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Biden Wants 5 Times The Climate Spending Obama Won. Thats Still 5 Times Too Small. – HuffPost

By any measure, the $2 trillion infrastructure package President Joe Biden unveiled Wednesday marks the most significant federal climate investment to date.

The American Jobs Plan, outlined in a nearly 12,000-word fact sheet, earmarks $500 billion for clean energy investments and research, including $174 billion for electric vehicles and charging networks, $165 billion for public transit and trains, and $100 billion for renewable electricity and new transmission lines. There are billions more for repairing water systems, relocating whole communities threatened by climate disaster and plugging abandoned oil wells and mines.

In all, the plan represents more than five times the climate spendingthe Obama administration secured in the 2009 American Recovery and Reinvestment Act.

Yet its still about five times too small to bring the U.S. economys planet-heating emissions down to zero, the level scientists say we need to keep warming in a relatively safe range.

On a private call with activist groups Tuesday evening that HuffPost listened to, White House climate policy czar Gina McCarthy acknowledged that the spending package may disappoint climate advocates hoping to see a more ambitious budget, but said it marked only one area of the administrations decarbonization plans.

I dont know if were going to meet your expectations on size, but its certainly going to be transformational to our economy, she said.

The proposal would stretch funding over eight years and amount to spending roughly 1% of the countrys gross domestic product per year. Most estimates say it would take more like 4-5% of GDP, or nearly $1 trillion per year over 10 years, to fully decarbonize the U.S. economy.

Proponents of setting a much higher funding level span the ideological spectrum. The left-leaning Roosevelt Institutes 80-page plan to eliminate climate-changing pollution from the U.S. economy used 5% of GDP as its north star. Thats roughly the same figure in the 2016 Risky Business Project report co-chaired by billionaire Michael Bloomberg and Henry Paulson, the George W. Bush-era treasury secretary. British clean energy consultant Michael Liebreich called for roughly $980 billion per year over 10 years in 2019.

Even University of Massachusetts Amherst economist Robert Pollins more conservative estimate of 2% of GDP per year a figure he came with in part by stretching out the investments over a longer period of time was double what Biden has proposed.

Progressives led by Sen. Ed Markey (D-Mass.) and Rep. Debbie Dingell (D-Mich.) announced a $10 trillion counterproposal to the White House plan on Monday called the THRIVE Act, which would pump $1 trillion per year into green infrastructure and care-economy work.

Absent large tax increases and steep cuts to the militarys budget, the Biden administration would need to borrow money to fund that kind of package, just as it increased the federal deficit to pay for its $1.9 trillion pandemic relief bill.

Instead, the White House plan aims to offset its infrastructure spending with relatively modest new taxes in what appears to be a bid to win support from moderate Democrats for whom fiscal discipline is a key political theme.

Deficit politics are getting in the way of building a more sustainable and resilient economy that works for all, said Mark Paul, an economist who co-authored the Roosevelt Institutes paper on U.S. climate spending. This is not a New Deal for America. This is not Johnsons Great Society. I wish it were.

Joe Raedle via Getty ImagesElectric power lines run through a neighborhood in Austin, Texas, where blackouts caused by a freak cold snap underpinned the need for new infrastructure.

Once a powerful cudgel Republicans used to paint Democrats as wasteful profligates, public understanding of how the federal deficit works has shifted in recent years. Because the federal government unlike a state government, a business, or a household issues the currency it spends, Congress can authorize as much spending as is needed, particularly when interest rates are low, according to newer macroeconomic research that helped undergird both the Trump and Biden administrations relief spending packages.

That research shows that the biggest risk of putting too much money into the system is inflation. Taxes, far from providing the cash the federal government needs to justify its spending, instead help control inflation by taking money out of circulation and keeping buyers bidding up prices.

Yet the old way of thinking about the deficit still holds sway with Biden. During transition talks, according to one source familiar with the presidents approach, Biden repeatedly indicated he supported deficit spending for emergency relief, but not for proactive federal investment.

A White House spokesperson did not respond to HuffPosts email requesting comment.

The worst mistake we could make right now would be to let concerns about the state of the economy overheating, inflation, the deficit convince people to do less than what Biden is proposing, said J.W. Mason, an associate professor economics at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice and a fellow at the Roosevelt Institute. That would be a disaster, a terrible mistake.

Earlier this month, Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.), the key swing vote in a Senate split 50-50 along partisan lines, told reporters he wanted an enormous infrastructure bill, but said Congress should do everything we possibly can to pay for it, including making tax adjustments.

The wealth tax Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) proposed this month would tax households and trusts worth between $50 million and $1 billion at 2%, and add another 1% surtax on those exceeding $1 billion. The tax would affect just 100,000 U.S. households and raise $3 trillion over the course of a decade, according to analysis by University of California, Berkeley, economists Emmanuel Saez and Gabriel Zucman.

The White House infrastructure proposal does not include a wealth tax. But it does call for reversing some of the 2017 tax cut law Republicans passed and raising taxes on corporations from 21% to 28%. It also takes steps to discourage companies from listing tax havens as their addresses and writing off expenses to offshore entities. Zucman called it an ambitious first step.

This is an inflection point and hopefully the beginning of a longer-term cycle of government investment and increases in tax progressivity, he said in an email.

Wall Street analysts saw the package less as a climate bill than an infrastructure overhaul that included some green provisions.

This is really rebuilding aging infrastructure, though he has also said that advancing environmental policy and getting to a net-zero power sector by 2035 is also a priority, said Scott Levine, a senior energy and industrial analyst at the investment research firm Bloomberg Intelligence. But those are different objectives.

The proposed spending on housing offered one of the starkest examples of where advocates say the package falls short of whats needed.

While U.S. Energy Information Administration data showthat one-third of Americans cant afford their utility bills, the plan pledges toproduce, preserve, and retrofit more than a million affordable, resilient, accessible, energy efficient, and electrified housing units less than 1% of the housing stock. The proposal also offers $20 billion worth of tax credits over the next five years to build or rehabilitate about 500,000 homes, a line item thats significantly smaller than the over $30 billion per year the federal government spends subsidizing mortgages.

Bidens housing plan has nice rhetoric but its lack of ambition is catastrophicsquandering a once-in-a-generation moment, Daniel Aldana Cohen, a sociologist and climate policy expert at the University of Pennsylvania, wrote in a series of tweets. This plan is a drop in the bucket.

On the Tuesday conference call, McCarthy urged advocates to hype the infrastructure package, warning that criticism may splinter support in Congress and pare down the ambition of what it does include. One advocate responded by stating: I dont feel hyped up.

Lets be really smart and lets just talk about how great it is to have a president that goes out as far as this, McCarthy said. Then well argue and fight and debate and push amongst ourselves. But all of us will see our ideas in this. You will see what you proposed.

McCarthys deputy Ali Zaidi also said the package was just the beginning of the race.

Among the more far-reaching provisions in the presidents proposal was a call for Congress to pass a clean energy standard mandating the country produce all its electricity from carbon-free sources by 2035. It also calls for targeting 40% of the benefits of clean energy and climate investments toward some of the poorest and worst-polluted parts of the country, in communities disproportionately populated by Black, Latino, and other nonwhite Americans.

Evergreen Action, the climate policy group formed by former staffers on Washington Gov. Jay Inslees climate-focused presidential bid, said it was thrilled to see the clean energy standard and environmental justice provisions.

Today in Pittsburgh, President Biden will tell America its time to go big and bold on building a new economy run on 100% clean energy, Jamal Raad, the executive director of Evergreen Action, said in a statement. This is just the tip-off, and now the ball is in Congress court.

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Biden Wants 5 Times The Climate Spending Obama Won. Thats Still 5 Times Too Small. - HuffPost

I, An Adult, Watched Michelle Obama’s New Kids Show On Netflix, And Here Were All Of My Thoughts – BuzzFeed

53. Post musical break, W + M wander the streets of an unfamiliar city at night. Luckily, they discover a classy pizzeria to hang out in.

54. There, we meet Katie, who both speaks and signs all of her dialogue.

55. The pizza place is called Mozzeria, and we learn from our new pal Katie that everyone who works here is deaf.

56. Wow, this is absolutely amazing. I love that this restaurant exists, and that the show is highlighting it.

57. OK, every time Mochi ~sort of speaks~, it sounds like hes saying Mamma Mia! Is this intentional or am I projecting?

58. So far, this show has been very low-key about its themes of healthy eating. Of course, theyve highlighted the importance (and deliciousness) of fresh produce, but choosing to emphasize a food like pizza really shows that their first priority is pitching food and cooking as a joyful, communal experience.

59. A bunch of adorable kids guess in different languages if a tomato is a vegetable or a fruit. About 50% of them are wrong, but thats fine. They hadnt gotten the chance to watch this episode before they were asked.

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I, An Adult, Watched Michelle Obama's New Kids Show On Netflix, And Here Were All Of My Thoughts - BuzzFeed

Humility Is Where Conservatives And Libertarians Can Still Find Fusion – The Federalist

While the Libertarian Party may be a political afterthought, libertarian ideology is not. Many Republican voters have assimilated libertarian ideas into their understanding of conservatism, so are irked by much of the American rights turn away from free-market orthodoxies and toward economic populism. Although I am sympathetic to this shift toward more family-friendly economic populism, I still believe that libertarianism may offer important insights.

If a new synthesis between conservative and libertarian ideas is to develop, however, it will have to begin with humility, which is where conservative and libertarian political philosophy should overlap in shared recognition of human fallibility and finitude.

Last century, right-leaning intellectuals and writers sought to unite American conservatives and libertarians by asserting the interdependence of liberty and virtue. This fusionism urged conservatives to recognize that virtue could only be fully realized under liberty, and it urged libertarians to acknowledge that liberty was unsustainable without virtue.

Of course, there was a problem: whose virtue, which liberty? The old fusionism required a shared, or at least broadly overlapping, understanding of liberty and virtue.

This commonality diminished over the decades, and the collapse of the Soviet Union abroad, as well as cultural changes at home, have left the two camps with fewer common concerns and priorities than before. A renewed fusionism will require conservatives and libertarians to find a common cause, beginning with a shared humility and awareness of human limitation.

There will still be differences. Conservative humility emphasizes deference toward the tried-and-true of what has worked in the past; libertarian humility emphasizes the propensity for even the most well-meaning plans, and especially government initiatives, to go awry. But each side should be able to recognize the others merit, and a shared appreciation for human limitation can bring admirers of Edmund Burke and of Friedrich Hayek together.

Such an alliance will be weakened, perhaps even broken, by hubris, which tempts each side in its own way. Thus, although I have sympathies in their direction, I fear that many of the rights emerging economic populists and nationalists have forgotten the need for humility.

In projecting the efficacy of their proposed programs for the revitalization of family, the bolstering of the working class, the succor of the poor, and other worthy goals they often appear to ignore the risks of regulatory capture, moral hazard, and similar problems. Effective government is difficult, and even successful programs will have trade-offs and unintended consequences. These dangers are sometimes overemphasized to the point of paralysis, but this is no excuse to err in the opposite direction.

Conservatives know that society is complex, and governing well, or even passably, is difficult; this is why we prefer reform to radical, revolutionary change. Thus, Anglo-American conservatism has emphasized that those who haughtily presume that they will easily bend government and society to their will are likely to fail, perhaps disastrously. Those on the right who are newly willing to deploy government power in the style of the European throne-and-altar right would do well to humbly reflect on their own limits before beginning. Rulers, as well as the ruled, are sinful creatures in need of restraint.

Libertarians, in turn, delight in reminding conservatives of the limits and dangers of government power, but they often indulge in their own forms of hubris. Philosophically, instead of focusing on human limitations, many libertarians rely on rigid and absolute systems that ignore the realities of human nature and life. Conservatives are right to be skeptical of libertarian arguments based on abstract systems of rights derived from an ahistorical, imaginary state of nature or social contract.

We are not, for instance, born as rational, autonomous individuals. Rather, we only attain limited degrees of independence and reason through often-difficult effort and instruction. A political philosophy that presumes a populace of rational, independent individuals without accounting for how such persons are formed is self-sabotaging. As the old fusionism insisted, those who would defend liberty must attend to the preconditions for sustaining liberty virtue, family, faith, and community.

Thus, among the ironies of modern libertarianism is that, although its flagship publication is called Reason, that magazine frequently features articles presuming that reason is the slave of the passions a tool for fulfilling our idiosyncratic desires, rather than what should control them. There and elsewhere, much of todays libertarianism has a propensity toward techno-utopianism and a preoccupation with porn, pot, and prostitution. The prudential case for liberty is replaced by a celebration of juvenile libertinism sex, drugs, and maybe some electronic dance music thrown in for good measure.

This libertine outlook is justified by apparently humble reasoning: who is to judge whether one way of life is better than another? But this relativistic pose proves more than it means to. After all, who then is to say that liberty is better than the alternative?

The assertion that human beings deserve liberty, or have a right to liberty, presumes truths about human beings and what is good for them. These truths cannot then be ignored by a regime that legitimates itself through them. It is arrogant to reject the wisdom of the ages about human flourishing and the life well-lived.

In the end, the libertarian insistence that all shall be well if we just let free minds and free markets do their thing is a mockery of religious belief. It puts man and the market in place of God. It is hard to govern well, but that does not mean the attempt should be forsaken in a drugged haze amidst the glow of streaming webcam sex shows. Such a society has simply embraced another form of tyranny and is content to be enslaved to base desires.

If we are to avoid this, as well as the follies of governmental good intentions gone awry, conservatives and libertarians must both check their pride to work toward a new fusionism. Their common ground begins with humility.

Nathanael Blake is a senior contributor to The Federalist and a postdoctoral fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center.

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Humility Is Where Conservatives And Libertarians Can Still Find Fusion - The Federalist

Letters to the Editor for March 31, 2021 | Serving Carson City for over 150 years – Nevada Appeal

Time to reopen AmericaIt has been one year since America shut down because of COVID-19. The closures have devoured our small businesses, resulting in a sharp rise in unemployment. Suicide rates have gone up as well. The problem is, some of our national leaders just don't seem to care anymore. They choose to incite racism as a weapon in order to get what they want. They want to remove our statues by any means necessary while doing absolutely nothing about riots or businesses being destroyed by perpetrators. They want to silence the Americans by erasing or canceling as much of our culture as they can. They want to steal our Second Amendment, our right to bear arms.And the saddest part? We, as Americans, are allowing this to happen. It is time for us to grow some spines and backbones. We need to tell our national leaders how extremely disappointed we are with them. I will not allow them to destroy America or let our U.S. Constitution crumble.Lastly, I want no more masks or social distancing ever again; reopen America now!Joshua DealyCarson CityPlain as dayLetter regarding Republican voter suppression/cheating #14. Never stops.Anyone with half a Trump brain, and paying some attention to life (Appeal columnists perhaps), has seen the non-stop assault by Republican-led state legislatures on the voting rights of Americans. Beyond stunning and appalling, this latest barrage on our civil liberties is the last ditch effort of a minority ideology doing whatever it takes to keep power.Face it folks, being anti-fill in the blank just ain't playing like it used to. So what else is there to do but cheat! Big time!The recent signing of abhorrent voter suppression laws by the governor of Georgia is beyond comprehension. It goes without saying that polling places will be reduced to one per 100,000 voters. Mail ballots/drop boxes will be harder to find than Ted Cruz telling the truth.And finally, as a late-night talk show fella from the past once said, I believe Jack Parr, "I kid you not." It will be against the law to offer food or drink to those Americans waiting in line for hours to vote. I can only imagine that Brian Kemp will reduce unemployment by hiring, monitoring and patrolling the election process.I can see it plain as day.The party of hate, the party of the big lie (Biden won, dudes), the party of insurrection... has gone beyond disgusting.Rick Van AlfenCarson CityBiden created border crisisRegarding Robert Simpsons letter criticizing my recounting of President Trumps accomplishments: Most importantly, Trump had implemented successful measures to control our southern border, starting with the wall. Illegal immigrants were turned away, asylum applicants were fairly treated, and remain in Mexico allowed an orderly process manageable by the Border Patrol and ICE.Now, the exact same libs who were hysterical about kids in cages (an Obama creation) support Bidens political weaponizing of illegal immigration. Coyotes and drug smugglers sexually abuse children on their journey north; mothers are sending their little girls to the border with Plan B pills. The surviving kids who get lucky are vaccinated for COVID, then are dumped onto our military bases while theyre still contagious, putting our soldiers and DOD civilians at risk.The Border Patrol is overwhelmed by sprawling camps with scabies, lice, the flu, COVID, crime, and drugs on a scale never before seen. Kamala Harris, who was appointed to be in charge of this ongoing human tragedy, has yet to visit the border.The Biden administration deliberately created this crisis because their goal is to grant millions of illegal immigrants U.S. citizenship and full voting rights to create a permanent voting Democrat majority.If Simpson thinks this is an improvement over Trumps border policy, in the words of his Uncle Joe, cmon man!Lynn MuzzyMindenLibertarian Party plans to become more visibleLast November, one-third of Douglas County voters surprised the status quo by supporting a Libertarian candidate for commissioner. That's more than any non-Republican candidate has won in this county in decades.Libertarians come from all political persuasions, from extreme liberal to ultra-conservative. What they have in common is the desire to pursue their interests, operate businesses, educate their children, and strive for prosperity without interference from intrusive government regulations.Basically, the party's mantra is "Do what you want as long as you don't hurt anyone." As simple as that sentence is, it seems to be a radical idea in this age when both the GOP and the ever-more-progressive Democratic Party want to control everyone's health care, business activities, and use of private property. Libertarians just want to be left alone and allow you the same freedom.If you're one of those who want an alternative, investigate the Libertarians, either on Facebook or http://www.lpnevada.org. Or come to the next meeting April 23 at 6 p.m. at Cook'd in Minden.Meanwhile, be on the lookout for Libertarians at local events, fairs, farmers' markets, wine walks, anywhere where you can meet and discuss issues with people who want to return America to a time where people said, "it's a free country" rather than "there oughta be a law."Sue CauhapeMinden

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Letters to the Editor for March 31, 2021 | Serving Carson City for over 150 years - Nevada Appeal

Scottish election 2021: Full list of candidates in Edinburgh and the Lothians – Edinburgh News

Scotland goes to the polls on May 6, in the sixth general election since the Scottish Parliament was reconvened in 1999.

At the last election in 2016, the SNP lost their parliamentary majority, but were able to rule as a minority government, with the help of the pro-independence Scottish Green Party.

Of the unionist parties, the Conservatives overtook Labour into second place, while the Liberal Democrats finished fifth.

No representatives of minor parties were elected to the Holyrood in 2016, but this time Alex Salmonds newly-founded Alba Party is looking to win seats by contesting the regional list elections.

There are 73 constituency seats up for grabs, under a first-past-the-post voting system, and 56 regional list seats, which are filled using the DHondt voting system.

Using the DHondt system, Mr Salmonds party is aiming to create a pro-independence super-majority, as in previous elections the number of constituency seats the SNP has won has limited the number of list MSPs the party has returned.

Meanwhile, from the unionist side of the political spectrum, George Galloways All For Unity Party is also attempting to use tactical voting to maximise the number of pro-union seats, by urging voters to pick pro-union parties like the Conservatives or Labour in the constituency elections, and to select his party in the regional list.

Eight candidates will contest Edinburgh Central, the most marginal of the Lothian seats, where UKIP, the Scottish Libertarian Party and video artist Bonnie Prince Bob, standing as an independent, join the five main parties.

The Scottish Libertarian Party is also standing in Edinburgh Western, the Scottish Family Party is standing in Edinburgh Pentlands and Edinburgh Southern, and the Scottish Freedom Alliance in Edinburgh Northern and Leith.

And a total of 18 parties and one independent are competing for votes on the Lothian list.

Bonnie Prince Bob - Independent

Scott Douglas Scottish Conservative and Unionist Party

Alison Johnstone Scottish Green Party

Maddy Kirkman Scottish Labour Party

Tam Laird Scottish Libertarian Party

Donald Murdo Mackay UK Independence Party (UKIP)

Angus Robertson Scottish National Party (SNP)

Bruce Roy Wilson Scottish Liberal Democrats

Bill Cook Scottish Labour Party

Ash Denham Scottish National Party (SNP)

Graham Hutchison Scottish Conservative and Unionist Party

Jill Reilly Scottish Liberal Democrats

Edinburgh Northern and Leith

Rebecca Bell Scottish Liberal Democrats

Katrina Faccenda Scottish Labour Party

Callum Laidlaw Scottish Conservative and Unionist Party

Ben Macpherson Scottish National Party (SNP)

Jon Pullman Scottish Freedom Alliance

Lorna Slater Scottish Green Party

Lezley Marion Cameron Scottish Labour Party and Scottish Co-operative Party

Fraser John Ashmore Graham Scottish Liberal Democrats

Gordon Lindhurst Scottish Conservative and Unionist Party

Richard Crewe Lucas Scottish Family Party

Gordon MacDonald Scottish National Party (SNP)

Miles Briggs Scottish Conservative and Unionist Party

Philip Holden Scottish Family Party

Daniel Johnson Scottish Labour Party and Scottish Co-operative Party

Catriona Mary Elizabeth MacDonald Scottish National Party (SNP)

Fred Mackintosh Scottish Liberal Democrats

Alex Cole-Hamilton Scottish Liberal Democrats

Daniel Fraser Scottish Libertarian Party

Margaret Arma Graham Scottish Labour Party

Sarah Masson Scottish National Party (SNP)

Sue Webber Scottish Conservative and Unionist Party

Euan Robert Davidson Scottish Liberal Democrats

Craig Hoy Scottish Conservative and Unionist Party

Paul Stewart McLennan Scottish National Party (SNP)

Martin David Whitfield Scottish Labour Party

Midlothian North & Musselburgh

Colin Beattie Scottish National Party (SNP)

Stephen Curran Scottish Labour Party

Charles Christopher Dundas Scottish Liberal Democrats

Iain Whyte Scottish Conservative

Midlothian South, Tweeddale and Lauderdale

Dominic Ashmole - Scottish Green Party

Michael James Banks - Vanguard Party

Christine Grahame - Scottish National Party (SNP)

Shona Haslam - Scottish Conservative and Unionist Party

AC May - Scottish Liberal Democrats

Katherine Sangster - Scottish Labour Party and Scottish Co-operative Party

Angela Constance Scottish National Party (SNP)

Damian Doran-Timson Scottish Conservative and Unionist Party

Caron Lindsay Scottish Liberal Democrats

Craig Smith Scottish Labour Party

Fiona Hyslop Scottish National Party (SNP)

Charles Kennedy Scottish Conservative and Unionist Party

Sally Pattle Scottish Liberal Democrats

Kirsteen Sullivan Scottish Labour Party and Scottish Co-operative Party

Abolish the Scottish Parliament Party: John Johnson Leckie; David Lindsay Nichol.

Alba Party: Kenneth Wright MacAskill; Alexander Arthur; Christina Mary Hendry; Irshad Ahmed.

All for Unity: Charlotte Morley; Parvinder Singh; Alan Hogg; Andy Macaulay; David Hamilton; Mike Knox; Derek Clark.

Animal Welfare Party: Vivienne Moir; Gavin Ridley.

Communist Party of Britain: Matthew Finlay Waddell.

Freedom Alliance - Integrity, Society, Economy: Jon Pullman; Cara Patricia Wase; Patricia McCann.

Reform UK: Derek Steven Winton; Mev Brown; Iain Murray Morse; Lesley MacDonald.

Scottish Conservative and Unionist Party: Miles Briggs; Sue Webber; Jeremy Balfour; Rebecca Fraser; Malcolm Offord; Scott Douglas; Gordon Lindhurst; Marie-Clair Munro; Graham Hutchison; Iain Whyte; Callum Laidlaw; Charles Kennedy.

Scottish Family Party: Richard Crewe Lucas; Philip Holden; Norman David Colville; Gareth Kirk; Amy Ireland.

Scottish Greens: Alison Johnstone; Lorna Slater; Kate Nevens; Chas Booth; Steve Burgess; Alys Mumford; Emily Frood; Ben Parker; Elaine Taylor; Bill Wilson; Evelyn Weston; Alex Staniforth.

Scottish Labour Party: Daniel Johnson; Sarah Boyack; Foysol Choudhury; Madelaine Kirkman; Kirsteen Sullivan; Nicholas Ward; Frederick Hessler; Stephen Robert Curran.

Scottish Liberal Democrats: Alex Cole-Hamilton; Fred Mackintosh; Jill Reilly; Rebecca Louise Bell; Sally Pattle; Fraser John Ashmore Graham; Caron Marianne Lindsay; Bruce Roy Wilson; Charles Christopher Dundas.

Scottish Libertarian Party: Tam Laird; Cameron Paul Paterson.

Scottish National Party: Graham Campbell; Angus Robertson; Fiona Hyslop; Ben Macpherson; Catriona MacDonald; Sarah Masson; Greg McCarra; Alison Dickie; Alex Orr; Andrew Ewen; Rob Connell.

Scottish Renew: Heather Jane Astbury; Anna Freemantle-Zee.

Scottish Women's Equality Party: Emma Jane Watt; David Malcolm Alexander Renton; Lucy Hammond.

Social Democratic Party: Alasdair James Young; Neil Peter Manson; Lawrence Sebastian Edwards.

UK Independence Party (UKIP): Donald MacKay; John Laurence Mumford; Steve Hollis; Kenneth Lowry.

Independent: Ashley Graczyk.

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Scottish election 2021: Full list of candidates in Edinburgh and the Lothians - Edinburgh News