Categories
Politics

Abortion Arrives on the Middle of the American Political Maelstrom

WASHINGTON – Die Entscheidung des Obersten Gerichtshofs, ein texanisches Gesetz, das Abtreibungen stark einschränkt, nicht zu blockieren, hat das Thema am Donnerstag abrupt in den Vordergrund der amerikanischen Politik gerückt und die Dynamik der Wahlen in Kalifornien in diesem Monat, in Virginia im November und in den Halbzeiten nächsten Jahres neu gestaltet, die entscheiden werden Kontrolle des Kongresses und der Statehouses.

Die Republikaner begrüßten die 5-zu-4-Entscheidung des Gerichts, die in einem einteiligen Urteil mitten in der Nacht erklärt wurde, als einen enormen Sieg, der ein fast vollständiges Verbot von Abtreibungen im zweitgrößten Staat der Nation ermöglichte.

Für die Demokraten wurde ein Albtraum wahr: Ein konservativer Oberster Gerichtshof, angeführt von drei vom ehemaligen Präsidenten Donald J. alte Entscheidung, die Abtreibung als verfassungsmäßiges Recht verankerte.

Plötzlich sahen sich Befürworter des Abtreibungsrechts nicht nur mit dem politischen und politischen Versagen konfrontiert, das zu diesem Punkt geführt hatte, sondern auch mit der Aussicht, dass andere republikanisch kontrollierte Gesetzgeber schnell Nachahmergesetze erlassen könnten. Am Donnerstag versprachen die GOP-Gesetzgeber in Arkansas, Florida und South Dakota, dies in ihren nächsten Legislaturperioden zu tun.

Die Demokraten nutzten jedoch auch die Gelegenheit, ein Thema, von dem sie glauben, dass es ein politischer Gewinner für sie ist, in den Mittelpunkt der nationalen Debatte zu drängen. Nach Jahren der Verteidigung sagen die Demokraten, das texanische Gesetz werde testen, ob die Realität eines praktischen Abtreibungsverbots die Wähler dazu motivieren kann, sie zu unterstützen.

Senatorin Catherine Cortez Masto aus Nevada, eine Demokratin, die sich 2022 zur Wiederwahl stellt, sagte, die Menschen in ihrem Bundesstaat hätten für den Schutz der reproduktiven Freiheit von Frauen gekämpft und würden entsprechend abstimmen. „Wenn ein Republikaner nach Washington geht, um diese Freiheiten zurückzudrängen, werde ich es zum Thema machen“, sagte sie in einem Interview. “Ich denke, Sie sollten die Auswirkungen, die dieses Problem auf die Einwohner Nevadas hat, nicht unterschätzen.”

Die Republikaner hielten das texanische Gesetz als Vorbild für das Land. „Dieses Gesetz wird das Leben Tausender ungeborener Babys in Texas retten und zu einem nationalen Vorbild werden“, sagte Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick aus Texas. “Ich bete, dass jeder andere Staat unserem Beispiel bei der Verteidigung des Lebens folgt.”

Gouverneurin Kristi Noem aus South Dakota, die als potenzielle republikanische Präsidentschaftskandidatin im Jahr 2024 gilt, sagte, sie habe ihr Büro angewiesen, “sicherzustellen, dass wir die stärksten Pro-Life-Gesetze in den Büchern haben”.

Die Entscheidung des Gerichts, die sich nicht mit dem Inhalt des texanischen Gesetzes befasste, schafft neue Dringlichkeit für Präsident Biden und die Demokraten im Kongress, mehr zu tun, als öffentliche Erklärungen abzugeben, in denen sie die reproduktiven Rechte der Frauen verteidigen.

“Die Temperatur ist in dieser Angelegenheit gerade viel heißer geworden, und ich erwarte jetzt sicherlich, dass sich der Kongress an diesen Kämpfen beteiligt”, sagte Gouverneurin Michelle Lujan Grisham aus New Mexico, die Vorsitzende der Democratic Governors Association. “Unsere Wähler erwarten von uns allen, dass wir mehr tun.”

Die Demokraten im Senat haben jedoch nicht die Stimmen, um den Filibuster zu beseitigen, der notwendig wäre, um das Bundesabtreibungsgesetz in der gleichmäßig geteilten Kammer zu ändern.

In Washington bemühten sich die demokratischen Führer am Donnerstag pflichtbewusst darum, ihre Entschlossenheit zu zeigen, gegen die Möglichkeit einer Nachahmung des texanischen Gesetzes an anderer Stelle zu protestieren – oder zu reagieren, wenn der Oberste Gerichtshof das Abtreibungsrecht zurücknimmt, wenn er über ein Mississippi-Gesetz entscheidet, das versucht, das Gesetz zu verbieten die meisten Abtreibungen nach 15 Schwangerschaftswochen, zwei Monate früher als Roe und nachfolgende Entscheidungen erlauben.

Die Sprecherin Nancy Pelosi versprach, über das Gesetz zum Schutz der Gesundheit von Frauen abzustimmen, das das Recht auf Abtreibung in Bundesgesetzen festschreiben würde.

Und Herr Biden versprach „eine gesamtstaatliche Anstrengung“ als Reaktion auf das texanische Gesetz und wies das Gesundheitsministerium und das Justizministerium an, mögliche Bundesmaßnahmen zu ermitteln, um sicherzustellen, dass Frauen im Bundesstaat Zugang zu sicheren und legale Abtreibungen.

„Das höchste Gericht unseres Landes wird es Millionen von Frauen in Texas ermöglichen, die eine kritische reproduktive Versorgung benötigen, zu leiden, während die Gerichte die verfahrenstechnischen Komplexitäten sichten“, sagte Biden. “Die Auswirkungen der Entscheidung von gestern Abend werden unmittelbar sein und erfordern eine sofortige Reaktion.”

Vizepräsidentin Kamala Harris fügte hinzu: “Wir werden nicht zusehen und zulassen, dass unsere Nation in die Tage der Abtreibungen in den Hinterhöfen zurückkehrt.”

Die erste Wahl, die die Fähigkeit der Demokraten auf die Probe stellen könnte, die Wähler für das Recht auf Abtreibung zu motivieren, findet am 14. September in Kalifornien statt, wo die Wähler das Schicksal von Gouverneur Gavin Newsom bestimmen werden, der mit einer Rückrufaktion konfrontiert ist. Herr Newsom warnte auf Twitter, dass das Abtreibungsverbot in Texas „die Zukunft von CA sein könnte“, wenn der Rückruf erfolgreich wäre.

In Virginia haben sich am Donnerstag demokratische Kandidaten für die drei landesweiten Ämter des Bundesstaates und das Abgeordnetenhaus auf das Thema gestürzt. Der ehemalige Gouverneur Terry McAuliffe, der im November für die Rückeroberung des Amtes kandidiert, sagte, der Kampf für das Recht auf Abtreibung würde dazu beitragen, demokratische Wähler zu motivieren, die möglicherweise selbstgefällig sind, nachdem die Partei 2019 die volle Kontrolle über die Landesregierung übernommen und Herrn Biden geholfen hat, den Staat zu gewinnen letztes Jahr.

„Wir sind ein demokratischer Staat. Es gibt mehr Demokraten“, sagte McAuliffe. “Aber dies ist ein Off-Off-Jahr, und die Demokraten zu motivieren, herauszukommen, das ist immer die große Herausforderung.”

Mit Blick auf das Jahr 2022 hat der Wahlkampfarm der Demokraten im Senat signalisiert, dass er das Abtreibungsrecht als Knüppel gegen Republikaner einsetzen wird, die in Staaten wie Florida, New Hampshire, Nevada und North Carolina antreten. Demokraten, die Kampagnen für den Gouverneur im nächsten Jahr planen, bereiten sich darauf vor, sich als letzte Verteidigungslinie für das Recht auf Abtreibung zu brandmarken, insbesondere in Staaten mit republikanisch kontrollierten Gesetzgebern.

„Die Leute wachen jetzt mit der Tatsache auf, dass der Kampf jetzt in den Staaten stattfinden wird, und sie erkennen, dass das einzige, buchstäblich das einzige, was der Verabschiedung des gleichen Verbots, das Texas gerade verabschiedet hat, im Weg steht, der Veto-Stift ist unseres demokratischen Gouverneurs“, sagte Josh Shapiro, der Generalstaatsanwalt von Pennsylvania, ein Demokrat, der sagte, er erwarte, in das Rennen um die Nachfolge von Gouverneur Tom Wolf einzutreten. „Ich habe die Politiker in Washington aufgegeben. Ich glaube nicht, dass wir uns mehr auf sie verlassen können.“

Obwohl die Republikaner den Sturz von Roe seit langem zu einem zentralen politischen Ziel gemacht haben – als Kandidat im Jahr 2016 sagte Trump voraus, dass seine späteren Ernennungen des Obersten Gerichtshofs dies tun würden –, herrschte unter den Demokraten immer noch ein spürbares Gefühl der Erschütterung. Trotz der konservativen Mehrheit von 6 zu 3 des Gerichts schienen viele Demokraten auf das Urteil vom Mittwoch geistig unvorbereitet zu sein.

“Sie können ein so offensichtlich falsches oder verfassungswidriges Gerichtsurteil nicht planen”, sagte der Abgeordnete Conor Lamb aus Pennsylvania, ein Demokrat, der nächstes Jahr für den offenen Senatssitz seines Staates kandidiert.

Verstehen Sie das texanische Abtreibungsgesetz

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Die Bürger, nicht der Staat, werden das Gesetz durchsetzen. Das Gesetz vertritt normale Bürger – auch solche außerhalb von Texas – und erlaubt ihnen, Kliniken und andere zu verklagen, die gegen das Gesetz verstoßen. Es zahlt ihnen mindestens 10.000 US-Dollar pro illegaler Abtreibung, wenn sie erfolgreich sind.

Senatorin Kirsten Gillibrand aus New York, die Frauenrechte zum Kernstück ihres Präsidentschaftswahlkampfs 2020 machte, sagte, die Demokraten könnten nicht länger zimperlich sein, wenn es um das Recht auf Abtreibung geht. “Wir müssen das Thema anheben”, sagte sie am Donnerstag. “Wir müssen dem amerikanischen Volk erklären, dass dieses texanische Gesetz und andere Gesetze, die in anderen Bundesstaaten verabschiedet werden sollen, die grundlegende Gesundheitsversorgung von Frauen auf den Kopf stellen werden.”

Im Allgemeinen beklagten progressive Befürworter das Versagen der Demokraten, mit den Republikanern mitzuhalten, die sich seit Generationen in den Hauptstädten der Bundesstaaten verschanzen und enormen Wert darauf legten, Konservative auf die Bank zu berufen – Schlüsselarenen, in denen Demokraten es versäumt haben, das Recht auf Abtreibung zu schützen.

„Wir spielen 50 Jahre Aufholjagd“, sagte Ben Jealous, ein ehemaliger NAACP-Chef und jetzt Präsident von People for the American Way, einer fortschrittlichen Organisation. „Das Gericht steht nicht im Einklang mit dem amerikanischen Volk. Und die Republikaner haben den Obersten Gerichtshof zu ihrer Mauer gegen die Demokratie gemacht.“

Selbst während sie frohlockten, machten sich die Konservativen gegen Abtreibungen Sorgen über mögliche Fallstricke. Sie erinnerten an Todd Akin, einen ehemaligen Kongressabgeordneten aus Missouri, dessen Kandidatur im Senat 2012 durch seine Aussage entgleist wurde, dass Frauen, die Opfer einer von ihm so genannten „legitimen Vergewaltigung“ sind, selten schwanger wurden. Demokraten benutzten Äußerungen wie die von Herrn Akin, um die GOP als einen „Krieg gegen die Frauen“ darzustellen, eine Taktik, die die Republikaner als sehr effektiv einräumten.

“Jeder Kandidat im Land wird jetzt nach seiner Position zur Abtreibung gefragt”, sagte Tom McClusky, der Präsident von March for Life Action, die sich für Gesetze zur Einschränkung des Abtreibungsrechts einsetzt. „Was wir vermeiden wollen, sind Vorfälle wie in der Vergangenheit.“

Demokraten glauben seit langem, dass die öffentliche Unterstützung für legale Abtreibung verhindern würde, dass sie effektiv verboten wird, wie es Texas getan hat. Sogar einige konservative Anti-Abtreibungs-Aktivisten räumen ein, dass ihre absolutistische Position nicht von einer Mehrheit der Amerikaner geteilt wird, obwohl sie glauben, dass einige Demokraten es übertrieben haben, alle gesetzlichen Beschränkungen der Abtreibung aufzuheben.

„Vielleicht stimmt nicht die Mehrheit der Leute mit mir überein, dass das Leben mit der Empfängnis beginnt, aber sie glauben nicht, dass Abtreibung zu irgendeinem Zeitpunkt legal sein sollte und alles vom Steuerzahler bezahlt werden sollte“, sagte Penny Nance, die Geschäftsführerin von Concerned Women for America, eine konservative christliche Organisation.

Die Unterstützung für das Recht auf Abtreibung war für die Demokraten kaum ein Motivationsfaktor wie für die konservativen Wähler, die gegen die Abtreibung sind. Bei den Präsidentschaftswahlen 2020 unterstützten Wähler, die sagten, Abtreibung sei das wichtigste Thema, Herrn Trump gegenüber Herrn Biden, 89 bis 9 Prozent, laut AP/Votecast-Daten.

Aber während die Republikaner seit Generationen für die Einschränkung des Abtreibungsrechts kämpfen, sind die Demokraten in dieser Frage erst vor kurzem nach links gerückt – von Bill Clintons Formulierung, dass es „sicher, legal und selten“ sein sollte, bis hin zu den Argumenten der modernen Demokraten, dass die Wahl bei der Frau liegen sollte allein. Senator Bernie Sanders aus Vermont hat sich noch 2017 mit Anti-Abtreibungskandidaten eingesetzt.

Während praktisch alle gewählten Demokraten das Recht auf Abtreibung befürworten, haben nur sehr wenige mit einem nationalen Profil eine politische Identität zu diesem Thema aufgebaut.

Eine, die es versuchte, war Wendy Davis, die ehemalige Senatorin des Bundesstaates Texas, die mehr als 11 Stunden lang bei einem gescheiterten Versuch im Jahr 2013 sprach, Gesetze zur Einschränkung des Zugangs zu Abtreibungen im Bundesstaat zu blockieren. Sie kandidierte 2014 für die Gouverneurin und 2020 für den Kongress, wurde jedoch beide Male leicht besiegt.

„Wir können dieses Thema nicht scheuen, aus Angst, dass wir als Abtreibungsaktivisten gebrandmarkt werden“, sagte Frau Davis am Donnerstag. „Ich bin stolz, so bezeichnet zu werden, denn es ist keine Schande. Abtreibungen sollten nicht stigmatisiert werden.“

Nate Cohn, Astead W. Herndon und Jeremy W. Peters trugen zur Berichterstattung bei.

Categories
Politics

Blinken Says American Diplomats Have Left Kabul

WASHINGTON — American diplomats have left Afghanistan, and the U.S. Embassy in Kabul will remain closed, Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken said on Monday, after the military announced that it had completed its withdrawal from the country.

The disintegration of diplomacy was a stunning turnabout from plans to stay and help Afghanistan transition from 20 years of war and to work toward peace, however tenuous, with a government that would share power with the Taliban. This month, Mr. Blinken had pledged that the United States would remain “deeply engaged” in Afghanistan long after the military left.

But with the Taliban firmly in control, what was one of the largest U.S. diplomatic missions in the world will for now be greatly scaled back, based in Doha, the Qatari capital, and focused largely on processing visas for refugees and other immigrants.

“Given the uncertain security environment and political situation in Afghanistan, it was the prudent step to take,” Mr. Blinken said in remarks at the State Department.

He sought to portray the departure as a “new chapter of America’s engagement with Afghanistan.”

“It’s one in which we will lead with our diplomacy,” Mr. Blinken said, commending the U.S. diplomats, troops and other personnel who had worked at the embassy, which just last month had employed around 4,000 people — including 1,400 Americans.

Left uncertain was whether American efforts to stabilize the Afghan government would continue — the main thrust of years of painstaking work and negotiations with leaders in Kabul that were supported by billions of dollars in American taxpayer funding.

Instead, Mr. Blinken said that any engagement with the Taliban — a longtime U.S. enemy that seized power when President Ashraf Ghani fled Afghanistan on Aug. 15 — “will be driven by one thing only: our vital national interests.”

Exactly four weeks earlier, on Aug. 2, Mr. Blinken had left little doubt that the Biden administration intended to keep the U.S. Embassy in Kabul open.

“Our partnership with the people of Afghanistan will endure long after our service members have departed,” he said then. “We will keep engaging intensely in diplomacy to advance negotiations between the Afghan government and the Taliban with the goal of a political solution, which we believe is the only path to lasting peace.”

As many as 200 American citizens, and tens of thousands of Afghans, were left behind in a two-week military airlift that Mr. Blinken called one of the largest evacuation efforts in U.S. history. He demanded that the Taliban keep its word and allow them to leave safely once they had exit documents in hand.

Understand the Taliban Takeover in Afghanistan

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Who are the Taliban? The Taliban arose in 1994 amid the turmoil that came after the withdrawal of Soviet forces from Afghanistan in 1989. They used brutal public punishments, including floggings, amputations and mass executions, to enforce their rules. Here’s more on their origin story and their record as rulers.

Who are the Taliban leaders? These are the top leaders of the Taliban, men who have spent years on the run, in hiding, in jail and dodging American drones. Little is known about them or how they plan to govern, including whether they will be as tolerant as they claim to be.

What happens to the women of Afghanistan? The last time the Taliban were in power, they barred women and girls from taking most jobs or going to school. Afghan women have made many gains since the Taliban were toppled, but now they fear that ground may be lost. Taliban officials are trying to reassure women that things will be different, but there are signs that, at least in some areas, they have begun to reimpose the old order.

More than 123,000 people were evacuated from Kabul in recent weeks, including about 6,000 Americans.

Mr. Blinken also said that the United States would closely watch the Taliban’s efforts to stanch terrorism in Afghanistan, as the group has said it will do, and would continue to work with the international community to provide humanitarian aid to millions of Afghans who need food, medicine and health care after decades of war and political instability.

He struck a resolute tone about the diplomatic retreat, and in reminding Americans about the cost of the conflict.

America’s longest war, with its casualties and the resources that were sunk into it over the past 20 years, “demands reflection,” Mr. Blinken said.

“We must learn its lessons, and allow those lessons to shape how we think about fundamental questions of national security and foreign policy,” he said. “We owe that to future diplomats, policymakers, military leaders, service members. We owe that to the American people.”

Categories
Politics

U.S. working to contact most of 1,500 Americans left

WASHINGTON — Secretary of State Antony Blinken said Wednesday that there may be as many as 1,500 Americans in Afghanistan left to evacuate, a calculation that he described as “difficult to pin down with absolute precision at any given moment.”

Blinken said during a press conference that the U.S. currently is “aggressively reaching out” to about 1,000 contacts “multiple times a day, through multiple channels of communication” to determine if they still want to leave and to give them instructions on how to do so. However, the ultimate number might be lower, Blinken said.

Blinken added that the State Department has been in direct contact with 500 other Americans in the last 24 hours with instructions on how to safely travel to the airport for evacuation.

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken speaks about refugee programs for Afghans who aided the U.S. during a briefing at the State Department in Washington, DC, U.S. August 2, 2021.

Brendan Smialowski | Reuters

“The U.S. government does not track Americans’ movements when they travel around the world,” Blinken explained. “There could be other Americans in Afghanistan who never enrolled with the embassy, who ignored public evacuation notices and have not yet identified themselves.”

“We’ve also found that many people who contact us and identify themselves as American citizens, including by filling out and submitting repatriation assistance forms, are not, in fact, U.S. citizens, something that can take some time to verify. And some Americans may choose to stay in Afghanistan,” the nation’s top diplomat said.

The U.S. Embassy in Afghanistan early on Thursday issued a security alert on its website urging Americans to avoid traveling to Kabul airport and warned some at certain gates to “leave immediately.”

“U.S. citizens who are at the Abbey Gate, East Gate, or North Gate now should leave immediately.” the alert said.

A State Department spokesperson called it a “dynamic and volatile security environment.”

White House press secretary Jen Psaki said Wednesday that many of the 1,000 contacts the U.S. is trying to reach are dual citizens who may not want to leave the country.

“Maybe they have extended family there, maybe they’ve spent their entire lives in Afghanistan and they’re not yet ready to depart,” Psaki told reporters during a press briefing. “Maybe they’re working on a range of projects there and aren’t yet ready to leave them. I know that’s hard for us to understand as we’re looking at the images, but for many of these Afghans, this is their home.”

Blinken’s press conference, his first since the collapse of the Afghan government to the Taliban more than a week ago, comes as U.S. and coalition forces intensify emergency evacuation flights.

In the past 24 hours, Western forces evacuated 19,000 people out of Kabul on 90 military cargo aircraft flights, a cadence of one departure flight every 39 minutes, according to the Pentagon.

Evacuees wait to board a Boeing C-17 Globemaster III during an evacuation at Hamid Karzai International Airport in Kabul, Afghanistan, August 23, 2021.

Sgt. Isaiah Campbell | U.S. Marine Corps | via Reuters

Since the mass evacuations began Aug. 14, approximately 82,300 people have been airlifted out of Afghanistan. About 87,900 people have been evacuated since the end of July, including about 4,500 U.S. citizens and their families.

The Pentagon said Wednesday that 10,000 people are currently at Hamid Karzai International Airport in Kabul awaiting a flight. About 5,400 U.S. servicemembers are assisting with evacuation efforts, with nearly 200 U.S. military aircraft dedicated to the mission.

President Joe Biden on Tuesday reiterated to leaders of the G-7, NATO, United Nations and European Union that the United States will withdraw its military from Afghanistan by the end of the month.

The president warned that staying longer in Afghanistan carries serious risks for foreign troops and civilians. Biden said that ISIS-K, an Afghanistan-based affiliate of the terror group, presents a growing threat to the airport.

“Every day we’re on the ground is another day we know that ISIS-K is seeking to target the airport and attack both U.S. and allied forces and innocent civilians,” he said.

Read more on the developments in Afghanistan:

The Taliban said earlier Tuesday that the group will no longer allow Afghan nationals to leave the country on evacuation flights nor will they accept an extension of the withdrawal deadline beyond the end of the month.

“We are not in favor of allowing Afghans to leave,” Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid told reporters during a press conference on Tuesday.

“They [the Americans] have the opportunity, they have all the resources, they can take all the people that belong to them, but we are not going to allow Afghans to leave and we will not extend the deadline,” he said. Evacuations carried out by foreign forces after Aug. 31 would be a “violation” of a Biden administration promise to end the U.S. military’s mission in the country, Mujahid said.

Clarification: There may be as many as 1,500 Americans still in Afghanistan awaiting evacuation. The State Department has given 500 of them specific instructions on how to reach Hamid Karzai International Airport safely. The U.S. is still trying to contact the remaining 1,000, though the number who actually want to leave may be lower, according to the State Department.

NBC News contributed to this report.

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Entertainment

Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater Proclaims In-Particular person Season

The upcoming season of the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater in New York City Center will celebrate Robert Battle’s tenth anniversary as artistic director, the company announced on Wednesday. After the difficulties of the past 17 months, Battle is more open to the opportunity than it otherwise would have been.

“Being part of the problem-solving that took place and getting us through this way has, in a way, made me feel a bit better at those 10 years,” he said in an interview. “There’s something going through that makes me think, ‘Hey, if I go through this, I’ll definitely take the good and I’ll do it.'”

During his tenure with Ailey, Battle founded the New Directions Choreography Lab, an initiative to support aspiring and medium-sized dance professionals, and named Jamar Roberts as the company’s first resident choreographer. “When I started creating, I was fortunate to have David Parsons to speak for me,” said Battle. “I’ve always wanted to pay for that.”

His support has paid off. Roberts has created several critically acclaimed dances since taking office in 2019, including “Members Don’t Get Weary” and “Ode”. his farewell performance on December 9th was announced along with the season’s slate.

Two dances that debuted online will be performed live for the first time as part of the three-week City Center engagement. Battles “For Four”, a piece for four dancers to a jazz score by Wynton Marsalis, will make its full stage debut on December 3rd with Roberts’ “Holding Space”.

New productions of older works will also be on view throughout the season: Ailey’s “Pas de Duke,” which Jacqueline Green and Yannick Lebrun performed for a dance video in the Woolworth Building in 2020; “The River,” Ailey’s 1970 collaboration with Duke Ellington; an Ailey solo, “Reflections in D”; and “Unfold,” a recent work by Battle.

Looking ahead, Battle said he would like to focus more on preserving and sharing works by underrated choreographers: “The idea of ​​being an archive for historical works really interests me, really promoting it.”

Ticket sales begin on October 12th. More information is available at alvinailey.org.

Categories
Entertainment

American Ballet Theater’s Government Director Proclaims Her Departure

American Ballet Theater was already looking for new leadership, with Kevin McKenzie, its artistic director of nearly three decades, planning to leave in 2022. Now, it must find new administrative leadership as well: Kara Medoff Barnett, its executive director, announced on Monday that she would be stepping down later this year.

Barnett will be leaving to lead social impact marketing and strategy at First Republic Bank and develop the recently established First Republic Foundation. She will start in mid-September but will continue to advise Ballet Theater part-time through the end of the year while its board searches for her successor. She will also serve on two Ballet Theater advisory groups.

A dancer since she was 3 and a graduate of Harvard Business School, Barnett joined Ballet Theater in 2016, after working for almost nine years as a senior executive at Lincoln Center.

“She’s got this ability to access joy, even when you’re having to make difficult decisions,” McKenzie said in an interview. “It’s one thing to be an empathetic or an inspirational leader, but it’s another thing to instill a sense of purpose and joy.”

The pandemic, Barnett said, has been an inflection point for everyone, including herself: Her new job will be her first in the world of finance, and her first role in a public company.

“I don’t think that I could have even contemplated moving on if A.B.T. were in a different place,” Barnett said, adding that the company was on “a positive trajectory, even after the year of upheaval that we’ve had.”

When Barnett joined the company, it was still recovering from the economic downturn. Although Covid-19 has posed new financial challenges, Barnett said that Ballet Theater had managed to broaden its donor pool. Those gifts, she said, came largely as a result of Ballet Theater’s digital programming — and more recently outdoor programming like its ABT Across America tour, which stopped at eight cities this month.

The outdoor performances were different from a traditional ballet tour, and provided a more casual entry point for audiences.

“When was the last time you saw ballet, sitting on a picnic blanket with your shoes off, with kids dancing around you while they’re eating snow cones?” she said. “That’s not the way that we usually think about ballet.”

Ballet Theater will return to rehearsals in mid-September, with more traditional performances at Lincoln Center to follow in October. That season, which the company announced last week, will feature a premiere by Jessica Lang and a run of the story ballet “Giselle.”

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Health

American Ballet Theatre government director on fall return after Covid halt

The American Ballet Theater – the country’s national ballet company – has announced that it will return to the stage in New York City this October, a year after indoor performances were suspended due to Covid.

“We can’t wait to see ABT in the Lincoln Center theaters that are our home,” Kara Medoff Barnett, ABT’s Executive Director, told CNBC’s Worldwide Exchange on Friday. “We know our New York fans are excited to see ABT performers back on stage.”

ABT has just completed a cross-country tour that took 20 of its 84 dancers along with 28 support crews to eight different states. The company has performed at socially distant outdoor venues, and Barnett said it will learn from the protocols it developed this summer to ensure a safe indoor season this fall.

“We want to continue our commitment to the safety of our artists, staff and viewers,” said Barnett. “That was certainly the most important thing when we planned our outdoor tour to keep the audience out while we have the summer sun.”

American Ballet Theater dancers perform the company premiere of “La Follia Variations,” choreographed by Lauren Lovette and costumes by Victor Glemaud, during a dress rehearsal for the American Ballet Theater’s production of “Uniting in Movement” at the Segerstrom Center for the Arts, Costa Mesa on Thursday, April 22, 2021.

Leonard Ortiz | MediaNews Group | Orange County Register via Getty Images

Since its last fall season in 2019, ABT has had to cancel its personal appearances and switch to digital programs, like many ballet companies across the country and worldwide.

Barnett said the pandemic was a time of adjustment and learning for the entire company. “We always think, especially in the last year and a half, what is Plan B, Plan C,” she added. “We are agile in more ways than one.”

During Lincoln Center season, which occurs the last two weeks of October, performances may require proof of vaccination or a negative Covid test, depending on guidelines from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The tickets will be refunded by 12 noon on the day of the performance if there are last-minute changes for spectators.

“We work very closely with our Lincoln Center venues. We work very closely with our medical advisor. And we are determined to find ways that we can continue the mission of this company, which has been bringing extraordinary art to audiences for 81 years.” can track. ” “Barnett told CNBC.

Performances this season include the classical ballet “Giselle” as well as three of the 22 works developed over the past year while the dancers have been divided into 11 creative bubbles.

“We’re bringing three of the works that were created in these residential bubbles to the New York audience to have their live premieres on stage,” said Barnett. “They had digital premieres, they had outdoor premieres all over the country – but now we’re bringing them to Lincoln Center.”

The “ABT Across America” ​​performances, which ended on Wednesday in New York City, were mostly free. But for a company that generated 36% of its revenue from ticket sales in 2018, the return of a full program is essential to future success and longevity.

Barnett isn’t worried about the recovery period and says she is very optimistic about the demand for live performances. “I think there is so much pent-up demand for the performing arts, so much pent-up demand for joint activities and experiences and the joy of celebrating together. In fact, I think we can assume we have the biggest audience we’ve had “seen in years.”

“We had 6,000 people, 8,000 people in these parks watching ballet under the stars,” added Barnett, referring to the cross-country tour. “I think the audience is ready, they missed us and they really want to come back.”

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Health

Biden is on observe to fall in need of vaccinating 70% of American adults by the Fourth of July

President Joe Biden speaks in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building in Washington, D.C., U.S., on Wednesday, June 2, 2021.

Samuel Corum | Bloomberg | Getty Images

With less than three weeks to go until Independence Day, President Joe Biden’s latest vaccination goals are in jeopardy.

The country is not on pace to hit his two main targets outlined in early May: fully vaccinating 160 million adult Americans and administering at least one shot to 70% of adults across the U.S. by July 4, according to a CNBC analysis of Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data.

About 65% of adults are at least partially vaccinated as of Wednesday, CDC data shows. Roughly 13.6 million would have to receive their first shot over the next 18 days to get that figure to 70%, an average of about 756,000 new vaccinations each day. The U.S., however, is averaging 336,000 newly vaccinated adults per day over the past week.

If the U.S. maintains that latest seven-day average, 67% of adults will be at least partially vaccinated by that day.

When asked about the consequences of missing the 70% target at a news briefing last week, the White House’s chief medical advisor, Dr. Anthony Fauci, said the Fourth of July would not be the end of the country’s vaccination efforts as the risk of infection and illness remains for those who haven’t gotten a shot.

“If you don’t meet the precise goal and you fall short by a few percent, that doesn’t mean you stop in your effort to get people vaccinated,” Fauci said. “We want to reach 70% of the adult population by the Fourth of July. I believe we can, I hope we will, and if we don’t we’re going to continue to keep pushing.”

Fauci emphasized that people who don’t get vaccinated, are still at risk. “If you get vaccinated, you dramatically, dramatically diminish the risk of getting infected and almost eliminate the risk of serious disease,” he said.

Fauci, the nation’s top infectious disease expert, also stressed the importance of vaccination in preventing the delta variant, which was first identified in India and is rapidly emerging as the dominant strain in the U.K, from taking hold in the United States.

White House Covid czar Jeff Zients told reporters Thursday that the U.S. would cross the 70% mark and “continue across the summer months to push beyond 70%,” but did not specify whether he expects the country to reach that mark by the goal deadline.

Biden’s goal of 160 million fully vaccinated adults is also on track to fall short if the pace of shots does not pick up in the next few weeks. Nearly 142 million adults have completed a vaccination program, on pace to land at around 152 million on the Fourth of July assuming the current pace of daily reported vaccinations holds steady.

When Biden first announced the two goals on May 4, the country was on pace to hit both. But the vaccination rate has fallen in the weeks since, from a seven-day average of 2.2 million shots per day across all age groups on the day of the announcement to 1.2 million per day as of June 16, according to the CDC.

The White House has doubled down on recent efforts to boost the vaccination rate. Biden announced June as a “national month of action” in which his administration would mobilize national organizations, community- and faith-based partners, celebrities, athletes, and other influential groups to be part of the vaccination campaign. The White House also asked pharmacies to extend hours for the month of June and partnered with Uber and Lyft to offer free rides to vaccination sites.

States are also offering incentives ranging from free beer to $1 million lotteries to try to convince Americans to get jabbed. 

Though the nationwide rate is still about 5 percentage points away, 14 states and the District of Columbia have already crossed the 70% milestone. New York is the latest to get there, and Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced Tuesday that the state would lift most of its Covid restrictions as a result. 

Other states lag, with 22 of them below the 60% mark. That includes Mississippi, Alabama, Louisiana and Wyoming, which have each reached less than 50% of adult residents with one or more shots.

The U.S. has undoubtedly made progress in fighting Covid, and nationwide case counts are down to levels not seen since the start of the pandemic, which U.S. officials attribute to the country’s vaccination campaign. American life is closer to its pre-pandemic normal than at any point since last March now that the CDC’s lifted most of its mask recommendations and started to ease travel restrictions.

Even so, pockets of the U.S. with low vaccination rates are a risk for the country’s ability to control the pandemic, said Dr. Wafaa El-Sadr, a professor of epidemiology and medicine at Columbia University. 

“Once you have an unvaccinated population, that’s a vulnerable population likely to see surges in cases,” she said. Ongoing spread means the potential for new variants to emerge, with the possibility that one will be able to evade the protection offered by vaccines.

“It is valuable to have aspirations and very ambitious targets ahead of us and I think we should do our best to reach those targets,” El-Sadr said of Biden’s July 4 goals. “If we don’t reach them, it doesn’t mean that we accept it as a failure and stop doing what we’re doing. It means we redouble our efforts.”

Categories
Health

How the Virus Unraveled Hispanic American Households

To a wide circle of friends and family, Jesse Ruby was the go-to guy.

The father who would drop everything and drive across town if his sons needed a ride. The cousin who spent weekends helping relatives move. The partner who worked odd jobs on weekends with his girlfriend, Virginia Herrera, to help make ends meet for an extended household in San Jose, Calif.

“If he was your friend, or he considered you a friend or family, all you had to do is ask,” Ms. Herrera said. “You could depend on him. He was that person.” Then, in December, Mr. Ruby caught the coronavirus. He died six weeks later, at just 38 years old.

Across the United States, the pandemic has shattered families like Mr. Ruby’s. Hispanic American communities have been pummeled by a higher rate of infections than any other racial or ethnic group and have experienced hospitalizations and deaths at rates exceeded only by those among Native Americans and Alaska Natives.

But new research shows the coronavirus has also attacked Hispanic Americans in an especially insidious way: They were younger when they died.

They are much more likely than white Americans to have died of Covid-19 before age 65, often in the prime of life and at the height of their productive years. Indeed, a recent study of California deaths found that Hispanic Americans between the ages of 20 and 54 were 8.5 times more likely than white Americans in that age range to die of Covid-19.

“It matters how old you are when you die, because your role in society differs,” said Dr. Mary Bassett, director of the François-Xavier Bagnoud Center for Health and Human Rights at Harvard’s T.H. Chan School of Public Health.

Her research has found that Hispanic Americans and Black people who died of Covid-19 lost three to four times as many years of potential life before the age of 65 as did whites who died.

The virus more often killed white Americans who were older. Their deaths were no less tragic, but they did not lead to the unraveling of income streams and support networks that was experienced in Hispanic American communities. These families experienced a very different pandemic.

“When you die young, you may be a critical breadwinner for your family,” Dr. Bassett said. “You may have dependent children. And we know that losing a parent is not good for children and has an impact on their future development and psychological well-being.”

Mr. Ruby and Ms. Herrera lived together in San Jose, Calif., where the extreme wealth of Silicon Valley’s high-tech elite contrasts with poverty and homelessness, and where working families double and triple up under the same roof, paying some of the highest rents in the country.

“It’s a tale of two cities,” said Jennifer Loving, chief executive officer of Destination: Home, a public-private partnership aiming to end homelessness in Santa Clara County, which includes San Jose. “We literally have Teslas sitting outside homeless encampments.”

Health is as polarized as wealth. An analysis of county death records by The New York Times provides a rare, granular look at who died of Covid-19 in a county of 1.9 million people — by age, sex, race and ethnicity, pre-existing health conditions and, importantly, where people lived.

The data show that people like Mr. Ruby and others in largely Hispanic neighborhoods, and in those areas where incomes are lower than the county median, were more likely to die at a younger age than those in high-income communities or in those where fewer Hispanic Americans were living.

The records were first obtained by Evan Low, a California Assembly member who advocated unsuccessfully for legislation requiring the state’s health department to collect and publicly report Covid-19 deaths by ZIP code.

“The goal is greater transparency about what has occurred during the pandemic,” Mr. Low said. “We need to know which neighborhoods have been most impacted. We want to understand precisely where people died of Covid, so we have data and facts to guide policy.”

Through the end of February, white residents were just as likely to die of Covid-19 as Hispanic residents, according to The Times’s analysis. But the white residents were much older, on average.

The median age at death was 86 for white Covid-19 patients, compared with 73 for Hispanic individuals. The analysis shows that while only 25 percent of the county’s population is Hispanic, 51 of the 68 residents under age 50 who died of Covid-19 through the end of February were Hispanic.

Only seven were white, though white residents make up nearly one-third of the county. Most of the others were of Asian or Pacific Islander backgrounds. (Asian-American residents had a much lower death rate, half that of white and Hispanic residents.)

Four San Jose ZIP codes with largely Hispanic populations — 95116, 95122, 95127 and 95020 — accounted for one in five of the Covid-19 deaths in Santa Clara County, even though they represented only one in eight of the county’s residents. Households in the four ZIP codes had incomes that were lower than the median in the county.

The patterns in Santa Clara County hint at a broader disparity throughout the nation. Hispanic Americans, who are more likely than white Americans to have jobs that cannot be done remotely and do not provide paid sick leave, are three times as likely as white Americans to be hospitalized with Covid-19 and more than twice as likely to die of it. Many lack health insurance.

Mr. Ruby was a charmer who could chat up anyone, the life of the party. Friends in school had nicknamed him Buddha, a reference to his happy-go-lucky nature and his chunky frame.

“He was all about having a good time,” said a cousin, Anthony Fernandez. “He would have you laughing within the first five minutes of talking to you.”

In 2011, when Ms. Herrera met Mr. Ruby, she was reluctant to get involved. He had just been released from a short stint in prison for a burglary involving beer. He had a scar on his stomach from a gunshot wound and a large, prominent tattoo of a Buddha on his forehead. She prevailed on him to remove it.

“I told him, ‘I’m not a pen pal,’” Ms. Herrera recalled. “‘I’m not going to write you in jail. You need to be out.’”

The relationship was stormy at first, but Mr. Ruby eventually became an integral, trusted part of Ms. Herrera’s extended family. He helped support two teenage sons from a previous relationship: Jesse Jr., 18, who plans to start attending community college in the fall, and Joseph, 16.

Mr. Ruby became a surrogate father to Ms. Herrera’s daughter, coaching her baseball team and watching movies with her when she was moping. He made a mean enchilada casserole, and took charge of the laundry and repairs around the house.

He even won over Ms. Herrera’s mother, Virginia Marquez, who thought he drank too much when she first met him but came to love Mr. Ruby.

“He was the person you could call,” she said. “He would drop what he was doing and go help.”

Ms. Herrera has felt the loss of Mr. Ruby in uncountable ways, but money has been a particular concern.

Shortly before he fell ill, Mr. Ruby had landed a steady job building walk-in coolers and freezers (Ms. Herrera said removing the Buddha tattoo had helped). The job paid well, he got to drive the company truck, and there was plenty of overtime.

For a brief while, “It felt like a weight was taken of our shoulders,” Ms. Herrera said. His abrupt death left her grieving — and panicked. “We went halves on everything, so I’ve struggled,” she said.

Researchers have long remarked on the social networks and expansive family ties that help explain why Hispanic Americans tend to be as healthy as, or healthier than, white Americans. Hispanic Americans have high rates of diabetes and obesity but live longer than white Americans, despite lower average incomes and educational levels and reduced access to health care.

But the phenomenon, called the Hispanic paradox, has not held up during the pandemic. A recent study in Health Affairs found that 70 percent of Covid-19 cases in California where race and ethnicity were known had struck Hispanic individuals, though that group makes up only 39 percent of the state population. Hispanic Americans also accounted for nearly half of the deaths from Covid-19 in the state.

“Covid-19 is so overwhelming that this previously known paradox, which is also called the healthy immigrant effect, is overwhelmed,” said Erika Garcia, an assistant professor of environmental health at the University of Southern California, whose study identified the discrepancies in death rates among younger adults in California.

The coronavirus spreads very quickly within households, and so close ties among extended households have emerged as detrimental factors for Hispanic Americans. A Health Affairs study also found that Hispanic Californians were eight times as likely as white residents to live in a “high exposure-risk household,” which scientists defined as one having one or more essential workers and fewer rooms than inhabitants.

“The stereotype is that Latino families care about family more, but it’s not really about that — it’s about the need to pool together resources,” said Zulema Valdez, a professor of sociology at the University of California, Merced. “There’s a whole web of a social safety net that the family is providing.”

A death creates a hole in the net. “They’re immediately one paycheck away from homelessness,” Dr. Valdez said.

“Everybody knows someone who has died, or multiple people who have died, and everyone is figuring out how to compensate for the roles and duties that are no longer being done by those people,” she added. “The hardship is extreme.”

Deaths of wage earners add to the hardships minority communities are already experiencing during the pandemic.

One in five Black and Hispanic Americans reported being behind on their rent or mortgage in April, compared with 7.5 percent of white Americans. One in five Black and Hispanic adults in households with children said they did not have enough to eat in the previous week, compared with 6.4 percent of white Americans, according to analyses of census surveys by Diane Schanzenbach, an economist at Northwestern University.

A few days before Thanksgiving, Ms. Marquez’s husband, a Lyft driver, got what looked at first like a cold. He started having trouble breathing — and then a coronavirus test came back positive.

He was hospitalized on Thanksgiving Day. Ms. Marquez, the mother of Mr. Ruby’s girlfriend, canceled the festive meal she had planned for the family and told everyone to stay away. But Ms. Herrera and Mr. Ruby stopped by for a brief visit, and then the virus raced through the two households.

Five in Ms. Marquez’s household of nine were infected; aside from her husband, most had mild symptoms. In Ms. Herrera’s household of eight, all but two got sick. Mr. Ruby’s teenage boys, who did not live with them, also became ill.

On Dec. 4, Mr. Ruby’s fever spiked to 104 degrees, and he too struggled to breathe. His job’s private insurance hadn’t kicked in yet — he was on California’s Medicaid program, MediCal — and Ms. Herrera drove him to a hospital emergency room.

His weight, high blood pressure and diabetes all put Mr. Ruby at high risk for severe disease, but the hospital sent him home. Ms. Herrera is still tormented about that.

“I keep on replaying over and over,” she said. “What did I say, what did I do? Could I have done something different? Should I have turned the car around and went into the E.R. myself to say, ‘Why are you sending him home?’”

Mr. Ruby spent the next few days at home sleeping. He refused food, and Ms. Herrera, who was starting to recover from her own bout with the virus, tried to make sure he stayed hydrated.

When Mr. Fernandez, his cousin, texted to ask how he was, Mr. Ruby responded with one word: “Tired.”

On Dec. 8, Mr. Ruby’s skin began to turn blue, and Ms. Herrera called an ambulance. This time, the hospital admitted him. A few days later, Mr. Ruby seemed to rally. But then he took a turn for the worse and was told he would be placed on a ventilator.

He told Ms. Herrera on the phone that he was scared.

“I just kept reminding him, ‘You’re going to come home, you’re going to be OK, and when it’s time, we’ll laugh about this,’” she said. He died on Jan. 16.

The family’s grief metastasized into accusations and guilt. Some of Mr. Ruby’s family members blamed Ms. Herrera, saying she should have gotten him help sooner. Mr. Fernandez blames the hospital, saying E.R. physicians should never have sent Mr. Ruby home when he first sought help.

There was bickering over donations raised to help the family get through the crisis, and relationships have frayed. Life will never be the same for anyone in the extended family.

“Jesse always used to say, ‘Nothing can take me out,’” Ms. Herrera said. “I was waiting for him to come home and tell stories about how he beat Covid that he’d repeat over and over until he got on my nerves. I never had any doubt in my mind that he was going to come home.”

Susan Beachy contributed research.

Categories
Politics

Concentrating on ‘Important Race Concept,’ Republicans Rattle American Faculties

Still, he acknowledged that Republicans had “figured out how to message this.”

The messaging goes back to Mr. Trump, who, in the final weeks of the 2020 campaign, announced the formation of the 1776 Commission, set up explicitly to link what he said was “left-wing indoctrination” in schools to the sometimes violent protests over police killings.

A report by the commission was derided by mainstream historians; Mr. Biden canceled the project on his first day in office, but its impact endures on the right.

Media Matters for America, a liberal group, documented a surge of negative coverage of critical race theory by Fox News beginning in mid-2020 and spiking in April, with 235 mentions. And the Pew Research Center found last year that Americans were deeply divided over their perceptions of racial discrimination. Over 60 percent of conservatives said it was a bigger problem that people see discrimination where it does not exist, rather than ignoring discrimination that really does exist. Only 9 percent of liberals agreed.

Some Democratic strategists said the issue was a political liability for their party. Ruy Teixeira, a senior fellow at the left-leaning Center for American Progress, recently wrote, “The steady march of ‘anti-racist’ ideology” into school curriculums “will generate a backlash among normie parents.”

In an interview, he criticized leading Democrats for not calling out critical race theory because of their fear that “it will bring down the wrath of the woker elements of the party.”

In Loudoun County, Va., dueling parent groups are squaring off, one that calls itself “anti-racist” and the other opposed to what it sees as the creep of critical race theory in the school district, which enrolls 81,000 students from a rapidly diversifying region outside Washington.

After a 2019 report found a racial achievement gap, disproportionate discipline meted out to Black and Hispanic students, and the common use of racial slurs in schools, administrators adopted a “plan to combat systemic racism.” It calls for mandatory teacher training in “systemic oppression and implicit bias.”

Categories
Business

American, Southwest maintain off on alcohol gross sales after surge in unruly vacationers

A bird flies by in the foreground as a Southwest Airlines jet lands at McCarran International Airport in Las Vegas, Nevada on May 25, 2020.

Ethan Miller | Getty Images

Southwest Airlines and American Airlines announced that they are holding back alcoholic beverages service after a flight attendant was attacked and the industry grappled with a spate of other onboard passenger incidents.

A southwest flight attendant sustained facial injuries and lost two teeth after being attacked by a passenger. This emerges from a letter dated May 24th to CEO Gary Kelly from Southwest flight attendants union president Lyn Montgomery. Between April 8 and May 15, there were 477 incidents of passenger misconduct on flights to the southwest, Montgomery wrote.

Airlines have been slowly bringing back a snack and drink service that they stopped at the start of the pandemic.

American Airlines said it will not sell alcoholic beverages in the main cabin until Sept. 13, when the federal mask mandate expires. Alcoholic beverages will continue to be offered in First and Business Class, but only during the flight.

“For the past week, some of these stressors have created deeply worrying situations on board aircraft,” said Brady Byrnes, executive director of flight operations at American, in a note to flight attendants. “Let me be clear: American Airlines does not tolerate attack or abuse of our crews.”

The Dallas-based Southwest had planned to resume alcohol sales in June for Hawaii flights and in July for longer domestic flights in the continental United States. A spokesman from the Southwest said there is currently “no schedule” for resumption of alcohol sales.

“If alcohol sales resume in this already volatile environment, you can certainly understand our concerns,” Montgomery wrote in the letter.

On Monday, one day after the incident aboard the Sacramento to San Diego flight, the Federal Aviation Administration announced that it had received approximately 2,500 reports of recalcitrant passenger behavior this year, approximately 1,900 cases of travelers refusing to do so Federal mask mandate to be followed during air travel.

The Biden government continues to require people to wear face masks on airplanes, at airports, and on buses and trains by September 13, although the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has relaxed guidelines for vaccinated people in other settings.

“We are also aware that alcohol can contribute to atypical behavior by customers on board, and we owe it to our crew not to aggravate what may already be a new and stressful situation for our customers,” said Byrnes.