Jim Jordan shortly adjustments the topic when requested if he’ll subpoena Alvin Bragg

Rep. Jim Jordan quickly switched to conspiracy theories when asked if he would subpoena Alvin Bragg.

Video:

Jim Jordan quickly changes the subject when asked if he’ll subpoena Alvin Bragg: “Everything’s on the table, Maria … We think that’s, here’s maybe the most important thing we think it’s bigger than that.” it affects us all.” pic.twitter.com/79bnFwORBK

— Sarah Reese Jones (@PoliticusSarah) April 2, 2023

Jordan said on Fox’s Sunday Morning Futures when asked if he would subpoena Alvin Bragg:

Everything is on the table Maria, we’re going to speak to the other chairman and look at the answer, we just got his letter back, we’re checking, but we think this is, I think, maybe the most important thing we have think Bigger is about all of us. I don’t think it’s a coincidence that the same week we learn that the IRS knocked on Matt Taibbi’s door while he is testifying in Congress, the same week that we learn that a district attorney is moving to a left wing District Attorney Is Soros Back District Attorney will go after the former President of the United States.

I mean, that’s the scary thing, they paid a foreigner, think about it, they paid a foreigner to put together a fake dossier to spy on President Trump’s campaign. The FTC sends letters to Twitter asking which journalists you’re speaking to, and then of course, when Matt Taibbi’s testimony before the IRS knocks on his door, and now an indictment against a former president, the guy who happens to be in every single one poll, it’s about all of us, it’s about prosecuting anyone who opposes the agenda of the left, the agenda of the establishment, and that’s maybe the scariest thing of all.

Jordan tried to get Trump supporters to protest. Trump’s defense attorneys are still trying to make his supporters feel connected to the charges and how the charges put them at risk. Rep. Jordan even used the word scary.

Jim Jordan knows that Bragg is never required to testify before the House of Representatives, and there is nothing the House of Representatives can do to compel him to testify because House Republicans have no oversight authority over a local attorney general.

Jordan doesn’t want to talk about something that even he probably knows will never happen, so he launched a slew of conspiracy theories and tried to escalate fear because Trump supporters don’t challenge the myth of the former’s policies Presidents protest power is shattered.

Jason is the managing editor. He is also a White House press pool and congressional correspondent for PoliticusUSA. Jason has a bachelor’s degree in political science. His thesis focused on public policy with a specialization in social reform movements.

Awards and professional memberships

Member of the Society of Professional Journalists and the American Political Science Association

Carl Icahn slams Illumina CEO’s pay rise

Carl Icahn speaks at Delivering Alpha in New York on September 13, 2016.

David A Grogan | CNBC

Carl Icahn exploded Enlightenment for nearly doubling its CEO’s pay last year despite a dramatic decline in the biotech’s market value since inching a controversial deal.

“I would find it funny if it weren’t so reprehensible that ILMN’s stock price has fallen 63% because CEO Francis deSouza made such an absurd and questionable purchase,” Icahn said in a statement to CNBC.

“And what’s really funny is the idea that it’s hard to find good CEOs in this space,” the activist investor added. “I reckon it would be hard to find someone who could lose $50 billion in shareholder value in a matter of months but still get 87% more for a grand total of $26.8 million in 2022.”

Illumina did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

DeSouza stepped in as CEO in 2016 after nearly three years as president of the DNA sequencing company. He received nearly $26.8 million in total compensation last year, nearly double the $14.3 million he received in 2021, according to a preliminary proxy statement filed Thursday.

Part of deSouza’s pay increase is a $12.5 million special stock option grant, which Illumina described as a “meaningful incentive for retention in a highly competitive talent environment.”

DeSouza’s pay rise follows a bumpy 18 months for San Diego-based Illumina. The company’s market value has fallen to about $35 billion from about $75 billion in August 2021, the month it completed its acquisition of cancer test developer Grail.

Rafael Henrique | Light Rocket | Getty Images

The $7.1 billion Grail deal is at the center of a proxy fight between Icahn and Illumina, who have been trading jabs for nearly a month.

Icahn, who owns a 1.4% stake in Illumina, is seeking a seat on the company’s board. He’s also trying to pressure Illumina into reversing the Grail acquisition, which he has called “catastrophic” and “a new low in corporate governance.”

He has repeatedly criticized Illumina’s board and management team, saying earlier this week that the company should bring back former CEO Jay Flatley to “fix the situation.”

Illumina on Thursday urged shareholders to reject Icahn’s three nominees for its board of directors and went on to defend its management team’s decision to acquire Grail.

The company also claimed Icahn had more positive things to say about its current CEO before initiating the proxy fight.

Icahn told Illumina last month that he intends to make board nominations, although he thinks deSouza “did a good job” running the company, Illumina said.

The activist investor also said he “supported” deSouza’s actions as CEO during another meeting earlier this month, but noted that he would not publicly repeat those comments, according to Illumina.

Part of Icahn’s opposition to the Grail acquisition stems from Illumina’s decision to complete the transaction without antitrust approval. The company prevailed against opposition from the US Federal Trade Commission in September but is still fighting for approval from European regulators.

The EU’s executive body, the European Commission, blocked Illumina’s acquisition of Grail last year, fearing it would stifle innovation and hamper consumer choice. The commission also revealed details of a proposed order that would force Illumina to reverse the deal.

Illumina said earlier this month that Grail has “tremendous long-term value creation potential.”

Grail says it offers the only commercially available early detection test that can detect more than 50 types of cancer from a single blood draw. The test generated $55 million in revenue in 2022 and is expected to bring in up to $110 million this year, according to Illumina.

One of many Central Park 5 Responds to Trump Accusation: “Karma”

Yusef Salamone of the acquitted Central Park FiveHe kept it short and sweet when responding to the former president donald trump‘s indictment on Thursday, offering a poignant word on the situation.

“For those asking for my statement on the charges against Donald Trump – who has never apologized for calling for my execution – here it is: karma,” Salaam tweeted upon learning of Trump’s 34-count indictment.

Central Park Five: A brief overview of the case in which five innocent black men were wrongfully imprisoned

In 1989, Salaam was wrongly imprisoned along with four other black teenagers for the rape of a white woman in New York’s Central Park.

Salaam served nearly seven years in prison before he and the other four were exonerated in 2002.

However, Trump ran full-page newspaper ads urging politicians in New York to reintroduce the death penalty.

None of the five teenagers had been brought to justice at the time the defamatory allegations were made.

#PowerPost✊🏻✊🏼✊🏽✊🏾✊🏿™️

For those asking for my statement on the charges against Donald Trump — who never apologized for calling for my execution — here it is:

karma

— Joseph Abdussalaam (@dr_yusefsalaam) March 30

At the time, Trump had placed newspaper ads calling for the reinstatement of the death penalty in New York

Finally, while those close to the situation said Trump’s ads did not specifically call for the death penalty for the five black teenagers, they played an important role in obtaining a conviction against them.

When asked about apologizing to the boys in 2019, Trump claimed, “You have people on both sides. They have admitted their guilt.” HuffPost.

On Thursday, Salaam, who recently announced his candidacy for New York City Council, said Trump never “apologized for calling for my execution.”

RELATED: ‘Shocked’ Donald Trump speaks out after being charged with 34 counts in Stormy Daniels case

All five boys, Salaam, Korey Wise, Antron McCray, Raymond Santana and Kevin Richardson are now criminal justice activists.

They added that they were forced by the police to confess to the crime even though they did not commit it.

I was a young man when the Central Park 5 were convicted, not much older than the five young men wrongly convicted of the heinous assault on a jogger.

Trump ran a full-page ad in four newspapers declaring that these boys should receive the death penalty.

They were… pic.twitter.com/lAZLxBdjHV

— BrooklynDad_Defiant!☮️ (@mmpadellan) March 31, 2023

“During the hours of relentless interrogation we all endured, detectives repeatedly lied to us,” Salaam, Kevin Richardson, and Raymond Santana wrote in a 2019 op-ed for The New York Times, describing themselves as “frightened boys” at the time.

Trump indicted Thursday on 34 counts over alleged hush money payments to Stormy Daniels in 2016

The article continues: “They said they matched our fingerprints with traces from the crime scene and told each of us that the others had confessed and implicated us in the attack. They said that if we only admitted taking part in the attack, we could go home. All of these were blatant lies.”

The shadow room reported that Trump was indicted Thursday by a Manhattan grand jury on 34 counts for making $130,000 in hush money payments to adult film star Stormy Daniels just days before the 2016 election.

The funds were paid to Daniels to keep quiet about an alleged affair between her and Trump a decade earlier.

Vince McMahon indicators two-year deal whereas WWE searches for patrons

World Wrestling Entertainment Inc. Chairman Vince McMahon is introduced during the WWE Monday Night Raw show at the Thomas & Mack Center August 24, 2009 in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Ethan Mueller | Getty Images

Vince McMahon has signed a two-year employment contract World Wrestling Entertainment.

The WWE chairman’s agreement dates back to Jan. 9, when he returned to the company, according to a securities filing. His deal comes about as WWE has been actively speaking with suitors.

As part of his most recent contract, which includes an annual base salary of $1.2 million that includes an incentive bonus target of 175% of that salary. If a deal were to go through, McMahon would receive a $2.4 million lump sum payout, plus his incentive bonus, which would be doubled and paid up front.

CEO Nick Khan told CNBC’s Morgan Brennan this week that it’s been a robust sale process so far, with many attractive bidders. Earlier in the week, CNBC’s David Faber, citing people familiar with the matter, reported that the trial was “hot and heavy”.

McMahon returned to the WWE Board of Directors in January and helped negotiate the sale. He resigned from his CEO role last June amid a cloud of sexual misconduct allegations from former WWE employees. He later announced his resignation.

At that time, his daughter Stephanie McMahon had taken over as co-CEO of WWE, a McMahon family business. She resigned in January following the return of Vince McMahon.

Last month, Khan told CNBC that McMahon was willing to step down from his position “if it’s the right deal.” The potential future involvement of McMahon, WWE’s controlling shareholder, has become an early sticking point in preliminary talks with some buyers, CNBC previously reported.

“Vince made it clear to me and the market that he doesn’t need to be involved in any bid or deal to move forward and he has kept his word on that as many of us predicted,” Khan said on CNBC earlier this week.

Khan added that since he’s been back for the past three months, McMahon has been “quite complementary to myself, too creative to have the expert on the business here if we want to reach out and have conversations.”

Additionally, according to the filing, his contract gives McMahon the rights to his “life story” and related intellectual property.

McMahon acquired the company from his father in 1982 and ran it until 2022. He even stepped into the ring several times. His contract agreement gives him the right to tell his life story with WWE, with a guarantee that he will not face any future lawsuits or retaliation out of business.

WWE stock is up about 34% so far this year, slightly outperforming the broader market amid intensifying sales talk.

TikTok, ByteDance gab Millionen für die Lobbyarbeit im Kongress aus

TikTok und seine Muttergesellschaft haben seit 2019 zusammen mehr als 13 Millionen US-Dollar für die Lobbyarbeit bei Regierungsbeamten ausgegeben – eine Anstrengung, die offenbar ins Stocken geraten ist, da der Gesetzgeber Vorschläge vorantreibt, die auf den Besitz der App durch ein chinesisches Unternehmen abzielen oder sogar versuchen, TikTok in den USA vollständig zu verbieten .

Wochen nachdem der republikanische Abgeordnete Ken Buck aus Colorado und Senator Josh Hawley aus Missouri Gesetze eingeführt hatten, die TikTok-Downloads landesweit sperren würden, erhielten die Mitarbeiter von Buck im Februar einen Anruf von Michael Beckerman, dem Leiter des US-Policy-Shops des Social-Media-Unternehmens eine Person in der Nähe von Buck.

Beckerman wies Bedenken von Bucks Mitarbeitern zurück, dass TikTok Kundendaten sammelt, und befürwortete die neue Initiative des Unternehmens, bekannt als Project Texas, erklärte diese Person. Project Texas ist das Bestreben von TikTok, seine US-Kundendaten in einem sicheren Hub zu platzieren, der vom Technologieriesen verwaltet wird Orakeldie die Bedenken der US-Regierung lindern soll, dass die Informationen könnten von der chinesischen Muttergesellschaft ByteDance oder Mitgliedern der Regierungspartei in China abgerufen werden.

Die Lobbyarbeit erfolgt inmitten der anhaltenden Bemühungen von TikTok, die Befürchtungen des Gesetzgebers herunterzuspielen, die die App verbieten wollen, die in den USA monatlich 150 Millionen aktive Nutzer hat Das Unternehmen hat versucht zu zeigen, dass es Bedenken hinsichtlich Benutzerinformationen ohne ein völliges Verbot ausräumen kann, aber die meisten Gesetzgeber bei eine umstrittene Anhörung über TikTok in diesem Monat schien nicht davon überzeugt zu sein, dass Project Texas dies angemessen tun würde.

Shou Zi Chew, Chief Executive von TikTok, sieht zu, wie er vor einer Anhörung des House Energy and Commerce Committee mit dem Titel „TikTok: How Congress can Safeguard American Data Privacy and Protect Children from Online Harms“ aussagt, während der Gesetzgeber die chinesische Video-Sharing-App unter die Lupe nimmt. auf dem Capitol Hill in Washington, 23. März 2023.

Evelyn Hockstein | Reuters

TikTok-CEO Shou Zi Chew sagte dem US-Gesetzgeber bei der Anhörung, dass in China ansässige Mitarbeiter von ByteDance möglicherweise betroffen sind Zugriff auf einige US-Daten von der App. Aber er versicherte ihnen, dass die Mitarbeiter diese Daten nicht mehr haben würden, sobald das Projekt Texas abgeschlossen sei.

Der anhaltende Lobbydruck und die Aussage von Chew haben die Bemühungen auf dem Capitol Hill, die Verbindungen von TikTok zu seinem chinesischen Eigentümer zu kappen oder den Zugriff auf die App einzuschränken, bisher nicht erstickt.

Brooke Oberwetter, eine Sprecherin von TikTok, bestritt kein Element dieser Geschichte. Sie verteidigte die Arbeit des TikTok-Teams in Washington und sagte, das Unternehmen versuche, die Datenschutz- und Sicherheitsbedenken des Gesetzgebers auszuräumen.

„Unser Team in Washington konzentriert sich – und war schon immer – darauf, Gesetzgeber und Interessengruppen über unser Unternehmen und unseren Service aufzuklären“, sagte Oberwetter. „Wir werden unsere Arbeit fortsetzen, um Gesetzgeber und die amerikanische Öffentlichkeit über unsere Fortschritte bei der Umsetzung von Project Texas aufzuklären, um nationale Sicherheitsbedenken auszuräumen, und wir werden weiterhin mit Gesetzgebern, Interessenvertretern und unseren Vergleichsunternehmen an Lösungen arbeiten, die die branchenweiten Probleme des Datenschutzes angehen und Sicherheit.”

TikTok-CEO Shou Zi Chew: Wir sammeln keine präzisen GPS-Daten

Einer der führenden Vorschläge, die auf TikTok abzielen, ist der RESTRICT Act, der von einer überparteilichen Gruppe von Senatoren unter der Leitung von Sens. Mark Warner, D-Va., und John Thune, RS.D., eingeführt wurde. Der Gesetzentwurf, der noch keine Begleitgesetzgebung enthält im Repräsentantenhaus, würde dem Handelsminister die Befugnis geben, nationale Sicherheitsrisiken im Zusammenhang mit bestimmten Technologietransaktionen mit Firmen oder Einzelpersonen in einer ausgewählten Gruppe ausländischer gegnerischer Länder, einschließlich China, zu bewerten. Der Handelsminister könnte dem Präsidenten empfehlen, Maßnahmen bis hin zu einem Verbot zu ergreifen.

Ein weiterer Vorschlag ist der DATA Act, der von Rep. Mike McCaul, R-Texas, eingeführt wurde. Es würde Schutzmaßnahmen aufheben, die kreative Inhalte normalerweise vor US-Sanktionen geschützt haben. Es würde den Präsidenten auch beauftragen, Sanktionen gegen in China ansässige Unternehmen zu verhängen, die sensible personenbezogene Daten von Amerikanern an Einzelpersonen oder Unternehmen in China übermitteln. Der Vorschlag wurde entlang der Parteilinien durch den von der GOP geführten Ausschuss für Außenbeziehungen des Repräsentantenhauses geleitet, wobei die Demokraten befürchteten, er sei überstürzt.

Am äußersten Ende des Extrems befindet sich die Gesetzgebung von Hawley und Buck, die einfach darauf abzielt, TikTok vollständig zu verbieten, indem sie den Präsidenten anweist, Transaktionen mit ByteDance zu blockieren.

Seit dem Anruf bei Beckerman hat Buck nicht zurückgehalten, die App als Bedrohung für die nationale Sicherheit zu bezeichnen. Die Mitarbeiter von Buck antworteten Beckerman, dass sie immer noch besorgt über die Datenschutz-, Cybersicherheits- und nationalen Sicherheitsrichtlinien des Unternehmens seien, sagte die Person, die Buck nahe steht.

Ein anderer Verbündeter des Gesetzgebers aus Colorado sagte, das Geld für die Lobbyarbeit sei verschwendet, um zu versuchen, Bucks Meinung zu ändern. „Es ist, als würden sie ihr Geld anzünden“, sagte ein mit Buck verbündeter republikanischer Stratege gegenüber CNBC.

Ein anderer GOP-Stratege, der mit den Lobbying-Bemühungen von TikTok vertraut ist, sagte CNBC, dass der „Last-Minute-Blitz“ des Unternehmens, Wochen vor Chews Aussage, Lobbying auf dem Capitol Hill zu betreiben, „Amateurstunde“ war. Die Person sagte, Kongressbüros hätten zeitweise Treffen mit Unternehmensvertretern abgelehnt und TikTok-Beamte hätten sich nicht an wichtige Gesetzgeber wie Hawley gewandt, die die App ins Visier genommen hätten.

Hawley hat seine Kampagne zum Verbot von TikTok nicht gelockert. Er versuchte am Mittwoch, die einstimmige Unterstützung des Senats zu gewinnen, um seinen Gesetzentwurf zu beschleunigen. Sen. Rand Paul, ein Republikaner aus Kentucky, der jetzt zu der kleinen Gruppe von Gesetzgebern beider Parteien gehört, die sich gegen die Bemühungen gestellt haben, den Zugriff auf die App zu sperren, blockierte Hawleys Gesetzgebung. Während es viele Gesetzgeber gibt, die noch nicht zu dem Schluss gekommen sind, dass ein Verbot notwendig ist, haben nur eine Handvoll dies offen ausgeschlossen.

Diejenigen, die es ablehnten, in dieser Geschichte genannt zu werden, taten dies, um frei über private Gespräche und Treffen zu sprechen. Eine Hawley-Sprecherin antwortete nicht auf eine Bitte um Stellungnahme.

Die Interaktion mit Bucks Team ist nur einer von vielen Fällen, in denen Lobbyisten von TikTok oder seiner in China ansässigen Muttergesellschaft ByteDance gesehen haben, wie ihre Kampagnen auf dem Capitol Hill auf taube Ohren gestoßen sind, so Berater und Helfer von Kongressabgeordneten. Die Tatsache, dass einige Gesetzgeber wenig Interesse gezeigt haben, TikTok-Führungskräfte anzuhören, ist das jüngste Anzeichen dafür, dass das Unternehmen möglicherweise mehr Verbündete im Kongress braucht, um neue Beschränkungen für die App oder ein mögliches Verbot zu verhindern.

House Speaker Kevin McCarthy zum TikTok-Verbot: Die letzte Regierung hatte Recht

Laut einer Person bei der Versammlung im Büro des Senators traf sich Warner Anfang dieses Jahres mit TikTok-Lobbyisten. Der Gesetzgeber von Virginia und Thune stellten später ihren Gesetzentwurf vor, der den Handelsminister ermächtigen würde, gegen TikTok vorzugehen. Das Weiße Haus hat das Gesetz inzwischen gebilligt und den Kongress aufgefordert, es zu verabschieden, damit Präsident Joe Biden es unterzeichnen kann.

Warners Büro antwortete nicht auf eine Bitte um Stellungnahme.

TikTok scheint seine Lobbyarbeit kurz vor Chews Aussage vor dem Ausschuss für Energie und Handel des Repräsentantenhauses verstärkt zu haben. Das Unternehmen flog TikTok-Influencer vor der Veranstaltung nach Washington.

Das Unternehmen hatte auch Verbündete in a eine Handvoll demokratischer Gesetzgeber wie Rep. Jamaal Bowman, DN.Y. Einen Tag vor der Anhörung hielten er und bekannte Ersteller von Inhalten der App eine Pressekonferenz ab, um sich gegen ein mögliches Verbot zu wehren.

Aber in privaten Treffen sagten einige dieser Influencer Bowman, dass es Vorschriften geben müsse, um ihre Daten auf allen Social-Media-Plattformen, einschließlich TikTok, zu schützen und gleichzeitig die App intakt zu halten, so ein mit den Diskussionen vertrauter Berater.

Ungeachtet ihrer Auswirkungen auf den Gesetzgeber scheinen die Bitten der Entwickler, den Zugang zu TikTok in den USA aufrechtzuerhalten, bei vielen amerikanischen Benutzern Anklang zu finden, die die App als Quelle für Unterhaltung, Informationen und sogar Einkommen sehen. Während und nach der Anhörung teilten TikTok-Benutzer Clips von Gesetzgebern, die dem CEO grundlegende Fragen stellten, und verspotteten den Kongress für das, was sie als mangelndes Verständnis der Technologie ansahen.

Aber basierend auf den fünf Stunden angespannter Befragung durch Mitglieder beider Parteien bei der Anhörung schienen die Appelle der Schöpfer die tiefen Bedenken der Gesetzgeber über die Verbindungen der App nach China sowie die süchtig machenden und potenziell schädlichen Eigenschaften nicht auszugleichen Design.

„Ich glaube nicht, dass sie irgendwelche Gesetzgeber überzeugt haben“, sagte Alex Moore, Kommunikationsdirektor des Abgeordneten Jan Schakowsky, D-Ill., über die Lobbyarbeit von TikTok vor der Anhörung. Das Einbeziehen von TikTok-Erstellern, um die Botschaft des Unternehmens zu verstärken, „hat meinen Chef nicht beeinflusst“, fügte Moore hinzu.

Dennoch sagte Moore, sein Büro habe seit der Anhörung viel von den Wählern gehört. Vor der Zeugenaussage würden Anrufe über TikTok „einsickern“, sagte er. Aber danach „klingelten unsere Telefone ununterbrochen“, und die Mehrheit der Anrufer sprach sich gegen ein TikTok-Verbot aus.

„Wir haben mit überwältigender Mehrheit gehört, dass unsere Wähler daran nicht interessiert sind“, sagte er.

Während ein solcher Anruf oft „heiß beginnt“, sagte Moore Bestandteile neigte zur Beruhigung, als Mitarbeiter erklärten, dass Schakowsky eine umfassende Datenschutzgesetzgebung wünsche, um andere Unternehmen für ähnliche Datenpraktiken nicht “aus der Klemme zu lassen”.

Schakowsky sagte CNBC unmittelbar nach der Anhörung, dass es wahrscheinlich noch „weitere Diskussionen“ darüber geben wird, wie die Bedenken angegangen werden können, die direkt mit dem chinesischen Eigentum von TikTok zusammenhängen. Aber Schakowsky, die die parteiübergreifende Datenschutzgesetzgebung mitgetragen hat, die vom Ausschuss beim letzten Kongress verabschiedet wurde, sagte, sie hoffe, dass die Anhörung dem Schutz der Privatsphäre neuen Schwung verleiht, der auch für andere große Technologieunternehmen gelten würde.

Verbundene Lobbyarbeit

Die Lobbyarbeit von TiKTok und ByteDance ist direkt miteinander verbunden.

Die vierteljährlichen Lobbying-Berichte von ByteDance zeigen, dass alle internen Lobbyisten für TikTok arbeiten. Dazu gehören Beckerman, der einst als politischer Direktor für den ehemaligen GOP-Abgeordneten Fred Upton aus Michigan arbeitete, sowie Freddy Barnes, der im Büro des Sprechers des republikanischen Repräsentantenhauses, Kevin McCarthy, tätig war.

TikTok selbst hat eine eigene Legion externer Lobbyisten angeheuert. Zu den neuesten Rekruten gehören der ehemalige Abgeordnete Jeff Denham, R-Calif., und Ankit Desai, ein ehemaliger Berater von Biden, als er Mitglied des US-Senats war.

ByteDance und TikTok haben zusammengenommen seit 2019 über 13 Millionen US-Dollar für Lobbyarbeit auf Bundesebene ausgegeben, laut Offenlegungsberichten und von OpenSecrets geprüften Daten.

Der Großteil der Ausgaben für Lobbyarbeit im Zusammenhang mit der Social-App stammt von ByteDance. Die Muttergesellschaft von TikTok gab im Jahr 2022 5,3 Millionen US-Dollar für Lobbyarbeit auf Bundesebene aus, ein neuer Rekord für das Unternehmen, so das überparteiliche OpenSecrets.

TikTok selbst hat seit 2020 etwas mehr als 900.000 US-Dollar für externe Lobbying-Berater ausgegeben.

ByteDance auch über 400.000 US-Dollar im vergangenen Jahr an gemeinnützige Gruppen gespendet, die mit Mitgliedern des Kongresses für „Ehrenausgaben“ verbündet sind, heißt es in einer Akte.

Das Dokument zeigt, dass ByteDance zusammen 300.000 US-Dollar an das Congressional Hispanic Caucus Institute und die Congressional Black Caucus Foundation gespendet hat, Gruppen, die mit überwiegend demokratischen Caucuses im Repräsentantenhaus verbunden sind. Jede dieser Organisationen listet Jesse Price, einen Public Policy Director bei TikTok, entweder als Mitglied des Board of Directors oder des Beirats auf.

Beckerman, der führende TikTok-Lobbyist, unterzeichnete den Bericht, der die von ByteDance geleisteten Beiträge zeigt.

Laut Offenlegungsberichten haben TikTok und ByteDance seit 2020 auch Bidens Exekutivbüro im Weißen Haus mit Lobbyarbeit ins Visier genommen.

Das Weiße Haus antwortete nicht, als es nach weiteren Einzelheiten der Lobbyarbeit gefragt wurde.

Biden is interesting the ruling eradicating free screening

Members of the media ask questions of U.S. President Joe Biden as he walks to the Marine One helicopter to fly from the White House in Washington, U.S., March 31.

Jonathan Ernest | Reuters

The Biden administration on Friday appealed a Texas federal judge’s decision to remove free Obamacare coverage of preventive health services ranging from screening for certain types of cancer and diabetes to drugs used to prevent HIV.

US Judge Reed O’Connor of the US Northern District Court of Texas on Thursday struck down an Obamacare mandate that requires most private insurance plans to cover certain types of healthcare, an independent panel of experts called the Preventive Services Task Force recommended.

“Prevention is an essential part of healthcare: it saves lives, saves families money and improves the health of our country,” said Kamara Jones, a spokeswoman for the health and human services, Thursday night after the judge’s ruling. “Actions that remove these decades-old protections are backward and wrong.”

The case is now before the US Circuit Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit. A majority of the judges on this court were appointed by Republican presidents.

HHS estimates that 150 million Americans have benefited from the free health screenings, consultations, medications and other forms of health care that prevent diseases as part of Obamacare’s requirements.

The judge’s ruling has created confusion about which retirement benefits are still covered and which are not, due to the way the court order was written. But Lawrence Gostin, a health law expert at Georgetown University, said the ruling clearly jeopardizes the free coverage of the vast majority of the preventive services listed below.

Here’s a list of preventive healthcare services to which the judge’s ruling is likely to apply

Gostin said most private insurance plans will likely continue to cover these benefits, but will charge co-payments and deductibles. Working-class Americans are being hit the hardest and may forgo the health care they need because they can’t afford the cost, Gostin said.

O’Connor ruled that Obamacare cannot mandate the free health care coverage recommended by the Preventive Services Task Force because the organization’s members were illegally appointed. O’Connor tried to take down Obamacare outright in 2018, but the Supreme Court disagreed with him.

Two business owners and several individuals sued the US in March 2020 over the preventive health services mandate, arguing that purchasing insurance that covers drugs to prevent HIV infection violated their Christian religious beliefs.

Plaintiffs alleged in their lawsuit that the mandate to cover drugs used to prevent HIV “forces religious employers to provide coverage for drugs that facilitate and encourage homosexual behavior, prostitution, sexual promiscuity and injecting drug use.”

They also argued that the Preventive Services Task Force was unconstitutionally appointed and therefore its recommendations could not serve as the basis for an Obamacare mandate.

CNBC Health & Science

Read CNBC’s latest global health coverage:

12 books to take a look at in April

Spring is here and reading is so much fun.

It may be April 1st, but we wouldn’t be fooled when we say that this month is packed with new books by some of our favorite authors. Not only is Emily Henry back with another love story that is sure to make you swoon, but TJ Klune‘s latest epic adventure inspired by Pinocchio and Megan Miranda‘s new thriller about a group of friends bound by trauma are also waiting to be devoured.

Whether you’re in the mood for a charming rom-com, historical fiction about a real-life tragedy, or a psychological suspense tale to keep you up at night, fire up your Kindle because we’ve got something for everyone.

Fox motions denied, Dominion lawsuit allowed to go to court docket

A Delaware judge on Friday dismissed Dominion Voting’s $1.6 billion defamation lawsuit Fox Corp. and its networks could face trial in April.

Delaware Superior Court Judge Eric Davis dismissed Fox’s arguments that it should avoid litigation because it is protected under the First Amendment. The judge granted some of the voting machine manufacturer’s motions, except for his argument that Fox and its hosts acted maliciously in spreading false claims about the 2020 presidential election between Donald Trump and Joe Biden.

The ruling comes more than a week after lawyers for Fox and Dominion met in Delaware for two days in front of Davis and urged him to make a decision instead of going before the jury in mid-April.

“We are pleased with the court’s thorough ruling, which dismisses all of Fox’s arguments and defenses and legally finds that their statements about Dominion are false. We look forward to going to court,” Dominion said late Friday afternoon.

Fox also weighed the judge’s verdict.

“In this case, what was and always has been about the First Amendment’s protection of the media’s absolute right to cover the news. ‘ the company said.

Dominion filed its lawsuit against Fox News and Fox Business and its parent company, Fox Corp. in 2021, arguing that the broadcasters and their hosts made false claims that their voting machines had been rigged in the 2020 election, in which Biden triumphed over Trump. The former president, who was charged in an unrelated criminal case on Thursday, has made repeated false claims that the election against him was rigged.

Last year, as part of Dominion’s evidence gathering, the company questioned Fox Corp executives. — including chairman Rupert Murdoch and his son and Fox CEO Lachlan Murdoch — and deposed Fox News and the network’s top presenters. A wealth of evidence has been released in recent weeks as part of the case, showing the hosts, as well as Rupert Murdoch, were skeptical of the voter fraud allegations made on the air.

Dominion has argued Fox defamed the company, harmed its business and acted with malice. Fox has argued that it covered newsworthy allegations made by Trump and lawyers at the time and is protected by the First Amendment.

The judge referred to allegations of electoral fraud that Dominion manipulated vote counts through software and algorithms, that it was formed in Venezuela to rig elections on behalf of the late dictator Hugo Chavez, and that it paid bribes to government officials who used the machines Wahl – all of which aired on Fox – as defamatory.

“The comments also appear to charge Dominion with the serious crime of voter fraud. Allegations of criminal activity, even in the form of opinions, are not constitutionally protected,” Davis said in court filings.

While Friday’s judge condemned some of Dominion’s arguments, including defamation, in summary judgment, he did not find any on the grounds of actual malice.

To win a defamation case, a plaintiff must show that the person or entity they are suing knowingly made false statements that caused harm and acted with “actual malice,” meaning: that the speaker knew or should have known what they were saying to be untrue.

In evidence released in recent weeks, internal text messages and emails between Fox executives and its hosts have shown they were skeptical of claims made on the air. Still, Dominion argues, Fox has continued to host guests like Trump attorneys Rudy Giuliani and Sidney Powell, who have repeated erroneous allegations of voter fraud.

Fox argued in court last week that the basis of his case was “whether the press reports the allegations correctly, not whether the underlying allegations are true or false.” Lawyers built the media company’s case around the notion that “any reasonable viewer” of the news would be able to discern what allegations or facts were on Fox’s networks.

In Freitag’s opinion, Justice Davis, there was “no clear and compelling evidence of actual malice.” Instead, Davis said it was a matter for a jury to decide.

Similarly, on Fox’s arguments against the $1.6 billion in damages Dominion is seeking in this case, Davis said the matter should be decided by a jury — including the calculation of the amount of damages.

The trial, which is expected to last for weeks, is scheduled to begin on April 17, with a pre-trial conference and jury selection taking place a week before.

Dominion is asking Fox’s top presenters, including Tucker Carlson, Sean Hannity, Maria Bartiromo and Jeanine Pirro, as well as former presenter Lou Dobbs and Fox News CEO Suzanne Scott to come to the booth for questioning. The testimonies of the two Murdochs and other Fox Corp. should also be included in the process.

Former Fox producer Abby Grossberg was also added to Dominion’s witness list. Grossberg, who worked on the Bartiromo and Carlson shows, filed a lawsuit against Fox alleging she was forced to make misleading statements as part of the Dominion lawsuit.

Read the verdict.

John Fetterman is fired by Walter Reed and returns to the Senate

Senator John Fetterman (D-PA) has been discharged from the hospital. The Senator is back in Braddock, PA. His depression is in remission, and he will return when the Senate reconvenes.

Fetterman’s office said in a statement to PoliticusUSA: “US Senator from Pennsylvania John Fetterman is back in Braddock. Earlier this morning he was discharged from Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, where he was diagnosed with major depression by a team led by Dr. David Williamson, Head of Neuropsychiatry and Medical Director. according to dr Williamson is Senator Fetterman’s depression now in remission. All of Senator Fetterman’s treatment took place in the Department of Neuropsychiatry at 7 East, a medical unit. With the Senate on recess for the next two weeks, Senator Fetterman will be spending time with his family and constituents in Pennsylvania and will return to Washington, DC when Senate session resumes on April 17.”

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In his discharge report, Dr. Williamson, the doctor who treated the senator, said his language skills improved as his depression improved, and the doctor suggested depression may have been a barrier to his stroke recovery.

Sen. Fetterman urged people suffering from depression to get help: “I’m so lucky to be home. I look forward to being the father and husband I want to be and the Senator that Pennsylvania deserves. Pennsylvanians have always had my back, and I will always have theirs. I am very grateful to the incredible team at Walter Reed. Your care has changed my life. I’ll have more to say about this soon, but for now I want everyone to know that depression is treatable and the treatment works. This is not about politics – right now there are people suffering from depression in red and blue districts. If you need help, please get help.”

According to the American Stroke Association, depression is a common experience for stroke survivors and is often caused by biochemical changes in the brain. Depression can be a barrier to rehabilitation and recovery after stroke.

Pennsylvanians will be happy to have their senator back, and Senate Democrats will welcome their 51st vote.

John Fetterman has had a tough road of late and it’s good to see that he’s made progress in his recovery.

Jason is the managing editor. He is also a White House press pool and congressional correspondent for PoliticusUSA. Jason has a bachelor’s degree in political science. His thesis focused on public policy with a specialization in social reform movements.

Awards and professional memberships

Member of the Society of Professional Journalists and the American Political Science Association

Hundreds of thousands lose cowl as Covid security web is dismantled

Hundreds of 1199SEIU healthcare workers held a rally and sat to block 3rd Avenue where some were arrested. They were protesting health care cuts in Gov. Kathy Hochuls’ Medicare budget.

Lev Radin | Light Rocket | Getty Images

U.S. states will begin stripping up to 15 million people of Medicaid coverage on Saturday as an emergency safety net put in place during the Covid-19 pandemic begins to come to an end.

Medicaid is the government health insurance program for people on low incomes. It is administered jointly by the federal and state governments.

Congress generally prohibited states from ending Medicaid coverage during the pandemic through the Families First Coronavirus Response Act. Passed in March 2020, the law provided people with a safety net as the first deadly wave of Covid swept across the nation and lockdowns crippled the US economy.

Medicaid health coverage grew to more than 85 million people in December, a 25% increase from February 2020, before requirements to keep people enrolled in the program went into effect, according to Department of Health and Human Services data.

However, states can begin throwing people out of Medicaid on Saturday if they no longer meet the program’s pre-pandemic eligibility requirements, which are primarily based on income. Congress in December inserted a provision into federal spending legislation that would allow states to begin deregistering people on April 1.

Although some states begin ending coverage in April, others are waiting until May, June, July and October before doing so. A list of when all 50 states will begin ending coverage is below.

Click here for a list of when states will end the first round of Medicaid coverage. The table was provided by the Kaiser Family Foundation.

States have up to a year to determine whether individuals are still eligible for Medicaid and 14 months to complete the process of renewing their coverage or terminating it, per HHS guidance documents.

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HHS estimates that up to 15 million people will lose insurance coverage if the program returns to pre-pandemic eligibility requirements. Many of these people are expected entitled to other forms of health insurance.

According to HHS, the changes will disproportionately affect people of color and young people. Approximately 30% of those at risk of losing Medicaid coverage are Hispanic and 15% are Black. At the same time, more than 5 million children and 4.7 million adults aged 18 to 34 are allowed be kicked out of Medicaid, according to HHS.

An estimated 2.7 million people who could lose Medicaid coverage should qualify for tax credits under the Obamacare health insurance markets. About 62% of these individuals are expected to be eligible for non-award plans. An additional 5 million people are expected to be able to obtain other forms of coverage, mainly through their employer.

HHS has created a special enrollment period on healthcare.gov to help people transition to Obamacare marketplace insurance if they lose Medicaid between March 31, 2023 and July 31, 2024.

A majority of states, 33 in all, use healthcare.gov as their marketplace for insurance. The 17 states that manage their own marketplaces can, but do not have to, offer this special registration period.

As many as 6.8 million people could lose Medicaid even though they still are eligible for the program. Before the pandemic, people often lost insurance coverage due to bureaucracy. A person could lose coverage if they did not complete the annual renewal process or if their state was unable to reach them due to a change of address or other issues.

Under a A provision passed by Congress in December requires states to make good faith efforts to contact persons whose eligibility is being checked using more than one method of communication. In other words, a state cannot cancel someone’s insurance simply because a mail contact has been returned as undeliverable, which is often due to a change of address or other reason.

HHS estimated in August 2022 that about 383,000 people who lose Medicaid when the spread of the pandemic slows will fall through a bureaucratic crack called the “coverage gap.”

This gap exists in 10 states that have not expanded Medicaid to individuals whose income is up to 138% above the federal poverty line. As a result, some people in these states who are struggling to make ends meet still do not qualify for Medicaid because the income eligibility requirements are so low. Some of these individuals also do not qualify for Obamacare tax credits, leaving them without affordable health insurance options.

Texas and Florida are the two most populous states that have yet to expand Medicaid.