Yahoo! News: Education News
Yahoo! News: Education News |
- U.S. to withdraw 5,000 troops from Afghanistan, close bases: U.S. negotiator
- Hurricane Dorian: ‘Extremely dangerous’ storm kills five in Bahamas as Donald Trump plays golf
- 7 fatally shot, 34 wounded in Chicago during Labor Day weekend gun violence
- Revealed: How a secret Dutch mole aided the U.S.-Israeli Stuxnet cyberattack on Iran
- Venezuela's Guaido in FARC pledge to Bogota
- Former Navy SEAL enters Yale as a 52-year-old freshman
- Tropical Storm Fernand forms in Gulf as it moves toward Mexico
- Hong Kong Businesses Are Reeling Amid the Protests, But Their Workers Say 'Freedom' Is More Important
- Parliament Debates Plan to Block No-Deal Split: Brexit Update
- Hurricane Dorian is slowly inching from the Bahamas toward the US, leaving devastation in its wake
- Cancer overtakes heart disease as biggest rich-world killer
- Five dead as mobs burn down shops in 'anti-foreigner' riots in Johannesburg
- South Korean reporters grill minister nominee for 11 hours
- Spurred by gun violence, Amy O'Rourke will make solo campaign trail debut
- After Texas shooting, McConnell says gun control legislation is up to Trump to decide
- Huawei Accuses U.S. of Harassing Workers, Attacking Network
- California boat fire: 25 bodies found after ‘horrendous’ inferno engulfs diving ship off Santa Cruz Island
- Hurricane Dorian has struck the Bahamas, with Florida, Georgia, and the Carolinas in its path. Here is where and when it's due to strike next.
- Be on your guard, Hong Kong activists tell Merkel before China trip
- Iran oil tanker at centre of diplomatic row with UK 'goes dark' off Syria after being released by Gibraltar
- Mexican official denies vigilante movement has reignited
- View Photos of 2020 BMW M4 Edition ///M Heritage
- The Electoral College isn't set in stone. Texas, Wisconsin could be next to switch sides.
- Student loans: Betsy DeVos rule change means college students must fight for loan forgiveness
- Millions ordered to evacuate as Dorian grows in size and bears down on US
- Greece proposes Parthenon marbles swap, says still wants their permanent return
- Palestinian women protest after suspected honor killing
- 'Bring on Brexit' says French mayor in row over Royal Marines veteran who left rowing machine up Mont Blanc
- Syrian pound at record low on black market: report
- Boris Johnson Humiliated by Parliament in First Brexit Vote
- Why Kamala Harris Hasn’t Caught Fire in the Democratic 2020 Race
- Customer pulls gun on Popeyes employees over chicken sandwiches, police say
- Hurricane Dorian edges 'dangerously close' to Florida after battering Bahamas
- A Rift Reportedly Opens Between Hong Kong Prosecutors and Police as Protests Continue Unabated
- Trump's new Mexico envoy stirs hornet's nest with Frida Kahlo jab
- Amazon crisis: Warring tribes unite against Bolsonaro plans to devastate Brazil’s rainforests for cash
- Paris court hands ex-Thai airline CEO 4-year term over 2007 crash
- Chris Hayes and Progressives’ Lack of Respect for the Constitution
- Hospital staff form human chain in Hong Kong
- Thai Lawmakers to Debate Prime Minister’s Swearing-In Controversy
- View Photos of Aston Martin Vanquish 25 by Callum
- Brother of British woman killed by expat husband pleads with UAE judge for murder sentence
U.S. to withdraw 5,000 troops from Afghanistan, close bases: U.S. negotiator Posted: 02 Sep 2019 04:04 AM PDT The United States would withdraw almost 5,000 troops from Afghanistan and close five bases within 135 days under a draft peace accord agreed with the Taliban, the chief U.S. negotiator, Zalmay Khalilzad, said on Monday. The deal, reached after months of negotiations with representatives from the insurgent movement, must still be approved by U.S. President Donald Trump before it can be signed, Khalilzad said in an interview with Tolo News television. In exchange for the phased withdrawal, the Taliban would commit not to allow Afghanistan to be used by militant groups such as al Qaeda or Islamic State as a base for attacks on the United States and its allies. |
Hurricane Dorian: ‘Extremely dangerous’ storm kills five in Bahamas as Donald Trump plays golf Posted: 02 Sep 2019 09:38 AM PDT Five people have been killed by Hurricane Dorian in the Bahamas, the nation's prime minister has revealed, as Donald Trump spent part of the day playing golf.As the Category 4 storm pummelled the Bahamas with 233kph (145mph) winds, triggering huge damage and massive flooding, Hubert Minnis said at least five people had been killed and that more than 20 had been injured. |
7 fatally shot, 34 wounded in Chicago during Labor Day weekend gun violence Posted: 03 Sep 2019 01:11 PM PDT |
Revealed: How a secret Dutch mole aided the U.S.-Israeli Stuxnet cyberattack on Iran Posted: 02 Sep 2019 09:00 AM PDT |
Venezuela's Guaido in FARC pledge to Bogota Posted: 03 Sep 2019 11:57 AM PDT Venezuela's opposition leader Juan Guaido on Tuesday offered to help neighboring Colombia track down dissident FARC rebels after Bogota accused President Nicolas Maduro of giving them a safe haven. "We are going to collaborate with the Colombian government on intelligence activities, and the detection of these groups that are operating irregularly," Guaido told reporters in Caracas. Colombia's right-wing President Ivan Duque has pledged to hunt down dissident FARC leaders who last week formally rejected a 2016 peace deal and announced a return to arms. |
Former Navy SEAL enters Yale as a 52-year-old freshman Posted: 03 Sep 2019 03:33 AM PDT |
Tropical Storm Fernand forms in Gulf as it moves toward Mexico Posted: 03 Sep 2019 11:04 AM PDT |
Posted: 03 Sep 2019 02:28 AM PDT |
Parliament Debates Plan to Block No-Deal Split: Brexit Update Posted: 03 Sep 2019 12:25 PM PDT (Bloomberg) -- Follow @Brexit, sign up to our Brexit Bulletin, and tell us your Brexit story. Prime Minister Boris Johnson lost his House of Commons majority as he faces a showdown with members of his Conservative Party that will determine the U.K.'s exit from the European Union and the length of his premiership.Johnson has vowed to leave the bloc on Oct. 31, but his political enemies are fighting to stop him from doing so without a divorce deal. Tonight is the first of a series of key votes in Parliament.Key Developments:MP Phillip Lee quit Tory party and joined Liberal Democrats, removing Johnson's majorityPound recovered losses after defection, having fallen below $1.20 for first time since 2017 earlierJohnson's ultimatum: back down or snap election on Oct. 14Vote in Commons expected around 10 p.m. in London on proposal for MPs to take control of parliamentary businessRees-Mogg Pits Parliament Against People (8 p.m.)Leader of the House of Commons Jacob Rees-Mogg gave a lengthy defense of the government's position. He portrayed the ruling Conservatives as being on the side of the 17.4 million voters who opted to leave the EU in 2016.Rees-Mogg accused Oliver Letwin -- the Tory former cabinet minister who sponsored Tuesday's debate, of "stunning arrogance" for his assertion that the U.K.'s "sovereign Parliament of this country clearly deserves an opportunity to be able to decide whether it will accept a policy of no-deal exit."Some 40 minutes after he first stood up, Rees-Mogg wound up concluding that Parliament is setting "itself against the people.""Sovereignty comes from the people to Parliament," he said. "It does not come to Parliament out of a void. If Parliament tries to challenge the people, this stretches the elastic of our constitution near to breaking point."Tory Letwin Calls Johnson Strategy 'Irresponsible' (7:05 p.m.)Former Conservative cabinet minister Oliver Letwin said Boris Johnson's strategy on Brexit is "irresponsible," as he outlined four reasons why MPs should vote to seize control of the order paper in order to pass legislation to stave off a no-deal departure from the European Union.They are:The government hasn't produced a "viable" proposal for an alternative Brexit deal, making the likelihood "slight" he'll secure a revised offer from the EUThis is the last week Parliament can block a no-deal Brexit, because if it waits until Oct. 14 following Johnson's planned suspension, there won't be time to pass legislation and see it play out through any legal challenges from the governmentWithout a new deal or a court order for Johnson to delay Brexit, he'll lead the country into a no-deal BrexitThe government's "intentional willingness to lead the country into a no-deal exit is a threat to our country"Speaker Bercow Grants Emergency Brexit Debate (6:40 p.m.)As expected, Commons Speaker John Bercow said the emergency debate on whether to give rank and file lawmakers control of Parliamentary proceedings on Wednesday will go ahead. It will last for up to three hours if it starts before 7 p.m. on Tuesday, with a vote expected around 10 p.m. This is the first stage in MPs' attempts to delay Brexit and stop a no-deal split.All Tories Who Don't Back Govt to Be Expelled (5.30 p.m.)Johnson's spokesman told reporters that every Conservative MP who doesn't vote with the government tonight -- even those who abstain -- will be expelled from the party. Asked if the same rule would apply next month if the prime minister does get a deal, and some Tory Brexiteers rebel because they would prefer a no-deal split from the EU, the spokesman was less clear.Asked the same question in Parliament, Johnson offered this answer: "What's sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander," an old expression meaning they would be treated the same. That suggests that even without an election, the number of Conservative MPs could shrink considerably before Nov. 1.Gove Says No-Deal Plans Are for Worst-Case (5:10 p.m.)Cabinet Office Minister Michael Gove, who is in charge of no-deal Brexit planning, said the government's preparations are designed to mitigate risks, meet "significant challenges" and ensure the U.K. is ready for the eventuality.Addressing the House of Commons, he said that the planning -- under the codename "operation yellowhammer" represents preparations for a "reasonable worst-case scenario" and doesn't represent a "base case" or a "prediction."A leaked Operation Yellowhammer document last month suggested Britain faces shortages of fuel, food and medicine as well as job losses and disruption at its ports in the event of a no-deal Brexit.Lee Predicts More Tory MPs Will Defect (4:40 p.m.)Phillip Lee, whose defection to the Liberal Democrats cost Johnson his working majority, cited bullying from Johnson's advisers as one of his reasons for quitting. But he said the "straw that broke the camel's back" was Cabinet minister Jacob Rees-Mogg's dismissive treatment of a doctor concerned about patient mortality after a no-deal Brexit during a radio phone-in on Monday."I don't expect to be the last person to make this decision," Lee, a doctor himself, told Sky News. "I haven't left my party. My party has left me."Johnson Pledges to Obey Law (4:35 p.m.)Boris Johnson said the government "will of course uphold the constitution and obey the law." He was answering a question from Labour lawmaker Angela Eagle, who asked "if a bill passes which makes it illegal to leave without a deal, will he and his government abide by the rule of law?"Moments later, Joanna Cherry of the Scottish National Party asked for Johnson's word that he would respect legislation passed by the House of Commons and court decisions in England and Scotland. He replied by referring her to the answer he gave Eagle.How Much Does Lee's Defection Matter? (4.30 p.m.)Does it matter that Johnson no longer has a majority? Conservative whips must have been counting Phillip Lee as a lost cause for months, and the government was already unable to pass anything controversial.But losing an MP adds to the sense of chaos around the government this week. All political parties are coalitions of different factions, and Lee isn't likely to be the last departure this week.With Johnson promising to expel any Tory who votes against him tonight, he seems on course to lose from the party not only two former Conservative chancellors of the exchequer but Winston Churchill's grandson, Nicholas Soames.It's a clear sign that Johnson's honeymoon is over. He is, like Theresa May before him, hamstrung by Parliament.Hammond Asks Johnson to Publish Plans (4.15 p.m.)Former Chancellor of the Exchequer Philip Hammond asked Johnson to publish his alternative Brexit proposals before tonight's vote, to reassure Tory MPs that he has a plan.Johnson replied that he'd told Hammond privately this morning that there was no point in publishing plans as long as there was a danger of the government's negotiating stance being undermined by Parliament."As long as this house is proposing motions such as the ones tonight and tomorrow, I am afraid we have no chance of getting progress from our EU friends," Johnson told the House of Commons. "We are working flat out to secure it, but the measures, if passed tonight, are making the prospects of success less likely."Johnson Accuses Rebels of Adding to Delay (4:05 p.m.)Johnson accused Corbyn -- and Tory rebels -- of holding up Brexit and weakening the hand of U.K. negotiators by seeking to block a no-deal Brexit.Corbyn is "an agent of further delay, further confusion, further uncertainty for business in this country," Johnson said. "What this bill would mean is that unless we agree to the terms" of the EU "they'd be able to keep us in as long as they want and on their terms."Pound Recovers After Johnson Loses Majority (4 p.m.)The pound reversed earlier losses to reach the day's high as the U.K. Government lost its majority in Parliament. This is seen as reducing the chances of a no-deal Brexit by giving Johnson less room to maneuver.Show Us No-Deal Analysis, Corbyn Demands (3:50 p.m.)Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn asked Johnson to publish the government's analysis of its no-deal Brexit preparations."It's becoming increasingly clear that this government only has one objective - no-deal," he told the House of Commons, accusing Johnson's administration of "cowardice" and said no-deal puts the U.K. "at the mercy of Donald Trump" for a trade deal.Johnson to Speak With EU, Ireland About Border (3:45 p.m.)Johnson told the House of Commons that "there is a solution" to the Irish border conundrum and that he'll be raising possible ways through the impasse with the EU "shortly" and with his Irish counterpart Leo Varadkar on Monday."There are practical arrangements that we can find which avoid anyone putting infrastructure on the Irish border," Johnson said. "These have been well worked out and involve measures such as trusted trader schemes, transit provisions, frontier zones, reduced bureaucracy for small and local traders and many others."The premier said he recognizes that agri-foods are "increasingly managed on a common basis across the island of Ireland." He said he's prepared to find a way forward that recognize that reality "provided it clearly enjoys the consent of all parties and institutions with an interest.""It is simply wrong to say that we are not making progress," he said. "There is a lot to do in the coming days but things are moving."The Math of Johnson's Majority (3:40 p.m.)Lee's defection means there are now 310 Conservatives, along with 10 members of the Democratic Unionist Party, who support the government: 320 MPs.Arrayed against them are 322 MPs from other parties. But two Labour MPs and one Tory serve as deputy speakers, and don't vote. That leaves 319 voting MPs supporting the government, and 320 MPs on the opposite benches.But it doesn't mean Johnson's government falls. There are 20 independent MPs, many of them uncomfortable with the idea of a Labour government led by Jeremy Corbyn. So though they oppose Johnson, they may well not act on it.Johnson Loses Majority After Lee Defects (3:35 p.m.)Johnson suffered another blow as Phillip Lee, an anti-Brexit Conservative, defected to the Liberal Democrats. Even with the support of the Democratic Unionist Party, Johnson no longer has a Parliamentary majority.Signs Some Rebels Are Willing To Be Won Over (3:15 p.m.)Johnson has been holding meetings with potential rebels and there are signs that some are looking for reasons to back the government.One said privately that if the prime minister is willing to assure them that he is genuinely seeking a Brexit deal, then he would believe him.Another said there are still moves the government could make to win back support including publishing more detail about its no-deal plans and negotiating strategy, alongside letting MPs sit in October.May Says 'Wait and See' on Voting Intentions (3 p.m.)If former Prime Minister Theresa May is amused at her successor Boris Johnson's efforts to bring rebels round to his cause -- given that he previously voted against her deal with Brussels -- she isn't saying it publicly. Looking cheerful and relaxed after a summer walking holiday in Switzerland, she told Bloomberg she wouldn't comment on whether she might rebel in the vote later."I'm not telling anyone how I'm voting," she said. "Wait and see."Johnson's Outreach Falls Short With Rebels (2:55 p.m.)Prime Minister Boris Johnson's overtures to potential Tory rebels aren't working with all of them. Former minister Margot James said she's minded to vote against the government "because the chances of no deal are too great."Another former minister, Alistair Burt, told Bloomberg he was in the meeting between Johnson and about 15 other MPs this morning. While he described it as "constructive" -- Johnson gave them a lot of time and both sides were able to set out their positions -- he said some of the differences are irreconcilable and he will vote for the proposal to take control of Parliament on Tuesday night, and then for the bill to prevent a no-deal Brexit on Wednesday.Sturgeon: Election Seems Inevitable (2:50 p.m.)Meanwhile in Edinburgh, Scottish First Minister Nicola Sturgeon reiterated her resistance to Johnson's suspension of parliament and a no-deal Brexit. An election now seems inevitable, she said, and her Scottish National Party will campaign against leaving the European Union and for another vote on breaking away from the rest of the U.K."The SNP's opposition to Brexit and a right to choose independence will be at the very heart of that contest," Sturgeon told the Scottish Parliament, before setting out her semi-autonomous government's package of policies for boosting the economy and improving transportation and education.The SNP is the third-largest party in Westminster, with 35 parliamentarians. Should Johnson end up triggering an election, the nationalists will be gunning for the dozen seats they lost in 2017 to the Conservatives when some voters recoiled from supporting another independence referendum to see how Brexit panned out. The face of that Tory campaign in Scotland, Ruth Davidson, quit last week as leader of the party north of the border.EU Says U.K. Has Made No New Proposals (2:45 p.m.)In Brussels, Brexit diplomats from the EU's 27 remaining governments have been meeting for the first time since the summer break to discuss the latest developments.They were told by the European Commission's negotiating team that the U.K. hasn't made any new proposals to prevent a hard border between Northern Ireland and the Irish Republic, according to officials at the meeting. The British government insists that the so-called backstop fallback solution in the current deal must be removed.The Commission believes the U.K. wants to solve the border issue using so-called maximum facilitation, which would see technology and trusted trader systems remove the need for customs checks. But the EU has said there's no evidence that this would be ready in time.Prime Minister Boris Johnson's chief negotiator, David Frost, is due back in Brussels on Wednesday and the Commission reiterated that it's still open to proposals from the U.K.Pence Urges EU to Negotiate 'in Good Faith' (2:40 p.m.)On a visit to Dublin, U.S. Vice President Mike Pence urged Ireland and the EU to negotiate "in good faith" with British Prime Minister Boris Johnson."The United States will look to play whatever helpful role we can play," he said, adding that the U.S. will be open to a trade deal with the U.K. after it exits the EU.Standing alongside Pence, Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadkar said Ireland must stand its ground on the backstop amid a "real risk" of a return to a hard border, and asked Pence to relay that message to Washington.Corbyn Says Stopping No-Deal Comes First (1:20 p.m.)Jeremy Corbyn, leader of the opposition Labour Party, refused to say if he would order his party to vote for a general election if Johnson proposes one to Parliament."The priority is to prevent a no-deal exit from the EU on Oct. 31," Corbyn said in a pooled TV interview when asked about an election. "Let's see what happens after this legislation goes through."Corbyn said he "fully expects" legislation to block a no-deal Brexit to be passed by Parliament this week. "I expect and hope that every Labour MP will support that legislation," he said.Rebel Tories Unconvinced After Johnson Meeting (1 p.m.)The group of Tories seeking to block a no-deal Brexit were unconvinced by Johnson's arguments after meeting with him in Downing Street this morning (see 12 p.m.), according to a person familiar with the group.The meeting was "professional" but Johnson didn't explain sufficiently how he still has enough time to get a deal before 31 Oct., especially since parliament will be suspended for five weeks, the person said. The prime minister didn't explain why the government hasn't yet given the EU a concrete alternative to the backstop, the person said.The group also challenged Johnson's argument that their plan to take control of the order paper is undermining his negotiations with the EU, saying he hasn't convinced them that any real negotiation is taking place. They reiterated that many of the rebels had voted for Theresa May's deal three times so are not trying to stop Brexit or hand power to Jeremy Corbyn's Labour party, the person said.Johnson Called Parliament a 'Rigmarole' (12:50 p.m.)A key legal test of Prime Minister Boris Johnson's plan to suspend Parliament got underway in Edinburgh, revealing a handwritten note from the prime minister in which he called the legislature a "rigmarole." An attorney for a group of lawmakers seeking to halt the suspension said the prime minister's move shows a "breathtaking" contempt for the U.K.'s constitution.Johnson's spokesman, James Slack, told reporters Tuesday the quotes in the court document were selective and didn't contradict the prime minister's position: that proroguing Parliament is necessary to supercharge his domestic political agenda, and not about Brexit.Read more: Johnson Called Parliament a 'Rigmarole' in Handwritten NoteJavid May Be Denied His Moment in the Sun (12:15 p.m.)Sajid Javid may once again be denied his first big speech as chancellor of the exchequer on Wednesday as a result of Brexit maneuvers in Parliament.The announcement of a spending round, due to take place Wednesday afternoon, could be reduced to a Written Ministerial Statement, depending on how events play out in the House of Commons, a U.K. Official said.If MPs succeed in taking control of the order paper, there's a chance they could not make time for government businesses. However, in previous cases, they have done so, according to the official, who was speaking on condition of anonymity.Last week, Javid canceled his first big speech, due to take place in Birmingham, and instead said he would be announcing the spending round this week.Johnson Had 'Cordial' Meeting With Rebels: Official (12 p.m.)Prime Minister Boris Johnson told rebel Tories their efforts to force the government to delay Brexit would damage the U.K.'s negotiating position with the European Union, according to a U.K. official, who described the meeting as "cordial."The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said the proposed legislation to delay Brexit is referred to on private Downing Street documents as the "surrender bill." The official acknowledged that some Tory rebels would not change their position despite Johnson's attempts to persuade them.In the meeting, former Chancellor of the Exchequer Philip Hammond disputed the government's position that a new Brexit deal could be legislated in Parliament in 17 days after it was agreed with the EU, arguing the process would take eight weeks, the official said.Johnson's Office Denies Election Could Move (11:45 a.m.)Boris Johnson's official spokesman, James Slack, said any general election called by the government couldn't be put off until after Oct. 14, and that once Parliament has been dissolved, it'll be 25 days until the vote -- denying Labour claims that once he won Parliamentary approval for an election he could delay it until after Brexit on Oct. 31.Johnson's officials have privately briefed any election would be on Oct. 14. But publicly the prime minister has only said he doesn't want an election."The prime minister does not want to have an election. If MPs take that decision to destroy his negotiation position then -- if any election did take place -- it would be before the European Council, which takes place on Oct. 17 and 18," Slack told reporters.He also said talks with the EU are serious after the Daily Telegraph newspaper reported that the U.K. premier's top adviser, Dominic Cummings, referred to them as a "sham," citing two unidentified sources. Comments from EU leaders show they are serious, Slack said.Application Made for Emergency Debate (11:40 a.m.)The application for an emergency debate on preventing a no-deal Brexit has been formally submitted, the House of Commons said in a posting on Twitter. "The Speaker will consider it later today," it said.The signatures on the application include former Tory ministers Oliver Letwin, Philip Hammond and David Gauke, senior Labour politicians including Yvette Cooper and Hilary Benn, the SNP's Stephen Gethins and Liberal Democrat Tom Brake.EU Stays Quiet on State of Talks (11:30 a.m.)The European Commission's spokeswoman, Mina Andreeva, refused to say whether there has been any progress on substance in the Brexit negotiations. She reiterated the EU is waiting for "concrete proposals compatible with the withdrawal agreement" from the U.K, declining to say whether anything resembling such a proposal has come from the U.K side.Andreeva told reporters the fact the two sides are talking, which wasn't the case before the Group of Seven meetings, signaled progress "on process," while refusing to answer questions about substance. The EU's executive arm is due to unveil an updated set of contingency instructions to companies on Wednesday, with a no-deal Brexit "a concrete possibility" she said.Officials representing the EU's 27 member states are being briefed by the European Commission on Tuesday morning in Brussels about the state of play in talks and preparations for the U.K. leaving the bloc without a deal. The meeting is behind closed doors and diplomats aren't even allowed to take laptops or mobile phones in the room.Johnson Meets Rebel Tories (10:30 a.m.)Prime Minister Boris Johnson is holding a meeting with rebel Tories in Downing Street ahead of Tuesday evening's expected debate and vote on a proposal for members of Parliament to take control of the agenda, enabling them to pass legislation to prevent a no-deal Brexit.The meeting comes as a second Conservative MP, after former Cabinet minister Justine Greening, announced their decision to step down ahead of any election. Keith Simpson, who represents the district of Broadland said on Twitter: "Decided that months ago but now feel like the first officer to man the lifeboats on the Titanic!"Attendees at the meeting with Johnson include former Chancellor of the Exchequer Philip Hammond and other ex-ministers including David Gauke, Alistair Burt, Caroline Nokes and Margot James, who all signed an August 12 letter asking Johnson to commit to reaching an agreement with the EU.Hammond: 'We Will Have the Numbers' (Earlier)Former Chancellor of the Exchequer Philip Hammond confirmed he will vote with other Conservative Party rebels to try to seize control of parliamentary business with the aim of passing legislation to force a Brexit Delay."I think we will have the numbers," Hammond told BBC Radio 4 on Tuesday. "Many colleagues have been incensed by some of the actions over the last week or so," he said, referring to the government's threat to withdraw the party whip from any MPs who rebelled.Hammond also said he wouldn't vote for a general election until legislation to prevent a no-deal Brexit had passed. "My view has been that Prime Minister Johnson has always intended there will be an election, despite what he says."Raab: Government Will Not Delay Brexit (Earlier)Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab made clear the government will not delay Brexit again because it "would send the EU all the wrong signals." He told BBC Radio on Tuesday there was a "lot of positivity" from the bloc's negotiators."We want to get out of this rut," Raab said. Asked whether the government would accept legislation to block a no-deal Brexit if it passed, he replied: "We will always behave lawfully, but we have been very clear that we will not extend beyond the October deadline.""Our intention is to get Brexit delivered before any election," he said, but added the government "will have to think again" if it is blocked.Earlier:U.K. Election Looms as Johnson Raises Stakes of Brexit FightCarney Has Last Chance to Send No-Deal Brexit Message to PublicPound Drops to 2017 Level on Johnson Election Threat: Chart\--With assistance from Nikos Chrysoloras, Alex Morales, Justin Sink, Ian Wishart, Jessica Shankleman and Charlotte Ryan.To contact the reporters on this story: Alex Morales in London at amorales2@bloomberg.net;Robert Hutton in London at rhutton1@bloomberg.net;Kitty Donaldson in London at kdonaldson1@bloomberg.netTo contact the editors responsible for this story: Tim Ross at tross54@bloomberg.net, Stuart Biggs, Thomas PennyFor more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.com©2019 Bloomberg L.P. |
Hurricane Dorian is slowly inching from the Bahamas toward the US, leaving devastation in its wake Posted: 03 Sep 2019 02:43 PM PDT |
Cancer overtakes heart disease as biggest rich-world killer Posted: 03 Sep 2019 02:04 AM PDT Cancer has overtaken heart disease as the leading cause of death in wealthy countries and could become the world's biggest killer within just a few decades if current trends persist, researchers said on Tuesday. Publishing the findings of two large studies in The Lancet medical journal, the scientists said they showed evidence of a new global "epidemiologic transition" between different types of chronic disease. While cardiovascular disease remains, for now, the leading cause of mortality worldwide among middle-aged adults - accounting for 40% of all deaths - that is no longer the case in high-income countries, where cancer now kills twice as many people as heart disease, the findings showed. |
Five dead as mobs burn down shops in 'anti-foreigner' riots in Johannesburg Posted: 03 Sep 2019 10:46 AM PDT The death toll from sweeping anti-immigrant riots in Johannesburg suburbs rose to five on Tuesday as police attempted to restore order with rubber bullets. Large sections of Africa's largest and wealthiest city were deserted as tens of thousands of workers, commuters and school children stayed home to avoid violence directed at 'foreigners' from other parts of Africa. Rocks, bricks and rubber bullets lay strewn across the empty streets of Alexandra after mobs plundered the township overnight, burning and looting shops in their path. Police presence remained heavy last night after officers fired rubber bullets to disperse the last of the crowds. Many shops owned by 'foreigners' were looted on a second night of urban rioting where hundreds of people marched through the streets on Monday in an unusually large expression of anti-foreigner sentiment. A group of Zulu men residing at the Jeppe Hostel shout and wave stick during a speech given by the Police Minister General Bheki Cele in JeppesTown Credit: GUILLEM SARTORIO/AFP Such violence breaks out sporadically in South Africa where many locals blame immigrants for high unemployment, particularly in manual labour. "They beat up everyone they could see, they didn't check to see who owned the shops, whether it was a foreigner or a South African shop," said a Zimbabwe carpenter who asked not to be named. Another migrant, reluctant to say where he came from, who lives in shabby Malvern suburb close to the city centre, said: "The people are going for Nigerians as they do drugs." At least five people died, according to authorities, and about 100 were arrested since the word went around last weekend that there would be a purge on migrants this week. At least two South Africans were killed on Tuesday in a small town south of Johannesburg. A foreign national, believed to be a Somalian shopkeeper, was arrested with an unlicensed gun, according to sources close to the South African police. President Cyril Ramaphosa on Tuesday condemned the wave of xenophobic violence. Attacks on businesses run by "foreign nationals is something totally unacceptable, something that we cannot allow to happen in South Africa," Ramaphosa said in a video address diffused on Twitter. "I want it to stop immediately," said Ramaphosa, adding that there was "no justification" for the violence. President Cyril Ramaphosa said he went to the "hostels" to speak to people about the attacks. The word hostels implies to many South Africans that the people he spoke to were Zulus - who still live in impoverished ghettoes formed during South Africa's mining boom. "This violence is now mutating and taking different forms that represent themselves in a way that we do not want to see in South Africa, where communities seem to be attacking one another. We want this to stop immediately," he said. While most illegal foreigners are from African countries, such as Mozambique, Zimbabwe, Democratic Republic of Congo, Malawi, Burundi, there is a steady flow of illegal nationals from Pakistan who mostly enter the country from Mozambique. South African truckers also started a nation-wide strike on Sunday to protest against the employment of foreign drivers. They staged road blockades and torched foreign-driven vehicles in various parts of the country on Monday. Police say about 200 long-haul drivers were injured or killed on the 350 mile highway between Johannesburg and port city Durban last year, while more than 2000 trucks were attacked. Bishop Paul Verryn, who allowed thousands of Zimbabwe refugees to live for more than five years in Johannesburg's Central Methodist Church, said he was approached by a group of foreign long-haul truck drivers last Saturday: "Somehow they knew violence was coming and came to tell me of their fears." |
South Korean reporters grill minister nominee for 11 hours Posted: 03 Sep 2019 03:31 AM PDT South Korean reporters have grilled President Moon Jae-in's nominee for justice minister for 11 hours over suspected ethical lapses surrounding his family that have triggered an intense political row and cut into Moon's popularity ratings. At a news conference that continued until the early hours of Tuesday, Cho Kuk, a law professor and Moon's former secretary for civil affairs, denied allegations that his daughter received special treatment in her admissions to a top university in Seoul and a medical school in Busan. Cho's news conference at the National Assembly in Seoul was abruptly arranged after his parliamentary confirmation hearing set for Monday and Tuesday fell through amid political bickering between ruling and opposition parties. |
Spurred by gun violence, Amy O'Rourke will make solo campaign trail debut Posted: 03 Sep 2019 04:00 AM PDT |
After Texas shooting, McConnell says gun control legislation is up to Trump to decide Posted: 03 Sep 2019 01:31 PM PDT |
Huawei Accuses U.S. of Harassing Workers, Attacking Network Posted: 03 Sep 2019 02:40 AM PDT (Bloomberg) -- Terms of Trade is a daily newsletter that untangles a world embroiled in trade wars. Sign up here. Huawei Technologies Co. lashed out at the U.S. government Tuesday, accusing Washington of orchestrating a campaign to intimidate its employees and launching cyber-attacks to infiltrate its internal network.China's largest technology company claimed the American government had instructed law enforcement agencies to threaten and attempt to manipulate its employees. Huawei also accused the U.S. of launching attacks against its networks, the company said in a statement without saying how it obtained that information.The accusations ratchet up tensions between Huawei and the Trump administration, which has accused the networking giant of aiding Beijing in espionage and labeled it a national security risk. Washington has blacklisted the Chinese company, curbing the sales of the technology Huawei needs to make phones and telecommunications equipment."It has been using every tool at its disposal – including both judicial and administrative powers, as well as a host of other unscrupulous means – to disrupt the normal business operations of Huawei and its partners," the company said. Other measures included "instructing law enforcement to threaten, menace, coerce, entice, and incite both current and former Huawei employees to turn against the company and work for them."Representatives for the U.S. National Security Council didn't immediately respond to requests for comment outside of normal hours.Read more: Huawei Founder Sees 'Live or Die Moment' From U.S. UncertaintyHuawei has become a focal point for U.S.-Chinese tensions, regarded by some as a bargaining chip in sensitive trade negotiations. The company is grappling with an existential threat after Washington blocked it from purchasing American technology, cutting off vital supplies from Qualcomm Inc. chipsets to Google's Android operating software. The U.S. has also urged countries and companies to reject Huawei technology in their next generation of wireless networks, telling allies it could put their citizens' data at risk of espionage.Those efforts squeezed a company that had been on the cusp of dominating fifth-generation networking, the technology that will underpin future modern economies. Billionaire founder Ren Zhengfei warned in an internal memo in August his company faced a "live or die moment."The smartphone maker's statement came in response to an Aug. 30 Wall Street Journal report, which cited unidentified sources as saying the Justice Department was investigating the alleged theft of patents by Huawei. The company again denied it had ever stolen technology, then launched into a litany of accusations against the Trump administration itself. Among the claims it listed: that the U.S. was detaining shipments, denying visas, sending federal agents to employees' homes and even impersonating Huawei staff to entrap legitimate workers."We strongly condemn the malign, concerted effort by the U.S. government to discredit Huawei and curb its leadership position in the industry," the company said. "No company becomes a global leader in their field through theft."(Updates with details in Huawei's statement from the second paragraph)\--With assistance from Justin Sink.To contact the reporter on this story: Edwin Chan in Hong Kong at echan273@bloomberg.netTo contact the editors responsible for this story: Peter Elstrom at pelstrom@bloomberg.net, Colum MurphyFor more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.com©2019 Bloomberg L.P. |
Posted: 02 Sep 2019 11:40 PM PDT |
Posted: 03 Sep 2019 01:45 AM PDT |
Be on your guard, Hong Kong activists tell Merkel before China trip Posted: 03 Sep 2019 03:41 PM PDT Days before Angela Merkel leaves for a tricky visit to Beijing, prominent Hong Kong activists have written to the German Chancellor calling her to be guided by her memories of life in dictatorial East Germany in her dealings with Beijing. In an open letter to Merkel published in Wednesday's Bild newspaper, activists including Joshua Wong, head of the Demosisto pro-democracy movement, said Germany should be on its guard in business dealings with China. Hong Kong has been convulsed by months of unrest since its government announced attempts to make it easier to extradite suspects to China, a move seen as a prelude to bringing the pluralistic autonomous region more in line with the mainland. |
Posted: 03 Sep 2019 04:48 AM PDT The tanker at the centre of a diplomatic row between Iran and Britain "went dark" yesterday night off the coast of Syria, where it is suspected she may be delivering a controversial cargo of Iranian crude oil. The Adrian Darya 1, formally named Grace 1, would be doing so in breach of an agreement made to secure its release and threatens to become a major political embarrassment for the UK. The vessel was detained by British Royal Marine commandos off Gibraltar on July 4 as it was believed to be en route to Syria in violation of European Union sanctions. Two weeks later, Iran in retaliation seized British-flagged Stena Impero in the Strait of Hormuz leading into the Gulf. Gibraltar released the Adrian Darya on August 15 after receiving formal written assurances from Tehran that the ship would not discharge its 2.1 million barrels of oil in Syria. The Stena has not been released. An aerial view shows a speedboat of Iran's Revolutionary Guard moving around the British-flagged oil tanker Stena Impero, which was seized in the Strait of Hormuz Credit: AP Iran changed the Grace 1's name and sold the oil, though it did not disclose the buyer. Since then it has been sailing around the Mediterranean with its load, continually changing its destination port. The US Treasury Department blacklisted the tanker on Friday, citing intelligence it was planning to deliver its crude to Syria. US Coast Guardsmen with Maritime Security Response Team East, Advanced Interdiction Team Detachment 1, during a training exercise in the Gulf Credit: Reuters Washington warned any state against assisting the ship, saying it would consider that support for a terrorist organisation, namely, Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, prompting Greece to deny the Adrian permission to dock. According to TankerTrackers.com, which uses satellite tracking to record shipping movements, the vessel sent its last signal giving its position in international waters heading north towards Syria at 5.53pm local time on Monday. "It's now safe to assume she's in Syria's territorial waters," TankerTrackers.com tweeted. It is now thought to be sitting off the coast of Tartus awaiting a ship-to-ship transfer via one of a handful of Iranian-linked tankers in the region, also currently with no Automatic Identification System signals active. It is not against international law for a ship to turn her AIS off, but it is often done to try to get around sanctions. Lloyd's List Intelligence suggested two possible smaller vessels that may be involved in any transfer. Silvia 1, an Iran-flagged tanker, turned off its transponder on August 29 having entered the Mediterranean via the Suez Canal. While Stark I, a 159,681 dwt, Iran-flagged crude tanker, took a similar route, also dropping off communication late on August 30. "The fact that Adrian Darya 1 is currently skirting the Syrian coast with its AIS offline, awaiting what the US intelligence services expect to be an imminent ship-to-ship transfer, which will ultimately see its cargo end up in Syria, is politically embarrassing for almost everyone except Iran," said Richard Meade, managing editor of Lloyd's List Intelligence. View of the Iranian oil tanker, formerly named Grace 1, anchored off Gibraltar Credit: REX The oil delivery could undermine European efforts to broker US-Iran talks. The UK, which has been pulled in opposing directions by European and American allies, has been trying to keep a diplomatic track with Tehran despite rising tensions. President Donald Trump pulled the US out of the nuclear deal with Tehran last year, leaving EU signatories scrambling to keep it alive. An Iranian government spokesman said on Tuesday it will "take a strong step" away from its 2015 nuclear accord if Europe cannot offer the country new terms by a deadline at the end of this week, as top Iranian diplomats travelled to France and Russia for last-minute talks. Should the Adrian offload as expected, it will raise questions as to whether the Islamic republic is acting in good faith. |
Mexican official denies vigilante movement has reignited Posted: 02 Sep 2019 06:57 PM PDT State and local officials in western Mexico disputed Monday whether the old vigilante "self-defense" movement has re-awakened, or whether recent confrontations are just turf battles between gangs. The 2013-2014 vigilante movement took control of large swaths of western Michoacan state, purportedly to expel the old Knights Templar drug cartel. Over the weekend, vigilantes in the town of Tepalcatepec said they had fought off a massive attack by the Jalisco New Generation Cartel and posted videos showing hundreds of purported vigilante fighters and shot-up pickup trucks surrounded by bodies. |
View Photos of 2020 BMW M4 Edition ///M Heritage Posted: 03 Sep 2019 10:15 AM PDT |
The Electoral College isn't set in stone. Texas, Wisconsin could be next to switch sides. Posted: 03 Sep 2019 05:42 AM PDT |
Student loans: Betsy DeVos rule change means college students must fight for loan forgiveness Posted: 03 Sep 2019 08:11 AM PDT |
Millions ordered to evacuate as Dorian grows in size and bears down on US Posted: 03 Sep 2019 10:30 AM PDT Millions of Americans have been ordered to evacuate their homes after Hurricane Dorian – having relentlessly battered the Bahamas for days, leaving at least five fatalities and dozens of injuries in his wake – picked up speed and size and started bearing down on the southeastern coastline.Officials on the Bahamas said at last 13,000 homes had been destroyed by massive flooding and powerful winds, that blasted the nation with a force not matched since 1935. Prime minister Hubert Minnis urged Bahamians to show love to come through the ordeal suffered by their country. |
Greece proposes Parthenon marbles swap, says still wants their permanent return Posted: 03 Sep 2019 04:34 AM PDT Greece confirmed on Tuesday its readiness to loan treasures to the British Museum in return for being able to temporarily exhibit the Parthenon marbles but also said the proposal did not alter its long-standing demand for their permanent return. Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis told Britain's Observer newspaper on Sunday he was willing to lend important artefacts to London that "have never left Greece" in return for putting the marbles on display in Athens in 2021, when the country marks 200 years since the start of its War of Independence. Athens has repeatedly called for the permanent return of the 2,500-year-old sculptures that Britain's Lord Elgin removed from the Acropolis temple during a period when Greece was under Ottoman Turkish rule. |
Palestinian women protest after suspected honor killing Posted: 02 Sep 2019 11:54 AM PDT Hundreds of Palestinian women held a demonstration in the West Bank on Monday to demand an investigation into the death of a 21-year-old woman who many suspect was the victim of a so-called honor killing. Israa Ghrayeb, a makeup artist from a village near Bethlehem, died last month after being hospitalized with severe injuries. Friends and women's rights activists suspect her male relatives assaulted her over a video shared online that purportedly showed her out with a man who had proposed to her. |
Posted: 03 Sep 2019 06:54 AM PDT ARoyal Marines veteran who attempted to climb Mont Blanc with a rowing machine on his back for charity was forced to abandon the device less than 1,500 feet from the summit, prompting a row with the local French mayor. Matthew Paul Disney attempted to scale Western Europe's highest mountain, which stands at 4,809m (15,780ft) but had to turn back on Saturday morning at 4,362m due to bad weather. The charity stunt was in aid of raising funds for Rock 2 Recovery and RMA - The Royal Marines Charity. The fitness enthusiast and global adventurer from Lancashire, left the 26-kilogramme, 2.5-metre long unbalanced Concept2 rowing machine in an emergency hut near the top. Mr Disney, 36, said he was very disappointed not to have completed the ascent with the machine, saying the the main reason was poor visibility due to bad weather. He did, however, go on to reach the top without it. Shortly after descending, he said on Facebook he intended to go back up between September 12 and 30 to retrieve the rowing machine, reach the summit and return with the equipment. However, his unfinished bid prompted a furious response from Jean-Marc Peillex, mayor of Saint-Gervais-les-Bains, which encompasses the French side of Europe's highest Alp. Matthew Paul Disney had intended to retrieve the rowing machine he left near the top of Mont Blanc but the mayor banned him Credit: Telegraph In an angry Facebook missive to Mr Disney, he wrote: "Can't wait for Brexit that you stay on your island [sic]." "I have received no apologies and even if it is for charity, it's an aberration, even more so for a soldier of her Majesty. Shameful", he later told The Daily Telegraph. The mayor said he had banned Mr Disney from going back up Mont Blanc to recover the rowing machine and would be sending a bill of €1,800 (£1,640) plus VAT to the British Embassy in Paris for the costs of his men bringing it down. Mr Disney said the mayor's Brexit comments were "very unprofessional, undiplomatic and could be seen as a mild form of racism". Jean-Marc Peillex, mayor of Saint-Gervais-les-Bains, sent an angry message to RM Disney welcoming Brexit "I wouldn't litter anywhere let alone a mountain. This is my 13th country's highest mountain with a rowing machine and 21st without a rowing machine, so I have a lot of love and passion for mountains. I would never dream of littering or making a mockery of a mountain," he told the Telegraph. Earlier this summer, Mr Disney successfully climbed Ben Nevis, Scafell Pike and Snowdon and the distance in-between with the Concept2 Rowing Machine on his back. Mr Disney posted a photo showing the rower neatly stored inside the hut. "As you can see in the photo, it is not litter, it is not on the top of the mountain. It is not taking up vital space," he said. Safety hut near the top of Mont Blanc where Royal Marines vet Matthew Paul Disney stored his rowing machine Credit: Telegraph He said could "understand the mayor's concern because there are a lot of foolish people". But he said, he had his climb rubber-stamped by gendarmes after showing them his "experience, skillset, my fitness level and my intention to raise awareness for two military charities, good causes for active and veterans on the brink of suicide." He questioned the decision by the gendarmes to bar him going back up to get the rowing machine as "they had allowed me to go up with it" beforehand after he showed them his plans. Mr Peillex responded: "He's not in his own home and he doesn't decide." This was just one of a string of cases of "disrespect" for the mountain, the mayor said, adding that a German climber forced his dog to the top at night this weekend after being ordered not to by police. The dog came back down alive but with "bloodied paws". The outspoken official has written to Emmanuel Macron, the French president, calling for him to pass new a new law next year to "punish all the loonies who break the rules" on the overcrowded peak, often leaving rubbish along the way. Earlier this year, two Swiss mountaineers landed a small plane less than 400 metres from the top of the famed mountain before heading for the summit with police in pursuit. The two climbers were equipped with ropes and crampons and had already started climbing towards the summit when they were intercepted by police and asked to turn back. Already threatened by global warming, such people were turning Mont Blanc into an "amusement park" where people expect to see "sea lions juggling with balls and pretty fireworks", the mayor warned. Local authorities tightened rules on ascending the "normal route" to the summit without booking at a refuge earlier this year saying overcrowding was increasing the risk of mortality. |
Syrian pound at record low on black market: report Posted: 03 Sep 2019 09:32 AM PDT The value of the Syrian pound against the dollar has fallen sharply to its lowest rate in history, an economic publication said Tuesday. On the black market on Tuesday, the pound was trading at 650 against the dollar (715 to the euro). It's "the lowest in history", Jihad Yazigi, the editor-in-chief of the Syria Report economic publication, told AFP. |
Boris Johnson Humiliated by Parliament in First Brexit Vote Posted: 03 Sep 2019 02:57 PM PDT REUTERSLONDON—Theresa May's abject humiliation over Brexit was three years in the making as she endured failed negotiations, misfiring political gambles, and a series of internal revolts. Boris Johnson got there in just one vote. The biographer of Winston Churchill entered Downing Street breathing rhetorical fire just one day before parliament was closed for the summer. On his very first day back in Parliament, he lost his majority in the House of Commons and was then defeated by his own side in a bitter battle over his trademark Brexit policy. The prime minister was reduced to begging the opposition parties to agree to a general election after he lost the power to deliver a Brexit of his choosing by 328 votes to 301. Lawmakers are expected to vote to rule out a hard, no-deal Brexit on Wednesday, which Johnson believes will destroy his ability to negotiate a good deal with the European Union.Kamikaze Boris Johnson Risks Becoming Britain's Shortest-Serving PMJohnson came to power boasting an ironclad, "do-or-die" commitment to deliver Brexit by Oct. 31. Braggadocious stories leaked to senior newspaper reporters explained that—after May's failure to deliver Brexit—the real men were now in charge and would channel the spirit of "Cocaine Mitch" to force through their plan using every mechanism or procedure in the book. Johnson appointed a notoriously spiky strategist as his chief of staff, and last week they broke with precedent and asked the queen to shut down parliament for five weeks until just before the Brexit deadline to prevent lawmakers thwarting Johnson's Brexit plan. The move was condemned as a constitutional outrage, and tens of thousands of people took to the streets to protest in cities and towns across Britain.Instead of convincing opponents within his own Conservative party to back down, the extraordinary gambit only served to strengthen their resolve. When it looked as though there would be enough rebels for the House of Commons to seize control of parliamentary business from Johnson, No. 10 responded not with conciliatory overtures but by threatening to kick anyone who voted against him out of the Conservative Party and banning them from running for re-election under the party's banner. On Tuesday night, 21 members of the party disregarded the threats and voted to take away Johnson's control over Brexit. The so-called "rebel alliance" will use that control to hold a new vote on Wednesday that would force Johnson to seek a further Brexit extension from the European Union. The lawmakers who risked their own careers and were thus willing to be expelled from the Conservative Party in order to facedown their party leader included a former chancellor of the exchequer, a former attorney general and Ken Clarke, a veteran of Margaret Thatcher's Cabinet, who now holds the unofficial position of Father of the House, as the longest serving member of the Commons. Another of the rebels was Sir Nicholas Soames, the grandson of Churchill, Johnson's cherished hero. Assuming the prime minister goes through with his threat to boot these Conservative stalwarts from the party, he will be reduced to presiding over the smallest minority government for 30 years.Philip Lee had already destroyed Johnson's majority earlier in the day when he quit the party and "crossed the aisle"—to sit with the Liberal Democrats—while the prime minister was speaking."This Conservative Government is aggressively pursuing a damaging Brexit in unprincipled ways," Lee said. "It is undermining our country's economy, democracy and role in the world. It is using political manipulation, bullying and lies. And it is doing these things in a deliberate and considered way."Johnson challenged the opposition Labour party to back his calls for a general election to be held on Oct. 15, before the Halloween deadline he has pledged to meet. Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn said he would only agree to an election once the threat of no deal had been taken off the table.It is very likely that an election will be held in the coming months, and the only thing on Johnson's record will be the failure to deliver his only policy.Read more at The Daily Beast.Got a tip? Send it to The Daily Beast hereGet our top stories in your inbox every day. Sign up now!Daily Beast Membership: Beast Inside goes deeper on the stories that matter to you. Learn more. |
Why Kamala Harris Hasn’t Caught Fire in the Democratic 2020 Race Posted: 03 Sep 2019 01:00 AM PDT (Bloomberg) -- Kamala Harris entered the presidential race with impressive credentials -- a popular black woman with an inspiring story who hailed from a large Democratic state and drew accolades for her fiery questioning of President Donald Trump's nominees.Yet despite a shot of adrenaline after confronting front-runner Joe Biden in the first debate, she has failed to catch fire with Democratic voters who are torn between a nostalgic fondness for Biden and a revolutionary desire for Bernie Sanders or Elizabeth Warren.Harris's attempt to replicate her feat in the second debate backfired among Democrats who say she went too negative on Biden. The Californian also suffers from a perception that she lacks a deep ideological well to guide her policy ideas, in contrast to her three main rivals who are better-defined. And her past as a prosecutor has earned her supporters and detractors.Harris and Senator Cory Booker "really went after Vice President Biden -- it rebounded to their detriment that they went after Biden so much. Because it also looked like they were not just going after Biden, but they were going after the Obama legacy," said Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers, which is neutral in the primaries.Weingarten said many Democrats left the June debate thinking, "Kamala seems really feisty and let's look at her." But in the July debate they were turned off by Harris and other aggressors because "it looked like they were burning the house down, as opposed to building on what Democrats believe in."Harris surged from about 7% to 15% in averages of Democratic polls immediately after the first debate in late June, putting her in second or third place in the crowded field. But it was a sugar high — she's back to the 7% she had when summer began.For Harris, the danger is that she's another Marco Rubio. The Florida senator, too, had a potentially history-making candidacy during the Republican nomination battle in 2016 and was hailed by the party establishment as presidential timber, before he failed to translate that on the ground."Our focus is on winning the primary, not an off-year August news cycle, which is why we've spent the summer building the grassroots organizing foundation that will propel Kamala to victory in this race," Harris spokesman Ian Sams said in an email. "These races are marathons, not sprints, and Kamala is a long-distance runner."'Too Flippy-Floppy'In late July, Harris backed off her previous support for replacing private insurance with a national government plan and released a proposal that preserves the option for private plans, positioning herself ideologically between Sanders and Biden on one of the most contentious issues in the race.But rather than placating both wings, the move drew fire from all sides — the Sanders campaign accused her of going soft, Biden charged her with "double talk," and voters were left wondering what she stands for."Too flippy-floppy. I just don't like her," said Debby Fisher of Richmond, California — near Harris's hometown of Oakland — who plans to support Sanders.Suzanne Cowan of San Francisco said she soured on Harris after her change on health care."That's not my kind of candidate. Either you know what issues you support and you have the courage to stand up for them or you don't," she said. "For me she's 'I'll be in favor of whatever is trending' — and that doesn't cut it."'Her Brilliance, Her Passion'Patrick Kollar of Roy, Washington, who recently attended a Warren rally in Seattle, said he's unsure how to define Harris ideologically."That's a problem," he said. "I follow politics pretty closely and I don't know what she's about."Harris has set herself apart on culturally salient issues like immigration and gun control with far-reaching legislative proposals and executive actions to tackle two high priorities for Democratic voters. At the same time, she has downplayed ideological labels and branded herself as the "3 a.m. agenda" candidate who's focused on problems that keep Americans up at night."I lost my son to gun violence," said Lynette McElhaney of Oakland, adding that she was drawn to Harris's aggressive positions on gun control. "And critically important, she sent her staff to stand with me when my son was killed in Los Angeles."She said she supports Harris for "her mind, her brilliance, her passion, her heart."McElhaney was among the Harris volunteers who lined the halls at the Democratic National Committee summer meeting in San Francisco. They had donned "Kamala Harris for the people" T-shirts and campaign gear and chanted slogans for their candidate.Harris's past as a prosecutor — seven years as San Francisco district attorney and six years as California attorney general — is a mixed bag. Some Democrats say it's the reason she was so effective when questioning William Barr and Brett Kavanaugh, Trump's nominees for attorney general and the Supreme Court. Others say she fought too hard to achieve and sustain convictions in dubious circumstances.Rubio Redux?In some ways, Harris risks falling into the same trap that ensnared Rubio in 2016 — eloquent on the stump, adept at raising money, acceptable across the party spectrum but not loved by enough voters."Harris is trying to run in a lane very similar to what Rubio tried to do in 2016," said Alex Conant, the communications director for Rubio's presidential campaign. "They're both new faces, running as next-generation candidates against candidates that in many ways represent the past. They came into the campaign with ideological credentials but a message that would play well in the general.""It's a good strategy for coming in second," he quipped. "If you're acceptable to everyone you're not necessarily loved by anyone."Conant said the key for Harris is to pick an early state to win. Rubio split his efforts about equally in the first four states and landed several top-three finishes, but failed to win any of them."At some point you need to win somewhere," Conant said. "You need to be people's first choice."To contact the reporter on this story: Sahil Kapur in Washington at skapur39@bloomberg.netTo contact the editors responsible for this story: Wendy Benjaminson at wbenjaminson@bloomberg.net, John HarneyFor more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.com©2019 Bloomberg L.P. |
Customer pulls gun on Popeyes employees over chicken sandwiches, police say Posted: 03 Sep 2019 07:24 AM PDT |
Hurricane Dorian edges 'dangerously close' to Florida after battering Bahamas Posted: 03 Sep 2019 09:48 AM PDT * Five dead as island nation suffers 'historic tragedy' * Follow the latest live updates on Hurricane DorianRain brought on by Hurricane Dorian continues to pour in Freeport, Bahamas, on Tuesday. Photograph: Tim Aylen/APHurricane Dorian was edging "dangerously close" to the US mainland on Tuesday, after its catastrophic two-day stall over the Bahamas destroyed thousands of homes and left at least five people dead.Despite weakening to a category 2 storm with sustained winds of 110mph, Dorian remained powerful, experts warned, with the potential to deliver "life-threatening storm surge and dangerous hurricane-force winds" from central Florida to the Carolinas.The storm's slow north-westerly crawl towards Florida finally began on Tuesday morning after a relentless 48-hour battering of the Abaco islands and Grand Bahama, causing massive destruction that the Bahamas prime minister, Hubert Minnis, said was an "historic tragedy"."The Bahamas is presently at war and being attacked by Hurricane Dorian," he told the Nassau Guardian. "And yet it has no weapon at its disposal to defend itself during such an assault by this enemy."Rescue workers, including some from the US coast guard, worked to lift stranded residents from the roofs of flooded homes. More than 20 people were airlifted to safety in New Providence island, some with serious injuries.Large areas of Grand Bahama, including the popular tourist resort of Freeport, remained under water."The reality of it all is, unfortunately, we will see more deaths. I can't see any way out of it," Marvin Dames, the Bahamas minister of national security, told reporters. He added that several of the confirmed dead were children.Millions in Florida, Georgia and North and South Carolina evacuated inland as Dorian, the most powerful Atlantic hurricane of modern times, began to menace the American mainland.The National Hurricane Center (NHC) in Miami said in its 11am advisory winds had dropped to almost half the speed of the 200mph gusts that pounded Abaco island at landfall on Sunday.But the size of the storm was increasing, senior hurricane specialist Dan Brown reported, with hurricane-force winds stretching 60 miles from its core and tropical storm-force winds up to 175mph.While Dorian's center is no longer predicted to make a Florida landfall, according to the NHC, the storm is still expected to deliver a powerful blow."The increasing size of Dorian's windfield along with any deviation to the left of the forecast track will bring hurricane-force winds onshore along portions of the Florida east coast," Brown said.Dorian's projected path saw it hugging the Florida coastline for the next 24 to 36 hours, close to the Florida-Georgia border by Wednesday evening and grazing the Carolinas through Thursday and Friday.The storm has been difficult to predict because of constant atmospheric changes in the Atlantic and Caribbean which left Dorian parked over Grand Bahama for so long."Somebody once told me a hurricane is like an elephant on roller-skates," severe weather expert Jim Lushine, a retired NHC forecaster, told the Florida Sun-Sentinel newspaper. "It doesn't make a very sharp turn. It has to slow down tremendously before it can turn."In Savannah, Georgia, on Tuesday the scene was eerily quiet, 36 hours ahead of the expected arrival of tropical storm force winds. The city, with a group of other Georgian coastal counties, was placed under an evacuation order on Monday by Governor Brian Kemp.Matthew Aylen wades through waist deep water as he is rescued during Hurricane Dorian in Freeport, Bahamas, on Tuesday. Photograph: Tim Aylen/APThe latest National Weather Service rainfall forecast indicated that the flash flood threat would increase into Wednesday along the Florida peninsula, then spread up the south-eastern and mid-Atlantic coast.In Miami, which has a large Bahamian community, volunteers and aid agencies were beginning to assemble relief supplies to send to the islands once the storm moved on.In a tweet using the hashtag bahamasstrong, Senator Marco Rubio said the government was ready to provide aid and assistance.As many as 13,000 homes in the Bahamas may have been destroyed or severely damaged, the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies said."It looks like they're boats on top of the water," said Rosa Knowles-Bain, 61, a resident who fled two days ago to an emergency shelter.At the White House, staff members reviewed hurricane planning with state and local officials. Donald Trump was being briefed hourly, the White House spokeswoman, Stephanie Grisham, said.After cancelling a visit to Poland to stay in the US and "monitor" the storm, Trump played golf at his course in Virginia on Saturday and Sunday, before receiving hurricane briefings.Nine counties in Florida issued mandatory evacuations. They included parts of Duval county, home to Jacksonville, one of the two biggest cities in the state, and some areas in Palm Beach county, home to Trump's Mar-a-Lago resort.Orlando international airport, one of the largest in Florida, ceased commercial operations at 2am on Tuesday because of the storm, it said in a statement. The airport in Fort Lauderdale planned to resume operations later on Tuesday, officials said.More than 2,300 flights were cancelled in the US as well as to and from the country. Walt Disney World Resort in Orlando was planning to close at 3pm on Tuesday. * The Associated Press contributed to this report. |
A Rift Reportedly Opens Between Hong Kong Prosecutors and Police as Protests Continue Unabated Posted: 03 Sep 2019 01:47 AM PDT |
Trump's new Mexico envoy stirs hornet's nest with Frida Kahlo jab Posted: 03 Sep 2019 07:12 AM PDT The new U.S. ambassador to Mexico has taken aim at Mexican icon Frida Kahlo for her support of Marxism, stirring up a fierce social media debate with a tweet asking if the painter had not been aware of atrocities committed in the name of that ideology. Few Mexicans have enjoyed greater global recognition than Kahlo, who spent long periods bedridden after a traffic accident in her youth, attained international fame following her death in 1954 and became a feminist symbol in the 1970s. U.S. Ambassador Christopher Landau, who was appointed by President Donald Trump and sworn in last month, must navigate a volatile bilateral relationship. |
Posted: 03 Sep 2019 04:04 AM PDT |
Paris court hands ex-Thai airline CEO 4-year term over 2007 crash Posted: 03 Sep 2019 07:40 AM PDT A French court on Tuesday sentenced the former head of a Thai budget airline to four years in jail over a 2007 crash that killed 90 people, nearly two-thirds of them foreigners. The suit, filed by the families of the nine French victims aboard the flight, claimed the crash landing on the resort island of Phuket was "an accident waiting to happen". The Paris court found Udom Tantiprasongchai, the former head of the airline One-Two-Go, guilty of voluntary manslaughter and also set a fine of 75,000 euros ($82,300). |
Chris Hayes and Progressives’ Lack of Respect for the Constitution Posted: 03 Sep 2019 12:38 PM PDT Last week, conservatives in the Twitterverse had a good chuckle at the expense of MSNBC host Chris Hayes for something he said about the Electoral College on his show."The weirdest thing about the Electoral College," he offered, "is the fact that if it wasn't specifically in the Constitution for the presidency, it would be unconstitutional."This is one of those things that sound a lot better in your head than they do coming out of your mouth! We've all been guilty of saying something similarly dumb, and most of us have probably been subjected to some good-natured ribbing over it. Hayes didn't appreciate the ribbing, though, and took to Twitter a few days later to blast the entire conservative movement:> These days, conservatism is a movement deeply paranoid and pessimistic about its own appeal, increasingly retreating behind counter-majoritarian institutions: the senate, the courts, the electoral college.> > -- Chris Hayes (@chrislhayes) September 1, 2019> And so they are increasingly focused, as a matter of tactical and tribal fidelity, on ways to uphold minority rule. It's a sad place for a movement to be.> > -- Chris Hayes (@chrislhayes) September 1, 2019I certainly agree that the Republican party needs to focus on broadening its appeal. But here's the catch: Hayes's armchair psychoanalysis notwithstanding, he is just plain wrong about the Constitution. And by that I do not mean that his breezy, clever-sounding point is actually a tautological non-sequitur. I mean that his underlying reasoning is false.Here's his full original assertion:> The weirdest thing about the Electoral College is the fact that if it wasn't specifically in the Constitution for the presidency, it would be unconstitutional. Here's what I mean by that. Starting in the 1960s, the Supreme Court started developing a jurisprudence of one person, one vote. The idea is that each individual vote has to carry roughly the same amount of weight as each other individual vote, which is a pretty intuitive concept, but is not a reality. There are all sorts of crazy representational systems that were created that would not give one person one vote, and that would disenfranchise certain minorities.If Hayes hadn't been so glib, he might have said that the Electoral College runs contrary to the spirit of the Constitution. But, as I said, that is not true, either.The Supreme Court's one-man-one-vote rule applies to state legislative elections and the House of Representatives, which makes sense in the constitutional scheme. The House of Representatives is the national institution of representation in our government. But our system is not wholly national. Here's James Madison in Federalist No. 39:> The House of Representatives will derive its powers from the people of America; and the people will be represented in the same proportion, and on the same principle, as they are in the legislature of a particular State. So far the government is NATIONAL, not FEDERAL. The Senate, on the other hand, will derive its powers from the States, as political and coequal societies; and these will be represented on the principle of equality in the Senate, as they now are in the existing Congress. So far the government is FEDERAL, not NATIONAL. The executive power will be derived from a very compound source. The immediate election of the President is to be made by the States in their political characters. The votes allotted to them are in a compound ratio, which considers them partly as distinct and coequal societies, partly as unequal members of the same society.For these reasons, as well as others, Madison concludes, "The proposed Constitution . . . is, in strictness, neither a national nor a federal Constitution, but a composition of both."So, Hayes is right in a very narrow sense: Neither the Senate nor the Electoral College would make any sense in a strictly national government where the states no longer had any sovereign function. At the Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia, this is what Madison wanted, more or less: to strip the states of their power in national affairs. But it just could not pass muster, and the Convention embraced the compromise pushed by small-state delegates: a compound republic embracing both national and federal modes.This is really Civics 101, and I'm not at all sure how many pundits on the left fully understand it. I rarely if ever see prominent progressives seriously engage with The Federalist Papers or Madison's notes on the Constitutional Convention. Sometimes I wonder if they even know to look in those places for explanations of our constitutional structure. I get the impression that they think the whole design is a product of simple-minded men who lacked their sophisticated views on government. Yet when you read through the original debates about the Constitution, it becomes clear that the Founders often thought through these issues more carefully than contemporary intellectuals.Why are they so intent on attacking the Constitution in this case, anyway? There are, after all, other ways to ameliorate the problem of divergence between the popular vote and the Electoral College. Each state's apportionment is the sum of its House and Senate delegates. The size of the House of Representatives is not fixed at 435. That number could be expanded, which would be completely consistent with the Constitution — probably more so, as the founding generation was skeptical that large districts could actually be representative. An expanded House would alleviate the frustrations of the large states, and it might also mitigate the problem of money in politics.Moreover, why are states given a pass for allocating electors on a winner-take-all basis? Again, it is not required under the Constitution, and in the early days of the republic electors were often allocated on a proportional basis. If the 2016 election had been conducted on that basis, Hillary Clinton's Electoral College haul would have gone from 227 to about 255 — not enough for her to win the required absolute majority under a 538-vote Electoral College, but perhaps enough to win such a majority of the larger electoral-vote total created by an expanded House.I do not like it when the Constitution is attacked in this way, but not because the Constitution is perfect. It is far from perfect. Nobody understood that better than Madison, who was at first deeply frustrated by the finished product. Yet when he started to see the criticisms of it, he noticed that they were scattershot, parochial, and sometimes even contradictory. He realized that the choice facing the country was not between the Constitution and some other alternative, but between the Constitution and chaos leading toward disunion.I think the same holds true today. We should respect the Constitution if for no other reason than that it may be the last thing still holding us together. Such respect does not necessitate that we blindly accept the institutions it bequeathed us as they are. But we should thoroughly understand it before we criticize it, because it deserves better than facile straw-man attacks — especially when, as in the case of the Electoral College, there are alternative remedies that could be pursued within its framework. |
Hospital staff form human chain in Hong Kong Posted: 02 Sep 2019 02:43 AM PDT Local Hong Kong media showed footage of hundreds of hospital staff holding hands and standing along hospital hallways, many of them carrying placards and banners. "I'm quite disappointed in society, that there are people that can say such unreasonable things. We have no choice but to come out (and protest)," one unnamed protester said. The strike follows a weekend marred by some of the worst violence since unrest escalated more than three months ago, with protesters burning barricades and throwing petrol bombs, and police retaliating with water cannon, tear gas and batons. |
Thai Lawmakers to Debate Prime Minister’s Swearing-In Controversy Posted: 03 Sep 2019 03:34 AM PDT (Bloomberg) -- Thailand's parliament will debate the incomplete oath of office taken by Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-Ocha and the Cabinet, a controversy critics say undermines the less than two-month-old government.The debate will be held on Sept. 18, Energy Minister Sontirat Sontijirawong told reporters in Bangkok on Tuesday after the weekly Cabinet meeting.Prayuth and the Cabinet were sworn-in in July after a disputed general election in March. But he and his ministers have been attacked for failing to utter part of the oath of office during the ceremony. Opponents argue the government could be illegitimate as a result.The Office of the Ombudsman last week sent a complaint about the incomplete oath-taking to the Constitutional Court to decide if it's a breach of the charter. The Ombudsman said the court must decide whether it will accept the case."It's hard for the government to make this go away," said Prajak Kongkirati, the head of the politics department at Thammasat University in Bangkok. "It's a serious issue, especially in a country that gives so much respect to traditions and ceremony."Prayuth led a military coup in Thailand in 2014 and the current constitution -- the nation's 20th -- was put together while he was junta leader. The former army chief returned as a civilian leader after this year's contested election.Television footage indicates the final sentence of the oath was omitted during the swearing-in ceremony in front of King Maha Vajiralongkorn.The full oath is:"I swear I will be loyal to His Majesty and perform my duties honestly for the benefit of the country and the people. I will also uphold and comply with the constitution of the kingdom in every aspect."Prayuth and the Cabinet on Aug. 27 received a letter from Vajiralongkorn containing the monarch's speech from the July ceremony. That speech includes a wish for the administration to have "the strength to do good."Thailand's pro-military ruling coalition comprises more than a dozen parties but has a razor-thin majority in the lower house, spurring doubts about whether it will last its full four-year term.(Updates with analyst's comment in the fifth paragraph.)To contact the reporter on this story: Siraphob Thanthong-Knight in Bangkok at rthanthongkn@bloomberg.netTo contact the editors responsible for this story: Sunil Jagtiani at sjagtiani@bloomberg.net, Ruth PollardFor more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.com©2019 Bloomberg L.P. |
View Photos of Aston Martin Vanquish 25 by Callum Posted: 02 Sep 2019 08:30 AM PDT |
Brother of British woman killed by expat husband pleads with UAE judge for murder sentence Posted: 02 Sep 2019 10:26 AM PDT The family of a murdered British woman has said Dubai will set a "dangerous" precedent if it releases her husband from prison this week, two years after he bludgeoned her to death with a hammer. Francis Matthew, 62, will fight his murder conviction on Wednesday on the grounds that his wife, Jane, provoked him during an argument at their Dubai family home. Two years into a potential 15 year sentence, his lawyers will claim she called him a "loser", which provoked the attack. Mrs Matthew's family criticised the proceedings, describing Dubai's legal system as "biased" and saying the defence was trying to "blame Jane for her own death". "The Dubai system is truly biased against Jane," said Peter Manning, brother of Mrs Matthew. In a letter seen by The Telegraph and sent to Dubai's Court of Cassation, the emirate's highest judicial body, Mr Manning said releasing Mr Matthew early would deny his sister justice. Francis was editor-at-large of Gulf News when he killed his wife, Jane, following an argument Credit: Telegraph "To excuse this crime in some way as being Jane's fault sends a clear message to husbands across the United Arab Emirates: you can kill your wife, even with a hammer, and all you have to do to escape justice is claim she 'demeaned you'," wrote Mr Manning. "This denies Jane her human right to life." He added, "It is very dangerous and completely opposite to the UAE's aim of being a modern, gender equal nation." Mr Matthew, a former Economist journalist and editor of Gulf News, hit his wife with a hammer in the early hours of the morning in June 2017 following an argument. Mr Matthew's original conviction of assault that led to death in March 2018 was upgraded to murder on appeal and he was sentenced to 15 years in prison. The Court of Cassation overturned the conviction and a panel of judges will review the case this week. His defence will argue that he is guilty of "physical assault that led to death". If the court agrees, he could walk free with time served. Francis is appealing for a lighter conviction, arguing that Jane provoked him by calling him a 'loser' Credit: Telegraph Mrs Matthew's family said her husband picked up a hammer in his kitchen and walked to the bedroom, where Mrs Matthew was lying in bed before attacking her with intent. After killing her, he showered and went to work as editor before staging a break-in on his return that evening. "As Jane's brother I am in no doubt that this was pre-meditated murder and I confirm that I wish to see Mr Matthew convicted of pre-meditated murder and jailed appropriately," said Mr Manning. "My father and I have been frustrated with the way the Court of First Instance allowed the defence to blame Jane for her own death." It is not clear what impact the letter will have and Dubai is yet to acknowledge it."If the court was open to justice they should be less willing to erect barriers to my letter," said Mr Manning. The Foreign Office said it is supporting Mrs Matthew's family and is in touch with the relevant local authorities. |
You are subscribed to email updates from Yahoo News - Latest News & Headlines. To stop receiving these emails, you may unsubscribe now. | Email delivery powered by Google |
Google, 1600 Amphitheatre Parkway, Mountain View, CA 94043, United States |
0 条评论:
发表评论
订阅 博文评论 [Atom]
<< 主页