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Monday 5 June 2023

What to know about Kristen Welker, the NBC reporter replacing Chuck Todd


NBC’s major Sunday politics show, “Meet the Press,” is getting a new look this fall. Chuck Todd, the show’s host for the past nine years, is stepping into a new role as the network’s chief political analyst, and Kristen Welker, NBC’s chief White House correspondent, will take over the role in September. Here’s what to know about the show’s new host:

Welker has hosted the show before 

Welker, who is 46, has regularly filled in for Todd during his tenure. She was also the co-host of “Meet the Press NOW,” a show on NBC’s online streaming network, NBC News NOW.



In 2020, she was named co-anchor of “Weekend TODAY,” alongside NBC’s Peter Alexander.

She’ll be the first Black journalist to host the show

Come September, Walker will become the 13th full-time host of “Meet the Press," joining an impressive list that includes David Gregory, Tim Russert, Garrick Utley, Lawrence Spivak and Martha Rountree.

But Welker is only the second woman — Rountree, the show’s co-creator, was the first — and the first Black person to serve as the host.

Her 2020 debate moderating performance is worth a watch. Just ask Jimmy Fallon. 

After Welker deftly navigated the 2020 presidential debate between Joe Biden and Donald Trump, the media sang her praises, including “Tonight Show" host Jimmy Fallon. “Think we can all agree the winner is Kristen Welker,” Fallon said, calling the performance a “knockout.”

Welker “did a bang-up job on the largest stage of any political journalist’s career, Playbook wrote at the time.

Her NBC roots run deep

Welker, a Harvard grad, was an intern for NBC’s “TODAY” in 1997, and worked as a researcher on “Weekend TODAY.”

She joined NBC News in 2010, and began covering the White House for the network at the end of 2011.

Here’s what some of her co-workers have to say: 

“I can’t imagine a better choice to succeed @chucktodd as moderator of @MeetThePress," Alexander, Welker’s fellow chief White House correspondent, tweeted. “@kwelkernbc is one of my closest friends in the world and one of the best (and hardest-working) journalists in the business! @NBCNews.”

“Wow !!! Classy @chucktodd announces he will step down after the summer and hand off to the brilliant @kwelkernbc his close colleague and White House correspondent,” NBC’s chief Washington correspondent and chief foreign affairs correspondent, Andrea Mitchell, wrote.

“So proud and happy for my two dear friends and colleagues, @chucktodd and @kwelkernbc They are the best of the best! As Tim would say, ‘go get ‘em!’” “TODAY” co-anchor Savannah Guthrie posted.



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California authorities say migrants flown to Sacramento have links to Florida


TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — More than a dozen migrants were flown to Sacramento and dropped off in front of a Catholic church on Friday, sparking speculation from California officials that the flight was arranged by Gov. Ron DeSantis’ administration.

DeSantis created a national furor last September when his administration paid to fly nearly 50 migrants from Texas to Martha’s Vineyard, an act that he frequently mentions during public appearances and speeches, including while campaigning for president.

But so far his administration had not commenced a second round of flights — even after state lawmakers expanded the program in February in response to a lawsuit that challenged whether the governor had the authority to ship people from Texas to Massachusetts. There is also an ongoing lawsuit in Massachusetts federal court that sought to block any more flights by Florida.

Both California Gov. Gavin Newsom and California Attorney General Rob Bonta put out statements on over the weekend saying they had met with a group of migrants who traveled from Texas to New Mexico before being flown to Sacramento.

Bonta suggested that the DeSantis administration may be linked to the operation because he said the migrants appeared to have paperwork connected to Florida, though he did not provide details on the documentation. The migrants flown last fall by the DeSantis administration to Martha’s Vineyard were given pamphlets detailing the benefits available to them in Massachusetts.

“We are investigating the circumstances by which these individuals were brought to California,” Bonta said. “We are also evaluating potential criminal or civil action against those who transported or arranged for the transport of these vulnerable immigrants. While this is still under investigation, we can confirm these individuals were in possession of documentation purporting to be from the government of the state of Florida.”

Eddie Carmona, campaign director at PICO California, a faith-based community organizing group that has been assisting the migrants, told The Associated Press that the migrants had already been given court dates for their asylum cases when a person representing a private contactor approached them outside a migrant center in El Paso, Texas. Carmona told the AP that “they were lied to and intentionally deceived.”

The Associated Press identified the migrants as originating from Colombia and Venezuela.

The latest flights could be considered political retaliation against Newsom, who has been a constant critic of Florida's policies. The California governor recently visited New College of Florida in Sarasota, a school currently undergoing a conservative overhaul led by DeSantis. At the time, Newsom said the efforts by DeSantis to rebrand the school were part of his efforts of "bullying and intimidating vulnerable communities."

Newsom also recently requested information from DeSantis, the Florida Department of Education and textbook publishers over changes made to K-12 textbooks that were requested by the Florida education agency.

DeSantis is headed to Texas on Tuesday for a three-day six-city fundraising tour according to a schedule obtained by The Texas Tribune. The governor is also headed to California later this month, where he will hold a June 19th breakfast fundraiser in Sacramento, the Sacramento Bee reported.

DeSantis was just one of a handful of governors or city leaders who have transported migrants. Texas GOP Gov. Greg Abbott has bused thousands of migrants from his state to Democrat-led cities like Washington, D.C., Chicago and NYC while New York Mayor Eric Adams, who has railed against the lack of resources available to handle an influx of migrants, has also transported migrants outside of his city.

Both DeSantis’ administration and the Florida Division of Emergency Management — which now oversees the relocation program — did not immediately respond to inquiries from POLITICO on Sunday.

DeSantis has been a persistent and vocal critic of the immigration policies of President Joe Biden, and one of his allies — Florida Attorney General Ashley Moody — has contended in federal court that the Biden administration is ignoring federal immigration laws.

During his presidential campaign stops over the past week, DeSantis vowed to reinstitute some of former President Donald Trump’s immigration policies such as “remain in Mexico” and promised to complete construction of a border wall.

“You deserve to have a secure border, you deserve to have the rule of law,” DeSantis said during a visit to Iowa right before he became an official candidate for president. “Someone comes across the border stop them and send them back on the other side … Don’t give them a piece of paper and say you come back for a court date in four years. What kind of a deterrence is that?”

Florida’s GOP-controlled Legislature in 2022 first gave DeSantis $12 million to operate the migrant relocation program through the Florida Department of Transportation, but authorities shifted control to the state Division of Emergency Management. State records suggested that the company that operated the first round of flights was paid $1.56 million.

The emergency management division in early May posted a notice that it intended to award contracts to three vendors to work on the migrant relocation program. DeSantis also signed an immigration bill last month that included an additional $12 million for the program.

Andrew Atterbury, Lara Korte and Jeremy White contributed to this story.



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Sunday 4 June 2023

Ukraine doubles down on joining NATO 'very, very' soon after war

In a POLITICO interview, Volodymyr Havrylov also calls on Beijing to refrain from sending military supplies to Moscow.

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China defends buzzing American warship in Taiwan Strait


SINGAPORE — China’s defense minister defended sailing a warship across the path of an American destroyer and Canadian frigate transiting the Taiwan Strait, telling a gathering of some of the world’s top defense officials in Singapore on Sunday that such so-called “freedom of navigation” patrols are a provocation to China.

In his first international public address since becoming defense minister in March, Gen. Li Shangfu told the Shangri-La Dialogue that China doesn’t have any problems with “innocent passage” but that “we must prevent attempts that try to use those freedom of navigation (patrols), that innocent passage, to exercise hegemony of navigation.”

U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin told the same forum Saturday that Washington would not “flinch in the face of bullying or coercion” from China and would continue regularly sailing through and flying over the Taiwan Strait and the South China Sea to emphasize they are international waters, countering Beijing’s sweeping territorial claims.

That same day, as a U.S. guided-missile destroyer and a Canadian frigate were intercepted by a Chinese warship as they transited the strait between the self-governed island of Taiwan, which China claims as its own territory, and mainland China. The Chinese vessel overtook the American ship and then veered across its bow at a distance of 150 yards in an “unsafe manner,” according to the U.S. Indo-Pacific Command.

Additionally, the U.S. has said a Chinese J-16 fighter jet late last month “performed an unnecessarily aggressive maneuver” while intercepting a U.S. Air Force reconnaissance aircraft over the South China Sea, flying directly in front of the plane’s nose.

Those and previous incidents have raised concerns of a possible accident occurring that could lead to an escalation between the two nations at a time when tensions are already high.

Li suggested the U.S. and its allies had created the danger, and should instead should focus on taking “good care of your own territorial airspace and waters.”

“The best way is for the countries, especially the naval vessels and fighter jets of countries, not to do closing actions around other countries’ territories,” he said through an interpreter. “What’s the point of going there? In China we always say, ‘Mind your own business.’”

In a wide-ranging speech, Li reiterated many of Beijing’s well-known positions, including its claim on Taiwan, calling it “the core of our core interests.”

He accused the U.S. and others of “meddling in China’s internal affairs” by providing Taiwan with defense support and training, and conducting high-level diplomatic visits.

“China stays committed to the path of peaceful development, but we will never hesitate to defend our legitimate rights and interests, let alone sacrifice the nation’s core interests,” he said.

“As the lyrics of a well-known Chinese song go: ‘When friends visit us, we welcome them with fine wine. When jackals or wolves come, we will face them with shotguns.’”

In his speech the previous day, Austin broadly outlined the U.S. vision for a “free, open, and secure Indo-Pacific within a world of rules and rights.”



In the pursuit of such, Austin said the U.S. was stepping up planning, coordination and training with “friends from the East China Sea to the South China Sea to the Indian Ocean” with shared goals “to deter aggression and to deepen the rules and norms that promote prosperity and prevent conflict.”

Li scoffed at the notion, saying “some country takes a selective approach to rules and international laws.”

“It likes forcing its own rules on others,” he said. “Its so-called ‘rules-based international order’ never tells you what the rules are and who made these rules.”

By contrast, he said, “we practice multilateralism and pursue win-win cooperation.”

Li is under American sanctions that are part of a broad package of measures against Russia — but predate its invasion of Ukraine — that were imposed in 2018 over Li’s involvement in China’s purchase of combat aircraft and anti-aircraft missiles from Moscow.

The sanctions, which broadly prevent Li from doing business in the United States, do not prevent him from holding official talks, American defense officials have said.

Still, he refused Austin’s invitation to talk on the sidelines of the conference, though the two did shake hands before sitting down at opposite sides of the same table together as the forum opened Friday.

Austin said that was not enough.

“A cordial handshake over dinner is no substitute for a substantive engagement,” Austin said.

The U.S. has noted that since 2021 — well before Li became defense minister — China has declined or failed to respond to more than a dozen requests from the U.S. Defense Department to talk with senior leaders, as well as multiple requests for standing dialogues and working-level engagements.

Li said that “China is open to communications between our two countries and also between our two militaries,” but without mentioning the sanctions, said exchanges had to be “based on mutual respect.”

“That is a very fundamental principle,” he said. “If we do not even have mutual respect, than our communications will not be productive.”

He said that he recognized that any “severe conflict or confrontation between China and the U.S. will be an unbearable disaster for the world,” and that the two countries need to find ways to improve relations, saying they were “at a record low.”

“History has proven time and again that both China and the United States will benefit from cooperation and lose from confrontation,” he said.

“China seeks to develop a new type of major-country relationship with the United States. As for the U.S. side, it needs to act with sincerity, match its words with deeds, and take concrete actions together with China to stabilize the relations and prevent further deterioration,” Li said.



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Signal fault behind India’s deadliest train crash in 20 years

More than 300 people were killed in the train collision in the eastern state of Odisha.

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A ‘Roast and Ride’ diary: DeSantis gladhands, Pence rides and longshots scramble to make the first debate


DES MOINES, Iowa — Mike Pence rode a motorcycle. Longshot candidates scrambled to find new donors to make it on stage for the first Republican presidential debate. And Ron DeSantis briefly — only briefly — lost his daughter in the crowd.

In the first major cattle call of 2024, every declared Republican presidential candidate except for Donald Trump gathered at the Iowa Fairgrounds on Saturday for Sen. Joni Ernst’s annual “Roast and Ride.”

I got there early, stayed late and somehow still didn’t manage to get a sliced pork sandwich. This is what it looked like as most of the GOP field scurried to make a mark in the first-in-the-nation caucus state:

10:42 a.m. — No act of ingratiation is too small in Iowa. The pro-Ron DeSantis super PAC Never Back Down is passing out ice cream, and while walking through the parking lot, I spot 77-year-old Bonnie Qualley eating some as she stands in the shade of Vivek Ramaswamy’s campaign bus. It isn’t moving her. She tells me she’s for Donald Trump.

The former president skipped the event. But Qualley, of Des Moines, was at Trump’s town hall event with Sean Hannity in Iowa on Thursday. “He’s really smart and he’s on top of everything,” she says of Trump. “He’s going to win.”



10:46 a.m. — There’s a young man operating a mechanical bull-style contraption that turns out to be a mechanical motorcycle. I ask him if anyone has been on it yet. “Yeah, one guy … twice.”

11:04 a.m. — At the table for Trump, they’re raffling off an autographed MAGA cap for those who sign up to volunteer for the campaign.

Trump isn’t desperate for a list of supporters. But among the longshot candidates, there is a palpable concern about getting enough donors and poll support to make the first debate stage. I walk up to Perry Johnson’s table. “One dollar will get you anything here,” his staffer says. “We’re trying to get on the debate stage.”

Johnson, a wealthy Michigan businessman who isn’t registering in polling, will need all the help he can get to meet the RNC’s newly announced participation criteria for the first debate in August. The staffer explains I could walk away with multiple items with a $1 donation — a book, T-shirt and a hat, even.

Iowans like free stuff as much as anyone. But they’re so used to being courted by politicians every four years that getting them on volunteer and donor lists can be a lift. Howard Rupp, 76, of Altoona, asks the Moms for Liberty member running DeSantis’ table if he can take a DeSantis hat if he promises to wear it. Asked if he would like to sign up to volunteer, Rupp shakes his head. “I’m too old for that,” he says.

He also declines the offer to give his email address for the DeSantis campaign’s list. “I almost had to change my email address and phone number last time I signed up at Joni’s thing,” Rupp says, believing his information was sold because he was inundated with so many solicitations for political donations.



11:12 a.m. — It’s not even noon, but the food is in high demand. Folks have begun piling Lynch BBQ’s sliced pork onto buns, squirting bottles of sauce on top and ladling baked beans onto Styrofoam plates. One man adds three chocolate chip cookies to his platter of food.

11:23 a.m. — DeSantis has arrived and is greeting supporters by the Never Back Down Bus. His wife, Casey, is showing an unparalleled commitment to wearing branded jackets, today sporting a leather “Where Woke Goes to Die” coat in 85-degree heat. She is holding their 3-year-old on her hip. The couple, who have been emphasizing their relative youthfulness as they travel the country, pledged in Iowa on Wednesday to bring their three children out on the campaign trail. They seem to be struggling to wrangle all these kids within a swarm of supporters and reporters.

But DeSantis — who has faced quite a bit of criticism for his aloofness — is out here doing retail politics, and he seems to be improving at it. “That’s an oldie but a goodie,” DeSantis says as he signs a bumper sticker from his 2018 congressional campaign. “Do you play golf?” DeSantis asks another man, before pivoting to his Covid response. “During the pandemic, I was telling everyone to get outside, so in April of 2020, they set a record for golf rounds in The Villages.”

He encourages his 3-year-old, Mamie, to say hello to a 2-year-old girl in a pink camouflage Harley Davidson T-shirt. A woman has DeSantis sign what appears to be a generic photo of himself waving, which he immediately recognized as being from a 2020 rally. A member of the conservative Bull Moose Club here invites DeSantis to come speak to the group, as some of the lower-polling Republicans in the race have already done. He says to talk to his staff.

11:29 a.m. — DeSantis holds up his daughter to help him sign the Never Back Down bus. Chaos ensues as he walks away. Reporters are sprinting to catch up with them. The family briefly loses 5-year-old Madison in the crowd, though she is soon recovered. At the super PAC’s ice cream tent, the children each get a scoop while DeSantis, who has slimmed down in recent months, goes without.

11:36 a.m. — Organizers are shouting that the motorcycles are about to come through, and everyone needs to get out of the way. The scrum remains focused on the Florida governor.



11:45 a.m. — The reporters who were surrounding DeSantis for a solid 20 minutes are now looking for Mike Pence in the line of bikers driving into the parking lot, only to learn he had already arrived and we all missed him. A couple dozen reporters had gotten shots of him leaving the Harley Davidson dealership with Ernst earlier in the morning, but this moment underscores the reality of the place where Pence has found himself: The former vice president, like all of the other underdog candidates, perpetually overshadowed by Trump and DeSantis.

12:17 p.m. — A line of reporters has formed to interview Sen. Chuck Grassley.

12:20 p.m. — The food supplies are dwindling. There’s one box of cookies remaining, and attendees are gobbling them up. Another man grabs three with his hands, forfeiting the tongs, as if he is stockpiling for an impending emergency.

Multiple people are calling out for someone to bring out another tray of baked beans. A man with an American flag bandana around his head is scraping the bottom of the empty pan, remarking that the baked beans are his favorite.

12:24 p.m. — Former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, accompanied today by her much more reserved husband, Michael, is now mingling with the crowd, giving hugs and taking selfies. She has on her cowgirl boots.

12:30 p.m. — Pence, who has changed out of his leather and into a navy blue blazer, has also been making the rounds, accompanied by his wife, Karen. “How was the ride?” a reporter asks. “Great. Loved it. I’ve got a dog named Harley.” (Harley, according to Pence’s book, is an Australian Shepherd.)

12:31 p.m. — The scrum of cameras that was around DeSantis seems to have moved on to Perry Johnson; for some reason that isn’t obvious to me. He’s wearing his signature sunglasses inside and signing copies of his book “Two Cents to Save America.” He asks someone at the table whose name to include as he signs the book. “Ron,” the man’s wife shouts. Johnson asks her how to spell it.

“R-o-n,” she says.


12:50 p.m. — Ernst is on stage. There’s a wall of hay bales, a line of American and Iowa flags, two large screens and a pair of John Deere tractors on each side of the platform. “Border security!” she shouts over and over as the crowd roars with applause and cheers. The program is underway and Ramaswamy has now arrived inside.

12:55 p.m. – Gov. Kim Reynolds speaks. Grassley speaks.

“Today I want to talk to you about something that doesn’t get talked about enough, and that’s the Deep State,” he says.

1:11 p.m. – Sen. Tim Scott comes on stage and announces that Grassley today is wearing a pair of socks Scott gave him.

Less than two minutes into his speech, he is bashing "The View," generating boos from the audience. Then, if you needed a reminder that much of the GOP’s media bashing is quite lucrative for them — Scott has been fundraising off Joy Behar’s criticism for weeks — he announces he’ll be on the show Monday.

1:23 p.m. — Former Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson, wearing an “Asa” ball cap, leads with talk about “advancing computer science education,” which, unsurprisingly, is not the type of red meat the base goes wild over.

Along with Pence, and now DeSantis, Hutchinson has been one of the only candidates in the field to criticize Trump. The crowd livens up as he talks about hitchhiking to go visit his now-wife while he was in law school. Pointing to his time as Arkansas GOP chair, “when Bill Clinton was governor, and then president,” Hutchinson begs the audience to believe he is a “fighter.”

1:34 p.m. — “Say hello to the Black face of white supremacy,” Larry Elder says as he takes the stage. Like some other longshot candidates, he is at risk of not qualifying for the first debate. He solicits donations. “As little as 10 bucks, just get me up there on that debate stage in Milwaukee, and game on, hold my beer,” Elder says.



At the hotel bar the night before, sipping a vodka martini with three olives, Elder signed up a few new supporters. I watched as he wrote down a man’s email address on a scrap piece of paper. A young woman across the bar went to his website on her phone and donated. Elder asked me to read his book, or if not that, to “at least read the Amazon reviews — I am a very, very, very good writer.”

Here now, on stage, he recalls another reporter asking him in the hotel lobby the day before what everyone seems to be wondering: “Why are you doing this?”

1:46 p.m. — Perry Johnson, who has now removed his sunglasses, announces from stage that he isn’t “woke,” something the crowd audibly appreciates. But then Johnson seems to lose them when he says he is “laser-focused on the economy.” He rails against the RNC’s debate requirements, calling them “ridiculous.”

Despite his campaign staffer asking attendees for $1 back at the table, Johnson makes the audience an even better offer: “I’m just going to ask for 2 cents.”

The crowd erupts in applause, and Johnson seems surprised. He beams. He then announces he’ll actually give away his book for free. “I won't even charge you 2 cents.”

1:57 p.m. — “Thank you, Perry. Very inspirational,” Ernst says, before introducing Ramaswamy.



2:14 p.m. — Pence’s wife walks out with him on stage and waves at the crowd. She steps off and he begins his speech. “I rode, and I roasted, on the ride,” Pence says. He teases his presidential campaign launch set for Wednesday in Ankeny declaring “I’m announcing in Iowa!” Pence closes his speech with scripture and recites the final lines of the Pledge of Allegiance.

2:29 p.m. — Did Pence start a trend? Haley is walking on with her spouse, too, as Tom Petty’s “American Girl” plays. “I wanted you to see that cute husband of mine,” Haley says, noting he is soon deploying with the Army National Guard. The crowd responds well to her pledge to “catch and deport” immigrants in the country illegally. Haley interrupts her speech to say “bless you” when someone in the crowd sneezes.

So far, she is the only one to bring up the caucuses. “Don’t complain about what you get in a general if you don’t play in this caucus.”

2:47 p.m. — The audience may be weary from enduring all of these speeches, but the main attraction is up: DeSantis. He is giving the same speech he recited here all week, touting his Florida accomplishments while comparing his own state to Iowa. But the crowd does not seem to mind, applauding fairly consistently throughout his 15-minute remarks.

3:10 p.m. — The show is over, but Ramaswamy is working the room. He signs a copy of his book. He signs a woman’s golf ball. His own cameraman is shooting all of this, as is the case with everywhere Ramaswamy goes.

“I like your hat,” he says to a man in a “Vivek” cap.

“I just picked it up,” the man replies. “For a dollar.”



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Pence dings Trump over praise for North Korea's Kim Jong Un


Former vice president and soon-to-be 2024 presidential candidate Mike Pence made a rare jab at his erstwhile running mate Saturday, saying that “no one should be praising the dictator in North Korea” or Russian President Vladimir Putin.

While he did not name Donald Trump in his comments, the dig came just one day after the former president reupped an article about North Korea’s appointment to the World Health Organization’s board on social media, writing “Congratulations to Kim Jung Un!”

Trump also stressed in a recent town hall with Fox anchor Sean Hannity that he had a strong relationship with Putin, and he has a history of praising authoritarian leaders.



“Whether it’s my former running mate or anyone else, no one should be praising the dictator in North Korea — or praising the leader of Russia, who has launched an unprovoked war of aggression in Ukraine,” Pence said in an interview with Fox News in Iowa. “This is a time when we ought to make it clear to the world that we stand for freedom and we stand with those who stand for freedom.”

During their joint time in office, Trump made unprecedented overtures to the North Korean leader, with the former president meeting Un three times during his four-year term, including in North Korea.

Pence’s comments are the latest sign that the ex-vice president will ramp up attacks against Trump to carve out his own space in advance of the Republican primaries.

Trump’s former UN ambassador and 2024 candidate Nikki Haley also lashed out on Twitter over the post. “Kim Jong Un starves his own people,” she wrote.

Pence is set to announce a bid for president June 7.



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