Politics
Trans activists march on state capitols nationwide as cloud of Nashville Christian school shooting looms
Transgender activists this week have been occupying state capitol buildings throughout the nation to protest laws putting restrictions on gender transition procedures for youngsters and the educating of gender identification within the classroom.
The protests got here the identical week police recognized a transgender particular person because the shooter chargeable for murdering six individuals, together with three 9-year-old youngsters, in Monday’s capturing at a non-public Christian faculty in Nashville.
A crowd of LGBTQ activists on Friday marched on the Florida Capitol after the state’s Republican-controlled Home handed a invoice that will prohibit the best way lecturers and college students can use most well-liked pronouns in faculties. The laws additionally bolsters the flexibility of involved dad and mom, college students and others to object to educational supplies and college library books.
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The measure handed on Worldwide Transgender Day of Visibility, when a number of transgender marches have been held nationwide. College students packed the Florida Capitol and shouted in protest, chanting “That is what democracy appears like” and referred to as to take management of the faculties.
Two days earlier in Kentucky, state police confirmed 19 individuals have been arrested on the Capitol as massive crowds gathered to protest Republican lawmakers overriding Democratic Gov. Andy Beshear’s veto of laws that bans puberty blockers, hormones and gender transition surgical procedures for youngsters underneath 18.
The invoice additionally bans classes on gender identification and sexual orientation, requires trans college students to make use of the toilet of their organic intercourse and stops faculty districts from requiring lecturers to make use of a scholar’s pronouns if they do not align with their intercourse at start.
On the similar time Wednesday, a whole lot of protesters descended on the Missouri Capitol after the Republican-led state Senate handed laws barring transgender youth underneath 18 from receiving gender-affirming well being care corresponding to puberty blockers and hormone remedies. The state Senate additionally handed a invoice stopping transgender college students from taking part on sports activities groups that align with their gender identification.
“We present up clearly at this time in love and in neighborhood, actually, however we additionally present up in righteous anger and in rage,” Katy Erker-Lynch, government director of PROMO, an LGBTQ public coverage and advocacy group, stated on the protest.
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Two days earlier in Texas, swaths of trans activists stormed the Capitol because the state Home was debating the same invoice banning gender transition procedures for youngsters. Protesters chanted “defend trans children” and lay on the ground in an obvious effort to hinder these attempting to stroll by.
The Texas protest occurred the identical day of the Nashville capturing at The Covenant College. Police say the shooter was Audrey Hale, a 28-year-old transgender particular person who was a former scholar on the personal Christian faculty. Hale, who was killed after firing at responding officers, left behind a manifesto, in line with authorities, who didn’t rule out that gender identification could have been a motivation.
On Thursday, dozens of protesters swarmed the Tennessee Capitol, demanding lawmakers take motion on gun violence as they appeared to mourn Hale’s loss of life.
“Each loss of life is a tragedy, y’all. Seven lives,” one protester might be heard saying in footage posted to social media.
Seven individuals have been killed within the capturing, together with Hale.
Politics
Tennessee Gov. Lee signs bill allowing concealed carry for public schoolteachers
Tennessee teachers and staff will be allowed to carry concealed handguns on public school grounds under legislation signed into law by Gov. Bill Lee on Friday.
Lee, a Republican, had announced his support for the proposal just the day before while flanked by top Republican legislative leaders who had helped shepherd the bill through the GOP-dominant General Assembly.
“What’s important is that we give districts tools and the option to use a tool that will keep their children safe,” Lee told reporters.
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As the idea of arming teachers began to gain support inside the General Assembly, gun control advocates and families began swarming to the Capitol to show their opposition. During the final vote, protesters chanted “Blood on your hands” and many members of the public who oppose the bill harangued Republican lawmakers after the vote, leading House Speaker Cameron Sexton to order the galleries cleared.
According to the statute, which becomes effective immediately, parents and other teachers will be barred from knowing who is armed at their schools.
A principal, school district and law enforcement agency would have to agree to let staff carry guns, and then workers who want to carry a handgun would need to have a handgun carry permit and written authorization from the school’s principal and local law enforcement. They would also need to clear a background check and undergo 40 hours of handgun training. They couldn’t carry guns at school events at stadiums, gymnasiums or auditoriums.
The legislation is the biggest expansion of gun access in the state since last year’s deadly shooting at a private elementary school in Nashville where shooter indiscriminately opened fire and killed three children and three adults before being killed by police.
Lee initially asked lawmakers to keep guns away from people deemed a danger to themselves or others in response to the shooting, the Republican supermajority ignored that request.
Many of the Covenant families had met with Lee and lawmakers hoping to persuade them to drop the idea of arming teachers. In the final days of the legislative session, Covenant families said they had collected nearly 4,300 signatures from Tennesseans against having public school staffers carry weapons on school grounds.
“There are folks across the state who disagree on the way forward, but we all agree that we should keep our kids safe,” Lee said Thursday.
It’s unclear if any school districts would take advantage if the bill becomes law. For example, a Metro Nashville Public Schools spokesperson, Sean Braisted, said the district believes “it is best and safest for only approved active-duty law enforcement to carry weapons on campus.”
Politics
Opinion: The Supreme Court just showed us that Trump is not incompetent. He's a master of corruption
I have badly underestimated Donald Trump. Thursday was the day that his justices — it turns out that they are indeed his justices on the Supreme Court, just as he claimed — got it through my thick head: Trump is not just competent but masterful. He is not just capable, he is supreme.
Because Trump is clumsy at his alleged crimes, surrounding himself with flagrant thugs, telling obvious lies, leaving prolific trails of damning evidence, offering ridiculous defenses for indefensible conduct, I had long concluded that he is incompetent at crookery along with his other manifest failings. That’s true as far as it goes. But for all his mad greed and compulsive lawlessness, for all his sleaze and stupidity, crime is ultimately not Trump’s game. Trump is nothing like a master criminal. But he is a master of something far more sinister and complex: corruption.
Crime is a largely private endeavor. Corruption is public. It seeps into the muscle and sinew of democratic society and institutions; it devours from within. The Supreme Court, drunk on arrogated power, cut loose from rudimentary ethics, has been eaten alive by it. But the court is just one plot of a vast terrain that Trump has conquered — not with crime, but corruption.
Crime is when you launch a violent attempt to overthrow the republic. Corruption is when you convince an entire political party to pretend they didn’t watch it live on television, or cower from it inside the Capitol while dozens of police officers were being bludgeoned by the mob.
Crime is when you make off with top-secret documents. Corruption is when a MAGA judge can’t find time to schedule your trial, or process the mountainous evidence of your guilt.
Crime is when a U.S. resident is murdered and dismembered by Saudi hit men. Corruption is when the all but acknowledged killer invests $2 billion in your talentless son-in-law’s fund, which other investors shun.
Crime is when you fake business expenses to cover up a payoff to an adult film actress who wants to cash in on your campaign for president. Corruption is when the head of the nation’s greasiest tabloid, a perpetual fount of lies and nonsense, expresses concern that your deeds are too sleazy for him.
Crime is when your lawyers tell the Senate not to convict you in an impeachment trial because you can be charged in court. Corruption is when your lawyers inform the Supreme Court that you are immune from criminal courts and only the Senate can judge you — but, alas, the senators have missed their window.
Trump has already succeeded at corrupting much of what’s corruptible. Government. Elections. Foreign policy. Democracy. Religion. Above all, people, and mostly men. Truckloads, boatloads, tiki-torch-parade-loads, courtloads of weak men all standing in the shadow that Trump casts.
The Republican Party has been corrupted absolutely. House Republicans have combined McCarthyism with Larry, Moe and Curlyism to twist Congress to comically corrupt ends — all to serve the greater degeneracy of Trump. In the Senate, the young hyenas, Tom Cotton (R-Ark.) and Josh Hawley (R-Mo.), study Trump’s demagogy and lick their chops, hoping for a turn at democracy’s carcass.
The establishment has utterly caved. Former Atty. Gen. William Barr’s endorsement of Trump this week, after having called Trump unfit, a psychologically damaged incompetent who cares only about himself, was barely newsworthy. What is Barr but another in the long line of weak men, one more debased Republican offering fealty to the grease king? Trump thanked Barr by humiliating him again.
But it was the Republican Supreme Court — mostly men again — that put the shiv a little deeper in democracy’s back this week. Originalists or textualists, all sounded more or less Trumpist as they seriously entertained Trump’s argument that his assaults on the constitutional order are protected by the Constitution itself. There is no way to make honest sense of such a liar’s mash. But Larry, Moe and Curly aren’t just chairing committees in Congress. They wear robes and furrowed brows now, too. And they seem eager to pretend that crimes are just constitutional exercises of power, and that one ex-president is a king.
Richard Nixon, a self-made, and self-corrupted, man who studied geopolitics and government assiduously, never achieved such a broad subjugation of American values and institutions. Trump, the ignorant, n’er-do-well heir to his father’s crooked fortune, has achieved so much more. Trump hasn’t just captured the trenches of conservative America, he has taken the commanding heights. He owns all of it, from the most racist backwater saloon to the Federalist Society clubhouse. They are his corrupted subjects. He is their corrupt and demented king. If he can somehow get through the next few perilous months, he may yet render corruption sacred, and the republic irredeemable.
Francis Wilkinson is a columnist for Bloomberg Opinion. @fdwilkinson
Politics
Republican makes major announcement in push to grow GOP support from once-solid Dem voting bloc
EXCLUSIVE: A Republican running for re-election in a race key to a possible GOP Senate majority made a major announcement Friday aimed at keeping a crucial voting bloc away from the Democrats.
Florida Sen. Rick Scott announced the latest ad installment of a multimillion-dollar investment in Hispanic outreach, one that his campaign hopes will continue the demographic’s swing toward the GOP and further solidify the state as deep red.
“As parents, we teach values to our children, the difference between right and wrong, truth and lies. But then we send our kids to school where some radical socialist teacher doesn’t teach them math or English. No, they’re taught that men can have babies and become women, and that we should worship the god of government, not the God who created us. That is socialism,” Scott says in the ad, titled “Verdad,” which will run in both Spanish and English.
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The ad will run in multiple TV and radio markets across Florida, as well as statewide on multiple digital platforms.
Socialism has been a major theme in Florida elections in recent years, especially considering the Hispanic population in the state has significant Cuban and Venezuelan heritage.
Some election experts argue that has been one of the major factors in the shift of Hispanics toward the Republican Party, which has expanded into other Hispanic groups, such as the Puerto Rican community.
According to the Americas Society/Council of the Americas, 55% of Florida’s Hispanics supported Republican Sen. Marco Rubio in his 2022 re-election bid, as well as Miami-Dade County — traditionally a Democratic stronghold that Hillary Clinton won by 29 percentage points in 2016.
Scott, who is expected to sail to victory in the Republican primary on Aug. 20, will likely face Democrat Debbie Mucarsel-Powell, the former representative of Florida’s 26th Congressional District ousted in the 2020 election.
Elections analysts rate the race as either “likely” or “solid” Republican.
Get the latest updates from the 2024 campaign trail, exclusive interviews and more at our Fox News Digital election hub.
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