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Politics

Potential G.O.P. Takeover of Atlanta-Space Election Board Inches Ahead

The Georgia state electoral committee on Wednesday appointed a Republican majority body to review the performance of the Fulton County’s electoral committee, another step towards a possible Republican takeover of the electoral system in the state’s largest Democratic district.

The three-person body will include two Republicans and one Democrat: Rickey Kittle, a Republican member of the Catoosa County Electoral Committee; Stephen Day, a Democratic member of the Gwinnett County Electoral Committee; and Ryan Germany, attorney in the office of Brad Raffensperger, Republican Secretary of State.

The moves related to the Fulton County Electoral Committee came as Republican-controlled legislatures across the country to gain more power over the electoral administration, often attempting to evade election officials and hand them over to partisan lawmakers. Those efforts come as former President Donald J. Trump continues to spread lies and conspiracy theories about the 2020 election.

Republicans have also pushed for many Georgia district electoral committees to be restructured, potentially allowing more local GOP officials to take up positions.

The State Election Board was required to appoint the body to review Fulton County under the Georgia Republican Electoral Law passed in March. Republican lawmakers representing the county moved for the review last month.

Fulton County, the largest in the state and encompassing much of Atlanta, has a long history of struggling with elections, including a disastrous June 2020 primary that left the polling line for hours.

But Democrats across the state have denounced the demand for a performance review there, noting that there had been no evidence of widespread voter fraud in the past year and that election results were confirmed by three recounts and audits. The Democrats see the request as a political ploy at best and as a partisan takeover of power in the most momentous district for their party in Georgia at worst.

President Biden won Fulton County in November with 73 percent of the vote and more than 380,000 votes. It is home to most of the colored voters in the state. Mr Trump and his Republican allies have falsely denied Mr Biden’s narrow victory in Georgia, which was solidly Republican for a long time but targeted the Democrats in the presidential election and two Senate runoffs last year.

Suffrage groups criticized the review panel – all white and mostly Republican – for being unrepresentative of Fulton County.

“Fulton County’s voters deserve better,” said Lauren Groh-Wargo, executive director of Fair Fight Action, a Georgia constituency founded by former Democratic candidate for governorship, Stacey Abrams.

The Review Board is one of several provisions in Georgia’s new electoral law that creates the basis for partisan legislators to take over electoral administration.

But any change in control of the Fulton County Electoral Committee would be a lengthy process that, given the many steps required by electoral law, would likely take months.

Mr. Raffensperger, the Foreign Minister, showed his support for the body and wrote on Twitter: “I have long said that the state needs the authority to intervene when counties have consistently let their voters down.”

“I am confident that the performance review team will do a good job and I hope Fulton will cooperate in this process,” he said.

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Health

Royal Caribbean says 6 Covid circumstances found on board a ship; shares fall

In an aerial view, the Royal Caribbean Freedom of the Seas (L) prepares to set sail from Port Miami during the first U.S. trial cruise testing COVID-19 protocols on June 20, 2021 in Miami, Florida.

Joe Raedle | Getty Images

Royal Caribbean Cruises shares fell about 4% on Friday after six passengers on board its Adventure of the Seas ship tested positive for Covid-19.

The four of those guests were fully vaccinated and not traveling together. The cases were discovered during routine testing.

Three of the four fully-vaccinated passengers had no symptoms and the fourth passenger had mild symptoms, Royal Caribbean said in a statement. The two unvaccinated guests are minors traveling in the same party and are asymptomatic.

The six guests were immediately quarantined and their close contacts were identified and tested. They all tested negative, Royal Caribbean said.

“Each guest and their immediate travel parties are disembarking in Freeport, The Bahamas today, and separately traveling home via private transportation,” the cruise operator said.

When the cruise departed on Saturday from Nassau in the Bahamas, the guests were required to show proof of a negative PCR test. Unvaccinated minors were also required to take another test at check-in. Everyone had tested negative prior to boarding, according to a spokesperson for the company.

Due to the rapidly spreading delta coronavirus variant, the cruise line will be expanding its test procedures for cruises departing from the U.S. that are five nights or longer. Passengers will be required to have a negative test before they board ships, said CEO Michael Bayley in a Facebook post. He added, the tests can be taken within 3 days of embarkation. The new policy will be in place from July 31 to Aug. 31.

“Even with the vast majority of our onboard population highly vaccinated we are seeing more covid positive cases with vaccinated guests,” Bayley said, in the post. “The Delta variant is now spreading rapidly with over 92,000 new infections yesterday alone in the USA and in Florida one of the industry’s major markets there were over 17,000 cases yesterday.”

“We realize this will not make many guests happy just as it will comfort many guests. We are trying our very best to provide a safe and healthy and fun vacation for all our guests our crew and the communities we visit during these challenging times,” Bayley said.

The stock closed down 3.9% at $76.87. Shares are up nearly 3% since the start of the year, bringing the company’s market value to $19.57 billion.

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Politics

Biden indicators order to crack down on Huge Tech, enhance competitors ‘throughout the board’

President Joe Biden signed a new executive order on Friday aimed at tackling anti-competitive practices in big tech, labor and numerous other sectors.

“Capitalism without competition is not capitalism. It’s exploitation, “Biden said in a speech ahead of the signing of the directive in the White House.

The comprehensive arrangement, which includes 72 measures and recommendations involving more than a dozen federal agencies, is intended to reshape thinking around corporate consolidation and antitrust laws, according to a White House leaflet.

These broad goals and initiatives include:

  • Call on the Federal Trade Commission to “question previous bad mergers” that previous governments let slip
  • Urging the FTC to ban restrictions on professional admission on the grounds that they “impede economic mobility”
  • Encourage the FTC to prohibit or restrict non-compete agreements
  • Encouraging the Federal Communications Commission to restore “net neutrality” rules that were reversed during the Trump administration
  • Request to the FCC to block exclusive contracts between landlords and broadband providers
  • Lowering prescription drug prices by helping government and indigenous efforts to import cheaper drugs from Canada
  • Allow hearing aids to be sold over-the-counter
  • Establishment of a “White House Competition Council” to guide the federal response to the growing economic power of large corporations

“The impetus for this executive order is really where we can encourage more competition across the board,” said White House chief economic adviser Brian Deese, Ylan Mui of CNBC in an exclusive interview aired early Friday morning.

Through its technology-related measures, the Biden order aims to ensure that the largest companies in the industry wield their power to crowd out smaller competitors and exploit consumers’ personal information.

The regulation calls on regulators to undertake a number of reforms, including increased scrutiny over technology mergers and a greater focus on maneuvers like “killer acquisitions” where companies buy smaller brands to take them off the market.

The tightened grip of the technology giants has led to a decline in innovation, Deese told Mui.

These platforms have “caused significant problems,” Deese said. These include “privacy and security issues for users” and “small business entry issues,” he said.

The executive order “is not just about monopolies,” said Deese, “but about consolidation in general and the lack of competition when you have a limited number of market participants.”

He noted that some research suggests that wages are lower in more concentrated markets dominated by only a handful of companies. A White House factsheet cites a May 2020 Journal of Human Resources paper that based on data from CareerBuilder.com, it found that market consolidation points to a double-digit percentage decline in wages.

The order was announced just weeks after the House Judiciary Committee voted for six antitrust laws to reinvigorate competition in the technology sector.

The draft laws that would make it more difficult for dominant companies to complete mergers and forbid certain common business models for such companies have been significantly pushed back by those concerned that they will not go far enough or have unintended side effects.

In late June, a judge dismissed complaints from the Federal Trade Commission and a group of attorneys-general alleging that Facebook illegally maintained monopoly power.

Biden’s executive order also calls on the FTC to enact new rules for Big Tech’s data collection and user monitoring practices, and calls on the agency to ban certain unfair competition practices in internet marketplaces.

The arrangement could provide some relief to small and medium-sized businesses that have complained about the alleged crippling grip of tech companies like Amazon, Apple, Facebook and Google on the digital markets.

Biden’s executive ordinance does not unilaterally impose its will on big tech companies, but instead often calls on independent agencies to take action.

But the new FTC chairman, Lina Khan, a Biden-appointed person who, at 32, was the youngest person to ever hold that role when she was sworn in last month, already has a reputation for being a vocal advocate of reform and empowerment Developed regulations for technology giants.

Amazon is demanding that Khan be excluded from ongoing investigations into his business, arguing that it lacks impartiality and that it has repeatedly said the company is “guilty of antitrust violations and should be liquidated.”

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WATCH: How US Antitrust Law Works and What It Means for Big Tech

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Politics

New York Mayor’s Race in Chaos After Elections Board Pulls Again Outcomes

The New York City mayor’s race plunged into chaos on Tuesday night when the city Board of Elections released a new tally of votes in the Democratic mayoral primary, and then removed the tabulations from its website after citing a “discrepancy.”

The results released earlier in the day had suggested that the race between Eric Adams and his two closest rivals had tightened significantly.

But just a few hours after releasing the preliminary results, the elections board issued a cryptic tweet revealing a “discrepancy” in the report, saying that it was working with its “technical staff to identify where the discrepancy occurred.”

By Tuesday evening, the tabulations had been taken down, replaced by a new advisory that the ranked-choice results would be available “starting on June 30.”

Then, around 10:30 p.m., the board finally released a statement, explaining that it had failed to remove sample ballot images used to test its ranked-choice voting software. When the board ran the program, it counted “both test and election night results, producing approximately 135,000 additional records,” the statement said. The ranked-choice numbers, it said, would be tabulated again.

The extraordinary sequence of events seeded further confusion about the outcome, and threw the closely watched contest into a new period of uncertainty at a consequential moment for the city.

For the Board of Elections, which has long been plagued by dysfunction and nepotism, this was its first try at implementing ranked-choice voting on a citywide scale. Skeptics had expressed doubts about the board’s ability to pull off the process, though it is used successfully in other cities.

Under ranked-choice voting, voters can list up to five candidates on their ballots in preferential order. If no candidate receives more than 50 percent of first-choice votes in the first round, the winner is decided by a process of elimination: As the lower-polling candidates are eliminated, their votes are reallocated to whichever candidate those voters ranked next, and the process continues until there is a winner.

The Board of Elections released preliminary, unofficial ranked-choice tabulations on Tuesday afternoon, showing that Mr. Adams — who had held a significant advantage on primary night — was narrowly ahead of Kathryn Garcia in the ballots cast in person during early voting or on Primary Day. Maya D. Wiley, who came in second place in the initial vote count, was close behind in third place. The board then took down the results and disclosed the discrepancy.

The results may well be scrambled again: Even after the Board of Elections sorts through the preliminary tally, it must count around 124,000 Democratic absentee ballots. Once they are tabulated, the board will take the new total that includes them and run a new set of ranked-choice elimination rounds, with a final result not expected until mid-July.

Some Democrats, bracing for an acrimonious new chapter in the race, are concerned that the incremental release of results by the Board of Elections — and the discovery of an error — may stir distrust of ranked-choice voting and of the city’s electoral system more broadly.

In a statement late Tuesday night, Ms. Wiley laced into the Board of Elections, calling the error “the result of generations of failures that have gone unaddressed,” and adding: “Sadly it is impossible to be surprised.”

“Today, we have once again seen the mismanagement that has resulted in a lack of confidence in results, not because there is a flaw in our election laws, but because those who implement it have failed too many times,” she said. “The B.O.E. must now count the remainder of the votes transparently and ensure the integrity of the process moving forward.”

Ms. Garcia said the release of the inaccurate tally was “deeply troubling and requires a much more transparent and complete explanation.”

“Every ranked choice and absentee vote must be counted accurately so that all New Yorkers have faith in our democracy and our government,” she said. “I am confident that every candidate will accept the final results and support whomever the voters have elected.”

And Mr. Adams noted the “unfortunate” error by the Board of Elections and emphasized the importance of handling election results correctly.

“It is critical that New Yorkers are confident in their electoral system, especially as we rank votes in a citywide election for the first time,” he said in a statement released on Tuesday night. “We appreciate the board’s transparency and acknowledgment of their error. We look forward to the release of an accurate, updated simulation, and the timely conclusion of this critical process.”

If elected, Mr. Adams would be the city’s second Black mayor, after David N. Dinkins. Some of Mr. Adams’s supporters have already cast the ranked-choice process as an attempt to disenfranchise voters of color, an argument that intensified among some backers on Tuesday afternoon as the race had appeared to tighten, and is virtually certain to escalate should he lose his primary night lead to Ms. Garcia, who is white.

Surrogates for Mr. Adams have suggested without evidence that an apparent ranked-choice alliance between Ms. Garcia and another rival, Andrew Yang, could amount to an attempt to suppress the votes of Black and Latino New Yorkers; Mr. Adams himself claimed that the alliance was aimed at preventing a Black or Latino candidate from winning the race.

In the final days of the race, Ms. Garcia and Mr. Yang campaigned together across the city, especially in neighborhoods that are home to sizable Asian American communities, and appeared together on campaign literature.

To advocates of ranked-choice voting, the round-by-round shuffling of outcomes is part of the process of electing a candidate with broad appeal. But if Ms. Garcia or Ms. Wiley were to prevail, the process — which was approved by voters in a 2019 ballot measure — would likely attract fresh scrutiny, with some of Mr. Adams’s backers and others already urging a new referendum on it.

By Tuesday night, though, it was the Board of Elections that was attracting ire from seemingly all corners.

Betsy Gotbaum, the city’s former public advocate who now runs Citizens Union, a good-government group, warned that “the entire country is watching” the Board of Elections. “New Yorkers deserve elections, and election administrators, that they can have the utmost faith in,” Ms. Gotbaum added.

A comparison between first-place vote totals released on primary night and those released on Tuesday offered some insight into how the 135,000 erroneous votes were distributed. The bottom four candidates received a total of 42,000 new votes, roughly four times their actual vote total; the number of write-in ballots also skyrocketed to 17,516 from 1,336. Mr. Adams and Mr. Yang received the highest number of new votes.

It was not known, however, how the test votes were reallocated during the ranked-choice tabulations, making it impossible to determine how they affected the preliminary results that were released and then retracted.

When accurate vote counts are in place, it is difficult, but not unheard-of for a trailing candidate in a ranked-choice election to eventually win the race through later rounds of voting — that happened in Oakland, Calif., in 2010, and nearly occurred in San Francisco in 2018.

The winner of New York’s Democratic primary, who is almost certain to become the city’s next mayor, will face Curtis Sliwa, the founder of the Guardian Angels, who won the Republican primary.

According to the now-withdrawn tabulation released Tuesday, Ms. Wiley, a former counsel to Mayor Bill de Blasio, nearly made it to the final round. She finished closely behind Ms. Garcia, the former sanitation commissioner, before being eliminated in the penultimate round of the preliminary exercise.

After the count of in-person ballots last week, Ms. Garcia had trailed Ms. Wiley by about 2.8 percentage points. Asked if she had been in touch with Ms. Wiley’s team, Ms. Garcia suggested there had been staff-level conversations.

“The campaigns have been speaking to each other,” Ms. Garcia said in a phone call on Tuesday afternoon, saying the two candidates had not yet spoken directly. “Hopefully we don’t have to step in with attorneys. But it is about really ensuring that New York City’s voices are heard.”

Ms. Wiley ran well to the left of Ms. Garcia on a number of vital policy matters, including around policing and on some education questions. Either candidate would be the first woman elected mayor of New York, and Ms. Wiley would be the city’s first Black female mayor.

Mr. Adams, a former police captain and a relative moderate on several key issues, was a non-starter for many progressive voters who may have preferred Ms. Garcia and her focus on competence over any especially ideological message.

But early results suggested that Mr. Adams had significant strength among working-class voters of color, and some traction among white voters with moderate views.

City Councilman I. Daneek Miller, an Adams supporter who is pressing for a new referendum on ranked-choice voting, suggested in a text message on Tuesday that the system had opened the door to “an attempt to eliminate the candidate of moderate working people and traditionally marginalized communities,” as he implicitly criticized the Yang-Garcia alliance.

“It is incumbent on us now to address the issue of ranked voting and how it is being weaponized against a wide portion of the public,” said Mr. Miller, the co-chair of the Black, Latino, and Asian Caucus on the City Council.

Other close observers of the election separately expressed discomfort with the decision to release a ranked-choice tally without accounting for absentee ballots.

“There is real danger that voters will come to believe a set of facts about the race that will be disproven when all votes are in,” said Ben Greenfield, a senior survey data analyst at Change Research, which conducted polling for a pro-Garcia PAC. “The risk is that this could take a system that’s already new and confusing and increase people’s sense of mistrust.”

Dana Rubinstein, Jeffery C. Mays, Anne Barnard, Andy Newman and Mihir Zaveri contributed reporting.

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Business

Exxon Board to Get a Third Activist Pushing Cleaner Power

Activist investors who dealt a stunning defeat to Exxon Mobil last week secured a third seat on the company’s board on Wednesday when the oil giant announced updated results of a shareholder vote.

While the first two new dissident board members were oil company veterans, the newest member, Alexander A. Karsner, has strong environmental credentials and is expected to pose more of a challenge to senior management. Mr. Karsner’s election sharpened the investor rebuke of the company’s management, which has produced lackluster returns for about a decade.

Investor discontent with Exxon had been building because the company has invested in a number of projects, acquisitions and strategies that have not paid off, including Canadian oil sands and natural gas fields. Critics also believe that the company has been very slow to adapt to a changing energy industry and done too little to reduce carbon emissions even as many European oil companies began investing in wind turbines, solar farms and hydrogen.

The investors challenging Exxon were led by a small hedge fund called Engine No. 1. Last week the activists secured enough votes to put two people on the oil producer’s board, the first time candidates picked by the company’s management have lost an election, according to analysts. Engine No. 1 has sought to push Exxon to move toward cleaner energy and away from oil and gas.

Exxon said last week that it needed more time to determine who had won the last two of the 12 seats on its board. Engine No. 1 had put up four candidates. Exxon said that one of two remaining candidates did not secure enough votes but that Mr. Karsner was still in contention.

On Wednesday, the company said its latest results were preliminary and would be certified before being filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Having a third director on the board will give the activists greater say in big corporate decisions and Exxon’s strategy, though they will still be up against nine people picked by the company’s management, who will presumably be more likely to back executives on crucial questions.

“We are grateful for shareholders’ careful consideration of our nominees,” Engine No. 1 said in a statement, “and are excited that these three individuals will be working with the full board to help better Exxon Mobil for the long-term benefit of all shareholders.”

Mr. Karsner is a senior strategist at X, a division of Google’s parent company, Alphabet, and has been an executive at various energy, technology and investment businesses. Companies he has worked at have built solar plants in Morocco. Between 2006 and 2008, Mr. Karsner was an assistant secretary of energy for energy efficiency and renewable energy during the Bush administration.

In that role, he supervised the Energy Department’s applied science programs and helped negotiate the United States’ re-entry into the United Nations Convention on Climate Change, which eventually led to the 2015 Paris climate agreement. He has been a member of the board of Conservation International, an environmental group that works to protect forests that absorb climate-warming carbon.

Today in Business

Updated 

June 2, 2021, 4:35 p.m. ET

Exxon Mobil announced the election results in a bland statement that thanked shareholders for “their ongoing support for our company.”

“We look forward to working with all of our directors to build on the progress we’ve made to grow long-term shareholder value and succeed in a lower-carbon future,” the company said.

Darren W. Woods, Exxon’s chairman and chief executive, was re-elected to the board. His answer to the challenge posed by climate change has been to build a business that captures carbon dioxide from industrial plants and buries it deep underground. Exxon recently proposed a $100 billion carbon capture project for plants along the Houston Ship Channel that could be a model for the world. But in order to be viable, the project will most likely require a carbon tax or another mechanism to put a price on carbon emissions. Lawmakers in Washington have been reluctant to embrace a carbon price.

The new activist-backed directors may support Exxon’s carbon-capture efforts, but probably will push for other clean energy initiatives, as well. Executives at Engine No. 1 have said the new directors need to get on the board and study company businesses before pushing for fundamental changes. The directors have declined requests for interviews.

The three directors nominated by Exxon’s management who were not elected are Samuel Palmisano, a former chief executive of IBM; Steven Kandarian, a former Met Life chief executive; and Wan Zulkiflee, chairman of Malaysia Airlines and the former chief executive of Petronas, Malaysia’s state-owned oil company.

The activist-backed directors who were declared winners last week are Gregory Goff, a former chief executive of the refiner Andeavor who had a long career at Conoco Phillips, and Kaisa Hietala, an environmental scientist who was a senior executive at Neste, a Finnish refiner. Both have experience in biofuels.

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Business

Trump Ban From Fb Upheld by Oversight Board

SAN FRANCISCO – A Facebook-appointed panel of journalists, activists and lawyers confirmed the social network’s ban on former President Donald J. Trump on Wednesday, ending any immediate return of Mr Trump to mainstream social media and renewing one Debate on the technical power of the Internet speech.

Facebook’s oversight board, which acts as the court for the company’s substantive decisions, ruled that the social network rightly banned Mr. Trump after the Washington uprising in January, saying that he had “created an environment in which to serious risk of violence is possible. ” The panel said the persistent risk “justified” the move.

The board has also thrown the case back on Facebook and its top executives. An indefinite suspension was “not appropriate” as it was not a punishment set out in Facebook’s policies and the company should apply a standard punishment such as a temporary suspension or a permanent ban. The board gave Facebook six months to make a final decision on Mr Trump’s account status.

“Our only job is to hold this extremely powerful organization, Facebook. accountable, ”Michael McConnell, co-chair of the Oversight Board, told reporters on a call. Mr. Trump’s ban “did not meet these standards,” he said.

The decision makes it difficult for Mr Trump to re-enter mainstream social media, a major source of clout that he used during his years in the White House to directly appease his tens of millions of followers, take advantage of their abuses, set guidelines and criticize opponents. Twitter and YouTube also cut Mr Trump off after the Capitol uprising in January, saying the risk and potential for violence he created was too great.

While Mr Trump’s Facebook account remains banned, he may be able to return to the social network once the company reviews its actions. Mr Trump still has a tremendous influence on Republicans, and his false claims of a stolen election continue to be mirrored. On Wednesday, House Republican leaders moved to expel Wyoming Representative Liz Cheney for criticizing Mr. Trump and his election lies.

In a statement, Mr. Trump did not directly address the board’s decision. But he slammed Facebook, Google, and Twitter – some of which were important fundraising platforms for him – and called them corrupt.

“The President of the United States has been denied freedom of speech because radical left-wing madmen are afraid of the truth,” he said.

Mr. Trump’s continued Facebook suspension gave new fuel to the platforms for Republicans who have accused social media companies of suppressing conservative voices. Mark Zuckerberg, the CEO of Facebook, testified several times in Congress whether the social network had shown bias towards conservative political views. He denied it.

Senator Marsha Blackburn, Republican from Tennessee, said the decision was made by the Facebook boardextremely disappointing ”and it was“ clear that Mark Zuckerberg sees himself as the arbiter of freedom of speech ”. And Ohio Republican Rep. Jim Jordan said Facebook, which is under antitrust scrutiny, should be disbanded.

Democrats were unhappy too. Frank Pallone, chairman of the House’s Energy and Trade Committee, tweeted, “Donald Trump has played a huge role in spreading disinformation on Facebook, but whether he’s on the platform or not, Facebook and other social media platforms do too The same business model will find ways to highlight divisive content in order to generate ad revenue. “

The decision underscored the power of tech companies to determine who can say what online. While Mr. Zuckerberg has said that he doesn’t want his company to be “the arbiter of truth” in social discourse, Facebook has become increasingly active on the type of content it allows. To prevent the spread of misinformation, the company has been cracking down on QAnon conspiracy theories, polling loopholes, and anti-vaccination content for the past few months before Trump’s lockdown in January.

“This case has dramatic implications for the future of online language as the public and other platforms examine how the Board of Directors will deal with a difficult controversy that will recur around the world,” said Nate Persily, professor at Stanford University Law School .

He added, “President Trump has moved the envelope beyond the allowable language on these platforms and set the outer boundaries so that if you are not willing to pursue it, you will allow a great deal of incitement and hate speech and disinformation online others will spread. “

In a statement, Facebook said it was “pleased” that the board recognized that Mr Trump’s January lockdown was warranted. It said it would examine the judgment and “determine an act that is clear and proportionate”.

The case of Mr Trump is the most prominent one that the Facebook Oversight Board, conceived in 2018, has dealt with. The board, made up of 20 journalists, activists and former politicians, reviews and evaluates the company’s most controversial decisions regarding the moderation of content. Mr. Zuckerberg has repeatedly referred to it as the “Facebook Supreme Court”.

Although positioned as independent, the body was founded and funded by Facebook and has no legal or enforcement agency. Critics were skeptical of the board’s autonomy, saying it gave Facebook the ability to make tough decisions.

Each of his cases is decided by a five-person panel chosen from the 20 members of the Board of Directors, one of whom must be from the country from which the case originates. The committee examines the comments on the case and makes recommendations to the entire board, which decides with a majority of votes. After a decision is made, Facebook has seven days to respond to the board’s decision.

Since the board began issuing decisions in January, it has overturned Facebook’s decisions in four of the five cases it examined. In one case, the board asked Facebook to restore a post in which Joseph Goebbels, the Nazis’ head of propaganda, made a reference to the Trump presidency. Facebook had previously removed the post for “promoting dangerous people,” but it was in line with the board’s decision.

In another case, the board ruled that Facebook had gone too far by removing a post from a French user who falsely suggested that the drug hydroxychloroquine could be used to cure Covid-19. Facebook restored the post but also said it would continue to remove the wrong information, as directed by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the World Health Organization.

In Trump’s case, Facebook also asked the board for recommendations on how to deal with the accounts of political leaders. On Wednesday, the board suggested that the company publicly explain when it would apply special rules for influential people, although it should set specific deadlines in doing so. The board also said Facebook should clarify its strike and punishment process and develop and publish a policy regulating responses to crises or novel situations in which its regular processes would not prevent impending harm.

“Facebook was clearly abused by influential users,” said Helle Thorning-Schmidt, co-chair of the Oversight Board.

Facebook doesn’t have to accept these recommendations, but has said it will “examine them carefully”.

For Mr. Trump, Facebook has long been a place to gather his digital base and support other Republicans. He was followed by more than 32 million people on Facebook, although this was far fewer than the 88 million+ followers he had on Twitter.

Over the years, Mr. Trump and Mr. Zuckerberg had an irritable relationship. Mr Trump regularly attacked Silicon Valley executives for suppressing conservative language. He also threatened to revoke Section 230, a legal shield protecting companies like Facebook from liability for what users post.

Mr Zuckerberg on occasion criticized some of Mr Trump’s policies, including how to deal with the pandemic and immigration. But as calls from lawmakers, civil rights activists, and even Facebook’s own staff increased to contain Mr Trump on social media, Mr Zuckerberg declined to act. He said the speeches given by political leaders, even if they are telling lies, were timely and in the public interest.

The two men appeared cordial at occasional meetings in Washington. Mr Zuckerberg visited the White House more than once and dined privately with Mr Trump.

The courtesy ended on January 6th. Hours before his supporters stormed the Capitol, Mr Trump used Facebook and other social media to cast doubts on the results of the presidential election he lost to Joseph R. Biden Jr. Trump wrote on Facebook, “Our country has had enough, them will not take it anymore! “

Less than 24 hours later, Mr Trump was banned from the platform indefinitely. While his Facebook page stayed active, she slept. His last Facebook post on January 6th read: “I ask everyone in the US Capitol to remain peaceful. No violence! “

Cecilia Kang contributed to coverage from Washington.

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Business

Amazon Illegally Fired Activist Staff, Labor Board Finds

SEATTLE – Amazon illegally battled two of its most prominent internal critics when it fired them last year, the National Labor Relations Board found.

Employees Emily Cunningham and Maren Costa had publicly urged the company to reduce its impact on climate change and address concerns about warehouse workers.

The agency told Ms. Cunningham and Ms. Costa that they would accuse Amazon of unfair labor practices if the company did not resolve the case. This emerges from correspondence Ms. Cunningham shared with the New York Times.

“It is a moral victory and it really shows that we are on the right side of history and the right side of the law,” said Ms. Cunningham.

The two women were among dozens of Amazon workers who told the Labor Department of the company’s retaliation last year, but in most of the other cases the workers had complained about the safety of pandemics.

“We support the right of every employee to criticize the working conditions of their employer, but that does not imply blanket immunity from our internal guidelines, which are all lawful,” said Jaci Anderson, a spokeswoman for Amazon. “We fired these employees because they did not speak publicly about working conditions, safety or sustainability, but because they repeatedly violated internal guidelines.”

Allegations of unfair labor practices at Amazon were common enough for the employment agency to convert them into a national investigation, the agency told NBC News. The agency usually conducts the investigation in its regional offices.

While Amazon’s starting wage of $ 15 an hour is twice the federal minimum, its labor practices in Washington and elsewhere are under scrutiny. The focus has increased over the past year as online orders soared during the pandemic and Amazon expanded its US workforce to nearly a million people. Amazon’s warehouse workers are considered key employees and have not been able to work from home.

This week, the National Labor Board is counting thousands of ballots determining whether nearly 6,000 workers will unionize at an Amazon warehouse outside of Birmingham, Alabama. This is the largest and most viable work threat in the company’s history. The union has stated that workers are under excessive production pressures and are closely monitored by the company to ensure quotas are respected.

The results could change the shape of the labor movement and one of America’s largest private employers.

Ms. Costa and Ms. Cunningham, who worked as designers at Amazon’s Seattle headquarters, began publicly criticizing the company in 2018. You were among a small group of employees who wanted the company to do more to manage the climate impact. The group, Amazon Employees for Climate Justice, has more than 8,700 colleagues to support their efforts.

Over time, Ms. Cunningham and Ms. Costa have expanded their protests. After Amazon told them that they had violated its external communications guidelines by speaking publicly about the company, their group organized 400 people to speak up and deliberately violated the guidelines to make a point .

At the start of the pandemic, they also raised concerns about the safety of Amazon’s warehouses. Amazon fired Ms. Costa and Ms. Cunningham last April, not long after their group announced an internal event where warehouse workers would speak to technical staff about their working conditions.

After the women were released, several Democratic senators, including Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts and Kamala Harris of California, wrote to Amazon of concerns about possible retaliation. And Tim Bray, an internet pioneer and former vice president of the Amazon Cloud Computing Group, stepped down in protest.

Mr Bray said he was delighted to hear the employment office’s findings and hoped Amazon had settled the case. “The policy so far has been ‘don’t admit anything, don’t admit anything’,” he said. “This is your chance to think it over a little.”

Ms. Cunningham said that despite the company’s rejection, she and Ms. Costa felt that they and Ms. Costa were primary targets for Amazon as they were the most visible members of Amazon Employees for Climate Justice.

The Labor Authority also upheld a complaint involving Jonathan Bailey, co-founder of Amazonians United, a workforce advocacy group. The agency filed a complaint against Amazon based on Mr Bailey’s allegations that the company was breaking the law when it interrogated him after a strike last year at the Queens warehouse where he works.

“They realized that Amazon violated our rights,” said Bailey. “I think the message that employees should hear and understand is, yes, we all experience it. But many of us struggle too. “

Amazon has resolved Mr Bailey’s case without admitting any wrongdoing and has agreed to post notices informing employees of their rights in the break room. Ms. Anderson, Amazon’s spokeswoman, said the company contradicts allegations in Mr. Bailey’s case. “We pride ourselves on providing an inclusive environment in which employees can perform excellently without fear of retaliation, intimidation or harassment,” she said.

Kate Conger contributed to the coverage.

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Tribune board backs Alden International’s bid for newspaper chain over Maryland lodge magnate’s.

Tribune Publishing’s board of directors recommended that shareholders approve an offer to buy by hedge fund Alden Global Capital for a higher bid from a hotel manager in Maryland, according to a securities notice filed Tuesday.

The filing comes a week after Stewart W. Bainum Jr., a hotel tycoon, made an offer of $ 18.50 per share for the entire company. Mr Bainum had initially agreed with Alden to outsource three of Tribune’s titles – The Baltimore Sun and two smaller Maryland newspapers – for $ 65 million. Negotiations between Alden and Mr. Banium over the details of the company agreements that would come into effect when the Maryland Papers passed from one owner to another failed, however, and prompted Mr. Banium to pursue an offer to buy the entire Tribune.

Alden, Tribune’s largest shareholder with a 32 percent stake, agreed last month to buy the rest of the company for $ 17.25 a share and make it private to value the company at $ 630 million. Alden would buy all of the company’s remaining papers, including The Chicago Tribune and The Daily News.

Alden has been criticized for firing journalists and reducing local coverage in the roughly 60 newspapers he already owns. The hedge fund says it is preventing local newspapers from going out of business.

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Business

Henry Ford’s great-great grandchildren nominated to automaker’s board

Ford Motor Co. is showing a new 2021 Ford F-150 Pickup Truck at the Rouge Complex in Dearborn, Michigan on September 17, 2020.

Rebecca Cook | Reuters

DETROIT – Two great-great-grandchildren of Ford Motor founder Henry Ford have been appointed to the company’s board of directors, the automaker announced on Friday.

Alexandra Ford English, 33, is the daughter of Ford CEO Bill Ford. She is currently a director of corporate strategy for the company, responsible for strategic business, connectivity and digital networking plans.

Henry Ford III, 40, is the son of Ford board member Edsel B. Ford II, 72, who plans to step down from the board in May. Ford III is currently a Director in Ford Investor Relations.

Ford Motor Company announced today that Alexandra Ford English and Henry Ford III have been nominated for election to the company’s board of directors at its annual general meeting on May 13th.

Source: Ford Motor Co.

“I am delighted and proud to have a new generation of Ford family leaders who believe in serving the company and making sure it remains a successful and positive force in the world for years to come,” said Bill Ford in a statement.

The second seat on the open board would replace the former managing director of KPMG International, John Lechleiter (67), who, according to the company, decided not to stand for re-election in May.

Both English and Ford III will stand for election to the company’s board of directors at the annual general meeting on May 13th.

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J&J board member says 20 million Covid vaccine doses might be delivered by the tip of March

According to Dr. Johnson & Johnson board member Mark McClellan expects the company to have 20 million doses by the end of March as the US is just one step away from adding a third safe and effective vaccine to its arsenal.

“There will be a ramp-up, so 4 million doses are expected next week, rising in March, with 20 million doses dispensed by the end of March,” the former FDA commissioner said in an interview Friday night on The News with Shepard Smith. ” “So that’s 20 million people who are fully vaccinated because it’s just one dose of the vaccine.”

A panel of advisors to the Food and Drug Administration unanimously voted late Friday to recommend Johnson & Johnson’s single-dose shot for approval for emergency use. The FDA will decide on Saturday whether the vaccine will be approved. A recommendation from advisors to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention would enable three to four million doses to be delivered next week.

McClellan told The News with Shepard Smith that the addition of the J&J vaccine will take the US a big step forward in fighting the coronavirus pandemic and protecting millions of people from the virus.

“That comes on top of some additions to the Pfizer and Moderna vaccine offering. They expect almost 90 million, 100 million doses … it’s a two-dose vaccine, but it all adds up to that we can get this far. ” At least 100 million people here in the US had been vaccinated by the end of March, “said McClellan, a health policy expert at Duke University.

Nationwide, average daily cases, hospitalizations and deaths have been going down for weeks, but Rochelle Walensky, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said recent declines could flatten out.

“We may be through with the virus, but the virus clearly isn’t through with us,” Walensky said. “We cannot take it easy or give in to a false sense of security that the worst pandemic is behind us. Not now, not when mass vaccination is so close.”

The CDC director added that we may begin to see the effects of the new, contagious variants of Covid that are spreading across the country. McClellan agreed with Walensky, warning that “we should be concerned” when it comes to the new variants, but doubled the importance of vaccinations.

“The good news is that the vaccines offer really strong protection against the variants. The best way to contain the variants is to get as many people as possible vaccinated as soon as possible,” said McClellan.