Connect with us

Politics

WI Gov. Evers appoints state’s first openly gay cabinet official

Published

on

WI Gov. Evers appoints state’s first openly gay cabinet official

Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers introduced Monday he promoted the deputy secretary of the Division of Veterans Affairs to guide the company, which has been troubled by frequent allegations of abuse and poor care.

James Bond, a disabled U.S. Marine Corps veteran who has labored on the division for years, is the primary overtly LGBTQ individual in state historical past to move a Cupboard company, in line with the Legislative Audit Bureau. The governor’s information launch didn’t specify Bond’s incapacity or particulars of his army service.

WISCONSIN GOV. EVERS ANNOUNCES RESIGNATION OF HEALTH SECRETARY KAREN TIMBERLAKE

Democratic Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers appointed James Bond because the state’s VA secretary, making him its first overtly homosexual cupboard official

“James has been a devoted chief at DVA for over a decade and has served the division and Wisconsin veterans properly as deputy secretary,” Evers stated in an announcement. “As a veteran himself, alongside together with his a long time of state service, I’ve little doubt he’ll deliver a wealth of expertise, data, and experience to this position as secretary.”

Advertisement

WISCONSIN WIDOW SUES VETERAN’S NURSING HOME OVER HUSBAND’S DEATH

Bond inherits an company that has been stricken by points in its assisted residing amenities and nursing houses. A current Milwaukee Journal Sentinel investigation discovered that the Union Grove veterans house ranked among the many worst within the nation for violations and fines.

His appointment fills the hole left by former Secretary Mary Kolar, who retired earlier this month.

Advertisement

Politics

Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin to undergo nonsurgical procedure, Deputy Kathleen Hicks will assume control

Published

on

Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin to undergo nonsurgical procedure, Deputy Kathleen Hicks will assume control

Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin had a “scheduled, elective, and minimally invasive” nonsurgical procedure Friday evening at Walter Reed Medical Center as a follow-up for a bladder issue he had earlier this year, the Pentagon said in a release.

The procedure was unrelated to Austin’s cancer diagnosis.  

“During that period [Friday], Deputy Secretary of Defense Kathleen Hicks assumed the functions and duties of the Secretary of Defense and served as the Acting Secretary of Defense. Secretary Austin subsequently resumed his functions and duties as the Secretary of Defense at 8:25 p.m. ET and has returned home,” Pentagon Press Secretary Maj. Gen. Pat Ryder stated in a release Friday night.

The Pentagon said the White House and Congress had been notified, and that Austin would be temporarily unable to perform his duties during the procedure. 

LLOYD AUSTIN GRILLED ABOUT LACK OF TRANSPARENCY

Advertisement

The Pentagon said Friday that Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin will undergo a nonsurgical procedure in the evening. (Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)

Austin was diagnosed with prostate cancer and hospitalized in December and January, undergoing two surgeries, but didn’t tell the White House for several days at the time. It took even longer for the public to find out. 

WHITE HOUSE ESTABLISHES GUIDELINES FOR CABINET NOTIFICATIONS FOLLOWING AUSTIN’S HOSPITALIZATION CONTROVERSY

Kathleen Hicks

Defense Secretary Austin will transfer power to Deputy Secretary of Defense Kathleen Hicks, who will serve as the acting secretary of defense. (Alex Wong/Getty Images)

The situation led to criticism of the Pentagon’s lack of transparency and the White House established a new set of guidelines for when Cabinet heads are unable to do their job and have to delegate authority at the end of January. 

Some Republicans, including former President Trump, had called on Austin to resign.

Advertisement

Trump said on Truth Social in January that the defense secretary, “should be fired immediately for improper professional conduct and dereliction of duty. He has been missing for one week, and nobody, including his boss, Crooked Joe Biden, had a clue as to where he was or might be.” 

The White House said that Austin maintained Biden’s “full trust,” and in February the defense secretary apologized for his lack of transparency. 

President Biden, left, and Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin, right

President Biden said Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin still had his “full trust” after some Republicans called on him to be fired or resign earlier this year.  (Demetrius Freeman/The Washington Post via Getty Images/Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)

“I want to be crystal clear: We did not handle this right,” he said at the time. “And I did not handle this right. I should have told the president about my cancer diagnosis. I should have also told my team and the American public, and I take full responsibility. I apologize to my teammates and to the American people.”

Austin was hospitalized again on Feb. 11 for a bladder issue weeks after he had returned to work following his hospitalizations for cancer treatment.  

The Pentagon added on Friday: “As highlighted in a Feb. 13 DoD news release, the Secretary’s bladder issue is not related to his cancer diagnosis and has had no effect on his excellent cancer prognosis. White House and congressional notifications have occurred.”

Advertisement

An update will be given following the procedure, the statement said.

Continue Reading

Politics

California Sen. Alex Padilla convinces colleagues to vote against bipartisan border bill

Published

on

California Sen. Alex Padilla convinces colleagues to vote against bipartisan border bill

Breaking with his own party’s leadership and the Biden administration, California’s Democratic Sen. Alex Padilla helped lead an effort to defeat the bipartisan border security bill that again failed to advance on Thursday.

In an impassioned Senate floor speech, Padilla criticized the legislation as inadequate and encouraged his fellow senators to “do what’s right for Dreamers, farmworkers and other long-term undocumented members of our communities.”

The remarks were his strongest public rebuke yet of the first major immigration reform proposal in years to make headway in Congress.

Padilla’s vigorous opposition to the compromise is the latest example of his willingness to stake out an aggressive position on principle on an issue critical to his state. He was joined by most Republicans, who voted against the bill because they said it did not do enough to secure the border.

Advertisement

The bill included significant provisions to tighten security but none to help change the status of immigrants in the country illegally.

“So the Senate is voting on this package for a second time, but still no vote on the DREAM Act?” he said. “It’s hard to swallow.”

Senate Majority Leader Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.) said he sought Thursday’s floor vote to make the point that Democrats want solutions on the border issue.

Senators voted 50 to 43 against the bill, which Sens. James Lankford (R-Okla.), Christopher S. Murphy (D-Conn.) and Kyrsten Sinema (I-Ariz.) had negotiated for months starting last fall.

A previous vote in February failed by a tally of 49 to 50, well shy of the 60 votes needed to pass. Lankford and Sinema flipped their votes to oppose their measure this time, as did Republican Sens. Susan Collins of Maine and Mitt Romney of Utah.

Advertisement

Padilla played a role in encouraging his colleagues to go against the plan. An aide said the senator had held private conversations with Democrats in the last few months and had contributed to Sens. Cory Booker of New Jersey and fellow Californian Laphonza Butler flipping their votes and opposing the bill.

In a statement after the vote, Butler echoed Padilla’s language, saying the bill “failed to provide comprehensive solutions for critical communities — DACA recipients, farmworkers, and longterm U.S. residents.”

“While there are elements of this bill I support, including funding for our border communities and efforts to prevent the flow of fentanyl, this measure simply misses the mark,” she wrote.

The Senate bill would toughen screenings for asylum and speed up the process, and let presidents immediately expel migrants if arrivals surpass a certain daily threshold.

Immigration has been a core issue of Padilla’s political identity. In his speech, he recalled returning home to California from college “to find hateful TV ads warning of an ‘invasion’ at our border.” The ads were in support of Proposition 187, the 1994 law that sought to deny medical care, social services and education to immigrants suspected of lacking lawful status.

Advertisement

Padilla said that seeing public officials scapegoat and demonize families like his convinced him to join an ensuing movement to bring more Latinos into positions of power.

That hateful rhetoric is back, Padilla said. He pointed to former President Trump’s statement — echoing those by Adolf Hitler — that immigrants are “poisoning the blood” of the country, and Republicans’ declarations that there is an “invasion” at the southern border.

Padilla said such claims are undeniably part of the context in which the border bill was written.

The senator’s independent streak is significant, coming in a critical election year in which Republicans have seized on the issue of immigration, rallying against Democrats for what they see as soft border policies.

The bipartisan legislation was a fundamental piece of the Biden administration’s shift toward more conservative immigration policies — an effort to help Democrats in vulnerable seats maintain control of the Senate and regain the House.

Advertisement

Padilla’s public opposition to the president on this issue reflects a growing rift among Democrats.

The senator campaigned in 2022 on his desire to reform the immigration system, and personally warned Biden in mid-December not to fold to the GOP.

In his speech Thursday, Padilla pointed out that the immigration proposal was originally meant as a concession to get Republicans to agree to send more aid to Ukraine.

“But guess what, Mr. President? We passed the foreign aid!” he said. “And so I can’t help but ask, what’s this concession for now?”

He also critiqued executive actions on immigration that Biden reportedly plans to announce in the coming weeks, calling them “extreme.” Thursday’s vote was widely seen as a leadup to those measures, which could include a provision that would allow the administration to broadly block migrants from entering the country.

Advertisement

Before the vote, Padilla warned colleagues that history would judge them.

“We should be better than this,” he said.

Continue Reading

Politics

WV Gov. Justice ends jail staffing state of emergency after nearly 2 years

Published

on

WV Gov. Justice ends jail staffing state of emergency after nearly 2 years

West Virginia Gov. Jim Justice said Friday he is ending the state of emergency over staffing in the state Department of Corrections.

The Republican governor called on the state National Guard to help stop worker attrition at the state’s jails and prisons almost two years ago now. Last summer, the vacancy rate was more than 30%.

“We’re just always proud to run to the fire,” Gen. William E. Crane, Adjutant General of the West Virginia National Guard said during a briefing with the press Friday.

WEST VIRGINIA GOV. JIM JUSTICE WINS SENATE GOP PRIMARY

Just over 730 members of the state National Guard worked in 17 of the state’s correctional facilities while the state of emergency was in place, Justice said.

Advertisement

FILE – West Virginia Gov. Jim Justice speaks at an election night watch party at the governor’s mansion in Charleston, W.Va., on Tuesday, May 14, 2024. West Virginia Gov. Jim Justice said Friday he is ending the state of emergency over staffing in the state Department of Corrections. (AP Photo/Chris Jackson, file)

Since January 2024, almost 240 people have graduated from the state’s corrections academy. A total of 38 National Guard members assigned to work in the jails and prisons decided to stay on permanently, Crane said.

Last summer, state lawmakers met in a special session to approve over $21 million for correctional officer pay increases, along with two one-time bonuses of $2,294 for other jail staff who are not correctional officers, like kitchen staff.

Justice previously declared a state of emergency for the state’s jails and prisons in 2017.

Advertisement

Continue Reading
Advertisement

Trending