Politics
Blinken Arrives in Poland to Gauge Additional U.S. Aid for Ukraine
KORCZOWA, Poland — With a line of refugees streaming into Poland behind them, the highest American and Ukrainian diplomats met at Ukraine’s border on Saturday in a quick however extraordinary encounter to evaluate what further assist and safety america would possibly ship to deal with Russia’s invasion, which appeared sure to proceed.
The Ukrainian international minister, Dmytro Kuleba, thanked U.S. Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken for “coming right here to Ukraine, actually.” The 2 males stood on the border the place, over the course of 1 hour, tons of of refugees had crossed into Poland by foot in bone-chilling temperatures.
For Mr. Blinken, the temporary assembly was an opportunity to take inventory of the humanitarian catastrophe — Europe’s largest refugee disaster since World Conflict II — brought on by the Russian president, Vladimir V. Putin, in his invasion of Ukraine.
For Mr. Kuleba, it was a second to remind the world anew, in stark phrases, of the opportunity of a permanent battle with excessive numbers of human casualties and the rupture of the worldwide order if international help stopped wanting what Ukraine was demanding.
“Ukraine will win this conflict,” Mr. Kuleba stated after the assembly, which was stored secret for a number of hours after it had concluded to make sure he may safely journey again into Ukraine. “The query is the value of our victory. And if our companions proceed to take daring, systemic selections to step up financial and political strain on Russia, in the event that they proceed to supply us with needed weapons, the value will likely be decrease.”
“It will save many lives in Ukraine, many homes; many youngsters will likely be born, many sufferings will likely be prevented,” he stated. “That is the one query that’s on the agenda.”
Mr. Blinken stated the Biden administration was searching for to ship not less than $2.75 billion in further humanitarian help to Ukraine and to the international locations which have taken in its multiple million refugees to date. “We’re in it with Ukraine — a method or one other, quick run, the medium run, the long term,” he stated, including that he was “in awe” of the Ukrainian resistance towards Moscow’s far bigger navy.
However Mr. Kuleba known as once more for NATO forces to impose a no-fly zone over Ukraine to guard it from Russian bombings — a transfer that the Biden administration and its allies fear would pull them into a bigger conflict.
The worldwide strain on Russia to face down — backed by devastating financial sanctions towards Mr. Putin’s authorities and its allies and by shipments of weapons and navy gear to Kyiv — “won’t solely proceed, it would develop till this conflict of alternative is delivered to an finish,” Mr. Blinken stated. He stated america and its allies “are, once more, taking a look at all the things” to assist Ukraine.
“The world is right here; the world is with you,” Mr. Blinken advised Mr. Kuleba.
Mr. Blinken has repeatedly famous the growing variety of deaths in Ukraine, generally describing them in graphic phrases, over the previous few days to underscore the conflict to People who might largely really feel untouched by its violence. He witnessed its despair firsthand on Saturday on the border crossing, the place the sounds of crying infants and truck engines punctuated an in any other case surprised silence amongst many of the arriving refugees, who shivered as they have been led in small teams by border guards to a processing middle simply inside Poland.
The Polish international minister, Zbigniew Rau, estimated that as many as a million refugees from Ukraine would have fled to Poland alone by the top of this weekend. As of Saturday afternoon, that quantity stood at 700,000 and plenty of of those that fled arrived on the Korczowa-Krakovets crossing. In all, greater than 1.3 million refugees have left Ukraine for neighboring nations as of Friday.
The road of Ukrainians trudging into Poland included refugees main youngsters by the hand or carrying a lone backpack or suitcase full of their belongings.
“We walked to the border, I don’t know what number of hours,” stated one 12-year-old lady, Venera Ahmadi, whose household left Kyiv after “we heard bombs” and have been staying at a close-by refugee reception middle in Korczowa.
“I used to be scared I’d die,” Venera’s older sister, Jasmine Ahmadi, stated.
Mr. Blinken met with a few of the latest arrivals on the reception middle, the place they got sizzling meals and rested in cots that have been crammed collectively in a constructing that had been a shopping center only a week earlier. Mr. Rau stated an estimated 3,000 Ukrainians have been there on Saturday — a quantity that he stated had elevated daily.
The newest tranche of humanitarian help is a part of the Biden administration’s $10 billion request to Congress for added funds to Ukraine.
Russia-Ukraine Conflict: Key Issues to Know
Arriving within the southeastern Polish metropolis of Rzeszow on Saturday morning, Mr. Blinken was greeted by Democrats and Republicans on the Home Overseas Affairs Committee who had additionally come to gauge what extra america may present.
“We’re going to do all we will to assist the Ukrainian individuals,” stated Representatives Gregory Meeks, Democrat of New York and the committee’s chairman. The highest Republican on the panel, Consultant Michael McCaul of Texas, nodded in settlement.
For the reason that invasion, Mr. Blinken stated, america has already despatched greater than $54 million in support that features water, 20,000 thermal blankets, and well being care provides for as much as 100,000 individuals over the subsequent three months.
After assembly with Mr. Blinken in Rzeszow, Mr. Rau stated Russian assaults on civilians and nuclear energy crops in Ukraine amounted to conflict crimes. He demanded that Russia be vigorously prosecuted — and stated he had raised the opportunity of a joint effort between Poland and america to take action. “Pursuing conflict criminals is a component of humankind’s frequent reminiscence,” he advised journalists in Rzeszow. “It’s our frequent obligation.”
Mr. Kuleba stated it was not clear the state that Ukraine could be in when the combating ceases — each time that may be — and famous that even restricted efforts to safe a cease-fire in not less than two Ukrainian cities for humanitarian entry had fallen quick.
“However each conflict ends with diplomacy, and with talks, so we’ve to proceed speaking,” Mr. Kuleba stated.
He added: “Hundreds of individuals in Ukraine sacrifice their lives — males, ladies, outdated, younger — to defend the nation. Once we prevail, and I’ve little question that we’ll, we are going to construct a brand new Ukraine. And that nation will likely be even higher than the one which Russia destroyed.”
Politics
Ted Cruz urges White House to halt $1.25B in 'digital equity' funds
FIRST ON FOX: Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, is urging the Biden administration to halt a $1.25 billion “Digital Equity” program, calling it unconstitutional for using race-based criteria to expand broadband access.
“I urge you to withdraw the unlawful [Notice of Funding Opportunity] NOFO and halt issuing Program grants before you cause real harm,” Cruz wrote to Alan Davidson, the assistant secretary of the National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA) Thursday morning. “NTIA’s use of racial classifications, as set forth in the NOFO, does not serve a compelling governmental interest.”
The letter comes as Republicans push back against diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives as they gear up for the incoming Trump administration. Under the soon-to-be Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), headed by Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy, such programs like the Digital Equity Competitive Grant Program could be examined as government waste.
“Any source of government waste is in scope for DOGE,” a Ramaswamy spokesperson told Fox News Digital.
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The letter criticizes NTIA’s guidance for the Digital Equity Competitive Grant Program, as Cruz claims it violates the Fifth Amendment’s Due Process Clause, lacking evidence of racial discrimination in internet access and failing to provide clear metrics for its race-based criteria.
The program was a key initiative under the Digital Equity Act, which was authorized by President Biden’s Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act of 2021. It is the third of three digital equity programs established by the act.
Cruz asserts that the program requires grant applicants to prioritize “Covered Populations,” a category that explicitly includes racial and ethnic minorities in the program. He argued the approach includes impermissible racial discrimination, arguing that the federal government cannot use racial classifications without demonstrating a compelling interest and “narrowly tailored” measures.
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“The NOFO provides no evidence racial minorities face discrimination in accessing the internet, let alone specific instances of discrimination that NTIA is seeking to address,” Cruz wrote. “And it does not attempt to make any claim that this discrimination is necessary to avoid a prison race riot.”
Cruz added that “the NOFO does not define ‘minority,’ making it impossible to determine whether it is underinclusive, but in any event, it is overinclusive because it includes anyone who falls into some racial group, without any determination that that specific group has faced discrimination in access to broadband.”
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Cruz, the ranking member of the Senate Commerce, Science & Transportation Committee, urged the NTIA to respond by Dec. 12, either by confirming the withdrawal of the guidance or by providing a detailed explanation of how it complies with constitutional requirements.
Fox News Digital has reached out to the NTIA for comment.
Politics
Opinion: Who's the vice-president elect? Elon Musk or JD Vance?
The speaker of the House, the man second in line to the presidency — Rep. Mike Johnson of Louisiana — had to photobomb the much-shared shot taken aboard the so-called Trump Force One airplane last weekend. There was no room for him at the four-top table where the real power bros — Donald Trump, of course, son Don Jr., world’s wealthiest man Elon Musk, and supposed health nut Robert F. Kennedy Jr. — were grabbing for greasy McDonald’s burgers and fries during their night out to see the UFC fights at Madison Square Garden.
But at least Johnson was in the picture. JD Vance was not.
The man soon to be first in the line of succession was cut out of the clique — as he seemingly has been since the election of the Trump-Vance ticket two weeks ago.
Opinion Columnist
Jackie Calmes
Jackie Calmes brings a critical eye to the national political scene. She has decades of experience covering the White House and Congress.
That’s raised a question around Washington that would be louder but for the cacophony about whether Trump’s Cabinet picks — alleged fellow sexual bad boys Matt Gaetz and Pete Hegseth; fellow admirer of murderous tyrants Tulsi Gabbard, and Kennedy, the conspiracy-minded anti-vaxxer who’s usually not a fan of fast food — will win Senate confirmation to head the Justice, Defense, intelligence and health departments, respectively.
Where’s the vice president-elect?
“Y’all seen JD Vance?” former Republican Party Chair Michael Steele wondered on MSNBC over the weekend.
The future veep was finally spotted on Wednesday, not beside Trump but back on Capitol Hill, ducking in and out of offices. Vance, a senator from Ohio for less than two years, was squiring Gaetz around to his Republican colleagues’ offices in hopes of persuading them to support confirmation of the manifestly unqualified Cabinet pick. As if Vance, rather than a vengeful Trump, has that kind of pull with the senators.
Meanwhile, Musk has been so ubiquitous at the president-elect’s side that Trump advisors are reportedly getting sick of him. The satirists at the Onion headlined an item, “Trump Locks Bathroom Door So Elon Musk Can’t Follow Him In.”
For the megabillionaire (and mega Trump donor), whose fortune owes much to his federal auto and aerospace contracts over the years, the joined-at-the-hip comradery with Trump — at Mar-a-Lago, day-tripping in Washington, courtside in Madison Square Garden and then in Texas for a SpaceX rocket launch on Tuesday — is already good for business.
“He’d be worthless” but for government subsidies, Trump sniped in 2022, before the two formed their mutually beneficial bond only months ago. Since the election, Musk’s net worth has increased nearly 25% based on future growth assumptions, Bloomberg estimated. And the federal largesse he enjoys isn’t likely to be threatened by the spending cuts that Trump has promised: Welfare of the corporate kind is rarely on Republicans’ chopping block, but certainly not now, given that Trump has put Musk in charge of a Department of Government Efficiency to identify targets to slash.
In past administrations, that’s the kind of role that presidents would delegate to their vice presidents, much as Bill Clinton assigned Al Gore to “reinvent government” and George W. Bush allowed Dick Cheney to essentially call the shots in his “war on terror.”
More than two weeks into Trump’s transition back to power, we know what he wants Musk to do, as well as Gaetz, Hegseth, Kennedy, Gabbard and more. Vance, not so much.
Aside from shepherding Trump’s nominees, Vance has been missing in action not just in Mar-a-Lago but in the Senate, too. That provoked intraparty grousing this week, even from Trump, when Vance’s absence in the closely divided body helped Senate Democrats, who still run the joint until January, to push through the confirmations of some of President Biden’s final nominees to federal judgeships. Vance posted on X that one of his right-wing critics was a “mouth breathing imbecile” and then deleted the post.
“No more Judges confirmed before Inauguration Day,” the boss warned Republican senators. (That’s rich coming from the man who, after his 2020 defeat, had Senate Republicans ram through a number of judges — including U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon in Florida, Trump’s judicial helpmeet who delayed and then stunningly dismissed the case against him for making off with classified documents in 2021.) As in his first term, Trump will get to fill whatever vacancies Biden leaves behind.
Vance’s deleted post did provide one clue to his activities lately: He’s been interviewing candidates to be the director of the FBI. That suggests both that Trump will indeed fire Christopher Wray, his first-term pick who subsequently enraged him by, among other things, approving the successful search of Mar-a-Lago for classified material in 2022, and that Vance may be carving a niche for himself as Trump’s retribution deputy.
When Trump tapped 40-year-old Vance for veep, the Ohioan was described by many Republicans as the future of a MAGA-fied party and country. Yet he embodies a future at odds with the nation’s challenges and trends.
Vance will play his T.B.D. part in an administration that seems hellbent on exacerbating climate change with a full-on embrace of fossil fuels. That would hasten the nation’s fiscal insolvency by further cutting taxes for the rich. That would threaten that economy (and the United States’ moral standing) by mass-deporting migrants when an aging population needs their labor. And that would purportedly make America great again by returning to a system in which white men continue to dominate, despite the country’s ever-growing diversity and women’s advancement.
Whatever Vance’s role, at least by his virtual invisibility he’s not running the risk that Musk is: Stealing the spotlight from the narcissist in chief. That never ends well.
@jackiekcalmes
Politics
Democrat Tammy Baldwin details recipe for running in a swing state after victory in Trump-won Wisconsin
Sen. Tammy Baldwin, D-Wis., successfully won re-election in Wisconsin all while President-elect Donald Trump simultaneously flipped the state back to red in the presidential election.
As to how she did it, the Democrat attributes much of her win to her “72-county strategy.” Baldwin made sure during her campaign to traverse the entire state, venturing far from the two large blue enclaves of Milwaukee and Dane counties.
“I think showing up matters, listening matters,” she said in an interview with Fox News Digital. “And so I go, and I really listen and get to know the challenges and aspirations of people all over the state, rural areas, suburban areas, urban areas.”
Baldwin won by a few tens of thousands of votes in the state, clinching victory by roughly the same margin as Trump.
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According to her campaign, she did more than 250 events in Wisconsin in 2024 alone. She also hosted several targeted tours during her campaign, including her Dairyland Tour and her Rural Leaders for Tammy Tour.
Further, Baldwin’s campaign microtargeted rural communities to deliver content regarding her agricultural work.
But her rigorous travel is not the only thing that sealed the deal for her. The senator acknowledged that people can go everywhere, but they also need to effectively engage voters in each place they travel to.
One thing she noted is that she’s “had years to earn the trust of Wisconsin voters,” referencing the short few months that the campaign of Vice President Kamala Harris had to turn out voters for her in the state.
Baldwin also said she convenes roundtables and forums on relevant issues while she travels in Wisconsin.
“So I’ve done that on, say, the fentanyl and opioid epidemic, bringing together first responders, public health officials, concerned community members to talk about what does the epidemic look like in this community, in this area of the state? What resources do you need? What are your biggest worries?”
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She also held events geared toward agricultural issues, she noted.
Baldwin notably credits, in part, her work on agricultural issues with her re-election win. In early October, Baldwin earned the endorsement of the Wisconsin Farm Bureau Federation Board of Directors, which was a significant achievement for a Democrat in a statewide election.
“They cited a number of different measures that I either championed or actually got into law,” she said.
The senator pointed to her Dairy Business Innovation Act, which provides small grants to various dairy producers and processors.
“I went this past spring to a particular farm that had received one of these grants, and they had also invited several other farmers and processors who had received grants to show me what they were able to do with these grants in order to grow their business and improve their bottom line,” she said.
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The Wisconsin Democrat also pointed to the large manufacturing sector in her state and attributed her push for “buy America” rules in pieces of legislation as helping her win some of those voters.
On whether her campaign is a model for other Democrats, specifically those in swing states, she said, “I think it is something that would be helpful to many public officials.”
Baldwin added that she realized the need to travel Wisconsin to this extent during her first Senate campaign: “I had been in the House of Representatives representing, as you know, seven counties in [the] south-central part of the state. I had to learn Wisconsin as I was running.”
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“And so traveling to do that learning was extremely important, being exposed to, you know, the timber industry and the north woods. We didn’t have a big timber industry in the south-central part of the state.”
The Midwestern senator also said this was the first time she heard from Wisconsinites that elected officials hadn’t been spending much time in certain parts of the state.
“One thing I will say that I hear from constituents when I show up is just like, ‘I don’t remember the last time we had a U.S. senator visit our community, and especially not a Democrat,’” she said.
“It’s like, you know, the timber industry folks saying, ‘I don’t think we’ve ever had a senator pay so much attention to us,’” she added.
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