Politics
Blankenship concedes in West Virginia Senate GOP primary
NBC News projected that Attorney General Patrick Morrisey was the winner, edging out Rep. Evan Jenkins, R-W.Va., who had been targeted by Democrats. That left Blankenship in a distant third.
Morrisey will face Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin, who faces a tough re-election battle, in November.
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., who wanted to see Blankenship defeated, celebrated the result. His campaign tweeted a photoshopped image of the most powerful man in the Senate emerging from a cloud of cocaine, mocking Blankenship for labeling McConnell “cocaine Mitch.”
It was just one of many cruel comments Blankenship made about McConnell, his wife, Treasury Secretary Elaine Chao, and her father, a Chinese-American shipping magnate whom Blankenship called a “China person.”
The fact that cocaine had reportedly once been found on one of Chao’s father’s ships led to the druggy moniker.
“Don Blankenship played the race card and West Virginia Republicans flipped it back in his face,” said Steven Law, the president of a McConnell-aligned super PAC, the Senate Leadership Fund, that ran ads against Blankenship.
With nearly 90 percent of the votes in, Blankenship had 20.1 percent and 26,176 votes, Jenkins was at 29.3 percent and 38,210 votes and Morrisey was on top with 34.5 percent and 44,988 votes.
Tuesday kicked off the 2018 battle for the Senate, offering mixed results for outsider candidates despite the electorate’s anti-incumbent mood.
Primaries were also held in Indiana, Ohio and North Carolina.
In Indiana, businessman Mike Braun easily defeated two members of Congress to win the Republican Senate primary, NBC News projected. He’ll face Sen. Joe Donnelly, one of the most endangered Democrats in the Senate.
Braun, like other GOP Senate candidates this year, ran as a mini-Trump, with one ad declaring, “Politicians put Mexico before Muncie, Beijing before Bloomington,” referring to Indiana locales.
But Braun was more polished than other anti-establishment crusaders, and Washington operatives think he’ll make for a strong candidate in the general election.
In Ohio, firebrand liberal Dennis Kucinich got romped by Richard Cordray, the mild-mannered former head of the Consumer Finance Protection Bureau, in a Democratic primary to be governor of Ohio.
Greg Pence is likely on his way to filling the congressional seat formerly occupied by his younger brother, Vice President Mike Pence, after winning a GOP primary in a deeply conservative part of Indiana.
And a Republican congressman, Rep. Robert Pittinger, R-N.C., conceded to a conservative challenger who defeated him in a primary there.
But the main event was West Virginia.
The state gave President Donald Trump his biggest victory in 2016, but Republicans grew nervous as Blankenship surged in internal polls as his two rivals attacked each other.
They worried his victory could have led to another fiasco like Alabama, where they sacrificed a winnable Senate seat by nominating Roy Moore, a candidate who was accused of sexual misconduct with young women and teenagers decades ago.
Blankenship’s crime was different, however. “Roy Moore never got 29 people incinerated beyond being recognizable as human beings,” Bob Kincaid, a West Virginia radio host, said on MSNBC.
Blankenship was convicted of conspiring to violate safety rules at a mine he owned, where an explosion killed 29 miners in 2010. He served a year in prison; his parole is set to expire Wednesday.
But Blankenship’s “Trumpier than Trump” swagger, as he dubbed himself, seemed like it could resonate with voters — even if the president himself was urging Republicans to vote for any one else.
He “can’t win the General Election,” Trump warned on Twitter on Monday. Democrats seemed to agree, spending over $1.1 million through a super PAC to attack Jenkins in the hope they could engineer Blankenship’s victory.
Blankenship shrugged off Trump’s anti-endorsement as just more establishment meddling. “No one, and I mean no one, will tell us how to vote,” he said.
In the end, however, four-out-of-five West Virginia Republicans voted against him.
Politics
Trump allies dismissed at VOA as Biden administration names new leadership
WASHINGTON — The Biden administration moved quickly on Thursday to name new leadership at Voice of America and other U.S.-funded media, replacing a Trump ally with a news editor he had recently demoted.
In its first full day in office, the Biden administration dismissed the director of Voice of America, Robert Reilly, and his deputy, Elizabeth Robbins, and replaced them with experienced journalists with long careers at VOA and other government-funded networks, according to a statement from the U.S. Agency for Global Media, which oversees the media outlets.
Reilly was replaced by Yolanda Lopez, a news editor who will serve as acting director at VOA. Reilly had just days ago reassigned Lopez after one of the journalists under her supervision shouted questions at then-Secretary of State Mike Pompeo at a Jan. 11 event at Voice of America headquarters.
Pompeo had given a speech and sat for a question and answer session afterward with Reilly, but reporters were not given a chance to pose questions. When one VOA reporter, White House correspondent Patsy Widakuswara, tried to ask questions, Reilly shouted at her, according to a recent protest letter from VOA journalists. Hours later, Widakuswara was kicked off the White House beat by Reilly.
Reilly, a conservative commentator, is the author of such books as “Making Gay Okay: How Rationalizing Homosexual Behavior is Changing Everything.”
Even after Joe Biden was sworn in as president on Wednesday, Robbins and another former Trump administration political appointee at the agency, John Jaggers, continued efforts to try to fire several employees on Thursday, according to David Seide, a lawyer representing the employees.
The two pushed to remove the staff members even though the Biden administration had issued instructions to suspend any personnel actions or proceedings at VOA and other networks.
Shortly after midnight early on Thursday, four employees received a letter from Jaggers telling them that they were being removed “as of the date of this letter,” Seide said, who shared excerpts of the document with NBC News.
The new leadership at the U.S. Agency for Global Media, which had already formally taken the helm late on Wednesday, quickly rescinded the letters on Thursday, Seide said.
Jaggers did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
As of about 1 p.m. on Thursday, more than 24 hours after Biden was inaugurated, Elizabeth Robbins sent an email to one employee telling them that an administrative hearing related to their possible removal was about to go forward with or without their attendance.
“It’s another example of petty vindictiveness that is still amazing,” Seide said.
Robbins told NBC News that she believed she was following federal regulations in pursuing the removal of an employee who had allegedly violated the terms of their employment. If the proceeding had gone ahead, it would have been difficult for the new management of VOA to reverse because it would have been held up under federal rules, according to Robbins.
When Robbins was told by the new management that she was being fired, she responded that such a move would be illegal, citing recently adopted legislation on VOA’s governance, Robbins said.
Her work email was then shut off and she was escorted out by security, Robbins said.
The director of VOA, Reilly, also contended his sacking was illegal and he too was escorted out of the building, she said.
Robbins said her removal was “politically motivated” and meant to suppress alleged whistleblower complaints by some employees of VOA.
The Biden administration named Kelu Chao, who has worked for nearly 40 years at VOA as a journalist and manager, as acting CEO of VOA’s parent agency, the U.S. Agency for Global Media. Brian Conniff, who held senior management positions at the agency and was president of the U.S.-funded Middle East Broadcasting Networks, was named as her deputy.
Chao replaced Michael Pack, a controversial Trump appointee who was accused by lawmakers and press freedom groups of undermining editorial independence at VOA and other outlets. A federal judge had recently barred Pack from making personnel decisions at VOA and other USAGM broadcasters. Pack named Reilly as director of VOA only weeks before the Biden administration was due to take over.
Pack was asked to step down shortly after Biden was inaugurated Wednesday at noon and he announced his resignation before 2 p.m. EST.
Politics
EU vaccine FARCE: MEPs hatch plot to skip queue for Covid jabs using taxpayer cash
THE European Parliament is planning to open up vaccination centres to hand out priority jabs to MEPs, it has emerged.
Source link
Politics
Guard troops back inside Capitol after furor over move to parking garage
National Guard troops were allowed back into the Capitol to rest after being asked to move, a request that sent some to a parking garage, officials said.
Senators expressed outrage Thursday evening after Politico reported that Capitol Police had asked the troops to move their rest area and some ended up in the garage.
Sen. Tammy Duckworth, D-Illinois, said that by 10:30 p.m., Capitol Police had apologized to the Guard personnel, who had been allowed back into the complex Thursday night.
Army Brig. Gen. Janeen Birckhead, commander of the inauguration task force, confirmed that troops were out of the parking garage and back in the Capitol and will take breaks near Emancipation Hall going forward.
Duckworth, an Iraq war veteran who lost her legs after the helicopter she was in was hit by a rocket-propelled grenade in 2004, said that forcing the troops out of the Capitol was “unreal.”
“I can’t believe that the same brave servicemembers we’ve been asking to protect our Capitol and our Constitution these last two weeks would be unceremoniously ordered to vacate the building,” Duckworth wrote in a tweet.
Thousands of Guard troops remain in Washington after being called in to help secure Wednesday’s inauguration of Joe Biden, and after a deadly riot by a pro-Trump mob at the Capitol on Jan. 6.
The Washington, D.C., National Guard said earlier Thursday that they were asked to move its rest area by Capitol Police.
Download the NBC News app for breaking news and politics
“As Congress is in session and increased foot traffic and business is being conducted, Capitol Police asked the troops to move their rest area. They were temporarily relocated to the Thurgood Marshall Judicial Center garage with heat and restroom facilities,” the D.C. Guard said.
“We remain an agile and flexible force to provide for the safety and security of the Capitol and its surrounding areas,” it said.
Security detail requires a rest and break so troops can get out of the weather, the D.C. Guard said.
Capitol Police did not immediately respond to a request for comment after senators said the situation had been resolved and that an apology had been issued.
Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-New York, vowed to get to the bottom of the situation.
Some lawmakers had offered to let troops stay in their office spaces.
“Congress is in session, but buildings are still closed to public, so there’s plenty of room for troops to take a break in them,” Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Arkansas, who is also a veteran and served in Iraq and Afghanistan, tweeted.
In the days following the riot and preceding the presidential inauguration, troops were seen resting in between shifts on the marble floors of the Capitol.
National Guard troops from across the country were sent to Washington to provide support. Almost 26,000 were sent.
Approximately 10,600 were on duty Thursday afternoon, and arrangements were being made to send 15,000 home as soon as possible, the National Guard Bureau said.
-
Latest News1 week ago
Spectacled ‘Paddington’ bears venture out at Machu Picchu | World News
-
Latest News3 days ago
Donald Trump’s farewell address: ‘Our movement is only just beginning’ | US News
-
Politics3 days ago
Washington hotels weigh inauguration profits against safety
-
Politics4 days ago
On MLK Day, Biden volunteers, Trump adds names to his ‘Garden of American Heroes’
-
Politics5 days ago
The stakes are high for Biden’s inaugural address. Here’s what to expect.
-
Politics1 day ago
Priti Patel press conference: Home Secretary to issue lockdown alert in major No10 address
-
Latest News1 week ago
How Uganda’s election has been stacked against the pop star who would be president | World News
-
Latest News1 week ago
9,000 children died at ‘brutally misogynistic’ homes for unmarried mothers in Ireland | World News