Tag: legislators

  • Seven former legislators in ‘most wanted’ list, says UP police

    Seven former legislators in ‘most wanted’ list, says UP police

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    Lucknow: Seven former Uttar Pradesh legislators have figured prominently in the UP Police list of ‘most wanted’.

    The state police’s ‘most wanted’ list includes names of criminals involved in serious offences such as murder and extortion and those who are accused in cases of usurping land and property.

    Those on the list also include don-turned-politician Mukhtar Ansari, former MLA Vijay Mishra, former BSP MLA Haji Yakoob Qureshi, former BSP MLC Haji Iqbal, former MLC Brijesh Singh from Varanasi, former SP MP Rizwan Zaheer, former BSP MLC Sanjeev Dwivedi, former block pramukh Sudhir Singh in Gorakhpur and block pramukh Dilip Mishra.

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    Special DG, of law and order, Prashant Kumar, reiterated that action against criminals has been taken irrespective of their caste, religion and region.

    “We will be monitoring these 66 criminals from the DGP headquarters and ensure that the cases in which they are named as an undertrial are pursued, so that conviction is achieved,” said Kumar.

    The officer added that activities of the gang members of those in the list will also be monitored. Special police units, like the STF and ANTF, will also initiate action against them.

    Kumar added that of the 66 named, two have died -Atiq Ahmed and Aditya Rana, who carried a bounty of Rs 2.5 lakh and was killed in an exchange of fire with the police in Bijnor.

    “Of the remaining, 27 are in jail, five are absconding while others are out on bail,” added the special DG.

    “Those on the run include Badan Singh Baddo, Vinay Tyagi of Muzaffarnagar, former MLC Haji Iqbal who also carries Rs 1 lakh reward and others,” added Kumar.

    Another senior officer said that since 2017, action against every dreaded criminal and gangster, who considered himself the uncrowned king of the underworld, has been initiated.

    “The Yogi government launched a crackdown on all sorts of mafia and gangsters in the state, including those who had established a network of crime and enjoyed political patronage during previous governments,” a government spokesperson added.

    (Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by Siasat staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • ‘Deeply frustrated’: Florida legislators worn out by DeSantis

    ‘Deeply frustrated’: Florida legislators worn out by DeSantis

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    One GOP legislator privately said: “We’re not the party of cancel culture. We can’t keep doing this tit for tat.” The lawmaker was granted anonymity to speak freely about the GOP governor.

    “People are deeply frustrated,” said former state Sen. Jeff Brandes, a St. Petersburg Republican who has been talking to his former GOP colleagues frequently this session. “They are not spending any time on the right problems … Most legislators believe that the balance of power has shifted too far and the Legislature needs to re-establish itself as a coequal branch of government.”

    The vexation in Tallahassee comes as DeSantis has struggled to gain traction nationally after weathering weeks of criticism from former President Donald Trump and other Republicans ahead of his likely 2024 announcement. DeSantis’ momentum after winning reelection in November by historic margins is beginning to evaporate. Even Florida’s GOP Legislative leaders, Senate President Kathleen Passidomo and House Speaker Paul Renner, on Wednesday declined to endorse DeSantis. While both praised the governor, they said they would wait until after the legislative session before saying who they would back for the 2024 election.

    DeSantis administration officials declined to comment for this story.

    DeSantis had already positioned himself as one of the most powerful governors in state history during his first term, strong-arming the Legislature to approve his congressional redistricting maps and reshaping GOP power in the state through boosting Republican voter registration numbers and endorsing school board candidates. Ahead of the session, the governor rolled out a lengthy agenda designed to give him a long line of legislative victories that he could tout if he runs for president as expected.

    But after seven weeks, the toll is wearing people down. POLITICO interviewed more nearly 20 people involved in the legislative process, including Republican and Democratic legislators as well as lobbyists and legislative staffers.

    Many Republicans said they support many of DeSantis’ priorities but have seen their own priority bills get waylaid or slowed down to help him. They have chafed at orders coming from legislative leaders who are working in concert with the governor’s office. Some have suggested that the GOP supermajority has made it easier for legislative leaders to ignore complaints from rank-and-file members.

    “I think our Republican colleagues are done,” said state Sen. Jason Pizzo, a South Florida Democrat. “I think they are fed up. There’s obviously still some true believers and there’s some very loyal and allegiant individuals and groups … They would like him to hurry up and announce and start focusing exclusively on other stuff other than here.”

    By all accounts though, DeSantis has racked up some big wins this session. Lawmakers have already passed multiple bills that the governor backed, including a ban on abortions after six weeks, a measure letting people carry concealed weapons without a permit and legislation that will no longer require a unanimous jury recommendation in death penalty cases.

    On Wednesday, the Legislature sent to the governor’s desk a bill that would bar the use of certain types of investment strategies that DeSantis and other Republicans have called “woke.” Lawmakers also agreed to put on the 2024 ballot a proposed constitutional amendment that would make school board elections partisan. And a bill that would block children from attending adult-themed drag shows is also heading to the governor.

    Yet some of DeSantis’ top priorities remain up in the air with less than three weeks to go, including tough new anti-immigration measures that DeSantis called for ahead of the session. One part of that package — eliminating in-state tuition rates for undocumented college students who went to a Florida high school — has yet to be introduced.

    Another bill that lawmakers appear unlikely to approve would alter defamation laws and was designed to potentially set up a challenge to New York Times v. Sullivan, the landmark 1964 Supreme Court ruling that limits public officials’ ability to sue publishers. The House and Senate versions of the bill, which drew criticism from both traditional media outlets and conservative media, have languished for weeks in committee stops and legislators have not advanced them.

    Renner insisted, though, that legislators this session were living up to what they told voters last fall.

    “We’re doing the very things we campaigned on, we’re governing as we campaigned,” Renner said.

    He acknowledged that there was a “chokepoint” earlier in the session because the House was spending most of its time on legislation being pushed by the governor and legislative leaders.

    “If people are frustrated it’s probably because we had a ton of bills that the governor’s put forward that we in House and Senate leadership have put forward but,” Renner said. “There’s going to be a ton of other bills that are coming forward.”

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Rahul Gandhi or Azam Khan, legislators disqualified on basis of law: UP minister

    Rahul Gandhi or Azam Khan, legislators disqualified on basis of law: UP minister

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    Noida: Uttar Pradesh minister Asim Arun on Saturday said the rule of law applies to everyone whether it is Congress leader Rahul Gandhi, SP’s Azam Khan or a BJP politician.

    Responding to an allegation by Samajwadi Party chief Akhilesh Yadav, who has said that the BJP was trying to lodge false cases against opposition leaders and get them disqualified, the social welfare minister said a member of the ruling BJP had to lose his membership of the UP Assembly last year after his conviction.

    Vikram Saini, a two-term MLA from Khatauli, was disqualified as a legislator in 2022 after he was sentenced to two years in prison by a court in a case related to the 2013 Muzaffarnagar riots.

    “He had a criminal case against him and he got convicted in it. His seat fell vacant and bye-election was held on it,” Arun said.

    The BJP fielded his wife in the bye-election but the RLD candidate won from there.

    “The crucial element here is we all know what Rahul Gandhi said. Do you feel it amounts to defamation? I feel yes, it does. You read the lawbook and according to Section 499 (of the IPC), it is clearly defamation,” Arun said.

    “Second, the speed of justice. The case was lodged in 2019 and it’s almost four years and the speed should be even greater, particularly for MP/MLA courts because they were made to ensure speedy legal proceedings in such cases,” the former IPS officer said during a visit to the National Capital Region.

    Whether it is Azam Khan or his son Abdullah, every case has gone through a robust legal process, he said.

    “Now Rahul Gandhi or other politicians who have been convicted have legal recourse and I am sure they must have taken that route. Either their conviction may not have got commuted or the sentence stayed because of which they have been disqualified. This is fundamentally about the rule of law, which must apply to everyone including politicians, which is happening,” the minister said.

    Gandhi was sentenced to two years in jail after a Surat court convicted him in a 2019 criminal defamation case on Thursday. The next day, the Lok Sabha Secretariat issued a notification disqualifying him as an MP.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Tripura: CPI-M legislator’s mother assaulted; MLA blames BJP

    Tripura: CPI-M legislator’s mother assaulted; MLA blames BJP

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    Agartala: The 79-year-old mother of a Communist Party of India-Marxist (CPI-M) legislator in Tripura has been allegedly assaulted by some miscreants who also vandalised his home at Pratapgarh in West Tripura district.

    Ramu Das, the CPI-M legislator, who claimed that the attackers were “BJP supporters”, told mediapersons on Thursday that his mother Kanan Das has been admitted to Indira Gandhi Memorial Hospital here after she was attacked on Wednesday night.

    Das said the incident happened hours after the swearing-in ceremony of Chief Minister Manik Saha and his council of ministers in presence of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Home Minister Amit Shah, BJP President J.P. Nadda and others.

    The MLA said the attack took place when he went to meet the doctor along with his wife.

    He claimed that despite being informed of the incident immediately, the police were yet to arrest the culprits.

    The CPI-M leader said that his house was attacked by the “BJP goons” several times earlier as well.

    Meanwhile, CM Manik Saha, while talking with the media on Thursday, said that he has instructed the Director General of Police to take tough action against those who are responsible for the post-poll violence.

    The opposition Congress and the CPI-M-led Left parties boycotted the swearing-in-ceremony on Wednesday citing the “unprecedented reign of terror unleashed by the BJP supporters and goons”.

    The Congress and the Left leaders earlier met Chief Secretary J.K. Sinha and Director General of Police Amitabh Ranjan and submitted a memorandum detailing the incidents of violence and demanded immediate strict actions against the perpetrators.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Florida legislators expected to tackle Disney in special session next week

    Florida legislators expected to tackle Disney in special session next week

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    disney florida feud 62647

    Reedy Creek Improvement District is the name of the special district that was created by Florida legislators more than 50 years ago and which has largely been governed by the entertainment conglomerate for more than five decades.

    Last year, legislators moved quickly to dissolve Reedy Creek during a special session after Disney officials spoke out against a new law restricting how sexual orientation and gender identity are addressed in public schools. The measure, called “Don’t Say Gay” by its opponents, prohibits educators from leading classroom instruction on sexual orientation and gender identity for students in kindergarten through third grade. LGBTQ+ advocates say the measure could lead students to increased bullying or even suicide.

    While DeSantis was not the initial driving force behind the controversial law, he became a champion of it and was instrumental in pushing through the plan to strip Disney of its special status in the aftermath. DeSantis, now seen as likely presidential contender, repeatedly used his battle against Disney on the campaign trail last year as an example of his resistance to “woke” corporations.

    But while legislators passed a bill targeting Reedy Creek they did not address ongoing questions about district debts and whether they would be shifted to local taxpayers.

    A spokesperson for Disney did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

    DeSantis has pledged that a plan would be developed to ensure that taxpayers wouldn’t be responsible for the debts. In early January, the administration said it had come up with a proposal that would have the state control the special district and at same time ensure that Disney would be responsible for any debts previously incurred.

    “The corporate kingdom has come to an end,” Taryn Fenske, a spokesperson for DeSantis, said earlier this month.

    State Sen. Linda Stewart, an Orlando Democrat whose central Florida district is close to Disney World, said in a message that “we have not received anything yet! Just been hearing rumors for the last couple of weeks.”

    DeSantis has relied more and more on special sessions to take care of high priority legislation, a move that guarantees more sustained media coverage — including among friendly conservative outlets — than during the somewhat hectic 60-day regular session where multiple controversial issues may be considered at once. State legislators in Florida are already expected to take up a major expansion of vouchers, a measure to eliminate concealed weapons permitting and possibly new abortion restrictions in the session scheduled to start in March.

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )