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Politics

Biden declares catastrophe, thousands and thousands boil water after energy outages

City workers and volunteers will hand out bottled water at Delmar Stadium in Houston, Texas, USA on Wednesday, February 19, 2021.

Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images

President Joe Biden has endorsed a statement of major disaster for Texas as the state grapples with widespread power outages and water shortages in freezing winter conditions, the Federal Emergency Management Agency said on Saturday.

The move unlocks federal funding for individuals in Texas, grants for temporary home and home repairs, and low-cost loans to cover uninsured property damage.

Millions of Texans are grappling with power outages and more than half of the state are suffering from disrupted water supplies as the boiling water reports are effective.

The statement also provides funding for cost-sharing with state and local governments, as well as some private nonprofits, for emergency response and risk reduction measures. Help is available in dozens of counties.

More than 15.1 million people faced water disruptions in Texas on Saturday after freezing conditions disrupted more than 1,300 public water systems and led to boiling water reports, the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality said Saturday.

The federal government has already approved emergency statements for Texas, Oklahoma, and Louisiana, and shipped supplies such as generators, blankets, water, and meals to Texas last week.

“This is great news for the people of Dallas after a terrible week,” Dallas Mayor Eric Johnson wrote in a tweet. “The damage caused by this storm is great and the declaration of the disaster will help our city to recover.”

Continue reading:
The power failure in Texas sparked a feud over Republican oversight of the power industry
How the Texas power grid went down and what could stop it from happening again

Biden plans to visit Texas as early as next week to assess the federal response. The president said he will make a final decision after making sure his presence does not hamper recovery efforts. The government has worked closely with Republican Texas Governor Greg Abbott on disaster relief.

“I thank President Biden for his assistance in responding to the effects of winter weather on our state,” Abbott said in a statement. “While this partial approval is an important first step, Texas will continue to work with our federal partners to ensure that all eligible Texans have access to the relief they need.”

Texas’s Electric Reliability Council (ERCOT) announced Friday that it has returned to normal conditions, restoring power for millions of customers. More than 60,000 people in Texas were still without power at 4:00 p.m. ET on Saturday, according to PowerOutage.us.

A shopper walks past a bare shelf as people stock up on essentials at the HEB grocery store in Austin, Texas on February 18, 2021.

Joe Raedle | Getty Images News | Getty Images

Texas Division of Emergency Management’s chief Nim Kidd said at a news conference Saturday that distributing bottled water is still the number one priority.

The state has ordered 9.9 million water bottles and received a total of 5.5 million bottles. The military provides water and food by air while the state utilities work to restore water supplies.

Around 156,000 people still have no water at all, said Toby Baker, executive director of the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality. “I understand the public is extremely frustrated right now,” said Baker.

In addition to the declaration of the major disaster, the US Environmental Protection Agency issued an emergency waiver for Texas on Friday. The immediate exemption enables the state to temporarily waive certain fuel standards in order to address the gas shortage in the affected areas.

Texas refineries had disrupted about a fifth of the country’s oil production during the outages and freezing temperatures. Oil prices fell from recent highs on Friday as companies were ready to resume production as soon as electricity services resumed.

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Business

Some use Ford F-150 hybrid vans to energy properties

Randy Jones, of Katy, Texas, was using his 2021 Ford F-150 to power space heaters and other appliances throughout his home when it lost power during the winter storm earlier this week.

Source: Randy Jones

When Randy Jones of Katy, Texas bought his new Ford F-150 pickup a few weeks ago, he didn’t think he’d use it to turn on the lights in his home during a historic winter storm that left millions without power.

The on-board generator of the 2021 Hybrid “gives you the opportunity to use your truck like a mobile generator”, which according to Ford can generate an output of up to 7.2 kW.

In a phone interview with CNBC on Thursday, 66-year-old Jones said he bought the truck due in part to that feature, adding that it frequently loses power due to hurricanes and other storms. When he lost power on Sunday evening, he decided to take out a couple of extension cords and put the generator to the test.

“Without them, I would have been in the dark and cold like everyone else in the neighborhood,” said the retired refinery worker, adding that he was helping the neighbors charge their phones and laptops. “Quite a few neighbors said, ‘Hey, I’ll get one’, like ‘I’ll trade my Dodge or GMC’ because we always have power in South Texas with hurricanes and things like outages.”

Jones said he used the truck’s on-board generator for three days to power appliances in his home until electricity was restored on Wednesday.

He is not alone. Jerry Hall, 73, bought his new F-150 in late January. It turned out to be perfect timing, he said.

“The truck saved the day,” the Kerrville, Texas resident said in a telephone interview Thursday. Hall said his house lost power from Sunday evening through early Thursday. “Without the truck it would have been three miserable days.”

Hall said he and his wife still spent those days without a heater, but they were able to run extension cords from the truck into the house to power lights, the refrigerator, television, and other luxuries.

“It connected us to the outside world,” he said.

Hall said “the main reason” he bought the truck was because of its on-board generator. He said last spring’s harsh weather had resulted in power outages in his part of the state, and he knew he wanted some kind of generator. It just makes sense to get a new truck with a built-in generator.

Other truck owners have posted similar stories on an online F-150 owner forum. Photos from the forum were posted on Twitter, where Ford CEO Jim Farley commented and tweeted: “The situation in the American Southwest is so difficult. I wish everyone in Texas had a new F150 with a PowerBoost generator on board …”

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Business

A tidal turbine inbuilt Scotland is now producing energy in Japan

The AR500 turbine is waiting to be installed in waters off the Japanese islands.

A tidal turbine built and tested in Scotland was installed in waters off a chain of Japanese islands. This is the latest example of the East Asian country studying the potential of marine forms of energy production.

In a statement on Monday, London-listed Simec Atlantis Energy said its pilot turbine generated 10 megawatt hours in the first 10 days of operation.

The AR500 turbine was assembled at a factory in Scotland before being shipped to Japan, where it was installed in waters off Naru Island, which is part of the larger Goto Island chain.

According to SAE, the overall project includes the leasing of tidal generation systems and the provision of offshore construction services for the Japanese company Kyuden Mirai Energy.

Graham Reid, CEO of SAE, described the installation as “a major milestone in the use of clean, renewable energy from tidal currents and we hope it will be the first of many tidal turbines installed in Japan”.

Monday’s news is the latest example of companies in Japan, an island nation with thousands of kilometers of coastline, turning to projects dealing with tidal and wave energy.

In January it was announced that the shipping giant Mitsui OSK Lines will be working with a company called Bombora Wave Power to develop potential project locations in Japan and the surrounding regions.

The collaboration between Tokyo-based MOL and Bombora focuses on finding possible locations for the latter’s mWave system as well as hybrid projects combining mWave and wind energy.

In simple terms, the technology developed by Bombora, which has offices in the UK and Australia, is based on the idea of ​​using rubber membrane cells that are filled with air and attached to a structure submerged in water.

According to a video by the company describing how its system works, the “flexible rubber membrane design pumps air through a turbine to generate electricity” when waves run across the system.

The International Energy Agency describes marine technologies as “great potential,” but adds that additional policy support is needed for research, design and development to “enable the cost reductions that come with bringing larger commercial plants up and running”.

For its part, Japan wants renewables to account for 22% to 24% of its energy mix by 2030.

In October last year, Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga said the country would target zero net greenhouse gas emissions by 2050. By 2030, Japan aims to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 26% compared to 2013.

However, work remains to be done to ensure that the country achieves its goals. In 2019, the Agency for Natural Resources and Energy said the country was “largely dependent on fossil fuels” such as coal, oil and liquefied natural gas.

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Politics

Pennsylvania G.O.P.’s Push for Extra Energy Over Judiciary Raises Alarms

She added: “It is far too much control for one branch to have another branch, especially when one of its jobs is to rule in the excesses of the legislature.”

If the Republican bill becomes law, Pennsylvania would be only the fifth state in the country, after Louisiana, Kentucky, Mississippi, and Illinois, to map its judicial system entirely to constituencies, according to the Brennan Center. And other states could soon join Pennsylvania in trying to redesign the courts through redistribution.

Republicans in the Texan legislature, also controlled by the GOP, recently introduced a bill to move districts for the state appeals courts by moving some districts to different districts, causing an uproar among the State Democrats who are the new districts see as a weakening of the vote The power of the black and Latin American communities in judicial elections and possibly the Republican bias of the Texas courts.

Gilberto Hinojosa, leader of the Texas Democratic Party, called the bill “a mere takeover to prevent blacks and Latinos from influencing the courts as their numbers in the state grow”.

These judicial restructuring struggles take shape as Republican-controlled lawmakers across the country investigate new election restrictions after the 2020 elections. In Georgia, Republicans are looking in the state assembly for a number of new laws that would make voting more difficult, including a drop box ban and extensive postal voting restrictions. Similar bills in Arizona would restrict postal voting, including the state’s ban on sending postal voting requests. And in Texas, Republican lawmakers want to limit early voting periods.

The Republican nationwide effort follows a successful four-year initiative by the Party’s Washington lawmakers to reshape federal justice with Conservative judges. Led by Senator Mitch McConnell, until recently the majority leader, and Mr. Trump, the Senate confirmed 231 federal judges and three new Supreme Court justices during the former president’s four-year tenure, according to Russell Wheeler. a research fellow at the Brookings Institution.

In a state like Pennsylvania, which has two densely populated Democratic cities and large rural areas, this could lead to an oversized representation of sparsely populated places that are more conservative, especially if lawmakers resort to a gerrymandering tactic used in Pennsylvania’s 2011 resembles.

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Business

Energy, Patriotism and 1.Four Billion Individuals:How China Beat the Virus and Roared Again

The Chinese Communist Party reached deep into private business and the broader population to drive a recovery, an authoritarian approach that has emboldened its top leader, Xi Jinping.

The order came on the night of Jan. 12, days after a new outbreak of the coronavirus flared in Hebei, a province bordering Beijing. The Chinese government’s plan was bold and blunt: it needed to erect entire towns of prefabricated housing to quarantine people, a project that would start the next morning.

Part of the job fell to Wei Ye, the owner of a construction company, which would build and install 1,300 structures on commandeered farmland.

Everything — the contract, the plans, the orders for materials — was “all fixed in a few hours,” Mr. Wei said, adding that he and his employees worked exhaustively to meet the tight deadline.

“There is pressure, for sure,” he said, but he was “very honored” to do his part.

In the year since the coronavirus began its march around the world, China has done what many other countries would not or could not do. With equal measures of coercion and persuasion, it has mobilized its vast Communist Party apparatus to reach deep into the private sector and the broader population, in what the country’s leader, Xi Jinping, has called a “people’s war” against the pandemic — and won.

China is now reaping long-lasting benefits that few expected when the virus first emerged in the central Chinese city of Wuhan and the leadership seemed as rattled as at any moment since the Tiananmen Square crackdown in 1989.

The success has positioned China well, economically and diplomatically, to push back against the United States and others worried about its seemingly inexorable rise. It has also emboldened Mr. Xi, who has offered China’s experience as a model for others to follow.

While officials in Wuhan initially dithered and obfuscated for fear of political reprisals, the authorities now leap into action at any sign of new infections, if at times with excessive zeal. In Hebei this January, the authorities deployed their well-honed strategy to test millions and isolate entire communities — all with the goal of getting cases, officially only dozens a day in a population of 1.4 billion, back to zero.

The government has poured money into infrastructure projects, its playbook for years, while extending loans and tax relief to support business and avoid pandemic-related layoffs. China, which sputtered at the beginning of last year, is the only major economy that has returned to steady growth.

When it came to developing vaccines, the government offered land, loans and subsidies for new factories to make them, along with fast-tracking approvals. Two Chinese vaccines are in mass production; more are on the way. While the vaccines have shown weaker efficacy rates than those of Western rivals, 24 countries have already signed up for them since the pharmaceutical companies have, at Beijing’s urging, promised to deliver them more quickly.

Other nations, like New Zealand and South Korea, have done well containing the virus without heavy-handed measures that would be politically unacceptable in a democratic system. To China’s leaders, those countries do not compare.

Beijing’s successes in each dimension of the pandemic — medical, diplomatic and economic — have reinforced its conviction that an authoritarian capacity to quickly mobilize people and resources gave China a decisive edge that other major powers like the United States lacked. It is an approach that emphasizes a relentless drive for results and relies on an acquiescent public.

The Communist Party, in this view, must control not only the government and state-owned enterprises, but also private businesses and personal lives, prioritizing the collective good over individual interests.

“They were able to pull together all of the resources of the one-party state,” said Carl Minzner, a professor of Chinese law and politics at Fordham University. “This of course includes both the coercive tools — severe, mandatory mobility restrictions for millions of people — but also highly effective bureaucratic tools that are maybe unique to China.”

In so doing, the Chinese Communist authorities suppressed speech, policed and purged dissenting views and suffocated any notion of individual freedom or mobility — actions that are repugnant and unacceptable in any democratic society.

Among the Communist Party leaders, a sense of vindication is palpable. In the final days of 2020, the seven members of the Politburo Standing Committee, the country’s top political body, gathered in Beijing for the equivalent of an annual performance review, where in theory they can air criticisms of themselves and their colleagues.

Far from even hinting at any shortcomings — the rising global distrust toward China, for example — they exalted the party leadership.

“The present-day world is undergoing a great transformation of the kind not seen for a century,” Mr. Xi told officials at another meeting in January, “but time and momentum are on our side.”

In recent weeks, as new cases kept emerging, the government’s cabinet, the State Council, issued a sweeping new directive. “There cannot be a shred of neglect about the risk of resurgence,” it said.

The dictates reflected the micromanaged nature of China’s political system, where the top leaders have levers to reach down from the corridors of central power to every street and even apartment building.

The State Council ordered provinces and cities to set up 24-hour command centers with officials in charge held responsible for their performance. It called for opening enough quarantine centers not just to house people within 12 hours of a positive test, but also to strictly isolate hundreds of close contacts for each positive case.

Cities with up to five million people should create the capacity to administer a nucleic test to every resident within two days. Cities with more than five million could take three to five days.

The key to this mobilization lies in the party’s ability to tap its vast network of officials, which is woven into every department and agency in every region.

The government can easily redeploy “volunteers” to new hot spots, including more than 4,000 medical workers sent to Hebei after the new outbreak in January. “A Communist Party member goes to the frontline of the people,” said Bai Yan, a 20-year-old university student, who has ambitions to join the party.

Zhou Xiaosen, a party member in a village outside of Shijiazhuang, a city of 11 million people that was among those locked down, said that those deputized could help police violations, but also assist those in need. “If they need to go out to buy medicine or vegetables, we’ll do it for them,” he said.

The government appeals to material interests, as well as to a sense of patriotism, duty and self-sacrifice.

The China Railway 14th Bureau Group, a state-owned contractor helping build the quarantine center near Shijiazhuang, drafted a public vow that its workers would spare no effort. “Don’t haggle over pay, don’t fuss about conditions, don’t fall short even if it’s life or death,” the group said in a letter, signed with red thumb prints of employees.

Updated 

Feb. 5, 2021, 2:21 a.m. ET

The network also operates in part through fear. More than 5,000 local party and government officials have been ousted in the last year for failures to contain the coronavirus on their watch. There is little incentive for moderation.

Residents of the northeastern Chinese city of Tonghua recently complained after officials abruptly imposed a lockdown without enough preparations for supplying food and other needs. When a villager near Shijiazhuang tried to escape quarantine to buy a pack of cigarettes, a zealous party chief ordered him tied to a tree.

“Many measures seemed over the top, but as far as they’re concerned it was necessary to go over the top,” said Chen Min, a writer and former Chinese newspaper editor who was in Wuhan throughout its lockdown. “If you didn’t, it wouldn’t produce results.”

The anger has faded over the government’s inaction and duplicity early in the crisis, the consequence of a system that suppresses bad news and criticism. China’s success has largely drowned out dissent from those who would question the party’s central control. The authorities have also reshaped the public narrative by warning and even imprisoning activists who challenged its triumphant version of events.

In the beginning, the pandemic seemed to expose “the fundamental pathologies of Xi-style governance,” said Jude Blanchette, a researcher at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington.

“In fact, with time and hindsight, we see that the system performed in large part as Xi Jinping was hoping it would do,” he added.

The measures in Hebei worked quickly. At the start of February, the province recorded its first day in a month without a new coronavirus infection.

In many countries, debates have raged over the balance between protecting public health and keeping the economy running. In China, there is little debate. It did both.

Even in Wuhan last year, where the authorities shuttered virtually everything for 76 days, they allowed major industries to continue operating, including steel plants and semiconductor factories. They have replicated that strategy when smaller outbreaks have occurred, going to extraordinary lengths to help businesses in ways large and small.

China’s experience has underscored the advice that many experts have suggested but few countries have followed: The more quickly you bring the pandemic under control, the more quickly the economy can recover.

While the economic pain was severe early in the crisis, most businesses closed for only a couple of weeks, if at all. Few contracts were canceled. Few workers were laid off, in part because the government strongly discouraged companies from doing so and offered loans and tax relief to help.

“We coordinated progress in pandemic control and economic and social development, giving urgency to restoring life and production,” Mr. Xi said last year.

Zhejiang Huayuan Automotive Parts Company missed only 17 days of production. With the help of regional authorities, the company hired buses to bring back workers, who had scattered for the Lunar New Year holiday and could not return easily since much of the country was locked down at the beginning. Government passes allowed the buses through checkpoints restricting travel.

Workers were only allowed to go back and forth between the factory and dormitories, their temperatures checked frequently. BYD, a large customer, started manufacturing face masks and shipped supplies to Huayuan.

Soon, the company had more orders than it could handle.

An ambulance manufacturer in Anhui Province increased production immediately, buying screws, bolts and other fasteners that Huayuan produces. Then Chinese automakers started needing them as the virus spread and overseas suppliers shut down.

“We just said no to clients who only wanted standard parts — we wanted to sell more specialized parts, with higher profit,” said Chen Xiying, the company’s deputy general manager. “Clients who were slow to pay we rejected outright.”

Like China itself, Huayuan rebounded quickly. By April, it had ordered nearly $10 million of new equipment to start a second, highly automated production line. It plans to add 47 technicians to its work force of 340.

Before the pandemic, multinationals were looking beyond China for their operations, in part prodded by the Trump administration’s trade war with Beijing. The virus itself added to fears about dependence on Chinese supply chains.

The pandemic, though, only reinforced China’s dominance, as the rest of the world struggled to remain open for business.

Last year, China unexpectedly surpassed the United States as a destination for foreign direct investment for the first time, according to the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development. Worldwide, investments plummeted 42 percent, while in China they grew by 4 percent.

“Despite the human cost and disruption, the pandemic in economic terms was a blessing in disguise for China,” said Zhu Ning, deputy dean of the Shanghai Advanced Institute of Finance.

Last February, while the coronavirus ravaged Wuhan, one of the country’s biggest vaccine manufacturers, Sinovac Biotech, was in no position to develop a new vaccine to stop it.

The company lacked a high-security lab to conduct the risky research needed. It had no factory that could produce the shots, nor the funds to build one.

So the company’s chief executive, Yin Weidong, reached out to the government for help. On Feb. 27, he met with Cai Qi, a member of China’s Politburo, and Chen Jining, the mayor of Beijing and an environmental scientist.

After that, Sinovac had everything it needed.

The officials gave its researchers access to one of the country’s safest labs. They provided $780,000 and assigned government scientists to help.

They also cleared the way for the construction of a new factory in a district of Beijing. The city donated the land. The Bank of Beijing, in which the municipality is a major shareholder, offered a low-interest $9.2 million loan.

When Sinovac needed fermentation tanks that typically take 18 months to import from abroad, the government ordered another manufacturer to work 24 hours a day to make them instead.

It was the sort of all-of-government approach that Mr. Xi outlined at a Politburo Standing Committee meeting two days after Wuhan was locked down. He urged the country to “accelerate the development of therapeutic drugs and vaccines,” and Beijing broadly showered resources.

CanSino Biologics, a private company, partnered with the People’s Liberation Army, working with little rest to produce the first trial doses by March. Sinopharm, a state-owned pharmaceutical company, got government funding in three and a half days to build a factory.

Mr. Yin of Sinovac called the project “Operation Coronavirus” in keeping with the wartime rhetoric of the country’s fight against the outbreak. “It was only under such comprehensive conditions that our workshop could be put into production,” he told The Beijing News, a state-controlled newspaper.

Less than three months after Mr. Yin’s Feb. 27 meeting, Sinovac had created a vaccine that could be tested in humans and had built a giant factory. It is churning out 400,000 vaccines a day, and hopes to produce as many as one billion this year.

The crash course to vaccinate a nation ultimately opened a different opportunity.

With the coronavirus largely stamped out at home, China could sell more of its vaccines abroad. They “will be made a global public good,” Mr. Xi promised the World Health Assembly last May.

Although officials bristle at the premise, “vaccine diplomacy” has become a tool to assuage some of the anger over China’s missteps, helping shore up its global standing at a time when it has been under pressure from the United States and others.

“This is where China can come in and look like a real savior, like a friend in need,” said Ray Yip, a former head of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation in China.

China’s efficiency at home has not translated into an easy triumph abroad. Chinese vaccines have lower efficacy rates. Officials in Brazil and Turkey have complained about delays. Still, many countries that have so far signed up for them have acknowledged that they could not afford to wait months for those made by the Americans or Europeans.

On Jan. 16, Serbia became the first European country to receive Chinese vaccines, some one million doses from Sinopharm. The country’s president, Aleksandr Vučić, stood in chilly winds with the Chinese ambassador to welcome the first planeload of supplies.

He told reporters that he was “not afraid to brag” of the country’s relationship with China.

“I’m proud of that and will invest more and more of our time and efforts to create and even improve our great relationship with the Chinese leadership and the Chinese people.”

Coral Yang, Amber Wang, Claire Fu and Elsie Chen contributed research.

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World News

How a Lethal Energy Recreation Undid Myanmar’s Democratic Hopes

This cycle repeated itself over the next few years as several of Myanmar’s slow-burning riots burned.

“It was actually much tougher than the military,” Connelly said, referring to a particularly bloody campaign in Rakhine, a region that has long been in trouble. “The military has declared a ceasefire and Aung San Suu Kyi should play her part in organizing elections in Rakhine State. She refused to do that, and so the truce was lost. “

These episodes deepened the feeling of a zero-sum and even deadly power struggle and “created conditions for a conservative insurrection” among military officers, Paliwal said, citing his time on the ground in Rakhine during some of the heaviest fighting.

A bloodless, but no less violent battle took place in the capital. In January 2020, Ms. Aung San Suu Kyi, apparently hoping to replace the lost international allies with military defense, received Xi Jinping, China’s leader, on a state visit.

But Myanmar military leaders widely see China as an enemy propping up their country’s uprisings. The junta is believed to have given up part of power as a move to break China’s hold in the country in hopes that Ms. Aung San Suu Kyi would bring Western support. Instead, she marched Mr. Xi through the capital.

Two months later, Ms. Aung San Suu Kyi tried to push through constitutional amendments that would have gradually reduced the military’s share in parliament from 25 to 5 percent. Though it failed, it was a political shot over the bow of an institution with the power to fire actual shots in return.

Her party won the November elections in a blowout and further reduced the seat share of the military representative party. General Min Aung Hlaing was due to retire later that year. To the generals it may have looked like a window was closing.

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Politics

Ohio energy brokers search enterprise leaders to run

Senator Rob Portman, a Republican from Ohio, speaks to media outlets as he walks the Senate subway at the U.S. Capitol in Washington on Tuesday, January 26, 2021.

Sarah Silbiger | Bloomberg | Getty Images

A group of Ohio power brokers have reached out to business leaders across the state to try to win them for Republican Rob Portman’s Senate seat in 2022 in an effort to keep pro-Trump contenders from winning this contest from familiarizing themselves with the cause.

Some of those who have started engaging with potential candidates are donors and company types close to former Ohio Republican governor John Kasich.

Kasich is one of the most famous GOP critics of former President Donald Trump. He was one of the few Republicans to be featured at the Democratic National Convention that summer to support Joe Biden.

The opportunity to try to win a Republican primary in a seemingly divided party leads some executives to choose not to join. Those raised on the Republican and Democratic sides include the CEO of a corporate advocacy group in Ohio, a venture capitalist and digital marketing manager.

Some people are reluctant to enter the race because a Republican primary will involve a battle for the party’s base and likely Trump’s own endorsement. If he stands up for it, Trump will likely endorse someone more aligned with his agenda than a more traditional Republican. Trump won Ohio in the 2020 presidential election.

Jim Jordan, a member of the House Freedom Caucus, R-Ohio, will not be running for Portman’s seat, his office recently announced. Kevin McCarthy, minority chairman of the House of Representatives, R-Calif., Said in a statement Thursday that after meeting with Trump, the former president “is required to elect Republicans in the House and Senate in 2022”.

GOP politicians with allegiances to Trump who reportedly may be in the mix include Rep. Steve Stivers and Jane Timken, leaders of the Ohio Republican Party.

Political strategists say they are not surprised by the effort to find a business-minded candidate. It is the latest signal that the Republican primary for Portman’s seat will be expansive.

“There will likely be a huge box in the GOP area code with a choice of all ideological stripes,” Charlie Black, a former Kasich strategist, told CNBC. It is “expected,” Black said of executive recruitment, “but there will be conservative candidates who are not married to Trump.”

Portman announced on Monday that he would not seek re-election in 2022 because “it had become more and more difficult to overcome the partisan congestion and to make progress in the political field.” Portman was a Republican legislature who voted to ratify the electoral college results and confirm Biden as the 2020 presidential winner.

Executives with Republican ties who have made attempts to include them in the race include Alex Fischer, president and CEO of The Columbus Partnership, and Mark Kvamme, a venture capitalist who has been in Ohio for more than a decade.

Another executive who has emerged as a Democratic contender is Nancy Kramer, founder of Ohio-based digital marketing agency Resource / Ammirati. Kramer’s company was taken over by IBM in 2016.

Fischer’s Columbus Partnership is a corporate agency group for the city of Columbus and central Ohio. Fischer has also been publicly credited for helping keep the MLS soccer team, the Columbus Crew, in town when they considered moving to Texas.

Kvamme and Fischer told CNBC that they are not interested in running for the Senate despite being approached. Kramer, who currently works at IBM iX in Columbus, has not returned a request for comment.

“Yes, some people called me. I’m flattered,” Kvamme told CNBC. “Maybe I’ll step into the political arena one day, but my time will be better spent demonstrating to my friends in California that Ohio and the Midwest are the next great place to start and build tech companies.”

Fischer, who was once the deputy governor of Tennessee before moving to Ohio, said he had no interest in running despite discussions in political circles.

“No, I don’t think about it privately or position myself otherwise. Obviously there is a lot of discussion in political circles,” Fischer told CNBC. “In my conversations there is mounting frustration about the wider political environment, the inability to solve problems and work across party lines to work together. There is also a desire to see leaders to become more active,” he added.

On the Democratic side, Axios reported that Amy Acton, former director of the Ohio Department of Health, might also be in the mix. Former Columbus Mayor Mike Coleman said he was considering running. Rep. Tim Ryan, a former presidential candidate, said he was “looking seriously” at running.

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World News

How Parler deplatforming exhibits energy of Amazon, cloud suppliers

Andy Jassy, ​​CEO of Amazon Web Services.

CNBC

Launching Amazon Web Services is rare, but it has enormous consequences.

It came this week when Amazon dropped Parler, a social network that caught on with conservatives after Twitter banned President Donald Trump and included content that encouraged violence. Parler filed a lawsuit against Amazon in federal district court to prevent Amazon from suspending Parler’s account, and Amazon pushed back, asking the court to deny Parler’s motion.

The incident shows a kind of power that Amazon wields almost uniquely because so many companies rely on it to provide computers and data storage. According to estimates by technology research firm Gartner, Amazon controlled 45% of cloud infrastructure in 2019, more than any other company. The app survived without being listed in the Apple and Google app stores. However, by sending from the Amazon cloud, Parler is not represented on the Internet for days.

Parler’s engineering team had developed software that relied on computer resources from Amazon Web Services, and the company had spoken to Amazon about introducing a proprietary AWS database and artificial intelligence services, the company said in a court case on Wednesday With.

It would take some time to figure out how to perform similar functions on Parler’s own servers or a cloud other than AWS. And in the case of Parler, time is of the essence as the service gained attention and new users after the Trump ban on Twitter.

Parler’s engineers could learn to use other computing infrastructures, or the company could hire developers who already have this knowledge. However, since no cloud provider is as popular as Amazon, Oracle’s clouds, for example, are not as easy to find as those who know how to build on AWS.

The warnings were there

The speed with which Amazon acted shouldn’t come as a shock. Companies have been posting details of their dealings with Amazon for years warning of such sudden crashes.

In 2010, DNA sequencing company Complete Genomics said that “if Amazon Web Services disrupted the services we rely on to deliver ready-made genomic data to our customers, our customers would not receive their data on time.”

Gaming company Zynga warned its AWS foundation could quickly disappear when it filed for prospectus for its IPO in 2011. At the time, AWS was hosting half of the traffic for Zynga’s games like FarmVille and Words with Friends.

“AWS may terminate the agreement without giving reasons with 180 days ‘notice in writing and terminate the agreement with 30 days’ notice in writing for good cause, including all material failures or violations of the agreement by us that we do not within the 30th – Time of day, “said Zynga.

AWS may even immediately terminate or suspend its agreement with a customer in certain circumstances, as was the case with Wikileaks in 2010, indicating violations of the AWS Terms of Service.

Parler began using AWS in 2018, long after the Wikileaks incident and the first company disclosures about the possibility of cloud disruptions.

When AWS announced to Parler that it was planning to block Parler’s AWS account, Parler repeatedly violated the rules, including by not owning or controlling the rights to its content.

Over the course of several weeks, AWS Parler drew attention to cases of user content that led to violence, Amazon said in a lawsuit. Additional content emerged after protesters stormed the Washington Capitol on January 6, disrupting Congress’ confirmation of the electoral college’s results in the 2020 presidential election. AWS said that Parler had not done enough to quickly remove this type of information from its social network.

Parler could have protected himself better. Large AWS customers can sign up for broader agreements that give more customers time to comply when they break the rules.

Gartner analyst Lydia Leong explained this difference in a blog post: “Thirty days is a common time frame specified as a curing period in contracts (and the curing period in the AWS Standard Corporate Agreement), but it is click-through agreements from cloud providers (e.g., because the AWS customer agreement) does not typically have a curing period, action can be taken immediately at the provider’s discretion, “she wrote.

Other cloud providers have their own set of conditions that their customers must follow. AWS now has millions of customers and holds more of the cloud infrastructure market than any other provider. As a result, if they don’t behave according to Amazon’s standards, many companies could be exposed to the type of treatment Parler has received, rare as it is.

Parler recognized the drawbacks of being committed to a cloud provider, but ultimately the flexibility offered by the clouds was too attractive to ignore. “Personally, I’m very much against the cloud and anti-centralization, even though AWS has its place for high-frequency traffic,” wrote Alexander Blair, Parler’s chief technology officer, in a post about the service.

Parler and Amazon did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

CLOCK: Apple pulls Parler out of the App Store while cracking down on violent posts

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‘I do not know that McConnell has a number of energy,’ says GOP senator

North Dakota Republican Senator Kevin Cramer told CNBC’s “The News with Shepard Smith” that he does not know of many Senate “wimps” who would follow Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell when it comes to impeachment Donald Trump is leaving.

“Mitch McConnell is a lot of influence, I don’t know he’s got a lot of power,” Cramer said during an interview on Wednesday night. “He has a lot of power over the schedule and the process, of course, but I don’t know of many wimps in the United States Senate who will vote one way or another just because Mitch McConnell does.”

McConnell said earlier that impeachment proceedings would not take place until President-elect Biden was inaugurated. McConnell also said he remains undecided how he will vote.

The House of Representatives voted 232-197 in favor of the indictment against President Donald Trump, and 10 Republicans voted in favor of the indictment against Trump. The House voted to charge Trump with “inciting insurrection” after a crowd of his supporters stormed the Capitol on January 6, killing five people, including a police officer. The unprecedented charge was brought just seven days before the end of his term, and now Trump stands alone in America’s 244-year history as the only president to be charged twice.

Cramer said he thought the House “rushed to the court” and referred to it as “a much more political organ than the Senate”. When host Shepard Smith asked Cramer if he would vote to condemn Trump, Cramer argued about due process.

“I’ve read my constitution many times and due process in the country I think unless you are Donald Trump and so I am not guilty because that is against everything the constitution stands for and due process Procedure, “said Cramer.

In a Wednesday night interview on The News with Shepard Smith, Ohio State University law professor Edward Foley explained when due process would occur during the impeachment process.

“What happened in the House today is essentially an indictment and the trial is in the Senate. So there will be due process and it seems the Senate is acting on purpose.” Speed ​​to make sure it’s a fair trial. “

In the impeachment proceedings, it is said in part that Trump “threatened the integrity of the democratic system, disrupted the peaceful transfer of power and endangered an equal branch of government.”

House spokeswoman Nancy Pelosi said impeachment and conviction are the “constitutional tool” for Trump’s actions, “which will ensure the republic is safe from this man who is determined to tear down the things that matter to us lie and hold us together. ” “”

However, Cramer told Smith he did not realize that Trump’s rhetoric was inciting the violent mob in the Capitol.

“The president’s rhetoric, while inconsiderate, could at some level be accused of causing anger and bad behavior. However, it is also clear that the exact words he used did not, in my opinion, lead to criminal incitement In my opinion, we should be as political as it is in this process, “said Cramer.

At the Save America rally on January 6, Trump told thousands of spectators on Capitol Hill that “we will never admit” and added strength to his supporters.

“We’re going to go down to the Capitol and cheer for our brave senators and congressmen,” Trump told a crowd near the White House. “We probably won’t cheer some of them as much because you will never retake our country with weakness. You have to show strength and you have to be strong.”

Minutes later, a crowd of his supporters stormed Congress and terrorized it. Trump has since taken no responsibility for the deadly uprising and has defended his speech.

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Twitter’s Ban on Trump Exhibits The place Energy Now Lies

It was a perfect match, and Mr. Trump soon began refining the free-running style of the stream of consciousness that would become its signature. For years he used the platform to weigh everything from wind turbines (ugly) to President Barack Obama’s birth certificate (fake) to Jon Stewart’s comedy (overrated). Mr. Trump’s no-filter considerations turned out to be engagement gold for Twitter, which recommended his tweets to millions of new users through its algorithms.

Social media became an even more powerful asset for Mr. Trump when he turned to politics. And after being elected president, thanks in large part to his dominance on Twitter and Facebook, he used his accounts in ways no world leader ever had: to announce key policies, harass foreign governments, raise votes in Congress, seniors hire and fire officials and interact with a colorful crew of racists and cranks.

Over time, we learned that the version of President Trump we saw on our feeds was in many ways more real than the flesh and blood person who occupied the Oval Office. People who wanted to know what Mr. Trump actually thought of a kneeling NFL player or spokeswoman Nancy Pelosi didn’t watch him read a prepared speech or hold a press conference. They looked at @realDonaldTrump, the most honest representation of who he was.

The most predictable outcome of Mr Trump’s dismissal from Twitter – and most likely a similar ban he will receive from Facebook after the day of inauguration – is that it will become a rallying call for conservatives who see themselves as victims of Silicon Valley censorship .

“We live Orwell’s 1984,” raged the President’s son, Donald Trump Jr., on his Twitter account (still working, 6.5 million followers). “In America there is no longer any free speech. It died with great technology. “

No serious thinker believes that Twitter and Facebook, as private companies, are obliged to provide a platform for every user, just as no one doubts that a restaurant owner can start an unruly dinner to create a scene. However, there are legitimate questions about whether a small handful of unelected technical executives who are accountable only to their boards of directors and shareholders (and in the case of Mr. Zuckerberg, none) should wield such enormous power. These measures also raise longer-term questions such as: B. whether the business models of social media companies are fundamentally compatible with a healthy democracy or whether a generation of Twitter-addicted politicians can ever learn the lesson that collecting retweets is a safer way to power than to govern responsibly.

Mr Trump’s ban will have a noticeable impact on the spread of disinformation about the 2020 election, much of which can be attributed to his accounts. It will also likely hasten the fragmentation of the American Internet by partisan standards, a process that was already underway, and reinforce calls for the repeal of Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, which puts social media companies from legal liability for their Internet protects user contributions.