Fewer Americans listing inflation as top issue in elections: survey

Fewer Americans said inflation is their top issue going into November’s midterm elections than in recent months, according to a new poll released on Thursday.

Thirty percent of respondents in the NPR/PBS Newshour/Marist poll listed inflation as their top issue in the upcoming elections — down from 37 percent in July — as inflation showed signs of slowing.

Even as fewer Americans placed inflation at the top of their list of concerns, it remained the issue most frequently cited as being “top of mind,” ahead of abortion and health care, according to the poll. 

However, the issue of abortion gained ground on inflation, as the portion of respondents listing it as their top election issue rose slightly from 18 percent in July to 22 percent in September, the poll found.

After the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in June, 61 percent of respondents said the decision made them more likely to vote in November’s elections. This number had decreased slightly by the September poll, with 58 percent saying the decision encouraged them to vote.

Democrats also maintained a slight edge over Republicans among the poll’s respondents, with 48 percent saying they would support a Democratic candidate for Congress in November and 44 percent saying they would support a Republican candidate. However, Republicans have narrowed the gap since June, when 41 percent said they would support one of the party’s candidates.

Democrats’ expectations for the upcoming elections have improved slightly in recent weeks, amid a series of wins for the party, including the passage of the Inflation Reduction Act and President Joe Biden’s announcement of student loan debt forgiveness. 

The NPR/PBS Newshour/Marist poll was conducted from Aug. 29 to Sept. 1 with 1,236 adults and is statistically significant within plus or minus 4.1 percentage points.

Source: TEST FEED1

Biden courts votes with pandemic emergency extension

The federal COVID-19 public health emergency will boost voter turnout for Democrats. That’s the unspoken reality of the Biden administration’s mid-August decision to extend the emergency past the midterm elections. It was a strange move, considering the administration recently loosened key pandemic restrictions, from social distancing to quarantines to testing recommendations for schools and offices. Yet while the pandemic is fading, the emergency keeps a temporary welfare expansion flowing, which is a guaranteed vote-getter and potentially even an election-winner.

This conclusion is supported by a poll sponsored by the Opportunity Solutions Project. Conducted by the Center for Excellence in Polling, we asked 2,500 working-class Americans about their voting habits and welfare. Low-income voters who have never been on welfare gave the Republican Party a slight edge on voter affiliation. But when looking at voting decisions, there’s a 30-point swing toward the Democratic candidate for those who receive some form of welfare.

In other words, more welfare means more votes for President Biden’s party, which is vying to keep control of the closely divided House and Senate in the midterms.

These findings put in perspective the dramatic welfare expansion of the past few years. Medicaid rolls have grown by 24 million people during the pandemic, driven by a federal policy that blocks states from disenrolling ineligible individuals. Similarly, Washington has suspended the most common work requirements for food stamps, contributing to a net increase of more than 4 million recipients. (The Biden administration also unilaterally increased the value of food stamps by 25 percent.) The first two policies will expire with the public health emergency, at which point millions of individuals will begin to leave welfare. That won’t start before the election, though, giving Democrats a boost at the ballot box.

How big a boost are we talking about? Potentially in the millions of voters. Based on our findings, for every 100,000 working-class voters who are added to welfare, 30,000 switch their vote from Republican to Democrat. Conversely, for every 100,000 voters who go from welfare to work, 25,000 swing back to Republicans. That means the Democratic Party gets a permanent boost in voter affiliation after expanding welfare, even if that expansion is later repealed. Even so, the obvious incentive is to prevent an expiration, especially before a crucial election.

Third-party research supports our findings. In 2019, University of Chicago and MIT researchers discovered that a state Medicaid expansion increased voter turnout by 7 percent, 96 percent of which occurred in heavily Democratic counties. And when Democrats’ expanded child tax credit expired earlier this year, a Morning Consult poll found that recipients quickly switched from supporting Democrats to supporting Republicans on the generic ballot. The Biden administration and its allies in Congress fought to prevent that expiration until after the midterms, but fell short in the Senate. Yet the White House doesn’t need Congress’s help to keep millions of people on food stamps and Medicaid.

There’s no telling how the greater turnout for Democrats will swing key House and Senate races, though it’s foolish to assume it won’t. What’s clear is that any expected short-term electoral benefit for the left is already doing long-term damage to America. Expanded welfare is directly contributing to soaring inflation, a devastating worker shortage, a massive increase in the national debt, and rapidly growing fiscal pain for states. Most disturbingly, it traps millions of people in welfare, robbing them of their chance at the American Dream. That’s a steep price for an electoral payout.

Government dependency inherently helps Democrats. Yet the independence that comes from rolling back pandemic welfare policies will help America as a whole. It will boost the economy, provide relief from inflation, and prevent the welfare state from spiraling even further out of fiscal control. Americans won’t get that relief until the Biden administration finally ends the public health emergency, hopefully in early 2023.

There’s a very real threat that the White House will keep extending the emergency, despite the fading pandemic and the public’s obvious desire to move on. Just as welfare recipients tend to get hooked on taxpayer handouts, Democrats may get hooked on the electoral benefits.  

Nick Stehle is a visiting fellow at the Opportunity Solutions Project and vice president of communications at the Florida-based  Foundation for Government Accountability. Follow him on Twitter @nstehle.

Source: TEST FEED1

Biden to receive updates on Queen Elizabeth's health

President Biden has been briefed on the health of Queen Elizabeth II and is expected to receive regular updates about her condition, White House national security spokesman John Kirby told reporters on Thursday.

Kirby also said that Biden told British Prime Minister Liz Truss during a video call with other leaders on Thursday that he and first lady Jill Biden were thinking of the queen.  

“The president has been briefed, of course, this morning and will be updated throughout the day concerning news out of the United Kingdom,” Kirby told reporters. “His and the first lady’s thoughts are solidly and squarely with the queen today and her family.” 

White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre called the news “concerning” later during a press briefing Thursday and reiterated that the president had been briefed on the queen’s condition.  

Buckingham Palace said earlier Thursday that the queen was under medical supervision at her estate in Scotland due to concerns about her health, without providing specific details on her condition. Members of the Royal Family were rushing to her side, suggesting a potential serious turn in her health.  

“The whole country will be deeply concerned by the news from Buckingham Palace this lunchtime,” Truss, who just days ago was tapped as the new prime minister, tweeted Thursday. “My thoughts — and the thoughts of people across our United Kingdom — are with Her Majesty The Queen and her family at this time.”  

Biden spoke with Truss and other U.S. allies Thursday about support for Ukraine amid the Russian invasion. It’s unclear if Truss provided the leaders with any details about the queen’s condition. 

Biden “conveyed to Prime Minister Truss that he was following reports about Queen Elizabeth’s health and that he and the First Lady are keeping the Queen and her family in their thoughts,” a White House readout of the video call said. 

Updated 1:10 p.m.

Source: TEST FEED1

Liberals push Biden on marijuana reform ahead of midterm momentum

Democrats are beginning to pressure President Biden to take on marijuana reform as Congress struggles to find a path forward on decriminalization and as the party contemplates what’s possible before the midterms. 

Liberals have been building momentum with just two months until the November elections with back-to-back wins on key pieces of Biden’s agenda, from student loans to healthcare and tax reform.

With the wind at their sails, they are now hoping to get the president on their side once again by moving towards what they believe would change the nation’s criminal justice system in a meaningful way.

“Now that the president has delivered on a progressive policy of student debt relief, he has seen an uptick in the polls, he’s united the base, put Republicans on the defensive and Democrats across the country seem to be riding the wave as well,” said Stacey Walker, a influential Iowa Democrat and former surrogate for Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), who focused on cannabis reform during the “Unity Task Force” negotiations between the Biden and Sanders camps in 2020. 

“Along with several members of President Biden’s senior leadership team, we all agreed that at the very least the president should decriminalize marijuana and reschedule it through executive action at the federal level,” Walker said of the negotiations following the last presidential election. 

On the campaign trail, some Democratic candidates are becoming more vocal about the issue, seeking to reignite what they see is not only a moral imperative but a smart political move to maintain their majority. 

The loudest call in recent weeks came from Pennsylvania Lt. Gov. John Fetterman, one of the most prominent Democrats to publicly urge Biden ahead of a visit to the Keystone state to direct his political will towards reforms where a closely watched race to flip a Senate seat is currently skewing in Fetterman’s favor. 

“It’s long past time that we finally decriminalize marijuana,” said Fetterman, who is comfortably leading against Republican nominee Mehmet Oz. “The president needs to use his executive authority to begin.”

Fetterman was not alone. His request came after a group of Democratic senators sent a letter to the Biden administration ahead of August recess pushing the president to start addressing the issue. They asked officials at the Department of Justice to remove marijuana from the list of federal controlled substances and pardon those convicted of nonviolent cannabis-related offenses.

“I think Biden understands the larger issues at play here and I’m encouraged by that,” Sen. Cory Booker (D-N.J.), one of the Democrats who signed onto the letter, told The Hill on Tuesday. Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), who also helped lead the letter, stressed, “there is more that we could do.”

The lawmakers said the request was a follow-up after receiving a “disappointing” response months prior, claiming the DOJ’s sole reason for not acting was a determination by the Health and Human Services (HHS) that “cannabis has not been proven in scientific studies to be a safe and effective treatment for any disease or condition.”

Erik Altieri, executive director of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, called the rationale “the complete illustration of the government having its head in the sand on this issue.” 

“There’s well over 33,000, peer reviewed studies on cannabis for all kinds of ailments,” Altieri said, “and as everyone knows, there is about 36 states in this country that currently have active medical marijuana programs that have thousands and thousands of individuals in them that are benefiting from its therapeutic use.”

Progressives have also prioritized marijuana decriminalization by framing it as a racial justice issue, as people of color have continued to bear an outsized burden from the nation’s drug policies through the years, especially Black Americans.

A 2020 report from the American Civil Liberties Union found that Black people were more than three times as likely to be arrested for marijuana offenses than their white counterparts in the U.S. That disparity, the report said, has only worsened in dozens of states over a decade, despite both racial groups having similar usage rates.

At the same time, as a growing number of states have moved toward legalization or decriminalization in recent years, data shows Black Americans are drastically underrepresented in the country’s booming cannabis industry. 

Figures crunched in Leafly’s 2021 Jobs Report showed that Black Americans accounted for “only 1.2 percent to 1.7 percent of all cannabis company owners,” despite making up about 12 percent of the country’s population.

Lawmakers and activists have urged Biden to sign reform from the Oval Office, which in their view would further round out what has become a staunchly progressive agenda from the moderate president. They claim that the more Biden signs, the more he elevates his standing with the public. 

Recent polling has provided credibility to that argument. Biden’s low approval, which has haunted his presidency for more than a year since the U.S. military withdrawal from Afghanistan, began to change after he signed the Senate-passed Inflation Reduction Act last month. 

He further bolstered his credentials by putting forth a plan to forgive between $10,000 and $20,000 in federal student loan relief meant to help low-income young people and other Americans’ debt for their education.

By decriminalizing marijuana, some activists and strategists say Biden would give another potential bump to voters in key swing states, noting that the policy is popular among many constituencies important to Democrats. Any move at the federal level could help inspire turnout among young voters and minority populations and could make a difference in races where the margin of error is tight.

“He gets a lot of flack from Democrats when he gives a speech on a single issue, and they say, man you could have done this months ago,” said Douglas Wilson, a Democratic consultant from North Carolina. 

Alteri, however, cautioned that drug scheduling is usually done through Congress, and the process through the executive branch is “not as straightforward” as some Democrats have made it seem.

“It does involve interagency cooperation that largely will have to come from both the attorney general as well as the Department of Health and the Secretary of Health,” Alteri said, before listing a series of steps the agencies would likely have to take to determine if marijuana needs to be descheduled.

“It’s a bit of a lengthy process to go through, but, assuming the president put priority on it, and he had supportive heads of those agencies, it’s something they could do,” he added.

Proponents agree, as marijuana decriminalization efforts have not yet found a place of consensus in Congress.

“I’d like for Congress to take this up, and I have a bill with others to do that. It’s long past time,” Warren told The Hill in July. “But so long as we’ve got Republicans blocking everything that we try to do, then the administration has an opportunity to step in and give us some much-needed relief.”

Many activists also recognize that, like the pathway to student loan forgiveness, decriminalization is likely to come from a grassroots-led approach.

Those who are mobilizing support on the ground see it as a numbers game: the more voices that are amplified in front of Biden, the easier it becomes to influence policy. Even better, some say, is that they have the support of key lawmakers in Congress, who Biden has regularly expressed a desire to continue working with to enact his agenda. 

According to a Pew Research study taken in April, 91 percent of respondents said they believe in legalizing marijuana for medical purposes, with 61 percent saying it should also be approved for recreational use. 

While the issue has come up periodically, Biden has been cautious about appearing too enthusiastic about it. He campaigned in 2020 in support of what many progressives are pushing for, including prohibiting anyone from going to jail for recreational use and allowing states to legalize it, but he’s been slow to sign any type of executive action that grants broad federal rules. 

Liberals are hoping that will change as the midterms get closer and as the president has momentum from some dovetailing off of some of their previous hardest fought policy pushes. 

“We need Biden to take action,” said Moné Holder, senior director of advocacy and programs at Florida Rising. “I don’t see waiting as being an option. I think the time to strike is now. Those who are impacted by it, those who partake in it whether we want to admit it or not can definitely see this as a gleam of hope.”

Source: TEST FEED1

1 in 4 now fear attacks near their homes: poll

A quarter of Americans said they now fear being attacked in their own neighborhood, according to a new poll from NPR, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. 

In breaking the poll down on racial lines, the surveyors found white were less likely to have fears of being attacked near their residences than people of color.

The poll, published on Thursday, found that 25 percent of Black respondents said they have fears of being attacked in their own neighborhood, compared to 19 percent of white respondents.

NPR reported that 26 percent of Latino respondents said they have feared being attacked near their residences, while 36 percent of Native American respondents and 21 percent of Asian respondents shared the same sentiment. 

When asked if they view crime as a serious problem in their community, 40 percent of Native American respondents said that crime is a serious neighborhood problem, while 35 percent of Black and Latino respondents in the poll shared concerns about their communities’ crime problems. 

Twenty-eight percent of White respondents also believed that crime is a serious problem in their community, while 22 percent of Asian respondents agreed with the same sentiment, the poll said. 

Crime has been a major topic of discussion over the last few years and is expected to be an issue in this fall’s midterm elections, where Republicans have sought to argue that Democrats have not offered sufficient support for police.

The NPR poll was conducted from May 16 to June 13 with a total of 4,192 respondents participating in the survey. The poll’s margin of error is 2.8 percentage points.

Source: TEST FEED1

Jill Biden selects Padilla aide as new press secretary

First lady Jill Biden has selected Vanessa Valdivia, currently communications director for Sen. Alex Padilla (D-Calif.), as her new press secretary.  

The first lady’s office announced Thursday that Valdivia would replace Michael LaRosa, who departed as press secretary at the end of July. Valdivia is expected to assume the position in the coming weeks, though the first lady’s office did not offer an exact start date.

Valdivia has served as communications director for Padilla since he entered the Senate in 2021, filling the seat vacated by Vice President Harris. She also worked on several presidential and Senate campaigns before that, including former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s 2016 presidential bid. 

“Vanessa’s combination of strategic communications skills, expertise, and experience, as well as her commitment to public service, will make her a tremendous addition to our team,” the first lady’s communications director Elizabeth Alexander said in a statement. “We look forward to welcoming her in the coming weeks.”  

Valdivia is also married to Chris Meagher, a deputy press secretary in the West Wing.  

Her move will fill an important role on the first lady’s communications team that has stood empty since the end of July when LaRosa, a longtime Jill Biden spokesman, left the East Wing for a job at public affairs firm Hamilton Place Strategies.

Other White House officials praised the announcement Thursday.

“This is such great news!” tweeted White House director of political strategy and outreach Emmy Ruiz, who noted she has worked with Valdivia in the past. “I can’t wait to see her shine in this new role.”  

The first lady is making a handful of domestic trips in the coming days, including delivering remarks at the Flight 93 National Memorial Observance in Shanksville, Pa., on Sunday to honor the victims killed in the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks.  

The West Wing has experienced some churn in the communications shop since Karine Jean-Pierre took over for Jen Psaki as press secretary. White House communications director Kate Bedingfield had initially planned to depart in July but changed her mind and decided to stay on later that month.

Source: TEST FEED1

DoorDash customer says delivery driver ate his chicken wings, left surprising note in bag

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(NEXSTAR) – A Wingstop customer in California claims his DoorDash driver ate all the food he ordered and delivered a bag containing the discarded chicken bones — along with a note of apology, of sorts.

Damien ‘Suede’ Sanders, who goes by Funny Mane Suede on social media, first chronicled the strange story on TikTok in mid-August. In the video, he tells his followers he just ordered Wingstop, only to find his wings and fries had already been eaten.

“My anticipation is the real victim here,” Sanders joked to Nexstar.

As seen in his TikTok video, Sanders opened up his delivery order to find an empty fry container, a box containing the discarded chicken bones, and a note — allegedly from the DoorDash driver — providing an explanation.

“I’m sorry I 8 cho food,” the delivery driver wrote in the note, according to Sanders. “I’m broke n hungry. Consider it like ur payin it 4ward. I’m quitting this lame a– job n e way. B blessed.”

The note was also signed: “Your Door Dash guy.”

The customer, Damien ‘Suede’ Sanders, said he opened his delivery order to find the driver had eaten his wings and fries. (Damien ‘Suede’ Sanders/@TheSuedeShow on TikTok)

The video has since been viewed hundreds of thousands of times since Sanders uploaded it to TikTok on Aug. 17. But the incident is still eating away at him, at least a little.

“Do you know what it feels like to have your taste buds throwing a party for lemon pepper [wings], only to be disappointed by a pile of bone marrow?” Sanders said.

Sanders added that he also felt the driver ate the wings “disrespectfully,” seeing as he appeared to leave meat on the contaminated bones — an act he described as a “travesty.”

“I … grabbed my iPhone to show my TikTok family,” Sanders said. “This was so unbelievable to me that I knew the fam wouldn’t be able to digest this either.”

Sanders confirmed to Nexstar that he soon called DoorDash and received a refund — along with a credit — after informing them of his chicken-less wings. A representative for DoorDash did not respond to a request for further information on the status of the delivery driver, but confirmed to Nexstar the company is “looking into” the incident.

Sanders, meanwhile, harbored no grudge against Wingstop, and even offered to be a commercial spokesperson in a new TikTok video shared this week.

“The whole family [is] eating it,” he said in the video, which showed several people seated around a table eating Wingstop. “I need some kind of sponsorship … I need to be on somebody’s commercial [or] advertisement. Wingstop marketing team, holler at me.”

He noted, however, that he didn’t opt for delivery this time around.

“I took everybody’s advice this time, went and picked up my own chicken so I don’t get a pile of bones,” Sanders said, glaring into the camera.

Wingstop, meanwhile, is planning a special delivery for Sanders and his family. “It’s important to Wingstop that we provide the best possible flavor experience,” a representative told Nexstar.

This isn’t the first time a DoorDash driver has been accused of consuming a customer’s order. In March 2019, a family in Stockton, California, captured video of a DoorDash driver taking a sip from the milkshake they ordered for their teenage son before ringing the doorbell.

DoorDash later confirmed that driver was fired, Nexstar’s KTXL reported.

“We sincerely regret that this incident fell short of the experience we strive to give our customers every day,” a spokesperson for DoorDash said at the time. “We reached out to this customer immediately after being notified of this event three weeks ago. We have since taken appropriate actions, including deactivating the dasher from our platform for failing to follow and maintain our standards of food safety.”

Source: TEST FEED1

Sanders vows to oppose controversial Schumer-Manchin side deal

Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) on Thursday blasted the side deal that Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) and Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) struck earlier this summer to pass a controversial proposal to make it easier to develop fossil fuel-based energy projects.

Schumer told reporters Wednesday that he plans to attach Manchin’s permitting reform bill to the stopgap spending measure that needs to pass by Sept. 30 to prevent a government shutdown.  

Sanders slammed the agreement as “a huge giveaway to the fossil fuel industry” and angrily warned that it would undermine President Biden’s pledge to reduce carbon emissions by 50 percent by the year 2030. 

“I rise this morning to express by strong opposition to the so-called side deal that the fossil fuel industry is pushing to make it easier for them to pollute the environment and destroy our planet,” Sanders said.  

He said the legislation crafted by Manchin would make it easier for the fossil fuel industry to receive permits and complete what he called “some of the dirtiest and most polluting oil and gas projects in America.” 

He added the bill would speed the approval of a pipeline spanning from West Virginia to North Carolina that would “generate emissions equivalent to 37 coal plants or over 27 million cars each and every year.”  

“Really, at a time when climate change is threatening the very existence of our planet, why would anybody be talking about substantially increasing carbon emissions and expanding fossil fuel production in the United States?” Sanders asked.  

Sanders said he understood the power of oil, gas and coal companies “in our corrupt political system” but called on his colleagues to vote against the deal.  

Pairing permitting reform to a continuing resolution gives it a very good chance of passing, even though opposition is building among progressive House Democrats.  

Schumer said he promised to pass the bill in exchange for securing Manchin’s vote last month for the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), which will invest more than $300 billion in programs to combat climate change and further develop domestic energy production.   

“Permitting reform is part of the IRA, and we will get it done,” Schumer said. 

The Democratic leader admitted last month that he was not thrilled to agree to permitting reform, but he noted that it could help the development of renewable energy projects as well as those to extract fossil fuels.  

“In terms of the permitting reform, I didn’t like it but it was something that Sen. Manchin wanted,” Schumer told reporters in early August. “And in fact it has some very good things for the environment. It’s going to make permitting easier for clean energy.”   

Source: TEST FEED1

Congress must pass the Give Kids a Chance Act without delay

Restating his mission to improve cancer treatment in the U.S., President Biden said: “When we work together in America, there is nothing beyond our capacity. So let’s show the world what’s possible. Let’s show the world we’re committed.”  

Today, he and members of Congress have an opportunity to do just that, by supporting the Give Kids a Chance Act, a bipartisan bill introduced by Sen. Michael Bennet (D-Colo.) and me that would expand children’s access to combination cancer therapy trials—and potentially save countless lives. 

In 2017, Congress passed the RACE for Children Act, which Sen. Bennet and I wrote to streamline the approval of pediatric cancer drugs and require that single-drug therapy trials be applied to children as well as adults. According to the chair of the Children’s Oncology Group, it was a “huge…game-changer.” Our new bill builds off of that law’s success to help more children.  

Medical doctors describe combination therapies, in which patients are treated with multiple drugs simultaneously, as “a cornerstone of cancer therapy.” They are more effective at counteracting drug-resistant cell growth, metastasis (the spreading of tumors throughout the body), and cancer relapse than single-drug therapies. 

In combination therapy trials, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approves patients’ advance access to innovative combinations of molecularly-targeted oncology drugs or biologics. It’s one of the primary ways in which doctors develop new, life-saving cancer treatments. But because of outdated red tape, those trials are often limited to adults, and children suffering from pediatric cancers are stuck with less effective, single-drug treatments. 

There isn’t a good reason to deny children battling a horrible disease the care they need. Fortunately, we don’t have to be satisfied with the status quo. We can make even more progress by further reforming the Pediatric Research Equity Act(PREA) and expanding the RACE for Children Act’s pediatric study requirement to combination therapy trials. That is what our Give Kids a Chance Actwould do. 

The Pediatric Oncology Section Head of Children’s Hospital Colorado confirms that our bill would “increase access to combinations of target cancer drugs” and bring new hope to “children and families who most need new treatment options.” Nor is that the only testimonial it has received. Dozens of hospitals, advocacy groups, and pediatric cancer research organizations have endorsed the Give Kids a Chance Act. Passing it should be common sense. 

The House of Representatives has already incorporated a companion piece of legislation, introduced by Reps. G. K. Butterfield (D-N.C.) and Michael McCaul (R-Texas), into its version of the FDA user fee reauthorization bill. Now it’s time for the House and Senate to incorporate the Give Kids a Chance Actinto the final reauthorization bill, before those fees expire at the end of September, and pass it as soon as possible. 

thirteen-year-old cancer patient Caroline asks us a weighty question: “Combinations of cancer drugs developed for adults should also be studied in kids. Don’t kids with cancer deserve the same chance to be cured?” 

The answer to that question is obviously yes. It’s why I call on my fellow policymakers in Washington to support the Give Kids a Chance Act.Our kids shouldn’t have to wait any longer—let’s turn this bill into law without delay. 

Rubio is the senior senator from Florida.

Source: TEST FEED1

Trump's DOJ pushed for legal action against John Kerry, says ex-US attorney

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Former President Trump’s Justice Department pushed for a criminal investigation of former Secretary of State John Kerry, an ex-U.S. attorney revealed in a new book, according to The New York Times.

The push for an investigation of Kerry was one of several instances in which Trump’s Justice Department pressured the U.S. attorney’s office in Manhattan to take action against the then-president’s critics, according to Geoffrey Berman, the former U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York. Berman was fired by Trump in June 2020.

In May 2018, the Justice Department told Berman’s office it would be investigating Kerry’s Iran-related conduct, Berman details in his new book “Holding the Line,” out Tuesday, according to the Times.

The request came days after Trump publicly attacked Kerry on Twitter over the Iran nuclear deal, which he helped negotiate as head of the State Department in the Obama administration, Berman said. Trump withdrew the U.S. from the accords around the same time.

“The conduct that had annoyed the president was now a priority of the Department of Justice,” Berman wrote, according to the Times.

After Berman’s office declined to prosecute Kerry, the request was sent to another U.S. attorney’s office, in Maryland, which also declined to prosecute, Berman said in his book, according to the Times.

In another case of what he described as a “clear” and “outrageous” pattern, Berman said the Justice Department referred a case against Gregory Craig, former White House counsel for the Obama administration, to his office. 

Berman claims he was asked to charge Craig prior to the midterm elections in order to “even things out,” according to the Times. The case was similarly shuffled around to another U.S. attorney’s office after Berman declined to prosecute.

Trump’s Justice Department also sought to block cases against the former president’s allies, including his personal lawyer Michael Cohen, Berman noted in his book, according to the Times.

The Hill has reached out to a Trump spokesperson for comment.

Source: TEST FEED1