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- 2024 candidate Nikki Haley is under fire
2024 candidate Nikki Haley is under fire
Also, is Mike Johnson up to the job?
Today we’re covering:
🗳️ 2024 candidate Nikki Haley is under fire
🇺🇸 San Francisco's streets are conveniently cleaned
🔈 Is New speaker Mike Johnson up to the job?
And everything else you need to know.
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TRENDING HEADLINES
Everything else you need to know
🤝 China and the United States reach a fentanyl pact. When they meet today, President Biden and President Jinping of China are apparently going to talk about fentanyl in the United States. According to a suggested accord, Biden would lift sanctions against the Chinese government in exchange for China taking tough measures against chemical businesses that assist in the lethal drug's export.
🇲🇽 Biden will also have a meeting with the president of Mexico. The White House said that Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador and Vice President Joe Biden will go to San Francisco on Friday to "address issues of shared concern." Finding a "hemispheric-wide response to" illegal immigration at the southern border will be part of this. Negotiations over the problem of fentanyl trafficking with Mexico have not succeeded thus far.
📄 Democrats obstruct help to Israel. Democrats blocked a bipartisan House plan that would have funded Israel because it excluded money for Ukraine. Sen. Patty Murray (D-WA) stated, "The global challenges we face are all connected, and they're all urgent." Republicans contended that supporting Israel should have its own vote because it is a "separate" and "less controversial" topic than backing Ukraine.
💰 The United States may give Iran $10 billion. According to reports, the Biden administration is debating whether to lift sanctions and unfreeze $10 billion in Iranian cash. This follows Iran's assistance to Hamas in organizing its historic strike against Israel, which sparked hostilities between American and Iranian proxy groups. Prior to Hamas's attack, Biden had already drawn harsh criticism for releasing $6 billion for Iran.
What has the media been talking about recently
At a pro-Israel demonstration, shouts were heard when House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) declared that "the calls for a ceasefire" between Israel and Hamas "are outrageous."
Ben Shapiro, co-founder of Daily Wire, referred to Candace Owens' comments about Israel as "disgraceful," but he also noted that "she still works at my company."
In a letter, more than 500 American officials denounced Biden's backing of the fight against Hamas and urged him to advocate for "a cease-fire" in Gaza.
Nikki Haley, the Republican nominee for president, has stated that she will make social media corporations "show America their algorithms" and remove anonymous accounts.
Since its launch, Trump's social media platform Truth Social has incurred a net loss of $35 million.
A former editor of the left-wing news website The Recount was charged by Massachusetts authorities with possessing and disseminating child pornography.
According to reports, the Israeli military plans to invade Gaza on the ground over several months, taking in the southern sector.
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2024 ELECTION
2024 candidate Nikki Haley is under fire
Here is what’s going on: Yesterday, Nikki Haley, a Republican candidate for president, was trending on X, and not in a good way. Conservatives are harshly criticizing the former South Carolina governor for remarks she made recently about social media and free speech.
Taking names: Haley has stated to Fox News that requiring "every person on social media should be verified by their name" would be the "first thing" she would do if elected. This would essentially mean outlawing anonymous accounts and speech.
The specifics Haley stated, "You're going to get some civility when people know their name is next to what they say," and implied that users who employ anonymity pose a "national security threat." In a recent podcast interview, she reiterated her suggestion, saying, "I want everybody's name."
The backlash: Notable conservatives, such as primary rivals Ron DeSantis and Vivek Ramaswamy, promptly mocked and denounced Haley's policy plan. Haley's idea was deemed "dangerous and unconstitutional" by DeSantis, who likened it to Chinese censorship. Vivek posted a nasty tweet.
The Constitution: The Supreme Court has consistently upheld the right to free speech, and the First Amendment forbids the government from "abridging the freedom of speech." The Court stated in 1995 that "anonymity is a shield from the tyranny of the majority." Admired by the majority of conservatives, the Federalist Papers were released under pseudonyms.
Why it’s important: Haley is trying to find a way to separate herself from the field in the GOP primary, where she is currently trailing Florida Governor Ron DeSantis and former president Donald Trump in the polls. These remarks follow Haley's having to defend herself against criticism from Vivek Ramaswamy, another presidential candidate, at a recent Republican debate in Miami.
TRENDING IN AMERICA
San Francisco's streets are conveniently cleaned
Here is what's going on: In anticipation of Chinese President Xi Jinping's arrival, city workers in San Francisco, California's SoMa area have temporarily evicted homeless people and camps, cleaned the streets, and erected a 10-foot fence around a conference building.
The justification: California Governor Gavin Newsom said, "I know folks are saying, 'Oh they're just cleaning this place because all those fancy leaders are coming to town.'" He acknowledged that the cleanup had been underway for some months.
Why it’s important: The cleanliness and safety of San Francisco's streets, which are often teeming with narcotics, human waste, disease, and mentally ill people, have completely changed. To appease a foreign leader, officials swiftly removed these requirements, fulfilling a long-standing pledge made by liberal Democrats.
It's a decision: according to many blue cities, violence, and lawlessness are major causes of the record-breaking population losses in San Francisco and other similar cities. Jinping's visit has shown that leaders from big cities are capable of finding solutions to the issues they raise during campaigns.
However, they don't because politicians, journalists, and left-wing activists consistently portray these problems as being too complex for a government takeover. Demanding orders, enforcing restrictions on behavior, and applying penalties are adversely represented and perceived as right-wing. For many, famous American cities are no longer livable due to this lifestyle.
WASHINGTON D.C
Is New speaker Mike Johnson up to the job?
Here is what’s going on: As November 17 approaches, there will be another government funding deadline. This time, however, Mike Johnson, not Kevin McCarthy, will be leading the new conflict between House conservatives and GOP leadership.
The big issue in the space: Despite initial conservative optimism regarding Johnson, some on his right flank are disappointed and frustrated by the new speaker's plan for a two-step clean continuing resolution, which does not include any significant budget cutbacks.
Congressman Warren Davidson of Ohio tweeted, "Disappointing is as polite as I can muster," criticizing the proposal's "status quo policies, and status quo funding levels." I'm going to vote no.
Chip Roy of Texas issued a warning that "more debt & more funding of tyranny" would result if the House GOP approved a clean CR "without extracting meaningful cuts or policy changes."
Russ Vought of the Center for Renewing America tweeted that the CR "fully funds Biden’s woke & weaponized bureaucracy" and that it makes no attempt to "force a national debate on the border & DOJ’s excesses." Vought described the bill as a "bad bill, bad strategy."
Impeachment is put on hold: The Washington Post reports that Johnson reportedly objected to the idea of a Biden impeachment investigation, telling moderate Republicans in a private conference that there was "insufficient evidence at the moment to initiate" the impeachment process.
Republicans in disarray: Eight Republican defectors thwarted a Monday attempt to introduce articles of impeachment against the Homeland Security Secretary, further infuriating conservatives in the caucus, despite Johnson's recent cautious support for initiating an impeachment investigation into Alejandro Mayorkas.
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