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- Yahoo News/YouGov poll: With one week left, Biden's lead over Trump grows to 12 points — his biggest yet
- Pennsylvania teen fatally shot while watching sunset in park with girlfriend, authorities say
- White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany Is Now Formally Moonlighting as a Trump Campaign Aide
- Judge rejects Trump request to be replaced in columnist's defamation lawsuit
- NASA used a Boeing 747 rigged with a massive telescope to discover water on the moon — take a look at SOFIA
- Hurricane Zeta could hit Louisiana by Thursday. It's the 27th named storm in this hurricane season, nearing the record.
- As Trump says news about COVID should be illegal, WH chief of staff says goal is to 'defeat' virus, not 'control' it
- Kamala Harris fever is gripping India – but not everyone is convinced
- Why critics find Kavanaugh's Wisconsin mail-in voting opinion 'sloppy'
- Venezuela's Guaido denounces forced disappearance of party coordinator
- Our Favorite Home Decor Pieces From the Second Annual Etsy Design Awards
- Turkey calls for France boycott as Islamic world backlash grows
- Jack Burkman and Jacob Wohl Indicted AGAIN Over Voter Intimidation
- Zeta is now a Cat 1 hurricane, and the Florida Panhandle is under a tropical storm watch
- Fox News staffers say the network is 'in a panic' about election-night coverage after top hosts were exposed to a COVID-19 patient and told to quarantine
- Column: Amy Coney Barrett's confirmation was shockingly hypocritical. But there may be a silver lining.
- A Florida man drove a stolen bulldozer through a neighborhood and destroyed Biden-Harris campaign signs, police say
- Small plane crashes in Texas, killing one on board
- 'Murder hornet': First nest found in US eradicated with vacuum hose
- Fighting cock kills police chief in Philippine raid
- Vietnam evacuating low-lying areas as strong typhoon nears
- Skull on fireplace mantel identified as man missing since 2012, Tennessee officials say
- France pulled its ambassador from Turkey, and Arab states are boycotting French products, after Macron said he wanted to regulate Islam
- Republicans use Amy Coney Barrett Supreme Court confirmation to taunt Hillary Clinton
- 100,000 people ordered to evacuate due to wildfires in Irvine, California
- Seattle woman still missing three weeks after traveling to Dallas, Texas
- Lincoln Project to Break Into TV after Election
- Hurricane Zeta hits Mexico's Caribbean coast
- Viral photo sparks concerns about Indonesia's 'Jurassic Park'
- Ex-Marines at Camp Lejeune arrested in Idaho for secretly selling guns, feds say
- Russian leader Putin rejects Trump’s claims about Hunter Biden
- Justice Kavanaugh seems to argue no votes should be counted after Election Day. He may get his wish in key states.
- Turkey's Erdogan sues Dutch anti-Islam lawmaker for insults
- Map: State-by-state breakdown of coronavirus travel restrictions
- Are polls of the presidential race reliable this time?
- Pfizer says Covid-19 vaccine still possible in 2020 despite data lag
- Rioters Injure Thirty Police Officers in Night of Violent Unrest in Philadelphia
- Some Irvine homeowners allowed to return as 2 wildfires burn in California's Orange County
- A Family Dollar customer reportedly shot and killed another shopper outside a store in Ohio
- German embassy in Bangkok becomes flashpoint as demonstrators pressure Berlin on Thai king's legal status
- Selena Gomez admits that the 2020 presidential election was her first time voting: 'I'm not ashamed to say this'
- Coronavirus in the U.S. is spreading like 'wildfire,' epidemiologist says
- 2020 polls: New data refutes Trump’s claims he’s ‘winning big’ as Biden stretches lead in Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania
Posted: 26 Oct 2020 12:27 PM PDT |
Pennsylvania teen fatally shot while watching sunset in park with girlfriend, authorities say Posted: 27 Oct 2020 04:52 AM PDT |
White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany Is Now Formally Moonlighting as a Trump Campaign Aide Posted: 27 Oct 2020 10:56 AM PDT White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany appears to have taken on a new gig. In addition to her role as a government employee, she's now serving as a senior aide on her boss's reelection campaign.In an appearance on Fox News on Tuesday morning, McEnany was introduced as "Trump 2020 senior adviser and White House press secretary." A few hours later, Fox Business Network host Stuart Varney introduced McEnany by saying she is "serving now as adviser for the Trump campaign."McEnany's dual roles for the White House and the Trump reelection campaign immediately set off alarm bells among good-government advocates, who said they represent yet another instance of the often blurry lines between the Trump administration and the president's political operation."This looks like the latest example of Trump administration officials bending and breaking ethics laws and norms," said Paul Seamus Ryan, the vice president of litigation for the group Common Cause. "This is unfortunately par for the course for this administration."Now Kayleigh McEnany Has COVID, Making a Dozen From Rose Garden CeremonyA White House spokesperson said McEnany was not representing the White House during her Fox appearances on Tuesday."Kayleigh was appearing in her personal capacity as a private citizen," the spokesperson said.A spokesperson for the Trump campaign confirmed that McEnany is an unpaid adviser and also said she was appearing on Fox on Tuesday in a personal capacity. The spokesperson said that cable news shows on which she appears "have been instructed not to refer to her with her White House title," notwithstanding the America's Newsroom introduction on Tuesday that included both her campaign and White House titles.While most of McEnany's two Fox hits on Tuesday concerned the status of the Trump campaign and the 2020 race, she also weighed in on official administration policy on issues such as COVID relief negotiations with congressional Democrats."The chances [for a deal] are slim when you have someone like Nancy Pelosi as Speaker of the House," McEnany told Varney. "If we're providing stimulus relief for the American people, it should be just that, for American people, for United States citizens, not a wish-list from the liberal left," McEnany told Varney.Speaking in front of a backdrop that featured both the White House and the Trump campaign logo, McEnany also rattled off a series of policy proposals that "we offered" in those negotiations.Fox News Reporter Explodes Over Kayleigh McEnany: 'Stop Blaming the Media, I'm Tired of It!'It's that sort of blurry line between White House and campaign messaging, and the prospect that taxpayer resources could continue bolstering the president's reelection effort, that concern Ryan."This excerpt is McEnany commenting on federal government policy currently being negotiated by the Trump administration with Congress. This is McEnany doing the work of a [White House] press secretary," he said. "It's permissible for someone who works in the White House to also do campaign work. They just can't mix the two. They can't try to do the two things simultaneously."Ryan compared the situation to controversy over illicit politicking by former senior White House adviser Kellyanne Conway, who used her official Twitter account to share political messages, leading the Office of Special Counsel to recommend her removal over violations of the Hatch Act, which bars the use of taxpayer resources for partisan purposes.Conway brushed off the recriminations with a simple statement: "Blah blah blah."The Trump White House, and the president himself, have reveled in the frequent criticism they get over their unprecedented uses of taxpayer resources in the service of the president's reelection. After coming under fire for putting on a political nominating convention on the White House grounds in August, Trump campaign communications director Tim Murtaugh tweeted, "Liberals are more upset about the use of government buildings than they ever were about the use of the FBI to target political opponents."McEnany's Fox appearances on Tuesday came about two months after White House attorneys waived ethics rules so that she could meet in her capacity as a government official with employees of the Trump campaign and the Republican National Committee, both of which previously employed her.The waiver memo is undated, but metadata in the file posted to the White House website indicates it was created on August 26. That was the day of McEnany's speech at the Republican National Convention. She also spoke at a Trump campaign rally this month.The White House has also waived ethics rules for another staffer, director of advance Bobby Peede, to permit communications with the Trump campaign. According to Federal Election Commission records, the Trump re-elect has made regular payments from December 2019 through early this month to the firm Event Strategies, where Peede served as a partner prior to joining the White House.The largest of those payments, for nearly $100,000, came on August 24, two days before Peede's waiver memo was created.\-- With reporting by Justin BaragonaKayleigh McEnany Grilled on Trump's Sudden Embrace of Mail-In VotingRead more at The Daily Beast.Get 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. |
Judge rejects Trump request to be replaced in columnist's defamation lawsuit Posted: 27 Oct 2020 07:34 AM PDT |
Posted: 26 Oct 2020 09:00 AM PDT |
Posted: 26 Oct 2020 11:58 PM PDT |
Posted: 26 Oct 2020 07:42 AM PDT |
Kamala Harris fever is gripping India – but not everyone is convinced Posted: 27 Oct 2020 12:01 PM PDT |
Why critics find Kavanaugh's Wisconsin mail-in voting opinion 'sloppy' Posted: 27 Oct 2020 11:53 AM PDT Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh's critics are perplexed by his concurring opinion following the court's 5-3 ruling that Wisconsin can only count absentee ballots that arrive by Election Day, describing his reasoning as "sloppy."One of the accusations hurled at Kavanaugh is that he confused receipt and submission deadlines while making his point. The Wisconsin case involved extending the former in light of U.S. Postal Service slowdowns, but Kavanaugh's analogies appeared more congruent with the latter.> This analogy makes no sense. The WI deadline is receipt deadline, not a submission deadline. The in-person voting equivalent is if someone showed up at their polling place before it officially closed but -- due to long lines -- didn't get to cast their ballot until after midnight. pic.twitter.com/q26z0vctGa> > -- Tierney Sneed (@Tierney_Megan) October 27, 2020> Another analogy that makes no sense! The IRS April 15 deadline is a submission deadline, not a receipt deadline. pic.twitter.com/UU3Lngl55V> > -- Tierney Sneed (@Tierney_Megan) October 27, 2020Kavanaugh was also criticized for his stance that the deadline should remain intact so that the "apparent winner" on the morning after election night doesn't have their victory overturned by late-arriving ballots, which could spark allegations of a "rigged election." In response, observers argued that declaring an election winner on Nov. 3 isn't necessary and that it's reasonable for close races in states to remain uncalled.> Still stuck on this Kavanaugh concurrence claiming that states announce the winner on election night. They don't. News organizations project based on the trajectory of incoming results. And furthermore, it's not uncommon for close races and states to be undeclared for days. https://t.co/Ivayoe6fOk> > -- Abby D. Phillip (@abbydphillip) October 27, 2020Finally, analysts called Kavanaugh out for apparently misreading a source that influenced his decision. > Kavanaugh ruled AGAINST the six-day extension for Wisconsin to accept ballots postmarked by Election Day. He cited an article from legal scholar (and CNN contributor) Rick Pildes. But in that article, Pildes says states SHOULD extend postmark deadlines. https://t.co/Uupirxyrgm pic.twitter.com/nEyj92Gh6p> > -- Marshall Cohen (@MarshallCohen) October 27, 2020More stories from theweek.com Republicans are on the verge of a spectacular upside-down achievement The very different emotional lives of Trump and Biden voters Middle-finger voting is driving the entire country mad |
Venezuela's Guaido denounces forced disappearance of party coordinator Posted: 27 Oct 2020 10:33 AM PDT Venezuela's Juan Guaido on Tuesday accused the government of illegally detaining an opposition activist, blaming it for what he called the forced disappearance of Roland Carreno of the Popular Will party. Carreno was approached on Monday afternoon by unidentified people in vehicles without license plates, Popular Will said on Twitter. "We alert the world about his forced disappearance and we hold the dictatorship responsible for his physical and mental integrity." |
Our Favorite Home Decor Pieces From the Second Annual Etsy Design Awards Posted: 27 Oct 2020 02:41 PM PDT |
Turkey calls for France boycott as Islamic world backlash grows Posted: 26 Oct 2020 06:35 PM PDT |
Jack Burkman and Jacob Wohl Indicted AGAIN Over Voter Intimidation Posted: 27 Oct 2020 10:07 AM PDT Conservative operatives Jacob Wohl and Jack Burkman have been indicted in Ohio, once more over a racist robocall aimed at minority voters.Wohl and Burkman, who rose to some level of infamy online for blundering attempts to manufacture sexual assault allegations against Democratic politicians and other Trump foes, have each been charged in Ohio's Cuyahoga County with eight counts of telecommunications fraud and seven counts of bribery, a charge that includes attempts to convince people not to cast ballots. The indictment only adds to the growing mountain of criminal and civil problems facing the notorious pro-Trump pair.In late August, a robocall that claimed to come from Wohl and Burkman warned voters not to use mail-in ballots, falsely claiming that the ballot information would be used to enforce vaccine mandates and collect on credit card debts. In the call, which was sent to 67,000 voters in the Midwest, according to prosecutors, a Black woman warned potential voters not to send in mail-in ballots or risk being fooled by "the man.""The right to vote is the most fundamental component of our nation's democracy," Cuyahoga County Prosecutor Michael C. O'Malley said in a statement. "These individuals clearly infringed upon that right in a blatant attempt to suppress votes and undermine the integrity of this election These actions will not be tolerated."> Jack Burkman and Jacob Wohl have been indicted in Ohio over an alleged robo-call operation targeting Black voters in Cleveland and East Cleveland, according to a news release from the Cuyahoga County prosecutor's office. pic.twitter.com/OOnfJ9dbQ2> > — Nick Castele (@NickCastele) October 27, 2020Michigan's attorney general charged Wohl and Burkman in a separate case on Oct. 1 for the same robocall, which was also sent to voters in that state. They have also been sued in New York in a civil lawsuit by people who received the call.Wohl, 22, and Burkman, 54, didn't respond to an immediate request for comment.The pair have claimed they didn't arrange the robocall. In the Michigan case, however, prosecutors intend to call as a witness the owner of a robocall company who prosecutors say will testify that his company was used by Burkman and Wohl to send the robocalls. Michigan prosecutors have also claimed they have an email from Wohl arranging the robocall's scripts.Wohl is also facing felony charges in California over alleged violations of securities laws. And the FBI is investigating the pair over the leak of juror questionnaires in the trial of former Trump adviser Roger Stone, according to sealed court documents obtained by The Daily Beast.Read more at The Daily Beast.Get 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. |
Zeta is now a Cat 1 hurricane, and the Florida Panhandle is under a tropical storm watch Posted: 26 Oct 2020 04:06 AM PDT |
Posted: 27 Oct 2020 04:26 AM PDT |
Posted: 26 Oct 2020 05:46 PM PDT |
Posted: 26 Oct 2020 01:18 PM PDT |
Small plane crashes in Texas, killing one on board Posted: 27 Oct 2020 06:04 AM PDT |
'Murder hornet': First nest found in US eradicated with vacuum hose Posted: 26 Oct 2020 12:59 AM PDT |
Fighting cock kills police chief in Philippine raid Posted: 27 Oct 2020 02:15 AM PDT |
Vietnam evacuating low-lying areas as strong typhoon nears Posted: 26 Oct 2020 09:39 PM PDT Vietnam scrambled Tuesday to evacuate more than a million people in its central lowlands as a strong typhoon approached while some regions are still dealing with the aftermath of recent killer floods, state media said. Typhoon Molave is forecast to slam into Vietnam's south central coast with sustained winds of up to 135 kilometers (84 miles) per hour on Wednesday morning, according to the official Vietnam News Agency. The typhoon left at least 3 people dead and 13 missing and displaced more than 120,000 villagers in the Philippines before blowing toward Vietnam. |
Skull on fireplace mantel identified as man missing since 2012, Tennessee officials say Posted: 27 Oct 2020 05:29 AM PDT |
Posted: 26 Oct 2020 04:11 AM PDT |
Republicans use Amy Coney Barrett Supreme Court confirmation to taunt Hillary Clinton Posted: 27 Oct 2020 02:32 PM PDT |
100,000 people ordered to evacuate due to wildfires in Irvine, California Posted: 26 Oct 2020 08:00 PM PDT |
Seattle woman still missing three weeks after traveling to Dallas, Texas Posted: 26 Oct 2020 04:18 PM PDT Marisela Botello, 23, was last seen leaving her ex-boyfriend's house in Dallas, Texas on October 4, 2020. She took a Lyft alone to the entertainment district Deep Ellum. Her family said security video reportedly shows her leaving the Select Start bar at 1 a.m. with an unknown man. Her cell phone and debit card haven't been used since that night and her other belongings were left behind at her ex-boyfriend's house where she had been visiting from Seattle for the weekend. She missed her flig |
Lincoln Project to Break Into TV after Election Posted: 27 Oct 2020 08:14 AM PDT The Lincoln Project is reportedly solidifying plans to ramp up its media arm after the general election next week and is considering offers from various television studios, podcast networks and book publishers.The political action committee, which was founded towards the end of last year and is run by prominent "Never-Trump" current and former Republicans, signed with United Talent Agency with an eye towards expanding Lincoln Media, Axios reported Tuesday.Lincoln Project co-founder Rick Wilson, a longtime Republican strategist before he left the party following President Trump's election in 2016, outlined the group's outlook for its upcoming media ventures."We discovered in doing research that voters are getting lots of information from streaming and podcasts," Wilson said. "We decided to build those things as advocacy vectors. We didn't set out to become a media company, but we've inadvertently become a content creation machine."Other prominent anti-Trump Republicans fronting the group are George Conway, husband of former Trump advisor Kellyanne Conway, and Steve Schmidt, who was a senior strategist for John McCain's presidential campaign."As a media business, we're putting a pretty big bet on the idea that they know how to get audiences," Ra Kumar, a UTA agent who represents the Lincoln Project, said of the group's plans, adding that the Lincoln Project has received numerous inquiries from Hollywood firms wanting to work with the group.The Lincoln Project already launched a wildly successful podcast in June and has two shows that it streams on YouTube, Facebook and Twitter. They have also seen high demand for its merchandise.The group raised over $58 million this year, including $39.4 million from July through September. The PAC's spending has come under scrutiny after they spent nearly $1.4 million through March with most of that money going towards the Lincoln Project's board members and firms run by them.The group raised over $58 million this year, including $39.4 million from July through September. The PAC's spending has come under scrutiny after they spent nearly $1.4 million through March, with most of that money going towards the Lincoln Project's board members and firms run by them.One of the projects reportedly in the works is a non-fiction film to be completed after the election. Several television studios are looking to team up to produce a series reminiscent of the hit show "House of Cards," and television networks that have expressed interest in hosting the Lincoln Project's two streaming shows.The group is currently in a kerfuffle with Ivanka and Jared Trump, who threatened to sue over the Lincoln Project's Times Square billboards depicting the pair displaying indifference to deaths caused by the coronavirus."Sue if you must," said Matthew Sanderson, an attorney for the Lincoln Project, saying the group "will not be intimidated by empty bluster." |
Hurricane Zeta hits Mexico's Caribbean coast Posted: 27 Oct 2020 12:21 AM PDT |
Viral photo sparks concerns about Indonesia's 'Jurassic Park' Posted: 27 Oct 2020 08:52 AM PDT |
Ex-Marines at Camp Lejeune arrested in Idaho for secretly selling guns, feds say Posted: 27 Oct 2020 10:10 AM PDT |
Russian leader Putin rejects Trump’s claims about Hunter Biden Posted: 26 Oct 2020 08:24 AM PDT |
Posted: 26 Oct 2020 10:39 PM PDT The Supreme Court sided with Republicans in Wisconsin on Monday, ruling 5-3 along ideological lines that Wisconsin can count only those absentee ballots that arrive by Election Day — even if they were mailed days earlier. Since first-class mail has been taking an average of 10 days to be delivered in the state, Wisconsin's Democratic Party urged mail-in Democrats to hand-deliver their absentee ballots or vote in person.The practical issue involves what happens with Wisconsin's 700,000 outstanding absentee ballots. "But the deeper issue is about the extent to which a ballot should be considered as valid," Phillip Bump writes in The Washington Post. In a factually sloppy concurring opinion, Justice Brett Kavanaugh evidently embraced President Trump's baseless conspiracies about voter fraud and bizarre demand that the winner be announced election night.Many states require absentee ballots to arrive by Election Day because they "want to avoid the chaos and suspicions of impropriety that can ensue if thousands of absentee ballots flow in after election day and potentially flip the results of an election," Kavanaugh wrote. "And those states also want to be able to definitively announce the results of the election on election night, or as soon as possible thereafter."Justice Elena Kagan, in her dissent, noted that "there are no results to 'flip' until all valid votes are counted. And nothing could be more 'suspicio[us]' or 'improp[er]' than refusing to tally votes once the clock strikes 12 on election night."More broadly, Kavanaugh — and Justice Neil Gorsuch — embraced late Chief Justice William Rehnquist's concurring opinion in 2000's Bush v. Gore, which invented a legal theory "so radical, so contrary to basic principles of democracy and federalism, that two conservative justices" rejected it, even as they agreed to hand the White House to George W. Bush in what was supposed to be a one-off decision, Mark Joseph Stern writes at Slate.> Kavanaugh favorably cites Bush v. Gore two pages later. So much for "limited to the present circumstances." (Kavanaugh worked on Bush's legal team in that case.) pic.twitter.com/3Q7E9Y6Kiy> > — Matt Ford (@fordm) October 26, 2020Rehnquist argued that state courts cannot interpret state election laws in federal elections, Stern writes, "a breathtaking assault on state sovereignty" that would transform the Supreme Court "into a national board of elections with veto power over each state's election rules." With Judge Amy Coney Barrett put on the court, the conservatives likely have five votes enact Rehnquist's theory, throwing out ballots in Pennsylvania and North Carolina as well as Wisconsin, he added. "In other words, Barrett's first decisions as a justice may determine the outcome of the election."More stories from theweek.com Republicans are on the verge of a spectacular upside-down achievement The very different emotional lives of Trump and Biden voters Middle-finger voting is driving the entire country mad |
Turkey's Erdogan sues Dutch anti-Islam lawmaker for insults Posted: 27 Oct 2020 05:00 AM PDT Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan is suing Dutch lawmaker Geert Wilders after the anti-Islam politician posted a series of tweets against the Turkish leader, including one that described him as a "terrorist." The state-run Anadolu Agency said Erdogan's lawyer on Tuesday filed a criminal complaint against Wilders at the Ankara Chief Prosecutor's office for "insulting the president" -- a crime in Turkey punishable by up to four years in prison. Wilders posted a cartoon depicting Erdogan wearing a bomb-resembling hat on his head, with the comment: "terrorist." |
Map: State-by-state breakdown of coronavirus travel restrictions Posted: 26 Oct 2020 11:34 AM PDT |
Are polls of the presidential race reliable this time? Posted: 26 Oct 2020 12:05 PM PDT |
Pfizer says Covid-19 vaccine still possible in 2020 despite data lag Posted: 27 Oct 2020 05:07 PM PDT |
Rioters Injure Thirty Police Officers in Night of Violent Unrest in Philadelphia Posted: 27 Oct 2020 06:54 AM PDT At least 30 police officers were hurt during rioting that broke out in West Philadelphia overnight after police fatally shot a man wielding a knife on Monday, authorities said.Rioters threw rocks and bricks at police and looted and vandalized businesses, NBC Washington reported. A 56-year-old sergeant was hospitalized after she was struck by a pickup truck, breaking her leg, among other injuries. The unrest broke out after police shot and killed 27-year-old Walter Wallace Jr., a black man, in Cobbs Creek. Wallace had a knife when he walked toward officers and ignored orders to drop his weapon, police said. Video of the incident appears to show Wallace approaching officers while his mother attempted to restrain him. The camera briefly points downward and the sounds of several gunshots ring out as police open fire. Wallace is then shown lying still on the ground while his mother, who is screaming hysterically, runs to him. Philadelphia mayor Jim Kenney, Police Commissioner Danielle Outlaw and District Attorney Larry Krasner said they would investigate the incident, while Fraternal Order of Police president John McNesby defended the officers in a statement. Looters took advantage of the unrest, breaking into a number of stores including several Rite Aid stores in West Philadelphia, clothing and shoe stores and at least one restaurant, NBC reported. At 57th and Vine streets, clothing and merchandise were thrown on the sidewalk. Two ATM machines were smashed as well.> A night of rioting and looting in West Philadelphia after police shot a man who they say was armed with a knife. Damage and looting reported at pharmacies, liquor stores, and shops along 52nd St @NBCPhiladelphia pic.twitter.com/x5ae6Dente> > -- Randy Gyllenhaal (@RandyGyllenhaal) October 27, 2020Rioters set fire to police cars and dumpsters. Police said five police vehicles and one fire department vehicle were vandalized.Police arrested more than 30 people for throwing rocks and bricks at police or looting, the department said. |
Some Irvine homeowners allowed to return as 2 wildfires burn in California's Orange County Posted: 27 Oct 2020 02:44 PM PDT |
A Family Dollar customer reportedly shot and killed another shopper outside a store in Ohio Posted: 26 Oct 2020 09:12 AM PDT |
Posted: 26 Oct 2020 07:41 AM PDT The German embassy in Bangkok became a new focal point of Thailand's months-long pro-democracy rallies on Monday as thousands marched on the building to petition Berlin to investigate the Thai king's use of his powers while residing in Bavaria. Since 2007, King Maha Vajiralongkorn, who ascended to the throne in 2016, has spent long periods of time in southern Germany. But his extended presence on German soil has become a diplomatic headache for Berlin during Thailand's nationwide rallies, where some protest leaders have made bold demands for the monarchy to be reformed – long a taboo subject in the Southeast Asian nation because of strict lese majeste laws. In Germany, Heiko Maas, the foreign minister warned the king against using the country as a base to conduct Thai politics. "We are monitoring this long-term," Mr Maas said. "It will have immediate consequences if there are things that we assess to be illegal." His comments came as the embassy's premises in central Bangkok turned into a potential flashpoint between rival protest groups on Monday. |
Posted: 26 Oct 2020 01:11 PM PDT |
Coronavirus in the U.S. is spreading like 'wildfire,' epidemiologist says Posted: 26 Oct 2020 04:56 PM PDT |
Posted: 26 Oct 2020 04:56 PM PDT |
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