Tuesday, March 26

Biden expected to respond to Putin’s nuclear threat in UN address – live | US politics


When he speaks at the first United Nations General Assembly since Russia invaded Ukraine, Biden will cast the assault as a violation of the global body’s ideals, while also announcing that the United States will put its economic heft behind an effort to help poor countries survive the spike in food prices that has pushed some to the brink of crisis.

That’s according to The Guardian’s Julian Borger in New York and Andrew Roth in Moscow as they previewed the American president’s address set for 10:35 am eastern time. Here’s more on what we can expect, from US national security adviser Jake Sullivan:

“I have [Biden] will underscore the importance of strengthening the United Nations and reaffirm core tenets of its charter at a time when a permanent member of the security council has struck at the very heart of the charter by challenging the principle of territorial integrity and sovereignty.”

Later in the day, Ukraine’s president Volodymyr Zelenskiy will make his own appeal to world leaders in a video address that Russia, unsuccessfully, tried to halt. And European leaders who already addressed the assembly used it as a platform to cast Moscow’s campaign as an imperialist project.

“Those who are keeping silent today are, in a way, complicit with the cause of a new imperialism,” French president Emmanuel Macron said in his speech on Tuesday.

Good morning, US politics blog readers. A new front in the war in Ukraine is opening temporarily in New York City today, when Joe Biden addresses world leaders gathered at the United Nations General Assembly at 10:35am ET in the wake of Vladimir Putin’s speech threatening to use nuclear weapons and ordering a partial mobilization in Russia. The American president is certainly not the only world leader speaking, but as a major supplier of aid for Kyiv, Biden’s address will be closely watched for signs of how the Western allies intend to respond to Putin’s latest gambit.

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Today’s news does not stop there:

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  • The Federal Reserve will likely again raise interest rates in a decision announced at 2pm eastern time. The central bank is trying to lower America’s worryingly high inflation without tightening fiscal conditions so much the economy enters a recession.

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  • The National Cathedral in Washington DC is holding a memorial service in honor of Queen Elizabeth II at 11am, which vice-president Kamala Harris will attend.

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  • Gas prices appear to be rising again after nearly 100 days of declines, though there is some dispute over when the latest uptick started.

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Key events

“We’ve all known that Trump is crazy. I’m done with him. I will never speak to him again.” Those words were uttered by the top Republican in the Senate, Mitch McConnell, after he returned to the Capitol on January 6.

That’s according to “UNCHECKED: The Untold Story Behind Congress’s Botched Impeachments of Donald Trump,” by Politico’s Rachel Bade and The Washington Post’s Karoun Demirjian, which was excepted in the latter publication today. While the enmity between Trump and McConnnell is well documented, the book goes on to say that the senator almost supported the effort to convict Trump for the January 6 insurrection after his departure from the White House, but backed down after determining there was simply too much support for the former president among his fellow senators.

Here’s more from the excerpt:

McConnell knew many of his rank-and-file were torn over how to handle the situation — and that in their uncertainty, they would look to him for guidance. If he declared the trial to be constitutional, breaking with Trump in the process, he could set the stage for a party mutiny, helping the GOP turn the page on Trump for good. It was an appealing prospect: conviction could enable the Senate to bar Trump from holding office again — and McConnell didn’t ever want Trump in office again.

But in all his years as GOP leader, McConnell had never led such a rebellion. And that day, he wasn’t sure he was up to the task.

Some of the most steadfast Republican supporters of Donald Trump in Congress can be found in the House, so perhaps it should not be a surprise that the party’s leadership there is encouraging a no vote on legislation amending America’s electoral code to stop another January 6.

“In their continued fixation to inject the Federal government into elections, this legislation runs counter to reforms necessary to strengthen the integrity of our elections,” the office of House Republican whip Steve Scalise wrote in an email distributed to members on Tuesday. “This bill, which contains unconstitutional provisions, is the Democrats’ latest attempt at a federal takeover of elections in order to stack the electoral deck in their favor.”

It goes on to enumerate a number of issues with the Presidential Election Reform Act, including that it “creates new and broad private rights of action that can be easily abused by Democrat election lawyers to drag out elections long after Election Day,” and that it “unconstitutionally empowers Congress and Federal judges to decide and interpret state election laws, instead of states themselves.”

The effort seems unlikely to stop the bill’s progress. Democrats have a majority in the chamber, and the legislation may also attract votes from some House republicans who disagree with the plot attempted on January 6. A bigger question is how the House effort can be reconciled with legislation expected to be approved by the Senate, and whether the lower chamber’s more expansive measure will spark any disagreement among senators.

Ukraine isn’t the only country worrying about its democracy. In Washington, the House of Representatives will today begin debate on a bill to stop the sort of legal shenanigans Donald Trump’s allies attempted on January 6 to prevent Joe Biden from taking office.

The Associated Press reports that the measure is the lower chamber’s version of separate legislation under consideration in the Senate, and would overhaul the United States’ archaic election law to stop political objections from preventing the accession of a new president.

Here’s more on the bill, from the AP:

The bill, which is similar to legislation moving through the Senate, would clarify in the law that the vice president’s role presiding over the count is only ceremonial and also sets out that each state can only send one certified set of electors. Trump’s allies had unsuccessfully tried to put together alternate slates of illegitimate pro-Trump electors in swing states where Biden won.

The legislation would increase the threshold for individual lawmakers’ objections to any state’s electoral votes, requiring a third of the House and a third of the Senate to object to trigger votes on the results in both chambers. Currently, only one lawmaker in the House and one lawmaker in the Senate has to object. The House bill would set out very narrow grounds for those objections, an attempt to wart baseless or politically motivated challenges. The legislation would also require courts to get involved if state or local officials want to delay a presidential vote or refuse to certify the results.

The House vote comes as the Senate is moving on a similar track with enough Republican support to virtually ensure passage before the end of the year. After months of talks, House Democrats introduced the legislation on Monday and are holding a quick vote two days later in order to send the bill across the Capitol and start to resolve differences. A bipartisan group of senators introduced legislation this summer and a Senate committee is expected to vote on it next week.

When he speaks at the first United Nations General Assembly since Russia invaded Ukraine, Biden will cast the assault as a violation of the global body’s ideals, while also announcing that the United States will put its economic heft behind an effort to help poor countries survive the spike in food prices that has pushed some to the brink of crisis.

That’s according to The Guardian’s Julian Borger in New York and Andrew Roth in Moscow as they previewed the American president’s address set for 10:35 am eastern time. Here’s more on what we can expect, from US national security adviser Jake Sullivan:

“I have [Biden] will underscore the importance of strengthening the United Nations and reaffirm core tenets of its charter at a time when a permanent member of the security council has struck at the very heart of the charter by challenging the principle of territorial integrity and sovereignty.”

Later in the day, Ukraine’s president Volodymyr Zelenskiy will make his own appeal to world leaders in a video address that Russia, unsuccessfully, tried to halt. And European leaders who already addressed the assembly used it as a platform to cast Moscow’s campaign as an imperialist project.

“Those who are keeping silent today are, in a way, complicit with the cause of a new imperialism,” French president Emmanuel Macron said in his speech on Tuesday.

Biden expected to take on Putin in address to world leaders

Good morning, US politics blog readers. A new front in the war in Ukraine is opening temporarily in New York City today, when Joe Biden addresses world leaders gathered at the United Nations General Assembly at 10:35am ET in the wake of Vladimir Putin‘s speech threatening to use nuclear weapons and ordering a partial mobilization in Russia. The American president is certainly not the only world leader speaking, but as a major supplier of aid for Kyiv, Biden’s address will be closely watched for signs of how the Western allies intend to respond to Putin’s latest gambit.

Today’s news does not stop there:

  • The Federal Reserve will likely again raise interest rates in a decision announced at 2pm eastern time. The central bank is trying to lower America’s worryingly high inflation without tightening fiscal conditions so much the economy enters a recession.

  • National Cathedral in Washington DC is holding a memorial service in honor of queen elizabeth ii at 11am, which vice-president kamala harris will attend.

  • Gas prices appear to be rising again after nearly 100 days of declines, though there is some dispute over when the latest uptick started.




www.theguardian.com

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