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Team Zuckerberg Masks the Heavily Pro-Democrat Tilt of 2020 Election ‘Zuck Bucks,’ Study Finds – The Epoch Times

The $332 million that Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg and his wife Priscilla Chan provided to a progressive group to help run the 2020 elections was distributed on a highly partisan basis that favored Democrats, according to a new analysis by election data experts.

While these Zuckerbucks or Zuck bucks were touted as a resource meant to help all jurisdictions administer the election during the COVID crisis, tax records filed by the progressive Center for Tech and Civic Life show that the group awarded all larger grantson both an absolute and per capita basis to deeply Democratic urban areas, particularly in swing states, according to the new report. Its authors are William Doyle, research director at the right-leaning Caesar Rodney Election Research Institute, and Alex Oliver, chief data scientist at Evolving Strategies, a nonpartisan research group.

The report contrasts with a report Zuckerberg commissioned in December, which emphasized that more Republican jurisdictions, defined as municipalities that voted for Trump in 2020, applied for and received grants.

Doyle and Oliver say this conclusion is misleading because Republican jurisdictions were far more likely to receive grants of less than $50,000, which, they wrote, were likely not substantial enough to provide the funding, infrastructure, and personnel to materially change election practices in the recipient jurisdiction. These small grants comprised 27 percent of the centers awards.

In the counties where CTCL made its 50 largest grants in terms of per capita spending, the average partisan lean in favor of Democrat Joe Biden over Republican Donald Trump was 33 pointsmeaning the aid could be expected to stimulate more Democratic votes. Twenty-five of the top 50 grants per capita went to just five statesGeorgia, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Florida, and Texas (the latter two where Democrats were optimistic about Bidens chances, the authors write). Seven of the top ten largest grants per capita went to counties in Georgia and Wisconsin, states that Biden narrowly won by 12,000 and 21,000 respectively. (Along with the report, Evolving Strategies has put together an online map and visualization app that tracks CTCLs top 100 grants on a per capita basis.)

The distribution of the CTCL programs grant amountsboth in absolute and per capita termsshows, unequivocally, a systematic bias in favor of Democratic jurisdictions, they write. The larger grants revealed a partisan pattern of funding [that] was especially apparent in swing states. Regardless of intention, CTCLs geographic allocation of larger grants is prima facie and de facto partisan.

Before 2020, the private funding of election administration was virtually unheard of. Against positive coverage of the development in liberal news media, conservative activists sounded the alarm about CTCLs efforts. Privatizing the management of elections undermines the integrity of our elections because private donors may dictate where and how hundreds of millions of dollars will be managed in these states, Phill Kline of the Thomas More Society told the Washington Post. Since 2020, 17 states have effectively banned the private funding of local election offices either through new laws or regulations. Two other states, Alabama and Missouri, are awaiting for the governors signature on similar bills.

The center and its defenders have argued that it is only logical that urban areas, which tend to support Democrats, would get more grant money, simply because they have more voters. But Doyle and Olivers analysis shows that those areas received more funding on a per capita basis. While the grant size for urban areas might naturally be larger overall, they said, areas with high concentrations of voters should result in economic efficiencies where substantial fixed cost of election administration is spread out over a relatively larger population, decreasing the per capita cost. If anything, they said, per capita costs of running an election should be higher in more rural Republican areas.

The report showed that Georgia alone received 10 of the top 50 grants per capita, totaling $41 millionmore than 10 percent of the $332 million CTCL spent across the country. Nine of those grants went to counties with an average partisan lean of 35 points in favor of Joe Biden.

The center awarded a total of $10.1 million in grants in Wisconsin, but $8.5 million of that went to the cities of Green Bay, Kenosha, Madison, Milwaukee, and Racinecities where Bidens average margin of victory was over 37 points. All five cities ranked on CTCLs top 50 per capita grants. Similarly, Pennsylvania had four of the top 50 per capita grants, amounting to $16 million. Some $15 million of those grants went to Philadelphia and to Delaware and Chester counties in the Philadelphia metro area. The Philadelphia vote favored Biden by 64 points, and Delaware and Chester voted Biden by 27 and 17 points respectively. Biden won Pennsylvania by just 1.2 points, so the victory might have been sealed by the influx of cash from private sources to the Philadelphia region, the states biggest cache of votes, which also has a history of corruption and electoral fraud.

The CTCL did not respond to RealClearInvestigations request for comment. Its executive director, Tiana Epps-Johnson, told the Washington Post in February that the grants given out reflected where the requests for funding came from, not any bias on the part of her organization. But the center has offered no insight into its internal process for awarding grants.

An investigation by Broad and Liberty, a right-leaning publication dedicated to Pennsylvania politics, obtained emails showing that the office of Pennsylvanias Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf coordinated with left-wing nonprofits to implement a secretive process that selectively invited Democratic counties to apply for Zuck bucks grants.

The center did not just award money to counties and cities that applied for grantsin many cases it embedded progressive activists into key local election offices to shape how elections were run. In Green Bay, Wisconsin, emails to the mayors office from the center touted its network of current and former election administrations and election experts available to build up vote by mail processes and ensure forms, envelopes, and other materials are understood and completed correctly by voters. In a July 13, 2020 email to the center, Celestine Jeffreys, chief of staff for Green Bay Mayor Eric Genrich, wrote, As far as Im concerned I am taking all of my cues from CTCL and work with those you recommend.

Eventually the center helped install an out-of-state operative named Michael Spitzer-Rubenstein in Green Bay and other Wisconsin election offices, who engaged in activities unusual for someone other than a public officialsuch as asking for direct access to the Milwaukee Election Commissions voter database and other sensitive data. Spitzer-Rubenstein became so active in running Green Bays election that City Clerk Kris Teske, unhappy with being replaced in her job, took leave a few weeks before the election and quit shortly thereafter.

I was verbally abused by the Mayor in front of everyone she reportedly wrote in one email. He had agenda when it came to the election and I nor the Clerks Office were included even though its the Clerks job to administer an election. He allowed staff who were not educated on election law to run the election, along with people who werent even City of Green Bay employees.

Though technically considered a nonpartisan organization, CTCLs leadership team has an extensive history of working with the Democratic Party and progressive causes. Epps-Johnson founded the organization with Whitney May and Donny Bridges. All three previously worked together at the New Organizing Institute, which the Washington Post described as the Democratic Partys Hogwarts for digital wizardry and the lefts think tank for campaign know-how.

A further Democratic-Zuckerberg intersection: Former Obama campaign manager David Plouffe is listed as head of policy and advocacy at the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative, the power couples philanthropy. In his 2020 book, A Citizens Guide to Beating Donald Trump, Plouffe wrote that the 2020 election may come down to block-by-block street fights in Detroit, Philadelphia, and Milwaukee.

This article was written by Mark Hemingway for RealClearInvestigations.

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Team Zuckerberg Masks the Heavily Pro-Democrat Tilt of 2020 Election 'Zuck Bucks,' Study Finds - The Epoch Times

Qualcomm successfully appeals $1B EU antitrust fine over Apple payments – The Verge

Europes second-highest court, the General Court, has sided with Qualcomm after it appealed a 997 million (around $1,045 million) fine from European Union regulators over payments made to Apple to use Qualcomm chips, Reuters reports. The EU issued the fine in 2018, and said payments Qualcomm had made to Apple between 2011 and 2016 to exclusively use its chips were illegal under EU antitrust rules.

This meant that no rival could effectively challenge Qualcomm in this market, no matter how good their products were, said EU competition commissioner Margrethe Vestager in a statement accompanying the fine. Qualcomm was accused of shutting rival chipmaker Intel out of the market, by making it too expensive for Apple to switch suppliers.

But in todays ruling, the European General Court said that a number of procedural irregularities affected Qualcomms rights of defence and invalidate the Commissions analysis of the conduct alleged against Qualcomm, Reuters reports. The court also cast doubt on the EUs competition analysis, noting that Apple had had no technical alternative to Qualcomms LTE chipsets for the majority of its requirements during the period concerned and that the Commission failed to take account of all of the relevant factual circumstances.

EU regulators now have the option of appealing the decision to the EU Court of Justice (CJEU).

When the fine was issued, Vestager said that it should serve as a warning to other tech companies considering using similar practices. The decision represents a major blow to the EUs attempts to regulate the fast-moving and well-financed tech sector.

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Qualcomm successfully appeals $1B EU antitrust fine over Apple payments - The Verge

European Union Resumes Financial Aid to the Palestinians – The Media Line

The EU had been withholding assistance from the Palestinian Authority for the last two-and-a-half years while demanding political reforms and the purging of alleged incitement from Palestinian textbooks

The Palestinian Authority is getting desperately needed help from the European Union to alleviate its financial woes after years of being cut off.

Visiting EU chief Ursula von der Leyen delivered the news to Palestinian Authority Prime Minister Mohammad Shtayyeh during a meeting in Ramallah on Tuesday.

Im very glad to announce that EU funds for 2021 can be dispersed rapidly. All the difficulties are gone. We have made clear that the disbursement will take place, said von der Leyen, president of the European Commission, during a joint appearance in front of reporters following the meeting.

After holding up its aid for the last two-and-a-half years, while demanding political reforms, a fight against corruption, and the purging of alleged incitement from Palestinian textbooks, the 27-nation EU is releasing hundreds of millions of euros to the PA.

It is important to have this EU funding to support the people, especially the most vulnerable, and it also helps to create the right conditions for economic opportunities; thats what we together should be working on, von der Leyen told reporters at the PA headquarters in Ramallah.

The European Union is the largest donor to the Palestinians, distributing an average of 600 million euros annually.

A visibly ecstatic Shtayyeh thanked the EU for the decision. Its a day of happiness for Palestinians and for Palestine, he said.

Europe has always been standing solidly in line with international law, for respect of international resolutions, and Europe has been very generous to Palestine, said Shtayyeh.

The funding will help pay the salaries of more than 160,000 PA civil servants, which comprise a substantial chunk of the West Bank economy.

Between 2008 and 2020 Brussels sent around $2.5 billion in direct budget aid to the PA.

European aid includes various sectors of the infrastructure in the West Bank, in the Gaza Strip, Jerusalem and Area C. It includes technical and police assistance, support for the private sector and civil society, and support for the price differentials resulting from the Ukraine crisis, Shtayyeh said.

This aid will inject liquidity into the Palestinian economy and bring about movement in the Palestinian economy. As far as the PA is concerned, the resumption of aid relieves pressure on the PAs treasury

The Palestinian economy has been in a dire crisis since at least 2018.

Dr. Nasr Abdel Karim, a professor of finance and economics at the Arab American University, told The Media Line that the resumption of EU aid no doubt is good news for the Palestinian economy. The PA is going through a stifling financial crisis and is unable to pay the full salary bill for its employees.

This aid will inject liquidity into the Palestinian economy and bring about movement in the Palestinian economy. As far as the PA is concerned, the resumption of aid relieves pressure on the PAs treasury, he added.

But its a temporary solution, according to Karim.

Without aid from the United States of America and the Gulf states, the government will continue to live in a cycle of deficit and public debt, he said.

Karim says the injection of EU financial aid is critical, but it doesnt mean the end of the PAs financial problems.

The PAs current deficit for the 2022 budget is one $1.2 billion.

Reinfusion of European funds will not solve the financial crisis because it is much greater than what the EU is giving, but it helps calm the situation and cool down the financial crisis, Karim said.

Jafar Sadaqa, an economics editor at the WAFA news agency in Ramallah, told The Media Line that the PA is on the verge of financial collapse, and an immediate intervention is needed.

It seems that there is a regional and international understanding and agreement that the situation in the Palestinian territories can no longer tolerate more pressures, and therefore this decision was expected, he said.

Sadaqa acknowledges that the help is timely, but not sufficient.

This support is important, regardless of whether it goes to the budget or to other sectors, but it is not sufficient to solve the crisis or to solve the financial crisis of the PA, he said.

Karim agrees, explaining that the crisis has to do with the Palestinian economy and its inability to generate sufficient revenues, as well as the large expenditures that the government undertakes.

He says that the question now is: if the aid helps solve the crisis this year, then what about next year?

Karim says that political steps, and deep reforms to the PA economy, are necessary.

The strategic solution lies in ending the occupation and reaching a sovereign state that has control over all its resources and the freedom to dispose of all its capabilities and to have freedom of movement. Also, there must be major internal political reforms, and democratic values, and an end to the internal Palestinian division.

Without those things, Karim says, these solutions remain prosthetic solutions.

During the nearly two years of COVID-19 pandemic restrictions, the PA relied on limited local resources to generate revenue, causing many Palestinians to slip below the poverty line. The World Bank reported that income fell in more than 60% of Palestinian households, and 20% of the previously employed workforce found itself unemployed.

The EU chief says the pandemic coupled with the war in Ukraine added more stress on the world economy including the Palestinians.

Palestine is slowly exiting the pandemic, but it suffers the consequences of the next crisis that we have and that is the Russian war against Ukraine. The Russian aggression has a devastating impact on food prices and on energy supply. And, indeed, Palestine is dependent on imports of Ukrainian cereals like many other vulnerable countries in the world too, she said.

Meanwhile, Shtayyeh called on Europe to exert pressure on Israel to allow Palestinians to hold elections in Jerusalem.

Today we need a political initiative in order to end the occupation, stop settlements, protect the holy sites, and Europe has stood by international law, international legitimacy, human rights and democracy, he said.

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European Union Resumes Financial Aid to the Palestinians - The Media Line

European Union and Council of Europe support improvement of women’s access to justice – Council of Europe

The European Union and the Council of Europes joint action on "Fostering Women's Access to Justice in Turkey" held its second multi-stakeholder meeting in Mula on 14 June.

The meeting aimed to identify the main challenges and solutions faced by women in accessing justice, but also to create local and sustainable support networks for the needs of vulnerable and disadvantaged women. Strengthening inter-institutional dialogue and raising awareness about practices sensitive to gender equality were also among the aims of the meeting.

In his speech, Atty. Cumhur Uzun, President of Mula Bar Association, noted that In this action, we are very pleased to have been selected as one of the four pilot bar associations in Turkey and to set a valuable example to the other provinces with our practices. For women's access to justice; non-governmental organisations, bar associations, local government officials, public institutions constitute the links of the chain and everyone should act with a sense of responsibility. As Mula Bar Association, we will continue to support women's access to justice and be a model not only for women in Mula, but also for women in other regions. We are glad to be part of this action and contribute together to the realisation of this ultimate and worthwhile goal."

Pnar Bapnar, Head of Operations at the Council of Europe Programme Office in Ankara, underlined that the joint EU/Council of Europe action Fostering womens access to justice in Trkiye strives to increase the gender sensitivity of legal aid services and women's access to these services as well as to improve legal awareness and literacy among women so that they can exercise their rights as equal citizens in Trkiye.

The grant agreement signed between the Council of Europe and the Union of Turkish Bar Associations to support women's access to legal aid is one of the important aspects of the action, said Bapnar. Within the scope of this grant, legal aid services will be provided to women by legal aid lawyers participating in the training program in at least 360 cases," she added.

The Union of Turkish Bar Associations, local bar associations and legal aid centres, legal aid lawyers, universities, law faculties, women's studies and gender research and application centres, non-governmental organisations working in the fields of combating gender-based violence and gender equality, public institutions and organisations, violence prevention centres, women's shelters and experts working in the field of women's rights have joined forces to ensure better protection of womens rights and their improved access to justice.

In her presentation, Assistant Professor Asuman Aytekin nceolu shared her observations on legal, institutional, socio-economic and cultural barriers to women's access to justice in Turkey and explained how the key principles of access to justice, namely justiciability, availability, accessibility, provision of remedies, quality of services and accountability, can be operationalised in practice. Related to the quality of judicial services, she stressed that legal professionals should be aware of and avoid re-producing gender-based stereotypes and biases when interpreting and applying existing laws, which otherwise amount to discrimination and set barriers to womens access to justice.

The first multi-stakeholder meeting was held in Ordu in May 2022, the second was held in Mula and two further meetings will be held in Nevehir and Diyarbakr before the end of September. The meetings are taking place as a part of the action on Fostering women's access to justice in Trkiye, implemented within the framework of the European Union and Council of Europes joint programme entitled "Horizontal Facility for the Western Balkans and Turkey 2019-2022".

Agenda

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European Union and Council of Europe support improvement of women's access to justice - Council of Europe

European Union and Council of Europe to support improvement of women’s access to justice – Council of Europe

The European Union and the Council of Europes joint action on "Fostering Women's Access to Justice in Turkey" held its second multi-stakeholder meeting in Mula on 14 June.

The meeting aimed to identify the main challenges and solutions faced by women in accessing justice, but also to create local and sustainable support networks for the needs of vulnerable and disadvantaged women. Strengthening inter-institutional dialogue and raising awareness about practices sensitive to gender equality were also among the aims of the meeting.

In his speech, Atty. Cumhur Uzun, President of Mula Bar Association, noted that In this action, we are very pleased to have been selected as one of the four pilot bar associations in Turkey and to set a valuable example to the other provinces with our practices. For women's access to justice; non-governmental organisations, bar associations, local government officials, public institutions constitute the links of the chain and everyone should act with a sense of responsibility. As Mula Bar Association, we will continue to support women's access to justice and be a model not only for women in Mula, but also for women in other regions. We are glad to be part of this action and contribute together to the realisation of this ultimate and worthwhile goal."

Pnar Bapnar, Head of Operations at the Council of Europe Programme Office in Ankara, underlined that the joint EU/Council of Europe action Fostering womens access to justice in Trkiye strives to increase the gender sensitivity of legal aid services and women's access to these services as well as to improve legal awareness and literacy among women so that they can exercise their rights as equal citizens in Trkiye.

The grant agreement signed between the Council of Europe and the Union of Turkish Bar Associations to support women's access to legal aid is one of the important aspects of the action, said Bapnar. Within the scope of this grant, legal aid services will be provided to women by legal aid lawyers participating in the training program in at least 360 cases," she added.

The Union of Turkish Bar Associations, local bar associations and legal aid centres, legal aid lawyers, universities, law faculties, women's studies and gender research and application centres, non-governmental organisations working in the fields of combating gender-based violence and gender equality, public institutions and organisations, violence prevention centres, women's shelters and experts working in the field of women's rights have joined forces to ensure better protection of womens rights and their improved access to justice.

In her presentation, Assistant Professor Asuman Aytekin nceolu shared her observations on legal, institutional, socio-economic and cultural barriers to women's access to justice in Turkey and explained how the key principles of access to justice, namely justiciability, availability, accessibility, provision of remedies, quality of services and accountability, can be operationalised in practice. Related to the quality of judicial services, she stressed that legal professionals should be aware of and avoid re-producing gender-based stereotypes and biases when interpreting and applying existing laws, which otherwise amount to discrimination and set barriers to womens access to justice.

The first multi-stakeholder meeting was held in Ordu in May 2022, the second was held in Mula and two further meetings will be held in Nevehir and Diyarbakr before the end of September. The meetings are taking place as a part of the action on Fostering women's access to justice in Trkiye, implemented within the framework of the European Union and Council of Europes joint programme entitled "Horizontal Facility for the Western Balkans and Turkey 2019-2022".

Agenda

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European Union and Council of Europe to support improvement of women's access to justice - Council of Europe