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Tag: Reena Diamante

  • U.S.-Russia prisoner swap puts spotlight on Austin Tice’s captivity in Syria

    U.S.-Russia prisoner swap puts spotlight on Austin Tice’s captivity in Syria

    The massive prisoner swap involving the U.S. and Russia nearly two weeks ago provided closure for some American families, but a number of U.S. citizens are still being wrongly held overseas. 


    What You Need To Know

    • The massive prisoner swap involving the U.S. and Russia nearly two weeks ago puts a spotlight on the plight of Austin Tice, a freelance journalist from Houston, who was abducted in 2012 while reporting on the civil war in Syria
    • On Wednesday, which marked 12 years since Tice’s abduction, the Washington Post, the Wall Street Journal and other news outlets ran ads calling on U.S. officials to do everything possible to bring Tice home and several Texas lawmakers in Congress sought to put pressure the Biden administration to prioritize Tice’s return
    • In a statement, President Joe Biden said he has repeatedly pressed Syria’s government to work with the U.S. 
    • Tice’s loved ones and supporters said they rejoice when other detained Americans return home and after 12 years, they hope their family will soon be whole again

    A concert Wednesday at the National Press Club in Washington marked 12 years since Austin Tice, a freelance journalist from Houston, was abducted while reporting on the civil war in Syria. His family and U.S. officials believe he is still alive.

    The concert featured Scotty Hasting, a rising star in country music and an Army veteran of the War in Afghanistan. Tice is a veteran of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars.

    “There is more to be done to help a fellow veteran be able to come home, back to the U.S.,” Emily Wilkins, the 117th president of the National Press Club, told Spectrum News. “He shouldn’t be detained. He did nothing wrong, and he deserves to be with his mom, his dad and all of his siblings.” 

    The commemoration came nearly two weeks after the largest prisoner swap involving the U.S. and Russia since the Cold War. Three Americans and a permanent U.S. resident were among those freed from Russian detention. They are Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich, former Marine Paul Whelan, Alsu Kurmasheva, a Russian American reporter with Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, and Vladimir Kara-Murza, a Russian-U.K. citizen who was critical of the Kremlin.

    Their release was the result of a lengthy, painstaking negotiation involving a half-dozen countries.

    “I think to a certain extent, they give us a lot of hope to see that another journalist, two other journalists, wrongfully detained, that were able to be released. It shows the power of our government. It shows kind of what we are able to do through advocacy, through awareness,” Wilkins said.

    Tice was a 31-year-old freelance reporter for the Washington Post, McClatchy News and other news outlets when he went missing in Syria in 2012. A native of Houston, he was last seen in a video released in September of that year surrounded by unidentified armed men.

    On Wednesday, the Washington Post, the Wall Street Journal and other news outlets ran ads calling on U.S. officials to do everything possible to bring Tice home. 

    Many Texans in Congress from both parties have been outspoken. Rep. Al Green, D-Houston, told Spectrum News he spoke with Austin Tice’s father, Marc, on Wednesday morning.

    Green said he had a statement from the Tice family, which reads, “We are so glad Evan, Alsu, Paul and Vladimir were released from Russia. It was one of the most complex deals in history. Brittany Griner was released in a historic deal involving multiple complicated events. The Iranian hostages were released in exchange for frozen Iranian assets. So as a family, we ask, ‘when is it Austin’s turn?’ It cannot possibly be any more complicated for him.”

    Green said that the Tice family has “waited long enough” and he believes “it’s time to bring Austin home.”

    “It’s a matter of will. I think the way is there for us, but we have to have the will to bring him home, as we brought others home,” Green continued.

    Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, led more than a third of the Senate in a bipartisan letter last week urging the Biden administration to prioritize Tice’s return. Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, also signed on.

    “As a beloved son, brother, Eagle Scout, journalist, and veteran, Austin represents the best our nation has to offer, and we are committed to working with you to return him to his loving family. As an American and a veteran, Austin deserves the full and active support of our government to secure his release. We also encourage your administration to utilize all available means to further discourage the hostage taking of American citizens,” the letter reads.

    Tice has been held captive for three presidential administrations.

    “We have repeatedly pressed the government of Syria to work with us so that we can, at last, bring Austin home. Today, I once again call for his immediate release. The freedom of the press is essential, and journalists like Austin play a critical role informing the public and holding those in power accountable,” President Joe Biden said in a statement.

    Biden said he stands in solidarity with Tice’s family, and that he has personally met with Tice’s parents, including his mother Debra Tice. “She has always been passionate, been poised and been eager to do whatever she needs to do to get the job done,” Wilkins said. “I’m honored to be fighting alongside of her.”

    Tice’s loved ones and supporters said they rejoice when other detained Americans return home and after 12 years, they hope their family will soon be whole again.

    Reena Diamante

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  • Biden makes campaign stop; RNC prep for next week

    Biden makes campaign stop; RNC prep for next week

    President Joe Biden makes another move to stay in office, and former President Donald Trump prepares for the RNC.


    Biden pushes on ‘blue wall’ sprint with Michigan trip as he continues to make the case for candidacy

    Four years ago, candidate Joe Biden stood before supporters at a Detroit high school, flanked by Kamala Harris and other rising Democratic stars, and called himself a bridge to the next generation of leaders.

    Biden, now a president seeking reelection, returned to the city Friday with many in his party now pleading for him to fulfill that very promise and step aside. But Biden remains defiant and says he’ll remain in the race despite a disastrous debate performance that triggered a wave of calls for him to end his candidacy.

    During a news conference on Thursday, when asked why he no longer considered himself a “bridge” to the next generation of leaders, Biden responded that “what changed was the gravity of the situation I inherited in terms of the economy, foreign policy, and domestic division.”

    “We’ve never been here before,” Biden continued. “And that’s the other reason why I didn’t, you say, hand off to another generation. I gotta finish the job.”

    In the two weeks since his debate debacle, Biden and his team have been on a relentless sprint to persuade fretting lawmakers, nervous donors and a skeptical electorate that at the age of 81, he is still capable of being president. But a spate of travel to battleground states, interviews with journalists and a rare solo news conference have done little to tamp down the angst within the party about Biden’s candidacy and his prospects against Donald Trump in November.

    So far, one Democratic senator and 16 House Democrats have publicly called on Biden to step aside, with the latest statements — from Connecticut Rep. Jim Himes, California Rep. Scott Peters and Illinois Rep. Eric Sorensen — coming as the president’s highly anticipated news conference ended Thursday night. Former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., has indicated Biden still has a decision to make on whether to run, even though the president has made it clear he plans to remain in the race.

    Meanwhile, his reelection campaign has indirectly acknowledged that Biden’s route to the White House is narrowing, saying the so-called “blue wall” of Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania is now the “clearest pathway” to victory, even as other battleground states like Arizona and Nevada are not out of reach.

    That strategy is reflected in how Biden is redoubling his efforts in the Midwestern states, hitting Detroit nearly one week after he campaigned in Madison, Wis.; Philadelphia; and Harrisburg, Penn. Rallying enthusiasm in Detroit and among its sizable Black population could prove decisive for Biden’s chances of winning Michigan, which Biden reclaimed in 2020 after Donald Trump won it in four years prior by just over 10,000 votes.

    Melania Trump to make rare political appearance at the RNC, sources say

    Former first lady Melania Trump will attend the Republican National Convention next week in Milwaukee, according to two people familiar with her plans.

    Melania Trump has largely refrained from public appearances, noticeably missing key moments such as former President Donald Trump’s Super Tuesday victory party and his 78th birthday party last month. She also did not accompany the presumptive Republican presidential nominee on any of the days of his hush money trial in New York.

    Her presence at the convention, where her husband will be officially nominated as the Republican candidate, will be a boost for the party as it tries to present a united front compared to the crisis the Democratic party faces as some are calling for President Joe Biden to withdraw his reelection bid following his debate performance.

    Melania Trump’s plans have not been formally announced, and it is not yet clear whether she will deliver a speech or have any role in the proceedings.

    The news was first reported by CNN.

    Her office did not immediately respond to a request for comment. After she had been largely absent from the campaign trail earlier this year, reporters asked the former first lady about her plans. Her response: “Stay tuned.”

    The few times she has been seen have been when she and Trump voted in Florida’s primary, at a couple of fundraisers and at their son’s high school graduation.

    After the Republican Party of Florida announced earlier this year that the son, Barron Trump, was selected to serve as one of 41 at-large delegates from Florida to the national gathering, Melania Trump’s office responded two days later by saying he would decline to participate “due to prior commitments.”

    Barron Trump was seen for the first time since he turned 18 at a campaign rally at his father’s golf resort in Doral, a Miami suburb. 

    Ryan Chatelain

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  • Jill Biden visits Tampa; Illegal border crossings decline

    Jill Biden visits Tampa; Illegal border crossings decline

    First Lady Jill Biden visits Tampa, and illegal border crossings are down.


    First lady Jill Biden rallies veterans, military families to boost her husband’s reelection bid

    First Lady Dr. Jill Biden on Monday embarked on a tour of battleground states to tout a new initiative aimed at boosting outreach among veterans and military families in an effort to boost her husband’s reelection bid.

    Biden is celebrating the launch of Veterans and Military Families for Biden-Harris with a one-day, three-state swing through Florida, North Carolina and Georgia — three states with large populations of veterans and military families, as well as three battlegrounds that could propel President Joe Biden to victory in November over former President Donald Trump.

    At her first event in Wilmington, North Carolina, on Monday, Jill Biden echoed her husband’s oft-used refrain that the country’s most “sacred obligation” is to its service members and their families.

    “Four years ago, Joe went from being a military father to being commander-in-chief,” she said, referencing their son Beau, who served in Iraq as part of the Delaware Army National Guard. “It’s a responsibility he stepped into with pride, because, as Joe reminds everyone any chance he gets, our U.S. military is the finest fighting military force in the history of the world. Of all the obligations that Joe has shouldered since he took his oath of office, he believes the only truly one sacred obligation is to prepare those we send into harm’s way, and to care for them and their families when they come home.”

    She went on to highlight a number of pro-military and veteran initiatives that the Democratic president has undertaken during his first term, including signing into law the PACT Act, a landmark law that expands toxic exposure benefits for veterans, and ending the war in Afghanistan.

    “As commander-in-chief, President Biden wakes up every morning ready to work for you,” the first lady said. “That’s what this election is all about: You. For all the talk out there about this race, Joe has made it clear that he’s all in.”

    The first lady’s barnstorming campaign trip comes amid calls from some Democrats for her husband to step aside as the party’s nominee after his shaky performance in last week’s presidential debate. President Biden has repeatedly insisted that he is staying in the race, most recently on Monday when he sent a letter to Democrats in Congress that he is “firmly committed to staying in the race” and called for the recent intraparty drama “to end.”

    Jill Biden — whose father was a Navy signalman in World War II — was also set to travel to Tampa, Florida, and Columbus, Georgia, on Monday, the campaign said. The campaign also said it will hold events in Green Bay, Wisconsin, Las Vegas and Reno, Nevada, Phoenix and Tucson, Arizona, Nashua, New Hampshire, and Erie, Harrisburg and Pittston, Pennsylvania.

    Biden tells Hill Democrats he ‘declines’ to step aside and says it’s time for party drama ‘to end’

    President Joe Biden, in a letter to congressional Democrats, stood firm against calls for him to drop his candidacy and called for an “end” to the intraparty drama that has torn apart Democrats since his dismal public debate performance.

    Biden’s efforts to shore up a deeply anxious Democratic Party came Monday as lawmakers are returning to Washington and confronting a choice: decide whether to work to revive his campaign, or edge out the party leader, a make-or-break time for his reelection and their own political futures.

    Biden wrote in the two-page letter that “the question of how to move forward has been well-aired for over a week now. And it’s time for it to end.” He stressed that the party has “one job,” which is to defeat presumptive Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump in November.

    “We have 42 days to the Democratic Convention and 119 days to the general election,” Biden said in the letter, distributed by his reelection campaign. “Any weakening of resolve or lack of clarity about the task ahead only helps Trump and hurts us. It’s time to come together, move forward as a unified party, and defeat Donald Trump.”

    Anxiety is running high as top-ranking Democratic lawmakers are joining calls for Biden to step aside despite his defiance. At the same time, some of the president’s most staunch supporters are redoubling the fight for Biden’s presidency, insisting there’s no one better to beat Trump in what many see as among the most important elections of a lifetime.

    As lawmakers weigh whether Biden should stay or go, there appear to be no easy answers.

    It’s a tenuous and highly volatile juncture for the president’s party. Democrats who have worked alongside Biden for years — if not decades — and cherished his life’s work on policy priorities are now entertaining uncomfortable questions about his political future. And it’s unfolding as Biden hosts world leaders for the NATO summit this week in Washington.

    Illegal border crossings decrease

    Since President Joe Biden signed an executive order last month to curtail asylum, the number of illegal border crossings has plummeted.

    The Biden administration attributes the sharp drop to the president’s new policies limiting asylum.

    CBS News was the first to report that the border patrol processed 84,000 migrants who crossed into the U.S. from Mexico last month without authorization.

    That’s the lowest since Biden’s first month in office, in 2021.

    Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas said his agency organized more than 100 deportation flights to more than 20 countries, and removed more than 24,000 people since the executive order.

    “The President took action,” Mayorkas said. “The border security steps we’ve taken over the past eighteen months are bringing order.”

    For years, Republicans have been blaming Biden for conditions at the border, creating a huge political liability for the president.

    The attacks have been a staple of former President Donald Trump’s campaign, most recently at least week’s debate.

    “The border. All he had to do was leave it. All he had to do was leave it,” Trump said during the debate.

    “After big policy changes, we often do see a decrease in border apprehensions, and then, it’s called a sort of a wait and see period,” said Migration Policy Institute associate policy analyst Colleen Putzel-Kavanaugh. “And so we don’t know what will happen in the coming weeks. It is possible that border apprehensions could increase, depending on how this policy is actually being carried out in practice.”

    It’s also unclear how long the policy will be in place. 

    Although Biden’s policy includes an expansion of legal immigration pathways, immigration advocates are mounting legal challenges to it. 

    Immigration analysts say unlawful border crossings have been dropping for months and that Biden’s new policy is not the only reason for the three-year low in June. They cite more asylum seekers making appointments at ports of entry using the Biden administration’s mobile app, as well as increased enforcement by Mexico to deter illegal crossings.

    Associated Press

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  • Biden, Trump visit border; antisemitism gets attention

    Biden, Trump visit border; antisemitism gets attention

    Both President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump visited the border on Thursday, and lawmakers in Tallahassee passed a bill to combat antisemitism. 


    Trump and Biden visit the border

    Former President Donald Trump spoke alongside Texas and border patrol officials near the U.S.-Mexico border on Thursday, describing the humanitarian crisis there as a “war” and spouted false conspiracy theories that the flow of migrants into the country was an “invasion” orchestrated by President Joe Biden to import “entire columns of fighting-age men.”

    Biden is “allowing thousands and thousands of people to come in from China, Iran, Yemen, the Congo, Syria and a lot of other nations. Many that nations are not very friendly to us,” Trump baselessly charged. “He’s transported the entire columns of fighting-age men and they’re all at a certain age and you look at them, and I said, ‘They look like warriors to me, something’s going on.’ It’s bad.”

    The baseless claims and insinuations echo the white supremacist conspiracy theory known as “The Great Replacement.” The theory, which posits Democrats and other elites are intentionally bringing nonwhite migrants into the country to “replace” white Americans and sow chaos, has inspired racist mass shootings with death tolls in the hundreds in the U.S. and across the world in the last decade.

    “I think they’re looking for votes, they’re looking for something, nobody’s really been able to tell me how anybody could want it,” Trump charged, before stumbling through a commentary on non-English speaking migrants. “Allowing millions of people from places unknown, from countries unknown, who don’t speak languages — we have languages coming into our country, we have nobody that even speaks those languages. They’re, they’re truly foreign languages. Nobody speaks them.”

    Trump and his campaign have pledged that his second administration will orchestrate the largest deportation operations in U.S. history, attempt to end the constitutional right to birthright citizenship and bring troops home from abroad to be deployed at the southern border — including using the U.S. Navy to “impose a full naval embargo on the cartels,” as his campaign said this week.

    The 2024 GOP frontrunner’s visit to the border came simultaneously to Biden’s visit to Brownsville, Texas, where he also addressed border and immigration issues and appealed to Republicans — including Trump — to embrace bipartisan solutions. Trump opposed a bipartisan border deal and helped convince Republicans, including some negotiators, to abandon it earlier this month.

    “Here’s what I would say to Mr. Trump: Instead of playing politics with this issue, instead of telling members of Congress to block this legislation, join me, or I’ll join you, in telling the Congress to pass this bipartisan border security bill,” Biden said Thursday. “We can do it together.”

    “Let’s remember who the heck we work for. We work for the American people. Not the Democratic Party, the Republican Party. The American people,” the president added.

    The proposed deal would have given Biden the authority to shut down the border if the number of migrant crossings in a given day crossed 8,500, or an average of 5,000 over a seven-day period. It also would have provided $20 billion in funding to facilitate the hiring of an additional 1,500 border patrol personnel, 4,300 asylum officers and 100 immigration judges, as well as allocated funds for 100 machines to help detect fentanyl and around $1.4 billion for cities and municipalities struggling to address their community’s ballooning migrant populations, per the White House.

    “Trump said, ‘Blame it on me.’ And so I will. Trump’s need to boost his own fragile political ego has gotten us here with another manufactured logjam,” Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker said on a press call organized by the Biden campaign on Wednesday, quoting Trump directly. “A few weeks ago, there was a chance for a real breakthrough on immigration policy. President Biden and congressional Democrats did what voters say they want from leaders: They sat down at a table with Republicans and negotiated a bipartisan compromise.”

    “But the same Republicans who helped write and were prepared to vote for it suddenly opposed it. Why? Because Donald Trump told them to because Donald Trump doesn’t want a solution,” Pritzker continued.

    Trump spoke at Shelby Park in Eagle Pass, Texas, a park on the Rio Grande where migrants — including children — have died attempting to reach since Gov. Greg Abbott seized it, kicked out U.S. Border Patrol and set up miles of razor wire. The federal government successfully sued to regain access and cut the wire, but Abbott’s administration has continued to defy the Supreme Court order and challenge Biden’s authority. While in Eagle Pass, Trump met with Abbott, border patrol agents and state and local law enforcement officials.

    “Biden is using every tool that he can to tear down the borders that Texas is putting up in our state,” Abbott said on Thursday. “What our National Guard has done, they have sealed off this entire park and taken it over, because this area was being used by the Biden administration to violate the laws of the United States of America.”

    Abbott, Texas National Guard Maj. Gen. Thomas Suelzer and border patrol union president Brandon Judd spoke alongside Trump when he addressed the media after touring the heavily fortified park. Judd described his members, federal employees who answer to Biden administration appointees, as “your agents” to Trump, who has not been president for over three years.

    “Your agents, Mr. President, are pissed. Border Patrol agents are upset that we cannot get the proper policy,” Judd said. “Thank goodness we have a governor like Gov. Abbott. Thank goodness we have somebody that’s willing to run for president of the United States, forgo everything else that he’s been doing to serve the American people.”

    Abbott and Trump both played up the menace of crime from migrants, with the Texas Republican also claiming his state was the subject of an “invasion.” Both referenced rapes, assaults and murders by undocumented immigrants, though the high-profile cases do not reflect years of data and analyses that conclude migrants, regardless of their legal status, commit less crimes than natural-born U.S. citizens.

    “Immigrants are 30% less likely to be incarcerated than are U.S.-born individuals who are white,” a Stanford University report from last year found. The right-wing Cato Institute reported in 2020 that immigrants, regardless of their legal status, were less likely to commit crimes than native-born Americans.

    “This immigrant crime narrative is racist. It’s not true,” California Rep. Robert Garcia said on the Wednesday press call. “Trump is out here saying that we’re poisoning the blood of this country. And the facts actually don’t bear that out.”

    Trump directly addressed the murder of University of Georgia nursing student Laken Riley last week. Police have arrested a Venezuelan migrant who entered the country illegally, but was allowed to stay as his immigration case was processed. Trump and other Republicans have seized on the case as an example of the dangers migrants pose to U.S. citizens. 

    On Thursday, Trump said he had spoken to Riley’s parents.

    “She was a beautiful young woman. She was a great person, best nursing student there was. I spoke to her parents yesterday. They’re incredible people that are devastated beyond belief,” Trump said. “The monster that was charged in the death is an illegal alien migrant who was let into our country and released into our communities by crooked Joe Biden. He’s crooked — I took the name away from Hillary [Clinton]. Because she’s no longer relevant, I guess.”

    According to an AP-NORC poll in January, the share of voters concerned about immigration rose to 35% from 27% last year. Fifty-five percent of Republicans say the government needs to focus on immigration in 2024, while 22% of Democrats listed immigration as a priority. That’s up from 45% and 14%, respectively, from December 2022.

    The number of people who are illegally crossing the U.S. border has been rising for years for complicated reasons that include climate change, war and unrest in other nations, the economy, and cartels that see migration as a cash cow.

    The administration’s approach has been to pair crackdowns at the border with increasing legal pathways for migrants designed to steer people into arriving by plane with sponsors, not illegally on foot to the border.

    Arrests for illegal crossings fell by half in January, but there were record highs in December. The numbers of migrants flowing across the U.S-Mexico border have far outpaced the capacity of an immigration system that has not been substantially updated in decades. Trump and Republicans claim Biden is refusing to act, but absent a law change from Congress, any major policies are likely to be challenged or held up in court.

    “I am an immigrant myself, I came to the U.S. when I was a young kid. I know how difficult it is to go through the immigration process, to become a citizen, to to struggle with poverty and to struggle through the process,” said Garcia, the California Democrat who came to the U.S. from Peru as a young child. “We actually could fix our system, but Donald Trump is not interested in it, so I personally take great offense to the way he characterizes people like myself and my family. And the way he is essentially characterizing essentially going back to a system where he would forcibly remove people like me, like my family from our homes and neighborhoods into detention or to be deported.”

    “It is sick,” Garcia added. 

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    Lawmakers pass antisemitism bill in Tallahassee

    The Florida Legislature unanimously approved legislation Thursday adopting a new definition of antisemitism. 

    The final version of the bill was passed by the House during the first-ever “Israel Day” at the Florida Capitol. The Senate passed its version of the bill on Wednesday.

    The International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance drafted the definition Florida is adopting. If approved, Florida would become the 13th state to do so.

    The legislation’s definition of antisemitism is as follows:

    “Antisemitism is a certain perception of Jews, which may be expressed as hatred toward Jews. Rhetorical and physical manifestations of antisemitism are directed toward Jewish or non-Jewish individuals and/or their property, toward Jewish community institutions and religious facilities.”

    More information on the IHRA definition is available online.

    Supporters say Florida’s legislation empowers prosecutors and police to address hate crimes more effectively.

    The bill, House Bill 148, now awaits Gov. Ron DeSantis’ consideration. 

    “We will continue this fight to tempt down inequality in the State of Florida and raise up those who need to be raised,” said the bill sponsor, Democratic State Rep. Mike Gotlieb.

    Antisemitism nationwide is on the rise, according to the Anti-Defamation League.

    “When conflict erupts in Israel, antisemitic incidents soon follow in the U.S. and globally,” said ADL CEO Jonathan Greenblatt.

    “You can use the definition when there is a hate crime,” said Boynton Beach Democratic State Sen. Lori Berman. “You can use the definition when there’s discrimination.” 

    Despite bipartisan support, at least one lawmaker voiced concern.

    Palm Bay Republican Rep. Randy Fine said he supports the bill, but fears that some local leaders may not utilize it.

    “It will not matter if we don’t demand that they act on these laws as we pass them,” said Fine, a Jewish lawmaker. 

    DeSantis often touts Florida as the “most pro-Israel state” in the nation. 

    To date, he’s embarked upon two Israeli trade missions and provided logistical support to Israel after the Oct. 7 attack. 

    “Florida is doing everything right, and it should be done across the country and across the world,” said Consul General of Israel to Florida, Maor Elbaz-Starinsky. 

    Other pro-Israel legislation this session includes policy boosting security at Jewish schools and a new state holiday — Holocaust Remembrance Day.

    The 2024 Legislative Session ends March 8.

    Short-term spending bill passes both chambers of Congress

    The Senate and the House have both passed another short-term spending measure Thursday that would keep one set of federal agencies operating through March 8 and another set through March 22, narrowly avoiding a shutdown for parts of the federal government that would otherwise kick in Saturday.

    The measure now heads to President Joe Biden’s desk, where he is expected to sign it quickly.

    In a 320 to 99 vote, the House passed a short-term funding agreement to avoid a partial government shutdown Friday. Florida Republicans were divided on the measure. 

    Twelve of the 20 Florida Republicans in the House voted against the short-term spending bill, including Reps. Anna Paulina Luna and Matt Gaetz.

    “If it were up to me, if I was a speaker, I’d say look, we need those 12 standalone appropriations bills, we need to determine exactly where we can make some of those cuts,” Luna said. “And frankly, remember, it’s been a really long time since we’ve balanced the budget.”

    The short-term deal followed a meeting between congressional leaders of both parties with President Joe Biden at the White House earlier this week. It sets new funding deadlines for March 8 and March 22.

    It does not include the $95 billion foreign aid package for wartime funding to Ukraine and Israel that passed the Senate earlier this month.

    The funding agreement also does not include any new border provisions as both Biden and former President Donald Trump took dueling visits to the U.S. Southern Border Thursday.

    House Freedom Caucus members, including Luna, had sought a 1% across the board cut to discretionary spending.

    House Speaker Mike Johnson defended the deal opposed by many in his own party Thursday.

    “The appropriations process is ugly. Democracy is ugly. This is the way it works every year, always has, except that we’ve instituted some new innovations,” Johnson said. “We broke the omnibus fever, right? That’s how Washington has been run for years. We’re trying to turn the aircraft carrier back to real budgeting and spending reform. This was an important thing to break it up into smaller pieces.”

    This is the fourth extension of the government funding deadline since September. Lawmakers say they are hopeful a fifth won’t be needed, and that funding for the full budget year that began five months ago will soon be approved.

    Joseph Konig

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