President Biden, in conversations with senior White Home advisers, has made it clear for days that he wouldn’t block Congress’s efforts to overturn D.C.’s new felony justice legislation, in line with folks acquainted with the matter who spoke on the situation of anonymity to explain non-public conversations.
Washington, D.C
Biden told advisers he would let Congress block D.C. crime law
The president’s resolution to signal the invoice, as he singled out a provision that may have lowered the penalties for carjacking, was a shock partially as a result of the White Home a month earlier had issued an announcement opposing Congress’s efforts to dam it. Such a transfer, the assertion mentioned, was an instance “of how the District of Columbia continues to be denied true self-governance and why it deserves statehood.”
White Home officers declined to say Friday whether or not Biden had identified about that assertion earlier than it went out.
For activists who’ve been pushing adjustments to the nation’s felony justice system, Biden’s motion prompt a dynamic they view as all too acquainted — his political occasion’s sensitivity to claims that Democrats are tender on crime.
“Worry will get in the way in which with regards to racial justice,” mentioned Rashad Robinson, president of the racial justice group Colour of Change. “And this concept that if we simply again off that these folks whose sole objective is to assault (Democrats) are usually not going to assault is preposterous.”
Robinson, saying his group has expressed its disappointment to White Home staffers, mentioned whereas he by no means anticipated Biden’s views to align with activists’, he thought it was out of line for Biden to intervene with D.C.’s autonomy.
Biden instructed legislators Thursday that he would help the trouble to dam D.C.’s revision of sentencing legal guidelines, which has already handed the Home, ought to it win approval within the Senate as properly. His remarks may affect extra Democratic senators to affix Republicans in reversing the town’s elected leaders, the primary time Congress will efficiently block a D.C. invoice in additional than three a long time.
“I help D.C. Statehood and home-rule — however I don’t help a few of the adjustments D.C. Council put ahead over the Mayor’s objections — corresponding to reducing penalties for carjackings,” Biden tweeted Thursday. “If the Senate votes to overturn what D.C. Council did — I’ll signal it.”
On Friday, the D.C. Council fired again in a tweet of its personal: “This ‘however’ is like saying ‘Save the whales!’ then consuming one.”
The transfer is the newest instance of Biden’s efforts to emphasize to would-be voters that Democrats may be robust on criminals.
Biden received election amid rising help for reforming a felony justice system seen by a rising variety of People as tilted in opposition to folks of shade. The household of George Floyd, who was killed when a police officer knelt on his neck, spoke on the Democratic Nationwide Conference. His operating mate, former senator Kamala D. Harris, as soon as co-sponsored a police reform invoice that may have enacted nationwide adjustments. And Biden himself as soon as knelt with protesters.
However within the two years since he took workplace, activists say, progress has been blunted by Democratic fears that Republicans will paint them as incapable of conserving voters protected. Republicans sought to model Democrats because the occasion of “defund the police,” a slogan shouted by activists that reached its zenith throughout nationwide protests in the summertime after Floyd was killed.
Former president Donald Trump and different Republicans have mentioned that cities led by Democrats are coddling criminals, making them hotbeds of lawlessness. Within the State of the Union handle final yr, Biden tried to emphatically distance his occasion from “defund the police.”
“We must always all agree the reply is to not defund the police; it’s to fund the police,” Biden mentioned, earlier than going off his ready remarks to emphasise the purpose. “Fund them. Fund them.”
White Home press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre confronted a second day of questioning Friday dominated by Biden’s announcement. Her responses targeted on what the administration sees as troubling facets of the D.C. Council’s transfer, together with decreasing the penalties for homicide, armed residence invasion and carjacking, in addition to illegal gun possession and a few sexual assaults.
“The president has been very clear we have to do extra to scale back crime, to make communities safer and to avoid wasting lives,” Jean-Pierre mentioned.
Throughout the nation there are indicators that crime considerations proceed to affect the habits of voters — and politicians.
Lightfoot, Chicago’s Democratic mayor, did not advance Tuesday to a runoff within the metropolis’s mayoral major, changing into the town’s first incumbent to lose reelection in 4 a long time. Crime was a serious difficulty within the race, and opponents pilloried Lightfoot for its dramatic rise, together with practically 90 killings within the metropolis with 2023 barely into its second month.
And Fla. Gov. Ron DeSantis, extensively anticipated to hunt the 2024 GOP nomination, has been touring to Democratic-leaning states and chatting with legislation enforcement teams.
“You apprehend a felony, carry them in after which they only launch them,” DeSantis instructed a bunch of legislation enforcement officers in Staten Island on Presidents’ Day, a part of a swing via New York, Pennsylvania and Illinois. “So that you’ve acquired to danger your life once more two weeks later to arrest the identical man yet again. How does that make any sense?”
DeSantis mentioned the states he visited had sought to scale back police budgets and put “woke ideology forward of your security as New Yorkers or folks from Illinois.”
Democrats confronted an identical problem upfront of final yr’s midterms. Though many Republican assaults targeted on the economic system, GOP candidates additionally sought to make use of crime to melt Democratic help.
Robinson praised Biden’s efforts to enact police and felony justice reform, regardless of blended outcomes. However when Democrats play protection on the problem, he mentioned, it finally does extra hurt to communities already hammered by inequities.
“Within the midst of all of the political rhetoric of whether or not somebody’s going to get assault advertisements, you’ve methods which are merely not designed to supply public security,” Robinson mentioned. “You could have Black folks and Black communities which are constantly put in hurt’s means.”
As a result of Washington, D.C., just isn’t a state, Congress opinions all laws handed by its metropolis council and has authority over its price range. That has lengthy engulfed D.C. in nationwide political debates, with Congress imposing restrictions on the way it spends its native funds with regards to issues corresponding to abortion or leisure marijuana.
However regardless of current progress towards D.C. statehood, Democrats have been traditionally hesitant to push for “residence rule” when the political stakes are excessive.
Biden this week sought to separate his help for D.C. statehood from his ideas on the felony code revisions, however that got here as little comfort to native statehood advocates and metropolis officers. The president’s transfer additionally rankled members of Congress who mentioned it was an about-face from the assertion of administration coverage the White Home made a month in the past.
Biden has sought to steadiness his help for overhauling policing with a powerful backing for legislation enforcement, together with advocating for giving police departments extra funding and sources. That has resulted in clashes with different Democrats lately as many within the occasion have referred to as for extra aggressive efforts to reform policing. However Biden made clear to his prime aides that the adjustments to the D.C. felony code went too far, the folks acquainted with the matter mentioned.
Jean-Pierre mentioned the White Home assertion from a month in the past and Biden’s place this week weren’t in battle, since Biden had by no means explicitly issued a veto risk.
“There was by no means a change of coronary heart,” Jean-Pierre mentioned. “The (earlier assertion), the way in which that it’s laid out, speaks to the president supporting D.C. statehood. That’s the place we have been on the time, and the place the president has been for the previous couple of a long time.” On the similar time, she mentioned, “the president has been very clear we have to do extra to scale back crimes, to make communities safer.”
However Eleanor Holmes Norton, D.C.’s nonvoting delegate to the Home of Representatives, mentioned she was shocked by Biden’s assertion and would search to alter his opinion.
“I’ll proceed to do every thing inside my energy to steer the president that signing or failing to veto the decision would empower the paternalistic, anti-democratic Republican opposition to the precept of native management over native affairs,” Holmes Norton mentioned in an announcement.
However different Democratic legislators had assorted responses, reflecting each help for Washington’s proper to manipulate itself and worries that Republicans may acquire the higher hand within the crime narrative.
Sen. Ben Cardin (D-Md.) mentioned he was shocked by Biden’s transfer, which he noticed as a violation of the town’s autonomy. However Sen. Joe Manchin III (D-W.Va.), a reasonable whom Democrats try to steer to hunt one other time period in his deep pink state, mentioned he started clapping with pleasure on the information.
Rep. Steven Horsford (D-Nev.), chairman of the Congressional Black Caucus, careworn the hazard “of taking away native decision-making” and echoed Norton in saying the CBC would foyer senators in opposition to overruling the District.
Many Home Democrats have been significantly aggravated that the White Home had not instructed them that Biden would help the GOP invoice, leaving them within the place of voting in opposition to a invoice that their very own president is predicted to signal. Greater than 100 Democrats voted in opposition to the Republican decision of disapproval after the Home Democratic management urged them to take action.
Their rebukes of the White Home on Friday targeted on the precept of self-rule for the District relatively than the deserves of sentences for specific crimes.
“That is easy: The District of Columbia have to be allowed to manipulate itself,” Congressional Progressive Caucus Chair Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.) mentioned in an announcement that didn’t point out crime.
Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) expressed an identical sentiment. “Loads of locations go legal guidelines the President might disagree with,” she tweeted. “He ought to respect the folks’s gov of DC simply as he does elsewhere.”
Marianna Sotomayor contributed to this report.
Washington, D.C
Evansville native in Washington D.C. for Trump’s inauguration
EVANSVILLE, Ind. (WFIE) – With Inauguration Day just around the corner, we spoke to an Evansville native who’s in Washington D.C. hoping to attend the event.
Evansville native Mike Boatman is a member of the Front Row Joes, a group that follows Donald Trump across the country. He arrived in Washington D.C. Friday morning.
He says he picked up his Inauguration tickets and was told they may not be valid.
Boatman says he was sad to hear the news that the inauguration would be moved inside the capitol and closed to the public.
He says he’s keeping a positive attitude about the sudden change in plans and says he’s happy to keep the ticket as a souvenir.
Boatman says he’ll now watch the inauguration from a jumbotron at capitol one arena and trying to be understanding of the situation.
“I’m disappointed because it’s my first one, but I mean, if it’s for safety reasons because of the cold or maybe because of security or threats, I don’t know, but I’m disappointed, but we need to do the right thing,” said Boatman.
Boatman says he can see a lot of fencing and barriers set up around the capitol building, although he says he’s not feeling concerned about security or his safety.
He’s looking forward now to going to Trump’s victory rally on Sunday and he predicts it’ll be the biggest one yet.
Copyright 2025 WFIE. All rights reserved.
Washington, D.C
Inauguration Day Weather Likely To Be Coldest Since 1985 | Weather.com
- The presidential inauguration ceremony will take place on what could be the coldest inauguration day since 1985.
- The forecast high for Washington, D.C., is in the upper teens to low 20s.
- It is likely that Donald Trump will be inaugurated indoors due to the cold.
- The high on Inauguration Day has only been below freezing once since 1985, in 2009.
The 2025 United States Presidential Inauguration is now more likely to be moved indoors due to the coldest weather for an inauguration in 40 years for Washington, D.C., with a high in the upper teens to low 20s.
This will be the first inauguration to be held indoors in 40 years. The record for the coldest January inauguration is currently held by the second inauguration of Ronald Reagan in 1985, when the temperature at noon for the swearing-in ceremony was only 7 degrees, according to the National Weather Service.
The weather for this year’s inauguration is forecast to somewhat mimic that of 1985, which took place on Jan. 21. The high temperature that day was 17 degrees, with sunny skies and afternoon wind chills in the minus 10 to minus 20-degree range. The parade was ultimately canceled, and the swearing-in ceremony had to be held indoors.
The Rotunda is prepared as the inclement weather alternative for each inauguration in the event of inclement weather, according to the Associated Press.
The 2025 Inauguration will be similarly sunny, with wind chills in the lower teens or single digits and winds gusting up to 35 mph in the afternoon. During the ceremony, the temperature will hover in the lower 20s.
Alternate plans are required for the more roughly 250,000 guests ticketed to view the inauguration from around the Capitol grounds and the tens of thousands more expected to be in general admission areas or to line the inaugural parade route from the Capitol to the White House.
Trump said some supporters would be able to watch the ceremony from Washington’s Capital One area on Monday, a day after he plans to hold a rally there. He said he would visit the arena after his swearing-in.
The current forecast high for Inauguration Day is only a couple of degrees above the current record for coldest afternoon high on Jan. 20, though it would break the record for the coldest Inauguration to take place on that date.
Only one other year had a sub-freezing high on inauguration day: Barack Obama’s first inauguration in 2009.
The warmest January Inauguration Day took place in 1981 for Ronald Reagan’s first inauguration, meaning Reagan’s two inaugurations hold the record for the warmest and coldest January Inauguration.
Warmer inaugurations have happened though: Before the 20th Amendment was enacted, Inauguration Day traditionally took place on March 4, which has an average high of 50.2 degrees. Jan. 20 has a cooler average high of 42.9 degrees.
The all-time record high for a U.S. presidential inauguration was set in August 1974 with the Inauguration of Gerald Ford with a high of 83 degrees, though that was a non-traditional inauguration date prompted by the resignation of Richard Nixon.
Here’s a look at some other notable inauguration day weather.
Snowiest Inauguration: William Taft, 1909
On the day of William H. Taft’s 1909 inauguration, nearly 10 inches of snow fell, setting the record for inauguration day. The snow and wind began the day before, with strong winds toppling trees and telephone poles. Trains were stalled and city streets clogged. All activity was brought to a standstill. Sanitation workers shoveled sand and snow through half the night. It took 6,000 men and 500 wagons to clear 58,000 tons of snow and slush from the parade route.
Fun fact: Historically speaking, there is approximately a 30% chance of snow on the ground in Washington, D.C., from a previous system for the date Jan. 20.
Worst Inauguration Day Travel: JFK, 1961
On the eve of John F. Kennedy’s inauguration in 1961, 8 inches of snow fell causing the most crippling traffic jam of its time. Hundreds of cars were stranded and abandoned. The president-elect had to cancel dinner plans and, in a struggle to keep other commitments, is reported to have had only 4 hours of sleep. Former President Herbert Hoover was unable to fly into Washington National Airport because of the weather and missed the swearing-in ceremony. By sunrise, the snowfall had ended and the skies cleared but the day remained bitterly cold.
An army of men worked all night to clear Pennsylvania Avenue, and despite the cold, a large crowd turned out for the swearing-in ceremony and inaugural parade. At noon, the temperature was only 22 degrees with the wind blowing from the northwest at 19 mph making it feel like the temperature was just 7 degrees.
Fatal Inaugurations: William Henry Harrison, 1841, and Franklin Pierce, 1853
The weather has caused two inaugurations to have fatal implications, and the most historically significant fatality was that of William Henry Harrison in 1841. Harrison decided to brave the elements and deliver the longest inauguration speech ever, an oration lasting an hour, and 40 minutes.
It was a cloudy, cold and blustery day, and the National Weather Service has estimated the temperature at noon to be approximately 48 degrees.
Harrison, who wore neither hat nor overcoat, also rode a horse to and from the Capitol ceremony. He subsequently caught a cold that developed into pneumonia. Harrison died a month later.
The second inauguration with a fatal effect was that of Franklin Pierce in 1853. The morning of the inauguration, there was heavy snow that continued until about half an hour before the ceremony. Skies looked to be brightening by noon, but the snow resumed shortly after Pierce took the oath of office.
The heavy snow dispersed much of the crowd and ruined plans for the parade. Abigail Fillmore, first lady to the outgoing President Millard Fillmore, sat on the cold, wet, exposed platform during Pierce’s swearing-in ceremony. She caught a cold that developed into pneumonia and died at the end of the month.
Rainiest Inauguration: Franklin D. Roosevelt, 1937
The first inauguration to be held on Jan. 20 – Franklin D. Roosevelt’s second inauguration in 1937 – also set the record for the heaviest rain on inauguration day. The day was cold and rainy, with sleet and freezing rain in the morning. Between 11 a.m. and 1 p.m., a period that includes the swearing-in ceremony, nearly three-quarters of an inch of rain fell.
Roosevelt insisted on riding back to the White House in an open car with half an inch of water on the floor. Total rainfall for the day was 1.77 inches, which remains the rainfall record for Jan. 20.
First Outdoor Oath: James Monroe, 1817
The first seven inauguration ceremonies from 1789 to 1813 were conducted indoors, making James Monroe’s 1817 inauguration the first that was held outdoors in the weather. Luckily, it was warm and sunny that day, with an estimated temperature at noon of 50 degrees.
Sara Tonks is a content meteorologist with weather.com and has a bachelor’s and a master’s degree from Georgia Tech in Earth and Atmospheric Sciences along with a master’s degree from Unity Environmental University in Marine Science.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Washington, D.C
The Southern Group launches federal presence with TSG Advocates in Washington, D.C.
A new chapter begins as The Southern Group takes its trusted advocacy model to the heart of the nation’s capital and launches TSG Advocates, a new federal lobbying practice.
With a deep-rooted presence across the Southeast, The Southern Group is now making its mark in Washington, D.C. The firm’s latest expansion, led by seasoned political experts Daniel Diaz-Balart and Chase Kroll, brings a dedicated federal lobbying arm. TSG Advocates combines its subject-matter expertise with a broad national network to offer a unique, relationship-driven approach to federal advocacy.
This move marks the next step in a 25-year journey for The Southern Group, as it transitions from its Florida roots to becoming a national influence network.
Diaz-Balart and Kroll are two distinguished government-relations professionals with a wealth of experience spanning foreign affairs, political strategy and policy advocacy. Their combined expertise in industries like defense, energy, health care, tax and financial services positions TSG Advocates to stand out as a trusted advocate for businesses navigating the complex federal landscape.
“Businesses will need strong representation in D.C. to take advantage of unprecedented opportunities in the coming years,” said Diaz-Balart, founding member of TSG Advocates. “With TSG Advocates’ connections in Florida and on the ground in Washington, D.C., I can’t think of a firm better positioned to help clients capture those opportunities.”
TSG Advocates’ launch is part of The Southern Group’s strategy to broaden its footprint at the federal level. With many prominent Florida leaders stepping into key roles in the new administration, the firm is poised to leverage its robust network and longstanding relationships in Florida to influence policy at the national stage.
“We’re building our federal practice with an eye on success over the next century, not just the next administration,” said TSG Senior Managing Partner for Growth, Rachel Cone. “Having well-connected leaders like Daniel and Chase at the helm in D.C. ensures we’re positioned to deliver high-level results for our clients over the long-term.”
Diaz-Balart’s career has spanned foreign policy, defense contracting, and governmental affairs, all while leading his own legal practice in south Florida. With years of experience advocating for foreign governments like Taiwan and the Dominican Republic, Daniel has played a critical role in policy strategy across multiple sectors, including space exploration, defense, and more.
“Daniel is an effective and knowledgeable advocate who couples his approach with an infectious optimism,” said U.S. Rep. Carlos Giménez of Florida. “He stands out for his professionalism and is a true pleasure to work with.”
Kroll, an accomplished political strategist with more than 14 years of experience in federal policy and international relations, also joins TSG Advocates. With a background in digital media, communications and traditional lobbying, Kroll’s expertise lies in crafting effective, multifaceted campaigns that combine strategic political insight with innovative outreach tactics.
“Chase is an exceptional advocate and strategist, bridging the gap between policy goals and legislative realities,” said Norm Coleman, former U.S. Senator from Minnesota, Chair of the Congressional Leadership Fund Super PAC, and Senior Counsel at Hogan Lovells. “Chase’s knowledge of Washington, his knack for building bipartisan relationships, and his commitment to delivering client results make him a tremendous asset to TSG Advocates.”
His lobbying experience on behalf of defense contractors, municipal clients, and foreign governments — including the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia — further strengthens TSG Advocates’ capabilities.
TSG Advocates will continue to grow in the coming months, adding to the firm’s federal influence. The firm plans to hire additional subject-matter experts in emerging industries such as artificial intelligence and cryptocurrency.
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