Tag Archives: Jim

Joe Biden condemns Georgia voting law: ‘This is Jim Crow in the 21st century’ – live | US news

The suspect in the Colorado supermarket shootings bought a firearm at a local gun store after passing a background check, and he also had a second weapon with him that he didn’t use in the attack that killed 10 people this week, authorities and the gun store owner said Friday.

Investigators are working to determine the motive for the shooting, but they don’t know yet why the suspect chose the store in Boulder or what led him to carry out the rampage, Police Chief Maris Herold said at a news conference.

“Like the rest of the community, we too want to know why why that King Soopers, why Boulder, why Monday,” Herold said.

“Unfortunately, at this time, we still don’t have those answers.”
Boulder County District Attorney Michael Dougherty said the quick response by officers kept others inside the store out of danger, but he declined to say how many people were there.

Investigators have an idea of how many shots were fired in the gun battle between officers and the suspect, but aren’t revealing it yet, Dougherty said.

The officer who was the first on scene was killed.
“Their actions saved other civilians from being killed,” Dougherty said about the officers. “They charged into the store and immediately faced a very significant amount of gunfire from the shooter, who at first they were unable to locate.”

More charges will be filed against the suspect, 21-year-old Ahmad Al Aliwi Alissa, in the coming weeks in connection with the shots fired at officers, Dougherty said.

John Mark Eagleton, owner of Eagles Nest Armory in the Denver suburb of Arvada, said in a statement that his store was cooperating with authorities as they investigate.

The suspect passed a background check conducted by the Colorado Bureau of Investigation before purchasing a gun, Eagleton said.

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Putting ‘cologne on Jim Crow’: Georgia GOP lawmakers drive toward new voting restrictions

Crucial action comes this week. The state’s GOP-controlled General Assembly has only five legislative workdays left on its calendar before it adjourns March 31. Lawmakers in both the House and Senate say they plan to finalize changes to election bills in the days ahead.

An omnibus bill that a key House committee is expected to take up Monday would impose identification requirements for absentee voting, limit the use of ballot drop boxes and disqualify most provisional ballots cast outside of voters’ home precincts. It also would make it a misdemeanor to provide food or soft drinks to voters as they wait in line.

Of particular concern to voting rights activists in the state: Measures that strip authority from the elected secretary of state and grant state officials broad rights, including the ability to replace local elections officials.

“We are facing an emergency,” Hillary Holley, organizing director of Fair Fight Action, told CNN.

Despite last-minute alterations to the package to preserve more weekend early voting, “this bill continues to be nothing but voter suppression,” said Cliff Albright, the co-founder of the Black Voters Matter Fund. “The recent changes are nothing more than putting a little makeup and cologne on Jim Crow.”

His group plans a rally Monday at the Georgia Chamber of Commerce headquarters in Atlanta to pressure businesses to oppose the package, part of a planned week of action.

High stakes

Georgia, a battleground state, sits at the forefront of efforts in Republican-controlled legislatures around the country to impose tough, new restrictions on voting. The proposed voting limits in Georgia arrive ahead of high-stakes gubernatorial and US Senate races next year.

A February tally by the liberal-leaning Brennan Center for Justice tracked bills that would restrict voting in 43 states. More states have joined the list since then, with new bills landing recently in North Carolina and Wisconsin.

Republican lawmakers in the state have cast their efforts as needed to shore up a system battered by allegations of fraud. A preamble to the House bill said it was designed “to address the lack of elector confidence in the election system on all sides of the political spectrum” and promote “uniformity in voting.”

Former President Donald Trump and his allies have stoked false claims that he lost the election because of fraud. There’s no evidence of widespread fraud that would have changed the election outcome in Georgia or elsewhere. President Joe Biden’s nearly 12,000-vote victory in the state was reaffirmed in three separate counts of the ballots.

Voting rights activists say the measures under consideration would restrict ballot access for wide swaths of Georgia’s increasingly diverse population.

Aunna Dennis, executive director of Common Cause Georgia, said ID requirements for obtaining absentee ballots, would harm older voters, those who are low-income, and college students because they are all less likely to have driver’s licenses or other forms of required identification, such as passports or a state or federal photo identification card.

Georgia currently uses signature matching in absentee voting, which Republican lawmakers argue is an unreliable way to verify voters’ identities. A signature-match audit in Cobb County, Georgia, following last November’s general election, found “no fraudulent absentee ballots with a 99% confidence threshold,” according to the Georgia Secretary of State’s office.

The Georgia House bill would require voters to provide their driver’s license numbers or state ID numbers and other identifying information, such as their date of birth, on the ballots.

Georgia Republicans “are saying that voting should be for the 1% and … for the privileged,” Dennis told CNN.

Last-minute changes

In recent days, lawmakers in Georgia backed down on a provision that critics say would have unfairly targeted Black voters. Republicans now say they plan to preserve Sunday early voting as part of the omnibus voting package that the House committee will take up this week. The change under discussion would specifically allow Georgians to cast ballots on two Sundays during the state’s early voting window. A previous bill sought to allow only one optional day of Sunday voting.

Voting rights activists had criticized that limit as attacking “Souls to the Polls” — programs that help drive turnout among Black churchgoers, a key Democratic constituency. And a CNN analysis of voting patterns in November’s general election found the measure eliminated days when a disproportionate number of Black voters had cast their ballots.
Republican Rep. Barry Fleming, the architect of the voting restrictions moving through the Georgia House, also has indicated that efforts to repeal no-excuse absentee voting are now dead. His package does not include the repeal passed by the Georgia Senate earlier this month. A record 1.3 million Georgians voted by mail in last November’s general election.

Fleming’s office did not immediately respond to request for comment. At a meeting last month, Fleming said the bills aim to address the “controversy” surrounding recent elections.

“If you have been following at all the issue of elections in Georgia, you know that there has been controversy regarding our election system. And I believe the goal of our process here should be an attempt to restore the confidence of our public in our election system,” Fleming said on February 18 as his committee began its work.

Georgia Republican Sen. Max Burns, who chairs the panel handling election bills in the Senate, has crafted a companion bill, the text of which was released Friday afternoon. His committee is scheduled to take it up Monday with a vote coming as early as Tuesday, Burns told CNN.

In a meeting Wednesday, Burns said his version “would address some of the issues and some of the challenges that we have.” He did not respond to a request for comment over the weekend.

New powers

Both measures give state lawmakers more authority over elections.

A provision in the House bill boots the elected secretary of state as the chairman of the state elections board. The General Assembly would choose the new chairman, giving lawmakers three out of five board appointments.

The current Republican Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger drew the former President’s ire last year when he rebuffed Trump’s false claims that widespread voter fraud in the state contributed to his defeat. (Trump’s entreaty to Raffensperger to “find” votes is now the subject of a Fulton County, Georgia, investigation.)

The House package also would grant the state elections board the right to suspend both local election superintendents and local boards of election and appoint a new official to step in as a temporary superintendent.

Voting rights activists say that bucks the tradition of local control and could lead to a scenario in which state officials swoop in to prevent a county from certifying its election results.

In his bid to overturn his loss, Trump targeted not only election officials, but also reached out to members of an obscure election board in Wayne County, Michigan, charged with certifying Biden’s win in the Detroit area.

“Imagine if they had this power in the last election,” Albright said of the new authority the Georgia package contemplates. “It’s the provision that can trump every other one in this bill.”

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Investors will get relief from falling Treasury yields: Jim Bianco

Investors may get a break from the market’s wild swings.

Wall Street forecaster Jim Bianco expects stocks to get a boost this spring because the benchmark 10-year Treasury Note yield will temporarily retreat.

“The near-term forecast is it’s oversold, and it’s probably due for a rally – meaning that we would have falling rates,” the Bianco Research president told CNBC’s “Trading Nation” on Friday.

He predicts the drop will benefit the indexes, including the tech-heavy Nasdaq which has gotten rocked by rising rates in the past month. The Nasdaq is particularly vulnerable to rates because technology is considered a long duration asset like Treasurys.

“The stock market will definitely act like it’s a relief,” Bianco said.

The 10-year yield closed the week at 1.70%, and it’s up almost 89% so far this year.

“Maybe we can see it fall way back to 1.50 [percent],” Bianco added. “But I wouldn’t consider that anything more than a respite in a move for longer-term for higher-yields.”

Bianco, who lists inflation as his big worry for 2021, predicts it will heat up in the year’s second half due to a strong economic recovery coupled with a record amount of federal coronavirus aid.

“$1400 checks, are hitting bank accounts today. Literally today, right now,” he said. “By Monday, President [Joe] Biden said one hundred million checks will be in the mail.”

By later this year, Bianco worries it will be virtually impossible to avoid lasting inflation for the first time in a generation.

“The trend towards yields is going to push-pull all year long,” Bianco said. “We could hit 2.50 [percent] over the next 12 months. So, about 75 basis points higher.”

Disclaimer

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Stacey Abrams on GOP efforts to target voting: ‘It is a redux of Jim Crow in a suit and tie’

“We know that the only thing that precipitated these charges — it’s not that there was a question of security. In fact, the secretary and the governor went to great pains to assure America that Georgia elections were secure,” the Georgia Democrat told CNN’s Jake Tapper on “State of the Union.” “And so the only connection that we can find is that more people of color voted and it changed the outcome of elections in the direction Republicans do not like.”

Republican-controlled legislatures in several states have recently pushed bills that would restrict voting rights, an effort in response to former President Donald Trump’s false claims of widespread fraud in the 2020 election. The Georgia Senate passed a sweeping voting rights bill Monday that if signed into law would repeal no-excuse absentee voting for many Georgians — a method 1.3 million residents used to cast ballots in the November general election.
State legislators in 43 states this year have introduced more than 250 bills with provisions that would restrict voting access, according to a tally from the Brennan Center for Justice at New York University.
Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds, a Republican, on Monday signed a new law that makes it harder to vote early, becoming one of the first states to enact new restrictions. And nearly two dozen bills aimed at restricting voting have been introduced in Arizona and several have advanced in recent weeks.
Earlier this month, the US House of Representatives passed an election bill that would counter state-level Republican efforts to restrict voting access. But the bill is likely to face challenges in the Senate, where it’s not clear there would be enough Republican support to overcome a filibuster.
Asked her message for President Joe Biden and other Democrats who support voting rights but don’t favor eliminating the filibuster, a move that could ensure the election bill is passed, Abrams told Tapper, “I don’t believe that it’s necessary to wholly eliminate the filibuster to accomplish the purposes of passing these bills.”

“Just as we have seen an exemption carved into the filibuster rules for judicial appointments, for Cabinet appointments and for budget reconciliation, the protection for our democracy, especially in the wake of the insurrection on January 6 and it’s continued ripples throughout our state legislatures, it demands that the entire US Senate acknowledge that protection of democracy is so fundamental that it should be exempt from the filibuster rules,” Abrams said.

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Jim Henson’s Old Wilkins Coffee Ads Resurface, Boy Are They Dark



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Another Michigan QB departure more ammo for Jim Harbaugh critics

As if they need more ammo, critics of Jim Harbaugh took to social media this week amid news that another quarterback he recruited to Michigan was transferring.

Joe Milton, who plans to graduate from the school this spring, announced plans Thursday to enter his name into the NCAA’s transfer portal and play elsewhere next year.

He’s hardly the first starting quarterback to leave —the portal and practice of transferring is becoming commonplace in the sport nowadays — but the latest in a string of quarterbacks to depart Michigan under Harbaugh, whose track record of developing players at the position is mixed at best in his first six seasons in Ann Arbor.

He’s had some success with transfers (more on that in a moment), but missed on many of his high-profile quarterback recruits out of high school. And it starts from the very beginning.

Harbaugh’s first recruited quarterback out of high school, Zach Gentry, a four-star prospect in the 2015 class from Albuquerque, New Mexico, never played a game at the position. He was converted to tight end soon after arriving at Michigan after Harbaugh sensed the big-bodied Gentry would have a difficult time breaking through in a packed and competitive quarterback room.

More: Michigan’s QB race takes new twist: Joe Milton to transfer

It worked out for Gentry, who twice earned all-Big Ten honors at tight end and was drafted by the Pittsburgh Steelers in the fifth round of the 2019 NFL Draft. But that hasn’t been the case with each of Harbaugh’s subsequent recruits.

With a full year to recruit the 2016 class, Harbaugh landed another high-profile quarterback at the time — four-star prospect Brandon Peters from Avon, Ind., whose strong arm and athleticism made him one of the top quarterbacks in the class. But four starts and three years later, Peters (680 passing yards on 55% completion, 4 TDs, 3 INTs) found himself buried on the depth chart and transferred to Illinois, where he won the starting job and found success.

Meanwhile, the results with Harbaugh’s 2017 and 2018 quarterback recruits, both four-star prospects out of high school, have been similar. Dylan McCaffrey opted out of the 2020 season and elected to transfer after four years and 13 appearances. And now Milton, who began the 2020 season as Michigan’s starter only to lose the job five gams in. Milton’s regression as the season went on was stunning, and the latest indictment on Harbaugh’s spotty track record of identifying and developing quarterbacks.

Harbaugh has had much better success in the transfer market, plucking quarterbacks with years under their belt at the college level and inserting them in at Michigan. Jake Rudock, a graduate transfer from Iowa, earned all-Big Ten honorable mention for his 2015 season with the Wolverines in which he threw for 3,017 yards and 20 touchdowns while leading the team to a 10-3 season.

More: U-M football to start spring practice on Monday

Then there’s Shea Patterson, the transfer from the University of Mississippi who started two seasons at Michigan and threw for more than 5,600 yards and 45 touchdowns. Still, Patterson’s prolific passing numbers weren’t enough to get Michigan over the hump — Harbaugh’s teams posted a 10-3 record in 2018 and 9-4 record in 2019.

Harbaugh also relied on another transfer, John O’Korn from Houston, to help plug the gap at quarterback in 2016 and 2017. But Wilton Speight won the starting job both seasons, edging O’Korn, who would only start six games in his two seasons of eligibility. By the time the 2017 season was over, O’Korn’s eligibility clock had expired and Speight, rehabbing from a broken bone in his spine, elected to transfer to UCLA.

Which brings us back to Milton, the third straight high school quarterback recruited to Michigan under Harbaugh to transfer. It was not going to be a slam dunk this offseason for Milton, who was going to have to beat out Harbaugh’s 2019 quarterback, Cade McNamara, and recently enrolled J.J. McCarthy, whose five-star status makes him the highest-rated quarterback recruit under Harbaugh. But as Milton makes a decision for himself (and I don’t think anyone blames him for that), the move once again magnifies Harbaugh’s inability to recruit, foster and develop high school quarterbacks at the college level.

Could McNamara or McCarthy eventually be the quarterback that helps get Michigan over the top? Sure. All it takes is one player, a capable coaching staff and the right pieces around him to do it. Harbaugh seems intent on making it happen — he made wholesale changes to his coaching staff this winter, including the decision to take the reins as quarterbacks coach.

Will it work? It’s too early to tell. But a big reason for Harbaugh’s struggles at Michigan — while he’s 49-22 in six seasons, but without a trip to the Big Ten championship or berth in the College Football Playoff — was once again brought to light this week.

Now he must do everything he can to change that narrative.

Read more on Michigan football:

Mike Macdonald: Michigan defense ‘going to be multiple, get after people’

U-M’s young receivers made progress (and got their feet wet) in 2020

Another NFL mock draft has two Michigan players in the first round

Michigan linebacker Adam Shibley enters transfer portal

Tight ends, marred by drops, have new leader, coach

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Bobby Green collapses after weigh-ins; Jim Miller fight off

Bobby Green made weight for his UFC 258 fight with Jim Miller – but it appears to have been a struggle. And now their fight is off.

Green was the last fighter to weigh in Friday morning at the UFC Apex in Las Vegas and hit the lightweight limit at 156 pounds. He walked to the scale and stepped on without assistance.

When it came time for the pre-fight faceoffs about 25 minutes later, Green and Miller did not participate. UFC president Dana White explained why during his scrum with reporters.

“Bobby Green just collapsed back there,” White said. “Doctors are looking at him. They’re trying to rehydrate him right now.”

Later Friday, the UFC announced that Green vs. Miller was pulled from UFC 258. Stepping into its main-card spot will be a featherweight bout between Brian Kelleher and Ricky Simon.

There is no word on Green’s condition at this time.

Green (27-11-1 MMA, 8-6-1 UFC) was looking to rebound from a unanimous decision loss to Thiago Moises last October, which snapped a three-fight winning streak. Miller (32-15 MMA, 21-14 UFC) also aimed to get back in the win column after dropping a decision to Vinc Pichel last August.

With the change, the finalized UFC 258 lineup includes:

MAIN CARD (Pay-per-view, 10 p.m. ET)

Champ Kamaru Usman (170) vs. Gilbert Burns (170) – for welterweight title
Maycee Barber vs. Alexa Grasso
Kelvin Gastelum vs. Ian Heinisch
Brian Kelleher vs. Ricky Simon
Julian Marquez vs. Maki Pitolo

PRELIMINARY CARD (ESPN, ESPN+, 8 p.m. ET)

Anthony Hernandez vs. Rodolfo Vieira
Dhiego Lima vs. Belal Muhammad
Mallory Martin vs. Polyana Viana
Andre Ewell vs. Chris Gutierrez

PRELIMINARY CARD (ESPN+, 6:15 p.m. ET)

Gabe Green vs. Phil Rowe
Miranda Maverick vs. Gillian Robertson

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