More than 2 million Georgians have already voted in the state’s twin Jan. 5 Senate runoff elections, where the Republican majority in the Senate is at stake.

The latest early voting numbers released Thursday morning by state officials indicate that more than a quarter (26.7%) of all registered voters in Georgia have already cast a ballot in the two contests.

WHO’S FAVORED TO WIN THE GEORGIA SENATE RUNOFF ELECTIONS?

More than 1.3 million Georgians have cast a ballot through early in-person voting at polling stations that have been open for a week and a half, with more than 720,000 casting an absentee ballot.

With less than two weeks to go until the runoff elections, the high number of Georgians who have already voted in two Senate runoffs comes close to rivaling the early turnout at this point in the November general election. A record 4.9 million voters in the state cast ballots in the general election.

“It looks like it’s going to be a fairly high turnout for a runoff election,” M.V. Hood, a political science professor at the University of Georgia and director of the school’s survey research center, told Fox News on Thursday. “People are energized.”

HARRIS SAYS ‘EVERYTHING IS AT STAKE’ IN GEORGIA’S TWIN SENATE RUNOFF ELECTION

But Hood added that with the holidays upon us, “turnout’s not going to reach the levels of the general election.”

An Election Defender volunteer directs voters to an area where they can get free hand sanitizer and masks during early voting for the Senate runoff election at a recreation center Thursday, Dec. 17, 2020, in Powder Springs, Ga. (AP Photo/Todd Kirkland)

The balance of power for the next Senate coming out of last month’s elections is 50 Republicans and 48 Democrats. This means Democrats must win both of Georgia’s runoffs to make it a 50-50 Senate. If that occurs, Vice President-elect Kamala Harris would be the tie-breaking vote, giving her party a razor-thin majority in the chamber.

In Georgia, where state law dictates a runoff if no candidate reaches 50% of the vote, GOP Sen. David Perdue narrowly missed avoiding a runoff, winning 49.75% of the vote. Democratic challenger Jon Ossoff trailed by roughly 87,000 votes.

In the other race, Republican Sen. Kelly Loeffler captured nearly 26% of the vote in a whopping 20-candidate special election to fill the final two years of the term of former GOP Sen. Johnny Isakson. Loeffler was appointed by Republican Gov. Brian Kemp after Isakson stepped down to due health reasons. Her opponent in the runoff, Democratic candidate Rev. Raphael Warnock, won nearly 33% of the vote in the special election.

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If the Democrats win both races, they would control both the Senate and the House as well as the White House.

Fox News’ Remy Numa contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/georgia-turnout-senate-runoff-elections

A pro-EU demonstrator sets up banners outside a London conference center, where trade talks were being held on Dec. 4.

Kirsty Wigglesworth/AP


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A pro-EU demonstrator sets up banners outside a London conference center, where trade talks were being held on Dec. 4.

Kirsty Wigglesworth/AP

With the clock ticking down, the United Kingdom and the European Union have finally agreed to a free trade deal a week before the Brexit transition period ends and 4 1/2 years since Britons voted in a landmark referendum to leave the EU.

The two sides were able to reach agreement by resolving a difficult dispute over fishing. The issue: how much to reduce European fleets’ share of the catch in British fishing grounds in the coming years?

Fish account for less than 1% of the British economy, but played an outsize role in negotiations. The winning campaign slogan from the 2016 Brexit referendum was to “take back control” from the EU and that included fishing grounds.

The U.K. and the EU also found agreement on what’s known as the “level playing field” — adherence to regulations on the environment, workers’ rights and state subsidies that ensure businesses in one country, in this case the U.K., don’t enjoy an unfair advantage over those in the EU.

The deal averts a worst-case divorce that would have hurt the EU economy but damaged the British economy even more. Had the U.K. walked away from the EU single market of nearly 450 million consumers empty-handed, the country could have lost more than 8% of growth in per capita income over the next decade, according to The UK in a Changing Europe, a leading group of academic researchers. A so-called no-deal Brexit also threatened to engulf British ports in regulatory and customs chaos at the turn of the year.

The U.K. got a glimpse of what that could look like last weekend when France closed the border after a coronavirus variant that scientists believe is much more infectious spread throughout London and southeastern England. The border closure caught the British government off guard and stranded thousands trucks around the Port of Dover. France reopened the border Wednesday, but said that travelers and truckers — most of them European — could not cross the English Channel unless they tested negative for the coronavirus.

The new trade deal is what is known as a hard Brexit, meaning the British and EU economies will no longer have the close regulatory alignment they’ve enjoyed for decades. Economists say that even with the deal, Britain’s per capita income will be 6.4% lower over the next decade than it would’ve been if the U.K. had remained part of the EU.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson has argued that leaving the EU will benefit the U.K. in the long run. He says it will allow Britain to negotiate independent free trade deals with other major economies, such as the United States and China, unencumbered by the bureaucracy, regulations and collective decision-making in Brussels, where the union is headquartered.

Being part of the European Union has meant U.K. companies could trade smoothly with Europe without tariffs or customs checks as if they were inside the same country. But one price of membership had been that EU citizens were allowed to live and work visa-free inside the U.K. It was amid anxiety over migration that British voters stunned the world in 2016 and voted to leave the EU.

The U.K. has spent most of this year in a transition period, which ends Dec. 31. Disruptions and backups at ports are could well follow as customs controls and new processes come into force at EU borders.

To minimize delays, the British government has told U.K. truckers that they will have to obtain a permit to enter the county of Kent, home to the Port of Dover and the Eurotunnel on the channel.

The deal still requires approval by the British Parliament and will be scrutinized by the governments of the EU’s 27 member-states. But this agreement begins to draw to a close one of the most tumultuous chapters in contemporary British history.

Brexit toppled two prime ministers — David Cameron and Theresa May — caused chaos in the U.K. Parliament and weakened the country’s economy as well as its standing in the world. After decades in the European Union, which was designed to promote peace and prosperity after two world wars, the island nation of nearly 67 million people will strike out on its own. Many political analysts are skeptical of the move and view it as one of the greatest self-inflicted wounds by a major democracy in many years.

The ultimate timing of the end of the Brexit saga is especially bad. The United Kingdom continues to grapple with the coronavirus pandemic, which has killed more than 69,000 people — one of Europe’s highest death tolls. Gross domestic product in Britain is expected to fall by 11% this year. That would be the largest drop since the Great Frost of 1709, when temperatures plunged in large parts of Europe, destroying crops, killing hundreds of thousands of people in France and devastating economies.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2020/12/24/943492678/u-k-and-eu-agree-to-last-minute-brexit-trade-deal

Donald Trump‘s decision to pardon allies has sparked anger among lawmakers, with one senator within the president’s own party describing the move as “rotten to the core.”

Among the 26 people granted clemency on Wednesday was Charles Kushner, whose son, Jared Kushner, is Trump’s adviser and son-in-law. Charles Kushner was jailed for tax evasion, witness tampering and making illegal campaign donations.

Trump also pardoned his former adviser, Roger Stone, convicted in November 2019 of lying to Congress in connection with its investigation into Russian election interference, witness tampering and obstructing an official proceeding.

On Thursday, a White House statement said “due to prosecutorial misconduct” Stone had been “treated very unfairly,” and that his pardon “will help to right the injustices he faced at the hands of the Mueller investigation.”

U.S. President Donald Trump n the South Lawn of the White House, on December 12, 2020 in Washington, DC. He ahs been criticized by lawmakers over his pardoning of allies.
Al Drago/Getty Images

A pardon was also given to Trump’s former campaign manager, Paul Manafort, who was convicted in 2018 on bank fraud and tax charges. He had been released from his seven-year sentence to home confinement in May due to the coronavirus pandemic.

Adam Schiff, who was the lead Democratic prosecutor during Trump’s impeachment trial, took aim at the granting of clemency to Manafort in particular.

“During the Mueller investigation, Trump’s lawyer floated a pardon to Manafort.

“Manafort withdrew his cooperation with prosecutors, lied, was convicted, and then Trump praised him for not ‘ratting.’ Trump’s pardon now completes the corrupt scheme. Lawless until the bitter end,” he tweeted.

The White House said that Manafort was a victim of “blatant prosecutorial overreach” and had been “the most prominent victims of what has been revealed to be perhaps the greatest witch hunt in American history.”

In a follow-up tweet, Schiff who chairs the house intelligence committee, said: “Lie to cover up for the president? You get a pardon. Corrupt politician who endorsed Trump? You get a pardon.

“Murder innocent civilians? You get a pardon,” adding, “elect a corrupt man as president? You get a corrupt result.”

“Rotten to the core”

Illustrating that sometimes less is more, GOP Senator Ben Sasse (R-Neb), issued a terse six-word statement in response to the latest presidential pardons that said: “This is rotten to the core.”

Sasse has been critical of Trump, taking aim at how he handled the COVID pandemic, his praise for Q-Anon supporters and his administration’s foreign policy. Trump in turn has traded barbs on Twitter in October, calling him a “liability” to the GOP.

Former Republican and now Libertarian Party representative for Michigan, Justin Amash, tweeted: “I’m all for the pardon power, but it should be used in all instances to cure injustices, not to help friends and associates evade justice.”

Meanwhile, Rep. Paul Mitchell, of Michigan, who said he would leave the GOP because of Trump’s actions following the election shared Amash’s message and wrote: “Absolutely. The pardons of the past 2 days are sickening distortions of pardon power.”

Democratic Rep. Ayanna Presley (D-Mass) tweeted: “Only in America: impeached, lost the election & handing out pardons for his corrupt friends while also carrying out an unprecedented execution spree.”

Source Article from https://www.newsweek.com/adam-schiff-trumps-pardons-show-lawless-until-bitter-end-1557109

The state of Georgia made history this past November during the 2020 presidential election, when it turned from a red state to a blue state, the first time in over 20 years.

After Joe Biden beat Donald Trump by more than 12,000 votes in the state, many took a closer look at the groundswell of activists who had helped engage and educate Georgia voters. Multiple profiles of Stacey Abrams, the gubernatorial candidate who has mobilized voters to combat voter suppression, and Black Voters Matter, splashed across media headlines. But behind the scenes, other groups have been operating on all cylinders, too. Now, with a heated Senate runoff on 5 January — one that will determine which party takes control of Congress – many are wondering if the ground game will remain strong.

These groups are working hard to make sure it does:

The Georgia Coalition for the People’s Agenda (People’s Agenda)

Founded by the late Ccivil rights leader Joseph E Lowery, the organization performs year-round voter registration, education and mobilization in Black communities throughout Georgia and works to support and establish state coalitions in south-eastern states. Headquartered in Atlanta, the People’s Agenda has offices throughout the state of Georgia and covers more than 53 Georgia counties statewide.

“We work 365 days a year registering people to vote and educating them on the candidates running for office. We hold forums and town hall meetings and have been doing phone and text banks to inform Georgia citizens about voter registration and the voting process. We want people to know that the voting process is easy and transparent,” said Butler.

Like most other outreach organizations, much of the group’s work is being done remotely due to Covid-19. Organizing, registering people to vote and even requesting absentee ballots is done online.

But some outreach continues in person. Members have been working with churches and community leaders in each of the cities where offices are located. Volunteers are canvassing door to door, following social distancing guidelines, handing out free literature and getting people registered. The group is also giving citizens rides to the polls and making sure that there are no indications of voter suppression through their Election Protection Program. There are monitors at polling locations to speak on problems and issues in real time, according to Butler.

“Decisions about unemployment, healthcare, the economic stimulus, and utilities in rural areas is determined by these two Senate seats,” explained Butler. “Currently the Senate is held up and has not acted on the George Floyd Criminal Justice Reform Act, or the John Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act, or the Cares Act.

“We don’t tell people who to vote for and we’re not endorsing any candidates, but we tell them why it’s important,” Butler said. “The election is not over. We are alerting people to vote again.

Clayton county’s Black Women’s Roundtable

The Black Women’s Roundtable works in states with large Black populations, building leaders and encouraging them to run for office in their communities and is an extension of the National Coalition on Black Civic Participation. The organization is an intergenerational coalition of Black women who are civil rights leaders, corporate leaders and elected officials. They organize around issues of concerns for Black women, including healthcare, racism and injustice.

Felicia Davis, head of the roundtable in Georgia’s Clayton county, said she is working hard to get people registered to vote. Her group is mobilizing and educating voters through door to door canvassing, hoping to get people to early vote and to keep people motivated throughout Covid-19 and the holiday season, to ensure they vote in the January run-off.

“This year we lost Dr Lowery, Rev CT Vivian and Congressman John Lewis, three civil rights heroes whose sacrifices played a key role in the passing of the Voting Rights Act. Their memory fuels our resolve,” said Davis. “Our part right now is to vote. When we show up, we always win.”

Transformative Justice Coalition

The Transformative Justice Coalition, a non-partisan group, fights for solutions that address racial injustice and result in systemic change and dismantling structures of white supremacy. Most of the work is in voting rights, not just during elections, but year-round.

Barbara Arnwine, the founder of the Transformative Justice Coalition, is based in Washington DC but works closely with the People’s Agenda to mobilize, educate and register voters.

“Georgia has an ugly history of purging voters,” said Arnwine. “Voting isn’t just about elections, but political accountability. We have built up good relationships, working together to battle southern suppression in Georgia and other states in the south and have trained over 100 people to be voting rights activists.”

Starting 14 December, the first day of early voting, the Transformative Justice Coalition will organize what they call Votercades, car caravans/marches getting people excited about voting. The Votercade is a three- to five-block caravan of cars with voting signs, 14ft banners and loud speakers and megaphones, making people aware that it is time to vote. There is music, dance, food and also a moment of silence where participants take a knee to remember those killed by police. There will be 15 Votercades throughout Georgia, including the week of 14-19 December.

“The Votercades are attention grabbing, joyous, infectious marches to the polls. We are doing these marches to encourage people to vote early,” said Arnwine. “We believe voting is a celebration, not something people endure. We are giving people support and are committed to going everywhere there are voters.”

Georgia Black Youth Vote

The Rev Jared Sawyer, co-coordinator of the Georgia Black Youth Vote, is also doing his part to mobilize young Georgia voters by engaging and training community advocates and young professionals aged 18-30, getting them fully involved in the voting process. This includes a statewide media campaign and online services that focus on voter registration.

“The right to vote is sacred,” said Sawyer. We are preparing voters for the run-off and getting people excited about the election.”

This group is touring throughout the state of Georgia and also hosting Votercade caravans and are canvassing to prepare young voters for the runoff election. The goal is to educate young people about voting and public policy. Sawyer was called to train a new generation of civic leaders and political activists and is calling on others to serve their communities. The group is phone banking and text banking to inform people about the runoff election, encouraging them to vote early.

“As long as we are as proactive as we’re being, people will get out and vote. The Black youth vote helped push Georgia blue,” said Sawyer. “It inspired people and they realized that it’s possible. Young people believed their voices count, not just in the streets, but at the ballot box. We are encouraging people to vote early. I believe there will be a strong voter turnout.”

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/dec/24/georgia-voter-registration-senate-runoffs

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said in a statement after her party’s measure failed that she would hold a full recorded vote on the proposal for $2,000 payments on Monday.

“If the President is serious about the $2,000 direct payments, he must call on House Republicans to end their obstruction,” Pelosi said.

Democrats have called on Trump to sign the coronavirus relief and government funding bill into law and to support the separate cash payment plan.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and McCarthy, the top two Republicans in Congress, and their aides have been silent on Trump’s demand for bigger checks.

But McCarthy, in a letter late Wednesday to Republicans, described a countermove his party planned to make on Thursday that would seek changes to the foreign aid component of the spending bill.

It is unclear who would be eligible for $2,000 payments in the Democrats’ plan. In the aid and government funding bill, individuals who earn up to $75,000 and couples filing jointly who make up to $150,000 would receive the full $600. In addition, the measure would pay $600 for each dependent child. Trump did not address the payments to children.

If Trump vetoes the legislation, Congress may have enough support to override his action. However, depending on how quickly the more than 5,000-page bill gets to his desk after formal enrollment, he could let it die by refusing to sign it before the new session of Congress starts at noon ET on Jan. 3.

Along with the direct payments, the rescue package would add a $300 per week federal unemployment supplement, extends jobless benefit expansion provisions and a federal eviction moratorium, direct $284 billion to Paycheck Protection Program loans and put more than $8 billion into Covid-19 vaccine distribution, among other provisions. If Trump does not sign the legislation in the coming days, about 12 million people would lose unemployment benefits on Saturday — the day after Christmas — and the government would shut down on Tuesday.

Many economists and Democrats have called the $900 billion relief plan inadequate after months of stalemate on Capitol Hill.

Democrats have said they plan to push for another relief bill after President-elect Joe Biden takes office Jan. 20. Biden has said he will present his own plan to lawmakers early next year and that he would push for a third round of direct payments.

Democrats have cited more direct payments and state and local government aid as their top priorities.

The White House did not immediately return a request for comment on Thursday.

—Reuters contributed to this report.

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Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2020/12/24/house-votes-on-2000-stimulus-checks-after-trump-supports-them.html

In Britain, just 12,000 people fish from 6,000 vessels and contribute less than half of one percent to the country’s gross domestic product — less than that of London’s fashionable department store Harrods. But in coastal towns and villages on both sides of the English Channel, fishing is of vital importance.

During the 2016 referendum campaign, Mr. Johnson promised fishing workers in Britain that Brexit would reclaim control over the country’s national waters, which have been shared with French and other European fishing crews for decades or, in some cases, centuries.

But fishing is also resonant in France, not least for President Emmanuel Macron, who faces an election in 2022. French fleets depend heavily on fish caught in British waters. Under current quotas, for example, 84 percent of the cod caught in one zone off the English coast is allocated to France, while just nine percent goes to Britain.

In the harried final days of the talks, European negotiators pushed Britain hard to continue to allow their fishing crews to have broad access to its waters.

The final days of Britain’s long divorce from the European Union were marked by haggling over something the two sides have shared for centuries: haddock and cod.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2020/12/24/world/europe/brexit-trade-deal-uk-eu.html

President Donald Trump issued another series of pardons and commutations on Wednesday, including full pardons for Charles Kushner, the father of Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner. Former Trump adviser Roger Stone and Trump’s former campaign manager Paul Manafort, both of whom were sentenced in relation to the investigation into meddling into the 2016 election, were also granted pardons. Clemency was also granted to 23 other individuals, according to a statement from the White House.

Charles Kushner pleaded guilty in 2004 to 18 counts of tax evasion, witness tampering and making illegal campaign donations. Charles Kushner also admitted to hiring videotaping an encounter between his brother-in-law William Schulder and a sex worker in 2003. Schulder was working with federal investigators on a case regarding illegal campaign contributions on Charles Kushner’s part.

Former New Jersey Governor Chris Christie said that Charles Kushner’s crime was “one of the most loathsome, disgusting crimes that I prosecuted when I was U.S. Attorney” during a January 2019 interview with PBS.

Trump granted Charles Kushner a full pardon, citing his devotion to “important philanthropic organizations and causes.”

“This record of reform and charity overshadows Mr. Kushner’s conviction and 2 year sentence for preparing false tax returns, witness retaliation, and making false statements to the [Federal Election Commission],” the White House said.

Newsweek reached out to Christie for comment.

President Donald Trump issued another round of clemency orders on Wednesday, including pardons for Roger Stone, Paul Manafort and Charles Kushners, the father of Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner.
Al Drago/Getty

Stone, who was sentenced to 40 months in prison in 2020 for his role in the Russian election meddling investigation, was granted a “full and unconditional pardon” by Trump.

“Pardoning him will help to right the injustices he faced at the hands of the Mueller investigation,” the White House statement read.

In a post-pardon interview with Fox News host Tucker Carlson on Wednesday, Stone expressed his appreciation to Trump.

“My hat is off to the president, the greatest president since Abraham Lincoln, who had the courage to correct this injustice,” Stone said.

Newsweek reached out to Stone for further comment.

Manafort received a “full and complete” pardon from Trump after approximately 2 years in prison on a charge of witness tampering. Manafort was released in May to home confinement. According to the statement, Manafort’s prison time included “a stretch of time in solitary confinement—treatment worse than what many of the most violent criminals receive.”

“As Mr. Manafort’s trial judge observed, prior to the Special Counsel investigation,” the statement read, “Mr. Manafort had led an ‘otherwise blameless life.'”

Manafort thanked Trump on Twitter Wednesday night. Mr. President, my family & I humbly thank you for the Presidential Pardon you bestowed on me,” Manafort wrote. “Words cannot fully convey how grateful we are.”

Manafort was charged in New York in March 2019 with state-level felonies, including mortgage fraud. However, those charges were dismissed by a New York State Supreme Court judge in December 2019, ruling that Manafort’s state crimes were included in his federal sentence.

Source Article from https://www.newsweek.com/trump-pardons-jared-kushners-father-paul-manafort-roger-stone-23-others-1557092

BOSTON (CBS) — Well for a week we’ve had the perfect Christmas snow on the ground. It’s been festive and has set the mood, but snow is always rented and not owned. It’s due to be returned to the atmosphere by Christmas morning. Instead of a White Christmas, this one will be in the most 2020 style imaginable. A soaking, windy, record warm meltdown.

The biggest headline for this extremely unusual storm system is the wind, which will be powered by one of the stronger low-level jet streams you’ll ever see this time of year. This is a “river of wind” just a couple thousand feet up, that will be roaring at 75-85 knots on Christmas morning. Not all of that will make it to us on the ground, but widespread 40-65mph gusts from the south are expected with some isolated 65-75mph gusts possible across high terrain (like Blue Hill).

The strongest winds will roar through between roughly 7 a.m. and noon Christmas day, accompanied by very heavy rainfall. It would be a good idea to prepare for a Christmas Day without power, because certainly thousands of people are going to lose it for a time. Power up electronics, have batteries ready to go, and it may be wise to take down some Christmas decorations (inflatables, etc) outside before going to bed Christmas Eve. Also a good idea to avoid parking under trees, if possible.

(WBZ-TV graphic)

That wind will be delivering a near-record warm air mass straight from the tropics that will have Santa wearing shorts. We’ll soar well into the 50s on Thursday (Christmas Eve Day) and see those readings rise overnight. By the time we start tearing into presents under the tree, some low 60s could push in. This will threaten some all-time Christmas highs in the area, which were just set in 2015.

Coming along for the ride will be exceptionally humid air with dewpoints nearing 60F. Winter dewpoints near 60F have only occurred a few times in the past 140+ years, so this is rare air. Dewpoints like these are also the most efficient way of chewing up snow cover as they help break the icy molecular bonds and chew the snowy landscape apart rapidly. We’re expecting a near/total loss of snow cover across southern New England by late Christmas morning.

(WBZ-TV graphic)

Runoff from that snowmelt will be added to 1-3″ of heavy rainfall, steadiest Christmas morning to early afternoon. Lots of poor drainage flooding will be likely, and you’ll want to keep a close eye on the basements. Sump pumps will be busy! The rain, plus snowmelt, makes this effectively a 3-4″ rainstorm. Rapid rises on smaller rivers and streams will be likely. And don’t be surprised to hear rumbles of thunder as a line of downpours and storms will push across by late morning.

When does it all wind down? It looks like the rainfall will slowly push eastward by the evening, with a drying trend overnight. Temperatures will also start to return to normal and will be subfreezing for most of the area by the time we wake up on Saturday. Fortunately, it will be a much quieter weekend with bright skies and highs in the 30s both days.

Source Article from https://boston.cbslocal.com/2020/12/24/christmas-forecast-wind-rain-weather-boston-wbz/

The husband and wife who pleaded guilty to criminal charges for staging the 2009 “balloon boy” hoax, in which they created a global media sensation with a false report that their son had floated away in a makeshift dirigible, have been pardoned by Colorado’s governor.

In granting executive clemency to Richard and Mayumi Heene, Governor Jared Polis said the couple, now 59 and 56, had paid their debt to society for a “spectacle” that wasted law enforcement time and resources.

The couple reported on 15 October 2009 that their six-year-old son, Falcon, had been carried aloft by a homemade helium balloon that had become untethered in the family’s back yard in Fort Collins, Colorado.

News footage showed the silver balloon, resembling a flying saucer, soaring over north-east Colorado for 90 minutes trailed by National Guard helicopters, as authorities scrambled to reroute aviation traffic around Denver international airport.

Millions were riveted to live coverage on television and the internet, watching as the balloon finally landed in a wheat field. No one was onboard the craft and Falcon, the youngest of the couple’s three children, ultimately turned up in the attic of the family’s garage.

Investigators said the mother later admitted the stunt was aimed at gaining the family their own reality TV show.

The Heenes’ initial account unravelled after an appearance on CNN’s Larry King Live programme in which Falcon was asked why he stayed in hiding so long. Looking first to his parents, the boy answered: “You said that we did this for a show.”

Richard Heene pleaded guilty to one count of attempting to influence a public servant, which is a felony, and was sentenced to 30 days in jail. His spouse pleaded guilty to a misdemeanour offence of filing a false report and was ordered to perform 20 hours of supervised community service.

The husband’s lawyer, David Lane, told Reuters that the family, who now live in Florida, were “very grateful” to Polis, but he took a swipe at prosecutors in the case. Lane said prosecutors told Richard Heene that unless he pleaded guilty to a felony, they would move to deport Mayumi, who was a Japanese citizen. “Richard had absolutely no choice, so he took it.”

The balloon boy case was among 18 pardons and four sentence commutations granted on Wednesday by Polis, a first-term Democrat.

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/dec/24/couple-behind-2009-balloon-boy-hoax-in-us-granted-pardons

WATERTOWN, CT (WFSB) – State police have captured a man accused in the murder of a UPS employee along Route 8 in Watertown.

The suspect was identified as 19-year-old Elijah David Bertrand, who is also a UPS employee.



Elijah David Bertrand




State police gave an update Wednesday morning and said a motive is not known at this time. They did say that troopers did recover what is believed to be the murder weapon, however they did not disclose the type of weapon.

According to state police, the incident was initially reported as a crash in the area of exit 37 on Route 8 north around 10:30 p.m. Tuesday.

The crash involved a UPS shipping truck.

Troopers told Channel 3 that there was a heavy police presence in the area through the overnight hours.

When troopers arrived at the scene, the driver of the truck was found to have been the victim of an assault.

Troopers immediately contacted emergency medical personnel, which responded to the scene and transported the victim to an area hospital where he later died as a result of his injuries.

On Wednesday afternoon, the Teamsters Joint Council 10 identified the victim as 28-year-old Nathan Daniel Burk, of Waterbury. He was a five-year “Teamster.”



Nathan Daniel Burk




Detectives from the Connecticut State Police – Western District Major Crimes Squad, or WDMCS, were requested to respond to the scene and assume this investigation.

Bertrand fled the scene of the assault and was on the run for hours.

Around 2:30 p.m. on Wednesday, state police said he was found at a gas station on Main Street in Plymouth.



Elijah David Bertrand was arrested and charged with murdering a UPS employee Wednesday.




He was taken into custody and charged with one count of murder.

State Police set Bertrand’s bond at $2 million.

He is expected to face a judge Thursday morning in Waterbury Superior Court.

UPS released a statement about the driver’s death on Wednesday morning.

“We are deeply saddened by the loss of our colleague, and are cooperating with the investigation,” said Matthew O’Connor, media relations, UPS. “Any additional information will need to be provided by local authorities.”

In a Facebook post, the Teamsters Joint Council 10 said a vigil will be held Wednesday at 6 p.m. in memory of Burk at the Waterbury UPS facility in Watertown.

A fund has also been set up to pay for family support and funeral expenses. Donations can be sent to: Nathan Burk Fund, c/o Teamsters Joint Council 10, 544 Main Street, Charlestown, Massachusetts 02129.

Refresh this page and watch Channel 3 for updates.



Source Article from https://www.wfsb.com/news/man-accused-of-killing-coworker-set-to-face-a-judge-today/article_8ad5cb3e-4522-11eb-abcc-b35e015b622c.html

President Trump issued a stern warning to Iran Wednesday after a rocket attack earlier this week on the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad and said if one American is killed, he will hold Tehran responsible.

Trump’s threat came in the form of a tweet that included a photo of what he identified as three Iranian rockets that failed to launch. He said there is chatter that Tehran could be planning future attacks on Americans in Iraq.

“Some friendly health advice to Iran: If one American is killed, I will hold Iran responsible. Think it over.”

U.S. Central Command said in a statement that the Dec. 20 attack on the Green Zone—which included 21 rockets– was likely from an “Iranian-backed Rogue Militia Group.”

The statement said that it was “clearly NOT intended to avoid casualties” and damaged buildings in the compound. The New York Times pointed out that Jan. 3 is the anniversary of the drone strike that killed Maj. Gen. Qassim Suleimani, one of Iran’s top military figures.

The Times reported that at least one Iraqi citizen was killed.

Iran’s Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif appeared to brush off Trump’s threat. He tweeted later, “Putting your own citizens at risk abroad won’t divert attention from catastrophic failures at home.”

Reuters reported that the Iraqi military downplayed any Iranian connections to the attack and pinned it on an “outlaw group.”

Last month, Trump discussed retaliatory measures against Iran’s nuclear program during a meeting with his national security team after the International Atomic Energy Agency reported a sizable increase in the country’s uranium stockpile, sources told Fox News.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/trump-issues-stern-warning-to-iran-after-rocket-attack-on-us-embassy-in-baghdad

With time running out before the end of Congress’s current session, there’s one tool that President Donald Trump could use to block a new stimulus bill without outright rejecting it: a pocket veto.

As Fox News reporter Chad Pergram explains, the name of this veto comes from presidents’ ability to effectively table bills and put them in their “pocket.”

As laid out in the Constitution, if the president does not sign a bill within 10 days of receiving it (excluding Sundays) and Congress adjourns during that time, the bill is considered vetoed. Because Congress has already adjourned by that point, it does not have the ability to override this veto.

Speculation about a potential pocket veto has emerged this week after Trump posted a last-minute speech criticizing the stimulus bill as a “disgrace” and calling on Congress to amend it. In his remarks, he urged lawmakers to increase the amount allocated in stimulus checks from $600 to $2,000. He also threatened to oppose the bill, though he did not commit to vetoing it if these demands aren’t met, raising questions about how he’ll respond when Congress likely fails to make the changes he wants.

It’s very possible that Trump won’t do anything and will simply sign the bill anyway; but if he wanted to, he could still veto the bill directly or go the pocket veto route.

Because the stimulus bill was passed so late in the year, it’s likely now within the window for a pocket veto. As of Wednesday afternoon, the final legislation had yet to be sent to the White House, which means there’s less than 10 full days, excluding Sundays, between now and Congress’s adjournment on January 3. (Although Congress passed the stimulus bill earlier this week, lawmakers needed a few extra days to finalize the text and officially “enroll” the bill before it was sent to Trump.)

As a result, if Trump doesn’t sign this bill by the time Congress adjourns, the pocket veto will take effect.

Trump’s main advantage in using this veto option is that Congress is unable to override it in the short term. If he were to veto the stimulus bill outright, it’s possible that lawmakers would have the numbers to override that veto given how much support it previously received. By using a pocket veto, however, Trump runs out the clock, so Congress doesn’t have the opportunity to respond.

In using this method, Trump would block the stimulus bill from becoming law, and force Congress to re-pass the legislation in a new term. This could be one way for him to express his opposition to the bill, though it’s unclear how this would benefit him prior to leaving office. Instead, if he took such action, he’d be responsible for delaying much-needed aid to millions of people grappling with unemployment, housing costs, and soaring coronavirus case counts.

Source Article from https://www.vox.com/2020/12/23/22197491/trump-pocket-veto

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HARRISBURG — As he seeks to overturn Pennsylvania’s election results in the courts, President Donald Trump invited Republican members of the GOP-controlled state Senate to a Wednesday lunch at the White House.

The invitation for the luncheon was sent to all GOP lawmakers in the chamber, said Jennifer Kocher, a spokesperson for the caucus.

No agenda was included, she said, and it was not immediately known how many senators were attending.

The top Republican in the state Senate, Jake Corman of Centre County, had other commitments, Kocher said, and was not planning to go. Aides to newly elected Majority Leader Kim Ward, R-Hempfield, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

At least one Republican senator, Doug Mastriano of Franklin County, had made arrangements to attend, a legislative source said. Mastriano organized a hearing last month in Gettysburg on unfounded claims of widespread election fraud.

Mere hours after the hearing, Mastriano, one of the chamber’s most conservative members, tested positive for covid-19. He received his results when he and a small group of people traveled to the White House that day to meet with Trump, the Associated Press reported. Guests are tested for the virus and Mastriano was forced to leave after testing positive that day.

Mastriano could not be reached for comment Wednesday.

The White House luncheon comes two days after Corman announced that he will push a measure to create a special committee to “conduct an exhaustive review” of all aspects of last month’s election. “Far too many residents of Pennsylvania are questioning the validity of their votes or have doubt that the process was conducted fairly, securely, and produced accurate results,” he said in a statement.

Trump’s Department of Justice as well as state and county officials have said there is no evidence of widespread fraud that would alter the election’s results.

Republican leaders including Corman, however, have accused the state Supreme Court of usurping the legislature’s powers by extending the deadline to receive mail ballots. They have also criticized the Department of State for issuing guidance to counties on “curing,” or fixing, mail ballots that were deficient in some way.

Trump is also continuing efforts in the courts to challenge Pennsylvania’s election results.

This week, the president’s campaign filed a petition with the U.S. Supreme Court seeking to reverse decisions made by Pennsylvania’s highest court regarding a 2019 state law that created no-excuse mail voting.

The president is asking the justices to throw out Pennsylvania’s results and allow the General Assembly to pick a slate of electors.

Pennsylvania, however, has already cast its 20 electoral votes for President-elect Joe Biden and Vice President-elect Kamala Harris. The electors met earlier this month near the state Capitol.

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Source Article from https://triblive.com/news/pennsylvania/as-he-seeks-to-overturn-pa-s-election-trump-invites-gop-senators-to-white-house-lunch/


Duncan Hunter walks out of Federal Courthouse on December 3, 2019 in San Diego, California. | Sandy Huffaker/Getty Images

OAKLAND — President Donald Trump’s full pardon of Duncan Hunter isn’t playing well in the convicted congressman’s home turf — even among GOP conservatives that have supported Trump.

Jon Fleischman, publisher of the influential Flash Report and a former state GOP vice chair, is among a crowd of conservative Californians who excoriated the decision on Wednesday.

“If the President is going to pardon lawbreakers like Duncan Hunter he may as well pardon the Tiger King. If the bar is that low,” Fleischman said on Twitter.

Trump granted a full pardon Tuesday to Hunter, who was set to begin an 11-month sentence at a federal prison in two weeks after pleading guilty to stealing campaign funds for personal use.

Federal prosecutors indicted Hunter and his wife Margaret in 2018 for lavish spending of campaign donations on “items as inconsequential as fast food, movie tickets and sneakers; as trivial as video games, Lego sets and Play-doh; as mundane as groceries, dog food and utilities; and as self-indulgent as luxury hotels, overseas vacations, and plane tickets for themselves, their family members, and their pet rabbits Eggburt and Cadbury.”

Hunter burned through upwards of $200,000 on expenses that included a $14,000 Italian vacation, as well as private school tuition and trysts with a mistress, prosecutors said.

Hunter, who represented California’s 50th Congressional district in eastern San Diego County, resigned from Congress in January.

In a statement Tuesday, the White House said the pardon came “at the request of many Members of Congress.” It also suggested that Hunter’s violations should have been handled as a civil case by the Federal Election Commission rather than in criminal court. And it said “Mr. Hunter has dedicated much of his adult life to public service,” pointing to his time in the U.S. Marine Corps serving in Iraq and Afghanistan.

His estranged wife, Margaret, who cooperated with prosecutors and who filed for divorce in December, received her own pardon Wednesday. She has been serving a three-month sentence of home confinement and had three years of probation. As in the explanation for Duncan Hunter’s pardon, Trump’s office said Wednesday that Margaret Hunter’s case should have been handled by the FEC.

Fleischman said in an interview that he found Duncan Hunter’s actions galling, particularly his attempt to cloak personal expenses as donations to wounded veterans. Fleischman said that “the system worked — he was convicted. He was given a sentence.”

He also said that Trump “set the standard that there’s a different set of justice for the friends of the president than there is for everyone else.”

Other loyal Republicans who have supported the president went public with their anger. Former state GOP Chair Ron Nehring lambasted the Duncan Hunter decision.

“Our elected officials should be held to a higher, not lower, standard than the average citizen, who would never have been pardoned for similar crimes,” he said.

“We have so many great, honorable Republicans who wish to serve for all the best reasons. We don’t have to put up with any crooks in our own party,” Nehring also said on Twitter. “Toss the bums out. Make room for the honest and honorable ones. Strong party. Stronger country.”

Republican Carl DeMaio, who unsuccessfully ran for Duncan Hunter’s 50th congressional district seat, issued a statement saying Trump’s action “sends absolutely the wrong message that politicians can break the law, but can easily avoid any punishment when they do.”

DeMaio said that the decision “will simply reinforce the clear impression that ordinary citizens have that Washington DC Swamp Creatures protect themselves, receive special exemptions, and enjoy double standards.”

While Duncan Hunter’s pardon was upsetting to many Republicans, Darrell Issa, who won the election to take the 50th congressional district seat, congratulated him via Twitter.

“I’m pleased that all of the Hunter family can spend this Christmas together with a fresh outlook on life,” he said.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/states/california/story/2020/12/23/california-conservatives-rebuke-trump-pardon-of-duncan-hunter-1350370

WASHINGTON – President Donald Trump on Wednesday vetoed the annual defense policy bill, following through on threats to veto a measure that has broad bipartisan support in Congress and potentially setting up the first override vote of his presidency.

The bill affirms 3% pay raises for U.S. troops and authorizes more than $740 billion in military programs and construction.

The action came while Trump was holed up at the White House, stewing about his election loss and escalating his standoff with Republicans as he pushed fraudulent conspiracy theories and tried to pressure them to back his efforts to overturn the results.

The House was poised to return Monday, and the Senate on Tuesday, to consider votes to override the president’s veto of the National Defense Authorization Act, or NDAA.

Trump’s move provoked swift condemnation, with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi calling it “an act of staggering recklessness that harms our troops, endangers our security and undermines the will of the bipartisan Congress.”

Sen. Jim Inhofe, R-Okla., chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, avoided any criticism of Trump, but called the NDAA “absolutely vital to our national security and our troops. … Our men and women who volunteer to wear the uniform shouldn’t be denied what they need — ever.”

Long before issuing the veto, Trump offered a series of rationales for rejecting it. He has called for lawmakers to include limits on social media companies he claimed are biased against him — and to strip out language that allows for the renaming of military bases such as Fort Benning and Fort Hood that honor Confederate leaders. Without going into detail, he has claimed the biggest winner from the defense bill would be China.

In his veto message to the House, Trump cited those objections and stated that the measure “fails to include critical national security measures, includes provisions that fail to respect our veterans and our military’s history, and contradicts efforts by my Administration to put America first in our national security and foreign policy actions. It is a ‘gift’ to China and Russia.”

He also wrote: “Numerous provisions of the Act directly contradict my Administration’s foreign policy, particularly my efforts to bring our troops home.

Both the House and Senate passed the measure by margins large enough to override a veto from the president. Trump had vetoed eight bills previously, but those vetoes were sustained because supporters did not gain the two-thirds vote needed in each chamber for the bill to become law without Trump’s signature.

Sen. Mark Warner, D-Va., called Trump’s veto “unconscionable” and said he would “look forward to overriding” it.

In advance of the veto, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., has said the bill would help deter Chinese aggression. Other GOP backers of the measure, including Sen. John Thune of South Dakota, the second-ranking Senate leader, and Rep. Mike Gallagher of Wisconsin, a member of the House Armed Services Committee, have tweeted that the bill would counter threats from countries such as China.

Sen. Jack Reed of Rhode Island, the top Democrat on the Armed Services Committee, said Trump’s declaration that China was the biggest winner in the defense bill was false. Reed also noted the shifting explanations Trump had given for the veto.

“President Trump clearly hasn’t read the bill, nor does he understand what’s in it,” Reed said. “There are several bipartisan provisions in here that get tougher on China than the Trump Administration has ever been.”

The measure guides Pentagon policy and cements decisions about troop levels, new weapons systems and military readiness, military personnel policy and other military goals. Many programs can only go into effect if the bill is approved, including military construction.

McConnell, in a rare break with Trump, had urged passage despite Trump’s threat to veto it. McConnell said it was important for Congress to continue its nearly six-decade-long streak of passing the defense policy bill.

Source Article from https://www.ksat.com/news/politics/2020/12/23/trump-vetoes-defense-bill-setting-up-possible-override-vote/

The men initially described the killings as self-defense. Multiple investigations found instead that they were unprovoked. Women and children, some with their hands in the air, were shot as they tried to flee. Among the dead was a young medical student, Ahmed Haithem Ahmed al-Rubiay, and his mother, Mahassin Mohssen Kadhum al-Khazali.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/middle_east/iraq-blackwater-military-contractors-pardons/2020/12/23/062ee814-44bb-11eb-ac2a-3ac0f2b8ceeb_story.html