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Biden to announce $1 billion in military aide to Ukraine

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Biden to announce  billion in military aide to Ukraine

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President Biden plans to announce over $1 billion in army help to Ukraine.

The over $1 billion in assist will embody army tools the Ukrainian army has discovered most helpful in its ongoing battle towards Russia, together with anti-armor and anti-air weapons, in response to the reporting from the Wall Avenue Journal. The funding will come from the over $13 billion that was allotted to Ukraine within the omnibus invoice signed by the president this week.

HOW MISCALCULATIONS AND MISPERCEPTIONS COULD LEAD TO US-RUSSIA CONFLICT

The funding comes as Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy is ready Wednesday to handle Congress, throughout which he’s anticipated to stipulate a listing of apparatus the Ukrainians really feel they should fend off the Russian invasion.

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The New York Occasions reviews that the checklist isn’t meant to be a alternative for Ukraine’s request for MiG fighter jets from Poland, an effort that has been stalled by the U.S. amid fears that it might serve to escalate tensions between NATO and Russia.

“The intelligence neighborhood has assessed that the switch of MiG-29s could also be mistaken as escalatory and will lead to vital Russian response that may enhance the prospects of a army escalation with NATO,” Pentagon press secretary John Kirby instructed reporters final week. “Subsequently, we additionally assess the MiG-29s to Ukraine to be high-risk.”

Pentagon Press Secretary John Kirby

Pentagon Press Secretary John Kirby
(Kevin Dietsch/Getty Photos)

Ukraine’s new request for help will embody weapons that may assist troops on the bottom, reminiscent of Stinger missiles and anti-tank Javelin missiles. It could additionally embody new help reminiscent of armed drones and communication jamming tools.

Zelenskyy made an analogous enchantment to the Canadian Parliament on Tuesday, although he went a step additional by making an enchantment for Canadian lawmakers to push for a no fly-zone over Ukraine.

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Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy is seen in a Zoom call with U.S. senators on Saturday, March 5, 2022.

Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy is seen in a Zoom name with U.S. senators on Saturday, March 5, 2022.
(Sen. Marco Rubio)

“Think about that Canadian services have been bombed equally as our buildings and memorial locations are being bombed,” Zelensky instructed Canadian lawmakers. “Numerous households have died. Each evening is a horrible evening.

“We wish to stay, and we wish to be victorious. We wish to prevail for the sake of life,” he continued. “Are you able to think about while you name your mates and nations, and also you ask to please shut the sky, shut the airspace, please cease the bombing? What number of extra cruise missiles need to fall on our cities till you make this occur?”

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Video: Harris Remembers Congresswoman Sheila Jackson Lee

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Video: Harris Remembers Congresswoman Sheila Jackson Lee

new video loaded: Harris Remembers Congresswoman Sheila Jackson Lee

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Harris Remembers Congresswoman Sheila Jackson Lee

Vice President Kamala Harris eulogized the long-serving congresswoman from Texas during a memorial service on Thursday.

Sheila Jackson Lee, to know her was to a true champion, a fierce champion for justice. To know her was to marvel at her mastery of the legislative process. She was also one of the most unrelenting. As those of us who were her colleagues can attest, there was never a trite or trivial conversation with Sheila Jackson Lee. Now, there were times, I will admit, if I saw her walking down the hall, I would almost want to hide because I knew whatever else may be on my mind, Sheila Jackson Lee would require a very serious and specific conversation with you about what she had on her mind, and then she would tell you exactly what she needed you to do to help her get it done.

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Trump replies to DA Bragg in case to get conviction tossed in light of Supreme Court immunity decision

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Trump replies to DA Bragg in case to get conviction tossed in light of Supreme Court immunity decision

Former President Donald Trump has filed a reply brief in his case to have his conviction in N.Y. v Trump overturned after the Supreme Court ruled presidents have some immunity for official acts in office. 

Trump was found guilty in an unprecedented criminal trial last month on all counts of falsifying business records in the first degree, following a six-week trial stemming from Bragg’s investigation. Trump has already requested Judge Juan Merchan overturn the verdict. 

TRUMP’S APPEAL TO LIFT REMAINING PARTS OF NY GAG ORDER DENIED

Donald Trump arrives to Trump Tower, Thursday, May 30, 2024, after being found guilty on 34 counts of falsifying business records in the first degree. (Felipe Ramales for Fox News Digital)

In the filing Thursday, lawyers for Trump argued that “The Supreme Court of the United States ruled conclusively and unequivocally that President Trump is protected by immunity for his official acts.”

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“In this case, a politically motivated district attorney violated that immunity by using official-acts evidence in grand jury proceedings and at trial. Therefore, the case must be dismissed, and the jury’s verdicts must be vacated.”

The Supreme Court ruled in Trump v. United States that a former president has substantial immunity from prosecution for official acts in office but not for unofficial acts. The high court said Trump is immune from criminal prosecution for “official acts” but left it to the lower court to determine exactly where the line between official and unofficial is.

Alvin Bragg

NEW YORK, NEW YORK – MARCH 21: Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg. 

“The President therefore may not be prosecuted for exercising his core constitutional powers, and he is entitled, at a minimum, to a presumptive immunity from prosecution for all his official acts,” the majority opinion written by Chief Justice John Roberts states. “That immunity applies equally to all occupants of the Oval Office, regardless of politics, policy, or party.”

TRUMP TOUTS SUPREME COURT’S PRESIDENTIAL IMMUNITY RULING AS ‘BIG WIN FOR OUR CONSTITUTION AND FOR DEMOCRACY’

The question of presidential immunity stemmed from special counsel Jack Smith’s Jan. 6 case against Trump. Trump pleaded not guilty to those charges. That trial was put on hold in a lower court pending the Supreme Court’s ruling, which wiped out any charges related to official presidential acts.

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Trump attorney Todd Blanche, in the filing Thursday, argued that Bragg offered official acts evidence during the six-week-long unprecedented criminal trial. Blanche said that included official White House communications with staffers like Hope Hicks, Madeleine Westerhout, and more. 

Trump and Todd Blanche address the media after hush-money guilty verdict

Former President Donald Trump speaks to the media alongside his attorney Todd Blanche after the conclusion of his hush money trial in New York, Thursday, May 30, 2024.  (Michael M. Santiago/Pool Photo via AP)

Blanche also said Trump’s official public statements made via Twitter were used as evidence; his official acts in response to inquiries by the Federal Election Commission; official acts relating to inquiries by Congress and prosecutors; and more. 

“President Trump was subjected to fundamentally unfair proceedings that invited jurors to examine official-acts evidence based on ‘their views of the President’s policies and performance while in office,’” Blanche wrote. “This fundamental unfairness also harms the public because of the adverse impact of these violations on the work of future Presidents to serve the American people.” 

He added: “For the reasons set forth in the Defense Motion and herein, the Court should dismiss the Indictment and vacate the jury’s verdicts based on violations of the Presidential immunity doctrine and the Supremacy Clause.” 

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Judge Juan Merchan, last month, agreed to Trump’s request to delay his original sentencing date, July 11, and said that a hearing on Trump’s potential sentencing would take place Sept. 18. 

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Ali: What's so hard about mixed-race heritage for Trump to understand?

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Ali: What's so hard about mixed-race heritage for Trump to understand?

It wasn’t a debate. It was train wreck interview, and no one from Donald Trump’s party has called on him to step out of the presidential race — but they should.

The former president characterized Vice President Kamala Harris as a woman who can’t be trusted based on her mixed racial background during a livestreamed appearance in Chicago for the annual meeting of the National Assn. of Black Journalists.

“[Kamala] was always of Indian heritage, and she was only promoting Indian heritage,” Trump said of his likely opponent in the 2024 presidential election.

Harris’ mother is South Asian and her father is Black. It’s still a bit much for Trump to process, though he tried in real time to weaponize this information for his first big showing since Harris became his probable competition in the presidential race.

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“I didn’t know she was Black until a number of years ago, when she happened to turn Black, and now she wants to be known as Black. So I don’t know, is she Indian or is she Black?” he asked. “I respect either one, but she obviously doesn’t, because she was Indian all the way then all of a sudden she made a turn and she went … she became a Black person. I think somebody should look into that too.”

Look into what, exactly? And does this critical investigation require a DNA test, a lie detector test, or both? What is so hard about mixed heritage to understand here?

Trump stopped short of using terms like “half-breed” or “unpure,” but the message was clear: mixed-race folks and those of multiple ethnicities are oddball anomalies, flip-floppers who must pick one identity to be trusted. Even then, their birthplace, citizenship and religious beliefs will be dissected and scrutinized by the birther movement he spearheaded against Barack Obama nearly a decade ago.

Race baiting and hating is nothing new to MAGA, of course, but it was still stunning to hear it come out of a presidential candidate’s mouth on a national stage with such confidence and candor.

For those of us who grew up in “mixed” households, the demand that we stay in one lane is not new, but it’s still absurd. Personally, I’m moving between outrage and disappointment that we’re still having these sorts of midcentury conversations in 2024.

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Explaining who or what you are to hostile interrogators (i.e., teachers, school bullies) is exhausting, especially as a kid. It certainly was to me. I hoped the world would change in time for my son, who is Arab, Indian and white.

Portraying Harris as The Other in front of a room full of Black journalists Wednesday backfired big time. His attempt to sow doubt about Harris’ blackness, in front of a predominantly Black audience, didn’t appear to win hearts and minds.

There were groans from the audience when he proclaimed he was the best president for Black people since Abraham Lincoln, and when he accused Rachel Scott of ABC News (one of three female interviewers on stage) of giving him a “very rude introduction.” Her tough first questions about his criticisms of Black journalists, Black prosecutors and communities in general were apparently “nasty.”

That sort of speak is ear-candy in the MAGA-verse, where elected officials resurrect Jim Crow-era descriptors like “colored” and use terms like “DEI hire” to discredit Harris. The latter smear suggests that she was picked for VP not because of her accomplishments as California’s attorney general or as a U.S. senator, but because she checks a few demographic boxes. But the GOP’s desperate scramble for a winning screed against Harris is not taking hold yet, at least not in the same way the age card was used against President Biden when he was in the race.

Still, Trump doubled down on his “You can’t trust her” banter via his Truth Social platform. “Crazy Kamala is saying she’s Indian, not Black,” he wrote. “This is a big deal. Stone cold phony.” Or perhaps it’s that she’s a threat to Trump’s world order.

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Harris is the daughter of, wait for it, immigrants! Her father is Jamaican and her mother is Indian. She attended Howard University, a historically Black university and she pledged to the historically Black sorority Alpha Kappa Alpha. As a U.S. senator representing California, Harris was a member of the Congressional Black Caucus.

Harris addressed Trump’s attacks from where she was speaking on Wednesday — the historically African American sorority Sigma Gamma Rho’s 60th International Biennial Boule.

“It was the same old show: the divisiveness, and the disrespect,” Harris said. “We deserve a leader who understands that our differences do not divide us — they are an essential source of our strength.”

Harris is right. Those of us from mixed parentage already know this, even if Trump wants to portray that truth as a weakness.

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