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Tuesday 19 September 2023

F-35 fighter jet still missing a day after pilot ejects, military says


Personnel on Monday were still searching for an F-35 fighter jet that went missing on Sunday after its pilot ejected, according to a statement from a South Carolina military base.

“Teams continue to search for the U.S. Marine Corps F-35B, using ground and air assets,” Joint Base Charleston posted on Monday afternoon.

The base is coordinating with local Marine, Navy and Air Force personnel to find the stray plane, according to the base.

“We appreciate the support we’ve received from our mission partners and every organization involved, as integrated teams are searching and preparing for the recovery of the jet,” the base wrote.

The pilot ejected safely from the Marine Corps aircraft, which can take off and land vertically. The base reported on Sunday that the jet’s last-known position was north of Joint Base Charleston, near Lake Moultrie and Lake Marion.

The base has since called on the public to help, asking those with information to call the facility’s operations center at (843) 963-3600.

Rep. Nancy Mace (R-S.C.) expressed her disbelief at the situation on X, the social media platform formerly known as Twitter.

“How in the hell do you lose an F-35? How is there not a tracking device and we’re asking the public to what, find a jet and turn it in?” she wrote.

Mace added that she was briefed by Marine Corps personnel on the situation on Monday, but it was “one of the shortest meetings I’ve eve[r] had” because no one “had any answers. Shocker.”

Base spokesperson Jeremy Huggins told the Washington Post on Sunday that the F-35’s transponder was not working “for some reason that we haven’t yet determined.”

“So that’s why we put out the public request for help,” he said.



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Monday 18 September 2023

Putin exposes the myth of Austria’s victimhood

EU envoy Martin Selmayr’s remark that Vienna is paying "blood money" to Russia should trigger greater self-reflection in Austria.

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The House GOP unveiled a new spending plan. It still won’t avert a shutdown.


Speaker Kevin McCarthy and his allies on Sunday began a sales pitch for a short-term spending plan loaded with conservative priorities like funding cuts and stricter border policies.

It’s unclear that the proposal could pass the House, given the GOP’s thin majority. And even if Republicans can muscle it through that chamber, it would do little to avert a shutdown looming just two weeks away.

GOP leaders told their members on a private call Sunday night that they hope to bring the plan to the floor Thursday, according to multiple people listening. The bill, which would punt the next funding deadline to Oct. 31, was drafted over the last few days by a coalition of hardliners in the House Freedom Caucus and more centrist members in the Main Street Caucus.

The deal includes across-the-board cuts to domestic spending bills — exempting defense and veterans spending, as well as disaster aid. It would also pave the way for Republicans to pass a standalone, full-year defense spending bill, which a band of ultraconservatives has blocked for days. That vote would now happen on Wednesday, leadership said on the call.

Perhaps the biggest sweetener in the GOP’s plan is to include the party’s marquee border policy bill, known as H.R. 2 — without a contentious provision related to making “e-verify” mandatory.

Some House Republicans are unclear on which agencies are getting bigger cuts in this deal. Rep. Juan Ciscomani (R-Ariz.) raised the matter on a call, but didn’t receive a direct answer.

McCarthy's latest maneuver is intended to unite the highly fractured House GOP as the Sept. 30 shutdown deadline ticks closer, after near-constant struggles to pass spending bills. It stands no chance, however, in the Democratic-controlled Senate.

There are already warning signs that it could fail to even pass the House. Within hours of the plan’s reveal, a half-dozen conservatives — including Reps. Ralph Norman (R-S.C.), Cory Mills (R-Fla.), Dan Bishop (R-N.C.), Tim Burchett (R-Tenn.), Matt Rosendale (R-Mont.) and Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.) — signaled they may not vote for it.

“No CR. Pass the damn approps bills,” Bishop tweeted.



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‘No defensible argument’: Anger boils over at CEO pay


GM CEO Mary Barra’s $29 million pay package is 362 times what her company’s median employee makes. For Ford CEO Jim Farley, the ratio is 281 times. It’s 365:1 for Stellantis CEO Carlos Tavares and his average employee.

The yawning pay gaps, a sore point among many rank-and-file workers across corporate America, is becoming one of the United Auto Workers’ most potent political rallying cries as it kicks off an unprecedented strike at the Big Three auto manufacturers. The historic labor action puts an exclamation point on more than a decade of halting efforts by lawmakers in Washington — most of them Democrats — to expose and narrow the disparity between the country’s wealthiest individuals and the vast majority of Americans.

More specifically, the strike threatens to fuel scrutiny of what critics say is excessive executive pay and how it contributes to risk-taking beyond the auto industry.

Midwestern lawmakers have started trumpeting the stats on Capitol Hill as they lean into solidarity with the striking workers. The UAW claims that the Big Three automakers saw their average CEO pay increase by 40 percent in the last four years while union members got 6 percent raises.

“I don’t want to hear whining from these companies that they can’t afford to pay workers what they’re worth,” Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio) said on the Senate floor Thursday.



Exploding executive compensation has bedeviled concerned policymakers for years, with attempts at imposing transparency measures and greater corporate accountability doing little to slow the trend. But the UAW strike is putting a fresh target on CEO pay at a precarious moment for big business, with populism holding sway on the left and the right.

Asked about her pay in a CNN interview Friday, Barra said 92 percent of her compensation is based on the performance of the company. She touted profit-sharing that GM offers employees.

“So when the company does well, everyone does well,” she said.

Likewise, a Ford spokesperson said that more than 90 percent of Farley’s $21 million in compensation last year was made up of variable components based on how well the company performed. Farley’s compensation was up by 21 percent compared to his predecessor Jim Hackett’s in 2019, according to Ford. GM and Stellantis did not respond to requests for comment.

Median CEO pay at the largest U.S. public companies hit $22.3 million last year, according to research firm Equilar — a 7.7 percent increase from 2021. And between 1978 and 2021, executive compensation at large American companies increased by more than 1,400 percent, the left-leaning Economic Policy Institute said.

It climbed 37 percent faster than stock market growth and 18 percent faster than average full-time worker pay over the same period, the EPI analysis found.

“There’s no defensible argument that that’s because CEOs have just gotten a lot smarter or more effective over time,” said Sarah Anderson, director of the Global Economy Project at the Institute for Policy Studies, a progressive think tank.



Disgust with Wall Street executives after the 2008 financial crisis spurred a Democratic Congress and President Barack Obama to enact a series of measures to address C-suite pay in 2010. But regulations to restrict pay packages that encourage excessive risk-taking have yet to be finalized, thanks to bureaucratic gridlock among several agencies working on the rules as well as regulator turnover between the Obama and Trump administrations.

A separate requirement that public companies disclose CEO compensation in comparison to their median employee salary became effective in 2018. It has done little to rein in executive pay, according to an academic study released last year by researchers at the University at Buffalo and the University of Colorado.

At the heart of the tension between management and union members is executive pay that’s tied to a company’s stock price and becomes more valuable as market returns increase.

“Rank and file employees don’t have such an immediate linkage, which leads to these compensation-related conflicts,” said the University at Buffalo’s Michael Dambra, who worked on the pay disclosure study.

“The argument that firms would make is that the job of a CEO has gotten exponentially more difficult in terms of responsibilities, litigation risks and outside pressure,” Dambra added. “Stock-based compensation allows for an alignment of interests between shareholders and managers. These are market (i.e. competitive) prices, and CEOs that are underpaid relative to their peers would leave.”

But Dambra said employee advocates would counter that “this explosion in CEO pay is extortion, and CEOs have captured boards, and they are earning more compensation than economically fair.”



President Joe Biden said Friday that auto companies have profited in recent years thanks to the “extraordinary skill and sacrifices” of UAW workers and that profits “have not been shared fairly, in my view, with those workers.”

This year’s regional bank failures rekindled concern in Congress about executive risk-taking. It spurred Brown and Sen. Tim Scott (R-S.C.) to craft a bill that would enable regulators to claw back pay from the CEOs of failed lenders and also make it easier to remove executives.

Despite resistance from industry — which argues that the bill would make it harder to recruit top talent — the proposal attracted broad bipartisan support at the Senate Banking Committee and is awaiting Senate passage.

Other unions are trying to elevate the CEO pay issue in negotiations. The Writers Guild of America West, which represents striking Hollywood writers, waged a successful campaign to convince Netflix’s shareholders to reject the company’s executive pay package in a non-binding vote.

“Everybody understands the fundamental unfairness of people who contribute to profits of a company getting such a small fraction of what the handful of individuals at the top are making,” said Anderson of the Institute for Policy Studies. “I think we’re seeing a much brighter spotlight on this issue, and that strengthens the hand of these unions going into negotiations.”

Jasper Goodman, Declan Harty and Eleanor Mueller contributed reporting.



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Trump: ‘I like the concept’ of a female running mate


Donald Trump is open to picking a female running mate for the 2024 presidential election, the former president said in an interview scheduled to air Sunday.

“I like the concept, but we’re going to pick the best person,” Trump told NBC's "Meet The Press" host Kristen Welker when asked if he was leaning toward choosing a woman. “But I do like the concept, yes.”

Trump said he hadn’t given it much thought yet, but told Welker, “You always do a little bit, but I really don’t think it’s time. I want to win.”

In the interview, Welker floated the possibility of South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem, who recently endorsed Trump while appearing alongside him at a fundraiser in her home state.

Trump called her “fantastic” and said she was someone he would consider choosing.

Nikki Haley, one of Trump's many primary contenders, is also among the potential candidates. Haley previously served as governor of South Carolina and then as ambassador to the United Nations, after being nominated by Trump.

Some of the male presidential candidates are also seen as potential picks.

Entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy has gone so far in his support for the former president as to pledge to pardon him if elected. Trump has expressed openness to having Ramaswamy as his running mate, but Ramaswamy has said he has no interest in the No. 2 spot.

In addition, South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott's refusal to attack Trump suggests that he could be keeping his options open to an invitation to the Trump 2024 ticket.

Trump and his former vice president Mike Pence have recently stepped up attacks on each other on the campaign trail, effectively ruling him out of the 2024 veepstakes.



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Texas AG Paxton back on job after acquittal


AUSTIN, Texas — Newly acquitted of impeachment charges, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton is back on the job and getting back to the usual.

Promises to keep dragging the Biden administration into court. Support from former President Donald Trump. And coming soon, a sit-down with former Fox News host Tucker Carlson.

As Paxton on Sunday begins his first full day back in office after winning acquittal in the Texas Senate over accusations of corruption and bribery, the Republican is quickly resuming what has long helped make him one of the most resilient political figures in the U.S. despite years of criminal charges and alleged scandal.

The fallout in the Texas Capitol is likely only beginning and threatens to spill into the 2024 elections, when conservative allies of the Trump-backed attorney general say they will target Republican legislators who led the investigation against Paxton.

Even the very act of impeachment in Texas could get a second look after Republican Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, who presided over the trial, called for new guardrails in a fiery speech questioning how the case made it this far.

On the other side are Republicans in the Texas House, where Paxton was overwhelmingly impeached and suspended from office in May. Its members bristled at Saturday’s verdict and the criticism leveled by the lieutenant governor.

“The inescapable conclusion is that today’s outcome appears to have been orchestrated from the start, cheating the people of Texas of justice,” Republican House Speaker Dade Phelan said.

Paxton, 60, was absent for most of the trial and was not in the Senate for his acquittal on 16 articles of impeachment. He issued a statement blasting his impeachment as the work of a “kangaroo court” and promoted an interview he plans to give this week with Carlson.

“I’ve said many times: Seek the truth! And that is what was accomplished,” Paxton said.

The trial was a showcase of sober testimony and occasional spectacle. In accusing Paxton of abusing his office, former advisers recounted how Texas’ top lawyer allegedly pressured them to help a political donor who was under FBI investigation. The testimony included arguments over who paid for home renovations, whether Paxton used burner phones and how his alleged extramarital affair became a strain on the office.

Paxton denied wrongdoing and his attorneys argued there either was no evidence or wasn’t enough to rise beyond a reasonable doubt. They portrayed Paxton as the victim of a plot orchestrated by Republican rivals and waved to political conspiracies involving George P. Bush, the nephew of former President George W. Bush, who unsuccessfully challenged Paxton in last year’s GOP primary.

Paxton was endorsed in that race by Trump, who reaffirmed his support in the waning days of the trial and applauded the verdict. “The Ken Paxton Victory is sooo BIG. WOW!!!” Trump posted on Truth Social, his social media platform.

More than three months after the overwhelming impeachment in the Texas House, where Republicans have a solid majority, Paxton was just as convincingly acquitted by Senate Republicans who serve alongside his wife, state Sen. Angela Paxton.

Angela Paxton was not allowed a vote in the trial. But she attended all two weeks of the proceedings, including one dramatic moment when a woman was called to publicly testify about an affair she had with the state senator’s husband.

The woman ultimately never took the witness stand, but her relationship with Ken Paxton was central to a case accusing him of going to potentially criminal lengths to help a local real estate developer named Nate Paul, who was under FBI investigation at the time.

Democratic state Sen. Nathan Johnson described nearly eight hours of deliberations among the 30 senators as a hard and seemingly sincere process.

“And then it collapsed,” he said.

Johnson said it eventually became clear there would not be enough votes to convict, which may have led some senators to change their minds.

“When enough people fall away from conviction, it exposes any remaining Republican to very strong attack from the right,” Johnson said. “We reached the wrong result and it was the result of political pressures.”

The outcome is not the end of Paxton’s troubles. He still faces trial on felony securities fraud charges, remains under a separate FBI investigation and is in jeopardy of losing his ability to practice law in Texas because of his baseless attempts to overturn the 2020 election.

Eight of Paxton’s former deputies reported him to the FBI in 2020 over his relationship with real estate developer Paul, setting off a federal investigation that is ongoing. Federal prosecutors investigating Paxton took testimony in August before a grand jury in San Antonio, according to two people with knowledge of the matter who spoke on the condition of anonymity because of secrecy rules around the proceeding.

Paul was indicted in June on charges of making false statements to banks. He has pleaded not guilty.

Dan Cogdell, one of Paxton’s attorneys, said the securities fraud charges the attorney general still faces should be dismissed.

“If they don’t dismiss them, we’ll try them and beat them there just like we beat them here,” he said.



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UAW prepared to do ‘whatever we have to’ to push negotiations forward, leader says


Striking autoworkers are ready to do whatever it takes to get the automakers to agree to their demands for raises, shorter work weeks and stronger job security — including starting strikes at additional plants, United Auto Workers President Shawn Fain said Sunday.

“We're prepared to do whatever we have to do,” Fain said during an interview on CBS’ “Face the Nation.” “The membership is fed up, we're fed up with falling behind. It's been decades of falling behind.”

The UAW went on strike at three plants across the Big Three car manufacturers at midnight on Friday after its existing contracts expired without a new deal.

So far, the strike has targeted General Motors' Wentzville Assembly plant in Missouri, Stellantis’ Toledo Assembly in Ohio and Ford’s Michigan Assembly in Wayne, Mich., though more locations could be added, Fain said Sunday.

The three-location work stoppage is just a fraction of the size of a possible full-scale walkout — which would involve nearly 150,000 union members across several other states.

Along with calls for a 40% pay raise and a four-day work week, autoworkers have voiced concern about a future in which more vehicles are made with electric batteries instead of internal combustion engines.

“This is where the rubber hits the road, we got to figure out how we're going to do this transition, how we're going to go from the transition of an internal combustion engine, and pay people who are making that battery, a decent wage, similar to what they're making for" internal combustion engines, Rep. Debbie Dingell (D-Mich.), who represents a district near Detroit, said Sunday on CBS’s “Face the Nation.”

“They're going to be new jobs, and different jobs that are going to come from this transition. But it's not a talking point moment. This is a real, intentional, hard moment,” Dingell said.

The strike puts President Joe Biden, the self-described “most pro-union president in American history,” in a precarious position as the 2024 presidential election draws closer.

On Friday, Biden said that he understood “workers’ frustration,” and announced that he was deploying acting Secretary of Labor Julie Su and senior economic adviser Gene Sperling, to Detroit to “offer their full support” in contract negotiations.



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