Tag: despair

  • Never Trumpers rally in D.C., trying to find hope and a plan amid despair

    Never Trumpers rally in D.C., trying to find hope and a plan amid despair

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    The former Bush speechwriter turned columnist David Frum compared their effort to reform the party to blazing a landing strip in the middle of the jungle and simply waiting for planes to land. Former congressional candidate Clint Smith, who switched his party affiliation from Republican to Independent to challenge Rep. Andy Biggs (R-Ariz.), described his state’s GOP as a forest of trees killed by an invasive species of beetle that crawls under bark to poison from the inside. Panels for the event included “Looking to 2024: Hope and Despair — but Mostly Despair” and “Can the GOP survive?”

    If it all felt a bit dark at times, it was a reflection of the mood of some headliners.

    “Trump is a cancer that’s now metastasized,” said former Rep. Barbara Comstock (R-Va.), shortly after wrapping the latter panel. “So it’s going to kill the party more.”

    It’s been roughly six years since the dawn of the Never Trump movement. And, over that time period, it has not had much success — at least when it comes to reforming the party to which its members once belonged. But those within it feel as if a new political opportunity could be at hand with Trump’s vulnerable position in the party. The question they’re confronting is whether they can capitalize on it. By Sunday, they’d had some indications of how it would go. Larry Hogan, the former Maryland governor long seen as a centrist alternative to Trump in 2024, announced he would be forgoing a run for the presidency.

    Despair, once again.

    Organizers billed the gathering of 300 people from across the country as a strategy session for those who no longer feel welcome at the typical gathering of conservative activists. But it also provided a snapshot of how far the party has drifted in such a short period of time.

    The summit itself is just three years old. A decade ago, many of the speakers at this year’s gathering were some of the party’s rising stars and top thinkers. Adam Kinzinger. Bill Kristol. John Kasich. But those who held office have hit political dead ends (Comstock notably lost by 12 points in a 2018 Trump-charged suburban revolt) and the anti-Trump talking heads found their usual confines less inviting. Of the few current elected officials who spoke at the Principles First Summit, two of them were Democrats: Maryland Gov. Wes Moore and Arizona Secretary of State Adrian Fontes.

    The more immediate problem, however, may be that those in attendance don’t even agree on a way out of their conundrum. One example: Charlie Sykes, a Wisconsin political commentator, asked John Bolton, Trump’s former national security adviser, to address the criticism that he refused to testify in Trump’s first impeachment trial but then profited by writing a tell-all book.

    Some in attendance wanted to reform the GOP from within. Others were resigned to boosting moderate Democrats over election-denying populists.

    “It turns out that once you let the toothpaste out of the tube, so to speak, demagoguery and bigotry and all that, some people like it. It’s hard to get it back.” Kristol said. “You can’t just give them a lecture.”

    “We need to defeat the Trump Republicans. And if that means being with the Democrats for a while, that’s fine,” he added, suggesting a presidential ticket of Democrats Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer and Rep. Abigail Spanberger of Virginia. “That’s fine with me.”

    The people who convened at the Conrad have little in common with those who attended the Trump coronation ceremony down the river at CPAC. The latter aired a music video of a song the Jan. 6 defendants recorded from prison. The former gave Michael Fanone, the former D.C. police officer who was brutally attacked on Jan. 6, an award (after which he hung around to sign copies of his new book) and introduced Kinzinger, who was one of two Republicans on Congress’s committee investigating the attacks, as its “patron saint.”

    Instead of MAGA hats and Trumpinator shirts, attendees wore navy blazers with American and Ukrainian flag pins affixed to the lapel. At least one Lincoln Project hat was spotted in the crowd.

    There were no photo ops in a replica of the Oval Office, but attendees could visit a table in the lobby to learn about the benefits of ranked-choice voting and purchase some cookies from a booth set up by Daisy Girl Scouts. No declared presidential candidates came to woo the room. But Hogan did tape a video message that played shortly after he announced he wasn’t mounting a White House run.

    Over the course of some 20 panels and speeches, the tone bounced from upbeat to nostalgic to despondent. One group debated whether Trump or Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis would be a worse nominee (no consensus was reached). At times, the proceedings had the feel of a collective therapy session — especially when it came to reliving the events of Jan. 6, 2021.

    “It’s depressing if you speak out,” said Alyssa Farah Griffin, a former Trump aide turned View host who moderated that panel. “Everyone of us has received death threats for simply telling the truth.”

    “There are members of my family that don’t speak to me. They actually think I’m an enemy of the state,” said Olivia Troye, a national security official who resigned from Vice President Mike Pence’s office in August 2020. “It’s almost like you’re trying to teach critical thinking to someone again.”

    In the audience was Caroline Wren, a top Trump fundraiser who helped coordinate the Jan. 6 rally. Her presence seemed, on the surface, like an attempt to troll Principles First organizers, who saw she registered and were anxious anticipating her arrival. Wren told POLITICO she was just there to listen and appeared surprised her presence caused suspicion.

    For many featured speakers, the crushing personal toll of opposing Trump and speaking out against Jan. 6 was a common theme.

    “I had my co-pilot in the war that told me I should have just stayed a pilot because I’m a terrible politician,” Kinzinger said. “And he was ashamed to have fought with me.”

    Michael Wood, who ran for a special congressional election in 2021 in Texas on an anti-Trump platform and got 3.2 percent of the vote, moderated a panel on whether the GOP could survive Trumpism. His opening question: “What evidence is there for any sort of optimism?”

    “At some point,” Wood remarked later, “you have to ask yourself, ‘Am I going to keep going into these rooms that boo me? Hate me? Send me mean messages?’”

    Comstock, once one of her party’s most touted incumbents and most effective operatives, said she had all but lost hope about the future of the GOP. But, she added, there remained glimmers: far-right GOP nominees for governor and secretary of state in Arizona, Michigan and Pennsylvania all fell to Democrats. “Pat yourself on the back that Kari Lake lost, Tudor Dixon lost and Josh Shapiro won.”

    “It’s all loserville over there at CPAC,” she added.

    The losses of MAGA Republicans was one of the threads of joy that surfaced at Principles First Summit. Indeed, Sarah Longwell, an anti-Trump strategist, suggested that the way to restore sanity to the GOP would be for it to suffer “sustained electoral defeats.”

    But others weren’t content to see Republicans somehow bottom out before building the party back up again. Former Georgia Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan — who was chased out of office by Trump — offered a vague formula for reform from within. The GOP, he said, needed to focus on policy, empathy, and tone.

    But even as he laid out a “five-point strategic roadmap” to reclaim the party, he couldn’t hide his joy at leaving elected office.

    “It’s really really been a hard transition. I’ve been at all my kids’ games on time,” Duncan said to laughter. “I’m sleeping extremely well. It’s a really tough period of time for our family.”



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    #Trumpers #rally #D.C #find #hope #plan #despair
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • ‘How can we get out of here?’: survivors of Cyclone Gabrielle describe sense of loss and despair

    ‘How can we get out of here?’: survivors of Cyclone Gabrielle describe sense of loss and despair

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    In the New Zealand city of Napier, black army helicopters hum overhead. Leonard Fleming has damp clothes, no food and faces a third night sleeping in his car with his dogs Beadle and Mika. Fleming knows he has likely lost everything he left behind when he fled his home in nearby Eskdale, Hawke’s Bay, ahead of Cyclone Gabrielle on Monday.

    “I’ve never had my house burned to the ground but I imagine it’s the same thing,” he tells the Guardian over a crackling phone line; service to the area is recently restored but coverage is intermittent. “All you can do is run away and I started thinking this morning about all the stuff that I’ve lost.”

    This picture shows a coastal home after part of its back garden and sand was washed away during the storm surge caused by Cyclone Gabrielle in Waihi Beach in the Bay of Plenty
    This picture shows a coastal home after part of its back garden and sand was washed away during the storm surge caused by Cyclone Gabrielle in Waihi Beach in the Bay of Plenty. Photograph: Marty Melville/AFP/Getty Images

    The ex-tropical cyclone which lashed New Zealand’s North Island on Monday and Tuesday – with high winds and heavy rain wreaking havoc in more than half a dozen regions – was the worst storm to hit New Zealand this century, said the prime minister, Chris Hipkins, whose government announced a rare national state of emergency on Tuesday.

    Four deaths have been confirmed by the police, including a child whose body was found in Eskdale on Wednesday afternoon.

    The trail of damage included fatal landslips, closed highways that cut off towns, flooding so severe and rapid that hundreds of people awaited rescue on their roofs, and widespread power, water and telecommunications outages. Some of the worst-affected areas were rural towns that were isolated even before the storm hit, with potholed roads and patchy cellphone reception.

    Even as painstaking restoration of services continued on Wednesday, communication woes made it difficult to assess the scale of the devastation.

    Fleming hoped those ferried back and forth in the army helicopters above him on Wednesday included his neighbours in Eskdale – a rural settlement 25km north of Napier. Some had stayed behind when he evacuated two days ago and now cannot be reached by phone.

    The Esk River across the street from Fleming’s house breached its banks on Tuesday morning and he was told that water at surrounding properties reached roof level. Fleming cannot return home – or travel to the nearby city of Hastings to stay with his son – because bridges and state highways in the area are impassable due to flooding, slips and downed trees.

    Army trucks and air force helicopters were sent to rescue hundreds of people in Hawke’s Bay on Tuesday as residents of cut-off settlements took to their roofs. Warnings were issued by civil defence officials on Sunday that residents of several areas should prepare to evacuate, but for many, the perilous speed of the rising water came as a shock.

    Jenna Marsh from central Hawke’s Bay said the water rose metres in minutes at her parents’ house in Pakowhai – a town between Hastings and Napier. Her mother had told her everything was fine as she fed her horses on Tuesday morning.

    Trees damaged by gale-force winds at a commercial pine forest in Tongariro.
    Trees damaged by gale-force winds at a commercial pine forest in Tongariro. Photograph: Marty Melville/AFP/Getty Images

    “Less than an hour later she texts me saying, ‘We’re on the roof,’” Marsh says. Her mother estimated the water level had risen by about three metres in 10 minutes.

    Marsh’s parents spent eight hours on the roof before they were rescued by helicopter, carrying nothing but their two dogs.

    “They had to pick between rescuing grab bags or their dogs and they picked their dogs,” Marsh says.

    The family’s pet goat was left bobbing in a boat and they hope to find their horses, one of which was last seen swimming past the house.

    The government says there are major animal welfare concerns for livestock and horses in rural areas lashed by the storm.

    On Tuesday morning, a group of orchard workers – many of them apparently visiting seasonal workers from Tonga – made news headlines as they broadcast live on Facebook, some using mattresses as flotation devices and others sheltering on the roof of their accommodation. They were rescued on Tuesday afternoon by the army.

    Tomas Lopez Castro and his host family in Napier on Wednesday.
    Tomas Lopez Castro and his host family in Napier on Wednesday

    The communications blackout in Hawke’s Bay provoked panic for relatives living abroad. One family in Bogotá, Colombia, whose 15-year-old son arrived in New Zealand a fortnight ago for a six-month exchange program, were not able to reach him for two days.

    Juan Sebastian Lopez says his younger brother, Tomas, is staying with a host family in Taradale, Napier, where evacuations were widespread. The family had felt reassured by New Zealand’s relative safety when they farewelled “our prince” on his first solo adventure abroad – and watched the news of rising flood waters in horror.

    “We never imagined that this was even possible,” Lopez says.

    Frantic with worry – and still unable to contact Tomas or his host family on Wednesday morning – the family filled in a police missing person form and waited. Lopez was overjoyed when Tomas and his host family were able to briefly confirm their safety on Wednesday afternoon, after traveling to a location with working wifi. More than 1,400 people have been registered with the police as uncontactable.

    A view of flood damage in the the aftermath of cyclone Gabrielle in Hawke’s Bay
    A view of flood damage in the the aftermath of Cyclone Gabrielle in Hawke’s Bay. Photograph: New Zealand defence force/Reuters

    Further north in Coromandel, widespread power cuts left residents in slip-prone beach settlements unsure about what was happening outside their towns and worried about food supplies running out if the roads to the peninsula cannot be reopened quickly.

    Claire Moyes, her husband and their visiting guests, spent two “terrifying” nights with “thunder, lightning and wind right on top of us”. Worried the stream beside their property would flood their home, the group dug trenches to funnel rising water away from their driveway.

    “It came all the way up to the garage twice during high tide,” Moyes said, but their house was spared. Most of the houses nearby are holiday homes, and the couple spent Tuesday checking their neighbours’ properties.

    By Wednesday, they had not showered in three days, and while power was briefly restored, it was not expected to last.

    Residents in Taradale clean up silt on Wednesday from flood waters in Napier.
    Residents in Taradale clean up silt on Wednesday from flood waters in Napier. Photograph: Kerry Marshall/Getty Images

    Bigger problems loom: the coastal settlement is reliant on tourism, and Moyes said a mudslide at one of the peninsula’s best-known spots, Cathedral Cove – which is now closed – and erosion at popular Hahei beach would have lasting effects on the local economy.

    “But at the moment, it’s just like, how can we get supplies? How can we feed ourselves for the next few days? How can we shower? How can we get out of here?” Moyes said.

    In Napier, Leonard Fleming has dog food, coffee and a burner to brew it on – but no food and no access to his bank account to buy more due to power cuts. He does not want to seek refuge at an evacuation centre.

    “When you’re in this situation, all you really want to do is just go home, relax, put your feet up and get a nice sleep in a cosy, warm bed but it’s all gone,” he said. “That’s really starting to sink in.”

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    #survivors #Cyclone #Gabrielle #describe #sense #loss #despair
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • ‘How can we get out of here?’: survivors of Cyclone Gabrielle describe sense of loss and despair

    ‘How can we get out of here?’: survivors of Cyclone Gabrielle describe sense of loss and despair

    [ad_1]

    In the New Zealand city of Napier, black army helicopters hum overhead. Leonard Fleming has damp clothes, no food and faces a third night sleeping in his car with his dogs Beadle and Mika. Fleming knows he has likely lost everything he left behind when he fled his home in nearby Eskdale, Hawke’s Bay, ahead of Cyclone Gabrielle on Monday.

    “I’ve never had my house burned to the ground but I imagine it’s the same thing,” he tells the Guardian over a crackling phone line; service to the area is recently restored but coverage is intermittent. “All you can do is run away and I started thinking this morning about all the stuff that I’ve lost.”

    This picture shows a coastal home after part of its back garden and sand was washed away during the storm surge caused by Cyclone Gabrielle in Waihi Beach in the Bay of Plenty
    This picture shows a coastal home after part of its back garden and sand was washed away during the storm surge caused by Cyclone Gabrielle in Waihi Beach in the Bay of Plenty. Photograph: Marty Melville/AFP/Getty Images

    The ex-tropical cyclone which lashed New Zealand’s North Island on Monday and Tuesday – with high winds and heavy rain wreaking havoc in more than half a dozen regions – was the worst storm to hit New Zealand this century, said the prime minister, Chris Hipkins, whose government announced a rare national state of emergency on Tuesday.

    Four deaths have been confirmed by the police, including a child whose body was found in Eskdale on Wednesday afternoon.

    The trail of damage included fatal landslips, closed highways that cut off towns, flooding so severe and rapid that hundreds of people awaited rescue on their roofs, and widespread power, water and telecommunications outages. Some of the worst-affected areas were rural towns that were isolated even before the storm hit, with potholed roads and patchy cellphone reception.

    Even as painstaking restoration of services continued on Wednesday, communication woes made it difficult to assess the scale of the devastation.

    Fleming hoped those ferried back and forth in the army helicopters above him on Wednesday included his neighbours in Eskdale – a rural settlement 25km north of Napier. Some had stayed behind when he evacuated two days ago and now cannot be reached by phone.

    The Esk River across the street from Fleming’s house breached its banks on Tuesday morning and he was told that water at surrounding properties reached roof level. Fleming cannot return home – or travel to the nearby city of Hastings to stay with his son – because bridges and state highways in the area are impassable due to flooding, slips and downed trees.

    Army trucks and air force helicopters were sent to rescue hundreds of people in Hawke’s Bay on Tuesday as residents of cut-off settlements took to their roofs. Warnings were issued by civil defence officials on Sunday that residents of several areas should prepare to evacuate, but for many, the perilous speed of the rising water came as a shock.

    Jenna Marsh from central Hawke’s Bay said the water rose metres in minutes at her parents’ house in Pakowhai – a town between Hastings and Napier. Her mother had told her everything was fine as she fed her horses on Tuesday morning.

    Trees damaged by gale-force winds at a commercial pine forest in Tongariro.
    Trees damaged by gale-force winds at a commercial pine forest in Tongariro. Photograph: Marty Melville/AFP/Getty Images

    “Less than an hour later she texts me saying, ‘We’re on the roof,’” Marsh says. Her mother estimated the water level had risen by about three metres in 10 minutes.

    Marsh’s parents spent eight hours on the roof before they were rescued by helicopter, carrying nothing but their two dogs.

    “They had to pick between rescuing grab bags or their dogs and they picked their dogs,” Marsh says.

    The family’s pet goat was left bobbing in a boat and they hope to find their horses, one of which was last seen swimming past the house.

    The government says there are major animal welfare concerns for livestock and horses in rural areas lashed by the storm.

    On Tuesday morning, a group of orchard workers – many of them apparently visiting seasonal workers from Tonga – made news headlines as they broadcast live on Facebook, some using mattresses as flotation devices and others sheltering on the roof of their accommodation. They were rescued on Tuesday afternoon by the army.

    Tomas Lopez Castro and his host family in Napier on Wednesday.
    Tomas Lopez Castro and his host family in Napier on Wednesday

    The communications blackout in Hawke’s Bay provoked panic for relatives living abroad. One family in Bogotá, Colombia, whose 15-year-old son arrived in New Zealand a fortnight ago for a six-month exchange program, were not able to reach him for two days.

    Juan Sebastian Lopez says his younger brother, Tomas, is staying with a host family in Taradale, Napier, where evacuations were widespread. The family had felt reassured by New Zealand’s relative safety when they farewelled “our prince” on his first solo adventure abroad – and watched the news of rising flood waters in horror.

    “We never imagined that this was even possible,” Lopez says.

    Frantic with worry – and still unable to contact Tomas or his host family on Wednesday morning – the family filled in a police missing person form and waited. Lopez was overjoyed when Tomas and his host family were able to briefly confirm their safety on Wednesday afternoon, after traveling to a location with working wifi. More than 1,400 people have been registered with the police as uncontactable.

    A view of flood damage in the the aftermath of cyclone Gabrielle in Hawke’s Bay
    A view of flood damage in the the aftermath of Cyclone Gabrielle in Hawke’s Bay. Photograph: New Zealand defence force/Reuters

    Further north in Coromandel, widespread power cuts left residents in slip-prone beach settlements unsure about what was happening outside their towns and worried about food supplies running out if the roads to the peninsula cannot be reopened quickly.

    Claire Moyes, her husband and their visiting guests, spent two “terrifying” nights with “thunder, lightning and wind right on top of us”. Worried the stream beside their property would flood their home, the group dug trenches to funnel rising water away from their driveway.

    “It came all the way up to the garage twice during high tide,” Moyes said, but their house was spared. Most of the houses nearby are holiday homes, and the couple spent Tuesday checking their neighbours’ properties.

    By Wednesday, they had not showered in three days, and while power was briefly restored, it was not expected to last.

    Residents in Taradale clean up silt on Wednesday from flood waters in Napier.
    Residents in Taradale clean up silt on Wednesday from flood waters in Napier. Photograph: Kerry Marshall/Getty Images

    Bigger problems loom: the coastal settlement is reliant on tourism, and Moyes said a mudslide at one of the peninsula’s best-known spots, Cathedral Cove – which is now closed – and erosion at popular Hahei beach would have lasting effects on the local economy.

    “But at the moment, it’s just like, how can we get supplies? How can we feed ourselves for the next few days? How can we shower? How can we get out of here?” Moyes said.

    In Napier, Leonard Fleming has dog food, coffee and a burner to brew it on – but no food and no access to his bank account to buy more due to power cuts. He does not want to seek refuge at an evacuation centre.

    “When you’re in this situation, all you really want to do is just go home, relax, put your feet up and get a nice sleep in a cosy, warm bed but it’s all gone,” he said. “That’s really starting to sink in.”

    [ad_2]
    #survivors #Cyclone #Gabrielle #describe #sense #loss #despair
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )