Trump feels ‘used’ by Jared Kushner after son-in-law bolts from him to protect his image: report

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On Wednesday’s edition of “Anderson Cooper 360,” correspondent Jim Acosta said that former President Donald Trump feels “used” by his son-in-law Jared Kushner, following reports that he and Ivanka Trump have distanced themselves from him as he continues to attack the legitimacy of the 2020 presidential election.

“It sounds like Jared and Ivanka are trying to treat Trump as the coffee boy. I never thought I would see that day,” said Acosta. “I did talk to a long-time Trump adviser today who said, you know what, Trump feels used by Jared Kushner. There’s a twist, Anderson, that I don’t know if we would ever see — Trump feeling used in all of this.”

“Listen, as for Jared and Ivanka trying to distance themselves, keep in mind, I don’t want to go over all of the history in the last four years, but Jared was in charge of Middle East peace in the Trump administration. He had a heavy hand in the COVID response. He was working on, you know, the border wall. He was a campaign adviser and so on. There’s no rehab tour. There’s no PR spinning. There’s no separation that can be put in place between Trump and Jared and Ivanka that is going to wash the blood of January 6th off of their designer suits. It’s just not going to happen. And I think Jared and Ivanka can try this, but I don’t think they’re fooling anybody. I think a lot of people out there see their failures tied very tightly to the failures of former President Donald Trump.” Continue reading.

In sentencing regretful Capitol protester, federal judge rebukes Republicans

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U.S. District Judge Royce C. Lamberth castigated Republican lawmakers on Wednesday for downplaying the violence of the mob that stormed the Capitol on Jan. 6, saying in handing down the first sentence to a charged defendant that those who break the law must pay a penalty.

“I’m especially troubled by the accounts of some members of Congress that January 6 was just a day of tourists walking through the Capitol,” he said. “I don’t know what planet they were on. . . . This was not a peaceful demonstration. It was not an accident that it turned violent; it was intended to halt the very functioning of our government.”

The 49-year-old Indiana woman before him, who had just pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor count of demonstrating inside the Capitol, did not disagree. Continue reading.

The ‘Tea Party’ is long dead — but a new fake ‘protest movement’ is in the making

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Loudoun County is an affluent suburb outside of Washington. Its public school board held a meeting last night. It was cut short. According to the Loudoun Times-Mirror, the board unanimously voted to end a period of public comment “after a capacity crowd descended into shouting and after numerous requests that attendees remain silent were not heeded.” Loudoun County Sheriff’s deputies cleared the meeting room. Some protesters were frog-marched out. Videos of the evening went viral on social media.

That’s why I’m bothering telling you about what would otherwise be a local event of no consequence to national politics. I think what happened last night is something we’re probably going to see more of in the weeks ahead. It has the feeling of a “Tea Party”-style “movement” in which “righteous” Americans “revolt” against the “infringement” of their liberties. It’s premised on a garbage pile of lies, but lots of white people in this country are willing to believe them, because lies tell them what they want to believe. They see themselves as victims. They will prove it, though the proof is delusional.

By the time the press corps picks up the story, the truth will be lost and the reported “controversy” will be about what liberalism’s enemies say liberals say, boxing out of “debate” almost entirely what liberals themselves say they say. Continue reading.

Nearly 900 Secret Service members were infected with the coronavirus. A watchdog blames Trump.

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Almost 900 Secret Service members have tested positive for the coronavirus since March 2020, according to a watchdog report, and many of those infected had protection assignments that included the safety of the president and vice president.

The nonprofit Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington published a report Tuesday detailing how 881 Secret Service employees had tested positive between March 1, 2020 and March 9, 2021. The data, which came from a Freedom of Information Act request to the Secret Service, found that 477 members of the special agent division had been infected. Described by the Department of Homeland Security as “the elite agents you see protecting the President and Vice President,” special agents are also responsible for a number of safety assignments overseas and in the United States, such as protecting the president and vice president’s families, presidential candidates and visiting foreign leaders.

CREW said it’s unclear “whom the special agents who tested positive were assigned to protect or when, exactly, they tested positive.” Continue reading.

Majority of Americans believe GOP ‘election audits’ are a sham designed to undermine election processes

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As Republican lawmakers continue their efforts to conduct audits of the 2020 presidential election, the majority of Americans are raising questions about the integrity of their efforts. 

The results of a new Monmouth University poll offer insight into how Americans view the so-called election audits, like the one underway in Maricopa County, Ariz. According to Truthout, poll respondents were asked if they believed election audits were “legitimate efforts to identify potential voting irregularities” or “partisan efforts to undermine valid election results.”

Based on the poll results, many Americans see the audits as nothing more than a partisan effort to undermine the outcome of the presidential election. Continue reading.

Biden administration removes Rodney Scott as head of U.S. Border Patrol

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The Biden administration has forced out the head of the U.S. Border Patrol, Rodney Scott, clearing a path for a leadership overhaul at an agency strained by a 20-year high in illegal border crossings, and whose top officials were broadly sympathetic to President Donald Trump.

Scott, a 29-year veteran, published a statement on social media Wednesday saying he had received a letter offering him the option to resign, retire or relocate. He said the notice did not provide a rationale for his removal, describing it a pro forma notice “so the new administration can place the person they want in the position.”

Scott’s departure was widely anticipated, with several of his current and former colleagues surprised he remained in the post long after President Biden’s inauguration. During last year’s presidential campaign, Scott appeared several times alongside Trump, eagerly defending his hard-line policies, leading some colleagues to privately express concern that Scott’s enthusiasm occasionally veered into partisanship. Continue reading.

House approves compromise Jobs, Economic Development, and Labor Budget

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SAINT PAUL, MINNESOTA – Today, the Minnesota House of Representatives passed the compromise Jobs, Economic Development, and Labor budget following a bipartisan agreement reached with the Senate. The budget delivers resources for workers, families, and small businesses to recover from an incredibly challenging year.

“The resilience of Minnesota workers, families and small businesses are rooted in our community values. Despite every challenge thrown our way this year, I have witnessed incredible leadership, service and most importantly, compassion from Minnesotans across our state,” said Rep. Mohamud Noor (DFL – Minneapolis), chair of the Workforce and Business Development Committee. “With our bipartisan Jobs, Economic Development, and Labor Budget, we will be able to strengthen these values through critical solutions that will expand economic opportunity, invest in the health and security of our workers, and extend a helping hand to small businesses recovering from both an unprecedented pandemic and civil unrest.”

“The last year has been devastating for many Minnesotans, and it compounded struggles that many workers, families, and small businesses were facing even prior to the pandemic,” said Rep. Rob Ecklund (DFL – International Falls), chair of the House Labor, Industry & Veterans Affairs Committee. “Our Jobs and Labor budget delivers strong investments to help businesses bounce back, improve economic security for workers, strengthen workplace safety, and includes a robust investment in high-speed broadband so more Minnesotans can have the reliable internet access they deserve. I’m proud we were able to reach a bipartisan budget compromise with the Senate that will create more opportunities to succeed in a post-COVID-19 Minnesota.”

The budget invests $70 million in grants to small businesses harmed by COVID-19 – up to $25,000 – with the smallest businesses prioritized, as well as BIPOC, women or veteran-owned businesses. Other business support in the bill includes $10 million in technical assistance for new businesses, $5 million for the Launch MN initiative to support high-tech startups, and funding for the Emerging Entrepreneur Loan Fund and the Northeast Entrepreneur Fund. Additionally, the legislation invests $80 million to help businesses rebuild following last year’s civil unrest, including those along the Lake Street, University Avenue, and West Broadway corridors. To help address the child care gap across the state, House DFLers were also successful in securing a historic $8 million investment to expand access to affordable child care. The budget also invests $70 million of federal funding over the next two years in broadband infrastructure to help more homes, businesses, and schools have access to reliable internet access.

“The burden of the COVID-19 pandemic has hit some harder than others. Our bipartisan budget provides assistance to small businesses that struggled through no fault of their own, more workplace protections, and expanded access to child care” said House Speaker Melissa Hortman. “This bill helps provide a measure of the economic security that Minnesotans deserve.”

To help connect Minnesotans with training for good-paying jobs, the legislation invests $34 million in several different nonprofit organizations from the Workforce Development Fund as well as additional funding for the Department of Labor and Industry’s apprenticeship program. The legislation also strengthens safety in workplaces through additional investments in the Minnesota Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) and funding for a logger safety program. The bill also protects renters by requiring high-rise public housing buildings to be retrofitted with automatic fire sprinkler systems.

The legislation includes workplace protections for new and expectant mothers. Employers must give nursing mothers space and time to pump while requiring workers to be paid for the time. Workplace accommodations for pregnant mothers will now apply starting on a worker’s first day on the job rather than after 12 months of employment.

To protect workers and communities around the facilities, the House voted to add a measure requiring workers at oil refineries to have apprenticeship-level training. The Senate had previously added this provision to its version of the bill on a broad bipartisan vote, only to later remove it.

“It is critically important that refineries in Minnesota operate consistent with the highest safety standards possible, and that they employ skilled workers who are well-trained to manage the extreme risk that refinery accidents pose to our communities,” added Speaker Hortman. “Fires, spills, and accidents at refineries threaten surrounding communities with devastating harm. It’s no surprise that the Minnesota House of Representatives voted in favor of high safety standards and skilled workers to protect our communities. We will continue our efforts to achieve bipartisan agreement with the Republican majority in the Minnesota Senate and to send this provision to the Governor’s desk.”

While the House included them in its original budget, Senate Republicans blocked Earned Sick & Safe Time and Paid Family Leave, two important priorities for the health, wellbeing, and economic security of workers and their families. Senate Republicans also refused to accept DFL-led measures to help hospitality workers laid off during the pandemic be rehired, to improve safety at meatpacking facilities, to prohibit the use of credit reports when hiring, and to prohibit employers from reducing worker tips to pay for credit card fees.

“Workers and families need time to care for newborn babies, aging parents, and all sorts of events that happen over the course of our lives,” said Majority Leader Ryan Winkler. “Democrats will continue to fight for a universal paid family and medical leave program because having time to care shouldn’t be a privilege for only those who can afford it.”

The budget agreement contains several changes to Unemployment Insurance (UI) law. After an 80-year prohibition, high school students will be eligible for unemployment benefits starting July 1, 2022. The bill also eliminates an outdated policy requiring an offset in UI benefits for seniors who receive social security benefits.

A spreadsheet of the investments contained within the legislation can be accessed here. Video of the House Floor session will be available on House Public Information Services’ YouTube channel.

Mike Lindell unloads on critics: ‘We’re going to have a new inauguration and it’s going to be beautiful’

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MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell on Wednesday lashed out at his critics after claiming that The Washington Post is releasing a “hit piece” to disprove his claim that the 2020 presidential election was fraudulent.

The Washington Post is coming out with a hit piece,” Lindell told Steve Bannon during an appearance on Real America’s Voice. “Since we announced the cyber symposium with all the packet captures that we’re going to reveal for the whole election — 37 terabytes of packet captures.”

According to Lindell, the Post “is going to say that what I have is hogwash.”

Minnesota UBLC statement on Derek Chauvin sentence

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SAINT PAUL, MINNESOTA – The members of the United Black Legislative Caucus in the Minnesota Legislature issued the following statement:

“Derek Chauvin betrayed the trust of the community he had the duty to protect and serve. On Memorial Day of 2020, he acted with an incredible disregard for George Floyd’s life, for his family, and for his community. While we’re pleased he will be held accountable for his heartless actions over the murder of George Floyd, nothing can bring George Floyd back and we will all continue to live with the trauma of what occurred 13 months ago and will continue to hold a distrust for the institution of policing.

Continue reading “Minnesota UBLC statement on Derek Chauvin sentence”

Joint Chiefs chairman clashes with GOP on race theory, ‘white rage’

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Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Army Gen. Mark Milley on Wednesday said it was important for service members to understand critical race theory, shooting down assertions by Republican lawmakers that studying the topic was harmful to military cohesion.

In an impromptu and passionate statement, Milley at a House Armed Service Committee hearing rejected the assertion that critical race theory and other such teaching could be damaging, telling lawmakers that “a lot of us have to get much smarter on whatever the theory is.”

“I do think it’s important, actually, for those of us in uniform to be open-minded and be widely read … and it is important that we train and we understand,” Milley said. “I want to understand white rage, and I’m white.” Continue reading.