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Biden says China-Russia partnership is ‘vastly exaggerated’ during Canada visit

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Biden says China-Russia partnership is ‘vastly exaggerated’ during Canada visit

President Biden had a tense alternate with a reporter when requested about Russia and China’s financial relationship, arguing that their partnership is “vastly exaggerate[d].”

Biden held a joint press convention with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in Ottawa on Friday. A reporter requested Biden what he thought the importance of the Russia-China alliance was.

“In ten years, Russia and China have had 40 conferences, 40 conferences,” Biden started. “And I disagree with the essential premise of your query.”

“Rhetorically, inform me how the truth is you see a circumstance the place China has made some vital dedication to Russia and what dedication can they make? Economically, economically,” the president continued.

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US President Joe Biden speaks throughout a joint press convention with Canada’s Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on the Sir John A. Macdonald Constructing in Ottawa, Canada, on March 24, 2023. (Andrej Ivanov/AFP by way of Getty Photographs)

“Their commerce has elevated, sir,” the reporter responded.

“Their commerce is elevated in comparison with what? Look, look, I do not take China calmly. I do not take Russia calmly. However I believe we vastly exaggerate,” Biden asserted.

CHINA FLEXES MUSCLES IN LATIN AMERICA IN LATEST SECURITY CHALLENGE TO US

“I have been listening to now for the previous three months about ‘China goes to offer vital weapons to Russia they usually’re gonna’ – plenty of speak about that,” the president continued. “They have not but. Does not imply they will not, however they have not but.”

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US President Joe Biden and Canada's Prime Minister Justin Trudeau arrive for a joint press conference at the Sir John A. Macdonald Building in Ottawa, Canada, on March 24, 2023. 

US President Joe Biden and Canada’s Prime Minister Justin Trudeau arrive for a joint press convention on the Sir John A. Macdonald Constructing in Ottawa, Canada, on March 24, 2023.  (Mandel Ngan/AFP by way of Getty Photographs)

Biden’s feedback had been made days after Russian President Vladimir Putin and Chinese language President Xi Jinping met in Moscow to debate their partnership.

“We hope that the strategic partnership between China and Russia will on the one hand uphold worldwide equity and justice, and however promote the widespread prosperity and growth of our nations,” Xi stated throughout a joint press convention on Monday.

The 2 leaders signed an settlement to broaden their financial ties on Tuesday, together with creating a gasoline pipeline from Siberia to China.

President Vladimir Putin and Chinese President Xi Jinping shake hands before a meeting at the Kremlin in Moscow, Russia, on Monday, March 20.

President Vladimir Putin and Chinese language President Xi Jinping shake fingers earlier than a gathering on the Kremlin in Moscow, Russia, on Monday, March 20. (AP/Russian Presidential Press Workplace by way of AP)

Fox Information Digital reached out to the White Home for an announcement, however has not heard again.

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Video: Chris Christie Launches Presidential Election Bid

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Video: Chris Christie Launches Presidential Election Bid

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Chris Christie Launches Presidential Election Bid

The former New Jersey governor announced that he would seek the 2024 Republican nomination, kicking off his second run for the presidency.

The more divided we are, the more likely we are to be dominated by a single leader. We cannot sit by and watch this happen. I can’t guarantee you success in what I’m about to do. But I guarantee you that at the end of it, you will have no doubt in your mind who I am and what I stand for and whether I deserve it. So that’s why I came back to Saint Anselm’s, and that’s why I came back to Manchester, and that’s why I came back to New Hampshire to tell all of you that I intend to seek the Republican nomination for president of United States in 2024. And I want your support. [cheering]

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Clinton-appointed federal judge blocks DeSantis-backed Florida bill banning gender transitions for minors

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Clinton-appointed federal judge blocks DeSantis-backed Florida bill banning gender transitions for minors

Portions of a new Florida law signed by Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis last month banning transgender treatments for children were temporarily blocked Tuesday by a Federal judge appointed by former President Bill Clinton.

“Gender identity is real. The record makes this clear,” Judge Robert Hinkle wrote in a 44-page preliminary injunction against parts of SB 254, adding that there was no basis for the state to deny treatment to patients. 

The injunction prevented the ban from being applied to three children already receiving treatment whose parents are part of a lawsuit against the state over the law. He claimed they would “suffer irreparable harm” if they were not allowed to continue their treatments.

TEXAS BECOMES LATEST STATE TO BAN PUBERTY BLOCKERS, SEX CHANGE SURGERIES FOR MINORS

Florida Governor Ron DeSantis speaks at a press conference at the American Police Hall of Fame & Museum in Titusville. (Paul Hennessy/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images)

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The ruling, however, does not apply to children who have not already begun treatment.

Hinkle wrote that the ban was not a “legitimate state interest,” and that it was a political decision. “Nothing could have motivated this remarkable intrusion into parental prerogatives other than opposition to transgender status itself,” he wrote.

“There has long been, and still is, substantial bigotry directed at transgender individuals,” he wrote. “Common experience confirms this, as does a Florida legislator’s remarkable reference to transgender witnesses at a committee hearing as ‘mutants’ and ‘demons.’”

NEWSOM THREATENS DESANTIS WITH ‘KIDNAPPING CHARGES’ OVER MIGRANT FLIGHTS TO SACRAMENTO

Tallahassee Florida state capitol building

The state capitol building in Tallahassee, Florida. (Joe Sohm/Visions of America/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)

“And even when not based on bigotry, there are those who incorrectly but sincerely believe that gender identity is not real but instead just a choice,” he added.

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Fox News Digital reached out to DeSantis’ office for comment but did not immediately receive a response.

Following Florida, Texas became the latest state to ban puberty blockers and sex change surgeries for minors when Republican Gov. Greg Abbott signed its version of the bill into law last week.

Gender-affirming care hormones puberty blockers consent

Gender-affirming care has been called “life-saving” by  multiple medical associations. Its critics raise concerns about the long-term effects on the minor cohort, of which there is limited research, and the ability to consent.  (Adobe Stock )

 

Fox News’ Greg Norman contributed to this report.

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Justice Dept. Reaches Cleanup Deal With Houston After Civil Rights Inquiry

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Justice Dept. Reaches Cleanup Deal With Houston After Civil Rights Inquiry

The Justice Department has reached an agreement with the City of Houston to improve trash removal and environmental monitoring after an investigation into the widespread dumping of garbage, including human bodies, in predominantly Black and Latino neighborhoods.

The pact, announced on Tuesday, was the result of a yearlong inquiry by the department’s civil rights division into dozens of complaints from residents. It includes a commitment by Mayor Sylvester Turner to fund cleanup projects, under the supervision of federal officials for three years.

The agreement, which followed weeks of negotiation between department officials and municipal leaders in Houston, is part of the Biden administration’s larger environmental justice agenda, which seeks to redress the disproportional impact of waste, air and water pollution on communities of color around the country.

“No one should have to live next to discarded tires, bags of trash, rotting carcasses, infected soils and contaminated groundwater, all caused by illegal dumping,” Alamdar S. Hamdani, the U.S. attorney for the Southern District of Texas, said on Tuesday during a news conference in Houston.

“For too long now, Houston’s underserved and low-income communities have had to bear the health burdens of the inaction and misdeeds of others,” he said.

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Under the agreement, the city said it would provide additional data and information about its efforts to address illegal dumping. Local officials have also vowed to bolster enforcement actions against industrial and commercial polluters in a city whose notoriously lax zoning laws have resulted in the intermingling of industrial sites and residential neighborhoods.

The deal also requires Houston to develop an online “neighborhood equity dashboard” to analyze whether officials are fulfilling their commitments, which department officials hope will be a model for subsequent similar agreements.

The Justice Department opened a wide-ranging investigation last July after a local legal aid group lodged a federal civil rights complaint on behalf of Houston residents accusing the city of discriminating against residents of a neighborhood in the northeast, Trinity/Houston Gardens.

The heaps of household garbage, industrial waste and other items tossed into low-income neighborhoods in recent years included discarded furniture, mattresses, tires, medical waste, trash, dead bodies and vandalized A.T.M.s, Justice Department officials said at the time.

Lawyers with the legal aid group, Lone Star Legal Aid, spent months collecting complaints from people who called Houston’s 311 system to report illegal dumping and other environmental violations only to have their problems ignored.

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At the time, Mr. Turner, a Democrat, blasted the department’s decision to open the investigation as “absurd, baseless and without merit.”

On Tuesday, Mr. Turner applauded the deal, but said it was an extension of initiatives his administration had already undertaken.

He ticked off a list of recent improvements under a plan he unveiled in March, saying the city had cut response times to illegal dumping complaints from 49 days to 11 days over the past year. It had also doubled the deployment of law enforcement officers to punish polluters, which has increased the total number of fines imposed from around 50 to more than 200 during the same period, he added.

“Despite all we have done and we continue to do, it was a little deflating,” Mr. Turner, who has been in office since 2016, said of the Justice Department’s decision to investigate the city.

Federal officials said they were more interested in improving conditions than denouncing the failures of the past.

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Often, the department’s civil rights division releases investigative findings to the public before announcing voluntary agreements, or court-approved consent decrees, with the local authorities.

In this case, Kristen Clarke, the head of the Justice Department’s civil rights division, told reporters that the government had “suspended its investigation” into the city’s actions to focus “on remedying the problem.”

While the agreement alluded to the city’s troubled past, it did not include detailed investigative findings, or a deeper examination into the origins of some of its most chronic and consequential problems, including historic patterns of discrimination that led to the construction of 11 of 13 garbage incinerators in Houston’s Black and brown neighborhoods.

That is the same approach the department adopted in April, when officials announced a similar agreement — but no investigative report — after examining claims that state and local officials discriminated against Black residents in impoverished Lowndes County, Ala., by failing to adequately repair and maintain wastewater and sewage systems.

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