Tag: delivered

  • Florida Legislature: We delivered for DeSantis this session

    Florida Legislature: We delivered for DeSantis this session

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    britain us florida desantis 66303

    The fate of a “digital bill of rights” that was aimed at Big Tech companies is up in the air with just days left. And while the Senate and House have passed rival versions of a controversial bill to ban gender-affirming care to minors — another top priority that DeSantis highlighted in his state of the state speech — Republicans are at odds over some of the provisions in the bill, including a proposal to outlaw private insurance companies from covering treatments.

    The DeSantis administration did not respond to a request for comment on Sunday.

    DeSantis’ expected presidential bid has loomed over much of the legislative session, and Republicans for the most part fulfilled DeSantis’ agenda. The governor has already touted some of those policy wins both here and abroad, such as last week when, while on a visit to Israel, he signed into law a measure that cracks down on hate crimes.

    But Republican rivals and Democrats are already attacking some of these legislative achievements which are aimed at the conservative base but could turn off moderate Republicans. South Carolina GOP Rep. Nancy Mace, for example, publicly criticized DeSantis for signing a ban on abortion after six weeks of pregnancy, and billionaire GOP donor Thomas Peterffy told the Financial Times he was uncomfortable with the governor’s support for the abortion ban and wanted to wait before donating to him.

    But Florida Republicans still trumpeted the support they provided the governor.

    “Listen, I think we’ve delivered major, major victories on so many different fronts and the governor can rightly claim credit for having one of the biggest sessions certainly in Florida history,” Florida House Speaker Paul Renner said last week.

    Their support provides DeSantis a long-list of legislative victories to tout to GOP primary voters across the country as springboard into a likely presidential campaign in a few weeks.

    The list includes:

    — Making it easier to execute criminals in Florida

    — Banning abortion after six weeks of pregnancy

    — Imposing new rules on public sector unions aligned with Democrats, including banning the automatic deduction of union dues

    — Ending permit requirements to carry concealed weapons

    — Block children from attending adult-themed drag shows

    DeSantis has also highlighted, during recent out-of-state stops, Florida’s dramatic expansion of private school vouchers that lawmakers also approved this year. And on Friday, legislators sent a sweeping elections bill to him that would clear up Florida law to make sure he would not have to resign as governor if he becomes GOP nominee for president.

    Democrats, vastly outnumbered by the supermajority Republicans enjoy in the Legislature, have spent the entire session calling on Republicans to stand up to DeSantis instead of assisting his presumed bid for president.

    “This session was about the governor’s wish list,” said Rep. Fentrice Driskell, the House Democratic leader. “Effectively anything he wished for or dreamed for … the Legislature hustled to make it happen.”

    But Driskell contended that she’s not sure that the legislative wins will give DeSantis the “national boost’ he was aiming for. She said while some of the bills passed this year were “red meat” for the conservative base they have alienated some GOP donors and would be unpopular with general election voters in 2024.

    “We’re starting to see it backfire on him,” said Driskell.

    DeSantis’ success with the Legislature is also drawing the ire of former President Donald Trump, who is also vying for the GOP presidential nomination. Trump on Sunday sharply criticized the newly passed elections bill as a “total mess.”

    “I couldn’t care less if Ron DeSanctus runs, but the problem is the Bill he is about to sign, which allows him to run without resigning from being Governor, totally weakens Election Integrity in Florida,” Trump posted on his Truth Social platform. “Instead of getting tough, and doing what the people want (same day voting, Voter ID, proof of Citizenship, paper ballots, hand count, etc.) this Bill guts everything … ”

    Yet DeSantis hasn’t just fared well in getting bills passed, but in a year when Florida has a hefty budget surplus, he also been highly successful in getting most of his budget recommendations pushed through including tens of millions for environmental projects, teacher pay, and the expansion of the fledgling Florida State Guard.

    Legislators have also crafted a big tax cut package modeled largely on what DeSantis wanted, although a push by the governor to give Floridians a year-long tax break on certain household goods was not picked up.

    “I think the governor has done very well, I think the Senate has done very well, I think the House has done very well,” maintained Rep. Tom Leek (R-Ormond Beach) and House budget chief when asked about the governor’s budget priorities.

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Earthquakes |  Finland delivered more tents, blankets and dry food to the earthquake areas in Turkey and Syria

    Earthquakes | Finland delivered more tents, blankets and dry food to the earthquake areas in Turkey and Syria

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    Previously, Finland provided Turkey with expert assistance and emergency accommodation capacity for around 3,000 people.

    Finland at the turn of the week, delivered more material aid to the earthquake areas of Turkey, says the Ministry of the Interior.

    Part of the aid is delivered from Turkey to Syria.

    Material transports included, among other things, tents, blankets, heaters and dry food.

    Previously, Finland provided Turkey with expert assistance and emergency accommodation capacity for around 3,000 people. In addition, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs has donated one million euros to Turkey and Syria.

    Destructive earthquakes ravaged Turkey and Syria at the beginning of February. As a result of the earthquake, a total of more than 50,000 people have died in the countries.

    #Earthquakes #Finland #delivered #tents #blankets #dry #food #earthquake #areas #Turkey #Syria

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    #Earthquakes #Finland #delivered #tents #blankets #dry #food #earthquake #areas #Turkey #Syria
    ( With inputs from : pledgetimes.com )

  • Letter lost in 1916 delivered in London more than 100 years later

    Letter lost in 1916 delivered in London more than 100 years later

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    A letter lost in the post in 1916 was finally delivered to a London address more than a century after being sent from Bath.

    Bearing a penny George V stamp and Bath and Sydenham postmarks, it dropped through the letterbox of theatre director Finlay Glen’s Crystal Palace flat in 2021.

    It was addressed to Katie Marsh, who was married to the stamp dealer Oswald Marsh, and was sent by her friend Christabel Mennell, who was holidaying in Bath, according to research by Stephen Oxford, the editor of The Norwood Review, a local history magazine.

    It begins: “My dear Katie, will you lend me your aid – I am feeling quite ashamed of myself after saying what I did at the circle.”

    The letter itself
    Parts of the letter are difficult to read but it mentions someone being unwell. Photograph: Finlay Glen

    Royal Mail said it remained “uncertain what happened in this instance”. But Oxford said it was likely the letter got lost at the Sydenham sorting office, which has closed. “I think it is being redeveloped. So, in that process they must have found this letter hidden somewhere, perhaps fallen behind some furniture.”

    He said: “The Upper Norwood and Crystal Palace area became very popular with wealthy middle-class people in the late 1800s and early 1900s. The letter is from Christabel Mennel, the daughter of a local wealthy tea merchant, Henry Tuke Mennell. And she was friends with Catherine – or Katie – Marsh.

    “Oswald Marsh is recorded in 1901 living in Crystal Palace as a lodger and as a stamp dealer. He was 20 then and I suspect he was being funded by his father, who was a quite wealthy architect who lived in Northern Ireland. They were a Quaker family.”

    Oswald, who married Catherine in 1904, would become a highly regarded stamp dealer who was often called as an expert witness in cases of stamp fraud, and later moved from where the letter was addressed to a large Victorian house with stables nearby.

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    Finlay Glen with the letter outside his flat.
    Finlay Glen with the letter outside his flat. Photograph: Finlay Glen

    The house the letter was addressed to has long been demolished and is now a block of flats. Parts of the letter are difficult to read, but it mentions someone being unwell.

    Glen, 27, said when he and his girlfriend, Lucy, first saw the date “we thought 2016, then saw it had the king’s stamp on it, and realised 1916 so thought it was probably OK to open it.

    “We were fairly mystified as to how it could have taken so long to be delivered but thought it must have got lodged somewhere in the sorting office and a century later was found and someone stuck it in the post.”

    Initially, they “shoved it in a drawer”. The envelope was in fairly good condition, although a bit weathered at the top.

    “We held on to it and tried to decipher it, though some is hard to read. And then we got in touch with the local historical society, because I thought they might be able to tell us about the people involved.

    “I had no idea that so many people would find it so interesting.”

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    #Letter #lost #delivered #London #years
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • D.C. police lieutenant delivered pre-Jan. 6 tips from Tarrio to Capitol Police, Proud Boy’s lawyer says

    D.C. police lieutenant delivered pre-Jan. 6 tips from Tarrio to Capitol Police, Proud Boy’s lawyer says

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    The messages were the latest twist in the trial on charges that Tarrio and four other Proud Boys leaders conspired to violently prevent the transfer of power from then-President Donald Trump to Joe Biden, who won the 2020 election. Tarrio, because of his arrest, was not in Washington during the riot, but he remained in contact with other leaders, who marched on the Capitol and were present at some of the most significant breaches as the mob approached the building.

    Prosecutors say the Proud Boys played a leading role in pushing the crowd toward weak points in the Capitol’s defenses and that their own “hand-selected” allies were responsible for breaching police lines — and ultimately the building itself — at multiple points.

    The details of Tarrio’s relationship with Lamond had largely remained shrouded in mystery until Wednesday, when prosecutors unveiled dozens of messages between the two.

    Over several months, including the crucial weeks before the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol, Lamond appeared to provide Tarrio with inside tips about investigations pertaining to the far-right group.

    Lamond, who defense attorneys have lamented is unable to testify in Tarrio’s defense because of the threat of potential prosecution he faces, repeatedly sent messages on encrypted platforms to Tarrio in the weeks before Jan. 6, even tipping off Tarrio to his impending arrest for burning a Black Lives Matter flag at a pro-Trump rally in Washington in December 2020.

    Prosecutors emphasized that this wasn’t a typical relationship between an investigator and an informant or cooperating source. Typically, it was Lamond who appeared to volunteer sensitive information about investigations connected to Tarrio, even when Lamond had learned that information from other agencies, like the FBI or Secret Service.

    And Tarrio, in turn, shared that information with Proud Boys allies, informing the group on Jan. 4, 2021, that the warrant for his arrest “was just signed.” He would be arrested the next day when he arrived in Washington ahead of Trump’s “Stop the Steal” rally, which would later morph into a riot that led to the storming of the U.S. Capitol.

    “That info stays here,” Tarrio told allies in one private chat.

    The relationship between Tarrio and Lamond has been an enigma. Defense attorneys have pointed to it as proof of Tarrio’s close relationship with law enforcement and his willingness to give police departments a heads-up about Proud Boys activities.

    During his own testimony to the Jan. 6 select committee, Tarrio alluded to his contacts with the police, indicating that he coordinated his group’s movements in December 2020, during a large pro-Trump rally.

    “I coordinated with Metropolitan Police Department to keep my guys away — on these marches, to keep them away from counter-protesters completely,” Tarrio said. “I would say, ‘Hey, I want to march to the monument,’ and they’d tell me, ‘Hey, there’s counter-protesters between where you are and the monument is.’ And I’d be like, ‘Okay, I’m not going to march 4 over there. We’ll march in the opposite direction.’”

    But he didn’t specifically identify Lamond. In their own Jan. 6 committee interviews, Donohue and his deputy, Julie Farnam, described coordinating with Lamond — a top intelligence official with the D.C. police — about potential threats. Neither Donohue nor Farnam, referenced getting Proud Boys-related tips or any information derived from Tarrio.

    Robert Glover, commander of the Metropolitan Police Department on Jan. 6, told the House select committee that the Proud Boys had had interactions with the department throughout 2020 and “always want to make it look like they’re law enforcement’s friends.” Robert Contee III, chief of the D.C. police, told the committee that Tarrio had been on the department leaders’ radar ahead of Jan. 6, including in a security briefing with Mayor Muriel Bowser a week before the riot.

    “I forget the date that the warrant was actually signed for his arrest,” Contee told the committee, describing a Dec. 30, 2020, briefing with the mayor. “But that was kind of lingering out there, MPD world, something that we were following up on.”

    The Jan. 6 select committee also indicated that Lamond forwarded other intelligence to the Capitol Police, including a tip from a “civilian” who lives near Washington who warned of stumbling upon a pro-Trump website that featured “detailed plans to storm Federal buildings, dress incognito, and commit crimes against public officials.”

    Prosecutors repeatedly suggested Lamond’s contacts with Tarrio appeared to be a one-way street, with Lamond repeatedly providing sensitive nonpublic information to Tarrio, which he’d characterize as a “heads up.” For example, Lamond appeared to give Tarrio advance notice that an arrest warrant for Tarrio was imminent.

    The department’s criminal division “had me ID you from a photo you posted on Parler,” Lamond indicated on Dec. 25, 2020. “They may be submitting an arrest warrant to U.S. attorney’s office.”

    To emphasize that point, prosecutors elicited testimony from FBI Agent Peter Dubrowski, one of the agents handling the post-Jan. 6 investigation of Proud Boys leaders, describing how unusual it is for law enforcement officials to share investigative information with someone who may be the subject or target of a probe.

    “I see no benefit [to law enforcement],” Dubrowski said on the witness stand in response to questions from Assistant U.S. Attorney Conor Mulroe.

    With the jury out of the room, Tarrio’s attorney, Sabino Jauregui, indicated that many of Lamond’s private communications would also show that he made use of information Tarrio provided him to inform superiors — and even other police agencies like the Capitol Police — about the group’s plans and activities.

    “We have example after example,” Jauregui said, noting that Lamond would often tell superiors that “my contact” — Tarrio — had informed him about the timing and locations of Proud Boys activities. He said Tarrio even told Lamond about when he would be arriving in D.C. to help facilitate his planned arrest. Some of Tarrio’s information was directed from Lamond to Donohue in the weeks before Jan. 6, Jauregui said.

    The trial featured some of the first discussion, with jurors present, of confidential human sources that the FBI relied on to investigate the Proud Boys. Prosecutors suggested that defense counsel had confused the matter by equating those sources — members of the public who voluntarily share information with law enforcement — with undercover FBI agents.

    Dubrowski said there were no undercover FBI agents monitoring the chats of the Proud Boys. However, prosecutors emphasized that there were sources within the group who grew alarmed and provided information to law enforcement.

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Himanta hasn’t delivered even 50% of BJP’s promises: Assam Cong chief

    Himanta hasn’t delivered even 50% of BJP’s promises: Assam Cong chief

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    Guwahati: Political pundits may be opining that the Congress in Assam looks like a puny force in front of the BJP’s massive election machinery and Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma’s tall image. However, Bhupen Borah, the Assam unit Congress chief, looks rejuvenated after the recent state version of the ‘Bharat Jodo Yatra’, and exudes confidence.

    Here are some excerpts from an exclusive interview with the Congress leader.

    IANS: You have been constantly attacking AIUDF’s Badruddin Ajmal. Can the Congress party win elections in Assam without a tie-up with the AIUDF?

    Borah: We forged an alliance with Ajmal’s party in the last assembly poll. But what we could see was that the AIDUF leaders were constantly delivering a series of provocative statements that, in turn, helped the BJP consolidate Hindu votes.

    The saffron camp was trying their best to do polarisation, however, they had looked to be failure in achieving their target. It was AIUDF leaders’ statements that tremendously aided the BJP wheel the result in their favour.

    IANS: Are you accusing Ajmal of having a pact with Himanta Biswa Sarma?

    Borah: This is very evident. Badruddin Ajmal and his brother have showered huge praises on Sarma a number of times. His party’s MLA says Himanta Biswa Sarma is the most successful Chief Minister. How could you say that? That man could not even fulfil a mere 25 per cent of his party’s vision document.

    The Chief Minister promised to give 1 lakh government jobs within a short time as he assumes the office. One and a half years have gone, the unemployed youths of Assam are crying for jobs, and there are still many unfulfilled promises. Hence, if you call Sarma a successful CM, then you must have a hidden agenda.

    IANS: How have you planned to challenge the BJP’s election machinery?

    Borah: We carried out an Assam version of the ‘Bharat Jodo Yatra’ from Dhubri to Sadiya. The BJP first claimed that people would not turn out for this campaign. But everybody has seen how much response we received during this yatra. Now, people from Barak Valley came to me and urged for a similar campaign in that area. We are launching it there also.

    Actually, the people of Assam were never communal, and I am sure the BJP’s attempt to instil communalism will fail miserably in the next election. Moreover, the BJP has deprived almost every section of society, be it a government employee, a teacher, or a homemaker. They are not giving Old Pension Scheme. The government is trying to lay off 8,000 teacher jobs in the state. The BJP will have to pay the political price of all this.

    IANS: Are you looking for an alliance with other parties leaving AIUDF?

    Borah: In Assam, the AGP (Asom Gana Parishad) has lost its significance. When our Bharat Jodo Yatra was passing through the constituencies of AGP’s top leaders like Atul Bora and Keshab Mahanta, people living adjacent to their houses also joined with us in large numbers. This shows how much they have lost people’s trust by going with the BJP.

    IANS: What about the Trinamool Congress? Ripun Bora already declared that they are ready to forge an alliance with you.

    Borah: We cannot take this decision at the state level. Our party’s national leaders will take a call on whether to go with the Trinamool Congress or not. The same situation applies for the Aam Aadmi Party too. But we are keeping close relations with the Left parties, the NCP, Akhil Gogoi, and Lurinjyoti Gogoi. They joined our yatra at different places.

    IANS: Do you expect this crowd will turn into votes in next year’s Lok Sabha election?

    Borah: I don’t think this is an appropriate time to answer this as we have more than one year left for the election. But people were earlier afraid of talking about the misrule of Himanta Biswa Sarma in the state. This has changed with our recent ‘Bharat Jodo Yatra’. People are now believing that the Congress is ready to take on BJP.

    IANS: Recently, Himanta Biswa Sarma has claimed that he controls at least 50 per cent of the Congress party in the state.

    Borah: I don’t think this is a right statement. However, he has ties with a few Congress leaders in Assam. We know who these people are, and the party’s high command has also been informed. Those leaders are keeping a relation with the Chief Minister for the sake of their personal benefit. I hope they will change very soon otherwise we have to take a strong decision.

    IANS: Is this not an embarrassing and helpless situation for you?

    Borah: In 2006, Himanta Biswa Sarma poached five out of 11 MLAs of the BJP in Assam and claimed that the Bharatiya Janata Party had been finished in the state. A few years later, that man had to join the BJP. He might have made pacts with three or four leaders, but he cannot control the party. We run the Congress in the state, no doubt about that.

    IANS: The BJP is already saying that they will win 12 out of the 14 seats in Assam in the next Lok Sabha polls…

    Borah: It is too early to comment as the election result is always decided in the last three months. But I must say that as of now, we are ahead of the BJP in at least eight Lok Sabha seats in the state.

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    #Himanta #hasnt #delivered #BJPs #promises #Assam #Cong #chief

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )