Washington
The Issue Is: From Long Beach to Washington, D.C.
This week on The Concern Is, a dialog with Congressman-Elect Robert Garcia.
The California Democrat, who spent the final eight years as Mayor of Lengthy Seashore, is on his strategy to the Home of Representatives, the place he was just lately elected by his friends as freshman class president.
Garcia joins Elex Michaelson to debate his expertise at freshman orientation, his use of social media to troll Republicans, immigration reform, crypto regulation, and his place as the primary openly-gay immigrant in Congress.
Subsequent, Michaelson travels to the Reagan Presidential Library for the annual Reagan Nationwide Protection Discussion board, an annual occasion that “brings collectively leaders from throughout the political spectrum and key stakeholders within the protection neighborhood… to debate and debate how the U.S. can lead the world in an period of more and more advanced challenges and alternatives.”
On the discussion board, Michaelson spoke with Congressmen Mike Garcia (R-CA), Ken Calvert (R-CA), and Jimmy Panetta (D-CA), former U.S. Protection Secretaries Mark Esper and Leon Panetta, FOX Information anchor Bret Baier, and extra.
THE ISSUE IS: BEING ELECTED FRESHMAN CLASS PRESIDENT AT CONGRESSIONAL ORIENTATION
GARCIA’S CENTRAL TAKE: “We’ve a fantastic class, there’s 34 Democrats, clearly an enormous, massive class of Democrats and Republicans, and I am honored to signify them. It is a fantastic group of individuals, academics, attorneys, mechanics, a illustration of the nation, and so I will be a consultant to the management. We’ve new management coming in, after all, Chief Hakeem Jeffries, for the Democrats. And so, it is an honor to be chosen, and I am simply going to work on daily basis to make sure that all of them get reelected…
“You realize, I am an immigrant child, I grew up with not quite a bit, and so to have the ability to develop into a U.S. citizen, to undergo this course of, get elected Mayor of my neighborhood after which get elected to Congress, is a large expertise, however one I believe that solely can occur right here on this nation…”
THE ISSUE IS: TROLLING REPUBLICANS VIA TWITTER
GARCIA’S CENTRAL TAKE: “I am homosexual and so I wish to have enjoyable, and I inform folks, like, you recognize, I do all my very own social media and I wish to have enjoyable and have a great time – it is a part of my persona. I believe it is also necessary to talk to a brand new era and people discuss, you recognize, and converse by means of social media, by means of Twitter, by means of different avenues, and so I do it myself, I plan to proceed doing it myself, and I plan to proceed to troll Marjorie Taylor Greene as absolute best… Whereas it is mild hearted and humorous, you recognize, I do take significantly that she desires to take rollback rights for homosexual folks and LGBTQ+ folks, in order that’s one thing that I take very significantly…”
THE ISSUE IS: IMMIGRATION REFORM
GARCIA’S CENTRAL TAKE: “Actually I help getting one thing performed on this lame duck session of Congress that may be excellent, however on the finish of the day, there’s obtained to be a broader dialog round immigration. There’s 10 to 11 million folks right here on this nation that haven’t any pathway to citizenship, and I believe we have got to a minimum of begin by discovering a pathway to those who there is a consensus round. You consider folks which are been in faculty, are Dreamers, of us which have served within the navy, that actually served this nation in uniform, that do not have a pathway to citizenship? I imply, these are I believe are areas that we are able to all come to settlement on and may give attention to first. Visitor employee applications, we’re listening to from corporations, a lot of whom help Republicans, which are saying we’d like extra staff inside visitor employee applications, whether or not it is in agriculture or whether or not it is in development. And so I believe these are areas that we should always attempt to discover settlement on and transfer ahead first…”
THE ISSUE IS: CRYPTO REGULATION AND SAM BANKMAN-FRIED
GARCIA’S CENTRAL TAKE: “Simply to be clear, I imply, I’ve by no means met [Sam Bankman-Fried], so I do not know him. He clearly donated to campaigns throughout the nation and people have been impartial expenditure campaigns, so that cash that he gave, whether or not it was to me or different candidates was by means of this darkish cash system that we have now on this nation the place any particular person individual can donate to any candidate. I imagine in public financing. I believe these legal guidelines ought to change. I’ve no management over what he or another individual out on this nation goes to spend cash on in these campaigns. I believe it is outrageous that one individual can spend a lot cash, and so I help reform. I do not know him, however I do assume the difficulty in entrance of us is critical. I haven’t got crypto. I do not know a lot about crypto, to be sincere, however I stay up for reviewing this situation in Congress…”
THE ISSUE IS: GARCIA’S LONG BEACH LEGACY
GARCIA’S CENTRAL TAKE: “I inform folks on a regular basis that Lengthy Seashore is a large metropolis. I believe folks do not understand that, from a inhabitants perspective, it is smaller than Atlanta, Georgia. It is obtained extra folks than Pittsburgh, Miami, New Orleans. In another state, this might be like the most important metropolis. Lengthy seashore is gigantic, significantly right here in southern California. So it has been an honor to serve, you recognize, as mayor. I believe after I look again, I believe the most important emergency we had was the pandemic. We misplaced 1,300 folks, the only largest emergency that we had as a metropolis was the pandemic, and so I am actually pleased with the neighborhood’s response round that. But additionally, you recognize, we have spent extra now on infrastructure and fixing streets than at any time within the final 50, 60 years, by means of measures we put in entrance of voters, we fastened faculties, we have modernized our local weather work, we have raised wages – in Lengthy Seashore, we really raised the minimal wage earlier than the state did… I am pleased with that work. I believe we have had a progressive file within the metropolis, however I additionally assume that we have all the time centered folks and tried to uplift folks’s proper. So I am pleased with the eight years…”
The Concern Is: with Elex Michaelson is California’s solely statewide political present. For showtimes and extra info, go to TheIssueIsShow.com.
Washington
Veteran faces extradition to Philippines over unfounded allegations, lawyer says
A 66-year-old American citizen has been in the DC jail for almost 10 months awaiting extradition to the Philippines for a crime her attorneys say there’s no evidence she committed.
Air Force veteran Grace Lourenco earned commendations for her service. In 1981, she was part of the flight crew aboard the Air Force plane that returned 53 U.S. diplomats and citizens who had been held hostage in Iran, her family said – a moment seen around the world.
She went on to earn a business degree, get married and have a daughter.
Court filings from a 2023 divorce proceeding between Lourenco and her husband, Hans Brunner, show a D.C. judge believed her statements that she had suffered physical abuse in the marriage.
The decree of divorce also contains the judge’s assessment of the alleged crime for which Lourenco was arrested at her Georgetown home earlier this year. It describes an incident in October 2018 at a home the couple owned in the Philippines, where Brunner worked.
“After lunch, on the ride back to their Manila home, Mr. Brunner told Ms. Lourenco he wanted to have an open relationship with [a German woman he’d met] and that he wanted to open a trust fund for her.”
“[Lourenco] remembers waking up in a hospital a couple days later,” said her attorney, William Zapf. “She had been unconscious, and it is believed that she had taken some medication that made her unconscious.”
The judge’s conclusions went on to say: “Later … while standing on the balcony, Mr. Brunner was attacked from behind. The perpetrator hit Mr. Brunner on the back of the head with a sharp, hard weapon. He did not see who attacked him.
“He was in a coma for two days.
“He asserts Ms. Lourenco was the perpetrator. Not only did Mr. Brunner fail to present evidence that Ms. Lourenco was the perpetrator, but he also failed to present evidence that (she) had wanted to kill him to get his pension.”
The judge concluded: “Both parties have committed intrafamily offenses against the other, but Mr. Brunner committed more offenses against Ms. Lourenco, and the Court finds (him) to have been the primary aggressor.”
Lourenco’s attorneys say her future is in the hands of the U.S. State Department.
“In cases like this where there are very serious humanitarian concerns about our client, Grace, this is the type of case where the Secretary of State can say no and should say no,” Zapf said.
Several people she served with in the Air Force have written letters supporting Lourenco.
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Washington
GOP Controlling Washington Means It’s Christmas for Lobbyists | Opinion
About 13,000 registered lobbyists plied their trade in Washington last year, at a total cost of more than $4.2 billion. Most represent industry groups ranging from the Chamber of Commerce to Big Pharma to Big Tech to oil, gas, and chemical producers. This holiday season, they have a golden opportunity to score big gifts for their clients and themselves through an obscure law only known to Washington insiders.
The Congressional Review Act allows a new lineup in the House, Senate, and Oval Office to repeal regulations issued during the last few months of the previous presidential administration with a simple majority vote (no filibuster) and a maximum of ten hours of floor debate (often much less). Historically, it has only really worked when Republicans take over the presidency, the House, and the Senate, and decide to destroy the work of a Democratic administration. The last time Donald Trump was president, Republican lawmakers eliminated 15 rules with little fuss and not much publicity.
The process is designed to allow Republican lawmakers, with almost no effort, to eliminate protections that took years to write. Prominent law firms and consultants are already working to sell lobbying campaigns to their clients. The law only applies to rules issued during the final 60 days that Congress is in session, and we don’t know when the House and Senate will adjourn. But this uncertainty is not stopping lobbyists from drumming up lucrative work.
This year’s list of rules to kill is chilling, targeting everything from pay increases for teachers at Head Start to limits on teenage smoking to drinking water purification. President-elect Donald Trump’s highly successful efforts to dominate the national news has so far masked these potentially destructive lobbying efforts.
Head Start provides early education for children from low-income families and focuses on their cognitive, social, and emotional development. Research shows that the program has produced great benefits for the children who are enrolled, preparing them for primary school where they would otherwise flounder. The program costs are modest, with funding of $12 billion last year.
The rule under attack was issued in August and would raise the salaries of Head Start teachers and improve their working conditions. Like Trump’s threatened Medicaid cuts, cancelling this rule would hurt people who need government help the most. Notably, the complete elimination of Head Start was among the radical proposals contained in the far-right Project 2025. Unknown industry players support this radical change to curry favor with the incoming administration.
Next up in the fight to shrink government is the age limit on buying cigarettes and smokeless tobacco. The targeted rule raises the age from 18 to 21. The Food and Drug Administration’s apparent sin here was following congressional instructions set out in a 2019 law.
If this rule experiences a rapid death, many members may not realize the significance of reversing a decision they made a mere five years ago. Because manufacturers deliberately add addictive nicotine to cigarettes, people who start smoking in adolescence most often do not quit. Smoking during childhood causes severe health problems, including the onset of respiratory disease, decreased physical fitness, and problems with lung growth.
Other regulations under scrutiny include an Environmental Protection Agency rule that would require the replacement of an estimated 9.2 million lead water pipes serving older housing and distribution systems across the country. The CDC advises that no safe level of lead is known for children under six, who can suffer brain and kidney damage when exposed to even minute amounts of lead.
Methane is released into the air from a variety of sources including facilities that produce oil and natural gas. It is 28 times more potent than carbon dioxide in causing climate change and causes one-third of the warming produced by human emissions of greenhouse gases. A rule being targeted by oil and gas producers would impose a fee for excessive emissions, as required by the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act. In our hearts, most Americans have a sense that something is very wrong with the climate, as we watch drought, floods, and wildfires overcome communities across the country. If this rule is swept from the books and we take no further action to reduce emissions, conditions will grow intolerable.
Of course, one response to this prediction of doom and gloom is that when a majority of Americans become disgusted enough, they’ll elect different politicians who will resurrect the rules. But the Congressional Review Act has a wrinkle that is even more destructive than sweeping the rules into the garbage with no debate. It is commonly referred to inside the Washington Beltway as “salting the earth.”
Once a rule is killed, an agency is forever barred from writing a new rule that is “in substantially the same form” as the vetoed rule. The first rule killed under the act was an effort under the Clinton administration to prevent ergonomic injuries in a variety of jobs, from meatpacking to manufacturing to health care. The Bureau of Labor Statistics found that 30 percent of injuries that caused employees to miss work were ergonomic injuries.
Ever since, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration has been too intimidated to try regulating this serious harm. Today we run the risk of other agencies being similarly deterred from making common-sense rules. Head Start may not get support for its teachers and other staff; teen smoking may increase; lead may remain in drinking water; and climate change may reach a breaking point unless and until Congress comes to its senses.
Rena Steinzor is professor emerita at the University of Maryland Carey Law School. James Goodwin is the policy director at the Center for Progressive Reform.
The views expressed in this article are the writers’ own.
Washington
Washington Fire Department adds food drive to annual Santa parade
WASHINGTON (25News Now) – A new tradition was born in the Town of Washington Thursday night, on top of one that’s already been going for 11 years.
The city’s fire department used its annual Santa parade as an opportunity to collect food donations for ‘Washington Helps Its People,’ more commonly known as WHIP.
Fire Captain Jakob Spitzer said the department started its annual Santa parade in 2013 after the tornado tore through town. It was a way to reconnect with neighbors after the tragedy.
As the number of spectators grows each year, the acts of service have started to follow.
“It’s a perfect opportunity for families to come together, to donate, and to give during this Christmas season,” Spitzer said.
WHIP hosts a food pantry twice a month, serving nearly 200 families. However, one volunteer, Sharla Davis, says the number of people in need has recently grown, making community involvement more important.
“Our demand is greater, so our community is really just stepping up. This is a great way that people can just donate from right out of their house; they don’t have to drive the donation to us, they don’t have to send us a check, they can just walk out their door, say hi to Santa, and be able to put food on the truck,” said Davis.
This year marks the first time the firefighters have added the WHIP Collection to the tradition, and they said they’ll continue it from here on out.
During Thursday’s 11-mile parade route, WHIP leaders estimate people donated over 3,000 pounds of food, including canned vegetables, cereal, and crackers.
People interested in donating but missed the collection or the fire trucks didn’t drive down their street can drop off nonperishable items at either the fire department or WHIP off Peoria Street.
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