2/08/2021

White House News (白宮消息) | Feb. 8, 2021

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Michael Cohen: Does Donald Trump have a 'secret' pardon? | 60 Minutes Australia
Feb 7, 2021

He may no longer be President, but Donald Trump can’t stop making headlines. In the next few days he goes on trial in the US Senate charged with inciting his supporters’ rampage on the Capitol building last month. But while the world was shocked by the shameful attack on democracy, Trump’s former attorney, Michael Cohen, wasn’t surprised at all. In fact two years ago he predicted it. Cohen used to be The Donald’s closest ally but ended up an enemy, and in prison, when he took the fall for covering up Trump’s affair with porn star Stormy Daniels. And now, in an extraordinary interview with Tara Brown, filmed while he serves the remainder of his sentence under house arrest in New York, Cohen is happy to spill all of his old boss’s dirty secrets.



There was only one Democrat among the visitors to a gun show in West Virginia
Americans voice 'legitimate fears' of civil war as Trump's impeachment trial looms


Many Americans are afraid of a looming civil war-style conflict, amid the second impeachment trial of Donald Trump.

Feb. 8 - American politics often baffles outsiders but on the eve of Donald Trump's second impeachment trial, it really has never been weirder.

Politicians promoting a delusional conspiracy claiming America is in the grips of a child-trafficking liberal cabal backed by the deep state are now sitting in the US Congress.

And Mr Trump's grand fiction that the election was stolen from him, is believed by millions.

From our soundings in West Virginiamany also fear the country is sliding towards civil war, backing claims in recent polls that more than half of Americans fear as much.

To gauge the mood of conservative rural America we went to a gun show where there was no shortage of people openly afraid of looming civil conflict.

"I'm very worried about this country, where it's going," gun dealer and wood carver Scott Pickett told me.

"If it keeps heading down this same way, they're going to push people into another civil war and I don't want to be here then."


From our soundings in West Virginiamany also fear the country is sliding towards civil war, backing claims in recent polls that more than half of Americans fear as much.

To gauge the mood of conservative rural America we went to a gun show where there was no shortage of people openly afraid of looming civil conflict.

"I'm very worried about this country, where it's going," gun dealer and wood carver Scott Pickett told me.

"If it keeps heading down this same way, they're going to push people into another civil war and I don't want to be here then."     source

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Former US Ambassador to Syria Robert Stephen Ford, 2020.
Robert Ford’s slanted Article in favor of the Turkish expansionist Policy in the Middle East and beyond!

Feb. 8 - A misguided vision of Former Ambassador Ford’s article published on January 25th, 2021; recommends that the US should rely on Turkey and Russia in Syria. Ambassador Ford mentioned Russia, but Russia is only lip service, his main lobby is Turkey. If President Erdogan is to write an op-ed to defend his expanist policy in Syria; he most likely wouldn’t be able to defend his expansionist policy in the way that Ambassador Ford defends it.

Mr. Ford’s ill-advised venture will create more chaos, more wars, more refugees, more displacement of people, and more ethnic cleansing than the Middle East could ask for. Turkey’s invasion of sovereign states and neighboring countries under the cover of their own security is illegal under international law. Turkish forces are fighting in Iraq, and along with their cohort Jihadis, are also fighting in SyriaLibya, and in Nagorno Karabakh-Armenia. President Erdogan is threatening the Greek government over gas and oil explorations in the eastern Mediterranean.

President Erdogan’s Turkish expansionist flail upheaval policy is similar to Benito Mussolini’s expansionist policy of imperial colonization of the mid 1920’s to early 1940’s on the Horn of Africa, in Somalia, Ethiopia, British Somaliland, and Libya…
“Biden Should rely rely on Turkey, Russia in Syria”     continue to read
Robert Stephen Ford (born 1958) is a retired American diplomat who served as the United States Ambassador to Algeria from 2006 to 2008 and the United States Ambassador to Syria from 2010 to 2014.

Syria
In 2010, U. S. President Barack Obama nominated Ford as the first U.S. Ambassador to Syria in five years (pending U.S. Senate approval).[6] In December 2010, after the U.S. Senate had failed to act on the nomination, Obama used a recess appointment to secure Ford the position.[7] The Senate then confirmed Ford by unanimous consent on October 3, 2011.[8][9] As a result, Ford no longer was serving under a recess appointment and therefore could have held the position until Obama's term ended in January 2017.

On October 24, 2011, Ford was recalled from Syria; the U.S. State Department cited "credible threats" to his safety.[10] Ford had attracted the ire of pro-Assad Syrians due to his strong support of the Syrian uprising. According to American officials, Ford had been attacked by an armed pro-government mob, and Syrian state television had begun running reports blaming him for the formation of death squads similar to those in Iraq. This led to fears that supporters of the Syrian government might try to kill him.[11]

In August 2013, it was reported by The New York Times that U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry had recommended that Ford serve as the next U.S. Ambassador to Egypt, following the incumbent ambassador, Anne W. Patterson, being nominated to serve as the Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern Affairs – the head of the Bureau of Near Eastern Affairs within the U.S. Department of State, which oversees the Middle East.[12]  On February 4, 2014, officials of the U.S. State Department said that Ford was retiring[13] and on February 28 announced his departure.[14]  The U.S. States Department announced the appointment of Daniel Rubinstein as U.S. special envoy for Syria on March 14.[15]  In December 2018, Ford declared his support for President Trump's decision to withdraw US troops from Syria, describing it as "essentially correct."[16]

Actions in Syria
He visited Hama, where he was cheered by protesters.[17]  He met with Hassan Abdul-Azim, and was attacked with eggs and tomatoes by government supporters.[18][19]

2/06/2021

White House News (白宮消息) | Feb. 6, 2021

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FEBRUARY 5, 2021
President Biden Delivers Remarks on the Economy
President Biden delivered remarks on the state of the economy and recovery efforts. The president said Republican’s proposed COVID-19 package deal does not go far enough and he is more concerned about getting help to Americans than “getting bogged down in lengthy negotiations.” He also said he is not willing to cut the size of stimulus checks from $1,400. 


Biden pledges to "act fast" on stimulus
​Biden leaves Republicans behind to fast track $1.9tn bill

US President Joe Biden is forging ahead with plans to ram through a $1.9tn (£1.4tn) relief bill without Republican support after disappointing jobs data.


Feb. 6 - Despite an Obama-era economist's warnings the stimulus package may be too big, Mr Biden vowed to "act fast".

The new president's fellow Democrats run Congress, and plan to pass the final bill using a budget manoeuvre.

Mr Biden's speech is being seen by US media as a shift in tone after he entered office pledging bipartisanship.

He met 10 Republican senators at the White House on Monday in the hope of a breakthrough, but brushed off their counter-proposal for a slimmed-down $618bn coronavirus relief bill.

Speaking at the White House on Friday after meeting congressional Democratic leaders, he said: "A lot of folks are losing hope.

What did Biden say?​
"I believe the American people are looking right now to their government for help, to do our job, to not let them down.
"So I'm going to act. I'm going to act fast. I'd like to be doing it with the support of Republicans. They're just not willing to go as far as I think we have to go."     more details

Related Articles:
When might life in US return to normal?
US job growth sluggish as virus hampers recovery
Biden ends deadlock over WTO leadership
'It's OK to have a bad day'

FEBRUARY 5, 2021
White House Daily Briefing
White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki answered a range of questions from reporters on the economic relief plan, foreign policy priorities, the president’s pre-Superbowl interview and the recent jobs numbers. White House Council of Economic Advisers member Jared Bernstein also joined the briefing and gave remarks at the top on jobs and the economy.
FEBRUARY 5, 2021
Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene News Conference
Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) held a news conference the day after the House voted to remove her from her committee assignments. “Yesterday, when the Democrats and 11 of my Republican colleagues decided to strip me of my committee assignments … they actually stripped my district of their voice. They stripped my voters of having representation to work for them,” she said. The freshman representative later added she felt “freed” after being removed from her assignments. “If I was on a committee, I’d be wasting my time because my conservative values wouldn’t be heard and neither would my districts'.” She also criticized Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY), who she said “faked her outrage with another hoax” when describing her experience during the January 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol. Rep. Taylor Greene called the Senate impeachment trial a scam and expressed her support for former President Trump. “Republican voters support him still. The party is his. It doesn’t belong to anybody else.”

PBS NewsHour full episode, Feb. 5, 2021
Feb 6, 2021
Friday on the NewsHour, the economy faces an uneven recovery as daily coronavirus deaths top 5,000 for the first time, and Congress begins to move closer to passing a relief package. Also, six months after a massive explosion in Beirut a worsening pandemic complicates the city's long recovery, and David Brooks and Jonathan Capehart consider the Republicans Party's identity crisis.

2/05/2021

White House News (白宮消息) | Feb. 5, 2021

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President Biden speaks at the State Department on Thursday.
White House convening National Security Council meeting for Iran nuclear program - Axios

Scoop: White House convening NSC to talk Iran

Feb. 5 - In a sign of the urgency President Biden feels about Iran, the White House is convening a National Security Council principals committee meeting Friday focused on the country's nuclear program, people familiar with the matter tell Axios.

Why it matters: The Biden administration is still refining its strategy about how to resurrect the 2015 deal that President Trump backed out of in 2018, but it wants to work with allies to slow Iran's effort to enrich uranium and prevent an arms races in the Middle East.     continue to read


New U.S. President Joe Biden is pitching a tough stance against Russia.
Biden Says No More U.S. 'Rolling Over' to Russia

Feb. 5 - President Joe Biden said Thursday the United States will no longer be "rolling over in the face of Russia's aggressive actions" and demanded release of jailed opposition leader Alexei Navalny.

In toughly worded remarks pivoting from his predecessor Donald Trump's muted approach to Moscow, Biden warned of "advancing authoritarianism" in China and Russia.
The speech at the State Department thrust Russia back onto the front burner of the U.S. diplomatic agenda after four years during which Trump largely pushed the worsening relationship with Moscow to the side and consistently refused to criticize Putin.

Biden said that in his first phone call with the Russian leader since taking office on January 20 he "made it clear" to Putin that the relationship was changing.     source


FEBRUARY 4, 2021
White House Daily Briefing

White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki was joined by National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan to discuss foreign policy and news of the day. Mr. Sullivan announced the U.S. will no longer support offensive operations in Yemen. He also said the administration will issue a memorandum prioritizing LGBTQ human rights in foreign policy and discussed possible targeted sanctions against Myanmar officials. The press secretary reiterated the importance of passing COVID-19 relief and the goal of bipartisan support for the package. 

FEBRUARY 4, 2021
House Oversight Hearing on Trump Administration's Family Separation Immigration Policy
Michael Horowitz, inspector general with the Justice Department, testified before the House Oversight and Reform Committee on his team’s investigative report on the Trump administration’s family separation policy at the southern border. Investigators concluded that former Attorney General Jeff Sessions knew enforcing a zero-tolerance policy of prosecuting all adults who cross the border illegally would result in children being separated from their parents. The report also found that there was poor coordination between the agencies tasked with implementing the policy and the Health and Human Services Department who would be caring for the separated children. In addition, investigators found that a system to track the children’s parents as they went through the stages of prosecution was lacking. The Trump administration’s strict policy to prosecute adult migrants started in May 2018. According to legal documents, thousands of children were separated as a result. Mr. Horowitz said, as of this hearing, approximately 500 children had yet to be reunited with their parents.

2/04/2021

White House News (白宮消息) | Feb. 4, 2021

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FEBRUARY 2, 2021
White House Daily Briefing

White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki 
held a briefing to discuss the administration’s policy priorities. She addressed the current situation regarding progress on the next coronavirus pandemic relief package after the president met with Republican senators in the Oval Office and spoke to Democratic senators over lunch. She also responded to a variety of questions regarding the administration’s immigration policies, Russia’s sentencing of opposition leader Alexei Navalny, former President Trump’s impeachment trial, President Biden’s interactions with various world leaders including China’s President Xi Jinping, and the future of Space Force.

White House press secretary Jen Psaki speaks during a press briefing at the White House, Wednesday, Feb. 3, 2021, in Washington. Even as President Joe Biden gathers with senators and works the phones to push for a giant COVID relief package, his team is increasingly focused on selling the plan directly to voters.

Stuck in DC, Biden team pitches rest of US on big virus aid


Feb. 4 - Even as President Joe Biden gathers with senators and works the phones with Capitol Hill to push for a $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief package, his team is increasingly focused on selling the plan directly to voters.

His administration has done 60-plus interviews with national TV and radio shows. There have been spots on local TV news and briefings last week with more than 50 groups that ranged from General Motors to Meals on Wheels America and Planned Parenthood. One of the main goals is to stop people from getting bogged down in the tangle of partisan deal-making and convince them that every penny of the “go big” package is needed.

“The public is not getting caught up in process — what they want is results,” said Cedric Richmond, the White House director of public engagement. “People these days are not worried about the inside-the-beltway terminology. They’re looking at who’s doing what to help.”     continue to read


FEBRUARY 3, 2021
Rules Committee Debates Rule on Removing Representative Greene from House Committees
The House Rules Committee debated the rule to remove a member of Congress from House Committees. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) came under heavy criticism for her controversial statements, including suggesting violence against members of Congress and claims that school shootings are “false flag” operations. Committee chair Jim McGovern (D-MA) began his opening statement saying, “We have never had a hearing like one this before,” and accused Republican leadership of refusing to hold Rep. Greene accountable. He later added that the purpose of the hearing was not about canceling someone with different beliefs, but about accountability, and that “if this isn’t the bottom line, I don’t know what the hell the bottom line is.” The resolution passed along party lines and will be voted on by the full House of Representatives. 
Republicans In Disarray Over Greene And Trump Impeachment | The 11th Hour | MSNBC
Feb 3, 2021
With one week until Trump faces his second Senate impeachment trial, Republicans are at odds over how to deal with that and the controversies surrounding Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene. This as Biden takes action on asylum and child separation saying he’s ‘eliminating bad policy.’
Takeaways from legal filings for Trump’s impeachment trial

Feb. 4 - WASHINGTON (AP) — The legal sparring around Donald Trump’s impeachment trial is underway, with briefs filed this week laying out radically different positions ahead of next week’s Senate trial.


House prosecutors and the former president’s defense team are putting forward their arguments about Trump’s role in the Jan. 6 riot at the U.S. Capitol and on the legality of even holding a trial. They’re also debating the First Amendment and a blunt assessment by Democrats that the riot posed a threat to the presidential line of succession.

Here are some of the takeaways from the arguments of both sides     continue to read

2/03/2021

White House News (白宮消息) | Feb. 3, 2021

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US promotes new sanctions against Russia for Navalny's arrest
The bill will be presented this week

Feb. 3 - The U.S. Senate prepares a new law on sanctions against the Russian government, because of the sentence in the case of Alexei Navalny. Mitt Romney, the Senator from the Republican party reported that on his Twitter account.

"Strong leaders don’t have to jail adversaries to maintain power. First, Alexei Navalny was poisoned, and when unsuccessful, the Putin regime has now jailed him following a sham of a trial. We'll be introducing legislation this week to sanction those responsible for these acts", he wrote.

Earlier, we reported that the Moscow court sentenced Alexei Navalny for 3,5 years of imprisonment in the standard-regime penal colony. Thus, the suspended sentence in the "Yves Rocher" case became the jail time for the leading Russian opposition figure, Novaya Gazeta reports.


Russian Federal Penitentiary Service asked the court to change the suspended sentence to the actual prison term. The authority claimed that Navalny allegedly violated the requirements of his probation period; he never showed up when summoned by the inspection twice a month.      source


Related Articles:

FEBRUARY 2, 2021
White House Daily Briefing

White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki held a briefing to discuss the administration’s policy priorities. She addressed the current situation regarding progress on the next coronavirus relief package after the president met with Republican Senators in the Oval Office and spoke to Democratic senators over lunch. She also responded to a variety of questions regarding the administration’s immigration policies, Russia’s sentencing of opposition leader Alexei Navalny, former President Trump’s impeachment trial, President Biden’s interactions with various world leaders including China’s President Xi Jinping, and the future of Space Force.


PBS NewsHour full episode, Feb. 2, 2021
Feb 3, 2021
Tuesday on the NewsHour, President Biden signs executive orders reversing Trump administration policies on family separation, border security and legal migration. Also, Sen. John Barrasso discusses negotiations over a major COVID relief bill, and debates over the risks and benefits of returning to in-person classes in schools reach a fever pitch.

2/02/2021

White House News (白宮消息) | Feb. 2, 2021

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FEBRUARY 1, 2021
White House Daily Briefing

White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki 
held a briefing on the Biden administration’s agenda. The press secretary previewed President Biden’s upcoming meeting with Republican senators on COVID-19 relief package negotiations but gave no timeline on the package being passed. She also discussed the situation in Burma, the stock market and GameStop, and COVID-19 vaccine distribution efforts. 

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Biden doesn’t buy GOP’s Covid pitch
Ten Senate Republicans attempted to sell a compromise to the president.

Jan. 2 - Ten Senate Republicans attempted to sell President Joe Biden Monday night on a coronavirus relief compromise, even as Biden’s own party made plans to leave the GOP in the dust.

In the two-hour meeting, the GOP senators presented their $618 billion counterproposal to Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris, and the president described his own $1.9 trillion plan to the senators. They agreed to keep talking, although senators conceded their discussions were just beginning.

In an interview afterward, Sen. Shelley Moore Capito (R-W.Va.) said the senators argued to Biden that by working together they can move much more quickly than Democrats’ party-line approach to stimulus through reconciliation, which would bypass GOP support. Biden gave no explicit indication he’s going to change his approach and recounted how many times he’d been through budget reconciliation as a senator.

“He did not discourage the thought that the Senate was going to move forward with budget reconciliation. He didn’t tell us that that’s not going to happen,” Capito said. Republicans argued that “if we can hit a sweet spot here we can do this very quickly and that budget reconciliation will be messier. It’s very partisan and it could also be much lengthier.”

Biden has spoken frequently of his ability to work with Senate Republicans after his long Senate service, and simply meeting with the group demonstrates his ability to hear his opposition out. But the reality is this: Republicans oppose Biden’s spending plans and are proposing something far smaller.     continue to read

FEBRUARY 1, 2021
Senate Republicans on COVID-19 Relief Talks with President Biden
Following their two-hour meeting with President Biden to discuss a COVID-19 economic relief package, Republican senators spoke with reporters. Senator Susan Collins (R-ME) said, “I think it was an excellent meeting and we’re very appreciative that as his first official meeting in the Oval Office the president chose to spend so much time with us in a frank and very useful discussion.”

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As Biden and Republicans meet, Democrats prepare to move covid-19 relief alone

Jan. 1 - EMAIL NEWSLETTERS TribLIVE's Daily and Weekly email newsletters deliver the news you want and information you need, right to your inbox.

WASHINGTON — As President Joe Biden met with 10 Republican senators Monday to test the waters of bipartisanship on coronavirus relief, Democrats on Capitol Hill took the first step toward fast-tracking the administration’s $1.9 trillion proposal through a legislative procedure that wouldn’t require GOP support.

Although the Oval Office meeting, Biden’s first with lawmakers, appeared cordial, it may amount to a token demonstration by both sides — an opportunity to hear each other out rather than a negotiation to bridge the massive gulf between them.
A group of 10 moderate GOP lawmakers put forth its counterproposal Sunday, outlining a $618 billion measure that would include more limited direct relief targeted to the neediest individuals, an extension of unemployment benefits through June (under Biden’s plan, it would be extended through September) and funding for vaccine distribution, school reopenings and small business loans, albeit in smaller amounts.

Emerging from the West Wing on Monday evening after a longer-than-expected two-hour conversation, the group’s leader, Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, expressed appreciation that Biden “chose to spend so much time with us” and called the meeting “excellent,” declining to offer details — or criticism — even as she acknowledged the impasse.     more details

2/01/2021

White House News (白宮消息) | Feb. 1, 2021

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Joe Biden will meet 10 Republican senators on Monday afternoon to discuss his $1.9 trillion plan, which many Republicans claim is too high. The counter is less than half that price-tag at $600 billion

Feb. 1 - Joe Biden has invited a group of Republican senators to the White House on Monday afternoon to discuss contentious COVID relief packages, the White House confirmed on Sunday.

The ten senators suggested a more targeted economic relief package, in response to the government's $1.9 trillion proposal.

The group of 10 Republicans, including moderate Senators Mitt Romney, Susan Collins and Lisa Murkowski, sent a letter to Biden on Sunday requesting a meeting to discuss a coronavirus relief package compromise they feel could gain swift support from both parties.     more details


Rep. Devin Nunes.
Scandal-rama: Figures tied to past controversies increasingly land jobs on Team Biden

From Peter Strzok's wife to key figure in Clinton email scandal, the names keep piling up to Republicans dismay.


Feb. 1 - Jake Sullivan was one of the most prolific users of Hillary Clinton's forbidden email server. Now he's Joe Biden's national security adviser.
Undersecretary of State Victoria Nuland previously had ties to Christopher Steele in the Russia scandal.

White House domestic adviser Susan Rice once falsely declared the Benghazi terror attack was provoked by an anti-Muslim video and later wrote the famously curious did-it-by-the-books email in the Russia scandal during her last minutes in he Obama administration.

And top Securities and Exchange Commission enforcement official Melissa Hodgman is married to Peter Strzok, the fired FBI agent who supervised the discredited Crossfire Hurricane probe into Russia-Trump collusion.

As Biden fills out his team, the list of people tied to past scandals and controversy keeps getting bigger And the pattern has some prominent Republicans taking note.

"If you look at the larger picture, the Russia hoaxers, the people that were pushing this out from the very beginning and lying about it after the fact, they're all at the top echelons of the Biden administration," former House Intelligence Committee chairman Devin Nunes (R-Calif.) said Sunday.     continue to read


The Grimsby spy who ‘tipped off’ papers about JFK assassination 25 minutes before Kennedy was shot
A telephone call 25 minutes before the fatal shooting was made to a newspaper in Britain, according to secret papers released by the American Government in October 2017

Feb. 1 - As Joe Biden begins serving as the 46th president of the United States, people have been comparing him to those who came before.

President Biden assumed office on January 20, preceded by Donald Trump, after serving as the 47th vice president from 2009 to 2017 under Barack Obama.

His work is just beginning but it has already been questioned whether he can live up to the ‘top ranked’ presidents, such as Abraham Lincoln, who claims the number one spot, according to Business Insider.

Other notable presidents included George Washington at number two, John F. Kennedy at number 8 and Barack Obama at number 12.

While all US presidents make the history books, it seems strange for the small town of Grimsby, North East Lincolnshire, to be written alongside them.

Back in November 1963, a Grimsby spy reportedly ‘tipped off’ the papers about the impending assassination of US President John F Kennedy.

A telephone call 25 minutes before the fatal shooting was made to a newspaper in Britain, according to secret papers released by the American Government in October 2017.

The documents reveal the Cambridge News received a call shortly after 6pm on November 22, 1963, warning "Call the American Embassy in London for some big news".

And it is thought the call was made by Albert Osborne, a Grimsby-born former soldier turned spy working for the Soviet Union.     more details

MONDAY
February 1, 2021