[ad_1]
[ad_2]
#Photos #White #House #Correspondents #Dinner #arrivals
( With inputs from : www.politico.com )
[ad_1]
[ad_2]
#Photos #White #House #Correspondents #Dinner #arrivals
( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

[ad_1]
New Delhi: The stretch between Metcalfe House and Purana Quila, two of Delhi’s historic landmarks, will soon get a facelift with ornamental lamp posts and beautiful fountains, officials said on Saturday.
A detailed plan of action has been prepared on the directions of Lieutenant Governor V K Saxena, who inspected the area recently, they said.
As part of the proposed revamp, sculptures, fountains and ornamental lamp posts will be installed on the road. Public conveniences, enhanced lighting and sufficient parking space will also be provided, the officials said.

“The extremely important stretch between Metcalfe House (Chandagiram Akhaada) and Purana Qila, encompassing areas like ISBT, Nigam Bodh Ghat, Salimgarh Fort, Samadhi Complex, area behind Daryaganj, Samta Sthal, JLN Marg, Dilli Gate, ITO and Mathura Road, etc., is all set for a thorough and unprecedented makeover,” a senior official said.
This stretch, largely corresponding to the Ring Road (Mahatma Gandhi Marg), apart from catering to lakhs of daily commuters, houses many iconic sites. It is an arterial road connecting north Delhi to central and south Delhi.
It also serves as the main approach road for people coming from Punjab, Haryana, Chandigarh, Himachal Pradesh, and Jammu and Kashmir.
“After the LG recently visited the stretch, mostly on foot, specific directions were issued for various tasks to be undertaken and completed within a fixed time frame,” the official said.
A detailed plan of action with concrete achievables was shared to address all issues and work has already started on it, the official said.
Under the plan, at least six public conveniences, including toilets and water ATMs on both sides of the road at ISBT, installation of decentralised STP for horticultural purposes, widening of the carriageway at the U-turn near Kashmere Gate metro station, multi-level and other parking at Nigam Bodh Ghat and refurbishing of the area around Hanuman Mandir will be done, the officials said.
Similarly, apart from developing a food street at Salimgarh Fort and a green recreational complex at Qudsia Ghat, ornamental lights will be installed at a distance of 10 metres from each other, sculptures with fountains will be installed at all crossings like those at Vijay Ghat, Shanti Van and Raj Ghat, they said.
The LG has also directed officials to come up with a concrete utilisation and beautification plan for a huge tract of land opposite Shakti Sthal.
“Volcano-like fountains will be installed in the Purana Quila lake and three fountains will be installed at Bhairon Marg. The entire area around the Bhairon Mandir will also be landscaped,” the official said.
[ad_2]
#Stretch #Delhis #Metcalfe #House #Purana #Quila #set #makeover
( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

[ad_1]
Hyderabad: The cabinet sub-committee, chaired by ministers T Harish Rao, KT Rama Rao, Errabelli Dayakar Rao, and Srinivas Goud, on Friday directed officials to accelerate the process of regularisation of house plots under Government Order (GO) no.58 and 59, to provide houses to underprivileged.
The sub-committee recommended that the process be completed within a week and distribution of the documents should be done by ministers and MLAs.
Chief Commissioner of Land Administration (CCLA) was directed to assess the number of documents ready for distribution in each district and prepare a comprehensive list.

“It was made clear that every deserving person should receive a patta. The sub-committee instructed officials to promptly process any pending applications and prepare them for distribution,” said a press release on Friday.
District Collectors were instructed to conduct daily reviews to expedite the process.
“CM KCR expressed his desire to bring happiness into the lives of the underpriviledged. The sub-committee called on everyone to work towards this goal and ensure that the benefits provided by the government reach those that deserve them,” said the press release further.
The meeting was attended by chief secretary Shanti Kumari, special chief secretary Ramakrishna Rao, revenue secretary Naveen Mittal, as well as other finance, revenue, municipal, and panchayat raj officials at BRK Bhavan
[ad_2]
#Telangana #Regularisation #house #plots #fasttracked
( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

[ad_1]

While Republicans believed the plan they passed Wednesday would force Biden to the table, the White House and most congressional Democrats have brushed it off and made clear they won’t entertain the GOP’s demands. Instead, both sides have retreated further into their corners, with each party planning to spend the coming days talking almost entirely to its respective base voters.
“I think we in the House ought to message the hell out of it,” Rep. Chip Roy (R-Texas) said, warning that Democrats would “make false claims” about their bill: “We need to be on offense on the message.”
As for the next steps, Roy said: “The ball’s in the president’s court and the Senate court.”
Roy is far from alone in the GOP conference in arguing that the problem is no longer in their hands, putting the blame squarely on Democrats’ shoulders. Most Republican lawmakers insist they have little anxiety about the increasingly rattled nerves on Wall Street as a dysfunctional Congress barrels closer toward this summer’s drop-dead debt limit date.
“Every day that he refuses to negotiate, he is putting the U.S. economy at risk,” Rep. Mario Diaz-Balart (R-Fla.) said. “The next move is on Biden.”
Top Democrats have revealed little about their next steps. While Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) has called on Republicans to work with him on a clean debt plan, it’s unclear if his caucus would even unite to vote in favor of one. Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.), specifically, has put the onus on Biden to meet with McCarthy.
And at least some in the party are getting nervous: “We all should be getting anxious,” Rep. Elissa Slotkin (D-Mich.) said.
All the focus next week will be on the Senate, which will return to Washington facing the pressure from House Republicans — and possibly from the Treasury Department. Officials there are expected sometime in the coming days to update the public on the “X date,” before which Congress will need to pass a debt limit lift to avoid default.
“I think once we have that date with clarity … then we’ll know with some urgency our timeframe for dealing with this challenge,” House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.) told reporters Friday, adding: “Understand that this is a manufactured crisis that extreme MAGA Republicans are foisting on the American people.”
In the meantime, Democrats plan to spend their time turning the GOP’s debt plan into campaign fodder, betting that fresh attacks on Republican plans to slash spending on programs like food stamps and Medicaid will hurt in the swing districts they need to flip next November.
Many of the Republicans currently holding those battleground seats, however, say they aren’t sweating their yes votes.
Rep. Nick LaLota (R-N.Y.), who flipped a purple Long Island seat last fall, said he recently did a tele-town hall with over 13,000 callers where he asked each person to weigh in on whether they supported his position on debt: Raising the limit, but with some cutbacks to federal spending, including Covid aid.
“Three to one, [constituents] agreed with my position,” LaLota said Friday.
Ever since House Republicans passed its plan on Wednesday, both parties have resorted to finger-pointing to try to pin blame if negotiations go south.
Still, the GOP bill remains a win for McCarthy, who faced a steep climb as he wrangled a deal among the disparate wings of his party with only a handful of votes to spare. By working closely with conservatives to craft a plan packed with right-flank priorities, the speaker achieved near-total unity in his bid to kick off negotiations with Biden.
Even so, White House officials have emphasized in conversations with Democratic congressional leaders the importance of staying aligned on Biden’s no-negotiation stance. The president’s team is clearly betting that it still holds the stronger hand in the debt ceiling standoff; the White House reacted to the House GOP’s bill by issuing a flurry of statements and analyses detailing the damage it would do to the economy and popular programs.
While Biden administration officials have explored a variety of potential alternative options for averting default, there is skepticism that any would be workable — and none are seen as preferable to Congress simply voting to raise the debt ceiling.
The House Republican pitch that would raise the debt limit by $1.5 trillion, or through March of next year — whichever comes first — setting up another fight with the White House next year. In particular, Republicans are proudest of the bill’s slashes to federal spending, including $130 billion in the upcoming fiscal year that would effectively return discretionary spending totals to nearly the same level as two years ago.
But the task is far from done, and McCarthy still could be squeezed yet by his own party.
Some members of the conservative Freedom Caucus are arguing that the California Republican should refuse to negotiate down at all as Democrats decide on their counter — a position that other Republicans in the conference view as irrational.
“I don’t do red lines because there might be a different price that I might want for something, right? Put a border bill on there, change the length and times. There’s always a way to come up with something that will actually be good for the country,” Roy said of the potentially negotiable items.
“Go ahead, Mr. President,” he added. “Go ahead, Sen. Schumer.”
Adam Cancryn and Nicholas Wu contributed to this report.
[ad_2]
#House #GOP #leaves #Washington #debt #win #breakthrough
( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

[ad_1]

The White House said on Thursday that it was “entirely normal” for a president to be briefed about the journalists who would ask questions at news conferences, a day after President Joe Biden was seen holding a paper with what appeared to be a reporter’s question.
“It’s entirely normal for a president to be briefed on reporters who will be asking questions at a press conference and issues we expect they might ask about,” press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said at a briefing on Thursday.
The comments come after Biden was seen on Wednesday holding a note card titled “question 1″ regarding a Los Angeles Times reporter’s information during a joint news conference with President Yoon Suk Yeol of South Korea.
[ad_2]
#White #House #normal #Biden #briefed #reporters #news #conference
( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

[ad_1]

The White House and congressional Democrats are preparing to ramp up attacks on House Republicans over the bill, targeting swing-district members for endorsing policies that would strip investments in their home districts and gut funding for popular programs. Biden’s party insists it’s feeling little pressure to now deliver on House Speaker Kevin McCarthy’s biggest ask — a true negotiation over the debt ceiling.
“If you reward hostage taking, it simply repeats,” said Sen. Chris Coons (D-Del.), a close Biden ally. “I don’t expect the president to now say, ‘Oh my gosh, you passed a bill with two votes that imposes draconian cuts across programs that most Americans would never support. Now I have to come and give you whatever you want.’”
Biden is refusing to budge from his demand that Congress pass an unconditional increase to the debt ceiling, betting that he still holds the stronger hand in the face of an economic catastrophe. And while a smattering of moderate Democrats have begun urging the president to actually negotiate with Republicans, the majority of the party seems content with showcasing a GOP bill they see as a self-inflicted wound in swing seats.
But Democrats’ public confidence that they’re winning the messaging war masks private concerns over how this all ultimately ends — and what damage the standoff may do to a fragile, recovering economy that’s critical to Biden’s case for re-election.
Biden allies had expected McCarthy’s bid to pass a sweeping debt ceiling bill to fail, especially after watching him struggle to win the speakership and quickly abandon his plan to construct a full budget proposal. Even the Republicans understood the skepticism directed at them with the thin majority.
“Nobody thought we would have this. Nobody thought we could get together and get anything to [the Senate],” Rep. Ralph Norman (R-S.C.) said in an interview Thursday. “If they want to say it’s not good enough, then I’m sorry that they’re doing that to the country.”
But once it became clear that McCarthy lacked the influence to wrangle his conference, Biden’s team reasoned, Republicans would lose most of their leverage and eventually soften their demand for concessions. The White House had harbored doubts about the bill’s chances of success even after McCarthy announced plans for a vote, privately questioning whether he could win over the last handful of conservatives trying to push the bill further to the right.
The speaker only had room to lose a handful of members. “Maybe he’ll eventually get it, but boy, who knows what they’ll have to put in it,” one adviser close to the White House said on Wednesday morning, as McCarthy raced to lock down the votes he needed.
Yet after the speaker pulled it off, notably winning broad support from his conservative wing, the dynamics shifted. An emboldened McCarthy vowed to make the next several months far more complicated for the White House than aides had initially hoped.
“No clean debt ceiling is going to pass the House,” McCarthy said to reporters on Wednesday as he did a victory lap.
In the aftermath of the vote, Biden allies and advisers privately acknowledged that there’s no clear endgame to the debt ceiling standoff — and that McCarthy’s victory makes it more difficult to convince moderate Republicans to back a clean debt ceiling increase for fear of economic disaster.
The White House signaled that Biden would now be willing to meet with McCarthy for the first time since early February — while sticking to their longstanding position that any negotiations be over the broader federal budget, and not the debt ceiling.
“I don’t think that it should be a debt ceiling negotiation, I think that it should be a budget negotiation,” said Robert Wolf, a prominent Democratic fundraiser and former Obama-era economic adviser, characterizing it as a “thread the needle” challenge for the White House to draw the distinction.
GOP leaders, meanwhile, were left livid that the White House had once again brushed aside their opening bid — still refusing to meet with McCarthy on the debt limit.
“I think it’s absolutely tone deaf,” said Rep. Garret Graves (R-Ga.), a McCarthy deputy who helped craft the party’s debt limit. “I could not believe he made such an arrogant statement.”
“We’ll continue to reach out to the White House,” Graves said. But, he added with his eye on the opposite chamber: “Obviously, it’s the Senate’s ball at this point.”
A White House official said that Biden has consistently challenged Republicans over their various proposals, including criticizing an early blueprint from the Freedom Caucus at several points, and maintained from the outset that he was open to negotiating the budget but not the debt ceiling.
White House officials have kept in close touch with Senate leaders over their plans to maintain Biden’s no-negotiation posture, believing they can still grind enough Republicans down over time — especially as pressure and political attacks on swing-district lawmakers begin to mount. Despite McCarthy’s victory on Wednesday, Biden allies noted that he still lost four members on what was effectively a messaging bill — and needed Rep. George Santos to vote yes and bail him out of potential embarrassment.
Still, there is recognition that the bill’s passage means Biden’s “show us your plan” dismissals will no longer cut it. Aides downplayed the idea that a meeting with Biden represents a direct reward for passing his bill, and stressed that any sitdown would include other congressional leaders.
Biden is also unlikely to meet with Republicans on the issue until May at the earliest, with the House leaving Friday for recess until May 8. (McCarthy allies, though, had said he’s willing to fly back to D.C. for such an occasion.)
For now, though, most Democrats seem comfortable with Biden’s position.
“Most Americans want Republicans to take action to avoid default. They don’t want the price of that to be throwing a million people off Meals on Wheels,” said Sen. Bob Casey (D-Pa.), who endorsed Biden early in the 2020 primary. “After that’s done, on a bill that should be about [the debt ceiling] and nothing else, you can have lots of discussions about appropriations level.”
Those kinds of Democratic attacks — targeting the GOP’s proposed cuts to popular social programs — will likely make up much of Biden’s messaging going forward. Though White House officials remain nervous about how and when the standoff will end, Biden’s more politically minded advisers see the House bill as an early gift to a re-election campaign that will rely heavily on contrasting Biden’s agenda with the goals of the GOP’s conservative wing, two people familiar with the campaign planning said.
Still, battleground Republicans argue that it’s Democrats, not their own party, that will face backlash if they keep sitting idle.
Rep. Mike Garcia (R-Calif.), who won a seat that swung towards Biden in 2020, said he is “looking for a president that actually shows up to the table.” But he also acknowledges that what Republicans passed was the first salvo in what is expected to be a tense standoff — even if other members of the right wing disagree.
“McCarthy has been very clear: This is the first step to change, right? But you got to be in a negotiation,” Garcia said Tuesday. “You have to have another party at the table to negotiate with, so we will not negotiate with ourselves anymore.”
[ad_2]
#White #House #regroups #McCarthys #debt #ceiling #success
( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

[ad_1]

Several advocacy events with celebrities and lawmakers are scheduled across the Capitol complex this week.
[ad_2]
#state #dinner #White #House #Correspondents #Dinner #festivitiesin #D.C #week #celebrities #finding #Hill
( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

[ad_1]

South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol brought the White House down with his surprise rendition of Don McLean’s “American Pie” Wednesday night.
After a round of musical performances at the lavish state dinner, Yoon took the microphone.
“Long, long time ago,” he sang, immediately drawing shouts, applause and fist pumps from President Joe Biden. Despite asking Yoon to perform the song moments before, Biden looked around the room in apparent disbelief, pointing to the South Korean leader in approval.
[ad_2]
#Yoon #woos #White #House #American #Pie #rendition
( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

[ad_1]

Kishtwar: A teenager was killed after a massive boulder rolled down a hill during a rain-triggered landslide and hit his house in Jammu and Kashmir’s Kishtwar district early Thursday, officials said.
Two people were trapped under the debris of the house. While 19-year-old Arshad was killed in the incident, Rashid (17) was rescued, they said.
The officials said the other occupants of the house are safe. The incident took place between 3:30 am and 4 am in the district’s Thakuria area.

Loyedhar Sarpanch Mohd Rafi Shah said the village is located at the foot of the hill and there is always the threat of boulders rolling down during a landslide
There was a major incident some years ago and now again there has been one, he said and demanded that the government take some measures for the safety of people.
[ad_2]
#19yearold #killed #massive #boulder #rolls #hill #hits #house
( With inputs from www.siasat.com )