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Sunday 17 December 2023

Cardin staffer linked to sex tape leaves Senate


A junior aide to Sen. Ben Cardin is no longer employed by the Senate, the Maryland Democrat's office said Saturday, following news reports linking the staffer to a sex tape filmed in a Capitol Hill hearing room.

Portions of the tape were published by the Daily Caller on Friday showing two men having sex in the cavernous Hart Senate Office Building hearing room that has played host to Supreme Court nominees, 9/11 Commission meetings and former FBI Director James Comey’s blockbuster 2017 testimony on Donald Trump. The American Spectator previously reported that a Cardin staffer was involved.

Neither report named the staffer, but other conservative outlets identified one person seen in the video as Aidan Maese-Czeropski, a legislative aide to Cardin.

Cardin’s office, after not commenting yesterday on what it called a “personnel matter,” said in a statement first provided to POLITICO on Saturday morning that “Aidan Maese-Czeropski is no longer employed by the U.S. Senate.”

“We will have no further comment on this personnel matter,” the statement added.

Maese-Czeropski on Friday night posted a statement to LinkedIn that did not unambiguously deny involvement.

“This has been a difficult time for me, as I have been attacked for who I love to pursue a political agenda,” he wrote. “While some of my actions in the past have shown poor judgement, I love my job and would never disrespect my workplace. Any attempts to characterize my actions otherwise are fabricated and I will be exploring what legal options are available to me in these matters.”

He separately denied allegations that he had accosted Rep. Max Miller (R-Ohio) in a Capitol hallway Wednesday by telling the Jewish lawmaker, "Free Palestine."

Attempts to reach Maese-Czeropski on Saturday were not immediately successful. He had worked for Cardin since October 2021, according to congressional records, and previously worked as an intern for Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) in 2018.

U.S. Capitol Police did not respond to an email Saturday asking whether an investigation is underway. Aides to Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer and Minority Leader Mitch McConnell declined to comment.

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Saturday 16 December 2023

Top US diplomat to China: Not 'optimistic' about future relations


Don’t expect Washington’s relationship with Beijing to improve anytime soon, U.S. Ambassador to China Nicholas Burns said Friday morning.

"I don't feel optimistic about the future of U.S.-China relations. I feel that we need to see how things develop,” Burns said during a Brookings Institution event.

The blunt remark came exactly a month after President Joe Biden met with Chinese leader Xi Jinping on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum in San Francisco. It was an attempt to stabilize the fraught relationship between the two nations, which have seen a deepening mistrust that has pushed relations to their lowest point in a half-century.

The pair agreed on a number of confidence-building measures, including a resumption of high-level military-to-military communications. But Biden soon after called his Chinese counterpart a “dictator” for the second time this year — angering Beijing.

Burns called the meeting in California “productive,” explaining that both countries have so far followed through with their commitments.

“I’m careful about this, maybe realistic — hopeful, if you will,” he said. “But hopeful is different than being optimistic.”

Burns also blasted Beijing for the recent uptick in harassment by Chinese Coast Guard forces of Philippine vessels in areas of the South China Sea that are within Manila’s territorial waters.

Later in the event, the ambassador called for an easing of relations between the U.S., China and others in the region.

"The people of China are not our enemy,” he said. “We do want to live in peace with China. No person in their right mind should want this relationship to end up in conflict or war."

Phelim Kine contributed to this report.



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Friday 15 December 2023

Senator to Pope Francis: Not so fast on AI


Congress hasn’t done enough work on artificial intelligence regulation in the U.S. to join Pope Francis’ proposal for a global treaty to regulate the technology, Sen. Mark Warner told POLITICO.

On Thursday, Francis called for a binding treaty that would ensure artificial intelligence is developed and used ethically. He said in a statement that the risks of technology lacking human values of compassion, mercy, morality and forgiveness are too great — and that failing to regulate it could “pose a risk to our survival.”

Warner said the United States, where lawmakers have yet to enact AI regulation, is not ripe for such a treaty.

“There is more work to do at the national level before we can establish global obligations and restrictions on the use of AI,” said Warner, who chairs the Senate Intelligence Committee, in an email to POLITICO.

The pope’s message was released just days after European Union negotiators reached a provisional deal on the world’s first comprehensive AI rules that are expected to serve as a gold standard for governments considering their own regulation.

Congress has been playing catchup, and Warner has cautioned his colleagues against overreach as they tackle the issue.

“Congress and governments around the world have an obligation to ensure that innovation in AI happens responsibly with appropriate safeguards in place,” he told POLITICO in the email.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.



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European leaders approve opening of accession talks for Ukraine

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Thursday 14 December 2023

White House is working ‘24 hours a day’ to get US hostages out of Gaza, say family members


President Joe Biden on Wednesday met for nearly two hours with the family members of American hostages held by Hamas in a session relatives later said had strengthened their faith in the administration’s efforts to bring their loved ones home.

“We have no better friend in Washington or in the White House than President Biden himself,” said Jonathan Dekel-Chen, one of roughly a dozen people who met with Biden and other top aides. “They are willing and ready to do all that they possibly can, by any number of means to get the hostages out.”

The lengthy meeting came as Israel has intensified its fighting in Gaza, after a seven-day truce centered on agreements to free some hostages fell apart last week.

More than 100 hostages were freed during that period, including four Americans.

The White House has worked since to strike another deal to pause the fighting, in an effort to get more hostages out.

The family members declined to say whether they had received an update on their relatives or detail specifics of the private meeting, but said that the administration had kept in constant contact with them since Hamas’ Oct. 7 attack on Israel.

“We know that they are working 24 hours a day, and they are going to work through the holidays,” said Liz Naftali, the great aunt of Abigail Edan, who was one of the Americans released during the pause in fighting. “And they are going to do everything they can to make sure that all of our loved ones — real people — come home to us and to the families across the world and in Israel.”



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Pentagon chief heads to Middle East as attacks on US forces spike


Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin will travel to the Middle East next week, the Pentagon announced, as the Biden administration works to manage a spike in Iran-backed attacks on American forces in the region and contain the Israel-Hamas conflict.

The visit will mark the second time Austin has traveled to the region since the Oct. 7 Hamas attacks on Israel and comes as war rages in Gaza. Austin plans to meet with senior leaders in Bahrain, Qatar and Israel, Pentagon spokesperson Maj. Gen. Pat Ryder told reporters on Tuesday.

Austin’s trip will support the Pentagon’s objectives, which are to: “protect U.S. forces and citizens, support Israel's inherent right to defend itself, work closely with Israel to help secure the release of hostages from Hamas and ensure the crisis doesn't escalate into a broader regional conflict,” Ryder said.

Top of mind will be the immediate threat to American forces in the region from a recent increase in attacks in Iraq and Syria, as well as on commercial shipping in the Red Sea that put U.S. warships at risk. Calls for the Biden administration to respond more forcefully to the attacks have grown in recent weeks, with current and former officials expressing frustration that the Pentagon’s actions are not deterring further violence.

Iran-backed militia groups have launched drones and rockets at U.S. positions in Iraq and Syria 94 times since Oct. 17, including nine on Friday, according to a Defense Department official, who was granted anonymity to discuss sensitive operational issues. At least 66 U.S. service members have sustained minor injuries, including at least 19 who were diagnosed with traumatic brain injury.

U.S. forces have responded multiple times to the attacks, including with precision airstrikes against facilities linked to Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps and affiliated groups in Syria. The U.S. also sent an AC-130J gunship to hit the proxy forces last month and separately took out five militants who were preparing to launch a drone strike in Iraq.

But those strikes have not stopped further attacks.

Meanwhile, Houthi rebels, who are based in Yemen and funded by Tehran, have increased strikes on international shipping in the Red Sea, increasingly drawing in U.S. warships. Many — but not all — of the civilian ships targeted were either owned or operated by Israel or Israeli companies, or crewed by Israelis.

Most recently on Wednesday, the destroyer USS Mason shot down a drone headed for the ship while it was responding to reports that a commercial oil tanker was under assault by suspected Houthi forces, according to the official.

“We’re not deterring anybody right now,” retired Vice Adm. John Miller, the former commander of naval forces in the Middle East, told POLITICO recently.

The Biden administration is wary of responding militarily to those attacks in an effort to avoid provoking Iran, which backs Hamas, the Houthis and Hezbollah in Lebanon, POLITICO reported last week.

“Iran respects the use of force — they know and understand it,” retired Gen. Frank McKenzie, the former head of U.S. Central Command, said in an interview last week. “They have always, always had a very high regard for our capability; they have always doubted our will to employ it.”

Although the administration has not ruled out responding militarily, the main focus for now is the formation of an international maritime task force to counter the Houthi attacks. The framework for that group is already in place, through Combined Task Force 153, a 39-nation partnership headquartered in Bahrain and focused on countering piracy and terrorism in the Red Sea, Bab el-Mandeb waterway and Gulf of Aden. Participants include Gulf nations, such as Bahrain, Oman and Saudi Arabia, as well as European and Pacific partners.

The existing framework is “a coalition of the willing and it does not prescribe a specific level of participation from any member nation,” Ryder said last week. The U.S. is in talks with partners about their participation in an effort to specifically counter the Houthis’ recent aggression, he said.

“We are definitely looking to take action here,” Ryder said. “This is an international problem that requires an international solution.”

However, the administration has not announced which partners will participate. Some may balk at an effort that could be perceived as protecting Israeli shipping as Israel continues bombarding Gaza. Pressure has increased on the U.S. to do more to urge Israel to protect civilians as the death toll rises.

And there are signs President Joe Biden is taking notice. He warned donors at a Tuesday fundraiser that Israel could be losing international support because of its “indiscriminate bombing” of Gaza.

As Biden appears to take a tougher stance, Austin will likely use the trip to press his Israeli counterpart to do more to protect innocent lives and create evacuation routes for civilians to move out of harm’s way, as he has in the past. Jake Sullivan, the national security adviser, is also headed to Israel on Thursday.



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City’s largest public union sues Adams admin over budget cuts


NEW YORK — The city’s largest public-sector union sued Mayor Eric Adams and his administration Wednesday over looming budget cuts, POLITICO can first report — the latest sign the planned spending reductions are hurting the mayor’s political coalition at a particularly difficult time in Adams’ tenure.

DC 37 — an early and vocal backer of Adams in the 2021 mayoral primary — filed suit in state Supreme Court in Manhattan, accusing the mayor and his administration of failing to properly vet a decision to nix thousands of union jobs as city officials seek to close an anticipated $7 billion budget gap.

“The approach to deal with this budget deficit has been short-sighted,” Henry Garrido, the union’s executive director, said in an interview. “When you exclusively cut services to deal with a shortfall and you don’t pursue revenue collection options that you have … the public gets more upset at city workers because the garbage takes longer to be picked up, it takes longer to take care of their calls and it takes longer to deal with emergencies.”

In its suit, the labor organization is alleging the city did not conduct a required cost-benefit analysis before proposing cuts that would slash 2,300 “job training participants” in the parks and sanitation departments — positions Garrido believes will now be filled with non-union contractors.

A mayoral spokesperson did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

DC 37 took former Mayor Bill de Blasio’s administration to court over Covid vaccine mandates. But this marks the first instance of the union suing the Adams administration — a move that highlights the strains budgets are placing on backers of the mayor.

It would appear public sentiment is on Garrido’s side.

In a recent Quinnipiac University poll, 83 percent of New Yorkers reported being concerned that the mayor’s planned budget cuts would impact their daily lives. The mayor also received a record-low job approval rating of 28 percent in that survey.

Wednesday’s lawsuit is the latest instance of Garrido registering complaints about how the city is going about trimming its $110 billion budget. On Monday, he blasted the cuts more broadly during a City Council hearing, saying the mandate is not only unfair [and] unjustified, it really makes a mockery of the process that we have of the counterbalances in governments in the city of New York."

On Wednesday, Garrido argued cutting DC 37 workers wholesale from some divisions while leaving others in city government untouched is another affront to his members.

“The way [the Office of Management and Budget] is trying to get to a point of reducing the budget is wrong, and is disproportionately hurting some of our members more than other workers,” he said.

However, he stopped short of saying the spending reductions have turned him off Adams completely.

Garrido said he plans to back the mayor in his efforts to secure more funds for asylum seekers by lobbying Albany officials, and is heading to the White House for a meeting Thursday on the matter.

“We’re still supporting [Adams],” Garrido said. “I don’t think this is directed at him. He has been given a real raw deal with this migrant situation.”



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