4/06/2021

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

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APRIL 5, 2021
President Biden Delivers Easter Message
President Biden delivered remarks on the tradition of Easter at the White House. The president was joined by First Lady Jill Biden and the Easter bunny, wearing a mask. He spoke about the importance of Easter and the impact COVID-19 has had on traditions.
Gold Gains as US Dollar, Treasury Yields Retreat – Biden’s Tax Comments Support

Apr. 6 - ​Gold is making gains in early trading on Tuesday, buoyed as the US dollar and Treasury yields slide lower, which has made it more attractive for holders of other currencies to purchase, driving up its demand and boosting its prices for now. At the time of writing, GOLD is trading at a little above $1,738.


The benchmark 10-year US Treasury yields have slid below 1.7% after rising to the highest level seen in 14 months over the past few sessions. This has also turned the dollar bearish, sending it to an almost two week low against most of its major rivals. While lower bond yields decrease the opportunity cost of bullion and make it more appealing as an investment, a weaker dollar drives up purchases of gold by holders of other currencies, helping push up its demand as a result.

The yellow metal is also trading bullish on the rising prospects for higher corporate taxes in the US, after President Biden stood by this proposal as a way to pay for his recently announced $2 trillion infrastructure plan. In addition, the precious metal’s safe haven appeal also enjoyed support from recent comments from Cleveland Fed President Loretta Mester on the central bank’s plans to remain dovish to boost economic growth further.

However, gains in gold remain limited on rising optimism for rapid economic recovery in the US. Investor confidence in the world’s largest economy remains high on the back of stronger than expected data releases, including the most recent employment report late last week and a record surge in non-manufacturing activity across the US in March.     source from 


On the way to launching his infrastructure plan and batteries initiative.
Threaten His Battery Hopes
A Deadline This Week Adjudicating a South Korean Blood Feud

Apr. 6 - At a fragile moment in the global technological war, President Biden is on the cusp of an extraordinary decision that some say could influence how fast and robustly the U.S. begins to ramp up battery manufacture at a time rivals Europe and China are already well on their way.


​By Saturday, Biden must decide whether to step in and set aside a February ruling by the International Trade Commission banning SK Innovation, an important South Korean company, from making lithium-ion batteries in the United States for a decade. The ruling sided with one of SKI’s blood enemies, LG Chemical, which accused SKI of stealing trade secrets in order to produce a battery it has sold to Ford for its coming electric F-150 pickup and to VW for its new ID.4 crossover SUV. SKI planned to make the batteries for both at a new, $2.6 billion plant in the Georgian town of Commerce, part of a battery awakening in the U.S.

​But the law allows the President to intervene and set aside the verdict, something that has precedent — President Obama did so in a separate battery case during his administration. SKI is pushing Biden lieutenants hard to overturn the ban, arguing that the Commerce factory has national security implications since the U.S. is competing with China to dominate the technologies of the future.     continue

APRIL 5, 2021
White House Daily Briefing
White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki held a briefing on the Biden administration’s agenda. She discussed President Biden’s proposed infrastructure plan, including a possible corporate tax increase and Republican opposition to the bill. She also talked about Major League Baseball’s decision to move the All-Star game out of Georgia in response to their recently passed voting bill. She said the White House has not called on corporate businesses to boycott the state or other states considering similar laws. At the end of the briefing, the Easter Bunny joined the press to pass out Easter eggs. 
New U.S. State Department report shifts policy on the Israel-Palestinian conflict to the left
The Biden team’s acceptance of Palestinian recalcitrance, plus U.S. financial support—with no quid pro quo—is what ensures there will be no end to the conflict.


April 6, FLAME - Supporters of Israel have been rubbing holes in their Ouija boards guessing how much further to the left the Biden administration will push U.S. Middle East policy from Trump’s iconoclastic positions. A new report indicates there will indeed be leftward shifts, but probably not all the way back to Obama’s strategy.

Until now—aside from a few minor pronouncements, a smattering of political appointments and a delay in President Biden calling Prime Minister Netanyahu after assuming office—there has been little by which to gauge Washington’s new approach to the Israel-Palestinian conflict.

However, the release of the 2020 Country Reports on Human Rights Practices this week, which the State Department annually produces, does reveal pointed indications about what Middle East watchers can expect.

On the plus side, the Biden administration used the phrase “Israel, West Bank and Gaza,” introduced by the Trump administration, instead of “Israel and the occupied Palestinian Territories,” the phrase used by the Obama administration.

​On the negative side, the report reintroduced the term “occupied” to describe Israel’s liberation of territory over the Green Line during the 1967 Six-Day War. 

This language shows what some have long suspected—that the new administration will be less friendly than the previous one, but not as unfriendly as that of President Obama, which was one of the most hostile to Israel in recent years. 
Nonetheless, language matters. The use of the terms “occupied” and “occupation” reflects the Palestinian narrative that Israel’s presence in its historic heartland of Judea and Samaria is somehow illegitimate.     more


Overnight Defense: Iran talks set up balancing act for Biden | Pentagon on alert amid Russian saber rattling | Lawmakers urge Pentagon to be pickier about commanders' requests for more troops

Apr. 5 -  All eyes are on Vienna this week as the United States and Iran participate in indirect talks to revive the flagging nuclear deal.

The talks, in which the United States and Iran will meet separately with the other signatories of the deal, are slated to start Tuesday.

Over the weekend, The Hill’s Laura Kelly took a look at how the talks set up a delicate balance for the Biden administration.

The meeting is likely to draw intense scrutiny from Capitol Hill, where hundreds of lawmakers have signed on to a handful of letters to the president and Secretary of State Antony Blinken over their concerns of engaging with Iran.

Why it matters: The United States and Iran are not expected to meet face-to-face, but the Vienna talks mark the most forward movement yet on the Biden administration’s goal to revive the 2015 deal limiting Iran’s nuclear program.
The Biden team and Iran have been in a “who goes first” conundrum over each side's demands.

​At the meeting, U.S. officials will engage with European, Russian and Chinese counterparts over what steps the U.S. can take to achieve a “mutual return” for both America and Iran...     more details

Korea: The Impossible Country: South Korea's Amazing Rise from the Ashes: The Inside Story of an Economic, Political and Cultural Phenomenon

In just fifty years, South Korea has transformed itself from a failed state, ruined and partitioned by war and decades of colonial rule, into an economic powerhouse and a democracy that serves as a model for other countries.

How was it able to achieve this with no natural resources and a tradition of authoritarian rule? Who are the Koreans and how did they accomplish this second Asian miracle? Through a comprehensive exploration of Korean history, culture and society, and interviews with dozens of experts, celebrated journalist Daniel Tudor seeks answers to these and many other fascinating questions. In Korea: The Impossible Country, Tudor touches on topics as diverse as shamanism, clan-ism, the dilemma posed by North Korea, and the growing international appeal of South Korean pop culture.

This new edition has been updated with additional materials on recent events, including the impeachment of Park Geun-hye and the sinking of the Sewol Ferry. Although South Korea has long been overshadowed by Japan and China, Korea: The Impossible Country illuminates how this small country is one of the great success stories of the postwar period.     source

4/05/2021

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

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Republican House and Senate leaders expressed vocal opposition to the president’s infrastructure plan, dismissing it as a "'kitchen sink' of wasteful progressive demands” and criticising its call for new taxes. Biden unveiled the plan on Wednesday, calling it a “once-in-a-generation” chance to fix America’s “crumbling” infrastructure.

Apr. 5 - Republican House and Senate leaders expressed vocal opposition to the president’s infrastructure plan, dismissing it as a "'kitchen sink' of wasteful progressive demands” and criticising its call for new taxes. Biden unveiled the plan on Wednesday, calling it a “once-in-a-generation” chance to fix America’s “crumbling” infrastructure.

The Biden administration plans to move ahead with the president’s $2.3 trillion infrastructure bill even if it has to be pushed through Congress without GOP support, Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm has announced.


“As [President Biden] has said, he was sent to the presidency to do a job for America. And if the vast majority of Americans, Democrats and Republicans, across the country support spending on our country and not allowing us to lose the race globally, then he’s going to do that,” Granholm said, speaking to CNN’s State of the Union on Sunday and responding when pressed whether the White House might pass the infrastructure bill using a process called reconciliation if Republicans don’t support the legislation.


The parliamentary process of reconciliation allows for bills to be passed using simple majorities, instead of the traditional 60 vote majority rule used in the Senate. The current Senate includes 48 Democrats and two Democratic-leaning independents, with Vice President Kamala Harris able to cast the deciding tie-breaking vote in the event of a tie. In the House, Democrats enjoy a thin 219-211 majority.

In her Sunday interview, Granholm went on to say that Biden’s “sincere preference” would be to have Republicans “come to the table” and negotiate.

Asked to comment on the bill’s spending on things not traditionally associated with infrastructure, including over $600 billion in funding for care home facilities and affordable housing, and hundreds of billions of dollars for electric vehicles, Granholm said the bill’s focus is not just roads and bridges, but “creating good-paying sustainable jobs in a whole array of sectors that will help us to win the future.”


Granholm called the bill “the biggest investment in America since FDR – since the New Deal” and said it would help restore America’s industrial base. “It is an amazing statement that finally we’re going to invest in America instead of watching all these other countries beat us to the punch,” she said.


Biden’s infrastructure proposal, formally known as the “American Jobs Plan,” includes four major components, including transportation infrastructure, spending on broadband and upgrading buildings, investments in the care economy, as well as funding for R&D into future technologies. The proposal will require a reform of the tax code, including a corporate tax hike from 21 percent to 28 percent (which would still be below the 35 percent rate it was at before the Trump-backed corporate tax cuts in 2017).     more to read


This April 2, 2021, file photo shows bridges spanning the Allegheny River in downtown Pittsburgh. Republicans in Congress are making the politically brazen bet that it’s more advantageous to oppose President Joe Biden’s ambitious rebuild America agenda than to lend support for the costly $2.3 trillion undertaking for roads, bridges and other infrastructure investments.
Biden’s big infrastructure plan hits McConnell, GOP blockade

WASHINGTON (AP), Apr. 5 — Republicans in Congress are making the politically brazen bet that it’s more advantageous to oppose President Joe Biden’s ambitious rebuild America agenda than to lend support for the costly $2.3 trillion undertaking for roads, bridges and other infrastructure investments.     more


Karine Jean-Pierre.
Lesbian White House official Karine Jean-Pierre becomes first Black woman to host press briefing in 30 years
Lesbian White House official Karine Jean-Pierre has become the first Black woman to host a press briefing in 30 years.

Apr. 5 - Jean-Pierre, deputy press secretary to Jen Psaki in the Biden administration, also became the first queer Black woman to ever host a White House press briefing in the history-making moment.

Karine Jean-Pierre, who previously served as chief of staff to Kamala Harris during the presidential race, delivered a 16-minute long briefing on the Air Force One on 31 March.

During the briefing, Jean-Pierre addressed assembled reporters about Joe Biden’s American Jobs Plan and fielded questions on infrastructure, the Derek Chauvin trial, and taxation plans.    more details


Monday
April 5, 2021
Watch LIVE On April 05 | 10am ET | C-SPAN2
Day 6 of Trial for Derek Chauvin Accused in Death of George Floyd'
Day 6 of the trial for former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin, charged in the death of George Floyd.
Picture

4/03/2021

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

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 APRIL 2, 2021

White House Daily Briefing
White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki was joined by Labor Secretary Marty Walsh to discuss the March jobs report. Secretary Walsh said the job numbers indicate the economic recovery is building momentum but there is still a long way to go. He and the press secretary advocated for the American Jobs Plan saying it could create 19 million jobs over the next decade. 
Former Boston Mayor Marty Walsh Addresses Public as Labor Secretary
Labor Secretary Marty Walsh said during a White House press briefing that employers added more than 900,000 jobs in March and spoke in favor of raising the federal minimum wage.    click for video

Labor Secretary Marty Walsh calls jobs report 'encouraging' but says there's 'a lot of work to do'
​'Good paying jobs for the future'

Apr. 3 - ...For his part, Walsh is touting President Joe Biden's $2 trillion infrastructure plan unveiled Wednesday as a tool to boost the labor market, particularly for communities of color who have faced a higher jobless rate than whites. 

That plan, which will largely be funded by boosting the corporate tax rate from 21% to 28%, proposes a host of measures to not only fix the nation's crumbling infrastructure but to also invest in so-called human infrastructure. That includes higher pay for crucial but low-paid workers like home health care workers.


Walsh hopes the plan gets people in the U.S. "back into the workforce, and create real opportunities that are good paying good jobs for the future," he said.

In his interview with Yahoo Finance on Friday, Walsh also commented on a union vote underway at an Amazon warehouse in Alabama. "I think everyone, everyone in this country should have the right to join a union if they feel they want to join a union, and everybody who has an opportunity to take a vote on that should have that right to take a vote vote," he said.

​Walsh, who served as Democratic mayor of Boston from 2014 to 2021, is the former head of the Boston Building Trades Council, making him the first union leader to serve in the position in nearly 45 years. He stands in stark contrast to his predecessor, former Labor Secretary Eugene Scalia, a longtime corporate lawyer whom the New Yorker described as "a wrecking ball aimed at workers"...     quoted from

APRIL 2, 2021
U.S. Capitol Police Briefing on Capitol Hill Vehicle Incident
Acting U.S. Capitol Police Chief Yogananda Pittman and Acting Washington, DC Police Chief Robert Contee briefed the press on an incident on Capitol Hill in which a vehicle struck two U.S. Capitol police officers before slamming into a barricade. Chief Pittman announced, “with a heavy heart,” that one of the police officers succumbed to his injuries. The suspect was also pronounced dead on the scene. 
APRIL 2, 2021
U.S. Capitol Security Incident
C-SPAN showed video coverage outside the U.S. Capitol, where an individual drove a car into a security barrier, killing one U.S. Capitol Police officer and injuring another. The suspect was identified as Noah Green, who was killed in the attack.

4/02/2021

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

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April 1, 2021
White House Daily Briefing
White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki held a briefing on news of the day. The press secretary answered a series of questions about President Biden’s proposed infrastructure plan including an increase to the corporate tax rate, allocation of funding for roads and bridges, and possible compromises with Republicans. She also clarified the White House expects Johnson & Johnson to meet vaccine supply deadlines despite recent contamination of 15 million doses.


President Joe Biden speaking on an Amtrak train in February 2011.
What Biden's $2 trillion infrastructure plan means for you


Apr. 2 - President Joe Biden is willing to spend big.

Just the first part of his next sweeping economic package — focused on various types of infrastructure spending — has a price tag of $2 trillion. Taken together with the second part of the package, to be announced in coming weeks, it could result in around $4 trillion of spending.

In his Wednesday announcement of the American Jobs Plan, Biden emphasized the importance of rebuilding not just crumbling roads and bridges, but the middle class as a whole. 

"Even before the crisis we're now facing, those at the very top in America were doing very well, which is fine," Biden said. "They were doing great. But everyone else was falling behind."

He added: "We all will do better when we all do well.  It's time to build our economy from the bottom up and from the middle out, not the top down."

The package certainly faces a long, rocky road before anything becomes law. But if all of its provisions get passed, here's how the current plan could impact you.

Anyone who commutes — whether by train, bus, or car — could feel the impact of the infrastructure package

Broadly, transportation infrastructure would get a $621 billion investment. The biggest expenditures go towards modernizing roads, bridges, and highways; electric vehicles; public transit; and Amtrak.     continue to read


US loses focus by inserting anti-China in infrastructure plan: Global Times editorial

Aprl 2 - US President Joe Biden unveiled a roughly $2 trillion American Jobs Plan focused on infrastructure and the climate crisis in a speech in Pittsburgh on Wednesday. To win support, he said that the "once-in-a-generation" investment would "put [the US] in a position to win the global competition with China in the upcoming years," Global Times wrote.

Much of infrastructure in the US has been old. Both Democrats and Republicans are on the same page on this matter. US former president Barack Obama in September 2010 proposed his ambitious plan to renew the US' transportation infrastructure, but failed to achieve it in both of his terms. Neither did Donald Trump. Biden launched the third round of such attempt. His plan contains the greatest details and seems to be the most serious one, Global Times wrote.

However, the Biden administration's infrastructure plan was met with opposition from Republicans when it was announced. Trump slammed the infrastructure plan as a "giveaway to China" in a statement on Wednesday, and said that the proposed tax increases designed to fund the $2 trillion proposal would end up backfiring by sending American jobs overseas. Biden may once again have mired himself down in a situation where everyone agrees that it was the right thing to do, but no one can agree on how to do it or where the money will come from, Global Times wrote.     source from

SOLUTIONS FROM THE LAND: BIDEN PLAN MAKES CLEAN ENERGY, AGRICULTURE PART OF HIS MAJOR CLIMATE INITIATIVE

Apr. 2 - ...SfL applauds President Biden's infrastructure proposal and calls on lawmakers to come together and support provisions that, while reshaping the U.S. economy, would build out the clean energy infrastructure as part of a broader effort to curb climate change. As policy makers move forward on this massive proposal, they are urged to remember the major contributions that U.S. agriculture and rural communities will continue to make in solving the challenges of our time.
     quoted from

4/01/2021

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

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MARCH 31, 2021
President Biden on Infrastructure, Jobs and the Economy
President Biden traveled to Pittsburgh to announce his $2 trillion infrastructure and jobs proposal, known as the American Jobs Plan. He called the plan “a once in a generation investment in America,” and said it will create “the strongest, most resilient, innovative economy in the world.” The event was held at the Carpenters Training Center just outside of downtown Pittsburgh.


Biden infrastructure plan targets electric cars, clean power

Apr. 1 - President Joe Biden is calling for sweeping investment in electric vehicles, renewable power and the electric grid as part of a broad blueprint to bolster the US economy while combating climate change.

The president’s plans, part of a $2.25-trillion infrastructure and stimulus blueprint he is set to unveil in Pittsburgh on Wednesday, are meant to catalyze investments in a clean energy economy and encourage low-emission technology necessary to constrain global warming.

Biden’s initiative would give a ten-year extension to tax credits that have been a boon to wind, solar and other renewable energy projects. His plan, which requires congressional approval, would also make those clean energy tax credits refundable -- a so-called direct-pay option that developers have sought as tax equity financing has dried up.     continue to read


Biden's Billions for Higher
president unveiled his new infrastructure plan Wednesday, with billions of dollars for community colleges, research and minority-serving institutions.

Apr. 1 - President Biden unveiled his new infrastructure legislation plan Wednesday, proposing billions of dollars for higher education over eight years.


The plan -- which is about $2 trillion in total -- would give $12 billion to updating infrastructure in community colleges and $50 million to the National Science Foundation. Historically Black colleges and universities and other minority-serving institutions would also be in for more funding under the proposal. The plan calls for a $10 billion investment in research and development and $15 billion to create 200 research incubators at those institutions, with the framing that those investments could eliminate racial and gender inequities in R&D and STEM. Of the $40 billion dedicated to improving research infrastructure and laboratories, half would be set aside specifically for HBCUs and other minority-serving institutions.

While there are some additions they say could be made, many in higher education are applauding the plan and its proposed investment.

“One thing that strikes you when you look at the summary the Biden folks put out is just the number of ways higher education serves in the recovery,” said Jon Fansmith, director of government relations at the American Council on Education. “It’s a pretty impressive commitment to higher education but I think it also demonstrates how inextricably linked colleges and universities are to the health of our economy.”     continue to read


On March 10, 2015 shows workers on an assembly line of the Mitsubishi Fuso Truck and Bus Corporation (MFTBC) Kawasaki plant in Kawasaki, suburban Tokyo.
Japan and South Korea reported unexpectedly strong economic data, as Asian stocks rise

Apr. 1, BEIJING (AP) — Asian stock markets followed Wall Street higher Thursday after Japan and South Korea reported unexpectedly strong economic data and President Joe Biden announced a $2.3 trillion U.S. infrastructure spending plan.


Market benchmarks in Shanghai, Tokyo, Hong Kong and Sydney advanced.

Japan’s closely watched Tankan survey found business conditions improved more than expected. South Korea reported higher

March export growth. House prices rose in New Zealand and Australian manufacturing expanded.

“Asia-Pacific released a lot of data today, including Japan’s latest Tankan survey. Most of it was positive,” Robert Carnell of
ING said in a report.

​Biden announced plans to spend on broadband internet and clean energy, roads, bridges and public transit. The plan would roll back corporate tax cuts enacted under his predecessor, Donald Trump.     continue to read