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Tag: Nancy Pelosi

  • Has Obama Turned on Biden?

    Has Obama Turned on Biden?

    White House, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

    That Barack Obama is “secretly running things behind the scenes” of the Biden administration is a strong belief among some conservatives.

    Of course, in our day and age when the entire national media and the president’s closest aides kept his condition under wraps, it would be near impossible to prove if it were true.

    But regardless, Obama still holds an outsized influence and fondness in the Democrat Party, so what he thinks and says matters.

    And reportedly, what he’s saying about Joe Biden is not good.

    Obama Abandons Biden?

    Democrats have been talking with Obama about Biden and the 2024 race, and at least according to CNN, the talk is not good.

    Over a dozen Members of Congress and insiders have been talking with Obama, who thinks its “Joever.” The problem is, they don’t know what to do about it. They only know that it’s over, and the only thing left to do is watch how it dies.

    It has honestly been shocking to see, and certainly unprecedented in my lifetime, elected Democrats and a goodly number of media figures actively call on a Democrat to step down. Especially a sitting Democrat President.

    And it’s not just backbenchers, either. Pelosi has been in on the action. The current Democrat Minority Leader in the House, Hakeem Jeffries, has been all over the map.

    Further, Obama was reportedly in-the-know regarding Hollywood actor George Clooney’s shocking call for Biden to drop out – and did nothing to dissuade him.

    Incredibly, it’s reported that Clooney even called Obama ahead of time to give him a head’s up.

    It should be clear to Team Biden that if Obama has real concerns about Biden’s ability to win the race, they should be listening. Obama ran two near-perfect campaigns and made it look easy.

    Bunker Biden hid during his campaign and let the media (and altered election rules) do the work for him.

    More Democrats Flee Sinking Ship

    This kind of thing hasn’t been seen since 1968. (Or ’72.)

    Here’s a full list of all the Democrats who have so far called on Biden to drop out:

    • Rep. Brittany Pettersen of Colorado
    • Rep. Eric Sorensen of Illinois
    • Rep. Scott Peters of California
    • Rep. Jim Himes of Connecticut
    • Rep. Greg Stanon of Arizona
    • Rep. Ed Case of Hawaii
    • Rep. Brad Schneider of Illinois
    • Rep. Hillary Scholten of Michigan
    • Rep. Earl Blumenauer of Oregon
    • Rep. Pat Ryan of New York
    • Rep. Mikie Sherrill of New Jersey
    • Rep. Adam Smith of Washington
    • Rep. Angie Craig of Minnesota
    • Rep. Mike Quigley of Illinois
    • Rep. Seth Moulton of Massachusetts
    • Rep. Raul Grijalva ofArizona
    • Rep. Lloyd Doggett of Texas
    • Sen. Peter Welch of Vermont

    One thing is for certain: if – and I’m being generous here – if Biden truly is incapable of running a campaign, forget about dropping out of the Presidential race.

    He needs to resign his office, immediately.

    If he’s incapable of a campaign, he’s incapable of running the government. Period.

    Derek Ellerman

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  • Barron Trump Gets Standing Ovation at Trump Rally in Florida

    Barron Trump Gets Standing Ovation at Trump Rally in Florida

    Screenshot: Patriot Oasis Twitter

    Future Emperor First Son Barron Trump made a huge splash at his father’s rally in Doral, Florida.

    So much so, the youngest Trump received a standing ovation from the raucous crowd.

    Barron Trump Gets Standing Ovation

    Barron, though only 18 years old, is already a massive mountain of a man!

    He proved it when he stood to take a bow and thank the crowd for their cheers.

    Watch:

    From the vantage point of the video, you can see how much taller Barron is than the rest of the crowd, even with the depth.

    The nearly 7-foot-tall youngster waved to the crowd with a big smile on his face, gave a fist pump, and even the classic Trump Thumbs Up.

    Here’s another shot from closer up:

    Trump Rally – Where’s Donald Trump?

    If you were to only go by leftwing pundits, you’d think Donald Trump fell off the face of the earth.

    Not so, as he proved at the rally in Dural.

    Oh, and his near-constant chirping from his Truth Social platform.

    At the rally, Trump was as confident as ever, saying that it didn’t matter who the Democrats put up to face him in November.

    And, truthfully, Trump could be right that he may not face Joe Biden.

    Just earlier today, Nancy Pelosi of all people threw President Biden under the bus on Morning Joe, Biden’s favorite “news” show.

    Her comments were short, but very revealing: “It’s up to the president to decide if he is going to run. We’re all encouraging him to make that decision because time is running short.”

    Why is that so important? Because for the last week, and even yesterday in meetings with Members of Congress, Biden unequivocally claimed he made up his mind and he is going to run. Pelosi already knows his answer. This is pressure to drop out without saying it.

    Get your popcorn, folks. This is almost better than Christmas!

    Derek Ellerman

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  • Though Biden says he’s staying in presidential race, top Democrats express doubts

    Though Biden says he’s staying in presidential race, top Democrats express doubts

    Washington — Nearly two weeks after a disastrous debate, President Biden remains adamant that he’s staying in the race amid circling doubts and reserved expressions of support from members of his party.

    He said this week in a letter to congressional Democrats he’s “firmly committed” to running, but some Democrats in Congress are still saying Mr. Biden faces a decision about continuing his campaign, suggesting that his future on the ticket remains an open question.

    Former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, when asked Wednesday morning whether Mr. Biden has her support to lead the ticket, deferred to Mr. Biden, saying that “it’s up to the president” to decide if he’s going to run.

    “We’re all encouraging him to make that decision,” she said on MSNBC. “Because time is running short.”

    The response fell short of a ringing endorsement for the president’s reelection bid, though Pelosi complimented the president on his speech at an event marking the 75th anniversary of NATO on Tuesday night, saying he was “absolutely spectacular.” And she touted his record and standing within the Democratic caucus. 

    “He’s beloved, he is respected and people want him to make that decision,” Pelosi said, adding that “I want him to do whatever he decides to do.”

    President Joe Biden pauses while speaking during a NATO 75th anniversary celebratory event at the Andrew Mellon Auditorium on July 9, 2024 in Washington, DC.
    President Joe Biden pauses while speaking during a NATO 75th anniversary celebratory event at the Andrew Mellon Auditorium on July 9, 2024 in Washington, DC.

    Andrew Harnik / Getty Images


    Meanwhile, Sen. Michael Bennet of Colorado on Tuesday night expressed doubt that the president will be able to beat former President Donald Trump in November, in the most critical comments made publicly by a Senate Democrat so far in the aftermath of the debate. 

    “Donald Trump is on track, I think, to win this election, and maybe win it by a landslide, and take with him the Senate and the House,” Bennet said on CNN, though he stopped short of calling on Mr. Biden to step aside. 

    The Colorado Democrat pointed to where the president stands in polls at this point, as compared to where he stood against Trump at this time in 2020, as well as where Hillary Clinton stood against Trump in 2016, saying “this race is on a trajectory that is very worrisome.” 

    Explaining why he isn’t calling on the president to step aside, Bennet said that “we’re all here this week, to have this discussion, to have this debate,” about the president’s prospects, though he added that the White House has “done nothing” to demonstrate a plan to win the election following the debate.  

    The comments come after congressional Democrats met on Tuesday, following a July 4 holiday recess that kept them out of Washington since the debate last month. House Democrats met Tuesday morning for what one member described as a “listening session.” And Senate Democrats held a lengthy meeting Tuesday afternoon that left some touting unity within the caucus, though most remained tight-lipped about the details of the meeting. Neither meeting appeared to yield a path forward for the party. 

    Particularly in the Senate, Democrats have adopted a wait-and-see approach, with no Senate Democrats having publicly called for the president to step aside. Instead, a number of Democrats, like Sen. Patty Murray of Washington, have outlined that they want to see more from the president, saying he “must do more to demonstrate he can campaign strong enough to beat Donald Trump.”

    Outside of the Capitol, another admission about the president’s ability to serve another term made waves late Tuesday, when a video surfaced from TMZ showing ABC News anchor George Stephanopoulos saying about the president that “I don’t think he can serve four more years.” Stephanopoulos conducted the first interview of the president last week since his debate about the path forward. 

    The developments come as top Democrats have continued to back the president, albeit with reserved statements of support. House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries reiterated his support for the president this week, saying, “I made clear publicly the day after the debate that I support President Joe Biden and the Democratic ticket. My position has not changed.” 

    After Tuesday’s meeting, Jeffries told reporters that members had an opportunity to express themselves, and “those discussions will continue throughout the balance of the week.” Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, repeatedly asked about the president’s ability to serve another four years during a weekly news conference following the Senate meeting, simply said “I’m with Joe.” 

    Kate Farrell contributed to this report. 

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  • David DePape convicted of five state charges in hammer attack on Nancy Pelosi’s husband

    David DePape convicted of five state charges in hammer attack on Nancy Pelosi’s husband

    David DePape, the conspiracy theorist who attacked Nancy Pelosi’s husband, Paul, with a hammer and plotted to interrogate the former House speaker on video, was convicted Friday of state charges related to the assault.

    A jury found DePape guilty of five felony counts in state court, according to several news outlets. The charges resulted from an attack that investigators described as the beginning of a planned “rampage” to go after high-profile targets, including actor Tom Hanks and Gov. Gavin Newsom.

    He was convicted of imprisonment, residential burglary, threatening a family member of a public official, attempting to sway a witness and aggravated kidnapping. The verdict comes seven months after he was found guilty of federal charges in the attack.

    DePape’s social media accounts, and interviews with friends and former co-workers, detail how he began to descend into baseless right-wing conspiracy theories. He wrote blog posts about several discredited conspiracy theories, including those popularly known as “Pizzagate” and “QAnon,” which posited large sexual abuse rings run by Hollywood and Democratic Party figures.

    San Francisco Assistant Dist. Atty. Phoebe Maffei argued during the trial that DePape targeted Nancy Pelosi because of her role as House speaker at the time, making her second in line for the presidency, the San Francisco Chronicle reported. She was not home during the break-in.

    “We haven’t seen anybody make a plan to break into the home of one of our national leaders, hold hostage and nearly kill that person’s spouse,” Maffei told jurors, according to the Chronicle. “Thankfully this is unusual. But it’s what happened.”

    In November, DePape was convicted in federal court of attempting to kidnap Nancy Pelosi and assaulting her husband. He was sentenced to 30 years in prison.

    Attorneys with the San Francisco public defender’s office, which represented DePape, successfully sought to have several charges against him dismissed in the state case, arguing that they were similar to those he had been convicted of in federal court.

    In response, San Francisco County Superior Court Judge Harry Dorfman tossed out the counts of attempted murder, elder abuse and assault with a deadly weapon. Defense attorneys argued that the state’s double jeopardy law prohibits defendants from being tried more than once on the same crime.

    In his closing arguments, Public Defender Adam Lipson argued that his client might be guilty of false imprisonment, residential burglary and attempting to sway a witness. But, he told jurors, DePape should not be convicted of aggravated kidnapping and threatening a family member of a public official, the Chronicle reported.

    Lipson reportedly argued that DePape’s threats were not specific to Pelosi’s role as House speaker, but rather to find and reach other targets.

    Conspiracy theories continued to play a role as the state trial came to a close this week.

    On Tuesday, Dorfman barred DePape’s former partner from the courtroom and second floor of the building, the Associated Press reported. The decision came after Gypsy Taub, a nudism activist, handed out fliers outside the courtroom with links to her website, which promotes a series of conspiracy theories.

    The day Dorfman kicked her out of the second floor, the address for Taub’s website was spotted on a wall and on a toilet paper dispenser in a women’s bathroom at the courthouse.

    Dorfman accused Taub of “trying to corruptly influence one or more jury members” and instructed bailiffs to escort her out.

    Salvador Hernandez

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  • US defense secretary says war with China neither imminent nor unavoidable, stressing need for talks

    US defense secretary says war with China neither imminent nor unavoidable, stressing need for talks

    United States Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin told a gathering of top security officials Saturday that war with China was neither imminent nor unavoidable, despite rapidly escalating tensions in the Asia-Pacific region, stressing the importance of renewed dialogue between him and his Chinese counterpart in avoiding “miscalculations and misunderstandings.”

    Austin’s comments at the Shangri-La defense forum in Singapore came the day after he met for more than an hour on the sidelines with Chinese Defense Minister Dong Jun, the first in-person meeting between the top defense officials since contacts between the American and Chinese militaries broke down in 2022 after then-U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi visited Taiwan, infuriating Beijing.

    Neither side budged from their longstanding positions on Taiwan — which China claims as its own and has not ruled out using force to take — and on China’s sweeping claims in the South China Sea, which has led to direct confrontations between China and other nations in the region, most notably the Philippines.

    While declining to detail the specifics of their conversation, Austin said the most important thing was that the two were again talking.

    “As long as we’re talking, we’re able to identify those issues that are troublesome and that we want to make sure that we have placed guardrails to ensure there are no misperceptions and no miscalculations … that can spiral out of control,” he said.

    “You can only do that kind of thing if you are talking.”

    Addressing the same forum on Friday night, Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. bluntly outlined what could be at stake, saying that if a Filipino were killed as China confronts his country’s coast guard and merchant fleet to press its claims in the South China Sea, it would be “very, very close to what we define as an act of war and therefore we will respond accordingly.”

    Marcos added that he assumed the Philippines’ treaty partners, which include the U.S., “hold the same standard.”

    In his own speech, Austin lauded how Marcos “spoke so powerfully last night about how the Philippines is standing up for its sovereign rights under international law.” But when pressed later, he would not say how the U.S. might react if a Filipino were killed in a confrontation with China, calling it hypothetical.

    He did say the U.S. commitment to the Philippines as a treaty partner is “ironclad,” while again stressing the importance of dialogue with China.

    “There are a number of things that can happen at sea or in the air, we recognize that,” he said. “But our goal is to make sure that we don’t allow things to spiral out of control unnecessarily.”

    Beijing in recent years has been rapidly expanding its navy and is becoming growingly assertive in pressing its claim to virtually the entire South China Sea.

    Australian Deputy Prime Minister and Defense Minister Richard Marles noted that not only had Philippine ships been rammed and hit with water cannons by China, but said a Chinese warplane dropped flares above an Australian helicopter earlier in the year, and in November a Chinese navy ship injured Australian divers in Japanese waters with sonar.

    “In the face of these multiple sources of tension, it’s even more imperative that every country plays its part in managing increasing strategic risk,” he said.

    The U.S., meantime, has been ramping up military exercises in the region with its allies to underscore its “free and open Indo-Pacific” concept, meant to emphasize freedom of navigation through the contested waters, including the Taiwan Strait.

    Chinese Senior Col. Cao Yanzhong, a researcher at China’s Institute of War Studies, asked Austin whether the U.S. was trying to create an Asian version of NATO with its emphasis on partnerships and alliances, a common Chinese claim. He suggested that could trigger conflict with China, citing ally Russia’s claim that NATO’s eastward expansion was a threat, which President Vladimir Putin has used as an excuse for his invasion of Ukraine.

    “The eastern expansion of NATO has led to the Ukraine crisis,” Cao said. “What implications do you think the strengthening of the U.S. alliance system in the Asia-Pacific will have on this region’s security and stability?”

    Austin said the U.S. is simply cooperating with “like-minded countries with similar values” and not trying to create a NATO-type alliance, while rejecting Cao’s interpretation of the cause of the Ukraine war.

    “The Ukraine crisis obviously was caused because Putin made a decision to unlawfully invade his neighbor,” Austin said.

    Expressing the concerns of some in the region, Indonesian academic Dewi Fortuna Anwar said any de-escalation of tensions “would be very welcome to this part of the world,” but wondered whether the U.S. would allow China’s assertive military posture to grow uncontested if Washington’s main emphasis was now dialogue.

    “We are also worried if you guys get too cozy, we also get trampled,” she said.

    Austin said that many of those issues were best addressed through talks, but also assured that Washington will continue to ensure that the rights of nations in the region were protected and that they continued to have access to their exclusive economic zones.

    “War or a fight with China is neither imminent, in my view, or unavoidable,” Austin said.

    “Leaders of great power nations need to continue to work together to ensure that we’re doing things to reduce the opportunities for miscalculation and misunderstandings,” he said. “Every conversation is not going to be a happy conversation, but it is important that we continue to talk to each other. And it is important that we continue to support our allies and partners on their interests as well.”

    Copyright 2024 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.

    David Rising, Associated Press

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  • David DePape sentencing hearing set to be reopened after court error

    David DePape sentencing hearing set to be reopened after court error

    Justice Department speaks about sentencing of Paul Pelosi attacker David DePape


    Justice Department speaks about sentencing of Paul Pelosi attacker David DePape

    03:00

    The man convicted in the 2022 hammer attack on Paul Pelosi will appear in court Tuesday, as the sentencing hearing in his case is being reopened due to a court error.

    A federal judge sentenced David DePape to 30 years after being found guilty of assaulting the husband of former Speaker Nancy Pelosi in their San Francisco home. DePape was convicted of assault and attempted kidnapping charges.

    During the hearing on May 17, the judge overseeing the trial made an error in sentencing when she did not give DePape the opportunity to make a statement before sentencing.

    Prosecutors noticed the mistake that afternoon and notified the court. DePape’s lawyers promptly filed an appeal.

    Judge Jacqueline Scott Corley wrote, “no party brought to the court’s attention” that it had not allowed Mr. DePape to speak, a requirement of federal criminal procedures. “As the court did not do so, it committed clear error,” she wrote.      

    At Tuesday’s hearing, DePape would have the option to speak.  

    The error is unlikely to alter his sentence, which consists of 30 years for the assault charge and 20 years for the attempted kidnapping charge being run concurrently. DePape was given credit for time served for the 18 months he has been in custody.

    State charges against DePape are pending.

    Tim Fang

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  • Man Who Attacked Rep. Pelosi’s Husband Sentenced To 30 Years In Prison – KXL

    Man Who Attacked Rep. Pelosi’s Husband Sentenced To 30 Years In Prison – KXL

    SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — The man convicted of attempting to kidnap then-House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and attacking her husband with a hammer was sentenced Friday to 30 years in prison.

    Judge Jacqueline Scott Corley handed down the sentence for David DePape, 44, whom jurors found guilty last November of attempted kidnapping of a federal official and assault on the immediate family member of a federal official. Prosecutors had asked for a 40-year prison term.

    DePape was given 20 years for one count and 30 years for another count. The sentences will run concurrently. He was also given credit for the 18 months that he’s been in custody.

    DePape stood silently as Judge Corley handed the sentence and looked down at times. His public defense attorneys had asked the judge to sentence him to 14 years, pointing out that he was going through a difficult time in his life and had no prior criminal history.

    Corley said she took into account when giving DePape’s sentence the fact that he broke into the home of public official, an unprecedented act in the history of the country.

    “He actually went to the home, that is completely, completely unprecedented,” she said.

    Before sentencing, Christine Pelosis read victim statements on behalf of her father and mother, explaining how the violent attack changed their lives.

    “The Pelosi family couldn’t be prouder of their Pop and his tremendous courage in saving his own life on the night of the attack and in testifying in this case,” Aaron Bennett, a spokesperson for Nancy Pelosi, said in a statement. “Speaker Pelosi and her family are immensely grateful to all who have sent love and prayers over the last eighteen months, as Mr. Pelosi continues his recovery.”

    DePape admitted during trial testimony that he broke into the Pelosis’ San Francisco home Oct. 28, 2022, intending to hold the speaker hostage and “break her kneecaps” if she lied to him. He also admitted to bludgeoning Paul Pelosi with a hammer after police showed up, saying his plan to end what he viewed as government corruption was unraveling.

    The attack on Paul Pelosi, who was 82 at the time, was captured on police body camera video just days before the midterm elections and sent shockwaves through the political world.

    Defense attorneys argued DePape was motivated by his political beliefs, not because he wanted to interfere with Nancy Pelosi’s official duties as a member of Congress, making the charges against him invalid.

    One of his attorneys, Angela Chuang, said during closing arguments that DePape was caught up in conspiracy theories.

    At trial DePape, a Canadian who moved to the U.S. more than 20 years ago, testified that he believed news outlets repeatedly lied about former President Donald Trump. In rants posted on a blog and online forum that were taken down after his arrest, DePape echoed the baseless, right-wing QAnon conspiracy theory that claims a cabal of devil-worshipping pedophiles runs the U.S. government.

    DePape also told jurors he had planned to wear an inflatable unicorn costume and record his interrogation of the Democratic speaker, who was not at the home at the time of the attack, to upload it online.

    Prosecutors said he had rope and zip ties with him, and detectives found body cameras, a computer and a tablet.

    Paul Pelosi also testified at the trial, recalling how he was awakened by a large man bursting into the bedroom and asking, “Where’s Nancy?” He said that when he responded that his wife was in Washington, DePape said he would tie him up while they waited for her.

    “It was a tremendous sense of shock to recognize that somebody had broken into the house, and looking at him and looking at the hammer and the ties, I recognized that I was in serious danger, so I tried to stay as calm as possible,” Pelosi told jurors.

    DePape is also charged in state court with assault with a deadly weapon, elder abuse, residential burglary and other felonies. Jury selection in that trial is expected to start Wednesday.

    Paul Pelosi suffered two head wounds in the attack, including a skull fracture that was mended with plates and screws he will have for the rest of his life. His right arm and hand were also injured.

    Grant McHill

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  • Biden awards Medal of Freedom to Nancy Pelosi, Al Gore, Katie Ledecky and more

    Biden awards Medal of Freedom to Nancy Pelosi, Al Gore, Katie Ledecky and more

    Washington — President Biden awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation’s highest civilian honor, on Friday to 19 recipients, including former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, former Vice President Al Gore and Olympic swimmer Katie Ledecky. 

    Mr. Biden spoke briefly about each honoree, praising their “relentless curiosity, inventiveness, ingenuity and hope.” 

    Nodding to the criticism of his own age as he runs for a second term at age 81, Mr. Biden praised the 27-year-old Ledecky, arguably the greatest female swimmer of all time, as she prepares for the Paris Olympics this summer. 

    “Don’t let age get in your way,” Mr. Biden said. “Katie, age is just a number, kid.” 

    Mr. Biden also used the occasion to make thinly-veiled references to the threat he says former President Donald Trump is to democracy. The two are the 2024 presumptive Democratic and Republican presidential nominees, respectively. 

    The president recalled Gore conceding the 2000 presidential election to George W. Bush after weeks of legal battles over the vote recount in Florida. Trump refused to concede after Mr. Biden was declared the winner of the 2020 election and has defended the rioters who attacked the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, in protest of the outcome of the election. 

    “After winning the popular vote, he accepted the outcome of a disputed presidential election for the sake of unity and trust in our institutions,” Mr. Biden said of Gore. “That to me was amazing what you did, Al — I won’t go into that.” 

    He called Pelosi the “greatest speaker of the House of Representatives,” saying she “used her superpowers to pass some of the most significant laws in our nation’s history.” 

    “On January 6, Nancy stood in the breach and defended democracy with her husband, Paul,” the president said. “They stood up to extremism with absolute courage, physical courage.” 

    Pelosi’s husband was attacked by a man with a hammer who broke into their San Francisco home while the then-speaker was out of town. 

    It’s the second time Mr. Biden has awarded Presidential Medals of Freedom. The latest round of recipients includes honorees both living and deceased. 

    The full list of 2024 Presidential Medal of Freedom recipients: 

    Michael Bloomberg, an entrepreneur, philanthropist and three-term mayor of New York City. 

    Father Gregory J. Boyle, a Jesuit Catholic priest and founder and director of Homeboy Industries, a gang rehabilitation and re-entry program.

    Rep. Jim Clyburn, a South Carolina Democrat who has served three decades in the House. He previously served as House Majority Whip and Assistant Democratic Leader. 

    Elizabeth Dole, who served as a North Carolina senator from 2003 to 2009. She was also Transportation Secretary under President Ronald Reagan, Labor Secretary for President George H.W. Bush and the president of the American Red Cross. 

    Phil Donahue, a journalist who pioneered the daytime issue-oriented talk show. 

    Medgar Wiley Evers is being honored posthumously. He led the fight against segregation in Mississippi after fighting for his country in World War II. He was murdered at age 37 in 1963. 

    Al Gore. The former vice president won the popular vote in the 2000 presidential election, but conceded the presidency to George W. Bush after a weeks-long recount battle in Florida. He was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2007 for his climate change work. 

    Clarence B. Jones, a renowned civil rights activist and lawyer who helped draft Martin Luther King Jr.’s “I Have a Dream” speech.

    John Kerry, who was Secretary of State for President Barack Obama and the Special Presidential Envoy for Climate under Mr. Biden. He earned a Silver Star and Bronze Star for his actions during combat in the Vietnam War. 

    Frank R. Lautenberg is being honored posthumously. The five-term senator from New Jersey is remembered for his work on environmental protection and consumer safety. 

    Katie Ledecky has won seven Olympic gold medals and 21 world championship gold medals, making her the most decorated female swimmer in history. 

    Opal Lee, an educator and activist who pushed to make Juneteenth a national holiday

    Ellen Ochoa, the first Hispanic woman in space and the second female director of NASA’s Johnson Space Center. She has flown in space four times. 

    Rep. Nancy Pelosi of California made history in 2007 when she was elected the first woman to serve as speaker of the House. She made history again in 2019 when she was reelected to the position. 

    Jane Rigby, the chief scientist of the James Webb Space Telescope, the most powerful telescope ever built.

    Teresa Romero, president of the United Farm Workers and the first Latina to become president of a national union in the United States.

    Judy Shepard, co-founder of the Matthew Shepard Foundation, an organization created in honor of her gay son who was brutally murdered. 

    James Francis Thorpe is being honored posthumously. He was the first Native American to win an Olympic gold medal. 

    Michelle Yeoh. The actress last year won the Academy Award for best actress for her role in “Everything Everywhere All at Once,” becoming the first Asian to win the category. 

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  • Voicemail threats to Pelosi, Mayorkas from San Francisco Bay Area man lead to 11-month prison term

    Voicemail threats to Pelosi, Mayorkas from San Francisco Bay Area man lead to 11-month prison term

    PIX Now – Morning Edition 3/27/24


    PIX Now – Morning Edition 3/27/24

    12:56

    A Concord man who made voicemail threats to U.S. House Speaker Emerita Nancy Pelosi and Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas was sentenced Wednesday to 11 months in prison.

    David Allen Carrier, 44, pleaded guilty to two counts of threatening a federal official in December 2023 after a grand jury indicted him on the charges three months prior. The sentence was announced in a press statement from U.S. Attorney Ismail Ramsey.

    In January 2021, Carter left a voicemail for then-House Speaker Pelosi threatening to assault her. Seventeen months later in July 2022, Carter did the same in a phone message to Secretary Mayorkas. Carter acknowledged that he acted with the intent to interfere with Pelosi’s and Mayorkas’ performance during their official duties as congressmember and cabinet secretary, respectively. 

    pelosi-mayorkas.jpg
    House Speaker Emerita Nancy Pelosi, Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas

    Ellen Uchimiya/Olivier Douliery/AFP


    “Participating in the public political conversation is an important right for all citizens,” said Ramsey in a prepared statement. “Nevertheless, threatening our public servants is not protected by the First Amendment and corrodes our ability to engage in peaceful and important public discourse. This Office will not tolerate behavior that crosses the line to criminal threats.”

    “Violent threats targeting elected officials also threaten our democratic system,” said a statement from FBI Special Agent in Charge Robert Tripp. “Today’s sentence demonstrates that anyone who sends politically motivated threats of violence to government officials will be investigated by the FBI and held accountable.”

    U.S. District Judge William Alsup also ordered Carrier to serve three years of supervised release following his prison term and ordered him to stay away from and not contact Pelosi and Mayorkas. He was also required to attend mental health and substance abuse treatment while on supervised release.

    Carter’s prosecution resulted from an investigation by the FBI and the U.S. Secret Service. 

    Carlos Castaneda

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  • UPDATE: Every Texan Charged for Crimes During the Jan. 6 Capitol Breach

    UPDATE: Every Texan Charged for Crimes During the Jan. 6 Capitol Breach

    UPDATE Feb. 6, 2023: On Friday, Feb. 2, the U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia announced that a Fort Worth man had been found guilty for his role in the Jan. 6 U.S. Capitol breach, and a Houston-area woman had been arrested for her role in the events that attempted to delay the certification of the 2020 presidential election.

    Jason Benjamin Blythe, 24, was found guilty of assaulting an officer with a deadly or dangerous weapon, a metal crowd control barrier, in this instance, and on a misdemeanor charge for committing an act of physical violence on the Capitol grounds. According to a press release, Blythe stayed on the Capitol grounds “for hours,” while he resisted officers and climbed the media tower near the Capitol steps. A sentencing hearing for Blythe is scheduled for June 13.

    Judy Fraize, 70, of Highlands, was arrested on Monday and charged with four crimes, including disruptive conduct in a restricted building or grounds and disorderly conduct in a Capitol building. Federal court records identify Fraize in more than a dozen images taken from the Capitol’s closed circuit security video. At one point during her time inside the building, Fraize, sporting a red Make America Great Again cap, can be heard yelling at an officer “we gotta take our country back!” Investigators zeroed in on Fraize by connecting her to a mobile device registered under her name and linked to her Gmail account that was used at the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.

    These are the latest developments related to Texans arrested in connection to the Jan. 6 insurrection to add to the total since the Observer originally published this article on Nov. 8, 2023. The article and list below is updated to reflect the latest information as of Feb. 6, 2024.

    Just over three years ago, thousands of pro-Donald Trump protesters stormed into the building in an attempt to prevent Congressional certification of the election of President-elect Joe Biden. The chaos quickly became deadly when Ashli Babbitt, a Trump supporter who illegally attempted to climb through a shattered Capitol window while at the front of a violent mob, was shot and killed by police.

    The third anniversary of the insurrectionist attacks on the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, is just over two weeks away. Nearly three years ago, thousands of pro-Donald Trump protesters stormed into the building in an attempt to prevent Congressional certification of the election of President-elect Joe Biden. The chaos quickly became deadly when Ashli Babbitt, a Trump supporter who illegally attempted to climb through a shattered Capitol window while at the front of a violent mob, was shot and killed by police.

    Since then, law enforcement agencies have continued to announce the arrests of many of those who participated, no doubt aided by a host of videos and photos posted to social media by the eventual defendants of their Jan. 6 rampage exploits. The U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia released a report detailing the arrests, charges, pleas and other action that have followed in the wake of the attack.

    “The government continues to investigate losses that resulted from the breach of the Capitol, including damage to the Capitol building and grounds, both inside and outside the building,” the report reads. “As of October 14, 2022, the approximate losses suffered as a result of the siege at the Capitol totaled $2,881,360.20. That amount reflects, among other things, damage to the Capitol building and grounds and certain costs borne by the U.S. Capitol Police.”

    So far, more than 1,200 arrests have been made in connection with the Jan. 6 case, and more than half of them have already resulted in guilty pleas.

    Filmmaker Alexandra Pelosi, daughter of former U.S. Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, recently released her latest documentary, The Insurrectionist Next Door, a harrowing look at several of the people who were arrested for their roles in the Jan. 6 attack.

    “The government continues to investigate losses that resulted from the breach of the Capitol, including damage to the Capitol building and grounds, both inside and outside the building.” – U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia

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    Some of the subjects featured in the film displayed no remorse for their actions, while others had undergone a change of heart since early 2021. One man admitted he didn’t really know what he was even doing that day since he had never been a Trump supporter. Perhaps as much as any other point, the film hammers home the fact that the hordes of rioters involved on Jan. 6 represent an unexpectedly wide cross-section of the American population, and that it’s not a stretch to think one of them might be living near you.

    That’s especially true if you live in Texas. The Lone Star state is home to the second most people charged with a role in the Capitol breach, behind only Florida. An X account that tracks arrests related to the Jan. breach, @Jan6thData, reports that Texas is now home to more than 100 Jan. 6 arrests with North Texas being home to more than a third of that total.

    People from nearly all 50 states have been arrested for their Jan. 6 misdeeds, but Texas sits near the top of the list. According to a July report from the Center for Policy and Research at Seton Hall University, Texas, Florida, Pennsylvania, New York and California account for just over 43% of those charged with Capitol breach crimes.

    Texans played pivotal roles in the violent attack on the peaceful transfer of power above and beyond the basic number of participants. On the second anniversary of the attack and following the release of a 2022 Congressional report on Trump’s attempt to overturn the 2020 presidential election, the Texas Tribune wrote “[t]he Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection would not have been possible without the help of a number of key Texans.” Later in the piece, Tribune reporter Robert Downen noted the massive report read “like a who’s who of Texas conspiracy theorists, conservative activists and extremists.”

    The charges that the dozens of arrested Texans face include, but are not limited to, entering and remaining in a restricted building or grounds; disorderly and disruptive conduct in a restricted building or grounds; engaging in physical violence in a restricted building or grounds; disorderly or disruptive conduct in the Capitol grounds or buildings; acts of physical violence in the Capitol grounds or buildings; parading, demonstrating, or picketing in a Capitol building; obstruction of law enforcement during civil disorder; assaulting, resisting, or impeding certain officers; and seditious conspiracy.

    There will likely be more added to the list of people charged. The U.S. Attorney’s 34-month report noted that “the FBI currently has 13 videos of suspects wanted for violent assaults on federal officers and (ONE) video of (TWO) suspects wanted for assaults on members of the media on January 6th and is seeking the public’s help to identify them.”

    But before those suspects are arrested, let’s take a look at all of the Texans who have been charged by the United States Attorney for the District of Columbia for their role in the attack (in alphabetical order, with location of arrest).

    Daniel Page Adams, Goodrich

    Wilmar Jeovanny Montano Alvarado, Houston

    Philip Anderson, Mesquite

    David Arredondo, El Paso*

    Thomas John Ballard, Fort Worth*

    Richard Franklin Barnard, Liberty*

    Dana Jean Bell, Princeton

    Kevin Sam Blakely, McKinney*

    Jason Blythe, Fort Worth

    Brandon Bradshaw, San Antonio

    Cory Ray Branan, Midland*

    Paul Thomas Brinson, Flower Mound

    Larry Rendell Brock, Fort Worth*

    Daniel Ray Caldwell, The Colony*

    Steven Cappuccio, Universal City*

    Luke Russell Coffee, Dallas

    Thomas Paul Conover, Keller*

    Nolan B. Cooke, Sherman*

    Christian Cortez, Seabrook*

    Jenny Louise Cudd, Midland*

    Matthew Dasilva, Lavon

    Nicholas Decarlo, Fort Worth*

    Lucas Denney, Kinney County*

    Robert Wayne Dennis, Garland*

    Alexander Fan, Houston

    Jason Farris, Arlington

    Frederic Fiol, San Antonio

    Judy Fraize, Highlands

    Jacob Garcia, Fort Worth*

    Anthime Joseph Gionet, Houston*

    Billy Joe Gober, Smithville

    Daniel Goodwyn, Corinth*

    Christopher Ray Grider, Austin*

    Leonard Gruppo, Lubbock*

    Stacy Wade Hagar, Waco

    Alex Kirk Harkrider, Carthage*

    Donald Hazard, Hurst

    Alan Hostetter, Parker County*

    David Howard, Frisco

    Jason Lee Hyland, Plano*

    Adam Jackson, Katy

    Brian Jackson, Katy

    Sergio Jaramillo, Dallas

    Raul Jarrin, Houston

    Shane Jenkins, Houston

    Joshua Johnson, Plano

    David Lee Judd, Carrollton

    Joseph Zvonimir Jurlina, Austin

    John Lammons, Galveston

    Benjamin Larocca, Seabrook*

    Joshua R. Lollar, Spring

    Duong Dai Luu, Katy

    Mario Mares, Ballinger

    Michael Marroquin, Nederland

    Felipe Antonio Martinez, Austin

    Victor Martinez, San Antonio

    Matthew Carl Mazzacco, San Antonio*

    Kyle McMahaon, Watauga

    William Hendry Mellors, Houston

    Jalise Middleton, Forestburg

    Mark Middleton, Forestburg

    Garrett Miller, Richardson

    Samuel Christopher Montoya, Austin*

    Andrew Jackson Morgan Jr., Maxwell

    Dawn Munn, Borger*

    Kayli Munn, Borger*

    Kristi Marie Munn, Borger*

    Thomas Munn, Borger*

    Ryan Taylor Nichols, Tyler*

    Jason Douglas Owens, Blanco*

    Paul Orta, Rio Hondo

    Nathan Donald Pelham, Frisco

    Tam Dinh Pham, Houston*

    Daniel Dink Phipps, Corpus Christi

    Jeffrey Reed, Rosanky

    Guy Wesley Reffitt, Bonham*

    Sebastian Reveles, Dallas

    Stewart Elmer Rhodes III, Little Elm*

    Eliel Rosa, Midland*

    Jennifer Leigh Ryan, Plano*

    Aron Sanchez, Dallas

    Katherine Staveley Schwab, Fort Worth*

    Geoffrey Samuel Shough, Austin*

    Jonathan Owen Shroyer, San Antonio

    Troy Anthony Smocks, Dallas*

    Kellye Sorelle, Junction

    Edward Spain Jr. (city not provided)*

    Andrew Taake, Houston*

    Timothy Tedesco, Corpus Christi

    Chance Anthony Uptmore, San Antonio*

    James Herman Uptmore, San Antonio*

    Sean David Watson, Alpine*

    Adam Mark Weibling, Katy*

    Dustin Ray Williams, Brady

    Elizabeth Rose Williams, Kerrville*

    Vic Williams, Odessa*

    Jeffrey Shane Witcher, Bastrop*

    Darrell Alan Youngers, Houston*

    Ryan Scott Zink, Lubbock
    *Defendant has either pleaded guilty to or has been found guilty of at least one count against them as of Feb. 6, 2024.





    Kelly Dearmore

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  • Nancy Pelosi Claims Protesters Calling For Ceasefire In Gaza Might Be ‘Connected To Russia’

    Nancy Pelosi Claims Protesters Calling For Ceasefire In Gaza Might Be ‘Connected To Russia’


    Politics

    Screenshot/X video

    Former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has a long history of seeing Russia everywhere when it comes to things she doesn’t like.

    Now she says that protesters demanding a ceasefire between Israel and Gaza might be “connected to Russia” and are spreading “Putin’s message.”

    To solve the issue, she says she’s going to ask the FBI to investigate. You can’t make this stuff up.

    RELATED: Nancy Pelosi Had A Great 2023 On The Stock Market

    Completely Delusional

    Democrats just can’t let this Russia stuff go. No matter where they look, they see Putin and sound more deranged than the parody characters in Dr. Strangelove.

    NBC News reports, “Rep. Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., on Sunday said she hopes to ask the FBI to investigate protesters calling for a cease-fire in the Israel-Hamas war and suggested that some of the antiwar demonstrations are linked to Russia.”

    Pelosi said on CNN’s State of the Union on Sunday that she believes that some of the protesters are “connected” to Russia and its president Vladimir Putin.

    Seriously, is there anyone out there who isn’t collecting rubles from Putin? Where’s my free money?

    RELATED: The Smiths’ Johnny Marr Tells Trump To Stop Using His Music – ‘Consider This Shut Right Down’

    Russia Russia Russia

    The story continued:

    “For them to call for a cease-fire is Mr. Putin’s message, Mr. Putin’s message. Make no mistake. This is directly connected to what he would like to see. Same thing with Ukraine. It’s about Putin’s message,” Pelosi said.

    “I think some of these — some of these protesters are spontaneous and organic and sincere. Some, I think, are connected to Russia, and I say that having looked at this for a long time now,” she continued.

    Pressed on whether she thinks some of the protesters are Russian plants, Pelosi said she would like to have the FBI look into the matter.

    “I didn’t say they’re plants. I think some financing should be investigated,” she said. “And I want to ask the FBI to investigate that.”

    More than two thirds of Americans support a ceasefire between Israel and Gaza in a November Reuters poll, a number that has continued to increase according to the data.

    That was two months ago. Does Pelosi legitimately think these people are just hooked up with Putin? Or maybe…

    Maybe they don’t like seeing so many people dying. Israel had every right to retaliate for the terrorist attacks carried out by Hamas on October 7th, but with thousands of Palestinians now dead and a large degree of them women and children, at some point is it rational to call for an end to the killing?

    Donald Trump, who in contrast to Joe Biden was responsible for several peace treaties between Israel and historically hostile Arab neighbors, has certainly said this.

    But we already know Pelosi thinks he’s in bed with Russia.

    Nancy Pelosi is already an absurd politician in many ways.

    And here’s a brand new one.

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  • Former Trump Advisor Peter Navarro Sentenced To 4 Months In Prison By Obama-Appointed Judge For Defying J6 Subpoena

    Former Trump Advisor Peter Navarro Sentenced To 4 Months In Prison By Obama-Appointed Judge For Defying J6 Subpoena

    Opinion

    Screenshot: CBS News YouTube Video

    Former senior Trump advisor Peter Navarro was sentenced to four months in prison for defying a subpoena from the House select committee investigating the January 6th protest at the Capitol.

    A federal grand jury indicted Navarro this past summer on two criminal contempt of Congress charges, one for failing to appear at a deposition, and another for refusing to produce documents despite a subpoena by the Committee.

    He was convicted in September 2023 on both counts.

    Prosecutors in the case were seeking a six-month prison sentence claiming that Navarro showed “utter disregard” for the House committee’s probe and “utter contempt for the rule of law.”

    Steve Bannon, another former White House advisor under President Donald Trump, was also convicted on two counts of contempt of Congress last year. 

    On top of his prison sentence, Navarro was ordered to pay a $9,500 fine.

    RELATED: Former Trump Advisor Peter Navarro Indicted For Not Complying With Jan. 6 Committee

    Navarro Heading To Prison – Reaction

    Navarro’s defense centered on his belief that he was protected by executive privilege, which he claimed was invoked by former President Trump. However, Judge Amit Mehta ruled that there was no evidence of Trump formally invoking executive privilege to shield Navarro from the committee.

    And prosecutors fed the judge what some would characterize as a gross inflation of the committee’s worth.

    “The committee was investigating an attack on the very foundation of our democracy,” Assistant U.S. Attorney John Crabb said. “There could be no more serious investigation undertaken by Congress.”

    There was very little of serious value that came from the January 6th committee which has now been found to have destroyed files after disbanding when Republicans took control of the House.

    U.S. District Judge Mehta, who was nominated to the United States District Court for the District of Columbia by former President Barack Obama, claimed that the Justice Department’s pursuit of Navarro was not motivated by politics.

    “It’s unfortunate that the statements mislead. They mislead,” Mehta said. “Nancy Pelosi is not responsible for this prosecution; Joe Biden isn’t responsible for the prosecution. It’s those kinds of statements from someone who knows better … that contributes to why our politics are so divisive.”

    RELATED: Hillary Clinton Taunts Steve Bannon With Message Reminding She’s ‘Never Been Indicted’

    Police State?

    There were some who took exception to Mehta’s contention that the pursuit of Peter Navarro and Steve Bannon over defiance of a politically biased committee of questionable authority was not a political prosecution.

    Especially as the public watches President Biden’s own son openly flaunting his defiance of congressional subpoenas.

    Former White House Advisor Sebastian Gorka slammed the sentencing as evidence of a deep state pursuit of the previous administration.

    “Peter Navarro has been sentenced to 4 months in prison for refusing to testify before Pelosi’s illegal J6 committee,” he wrote. “Hunter Biden is walking around a free man.”

    “The police state has arrived,” he added.

    Trending Politics co-owner Collin Rugg also took aim at Mehta’s specious claims that the Justice Department wasn’t heavily engrossed in political persecution.

    “Selective ‘justice’ strikes again,” he wrote on X, the social media platform formerly known as Twitter.

    Navarro indicated that he would continue the appeals process.

    “It is a case that really asks the important question of whether a senior White House aide and alter ego for the president can be compelled to testify by Congress,” he said amidst protesters.

    What do you think about this? Let us know in the comments section.

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  • What Nikki Haley (Maybe) Learned in New Hampshire

    What Nikki Haley (Maybe) Learned in New Hampshire

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    “Everybody’s waiting to write my obituary.”

    This is never a good thing for a candidate to be saying on Election Day.

    But Nikki Haley, the candidate, was trying—pleading—to make a larger point to CNN’s Dana Bash as they sat on raised chairs in the middle of Chez Vachon, the landmark coffee shop and makeshift TV studio on the west side of Manchester, New Hampshire.

    “We had 14 candidates,” Haley said, referring to the number of people who were seeking the Republican nomination a few months ago. “It’s now down to two”—Haley and Donald Trump. “That’s not an obituary; that’s somebody who’s a fighter.”

    Fair enough. Haley was indeed still here and showing up, which is something to be proud of. She is the last woman standing between the former president and an unimpeded romp to the Republican nomination. This was Haley’s “closing argument” as she made her final rounds in New Hampshire yesterday, greeting volunteers at polling places, doing interviews, and hitting the tables at Chez Vachon. She would keep fighting and continue to flout the naysayers who have trailed her for her entire career. Underestimate me is the message printed on one of Haley’s favorite T-shirts. That’ll be fun.

    Almost immediately after the polls closed, a few hours later, networks declared Trump the New Hampshire winner. His margin of victory over Haley, however, looked smaller than expected. “THIS RACE IS OVER,” Trump insisted in a text blasted out to his supporter list just after 8 p.m. Nope, Haley told her Election Night revelers in Concord, vowing to persist as the campaign moved to her home state of South Carolina. “New Hampshire is first in the nation. It’s not last in the nation,” she said in her speech. “This race is far from over.”

    I spent much of December and early January watching Haley campaign for the job she quite clearly has been aspiring to for years. She proved to be disciplined and polished, good enough to outlast the battalion of male challengers arrayed alongside her—“the fellas,” as she has lately taken to calling her rivals, many of whom endorsed Trump as they fell away. She has claimed repeatedly to be part of a “two-person race” against Trump, despite finishing third in Iowa behind him and Florida Governor Ron DeSantis.

    This felt like wishful thinking at times, but it is unquestionably true now and will present Haley with what’s been a recurring dilemma of her candidacy: How hard will she be willing to campaign against Trump? Will she be as noxious and ornery as the former president surely will be against her? Will she be willing to attack Trump and seize the ample vulnerabilities he provides, even if it risks his unrestrained ire?

    Haley was hesitant to go after him when the field was more crowded. She offered only the mildest of critiques—that “chaos follows” Trump “rightly or wrongly” and that he was not “the right president” for these times (as he was before). But it was hardly a sure thing that Haley would deploy her best material against Trump—about his odd behavior and mental capacity and legal problems.

    The final days of the New Hampshire campaign offered clues that she might now be willing to do so. She mentioned Trump’s age throughout the day yesterday (inflating it by three years, to 80) and brought up the perplexing sequence from Trump’s Friday-night rally, in which he seemed to suggest that Haley had been in charge of security at the Capitol on January 6 (he apparently had mistaken her for Nancy Pelosi).

    Perhaps more notably, Haley conveyed that she was willing to draw out the race for as long as necessary. “Joe Biden isn’t going to get any younger or any better,” she said in her speech in Concord. “We’ll have all the time we need to beat Joe Biden.” This carried a sly message directed at Trump: He wasn’t getting any younger or better, either. And the longer the race continued, the more his court cases would advance, new facts would be revealed, and his behavior could spiral. Haley pointed out that voters in 20 states would be casting ballots in the next two months. There would be many more contests to enjoy, or stay alive for.

    If nothing else, Haley would live to see another Election Day, in another state.

    Primary days can give off an oddly freewheeling and punch-drunk vibe. Candidates, staffers, and volunteers have all done their work. Most of them are exhausted and often battling colds, hangovers, or other ailments. There is no more practice and preparation left to do.

    “The hay is in the barn,” as old political hacks like to say. Or, at least one political hack said this—to me—but I forget who it was. I’ve also seen the maxim attributed to stir-crazy football coaches (before the big game) and distance runners (before a race). The basic idea is the same: There’s not much left to do, except find a way to pass hours and burn nervous energy.

    Everything that remains tends to be improvisational and hardly strategic. Candidates rush around, trying to get supporters out to vote and, in Haley’s case, to convince them that the race is not over, despite all the polls showing Trump with a big lead.

    “I don’t even want to talk about numbers, and I don’t think y’all should either,” Haley admonished Bash at Chez Vachon.

    She then mentioned one number in particular: six.

    That reflects the sum of votes that Haley received in Dixville Notch, the tiny village in the northern tip of the state that is known for tallying its votes just after midnight on the morning of the primary. “There were more than 10 journalists for every voter,” The New York Times said in its report on the wee-hours scene, which it called “as much a press spectacle as it is a serious exercise in democracy.” (The same could be said about the New Hampshire primary in general, an exercise that features a relatively tiny number of voters whose views are comically amplified by media swarms.)

    “All six came to us,” Haley reported of the Dixville Notch vote. “Not part, not one—all six.”

    Haley was joined at Chez Vachon by New Hampshire Governor Chris Sununu, her biggest supporter and frequent traveling companion across the state in recent weeks. At one point, I asked Sununu, who was standing next to the kitchen door—nearly getting run over by waitresses carrying plates loaded with pancakes, bacon, and poutine drowned in brown gravy—whether he was worried that this might be the last New Hampshire primary as we know it. Some have predicted as much, given that the Democrats are no longer holding their first contest here. Was he feeling wistful at all, nostalgic maybe?

    “Nah, we’re always in this. It never leaves us,” Sununu said. He added that the Democrats had “learned their lesson”—that they never should have messed with New Hampshire and tried to take away its rightful spot at the front of the primary parade.

    Sununu has shown himself willing to question Trump’s age and mental fitness more directly than Haley had been until the past few days. “If he’s off the teleprompter, he can barely keep a cogent thought,” Sununu said of Trump in an interview with Fox News yesterday. “This guy is nearly 80 years old.”

    “He’s 77,” the Fox host corrected him.

    “That’s nearly 80,” Sununu maintained. “We’ll do math later.”

    He has an obvious point about Trump, one that’s worth making. But this is a pet peeve of mine. Sununu and Haley often say that a Donald Trump–Joe Biden rematch would feature “two 80-year-olds.” Haley recently said that if Trump were convicted, and she were elected, she would likely pardon the former president. Why? Because it’s not in the country’s interest to have “an 80-year-old man sitting in jail,” she said.

    It sounds like a minor thing, but if Haley is going to attack Trump (correctly) for lying, if she’s going to try to claim some moral high ground in this race, she herself should not be fudging the facts. There’s no need to anyway; at 52, she’s clearly younger than both him and Biden.

    Since I figured the encounter at Chez Vachon might be the last time that I’d be so close to Haley—maybe ever—I decided to be one of those nuisance reporters and follow her out of the restaurant.

    “How old is President Trump?” I asked her as she crossed Kelley Street. Haley ignored me.

    “How old is President Trump?” I tried again. She kept walking. Someone else shouted a question that I didn’t hear.

    “There’s a lot of energy, that’s what we’re seeing today,” Haley said in a rote tone, disappearing into a town car and motoring off to her next stop, and then more stops after that.

    Mark Leibovich

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  • Donald Trump Challenged Nikki Haley To An 'Aptitude Test' And You Know What Happened

    Donald Trump Challenged Nikki Haley To An 'Aptitude Test' And You Know What Happened

    Donald Trump raised eyebrows on Sunday when he challenged his Republican presidential primary rival Nikki Haley to a mental aptitude test.

    Haley has upped her attacks on Trump in recent weeks and on Saturday suggested the former president is “not as sharp” as he “used to be” when he appeared to mix her up with former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) during a campaign speech.

    Asked by Fox News’ Martha MacCallum about Haley’s assessment, Trump argued he was “a lot sharper than” his former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations.

    The four-times-indicted Trump then suggested, “I would do this. I would sit down right now and take an aptitude test and it would be my result against her result and she’s not gonna win, not gonna even come close to winning.”

    “In fact, when I heard the word ‘cognitive,’ you know, I’ve taken two of them now,” Trump continued. “I took one with Doc Ronnie, who’s now a fantastic, you know, White House doctor, and a fantastic congressman from Texas. Admiral. The White House doctor. Jackson. Ronny Jackson. And he’s now a great congressman from Texas. I took one then and I took one recently. I think the result was announced and it was, I aced it twice. I aced it.”

    “But I would say that, you know, I’ve actually called for a cognitive test for anybody running for president because I actually think that’s a good idea. It’d be nice to have an intelligent person be president,” Trump added.

    Haley herself has called for presidential candidates over the age of 75 to pass cognitive tests.

    Trump’s comment predictably went viral on X, the platform formerly known as Twitter:

    Related…

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  • Nikki Haley questions Donald Trump's mental acuity, Biden adds jab by agreeing she’s not Nancy Pelosi  

    Nikki Haley questions Donald Trump's mental acuity, Biden adds jab by agreeing she’s not Nancy Pelosi  

    Nikki Haley pressed her attack on Donald Trump’s age and mental fitness over the weekend as she seeks an upset win in the New Hampshire Republican primary.

    “He’s just not at the same level he was in 2016,” the former South Carolina governor said Sunday of Trump on CBS’s Face the Nation. “I think we’re seeing some of that decline.”

    Haley, 52, has mostly steered clear of strong attacks on the 77-year-old former president, whom she served as United Nations ambassador. But she seized on Trump’s mental acuity after he repeatedly appeared to confuse her with former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi at a rally on Friday night.

    Her shift in tone comes as the critical vote looms Tuesday, with a new CNN poll showing Trump holds 50% of support among likely Republican primary voters in New Hampshire versus 39% for Haley.

    On CBS, Haley ticked off “multiple” examples of Trump possibly being “confused.”

    “He claimed that Joe Biden was going to get us into World War II. I’m assuming he meant World War III,” she said. “He said that he ran against President Obama. He never ran against President Obama. He says that I’m the one that kept security from the Capitol on January 6th, I was nowhere near the Capitol on January 6th.”

    “Don’t be surprised if you have someone that’s 80 in office, their mental stability is going to continue to decline,” Haley said.

    “It should be enough to send us a warning sign,” she said. “Joe Biden, he’s very different than he was two years ago.”

    Biden, 81, added his voice to the tumult over Trump’s repeated assertions Haley was responsible for security on Jan. 6.

    “I don’t agree with Nikki Haley on everything, but we agree on this much: She is not Nancy Pelosi,” Biden said on X, formerly Twitter.

    New Hampshire so far presents the strongest opportunity for Haley to upset Trump, owing to the state’s more moderate electorate and the ability of undeclared voters to participate in the GOP primary.

    Read more: Haley Doesn’t Need Tuesday Win to Sustain Bid, Sununu Says

    But even if she defies the polls and wins in New Hampshire, Haley faces a steep climb toward the GOP nomination. Other polls show Trump dominating around the nation, including in her home state of South Carolina. That primary is on Feb. 24.

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    Ian Fisher, Bloomberg

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  • Taiwan’s new president: 5 things you need to know about William Lai

    Taiwan’s new president: 5 things you need to know about William Lai

    TAIPEI — Forget Xi Jinping or Joe Biden for a second. Meet Taiwan’s next President William Lai, upon whom the fate of U.S.-China relations — and global security over the coming few years — is now thrust.

    The 64-year-old, currently Taiwan’s vice president, has led the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) to a historic third term in power, a first for any party since Taiwan became a democracy in 1996.

    For now, the capital of Taipei feels as calm as ever. For Lai, though, the sense of victory will soon be overshadowed by a looming, extended period of uncertainty over Beijing’s next move. Taiwan’s Communist neighbor has laid bare its disapproval of Lai, whom Beijing considers the poster boy of the Taiwanese independence movement.

    All eyes are now on how the Chinese leader — who less than two weeks ago warned Taiwan to face up to the “historical inevitability” of being absorbed into his Communist nation — will address the other inevitable conclusion: That the Taiwanese public have cast yet another “no” vote on Beijing.

    1. Beijing doesn’t like him — at all

    China has repeatedly lambasted Lai, suggesting that he will be the one bringing war to the island.

    As recently as last Thursday, Beijing was trying to talk Taiwanese voters out of electing its nemesis-in-chief into the Baroque-style Presidential Office in Taipei.

    “Cross-Strait relations have taken a turn for the worse in the past eight years, from peaceful development to tense confrontation,” China’s Taiwan Affairs Office spokesman Chen Binhua said, adding that Lai would now be trying to follow an “evil path” toward “military tension and war.”

    While Beijing has never been a fan of the DPP, which views China as fundamentally against Taiwan’s interests , the personal disgust for Lai is also remarkable.

    Part of that stems from a 2017 remark, in which Lai called himself a “worker for Taiwanese independence,” which has been repeatedly cited by Beijing as proof of his secessionist beliefs.

    Without naming names, Chinese President Xi harshly criticized those promoting Taiwan independence in a speech in 2021.

    Without naming names, Chinese President Xi harshly criticized those promoting Taiwan independence | Mark Schiefelbein-Pool/Getty Images

    “Secession aimed at Taiwan independence is the greatest obstacle to national reunification and a grave danger to national rejuvenation,” Xi said. “Those who forget their heritage, betray their motherland, and seek to split the country will come to no good end, and will be disdained by the people and sentenced by the court of history.”

    2. All eyes are on the next 4 months

    Instability is expected to be on the rise over the next four months, until Lai is formally inaugurated on May 20.

    No one knows how bad this could get, but Taiwanese officials and foreign diplomats say they don’t expect the situation to be as tense as the aftermath of then-U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s visit to the island in 2022.

    Already, days before the election, China sent several spy balloons to monitor Taiwan, according to the Taiwanese defense ministry. On the trade front, China was also stepping up the pressure, announcing a possible move to reintroduce tariffs on some Taiwanese products. Cases of disinformation and electoral manipulation have also been unveiled by Taiwanese authorities.

    Those developments, combined, constitute what Taipei calls hybrid warfare — which now risks further escalation given Beijing’s displeasure with the new president.

    No one knows how bad this could get, but Taiwanese officials and foreign diplomats say they don’t expect the situation to be as tense as the aftermath of then-U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s visit to the island in 2022 | Annabelle Chih/Getty Images

    3. Lai has to tame his independent instinct

    In a way, he has already.

    Speaking at the international press conference last week, Lai said he had no plan to declare independence if elected to the presidency.

    DPP insiders say they expect Lai to stick to outgoing Tsai Ing-wen’s approach, without saying things that could be interpreted as unilaterally changing the status quo.

    They also point to the fact that Lai chose as vice-presidential pick Bi-khim Hsiao, a close confidante with Tsai and former de facto ambassador to Washington. Hsiao has developed close links with the Biden administration, and will play a key role as a bridge between Lai and the U.S.

    4. Taiwan will follow international approach

    The U.S., Japan and Europe are expected to take precedence in Lai’s diplomatic outreach, while relations with China will continue to be negative.

    Throughout election rallies across the island, the DPP candidate repeatedly highlighted the Tsai government’s efforts at diversifying away from the trade reliance on China, shifting the focus to the three like-minded allies.

    Lai has to tame his independent instinct | Annabelle Chih/Getty Images

    Southeast Asia has been another top destination for these readjusted trade flows, DPP has said.

    According to Taiwanese authorities, Taiwan’s exports to China and Hong Kong last year dropped 18.1 percent compared to 2022, the biggest decrease since they started recording this set of statistics in 1982.

    In contrast, Taiwanese exports to the U.S. and Europe rose by 1.6 percent and 2.9 percent, respectively, with the trade volumes reaching all-time highs.

    However, critics point out that China continues to be Taiwan’s biggest trading partner, with many Taiwanese businesspeople living and working in the mainland.

    5. Lai might face an uncooperative parliament

    While vote counting continues, there’s a high chance Lai will be dealing with a divided parliament, the Legislative Yuan.

    Before the election, the Kuomintang (KMT) party vowed to form a majority with Taiwan People’s Party in the Yuan, thereby rendering Lai’s administration effectively a minority government.

    While that could pose further difficulties for Lai to roll out policies provocative to Beijing, a parliament in opposition also might be a problem when it comes to Taiwan’s much-needed defense spending.

    “A divided parliament is very bad news for defense. KMT has proven that they can block defense spending, and the TPP will also try to provide what they call oversight, and make things much more difficult,” said Syaru Shirley Lin, who chairs the Center for Asia-Pacific Resilience and Innovation, a Taipei-based policy think tank.

    “Although all three parties said they wanted to boost defense, days leading up to the election … I don’t think that really tells you what’s going to happen in the legislature,” Lin added. “There’s going to be a lot of policy trading.”

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  • Ocasio-Cortez Said Nancy Pelosi Mocked Her Because Of Her Age, New Book Relates

    Ocasio-Cortez Said Nancy Pelosi Mocked Her Because Of Her Age, New Book Relates

    Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez claimed that former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi made her life in Congress miserable, frequently singling out the more junior lawmaker because of her age, according to an upcoming book that focuses on the New York Democrat’s congressional career.

    “The amount of times she told me that stupid ‘I have protest signs older than you in my basement’ shit. Like yeah, but mine don’t collect dust,” Ocasio-Cortez said of the Democratic speaker in a text to Ryan Grim, the Washington bureau chief for The Intercept and a former D.C. bureau chief for HuffPost. The anecdote is included in an advanced copy of Grim’s book obtained by HuffPost.

    Ocasio-Cortez, known as AOC, was elected to the House from a New York City district in 2018, at the time becoming the youngest woman ever elected to Congress at age 30. She has since become known for her progressive politics and bold moves, including attending multiple protests.

    In 2018, Ocasio-Cortez participated in a sit-in with environmental activists in Pelosi’s office, demanding legislation to address climate change. In 2022, the young politician was arrested for protesting the overturning of abortion rights alongside other lawmakers. And earlier this year, she showed support for striking writers and actors on a picket line in New York City. (She’s not free from criticism — her activism has been called performative by some.)

    On the other hand, Pelosi is a veteran lawmaker, representing a San Francisco district for more than three decades. She is known as a trailblazer for equality and women’s rights but has had a notable feud with Ocasio-Cortez and other progressives in the Democratic Party.

    AOC told The Washington Post in 2019 that she thought Pelosi had singled out “newly elected women of color.”

    For example, Pelosi had called out newly elected Democratic Reps. Ocasio-Cortez, Ilhan Omar (Minn.), Rashida Tlaib (Mich.) and Ayanna Pressley (Mass.), popularly known as “The Squad,” for not having the same support in Congress as other lawmakers.

    “All these people have their public whatever and their Twitter world,” Pelosi told The New York Times in 2019. “But they didn’t have any following. They’re four people, and that’s how many votes they got.”

    Ocasio-Cortez called the jab “outright disrespectful,” according to The Washington Post interview.

    The 83-year-old congresswoman, who served as speaker from 2007 to 2011 and again in 2019, stepped down from that leadership role in January. When Pelosi moved on from the speakership, Ocasio-Cortez thought her “misery” would continue. But she was wrong.

    “I thought things would get worse,” AOC said, according to Grim’s book. “I thought a lot of my misery was due to leadership more broadly having a thing against me. But … my life has completely transformed. It’s crazy. And it’s that that made me realize it was kind of just [Pelosi] the whole time.”

    “Now, senior members talk to me, [committee] chairs are nice to me, people want to work together. I’m shocked. I couldn’t even get floor time before,” she added.

    Ocasio-Cortez, now 34, told Grim that today she’s treated fairly by her congressional counterparts.

    Grim’s book, “The Squad: AOC and the Hope of a Political Revolution,” is set to be released on Dec. 5.

    A representative of Pelosi declined HuffPost’s request for comment.

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  • They’re talking, but a climate divide between Beijing and Washington remains

    They’re talking, but a climate divide between Beijing and Washington remains

    This article is part of the Road to COP special report, presented by SQM.

    Last week’s surprise deal between China and the United States may provide a boost to the climate talks in Dubai — but the two powers remain at odds on tough questions such as how quickly to shut down coal and who should provide climate aid to developing nations.

    The world’s top two drivers of climate change are also divided by a thicket of disagreements on trade, security, human rights and economic competition.

    The good news is that Washington and Beijing are talking to each other again and restarting some of their technical cooperation on climate issues, after a yearlong freeze. That may still not be enough to get nearly 200 nations to commit to far greater climate action at the talks that begin Nov. 30.

    The two superpowers’ latest detente creates the right “mood music” for the summit, said Alden Meyer, a senior associate at climate think tank E3G. “But it still is not saying that the world’s two largest economies and two largest emitters are fully committed to the scale and pace of reductions that are needed.”

    The deal, announced after a meeting this month between U.S. climate envoy John Kerry and his Chinese counterpart Xie Zhenhua, produced an agreement to commit to a series of actions to limit climate pollution. Those include accelerating the shift to renewable energy and widening the variety of heat-trapping gases they will address in their next round of climate targets.

    U.S. President Joe Biden and Chinese leader Xi Jinping endorsed that type of cooperation after a meeting in California on Wednesday, saying they “welcomed” positive discussions on actions to reduce greenhouse gas emissions during this decade, as well as “common approaches” toward a successful climate summit. Biden said he would work with China to address climate finance in developing countries, a major source of friction for the U.S.

    “Planet Earth is big enough for the two countries to succeed,” said Xi ahead of his bilateral with Biden.

    But the deal leaves some big issues unaddressed, including specific measures for ending their reliance on fossil fuels, the main contributor to global warming. And the two countries are a long way from the days when a surprise U.S.-Chinese agreement to cooperate on climate change had the power to land a landmark global pact.

    That puts the nations in a dramatically different place than in 2014, when Xi and then-President Barack Obama made a historic pledge to jointly cut their planet-warming pollution, paving the way for the landmark Paris Agreement to land in 2015.

    Even a surprise joint deal between the two nations in 2021 failed to ease friction, with China emerging at the last minute to oppose language calling for a phase-out of coal power. The summit ended with a less ambitious “phase-down.”

    A year later, a visit to Taiwan by then-U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi angered Beijing so much that Xi’s government canceled dialogue with the United States on a host of issues, including climate change. China, which claims that Taiwan is part of its territory, alleged that the visit had undermined its sovereignty.

    House Speaker Nancy Pelosi speaks after receiving the Order of Propitious Clouds with Special Grand Cordon, Taiwan’s highest civilian honour | Handout/Getty Image

    The two countries’ struggles to find comity have come at the worst possible moment — at a time when rapid action is crucial to preventing climate catastrophe. A growing number of factors has threatened to widen the U.S.-Chinese wedge further, including their competition for supremacy in the market for clean energy.

    Two nations at odds

    While the U.S. has contributed more greenhouse gases to the atmosphere than any other nation during the past 150 years, China is now the world’s largest climate polluter — though not on a per capita basis — and it will need to stop building new coal-fired power for the world to stand a chance of limiting rising temperatures.

    The recent agreement hints at that possibility by stating that more renewables would enable reductions in the generation of oil, gas and coal, helping China peak its emissions ahead of its current targets.

    The challenge will be bridging the countries’ diverging approaches to climate issues.

    The Biden administration is urging a rapid end to coal-fired power, which is waning in the U.S., even as it permits more oil drilling and ramps up exports of natural gas — much of it destined for Asia.

    At the same time, it wants the United States to claim a larger role in the clean energy manufacturing industry that China now dominates, and is seeking to loosen China’s stranglehold on supply chains for products such as solar panels, electric cars and the minerals that go into them. It’s also pressuring Beijing to contribute to U.N. climate funds, saying China’s historic status as a developing country no longer shields it from its responsibility to pay.

    China sees the U.S. position as a direct challenge to its economic growth and energy security.

    Beijing wants to protect the use of coal and defend developing countries’ access to fossil fuels. It has also backed emerging economies’ demands that rich countries pay more to help them deploy clean energy and adapt to the effects of a warmer world. China says it already helps developing countries through South-South cooperation and points to a clause in the 2015 Paris Agreement that says developed countries should lead on climate finance.

    Hanging over the talks is also the prospect of a change of administration in the U.S., and continued efforts by Republicans to vilify Beijing and accuse the Biden administration of supporting Chinese companies through its climate policies and investments. And as China’s response to Pelosi’s trip underscored, climate cooperation remains hostage to other tensions in the two countries’ relationship, a dynamic likely to heighten in the coming year as both Taiwan and the U.S. hold presidential elections.

    One challenge is that China doesn’t seem to see much to gain from offering more ambitious climate actions amid worsening relations with other countries, said Kevin Tu, a non-resident fellow at the Center on Global Energy Policy at Columbia University and an adjunct professor at the School of Environment at Beijing Normal University.

    “In the past several years, China has voluntarily upgraded its climate ambitions a few times amid rising geopolitical tensions,” Tu said, pointing to its 2020 pledge to peak and then zero out its emissions. “So China does not necessarily have very strong incentive to further upgrade its climate ambition.”

    The divide between the two nations has created a dilemma for some small island nations that often walk a fine line between negotiating alongside China at climate talks while pushing for more action to scale back fossil fuels.

    The U.S. and China remain at odds on how quickly to shut down coal and who should provide climate aid to developing nations | Brendan Smialowski/AFP via Getty Images

    “The U.S. is trying to drag everyone to talk about an immediate coal phase-out,” Ralph Regenvanu, climate minister for the Pacific island nation of Vanuatu, said during a recent call with reporters, calling the effort a “U.S.-versus-China thing.”

    “But we also need to talk about no more oil or gas as well,” he added.

    Operating on its own terms

    The dynamic between China and the U.S. will either drag down or bolster the ambitions of countries updating their national climate pledges, a process that begins at the close of COP28. Nations are already woefully behind cuts needed to hit the goals they laid out in Paris.

    China’s new 10-year targets will be crucial for meeting those marks, given that China accounts for close to 30 percent of global greenhouse gas emissions and that it plans to build dozens of coal-fired power plants in the coming years. The U.S., and many other countries, will be looking for greater commitments from China — whether that’s modifying what it means by phasing down coal or setting more stringent targets.

    China has pledged to peak its carbon emissions before 2030 and zero them out before 2060, a decade later than the United States has promised to reach net-zero. Beijing is unlikely to accelerate that timeline, in part because — analysts say — its philosophy is fundamentally different from that of the U.S.: underpromise and overdeliver.

    Even without committing to more action, China’s massive investments in low-carbon energy installations — twice that of the United States — may inadvertently help the country achieve its peaking target early, some analysts say.

    A complicated picture

    If the Trump years drove China further from America, the global pandemic and resulting economic slowdown that started during his final year didn’t bring it closer. And the energy crunch stemming from Russia’s war with Ukraine cemented China’s drive for reliable energy to meet the rising needs of its 1.4 billion people. That created a coal boom.

    Meanwhile, China heavily subsidized the expansion of wind, solar and electric vehicle production. Its clean energy supply chain dominance has lowered the global costs for those technologies but drawn scorn from the U.S. as it tries to rebuild its own domestic manufacturing base.

    China has turned more combative in response. Rather than work with the U.S. to make joint announcements on climate action, Xi has made clear that China’s climate policy won’t be dictated by others. At G20 meetings, China has aligned with Saudi Arabia and Russia in opposing language aimed at phasing out fossil fuels.

    “At the end of the day, it’s harder to make a claim that China needs the U.S. and it’s harder to make the claim that the U.S. can rely on China,” said Cory Combs, a senior analyst at policy consulting firm Trivium China.

    Wealthy countries’ inability to deliver promised climate aid to vulnerable countries hasn’t helped. While China remains among the bloc of developing nations in calling for more action on climate finance, it also points to the investments it’s making in the Global South through its Belt and Road infrastructure initiative and bilateral aid. 

    A foreign diplomat who asked for anonymity to speak openly said China has resisted pressure to contribute money to a climate fund that would help developing countries rebuild after climate disasters and would likely push back against a focus on its continued build out of coal-fired power plants.

    US climate envoy John Kerry sits next to China’s special climate envoy Xie Zhenhua | Fabrice Coffrini/AFP via Getty Images

    “Anything that would signal that they would need to do more is something that gets blocked,” the person said.

    China did release a plan earlier this month to cut emissions of the potent greenhouse methane, delivering on a promise it had made in a joint declaration with the U.S. at climate talks in 2021. But it has still not signed onto a global methane pledge led by the U.S. and the European Union.

    All that amounts to a complicated picture for the U.S.-Chinese relationship and its broader impact on global climate outcomes.

    “The U.S.-China talks will help stabilize the politics when countries meet in the UAE, but critical issues such as a fossil fuel phase-out still require much [further] political efforts,” said Li Shuo, incoming director of the China climate hub at the Asia Society Policy Institute.

    “It’s very much about setting a floor,” and the talks in Dubai still need to build out from there, Shuo added.

    He argues in a recent paper that China will subscribe to targets it sees as achievable and will continue to side with developing countries on climate finance. Chinese government officials are cautious about what they’re willing to commit to internationally, which sometimes serves as a disincentive for them to be more ambitious, he said.

    The calculation is likely to be different for Biden’s team, who “want a headline that the world agrees to push China,” said David Waskow, who leads the World Resources Institute’s international climate initiative.

    Not impossible

    The power of engagement can’t be completely written off, and in the past it has proven to have a positive effect on the U.S.-China relationship.

    “[Climate] sort of was a positive pillar in the relationship,” said Todd Stern, Obama’s former chief climate negotiator. “And it came to be a thing where when the two sides have come to get together, it was like, ‘What can we get done on climate?’”

    Engagement with China at the state and local level and among academics and research institutes has potential — in large part because it’s less political, said Joanna Lewis, a professor at Georgetown University who closely tracks China’s climate change approach.

    There could also be opportunities to separate climate from broader bilateral tensions.

    “I do feel like there’s that willingness to say, ‘We recognize our roles, we recognize our ability to have that catalytic effect on the international community’s actions,’” said Nate Hultman, director of the University of Maryland’s Center for Global Sustainability and a former senior adviser to Kerry. “It doesn’t solve all the world’s issues going into the COP, but it gives a really strong boost to international discussions around what we know we need to do.”

    Sara Schonhardt and Zack Colman reported, and Phelim Kine contributed reporting, from Washington, D.C.

    This article is part of the Road to COP special report, presented by SQM. The article is produced with full editorial independence by POLITICO reporters and editors. Learn more about editorial content presented by outside advertisers.

    Sara Schonhardt and Zack Colman

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  • Man found guilty in violent attack on Nancy Pelosi’s husband

    Man found guilty in violent attack on Nancy Pelosi’s husband

    Man found guilty in violent attack on Nancy Pelosi’s husband – CBS News


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    A San Francisco jury on Thursday found David DePape guilty of federal charges in last year’s violent hammer attack on Paul Pelosi, the husband of then-House Speaker Nancy Pelosi at the couple’s home. DePape faces up to 50 years in prison.

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  • Tearful David DePape testifies in the Paul Pelosi assault trial;

    Tearful David DePape testifies in the Paul Pelosi assault trial;

    David DePape gives tearful testimony in his federal assault trial


    David DePape gives tearful testimony in his federal assault trial

    02:10

    David DePape took the stand Tuesday morning in his federal trial and tearfully recounted his motivations – fueled by conspiracy theories and right-wing media – that led to the bludgeoning of Paul Pelosi, husband of then-House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, at their San Francisco mansion last year.

    The 43-year-old DePape described in detail his far-fetched plan to single-handedly “take down” a series of high-profile figures that have been demonized over the year in right-wing media. During his testimony, DePape burst into tears when he was asked about transitioning from being “left-wing” to becoming more conservative.  

    “Biased against Trump”

    “At that time I was biased against Trump. But there’s, like, truth there,” he said, sobbing. “So if there’s truth out there that I don’t know, I want to know it.”

    depape.jpg
    David DePape weeps while testifying at his federal trial in the attack on Paul Pelosi, Nov. 14, 2023.

    Sketch by Vicki Behringer


    Originally from Canada, DePape said he was doing carpentry and living in a friend’s garage in Richmond at the time of the attack, using bathrooms at parks or restaurants. He testified that he spent endless hours playing video games as well as watching and listening to political content online. 

    DePape said he mainly watched YouTube videos and listened to podcasts from the likes of Tim Pool, Glenn Beck and conservative media outlets, He described his worldview as taking up a battle against a sinister cabal of government officials, celebrities, and pedophiles driving the country to ruin, echoing baseless Q-Anon diatribes.

    The defense claims said the attack at the Pelosis’ home was part of a bigger plan to end corruption in the U.S. DePape has pleaded not guilty to attempted kidnapping of a federal official and assault on the immediate family member of a federal official with intent to retaliate against the official for performance of their duties. 

    His attorneys argue that he was not seeking to go after Nancy Pelosi because of her official duties as a member of Congress and so the charges do not fit.

    The attack happened in the early hours of Oct. 28, 2022, just days before the midterm elections. DePape said he went to the Pelosis’ home to talk to Nancy Pelosi about Russian involvement in the 2016 election, and that he planned to wear an inflatable unicorn costume and upload his interrogation of her online. Prosecutors say he had rope and zip ties with him.

    Questionable plan

    Defense attorney Jodi Linker told jurors last week that DePape believed he was taking action to stop government corruption, the erosion of freedom in the United States, and the abuse of children by politicians and actors.

    In testimony Monday, Paul Pelosi recounted the attack publicly for the first time, He recalled being awakened by a man bursting into the bedroom door asking, “Where’s Nancy?” He said that when he responded that his wife was in Washington, DePape said he would tie him up while they waited for her.

    Pelosi testified he tried to remain calm and affable while managing to call 911. On the stand Tuesday, DePape testified that he felt really bad for Pelosi after hearing testimony from a neurosurgeon who operated on him after the attack. Pelosi underwent surgery to repair a skull fracture and injuries to his right arm and hands.

    “We had a good rapport going on,” said DePape on the stand Tuesday. “I gave him a squeeze on the shoulder to be reassuring. The idea of restraining him didn’t really occur to me.”

    DePape bludgeoned Pelosi on the head when officers appeared at the Pelosi front door to find the men grappling over the hammer.

    “I reacted because my plan was basically ruined,” DePape said when asked why he hit Pelosi.

    “I actually thought he was dead until I heard the charges,” he said. “He was never my target and I am sorry he got hurt.” 

    Multiple Targets

    DePape testified that his plan was to get to Nancy Pelosi and other targets to admit to their corruption and eventually get President Joe Biden to pardon them all. His list of targets also included Hunter Biden, Congressman Adam Schiff, former Attorney General Bill Barr, Tom Hanks, Sen. Bernie Sanders, and California Gov. Gavin Newsom.

    “It’s just easier giving them a pardon so we can move forward as a country,” he said, crying.

    “There is a sympathy defense here. A sympathy defense is not a legal defense.  A sympathy defense is an attempt to get a jury to acquit or to hang,” explained UC San Francisco law professor Rory Little. “The intent for the defense is to have compassion for this guy. There’s no doubt here that DePape is presented as a sympathetic figure; a sad, almost pathetic and deluded person.”

    Also on DePape’s list was Bay Area scholar Dr. Gayle Rubin, a leading academic in feminist theory and queer studies and a cultural anthropologist at the University of Michigan, previously identified in court papers as “Target 1.”  

    DePape stated besides Hunter Biden, Target 1 was at the top of his list and he planned to go to Rubin, a target of right-wing groups over her writings that have been misconstrued and which are now used to demonize the LGBTQ community. 

    U.S. District Judge Jacqueline Scott Corley ordered her name not be put in the public record because of threats against her. However, Rubin has been identified as Target 1 by both prosecutors and defense attorneys as well as in published reports.

    “Because she is a pedo activist. she wants to turn all the schools into pedo factories,” DePape testified about why he Rubin on his list. “if she was just a pedo activist I probably wouldn’t have targeted her.  

    DePape said he looked up Rubin’s home but it appeared on maps to be difficult to gain entry. His hope was to use Pelosi to get to Rubin.

    “I figured Target 1 would know Nancy and be attracted to her celebrity,’ he said.

    David DePape trial
    Dr. Gayle Rubin (2nd from top right) testifies as Target 1 at the federal trial of David DePape, Nov. 14, 2023 in San Francisco.

    Sketch by Vicki Behringer


    Rubin testified using the “Target 1” pseudonym Tuesday, saying “Absolutely not,” when asked if she supported the sexual abuse of children. She also said her workplace had to take measures to ensure her safety following word that DePape had her at the top of his list.  

    “Regardless of how sympathetic they may be, and that is where, if they follow the law, it sounds to me like they will have to vote to convict,” said Little.

    Closing arguments begin when the trial resumes on Wednesday, when the jury could also deliver its verdict. 

    f convicted, DePape faces life in prison. He has pleaded not guilty to charges in state court of attempted murder, assault with a deadly weapon, elder abuse, residential burglary and other felonies. A state trial has not been scheduled.

    Kenny Choi, Kathleen Seccombe, and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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