Archive for August, 2017

23 illegal immigrants, 250 pounds of weed found in semi-trailer in El Paso – Fox News

ICE has arrested the driver of a tractor-trailer and a passenger Wednesday, after they were found with 23 illegal immigrants and 256 pounds of marijuana in the truck.

The arrests were made on Interstate 10 near the city limits by ICEs Homeland Security Investigations unit.

There were 18 adult males and two unaccompanied boys in the trailer; there were also two women and another man in the sleeper cabin. Three of the immigrants were from Guatemala and 20 were from Mexico. The immigrants are in federal custody pending disposition of the immigration cases, according to ICE.

In addition to the immigrants, agents also found 256 pounds of marijuana in the sleeper cabin.

The driver, Comothial Harper, 44 of Bainbridge, Ga., was arrested and charged with transporting illegal aliens for financial gain, investigators said. They added that the passenger, Gerardo Aguilar-Roque, 35, was arrested and charged with possession with intent to distribute marijuana.

Despite there being no ventilation system, the immigrants all appeared to be in good health inside the trailer. According to court documents, agents with the El Paso Border Enforcement Security Task Force found the immigrants in the trailer hiding behind commercial boxes.

The people inside the trailer had a long trip ahead of them, and nothing assures us they would have arrived at their destination alive, said Waldemar Rodriguez, special agent in charge of HSI El Paso in a statement. HSI and its law enforcement partners will continue to work tirelessly to dismantle human smuggling networks operating on the border.

KFOX reported agents found the truck because of a traffic violation and outstanding warrant. Harper was paid anywhere from $3,000 to $5,000 to smuggle the immigrants, according to KFOX.

Ray Bogan is a Fox News multimedia reporter based in El Paso, Texas. Follow him on twitter: @RayBogan

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23 illegal immigrants, 250 pounds of weed found in semi-trailer in El Paso - Fox News

Vice President Mike Pence is heading to California to raise money with Kevin McCarthy – Los Angeles Times

Aug. 18, 2017, 3:04 p.m.

Vice President Mike Pence and House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Bakersfield)are hosting a series of high-dollar fundraisers in California in September in an attempt tobolsterthe states vulnerable GOP members of Congress, according to invitations obtained by The Times.

Pence and McCarthy will headline a reception and dinner in Beverly Hills on Sept. 14. The following day, the pair will raise money at a breakfast in Bakersfield, a luncheon in Newport Beach and a reception and dinner in Sacramento.

Donation levels vary. For the kickoff event at the Beverly Hilton, $100,000 gets a donor the title of co-chair, a cocktail reception, a photo, a private roundtable and dinner for two. The least expensive ticket is $2,700, for entry to the cocktail party.

The fundraisers benefit California Victory 2018,a joint fundraising committee that benefits Pences and McCarthys political action committees, the National Republican Congressional Committee andthe congressional campaign accounts of McCarthy, Darrel Issa of Vista, Dana Rohrabacher of Costa Mesa, Mimi Walters of Irvine, Ed Royce of Fullerton, Steve Knight of Palmdale, David Valadao of Hanford, Jeff Denham of Turlock.

Aside from McCarthy, the other seven members of Congress are being targeted in the midterm elections by Democratsbecause they represent districts won by Hillary Clinton in the 2016 presidential election. Flipping those seats is key to Democrats' effort to retake control of the House of Representatives in 2018.

Pence's visit to California also comes shortly after he vehemently pushed back at rumors that he is laying the groundwork for a 2020 presidential run if President Trump does not seek a second term.

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Vice President Mike Pence is heading to California to raise money with Kevin McCarthy - Los Angeles Times

WATCH: Gavin Newsom schools Bill Maher on why Mike Pence is just as terrifying as Donald Trump – Raw Story

Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom (D-CA) (Photo: Real Time Twitter)

Comedian Bill Maher refused to believe that Vice President Mike Pence is as bad as Donald Trump. During a conversation about the Democratic Party, Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom (D-CA) maintained that the Russia investigation might kick Trump out of the White House but wed be left with Pence, who is just as bad or worse.

Newsom called Russia a loser of an issue, which Maher took issue with. He explained that there are pieces of Russia like the safety of our elections, cyber security and the general understanding that its critical to defend the homeland against foreign adversaries. However, Newsom wants to see Democrats walk and chew gum at the same time.

Absolutely, unequivocally we need to get to the bottom of this, Newsom explained. What I was saying is an important point is if you game this thing out and you get rid of Trump youre left with a problem and thats Mike Pence even if this thing goes nowhere

Maher cut him off to maintain that Pence is not as bad as Trump, but Newsom said that legislatively Pence is awful and could actually get things passed with Congress that are so far right it would take years for us to recover. However, there is a lot to connect Pence with the scandals and it is entirely possible Pence could go down with the ship its just a tougher sell.

But, Bill, heres my bigger point, he continued. We have to have absolute accountability on Russia but the bigger point is that the Democratic Party right now were in trouble. And with all due respect, being in opposition to Donald Trump and focusing on emoluments and focusing on Russia may be important but we also have to have positive alternative agenda. Before the Russian issue we lost close to 1,000 state legislative seats. Were now at the lowest point since 2001. What is the positive Democratic agenda. Whats the bottom-up agenda? You have 196 people suing Trump on emoluments, thats great, but you only have 116 supporting medicare for all. Thats not so good.

This echoes some of what Steve Bannon said to the American Prospect this week, though his point was that focusing on statues while the GOP is dealing with economic issues would win in the GOP. Most Democrats, however, are focusing on Trumps defense of Nazis and white supremacists, not statues. Similarly, as Trumps accomplishments in the last eight months have proven, these detours have prevented his agenda from moving forward. No Republican in Congress will ever be willing to stand with a Nazi-sympathizer in an election year tax cuts or not.

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WATCH: Gavin Newsom school Bill Maher on why by sarahburris

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WATCH: Gavin Newsom schools Bill Maher on why Mike Pence is just as terrifying as Donald Trump - Raw Story

President Trump’s Entire Arts and Humanities Council Just Quit – TIME

Updated: Aug 18, 2017 4:38 PM ET

Another presidential advisory committee appears to be breaking up.

Actor Kal Penn, artist Chuck Close and the entire membership of the President's Committee On the Arts and Humanities have announced their resignation. A letter dated Friday, and signed by 16 of 17 committee members, cited the "false equivalence" of President Donald Trump's comments about last weekend's "Unite the Right" gathering in Charlottesville, Virginia. Trump has blamed "many sides" for the demonstrations that left an anti-racism activist dead.

"Ignoring your hateful rhetoric would have made us complicit in your words and actions," the letter reads. "Supremacy, discrimination, and vitriol are not American values. Your values are not American values. We must be better than this. We are better than this. If this is not clear to you, then we call on you to resign your office, too."

The only member whose name did not appear was Broadway director George C. Wolfe. Representatives for Wolfe at Creative Arts Agency said Friday that he was also resigning and that his name would be added to the letter, which seemed to contain a hidden political message beyond the ones stated openly. The first initials of the letter's six main paragraphs spell out "r-e-s-i-s-t."

Earlier this week, two business advisory councils were disbanded as members left in protest.

The arts and humanities committee was established in 1982 under President Ronald Reagan and, with the first lady serving as honorary chair, works with both government and private agencies in promoting the arts through such programs as Turnaround Arts and Save America's Treasures. Others signing the resignation letter included Pulitzer Prize winning author Jhumpa Lahiri; and Vicki Kennedy, widow of Edward M. Kennedy. All were appointed by President Barack Obama.

The White House did not respond to a request for comment Friday.

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President Trump's Entire Arts and Humanities Council Just Quit - TIME

Donald Trump, the anti-business president – Chicago Tribune

Most business executives fumed and groused for the eight years Barack Obama was in the White House. He was a former community organizer who had never met a payroll, and those in the corporate boardrooms thought he was no friend of free enterprise.

In 2010, New York real estate and media tycoon Mortimer Zuckerman said Obamas demonization of business was discouraging investment and sapping job growth. Gary Shapiro, head of the Consumer Technology Association, called Obama the most anti-business president in my lifetime. Former General Electric Chairman Jack Welch implored the president, Stop it. You cant go industry by industry ...through intimidation, business by business by business.

As ordeals go, though, theirs was notably mild. The stock market soared, corporate profits nearly tripled and the unemployment rate declined to 4.8 percent from 7.8 percent. From the depths of the Great Recession, the economy began what is now the third-longest expansion on record. If making money was your goal, the Obama years were a good time to do it.

Now, instead of a liberal lawyer in the White House, CEOs have one of their own. And theyre finding its not everything they had hoped. The stock market and other economic indicators look about the same as they did before Donald Trump took office. In Obamas final six months, the economy added an average of nearly 181,000 jobs per month. In Trumps first six months, it added 179,000 per month. Gross domestic product growth has even slowed a bit.

More troublesome at the moment is Trumps insistence on defending Confederate monuments and stoking white racial resentments. In recent days, so many CEOs resigned from the presidents two business advisory councils that Trump closed them down. Some of the executives no doubt were genuinely upset at the presidents coddling of bigots and his inability to behave with a dignity befitting his office. Some were fearful of alienating customers who find Trump toxic.

Other business executives are edging away from the president as though he were an erratic panhandler, and for the same reason: Best not to be close to him if he flips out. You dont want to have to stand there in silent mortification, as White House chief of staff John Kelly had to do the other day, while the president makes a fool of himself on national TV. It would not be good for your company or your career.

But even before Trumps Charlottesville debacle, he was not covering himself with capitalist glory. His January travel ban order put him at odds with some 100 tech firms that sued to block it, arguing, It disrupts ongoing business operations. And it threatens companies ability to attract talent, business, and investment to the United States.

His decision to pull out of the Paris climate accord didnt go down well with many big companies, 25 of which had signed a letter urging him to stay in. Even oil giants Exxon Mobil and ConocoPhillips opposed the withdrawal. In abandoning the Trans-Pacific Partnership trade deal, Trump spurned the recommendation of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. His insistence on renegotiating NAFTA has the Big Three automakers worried about their supply chains.

A lot of executives applaud Trumps war on federal regulation. But what else has he done for them? His failures on Obamacare have generated uncertainty among insurance companies and health care providers. His sour relations with Congress make tax reform less plausible every day. Infrastructure is what he was supposed to focus on Tuesday when he appeared before reporters at Trump Tower. But he buried that issue by venting about Charlottesville.

Perhaps worst of all, he has been the arrogant bully that Jack Welch and others accused Obama of being. Trump slammed Boeing over the cost of Air Force One. He blasted Ford over a planned factory in Mexico. He has repeatedly attacked Amazon.com CEO Jeff Bezos, who also owns The Washington Post. He went after Nordstrom for dropping his daughters products. When Mercks Kenneth Frazier quit his manufacturing advisory group Monday, Trump flamed him for ripoff drug prices.

His recurring message is that any executive who doesnt do as Trump wishes can expect retribution from the most powerful man on Earth. Obama was not the friend CEOs think the president of the United States should be. But in Trump, theyre finding out what its like to have a real enemy.

Steve Chapman, a member of the Tribune Editorial Board, blogs at http://www.chicagotribune.com/chapman.Download "Recalculating: Steve Chapman on a New Century" in the free Printers Row app at http://www.printersrowapp.com.schapman@chicagotribune.comTwitter @SteveChapman13

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Donald Trump, the anti-business president - Chicago Tribune