Biden worsening ‘root causes’, gov’t agencies failed Paul Pelosi and other commentary

Border watch: Biden Is Worsening ‘Root Causes’

“Critics with regional expertise say Biden administration policies . . . have severely worsened” poverty, crime and political instability in Mexico and the Southern Triangle — his administration’s alleged “root causes” of immigration, reports RealClearInvestigations’ James Varney. How? “The torrent of people moving across the region has delivered billions of dollars to the coffers of human smuggling rings and the drug cartels.” Reports also suggest “more than two-thirds of those making the trek had been victimized by criminals and nearly one-third of the women had been sexually assaulted.” That’s why one expert sees the surge in traffic as something close to an international crime and places “a lot of blood on the hands” of Team Biden “for opening the Southern border on purpose.”

Iconoclast: Dems’ ‘Pro-Democracy’ Morass

Democrats’ message — that only one party in this election is committed to democracy (theirs), and thus there’s only one real choice — “makes little sense,” even if you reject their agenda and record on issues like inflation, crime and immigration, Josh Barro rants at Very Serious. That message “amounts to telling voters that they have already lost their democracy,” and if you insist to voters they “have no choice but you, you had better make yourself a palatable choice — otherwise, they are liable to defy you and choose what you claimed was unthinkable.” Yet “Democrats have not governed” that way. So: “You can see from [Dems’] actions that they are not actually serious about the arguments they’re making now, and I for one am sick of the disingenuous speechifying.”

Libertarian: GOP Should Govern Like Adults

If Republicans win the House and Senate, they’ll face “enormous challenges”: recession, inflation, debt and deficits “as far as the eye could see” — and more, warns Veronique de Rugy at Reason. How can they address them? First, make inflation a “top priority”: Congress and the White House “must trim government spending,” with Republicans avoiding “bloated ‘family friendly’ programs” like child tax credits and paid leave — which studies show “make the lives of families harder.” They should also resist the urge to “pressure [Federal Reserve] chairman Jerome Powell to stop jacking up” interest rates. Oh, and “govern like adults” — and not seek “revenge” by launching probes against Democratic foes. “Investigating the Dems is not on the top of most voters’ concerns this election season.”

From the right: Gov’t Agencies Failed Paul Pelosi

President Biden’s depiction of the assault on Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s husband, Paul Pelosi, “ignores the multiple ways that government agencies who have the responsibility to prevent, deter, or quickly intervene in crimes such as this failed in their duties,” huffs National Review’s Jim Geraghty. The intruder who “attacked Paul Pelosi overstayed his visa and had resided illegally in the U.S. for many years.” Pelosi might have been spared the assault “if there were better enforcement of immigration laws,” had his attacker “been deported back to Canada years ago,” if the city and state had better “intervention for those with severe mental-health issues” and if US Capitol Police had “been watching the surveillance monitors.” Government agencies clearly “failed in their responsibility to protect the public.”

Eye on elex: Blake Masters’ Final Sprint

“Less than one week from Election Day,” notes the Washington Examiner’s Selena Zito, “36-year-old venture capitalist-turned-candidate” Blake Masters “has gone from a long shot at best to within the margin of error” against incumbent Dem Sen. Mark Kelly in Arizona. Why? “Democrats’ failure to recognize earlier how angry voters are about the economy, crime, and the border.” Plus, his age: “I’m a whole generation behind, and I actually know what it’s like to be raising a family under current conditions,” notes Masters. Zito adds that Masters has now joined “dynamo” gubernatorial candidate Kari Lake “on the stump,” and it’s helping his numbers. So the race is being closely watched: “If he flips this seat, Masters will almost certainly enter a Republican majority in the upper chamber.”

— Compiled by The Post Editorial Board

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Va. history repeating in NY, … and other commentary

Conservative: Va. History Repeating in NY?

Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe likely lost the 2021 election with his debate declaration, “I don’t think parents should be telling schools what they should teach.” Now, argues the Washington Examiner’s Hugo Gurdon, Gov. “Hochul may have just gifted deep blue New York to her challenger” with her debate flub, when Rep. Lee Zeldin noted she “hasn’t talked about locking up anyone committing any crimes” and she replied “I don’t know why that is so important to you.” Like McAuliffe’s gaffe, Gurdon notes, it was a “crystalline statement of Democratic insouciance toward ordinary people’s interests.” So: “It can be no surprise” that the polling “trend is fast against” Hochul. If Zeldin wins, “McAuliffe can take consolation in the thought that he isn’t alone in his Olympian blundering.”

Budget watch: Hochul Hiding Red Ink

“Governor Hochul’s budget office has yet to release the statutorily required mid-year financial plan update,” huffs the Empire Center’s Peter Warren. State law requires its release by Oct. 30. Why the delay? Likely because it holds “grim news” reflecting the “economic and financial market downturn.” The Aug. 1 update “projected a sea of red ink in the coming years, with deficits exceeding $6 billion by FY 2027.” By “signing the Green CHIPS legislation” a few days later, Hochul added “another roughly $500 million per year to the outyear annual deficits.” Voters should be able “to see the full impact on the state’s finances of both broad economic and market conditions, and specific policy decisions made by elected officials.” That’s why the law requires them “by a date certain.”

From the left: Big Brother’s Watching You Vote

TKNews’ Matt Taibbi flags the rise of mailers aiming “to remind people voting records are public, and whether they vote next week will be public record.” Some are handwritten with a signature; one creeped-out recipient says, “It feels threatening, as if a neighbor is keeping track of who has or has not voted.” Indeed, Taibbi reports, “the word ‘Orwellian’ came up more than once in interviews” on “so-called social shaming mailers.” Yet the practice “is likely to increase even more in the future” because it works. “Is Big Brother watching? If the wrong party loses next week, someone in your neighborhood probably will be. Welcome to 21st century electioneering.”

Eye on elex: Dems’ Dead-Parrot Denialism

“It’s never a good idea to tell people that what they see before them isn’t real,” warns The Wall Street Journal’s Gerard Baker, recalling the classic Monty Python “dead parrot” sketch. On key issues, “Democratic candidates across the country are performing an uncanny impersonation of the shopkeeper in the sketch who insists that the deceased bird is in fact not deceased, but ‘just resting’ and ‘pinin’ for the fjords.’ ” President Biden, for one, calls the economy “strong as hell,” yet inflation is “rapidly eroding real wages.” And Gov. Hochul’s “I don’t know why” locking up criminals is “so important to you” remark, Baker contends, shows “a detachment from the reality in which so many of her fellow New Yorkers live.”

Populist: GOP Must Learn From Musk

Elon Musk’s top challenge at Twitter “is changing the culture of this large organization without interrupting its business,” Bruce Abramson explains at RealClearPolitics, and “it’s a task at which President Trump failed. Trump often complained about the politicization and corruption of federal agencies . . . but he had zero perceptible impact on the culture of the federal bureaucracy.” Learn from Musk’s “first moves. He immediately removed key members of Twitter’s leadership, including its CEO, CFO, policy head, and general counsel,” axing “the highest profile senior people most identified with Twitter’s culture.” Then he “denied the rumors that he intended to fire three out of every four employees — without providing details about his actual intentions. The combined message is exactly right: Twitter culture is about to change in a significant way. If you’re competent in your job and on board with the shift, we’d be pleased to have you stay.”

Compiled by The Post Editorial Board

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CEOs fixing Biden’s Saudi oil mess because he won’t

Some of Wall Street’s top CEOs spent the last week on a diplomatic mission to ­Saudi Arabia. It wasn’t touted as diplomacy, of course. The financiers who attended the Future Investment Initiative in ­Saudi Arabia, known as “Davos in the Desert,” are a well-scripted bunch who prefer to keep their dealings private whenever possible.

Tough luck. Word leaked to me that what went down was vastly more important than seminars on climate change or whatever else the globalist crowd likes to virtue-signal about.

Rather, I am told by people with knowledge of the matter that the real reason so many top CEOs attended the conference was to forge a truce between the Saudis and the Biden administration. The ongoing and very public bellicosity between the two longtime allies is bad for business, both the CEOs’ and that of the US.

True, Saudi Arabia is a big Wall Street client looking to further modernize its economy through investment-banking deals, while it turns to our financial sector to manage its riches. But the growing consensus among the people who run the US financial system is that having the Saudis as an enemy is among the biggest geo­political and economic mistakes of the mistake-prone Biden administration.

It will embolden the aims of our common enemy, the terrorist regime in Iran, and drive the Kingdom further into the hands of our rivals, Russia and especially China. (Reps from China flooded the conference this year, I am told, and not because they like the desert heat). Plus the bickering will do nothing to satisfy our ­energy needs and save Sleepy Joe Biden’s presidency.

Biden reportedly thought he and the Saudis had made a deal over the summer.
Biden was reportedly blindsided when the Saudis and OPEC announced cuts to oil.
Anadolu Agency via Getty Images

For the unacquainted, what goes down in Riyadh every year for ­almost a decade is very similar to the more established World Economic Forum confab in Davos, Switzerland. Running the show in Riyadh is a more controversial host than milquetoast globalist WEF chief Klaus Schwab.

It’s the crown prince, Mohammed bin Salman — known by haters and admirers alike as MBS. When MBS (now just 37) became the Kingdom’s de facto ruler a few years ago, he was in charge of a country with enormous oil wealth and vast economic potential.

Uneven record

He was also in charge of maintaining the somewhat uncomfortable relationship with us because of his country’s often lousy record on human rights. There were hopes the youthful new leader would enact reforms, soften the Kingdom’s anti-Democratic impulse and modernize its economy away from its reliance on crude.

Let’s just say it hasn’t gone down exactly that way. The crown prince instituted some much-needed changes, such as expanding women’s rights. The Kingdom’s giant oil company, Saudi Aramco, is venturing beyond fuel into areas such as tech. The Saudis have continued to support Israel’s existence, albeit tacitly, and remain an enemy of Iran.

MBS also put a slew of people he deemed potential rivals under house arrest immediately after taking control. Then presidential candidate Biden campaigned in 2020 to make Saudi Arabia a “pariah” nation because the Kingdom hasn’t shed its autocratic leanings, and because MBS is widely blamed for the assassination of a journalist critical of his regime, Jamal Khashoggi.

Many have criticized Biden’s lack of action to get the US more energy independent.
Getty Images

More recently, tensions have gone from bad to worse after our feeble leader sought to cut domestic oil production, traveled to the Middle East and begged the crown prince to increase supply. Biden thought he had a deal until MBS and OPEC announced cuts, prompting the administration to threaten sanctions and maybe more.

OK, I know what you’re saying: This MBS is a bad dude. Wall Street likes him only for his money, his control of Saudi Aramco and the massive state pension fund. Both are growing gushers of investment-banking and money-management fees for the likes of Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan, BlackRock etc. — the very same type of people who are telling the White House to back off.

Point taken, but the fat cats who went to Riyadh (JP’s Jamie Dimon, Goldman’s David Solomon, reps for big private-equity and money-management firms) are also saying the world is filled with bad actors. The Saudis are probably the best — and most strategically important — of the bunch.

It’s a geopolitical reality that the Trump administration and prior presidents have accepted, but the progressive zealots currently in charge of Team Biden won’t.

It’s also foolhardy. Biden’s scorched-earth approach to MBS is hurting the American consumer and the country’s national-security interests, and Wall Street executives make the point both to me and their contacts in the White House that our time would be better spent completing pipelines if we really want to lower the cost of fuel here at home.

On top of all that, the recent spat over oil production may not be the one-sided affair the White House and Dems are claiming. In private meetings with CEOs, the Saudis contend the oil-production cut was well-telegraphed no matter what Biden may have thought after his famous fist bump with MBS in July.

‘No choice’ on supply

OPEC’s move is a function of a long-standing desire to keep ­prices from falling below $80-$90 a barrel. Because Biden keeps releasing oil from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve and with the world economy falling into recession, the Saudis say they had no choice but to cut supply.

If the White House didn’t know that, Sleepy Joe must have been half-asleep during those talks, the Saudis say.

These are all points made by senior Wall Street executives to people in the Biden administration in recent days, I am told. The Wall Streeters get that MBS is no saint, but Sleepy Joe’s weak hand makes the crown prince a necessary evil. Biden should take their advice and focus on some real enemies.

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With midterms rapidly approaching, Dem flip-flopping in now in overdrive

Diary of disturbing disinformation and dangerous delusions

With elections just three weeks off, Democrats have suddenly been singing a different tune on a wide range of issues, especially — given that soaring crime is a top issue — criminal-justice reforms and defunding the police. Here are 10 examples of almost comical flip-flops by leading Democrats.   


President Joe Biden

President Biden has flipped his view on defunding the police since 2020.
BACKGRID

Question: “But do we agree that we can redirect some of the [police] funding?”

Answer: “Yes, absolutely.” 

— President Biden, July 2020

“The answer is not to ‘defund the police,’ it’s to fund the police.”

Biden, August 2022


Letitia James, NY state attorney general

New York AG Letitia James now says we should look at fixing cashless bail.
Lev Radin/Pacific Press/Shutterstock

“I’ll work to eliminate cash bail.”

— NY state Attorney General Letitia James, 2018

“We need to address a wide range of issues, including . . . looking at [fixing cashless] bail.”

— James, Tuesday


Beto O’Rourke, Texas gubernatorial candidate

Beto O’Rourke claims he never supported the “defund the police” movement.
Getty Images

“I really love that Black Lives Matters and other protesters have put this front and center . . . in some necessary cases, completely dismantling those police forces and rebuilding them.”

Texas gubernatorial candidate Beto O’Rourke, 2020

“I don’t think I’ve ever advocated for defunding the police.”

— O’Rourke, 2021, after launching his campaign for governor


Rep. Jerrold Nadler

Rep. Jerrold Nadler this year backed giving police departments more federal money.
AP

“We’re spending too much on the police.”

Rep. Jerrold Nadler, 2020 

“Yes.”

— Nadler, August, 2022, when asked if he backed more federal funding for police


John Fetterman, US Senate candidate, Pa.

Pennsylvania Lt. Gov. John Fetterman previously called for reducing the prison population by a third.
AP

“We could reduce our prison population by ⅓ and not make anyone less safe.” 

John Fetterman, US Senate candidate, Pa., 2020 (a sentiment he’s repeated numerous times)

“This idea that I want to release all these prisoners is just also a lie.”

—  Fetterman, Oct. 2022


Speaker Nancy Pelosi

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi flip-flopped on whether Biden has the authority to forgive student loans.
AP

“People think that the president . . . has the power for [student] debt forgiveness. He does not . . . That has to be an act of Congress.”

— Speaker Nancy Pelosi, July 2021

 “Clearly, it seems he has the authority.”

— Pelosi, August 2022


Mandela Barnes, US Senate candidate, Wis.

Wisconsin Senate candidate Mandela Barnes advocated for redirecting money from police department budgets.
Getty Images

“We need to invest more in neighborhood services . . .  Where will that money come from? . . . From overbloated budgets and police departments.”

— Mandela Barnes, US Senate candidate, Wis., 2020 

“They’re claiming I want to defund the police . . . That’s a lie.”

— Barnes, recent ad


Stacey Abrams, candidate for governor, Ga.

Stacey Abrams has finally changed her tune on the 2018 gubernatorial election she lost.
ZUMAPRESS.com

“Despite the final tally . . . we won.”

— Stacey Abrams, April 2019, on Georgia’s 2018 governor’s race

“I have never been unclear . . . I did not win the race.”

— Abrams, this month


Vice President Kamala Harris

Vice President Kamala Harris’ views on marijuana legalization have changed since she was a district attorney.
CNP/MediaPunch

“He’s entitled to his opinion [backing pot legalization].” 

— Vice President Kamala Harris, laughing and taking issue with her then-GOP foe, 2014. As San Francisco’s district attorney, Harris oversaw 1,956 marijuana convictions.

“Nobody should have to go to jail for smoking weed.” 

— Harris, this month


President Biden

Biden claimed inflation would be temporary.
AP

“The data shows that most of the price increases we’ve seen are — were expected and expected to be temporary.”

— President Biden, July 2021

“Prices are still too high.”

Biden, this month

— Compiled by The Post Editorial Board



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Biden releases 15 million barrels from oil reserve

President Biden announced the release of 15 million more barrels of oil from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve Wednesday — before ripping critics who accused him of a desperate ploy to drive down gas prices temporarily right before next month’s midterm elections.

“What is your response to Republicans who say you are only doing this SPR release to help Democrats in the midterms?” a reporter asked Biden at the White House.

The president initially tried to brush off the inquiry, saying: “Where have they been in the last four months? That’s my response.”

It’s unclear why Biden said “four months” — as he first ordered oil released from the reserve nearly seven months ago.

Another journalist pressed, “Is it politically motivated, sir? It’s three weeks before the midterms.”

“Look, it makes sense,” Biden said.

Biden delivers remarks on energy at Secretary of Energy Jennifer Granholm and Special Presidential Coordinator Amos Hochstein listen on Oct. 19.
Alex Wong/Getty Images

“I’ve been doing this for how long now? It’s not politically motivated at all,” he added. “It’s motivated to make sure that I continue to push on what I’ve been pushing on.”

“The problem is these guys are asleep,” Biden went on, in an apparent reference to oil companies. “I don’t know where they’ve been. And they seem — you know, the price at the pump should reflect what the price of a barrel of oil costs.”

White House officials told reporters ahead of the announcement that higher than usual corporate profits explain roughly 60 cents of current gas prices per gallon. The average cost of a gallon of gas is $3.85 per gallon, up from $3.34 one year ago, according to AAA data.

In his remarks Wednesday, Biden said that the federal government would begin to replenish the Strategic Petroleum Reserve when the price per barrel of oil reaches $70. Former President Donald Trump tried to add 77 million barrels to the reserve in 2020 when oil went for about $20 per barrel, but House Democrats blocked the plan.

The president announced the release of 15 million more barrels of oil from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve — just three weeks ahead of midterms.
Richard Carson/REUTERS

Biden claimed in his remarks that he had done nothing to impede US oil production — despite the fact that he took several actions to throttle exploration, drilling and transportation of oil last year.

“Let’s debunk some myths here. My administration has not stopped or slowed US oil production. Quite the opposite,” Biden said.

The president justified the claim by noting that “we’re producing 12 million barrels of oil per day. And by the end of this year, we will be producing 1 million barrels a day more than the day in which I took office. In fact, we’re on track record oil production in 2023.”

Although domestic production has increased, Biden’s critics point out that he also attempted to impose a moratorium on new oil and gas leases on federal land, canceled the Keystone XL oil pipeline project from Canada into the US and banned oil drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.

Gas prices surged across America for months as the White House attempts to remedy the rise.
Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images

“Americans know that Biden has resorted to gimmicks because his anti-US energy agenda has resulted in soaring gas prices,” Republican National Committee Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel said in a statement. “Democrats are to blame for the pain at the pump, the record high utility bills, and soaring energy costs. Voters know Republicans are ready to get our economy back on track and that starts with unleashing American energy.”

The US Oil & Gas Administration joined the pile-on, tweeting: “Gonna keep saying this over and over. The Biden Administration has taken dozens upon dozens of actions (over 100 to date) that will make it harder to produce the very US barrels that POTUS needs to refill the SPR.”

“Biden’s attempt to dig himself out of this energy crisis using our emergency oil reserves threatens our national security and leaves us vulnerable, should disaster strike,” tweeted Rep. Mike Garcia (R-Calif.). “Instead, the President should focus on expanding our domestic energy production.”

Biden said that the federal government would begin to replenish the Strategic Petroleum Reserve when the price per barrel of oil reaches $70.
FREDERIC J. BROWN/AFP via Getty Images

“It’s the Strategic Petroleum Reserve. It’s not the political petroleum reserve,” added Rep. Michael McCaul (R-Texas). “[Biden] is playing politics with this national security asset.”

Biden initially ordered oil to be released from the US strategic reserve in late March to offset price increases linked to Russia’s Feb. 24 invasion of Ukraine.

Biden administration officials framed the upcoming releases as merely “completing” Biden’s plan to release 180 million barrels from the strategic reserve between April and September.

The newly announced release will happen in December. Biden said earlier this month he would release 10 million barrels from the reserve in November to offset production cuts announced earlier this month by the OPEC+ cartel.

About 400 million barrels of oil will remain in the reserve after the December release is complete.



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Bidens’ $5M China loan part of ‘pay-to-play’ scheme: Sen. Grassley

A $5 million interest-free loan the Biden family received from a Chinese energy conglomerate in 2017 should have been probed by the FBI as part of a possible “pay-to-play” plan, Sen. Chuck Grassley told top law enforcement officials last week.

In an Oct. 13 letter to Attorney General Merrick Garland, FBI Director Christopher Wray and Delaware US Attorney David Weiss, Grassley (R-Iowa) questioned whether the bureau is fully investigating corruption allegations against first son Hunter Biden and demanded a “full and unredacted FBI summary” of Hunter business partner Tony Bobulinski’s October 2020 FBI interview.

According to Grassley, Bobulinski told investigators that Hunter and first brother James Biden were contracted to assist CEFC China Energy “with potential business deals and investments while Joe Biden was Vice President; however, that work remained intentionally uncompensated while Joe Biden was Vice President.

“After Joe Biden left the Vice Presidency, the summary makes clear that Hunter Biden and James Biden worked with CEFC and affiliated individuals to compensate them for that past work and the benefits they procured for CEFC,” Grassley went on. “According to the summary, Hunter Biden, James Biden and their business associates created a joint venture that would serve as a vehicle to accomplish that financial compensation, and that arrangement was made sometime after a meeting in Miami between Hunter Biden and CEFC officials in February 2017.”

Sen. Chuck Grassley accused President Biden of conducting a possible “pay-to-play” scheme with China.
AP Photo/Mariam Zuhaib
Hunter Biden’s former business partner Tony Bobulinski (above) and another partner, James Gilliar, used to refer to Joe Biden as “the big guy.”
MANDEL NGAN/AFP via Getty Images

In a July 26, 2017 email to Bobulinski — first revealed by The Post in October 2020 — CEFC executive Zhao Runlong wrote that the company “fully support the framework of establishing the [joint venture], based on their trust on BD [Biden] family.”

Zhao added that “5 million is lent to BD family in the 10 million charter capital … This 5 million loan to BD family is interest-free. But if the 5M is used up, should CEFC keep lending more to the family? If CEFC lends more, they need to know the interest rate for the subsequent loan(s).”

The $5 million was originally meant to be sent through the joint venture, dubbed SinoHawk and co-owned by Oneida, a holding company made up of five LLCs, two of which were controlled by Hunter and James Biden.

According to a report, investigators think they have enough evidence to indict Hunter Biden on tax crime charges.
AP Photo/Andy Wong, Pool

However, Grassley said, the money had not been sent at the time of Zhao’s email to Bobulinski, and “James Biden considered calling CEFC officials and threatening to withdraw Biden family support from future deals.”

The following month, in August 2017, $5 million was wired from “a company connected to CEFC” to Hudson West III, a company jointly owned at the time by Hunter Biden’s law firm Owasco and Coldharbour Capital LLC, which Grassley and Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.) tied to another CEFC executive, Gongwen Dong, in a September 2020 report.

The money, Grassley wrote last week, was later transferred to Owasco and James Biden’s own consulting company, the Lion Hall Group.

President Biden has long denied discussing Hunter’s business deals.
Chris Kleponis / Pool via CNP / SplashNews.com

The first family’s arrangements with CEFC are among the most scrutinized of Hunter Biden’s overseas business interests after a May 13, 2017 email — also revealed by The Post in 2020 — showed that Bobulinski, Hunter Biden, and two other business partners planned split equity in a planned business venture with the company four ways.

According to the email, each of the foursome would get 20% of the shares in the new company, with 10% going to James Biden and the remaining 10% “held by H for the big guy?” – a phrase Bobulinski and another partner, James Gilliar, used to refer to Joe Biden.

The president has repeatedly denied ever discussing Hunter’s overseas business arrangements with his offspring, a stance that has come under scrutiny due to evidence gathered from the first son’s abandoned laptop.

The Post has previously reported on extensive findings from Hunter Biden’s laptop.

“The Justice Department and FBI must come clean to Congress and the American people with respect to the steps they have taken, or failed to take, relating to the Hunter Biden investigation,” Grassley wrote.

The letter was sent one week after the Washington Post reported that investigators believe they have enough evidence to indict Hunter Biden on tax crime charges, as well as making a false statement about his drug use on a federal gun purchase form.

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What will change if federal marijuana ban is loosened?

U.S. President Joe Biden’s pardon for thousands of Americans convicted of simple marijuana possession under federal law has profound impact, experts and individuals say, even if it affects fewer people than similar state and local initiatives. Biden has called on governors to issue similar pardons regarding state marijuana offenses.

WHO IS AFFECTED?

Biden’s pardons announced Oct. 6 affect about 6,500 people convicted of cannabis possession at the federal level. None remain in prison. Without a felony on their record, they won’t be tripped up when applying for a job or trying to rent an apartment. Research by the American Civil Liberties Union has shown Black Americans are nearly four times as likely as whites to be arrested for marijuana possession.

Most states that have legalized marijuana have also moved to expunge the records of nonviolent offenders or issue pardons.
Getty Images

WHO ISN’T

Biden’s pardon does not affect some 3,000 people convicted of higher level marijuana crimes who remain in federal prisons, and as many as 30,000 who are still in prison in several states, according to the advocacy group the Last Prisoner Project. Those numbers do not reflect people with convictions for marijuana possession at the state level.

However, approximately 2 million marijuana convictions have been expunged or pardoned by states where the drug is now legal.

SPEAKING OF THE STATES

Biden has called on governors to give similar pardons in their states, where most possession cases are prosecuted.

Kevin Sabet, an opponent of marijuana legalization who runs the group Smart Approaches to Marijuana, said in an interview that he thinks Biden’s pardons could serve as a model for governors in conservative as well as a few liberal states who oppose decriminalizing pot but agree that users should not go to prison.

8.2 million marijuana arrests in the U.S. between 2001 and 2010.
Getty Images

Marijuana is now fully legal in 19 U.S. states and allowed for medical use in 37. Most states that have legalized marijuana have also moved to expunge the records of nonviolent offenders or issue pardons.

But thousands of people continue to be arrested for marijuana offenses annually. Data is hard to come by, but NORML estimates that about 350,000 people were arrested for marijuana-related offenses in 2020, of which roughly 91% were for possession offenses only. According to the ACLU, of the 8.2 million marijuana arrests in the U.S. between 2001 and 2010, 88% were for just possessing marijuana. 

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Emmanuel Macron chides Biden for warning of ‘armageddon’

French President Emmanuel Macron chided President Biden for invoking the possibility of nuclear “armageddon” and said his US counterpart should choose his words carefully.

“We must speak with prudence when commenting on such matters,” Macron told reporters at a European Union summit in Prague on Friday.

“I have always refused to engage in political fiction, and especially … when speaking of nuclear weapons,” he added. “On this issue, we must be very careful.”

Biden made his remarks about the potential end of the world during a Democratic fundraising event on Thursday

Vladimir Putin was “not joking when he talks about the use of tactical nuclear weapons or biological or chemical weapons.” Biden said. “We have not faced the prospect of Armageddon since Kennedy and the Cuban Missile Crisis.”

White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre tamped down the armageddon talk Friday and instead looked to place the blame back on Russia and Vladimir Putin — who has repeatedly raised the prospect of utilizing his country’s nuclear arsenal.

Biden made the comments about Russian President Vladimir Putin’s nuclear threats at a Democratic fundraising event.
AP Photo/Julio Cortez

“Russia’s talk of using nuclear weapons is irresponsible and there’s no way to use them without unintended consequences. It cannot happen,” Jean-Pierre said.

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US President Joe Biden Signs Order to Implement EU-US Data Privacy Framework

The US President Joe Biden on Friday signed an executive order to implement a European Union-United States data transfer framework announced in March that adopts new American intelligence gathering privacy safeguards.

The deal seeks to end the limbo in which thousands of companies found themselves after Europe’s top court threw out two previous pacts due to concerns about the US surveillance.

The US Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo told reporters the executive order “is the culmination of our joint effort to restore trust and stability to transatlantic data flows” and “will ensure the privacy of EU personal data.”

The framework addresses the concerns of the Court of Justice of the European Union which struck down the prior EU-US Privacy Shield framework as a valid data transfer mechanism under EU law.

The White House said “transatlantic data flows are critical to enabling the $7.1 trillion (nearly Rs. 5,86,18,300 crore) EU-US economic relationship” and the framework “will restore an important legal basis for transatlantic data flows.”

The White House said Biden’s order bolstered current “privacy and civil liberties safeguards” for US intelligence gathering and created an independent, binding multi-layer redress mechanism for individuals who believe their personal data was illegally collected by US intelligence agencies.

EU officials said it would take about six months for this to complete a complex approval process, noting the previous system only had redress to an ombudsperson inside the US administration, which the EU court rejected.

Biden’s order adopts new safeguards on the activities of the US intelligence gathering, requiring they do only what is necessary and proportionate, and creates a two-step system of redress — first to an intelligence agency watchdog then to a court with independent judges, whose decisions would bind intelligence agencies.

Biden and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen in March said the provisional agreement offered stronger legal protections and addressed the EU court’s concerns.

Raimondo on Friday will transmit a series of letters to the EU from the US agencies “outlining the operation and enforcement of the EU-US data privacy framework” that “will form the basis for the European Commission’s assessment in a new adequacy decision,” she said.

Under the order, the Civil Liberties Protection Officer (CLPO) in the US Office of the Director of National Intelligence will investigate complaints and make decisions.

The US Justice Department is establishing a Data Protection Review Court to independently review CLPO’s decisions. Judges with experience in data privacy and national security will be appointed from outside the US government.

European privacy activists have threatened to challenge the framework if they did not think it adequately protects privacy.


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Joe and Jill Biden pay their respects to Queen Elizabeth

President Biden and First Lady Jill Biden paid their respects to Queen Elizabeth II on Sunday, visiting her coffin in London’s Westminster Hall, where she is currently laying in state.

Tens of thousands of people have cycled through to say their final goodbyes while the queen’s coffin is on display in Westminster Hall, although Biden did not have to wait in the up-to 24 hour lines that many Brits have been enduring.

Biden, 79, made the sign of the cross when he arrived and placed his hand on his heart while paying his respects.

The president was filmed on a balcony overlooking the late monarch’s coffin, joined by the first lady, as visitors continued to enter the hall below.

The president and first lady arrived Saturday to London, where they will stay until Monday for the queen’s funeral at Westminster Abbey.

The Bidens will also sign the official condolence book for the queen in Lancaster House Sunday, and then will go to Buckingham Palace for a reception of dignitaries hosted by King Charles III.

Around 500 royals and heads of state and government from around the world have been invited to the funeral for Elizabeth, who died Sept. 8 at 96 after reigning for 70 years.

Prince William and his wife Princess Kate will be at that reception, but Prince Harry and Meghan Markle will not be in attendance, after they were apparently uninvited — something they only found out in press reports. King Charles III has said only working royals are invited to the event. 

Biden, French president Emmanuel Macron and the Canadian prime minister Justin Trudeau are among the heads of states who are expected to attend the reception, hosted by Charles and Queen Consort Camilla ahead of the Queen’s funeral on Monday.

Guests will also be greeted by the Prince and Princess of Wales, the Princess Royal and the Earl and Countess of Wessex at the Buckingham Palace reception.

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