to the Jan. 6 Capitol riot.

Here are five takeaways from the Wisconsin Senate debate.

Barnes seeks to deflect attacks on crime

Throughout the campaign, Barnes has been forced to defend himself against an onslaught of GOP attacks over crime and law enforcement. Friday night was no exception, as Johnson used the debate to paint the Democrat as a supporter of defunding the police.

“He has a record of wanting to defund the police, and I know he doesn’t necessarily say that word,” Johnson said. “But he has a long history of being supported by people that are leading the effort to defund. He uses code words like [Rep.] Cory Bush said, talk about ‘reallocate,’ ‘overbloated police budgets.’ He says it pains him to see fully funded police budgets.”

Barnes for his part struck a measured tone on the issue, arguing that the way to prevent crime was to adequately fund schools and make sure there was enough jobs, adding that his administration had invested millions of dollars for public safety, law enforcement and crime prevention efforts. 

A CNN KFile review published on Friday noted that while Barnes has argued that he is against abolishing U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) or defunding the police, past interviews and social media activity have suggested otherwise, including instances of him like posts endorsing getting rid of ICE.

Johnson put on defense over Jan. 6

The Republican senator found himself repeatedly on the defensive over his alleged involvement in Jan. 6, including reports of his office’s participation in a fake elector scheme that was first brought up during a hearing held by the House select committee investigating the Capitol riot.

During a hearing this summer, the committee showed a text exchange between an aide to former Vice President Pence and a person identified as an aide to Johnson, who told the Pence official that Johnson wanted to hand over an alternative slate of electors from Wisconsin and Michigan.

During the debate, Johnson reiterated that he had no involvement in such a scheme. 

“Let me clear things up here. I had no idea — when I got a call from the lawyer from the president United States to deliver something to the Vice President, did I have a staff member that could help out with that? I had no idea what it was. And the fact of the matter was, nothing was delivered. The whole episode took less than an hour, and I wasn’t even involved. So again, I had no knowledge of an alternate slate of electors,” he argued. 

Barnes also used Jan. 6 to hit back at allegations that he didn’t support law enforcement, invoking “the 140 officers that [Johnson] left behind [at the Capitol] because of an insurrection that he supported.”

Johnson for his part said he “condemned” the Jan. 6 riot and, asked whether Vice President Pence did the right thing on Jan. 6, said: “Yes. President Biden is now president of the United States.”

Candidates try to paint each other as extreme on abortion

Both candidates tried to portray the other as out-of-touch on the issue of abortion. While Johnson suggested that Barnes supported no limits to the medical procedure, the Democrat hit his opponent over his praise of the Supreme Court decision to overturn Roe v. Wade.

“He celebrated the Dobbs decision,” Barnes said of Johnson. “And he said that if women don’t like the laws of their state, like the 1849 criminal abortion ban we have here, he said they can move. I can’t think of a more callous, out-of-touch or extreme position to take.”

“…the most extreme position here would be no limits on abortion whatsoever, allowing an abortion right to the moment of birth, which is what the lieutenant governor supports,” Johnson shot back at one point during the debate.

The issue of abortion has galvanized voters after the Roe v. Wade ruling, which impacted a number of states that had “trigger” laws on the books. Abortion is practically illegal in Wisconsin given a 1849 law that was dormant until the overturning of Roe.

Social Security comments come back to haunt Johnson

The senator was also forced to go on defense over his previous comments on Social Security and Medicare, in which he suggested in August that they should be annually approved. Democrats at the time seized on his comments, claiming the senator wanted to ax the federal programs. 

“Let me make myself very clear: I want to save Social Security. I want to save Medicare. The greatest threat to Social Security and Medicare is the completely out-of-control deficit spending and our growing debt,” he said during the debate.

“What I’ve been saying is we should be looking at all spending so we can prioritize, and Social Security, Medicare would be at the top [of] priority list. I’ve never, ever said I would cut it or put it in the chopping block. That is a false attack,” he added. 

Barnes repeatedly accused Johnson of referring to Social Security as a “ponzi scheme” and likening it to “candy;” Johnson denied the latter point.

Barnes invokes personal stories

The lieutenant governor repeatedly invoked anecdotes from his life and about his family as he sought to paint himself as someone who could relate to the common struggles of Wisconsinites.  

Barnes referenced his grandfather in several of his answers, contrasting the opportunities his relative was afforded while living in Milwaukee and how deindustrialization and the offshoring of jobs have hit communities hard in the state since.

“My granddad moved here after World War II. He got a job as an union steelworker and that’s the story of a whole lot of black men in the city of Milwaukee. And again, when those opportunities dried up, there was nothing really that came in to fill the void. We saw, again, those rises in crime which also led to rises [in] incarceration, so many other devastating — so many other devastating results because of deindustrialization, because of offshoring,” Barnes claimed. 

Additionally, he spoke about his cousin, Dennis, who decided not to go to college and pursue a career as an electrician while Barnes spoke about the issue of rising college tuition costs. And he noted that he had lost several people in his life to gun violence when discussing the scourge of crime in the state.

Source: TEST FEED1

Woman at center of Walker controversy says he urged her to have second abortion

The woman who has said that Republican Georgia Senate candidate Herschel Walker reimbursed her for an abortion she had in 2009 told The New York Times that Walker also urged her to get a second abortion two years later. 

The Times reported Friday that the woman, who remained anonymous, said she decided to go through with the pregnancy, and that Walker has barely been involved in her son’s life. 

The Daily Beast reported on Monday that Walker reimbursed his then-girlfriend for an abortion, and the woman provided receipts for the procedure she received, the check Walker wrote and a get-well card he sent. 

The outlet later reported that the woman became the mother of one of Walker’s children after she had a child they conceived years later. The woman told the Daily Beast previously that Walker had told her during the second pregnancy that it was not a “convenient” time for her to have child but elaborated to the Times that he urged her to get an abortion again. 

The Times reported that they ended their relationship after she refused to get the procedure again. 

The Hill has reached out to Walker’s campaign for comment. 

Walker has denied the allegations and said he does not know who the woman is.

The former football star has faced accusations of hypocrisy, as he is running against Sen. Raphael Warnock (D) on a platform staunchly opposed to abortion, not supporting any exceptions for rape, incest or protecting the health of the pregnant parent. 

Most polls have shown Walker and Warnock locked in a tight race, with Warnock leading by a couple points on average. The winner of the seat could be key to determining which party controls the majority in the Senate after the November midterm elections.

Source: TEST FEED1

GOP Senate campaign arm pulls money out of New Hampshire as Bolduc falters

The GOP’s Senate campaign arm is reportedly pulling millions of dollars out of the New Hampshire Senate race and redirecting it to other states. 

Politico’s Natalie Allison reported Friday that the National Republican Senatorial Committee (NRSC) said the move was a result of other ad money being spent in the state to support Don Bolduc, the Republican nominee for Senate who is attempting to defeat Sen. Maggie Hassan (D). The committee is diverting the funding to races in Arizona, Georgia, Pennsylvania and Nevada. 

The Hill has reached out to the NRSC.

The announcement comes as Bolduc has faced controversy in his candidacy and his poll numbers consistently trail Hassan’s. 

Bolduc, a retired Army general, won the Republican nomination last month over the more moderate establishment favorite, state Senate President Chuck Morse. Bolduc falsely claimed that former President Trump won the 2020 presidential election and once called New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu (R) a “Chinese communist sympathizer.” 

He reversed his position on the 2020 election results after winning the nomination, saying that the election was not stolen and Trump lost to President Biden. 

Polls have shown Hassan with large leads over Bolduc. She led her Republican challenger by about 8.5 points in a Suffolk University-Boston Globe poll late last month and leads by about 7 points in the FiveThirtyEight polling average. 

Republicans saw the seat as key to their goal to retake the majority in the Senate, but Bolduc has struggled to close the gap with Hassan.

Hassan’s communications director, Kevin Donohoe, tweeted that the Senate Leadership Fund, a super PAC tied to Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell’s (R-Ky.), is still spending more than $14 million through the rest of the campaign to defeat Hassan.

“The one and only thing I agree with the NRSC on: there is still a TON of GOP spending against Senator Hassan,” he said.

This story was updated at 5:59 p.m.

Source: TEST FEED1

What Biden’s marijuana order does and doesn’t do

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President Biden on Thursday announced mass pardons for federal marijuana possession, a step long sought by advocates and the most significant action on marijuana his administration has taken to date. He also directed federal agencies to conduct a review of whether marijuana should remain a Schedule I substance. 

Advocates, lawmakers and experts cheered the moves, but acknowledged there are limitations. Here’s what Biden’s marijuana order does and does not do:

People convicted of simple possession will be pardoned

The pardons will clear everyone convicted on federal charges of simple possession since it first became a crime. The pardons will also extend to anyone convicted under District of Columbia drug laws, since the District is not a state and charges in D.C. are technically considered federal charges. 

Possession of marijuana is a misdemeanor punishable by up to one year in jail and a minimum fine of $1,000 for a first conviction.

More than 6,500 people were convicted of simple possession between 1992 and 2021 under federal law, and thousands more under D.C. code, White House officials said. But the vast majority of convictions happen at the state level. The White House appealed to governors to follow suit and issue the same pardon.

A pardon won’t mean people’s records will be expunged, but the Justice Department said it would remove “civil disabilities,” which include restrictions on the right to vote, to hold office or to sit on a jury.

The pardons won’t cover any other marijuana offenses

Any other charges beyond simple possession, like distribution or possession with intent to distribute, are not covered by Biden’s announcement.

As a result, nobody is getting released from jail because of the pardons. There isn’t anyone currently in federal prison solely for simple possession, White House officials said. 

“There are thousands of people who have prior federal convictions for marijuana possession, who may be denied employment, housing, or educational opportunities as a result. My action will help relieve the collateral consequences arising from these convictions,” Biden said in a statement.

It moves the federal government more in line with states

Currently, 37 states and the District of Columbia have legalized medical marijuana, and 19 states have legal adult-use marijuana. Five states have legalization on the ballot in November. Yet even as states moved toward greater acceptance, the federal government has continued to focus on prohibition, treating marijuana as a dangerously illegal drug with no potential benefits.

“We have something really crazy going on that can’t go on anymore, which is that there are active state legal markets that are doing billions of dollars of commerce. And this should be treated as a regulated product, and yet the federal government has kind of been operating under almost a ‘don’t ask, don’t tell’ policy here,” said Andrew Freedman, executive director of the Coalition for Cannabis Policy, Education and Regulation.

During the 2020 campaign, Biden was the only Democratic presidential candidate who did not support federal descheduling. During his time in the Senate, Biden authored some of the very laws that advocates say has led to a disproportionate number of incarcerated Black people for relatively minor offenses. 

So the announcement represents a major shift not just in the federal approach to marijuana, but also in Biden’s.

It doesn’t decriminalize marijuana 

Biden’s order is a step toward decriminalization, but it doesn’t go all the way. That is something Congress will have to do.

Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) introduced legislation to expunge some criminal records and remove marijuana from the Controlled Substances Act, but it currently doesn’t have the votes to pass. 

“Members of Congress have been working on this issue with one significant bill passing the House. That effort has stalled and we are almost at the end of this Congress,” a senior administration official said Thursday.

Freedman said Biden’s apparent evolution on marijuana could be the catalyst for Congress to act.

It doesn’t change how marijuana is scheduled

Biden ordered the departments of Justice and of Health and Human Services to conduct a review of whether to reschedule marijuana.

Marijuana is a Schedule I drug, meaning it is in the same category as drugs like heroin and LSD, and more serious than fentanyl. According to the federal government, it has a high potential for abuse and no accepted medical value. 

Freedman, who served as Colorado’s cannabis czar in 2014 when the state legalized marijuana, said the process to reschedule a drug can typically take 5 to 10 years. He said the likely outcome of reclassifying marijuana as a Schedule 2 substance — meaning it could have some medicinal benefits but is still harmful — would have a fairly limited impact.

“And so I think there’s more to gain from using this as a moment for a national conversation [about the limits of prohibition] than to talk through the merits of rescheduling,” Freedman said. 

Even Democratic lawmakers urged Biden to do more than just conduct a review.

“A review by HHS of how cannabis is scheduled is welcome, but those of us who have been advocating for reform, we already know that a comprehensive federal solution is needed,” Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) said in a statement on Thursday.

Source: TEST FEED1

Biden administration has reunited 500 families separated under Trump

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The Biden administration has reunited 500 children separated from their parents under the Trump White House’s zero tolerance border policy, an official told The Hill Friday. 

The benchmark follows nearly two years of steady work by the Biden administration, which tasked itself with reuniting an estimated more than 1,000 children who remained separated from their parents due to the 2018 Trump policy.

“Five hundred is a really important milestone. Obviously, the first step for these families is that physical reunification and going through that process,” Michelle Brané, executive director of the administration’s Family Reunification Task Force, told The Hill.

“Those are 500 individual children that are now with their parents.”

The Biden administration launched its family reunification task force weeks into taking office, pledging to contact the parents, many of whom are outside the U.S. and may no longer reside in their home country.

Outrage over the policy pushed Trump to suspend it, but not before separating more than 5,000 children from their parents. 

Brané said the task force still has nearly 700 children it is still trying to reunify with their parents.

The administration in September of last year launched two sites — together.gov and its Spanish-language counterpart juntos.gov — to give families a portal to actively seek reunification.

Some 200 families are still being processed through the portal, but about 500 who have been initially contacted by the government have yet to do so. There is also a group of parents for the more than 150 children the task force has not yet been able to contact.

“We’re making progress. We have been able to contact many of the families that we had not previously had any contact with when we came into this job and into this mission. And we know that there is a lot of work left to be done. We are committed to continuing to work to find these families,” Brané said, an effort that has included visiting villages in other countries in an effort to locate the parents. 

“Obviously the last cases are the hardest cases in many ways.”

Lee Gelernt, a lawyer with the American Civil Liberties Union representing those separated under the Trump policy in a class action suit, said the task force still has significant work to do.

“The Biden administration should be applauded for reuniting hundreds of families cruelly separated by the Trump administration, but unfortunately there could be more than a 1,000 families who are still separated, and we still haven’t even found 150 families, ” said Gelernt, Deputy Director of the ACLU’s Immigrants’ Rights Project and lead counsel in the case that ended the Trump family separation practice.

The Biden administration has allowed such families to temporarily reside in the U.S., offering work permits for three years to parents who were separated from their children. While they can seek to renew that status, in and of itself it is not a pathway to citizenship. 

The reunification program also comes with mental health services through nonprofit partners, including sessions to prepare prior to reunification for children that have in some cases not seen their parents for four years.

That process has come with its own challenges. Reports indicate some children reunited with their parents have suffered severe emotional trauma as a result of the separation. 

A study by Physicians for Human Rights indicated that the cases meet the definition of torture as defined by the U.N. Convention Against Torture.

“In the cases reviewed, it is apparent that U.S. officials intentionally carried out actions causing severe pain and suffering in order to punish and intimidate mainly Central American asylum seekers to not pursue their asylum claims,” the study stated.

Clinicians identified “symptoms and behaviors consistent with trauma and its residual effects in nearly all of the parents and children.”

That includes depression, constant worry/preoccupations, frequent crying, difficulty sleeping, loss of appetite, recurring nightmares, and overwhelming anxiety.  

Four families have since launched a suit against the government, seeking damages for the trauma.

—Updated at 2:09 p.m.

Source: TEST FEED1