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    Biden says Congress needs to 'act now' on $1.9tn Covid relief proposal

    Joe Biden said on Friday that Congress needs to “act now” on his $1.9tn Covid-19 relief proposal, even without Republican support, adding that most economists believe additional economic stimulus is needed.“We have to act now,” the president told reporters at the White House. “There is an overwhelming consensus among economists … that this is a unique moment and the cost of inaction is high.”Biden later said he supported passing Covid-19 relief with or without Republican help.“I support passing Covid relief with support from Republicans, if we can get it. But the Covid relief has to pass with no ifs, ands or buts,” Biden said.This suggests that even as Biden has stressed the importance of bipartisanship and reaching out to moderate Republican lawmakers, his tolerance for opposition has its limits.Biden spoke as Democrats who lead the US Senate and House of Representatives prepared to take the first steps next week toward delivering fresh assistance to Americans and businesses reeling from a pandemic that has killed more than 433,000 people.Congress enacted $4tn in Covid-19 relief last year.On Thursday, the Senate majority leader, Chuck Schumer, said the sharply divided chamber would begin work on robust legislation next week, despite misgivings among Republicans and some Democrats about the size of Biden’s proposal.With the 100-seat Senate split 50-50 and Kamala Harris, the vice-president, wielding the tie-breaking vote, Democrats are preparing to use a parliamentary tool called “reconciliation” that would allow the chamber to approve Covid-19 relief with a simple majority. Because of Senate rules, legislation usually requires 60 votes to pass in the chamber.“There is no time for any delays,” Biden said on Friday. “We could end up with 4m fewer jobs this year … It could take a year longer to return to full employment if we don’t act and don’t act now.“The House speaker, Nancy Pelosi, predicted on Thursday that both chambers of Congress would be ready to move forward through reconciliation by the end of next week. More

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    Biden move to refund UN population agency is 'ray of hope for millions'

    The decision by US president Joe Biden to refund the UN population fund, UNFPA, offers “a ray of hope for millions of people around the world”, said the agency’s executive director.
    Dr Natalia Kanem said the announcement on Thursday would have an “enormous” impact on the agency’s work, particularly as the world continues to grapple with the coronavirus pandemic.
    In 2017, the Trump administration halted funding to the UNFPA, claiming it supported coercive abortion and involuntary sterilisation – claims strongly denied by the agency.
    The US was one of the agency’s largest funders. In 2016, it provided $69m (£50m) to support its work in more than 150 countries.
    “Ending funding to UNFPA has become a political football, far removed from the tragic reality it leads to on the ground. Women’s bodies are not political bargaining chips, and their right to plan their pregnancies, give birth safely and live free from violence should be something we can all agree on,” said Kanem.
    She added that the pandemic had hit particularly hard the vulnerable communities in which the UNFPA works. “US support will be instrumental in helping us build back better and fairer.”
    US secretary of state Antony Blinken said his department would appropriate $32.5m to support the UNFPA this year.
    “UNFPA’s work is essential to the health and wellbeing of women around the world and directly supports the safety and prosperity of communities around the globe, especially in the context of the global Covid-19 pandemic,” he said.
    Blinken also confirmed that the US would withdraw its support for the “Geneva Consensus Declaration” – an anti-abortion policy introduced last year by the then secretary of state Mike Pompeo, and signed by more than 30 countries, including Brazil, Hungary and Uganda.
    “The United States is re-engaging multilaterally to protect and promote the human rights of all women and girls, consistent with the longstanding global consensus on gender equality and sexual and reproductive health and reproductive rights,” said Blinken. More

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    'The future is bright': Guardian US readers on their hopes for Biden's presidency

    One week after the inauguration of Joe Biden as the 46th president of the United States, we asked Americans how they feel about the election result and what their hopes are for the next four years.‘Biden and Harris can show that we have a genuine desire to overcome the problems Trump has exposed’I’m a Democrat and a secular humanist and voted for Biden and Harris. I believe in making the world a more equitable place. For 12 years, Donald Trump has pushed a racist agenda that has divided us, starting with his birther attacks on President Obama. Having exposed the rifts in our country, I believe Biden and Harris can show that we have a genuine desire to overcome the problems Trump has exposed.The pandemic has shown us the fragility of our lives and how we need to work together to solve problems. I hope the Green New Deal can be implemented. The food industry is an example of how broken we are, and how we can make meaningful, just and environmental changes. Trump built a wall to keep people out, but agriculture depends on undocumented migrant workers. Every aspect of the food industry depends on immigrant labor, from harvesting to planting.There’s also the pandemic and racial inequality, and the need to engage with people to understand what the Black Lives Matter and defund the police movements are. Biden needs to meet with the leadership of these movements. Joy Feasley, 54, arts worker, Philadelphia – voted for Joe Biden‘The future is bright’I proudly voted for Joe Biden and Kamala Harris. My belief is that they will get the virus under control, provide immediate financial relief to everyone in need, reopen/open small minority-owned businesses, get the kids back to school (at least part-time by the summer months), and get everyone to continue to wear a mask.My concern is the pushback from the GOP and the lingering bad blood from the Trump era. We have to find a way forward together and heal the divide.I am especially elated we African Americans played such a huge role in electing Joe and Kamala. The power of black voices is growing stronger and I truly believe if we are to save the American democracy it will be because of African Americans. We hold fast to the American idea that all of us are created equal, entitled to justice and you cannot wish us away, as much as you would like to. We will beat back white supremacy and render their whole movement impotent through love, determination and fight. The future is bright. Robyn McGee, journalist, Los Angeles – voted for Joe Biden‘It’s just more of the same’The Democrats and the Republicans are as one. If you’d lived through [2020’s] horrifying fire season, you’d vote Green, too. If we don’t do something about this right now, we’re all doomed.I’m not buying the “Uncle Joe” routine – it’s just more of the same. I have very few hopes for this administration. The corporate sponsors made it very clear. People want commonsense gun reform; a Green New Deal; an end to corporate tax loopholes; and Medicare for All, but they’re not gonna get any of it.The most important thing that needs to happen is that the media needs reform. Some news channels spend every night spewing hate propaganda, often about each other. I’m from the UK, so imagine turning on Channel 4 News and having Jon Snow spew vile drivel at you for two hours about Sophie Raworth. It’s insanity. John, 47, commercial property developer, San Francisco – voted for Howie Hawkins and the Green party‘We should cancel student loan debt that is crippling an entire generation’I voted Biden/Harris, not because I like them, but because I honestly only wanted to see the “orange one” out of office. I believe Biden could do significant things for everyone but it’s hard to not see them in the pockets of lobbyists. I personally will not be putting hope in any Biden basket until I see significant changes.I’d like to see universal healthcare; navigating a Covid-19 mass vaccination; more unemployment opportunities, especially for gig workers and people paid under the table; and consistent stimulus checks so we can all stay home and kill the spread of the virus. I also think he should cancel all federal and state student loan debt that is crippling an entire generation from any upward mobility (I have been living in a house with five roommates since I left high school); and pass significant environmental bills to protect wild areas and return land back to indigenous people.Oh, and please can we paint the White House something a little more uplifting? Maybe a nice lavender or at the very least some shade of gray? Katy, 32, manager of a tattoo studio, Oregon – voted for Joe Biden‘The administration should be careful about what they mess with’I voted for Donald Trump. I don’t like him as a person, but I believe that good politicians don’t exist and that instead of voting for a personality you should vote for policy – I agree and support his policies on things like immigration, abortion and economics. I think that Joe himself is a weak person that will be easily influenced by the far-left members of his party. I think that the Biden administration should be very careful about what they mess with. If they’re smart, they won’t touch guns and they won’t even mention the word “reparation”. There are still over 70 million people, myself included, who voted for Trump that they shouldn’t forget about, even if they have marginalized and alienated them. Liam Cawood, 18, student, Georgia – voted for Donald Trump‘We need to rein in corporations’I voted Harris/Biden but it wasn’t a decision that I felt at ease with, because of Biden’s background and circle of influence. I felt that Kamala grew up in such a way that would give her some kind of somatic sense of what would support a large portion of people in our country who have not had care in a big way. They both seem to speak to care for all.My greatest hope for the next eight years – because I think that’s the minimum time it would take the administration once it sets this intention – is to rein in corporations. We are far past a point where technology influences people. As far as I can see it, as long as corporations have legal entity status like people, and corporations are driven by resource accumulation, we will continue to remove power, voice and decision-making from people, which will self-perpetuate systems that are harmful. Isa Stewart, 28, works at a non-profit, New Mexico – voted for Joe Biden‘My expectations are low’I chose not to vote. The US has two capitalist parties and no working-class ones. This is seen most clearly in the lack of socialized medicine. However, in the past four years, the Republicans have moved towards neo-fascism, and the Dems have become the main capitalist party. I would vigorously support a labor party if I felt there was one. My expectations are low. [Biden’s] embrace of progressive cultural issues helps disguise the fact that the Dems’ only political program is maintenance of the status quo. Joy, 68, retired, Louisiana – chose not to vote‘I hope the two parties can move towards the middle’I learned a lot from this election. Joe was not my first pick as I wanted Kamala. After he won the primary and was nominated I realized that Joe was the perfect candidate all along. I didn’t think about the mess our country was in. I wanted a female Potus. I’ve learned that you have to think hard and long. You cannot always have the candidates your heart wants. It’s bigger than your own needs and concerns, and this election needed a leader that would not be starting from scratch. Joe is ready for this role in every way and was ready to take on this mess from the second he won the election. I’m relieved and confident and trust him with our country and even my own life. Kamala is the perfect VP, by the way.My hopes are that the two parties can move towards the middle for human’s sake. Covid is the enemy, not red v blue. I hope that Joe can reach the hearts and minds of the people left on the fence, so to speak. Get them to climb down on to his side – the side of democracy, truth and fairness.I’m concerned that the hate left in people’s hearts will not fade away and Joe will be hindered by the rift. And lastly, Joe has to bring back the trade unions to our country. Gayle, 55, San Diego – voted for Joe Biden More

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    Don't swerve the culture war – that's the lesson from Joe Biden to UK progressives | Owen Jones

    “Culture war” used to be a term inextricably linked with the maelstrom of US politics. Popularised by American sociologist James Davison Hunter in his 1991 book Culture Wars: The Struggle to Define America, it described how socially progressive and conservative coalitions were locked in a seemingly eternal conflict. It could make for surprising alliances, he noted, citing Protestant, Catholic and Jewish clergy joining forces in anti-abortion movements during the late 1980s.The battlegrounds of the US culture war are familiar ones, long regarded with bafflement by patronising and complacent European eyes: God, guns, abortion, gay rights and, of course, race. In a moment that threatened to temporarily derail his 2008 presidential bid, Barack Obama said of working-class rust-belt Americans: “They get bitter, they cling to guns or religion or antipathy to people who aren’t like them.” As the Tea Party movement’s backlash against his Medicare proposals underlined, culture wars became a highly effective means to mobilise low-income white Americans to vote against their economic interests.Brexit proved the detonator for the British culture war, which became not so much about our relationship with a trading bloc but about identity: we were no longer Labour or Tory, or working class or middle class, but remainers and leavers. As polling by Lord Ashcroft after the referendum showed, pro- and anti-EU were equally divided about whether capitalism was a force for good or ill. But while leave voters overwhelmingly believed multiculturalism, social liberalism, feminism and the green movement were forces for ill, remain supporters believed the opposite.This set the basis for a clash of values that proved electorally fatal for Jeremy Corbyn: after all, the basis of any authentic leftwing project is class politics – “for the many, not the few”, as his Labour party put it. Culture wars are the toxic reaction to class politics.Yet culture wars continue not simply to shape politics on both sides of the Atlantic, but to define it. According to the Financial Times, just as Joe Biden swept the rust-belt states, Keir Starmer believes he can win back Labour’s lost red wall by copying the US president’s “emphasis on ‘family, community and security’ … and avoiding endless arguments about ‘culture war’ issues such as trans rights and the destruction of historic statues”.Yet this is a curious lesson to draw from the US. It is true that Biden’s past record can hardly be described as a beacon of progressive social norms: he backed crime legislation that led to the mass incarceration of Black people; his chosen vice president, Kamala Harris, was among those who assailed him for once working with segregationists, and said she believed the women who had accused him of inappropriate sexual behaviour. But progressive movements have succeeded in shifting the centre of gravity within the Democrats to an extent no nominee can ignore.Take trans rights, which has become one of today’s totemic “culture war” issues. Harris has her pronouns in her Twitter bio; Biden campaigned promising trans people, “We see you, we support you, and we will continue to do everything we can to ensure you are affirmed and accepted just as you are.” He became the first president-elect to thank trans people in his victory speech, issued an order expanding LGBTQ protections and repealed the ban on trans military personnel.There were, of course, howls of outrage: one Republican senator questioned “Another ‘unifying’ move by the new Administration?” But according to the polling, it was indeed unifying: more than seven in 10 Americans support trans people serving in the military. Here is an instructive example. Rightwingers often push back at moves to secure rights for minorities on the grounds that they are “divisive”: yet, though noisy and obsessed, they are also unrepresentative.As it does in the US, polling in Britain consistently shows women and younger people are most supportive of trans rights, with older men least supportive. There is a complication here: while support for trans rights is a given in US feminist, “centrist” and progressive circles, transphobia is a permissible prejudice across the political spectrum in Britain. This week the SNP leader, Nicola Sturgeon, condemned transphobia in her party’s ranks after it had led to an exodus of younger members. But while anti-trans activists are vocal, for the majority of people it’s not an issue on their radar. As the Democrats underlined, what is needed is leadership – or a vacuum will be filled by increasingly emboldened bigotry.But there are other lessons too. Rather than treating claims for racial justice as risking the support of white floating voters, the Democrats embraced Black Lives Matter. After the killing of George Floyd this spurred a surge in Black voter registration, and the relationship between grassroots Black organisers and the Democrats played a pivotal role in flipping several states in the presidential race. As well as working with movements representing the struggles of minorities – rather than treating them as unhelpful – a progressive political project needs policies that unify working-class people, regardless of background. Take the New Labour period: policies such as tax credits and investment in public services made a considerable difference to millions of lives; yet in its final years, wages began to stagnate or decline for the bottom half, and an escalating housing crisis hit living standards.The resulting grievances among struggling people can be exploited by savvy rightwing populists claiming progressive politicians only care about minorities rather than “people like me”.The answer, then, isn’t to swerve the culture war, or stick fingers in our ears and pretend it isn’t there. It is to offer political leadership, work closely with minorities to expand the electorate, and stand on a policy platform that uplifts the living standards of the majority, irrespective of their identity. To throw minorities under a bus is not only immoral: it’s a recipe for electoral defeat. More

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    Biden's pandemic problem: Politics Weekly Extra podcast

    Jonathan Freedland speaks to the Pulitzer prize-winning author and journalist Laurie Garrett about what Joe Biden needs to do to get a grip on the Covid crisis in the US

    How to listen to podcasts: everything you need to know

    When Joe Biden entered the Oval Office as president, he got to work trying to figure out how to mitigate the coronavirus situation in the US, and what exactly he was up against. Jonathan speaks to the expert on how governments plan for pandemics, Pulitzer prize-winning author and journalist Laurie Garrett about how she knew a crisis like this was coming but why no one in government chose to act. They also discuss what the Biden administration needs to do next. Send us your questions and feedback to podcasts@theguardian.com Help support the Guardian by going to gu.com/supportpodcasts More

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    Joe Biden axes 'global gag rule' but health groups call on him to go further

    Health groups around the world are celebrating the end of a harmful policy banning US funding for overseas aid organisations that facilitate or promote abortion, which was scrapped by the US president, Joe Biden, in a presidential memorandum on Thursday.Reproductive rights advocates are urging the new administration to now go further and permanently repeal the Mexico City policy – known as the “global gag rule” – to prevent it being reinstated by a future Republican president. The policy has been blamed for contributing to thousands of maternal deaths in the developing world over the past four years.The gag rule prevents overseas organisations that receive American aid from using their own money to provide information about abortion, or carry out abortions. First adopted by the Reagan administration in 1984, it has been repealed by every Democratic administration and reinstated by every Republican one in the years since.In a short appearance in the Oval Office on Thursday afternoon, Biden said he ended the policy as part of an effort to “protect women’s health at home and abroad”.But Donald Trump went further than previous Republican presidents. The policy usually applies to family planning organisations. But the Trump administration expanded the policy to include all global health programmes, including programmes that address HIV, nutrition, malaria and cholera.Widening the rule increased the pool of aid funds it affected from roughly $600m to about $12bn (£8.7bn), according to the Guttmacher Institute, a health policy research group.“We can breathe,” said Serra Sippel, the president of the Center for Health and Gender Equity, of Biden’s plans to repeal the policy. “There’s just so much hope and optimism in Washington DC right now. We have a lot of work to do, but it’s so much better.”The consequences of Thursday’s memorandum will ripple out from Washington into more than 70 countries including some of the poorest places in the world, where essential women’s health operations were abruptly halted or scaled down after Trump reinstated the rule in January 2017.In Zimbabwe, a women’s health team run by Abebe Shibru, from the organisation MSI Reproductive Choices, cut its operations by 60%. “We reduced our outreach from 700,000 women to about 300,000,” Shibru, who now heads the organisation’s Ethiopian operations, told the Guardian.“Women missed out on information, they had no access to family planning, and in return they were exposed to unintended pregnancy and unsafe abortion, which contributed to higher maternal mortality.”Zimbabwe’s teenage pregnancy rate increased by 2% over the past four years, according to Unicef data, a trend Shibru said was exacerbated by cuts as a result of the gag rule.“We were not providing services to rural women, so they had no choice but to get pregnant against their wish,” he said.Pledging conferences attracted hundreds of millions of dollars in donations from governments and private groups to try to bridge the gap in American funding, but could not meet the total shortfall.An assessment of the rule’s impact released last year, surveying health organisations in Nigeria, Kenya, South Africa and Nepal, found a sector in “crisis” with confusion over what was banned and permitted using US aid, a growing stigma around reproductive health services and widespread closures and scaling downs of programmes.Trump’s ban also spawned a new wave of activism, including a new grassroots movement, SheDecides, which is pressuring policymakers around the world to commit to upholding reproductive and sexual health rights.Zara Ahmed, the associate director of federal issues at the Guttmacher Institute, said repealing the gag rule “is just the first step in undoing [the US’s] current status as the greatest global hindrance to reproductive health”.“We are glad that the Biden-Harris administration is addressing the global gag rule …… But let’s be clear, repealing the global gag rule is the bare minimum this administration can do to address the harm caused by the previous administration’s coercive and spiteful approach to foreign policy,” she said.“The Biden-Harris administration can, and must, take a comprehensive approach to unravelling the dangerous, punitive and coercive policies the outgoing administration has woven into our foreign policy, and it must take action to address longstanding harmful policies like the Helms amendment.”The Helms amendment has been widely misinterpreted as a total ban on US funding used for abortion overseas, when in fact it can be used to support abortion in cases of rape, incest or a woman’s life being in danger. A bill to permanently repeal it was introduced last year.On Thursday, the Global Health, Empowerment and Rights Act (Global HER Act) to permanently repeal the global gag rule will be introduced for the third time in Congress. The bill, cosponsored by the new vice-president, Kamala Harris, has received cross-party support, and hopes are high it will pass.“It’s not automatic and it’s not going to be easy but we’re starting in a very strong place to get the act passed,” said Sippel. “If not the bill itself, but the language of the bill incorporated into another bill. Getting rid of the GGR, that’s what we’re striving for.”Sippel also called on the Biden administration to disavow the “Geneva consensus declaration” – an anti-abortion policy Trump promoted last year – to “signal to the world that abortion and LGBTQ rights and sexual and reproductive rights are important, and to state that loudly to the world”.She added that some activists wanted the Biden administration to issue a formal apology for US policies on sexual and reproductive health and rights over the past four years.Biden also ordered funding restored to the UN population fund, UNFPA, which Trump stopped.The agency’s executive director, Natalia Kanem, hailed the “enormous” impact of the decision.“Ending funding to UNFPA has become a political football, far removed from the tragic reality it leads to on the ground. Women’s bodies are not political bargaining chips, and their right to plan their pregnancies, give birth safely and live free from violence should be something we can all agree on,” she said. More