Anonymous ID: bbe7fc Feb. 11, 2020, 6:03 a.m. No.8100896   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>8100777

Obama Endorsed Bloomberg.

 

Bloomberg highlights ties to Obama in new ad

 

Democratic presidential hopeful Michael Bloomberg on Wednesday launched a new ad touting his ties to former President Obama, highlighting their work together in communities across the country.

 

The ad opens with clips of Obama introducing Bloomberg at an event in 2013, and goes on to list Bloomberg's work with the former president on gun safety and education.

 

"At a time when Washington is divided in old ideological battles, he shows us what can be achieved when we bring people together to seek pragmatic solutions," Obama is heard saying of Bloomberg in the 30-second spot.

 

https://thehill.com/homenews/campaign/481587-bloomberg-highlights-ties-to-obama-in-new-ad

Anonymous ID: bbe7fc Feb. 11, 2020, 6:09 a.m. No.8100934   🗄️.is 🔗kun

California Gov. Gavin Newsom on The View: 'We are the most un-Trump state in America'

 

Gavin Newsom, the Democratic governor of the state of California, joined ABC’s "The View" on Monday, ahead of the New Hampshire primary and Super Tuesday on March 3 and proudly touted his state's more progressive electorate declaring.

 

"We are the most un-Trump state in America, and we are also the most diverse state in America," he said adding "Trump is just scared of California."

 

Changes to California’s primary voting–including new voter registration until Feb. 18 and on Election Day– coupled with early voting which kicked off on February 3, the same day as the Iowa caucuses– could mean the state has an even more prominent role in the election cycle. As the nation’s most populous state, California has 415 delegates up for grabs this Democratic primary season – nearly ten times more than Iowa.

 

https://www.yahoo.com/gma/californa-gov-gavin-newsom-view-most-un-trump-165800830.html

Anonymous ID: bbe7fc Feb. 11, 2020, 6:13 a.m. No.8100953   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1009

Ukraine's president fires chief of staff after reports of turf war

 

KIEV (Reuters) - Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskiy dismissed his chief of staff Andriy Bogdan on Tuesday, cutting ties with a lawyer whose links with a prominent tycoon had made him one of Zelenskiy's most controversial appointments since taking office last year.

 

No official explanation was immediately given for the dismissal but it came after reports of a turf war between Bogdan and Andriy Yermak, a senior presidential aide who has now been appointed to replace him.

 

Zelenskiy appeared to hint at this in an interview published by Interfax Ukraine on Tuesday, saying that internal conflicts within his team had prevented it from working effectively.

 

Bogdan did not immediately comment on his dismissal.

 

The ousted chief of staff was previously a lawyer for Ihor Kolomoisky, one of Ukraine's wealthiest men. Kolomoisky owns the TV channel that brought Zelenskiy fame as a sitcom star, and the president's business ties to him have alarmed some investors.

 

Bogdan represented Kolomoisky in a legal battle with the government over control of Ukraine's biggest commercial lender, PrivatBank, a case that has weighed on whether the International Monetary Fund will disburse new loans to Ukraine.

 

Bogdan "never really managed to shake the perception that he was in the Kolomoisky camp still," said Timothy Ash at BlueBay Asset Management.

 

"His departure, if confirmed, would be well received by the market as it would give hope of a step forward in reforms - which at this stage seem to be running into sand," he wrote, shortly before news of Bogdan's dismissal was confirmed.

 

In his place steps Yermak, a former lawyer and film producer who became a protagonist in the impeachment of U.S. President Donald Trump. Yermak met Trump's personal lawyer Rudy Giuliani in Madrid last year at a time when Trump's camp was pressing Ukraine to investigate the son of former vice President Joe Biden who had worked at a Ukrainian energy company.

 

Read more https://www.yahoo.com/news/ukraine-presidents-chief-staff-dismissed-094856014.html

Anonymous ID: bbe7fc Feb. 11, 2020, 6:20 a.m. No.8100996   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1022 >>1035 >>1048

Polygamists may not face jail time under new Utah bill

 

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — Polygamists have lived in Utah since before it became a state. Eighty-five years after plural marriage was declared a felony, they still number in the thousands and have even been featured in the long-running reality TV show, “Sister Wives.”

 

Now, a state lawmaker says it’s time to remove the threat of jail time for otherwise law-abiding polygamists.

 

“The law is a failure. It hasn’t stopped polygamy at all and it’s actually enabled abuse to occur and remain unchecked,” said Sen. Deidre Henderson, a Republican. Her proposal to make bigamy an infraction rather than a felony has gathered significant support. It was unanimously approved by a legislative panel Monday, despite resistance from former members of polygamous groups who said it could embolden abusers.

 

The estimated 30,000 people living in Utah’s polygamous communities believe plural marriage brings exaltation in heaven — a legacy of the early Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. The mainstream faith abandoned the practice in 1890 under pressure from the U.S. government and now strictly forbids it.

 

Unlike other states, Utah outlaws living with a second “spiritual spouse” even if the man is legally married to just one woman.

 

Henderson argues that law, and the legacy of raids as recently as the 1950s, has created a culture of fear that empowers notorious abusers like the polygamous leader Warren Jeffs. His followers wear distinctive, historic-looking dresses, and he is now serving a life prison sentence in Texas for sexually assaulting girls he considered plural wives.

 

On the other end of the spectrum are modern, consenting adult polygamists like Kody Brown of TV’s “Sister Wives." The show chronicling the lives of Brown and his four wives premiered on TLC in 2010.

 

The Utah attorney general has publicly declined to prosecute polygamists like him for years, but the bigamy law remains on the books. The “Sister Wives” family left the state shortly after going public with their TV show, saying they were afraid of being charged by local prosecutors.

 

They later lost an attempt to overturn the polygamy law in court.

 

The new proposal would significantly lower the potential penalties for consenting adult polygamists but keep harsher penalties for other crimes sometimes linked to polygamy, including the new addition of coerced marriage. Some pro-polygamy advocates have pushed back, arguing that those enhancements create an unfair association with their communities.

 

Others, though, say that easing restrictions on polygamous marriages won’t do much to help victims and could even make things worse. Melissa Ellis grew up in the polygamous Kingston group and said she worries that leaders could consider it a victory if the state lightened penalties.

 

“Those men are going to have more power and more control over their victims than they did before,” she said.

 

A representative for the group did not immediately return a message seeking comment.

 

Ellis also pointed to a recent law that allowed people leaving polygamous groups to access money from the state’s crime-victims fund to help get on their feet. “We need more laws in place that are going to help the victims,” she said.

 

More than 100 years after Utah's predominant faith abandoned the practice, the state continues to struggle with the best way to deal with polygamy, lawmakers acknowledged.

 

“At this point, I think this is better than what were doing now,” said Republican Sen. Daniel Thatcher.

 

https://www.yahoo.com/news/polygamists-may-not-face-jail-230928983.html