Tag: Controversial

  • Fox News parts ways with controversial host Tucker Carlson

    Fox News parts ways with controversial host Tucker Carlson

    [ad_1]

    Fox News has announced the departure of its influential host, Tucker Carlson, after months of speculation regarding the controversial figure’s future at the conservative news network. The announcement came as a surprise to many, given Carlson’s popularity and influence within conservative circles.

    According to a statement released by Fox News on Sunday, the network and Carlson have “mutually agreed” to part ways, with the host’s final show set to air on June 30. While the reasons behind the decision have not been explicitly stated, Carlson’s tenure at Fox News has been marred by a number of controversies, including allegations of racist and sexist comments, as well as criticism of his coverage of the COVID-19 pandemic and the 2020 presidential election.

    The decision to part ways with Carlson is seen as a significant move for Fox News, which has been grappling with declining ratings and internal strife in recent months. The network has also faced scrutiny over its coverage of the January 6 Capitol riots, which many critics have accused of fomenting violence and promoting conspiracy theories.

    MS Education Academy

    Despite Carlson’s departure, he remains a polarizing figure in the world of conservative media. Some have speculated that he may seek to launch his own media platform or be courted by rival conservative outlets.

    Carlson has not yet commented on his departure, leaving many to wonder what lies ahead for the controversial host. Regardless of what the future holds for Carlson, his departure from Fox News marks the end of an era for the conservative news network.

    (With inputs taken from agencies)

    [ad_2]
    #Fox #News #parts #ways #controversial #host #Tucker #Carlson

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Inside McCarthy’s controversial plan to shrink food aid

    Inside McCarthy’s controversial plan to shrink food aid

    [ad_1]

    2023 0417 gop 100 2 francis 2

    McCarthy has made targeting these adults, who generally don’t have children in their household, central to his efforts to shrink welfare programs as he tries to balance competing demands from various wings of the GOP caucus. Republicans who represent swing districts President Joe Biden won in 2020 are wary of going too far in tightening restrictions, prompting an outcry from some voters. At the other end of the party spectrum, conservatives are pushing McCarthy to pursue much stricter limits on SNAP and other federal assistance programs.

    Given Republicans’ slim majority, McCarthy can only afford to lose four GOP votes in the House, leaving him and his team with very little room for error.

    The speaker and his allies have yet to share a final debt limit bill with fellow Republicans. A spokesperson for McCarthy’s team didn’t respond to a request for comment about the plan.

    Several members stood up during the House GOP Conference meeting Tuesday and called for McCarthy to go even further on his proposals to expand work requirements, according to two people in the room who were granted anonymity to discuss internal caucus matters.

    “Yeah, I don’t think that’s an appropriate conversation for this debt ceiling conversation at this point,” said Republican Rep. Mike Garcia (Calif.), who represents a district Biden won.

    Garcia said he supports McCarthy’s effort to expand work requirements for food assistance for “able-bodied” people of working age who “can get a job.”

    “Now, if once employed, you still fall into those demographics, whether it’s age or whatever it is, and you’re still needing assistance for food stamps, then I’m supportive of that as well,” Garcia said.

    “The conversation has been not to impact those with dependents, and not certainly single moms,” said Rep. Marc Molinaro (R-N.Y.), who represents a Biden district and is being targeted by Democrats in 2024. “I just want to see what they’re actually proposing.”

    Democrats, however, warn McCarthy’s proposed spending cuts in the debt limit talks would slash other key food aid — including programs with strong bipartisan support on Capitol Hill. More than one million low-income moms, babies and young children would lose access to baby formula and food benefits, while another million largely home-bound seniors would lose access to food through the meals on wheels program, according to the Biden administration.

    Senate Republicans have been generally skeptical of the House GOP effort to shrink food aid via the debt limit talks. And, as McCarthy and House GOP leaders try to push for a final vote before the end of the month, some key GOP members like moderate Rep. Don Bacon (R-Neb.) are starting to suggest Republicans could drop the SNAP plans from the debt limit bill, and leave it for upcoming negotiations on the farm bill.

    “I’ll let the speaker and the chairman wrestle with that,” Bacon said, referring to House Agriculture Chair G.T. Thompson (R-Pa.). Thompson agreed that he’d rather the fight over SNAP work requirements be left to the farm bill. “But I don’t have control over the debt ceiling,” he added.

    Republican leaders are looking to reassure vulnerable members about the scope of their SNAP proposal. Senior Republicans have been telling members that work requirements for able-bodied adults without young children at home are popular in swing states, pointing to a non-binding ballot initiative in Wisconsin that advised the state legislature to require “able-bodied, childless adults” to “look for work in order to receive taxpayer-funded welfare benefits.” The measure passed with 80 percent approval.

    “This is popular with the American people,” said Rep. Kelly Armstrong (R-N.D.), a top McCarthy ally. “It’s smart policy that reduces debt and has a long term effect on our workforce and economy.”

    Senate Democrats, however, firmly rejected talk of new SNAP restrictions on Tuesday, arguing what the House GOP describes as targeted measures will still hit millions of vulnerable people.

    “Let’s be clear, this is a non-starter,” said Sen. Debbie Stabenow (D-Mich.).

    Stabenow, a member of Democratic leadership and the chair of the Agriculture Committee that oversees SNAP, noted in a brief interview that there’s already “stringent” work requirements in place for the program, set to return in July after a pandemic pause, including the “able-bodied” group.

    “Frankly, I don’t think they understand that,” said Stabenow. “And we’re certainly not gonna tie it to whether or not we default.”

    Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack recently told House Agriculture members who oversee SNAP that the “able-bodied” group of low-income Americans without dependents receiving assistance is “mostly male and mostly homeless,” including homeless veterans. People who have just aged out of foster care are also in the group. This population of SNAP recipients tends to have lower education levels, as well.

    Vilsack also highlighted recent research that shows tightening work requirements “didn’t impact the earnings or employment opportunities” for recipients. “So in other words, you can talk about restraining that, but it’s not going to do what you think it’s going to do,” Vilsack told lawmakers.

    As a former governor of Iowa, he also argued the move would ultimately “hamstring” governors’ ability to respond to disasters and other crises — since current SNAP exemptions are designed to help provide food to the most vulnerable low-income Americans in areas with high unemployment. Republicans argue Democratic governors exploit that exemption.

    Molinaro said Tuesday he also wants blue states, like New York, to “make sure those [SNAP] dollars get to the people who are most vulnerable.”

    Asked whom he considers “the most vulnerable,” Molinaro replied: “That’s a great question.”

    “Let me see what they’re proposing and then I’ll take a look at it.”

    [ad_2]
    #McCarthys #controversial #plan #shrink #food #aid
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • House Republicans will formally kick off their immigration and border work on Wednesday, but are sidestepping a controversial asylum proposal, for now.

    House Republicans will formally kick off their immigration and border work on Wednesday, but are sidestepping a controversial asylum proposal, for now.

    [ad_1]

    Nearly 100 people have been killed due to the conflict — and the death toll continues to rise.

    [ad_2]
    #House #Republicans #formally #kick #immigration #border #work #Wednesday #sidestepping #controversial #asylum #proposal
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Controversial judge tests New Hampshire senators’ clout

    Controversial judge tests New Hampshire senators’ clout

    [ad_1]

    Several Democrats are privately balking at the nomination. And it would be a second significant loss for the New Hampshire senators, after their unsuccessful effort to dissuade President Joe Biden and the Democratic Party from ending New Hampshire’s first-in-the-nation presidential primary in 2024. While colleagues speak reverently of the two Democrats, Delaney will test just how much influence they really wield.

    Some in the caucus have started to quietly question why Shaheen and Hassan, who are known for their collaborative natures and prevailing in tough Senate races, are going to the mat for a nominee with such a controversial record. And even the duo’s best efforts may not be enough.

    “There’s a lot of concerns that are being aired from groups that I really respect. I’m going to listen to them, I’m going to read their statements and things to me. I’m going to learn more,” said Sen. Cory Booker (D-N.J.), a member of the Judiciary Committee. He also described Hassan and Shaheen as “two dear friends whose judgment I trust.”

    Sen. Mazie Hirono (D-Hawaii), another member of the panel who has spoken to both senators, was also noncommittal: “I haven’t decided how I’m going to vote for him yet. That’s all I’m going to say at the moment.”

    It’s a rare step into the spotlight for the Democratic pair of Granite Staters, who are known more for cutting bipartisan deals than stirring up trouble. But when it comes to Delaney, they’re not holding back.

    In making her case to confirm Delaney, Shaheen said in a brief interview that she’d told the caucus about “what a great job he did as attorney general and in private practice” and wants “to correct the misinformation that’s been put out there about him.”

    Concerns about Delaney extend beyond the legislative branch. Outside groups that typically align with the administration have expressed deep concerns or even outright opposition to Delaney. In addition, officials at the White House were uneasy about Delaney but felt they couldn’t pick a fight with the New Hampshire senators after the state lost its first-in-nation primary status, according to a person who was told by the White House.

    Biden pressed to reorganize the primary calendar on Dec. 1; Delaney was nominated on Jan. 18. Shaheen pushed back on any suggestion that the two events could be linked: “no connection at all.”

    “The President nominated Michael Delaney based on his three decades of legal experience, including his time as a front-line prosecutor combating violent crime, and his leadership fighting human trafficking,” said White House spokesperson Andrew Bates. “As is typical for judicial nominations, the President consulted with Senators Shaheen and Hassan; it would be very unusual if he hadn’t. Then the President made his call, and is standing shoulder to shoulder with New Hampshire’s Senators in support of this qualified nominee.”

    It’s also not unusual for home-state senators to have substantial sway over judicial nominees. In this case, Delaney would be New Hampshire’s pick on the New England-based First Circuit.

    While Shaheen and Hassan tout Delaney’s credentials, some Senate Democrats privately wonder why the two don’t cut their losses and go with another option. And there’s increased anxiety over nominees lately, given Democrats’ focus on confirming judges in divided government and the withdrawal of two high-profile nominees earlier this month.

    “Nobody seems to have a clear idea as to what explains their intensity,” said one Democratic senator, granted anonymity to speak candidly about the situation. “Except maybe they’re out on a limb. Maybe there’s a certain amount of competitive pride. They are such really great senators, you know, maybe there’s somebody else who could go right through.”

    Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse (D-R.I.), however, gets where Shaheen and Hassan are coming from. In his words, it’s a “small-state thing.”

    “If it were Rhode Island, I’d feel the same way,” he said. “You don’t get very many. If you do and you know the people [who are nominated] it’s much more tangible and real than if it’s just someone picked by your appointments advisory committee out of a stack of resumes.”

    Delaney’s representation of St. Paul’s School in a sexual assault case is perhaps his greatest obstacle. Delaney filed a motion that would have allowed the plaintiff, who was a minor at the time, to remain anonymous only if she and her representatives did not speak about the case publicly, spurring accusations that he was trying to silence an alleged victim of assault. Senate Republicans made the case a top focus during his confirmation hearing and Delaney is not expected to get any GOP votes in committee, where Democrats enjoy a one-seat majority when every senator is in attendance.

    But it’s more than just the school sexual assault case. Delaney has also drawn scrutiny from Democrats for signing on to a 2005 legal brief defending parental notification in abortion cases.

    A committee vote on Delaney’s nomination has been delayed for weeks, partly because of Sen. Dianne Feinstein’s (D-Calif.) prolonged absence as she recovers from shingles. That gives the New Hampshire senators more time to convince their colleagues, although it’s left the nomination hanging in limbo for a while.

    “His entire career has demonstrated a commitment to justice,” Hassan said in an interview Tuesday. “He started sexual assault response teams as attorney general. And he has just extraordinary support statewide, from plaintiffs’ attorneys, from defense attorneys, from former New Hampshire Supreme Court Justices appointed by both parties.”

    Yet Judiciary Committee Democrats aren’t the only senators who are on the fence. Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) said she’ll “review the full record if he’s voted out of committee.” And Sen. Ed Markey (D-Mass.) said he hasn’t begun considering the nomination.

    Still, Democratic senators respect the hustle from Shaheen and Hassan. Sen. Peter Welch (D-Vt.), a member of the Judiciary panel, said Delaney “couldn’t have two better advocates.” Meanwhile, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer also supports the nominee.

    And some Democrats say they’re surprised at the quandary that Delaney — and his backers — are now in. Senate Judiciary Chair Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) called Shaheen and Hassan’s advocacy “extraordinary. But it’s extraordinary the attacks that are coming at this nominee. So, you got to look at the wealth of support that this nominee has.”

    Asked if he will still put Delaney up for a vote, Durbin replied: “It’s on the calendar.”

    [ad_2]
    #Controversial #judge #tests #Hampshire #senators #clout
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Maha: Speaker grants more time to Sanjay Raut to clarify his controversial remark

    Maha: Speaker grants more time to Sanjay Raut to clarify his controversial remark

    [ad_1]

    Mumbai: Maharashtra Legislative Assembly Speaker Rahul Narvekar on Wednesday said he has accepted Rajya Sabha member and Shiv Sena (UBT) leader Sanjay Raut’s request for more time to submit a written clarification on his “chor-mandal” remark.

    Narvekar said he has received a communication from Raut seeking more time for submitting a written reply. “I have accepted the request,” he said without specifying how much time has been given to Raut.

    The speaker said Raut had been asked on March 1 to submit his written response by March 3.

    “I have received a communication from him today. The response was sought as part of natural justice. My view was that the remarks referring to the legislature as a body of thieves’ was an insult to the House,” he said.

    Earlier, Raut had sparked chaos in the House after he called the legislature a “chor-mandal” (council of thieves). His comment also prompted members of the ruling BJP and Shiv Sena to submit to the speaker a notice for breach of privilege motion against the MP.

    Subscribe us on The Siasat Daily - Google News

    [ad_2]
    #Maha #Speaker #grants #time #Sanjay #Raut #clarify #controversial #remark

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Watch Video: Mohammad Amir’s Controversial Gesture In PSL Leaves Fans Fuming – Kashmir News

    [ad_1]

    Watch Video: Mohammad Amir’s Controversial Gesture In PSL Leaves Fans Fuming

    Pakistani pacer Mohammad Amir has time and again made headlines for his action in the Pakistan Super League.

    The left-arm seamer earned plenty of flak for his on-field antics while bowling to Pakistan national team skipper Babar Azam. The incident even saw ex-Pakistan captain Shahid Afridi reaching out to Amir and speaking to him about his actions.

    However, Afridi’s words seem to have had no impact on Amir, who left fans disgusted with another poor action on the field in a PSL match.

    Mohammad Amir, who is currently plying his trade for the Karachi Kings, was bowling in the 6th over of the game against Lahore Qalandars. On the first ball, Irfan Khan Niazi took a brilliant catch off Amir’s bowling to dismiss the dangerous Shai Hope. After taking the wicket, Amir took a leaf out of WWE Superstar Triple H’s book as he imitated the famous but controversial ‘Suck It’ gesture made famous by the pro wrestling legend.

    Watch the controversial gesture below:

    In an earlier match between the Karachi Kings and Peshawar Zalmi, Mohammad Amir and Babar Azam were embroiled in quite a heated exchange, and this in turn angered fans and ex-cricketers alike, including Shahid Afridi who had quite some harsh words for the fast bowler.

    Reacting to Amir’s antics, Shahid Afridi had said: “Whenever a player doesn’t perform, or even if he does, I drop him a message to call him. Likewise, I messaged Amir yesterday. I talked to him respectfully, but I also scolded him. I told Amir, ‘what do you want?’ You have gained so much respect, you faced a blot on your reputation and from there, you made a return. You got a new life, in a way. What are you even trying to do?”

    Ye koi tareeka hai? (Is this the way to play?) There are juniors around you, you are using bad words. There are fans who are disheartened to see that. Even we have used such words and sometimes, the camera used to catch us. There are families, kids watching you on television. Aggression is fine, but keep it under control,” Afridi had further said.

    ALSO READ: 7th Pay Commission: Shock to Govt Employees, This Rule Will be Applicable From April 1

    CLICK ON THE BELOW PROVIDED LINKS TO FOLLOW KASHMIR NEWS ON: 


    Post Views: 618



    [ad_2]
    #Watch #Video #Mohammad #Amirs #Controversial #Gesture #PSL #Leaves #Fans #Fuming #Kashmir #News

    ( With inputs from : kashmirnews.in )

  • Israel greenlights controversial judicial reform despite opposition

    Israel greenlights controversial judicial reform despite opposition

    [ad_1]

    Jerusalem: Israel’s parliament voted on Tuesday to advance Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s contentious plan to overhaul the country’s judiciary, despite widespread public opposition.

    After a stormy debate, the first two bills of the judicial reform passed in a first, non-binding reading, reports Xinhua news agency.

    Out of the 120 seats in Parliament, 63 lawmakers voted in favour of the bills, 47 against, and 10 were absent.

    Members of Netanyahu’s new ultra-religious and ultranationalist coalition government celebrated the outcome.

    “A great night and a great day,” Netanyahu wrote on Twitter after the vote.

    The first bill would alter the composition of the nine-member committee that appoints judges, limiting the influence of legal professionals and giving the government an outright majority.

    If approved, the law would enable the government to choose judges.

    The other bill would eliminate the Supreme Court’s authority to cancel basic laws passed by Parliament, even if they are unconstitutional.

    The vote means the ruling coalition could now bring the two bills for the final second and third readings in Parliament, after which they will become laws, kick-starting the reform.

    Opposition members warned that the bills will weaken the legal system and politicize it.

    Yair Lapid, the centrist leader of the opposition, criticized the coalition on Twitter, saying: “Members of the coalition — history will judge you for this night for the damage to democracy, for the damage to the economy, for the damage to security, for the fact that you are tearing the people of Israel apart and you simply do not care.”

    The divisive reform has also sparked a massive uproar in Israeli society.

    Tens of thousands of Israelis rallied outside the parliament in Jerusalem on Monday as the votes began. They held flags of Israel and chanted “Democracy!”

    A major concern of the protesters is that the reform will concentrate power in the hands of Netanyahu.

    The longest-serving leader of Israel is facing a criminal trial over corruption charges and Attorney General Gali Baharav-Miara has warned his involvement in the proposed reform puts him in a conflict of interest.

    [ad_2]
    #Israel #greenlights #controversial #judicial #reform #opposition

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • British architect choice for controversial revamp of Athens ‘museum of museums’

    British architect choice for controversial revamp of Athens ‘museum of museums’

    [ad_1]

    It is slated to be the “western world’s museum of museums”, a showcase of Greece’s greatest repository of ancient art.

    Once completed, the revamped National Archaeological Museum in Athens will, say officials, not only have been expanded but “reborn” at a time of record tourism to the country.

    “Today I have been profoundly persuaded that a personal dream of mine has become reality,” the Greek prime minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis told an audience at the museum for the unveiling of the new design on Wednesday.

    The emblematic work, overseen by the British architect Sir David Chipperfield, is expected to last five years. Presenting the plans, the Briton emphasised that the goal was not to compete with the museum’s main neoclassical building, which houses one of the finest collections of antiquities globally, but to complement the historic landmark by drawing on the original design. “Our architectural approach has been to create a plinth growing out of the existing building … [that] at the same time develops into a powerful piece of architecture,” he said.

    “The challenge, of course, is to get those two things in balance.”

    The proposed renovation was unanimously selected from a shortlist of 10 by an international evaluation committee last month. Chipperfield, renowned for his restoration of the Neues Museum in Berlin, has calculated the construction will generate about 20,000 sq m of additional space, including two floors of subterranean galleries, a lush roof garden and street-level entrance.

    But like most public works it is controversial.

    Not since the Acropolis Museum was built back in 2009 at the foot of the fifth century BC site has a project of such scope stirred such debate or emotion. Before the proposed design had been chosen, the Association of Greek Architects had threatened to take the issue of the competition’s rules to the Council of State, the country’s supreme administrative court, after it became clear that only award-winning foreign firms with experience in museum work would be permitted to participate.

    “It is unacceptable that Greek architects were not allowed to take part,” said Tassis Papaioannou, emeritus professor of architecture at the National University of Athens. “We are seriously thinking of taking it to court because the way they have proceeded so far is illegal.”

    Greek renovation experts have also objected to the scale of the new entrance, saying photorealistic images released by the winning team are overly optimistic. “The new construction will virtually eclipse the original 19th building from public view at street level,” said Costas Zambas, who headed restoration works at the Acropolis for 25 years. “After yesterday’s presentation it is clear that what is one of the great neoclassical monuments in Athens will be hidden if this overly optimistic approach is allowed.”

    Chipperfield, described as a master of works dealing “in dignity, in gravitas, in memory and in art”, told the Guardian his team had wrestled with similar concerns. “You can’t make an omelette without breaking eggs,” he said after the presentation. “From certain angles, it is true, it will have an impact but the question is whether it amounts to significant harm or whether [the change in view] is just different. It’s a perfectly valid question. Our concerns are not dissimilar.”

    Mitsotakis, whose centre right government faces re-election this year, has made the renovation a cultural priority, saying it will not only put the institution on the map but help revive an entire district in downtown Athens.

    “We display less than 10% of what we have in our warehouses,” he said of its vast collection. “It has always troubled me that just over 500,000 visitors come to the museum every year when it hosts such an incredible wealth of world cultural heritage.”

    [ad_2]
    #British #architect #choice #controversial #revamp #Athens #museum #museums
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Why is the Prevent counter-terrorism programme review so controversial? – podcast

    [ad_1]

    Since its inception two decades ago, Prevent, part of the UK government’s counter-terrorism strategy, has attracted controversy. Its aim is to ensure that those at risk of radicalisation can be stopped and turned away from extremist ideologies, reducing terrorist attacks.

    For many years there have been criticisms that Prevent has impinged on civil liberties, and has discriminated against Muslims. And, the Guardian’s crime correspondent, Vikram Dodd, tells Nosheen Iqbal, with increasing numbers of referrals to Prevent concerning the far right, there have been growing criticisms it has lost its way.

    Now an independent review has been published, offering recommendations that the government says it will accept in full to overhaul the programme. But with the review itself mired in controversy after human rights and community groups boycotted it, will it make Britain safer?

    Libya-IRA arms report<br>File photo dated 23/01/18 of former Chair of the Charity Commission William Shawcross, the author of a confidential Foreign Office report on Libyan-sponsored IRA bombings. Mr Shawcross has expressed surprise and disappointment at the Government’s response to his work. Issue date: Wednesday March 24, 2021. PA Photo. The Government has ruled out using £12 billion of frozen Libyan assets held in the UK, specifically the tax take generated by them, to compensate victims of explosives supplied by former Libyan dictator Muammar Gaddafi. See PA story ULSTER Libya. Photo credit should read: Dominic Lipinski/PA Wire

    Photograph: Dominic Lipinski/PA

    Support The Guardian

    The Guardian is editorially independent.
    And we want to keep our journalism open and accessible to all.
    But we increasingly need our readers to fund our work.

    Support The Guardian

    [ad_2]
    #Prevent #counterterrorism #programme #review #controversial #podcast
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Bihar: Activist files complaint against Ramdev for controversial anti-Muslim remarks

    Bihar: Activist files complaint against Ramdev for controversial anti-Muslim remarks

    [ad_1]

    Muzaffarpur: A Bihar-based rights activist on Saturday filed a complaint against yoga guru Ramdev for allegedly hurting the religious sentiments of Muslims with his remarks at a recent meeting of seers.

    Tamanna Hashmi lodged the complaint against Ramdev before a local court here and demanded the registration of an FIR against him.

    At a meeting of seers in Rajasthan’s Barmer on Friday, the yoga guru had accused Muslims of resorting to terror and abducting Hindu women, while comparing Hinduism to Islam and Christianity.

    “Ramdev’s statement against Muslims and Islam is objectionable and it has hurt their sentiments,” Hashmi told reporters, after filing the complaint before the court of the Chief Judicial Magistrate in Muzaffarpur.

    Subscribe us on The Siasat Daily - Google News

    [ad_2]
    #Bihar #Activist #files #complaint #Ramdev #controversial #antiMuslim #remarks

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )