But the congressional response, limited by a powerful gun lobby and deep partisan polarization, has been a far cry from the comprehensive solutions that many gun violence researchers feel are needed. And the conservative 6-3 majority on the Supreme Court has signaled an inclination to not only preserve, but also further expand gun rights.

That has left states led by Democrats to seek their own solutions. The search has extended beyond gun violence policies as the court’s rulings have upended reproductive rights and placed L.G.B.T.Q. protections and other civil liberties at risk. Increasingly, the charge from the left has been led by Mr. Newsom, who has had political capital to spare since last year, when he crushed a Republican-led recall.

Dan Schnur, a former Republican strategist who now teaches political science at the University of Southern California and the University of California, Berkeley, said that the governor’s motives were easy to deduce: Mr. Newsom believes his “California way” is a success, and using a national platform to call out Republicans helps rally constituents across the many media markets in his own immense state.

Also, Mr. Schnur said, “He is running for president.”

Mr. Newsom has said that he has “subzero interest” in the White House. “But just being seen as a player on the national stage serves him, even if he never runs,” Mr. Schnur said. “Mario Cuomo played that game for years.”

California’s gun laws are among America’s strictest, helping the state deliver one of the nation’s lowest rates of gun deaths. In 2020, the state’s rate of firearm mortality was about 40 percent lower than the national average, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and the Public Policy Institute of California has determined that Californians are about 25 percent less likely to die in mass shootings, compared with residents of other states.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2022/07/22/us/newsom-gun-bill-california.html

ISTANBUL—Russia and Ukraine agreed Friday to resume exports of millions of tons of Ukrainian grain via the Black Sea for the first time since the Russian invasion, a deal aimed at freeing up vital supplies amid fears of a global food crisis.

The deal is the product of months of diplomacy led by the United Nations and Turkey, both of which are signatories to a pair of parallel agreements with Russia and Ukraine. It raises hopes that grain stocks could soon be shipped out from Ukrainian ports, after the war caused a worldwide surge in the cost of food, pushing tens of millions of people closer to starvation.

Source Article from https://www.wsj.com/articles/russia-ukraine-clear-way-for-grain-exports-to-resume-amid-fears-of-global-food-crisis-11658499653

Satellite images released by NASA this week show a dramatic drop in water levels over the last 22 years at Lake Mead.  

NASA confirmed that water levels in Lake Mead, located in Nevada and Arizona, are at their lowest since April 1937, when the reservoir was being filled for the first time.

As of Monday, Lake Mead, the largest reservoir in the United States, was filled to 27% capacity, according to NASA.  

The photos shared by the NASA Earth Observatory, taken in 2000, 2021 and 2022, show Lake Mead appearing to grow less and less full of water, even in the one-year span between 2021 and 2022. The image from 2000 shows swaths of Lake Mead full of water, while the image from 2022 only shows one section, known as Overton Arm, filled.

‘This is not temporary’:As climate change deepens, Lake Mead and Lake Powell continue drying up  

A body in a barrel, ghost towns, a crashed B-29:What other secrets are buried in Lake Mead?

The lake’s water levels have fallen nearly 160 feet since July 2000 and 26 feet since July 2021.

The severity of this loss is underlined by its impact on those who have relied on Lake Mead’s water for decades. The images also arrive as states throughout the West experience high levels of drought – with 74% of nine Western states currently reporting some level of drought, and 35% facing extreme levels, according to the U.S. Drought monitor.

“The largest reservoir in the United States supplies water to millions of people across seven states, tribal lands, and northern Mexico,” NASA Earth Observatory’s news release reads. “It now also provides a stark illustration of climate change and a long-term drought that may be the worst in the U.S. West in 12 centuries.”

‘Death by 1,000 cuts’:How the US Forest Service is losing a war over water in the West

In recent months, the rapidly receding waters at Lake Mead have revealed human bodies, ghost towns, a crashed B-29 Superfortress and more. 

“This is just the tip of the iceberg,” Travis Heggie, a former National Park Service official who has studied deaths at Lake Mead Recreation Area, told USA TODAY in May.

The water elevation at Hoover Dam, which formed Lake Mead, is dropping significantly. According to data from the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation, the water elevation of Hoover Dam was almost 1,200 feet in July 2000. As of July 18 this year, it had fallen to about 1,040 feet.

The last time Lake Mead was at maximum capacity, reaching an elevation of about 1,220 feet near the dam, was in 1983 and 1999, NASA notes.

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2022/07/22/nasa-images-lake-mead-water-level-loss/10123279002/

An entire police department in North Carolina resigned Friday after the hiring of a new town manager.

Police officers and other officials in the small town of Kenly have submitted mass-resignation letters citing stress, a hostile work environment and an inability to continue the department’s long-term betterment projects.

In a letter to Town Manager Justine Jones, Police Chief Josh Gibson expressed regret toward the negative changes he felt were occurring in the department.

“In my 21 years at the Kenly Police Department, we have seen ups and downs. But, especially in the last 3 years, we have made substantial progress that we had hoped to continue. However, due to the hostile work environment now present in the Town of Kenly, I do not believe progress is possible,” Gibson wrote.

Neither the police department nor Jones has been willing to speak to the media on the nature of these complaints, local outlets report.

MISSOURI CITY POLICE CHIEF ‘UNEXPECTEDLY’ RESIGNS ALONG WITH EVERY SINGLE OFFICER

Gibson’s letter was only one of several resignations that were made publicly available after the mass exodus.

Police car siren.
(iStock)

“It is with a heavy heart that I take this action. I have been with the town since 2004 and fully expected to finish my law enforcement career with the Town of Kenly. Unfortunately, there are decisions being made that jeopardize my safety and make me question what the future will hold for a Kenly Police Officer,” wrote officer G.W. Strong.

While all others addressed their resignations to Gibson, the police chief himself submitted his to Jones.

NEW YORK CRIME CRISIS: ROCHESTER POLICE OFFICER KILLED IN SHOOTING, ANOTHER INJURED

Jones was just hired as town manager last month after serving in various local government positions in other states. Her new position was celebrated by the Town of Kenly in a June press release.

“Jones has dedicated her career to public service over the last 16 years during which she worked in progressively responsible positions with local governments in Minnesota, Virginia, South Carolina and North Carolina,” the town wrote in the statement. “She began her municipal career as the Executive Assistant to the City Manager and National Urban Fellow in the City of Norfolk, Virginia”

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP 

Police leadership and active duty officers were joined in their resignation by other officials.

“I have truly enjoyed working for The Town the last four years. Due to the current situations and the stress in the work area lately, my main concern is my health, and right now I need to focus on my wellbeing. The work area is very hostile and I will not let myself be around that kind of atmosphere,” wrote Christy Thomas, utility clerk for the town of Kenly.

Some outgoing government employees kept their messages curt and to the point — including Town Clerk Sharon Evans.

“I will be retiring sooner than I had planned. This is my two weeks notice as of today. I can no longer work under the stress,” wrote Evans.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/us/entire-north-carolina-police-department-resigns-new-town-manager-hired

WASHINGTON (AP) — For more than a year, President Joe Biden’s ability to avoid the coronavirus seemed to defy the odds. When he finally did test positive, the White House was ready. It set out to turn the diagnosis into a “teachable moment” and dispel any notion of a crisis.

“The president does what every other person in America does every day, which is he takes reasonable precautions against COVID but does his job,” White House Chief of Staff Ron Klain told MSNBC late in the afternoon on Thursday.

It was a day that began with Biden’s COVID-19 results and included repeated assurances over the coming hours that the president was hard at work while isolating in the residential areas of the White House with “very mild symptoms” including a runny nose, dry cough and fatigue.

Biden, in a blazer and Oxford shirt, recorded a video from the White House balcony telling people: “I’m doing well, getting a lot of work done. And, in the meantime, thanks for your concern. And keep the faith. It’s going to be OK.”

“Keeping busy!” he also tweeted.

On Friday, Biden was scheduled to meet virtually with his economic team and senior advisors to discuss congressional priorities.

It was all part of an administration effort to shift the narrative from a health scare to a display of Biden as the personification of the idea that most Americans can get COVID and recover without too much suffering and disruption if they’ve gotten their shots and taken other important steps to protect themselves.

The message was crafted to alleviate voters’ concerns about Biden’s health — at 79, he’s the oldest person ever to be president. And it was aimed at demonstrating to the country that the pandemic is far less of a threat than it was before Biden took office, thanks to widespread vaccines and new therapeutic drugs.

Conveying that sentiment on Day 1 of Biden’s coronavirus experience virus wasn’t always easy, though.

In a lengthy briefing with reporters, White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said repeatedly that the White House had been as transparent as possible about the president’s health. But she parried with reporters over specifics. And when pressed about where Biden might have contracted the virus, she responded, “I don’t think that that matters, right? I think what matters is we prepared for this moment.”

Jean-Pierre and White House COVID-⁠19 Response Coordinator Dr. Ashish Jha didn’t fully answer questions about whether Biden began isolating as soon as he started experiencing symptoms on Wednesday night, as federal guidelines suggest, or did so following his positive test the next day. Jha declined to speculate on some aspects of the president’s prognosis, characterizing the questions as hypotheticals.

Michael Osterholm, director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota, said it’s important for Americans to know they must remain careful about the virus, which continues to kill hundreds of people daily.

“That’s the balance that we have to strike,” Osterholm said. “The president of the United States will do very well. But that may not be true for everyone.”

Biden’s first-day symptoms were mild in large part because he’s fully vaccinated and boosted, according to a statement issued by his physician, Dr. Kevin O’Connor. The president also is taking Paxlovid, an antiviral drug designed to reduce the severity of the disease.

Jha said Biden’s case was being prioritized, meaning it will likely take less than a week for sequencing to determine which variant of the virus Biden contracted. Omicron’s highly contagious BA.5 substrain is responsible for 78% of new COVID-19 infections reported in the U.S. last week, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s latest data released Tuesday.

Jean-Pierre said first lady Jill Biden was in close contact with the president, but she declined to discuss others who also might have been exposed, citing privacy reasons. Biden had traveled to Massachusetts a day earlier to promote efforts to combat climate change and flew on Air Force One with several Democratic leaders, including Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren.

A White House official confirmed that Vice President Kamala Harris was also in close contact with Biden, and Klain said he was too.

Klain, who said he hoped the president’s testing positive a “teachable moment” for the country, said the White House wasn’t aware of any positive COVID results that were linked to the president’s case.

During her briefing, Jean-Pierre bristled at suggestions the Biden administration wasn’t being much more forthcoming with information about the president’s illness than that of his predecessor, Donald Trump. The former president contracted COVID-19 in the fall of 2020, before vaccines were available, and was hospitalized at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center for three nights.

“I wholeheartedly disagree,” Jean-Pierre said of comparison. “We are doing this very differently — very differently — than the last administration.”

Asked about the possibility Biden might need to be hospitalized, Jha stressed that the president was “doing well” and added that there were “obviously a lot of resources available here at the White House to take care of him.”

“Walter Reed is always on standby for presidents. That’s always an option,” he added. “That’s true whether the president had COVID or not.”

Dr. Leana Wen, a public health professor at George Washington University, said it was good for the White House to send the message that Biden can keep working even after testing positive.

“That shows that it’s business as usual,” Wen said.

Jean-Pierre’s predecessor, Jen Psaki, noted that White House officials have “been preparing for this probably for several months now, given the percentage of people in the country who have tested positive.”

“What they need to do over the next couple of days is show him working and show him still active and serving as president and I’m certain they’ll likely do that,” Psaki, who left her post as White House press secretary in May, said on MSNBC, where she’s becoming a commentator.

Biden plans to continue to isolate until he tests negative, the White House said.

Dr. Eric Topol, head of Scripps Research Translational Institute, said that could mean he’s “out of commission from interacting with people for at least eight to 10 days.”

“This could go on easily for a couple of weeks, but the good thing is they are going to monitor him very carefully,” Topol said. “That is what we should be doing for everyone so that we don’t keep playing into the virus’ hands, causing more spread when it’s already hyper-spreadable.”

Source Article from https://apnews.com/article/biden-covid-teachable-moment-a3013aa63e6efa4d8130881f0f1b2329

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/national-security/2022/07/22/mike-pence-secret-service-january-6/

LIVE UPDATES

This is CNBC’s live blog tracking developments on the war in Ukraine. See below for the latest updates. 

A U.N.-backed deal to resume exports of Ukrainian grain could be signed on Friday, easing a global food crisis caused by the conflict in Eastern Europe.

International onlookers are cautious on the deal and Russia will be closely watched to make sure it upholds its side of the agreement.

The State Department has slammed Russian attacks on Ukrainian agricultural facilities and a months-long blockade on foodstuff exports. “To date, Russia has weaponized food during this conflict,” State Department spokesman Ned Price said during a daily press briefing.

Fight for Donetsk will ‘likely last through the summer,’ Defense official says

A senior Defense official said the Pentagon assesses that the fight for Donetsk will “likely last through the summer.”

The official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said that Russian forces are significantly behind on their timelines and continue to face stiff Ukrainian resistance.

Earlier in the week, U.S. Army Gen. Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told reporters at the Pentagon that the fight in the wider Donbas region is “very intense.”

Milley also said that Russia has only advanced about 10 miles in the past three months.

“Ukrainians are making the Russians pay for every inch of territory that they gain,” he added.

— Amanda Macias

Russia hands out passports in Ukraine cities Kherson and Melitopol regions

People arrive to receive Russian passports at a center in Kherson after Russian President Vladimir Putin signed a decree to make it easier for residents of Kherson and the Melitopol regions to get passports.

-Getty Images

Russia surprises markets with bigger-than-expected rate cut

Russia’s central bank surprised markets with a bigger-than-expected rate cut, as it responds to a strong currency, cooling inflation and a possible recession.

The Central Bank of Russia cut its key interest rate by a bigger-than-expected 150 basis points — analysts had expected a rate cut of 50 basis points, according to a Reuters poll.

It comes as central banks elsewhere scramble to hike rates as they attempt to reign in sky-high inflation.

— Katrina Bishop

How important is Ukrainian grain?

You might be wondering why a deal on Ukraine’s agricultural exports in the Black Sea would be so critical for the globe. The United States Department of Agriculture has the following facts from before the conflict began:

Ukraine is one of the world’s top agricultural producers and exporters.

More than 55% of Ukraine’s land area is arable land.

Ukraine is normally the world’s top producer of sunflower meal, oil, and seed and the world’s top exporter of sunflower meal and oil.

Ukraine is the world’s sixth-largest corn producer.

Ukraine is the world’s seventh-largest wheat producer.

Ukrainian wheat exports were valued at $5.1 billion, with Egypt, Indonesia, Turkey, Pakistan, and Bangladesh as the primary destinations.

—Matt Clinch

Germany takes 30% stake in Uniper under bailout deal

The German government has agreed to bail out gas firm Uniper with a 15-billion-euro ($15.24 billion) rescue deal.

Uniper, the first in Germany to sound the alarm over soaring energy bills, submitted a bailout application for government support earlier this month.

Read more here.

—Katrina Bishop

Zelenskyy hints at Turkey grain deal

In his regular nightly address Thursday, Ukrainian President Vlodymyr Zelenskyy hinted at the prospect of a deal in Istanbul later on Friday.

“Tomorrow we also expect news for our state from Turkey — regarding the unblocking of our ports,” he said.

Millions of tons of wheat has been stuck in the country. Ukraine is one of the world’s biggest wheat exporters, and Russian forces have been blocking the Black Sea, where the grain silos at key Ukrainian ports are located.

—Matt Clinch

Turkey says Russia and Ukraine are close to signing grain export deal

A U.N.-backed deal to resume exports of Ukrainian grain could be signed on Friday, easing a global food crisis caused by the conflict in Eastern Europe.

The signing is reportedly due to be held at Istanbul’s Dolmabahce Palace in Turkey, with the spokesperson for Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan telling reporters Thursday that Russia and Ukraine had come to an agreement.

International onlookers are cautious on the deal and Russia will be closely watched to make sure it upholds its side of the agreement. Grain exporters in the Ukrainian port city of Odesa have been unable to export their goods due to the war, fueling a global shortage of the commodity and pushing up food prices.

The agreement will reportedly allow Ukrainian vessels to guide ships through mined waters, with a localized truce in place so Russia does not attack. Turkish officials are also expected to inspect the shipments to rule out any weapons smuggling.

Moscow, which blames Ukraine for laying the mines, is also expected to restart its own grain exports in the Black Sea under the agreement.

—Matt Clinch

Russia deliberately weaponized food in Ukraine, State Department says

The State Department slammed Russian attacks on Ukrainian agricultural facilities and a months-long blockade on foodstuff exports.

For months, Russian warships have blocked Ukrainian ports on the Sea of Azov and the Black Sea.

“To date, Russia has weaponized food during this conflict. They have destroyed agricultural facilities they prevented millions of tons of Ukrainian grain from getting to those who need it,” State Department spokesman Ned Price said during a daily press briefing.

“It is a reflection of Russia’s disregard for lives and livelihoods not only in the region but well beyond that,” he added.

Price’s comments come on the heels of an announcement that the United Nations, Turkey, Russia and Ukraine will soon sign an agreement that will usher in a sea corridor for Ukrainian grain exports.

“We should never have been in this position in the first place. This was a deliberate decision on the part of the Russian Federation to weaponize food,” Price said.

— Amanda Macias

Ukraine’s first lady meets with HP representatives and accepts computers for students

Ukraine’s first lady Olena Zelenska met with representatives from HP and the Global Business Coalition for Education this week to accept a donation of computers for children, students and healthcare providers in Ukraine.

“We are very grateful for HP’s and the Global Business Coalition for Education’s support,” Zelenska wrote in a statement about the $30 million HP initiative. “Their efforts and contribution will help students in Ukraine and beyond continue learning and prepare for the future, like any other youth in the world,” she added.

Enrique Lores, CEO of HP, said that the Palo Alto-based company would continue to mobilize tech resources for Ukraine.

“Through our partnership with the Global Business Coalition for Education, we will put personal computers in the hands of students and families who have been displaced from their homes and classrooms,” Lores wrote in a statement.

 — Amanda Macias

Read CNBC’s previous live coverage here:

UK to send more weapons to Ukraine; more than 9.5 million Ukrainians have fled

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2022/07/22/russia-ukraine-live-updates.html

Sen. Josh Hawley, the Missouri Republican who raised his fist in solidarity with a crowd of Trump supporters outside the Capitol on Jan. 6, was forced to flee the rioters in new footage presented Thursday night by the House Jan. 6 committee in a televised hearing.

Hawley can be seen running through a hallway in the Capitol and then quickly making his way down a staircase with colleagues. The video was taken just hours after the senator was photographed saluting protesters massing at security gates near the building.

Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., runs through the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.January 6th Hearings

Rep. Elaine Luria, a Democratic member of the Jan. 6 committee, cited panel interviews with law enforcement in describing how Hawley’s salute “riled up the crowd” and made it harder for officers to protect the complex from the pro-Trump mob.

Not long after Hawley made the gesture, barriers on the east side of the Capitol were breached, she said.

“Later that day, Sen. Hawley fled after those protesters he helped to rile up stormed the Capitol,” Luria said. She noted that many of the people he saluted joined the mob after breaking through the barricades.

Footage of Hawley fleeing during the riot drew bursts of laughter in the committee hearing room.

Following the riot, Hawley condemned the violence at the Capitol and said he was simply objecting to the electors during the counting of electoral votes to give voice to his constituents in Missouri, a state that went for then-President Donald Trump by 15 percentage points in 2020.

NBC News has reached out to Hawley’s office for comment on the new footage.

In remarks outside the hearing room after seeing the footage, Washington, D.C., police officer Michael Fanone, who was violently assaulted Jan. 6, called Hawley a “bitch” for running away.

“And the fist pump, combined with what he did in the immediate aftermath, just shows the true character, or lack thereof,” he told Politico, which tweeted a video of his comments.

“You see the way that these guys perform in public and then what they are in reality,” Fanone added. “You get a lot of that nonsense up here on Capitol Hill with these members of Congress that have become like a caricature in the media. But in reality, they have no character, they have no honor, they have no integrity, and the way they behave outside of the camera’s eye is very different.”

Thursday’s prime-time hearing offered a timeline of the 187 minutes between the end of Trump’s speech at the Ellipse on Jan. 6 to when he tweeted a video telling rioters to “go home.” The attack on the Capitol unfolded during that period.

The committee heard live testimony from a pair of Trump White House aides, Sarah Matthews and Matthew Pottinger, who resigned following Trump’s actions Jan. 6. The House panel also presented never-before-seen outtakes from a speech Trump gave Jan. 7, with one showing him stopping and telling aides off-camera, “I don’t want to say the election is over.”

Source Article from https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/congress/josh-hawley-seen-fleeing-trump-mob-riled-newly-released-jan-6-footage-rcna39490

Editor’s note: The Rochester police officer who was killed Thursday has been identified as Anthony P. Mazurkiewicz. A second officer, Sino Seng, was shot and wounded. Get our latest coverage.

A Rochester police officer, who was one of two shot on Bauman Street Thursday night, has died from his injuries.

Police spokesman Lt. Gregory Bello said the two were shot shortly after 9:15 p.m. by a single individual. Police called for aerial help to search for the suspected gunman; it is currently unknown publicly if he is in custody.

One of the officers later died, according to sources. More information was not immediately available.

One officer was taken to Rochester General Hospital and the other to Strong Memorial Hospital; both were taken in private vehicles. A female was also shot and treated at the scene.

The shootings come on the same day that Mayor Malik Evans declared a state of emergency in the city because of gun violence.

More:Remembering the Rochester police officers killed in the line of duty

Speaking of the 41 homicides this year, Evans said, “The trajectory, unless we change something, will be the same. We will break records in terms of the bloodshed and carnage we see in out streets.”

In his statement Thursday night, he said: “The tragic gun violence in Rochester must come to an end. Today, we declared a gun violence emergency in our community and this shooting is proof that we are indeed, in an emergency.

“Our police officers are out there sacrificing their lives for us every day. They perform their jobs in dangerous conditions as we go about our daily lives and we owe them a great debt of gratitude. I pray for the comfort of the officers shot tonight, and for their families, friends, and all of their fellow first responders.”

More:Mayor Evans, trying to combat bloodshed, declares gun violence emergency in Rochester

Source Article from https://www.democratandchronicle.com/story/news/2022/07/22/rochester-ny-police-shooting-two-rpd-officers-shot-bauman-street/65379945007/

WASHINGTON, July 21 (Reuters) – Donald Trump sat for hours watching the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol unfold on live TV, ignoring pleas by his children and other close advisers to urge his supporters to stop the violence, witnesses told a congressional hearing on Thursday.

The House of Representatives Select Committee used its eighth hearing this summer to detail what members said was Trump’s refusal to act for the 187 minutes between the end of his inflammatory speech at a rally urging supporters to march on the Capitol, and the release of a video telling them to go home.

“President Trump sat at his dining table and watched the attack on television while his senior-most staff, closest advisors and family members begged him to do what is expected of any American president,” said Democratic Representative Elaine Luria.

The panel played videotaped testimony from White House aides and security staff discussing the events of the day.

Former White House counsel Pat Cipollone was asked question after question in the recorded testimony about Trump’s actions: did he call the secretary of defense? The attorney general? The head of Homeland Security? Cipollone answered “no” to each query.

“He’s got to condemn this shit ASAP,” Trump’s eldest son, Don Jr., appealed in a text message to Trump’s chief of staff, Mark Meadows. “They will try to fuck his entire legacy on this if it gets worse.”

The onslaught on the Capitol, as Vice President Mike Pence met with lawmakers, led to several deaths, injured more than 140 police officers and delayed certification of Democratic President Joe Biden’s victory in the November 2020 election.

Representative Adam Kinzinger, one of two Republicans on the committee, said Trump had no interest in calling off the rioters.

“The mob was accomplishing President Trump’s purpose, so of course he didn’t intervene,” Kinzinger said.

Trump remains popular among Republican voters and continues to flirt with the possibility of running for president again in 2024. But a Reuters/Ipsos poll concluded on Thursday found his standing among Republicans has weakened slightly since the hearings began six weeks ago. Some 40% of Republicans now say he is at least partially to blame for the riot, up from 33% in a poll conducted as the congressional hearings were getting underway. read more

Trump denies wrongdoing and continues to claim falsely that he lost because of widespread fraud. “These hearings are as fake and illegitimate as Joe Biden — they can’t do anything without a teleprompter,” Trump spokesperson Liz Harrington said in a post on his Truth Social social media site during the hearing.

OFFICERS FEARED FOR THEIR LIVESScheduled during the evening to reach a broad television audience, the hearing was shown on most of the major U.S. television networks. Another round of hearings will begin in September, said the panel’s Republican vice chairperson, Representative Liz Cheney.

Witnesses in the room were Matthew Pottinger, a deputy national security adviser under Trump, and Sarah Matthews, a deputy press secretary in his White House. Both resigned in the hours following the riot.

“If the president had wanted to make a statement and address the American people, he could have been on camera almost immediately,” Matthews testified. “If he had wanted to make an address from the Oval Office, we could have assembled the White House press corps within minutes.”

The panel of seven Democratic and two Republican House members has been investigating the attack for the past year, interviewing more than 1,000 witnesses and amassing tens of thousands of documents.

It has used the hearings to build a case that Trump’s efforts to overturn his defeat by Biden in 2020 constitute dereliction of duty and illegal conduct, far beyond normal politics.

Audio testimony from a White House security official whose identity was shielded bolstered previous testimony that administration officials knew there were multiple reports of weapons in the crowd of supporters who gathered for Trump’s rally speech.

The committee showed video of several White House officials describing their dismay that afternoon at seeing a Twitter post by Trump to his supporters in which he blamed Pence for not stopping the certification.

“Trump was pouring gasoline on the fire,” Matthews said.

The security official said some of Pence’s bodyguards began to fear for their own lives. “There were calls to say goodbye to family members,” the security official said. “The VP detail thought this was about to get very ugly.”

The attack on the Capitol led to several deaths. More than 850 people have been charged with taking part in the riot, with more than 325 guilty pleas so far.

Near the end of the hearing, the committee showed outtakes of a video Trump made on Jan. 7 addressing what he called “the heinous attack.” But he refused to say in the speech that the election was over.

Trump eventually left Washington on Jan. 20 rather than attend Biden’s inauguration that day.

Asked for his assessment of the riot, Cipollone said in the testimony shown on Thursday that it could not be justified in any way. “It was wrong and it was tragic and it was a terrible day for this country.”

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Source Article from https://www.reuters.com/world/us/us-capitol-probes-season-finale-focus-trump-supporters-three-hour-rage-2022-07-21/

A man “attempted to stab” Rep. Lee Zeldin, the New York Republican gubernatorial candidate, at a rally on Thursday, his campaign said. No one was injured in the attack in Perinton, Monroe County, authorities said.

The latest: The Monroe County Sheriff’s Office said in a statement early Friday that a suspect was charged with second degree attempted assault after a man climbed on stage at the event with “a weapon in his hand, swung it towards Zeldin’s neck, and told him, ‘You’re done.'”

  • The suspect, identified as David Jakubonis, 43, of Fairport, Monroe County, was taken into custody before being “arraigned in Perinton Town Court and released on his own recognizance.”
  • Zeldin tweeted late Thursday, “Someone tried to stab me on stage during this evening’s rally, but fortunately, I was able to grab his wrist and stop him for a few moments until others tackled him.” Law enforcement was on the scene “within minutes,” he said.

The big picture: Witnesses say Zeldin was giving a speech on bail reform when the attack happened, WIVB News reports.

  • Zeldin and his team praised running mate, former New York Police Department Deputy Inspector Alison Esposito, for “quickly” jumping in to help tackle the man.
  • “Congressman Zeldin went back on stage to finish his remarks and thank the law enforcement officers who responded to the scene,” per a statement from his spokesperson Katie Vincentz.
  • Zeldin said he and everyone who attended the event were “ok” and he thanked “the attendees who stepped up quickly to assist and the law enforcement officers who quickly responded,” along with those who had contacted him after the attack.

What they’re saying: New York Gov. Kathy Hochul, Zeldin’s Democratic rival, tweeted that she’s relieved to hear that Zeldin wasn’t injured.

  • “I condemn this violent behavior in the strongest terms possible — it has no place in New York,” Hochul said.

Worth noting: Trump ally Zeldin has pledged to be tough on crime if he’s elected New York’s first Republican governor in some 15 years. He said in his Twitter post that he’s “as resolute as ever to do my part to make NY safe again.”

  • Vincentz tweeted that “far more must be done” to make New York safe.
  • “This is out of hand. Rep. Zeldin is just the latest NY whose life has been affected by the out of control crime & violence in NY,” she said. “This must stop! Thankfully, we still have exceptional officers answering the call to protect us.”

Go deeper: Capitol Police data indicates threats to lawmakers have surged since 2017

Editor’s note: This article has been updated with new details throughout.

Source Article from https://www.axios.com/2022/07/22/gop-rep-zeldin-attacked-new-york-governor-campaign-event

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/health/2022/07/21/biden-covid-return-to-normal-strategy/

  • A deal to resume Ukraine’s Black Sea grain exports is expected to be signed by Ukraine, Russia, Turkey and the United Nations on Friday. The agreement will be put in writing by the parties and signed at the Dolmabahce Palace offices at 1.30pm GMT, the office of the Turkish president, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, said. Ukraine’s foreign ministry spokesperson, Oleg Nikolenko, added: “In summary, a document may be signed which will bind the sides to [ensure] safe functioning of export routes in the Black Sea.”

  • Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/jul/22/russia-ukraine-war-what-we-know-on-day-149-of-the-invasion

    Members of Mike Pence’s Secret Service detail phoned loved ones to say their final farewells on Jan 6, 2021 as rioters called for Pence’s head came within feet of the former vice president, it was revealed on Thursday.

    The agents feared for their lives as they made a frantic effort to evacuate Pence from the Senate chamber while angry rioters called for the vice president to be hanged.

    “The members of the VP detail at this time were starting to fear for their own lives,” an unidentified security official told the select panel investigating the Capitol riot.

    “There was a lot of yelling, a lot of very personal calls over the radio, so it was disturbing. I don’t like talking about it,” he testified.

    The agents protecting Pence were preparing for a potential clash with the rioters when they placed the desperate phone calls.

    “There were calls to say goodbye to family members,” he continued. “For whatever the reason was on the ground, the VP detail thought that this was about to get very ugly.”

    He added: “We came very close to either Service having to use lethal options or worse.”

    Mike Pence’s agents were prepared for the rioting after there were desperate phone calls placed on their behalf regarding the clash.
    Siavosh Hosseini/SOPA Images/Shu

    As Pence was held in an office off the Senate floor at 2:13 p.m., a female agent was heard saying on the radio: “They gained access to the second floor and they are about five feet from me down below.”

    “If we lose any more time, we may lose the ability to leave, so if we are going to leave, we need to go now,” another agent recalled.

    Security footage showed the corridors of the building filling with smoke as the tension grew.

    The panel’s eighth hearing on Thursday focused on former President Donald Trump’s failure to call on the rioters to leave the Capitol for more than three hours after the building was breached.

    Matthew Pottinger, Trump’s former national security advisor and former deputy press secretary Sarah Matthews told lawmakers that his inaction led them to hand in their resignations that same day.

    The select panel said hearings will be scheduled for September after lawmakers spend next month organizing an abundance of new evidence about the former president’s role in the riots.

    Source Article from https://nypost.com/2022/07/22/ex-vice-president-pences-secret-service-agents-made-calls-to-loved-ones-during-jan-6-riot/

    WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court won’t allow the Biden administration to implement a policy that prioritizes deportation of people in the country illegally who pose the greatest public safety risk.

    The court’s order Thursday leaves the policy frozen nationwide for now. The vote was 5-4 with conservative Justice Amy Coney Barrett joining liberal Justices Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan and Ketanji Brown Jackson in saying they would have allowed the Biden administration to put in place the guidance.

    The court also announced it would hear arguments in the case, saying they would be in late November.

    The order is the first public vote by Jackson since she joined the court June 30 following the retirement of Justice Stephen Breyer.

    The justices were acting on the administration’s emergency request to the court following conflicting decisions by federal appeals courts over a September directive from the Homeland Security Department that paused deportation unless individuals had committed acts of terrorism, espionage or “egregious threats to public safety.”

    The federal appeals court in Cincinnati earlier this month overturned a district judge’s order that put the policy on hold in a lawsuit filed by Arizona, Ohio and Montana.

    But in a separate suit filed by Texas and Louisiana, a federal judge in Texas ordered a nationwide halt to the guidance and a federal appellate panel in New Orleans declined to step in.

    The judge’s order amounted to a “nationwide, judicially imposed overhaul of the Executive Branch’s enforcement priorities,” Solicitor General Elizabeth Prelogar wrote in a court filing. Prelogar is the administration’s top Supreme Court lawyer.

    In their Supreme Court filing, Texas and Louisiana argued that the administration’s guidance violates federal law that requires the detention of people who are in the U.S. illegally and who have been convicted of serious crimes. The states said they would face added costs of having to detain people the federal government might allow to remain free inside the United States, despite their criminal records.

    The guidance, issued after Joe Biden became president, updated a Trump-era policy that removed people in the country illegally regardless of criminal history or community ties.

    Source Article from https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/wireStory/supreme-court-biden-implement-immigration-policy-87207937

    Sen. Josh Hawley (R-MO) made an inadvertently comedic cameo at the Jan. 6 committee’s primetime hearing Thursday night when Rep. Elaine Luria (D-VA) laid out what Donald Trump’s most loyal congressional supporters were up to during the Capitol insurrection.

    “Senator Josh Hawley also had to flee,” Luria said. “Earlier that afternoon, before the joint session started, he walked across the east front of the Capitol.”

    “As you can see in this photo, he raised his fist in solidarity with the protesters already amassing at the security gates,” she added, displaying the iconic photo of Hawley on the morning of Jan. 6. “We spoke with a Capitol Police officer who was out there at that time. She told us that Senator Hawley’s gesture riled up the crowd, and it bothered her greatly because he was doing it in a safe space, protected by the officers and the barriers.”

    Then came the twist. “Later that day, Senator Hawley fled after those protesters he helped to rile up stormed the Capitol,” Luria said, before adding, “See for yourself.”

    With that, the committee room was treated to the slow-motion security camera footage of Hawley running across the screen to evade the rioters who had violently entered his safe space.

    Multiple reporters conveyed that the video of Hawley was met with “loud laughter” by those watching inside the hearing room. “It was a badly needed moment of levity in a room that was increasingly (understandably) tense and dark,” MSNBC’s Ali Vitali tweeted.

    “Think about what we’ve seen,” Luria concluded. “Undeniable violence at the Capitol, the vice president being evacuated to safety by the Secret Service, senators running through the hallways of the senate to get away from the mob. As the commander in chief, President Trump was oath and duty-bound to protect the Capitol.”

    But as we now know from Thursday’s testimony, he actively chose not to do that.

    Source Article from https://www.thedailybeast.com/jan-6-committee-embarrasses-josh-hawley-with-fleeing-video

    WASHINGTON—President Donald Trump spent hours in front of a television at the White House watching the attack on the Capitol unfold on Jan. 6, 2021, ignoring pleas from staff, supporters and family to call off the rioters—and even at times encouraging them—according to testimony Thursday at a prime-time hearing of the House committee investigating the attack.

    “The case against Donald Trump, in these hearings, is not made by witnesses who are his political enemies,” said Rep. Liz Cheney (R., Wyo.), the committee’s vice chair, at the close of the hearing, the eighth and last of the current series. “It is instead a series of confessions by Donald Trump’s own appointees, his own friends, his own campaign officials, people who worked for him for years, and his own family.”

    Source Article from https://www.wsj.com/articles/jan-6-committee-hearing-to-focus-on-trumps-actions-during-attack-on-capitol-11658395800

    U.S. Rep. Lee Zeldin, the Republican nominee for New York governor, seen here speaking at the 2022 New York GOP Convention in March, was attacked on Thursday by man with a pointed weapon at an upstate event but was uninjured, his campaign said.

    John Minchillo/AP


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    John Minchillo/AP

    U.S. Rep. Lee Zeldin, the Republican nominee for New York governor, seen here speaking at the 2022 New York GOP Convention in March, was attacked on Thursday by man with a pointed weapon at an upstate event but was uninjured, his campaign said.

    John Minchillo/AP

    NEW YORK — U.S. Rep. Lee Zeldin, the Republican candidate for New York governor, was attacked by a man who apparently tried to stab him at an upstate event Thursday but the congressman managed to escape uninjured, his campaign said.

    Zeldin was giving a speech when a man climbed onstage and appeared to begin wrestling with the congressman, said Katie Vincentz, a spokesperson for his campaign. A video of the event in Perinton posted on Twitter showed the man appearing to grab Zeldin’s arm before the two fall to the ground as other people try to intervene.

    Zeldin’s campaign said the attacker was taken into custody and the congressman continued his speech. He is challenging incumbent Democratic Gov. Kathy Hochul this November.

    New York GOP Chair Nick Langworthy told The Associated Press that he didn’t have any details on the attacker or his weapon but exchanged text messages with Zeldin afterward while the congressman was speaking to police.

    “He is fine. He’s not seriously injured. It’s just a chaotic scene there,” Langworthy said.

    Langworthy said Zeldin had “just a little scrape” but it wasn’t what anyone would consider an injury. The chair said he was told that Zeldin’s running mate, former New York Police Department Deputy Inspector Alison Esposito, was there and among those who helped to subdue the man.

    Langworthy is calling on Hochul to issue a security detail for Zeldin to protect him on the campaign trail.

    “This could have gone a lot worse. This could have really ended in a horrible way tonight and this is unacceptable,” he said.

    Hochul, in a statement, condemned the attack and said she was “relieved to hear that Congressman Zeldin was not injured and that the suspect is in custody.”

    Zeldin, an Army Reserve lieutenant colonel who has represented eastern Long Island in Congress since 2015, is a staunch ally of former President Donald Trump and was among the Republicans in Congress who voted against certifying the 2020 election results.

    Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2022/07/21/1112866046/zeldin-attack-republican-ny-governor-candidate