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Biden pledges to get all Individuals out

WASHINGTON – President Joe Biden said flights from Afghanistan resumed Friday afternoon after an hour-long hiatus, and he promised to get any Americans out of the country who wanted to leave.

Almost as important as the liberation of the Americans is the evacuation of US military translators and others who have helped American troops, said the president, along with Vice President Kamala Harris and Secretary of State Antony Blinken.

Biden said at the White House that over 18,000 people have been evacuated from the country since late July and 5,700 in the past 24 hours. At the Pentagon, spokesman John Kirby said the vast majority of those evacuated were Afghan nationals. Kirby added that the U.S. military’s top priority is to fly U.S. citizens and their families first.

Biden’s remarks come as more than 5,000 U.S. forces evacuate as many people as possible before a self-imposed deadline of August 31 to leave Afghanistan.

“I think we can make it by then, but we’ll make that judgment over time,” Biden said of the retreat’s schedule.

Evacuees populate the interior of a U.S. Air Force C-17 Globemaster III transport aircraft that is bringing about 640 Afghans to Qatar from Kabul, Afghanistan, August 15, 2021.

Courtesy Defense One | Handout via Reuters

The president also reiterated his belief that American troops could not have left Afghanistan, either in the past or in the future, without chaos.

“There was no way we could have left Afghanistan without some of what you are seeing,” he said.

For many Americans, “what you see now” are scenes of desperate families with children fleeing the gates of Hamid Karzai International Airport in Kabul to seek a flight out of the country. Critics have accused the president of no longer showing empathy for these people.

Earlier this week, Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin told reporters that the Pentagon was unable to safely escort Americans to the airport for evacuation.

“I currently do not have the opportunity to expand operations into Kabul,” said Austin when asked about those who cannot reach the airport gates because they are behind Taliban checkpoints.

The US is relying on an agreement with the Taliban to ensure safe passage for Americans. While the State Department has declared that the Taliban have met their obligations to ensure safe transit for US citizens, some Afghan nationals are being held up by the militants.

Biden said he did not plan to extend the US security perimeter beyond the airport as it would have “unintended consequences”.

“We are in constant contact with the Taliban leadership in Kabul and with the Taliban leadership in Doha,” he said. “And we coordinated what we do.”

When asked at the Pentagon whether US forces would expand their mission outside the airport, Kirby declined to speculate about future military operations. He repeated that Biden would have to agree to such a mission.

At the State Department spokesman Ned Price told reporters that American citizens in Afghanistan will shortly receive personalized phone calls to coordinate their departure from the country or relocation to the United States should they decide to leave.

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The Pentagon has said its goal is to move around 5,000 to 9,000 people from Kabul every day. US Army Maj. Gen. William “Hank” Taylor, assistant director for regional operations, said Thursday that the speed of departure depends on who is allowed to leave the country by the State Department.

Taylor said he anticipates a departure speed of one US military cargo plane an hour. But less than a day later, Taylor’s expectation collided with the reality of long flight stops.

The Pentagon confirmed during a briefing Friday that the flights were about seven hours late, saying the temporary pause was due to the plane’s no destination outside of Kabul. Taylor said at least one flight has left Kabul since then and other planes have been lined up to take off.

Kirby added that the U.S. military is looking for additional locations to dispatch evacuation flights.

Price said Friday that more than a dozen countries, including Turkey, Bahrain, Germany and Italy, have agreed to “move to safety” both Americans and Afghan nationals through their territories.

“Albania, Canada, Colombia, Costa Rica, Chile, Kosovo, North Macedonia, Mexico, Poland, Qatar, Rwanda, Ukraine and Uganda have also made generous offers on relocation efforts for vulnerable Afghans,” Price added.

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The Congressional Black Caucus: Highly effective, Numerous and Newly Difficult

The Congressional Black Caucus is the largest it has ever been, jumping to 57 members this year after a period of steady growth. The 50-year-old group, which includes most Black members of Congress and is entirely Democratic, is also more diverse, reflecting growing pockets of the Black electorate: millennials, progressives, suburban voters, those less tightly moored to the Democratic Party.

But while a thread of social justice connects one generation to the next, the influx of new members from varying backgrounds is testing the group’s long-held traditions in ways that could alter the future of Black political power in Washington.

The newcomers, shaped by the Black Lives Matter movement rather than the civil rights era, urge Democrats to go on the offensive regarding race and policing, pushing an affirmative message about how to overhaul public safety. They seek a bolder strategy on voting rights and greater investment in the recruitment and support of Black candidates.

Perhaps more significant than any ideological or age divide, however, is the caucus’s fault line of political origin stories — between those who made the Democratic establishment work for them and those who had to overcome the establishment to win.

Representative James E. Clyburn of South Carolina, a Democrat and the most powerful Black lawmaker in the House, said in an interview that the group still functioned as a family. But that family has grown to include people like Representative Cori Bush of Missouri, an outspoken progressive who defeated a caucus member in a hotly contested primary last year, and Representative Lauren Underwood of Illinois, whose district is overwhelmingly white.

“There was not a single member of the caucus, when I got there, that could have gotten elected in a congressional district that was only 4 percent African American,” Mr. Clyburn said, referring to Ms. Underwood.

“We didn’t have people in the caucus before who could stand up and say, ‘I know what it’s like to live in an automobile or be homeless,’” he said of Ms. Bush, whose recent dayslong sit-in on the Capitol steps pushed President Biden’s administration to extend an eviction moratorium.

In interviews, more than 20 people close to the C.B.C. — including several members, their senior aides and other Democrats who have worked with the group — described the shifting dynamics of the leading organization of Black power players in Washington.

The caucus is a firm part of the Democratic establishment, close to House leadership and the relationship-driven world of political consulting and campaigns. However, unlike other groups tied to party leaders, the caucus is perhaps the country’s most public coalition of civil rights stalwarts, ostensibly responsible for ensuring that an insider game shaped by whiteness can work for Black people.

Today, the C.B.C. has swelling ranks and a president who has said he owes his election to Black Democrats. There is a strong chance that when Speaker Nancy Pelosi eventually steps down, her successor will be a member of the group. At the same time, the new lawmakers and their supporters are challenging the group with a simple question: Whom should the Congressional Black Caucus be for?

The group’s leadership and political action committee have typically focused on supporting Black incumbents and their congressional allies in re-election efforts. But other members, especially progressive ones, call for a more combative activist streak, like Ms. Bush’s, that challenges the Democratic Party in the name of Black people. Moderate members in swing districts, who reject progressive litmus tests like defunding police departments or supporting a Green New Deal, say the caucus is behind on the nuts and bolts of modern campaigning and remains too pessimistic about Black candidates’ chances in predominantly white districts.

Many new C.B.C. members, even those whose aides discussed their frustration in private, declined to comment on the record for this article. The leadership of the caucus, including the current chair, Representative Joyce Beatty of Ohio, also did not respond to requests for comment.

Miti Sathe, a founder of Square One Politics, a political firm used by Ms. Underwood and other successful Black candidates including Representative Lucy McBath, a Georgia Democrat, said she had often wondered why the caucus was not a greater ally on the campaign trail.

She recounted how Ms. Underwood, a former C.B.C. intern who was the only Black candidate in her race, did not receive the caucus’s initial endorsement.

In Ms. Underwood’s race, “we tried many times to have conversations with them, to get their support and to get their fund-raising lists, and they declined,” Ms. Sathe said.

Representative Ritchie Torres of New York, a 33-year-old freshman member, said the similarities among C.B.C. members still outweighed the differences.

“It seems one-dimensional to characterize it as some generational divide,” he said. “The freshman class — the freshman members of the C.B.C. — are hardly a monolith.”

Political strategy is often the dividing line among members — not policy. The Clyburn-led veterans have hugged close to Ms. Pelosi to rise through the ranks, and believe younger members should follow their example. They have taken a zero-tolerance stance toward primary challengers to Democratic incumbents. They have recently pushed for a pared-down approach to voting rights legislation, attacking proposals for public financing of campaigns and independent redistricting committees, which have support from many Democrats in Congress but could change the makeup of some Black members’ congressional districts.

And when younger members of Congress press Ms. Pelosi to elevate new blood and overlook seniority, this more traditional group points to Representatives Maxine Waters of California and Bennie Thompson of Mississippi — committee chairs who waited years for their gavels. The political arm of the Black caucus reflects that insider approach, sometimes backing white incumbents who are friends with senior caucus leaders instead of viable Black challengers.

Representative Gregory Meeks of New York, the chairman of the caucus’s political action committee, said its goal was simple: to help maintain the Democratic majority so the party’s agenda can be advanced.

“You don’t throw somebody out simply because somebody else is running against them,” he said. “That’s not the way politics works.”

In a special election this month in Ohio to replace former Representative Marcia Fudge, the newly appointed housing secretary and a close ally of Mr. Clyburn’s, the caucus’s political arm took the unusual step of endorsing one Black candidate over another for an open seat. The group backed Shontel Brown — a Democrat who is close to Ms. Fudge — over several Black rivals, including Nina Turner, a former state senator and a prominent leftist ally of Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont.

Mr. Meeks said the caucus had deferred to its ranking members from Ohio, including Ms. Beatty and Ms. Fudge. Mr. Clyburn also personally backed Ms. Brown. In the interview, he cited a comment from a campaign surrogate for Ms. Turner who called him “incredibly stupid” for endorsing Mr. Biden in the presidential primary race. “There’s nobody in the Congressional Black Caucus who would refer to the highest-ranking African American among them as incredibly stupid,” Mr. Clyburn said.

Ms. Turner, a progressive activist, defended the remark and said the caucus’s endorsement of Ms. Brown “did a disservice to the 11 other Black candidates in that race.” She argued that Washington politics were governed by “a set of rules that leaves so many Black people behind.”

“The reasons they endorsed had nothing to do with the uplift of Black people,” Ms. Turner said, citing her support of policies like reparations for descendants of enslaved people and student debt cancellation. “It had everything to do about preserving a decorum and a consensus type of power model that doesn’t ruffle anybody’s feathers.”

Privately, while some Black members of Congress were sympathetic to Ms. Turner’s criticism, they also regarded the comment about Mr. Clyburn as an unnecessary agitation, according to those familiar with their views.

Last year, several new C.B.C. members across the political spectrum grew frustrated after concluding that Democrats’ messaging on race and policing ignored the findings of a poll commissioned by the caucus and the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee. The poll, obtained by The New York Times, urged Democrats in swing districts to highlight the policing changes they supported rather than defending the status quo.

But the instruction from leaders of the caucus and the Democratic campaign committee was blunt: Denounce defunding the police and pivot to health care.

“It was baffling that the research was not properly utilized,” said one senior aide to a newer member of the Black caucus, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to voice the frustrations. “It could have helped some House Democrats keep their jobs.”

Mr. Clyburn makes no secret of his disdain for progressive activists who support defunding the police. In the interview, he likened the idea to “Burn, baby, burn,” the slogan associated with the 1965 Watts riots in California.

“‘Burn, baby, burn’ destroyed the movement John Lewis and I helped found back in 1960,” he said. “Now we have defunding the police.”

Mr. Meeks, the political point man for the caucus, said he expected its endorsements to go where they have always gone: to Black incumbents and their allies. Still, he praised Ms. Bush’s recent activism as helping to “put the pressure on to make the change happen,” a sign of how new blood and ideological diversity could increase the caucus’s power.

But Ms. Bush won despite the wishes of the caucus’s political arm. And those who seek a similar path to Congress are likely to face similar resistance.

When asked, Mr. Meeks saw no conflict.

“When you’re on a team,” he said, “you look out for your teammates.”

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Biden to faucet Nicholas Burns ambassador to China, Rahm Emanuel to Japan

Nicholas Burns

Scott Mlyn | CNBC

WASHINGTON – President Joe Biden announced on Friday his intention to appoint a career diplomat and former US ambassador to NATO, Nicholas Burns, as his ambassador to China.

The president also announced that Rahm Emanuel, the former two-term mayor of Chicago, will be nominated as his ambassador to Japan.

Both announcements have been eagerly awaited, and once officially nominated, both Burns and Emanuel are expected to be ratified by the Senate.

Burns is one of America’s most skilled and respected diplomats, serving both Republicans and Democrats for more than 25 years. He was ambassador to Greece in the Clinton administration, ambassador to NATO in the George W. Bush administration and from 2005 to 2008 undersecretary of state for political affairs.

With the Biden administration making economic and geopolitical competition with China the cornerstone of its broader foreign policy, Burns would be the spearhead as ambassador.

He would likely undertake the double duty of implementing policies deeply unpopular with his Chinese hosts while maintaining a warm working relationship.

The White House has signaled that it will seek a relationship with Beijing that, in some ways, reflects Washington’s strategy towards the Kremlin.

While Russia and the United States are adversaries on almost all fronts, senior diplomats in both countries maintain specific areas of cooperation on issues where cooperation is in their mutual interest, such as nuclear arms control.

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Such a model could be applied to US-China relations, with collaboration on issues such as North Korea and climate change.

In contrast to Burns, Emanuel is neither a professional diplomat nor a Japan expert.

As former White House Chief of Staff to then President Barack Obama and previously an Illinois Congressman, Emanuel has close ties with several of the top figures in the Biden White House, including current White House Chief of Staff Ron Klain.

However, within the broader Democratic Party, Emanuel is a polarizing figure.

As a centrist on issues such as immigration and health care, Emanuel has drawn the wrath of progressives in Congress since the early days of the Obama administration.

But it was his time as Mayor of Chicago that nearly ruined any chance Emanuel had to join the Biden administration.

As mayor, Emanuel has been heavily criticized for refusing to post police dashcam footage for more than a year after the 2014 shooting of Laquan McDonald, a black teenager who was shot 16 times by a police officer who alleged , McDonald pounced on him.

The footage of that shooting showed that McDonald was actually turned away by the policeman when the policeman shot him. McDonald collapsed on the first shot, but the officer didn’t stop; he fired another 15 shots at McDonald while the teenager was on the ground.

Emanuel claimed he never saw the video, which clearly showed the Chicago police’s version of the events was a lie.

Emails later revealed that Emanuel’s closest mayor’s aide knew early on that the police story did not match the footage.

Emanuel’s nomination as Biden’s ambassador to Japan is a blow to the progressives who fought against him.

But as with any ambassador, it is Emanuel’s personal friendship with Biden and other senior White House officials that is most important to the Japanese government.

In this regard, Tokyo is no different from any other foreign capital: a US ambassador is only as good as the time it takes to get the president on the phone.

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Biden’s Immigration Insurance policies Face Contemporary Judicial Setbacks

WASHINGTON – The Justice Department on Friday called on the Supreme Court to halt a judge’s order to restart a Trump-era program that was causing migrants crossing the southern border to seek asylum to await their cases in Mexico , often in life-threatening situations.

The move came in response to one of two court rulings this week that marked a backlash in President Biden’s efforts to reverse his predecessor’s tough immigration policies.

On Thursday, a federal appeals court in Texas dismissed an attempt by the Biden administration to halt a court order reinstating the controversial migrant protection protocols program, also known as “Remain in Mexico” asylum policy, underway during the Trump administration. The order should take effect on Saturday.

And in a separate case, a federal judge in Texas temporarily blocked the Biden administration’s short-term strategy of limiting arrests of undocumented immigrants by prioritizing those who most threatened national and public security. A Justice Department spokeswoman said the agency is reviewing Judge Drew B. Tipton’s 160-page verdict of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas and lawyers are considering next steps.

Taken together, the trials threaten two of the Biden government’s earliest efforts to reshape the country’s immigration system. Another blow came in July when a federal judge ruled that an Obama-era program protecting hundreds of thousands of undocumented young adults from deportation was illegal.

The judges’ decisions and the administration’s appeal to the Supreme Court on Friday, emphasized the role of the courts as the primary venue for shaping polarizing immigration policy, one legal challenge after another – a strategy that immigration advocates have refined during the Trump administration.

“Those who oppose the Biden government’s immigration agenda take every opportunity to ask political questions and have them answered in favorable courts,” said Tom K. Wong, director of the US Immigration Policy Center at the University of California, San Diego said.

The order for the Biden administration to restore Trump policies that forced asylum seekers to wait in Mexico while their cases were being handled in the United States came from Judge Matthew J. Kacsmaryk of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas.

He and Judge Tipton were both appointed by President Donald J. Trump. Of the three judges on the Fifth District Court of Appeal who on Thursday denied the government’s motion to stop the “stay in Mexico” ruling, two were appointed by Trump; the third was appointed by President George W. Bush.

On appeal to the Supreme Court, government attorneys said the reintroduction of asylum policy on Saturday was “almost impossible” and would cause “irreparable harm”. Critics said it would place asylum seekers in dangerous gathering environments at a time when the highly contagious Delta variant fueled a surge in coronavirus cases.

It was initially unclear what exactly the order would set in motion on Saturday or whether Mexico would allow the program to resume.

The program was also litigated during the Trump administration.

“You will likely see opponents of the Biden administration’s future policies using the courts to hold back progress, which only adds to the importance of Congressional action,” Wong said.

The most recent example is efforts to prevent the administration from prioritizing undocumented immigrants to be arrested.

In February, the Biden administration issued its preliminary arrest priorities for immigration and customs enforcement, a marked departure from the Trump administration’s policy of arresting undocumented immigrants for any immigration violations. The Biden team ordered ICE officials to give priority to the arrest of undocumented persons who pose a risk to national and public security, as well as those who recently illegally crossed the border. The Obama administration has similar enforcement priorities.

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton celebrated the injunction on the priorities of Mr. Biden’s arrest, calling it “another Texas win over Biden.”

Texas is a party in both cases and this year has borne the brunt of the unusually high number of illegal border crossings, with many migrant families and children from Central America arriving in the state’s Rio Grande Valley and overwhelming border officials. The state has taken several measures to challenge the immigration policies of the Biden government; Earlier this summer, Republican Governor Greg Abbott ordered state law enforcement agencies to arrest migrants for trespassing in an attempt to tackle illegal immigration – because, he said, the Biden administration did not.

Alejandro N. Mayorkas, the Secretary of Homeland Security, has been working to outline permanent arrest priorities for ICE that would replace the tentative ones currently under attack. It was not immediately clear whether the judge’s ruling would apply to the administration’s final arrest priorities.

If the Biden government cannot continue with its immigration arrest strategy, the postponement will likely continue to weigh on an immigration detention system that is already near full. ICE arrests have so far decreased by more than half this year compared to the same period in 2020, according to immigration statistics, in part due to pandemic-related rules to limit the number of people in meeting places and temporary arrest priorities.

Mr. Wong said that even if Republicans were to challenge arrest priorities, it would not change the reality that there was not enough room.

“And so the policy of ‘enforcement en masse’ does not take into account finite resources,” he said, “including limited detention capacities.”

The government is also waiting for a judge to rule on a lawsuit that would prevent them from continuing a public health rule that the Trump administration put in place at the start of the pandemic to help many asylum-seeking families arriving at the border to refuse. Immigration advocates filed the lawsuit last year, when Vice President Kamala Harris, then a Senator from California and a presidential candidate, argued against the rule.

The plaintiffs’ attorneys hoped to reach an agreement with the Biden administration. But discussions collapsed last month when the White House decided not to lift the health rule anytime soon due to the overwhelming number of migrants arriving at the southern border and the risk of further Covid-19 infections.

If the courts ultimately order the administration to repeal the public health rule, it will expand the federal government’s enforcement capabilities even further.

Charlie Savage contributed to the coverage.

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Capitol Hill bomb menace defendant Floyd Ray Roseberry in courtroom

A man named Floyd Ray Roseberry, who claims to be in his truck with explosives, speaks during a Facebook livestream in a still from a video that was captured in Washington on August 19, 2021.

Social media | via Reuters

The North Carolina man, who announced he had a bomb in his truck parked on Capitol Hill, was charged Friday on threats with the use of a weapon of mass destruction and attempted use of an explosive device.

The man, Floyd Ray Roseberry, was arrested without bail pending a medical examination of the defendant at a hearing in the US District Court in Washington, DC.

Judge Zia Faruqui ordered the assessment after Roseberry said it was difficult to understand the trial as he had been denied blood pressure medication and “my mental medicine” since he was handed over to police on Thursday.

“My memory is not that good, sir,” said Roseberry via audio link during the remote performance.

“We don’t need to be eye to eye,” Roseberry said at one point, referring to the lack of physical presence or video. “I can tell by your voice that you are a good man … I am ready to do whatever is asked.”

Roseberry, who said he was 51 years old despite authorities said he was 49, was appointed federal defender by Faruqui.

He’s next on trial on Wednesday. Roseberry faces the highest possible life imprisonment if convicted of weapons of mass destruction.

Prosecutors said they would ask Faruqui to hold him pending trial without bail.

Roseberry’s threat resulted in the evacuation of buildings including the Supreme Court, the Library of Congress, the Cannon House office building and the offices of the Republican National Committee.

Roseberry parked a pickup truck on a sidewalk in front of the library Thursday morning.

He then told police officers that he had a bomb inside, which set off an hour-long stalemate that resulted in him surrendering peacefully.

Floyd Ray Roseberry sits in his pickup truck in a standoff with the Capitol Police outside the Library of Congress in Washington DC on August 19, 2021

Photo: Sydney Bobb

Before giving up, the Grover, North Carolina man posted videos of his truck on Facebook speaking directly to President Joe Biden, whose resignation he called for when he called for a revolution.

He also called for US air strikes on the Taliban in Afghanistan.

Roseberry claimed in a video that he had a barrel of gunpowder and more than two pounds of the explosive tannerite in the truck. He also suggested that there were four more bombs in the DC area.

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Reducing off jobless advantages early could have harm state economies.

When states began cutting federal unemployment benefits this summer, their governors argued that doing so would drive people back to work.

New research suggests that ending social benefits actually resulted in some people getting jobs but many more people not, putting them – and perhaps their countries’ economies – in a worse position.

A total of 26 states, all but one with Republican governors, have ended the extended unemployment benefits that have been in place since the beginning of the pandemic. Many entrepreneurs blame the benefits for keeping people from returning to work, while proponents argue that they provided a lifeline to people who lost their jobs during the pandemic.

The additional benefits are due to expire nationwide next month, although President Biden on Thursday encouraged high unemployment states to use separate federal funds to continue the programs.

To study the impact of the guidelines, a team of economists used data from Earnin, a financial services company, to review anonymized banking records of more than 18,000 low-income workers who received unemployment benefits in late April.

The researchers found that termination of benefits had an impact on employment: in the states that cut benefits, about 26 percent of people in the study were employed in early August, compared with about 22 percent of people in the states in which the services were continued.

But far more people couldn’t find work. In the 19 states that ended programs on which researchers had data, about two million people lost their benefits completely and one million had their payments cut. Of these, only about 145,000 people found jobs due to the lockdown. (The researchers argue that the actual number is likely even lower, since the workers they studied were most likely to have been affected by the loss of income and, therefore, may not have been representative of all benefit recipients.)

As a result of the cut in benefits, the unemployed fared worse on average. The researchers estimate that as a result of the change, workers lost an average of $ 278 a week in welfare benefits and made only $ 14 a week (not $ 14 an hour as previously reported here). They compensated for this by cutting their spending by $ 145 a week – a reduction of about 20 percent – and putting less money into their local economy.

“The job market didn’t burst after you kicked these people out,” said Michael Stepner, a University of Toronto economist and one of the study’s authors. “Most of these people can’t find work and it will be a long time before they get their income back.”

The results are in line with other recent studies that have found that the additional unemployment benefit had a measurable but small impact on the number of people working and looking for work. The next evidence will come on Friday morning when the Department of Labor releases state employment data in July.

Coral Murphy Marcos contributed to the coverage.

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Capitol Hill bomb risk: Floyd Ray Roseberry surrenders

A North Carolina man surrendered Thursday afternoon to police, hours after telling them he had a bomb in his truck parked outside the Library of Congress on Capitol Hill.

That threat by the suspect, Floyd Ray Roseberry, led to the evacuation of the library, the Supreme Court, the Cannon House Office Building and the offices of the Republican National Committee.

It also sparked a massive police response to an area that seven months earlier saw the Capitol complex violently invaded by supporters of then-President Donald Trump.

“He got out of the vehicle and surrendered, and the tactical units that were close by took him into custody without incident,” U.S. Capitol Police Chief Tom Manger said of the 49-year-old Roseberry.

“He gave up and did not resist,” Manger said. “As far as we could tell it was just his decision to surrender at that point.”

A man named Floyd Ray Roseberry who claims to be sitting in his truck with explosives speaks during a Facebook livestream in a still image from video taken in Washington, U.S. August 19, 2021.

Social Media | via Reuters

Manger said there was a propane gas container in his black pickup truck.

But, the chief added, “At this point we think that’s safe.”

Manger also said, “Right now we have no indication that he was acting with anyone else, but that is part of the ongoing investigation.”

A bomb was not found after a search of Roseberry’s vehicle but possible bomb making materials were secured from his truck, according to a statement from U.S. Capitol Police.

Roseberry, who most recently lived in Grover, North Carolina, posted several videos on Facebook from his truck in the hours before he surrendered, directly addressed remarks to President Joe Biden, whose resignation he demanded. He also called for U.S. airstrikes on the Taliban in Afghanistan.

Roseberry claimed on the video that he had a 7-pound keg of gunpowder and 2.5 pounds of the explosive tannerite in the truck, and suggested there were four other bombs in the D.C. area.

He also said his wife has cancer and that health insurance would not cover some treatment for her.

“I promised my wife I’d be home Sunday, whichever home it is. I’ve cleared my conscience with God,” Roseberry said.

The White House received updates from law enforcement during the standoff.

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Facebook removed Roseberry’s videos and his page after reporters found the messages.

Manger said that Roseberry has had some losses of family, including his mother, who “recently passed away.”

“There were other issues that he was dealing with,” the chief said.

Manger said the Capitol Police would work with the office of the U.S. attorney for the District of Columbia to determine what criminal charges Roseberry will face.

The chief said that Roseberry has a criminal record in North Carolina, but nothing that appeared “serious.”

Manger earlier had told reporters that Roseberry drove his truck onto the sidewalk in front of the Library of Congress at about 9:15 a.m.

A pickup truck is parked on the sidewalk in front of the Library of Congress’ Thomas Jefferson Building, as seen from a window of the U.S. Capitol, Thursday, Aug. 19, 2021, in Washington.

Alex Brandon | AP

When Capitol Police responded to a call about the truck, “The driver of the truck told the responding officer on the scene that he had a bomb and what appeared, the officer said, appeared to be a detonator in the man’s hand,” Manger said.

“So we immediately evacuated the nearby buildings,” Manger said.

Congress and the Supreme Court are not currently in session, which reduced the number of people who normally would be working around the Capitol Hill complex.

Subways were bypassing the Capitol South station because of the incident, the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority said.

People are evacuated from the James Madison Memorial Building, a Library of Congress building, in Washington on Thursday, Aug. 19, 2021, as law enforcement investigate a report of a pickup truck containing an explosive device near the U.S. Capitol.

Alex Brandon | AP

The area quickly was swarming with officers from a slew of law enforcement agencies: Capitol Police, FBI, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, and Washington, D.C., police.

Police negotiators began communicating with Roseberry, and sharpshooters took up positions in the area surrounding the truck.

A police sniper team remains in position near the Library of Congress on Capitol Hill August 19, 2021 in Washington, DC.

Win McNamee | Getty Images

Sydney Bobb, a student at the University of Wisconsin in Madison, told CNBC that she had been walking to a class at the United Methodist Building on Capitol Hill when she saw Roseberry in his truck outside the Library of Congress.

“I look up and see a guy throwing [$1 bills] out of his truck,” said Bobb, who snapped a photo of the bizarre scene, which she posted on Twitter.

“I heard him say, like, he had a bomb on him.”

During the standoff, Roseberry communicated with authorities by writing on a dry-erase board that he had in the vehicle.

He refused to use a telephone that was sent to him with a police robot, according to Manger.

One of the explosives Roseberry claimed on his videos to have, tannerite, is popular in target shooting.

Tannerite is a binary explosive. Each part separately is not an explosive element, but when combined they are combustible.

Overuse of tannerite has been responsible for several gender reveal parties gone wrong in recent years, and was also popularized by the Netflix show “Tiger King.”

— Additional reporting by CNBC’s Amanda Macias, Bradley Howard and Brian Schwartz.

Correction: Sydney Bobb is a female student at the University of Wisconsin in Madison. An earlier version misstated her gender.

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Senators Wicker, King and Hickenlooper Take a look at Constructive

Senators Roger Wicker, Republican of Mississippi, Angus King, independent of Maine, and John Hickenlooper, Democrat of Colorado, said on Thursday that they had tested positive for the coronavirus, adding to the number of breakthrough cases among lawmakers.

“Senator Wicker is fully vaccinated against Covid-19, is in good health and is being treated by his Tupelo-based physician,” his spokesman, Phillip Waller, said in a statement released by his office, adding that the senator was experiencing only mild symptoms.

The announcement from Mr. Wicker came as his home state has shattered previous records for new cases this week, and is now reporting more new cases relative to its population than any other state in the country. Mississippi is averaging 118 new cases a day for every 100,000 people, according to data compiled by The New York Times.

Mr. King’s statement said he was symptomatic but taking recommended precautions.

“While I am not feeling great, I’m definitely feeling much better than I would have without the vaccine,” he said. “I am taking this diagnosis very seriously, quarantining myself at home and telling the few people I’ve been in contact with to get tested in order to limit any further spread.”

Mr. Hickenlooper said on Twitter that he was experiencing limited symptoms and expressed gratitude to scientists who had developed the vaccine. He also encouraged vaccinated people to get booster shots in accordance with a plan that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced this week.

The Senate is in recess this week after adjourning early last Wednesday, leaving it unclear whether any of the men had been in recent contact with other lawmakers, as well as when or where they were first exposed. Their diagnoses brings to 11 the number of senators who have tested positive so far, according to news reports compiled by Ballotpedia, a political data website; more than 50 members of the House have tested positive.

Several other vaccinated politicians have recently announced breakthrough cases of their own, including Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, who said he tested positive for the virus after attending a gathering hosted by Senator Joe Manchin III of West Virginia.

On Tuesday, Gov. Greg Abbott of Texas tested positive and began receiving an antibody treatment, highlighting both the growing concerns over breakthrough cases in the United States and the political tensions over public health measures that Mr. Abbott has consistently opposed in his home state.

While Mr. Wicker has encouraged his constituents to get vaccinated and has applauded the national vaccination effort in official statements, he has also resisted elements of the Biden administration’s coronavirus response. In June, he introduced a resolution calling on the C.D.C. to end a mask mandate for vaccinated people on public transportation.

As the Delta variant spreads aggressively, infections in vaccinated people have been seen more frequently, though they are still rare. The surge and the rising frequency of breakthrough infections have prompted agencies to extend public health measures. The Transportation Security Administration said on Tuesday that the mask mandate would remain in effect on public transportation through Jan. 18.

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After DC bomb scare, Rep. Mo Brooks sympathetic for ‘citizenry anger’

In this file photo dated January 6, 2021, Rep. Mo Brooks, R-Ark., Speaks in Washington at a rally in support of President Donald Trump known as the “Save America Rally”.

Jacquelyn Martin | AP

Republican MP Mo Brooks responded Thursday to a bomb threat that forced the evacuation of numerous buildings on Capitol Hill by saying he understood “civil anger against dictatorial socialism”.

The statement quickly drew heavy criticism of Brooks, who voted to overturn President Joe Biden’s election and is facing a lawsuit from California Democratic MP Eric Swalwell accusing him of contributing to the deadly invasion of the Capitol on January 6 to have.

“Tell us you’re on the terrorist’s side without telling us you’re on the terrorist’s side,” Swalwell wrote on Twitter in response to Brooks’ testimony.

Rep. Adam Kinzinger, a Republican from Illinois, described Brooks’ testimony in a Twitter post as “nasty”. Kinzinger was one of the few Republicans who voted for the impeachment of former President Donald Trump for invading the Capitol.

49-year-old Floyd Ray Roseberry, the alleged bomb threat, surrendered and was taken into custody by police outside the Library of Congress after an hour-long standoff where he claimed to have explosives in his truck.

In social media videos posted on Facebook, Roseberry repeatedly referred to a “revolution” and asked Biden to send someone to speak to him.

Brooks said in his statement that “although the motivations of this terrorist are not yet publicly known … in general I understand the anger of citizens directed at dictatorial socialism and its threats to liberty, liberty and the fabric of American society . “

He added that the way to stop socialism is to have “patriotic Americans” fight back in the coming election cycles.

“I strongly encourage patriotic Americans to do just that, more than ever. Frankly, America’s future is in jeopardy,” said Brooks.

Brooks, a member of the Alabama House of Representatives who has been running for the Senate since 2011, had negotiated with Trump in late 2020 about ways to overturn Biden’s election victory in the electoral college.

On January 6, when Congress was due to meet in the Capitol to confirm Biden’s victory, Brooks spoke nearby at a Trump-organized rally calling on Republicans to reject the election results.

At the “Stop the Steal” rally, Brooks urged a crowd of Trump supporters to “start by name and kick the ass”. Trump, in his own speech, urged the crowd to march to the Capitol: “If you don’t fight like hell, you will have no more land,” he said.

Shortly after Congress convened to confirm Biden’s victory, a mob of Trump supporters stormed the Capitol, derailed the process and forced lawmakers to flee their chambers and go into hiding. Since then, more than 500 arrests have been made in connection with the Capitol Rebellion.

In March, Swalwell filed a civil lawsuit against Brooks and Trump, as well as Donald Trump Jr. and former Trump attorney Rudy Giuliani, accusing them of “being wholly responsible for the injuries and destruction caused by the mob.”

Brooks has asked a judge to dismiss him as a defendant on the lawsuit, partially saying that his speech at the January 6 rally was given as part of his membership in Congress.

Thursday’s bomb threat forced the evacuation of the Library of Congress as well as the Supreme Court, the Cannon House office building and the offices of the Republican National Committee. Congress was on hiatus so there were fewer people on the hill.

Police negotiators began communicating with Roseberry, and snipers took up positions around the truck. He finally got out of his pickup truck, which was parked on the sidewalk in front of the government building, and surrendered without resistance, police said.

US Capitol Police chief Tom Manger said Roseberry appeared to have been grappling with the recent loss of family members as well as “other issues he has faced.”

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Politics

F.T.C. Refiles Fb Antitrust Go well with

WASHINGTON – The Federal Trade Commission re-targeted Facebook Thursday, increasing its allegations that the company was a monopoly illegally suppressing competition in an attempt to overcome the skepticism of a federal judge who dismissed the agency’s original case two months ago .

The lawsuit filed on Thursday contains the same overall arguments as the original, namely that Facebook’s Instagram and WhatsApp acquisitions were made to create a “ditch” for its monopoly on social networks, and argues that the social network should be disbanded. But the updated lawsuit is nearly twice as long and has more facts and analysis that the agency says it better supports the government’s allegations.

“Facebook lacked the business acumen and technical talent to make the transition to cell phones,” Holly Vedova, the acting director of the agency’s competition bureau, said in a statement. “After failing to compete with new innovators, Facebook illegally bought them or buried them when their popularity became an existential threat.”

Facebook replied, “There was no valid claim that Facebook was a monopoly – and that has not changed. Our Instagram and WhatsApp acquisitions were reviewed and approved many years ago, and our platform policies were lawful. “

The agency had to re-file the case after the judge in charge said in June that the government had not provided enough evidence that Facebook was a monopoly on social networks. The judge’s decision, and a similar one he made in one of more than 40 states brought against the company, dealt a staggering blow to regulatory efforts to contain big tech.

His decision represented the first major test for Lina Khan, the FTC chairwoman, who had only been in office for a few days at the time. Ms. Khan represents a wave of new thinking in the industry among administrators and many lawmakers, arguing that the government needs to take far more aggressive measures to curb the power of tech giants like Facebook, Google, Amazon and Apple. President Biden has appointed several regulators with similar goals, and lawmakers have proposed updates to antitrust laws to combat the power of tech companies.

Criticism of the first version of the Facebook case by Judge James E. Boasberg of the District Court of the District of Columbia highlighted the major challenges that regulators are facing. Although companies dominate the markets in which they operate – social media, in the case of Facebook – the courts often examine whether prices are rising as a sign of monopoly. The most popular services from Facebook are free.

“Nobody who hears the title of the film ‘The Social Network’ from 2010 wonders which company it is about,” wrote Richter Boasberg. “But whatever it means to the public, ‘monopoly power’ is a federal art term with a precise economic meaning.” He directed the FTC to back up claims that Facebook controlled 60 percent of the market for “personal social networks” and that Competition blocked.

Ms. Khan then faced a choice of how to deal with Judge Boasberg’s decision. One way was to drop the case entirely, while another was to expand it with even broader allegations. Instead, she went more of a middle ground and filed the lawsuit with more detail and a fuller account of the company, and what the agency says is a pattern of anti-competitive behavior since Mark Zuckerberg co-founded it at Harvard in 2004.

The revised lawsuit was approved 3: 2 by the commission, with the commission’s three Democrats voting in favor and the two Republican members opposing.

In the new complaint, the FTC provides more details to support government claims that Facebook has a monopoly on social networks. But in the public version of the lawsuit, many of the statistics have been blacked out because the numbers are proprietary.

The agency said that Facebook – the company’s largest service, known within the company as Facebook Blue – and Instagram are the leading social networks in the US, well ahead of its closest competitor, Snapchat.

The agency refuted Facebook’s claims that it had many competitors in social networking, instant messaging, and entertainment. The agency argued that Facebook’s products are intended for “personal social networks”, which distinguishes them from specialized social networks such as the professional network LinkedIn or the neighborhood site NextDoor. The FTC added that Facebook’s products are also different from messaging services like Signal and iMessage in that users don’t typically use these services to send notes to large groups, nor do they use these services to find contacts.

And the agency said that Facebook was different from Twitter, YouTube, and TikTok in that content on those sites was usually created for the public, rather than targeted at specific people on a social network.

“Today and since 2011, Facebook has a dominant share of the relevant market for US personal social networking services, measured using several metrics: time spent, daily active users and monthly active users,” the agency said in its complaint.

The core argument of the FTC is that Facebook tried to maintain a monopoly over social networks through the acquisitions of Instagram in 2012 and WhatsApp in 2014. Facebook in the new mobile environment, “the agency said in its complaint.

The lawsuit also states that as of 2010, the company stifled competitors like Circle, a social network, and Vine, a short video platform, by pushing new boundaries for external developers whose products are connected to Facebook to work with other social ones Networks added.

“Facebook does not beat competitors by improving its own product, but by imposing anti-competitive restrictions on developers,” the lawsuit said.

Facebook has criticized the arguments as a revisionist story, pointing out that the FTC reviewed the mergers with Instagram and WhatsApp and did not block deals.

“The FTC’s allegations are an attempt to rewrite the antitrust laws and reverse the set expectations for the merger review by telling the business community that no sale is ever final,” Facebook said Thursday.

The company has filed a motion to Ms. Khan to withdraw from the agency’s case, saying her work on a House investigation into platform monopolies shows a bias against the company. The FTC said Thursday it had dismissed that petition, saying that Facebook would receive “adequate constitutional protection from due process” as the case would be heard by a federal judge.

Bill Kovacic, a former FTC chairman, said the agency had done enough to “fight another day”.

“The judge said ‘show your work’ and it appears you have done enough to accommodate that request,” he said.

But he warned that the case would face a long and steep challenge. The FTC has won fewer than 20 of its monopoly cases in the appeals court since it was founded more than 100 years ago, he said.

“Facebook will fight this bitterly,” added Kovacic.