Politics
California lawmakers target fentanyl as opioid overdoses surge
California lawmakers are responding to a surge in fentanyl overdoses and deaths of their cities with a listing of payments that embody imposing stronger penalties for distributing the artificial opioid and easing entry to safer consumption and therapy.
“There is no such thing as a doubt in my thoughts that the fentanyl epidemic is an pressing public well being disaster. There’s additionally little doubt in my thoughts that we’ve not acted with satisfactory urgency to deal with that,” stated Meeting Member Cottie Petrie-Norris (D-Irvine) throughout a press convention Tuesday to unveil Meeting Invoice 2246, a measure to strengthen punishment for distribution and possession. “I feel it’s vital for us as a Legislature to show the web page on that and act urgently now to guard our youngsters.”
The proposal would permit prosecutors to pursue a sentence of 20 years to life for many who distributed fentanyl that resulted in a lethal overdose, and would make it a felony to own 2 or extra grams of the opioid. The measure would additionally add sentence enhancements for promoting fentanyl in areas round kids or on social media. And it will classify fentanyl distributed for illicit use as a Schedule 1 drug, a label utilized by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration for narcotics that don’t have an appropriate medical use and are the probably to be abused.
“The underside line for me is we’ve to make sure that those that are making the most of the fentanyl disaster, those that are poisoning our youngsters, know that there are penalties and know that the punishment will match the crime,” Petrie-Norris stated.
Fentanyl habit has shortly turn out to be one of the regarding public well being crises within the nation. The extremely addictive artificial opioid is often utilized in medical settings to mitigate excessive ache. It’s as much as 100 occasions stronger than morphine, in keeping with the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration, rendering it extraordinarily harmful outdoors of a supervised medical setting. Even 2 milligrams might be deadly.
The drug helped drive lethal overdoses in america to greater than 100,000 over the 12-month interval to April 2021, in keeping with the U.S. Facilities for Illness Management and Prevention — a rise of 28.5%.
California is not any stranger to the disaster. The state Division of Public Well being recorded 3,946 fentanyl-involved deaths in 2020. San Francisco recorded 98 overdose deaths in January and February of this 12 months, in keeping with a current health worker’s report, and most concerned fentanyl. The drug can also be behind alarming traits in Los Angeles County, the place lethal overdoses skyrocketed by 48% throughout the first 5 months of the pandemic in contrast with the identical interval in 2019, in keeping with the Public Well being Division.
Petrie-Norris’ invoice is amongst a flurry of proposals in Sacramento to deal with the issue.
Meeting Member James Ramos (D-Highland) needs to crack down on social media as a market for opioids with Meeting Invoice 1628, which might require corporations similar to Snapchat to implement insurance policies that prohibit the sale of fentanyl and different managed substances on their platforms. Ramos launched a second invoice to make overdose-reversing medicine Narcan extra out there and to arrange native overdose response groups by means of a state Division of Justice pilot program.
“Fentanyl is a lethal disaster ravaging our younger individuals, adults and our state,” Ramos stated throughout a January press convention.
One of many extra controversial efforts to curb overdoses and deaths is Senate Invoice 57, a measure to legalize in sure jurisdictions so-called secure injection websites, or areas the place adults can eat medicine in a supervised setting with educated employees. The proposal would authorize pilot applications in San Francisco, Oakland, town of Los Angeles and Los Angeles County.
State Sen. Scott Wiener (D-San Francisco) stated SB 57 is a instrument to “scale back hurt, save lives and assist individuals get linked to therapy and providers.”
“The time has come for an all-hands-on-deck method to our overdose dying disaster, and secure consumption websites are a confirmed technique to avoid wasting lives,” Wiener stated in a January assertion.
Republicans have their very own concepts on the way to stem the disaster.
One invoice would require hospitals to check drug-screening urine samples for fentanyl; one other would require courts to advise people convicted of sure crimes in writing that it’s “extraordinarily harmful” to fabricate and distribute the drug and that, “if somebody dies consequently, the defendant might be charged with voluntary manslaughter or homicide.” A 3rd invoice would set up the California Fentanyl Abuse Process Pressure in efforts to gather knowledge on utilization and to ramp up public consciousness, and a separate measure would arrange a grant program below the California Well being and Human Providers Company for locals to battle the disaster.
Petrie-Norris stated it is not going to be simple to land her proposal on Gov. Gavin Newsom’s desk. California Democrats have in recent times shied away from including penalties to the state’s penal code in favor of supporting rehabilitation and diversion applications. On Tuesday, a Republican-led invoice so as to add penalties for fentanyl possession did not move the Meeting Committee on Public Security.
Petrie-Norris stated it is necessary for legislators to stability rehabilitation with holding individuals accountable for the flood of unlawful fentanyl distribution in California.
“Even supposing this can be a commonsense proposal, we face an uphill battle to maneuver this by means of the Legislature,” she stated.
However Jeannette Zanipatin, California state director for the Drug Coverage Alliance, cautioned towards any proposal that mimics the “conflict on medicine” insurance policies of the Nineteen Eighties and Nineties. Zanipatin stated growing penalties would funnel extra low-level sellers into jail or jail and would disproportionately have an effect on Black, Brown and Indigenous individuals.
“The priority is that when you introduce a measure like this that targets sellers, along with people feeling stigmatized, it actually pushes them extra underground,” Zanipatin stated. “We additionally see individuals have interaction in additional dangerous habits, which additionally results in extra people dying.”
She stated federal efforts to crack down on fentanyl trafficking haven’t performed a lot to curb its distribution and use. As an alternative of following go well with, Zanipatin stated, California ought to focus its efforts on community-based therapy fashions.
“The identical approaches with a distinct identify isn’t going to vary something,” she stated. “We now have to vary our method and do one thing that’s revolutionary and extra centered in harm-reduction approaches.”
Politics
Disasters like Helene and Milton test leaders. Trump fails every time
In 2019, residents of Alabama were unnecessarily alarmed after then-President Trump incorrectly said Hurricane Dorian was headed their way. However, instead of acknowledging he made a mistake, Trump questioned the National Weather Service and showed Americans a falsified weather map — which is against the law.
Opinion Columnist
LZ Granderson
LZ Granderson writes about culture, politics, sports and navigating life in America.
Today the former president is spewing lies about relief efforts and federal resources at a time when those affected by Hurricanes Helene and Milton need guidance and aid. State and local Republicans have asked him to stop, because apparently misinformation mucks up rescue and relief efforts. Of course, Trump doesn’t care so long as his lies also muck up the election.
What can I say? Same Trump, different year.
After he intentionally played down the threat of COVID-19 in those initial months of 2020, Trump said he purposefully misled the public to prevent panic. As a result, we were ill-prepared as a country. Our hospitals became quickly overrun, with people dying in school gyms and bodies held in refrigerated trucks as morgues overflowed.
The pandemic began with him lying to us about the severity of the virus. Four years later, and once again Trump’s instinct as a leader during a national crisis is to lie to the American people and complain about “The View.”
Elections have consequences. The first Trump term added $8.4 trillion to the national debt and forced rape victims to give birth after the overturning of Roe vs. Wade by Trump justices. If you flip through Project 2025, the plan conservatives put together to reshape the federal government under a second Trump administration, you’ll see that Round 2 would be much worse.
Trump would even make natural disasters worse.
The 2025 blueprint calls for chopping up and selling off large chunks of the federal government’s agency devoted to gathering data about weather — the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. That’s where the National Hurricane Center is housed. The expert who suggested that Trump scrap this agency for parts, Thomas F. Gilman, was a lifer in the automobile industry before joining Trump’s Commerce Department in 2019, the same year Trump redrew the route of a hurricane with a Sharpie.
Project 2025 sets out to replace tens of thousands of experienced civil servants who have relevant expertise with political appointees who are first loyal to Trump — people like Gilman. If you’re still wondering how bad that could be, consider that while the nation was bracing for Hurricane Milton — on the heels of Hurricane Helene — one of Trump’s allies, Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.), used her platform to tell Americans “they” control the weather.
She didn’t say who “they” are, how “they” are doing it or what House Republicans would do to stop … “they.” It sounds nonsensical because it is. But do not conflate nonsensical with inconsequential. Elections have consequences.
Greene might believe 9/11 was a hoax, but Republicans who know better placed her on the Homeland Security Committee to appease Trump. The committee’s official website states that it was formed “in 2002 in the aftermath of September 11, 2001,” and yet GOP leadership put a denier on the panel to appease someone who they know is lying about hurricane relief efforts right now. Loyalty to Trump is the only currency that matters to some of these people. Not expertise, not traditional conservative values, not integrity.
That’s how the party of Lincoln has sadly become the party that responds to national emergencies by scapegoating others: claiming “they” control the weather; “they” are eating pets; “they” are paid actors rather than traumatized survivors of a school shooting. To this day, House Speaker Mike Johnson refuses to say who won the 2020 election. Instead when reporters ask, he accuses them of hurling “gotcha questions” at him, which may be good for his relationship with Trump but doesn’t help the country in any way.
All of which brings me here: For more than 50 years, since Richard M. Nixon faced off against John F. Kennedy, televised debates have been a benchmark in presidential politics. With Trump at the center of attention, the first Republican primary debate of 2016 gave Fox the most-watched nonsports event in cable history. The second debate also brought high ratings. Trump didn’t start skipping debates in the primary until Fox News announced it would be using video of previous appearances to hold candidates accountable for their words.
That’s why he and his running mate, Sen. JD Vance (R-Ohio), oppose fact-checking during debates and interviews. Accountability is why Trump avoided debating Ambassador Nikki Haley during the 2024 primary. It’s why he got into a fight with journalists at a news conference this past summer. It’s why he’s afraid to debate Vice President Kamala Harris again.
When a businessman is accustomed to escaping consequences for his misdeeds by filing for bankruptcy as often as Trump has, I can see why he’d be uncomfortable with being held accountable.
However, a president or candidate doesn’t get to avoid accountability any more than the country can escape the consequences of an election. Trump’s lies in office did damage. His lies today are hurting people who need help. And no one should be surprised: In every crisis, Trump has shown himself to be a liar, not a leader.
@LZGranderson
Politics
Video: Vance Refuses to Acknowledge That Trump Lost the 2020 Election
“In the debate, you were asked to clarify if you believe Trump lost the 2020 election. Do you believe he lost the 2020 election?” “I think that Donald Trump and I have both raised a number of issues with the 2020 election, but we’re focused on the future. I think there’s an obsession here with focusing on 2020. I’m much more worried about what happened after 2020, which is a wide-open border, groceries that are unaffordable. And look—” “Senator, yes or no? Did Donald Trump lose the 2020 election?” “Let me ask you a question. Is it OK that big technology companies censored the Hunter Biden laptop story, which independent analysis have said cost Donald Trump millions of votes?” “Senator Vance, I’m going to ask you again, did Donald Trump lose the 2020 election?” “Did big technology companies censor a story that independent studies have suggested would have cost Trump millions of votes? I think that’s the question.” “Senator Vance, I’m going to ask you again. Did Donald Trump lose the 2020 election?” “And I’ve answered your question with another question. You answer my question and I’ll answer yours.” “I have asked this question repeatedly. It is something that is very important for the American people to know. There is no proof, legal or otherwise, that Donald Trump did not lose the 2020 election.” “You’re repeating a slogan rather than engaging with what I’m saying, which is that when our own technology firms engage in industrial scale censorship, by the way, backed up by the federal government, in a way that independent studies suggest affect the votes, I’m worried about Americans who feel like there were problems in 2020. I’m not worried about this slogan that people throw, ‘Well, every court case went this way.’ I’m talking about something very discrete: a problem of censorship in this country that I do think affected things in 2020, and more importantly, that led to Kamala Harris’s governance, which has screwed this country up in a big way.” “Senator, would you have certified the election in 2020, yes or no?” “I’ve said that I would have voted against certification because of the concern that I just raised. I think that when you have technology companies—” “The answer is no.” “When you have technology companies censoring Americans at a mass scale in a way that, again, independent studies have suggested affect the vote, I think that it’s right to protest against that, to criticize that. And that’s a totally reasonable thing.” “So the answer is no. And the last question, will you support the election results this time and commit to a peaceful transfer of power?” “Well, first of all, of course we commit to a peaceful transfer of power. We are going to have a peaceful transfer of power. I, of course, believe that peaceful transfer of power is going to make Donald Trump the next president of the United States. But if there are problems, of course, in the same way that Democrats protested in 2004 and Donald Trump raised issues in 2020, we’re going to make sure that this election counts, that every legal ballot is counted. We’ve filed almost 100 lawsuits at the R.N.C. to try to ensure that every legal ballot has counted. I think you would maybe criticize that. We see that as an important effort to ensure election integrity, but certainly we’re going to respect the results in 2024. And I feel very confident they’re going to make Donald Trump the next president.
Politics
Hunter Biden legal saga is ‘real war’ that 'preoccupied' outgoing president, new Woodward book claims
President Joe Biden’s decision to exit the presidential race in July was motivated in no small part by the high-profile struggles that plagued his son, Hunter Biden, in the final years of his first term — leaving him with a “crushing” sense of guilt that those close to the outgoing president say plagued him more than the wars in Ukraine and the Middle East.
In his new book, “War,” famed Watergate reporter Bob Woodward offers readers an intimate look inside both the Trump and Biden presidencies at some of their most vulnerable moments; offering a rare, split-screen view into the thinking of two very different leaders as they stared down some of the biggest foreign policy challenges and security risks in modern memory.
Fox News obtained an early copy of the book ahead of its release next week.
Woodward’s book captures the more intimate moments of both presidencies, as well. For Biden, this includes the aftermath of his disastrous performance at the first presidential debate in June — watched by an estimated 51 million people — and the torrent of pressure it unleashed within the Democratic Party for Biden to exit the race.
Among party leaders and donors, it crystallized long-held fears that Biden, 81, was no longer fit to hold his own in a second match-up against Donald Trump. Their panic was matched only by their sense of urgency and the ticking clock they had to select a suitable nominee.
BIDEN WON’T PARDON HUNTER, WHITE HOUSE REAFFIRMS, BUT CRITICS AREN’T SO SURE
As Woodward reports, Biden struggled mightily to accept that consensus — first, by attempting to brush off his catastrophic performance as a bad night and an event he could recover from in the months ahead. The tsunami of pressure on him to drop out only got stronger.
In fact, according to Woodward, Biden was leaning in the direction of staying in the race on July 4, when he met with Secretary of State Antony Blinken for a private lunch. Blinken, who had shown up to the lunch prepared for a difficult conversation, told Woodward that Biden still believed he could win a second term as president — a title he had chased all his life and finally achieved.
In his telling, among the factors ultimately driving his decision to bow out was the scrutiny and legal troubles surrounding his son Hunter.
The toll his son’s troubles had taken was apparent when the two met, Woodward reports. Blinken, in his telling, spoke frankly to Biden about dropping out. “I don’t want to see your legacy jeopardized,” he said.
’60 MINUTES’ DEFENDS HANDLING OF HUNTER BIDEN LAPTOP COVERAGE AS IT HITS TRUMP FOR SKIPPING INTERVIEW
Sensing little headway, Blinken then tried a different approach. “Do you really want to be doing this for the next four years?” he asked.
Biden’s first term included overseeing the U.S. recovery from a global pandemic, the first war on European soil since World War II, and the start of Israel’s wars in Gaza and Lebanon. Each day was charged with turmoil and lasting consequence. And yet, those close to Biden say it was his younger son, Hunter Biden, whose struggles seemed to weigh most heavily on the president.
Hunter’s troubles are described in the book as Biden’s “real war”: a constant source of preoccupation for the president, who was constantly fighting against his fatherly instincts to protect his son, his “beautiful boy,” as he called him — and to reconcile the deep sense of guilt he felt, in knowing his presidency had been a driving factor behind much of the scrutiny surrounding his son.
POLITICAL STORM: ON TRUMP ‘ONSLAUGHT OF LIES,’ BIDEN URGES FORMER PRESIDENT TO ‘GET A LIFE, MAN’
For Biden, this knowledge left him “heartbroken” and affected him more than the major crises playing out abroad in Europe and the Middle East, sources told Woodward. These things took the president “off an even keel,” preoccupied him and taken “a lot out of him” in recent years.
In describing the president’s inner turmoil to Woodward, Blinken himself teared up, thinking of his own relationships with two young children.
Biden, Blinken explained, “desperately” wanted to pull Hunter “out of the abyss” — to reel him in, to protect him — but his attempts and best efforts had failed.
The book does not detail the extent to which Hunter’s legal woes and investigations were directly involved in the president’s decision to step down, which was likely the result of myriad factors, internal party pressures, and deeply personal considerations. The White House did not respond to Fox News’s request for comment on the matter.
The book offers an unflinching look at one of the president’s most emotionally difficult struggles, one which staying in the race would have ultimately exacerbated.
“War” will be out on bookstore shelves October 15.
Get the latest updates from the 2024 campaign trail, exclusive interviews and more at our Fox News Digital election hub.
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