google-site-verification: google6508e39c6ec03602.html The news

google-site-verification: google6508e39c6ec03602.html

Sunday 13 August 2023

Trump blames left for legal costs


Former President Donald Trump on Saturday blamed his political enemies for legal fees he’s incurred over the course of three recent indictments.

Trump posted on his social media site Truth Social slamming the “Lunatic Left” for his “vast” legal fees, less than two weeks after FEC filings revealed that his operation is bleeding campaign funds to pay bills related to his mounting legal challenges.

Trump’s Save America PAC shrank from over $100 million at the beginning of last year to $3.6 million after bankrolling legal fees for the former president and his allies, according to filings first reported in The Washington Post. Filings also show that Save America and five other Trump committees have spent a total of over $40 million in legal fees since the start of 2021.

“The Lunatic Left, working closely with Crooked Joe Biden and his corrupt DOJ, is not only focusing on Election Interference, but on getting the Trump Campaign to spend vast amounts of money on legal fees, thereby having less to spend on ads showing that Crooked Joe is the WORST PRESIDENT IN U.S. HISTORY!” Trump wrote Saturday on the way to the Iowa State Fair.

Trump is currently facing federal indictments in both Florida and Washington, D.C. — the former for the mishandling of highly classified documents at his Mar-a-Lago residence and the latter in relation to his efforts to overturn the 2020 election. The former president is also facing state charges in New York in connection to hush money payments to porn star Stormy Daniels and is under investigation for alleged election interference in Georgia.

Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis is expected to begin presenting the election interference case before a grand jury as early as next week.



from Politics, Policy, Political News Top Stories https://ift.tt/LbkBaDu
via IFTTT

Saturday 12 August 2023

Jamaal Bowman on hip-hop’s ‘eff you’ response to bad politics


A version of this story originally appeared in The Recast.

While I have to literally chase most politicians to get a question in, there is always one who makes himself available: Rep. Jamaal Bowman (D-N.Y.).

This guy has an affinity for viral on-camera moments: telling Rep. Majorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) to “take her ass back to Washington” during a visit to his state — or lambasting GOP members for being "gutless" on guns. And just like the punchline to your favorite song, you’re guaranteed to remember what he said the next day.

He was born and raised in New York City, and before he became a lawmaker, Bowman served as a principal at a middle school he founded in the Bronx. Now he’s using his 20 years of experience as an educator to legislate on some of the most controversial issues, including student debt and how African American history is taught in schools.

Beyond education policy, he also introduced the RAP Act, a bill that would limit the use of lyrics as evidence in court — very fitting for a congressman who represents the birthplace of hip-hop: The Bronx.

There is no doubt that the art form was born in the Bronx. But there is some controversy on exactly when. Some historians consider the birth date of hip-hop to be Aug. 11, 1973, while others predate it just a year earlier — and others still date it a year later. One thing they all agree on: DJ Kool Herc, a Jamaican American DJ, was the godfather of rap, marrying rhymes to beats at parties in the Bronx. And so, today, fans around the world are paying homage to the art form Kool Herc created, celebrating 50 years of hip-hop.



With that in mind, I talked to Bowman about the golden anniversary of this prolific genre of music and its ties to politics. He shares how his “bombastic” style of communicating is linked to hip-hop’s “eff you” response to bad politics.

This transcript has been edited for length and clarity.

Can you help me understand hip-hop’s connection to politics? How do you see those two things converging?

Hip-hop has always been very critical of our political system, as well as the people within that system, especially during the time of hip-hop in which I was raised.

I was raised during a time where people refer to it as the golden age of hip-hop. So pretty much like the mid- to late eighties where artists like Eric B. & Rakim and KRS-One and Big Daddy Kane and X Clan and, you know, so many artists that put first and foremost consciousness and political social justice into their music, sort of laid the foundation for what hip-hop was going to continue to be.

What do you think the impact of those within your generation, this golden age of hip-hop, that are now in positions of leadership, have on politics and policy today?

Myself, Leader [Hakeem] Jeffries (D-N.Y.), Joe Neguse (D-Colo.), and not just African Americans, you know, Katherine Clark (D-Mass.), Chairman [Pete] Aguilar, [Jared] Moskowitz (D-Fla.), all of these people, were influenced in one way or another by hip-hop music.

It creates the consciousness where, you know, we are governing from the perspective of communities that have been historically marginalized. What you didn't learn in your history books or in your school textbooks about these communities, hip-hop provided that curriculum.

That's why I think many of us govern the way we govern. It really has been an integrating force in our society in ways in which politics is still behind. We still have schools that are segregated, communities that are segregated. We still have these levels of wealth inequality. Hip-hop is one of the only things that literally brings everyone together.

You mentioned Katherine Clark. What instance are you referencing in terms of her and hip-hop?

We talk all the time on the House floor and not just about bills and laws and politics, but we talk about each other like, you know, where were you born? Where were you raised? What were some of the artists that you listened to growing up?

I had a conversation with Katherine Clark about this, like who would she attribute herself mostly to. And with Katherine Clark, the conversation landed on Lauryn Hill or Queen Latifah.

The real Queen Latifah is Speaker [Nancy] Pelosi.

She is the multi-time speaker, and she is a badass leader in her own right in American history. So she would be Queen Latifah and Katherine Clark would probably be Lauryn Hill.

[Jeffries] is smooth. He's from Brooklyn. He's an orator. He's linguistically gifted. That's Jay-Z.




OK! And you said Pete Aguilar, who would you attribute to him?

I don't want to use like racial stereotypes, but it fits too well. Like he's Mexican from California, he has to be B-Real from Cypress Hill. Even though his first response was Tupac. I told him, “You not radical enough to be Tupac.”

And you said you would be Busta [Rhymes]. Why?

There was a series of events that took place where I was loud and bombastic in public. And there was a lot of conversation around decorum and that style and “can you get things done with that style?”

So this was around the time where I was arguing with Thomas Massie (R-Ky.) about gun violence and doing something about it. I was very loud there. I had a debate with Byron Donalds (R-Fla.) about a few things and, you know, showing a particular style there. But then also Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) came to New York, and I was very loud and told her to get the hell out of New York.

I guess Busta Rhymes is known to be loud and bombastic. And people initially may not put him as a top-five rapper or top-10 rapper because the style overwhelms the pen. But the people who really know, know Busta Rhymes is one of the greatest rappers of all time in terms of his verbal linguistics.

Is this style advantageous to you? Do you see it working?

I don't know. I mean, I think so. You know, I hate talking about it that way because it makes it seem like it's orchestrated, it's choreographed, and it really isn't. Everything that has happened has been organic.

If I am being intentional about anything, it's not allowing hate or fear or lies or misinformation to stand on its own without there being a response to that.

After my engagement with Marjorie Taylor Greene in Washington, she literally had a press conference the next day saying that my “aggressive mannerisms” intimidated her and that people need to watch Jamaal Bowman.

I had to talk to reporters about how dangerous and reckless those words were made by a white woman about a Black man in America. And I had to remind people of the history of that, whether it's Emmett Till or Medgar Evers or Malcolm X or any outspoken Black man across history.



And that's the kind of thing that hip-hop always shines a light on. You know what I mean? A lot of art is really ahead of what we do in Congress when it comes to this stuff. Congress still hasn't gone through a process of truth and reconciliation regarding the genocide of the Indigenous and the enslavement of Africans. We can't even do that, you know, but art can, because art should be about holding a mirror up to who we are so that we could become better, better Americans and better people.

You’ve brought certain policies related to hip-hop to the floor. How is that going?

The RAP Act is something that the hip-hop community and the arts community can galvanize around because we have brothers, and it's mostly Black men being put in jail and their lyrics being used against them, which is unconstitutional. Freedom of speech is protected, and art is protected. It's also unconstitutional in terms of the way rap has been stereotyped and weaponized in courts of law.

One of the common things that I'm getting from our conversation is that there's this overarching theme of how sometimes people want to police the way in which Black folks communicate.

With rap, it's “why are you putting this in your lyrics?” 

And what you are explaining to me about how other people have written about you, it's “why are you talking like this? Why must you raise your voice?”

There seems to be some sort of common thread there. Do you think that’s a fair characterization?

Yeah, I think that's fair. The policing of Black people is as American as apple pie.

What hip-hop is, is an “eff you” response to that. It's “this is who I am. This is me and my full, authentic self. Deal with me or get out of my way.” That's what hip-hop is.

And so, yeah, let's target these aspiring artists and their lyrics, and let's get them out of here and put them in jail if we can, because this movement is producing Cori Bush (D-Mo.) and Summer Lee (D-Pa.) and Jamaal Bowman and Hakeem Jeffries and others. And these people are talking about white supremacy out loud, publicly on the House floor in a way that maybe others didn't do before. And that's what it is. Hip-hop is about our power.



from Politics, Policy, Political News Top Stories https://ift.tt/O1xrVmN
via IFTTT

Pence finds the spotlight. And it’s all about Trump


DES MOINES — Mike Pence worried about how he looked, squinting at a Fox News camera leveled at him in the midday sun.

“This is not good,” Pence said last week, during a warm-up in Indiana for the Iowa State Fair. "My eyes look really dark." In a flash of uncharacteristic sternness, he pleaded with the cameraman, “You with me?”

It was the question beating beneath the surface of his entire campaign. Are donors with him? Are Trump-skeptical Republicans with him? Does he have any real shot at winning his party’s nomination after his actions on Jan. 6 to certify the 2020 election?

In a donor call later that day, Pence’s campaign manager, Steve DeMaura, would acknowledge the “question that the media seems to be obsessed with, which is: Will the vice president make the debate?”

A week later, now at the Iowa State Fair, the picture around Pence has improved. The maw of reporters at his press events has grown. He has racked up the 40,000 donors needed to qualify for the first debate, including 7,400 the day after the indictment, and seems a virtual lock for the second one as well. His campaign noted that he qualified in nine weeks, faster than Nikki Haley and Vivek Ramaswamy at 21 weeks, and Tim Scott at 13 weeks.

But he also is still registering in single digits in the polls, punished by rank-and-file Republicans for his refusal to overturn the results of the 2020 election. And as he arrived at the fair here Friday, his presidential campaign these days can feel like it's engineered as much for his place in history as the Iowa caucuses.

After being left for political dead, Pence is leaning into his actions on Jan. 6 and promises to be relevant long past Iowa — win or lose — as the government's star witness in special prosecutor Jack Smith's case against former President Donald Trump. Trump is for the first time attacking Pence, and recruiting surrogates to do the same.

In a fire-side chat with Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds on Friday, Pence brought up his own role on Jan. 6 without prompting, then, walking to the Iowa Pork Tent at the state fair, said he welcomed questions about that day.

“Over the last two and half years, President Trump has continued to tell the American people things that just aren’t so,” Pence told POLITICO. “I had no right to overturn the election. I welcome the opportunity to set the record straight. And I’ll continue to.”

Mike Murphy, a former Republican member of the Indiana House of Representatives and a longtime friend of Pence, said, “He’s kind of like, ‘act on my principles and the future will take care of itself.’”

There were signs here this week that the controversy surrounding Jan. 6 may not be as debilitating for Pence as advertised. He drew a sizable crowd at the Des Moines Register Soap Box on Thursday, and the two toughest questions he received — “Why did you commit treason on Jan. 6?” and “How’s life going since Tucker Carlson ruined your career?” — were asked by a Democrat and a Kari Lake staffer, respectively.

As he made his way to the pork tent the following day, at least a half dozen fair goers thanked Pence for standing up to Trump.

“I appreciate what you did,” a man in a cutoff T-shirt, shorts and hiking boots told him.

“You gotta beat the other guy,” Troy Hazelbaker, a 54-year-old landlord and Trump voter from Pleasant Hill, told Pence of Trump.

“Keep smiling,” a man somewhat inexplicably handing out packaged toothbrushes told Pence.

And before the first debate, Pence is receiving the most intense media interest yet in his still-young candidacy.


“We’re coming up to the end of the summer, and all things Pence are coming together at the right time,” said Scott Reed, the co-chair of the Pence-allied Committed to America super PAC. “Trump is in another legal spotlight and those clouds are only going to darken. DeSantis is really struggling. He’s not meeting any expectations at any level. And Biden continues to not be ready for another four-year term. The contrasts with Pence are clear.”

Still, at times the Pence campaign has brought with it an element of dramatic irony. One elected official who has endorsed Pence, granted anonymity to assess the campaign candidly, confessed they don’t know whether he’ll catch on.

“What else can he do? He’s in a corner on it,” said David Kochel, the veteran Iowa Republican strategist. “He’s gotta lean on it. It’s true. He will have to testify in the trial. Why avoid it? There is still a percentage of the Republican Party that is very much anti-Trump. The people that are really pro-Trump are not going to be for Mike Pence under any circumstances. You might as well own your role in the whole thing.”

Pence’s camp is looking forward to the debate, where Pence is relishing the opportunity to deploy the skills he honed as part of high school National Forensic League speaking tournaments all the way to a vice presidential debate with Kamala Harris.

“I think if they’re being realistic, the goal is the debate where he has traditionally done really well and hope that provides him a platform where people see leadership and navigate conservative politics,” a Pence confidant, granted anonymity to frankly assess his campaign, told POLITICO.

Last year, a Pence ally speculated to POLITICO that Pence has “to decide whether he wants to be a Jim-Baker-like statesman that can just always be principled and speak the truth for the rest of his life, with no calculation of political cost,” the person said, granted anonymity to assess Pence’s campaign. “Or do you want to get the nomination?”

In Iowa, Pence was hoping he could do both. The world was his oyster — or pork burger, at least.

“This is my strike zone,” he told reporters.



from Politics, Policy, Political News Top Stories https://ift.tt/6FzGr5c
via IFTTT

For the first time, U.S. government lets hackers break into satellite in space


LAS VEGAS — Hackers in a desert in the Southwest are lobbing a barrage of cyberattacks at a U.S. government satellite on Friday — and it’s exactly what the Pentagon wanted to happen.

The U.S. Air Force and Space Force are hoping the effort, the first-ever attempt to use hackers to break into a live, orbiting satellite, will help them build more secure space systems and identify security gaps that could be exploited by China or other adversaries.

Five teams of hackers are competing at the DEF CON cybersecurity conference in Las Vegas to remotely seize control of SpaceX satellite Moonlighter, currently spinning in Earth’s low orbit. Along with trying to break in and build a data link to the satellite, hackers are also trying to keep enemy teams out of their own vulnerable system by using encryption and firewall protections. The satellite is zooming around the earth at about five miles per second, Air Force and Space Force staffers told reporters Friday.

The event — which comes with a $50,000 prize for first place — may feel like a fun, sci-fi thriller, but it also reflects the growing danger of America’s enemies developing cyber capabilities to infiltrate and block U.S. defenses.

China is developing capabilities to “deny, exploit or hijack” enemy satellites, according to a classified intelligence report among the dozens leaked this spring by an Air guardsman and reviewed by the Financial Times. The U.S. military also uses data from satellites to guide a majority of their munitions, move troops into position, communicate and gather intelligence.

And China has already been making attempts.

In 2018, hackers from China targeted an unidentified company’s satellite communications operator in what appeared to be a mission both to spy on and explore how to gain control of the satellites, according to a report by cybersecurity research firm Symantec. It’s unclear if the attempt was successful, but the plan was foiled.

Russia has also been honing its satellite-hacking capabilities in Ukraine. Just after the Kremlin launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, it infiltrated the satellite network of U.S.-based telecommunications company Viasat. It took the hackers about 45 minutes to deploy malware that knocked up to 45,000 modems offline, according to an analysis from Viasat and NSA leadership on Thursday at this week’s earlier Vegas cybersecurity conference, Black Hat.

The company’s vice president and chief information security officer Mark Colaluca said on a panel at Black Hat that the company still can’t confirm exactly how hackers gained access to the VPN, but they “fully expect them to come back.”

For organizers of the “Hack-A-Sat,” the best way to address the security problems is to foster some of cyber's brightest minds.

"We don't want to just be a big, monolithic organization," said Space Force Capt. Kevin Bernert. "We want to get as many people smartly involved. And so the long term impact in that is to understand that you have to bake in cybersecurity — you don't just bolt it on afterwards."

The first points on Friday were scored by "Poland Can Into Space," the defending champs from last year's Earth-based competition. The winning team will be announced this Sunday.



from Politics, Policy, Political News Top Stories https://ift.tt/jmQM6gw
via IFTTT

Francis Suarez: If you don’t make the debate, drop out


DES MOINES — Miami Mayor Francis Suarez has a message to fellow presidential candidates: If you don’t make the debate stage, drop out.

Even if that means him.

“I agree that if you can’t meet the minimum thresholds, you shouldn’t be trying to take the time involved away from being productive,” Suarez, who has yet to qualify for the first Republican debate, said at the Iowa State Fair on Friday.

In response to a question from a reporter, Suarez agreed that if a candidate didn’t meet the minimum requirements to qualify for the debate, then the candidate should drop out.

Suarez, who has met the donor threshold but hasn’t gotten the polling numbers required to qualify, said the polling requirements are unfair for largely unknown candidates.

In order to make the debate, candidates must hit 1 percent in three RNC-sanctioned national polls, or they could hit that mark in two national polls combined with two (not one) state-specific polls. Suarez has hit 1 percent in one state poll.

Still, Suarez said he's confident he’ll make the debate stage on Aug. 23 in Milwaukee.

Suarez met the 40,000 donor threshold in early August. The Miami mayor was one of the few candidates to offer gift cards in exchange for donations.

The polling threshold has proved more difficult for him.

“I’m running against [people] who have been national figures for years. I’ve been a national figure for 60 days,” Suarez said. “So, fortunately for me, you’re sort of new so you have a different threshold, a different timeframe and we’re going to have to compete at the same level.”



from Politics, Policy, Political News Top Stories https://ift.tt/w6U7CQR
via IFTTT

Trump campaign brings in longtime political operative to lead Florida effort


TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — Donald Trump’s presidential campaign is bringing on Brian Hughes, a longtime Florida political operative who recently worked for Jacksonville’s Republican mayor, to lead its campaign operation in the Sunshine State.

Hughes confirmed the news in a text message but referred questions to the Trump campaign. The Trump campaign did not immediately respond for comment. The news was first reported by Florida Politics.

The decision by Hughes to join Trump’s campaign represents yet another hire by the former president’s operation who has ties to Gov. Ron DeSantis, who is also vying for the 2024 GOP presidential nomination. Hughes was one of the political consultants who helped with DeSantis’ initial campaign for Congress back in 2012 but did not work with him on any subsequent campaigns.

One of Trump’s top advisers, Susie Wiles, also formerly worked for DeSantis. DeSantis hired Wiles in 2018 after she helped Trump win the state in 2016 and lead Rick Scott’s first successful campaign for governor.

Wiles was credited for helping stabilize the governor’s operation and guide DeSantis to a narrow win over Democrat Andrew Gillum in 2018. But Wiles and DeSantis had a notable falling out in 2019 when, at the governor’s urging, she was pushed out of Trump’s 2020 campaign and pressured to leave Ballard Partners, one of the state’s premier lobbying firms. Trump, however, later brought Wiles back into his orbit just months ahead of his campaign for reelection even though the move angered DeSantis.

Florida’s Republican presidential primary is scheduled for March 19, a date that puts it behind the early states and Super Tuesday. But it is also a winner-take-all primary that could give the winning candidate a decisive edge in capturing the nomination.

Hughes has spent the past eight years working hand-in-hand with Jacksonville Mayor Lenny Curry, a former Republican Party of Florida chair, and had risen to the position of chief administrative officer for the city.

Curry left office due to term limits. Republicans had hoped to hold on to the position but Democrat Donna Deegan scored an upset in May over the GOP candidate endorsed by DeSantis.

DeSantis, however, did not do any events with Republican Daniel Davis in the closing days of the campaign, a move that irked some Jacksonville Republicans.



from Politics, Policy, Political News Top Stories https://ift.tt/5Ho6PlB
via IFTTT

Friday 11 August 2023

NYC mayor hasn't spoken to Biden since 2022 amid migrant crisis


NEW YORK — Mayor Eric Adams said late Wednesday he has not talked with President Joe Biden in 2023 — a striking admission for someone who was once on a list of the president's top surrogates and who is seeking federal help for the city's migrant crisis.

Adams told CNN that he and the president have not conferred since Biden was in New York last year, but added that his team has been talking with White House and other immigration officials about the flow of migrants to New York City shelters. He said he still supports the president’s reelection.

“I believe he's moving the country in the right direction, and we need to continue to move in the right direction,” Adams said. “And I can separate what I believe [is] an issue that we disagree on.”

The two initially seemed to hit it off.

When still the Democratic nominee, Adams visited the White House and referred to himself as the "Biden of Brooklyn." And in 2022, the year Adams officially became mayor, Biden visited New York several times, including an appearance with Adams about fighting crime and seizing guns. Ahead of the visit, Adams mused: “I’m sure if you were to ask him what is his favorite mayor, he would clearly tell you, ‘It’s Eric.’” In March of this year, Adams was listed among 20 Democrats who would sit on a national advisory board and serve as key validators for the president’s bid for a second term.

However, a month later the mayor’s frustrations with the asylum-seeker situation boiled over.



At an April press conference, he said the White House had failed the city, a statement that kicked off weeks of pointed criticism of the president from Adams on an issue that will be top of mind for voters during Biden's reelection campaign.

In May, when the Biden campaign released a list of 50 surrogates for Biden, the outspoken New York City mayor was not among them.

The fraying of relations between the two comes as the city is taking on an ever-growing role in the migrant crisis. On Wednesday, Adams said his administration could spend up to $12 billion providing services to arriving asylum-seekers and again pleaded for assistance from the federal government — albeit in terms less hostile to the White House.

So far, the mayor’s entreaties to Biden for work authorization, funding and a more coherent resettlement strategy at the border have gone largely unanswered, though the president dispatched Tom Perez, the director of White House intergovernmental affairs, to meet with Adams on Thursday morning about the issue, according to a New York Post report.



from Politics, Policy, Political News Top Stories https://ift.tt/3rlYWxg
via IFTTT