Tag: job

  • He’s got the most thankless job in Congress — writing a GOP budget

    He’s got the most thankless job in Congress — writing a GOP budget

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    After throwing cold water on Arrington’s plans to move a budget, McCarthy reached out with a peace offering and consolation prize, making him chief sponsor of the 320-page fiscal measure House Republicans will push to pass this week. When the speaker called about that gesture, Arrington said in a recent interview, he did not address the private drama that escalated over the past several weeks as McCarthy spurned Arrington’s eagerness to vote on a budget and relied increasingly on his own posse of advisers.

    That leaves Arrington in a touchy spot. He’s still publicly committed to drafting a budget that could lay out the GOP’s fiscal aspirations for the next decade — even as McCarthy forges ahead with his own separate plan. The chair is still meeting with his committee about advancing his budget.

    “These budget resolutions are not easy,” Arrington acknowledged in an interview. “They’re complicated by the fact that you have a diverse group of members, it touches virtually every policy in every program in the federal government, and we are so deep in the debt hole.”

    While Arrington wouldn’t commit to a future markup of a House GOP budget, he stressed that “we are making very good headway.” But even if he can finish writing one, a budget would promptly saddle Republicans with political liabilities galore: Including internal fights over taxes, entitlements and the desire among some conservatives to pare back Pentagon spending.

    Knowing those drawbacks, President Joe Biden has spent months calling on House Republicans to release a budget as a marker in the debt talks. McCarthy has sidestepped that gambit by rallying his members instead around the package of spending cuts, deregulatory moves and a short-term debt hike that is slated for a floor vote this week.

    All of that makes Arrington’s entire effort now appear fruitless, with GOP appropriators preparing to write annual spending bills based on the funding totals outlined in the McCarthy-driven package.

    Still, a number of Republicans say they want to adopt a budget, even if it amounts to more of a pure party messaging exercise than in years past. Arrington said friends in the conference have flooded him with calls and texts of support amid rumors of conflict with McCarthy.

    The 51-year-old chair is hardly the first budget chair who’s seen tension with House leaders. The role is often seen as undesirable, rendered feckless by an eroded federal budget process but still serving as a mouthpiece for the majority party’s fiscal goals.

    Four years ago, then-Rep. John Yarmuth (D-Ky.) faced a similar quandary as Democratic Budget Committee chair. Leaders of Yarmuth’s party in 2019 wanted to lay down an opening bid as they faced off with the Trump administration over the debt limit and budget caps. After weeks of painstaking work and a nail biter of a committee vote, Democrats were forced to yank the budget from the floor amid a revolt from progressives and moderates.

    “That’s the position I found myself in,” Yarmuth said in a phone interview. Arrington, he observed, is “just going to have to sit there and take the abuse.”

    Yarmuth said he recommended Arrington for the Budget gavel before retiring last year “because he’s basically a reasonable person and someone I never had a problem talking to or working with.” Lately, the Kentucky Democrat sees Arrington’s predicament as even tougher than his own previous dilemma.

    “He has a double-edged problem,” Yarmuth said. “One is that leadership is trying to herd more cats than we ever had to herd, and he’s got mandates to [enact] things that would be highly unpopular and can never get done.”

    Arrington didn’t dispute that passing a budget would force his colleagues to make painful, potentially unpopular choices to back up their goal of massively paring back federal spending.

    “These are not easy decisions. So most people, they avoid them,” the 51-year-old said in last week’s interview.

    He sent confusing signals earlier this year — first promising to release a budget in April and then May, only to later walk back any definitive timeline. Arrington also told reporters that Republicans were preparing a “deal sheet” outlining the party’s debt limit demands, prompting confusion when McCarthy later said he had no knowledge of any such thing.

    Arkansas Rep. Steve Womack, a former GOP budget chief and top Republican appropriator, said he has spoken to Arrington about how to navigate the “gymnastics” of writing a budget, keeping leadership happy and shepherding Republicans’ debt limit offer.

    “He has advocated for some things and put some talking points out that may have ruffled a few feathers — I don’t know, that’s between Jodey and the leadership team,” Womack said. “You’re the budget chair. You need to lead your committee to do its mandated duty.”

    Arrington vowed that he has “the confidence and trust of the members” in doing that job. Yet it’s undeniable that the budget chair can most effectively wield power when one party holds both chambers of Congress, thereby putting the party-line maneuver known as reconciliation into play.

    Democrats used that filibuster end-around during the last Congress to pass last year’s health, climate and tax bill without a single GOP vote, in addition to Biden’s $1.9 trillion Covid relief plan. Republicans tapped the process in 2017 to pass a massive tax overhaul.

    But under divided government, Arrington’s influence is limited — if still meaningful. He’s a senior lieutenant in McCarthy’s drive to force Democrats into spending concessions in exchange for lifting the debt ceiling.

    And the speaker’s recent repair of their relationship underscores how crucial Arrington’s buy-in is to projecting the appearance of harmony among House Republicans, despite internal dissonance amplified by the slim margin of their majority.

    Asked about McCarthy’s call to seek his chief sponsorship of the debt bill, Arrington downplayed any fractiousness with McCarthy: “No, no, no, no. Look, he and I are both focused on the mission,” he said. “And the mission is to rein in the spending, reduce our debt, grow our economy, and save this country from a debt crisis.”

    “All this other stuff,” he added, “is a distraction.”

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    #Hes #thankless #job #Congress #writing #GOP #budget
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Oman to provide 35,000 job opportunities for citizens this year

    Oman to provide 35,000 job opportunities for citizens this year

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    Muscat: The Oman Ministry of Labour aims to provide minimum of 35,000 job opportunities for citizens this year, local media reported.

    Out of the total number of job opportunities, 14,000 job will be created “through replacement” in the private sector and 10,000 jobs will be created through “replacement and employment” in the public sector.

    In addition, 2,000 job opportunities created through initiatives by government authorities and units, Labour Minister Professor Mahad Bin Said Bin Ali Baawain said while speaking to the media on Tuesday, Oman Observer reported.

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    In 2022, 80,403 jobs were created including more than 45,000 employment opportunities for the first time in the private and public sectors.

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    #Oman #provide #job #opportunities #citizens #year

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Sununu on 2024: ‘I think I could do the job’

    Sununu on 2024: ‘I think I could do the job’

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    image

    “I think I could do the job,” Sununu quickly responded.

    The New Hampshire Republican has teased a run numerous times, appearing on cable shows in recent weeks and speaking at the annual National Rifle Association conference in Indianapolis last week. In February, he formed the “Live Free or Die” fundraising committee, a move viewed as Sununu testing the presidential waters.

    Harlow noted that Sununu’s comment is the closest he has come yet to declaring a run, to which he responded: “I’m looking at it … it’s a big decision for the family, for the process, for the party.”

    “Why not just say it?” Lemon asked, pointing to the various cameras in the newsroom.

    “Literally my wife is texting me right now as we’re speaking, [saying] what is going on? Look, we’ll have the whole discussion,” Sununu said. “I think there’s hope, I really think there’s opportunity, and if it’s a Chris Sununu way, or some other candidate to bring it to the table, that’s a win for America.”

    Earlier in the interview, Sununu emphasized his difference to Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, another likely GOP presidential contender, on abortion: “We in New Hampshire have a 24 week ban, or 24 weeks of choice … that seems to be where most of America is.” DeSantis, on the other hand, last week signed a bill to ban abortion after six weeks of pregnancy.

    He also criticized former President Donald Trump’s leadership while in office, saying that he got “very little done, didn’t drain the swamp like he promised, didn’t provide border security like he promised.”

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    #Sununu #job
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • UK Sikh temple warns after Indians lured with fake visas, job offers

    UK Sikh temple warns after Indians lured with fake visas, job offers

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    London: A Sikh temple in the UK has issued warnings after fraudsters impersonating as its members tried to trick people in India by making false job and visa promises with an intent of extracting money from them, media reports said.

    The Guru Nanak Darbar Gurdwara in Gravesend placed warnings on its social media pages after they were alerted to fake advertisements titled, “urgently needed in the UK”, offering free food and travel tickets for job opportunities at the Sikh temple, the Kent Online reported.

    “We had somebody come into the gurdwara last week who is here but her father is in India and she wanted to see if he could come over,” General secretary of the gurdwara, Jagdev Singh Virdee, said.

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    “Her father had been alerted to this ad and asked if it was a job so she came to check whether it’s genuine or not, and that’s how we first found out about it,” Virdee told Kent Online.

    Following this, nearly a dozen people got in touch with the gurdwara authorities to enquire about the advertisement, which has been circulated on the internet, and asked people to get in contact via WhatsApp.

    According to the news report, some have already gone through the process of exchanging passport information and personal details.

    Virdee said that the fraudsters have set up a website domain and email address similar to the gurdwara’s.

    “They are faking letters as if it’s a job offer from the gurdwara, then they’re saying to them, ‘you’ve had the job offer now so if you pay over so much money, then we’ll arrange a travel ticket and visa’,” Virdee told Kent Online.

    “Please be aware that the following flyer is being used to fraudulently obtain funds from individuals with a false promise of securing a UK visa and job at the Gurdwara Sahib. Please do not exchange any documents or money with this individual,” the Guru Nanak Darbar Gurdwara posted on its website.

    “Though the image shows Guru Nanak Darbar Gurdwara, Gravesend, this is no way affiliated to GNDG Gravesend,” it added.

    Virdee said that the crime has been reported to both Kent Police and the National Home Office of Action Fraud.

    A Kent Police spokesperson said they “received a report on March 29 that an unknown person had falsely purported to represent the Guru Nanak Darbar Gurdwara in Gravesend online, in an attempt to defraud victims”.

    “Officers have been in contact with representatives at the Gurdwara and are investigating the circumstances,” the spokesperson said.

    Gravesend is home to more than 15,000 Sikhs.

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    #Sikh #temple #warns #Indians #lured #fake #visas #job #offers

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Telangana: 10 Transgenders employed by Amazon at Karimnagar’s job mela

    Telangana: 10 Transgenders employed by Amazon at Karimnagar’s job mela

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    Hyderabad: 10 transgenders bagged Amazon jobs at a job fair organised by the Karimnagar Police in the district on Tuesday.

    Officials stated that they were mostly employed as packing assistants with a monthly salary of Rs 30,000.

    The recipients of the appointment letters were overwhelmed when Telangana Planning Board vice chairman B Vinod Kumar distributed their employment orders.

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    “We also aspire to work and are proud to get a job,” said one of the transgender while they thanked Karimnagar cops for helping them secure employment and lead a decent life.

    The job mela was organised by the police at Padmanayaka Kalyana Mandapam in Karimnagar town with the participation of over 120 companies.

    Over 4000 candidates attended the fare while 1000 were selected with a salary package ranging from Rs 20,000 to Rs 50,000 per month and were handed over the appointment orders.

    Byjus, Wipro, Genpact, HCL, Cluster IT, Air India, Indian Airlines, Indigo, Hetero, Aurobindo, Apollo, HDFC, ICICI among others offered employment at the fair.

    Vinod Kumar appreciated the district police for helping the transgenders secure employment while the district collector called upon the youth to download Varadhi app for securing employment and career guidance and preparing for various competitive examinations.



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    #Telangana #Transgenders #employed #Amazon #Karimnagars #job #mela

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Tejashwi to join ED probe in ‘land for job’ case today

    Tejashwi to join ED probe in ‘land for job’ case today

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    New Delhi: Bihar’s Deputy Chief Minister Tejashwi Yadav is likely to join on Tuesday the Enforcement Directorate (ED) probe in connection with the alleged land for job matter involving his father and former Union Railway Minister Lalu Prasad Yadav and other family members.

    Tejashwi is likely to join the probe by 11 a.m. Earlier, he was questioned the CBI in the same matter on March 25.

    On the same day (March 25) his sister and Rajya Sabha Member Misa Bharti was questioned by the ED.

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    In March, the ED had come up on record saying unaccounted cash of Rs 1 crore, besides gold and incriminating documents were recovered during the raids which were conducted at 24 locations in Delhi, Mumbai, Patna and Ranchi based on on the specific intelligence inputs.

    The ED had said that they detected around Rs 600 crore, which were Proceeds of Crime (POC), in the form of immovable assets of Rs 350 crore and transactions of Rs 250 crore routed through various benamidaars.

    The ED said that PMLA investigation conducted so far has revealed that several pieces of land at prominent locations in Patna and other areas were illegally acquired by the family of Lalu Prasad in lieu of jobs provided in Railways. The current market value of these land parcels is more than Rs 200 crore.

    According to ED, several benamidars, shell entities and beneficial owners for these lands have been identified.

    “A property situated at D-1088, New Friends Colony, Delhi (registered in the name of A B Exports Private Limited, a company owned and controlled by Tejashwi Prasad Yadav and family) was shown to have been acquired at a value of mere Rs 4 lakh, while the present market value of the property is approximately Rs 150 crore,” the ED claimed.

    An ED official said: “Huge amount of cash were infused in purchasing this property and few Mumbai-based entities, dealing in the gems and jewellery sector were used to channel ill-gotten proceeds of crime in this regard.”

    “The property has been though, on paper declared as office of A B Exports Private Limited and A K Infosystems Pvt Ltd, is being exclusively used as residential premises by Tejashwi. During the searches, Tejashwi was found to be staying at this house and was found to be using this house as his residential property,” the ED alleged.

    The official said that their investigation has found that four parcels of lands “acquired by the family of Lalu Yadav in just Rs 7.5 lakhs from poor Group-D applicants were sold to Syed Abu Dojana, Ex-RJD MLA by Rabri Devi with huge gains at Rs 3.5 crore in a collusive deal”.

    The ED said that their investigation has further revealed that a major portion of the amount thus received, was transferred to the account of Tejashwi.

    “Investigations revealed that in a similar fashion, lands were taken from several poor parents and candidates in lieu of Group D jobs in the Railways. It has been revealed during the investigation that in many Railways Zones, more than 50 per cent of recruited candidates were from Lalu Yadav families’ constituencies,” the ED said.

    Further investigation into the case is on.

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    #Tejashwi #join #probe #land #job #case #today

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • My Friend Evan Gershkovich Is Suffering for Doing a Job He Loved

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    linda kinstler evan in riga summer 2019

    This week, U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Senator Bob Menendez, Chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, both asserted that Evan has been wrongfully detained by the Russian government. In a statement released on Thursday, Menendez referred to the “trumped up” charges on which Evan is held and urged the Russian government to give Evan access to U.S. consular officials. The denial of access is a blatant violation of the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations. In a rare joint statement released Friday, Senator Chuck Schumer and Senator Mitch McConnell demanded Evan’s immediate release.

    Evan may be the latest in a string of Americans detained in Russia in recent years, but his case is fundamentally unlike all the others, for Evan was abducted simply for doing his job.

    His arrest is more than just an assault on the freedom of the press: It is a signal of the grave new reality in which Russia is operating, in which all the old rules and norms no longer apply. Until recently, U.S. correspondents in Russia operated under the assumption that while the Kremlin might monitor their activities, Russian authorities would not target them in the same way that they have muzzled and jailed Russian journalists. Now, unfortunately, we know that is not true. To say that a line has been crossed is to understate the gravity of the situation.

    The charges that Evan faces come with a penalty of up to 20 years in prison. He is now 31 years old. My mind does the math, but I refuse to write the grim possibilities down, to speak them into existence. I have to believe that we will get him home soon, but I also am all too aware — as is Evan, I’m sure — that the prognosis is not good. If, before the 2014 invasion of Ukraine, it may have been possible to try to reason with the Russian government, that is no longer the case. If there were once outside individuals — oligarchs, diplomats, businesspeople, cultural figures — who could possibly influence the Kremlin from within Russia, they are now few and far in between — too many have been exiled, silenced or co-opted. All this means that we have to look to new places, and to new partners, to advance his cause. Countries that retain active economic ties with Russia, such as India, Israel, Turkey, Brazil and South Africa may have more chances to raise Evan’s case. His arrest could be a signal that Russia is looking for another prisoner exchange, the same kind of trade that freed Brittney Griner. If that is the direction in which this is headed, it might work eventually. But it will probably be a long road.

    For the past several years, Evan has been chronicling the gradual closing of a country that he came to love. In 2017, when he was offered reporting positions in Moscow and in Pittsburgh, he asked for my advice on how to choose between them. “Which one would you take, if you were Evan Gershkovich?” he asked. I told him to go to Moscow — I had seen so many colleagues start out as stringers for English-language newspapers abroad to go on to incredible careers — and I wished the same for him.

    He moved to Russia to chase his journalism dream, but also because he believed it was important to capture life on the ground, to help Americans understand Russian culture and politics as intimately as he did. He wanted to write about the disappearing languages of Russia and its indigenous cultures; about Russian landfill closures and environmental degradation; about the arrests of journalists and dissidents who dared to speak out against the regime. During the Covid-19 pandemic, he helped me get in touch with Russian journalists who had been detained for their work for a story I was working on. It makes me ill to think that he is experiencing the same conditions that he was accustomed to reporting on.

    We first met in college, where we traveled in the same circle of friends but were not, at first, that close. I distinctly remember bumping into Evan on the quad one day and hearing him speaking in Russian on the phone to one of his parents. After that, we bonded about being fellow children of Soviet emigrés in the U.S. — members of a subculture that was not, back then, terribly common at our small liberal arts college in coastal Maine. He worked as a cook at the on-campus pub as part of his financial aid package, and also as a staff writer covering arts and entertainment for the college paper, where I was an editor. He was still growing into himself as a writer — we all were — but he already had the winning combination of charisma, talent, kindness and humor that would propel him in the years to come.

    In 2014, the summer after he graduated, he wrote to me from Thailand, where he was living on a reporting fellowship. He said he’d been reading my writing and asked for my advice about how to get a job in journalism when he came home. He would occasionally send me drafts of essays and pitches he was trying to place; he wanted to be a professional journalist more than anything and was stubborn and determined enough to make it happen. He was always hungry for advice and critiques, and positively exuberant about the possibility of being edited, which, in my opinion, is the mark of a truly good writer. “Don’t make fun of me but I’m here for the criticism!!!” was one of the messages he appended to a draft.

    Several years ago, he asked me to take a look at an essay he’d written about surviving the 2015 earthquake in Kathmandu, where he’d been visiting toward the end of his fellowship year to help rural communities adapt to climate change. He had been in a café when the quake hit — a good Samaritan extracted him from behind a fallen bookcase — and spent the following three days working nonstop to feed hundreds of fellow survivors. In the essay he sent me, Evan referenced authors he had studied and admired, including George Saunders, Kathryn Schulz, Haruki Murakami and Leo Tolstoy, and quoted from The Death of Ivan Ilyich. The character he most related to, he wrote, was Schwartz, “the playful and lively guy who urges Piotr Ivanovich to not be despondent in the face of Ivan Ilyich’s death, who invites him over to his house for a card game that very night.” Schwartz, Evan wrote, was “joyful and playful, always, even in the face of tragedy and horror.”

    So is Evan, as any of his friends will be quick to tell you. That’s why none of us were surprised to hear that he joked with the prison monitors who came to visit him at Lefortovo this week. It always cheered me to see his name pop up on my screen: “you up for a bit of banter on this Friday afternoon?” He’d message me with his anxieties, professional and personal — “stressed about FIFA”; “having trouble figuring out whom to pitch”; “I’m worried about my byline disappearing!” — and I’d share mine in turn.

    In recent years, we’ve only kept in touch sporadically: He would request updates about my writing — he once promised to moderate a book event for me in Moscow — and told me: “I think you’d be proud of me — started meditating!” (Evan, when you read this: sorry.) In summer 2020, the day after my wedding, he messaged me from Moscow to say congratulations, adding that my husband’s salt-and-pepper hair was “looking FLY.” One of the benefits of marriage, he said, was that I’d “always have someone to kvetch to!”

    I am scared for my friend. He’s great to kvetch to. The last time we really talked was over the summer, when he was heading back to Moscow to report. He was glad to be able to do so. He never for a minute regretted his choice to move to Russia and dedicate his career to covering the region. “100% the right decision to have come here,” he once wrote me. “Doing some stories I’m proud of.” Let’s make sure his byline does not disappear.

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    #Friend #Evan #Gershkovich #Suffering #Job #Loved
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Govt Job: Applications Invites For 3120 Teachers Posts, Salary 47600-151100/- Check Other Details – Kashmir News

    Govt Job: Applications Invites For 3120 Teachers Posts, Salary 47600-151100/- Check Other Details – Kashmir News

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    This recruitment drive will fill up 3120 PGT, TGT regular and backlog posts. Read below for eligibility, selection process and other details.

    Exam NameJSSC Post Graduate Trained Teacher
    Competitive Examination-2023
    OrganizationJharkhand Staff Selection Commission (JSSC)
    Total Posts3120
    QualificationPost Graduate + B.Ed In Relevant Subject
    Application ProcessOnline
    Application Fee100 And 50
    Start Date05 April 2023
    Last Date04 May 2023
    Fee Payment Last Date06 May 2023
    Photo, Sign Upload Last Date08 May 2023
    Correction Date10 May to 08 May 2023
    Exam DateComing Soon

    Important Dates

    • Opening date of application: April 5, 2023

    • Closing date of application: May 4, 2023

    • Last date for submission of application fees: May 6, 2023

    • Correction window: April 10 to April 12, 2023.

    Name & Post Details

     (Regular & Backlog)Total Post
    PGT Regular2137 + 718
    PGT Backlog204 + 61
    Total3120

    Eligibility Criteria

    Candidates who want to apply for the posts mentioned above can check the educational qualification and age limit through the Detailed Notification given below.

    News WhatsApp Group Links – Join Now

    Selection Process

    The selection process is based on CBT main exam. Those candidates who will qualify the examination will be put in the merit list prepared by the Commission.

    Application Fees

    The application fees is ₹100 for all categories and reserved category candidates will have to pay ₹50/- as application fees. For more related details candidates can check the official site of JSSC.

    Pay Scale/ Remuneration

    • Pay salary for JSSC Teacher Posts: Rs. 47600-151100/-

    How to Apply

    Online applications are invited from eligible candidates for this recruitment. Intended candidates are able to submit their online application by following below provided steps.

    • First of all Scroll down, and check the Important Links section From This Page.
    • Click on New Registration Click Here Link
    • On the new page, click on the Apply Online link given in from of the ‘Online Applications for PGTTCE-2022’.
    • Click on Apply Online Link.
    • After that, Register yourself by providing personal and educational details. Moreover, click on the ‘Next’ button after filling in all the blank fields.
    • After that, Enter your all asked details Name, Address, etc including photograph and signature.
    • After that, click on Submit button.

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    #Govt #Job #Applications #Invites #Teachers #Posts #Salary #Check #Details #Kashmir #News

    ( With inputs from : kashmirnews.in )

  • Unacademy lays off 12 pc of workforce in its latest round of job cuts

    Unacademy lays off 12 pc of workforce in its latest round of job cuts

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    New Delhi: Edtech major Unacademy has laid off 12 per cent of its workforce or over 350 employees in its latest round of job cuts.

    Gaurav Munjal, co-founder and CEO of Unacademy, announced the latest layoffs in a Slack message to employees, reports TechCrunch.

    “We have taken every step in the right decision to make our core business profitable, yet it’s not enough. We have to go further, we have to go deeper,” Munjal was quoted as saying.

    “Today’s reality is a contrast from two years ago where we saw unprecedented growth because of accelerated adoption of online learning. Today, the global economy is enduring a recession, funding is scare and running a profitable business is key. We have to adapt to these changes, build and operate in a much leaner manner so we can truly create value for our users and shareholders,” he added.

    Moreover, in a message to employees, Munjal stated that he takes “complete responsibility for the way things have turned out”.

    In November last year, Unacademy laid off 10 per cent of its workforce or nearly 350 employees, as funding winter deepens for the Indian startup ecosystem.

    Earlier this year, Unacademy-run Relevel laid off 40 employees, or 20 per cent of its workforce, as it shifts its focus from the education business to “tests product” and a new app called NextLevel.

    Meanwhile, another edtech major BYJU’s has laid off further 15 per cent of its employees from its engineering teams, as the company continues phased layoffs to remain growth-oriented in a global economic meltdown.

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    #Unacademy #lays #workforce #latest #job #cuts

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • ‘He’s done a great job’: Youngkin praises would-be rivals

    ‘He’s done a great job’: Youngkin praises would-be rivals

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    Any criticism at all of those tumultuous Trump years? “Well, I think what you say and how you say it,” Youngkin offered delicately. “I think there is a chance to disagree with people without being disagreeable. I don’t call people names. [Avoiding insults] is just one of the things I believe is appropriate. We just have different styles.”

    In an age of snarling politics, Youngkin is trying to decide if the 2024 field has room for a different style. While he draws a contrast with Trump, Youngkin shot to national prominence in GOP circles largely on the strength of his deft handling of Trump in his 2021 victory. He gained the former president’s support — and won handily in Trump-backing precincts—but effectively rebuffed Democratic efforts to tie him closely to the former president. Youngkin, a wealthy former private-equity executive and political novice, beat former Gov. Terry McAuliffe, who had been a well-known national Democrat for 25 years.

    Now, as winter turns to spring, Youngkin is in the midst of a prolonged and even anguished decision-making process about whether the moment is right for a presidential run, according to people close to his deliberations, as well as Virginia and national operatives familiar with his decision-making.

    Pushing him forward are the appeals of people who want what they perceive as a winning alternative to Trump and DeSantis — as well as the historical examples of Trump and former president Barack Obama, who showed that this is an era that rewards people who seize their moment rather than devote years to checking traditional boxes.

    Holding him back are doubts about whether there is sufficient fluidity in the Republican field to accommodate what would start as a somewhat longshot candidacy. In addition, a presidential flop could mar what has been a strong start to his governorship.

    On the day of the Youngkin interview, it was clear from conversations with legislators that many are derisive about his presidential ambitions after a short time in office. Local reporters scoff irritably about his national interviews while being often inaccessible to people covering his official Virginia duties. (Youngkin’s team noted that he’s done more than 100 one-on-one interviews with Virginia outlets.)

    Former Gov. L. Douglas Wilder — a Democrat who says he likes Youngkin personally — recalled the home-state backlash to his own short-lived 1992 campaign. In an interview, he said Youngkin would be making a mistake to run: better to build a local record and bide his time and perhaps be selected as vice presidential nominee or run in 2028.

    For now, his interview and travel schedule certainly seems like someone who wants to keep his options open — and is enjoying the attention. In his two years in office, he’s done around 80 national TV interviews, including numerous Sunday shows, and is headlining a number of prominent events in the next few weeks, including the Bush Institute leadership forum in Dallas, the Heritage Foundation’s 50th anniversary summit at Mount Vernon and a speech at the Reagan Library.

    Other highlights of the Youngkin interview — conducted over fried chicken tacos at a Main Street diner near the Capitol—included:

    — His calculation about running: Unsurprisingly for the politician he’s become, Youngkin called his name being thrown into the mix “a humbling, humbling, humbling conversation” but said his full attention was on Virginia. But implicit in his answer was that by turning a purple state red, he is trying to create a Virginia model for the Republican party to win nationally.

    “Virginia is a really good case study on the nation,” he said. “People thought it was purple, it was pretty darn blue. And what it takes is, first of all, a platform that is true to your ideals. You can’t deviate because people know, they can look at you and say, is he really going to do what he said he’s going to do?”

    Youngkin implicitly criticized right wing Republican politicians who just play to the base, saying: “What I’d seen in Virginia, and I think I see this across the nation, is we in fact have to bring people into the Republican Party, we have to be additive, not [rely on] subtraction, and we can’t win otherwise.”

    — He never expected to run for office in the first place: In a nation that has seen inequality surge in recent years, Youngkin has had a true rags to riches story, going from helping his family out by working as a dishwasher as a 15 year old in Virginia Beach to attending Rice University on a college basketball scholarship to then becoming a captain of finance. “I never dreamed that I would have a chance to take over from the founders of Carlyle and never dreamed I’d be sitting here with you all as the 74th governor of the Commonwealth,” he said.

    — The mental health crisis: Youngkin said that no one has been spared from the profound mental health crisis in society that has manifested itself in huge challenges in schools, the workplace and families and marriages. He’s made the issue a top priority of his legislative agenda by asking for more than $230 million as part of a three-year plan for the state’s behavioral health system to try to stem the tide of despair.

    “Our mental health crisis that we’re in is more acute than we could possibly ever imagine,” he said somberly. “Because of the base-level issues that we’ve had with the pandemic on top, and then when you marry that with the fact that our behavioral health system is so ill equipped, and I don’t know nationally, but I know Virginia, and we are overwhelmed.”

    — The hot-button issue of education: Youngkin said that Republicans aren’t on their back heels anymore when it comes to education since parents want to have a say in their children’s education and are mad that many public schools were closed during much of the Covid pandemic. He said that there’s been “a systematic reduction of expectations” that damaged many students, especially those from minority, poor or immigrant backgrounds.

    “Parents stood up for a moment and said, ‘It’s all wrong,’ ” he said. “They were all upset because they had been pushed out of their children’s lives and bureaucrats and politicians had told them ‘we know better, go over there, and we’re not going to let you have a role.’ That was the issue.”

    Youngkin said that the infamous comment that his 2021 opponent McAuliffe made during the campaign (“I don’t think parents should be telling schools what they should teach kids”) did not surprise him.

    “When my opponent said what he said, I wasn’t shocked, because I knew that’s what he believed,” he argued. “But I do believe that many of the independents and the Democrats who had kind of hoped that’s not what they believed, all of a sudden recognize that no, that is what the liberal left wing and the Democrats believe, that they know better than parents. And I do think that that was a very important part of the clarification of our message.”

    — Loudoun county sexual assaults: Youngkin drew attention in our interview to the recent sexual assault cases in Loudoun county, where a public school superintendent didn’t tell parents about a male student who had sexually assaulted a young woman and moved the student to another school rather than prosecuting the person. (The student then sexually assaulted another student at the new school.) Youngkin initiated an investigation, which led to a grand jury and an indictment against the superintendent.

    “Everybody said that I was fighting the social culture wars,” he said. “Cover ups are not part of what we do in Virginia. … We’re gonna stand up for parents, we’re gonna have transparency, we’re gonna have high expectations, we’re gonna have the best standards in the nation, we’re gonna go from last to first again.”

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )