BREAKING NEWS
Giuliani associates face trial in campaign finance scheme
Read full article: Giuliani associates face trial in campaign finance schemeA businessman who once pitched himself as someone who could expose corruption in the Trump Administration over its dealings in Ukraine is facing trial in New York City.
Fact-checking Gov. Abbottās claim of migrants entering Texas border cities with virus
Read full article: Fact-checking Gov. Abbottās claim of migrants entering Texas border cities with virusāThey cannot cross the border without having a negative test result,ā Romero said. The other group is people who crossed the border illegally and are dropped off by U.S. Customs and Border Protection under the catch-and-release program. Of those tests, 169, or just over 13%, tested positive, but thatās just for the city of Brownsville. Romero said local non-governmental organizations have set up shelters and hotel rooms for those who test positive to stay in and quarantine if they choose to. Romero said the city received 10,000 Rapid COVID-19 tests from the Texas Department of Emergency Management to facilitate the process.
House committee chair presses Census on delays to count
Read full article: House committee chair presses Census on delays to countMaloney wrote that the Commerce Department ā which oversees the Census Bureau ā missed a Nov. 24 deadline to give the documents to the committee. Maloney threatened a subpoena if āa full and unredacted setā of the requested documents are not given to the committee by Dec. 9. Because of the coronavirus pandemic, the Census Bureau switched its deadline for wrapping up the once-a-decade head count of every U.S. resident from the end of July to the end of October. The Census Bureau already was facing a shortened schedule of two and a half months for processing the data collected during the 2020 census ā about half the time originally planned. The bureau has not officially said what the anomalies were or publicly stated if there would be a new deadline for the apportionment numbers.
TikTok asks judge to block Trumpās ban as deadline looms
Read full article: TikTok asks judge to block Trumpās ban as deadline loomsNEW YORK ā Chinese-owned TikTok asked a judge to block the Trump Administrationās attempt to ban its app, suggesting the video-sharing appās forced deal with Oracle and Walmart remains unsettled. An app-store ban of TikTok, delayed once by the government, is set to go into effect Sunday. President Donald Trump set this process in motion with executive orders in August that declared TikTok and another Chinese app threats to U.S. national security. But he also said he could retract his approval if Oracle doesn't āhave total control.āThe two sides in the TikTok deal appear at odds over the corporate structure of TikTok Global. ByteDance, TikTokās Chinese parent, said Monday that it will still own 80% of the U.S. entity after a financing round.
TikTok to fight Trump over his pending order to ban its app
Read full article: TikTok to fight Trump over his pending order to ban its appNEW YORK Video app TikTok said it will wage a legal fight against the Trump Administration's efforts to ban the popular, Chinese-owned service over national-security concerns. TikTok, which is owned by China's ByteDance, insisted Monday that it is not a national-security threat and that the government is acting without evidence or due process. President Donald Trump has issued two executive orders in August, first a sweeping but unspecified ban on anytransaction with ByteDance, to take effect within 45 days. Both Republican and Democratic lawmakers have shared concerns about TikTok that ranged from its vulnerability to censorship and misinformation campaigns to the safety of user data and childrens privacy. But the administration has provided no specific evidence that TikTok has made U.S. users data available to the Chinese government.
Cut in federal funding to some Texas COVID-19 testing sites wont affect San Antonio, city says
Read full article: Cut in federal funding to some Texas COVID-19 testing sites wont affect San Antonio, city saysSAN ANTONIO The Trump Administrations plan to stop federal funding at seven Texas coronavirus testing sites will not affect any San Antonio access points. City officials said the drive-thru sites in San Antonio are not federally funded, unlike in some major Texas cities. The Trump Administration has said it will cease funding to 13 testing sites in five U.S. states at the end of the month. According to the Texas Tribune, elected officials from both parties in Texas have fought back against the closures as COVID-19 cases continue to spike. Across Texas, other testing sites are funded by private companies, local governments or the state level.
Appeals court rules Trump can use nearly $4 billion in military funds for border wall
Read full article: Appeals court rules Trump can use nearly $4 billion in military funds for border wallA federal appeals court late Wednesday ruled the Trump Administration can use nearly $4 billion in military funds for construction of the presidentās long-promised border wall. The $3.6 billion had been earmarked by the Trump administration for construction of 11 barriers on the southern border, CNN reported Wednesday. The Trump administration asked the appeals court to consider the matter on December 16. "The United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit has lifted an illegitimate nationwide injunction entered by a lower court, and in doing so has allowed vital border wall construction to move forward using military construction funds. āA court has already determined that the government canāt lawfully use military construction funds to build Trumpās border wall,ā Parker said in a statement.
Rio Grande Valley getting its first new border wall under Trump administration
Read full article: Rio Grande Valley getting its first new border wall under Trump administrationDONNA, Texas ā One of the nationās first new sections of the border wall, not a replacement, is being built near Donna and will be unlike existing structures that are more than a decade old. āThe new levee wall system is much better,ā said Jason Montemayor, U.S. Border Patrol special operations supervisor with the Rio Grande Valley sectorās wall team. āThey will not want to conduct business here in the Rio Grande Valley sector," he said. However, Scott Nicol, with the Lower Rio Grande Valley chapter of the Sierra Club and a longtime opponent of border walls, said what hasnāt changed is that many property owners continue to fight eminent domain. He said the fact that the disputes over border walls have persisted over the years ātells me people just donāt understand what walls do.āFor those pushing for more border walls, āItās strictly a political issue for them,ā Nicol said.