Categories
Politics

Crypto’s Speedy Transfer Into Banking Elicits Alarm in Washington

BlockFi, a fast-growing financial start-up whose headquarters in Jersey City are across the Hudson River from Wall Street, aspires to be the JPMorgan Chase of cryptocurrency.

It offers credit cards, loans and interest-generating accounts. But rather than dealing primarily in dollars, BlockFi operates in the rapidly expanding world of digital currencies, one of a new generation of institutions effectively creating an alternative banking system on the frontiers of technology.

“We are just at the beginning of this story,” said Flori Marquez, 30, a founder of BlockFi, which was created in 2017 and claims to have more than $10 billion in assets, 850 employees and more than 450,000 retail clients who can obtain loans in minutes, without credit checks.

But to state and federal regulators and some members of Congress, the entry of crypto into banking is cause for alarm. The technology is disrupting the world of financial services so quickly and unpredictably that regulators are far behind, potentially leaving consumers and financial markets vulnerable.

In recent months, top officials from the Federal Reserve and other banking regulators have urgently begun what they are calling a “crypto sprint” to try to catch up with the rapid changes and figure out how to curb the potential dangers from an emerging industry whose short history has been marked as much by high-stakes speculation as by technological advances.

In interviews and public statements, federal officials and state authorities are warning that the crypto financial services industry is in some cases vulnerable to hackers and fraud and reliant on risky innovations. Last month, the crypto platform PolyNetwork briefly lost $600 million of its customers’ assets to hackers, much of which was returned only after the site’s founders begged the thieves to relent.

“We need additional authorities to prevent transactions, products and platforms from falling between regulatory cracks,” Gary Gensler, the chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission, wrote in August in a letter to Senator Elizabeth Warren, Democrat of Massachusetts, about the dangers of cryptocurrency products. “We also need more resources to protect investors in this growing and volatile sector.”

The S.E.C. has created a stand-alone office to coordinate investigations into cryptocurrency and other digital assets, and it has recruited academics with related expertise to help it track the fast-moving changes. Acknowledging that it could take at least a year to write rules or get legislation passed in Congress, regulators may issue interim guidance to set some expectations to exert control over the industry.

BlockFi has already been targeted by regulators in five states that have accused it of violating local securities laws.

Regulators’ worries reach to even more experimental offerings by outfits like PancakeSwap, whose “syrup pools” boast that users can earn up to 91 percent annual return on crypto deposits.

Treasury Secretary Janet L. Yellen and Jerome H. Powell, the chair of the Federal Reserve, have also voiced concerns, even as the Fed and other central banks study whether to issue digital currencies of their own.

Mr. Powell has pointed to the proliferation of so-called stablecoins, digital currencies whose value is typically pegged to the dollar and are frequently used in digital money transfers and other transactions like lending.

“We have a tradition in this country where, you know, where the public’s money is held in what is supposed to be a very safe asset,” Mr. Powell said during congressional testimony in July, adding, “That doesn’t exist really for stablecoins.”

The cryptocurrency banking frontier features a wide range of companies. At one end are those that operate on models similar to those of traditional consumer-oriented banks, like BlockFi or Kraken Bank, which has secured a special charter in Wyoming and hopes by the end of this year to take consumers’ cryptocurrency deposits — but without traditional Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation insurance.

On the more radical end is decentralized finance, or DeFi, which is more akin to Wall Street for cryptocurrency. Players include Compound, a company in San Francisco that operates completely outside the regulatory system. DeFi eliminates human intermediaries like brokers, bank clerks and traders, and instead uses algorithms to execute financial transactions, such as lending and borrowing.

“Crypto is the new shadow bank,” Ms. Warren said in an interview. “It provides many of the same services, but without the consumer protections or financial stability that back up the traditional system.”

“It’s like spinning straw into gold,” she added.

Lawmakers and regulators are worried that consumers are not always fully aware of the potential dangers of the new banklike crypto services and decentralized finance platforms. Crypto deposit accounts are not federally insured and holdings may not be guaranteed if markets go haywire.

People who borrow against their crypto could face liquidation of their holdings, sometimes in entirely automated markets that are unregulated.

BlockFi’s extraordinary growth — and the recent crackdown by state regulators — illustrates the fraught path of cryptocurrency financial services companies amid confusion about what they do.

BlockFi’s business is not dissimilar to that of a regular bank. It takes deposits of cryptocurrencies and pays interest on them. It makes loans in dollars to people who put up cryptocurrency as collateral. And it lends crypto to institutions that need it.

For consumers, the main allure of BlockFi is the chance to take loans in dollars up to half of the value of their crypto collateral, allowing customers to get cash without the tax hit of selling their digital assets, or to leverage the value of holdings to buy more cryptocurrency. The company also offers interest of up to 8 percent per year on crypto deposits, compared with a national average of 0.06 percent for savings deposits at banks in August.

How can BlockFi offer such a high rate? In addition to charging interest on the loans it makes to consumers, it lends cryptocurrency to institutions like Fidelity Investments or Susquehanna International Group that use those assets for quick and sometimes lucrative cryptocurrency arbitrage transactions, passing on high returns to customers. And because BlockFi is not officially a bank, it does not have the large costs associated with maintaining required capital reserves and following other banking regulations.

Also unlike a bank, BlockFi does not check credit scores, relying instead on the value of customers’ underlying crypto collateral. The company’s executives argue that the approach democratizes financial services, opening them to people without the traditional hallmarks of reliability — like good credit — but with digital assets.

The model has worked for BlockFi. It is hiring employees from London to Singapore, while prominent investors — like Bain Capital, Winklevoss Capital and Coinbase Ventures — have jumped in to fund its expansion. The company has raised at least $450 million in capital.

But to regulators, BlockFi’s offerings are worrying and perplexing — so much so that in California, where BlockFi first sought a lender’s license, officials initially advised it to instead apply for a pawnbroker license. Their reasoning was that customers seeking a loan from BlockFi hand over cryptocurrency holdings as collateral in the same way that a customer might give a pawnshop a watch in exchange for cash.

Ms. Marquez of BlockFi called the sheriff’s office in San Francisco about a pawnbroker license, only to be redirected again. “No, pawnbrokers’ licenses are only for physical goods,” she recounted being told. “And because crypto is a virtual asset, this license actually does not apply to you.”

Undeterred, she returned to the state’s banking regulators and persuaded them BlockFi qualified as a lender, albeit of a new variety. The company now has licenses in at least 28 states, which it uses for cryptocurrency deposits from its more than 450,000 clients — many of whom are outside the United States. In the first three months of this year, the value of crypto held in BlockFi interest-bearing accounts more than tripled to $14.7 billion from $4.4 billion, a jump driven in part by the rise in the price of Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies.

As the company has expanded, regulators have become increasingly concerned. New Jersey’s attorney general sent it a “cease and desist” letter in July, saying it sells a financial product that requires a securities license, with all the associated obligations, including mandated disclosures.

“No one gets a free pass simply because they’re operating in the fast-evolving cryptocurrency market,” the acting attorney general, Andrew J. Bruck, said.

BlockFi does not adequately notify customers of risks associated with its use of their cryptocurrency deposits for borrowing pools, including the “creditworthiness of borrowers, the type and nature of transactions,” officials in Texas added in their own complaint, echoing allegations made by state officials in Alabama, Kentucky and Vermont.

Zac Prince, BlockFi’s chief executive, said that the company was complying with the law but that regulators did not fully understand its offerings. “Ultimately, we see this as an opportunity for BlockFi to help define the regulatory environment for our ecosystem,” he wrote in a note to customers.

The regulatory challenge is even greater when it comes to other emerging crypto finance developers in the world of DeFi, such as Compound, SushiSwap and Aave as well as PancakeSwap.

They are all essentially automated markets run by computer programs facilitating transactions without human intervention — the crypto-era version of trading floors. The idea is to eliminate intermediaries and bring together buyers and sellers on the blockchain, the technology behind cryptocurrency. The sites do not even collect users’ personal information.

Founders of those kinds of platforms argue that they are just building a “protocol” ultimately led by a community of users, with the computer code effectively running the show.

Robert Leshner, 37, started Compound in 2018 after spending a year in a tiny attic office sublet in the Mission district in San Francisco with five colleagues, experimenting with a computer program that would become part of the foundation of the DeFi movement.

Compound — backed by prominent crypto venture capitalists like Andreessen Horowitz and Coinbase Ventures — now has more than $20 billion in assets. Each of the nearly 300,000 “customers” is represented by a unique 42-character list of letters and numbers. But Compound does not know their names or even what country they are from.

Mr. Leshner and others who helped set up Compound own a large share of its self-issued cryptocurrency token — known as COMP — which has surged in value, making him worth, at least on paper, tens of millions of dollars.

Mr. Leshner has been startled by the rapid growth. “At every juncture, the speed at which decentralized finance has just, like, started to work, has caught myself and everybody off guard,” he said.

Industry executives say concerns about the safety and stability of digital assets are overblown, but federal financial regulators are still working to get a handle on the latest developments.

DeFi protocols largely rely upon stablecoins, cryptocurrencies that are ostensibly pegged to the United States dollar for a steady value but without guarantees that their value is adequately backed.

The overall market of stablecoins has ballooned to $117 billion as of early September from $3.3 billion in January 2019. That has regulators worried.

“These things are effectively treated by users as bank deposits,” said Lee Reiners, a former supervisor at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. “But unlike actual deposits, they are not insured by F.D.I.C., and if account holders begin to have concerns that they cannot get money out, they might try and trigger a bank run.”

One option worth considering, Ms. Warren said, is to ban banks in the United States from holding cash deposits backing up stablecoins, which could effectively end the surging market. Another possibility that some say could undermine the entire crypto ecosystem is the creation of a government-issued digital dollar.

“You wouldn’t need stablecoins, you wouldn’t need cryptocurrencies if you had a digital U.S. currency,” Mr. Powell, the Fed chairman, said in July. “I think that’s one of the stronger arguments in its favor.”

Categories
Health

Washington state infections and hospitalizations hit document

An infection control nurse accompanies a patient who was born on Jan.

Karen Ducey | Getty Images

Covid-19 transmissions and hospitalizations in Washington state are at all-time highs, according to the state’s Department of Health.

On July 8, Washington recorded a Covid infection prevalence of 1 in 588 residents. Just one month later, on August 6, that number almost quadrupled to a Covid infection prevalence of 1 in 156 residents, the department said on Thursday. The latest numbers exceeded those of the state’s third wave of Covid infections in the winter of 2020.

According to a CNBC analysis of data from Johns Hopkins University, Washington state reports a seven-day average of 38.5 daily new cases per 100,000 population, ranking 22nd among all states.

Four counties had 14-day new infection rates of 500 per 100,000 Washington residents and five counties had rates of 300 to 500 per 100,000 residents. Sixteen counties had rates from 200 to 300 and 12 counties had rates from 100 to 200. The delta variant accounts for 98% of the cases in the state.

Hospital admissions in the state also rose, with a seven-day moving average of 29 hospital admissions for Covid on June 16. The number remained relatively low through July 8, but tripled by August 6 to a seven-day moving average of 96 hospital admissions for Covid symptoms. The state found that hospital admissions for people between the ages of 20 and 30 have increased, a trend seen in hospitals across the country as most older Americans were vaccinated.

Admissions to state hospitals for the unvaccinated and over 65s are six times higher than for those who are fully vaccinated. In people aged 16 to 64, unvaccinated people are ten times more likely to be hospitalized than their vaccinated counterparts. “If the entire population were to experience the hospitalization rates currently observed in unvaccinated people, the hospital system would be completely overwhelmed,” the state health department said in a statement.

Death rates have been down since Jan.

Immunity to prior infection in the state is only 15.5%, which would leave 84.5% of Washington residents unprotected if they did not have access to Covid-19 vaccines. According to the Ministry of Health, by August 16, 71.5% of the population aged 12 and over had received at least one dose of a Covid vaccine.

In the nationwide population, immunity to previous infections and vaccinations is 54.7%, an increase of only 2.8% since July 6.

“It is imperative to realize that literally any of us or our loved ones could be in need of hospital treatment in the near future,” said Acting State Science Director Dr. Scott Lindquist. “To ensure that care is available when needed, our hospitals are currently counting on each of us to be masked and vaccinated.”

CNBC’s Nate Rattner contributed to this report.

Categories
Politics

Rushed Evacuation in Kabul Highlights Disconnect in Washington

Meanwhile, at the Pentagon, Defense officials said that 3,000 Marines and soldiers were on the ground in Kabul as of Sunday night to help with the evacuation, and another 3,000 were en route.

Tension had been building between the Kabul Embassy and the Pentagon, the officials said, with Pentagon officials urging a smaller footprint and the State Department seeking to keep a robust presence. During meetings and video conference calls, Pentagon officials reminded their diplomatic counterparts that American troops were leaving.

Three weeks ago, as Afghan cities began to fall to the Taliban, Defense Secretary Lloyd J. Austin III extended the deployment of the amphibious assault warship U.S.S. Iwo Jima in the Gulf of Oman so that it would be close to the region. One week after that, he ordered the Marine expeditionary unit on the ship — some 2,000 Marines — to disembark and wait in Kuwait so that they could more easily deploy to Afghanistan.

On Sunday, the military evacuated 500 people, officials said, adding that they expected that number to go up to 5,000 a day in the coming week.

All U.S. embassies overseas have emergency evacuation plans, but Kabul posed significant hurdles. First, with some 4,000 employees, the embassy is one of the largest in the world. Shutting it down and destroying any sensitive documents and other materials takes time. Second, given that the Taliban control border crossings out of the country, the evacuation has to be done entirely by air, officials said.

Thousands of others, including dual citizens and U.S. contractors, are also in the country.

Embassy officials urged American citizens who are still in Afghanistan to shelter in place and resubmit paperwork to request help to leave instead of showing up at the airport, given reports of gunfire there.

Categories
World News

U.S. warning about Hong Kong alerts Washington might do extra: Lawyer

The U.S. has issued a warning to U.S. companies operating in Hong Kong — signaling that Washington could take further action, says a lawyer who specializes in international trade compliance.

Adam Smith, a partner at law firm Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher, said Friday’s financial and regulatory risks advisory was “quite substantial” but it “doesn’t actually do anything with respect to changing the rules” right now.

However, it does indicate “there’s a lot more the U.S. could do” from a policy perspective, he told CNBC’s “Capital Connection” on Monday.

The nine-page advisory on Friday warned that U.S. firms are encountering several risks posed by China’s national security law in Hong Kong. Washington also announced sanctions on seven Chinese officials for violating Hong Kong’s autonomy.

Possible next steps

In response to Beijing’s crackdown on the former British colony, Smith said, what would “really change the nature of engagement and risk for parties in Hong Kong” would be sanctions on organizations, entities and institutions, which have been absent so far.

Sanctions on individuals can be a challenge to U.S. firms in Hong Kong, but the “real difficulty” would come from restrictions on organizations that businesses need to interact with frequently, he said.

People wearing face masks crossing a street at Hong Kong’s Wan Chai district on Feb. 16, 2021.

Zhang Wei | China News Service | Getty Images

Hong Kong’s attraction

For now, however, there remains “too much opportunity” in Hong Kong for businesses to move out of the city.

“Hong Kong … still has an unbelievable amount of human capital that many companies still need,” he said.

Kurt Tong, a former consul general representing the U.S., and chief of mission in Hong Kong and Macao, said Hong Kong is still a good place for businesses to be despite the risks.

“There’s legal risk, there’s reputational risk, there’s a certain amount of operation risk — but I think that those risks are measured,” he said.

“At the same time, (businesses) need to keep their eye on the big picture, which is that China is an enormous and attractive economy to do business with. And Hong Kong is in many ways, still … one of the best platforms to do that work,” he added.

The rhetoric has been so tough from both sides, so there’s a lot of face-saving that needs to be done.

Kurt Tong

partner, The Asia Group

Tong, a partner at advisory firm The Asia Group, said the rule of law in Hong Kong has deteriorated, but most businesses are not convinced that it has been completely wiped out.

“I think it will take more to drive companies out of Hong Kong than the changes that have taken place thus far,” he told CNBC’s “Squawk Box Asia.”

Biden-Xi meeting?

As for the path forward, Tong said he expects U.S. President Joe Biden and Chinese President Xi Jinping to meet in the fall, and discuss each of their “red lines” that cannot be crossed.

In the meantime, he said, “diplomatic jousting” will continue.

“The rhetoric has been so tough from both sides, so there’s a lot of face-saving that needs to be done,” he added.

Trade discussions between the two sides have stalled for now, and the U.S. doesn’t have incentives to enter negotiations because it doesn’t believe such talks will be successful, Tong said.

“It’s a complex picture … the U.S.-China relationship under the Biden-Xi era,” Tong said. “We’re still on the … first scene of the first act of how this is going to play out over the coming year.”

Indeed. After Tong and Smith spoke, a new alliance of NATO member states, the European Union, Australia, New Zealand and Japan blamed China’s Ministry of State Security for a massive cyberattack on Microsoft Exchange email servers earlier this year.

Categories
Politics

What Would George Washington Look Like In the present day? A Pandemic Creation Attracts Consideration.

What would George Washington look like if he were a modern politician? This question came to George Aquilla Hardy, a musician, 14 months after the pandemic. There he was stuck in his nursery in Dorset, England at the age of 23 instead of playing music festivals.

With nowhere to be and tired of “looking at the same four walls,” said Mr. Hardy, he decided to use Photoshop to answer his question. This is the result he posted on Reddit on May 2nd:

Since then, he – and others – have posted and republished it thousands of times on virtually every social media platform. A lot of the comments are silly. But Mr. Hardy’s creation – which he mocked in about three hours – also piqued real interest in the question he started with: What would the first President of the United States look like if he lived in the era of online suit ordering would? and Instagram campaign ads?

It’s unlikely that a man so proud of what he wore would have chosen to be seen in such an inconspicuous suit, said Alexis Coe, a political historian and author of “You Never Forget Your First: A biography of George of Washington. ”

“He was pretty fancy,” she said. “I don’t think it would look as chic as Mitt Romney, but you could tell it was well tailored. If he couldn’t wear Prada, he’d probably have it made to measure. “

Dean Malissa, described as the “greatest George Washington impersonator in the world,” agreed that the first president was “a bit of a fashion sign.” He also tended to dress more formally than his colleagues. “When men of his day took off their coats when it was scorching hot, he kept his on,” said Mr. Malissa, a longtime Washington performer at Mount Vernon.

Mr. Hardy doesn’t know who designed the coat his George Washington wears, only that it was worn by Representative Roger Williams of Texas. He chose Mr. Williams as the base image for his Photoshop creation after searching for “US Politicians” online and scrolling a bit, he said. He then combined that image with photos of Glenn Close and Michael Douglas because an article about celebrities who look like historical figures convincingly convinced him they had a bit of Washington in them.

Ms. Coe, the political historian, said she hadn’t seen any of the 6-foot-2-inch Washington’s that are known to wear like an athlete on those narrow shoulders. Nor can she imagine a man who put so much effort into photographing Mr. Hardy’s creation. (No, George Washington did not wear a wig, contrary to what many believe.)

What exactly, she said, assuming time travel hasn’t somehow fixed this for him, is the tight-lipped smile. The founding father had terrible teeth. He wore walrus and hippopotamus ivory dentures, as well as slave teeth obtained from dentists who specialize in such things, she said. But even with the dentures he was conscious of opening his mouth.

As it turns out, Mr. Hardy wasn’t the only person who caused pandemic malaise to create a modern portrayal of the man who presided over the 1787 Constitutional Convention. Magdalene Visaggio, a comic book writer, posted this in January:

“I always had a hard time imagining George Washington as a person walking around saying things,” she explained, explaining why she’d done it using a cell phone face-swapping tool and a photo of President Biden.

Her primary objection to Mr. Hardy’s image was that Washington was only 67 when he died, but “he looks super old” in the Reddit portrait.

She also noted that while it is difficult to take photos of people who died before photography, it is difficult to find what is right. She recently began using the teachings of her own modern Washington to create a photograph of Julius Caesar.

Categories
Politics

Justice Dept. Seizes Washington Publish’s Telephone Data

WASHINGTON – The Justice Department under President Donald J. Trump has secretly obtained the phone records for three Washington Post reporters from the early months of the Trump administration, the newspaper said on Friday.

Prosecutors searched for records of reporters’ work, home and cell phone numbers from April to July 2017 to find out who had spoken to them.

“We are deeply concerned about this use of governance to gain access to journalists’ communications,” said Cameron Barr, the Post’s acting editor-in-chief, in a statement. “The Justice Department should immediately clarify its reasons for interfering with the activities of reporters doing their job, an activity protected by the first amendment.”

The department’s decision to seek a court order for the records made in 2020 would have required the approval of Attorney General William P. Barr, a department official said.

The Justice Department, under the Trump administration, had also indicted a former Senate assistant over his contacts with three reporters in a case in which prosecutors secretly confiscated years’ worth of phone and email records from a New York Times reporter. This case signaled a continuation of the aggressive pursuit of leaks under the Obama administration.

Marc Raimondi, a Justice Department spokesman, said on Friday in a statement regarding the seized postal records: “Although the department is rare, it follows the procedures set out in its media policy guidelines when looking for legal procedures to and not to telephone charges Email records of content received from media members as part of a criminal investigation into unauthorized disclosure of classified information. “

He added, “The targets of these investigations are not those who receive the news media, but rather those with access to the national defense information they made available to the media and therefore did not protect them as required by law.”

According to its guidelines, the Justice Department should exhaust other investigative steps before seeking permission to receive telephone recordings or e-mails from journalists from telecommunications companies. In addition, the division must “strike the right balance between a number of important interests”, it says in its guidelines, such as “Maintaining the essential role of the free press in promoting government accountability and an open society”.

Leak cases, as known in the Justice Department, are notoriously difficult to track and require FBI agents to devote significant time to cases that rarely lead to charges.

It wasn’t clear what caused the Justice Department to seize the Post’s records, but in July 2017 the newspaper published an article about Sergey I. Kislyak, the then Russian Ambassador to the United States, and Jeff Sessions, the Attorney General at the time the publication of the article.

The Post reported that the two men discussed the Trump campaign during the 2016 presidential election when Mr. Sessions was a Republican Senator from Alabama and a prominent supporter of Mr. Trump. The article referred to U.S. surveillance sections, which are highly ranked and among the government’s best kept secrets.

In addition to the phone records of the Post reporters – Ellen Nakashima, Greg Miller and Adam Entous who now work at The New Yorker – prosecutors have also received a court order to obtain metadata for the reporters’ email accounts, the company said Newspaper with.

The New York Times also reported in June 2017 that surveillance wiretaps suggested Mr Kislyak was discussing a private meeting with Mr Sessions at a Trump campaign event at the Mayflower Hotel in Washington. The Times has received no indication that their reporters’ records have been confiscated.

The media leaks enraged Mr Trump, who repeatedly railed against them, particularly those revealing details of the government’s efforts to investigate Russia’s interference in the 2016 election and whether any of his campaign aides had conspired with Russia.

In August 2017, as Attorney General, Mr. Sessions condemned the “dramatic increase in the number of unauthorized disclosures of classified national security information in recent months”.

Under the Obama administration, the Justice Department also aggressively prosecuted officials who provided sensitive information to reporters. In 2013, prosecutors obtained the phone recordings from reporters and editors from The Associated Press. In this case, law enforcement officers obtained the records for more than 20 phone lines from their offices and journalists, including their home and cell phone numbers.

In addition, the Justice Department confiscated the phone records of James Rosen, then a Fox News reporter, after one of his articles contained details of a secret United States report on North Korea. In an affidavit, Mr. Rosen was described as “at least as a helper, advocate and / or co-conspirator”.

The Justice Department’s decision to search the phone records was widely condemned in the news media.

In 2013, then Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr. issued new guidelines that severely restricted the circumstances in which journalists’ records could be accessed, but did not prevent prosecutors from keeping phone records and emails for national security reasons to search.

In an email from July 2017, Sarah Isgur Flores, then a top Justice Department spokeswoman, tried to cast doubt that a meeting between Mr Kislyak and Mr Sessions had even taken place. She described the section as “exposed” and challenged its credibility when defending Mr. Sessions on the news media.

Ms. Isgur described the coverage as “serious leaks for our national security”. The email was received from reporter Jason Leopold of BuzzFeed News under the Freedom of Information Act.

Last year the Trump administration released confidential transcripts from Mr. Kislyak speaking with Mr. Trump’s former National Security Advisor Michael T. Flynn. The documents also revealed extremely delicate capabilities of the FBI, showing that the office was able to monitor the phone line at the Russian Embassy in Washington even before a call from Mr. Kislyak connected to Mr. Flynn’s voicemail.

In his extensive investigation, Robert S. Mueller III, the special adviser, “found no evidence that Kislyak spoke or had the opportunity to speak to Trump or Sessions after the speech,” his office’s 2019 report said.

Categories
Business

Yamiche Alcindor Is Named Host of ‘Washington Week’ on PBS

When Yamiche Alcindor found out last month that she was going to be the next presenter on the PBS show Washington Week, she immediately felt the emotions of the moment.

“I basically cried right away,” recalled Ms. Alcindor, “and thought of Gwen.”

Washington Week, a quiet redoubt on the screaming battlefield of political television, is most closely associated with its longtime host Gwen Ifill, the pioneering journalist who broke barriers as a black woman in the Washington press corps.

Prior to her death in 2016, Ms. Ifill also mentored Ms. Alcindor, the White House correspondent for PBS NewsHour. Beginning with Friday’s episode, Ms. Alcindor, 34, will take over Ms. Ifill’s old chair at the head of Washington Week. She succeeds Robert Costa, a Washington Post reporter who took office in 2017 and left the show that year.

PBS and WETA-TV, the Washington subsidiary that produces the show, announced the appointment of Ms. Alcindor on Tuesday.

“I know how much ‘Washington Week’ meant to Gwen and how much she put her stamp on the legacy of the show,” Ms. Alcindor, a Haitian-American woman, said in an interview. “I also feel this incredible responsibility to think deeply about taking this and making it a show that people want to see, that people believe lives up to their great legacy.”

Ms. Alcindor will continue to report on President Biden for NewsHour while continuing to contribute to NBC News and MSNBC. She was previously a reporter for the New York Times and USA Today.

She said that she had been a Washington Week viewer since college and that she wanted to expand the scope of a show that is sometimes imbued with DC Arcana. She also plans to maintain the bourgeois tone – “a sense of respect and respectability,” as she put it – that has been the show’s signature since its debut in 1967.

“When you work and live in Washington it can feel like everything is about what’s going on in DC,” said Ms. Alcindor. “What has guided my journalism so much is how vulnerable populations are affected by these guidelines. That will be my directional light. “

As a White House reporter, Ms. Alcindor became known as a frequent target of former President Donald J. Trump’s anger at press conferences. Once in 2018, Mr Trump labeled her question “racist” after asking if his policies had encouraged white nationalists. “As a black woman, it wasn’t the first time someone had targeted me or said something about me that I knew wasn’t true,” recalled Ms. Alcindor.

When Ms. Alcindor was first booked as a guest on NBC’s Meet the Press, she called Ms. Ifill “in a panic”.

She recalled Ms. Ifill’s advice: “She was basically telling me, ‘You are a reporter who knows as much as the people at this table. You deserve it and you are ready for it. ‘”

Categories
Business

Coinbase’s Washington Debut – The New York Instances

Players, observers, lobbyists and lobbyists view this as a critical moment for Crypto and its influencers. If it succeeds or does not succeed in convincing the officials, a decision will be made as to whether the regulation will allow the digital gold rush to accelerate or to slow it down to a sputtering.

Here are four of the big problems facing crypto lobbyists:

Call. The impression that crypto facilitates crime is voiced with some frequency by lawmakers and regulators and remains a significant hurdle to legitimacy. The first commissioned publication from the Crypto Council is an analysis of the illicit use of Bitcoin and concludes that concerns are “vastly overrated” and that blockchain technology could be better used by law enforcement agencies to stop crime and provide information to collect.

Reporting requirements. The new anti-money laundering rules passed this year will significantly expand the information available on digital currencies. The Treasury Department has also proposed rules that require detailed reporting for transactions over $ 3,000 that are “non-hosted wallets” or digital wallets that are not associated with a third-party financial institution and that require institutions that use cryptocurrencies manage, process more data. The Financial Action Task Force, an intergovernmental monitoring and standardization body, recently presented a draft guideline on virtual assets that would require service providers to provide further information.

Securities Uncertainties. When is a digital asset a security and when is a commodity? Technically not a mystery, this question has puzzled regulators and innovators for some time. Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies shared over a decentralized network are generally considered commodities and are less regulated than securities that represent a stake in a company. Tokens released by individuals and companies are more likely to be classified as securities, as they more often represent a participation in the issuer’s project.

  • The Securities and Exchange Commission sued Ripple Labs in December, accusing them of selling unregistered securities in the form of a token called XRP. Ripple insists that XRP is a commodity. A decision in this case can prove to be a turning point in determining how to properly characterize cryptocurrencies in the future.

  • This week, an SEC commissioner, Hester Peirce, released an updated “safe haven” proposal that would allow developers a grace period to issue a token without fear of mischaracterization and keep regulators informed. “The idea is to give people a three-year runway,” said Ms. Peirce.

Catching up with China. The Chinese government is already experimenting with a digital currency from the central bank, a digital yuan. China would be the first country to create a virtual currency, but many are considering it. Some crypto proponents fear that China’s speed in space threatens the dollar, national security, and American competitiveness.

In business today

Updated

April 16, 2021, 1:30 p.m. ET

For more information, see our previous weekend edition on the future of crypto regulation.

“In any new industry, Washington is not easy to find out,” said Ms. Peirce, the SEC commissioner. Entering a highly regulated industry like finance and talking about technologies that few officials understand only compound the difficulty for the crypto crowd.

Since joining the SEC in 2018, Ms. Peirce has been a vocal supporter of the blockchain in both the halls of power and crypto insider circles, sharing her thoughts on important topics such as when there will finally be an exchange-traded Bitcoin fund in the United States there will be states. (Not soon enough from their point of view, but maybe soon.)

As the sector matures, some things become simpler, even as the landscape of actors becomes more complex. Blockchain companies will increasingly speak to regulators who understand their language, Ms. Peirce said, as new SEC chairman Gary Gensler, a former MIT professor who taught crypto classes, happened to be confirmed on the day Coinbase was listed .

Categories
Politics

World Struggle I Memorial in Washington Raises First Flag After Years of Wrangling

WASHINGTON – Monuments to the war dead of the 20th century are one of the central attractions in the country’s capital. So it has always been remarkable that one of the most momentous American conflicts, World War I, failed to find national recognition.

Now that the United States is pulling out of its longest war, a memorial to one of the most complicated is due to open on Friday, which officially opened in Washington after years of entanglements between monument preservers, city planners, federal officials and the commission that brought it about.

The first flag was hoisted at the memorial in Pershing Park near the White House – rather than along the National Mall where many devotees had imagined it – in a place where office workers once hurried to ice skate, sip cocoa, and nibble lunch sandwiches sat underneath the crepe myrtle. Battles over the monument’s location, accuracy, and size were part of his journey.

“Our goal was to create a memorial that would go hand in hand with other monuments and raise World War I in American consciousness,” said Edwin L. Fountain, deputy chairman of the World War I Centennial Commission, recognizing that this was the case In contrast to these monuments there must be a monument and a city park. “

The only original allusion to the war in the park, a statute of General John J. Pershing who commanded the American expeditionary forces in Europe, will remain on the edge of space. At the center of the monument, however, is a large wall that has its final feature: a 58-foot bronze sculpture that, depending on your point of view, is either a bold testimony to the importance of the mission or an impairment of its natural environment.

The design, restoration of the original park, and construction of the new monument will cost $ 42 million. The commission still has $ 1.4 million available.

The sculpture “A Soldier’s Journey” tells the story of an American from reluctant service member to returned war hero in a series of scenes with 38 characters. They are designed to convey the story of the country’s transformation from an isolationist to a leader on the world stage and create a definitive visual reference to the next great war. The play had its own trip from New York to New Zealand to the Cotswolds of England, one with live models in period clothes and thousands of iPhone photos and other technology to capture the models in motion.

Critics – many of whom have fought the concept of Mr. Fountain with every available tactic – say the structure is incapable of marrying a historically significant park with a grand dream monument.

“The real question is: did the monument use the power of the place where it is now?” said Charles A. Birnbaum, president of the Cultural Landscapes Foundation, who attempted to add the park to the national register of historic places, thereby cutting down on the commemorative planners’ large-scale plans. “Has it succeeded in integrating into a place in a federal city that is unique in serving tourists and residents?”

The park, designed by M. Paul Friedberg, a well-known landscape architect, and built in 1981, was in ruins when the foundation stone for the memorial was laid in 2017. A popular ice rink was closed in 2006 due to mechanical problems and never reopened; The nooks and crannies were littered with garbage and pigeons that preferred to eat it.

Admittedly, it wasn’t anyone’s first choice for a memorial. Quarrels of a very Washington kind engulfed the effort.

Texas Republican Ted Poe spent years trying to expand the memorial effort on the National Mall before retiring. Congress considered converting the District of Columbia War Memorial at the end of the mall into a national memorial. Washington officials firmly opposed this, as did Missouri lawmakers who wanted no competition for the National World War I Museum and Memorial in Kansas City. The Ministry of the Interior was also not interested in the project.

In 2014, Congress decided on Pershing Park. In 2016, Joseph Weishaar, a 25-year-old architect, and Sabin Howard, a neo-classical sculptor in New York, were selected to create the giant sculpture after winning a design competition.

“I made a very myopic, classic male figurative sculpture that came from Hellenistic art,” said Howard. “Neither of us was ready. It’s just insane. You are entering this process that could cost you 15 years of your life. “

Given the location of the monument, the pace moved significantly faster than the National Mall, despite multiple reviews by the US Fine Arts Commission and other federal agencies.

Mr Howard began hiring models in 2016 – as did his daughter Madeleine, who played the role of the young girl in the sculpture – who dressed in antique clothes and played fight scenes when he was in a studio with 12,000 images on his iPhone made in the South Bronx. The project continued in New Zealand, where Mr. Howard made film props using special technology to create the first model for commission review.

Next, he and his models packed up for the Cotswolds, where he used a special foundry to begin his sculpting, which is now being completed at his studio in Englewood, NJ

Mr. Howard said he was aware of making the sculpture visually appealing but also educational. “My client said,” You have to do something that dramatizes World War I enough that visitors want to go home and learn more about it, “he said.

However, accuracy gave way to artistic license. The piece, which shows black, Latin American and Native American soldiers, blurs reality. At a meeting with the commission in 2018, Toni Griffin, a member, noted that in World War I black soldiers did not normally fight white soldiers as shown and suggested that “the sculpture should represent the authentic experience,” so the minutes from the meeting.

While changing the black troops’ helmets to reflect this, Mr. Howard said he was unaffected by the broader argument. “You had segregation in the army,” he said in an interview. “On the battlefield, however, there is no difference.” Even when black soldiers were portrayed in a historically incorrect way, he said, “They had to be treated as equals.”

It is a notable coincidence that the memorial opens to visitors during a pandemic, much like the flu outbreak that killed thousands of troops in the trenches during the war. “The flu wasn’t on my head,” said Mr. Howard. “What I thought was a pro-human act increase.”

The memorial is unlikely to suppress longstanding criticism that too many memorials in Washington focus on war and death.

“There are marginalized stories that could be celebrated and sobering stories about the reality of the war experience that could more effectively honor the victim,” said Phoebe Lickwar, who was a landscape architect in the early stages of the project. “Instead, we are presented with a banal narrative and a glorification of the struggle.”

Categories
Politics

In Washington, Coverage Revolves Round Joe Manchin. He Likes It That Method.

WASHINGTON – Wenn Demokraten den Filibuster eliminieren, gibt es einen Senator, der in der 50: 50-Kammer einen übergroßen Einfluss auf Themen haben würde, die die Zukunft der Nation verändern könnten: Infrastruktur, Einwanderung, Waffengesetze und Stimmrechte. Dieser Senator ist Joe Manchin III aus West Virginia.

Es gibt auch einen Senator, dessen Widerstand gegen die Beseitigung des Filibusters ein wesentlicher Grund dafür ist, dass dies niemals passieren kann. Auch dieser Senator ist Mr. Manchin.

“Er sollte den Filibuster loswerden wollen, weil er plötzlich die mächtigste Person an diesem Ort wird – er ist die 50. Stimme über alles”, skizzierte Senator Chris Coons, Demokrat von Delaware, das Argument, ohne es jedoch anzunehmen.

Mr. Manchin sieht das jedoch nicht so. Zur Verärgerung der Demokraten, zur Freude der Republikaner und zur Verwirrung der Politiker, die nicht verstehen können, warum er nicht mehr Macht ausüben möchte, rührt sich Herr Manchin, ein ehemaliger Gouverneur des Staates, nicht.

“Sechzig Stimmen”, sagte er in einem Interview letzte Woche in seinem Büro und bezog sich dabei auf die Schwelle, die erforderlich ist, um die meisten Gesetze voranzutreiben. Er fügte hinzu, dass er nicht in Betracht ziehen würde, den Filibuster für bestimmte Rechnungen auszusetzen, da einige seiner Kollegen schwebten: “Sie” entweder verpflichtet oder nicht. “

Aber mit 18 Toten nach zwei Massenerschießungen innerhalb einer Woche, einer sich verschlechternden Herausforderung für Migranten an der Grenze und Republikanern, die versuchen, die Stimmabgabe in fast jedem Staat, in dem sie die Macht haben, einzuschränken, glauben die Liberalen, dass dieser Moment nach einer anderen Art von Engagement verlangt. In einer Zeit, in der sie die volle Kontrolle über den Kongress haben und mit sich überschneidenden Krisen konfrontiert sind, empfinden viele Demokraten einen moralischen und politischen Imperativ, um zu handeln und verdammt zu sein.

Damit steht der 73-jährige Manchin im Zentrum der wichtigsten politischen Debatten in Washington – und hat die Voraussetzungen für eine Kollision zwischen einer Partei geschaffen, die ihre Mehrheiten nutzen will, um umfassende Gesetze zu verabschieden, und einem politischen Rückschlag, der entschlossen ist, die Überparteilichkeit wiederherzustellen Kammer, die so polarisiert ist wie das Land.

Herr Manchin glaubt, dass die Beendigung des gesetzgeberischen Filibusters den Senat effektiv zerstören würde. Er erinnerte sich an seinen Vorgänger Robert C. Byrd und sagte ihm, dass die Kammer entworfen worden sei, um einen Konsens zu erzwingen.

Herr Manchin hat seine Bereitschaft zum Ausdruck gebracht, einen „sprechenden Filibuster“ zu unterstützen, bei dem der Gesetzgeber tatsächlich das Wort ergreifen muss, vielleicht für viele Stunden, um eine Abstimmung zu blockieren. Aber er hat nicht nachgegeben, es insgesamt loszuwerden, und in einer Reihe von Fragen, einschließlich Stimmrecht und Waffenkontrolle, geht es bei seiner Ermahnung weniger um ein bestimmtes politisches Ende als vielmehr darum, sicherzustellen, dass die Gesetzgebung von beiden Parteien unterstützt wird.

Im weiteren Sinne hat der Widerstand von Herrn Manchin gegen die Beendigung des Filibusters grundlegende Fragen darüber aufgeworfen, welche Version des Kongresses dysfunktionaler wäre: ein Gremium, das durch einen Stillstand behindert wird oder das Gesetze nur durch Abschaffung langjähriger Richtlinien verabschieden kann, um die Stimmen der Parteilinien durchzusetzen ?

“Man kann den Ort nicht zum Laufen bringen, wenn nichts Bedeutendes passiert”, sagte Vertreter Ro Khanna, ein führender Progressiver aus Kalifornien.

Herr Manchin befürchtet, dass der kurzfristige Vorteil, den Filibuster fallen zu lassen, für die Demokraten langfristig nach hinten losgehen würde.

“Ich bin besorgt darüber, dass das Haus eine Agenda vorantreibt, die für uns schwierig sein würde, die Mehrheit aufrechtzuerhalten”, sagte Manchin über die fortschrittliche Gesetzgebung, die die Hausdemokraten vor der Tür des Senats aufstellen. Was den Druck von links angeht, sagte er höhnisch: „Was werden sie tun, sie werden nach West Virginia gehen und gegen mich kämpfen? Bitte, das würde mir mehr als alles andere helfen. “

Für eine wachsende Zahl seiner demokratischen Kollegen – und nicht nur für Liberale – ist es naiv, weiterhin Hoffnung auf die Geschichte zu setzen. und glauben Sie, wie Herr Manchin über die Waffengesetzgebung sagte, dass die Republikaner sagen könnten: “Hören Sie, es ist Zeit für uns, das Vernünftige und Vernünftige zu tun.”

Natürlich werden nur wenige in einem Senat, dessen 50. Abstimmung von Herrn Manchin abhängt, direkt sagen, dass ihr Kollege sich der Fantasie hingibt.

“Ich glaube, Joe konzentriert sich auf Überparteilichkeit, und ich stimme dem Ausgangspunkt zu”, sagte Senator Richard J. Durbin aus Illinois, bevor er den Boom senkte: “Sie wollten uns keine einzige Stimme geben”, sagte er die Stimulusrechnung.

Herr Manchin ist ein ehemaliger Highschool-Quarterback, von dem Freunde sagen, dass er es immer noch genießt, im Mittelpunkt des Geschehens zu stehen. Er ist so etwas wie ein Einhorn im heutigen Kongress. Als Pro-Kohle- und Anti-Abtreibungs-Demokrat spiegelt er eine weniger homogenisierte Ära wider, in der Regionalismus ebenso bedeutsam war wie Parteilichkeit und Senatoren mehr individuelle Akteure als vorhersehbare Stimmen für ihren Caucus waren.

Zweimal zum Gouverneur gewählt, bevor er den Sitz von Herrn Byrd beansprucht, ist er der einzige Gesetzgeber, der einer rein republikanischen Kongressdelegation in West Virginia im Wege steht, einem Staat, den der frühere Präsident Donald J. Trump im vergangenen Jahr um fast 40 Punkte befördert hat. Und er ist ein unwahrscheinlicher Mehrheitsmacher des Demokratischen Senats.

“Wir sind wirklich das große Zelt”, sagte Senatorin Debbie Stabenow aus Michigan, bevor sie wissentlich hinzufügte: “Jetzt ist es eine Menge Arbeit, wenn Sie ein großes Zelt haben, oder? Aber so haben wir eine Mehrheit. “

Obwohl er in einigen Fragen nicht mit seiner nationalen Partei Schritt hält und von Teilen der Linken als kaum besser als ein Republikaner abgeschrieben wird, ist seine Politik komplexer und sogar verwirrender, als sie auf den ersten Blick erscheint.

Er gab die entscheidende Stimme für zwei der größten liberalen Prioritäten dieser Ära ab – die Blockierung der Aufhebung des Affordable Care Act im Jahr 2017 und die Verabschiedung des Gesetzes über einen Anreiz von fast 2 Billionen US-Dollar in diesem Monat – und stimmte zweimal für die Verurteilung eines angeklagten Präsidenten, der in diesem Land sehr beliebt ist sein Heimatstaat.

Und obwohl er Mr. Byrds Engagement für die Tradition des Senats bewundern mag, hat Mr. Manchin seinem Vorgänger nicht nachgeahmt, indem er seine Macht genutzt hat, um sich unermüdlich darauf zu konzentrieren, Ausgabenprojekte zurück nach West Virginia zu lenken.

Als Herr Manchin an einem einzigen Änderungsantrag festhielt, der die Verabschiedung des Konjunkturgesetzes verzögerte, waren die Helfer des Weißen Hauses ratlos, weil sein Preis für die Unterstützung der Maßnahme kein zusätzliches Geld für seinen verarmten Heimatstaat war. Seine Hauptanforderung laut Beamten des Westflügels war es, die Ausgaben zurückzufahren und republikanische Beiträge zu berücksichtigen, die die Rechnung moderater erscheinen lassen könnten.

Herr Manchin sagte, Präsident Biden habe ihn in einem Telefonanruf gewarnt, dass die progressive Linke im Haus zurückschrecken könnte, wenn die Rechnung wäre deutlich getrimmt. „Ich sagte:‚ Mr. Präsident, wir versuchen nur, ein paar Leitplanken anzubringen “, erinnerte er sich.

Er war weniger glücklich über die Bemühungen von Vizepräsidentin Kamala Harris, ihn in die Gesetzgebung einzubeziehen, indem er bei einem Fernsehsender in West Virginia auftrat, um für die Gesetzesvorlage zu werben, ohne ihn zu warnen. Der Clip wurde viral und führte, wie Herr Manchin sagte, zu Aufräumgesprächen mit Herrn Biden und dem Stabschef des Weißen Hauses, Ron Klain.

In Bezug auf den Druck, den er auf den Filibuster verspüren könnte, sagte Herr Manchin, er habe Senator Chuck Schumer, den Mehrheitsführer, daran erinnert, wie wichtig er sei, um den Demokraten eine Mehrheit zu verschaffen.

Er sagte, er habe Herrn Schumer gesagt: “Ich weiß eines, Chuck, Sie hätten dieses Problem überhaupt nicht, wenn ich nicht hier wäre.”

Der Widerstand von Herrn Manchin gegen die Beseitigung des Filibusters hat bei vielen Hausdemokraten Ärger ausgelöst, insbesondere bei denen, die ihn als effektiv priorisierende Überparteilichkeit gegenüber schwarzen Stimmrechten ansehen.

Er ist nicht das einzige Hindernis für die expansive liberale Agenda, die von vielen Kongressdemokraten bevorzugt wird, oder sogar der einzige, der den Filibuster noch verteidigt. Andere Senatsdemokraten, darunter Kyrsten Sinema aus Arizona, teilen ebenfalls seine Zurückhaltung.

Dennoch ist keiner so eifrig wie Mr. Manchin, einen vergangenen Tag der Kollegialität wiederherzustellen. Und vielleicht, um es auf den Punkt zu bringen, ist keiner so glücklich wie er, über die Notwendigkeit zu sprechen, wenn er einen einst stark demokratischen Staat vertritt, der sich bereits vor der Ankunft von Mr. Trump auf die GOP verlagert hatte.

Er überquerte letztes Jahr den Gang, um seine engste republikanische Verbündete, Senatorin Susan Collins aus Maine, zu unterstützen, und veranstaltet bereits gemeinsam mit ihr überparteiliche Mittagessen. Er plant die Wiederherstellung seiner Pizza- und Bierpartys nach der Pandemie auf dem Boot, das er in Washington zu Hause anruft. (Es heißt “Almost Heaven”, die Eröffnungslyrik zu John Denver’s Ode an West Virginia.)

Obwohl einige seiner Kollegen die ideologisch aufgeladenen Kabelnachrichtensendungen zur Hauptsendezeit genießen, bevorzugt Herr Manchin eine andere Institution in Washington, die auch in weniger polarisierten Zeiten florierte: die Show am Sonntagmorgen.

In der Art vieler ehemaliger Gouverneure, die sich über Washingtons Gletschertempo ärgern, kann er seine Ungeduld manchmal kaum eindämmen. Er hat wiederholt darüber nachgedacht, den Senat zu verlassen und zu versuchen, seinen alten Job in Charleston zurückzugewinnen.

Aber diejenigen, die Mr. Manchin gut kennen, glauben, dass er die Aufmerksamkeit, die er in der Hauptstadt erhält, genauso mag wie als Signalrufer in Farmington, WV, wo er in der Nähe von Nick Saban, dem legendären Fußballtrainer der Universität, aufgewachsen ist von Alabama und ein lebenslanger Freund von Herrn Manchin.

“Sie sind auf dem heißen Stuhl, wenn Sie ein Quarterback sind, aber es ist ziemlich befriedigend, wenn Sie Fortschritte machen”, sagte Nick Casey, ein Verbündeter von Manchin und ehemaliger Vorsitzender der Demokratischen Partei von West Virginia. Herr Casey sagte, der Senator, der sich eine Verletzung zugezogen hatte, die seine Spieltage verkürzte, sei “der größte QB, der nie an der West Virginia University anfangen durfte – fragen Sie ihn einfach.”

Steve Williams, der Bürgermeister von Huntington, WV, der mit Mr. Manchin im Landtag zusammenarbeitete, sagte: “Dies ist der nächste Schritt, wie er als Gouverneur sein könnte, der tatsächlich die Agenda vorantreibt und die Menschen zusammenhält.”

Es ist der letzte Teil, der den Senator am meisten animiert. Er scherzt glücklich mit Reportern, während er sich als einsame, wenn auch gut verdeckte Stimme für Comity positioniert, und verschiebt Fragen von Politik zu Prozess.

“Warum fragst du die Leute nicht, wann sie sich das letzte Mal Zeit genommen haben, um mit einigen Leuten auf dieser Seite zu sprechen?” Herr Manchin erzählte diese Woche einem CNN-Reporter. „Versuchen Sie, sie zu überzeugen oder mit ihnen zu arbeiten. Hast du mit ihnen zu Abend gegessen? Hast du mit ihnen zu Mittag gegessen? Haben Sie eine Tasse Kaffee mit ihnen getrunken? Versuche etwas.”

Eine Reihe von Anti-Filibuster-Senatsdemokraten konzentrieren sich jedoch mehr darauf, was die Unterstützung von Herrn Manchin für den “sprechenden Filibuster” bedeuten könnte.

“Ich denke, das gibt uns viel Raum für Diskussionen”, sagte Senatorin Elizabeth Warren aus Massachusetts und nahm eine halb volle Perspektive ein.

Es scheint klar zu sein, dass Herr Manchin die Parteien nicht wechseln wird.

“Ich glaube nicht, dass das passieren wird, obwohl wir ihn mit offenen Armen empfangen würden”, sagte Frau Collins, die in der Vergangenheit versucht hat, ihre Freundin davon zu überzeugen, sich den Republikanern anzuschließen.

Es ist nicht schwer zu verstehen, warum Herr Manchin in der Partei seiner Vorfahren bleibt. Als Katholik italienischer Abstammung suchte er bei seiner Ankunft im Senat den Schreibtisch von John F. Kennedy auf, zeigt ein Bild des ermordeten Präsidenten in seiner Bürolobby und kann sich daran erinnern, diesen Akzent in Massachusetts in seiner Küche gehört zu haben, als Kennedys Brüder zum Haus seiner Eltern kamen während der West Virginia Grundschule im Jahr 1960.

“Joe erinnert mich sehr an die alten konservativen Demokraten in Texas”, sagte Senator John Cornyn, Republikaner von Texas. „Sie wurden als Demokraten geboren. Sie werden Demokraten sterben. “

Was den Filibuster betrifft, sagte Mr. Coons, der 2010 neben Mr. Manchin vereidigt wurde, dass Liberale ihre Hoffnungen nicht wecken sollten.

Mr. Coons erinnerte sich an ein Gespräch mit jemandem, der Mr. Manchin gut kennt, und sagte, diese Person habe ihm gesagt: „Wenn der Geist von Robert Byrd wieder zum Leben erweckt würde und die Zukunft von West Virginia selbst auf dem Spiel steht, könnte er… darüber nachdenken . ”