Archive for March, 2022

On Eve of Confirmation Hearings, G.O.P. Steps Up Attacks on Jackson – The New York Times

WASHINGTON Republicans are intensifying their attacks on Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson after weeks of publicly reserving judgment on President Bidens Supreme Court nominee, ahead of historic hearings on the first Black woman to be put forward as a justice.

Republican leaders, wary of engaging in a potentially racially charged spectacle that could prompt a political backlash, have promised a more dignified review of the latest Supreme Court candidate, after a series of bitter clashes over the court. But in recent days, with the approach of the Senate Judiciary Committees hearings on her nomination that begin on Monday, their tone has shifted.

Last week, Senator Josh Hawley, a Missouri Republican who sits on the panel and will question Judge Jackson, claimed his review of her judicial record had determined that she had been lenient in sentencing some sex offenders and those convicted of possessing child pornography. He also suggested that, as a member of the United States Sentencing Commission, she worked to reduce penalties for those caught with child pornography. A detailed background paper prepared for the Judiciary Committee made a similar case.

At the same time, Senator Mitch McConnell, Republican of Kentucky and the minority leader, has doubled down on his suggestion that Judge Jacksons experience as a public defender could influence her view of the law and lead her to favor criminal defendants.

Her supporters look at her rsum and deduce a special empathy for criminals, Mr. McConnell said in a lengthy floor speech in which he argued that her work on behalf of the accused was a blot on her record. I guess that means that government prosecutors and innocent crime victims start each trial at a disadvantage.

The increasingly hostile critiques of Judge Jackson suggest that her confirmation hearings might not be the sober, drama-free proceeding that many had anticipated when she was nominated to replace Justice Stephen G. Breyer, who has announced he will retire at the end of the courts current term this summer.

Her confirmation would not change the ideological composition of the court, which is tilted 6-3 toward conservatives. And Judge Jackson has previously been confirmed three times by the Senate for two judgeships and a spot on the sentencing commission. Nothing surfaced on those occasions to impede her approval. Republicans concede she has the legal experience and educational qualifications for the lifetime position.

Mr. Hawley, who is regarded as a potential Republican presidential contender and has not voted for a single Biden administration judicial nominee, was never considered a likely supporter of Judge Jackson. Still, his detailed takedown of her record on sex crimes has generated concern among Democrats, who worry it could deter some Republicans who are considering supporting her, or even rattle some senators in their own party, all of whom will likely be needed to win confirmation.

The White House and Senate Democrats have pushed back forcefully, accusing Mr. Hawley of intentionally disseminating misleading information and taking material out of context to paint a distorted picture of Judge Jacksons record.

Attempts to smear or discredit her history and her work are not borne out in facts, said Jen Psaki, the White House press secretary.

Administration and Senate officials say that Judge Jacksons sentences in pornography cases were at or above recommendations from probation officials and comparable to what other federal judges were handing down under guidelines that were considered badly outdated. They also point to her strong support from law enforcement groups and prominent police officials.

Those individuals would be surprised to learn that they are supposedly soft on crime, said Andrew Bates, a White House spokesman who has been working on the confirmation. He called Mr. Hawleys allegations toxic and weakly presented misinformation that relies on taking cherry-picked elements of her record out of context and it buckles under the lightest scrutiny.

As for the criticism of the sentencing commission, the White House and Senate Democrats note that the sentencing recommendations it made during Judge Jacksons tenure were approved unanimously by the bipartisan panel, with members appointed by presidents of both parties and ultimately accepted by Congress.

One Republican-appointed member of the panel who served with Judge Jackson, Judge William H. Pryor Jr., the chief judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit, confirmed that the recommendations of the commission were almost uniformly supported by all its members as the panel sought to eliminate disparities and improve sentencing.

We worked by consensus, and that is the tradition of the sentencing commission,, he said in an interview. Virtually all of our votes were unanimous and data-driven.

Judge Jacksons service as a federal public defender, and her work for some detainees held at the U.S. prison at Guantnamo Bay, Cuba, was always going to be an issue in her confirmation. But Mr. Hawleys accusation added a new element to the debate, focusing more on her time as a federal district court judge and a member of the sentencing commission. Other Republican members have said they intend to pursue the issue with Judge Jackson.

The days of broad bipartisan support for Supreme Court nominees are long gone, but Democrats have held out hope that Judge Jackson could get at least a handful of Republican votes given her experience and the possibility that some would want to be counted in support of placing a Black woman on the court.

But just three Republicans backed her last year when she was confirmed to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, and persuading senators to support a candidate for a higher court after opposing her for a lower one is a difficult task.

Still, Judge Jackson, with her White House entourage in tow, has engaged in a charm offensive in the Senate, meeting with 44 senators of both parties and all 22 members of the evenly divided Judiciary Committee.

Democrats have been effusive in their praise and support of Judge Jackson, calling her an ideal candidate for the court with the capacity to work with other justices to try to develop more consensus rulings.

Republicans who have met with her report privately that she is very engaging, presents a memorable life story of achievement and speaks admiringly of Justice Antonin Scalias view that judges should interpret, not make the law. But they say they have also been frustrated by her unwillingness to lay out a specific judicial philosophy and her refusal to take a stance on whether the Supreme Court should be expanded, as progressive groups have proposed.

She will be pressed on those subjects and many more during questioning by senators on Tuesday and Wednesday, after a session on Monday in which each of them will deliver statements, Judge Jackson will be introduced, and she will make opening remarks.

Despite the historic nature of her nomination, Supreme Court confirmations have become intense struggles, and the recent shift in tone among Republicans suggests this weeks proceedings could be no different.

Given the increasing role of the court in settling political and social questions, activists on both sides of the ideological spectrum are deeply invested in its makeup. Democrats are still livid at Republicans blockade of Merrick B. Garland, President Barack Obamas 2016 nominee to the court, and the rapid manner in which they rammed through the confirmation of Justice Amy Coney Barrett, former President Donald J. Trumps pick, just before he lost the 2020 election.

Republicans remain irate about the confirmation hearings for Justice Brett M. Kavanaugh, which were marred by allegations of sexual assault.

Against that backdrop, Senate veterans say a fight over Judge Jackson is probably inevitable.

It's a fact that we are now living in very partisan times, said Senator Richard J. Durbin, Democrat of Illinois and the chairman of the Judiciary Committee, who will for the first time be overseeing a high court confirmation.

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On Eve of Confirmation Hearings, G.O.P. Steps Up Attacks on Jackson - The New York Times

Republicans Think They Can Win the COVID Funding Fight – The Atlantic

If a new coronavirus variant surges in the United States this yearperhaps the one currently tearing through Europetheres a reasonable chance that the country will be unprepared to fight it. You can thank Congress for that.

Last week, lawmakers passed a massive spending bill without any additional funding for COVID-19 relief, despite White House pleas for more. Democrats would like to fulfill the administrations request. But Republicans have taken the position that Congress has already done enough. We dont need COVID funding, GOP Representative Randy Feenstra of Iowa told me. Most people would say were done. We have more issues with inflation than COVID right now.

Politically, Republicans feel safe making this argument. New cases of COVID have been decreasing for weeks, and hospitalizations are on the decline too. Most cities that had mask mandates have gotten rid of them. Many Americans tell pollsters that theyre ready for the country to move on; people are focused on other issues, such as Russias war in Ukraine and rising gas prices. But more than 1,000 people are still dying every day from COVID. Experts predict that the new BA.2 subvariant could be the dominant strain in the United States in a matter of weeks.

Read: Another COVID wave is looming

In other words, refusing to approve new funding is a risk. People want us to be prepared in advance and stabilized, the Democratic pollster Celinda Lake told me. Republicans are voting against both. If COVID gets much worse over the next few months, Democrats will rush to blame the GOP, especially if Republican members strike down a stand-alone vote on COVID relief. Theyre forcing a situation thats going to make it worse for them in November, Lake said. Of course, by election season, a spring debate over COVID funding will be a distant memory. If a new variant has overwhelmed the country by then, the partisan discourse will probably center on mask mandates and vaccines instead. Perhaps Republicans are right to bet that voters wont punish them for blocking new funding.

Republicans were skeptical about approving more money to combat the virus; theyd suggested that the government simply repurpose any funds that states hadnt yet spent (but may have already earmarked). After many Democrats balked at this idea, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi stripped COVID aid from the funding bill entirely, hoping to deal with it separately later. Democrats may soon try to pass COVID relief as a stand-alone bill, but the chances of getting it through the tied-up Senate are slim.

The White House is now warning that as soon as next week, the government will have to cut shipments of monoclonal-antibody treatments by a third, as my colleague Ed Yong wrote earlier this week. By next month, it wont be able to reimburse health-care providers for treating uninsured Americans with COVID. By the summer, itll have to cut funds for test manufacturers. Perhaps most crucially, itll scale back global vaccination efforts that would help keep new variants from emerging.

Democrats want to answer the White Houses call, though theyre divided on how to do it. Some members are a bit more closely aligned with Republicans, and would prefer to take an accounting of current COVID funds and redirect them to fulfill the White Houses needs. There is a lot of money sloshing around, Representative Elissa Slotkin of Michigan told me. People understand the desire to sweep unspent funds; I just want that conversation to be fair. Others, mainly progressives, support new spending, and even authorizing emergency funds for COVID relief. We just put enormous amounts of money into defense spending for Ukraine, Representative Pramila Jayapal of Washington, the chair of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, told me. Were literally asking for very little money here to deal with this global pandemic.

Republicans, on the whole, believe that Congress has already spent enough money combatting COVID in the past two years. Everybody obviously is tired of all this, and I dont mean that in a dismissive way, Representative Tom Cole of Oklahoma told me. The administrations requests are legitimate, but we have the money; we dont need to go deeper into debt. Using up resources that have already been allocated is more important, GOP members argue. When I asked Representative Ron Estes of Kansas whether the possibility of a surge in cases due to a new variant would change Republicans views on funding, he told me that its one of those things that well have to see how it plays forward. Estes also suggested that more Americans have natural immunity now, after so many contracted the most recent Omicron variant.

Read: Bidens uncertainty principle

To pass COVID relief on its own, rather than tucked into some larger package, Democrats would likely have to pair any new funding with spending cuts elsewhere to get it through both chambers of Congress. All epidemics trigger the same dispiriting cycle, Yong wrote earlier this week. First, panic: As new pathogens emerge, governments throw money, resources, and attention at the threat. Then, neglect: Once the danger dwindles, budgets shrink and memories fade.

In Washington, D.C., the easiest thing to do is nothing. If lawmakers fail to pass any more money for testing or research or monoclonal-antibody treatments before another variant is raging through the United States, their neglect wont be a surprise. But their panic might come too late.

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Republicans Think They Can Win the COVID Funding Fight - The Atlantic

Letters to the editor: Upgrade Redmond swim center; Why Republicans dislike Biden; What next for the mortgage deduction; Dear President Biden – The…

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Today in History: Today is Saturday, March 19, the 78th day of 2022. – wausaupilotandreview.com

By The Associated Press

Todays Highlight in History:

On March 19, 1945, during World War II, 724 people were killed when a Japanese dive bomber attacked the carrier USS Franklin off Japan (the ship was saved). Adolf Hitler ordered the destruction of German facilities that could fall into Allied hands in his so-called Nero Decree, which was largely disregarded.

On this date:

In 1859, the opera Faust by Charles Gounod premiered in Paris.

In 1931, Nevada Gov. Fred B. Balzar signed a measure legalizing casino gambling.

In 1942, during World War II, President Franklin D. Roosevelt ordered men between the ages of 45 and 64, inclusive, to register for non-military duty.

In 1977, the series finale of Mary Tyler Moore aired on CBS-TV, ending the situation comedys seven-season run.

In 1982, The film Porkys was widely released in theaters.

In 1987, televangelist Jim Bakker resigned as chairman of his PTL ministry organization amid a sex and money scandal involving Jessica Hahn, a former church secretary.

In 1991, Polish President Lech Walesa arrived in Washington for his first state visit to the United States.

In 1995, after a 21-month hiatus, Michael Jordan returned to professional basketball with his former team, the Chicago Bulls.

In 1997, artist Willem de Kooning, considered one of the 20th centurys greatest painters, died in East Hampton, New York, at age 92.

In 2003, President George W. Bush ordered the start of war against Iraq. (Because of the time difference, it was early March 20 in Iraq.)

In 2007, a methane gas explosion in a Siberian coal mine killed 110 workers.

In 2013, Pope Francis officially began his ministry as the 266th pope, receiving the ring symbolizing the papacy and a wool stole exemplifying his role as shepherd of his 1.2-billion strong flock during a Mass at the Vatican.

In 2020, President Donald Trump focused attention on a malaria drug, chloroquine, as a possible coronavirus treatment; the FDA issued a statement saying that there were no FDA-approved therapeutics to treat COVID-19.

Ten years ago: An assailant on a motorbike opened fire with two handguns in front of a Jewish school in the southern French city of Toulouse, killing a rabbi, his two young sons and a girl. (The gunman, French-born Mohammed Merah, was killed in a gunfight with police after a 32-hour standoff at his apartment; he had also killed three French paratroopers.) The Justice Department announced it had begun an investigation into the fatal shooting of 17-year-old Trayvon Martin in Florida by a neighborhood watch captain, George Zimmerman. (No federal civil rights charges were filed; Zimmerman was acquitted of second-degree murder after claiming self-defense.)

Five years ago: Author-columnist Jimmy Breslin, the legendary street-smart chronicler of wise guys and underdogs, died at his Manhattan home at age 87.

One year ago: President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris visited Atlanta, days after a white gunman killed eight people, most of them Asian American women, in the Atlanta area. The United States accused China of committing genocide and crimes against humanity against Uyghur (WEE-gur) Muslims and other minorities; China accused the U.S. of discrimination and even savage murder of people of African and Asian descent. Four men described as leaders of the far-right Proud Boys were indicted on charges stemming from the Jan. 6 riot at the Capitol. (The four remain jailed and are awaiting trial.) The U.S. cleared President Joe Bidens goal of injecting 100 million coronavirus shots, more than a month before his target date of his 100th day in office.

Todays Birthdays: Actor Renee Taylor is 89. Actor Ursula Andress is 86. Singer Clarence Frogman Henry is 85. Singer Ruth Pointer (The Pointer Sisters) is 76. Actor Glenn Close is 75. Actor Bruce Willis is 67. Actor-comedian Mary Scheer is 59. Playwright Neil LaBute is 59. Actor Connor Trinneer is 53. Rock musician Gert Bettens (Ks Choice) is 52. Rapper Bun B is 49.

Rock musician Zach Lind (Jimmy Eat World) is 46. Actor Virginia Williams is 44. Actor Abby Brammell is 43. MLB pitcher Clayton Kershaw is 34. Actor Craig Lamar Traylor is 33. Actor Philip Bolden is 27.

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Today in History: Today is Saturday, March 19, the 78th day of 2022. - wausaupilotandreview.com

CT version of Stand your ground faces opposition in key committee – CT Insider

A bill pending in a key legislative committee would provide legal protections for innocent targets of criminals, allowing them the use of deadly force, especially firearms, to defend themselves.

While supported by dozens of gun owners and representatives of firearms rights groups during a recent marathon public hearing, the Connecticut version of a so-called stand-your-ground law is unlikely to clear the Judiciary Committee.

The legislation, proposed by Republicans including state Rep. Craig Fishbein of Wallingford, a top GOP member of the committee, would force state prosecutors to presume that the threat a suspect or suspects presented in someones home, work place or motor vehicle was so dire that deadly force was necessary.

It shifts the burden, Fishbein said after the 16-hour hearing on a variety of gun-safety bills. It merely creates a presumption that the action was justified. Of course, the presumption could be overturned, based on particular facts. Currently, one has to prove that their action is reasonable. This bill would put the burden on prosecutors that the presumption of the person was not reasonable.

Floridas stand-your-ground law received national attention in 2012 when George Zimmerman fatally shot Trayvon Martin, an unarmed 17 year-old. Zimmerman was acquitted of murder.

Harwood W. Loomis of Woodbridge told the committee that as a disabled veteran and senior citizen, he believes crime has decreased overall in recent years but the nature of criminal activity seems to be more-violent.

There is a general lack of respect and value for human life on the part of criminals, Loomis said. Physically, I am no match for even one younger, stronger assailantand it appears that today, criminals dont work alone. Tthey travel and operate in packs. There should never be any doubt that if I am trapped in my car by an assailant or a group of assailants that I have a God-given right to defend myself.

Lauren E. LePage, state director of the National Rifle Association in Connecticut, said the presumptive defense, combined with another proposal to eliminate the requirement for people in churches and other places of worship retreat before using deadly force, would make it easier for criminal targets to defend themselves.

Expecting the police to prevent all crime is neither practically nor legally justified, LePage said in prepared testimony. Courts have consistently ruled that law enforcement officers have no enforceable obligation to protect individuals.

But it is unlikely to emerge beyond the legislative committee level.

Weve had this bill in the committee off and on forever, said state Sen. Gary Winfield, D-New Haven, co-chairman of the Judiciary Committee, who opposes it.

First of all, you dont need it. Second, there are racial implications weve seen played out across the country in states including Georgia and Florida. I have no reason to believe people cant protect themselves, Winfield said in an interview Friday. I dont know why some people think well be safer than what we can do already. I dont want people feeling they should have to be a hero. Thinking you have a license to be a hero gets people hurt.

In unsigned testimony from the state Division of Criminal Justice, where Richard Colangelo with retire from the post of chief states attorney on March 31 and John Russotto will take over on an interim basis, prosecutors warned of the potential dangers of the proposal.

Such a change in the law is unnecessary because it will have no effect, the prosecutors wrote, stressing that under current law, if someone claims self-defense, it is up to the state to show it wasnt.

Because the state must meet this high burden of disproving a claim of self-defense in every case in which it is asserted, and because such a high degree of proof always will be sufficient to rebut the proposed presumption of reasonableness set forth in the bill, the presumption will, for all intents and purposes, be a hollow gesture that has no meaningful effect, prosecutors wrote. Intended or not, as written, this portion of the bill will effectively permit one person, absent any perceived threat of personal or third party harm, to kill another person merely because the person employing deadly physical force reasonably believes that the other person is attempting, or has succeeded, with force, to enter their unoccupied motor vehicle.

The division warned that gunfire used to supposedly prevent a motor vehicle theft creates more hazards. Ask yourself: Is your neighbors motor vehicle worth an errant bullet through your childs bedroom window or wall at 3 a.m.? the prosecutors wrote. Moreover, human life, even one engaging in criminal activity, is more valuable than a motor vehicle.

kdixon@ctpost.com Twitter: @KenDixonCT

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CT version of Stand your ground faces opposition in key committee - CT Insider