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US officials say all debris from suspected Chinese spy balloon has been collected – as it happened

Ron DeSantis has recently gained a reputation as the GOP’s best hope to keep Donald Trump from the top of the ticket in 2024.

The governor reinvigorated the culture wars in Florida, including by taking on Disney World, cracking down on shaky claims of election fraud and going after the state’s higher education institutions for being too “woke”.

But that doesn’t mean Republicans won’t have other candidates to choose from. Trump’s former UN ambassador Nikki Haley formally launched her presidential campaign this week, and his ex-vice-president Mike Pence is waiting in the wings, along with a host of others. That all could be good news for the former president; a recent poll showed it would be DeSantis’s support – not Trump’s – that would suffer in a contested primary.

Sarah Palin, the one-time candidate for vice-president whose hokey, vapid brand of conservatism is seen as a prototype for Trump’s iconic style, thinks DeSantis should hold off. “He should stay governor for a bit longer. He’s young, you know. He has decades ahead of him where he can be our president,” she said this week. That’s the opposite of the advice she gave herself in 2009, when she resigned as Alaska’s governor before completing her term.

We still don’t have all the answers about the recent spate of UFO shootdowns, but the US military announced it had recovered all of the Chinese spy balloon destroyed off South Carolina’s coast. As for the three other mysterious objects American warplanes downed over the US and Canada, there’s a compelling theory that one was a hobbyist’s balloon launched from Illinois. Speaking of the midwestern state, Florida’s Republican governor, Ron DeSantis, will head there next week to address a police union – just the type of thing a state politician with national aspirations would do.

Here’s what else happened today:

  • The justice department searched the offices of a group connected to Mike Pence, but found no new classified documents.

  • Joe Biden spoke out in support of John Fetterman, Pennsylvania’s Democratic senator who checked himself into a hospital for treatment of clinical depression.

  • Georgia’s Republican secretary of state is claiming vindication after a special grand jury unanimously found there was no evidence of fraud in the 2020 election.

  • Fox News’ biggest names never believed Donald Trump’s election fraud claims but parroted them anyway, newly released court filings show. This story has raised plenty of eyebrows – except for readers of the Wall Street Journal, a publication that shares ownership with the network and has yet to cover it.

  • On the new Index of Impunity, the US’s ranking is not particularly enviable.

With Roe v Wade overturned, the religious right is now pushing legislation in Republican-led states that would crack down on everything from drag queen performances to the sale of romance novels, Hallie Lieberman reports:

A wave of proposed legislation pushed by Republicans across the US at the state level is aimed at outlawing aspects of sexuality that could have a huge impact on Americans’ private lives and businesses.

Opponents of the laws before legislatures in various states say the planned new legislation could spawn prosecution of breast-pump companies in Texas for nipples on advertising, or a bookstore might be banned from selling romance novels in West Virginia, or South Carolina could imprison standup comics if a risque joke is heard by a young person.

The bills are part of a post-Roe nationwide strategy by the religious wing of the Republican party, now that federal abortion rights have fallen. They range from banning all businesses that sell sex-related goods to anti-drag queen bills. Tyler Dees, an Arkansas state senator who wrote an anti-porn bill, said: “I would love to outlaw it all,” referring to porn.

The most prevalent bills relate to age verification of sex-related websites. Seventeen states drafted porn age-verification bills, many inspired by Louisiana’s law that went into effect in January. Louisiana’s law requires websites featuring one-third or more pornographic content to check government-issued ID to verify users are 18 or older. Websites that don’t comply face civil penalties. Parents can sue a site if their kids access it.

Republicans take aim at risque jokes and romance novels with anti-sex bills
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Joe Biden spoke out in support of Senator John Fetterman’s decision to seek hospital treatment for depression:

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John, Gisele – Jill and I are thinking about your family today.Millions of people struggle with depression every day, often in private.Getting the care you need is brave and important. We're grateful to you for leading by example. https://t.co/V3rGZSKrM4

&mdash; President Biden (@POTUS) February 17, 2023

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John, Gisele – Jill and I are thinking about your family today.

Millions of people struggle with depression every day, often in private.

Getting the care you need is brave and important. We’re grateful to you for leading by example. https://t.co/V3rGZSKrM4

— President Biden (@POTUS) February 17, 2023

The White House press secretary also talked about the Democratic lawmaker’s decision in her briefing today:

Vice-president Kamala Harris along with a host of Democratic and Republican lawmakers are at the annual Munich security conference, where they heard a speech from Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy. Here’s what he had to say, from the Guardian’s Patrick Wintour:

The west needs to hurry up its support for Ukraine as Vladimir Putin will gain a military advantage unless arms deliveries and further sanctions arrive soon, Volodymyr Zelenskiy said in a video address to world leaders at a security conference in Munich in the face of mounting fears that Russia is planning a new offensive.

“We need to hurry up. We need speed – speed of our agreements, speed of our delivery … speed of decisions to limit Russian potential,” the Ukrainian president said. “There is no alternative to speed because it is speed that life depends on.”

He added: “Delay has always been and still is a mistake.”

His address came just days before the anniversary on 24 February of Moscow sending its forces into the country and unleashing the biggest war in Europe since the 1940s.

Zelenskiy warned that Russia was trying to mount an offensive, mainly in the south, partly by attacking civilian and energy infrastructure. Meanwhile, he said, neighbouring Belarus would make a mistake of historic proportions if it joined in the Russian offensive, and claimed surveys showed 80% of the country did not wish to join the war.

Trying to sound an optimistic note and taking up the theme of the conference, “David on the Dnipro”, Zelenskiy said his country had the courage to defeat Goliath with a slingshot. But for this to succeed, he said, the slingshot had to become stronger and faster. “Goliath has already started to lose. Goliath will definitely fall this year,” he said.

Zelenskiy urges west to speed up arms support to head off Russia offensive
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Donald Trump tried to call into Fox News as the January 6 insurrection was occurring, but network executives turned him down, fearing he could make the situation worse, CNN reports.

The new details come from the documents containing communications between top Fox News personalities and officials that were made public yesterday as part of Dominion Voting Systems’ defamation lawsuit against the network:

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Buried in the Dominion filing: Donald Trump dialed into Lou Dobbs’ show on 1/6 trying to get on air but Fox would not let him. 1/6 committee didn’t know Trump had made this call, according to a source familiar with the panel’s work. pic.twitter.com/vGWl4Lbn5Y

&mdash; Annie Grayer (@AnnieGrayerCNN) February 17, 2023

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Buried in the Dominion filing: Donald Trump dialed into Lou Dobbs’ show on 1/6 trying to get on air but Fox would not let him. 1/6 committee didn’t know Trump had made this call, according to a source familiar with the panel’s work. pic.twitter.com/vGWl4Lbn5Y

— Annie Grayer (@AnnieGrayerCNN) February 17, 2023

The justice department searched the offices of a conservative group connected to former vice-president Mike Pence as part of its investigation into his possession of classified documents, but found no additional items, Politico reports:

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JUST IN: Pence spokesman says&quot;[DOJ] today completed a thorough and unrestricted search of Advancing American Freedom's office for several hours and found no new documents with classified markings. One binder with approximately three previously redacted documents was taken.&quot;

&mdash; Kyle Cheney (@kyledcheney) February 17, 2023

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JUST IN: Pence spokesman says

“[DOJ] today completed a thorough and unrestricted search of Advancing American Freedom’s office for several hours and found no new documents with classified markings. One binder with approximately three previously redacted documents was taken.”

— Kyle Cheney (@kyledcheney) February 17, 2023

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A person familiar with the search says the binder is believed to be related to Pence's 2020 debate prep. Pence had attorneys present throughout the search.

&mdash; Kyle Cheney (@kyledcheney) February 17, 2023

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A person familiar with the search says the binder is believed to be related to Pence’s 2020 debate prep. Pence had attorneys present throughout the search.

— Kyle Cheney (@kyledcheney) February 17, 2023

The presence of classified documents at Pence’s Indiana home was first revealed last month, and the Republican former vice-president said he would cooperate with government efforts to retrieve any material in his possession. Unlike with the cases involving Joe Biden and Donald Trump – both of whom were discovered to be in possession of secret government material, though in vastly different circumstances – the justice department has not appointed a special counsel to handle the investigation into Pence.

Joe Biden’s former executive assistant will sit for an interview with House Republicans investigating the president’s possession of classified documents, CNN reports.

Kathy Chung was a staffer who in 2017 helped pack up Biden’s belongings at the end of his eight years as vice-president. Classified material dating to that stint in the White House, and to his time as senator, were among those found in his possession, sparking investigations by the justice department as well as the GOP-led House oversight committee, which will interview Chung.

Here’s more from CNN’s report:

.css-cumn2r{height:1em;width:1.5em;margin-right:3px;vertical-align:baseline;fill:#C70000;}Chung was one of the staffers who packed Biden’s belongings and documents at the end of his time as vice president, according to people familiar with the matter.

Those boxes eventually ended up at the Penn Biden Center and are now at the center of a special counsel investigation into the possible mishandling of classified info. A source close to Chung says she feels partly responsible for the situation.

Chung’s lawyer, Bill Taylor, told CNN … they have been in discussions with the Oversight Committee over the past week and have agreed to provide the committee with much of what it requested in a letter last month.

“She is happy to sit for an interview with the committee,” Taylor told CNN.

The committee made a broad request that asks for materials well beyond the Biden document investigation including all communications with the Biden family dating back to 2009. The panel also demanded all documents and communications “related to then-Vice President Biden’s departure from office in 2017, including communications regarding Penn Biden Center,” the letter notes.

Chung’s lawyer says there are limits on what they are willing to provide: “She is not agreeing to produce everything in the letter but would provide documents related to the movement of documents from the White House to the Penn Biden Center.”

Taylor has proposed several dates for a possible interview, but the final date has not been set.

More from Kamala Harris’s NBC interview, on her response to moves by Ron DeSantis, the governor of Florida, targeting the teaching of African American history.

DeSantis, 44, is widely expected to run for the Republican presidential nomination and is the only close challenger to Donald Trump in polling.

Harris is the first woman, the first Black American and the first South Asian American to be vice-president.

She said: “Any push to censor America’s teachers and tell them what they should be teaching in the best interest of our children … is, I think, wrongheaded.

“The people who know our children, are their parents and their teachers … and it should not be some politician saying what should be taught in our classrooms.”

Dismissing Washington “chatter” about whether Joe Biden should run for re-election in 2024 and whether her own party thinks she would be a suitable replacement if he does not, Kamala Harris said the president “has said he intends to run for re-election … and I intend to run with him as vice-president of the United States”.

Harris was speaking to NBC News at the Munich security conference.

Biden has not formally declared a run but all signs suggest that he will. On Thursday, the White House physician pronounced him “fit for duty, and [to] fully execute all of his responsibilities without any exemptions or accommodations”.

Also on Thursday, however, Politico reported concern among Democrats that at 80, and already the oldest president ever, Biden is too old to run for a second term, by the end of which he would be 86.

The site also reported that insiders believe Harris would not be a good presidential candidate herself.

Speaking to NBC, Harris said: “I think that it is very important to focus on the needs of the American people and not political chatter out of Washington DC.”

She was also asked about Nikki Haley, the 51-year-old former South Carolina governor and UN ambassador now running for the Republican presidential nomination, who has called for a “new generation” of leaders and said politicians over the age of 75 should be subject to mandatory mental health tests.

Haley’s only declared opponent for the Republican nomination, former president Donald Trump, is younger than Biden but only by four years. Haley has not said that Trump is too old.

Harris, 58, said Haley was using “very coded language”, adding: “What I know from traveling our country is that the American people want leaders who will see what’s going on in their lives and create solution.

“In Joe Biden, we have a president who is probably one of the boldest and strongest American presidents we have had in his response to the needs of the American people.”

The Republican presidential candidate Nikki Haley told a New Hampshire audience a controversial “don’t say gay” education law signed by the governor of Florida, Ron DeSantis, does not go “far enough”.

“Basically what it said was you shouldn’t be able to talk about gender before third grade,” Haley said. “I’m sorry. I don’t think that goes far enough.”

DeSantis’s law bans classroom instruction on sexual orientation or gender identity through third grade, in which children are eight or nine years old. The law has proved hugely controversial, stoking confrontation with progressives but also corporations key to the Florida economy, Disney prominent among them.

Some pediatric psychologists say the law could harm the mental health of LGBTQ+ youth already more likely to face bullying and attempt suicide than other children.

Haley, a former South Carolina governor and UN ambassador, this week became the second declared major candidate for the Republican nomination in 2024, after Donald Trump.

Widely expected to run, DeSantis is the only candidate who challenges Trump in polling. Surveys have shown Haley in third place, with the potential to split the anti-Trump vote and hand the nomination to the former president.

New Hampshire will stage the first primary of the Republican race. In Exeter on Thursday, Haley said: “There was all this talk about the Florida bill – the ‘don’t say gay bill’. Basically what it said was you shouldn’t be able to talk about gender before third grade. I’m sorry. I don’t think that goes far enough.

“When I was in school you didn’t have sex ed until seventh grade. And even then, your parents had to sign whether you could take the class. That’s a decision for parents to make.”

As reported by Fox News, Haley also said Republicans should “focus on new generational leadership” by putting “a badass woman in the White House”.

Full story…

Nikki Haley says Florida’s ‘don’t say gay’ law does not go ‘far enough’
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In California, the Guardian’s Kira Lerner reports lawmakers are considering a proposal that would allow citizens to vote while incarcerated for felonies in state and federal prisons. Advocates for the measure see it as crucial for racial justice, since the state’s prison population is disproportionately non-white:

Before having his sentence commuted by Governor Gavin Newsom last year, Thanh Tran served 10 and a half years in prisons and jails across California, a time he described as the “most traumatizing and dehumanizing experience of my life”.

Had he been able to vote during that time, he said he would have maintained some hope that his community still cared about him.

“The focus of incarceration right now in California is about punishment, but if I had the ability to vote, it would still create that tie to the community,” said Tran, now a policy associate with the Oakland-based Ella Baker Center for Human Rights. It would be like the community saying, “Thanh, we still care about you out here,” he said. “We know your sentence will one day end and we want you to return home and be a good neighbor to us.”

Could California be the latest state to restore voting rights to felons?
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We still don’t have all the answers about the recent spate of UFO shootdowns, but the US military announced it had recovered all of the Chinese spy balloon destroyed off South Carolina’s coast. As for the three other mysterious objects American warplanes downed over the US and Canada, there’s a compelling theory that one was a hobbyist’s balloon launched from Illinois. Speaking of the midwestern state, Florida’s Republican governor Ron DeSantis will head there next week to address a police union – just the type of thing a state politician with national aspirations would do.

Here’s what else has happened today so far:

  • Georgia’s Republican secretary of state is claiming vindication after a special grand jury unanimously found there was no evidence of fraud in the 2020 election.

  • Fox News’s biggest names never believed Donald Trump’s election fraud claims but parroted them anyway, newly released court filings show. This story has raised plenty of eyebrows – except for readers of the Wall Street Journal, a publication that shares ownership with the network and has yet to cover it.

  • On the new Index of Impunity, the United States’s ranking is not particularly enviable.

But what of the unidentified objects the US military shot down in the days after it destroyed the Chinese spy balloon? There’s still no official explanation of what those were, but the Guardian’s Richard Luscombe reports on the convincing evidence that one may have been a hobbyist’s balloon launched from Illinois:

A group of amateur balloon enthusiasts in Illinois might have solved the mystery of one of the unknown flying objects shot down by the US military last week, a saga that had captivated the nation.

The Northern Illinois Bottlecap Balloon Brigade says one of its hobby craft went “missing in action” over Alaska on 11 February, the same day a US F-22 jet downed an unidentified airborne entity not far away above Canada’s Yukon territory.

In a blogpost, the group did not link the two events. But the trajectory of the pico balloon before its last recorded electronic check-in at 12.48am that day suggests a connection – as well as a fiery demise at the hands of a sidewinder missile on the 124th day of its journey, three days before it was set to complete its seventh circumnavigation.

If that is what happened, it would mean the US military expended a missile costing $439,000 to fell an innocuous hobby balloon worth about $12.

Object downed by US missile may have been amateur hobbyists’ $12 balloon
Read more

The Chinese spy balloon has generated plenty of partisan furor in Washington, but there’s more evidence that Beijing has deployed similar craft for surveillance in the past.

The Wall Street Journal reports that during Donald Trump’s administration, a small group of Pentagon officials tracked strange objects that are now thought to have been balloons over US airspace – but their observations never made their way to the White House.

Here’s more from the report:

.css-cumn2r{height:1em;width:1.5em;margin-right:3px;vertical-align:baseline;fill:#C70000;}Now it appears some intelligence officials at the Pentagon were aware of the incidents and harbored concerns that they were related to China, believing Beijing was using them to test radar-jamming systems over sensitive U.S. military sites. The data collected about the Trump-era incidents was limited to a basic assessment and therefore wasn’t shared more broadly within the government at the time.

Pentagon intelligence analysts reached their assessment about the objects in the summer of 2020, the former officials said.

The assessment “never got to be assertive” in concluding that the objects were linked to Chinese surveillance, said one of the officials familiar with the issue.

The Journal’s article notes that Mark Esper, the defense secretary from 2019 to 2020, never heard about these objects, which were smaller and made shorter flights over navy installations in Guam, California and Virginia.

Republicans seized on the Chinese’s balloon’s flyover this month to argue the Biden administration wasn’t taking the threat from Beijing seriously, but the White House countered that three objects went undetected over US airspace while Trump was in office, and one earlier in Biden’s presidency.


Source: US Politics - theguardian.com


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