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Monday, 16 January 2023

Missouri Democrats say House dress code debate a distraction


Women who serve in the Missouri House will face a tougher dress code when they return to the floor this week after a debate that Democrats panned as a pointless distraction from the issues facing the state.

The new rules require female legislators and staff members to wear a jacket such as a cardigan or blazer. The Republican lawmaker who introduced the change said it was done to ensure decorum and mirror the men’s dress code. Democrats called it ridiculous, saying women shouldn’t be policed for their fashion choices.

Republican Rep. Ann Kelley, who introduced the amendment, said it cleans up language in current House rules so that the dress code for women will mirror the dress code for men.

“It is essential to always maintain a formal and professional atmosphere on House floor and to ensure this happens, I have felt compelled to offer this amendment,” she said during Wednesday’s floor debate.

Her initial amendment said women would be required to wear business attire — specifically a “jacket,” which would include “blazers and knit blazers.” After spirited debate, a revised amendment was adopted to clarify that a cardigan could also be worn.

Men in the Missouri House of Representatives were already required to wear a jacket, shirt and a tie. Under the previous dress code, women were required to wear “dresses or skirts or slacks worn with a blazer or sweater and appropriate dress shoes or boots.” A second layer of clothing was not required.

Kelley said ensuring decorum was a key reason behind her proposal — an idea Democrats seized on.

“I’ve seen a lot of lack of decorum in this room in my two years here and not once has that lack of decorum spurred from someone’s blazer or lack thereof,” said Rep. Ashley Aune, a Democrat. “There are a lot of ways we could break decorum in this room. But a woman, what she’s wearing, that is ridiculous.”

Aune went on to say she has personally been asked about her attire, even though she was following the rules.

“Do you know what it feels like to have a bunch of men in this room looking at your top trying to determine if it’s appropriate or not?” she said.

Virginia Ramseyer Winter, an associate professor at the University of Missouri School of Health Professions and director of the Center for Body Image Research and Policy, said lawmakers shouldn’t have even debated this because it unnecessarily put the focus on the way women look instead of the issues.

“I think it reinforces the idea that we value women more for their appearance above other more important things like their intelligence and their contributions,” she said.

Ramseyer Winter and other critics of the measure said the debate echoed the one over abortion restrictions lawmakers approved last summer after the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade.

“I do think that it also sends the message that we have to police women’s bodies,” she said.

Rep. Raychel Proudie, a Democrat, took issue with the amendment before it was amended to include “cardigan.” She pointed out that it wouldn’t be easy for pregnant women to comply because “they don’t make jackets or blazers for women who are pregnant. That could be very uncomfortable, particularly in a pro-life state.”

The dress code was a small part of a package of rules that state lawmakers ultimately approved last Wednesday.

“There are some very serious things that are in this rule package that I think we should be debating, but instead we are fighting, again, for a women’s right to choose something. And this time it is how she covers herself,” Proudie said.

Lawmakers in other states have pushed back against dress code rules as sexist and culturally insensitive. Congress’ longstanding ban on sleeveless tops and open-toes shoes generated a fight in 2017 before those rules were updated.

Missouri Republicans said the criticism of the dress code was overdone when all the rules did was clarify what is required.

“It’s a normal process for any entity regarding a professional work environment,” Republican state Rep. Doug Richey said. “We just happen to have a political context that we have to navigate and, because of that, it is ripe for some members to grandstand and try to make it into something that it’s not.”

Still, Rep. Peter Merideth, a Democrat, declined to vote on the dress code amendment because he didn’t want to dare say what was appropriate or inappropriate for women to wear. In the House, there are 43 women and 116 men.

“This is ridiculous,” he said. “Our people sent us here to pass laws … not fight about mandates and rules on women’s clothing.”



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Sunday, 15 January 2023

‘A complete smear job against me’: Johnson spars with ‘Meet the Press’ host


Sen. Ron Johnson said Sunday that media coverage of his proximity to 2020 election denial was a "smear" in a contentious interview with host Chuck Todd on NBC's "Meet the Press."

“This has been a complete smear job against me," Johnson (R-Wis.) said. Todd had asked Johnson about a moment after the 2020 election in which Johnson allegedly considered helping to send an alternative slate of Wisconsin electors to then-Vice President Mike Pence.

In the interview, Johnson denied that he knew what he was being asked to deliver. A top aide to Johnson attempted to arrange the handoff on Jan. 6, 2021, the House committee investigating Jan. 6 revealed in June.

"Chuck, you started this questioning falsely. You falsely accused me of getting those — and I never took possession. I never had them. OK?" Johnson said.

Asked whether the FBI had interviewed him in relation to the Capitol riots, Johnson said Sunday, "There’s nothing to interview me about." The Wisconsin senator also accused Rep. Mike Kelly (R-Pa.), who was allegedly involved in the scheme to deliver false electors, of lying when he denied he was involved.

The exchange also addressed Johnson's purported role in 2020 election denial more generally.

"You dabbled in so much of this, do you understand why somebody might have thought you were willing to go along with the scheme?" Todd asked Johnson.

Johnson responded that he "did not dabble in very much of this" — to which Todd responded, "'Very much' is doing a lot of work there."

Johnson snapped back: "What you ought to do is go back and read my opening statement. And that pretty well lays out exactly what I thought about the 2020 election. But the news media never does that. They smear me. They lie about me. They make these things up."

Johnson held a hearing in December 2020 suggesting there was fraud in the 2020 election, as well as efforts to influence the results by multiple factions, including the press.

"Part of the reasons are our politics are inflamed, is we do not have an unbiased media. We don't," Johnson said.

"Look, you can go back on your partisan cable cocoon and talk about media bias all you want," Todd replied. "I understand it's part of your identity."



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Greece to hold elections in spring

"From April and onwards, the elections can be held at any time," Greek prime minister tells Proto Thema.

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Ukraine’s first lady: Women bearing the brunt of the war


Ukraine's first lady said in an interview that aired Sunday that women have borne the brunt of the Russian invasion of her nation.

Speaking through a translator on CNN's "Fareed Zakaria GPS," Olena Zelenska talked about the impact of the war between Russia and Ukraine that began almost a year ago.

"You know," she told Zakaria, "women have taken the brunt of this war in terms of ensuring that their families are OK, that their children are OK, that their children are safe. Mothers and grandmothers have stepped in to protect them."

She said the war has separated many families in Ukraine as people have fled the fighting.

"We hope that most of the families will be able to reunite. I would not be wrong if I say that more than half of our families are divided, are separated," Zelenska said, adding that she cannot see her husband, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, every day because of the circumstances of the war.

"Sometimes you say it’s cool when your husband is a president," she said. "You can see him on the TV screen, and you can make sure that everything is OK with him. But we do miss one another in the family, and I do miss my husband."

Zakaria asked her whether it was possible for any kind of normal life in Ukraine today.

"It depends on your definition of normality because our life cannot be considered as normal today," she said, "even if you compare what we had a year ago and what we have today in Ukraine. In the first months, we were shocked. We could not believe that such an aggression is possible. It is absolutely illogical, and it was inconceivable that it can happen in the center of Europe. Now people are trying to go on living, working, having their children go to school. Sometimes they even make jokes."

The invasion of Ukraine began in February 2022 and, while Ukraine has been more successful in defending its territory than expected, combat with Russian forces continues, as do attacks on civilian targets. A Russian missile strike Sunday on an apartment building in the southeastern Ukrainian city of Dnipro left 25 people dead, according to reports.



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Pennsylvania GOP launches postmortem to figure out what exactly went so wrong


PHILADELPHIA — The Pennsylvania GOP is trying to figure out what went so horribly wrong in 2022.

After the party’s disastrous midterm races, Republicans in the critical battleground state are conducting a postmortem, holding focus groups throughout the state and interviewing thousands of voters about everything from abortion to former President Donald Trump in hopes of getting to the bottom of their losses. As a sign of the seriousness of the effort, the state party has enlisted Public Opinion Strategies, a D.C. area-based firm, to conduct the review of the 2022 election. Republicans said it is expected to cost $100,000.

GOP officials in Pennsylvania are also in the process of launching initiatives aimed at persuading more of their supporters to vote by mail — a method many of them had previously criticized, challenged in court and tried to repeal legislatively — and healing intraparty divides across the state’s diverse regions.

“Every aspect of the 2022 election will be examined,” wrote Lawrence Tabas, the chair of the state Republican Party, in an email to supporters obtained by POLITICO about the postmortem. He added that its funding would help inform “clear messaging on what we, as Republicans, stand for.”

The multipronged endeavors, which are being organized by top GOP donors, leaders and elected officials in the state, represent the most comprehensive attempt within the party to chart a path back to success in Pennsylvania ahead of the 2024 presidential election. Republicans in the state failed to flip any congressional districts and lost the governor’s race, Senate contest and majority of state House seats last year.

“We didn't do that well at all. Here you have Biden with a lot of failures. Super high inflation — higher than it's been since 40 years — gasoline prices, interest rates going up, small businesses under the gun, and we have international problems existing. And yet no red wave,” said Rep. Dan Meuser (R-Pa.), who is helping finance the postmortem. “We want the God’s honest truth.”

Discovering the truth is one thing. Accepting it is another. And the state GOP’s ability to do just that will likely have a profound impact on whether it can help the party take back the White House in 2024. Pennsylvania looms as the swing state with the most electoral votes at play in the presidential contest.

Pennsylvania will also play a key role in the upcoming battle for control of the Senate, with incumbent Democrat Bob Casey on the ballot in 2024, while judges are up for election in the state this year.

Bob Asher, a top GOP donor in Pennsylvania who is also helping finance the postmortem, said that he came up with the idea during discussions with other local Republicans after the election. He was struck, he said, by what he heard. Some officials told him that efforts that flew under the radar — such as Democratic mail advertisements aimed at older voters arguing that Republicans would eliminate Social Security and Medicare — were actually major factors in the election.

“I'm saying to myself, ‘I don't think we have the right poop … I don’t think we have the right story,’” he said. “I want the truth about what the issues are in Pennsylvania and how we can look forward to trying to take the Supreme Court seat in ’23.”

Another major goal of the postmortem, Asher said, is to figure out how to win back the suburban areas in the state that have trended away from Republicans in recent years, chief among them Philadelphia’s vote-rich collar counties.

The stakes of the report are high not just for upcoming elections but also the state party itself. The GOP’s lackluster showing during the 2022 cycle spurred chatter of potential candidates looking at challenging Tabas, whose term ends in 2025. No one has declared a bid yet.

“The county parties and state party have become more of a social club with really well-intentioned people rather than operations that help elect Republicans,” said a top Pennsylvania GOP campaign aide this cycle who was granted anonymity to speak frankly. “They need to get back in the business of actually talking to friends and neighbors about the candidates and getting them registered and to vote.”

In a statement, Tabas said, "Last year we executed record registration drives and very expansive GOTV efforts, but going forward I’m calling our leaders to collaborate on the mission of turning what has been a mail-in ballot deficit into a winning advantage."

Along with Asher and Meuser, other elected officials such as Rep. Lloyd Smucker and state Senate President Pro Tempore Kim Ward are helping fund the project.


Republicans insist that they will use the postmortem to address sensitive topics. Meuser said that the impacts of Trump and the “Stop the Steal” movement on the midterms “have to” be looked at, along with things such as immigration and inflation. Republicans also said their analysis isn’t shying away from examining how the end of Roe v. Wade affected the election. Gov.-elect Josh Shapiro, a Democrat, made a central part of his campaign his Republican opponent Doug Mastriano’s support of an abortion ban with no exceptions for rape, incest or the life of the mother. In exit polls, a plurality of voters in Pennsylvania ranked abortion as their top issue.

“Clearly that issue played more of a role than most political pundits, particularly Republicans — no, let’s just rephrase that, Republican pundits — gave it weight,” said Meuser. The question, he added, is, “What’s the way you can say it without being offensive? … To me, there’s definitely a reasonable way of maintaining my pro-life position without being offensive to others.”

Other initiatives that Pennsylvania Republicans are embarking on in the wake of the 2022 midterms include establishing a vote-by-mail strategy.

After last year’s races, many Republicans in the state and nation came to the determination that their recent war against mail voting cost them. The state GOP is launching a mail-in ballot task force to look at the problem. According to an internal email, Rep. G.T. Thompson, State Treasurer Stacy Garrity, State Auditor General Timothy DeFoor and state House Republican Leader Bryan Cutler are among those who have joined the task force.

“Most folks now on the Republican side recognize that if one party is voting for 50 days and the other party is voting for 13 hours, the party voting for 50 days is going to have a higher turnout,” said Andy Reilly, a Republican National Committee member in Pennsylvania who has also been tapped to sit on the task force. “We have to embrace it and convince the Republican voters that there's integrity with the mail-in voting process, i.e. that their vote will count.”

That’s perhaps the lesson from 2022 that, at this point, the largest number of Pennsylvania Republicans can agree on.

“What I can tell you definitively is that mail-in ballots and voting by mail is a top priority for us,” said Tabas.



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In doomed coal village, Germany's Greens go to war among themselves

Chaotic scenes in Lützerath as thousands of protesters confront armored police with truncheons and pepper spray.

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Ukraine says missile strike on apartment block leaves 18 dead in Dnipro

President Zelenskyy renews call for more weapons from Western partners.

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