Tag: United States News

  • Oil and gas critics escalate their gripes against Biden

    Oil and gas critics escalate their gripes against Biden

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    The unhappiness among advocates could point to trouble in 2024, sapping the enthusiasm Biden will need from his party’s base to win reelection, people following the policy debate warn. He also faces a risk that his accomplishments — including signing the nation’s biggest-ever climate law — will have to compete for attention with criticism of administration moves that bolster fossil fuels.

    “What I’m calling pragmatism is still a great source of disappointment to the progressive wing of the Democratic Party,” said David Goldwyn, who led the energy office in Obama’s State Department and is now president of the energy consulting firm Goldwyn Global Strategies.

    That “pragmatism” won’t win over voters who see climate change as an emergency demanding a sharp turn away from fossil fuels, green activists say.

    “President Biden will not win this election by reaching for conservative votes,” said Varshini Prakash, executive director of the youth-led environmental group Sunrise Movement, which has alternately cheered and panned Biden’s moves on climate change. In a statement, she said the administration’s recent moves are “steps backward” that will discourage people who supported him in 2020.

    “If you continue to do fossil fuels, isn’t that just another form of climate denialism?” asked Jean Su, energy justice director and senior attorney with the environmental group Center for Biological Diversity.

    In response, the administration noted that Biden last month banned new oil and gas leases in the entire U.S. portion of the Arctic Ocean, and is preparing to close off 13 million acres of land and water in Alaska from fossil fuel development. It contends that any of its fossil fuel moves were either mandated by Congress — such as a March sale of offshore oil and gas leases in the Gulf of Mexico — or a legal calculation on matters left over from the Trump administration.

    “President Biden has been delivering on the most ambitious climate agenda ever with the support of labor groups, environmental justice and climate leaders, youth advocates, and more,” White House spokesperson Abdullah Hasan said in a statement Friday.

    A majority of the climate movement has praised Biden — and many of its leaders joined the president at an April 21 Rose Garden event where he announced new steps to block pollution in poor or minority communities, Hasan noted. Yet the administration has nonetheless tried to soothe the anxieties of the Democratic base’s most fervent climate backers.

    In a recent New Yorker article, White House climate adviser John Podesta urged climate supporters to have some “perspective” about the Interior Department’s decision last month to greenlight a ConocoPhillips oil drilling project in Willow, Alaska. The department has said it approved the project reluctantly to avoid what would have probably been an unsuccessful court fight with Conoco.

    “I’m not trying to minimize, but it’s less than one per cent of the emission reductions that come from the” climate law, Podesta said. “I think the opponents have overstated the climate effect.”

    For Biden, as for Obama, efforts to reduce greenhouse gas pollution have had to coexist with the politics of energy prices and the United States’ newfound role as a major oil and gas producer.

    Both presidents unleashed huge amounts of oil from the nation’s strategic reserves to respond to disruptions of the oil markets — although Biden did it on a much larger scale. Obama’s early moves to send more U.S. gas overseas have also turned into a mighty geopolitical weapon for Biden, who is using fossil fuel exports to blunt Vladimir Putin’s influence over Europe.

    Of course, Biden has accomplished something Obama never did — signing a major climate bill, last year’s Inflation Reduction Act, with its $369 billion in incentives designed to move the nation’s power supply, vehicles and other carbon sources away from fossil fuels. That’s far larger than the $90 billion in clean energy spending from Obama’s 2009 stimulus, which is widely credited with bringing down the costs of wind and solar power.

    The Biden administration has followed up with regulations designed to push gasoline-powered cars and trucks out of the market and an upcoming proposal to clamp down on power plants’ greenhouse gas pollution. (Obama’s attempt to do the latter was eventually rejected by the Supreme Court.) The president is taking abundant flak for those efforts from Republicans, whose attacks on Biden’s energy policies are a centerpiece of their 2024 messaging.

    But the administration’s recent actions advancing fossil fuels contradict those efforts, in the view of some irritated Democratic constituencies. Approval of Biden’s environmental performance has slipped among Democrats, independents and younger voters since October 2022, according to the polling firm Data for Progress and the group Fossil Free Media, which opposes fossil fuel advertising and messaging.

    Democrats’ approval of Biden’s environmental policies fell to 69 percent in March, down from 82 percent in October, while 30 percent of independents approved versus 37 percent in March, the poll found. Biden’s environmental favorables plummeted with voters ages 18 to 29 over that period, from 48 percent to 35 percent. That period covered the approval of the Willow oil project.

    On the other hand, the Willow decision is popular with much of the American public, according to separate polls showing that roughly half support the project. A YouGov poll found 55 percent of U.S. adults backed it, while approval hit 48 percent in a Morning Consult poll — with 25 percent having no opinion.

    As a candidate in 2020, Biden promised to shift the U.S. off fossil fuels, pledging, “I guarantee you. We’re going to end fossil fuel,” though he later cautioned this would happen “over time.”

    But Putin’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 jostled the administration’s energy rhetoric and view of natural gas, according to industry officials. European allies wanted to ditch their reliance on Russian gas, and the Biden administration helped by promoting an export surge that led to U.S. companies providing half of Europe’s liquefied natural gas last year.

    Fossil fuels have also gotten a boost from some of the administration’s domestic actions. Earlier this month, Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm endorsed the energy security benefits of a nearly completed natural gas pipeline championed by Senate Energy Chair Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) — a project Biden’s green allies fiercely oppose. In an April Senate hearing, Biden’s pick for chief economist, Jared Bernstein, boasted that the administration had permitted more oil and gas wells in its first two years than former President Donald Trump.

    Even if they disapprove of Biden’s recent fossil fuel moves, his most ardent green allies contend that the president has focused on the right things to reduce the United States’ climate impact: new car and truck pollution standards, upcoming power plant rules and his vow to defend the IRA from the cuts Republicans are demanding.

    “Those are the big key issues here, and how they navigate the politics on that is very important,” said Jamal Raad, co-founder and senior adviser for the environmental group Evergreen Action.

    “If you sum the effort on balance, it moves very much in the direction of emissions reduction,” Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse (D-R.I.) told reporters.

    Obama’s efforts to pass his own climate bill failed during his first term, and his most aggressive climate actions didn’t emerge until late in his second term. Those included his 2015 decision to reject Keystone — a pipeline Biden had to kill a second time after Trump tried to revive it — and a carbon rule for power plants that the Supreme Court rejected last year.

    Obama also played a major role in reaching the Paris climate agreement, in which the U.S. joined every other nation on Earth in pledging to address climate change.

    But Obama had something Biden doesn’t have: more time on the Earth’s climate clock. The additional six years of greenhouse gas pollution since Obama left office means that the world is closer to exceeding the amount of global warming that would usher in catastrophic consequences.

    So any nod toward fossil fuel use at home or abroad is a step in the wrong direction, activists say.

    “Joe Biden is tacking to the right on a number of issues — climate included,” said Lukas Ross, a program manager with environmental group Friends of the Earth. “I can guarantee the climate doesn’t care where U.S. fossil fuels are combusted. That’s the worry here.”

    The administration has insisted its actions are consistent with its climate goals, noting it wants to cut greenhouse gas pollution in half by 2030, and that technologies aimed at limiting fossil fuels’ warming effects — such as capturing power plants’ carbon output — remain options.

    Mindful of the climate implications, the Biden administration has called gas a diplomatic tool while cautioning that new infrastructure must not squander the nation’s climate goals. It also has pushed regulations, originally initiated under Obama but strengthened by Biden, to limit pollution by heat-trapping methane from oil and gas production.

    In addition, the administration is discussing a system to assure European and other buyers that U.S. gas is clean enough to maintain national climate pledges. And the Energy Department is starting to assess whether its approvals of gas export projects are jeopardizing the nation’s goals for cutting carbon pollution.

    But Biden’s efforts are still complicated by the United States’ role as one of the world’s top oil and gas producers, a status it achieved during the Obama years thanks to the fracking boom.

    The president and his advisers “haven’t quite figured out how you resolve the perceived tension between the U.S. being increasingly an exporter of [gas] — like, the major exporter — and that being important for allies and the global economy with their long-term climate agenda,” said Joseph Majkut, director of the energy security and climate change program at the think tank Center for Strategic and International Studies.

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    #Oil #gas #critics #escalate #gripes #Biden
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Biden’s old guy advantage with older voters

    Biden’s old guy advantage with older voters

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    The two surveys underscored an inside-the-crosstabs phenomenon that’s appeared in many — though not all — recent public surveys: Voters in older age groups approve of Biden’s job performance in greater numbers than those in younger clusters.

    Over the past few decades, that’s been unusual for presidents from Biden’s party. The splits look more like polling from Biden’s predecessor, former President Donald Trump, who retained stronger numbers with seniors and voters just shy of retirement age than among the younger half of the electorate.

    Enduring popularity with older voters could be a major asset for Biden in his just-announced reelection campaign. Though no Democratic presidential candidate has carried seniors — those 65 and older — since Al Gore in 2000, Biden limited his losses among that cohort, losing them by a mid-single-digit margin in 2020, according to exit polls. (By contrast, Republicans carried the senior vote by roughly twice that margin — 10 or 12 points, depending on the voter survey, in the 2022 midterm elections.)

    Biden, 80, is the oldest person to serve as president. And there’s debate about whether attacks on him from some Republicans — recall Trump’s “Sleepy Joe” nickname during the last campaign — backfire among voters at or fast approaching the same age.

    Seniors have become the most reliable voters in every presidential election since 1996, according to data from the Census Bureau. Seventy-two percent of voters 65 and older turned out in the 2020 presidential election, a higher rate than voters aged 45 to 64 (66 percent), 25 to 44 (55 percent) and those under 25 (48 percent).

    Most public surveys show older voters are more likely to approve of Biden’s job performance than younger voters. In the Fox News poll, Biden’s approval rating was right-side-up with seniors, 49 percent approve versus 47 percent disapprove — but 8 points underwater among voters under 45.

    An NPR/PBS NewsHour/Marist College poll released Tuesday similarly showed Biden’s approval lowest among Americans aged 18 to 29 (27 percent) and highest among those 60 and older (49 percent). And though a large-sample Pew Research Center poll from late March and early April showed a smaller disparity across ages, the trend was the same: Biden’s net-approval rating was lowest among Americans aged 18 to 29 (-32) and highest among seniors 65 and older (-20).

    Not all polls show the same pattern. An Economist/YouGov poll this week showed Biden with a much higher approval rating among Americans aged 18 to 29: 61 percent. Biden’s approval rating with seniors was only 38 percent.

    That’s much closer to what one would expect for a Democratic president, but it also represents an uptick in approval among young voters in their polling, as The Economist’s G. Elliott Morris wrote on Twitter this week.

    Whether that’s an outlier, a more accurate reflection of public opinion or the start of a new trend could have significant implications for the next election. Whether the 80-year-old Biden is mostly unpopular among young voters, or equaling his best-ever approval rating with them could reshape his 2024 coalition.

    Democratic presidential candidates have carried the under-30 vote in each of the past eight presidential elections. But dating back to 1976, only three Democratic presidential candidates have carried the senior vote, according to exit polls: Bill Clinton in his decisive victories in 1992 and 1996, and Gore in 2000.

    In 2020, Trump edged Biden among older voters by a narrow margin: The traditional network exit poll gave the then-president a 7-point edge among voters 65 and older, while AP VoteCast, another survey of actual voters, had Trump only ahead by 3 points. Biden, meanwhile, won voters under 30 by a more-than-20-point margin.

    As Americans live longer, seniors are also growing as a share of the electorate. Americans 65 and older made up 17 percent of all U.S. residents in the 2020 census — up from 13 percent only 10 years prior. And those numbers understate their share of the electorate, given that older Americans are more likely to be citizens, more likely to be registered to vote and more likely to turn out than younger ones.

    Older voters outpunch their weight even more in Republican primaries — which might be why both Trump and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis are sparring over the future of Medicare and Social Security in recent weeks.

    Biden is also highlighting the issue. About 35 seconds into the announcement video his campaign produced to announce he’s running for a second term, Biden begins decrying “MAGA extremists” who are “lining up to take away” Americans’ “bedrock freedoms.”

    His first example? “Cutting Social Security you’ve paid for your entire life.”



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    #Bidens #guy #advantage #older #voters
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • ‘Are You There, God?’ Reminds Us Why Books Are Still Banned, Even in the Digital Age

    ‘Are You There, God?’ Reminds Us Why Books Are Still Banned, Even in the Digital Age

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    blume illo2

    At the time the book came out, some critics seemed surprised at how deeply it drilled into the anxious self-centeredness of a growing child. “The world may be in serious trouble, but for Margaret Simon and her friends, the real crises have to do with breast‐growth and the competition to see who menstruates first,” sniffed an otherwise positive New York Times children’s book reviewer in November 1970. Well, yes, for a standard 12-year-old, that sounds about right.

    It didn’t matter what the Times thought, anyway; the kids handled the publicity themselves, making the book a viral hit before viral hits were a concept. Blume had fortuitous timing, Leonard Marcus, a children’s book historian, told me: Margaret came out just as publishers were starting to issue children’s books in inexpensive paperback form, and mall stores like B. Dalton were starting to sell books outside of the watchful eyes of librarians and traditional bookstore clerks.

    And a forbidden book will always have appeal. Almost as soon as Margaret was published, it was banned in certain corners; Blume has said her own children’s elementary school principal wouldn’t shelve it in the school library because it mentioned menstruation. In the 1980s, conservative warriors Phyllis Schlafly and Jerry Falwell made Margaret and other Blume books a target of their ire. Schlafly’s Eagle Forum put out a pamphlet titled “How to Rid Your Schools and Libraries of Judy Blume Books.”

    The bullseye on Blume’s work remains today. This spring, Forever was one of 80 books banned from Florida’s Martin County school system, along with Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale and Toni Morrison’s The Bluest Eye. Last year was a record year for book bans in the United States, with 60 percent of the bans directed at school libraries and classrooms. Some objections to books have evolved since 1970 — many of 2022’s banned books were targeted for LGBTQ themes, including Gender Queer, a graphic memoir by Maia Kobabe about explaining nonbinary and asexual identity to friends and family. But a common thread to book bans, then and now, is discomfort about frank discussion of sexuality.

    In that context, the movie version of Margaret doesn’t feel like something that would rile up the Phyllis Schlafly set. It’s a gentle, charming period piece, an exercise in nostalgia — so reverent of Blume, who served as a producer, that it starts with footage of her reading the entire first chapter aloud. Florida legislators might also be pleased to know that, as much as Margaret and her friends talk about getting their periods, the film treats the actual event with 1970s-era restraint: not a drop of blood appears onscreen.

    In other words, the movie is safe — more so than the book felt, when it left a monthly flow to your preteen imagination. And while it’s sweetly faithful to the Margaret text, the fact that it’s emblazoned on a giant screen, in a public setting, seems to me to undermine its spirit. Sitting in the theater, I imagined a version that might actually make people squeamish — like the period jokes that show up now in Michelle Wolf’s comedy routines and edgy TV shows like “Broad City.” In her time, Blume was that kind of fearless, says Anita Diamant, the author of Period. End of Sentence, a book about destigmatizing menstruation. That’s why “she became this legend.”

    But if the kids in my theater seemed unfazed, watching sanctioned fare in the company of adults, they clearly still had secrets of their own. One group of girls slipped down the aisle just as the lights went down and ran in and out together, whispering, over the course of the screening. They looked to be 11 or 12, Margaret’s age, wearing matching cat-ear headbands, taking part in a private scheme that adults wouldn’t understand. Who knows what book they’re passing among themselves.

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    #God #Reminds #Books #Banned #Digital #Age
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • How the Trump Years Weakened the Media

    How the Trump Years Weakened the Media

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    The Trump years, like the Nixon years, came with triumphal language in which journalists portrayed ourselves as soldiers in a righteous army. “Democracy Dies in Darkness,” is the Washington Post’s new portent-filled slogan. But how effective is that army? And how righteous really? Exploring the gap between aspiration and achievement can be uncomfortable.

    The reality is that the defining ethos of contemporary journalism is not confidence but insecurity — a reality that is expressed in everything from the business models of news organizations to the public personas and career arcs of reporters and editors.

    This is an apt weekend to examine the question. The annual White House Correspondents’ Association dinner always puts divergent strands of journalistic psychology in sharp relief. Invariably presidents (except for Trump, who attended as a guest before the presidency but skipped it once in office) offer amiable remarks making fun of the press and of themselves, then close with solemn comments that bow to journalists’ own sense of high purpose: People, we have had some good fun tonight but let me be serious. I often object vigorously to some of what I watch and read from all of you but — make no mistake — asking tough questions is part of your so on and so forth and every citizen benefits from your unyielding etc, etc. The heart of the weekend — which now actually starts mid-week and continues through Sunday afternoon — is actually all manner of socializing and scene-making. Are you going to the Semafor party? Is that where people are going? Maybe the invite got caught in my spam. Any chance you could get me into the POLITICO brunch? Maybe. It’s closed, but I’ll talk to our folks…

    Several years ago the editors at the New York Times decided the whole event was such an unseemly spectacle they stopped buying tables at the dinner (though you will still see plenty of its reporters at before and after parties). I have always thought the contradictions of the weekend — people who are not naturally cool indulging a fleeting fantasy that they are — are funny and essentially harmless.

    But it’s a different matter when those contradictions come to define large parts of the media sector on the other 51 weeks a year. Increasingly, they do. There are three ways that stand out:

    First, is the ambiguity of the media’s relationship with Trump. He sometimes boasted of an awkward truth, even as news organizations didn’t like to acknowledge it: He was good for business. For news organizations whose economic prospects hinge on ratings and traffic (fortunately, this is not central to POLITICO’s business model) there was as much symbiosis as conflict with Trump. We see this now as news organizations, cable television especially, are beset with fundamental problems in their business models that they were able to defer temporarily during the heady Trump years.

    There is another, even more awkward truth. Unlike during the Nixon years, not much of the excellent truth-squadding and investigative coverage actually drew blood — even as the revelations were just as or more shocking. Trump’s singular genius was to reduce every issue to a binary choice: Which side are you on? He’s not the first politician to do this, but he was the most effective in turning critical coverage, no matter how true or damning, into another rallying cry for his supporters. Media leaders haven’t really confronted the implications: In such a polarized environment, the levers of accountability we used to wield on behalf of the public interest often work imperfectly or not at all.

    Second, many of the media innovations of this generation have made journalists more insular and self-involved in their attention.

    Fortunately, the problems of legacy media platforms like CNN are being balanced by energy and investment in new properties. But many of those new platforms have a considerably different conception of their audiences and their responsibilities. In the wake of Watergate, journalists put a premium on detachment from political and corporate power. The assumption was that news organizations and their top journalists had their own power. With their large audiences, which provided agenda-setting power, they didn’t need to grovel for access or publicly revel in their intimacy with influential people. Many of the new generation of publications, by contrast, trumpet the fact that their principal audience is insiders and their principal interest is private intrigue and public scene-making. Journalists cast themselves as consummate insiders, and devote large coverage to their own industry. The new newsletter company Puck, for instance, writes as much about CNN president Chris Licht and his struggles to transform the network as it does about the possibility of a dangerous new conflict with China. “Elite journalists are our influencers,” Puck co-founder and editor-in-chief Jon Kelly boasted to the New Yorker. The publication hosted a big launch party at the French embassy.

    POLITICO in its early days partly reflected the trend. Back then, we were simultaneously celebrated and denounced for being too close to Washington sources and socializers. In the years since we have developed one of the country’s largest rosters of policy journalists, whose influence hinges on intellectual expertise rather than intimacy.

    Third, is the way that classic Trump traits have their equivalents in the media industry. Trump’s rise helped spark new attention into sexual harassment and launched the #MeToo movement — a vivid illustration on how the media can still set the agenda and enforce accountability. It’s also true that the reckoning revealed many prominent abusers within journalists’ own ranks, especially in television.

    This was a surprise to me. In retrospect, this looks naïve. Even beyond the scandal of sexual harassment, the paradox is evident. Like many colleagues, I have an instinctual tendency to perceive certain traits in many (perhaps not most but a lot) of the politicians, business leaders and other powerful people we cover: vanity, hypocrisy, sanctimony, status anxiety, blowhardery and all manner of insecurities cloaking themselves in exaggerated self-regard. These human infirmities are found in all walks of life, but seem overrepresented in professions that attract ambitious, creative people with a hunger for public acclaim.

    No, I don’t think jerks are overrepresented in media. But insecurity breeds obnoxiousness, and the incentives of modern media and social media, in which journalists seek to “build their brand,” can be stimulants to shallowness and egomania. The antidote to these things is hard work and high standards.

    The most appealing thing about journalists in this generation, as in previous ones, is their belief in a profession that is on the side of the good guys. When this week’s partying is over, we should work even harder to ensure that we really are on that side.

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    #Trump #Years #Weakened #Media
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Democratic mayor becomes unlikely GOP ally in battle over Southern border

    Democratic mayor becomes unlikely GOP ally in battle over Southern border

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    “This administration has been asleep at the wheel on border security, and it has had a tremendous, negative impact on New York City,” Lawler said in a statement to POLITICO. “I would be more than happy to work in a bipartisan way with the mayor to force President Biden to secure our borders and reform the immigration system.”

    Since spring 2022, more than 57,000 migrants — largely from Latin America — arrived in New York after crossing the southern border. Some were sent from conservative states like Texas, where Republican Gov. Greg Abbott chartered as many as eight buses a day to carry migrants to Manhattan. Others arrived on their own.

    The influx has strained the resources of one of the biggest cities in the world.

    Services tied to housing, feeding, educating and providing health care to the newcomers are projected to cost $2.9 billion next year alone, an amount that exceeds the New York City Fire Department’s entire operating budget. So far, Adams has mostly failed to get the White House to respond to his pleas for additional funds, easing of work requirements and better coordination at the border to resettle asylum seekers around the U.S.

    Adams’ new rhetoric, which drew praise from the conservative editorial page of the New York Post and mirrored remarks by Fox News contributor Sean Duffy, was even more eyebrow-raising given the moderate Democrat is a national surrogate for Biden.

    The mayor’s comments came just days before the president announced his reelection bid and at a time when Republicans are gearing up to use voter discontent around immigration in their fight for the White House, the Senate and a larger majority in the House.

    This is the second time in less than a year that Adams’ message on a highly contentious political issue has overlapped with Republican talking points. In 2022, he joined GOP calls for reforms to New York’s bail laws and only changed his tune as the midterms neared and it became clear his party would take a beating over crime at the ballot box.

    Though Adams’ words on immigration could now hurt fellow Democrats running for national office, particularly in New York’s swing congressional districts where Lawler is facing a competitive race, Adams may be thinking more about protecting his own reelection bid in 2025.

    One mayoral adviser, granted anonymity to discuss the administration’s internal mood, noted most New Yorkers would rather see investments in schools, libraries and other city services than billions more spent to help the newcomers. Indeed, a February poll by Quinnipiac University found that 63 percent of voters — including 53 percent of Democrats — don’t think New York City can accommodate the sanctuary-seekers.

    Spokespeople for Adams strongly rejected criticism that he’s parroting Republican talking points, saying he’s done more to care for tens of thousands of migrants than any other Democrat in the country.

    “To personally show his support for asylum seekers, Mayor Adams has organized haircuts for migrants, book donations for kids, and clothing drives, as well as slept besides migrants at a humanitarian relief center while spending hours hearing their personal stories,” mayoral press secretary Fabien Levy said in a statement.

    “Anyone falsely accusing Mayor Adams of using Republican rhetoric should stop criticizing the one person doing more than anyone else in this city for migrants and start pushing for more aid from Washington, DC and Albany,” Levy said.

    But his language around the issue — saying the migrant crisis has “destroyed” the city, directly blaming Biden for the situation and saying it has prevented New York’s economic comeback — is still jarring to many members of his party.

    “It’s extremely disappointing and dangerous to hear anyone feed into anti-immigrant rhetoric, particularly the highest-ranking elected city official of one of the most diverse cities that is fueled by the contributions of the immigrant community,” said Rep. Delia Ramirez, a first-term Democrat from Illinois who says her progressive stance is key to stemming GOP gains in the Latino community.

    “At the federal level, we need to utilize executive authority to ensure cities like Chicago and New York have the support they need to continue providing shelter with maximal flexibility,” she said.

    Added Florida state Rep. Anna Eskamani, a leading critic of Gov. Ron DeSantis’ immigration policies: “We should tone down the rhetoric and focus on solutions.”

    Both Republican and Democratic strategists say Adams’ decision to amplify the right’s messaging around immigration could be a gift to the GOP.

    “I think echoing Republican attacks when Biden is going to need every single resource from Democrats to back him up is not what good Democrats do,” said Bill Neidhardt, a progressive political consultant.

    Republican strategist Bob Heckman said it’s surprising that other Democratic mayors of places like Chicago, D.C. and Denver, which have also faced an influx of migrants, aren’t speaking out like Adams.

    “If you are the mayor of a city who’s receiving the huge influx of migrants that are pouring across the southern border, it’s hard not to talk like that,” Heckman said. “The administration needs to get serious about it. They can’t just ignore it and run on, ‘We can’t let Donald Trump get reelected.’”

    A spokesperson for Biden declined to respond directly to Adams’ criticism but pointed to the president’s announcement in January about new border enforcement actions when he said “extreme Republicans” have always tried to use immigration to score political points but don’t help solve the problem.

    One of those so-called extreme Republicans, Rep. Chip Roy of Texas who has advocated for conservative immigration measures, wasn’t quite ready to embrace the New York mayor.

    “Eric Adams is right to blame the Biden Administration for the border crisis, but this is the same guy who campaigned on his city’s sanctuary status and extended childcare, colleague classes and other taxpayer-funded programs to illegal migrants,” Roy said in a statement.

    “Texas has been bearing the brunt of this crisis for over two years — now New York is getting a taste of their own medicine.”

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    #Democratic #mayor #GOP #ally #battle #Southern #border
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • KVS Non Teaching Cutoff Marks 2023 – Cutoff Marks Released

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    KVS Non Teaching Cutoff Marks 2023 – Cutoff Marks Released

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    [ad_2] #KVS #Teaching #Cutoff #Marks #Cutoff #Marks #Released( With inputs from : The News Caravan.com )

  • JeM Militant Arrested Along With Grenade: Police

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    SRINAGAR: Police on Saturday claimed to have apprehended a militant associate of Jaish-e-Mohammad outfit in North Kashmir’s Handwara.

    In a handout ,the police said that during routing checking at Ganai Mohalla Pazalpora Magam, a joint party of Handwara Police and Army (15RR) intercepted an individual who attempted to evade the joint party suspiciously but was apprehended by the joint party.

    On search, one hand grenade and other incriminating material were recovered from his possession. He has been identified as Khursheed Ahmad Bhat son of Gulzar Ahmad Bhat, a resident of Amargarh Tarathpora.

    Police spokesman further said that preliminary investigation reveals that he was working as a militant associate for proscribed militant outfit JeM.

    Accordingly, a case FIR No 95/2023 under relevant sections of law has been registered at Police Station Handwara and further investigation has been initiated, reads the statement.

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    #JeM #Militant #Arrested #Grenade #Police

    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • Body Of Non-Local Found In Central Kashmir

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    SRINAGAR: A body of non-local man was found at Batamallo area of Central Kashmir’s Srinagar district on Saturday afternoon.

    A 40-year-old non local identified as Rakesh Kumar resident of Katra was found unconscious in a road at Batamallo.

    He was shifted to SMHS hospital where doctors declared them brought dead.

    Meanwhile, further proceedings have been initiated in this regard. (KS)

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    #Body #NonLocal #Central #Kashmir

    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • Shah Rukh Khan Gets Mobbed At Srinagar

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    SRINAGAR: Shah Rukh Khan, the famous actor, caused a stir among his fans when he arrived at Srinagar airport, and a video capturing the incident has surfaced on Twitter.

    In the video, he is seen being mobbed by enthusiastic fans. The reason for his visit was to shoot for his upcoming movie, Dunki, in which he will star alongside Taapsee Pannu.

    The short clip depicts the actor being jostled by the crowd while his security personnel work to extricate him from the situation. On Friday, Shah Rukh concluded filming in Kashmir and returned to Mumbai, where he was spotted arriving at Kalina airport later that evening.



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    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • Kashmir University PG Entrance Syllabus 2023, Download Subject-wise PDF – TheNewsCaravan

    Kashmir University PG Entrance Syllabus 2023, Download Subject-wise PDF – TheNewsCaravan

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    The University of Kashmir has released the Syllabus for PG(Post-Graduation) Programmes Entrance Test 2023 – Aspirants can KU Subject-wise PDFs for all the Courses. Now easily download the Kashmir University PG Entrance Syllabus 2023.

    Kashmir University syllabus for PG entrance Test 2023.

    School of Arts, Languages and Literature


    School of Business Studies

    School of Biological Sciences


    School of Applied Sciences & Technology

    School of Earth & Environmental Sciences

    School of Social Sciences

    School of Education & Behavioural Sciences


    School of Law

    School of Physical & Mathematical Sciences

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    #Kashmir #University #Entrance #Syllabus #Download #Subjectwise #PDF #TheNewsCaravan

    ( With inputs from : www.TheNewsCaravan.com )