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Tag: Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer

  • President Biden seeks to reassure lawmakers after meeting with Minority House Leader Jeffries

    President Biden seeks to reassure lawmakers after meeting with Minority House Leader Jeffries

    Washington (CNN) — President Joe Biden is launching a delayed outreach campaign to key groups of lawmakers – the kind of effort Democrats have long called for – after he met Thursday with House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries following the president’s closely watched solo news conference.

    In the meeting, Jeffries “directly expressed the full breadth of insight, heartfelt perspectives and conclusions about the path forward that the Caucus has shared in our recent time together,” the New York Democrat wrote in a letter to his colleagues on Friday.

    But Jeffries did not offer Biden one key thing: His endorsement.

    A person familiar with the meeting said Jeffries “bluntly” shared the views of the caucus – as he stated in his letter – but intentionally did not offer an endorsement or say publicly that the decision is Biden’s to make.

    While it is uncertain if Biden directly asked Jeffries for his tacit endorsement, a person familiar with the matter said, Jeffries did not extend it at the meeting or in the public letter released Friday morning.

    Following the conversation, the president has embarked on a series of calls to key groups of Democratic lawmakers – the kind of enterprise that many in Congress asked him to make weeks ago following his disastrous debate performance. CNN reported Friday that Biden had calls with the political wings of the Congressional Asian Pacific American Caucus and the Congressional Hispanic Caucus on Friday and a Saturday virtual meeting with both the New Democrat Coalition and the Congressional Progressive Caucus, according to sources familiar with those meetings.

    Ahead of those meetings, defections in Biden’s Democratic coalition in Congress continued.

    Biden’s performance during his news conference, which lasted just under an hour and during which he fielded 19 questions from reporters on topics ranging from his mental capabilities to foreign policy, was much stronger than his appearance during the CNN presidential debate, but it did not stem the steady stream of House Democrats coming out against Biden’s efforts to seek a second term.

    More than a dozen Democratic House members and at least one Democratic senator have publicly called on Biden to withdraw from his reelection campaign. That list includes multiple House members in the nation’s most competitive congressional districts, but also senior Democrats on influential committees and members in safely Democratic seats.

    One of those Democrats, Rep. Mike Levin of California, told Biden directly on the Congressional Hispanic Caucus call that he should step aside, according to someone briefed on the call. It’s the first time CNN has reported on a member of Congress directly telling Biden to drop out of the race.

    Dozens of other Democrats have stopped short of calling for Biden to end his campaign, but have either expressed concerns about Biden’s chances, said he’ll lose out right or remain publicly undecided. Still, more than 70 members of the House and Senate have publicly reaffirmed their support for Biden as the party’s presidential nominee following his disastrous debate performance late last month.

    The top Democrats in Congress – Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer and Jeffries – have made a series of public statement supporting Biden’s bid this week. Former Speaker Nancy Pelosi – who remains in Congress and is among the most influential members of the party – has privately expressed her concerns, CNN reported Thursday night.

    Biden last night was able to provide incisive remarks on everything from Israel to Russia to China to gun control in the United States. But he also had two notable flubs: During a NATO event before the presser, Biden introduced Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky as “President Putin,” and repeated a similar mistake during the presser, using Donald Trump’s name to refer to Vice President Kamala Harris.

    The evening served as a sort of Rorschach test for Democrats’ feelings on Biden. Those who remain firmly in his corner seized on his extended answers on wonky foreign policy issues to prove he still has what it takes to lead the country effectively, while his Democratic doubters used his verbal miscues to reinforce their calls for someone to replace the president on the top of the ticket.

    Biden, for his part, came off as chastened during the news conference and was less defiant than in previous appearances. While he told ABC’s George Stephanopoulos last week that only the “Lord Almighty” could convince him to remove himself from the race, Biden on Thursday night opened the door for other scenarios in which he would drop out of the contest. Pressed on whether he might reconsider his stance if he was shown data that had Harris performing better against Trump, he offered some openness to that possibility.

    “No, unless they came back and said there’s no way you can win,” Biden said.

    Biden’s campaign, meanwhile, has bluntly acknowledged the challenges it has faced since his debate performance two weeks ago.

    Biden campaign chair Jen O’Malley Dillon acknowledged to staff in a call Thursday that the period after Biden’s disastrous debate performance have been “hard,” “very bad” and “bad f***ing weeks,” a source who was on the call said. Some of the details of what O’Malley Dillon said were first reported by Axios.

    O’Malley Dillon acknowledged when she fumbled words that she had not slept much recently. She tried to rally the troops on this call after first bluntly accepting that the most recent stretch has been deeply challenging, the source said.

    Her case, as this source described it, was: “It’s not just that we feel like we can win. We have a plan to get there.”

    She laid out both external and internal polling numbers, and made the case that the data still backs up that Biden can defeat Trump.

    O’Malley Dillon argued to her team that the Biden reelection campaign is going through a moment that they are “built for,” and that it is because of the team that the president would ultimately win.

    Itoro N. Umontuen

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  • GlobalFoundries, politicians talk expansion

    GlobalFoundries, politicians talk expansion

    MALTA, N.Y. (NEWS10) — The message on Tuesday was clear: invest in America’s future by bringing back manufacturing. GlobalFoundries opened its first chip manufacturing site in Malta 15 years ago, the new investments will go towards expanding the existing site and building a new one next door. 

    “This is the future for upstate New York. This is the future for America, that we’re not making these things overseas anymore. We’re not gonna let foreign countries hold us hostage, they’re gonna be made right here in America and in Malta,” said Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer.

    The semiconductor, or microchip, market is expected to double over the next decade. When the new chip fabrication site is fully operational, GlobalFoundries expects to produce more than 1 million chips a year, tripling its current output and that includes one specifically for the military.

    U.S. Secretary of Commerce Gina Raimondo said this announcement is not just exciting for the Capital Region but for the nation as a whole. 

    “The Department of Defense will finally have a steady, secure, domestic supply of these chips. That’s a big deal, that is a big, big deal,” said Raimondo.

    The Department of Commerce awarded GlobalFoundries a record $1.5 billion grant to build a new fabrication site and expand the existing one, as part of the CHIPS and Science Act.

    Another $1.6 billion will be covered by loans and $575 million will be invested by News York state. The rest will be covered by the company. The project is slated to total more than $12 billion.

    GlobalFoundries President and CEO Dr. Thomas Caulfield said the expansion will create 1,500 permanent manufacturing jobs. 

    The company laid off about 220 employees in 2022. Caulfield said there may be potential to rehire some of those employees.

    “We are always looking to build our workforce and part of our industry, the cyclicality, has ebbs and flows in employment. More times than not we are growing more than we are shrinking,” said Caulfield.

    Governor Kathy Hochul believes this is the beginning of a historic shift that will change the nation’s trajectory by bringing back manufacturing.

    Never again can we be so dependent on foreign supply chains and all the uncertainty around political circumstances that we have no control over. We can’t let our economy come down to that,” said Hochul. “We are competitive, we don’t like to lose.”

    A timeline for the project was not clear, however GlobalFoundries did share plans to develop workforce training programs with local colleges and universities. 

    $15 million will be invested in cultivating a local pipeline of talent, which will also include internship and apprenticeship programs, as well as K-12 STEM outreach.

    Carina Dominguez

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  • Can marijuana be legal in US? Chuck Schumer thinks a new act can pave the way – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

    Can marijuana be legal in US? Chuck Schumer thinks a new act can pave the way – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

    Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer thinks a federal legalisation of marijuana might be a reality in the near future due to the SAFER Act, which would reduce the risks to businesses in the cannabis industry.

    He added that public support for recreational cannabis has increased dramatically in the past 10 years, which was recently evidenced in Ohio as well.

    It would provide the industry with access to banking services- something that has been evasive since states first began to legalize recreational marijuana more than a decade ago.

    “Its time has come. The people are on our side,” told Chuck to Yahoo News in an interview. He added that public support for recreational cannabis has increased dramatically in the past 10 years, which was recently evidenced in Ohio as well. The traditional Republican stronghold voted to legalize recreational marijuana last week, becoming the 24th state to do so.

    Additionally, he thinks the SAFER Banking Act is a boom for the cannabis industry. The Secure and Fair Enforcement Regulation Banking Act, or SAFER Banking Act, was passed by a bipartisan majority in the Senate Banking Committee in late September. It would allow financial institutions to shell out more small business loans while also providing legal protection to banks that work with cannabis retailers.

    Previous versions of the bill were approved seven times by the House but were not able to get the sixty votes required to pass the Senate. Now Chuck claims that “as soon…

    Original Author Link click here to read complete story..

    MMP News Author

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  • How the Democrats Rallied

    How the Democrats Rallied

    By now you’ve surely heard: Reports of the Democrats’ inevitable defeat this November (might) have been exaggerated. The party infamous for its disarray is suddenly passing legislation left and right (well, center), making a mockery of its effete opposition, and scoring huge abortion-rights victories in Republican strongholds. Inflation may have peaked, and President Joe Biden slayed a terrorist (while sick with COVID). On Capitol Hill, Democrats finally mounted an effective case against former President Donald Trump, who, by the way, had his mansion searched by the FBI for the possible pilfering of nuclear and other highly sensitive secrets.

    The Democrats’ recent hot streak has political prognosticators reassessing the party’s once-brutal outlook for this fall’s midterm elections. Its chances of retaining control of the Senate and swing-state governorships are rising, and although Democrats remain an underdog in the battle for the House, a GOP majority isn’t the sure thing it once was. Republicans have nominated highly flawed candidates in key Senate races (most notably Dr. Mehmet Oz in Pennsylvania and Herschel Walker in Georgia), and Democrats have gained ground in the closely watched generic-ballot polling measure.

    Democrats have plenty of reason for caution. Polls are notoriously unreliable in August, and recent elections have shown that political fortunes can change fast. Biden’s lackluster approval ratings remain a clear drag for the party, and even a slowdown in inflation means prices will remain high for a while. The president’s party historically loses seats in a midterm election even when voters are happy about the economy; the Democrats’ majorities in Congress are tiny to begin with. Yet the party’s prospects are clearly better now than they were back in the spring, thanks in large measure to three main developments.

    The Overturning of Roe

    If Democrats somehow maintain control of the House, or even lose their majority by less than expected, history will look at June 23—the date that the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade. The 5–4 decision authored by Justice Samuel Alito was not a surprise to political junkies, but surveys suggest that it stunned rank-and-file voters who consistently told pollsters that they did not believe the end of Roe was coming. “It’s always been theoretical. People thought, Oh, they won’t go that far. And now it’s here,” Kelly Dietrich, a longtime Democratic operative who founded the National Democratic Training Committee, told me.

    The clearest signal of an electoral backlash came just six weeks later in Kansas, when voters in the solidly Republican state overwhelmingly defeated an amendment that would have allowed the legislature to ban abortion. Democrats, however, have seen indications of higher engagement in several elections in which abortion was not directly on the ballot. In special elections in Nebraska and Minnesota, Democrats lost both House races but kept the gap several points below Trump’s 2020 margin of victory in each district. They performed better in Washington State’s nonpartisan primaries than they did in comparable contests in 2010 and 2014, both GOP “red wave” years. And in Alaska, the party exceeded expectations in a special House election, positioning Democrats to possibly capture a seat that the party has not held in more than 50 years.

    Polls show Democratic enthusiasm for voting in the midterms—a data point in which they had severely lagged behind Republicans—spiking after the decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization. Dietrich told me that registrations for candidate trainings have also surged in the past two months, and new Democratic voter registrations have significantly outpaced Republican ones in states where abortion rights are at risk, such as Wisconsin and Michigan, according to data compiled by TargetSmart, a Democratic firm.

    Joe Manchin Gets to Yes

    After more than a year of on-and-off-again negotiations, the Senate’s Hamlet on the Potomac finally agreed to a deal with Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer to back legislation lowering prescription-drug prices and making the nation’s largest-ever investment in the fight against climate change. The oddly named Inflation Reduction Act, which doesn’t do much to tame inflation but will reduce the deficit, hands an enormous and long-sought victory to Biden and the Democrats just in time for the fall campaign.

    The law contains only a fraction of Biden’s original transformative vision, but because most Democrats had given up on Manchin entirely, they were ecstatic at his surprise, eleventh-hour decision to support a robust climate, health, and tax package. The elements of the law poll exceedingly well with key constituencies, making it an easy—and timely—issue for Democratic candidates to campaign on this fall.

    Whether the Inflation Reduction Act by itself will boost the party in the polls is hard to say. But its enactment is the latest in a string of legislative achievements for Biden, including the passage of a modest gun-reform bill, the CHIPS Act to support high-tech manufacturing, and the PACT Act to help veterans exposed to toxic burn pits. Along with last year’s $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan and the $1 trillion infrastructure law, the recent run should erase the image of a do-nothing Congress and a Democratic Party that was seen as squandering its two years in power. “It’s an opportunity—almost a mandate—for Democrats to get out there and brag,” Dietrich said. “Democrats can’t be humble anymore.”

    The January 6 Hearings: This Summer’s Surprising Smash TV Hit

    Many cynics in media had low expectations for the hearings that the House Select Committee on January 6 would hold. But Democrats running the panel hired a former ABC News executive to help produce the events, and the result was a series of newsy and often riveting hearings that drew strong TV ratings and built a compelling case against Trump. The starring role of Vice Chair Liz Cheney of Wyoming lent the hearings a bipartisan sheen and helped obscure the lack of involvement from most other Republicans, and the committee made a smart decision to almost exclusively feature testimony from current and former Trump confidants rather than famous critics of the former president.

    Did the hearings change public opinion? For Democrats, the early evidence is mixed at best, and it’s possible that this month’s FBI search of Trump’s Florida home helped him consolidate support among Republicans all over again. Yet the hearings succeeded in reminding voters of the horror of the attack on the Capitol and what many of them disliked most about Trump. To that end, Democrats believed the hearings helped energize their base about the urgency of the fall elections, potentially protecting against a drop in turnout that would seal their defeat.


    The biggest question about the Democrats’ newfound momentum is how long it will last. Did the Supreme Court’s abortion ruling and the party’s flurry of legislative success in Congress represent a decisive turning point, or merely a brief calm before the crashing of a red wave? Republicans have history and, they believe, political gravity on their side. Biden’s approval ratings have ticked up a few points to an average of 40 percent, but that dismal standing would still ordinarily point to a rout for a president’s party in November. Democrats are left to hope that this is no ordinary year, and if they do come out ahead in the fall, this summer’s comeback will likely prove to be the reason.

    Russell Berman

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