McCarthy relents on key conservative demand — but uncertainty remains over speaker bid

Politics, Policy, Political News Top Stories 

Kevin McCarthy has made perhaps his biggest concession so far to the band of conservatives standing in the way of his path to speaker. Yet it’s not clear if it will be enough to clinch his gavel.

In a lengthy conference call on Sunday, McCarthy and his team informed members that he would lower the barriers for rank-and-file members to attempt to depose a sitting speaker, a change that some GOP lawmakers have warned could weaken their leadership team. If adopted, the new rule would allow five members of the House majority to force a vote of no-confidence in their leader — a long-time demand of the party’s right flank.

That tweak is part of a broad slate of GOP rule changes that McCarthy’s leadership team unveiled Sunday night. Approving new rules will be one of the first acts of the GOP’s majority later this week. But first, Republicans have to elect a speaker — and McCarthy’s slim margin for error has emboldened many conservatives in their push for reforms.

“The simple fact is that Congress is broken and needs to change,” McCarthy wrote in a letter to his members, citing party leaders’ increasingly centralized power that has “relegated members of both parties to the sidelines, with mammoth bills being drafted behind closed doors and rushed to the floor at the last minute for an up-or-down, take it or leave it vote.”

The 55 pages of proposed rules are highly procedural, yet critical to the inner workings of the House. They would, for instance, govern how party leaders bring bills to the floor and how to ensure transparency around what those bills include. But the biggest focus for Republicans lately has been the so-called motion to vacate — the same tool that conservatives effectively used to topple former Speaker John Boehner in 2015. And it could be a serious threat to McCarthy as his conference takes power this week with one of the slimmest margins in House history.

It wasn’t the only ominous sign for McCarthy on Sunday: A group of nine conservatives who haven’t said how they plan to vote on Jan. 3 released a missive stating they remained unsatisfied by McCarthy’s answers to their demands from last month.

“Despite some progress achieved, Mr. McCarthy’s statement comes almost impossibly late to address continued deficiencies ahead of the opening of the 118th Congress on January 3rd,” the group, led by Rep. Scott Perry (R-Pa.), wrote.

The group added that McCarthy’s response, which was delivered to them on Saturday, was “missing specific commitments with respect to virtually every component of our entreaties,” though they said some of the progress has been “helpful.”

Those noncommittal members, many of whom belong to the House Freedom Caucus, are in addition to several other prominent McCarthy skeptics in the GOP — underscoring the shakiness of the California Republican’s path to speaker on Tuesday.

Even so, McCarthy’s allies are not backing down, though they did make clear in their New Year’s Day huddle that they wanted more clarity on exactly how his compromises with the conservatives are translating into support. The speaker vote is just two days away, and opposition does not appear to be softening.

At one point during the call, Rep.-elect Mike Lawler (R-N.Y.) asked Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.) if he would support McCarthy if he agreed to lower the threshold to one. Gaetz replied by noting McCarthy wouldn’t agree to that, to which the California Republican replied that it is the conference that will oppose that threshold.

And McCarthy said he’d like to hear Gaetz’s answer, but Gaetz — one of his most fervent opponents — said he’d think about it. At one point he asked: is that an offer?

“Some of the rules changes are being made, some of us will live with them even though we think some of them may be unnecessary,” said one GOP lawmaker supportive of McCarthy, who requested anonymity to speak candidly of the private discussions.

Some of McCarthy’s allies also made clear they would not accept the conservative-led changes if they derailed the speaker vote. “Many of us said we’ll only agree to rules if we get 218 for Kevin,” said another House Republican, who is also a McCarthy supporter.

Other proposed changes would bring a return to Republican rules prior to the Democratic takeover in 2019. One focus is on controlling spending by restoring provisions on how House bills are scored and paid for. The GOP would reinstate so-called “Cut As You Go,” which requires all mandatory spending increases to be offset by a cut in spending.

Other proposals are new. Republicans will push ethics reforms, calling for the first members-focused ethics task force in 25 years and a new feature that would allow the House Ethics Committee to take complaints directly from the public. The package would also create a new select subcommittee within the Judiciary Committee called the “Weaponization of Federal Government,” to focus on what the GOP has called the White House’s “assault on civil liberties” —another conservative ask.

Most of the proposed rules are not surprising. Republicans plan to nix Democratic rules allowing for proxy voting, remote committee work, and magnetometers outside of the House chamber. Congressional staff unions, which had just begun forming this fall, would be banned. The GOP would form a new select committee on China that would work on protecting “American competitiveness” and defending human rights.

Certain committees will again be renamed: The House Education and Labor Committee, for instance, will become Education and Workforce.

The Democrat-led committee to investigate the Jan. 6 Capitol riots will be disbanded, requiring a “quick transfer of funds” back to the House Administration Committee.

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[World] Surfer creates island eco-haven with ancient knowhow

BBC News world 

Image caption,

Javier Lijo chose the plot of land for the waves nearby but he soon got to work improving it

When Javier Lijo bought nine acres of deforested land atop a Panamanian island, he had an eye on the waves below.

A keen surfer, the Argentine had always dreamed of a leisurely life surfing the sea, away from the car-filled giant metropolises of Latin America. But a love of sustainable living took him in a different direction.

Over 20 years, and with the help of the local indigenous Ngäbe-Buglé people, he turned his land on Isla Bastimentos, on Panama’s Caribbean coast, into a thriving, forested eco-haven.

Mr Lijo hopes his example can serve as a model for others who are looking to reforest cleared land.

Image source, Courtesy of Jvaier Lijo

Image caption,

The land had been cleared for cattle grazing and was infested with mosquitoes when Mr Lijo bought it

Image caption,

Much of the vegetation has since grown back and the buildings are hidden among the foliage

The 52-year-old pulls down the soaked leaves of one plant as he guides visitors on a tour of his Up in the Hill eco-farm, explaining that water retention in this particular species is so great “you can shower with it”.

To the uninformed, his land looks wild. But much of it is farmed: one part has timber trees for making furniture, in another cacao trees for chocolate, near the top a garden for herbs, and everywhere throughout the forest a variety of fruit, vegetables and flowers.

Most of the products he sells locally.

Image caption,

Cocoa is just one of the many things Javier Lijo grows on his eco farm

It is a big change from when Mr Lijo bought the land in 1996. Then it was cleared grazing land for cows, full of mosquitoes and flies, but he fell in love with it anyway.

As he began to manage the land, he read about the theory of permaculture – a sustainable way of living that emphasises recycling and reducing impact on the planet. From that, he had an idea for an eco-haven farm free of pesticides, where everything had a use.

He said that his vision was one where “education, working with the community, diversity of materials in the farm, different ways to make money and live” would all come together.

First he had to learn the basics, and for that, he turned to the indigenous people who have been managing Panama’s forests for centuries.

The indigenous Ngäbe-Buglé have a number of nearby settlements.

Mr Lijo first met 53-year-old Benjamín Aguilar in 2000 when he asked him for help cutting trees on the farm.

Image source, Courtesy Javier Lijo

Image caption,

Benjamín Aguilar is a member of the Ngäbe-Buglé indigenous group

Soon Mr Aguilar was advising him on how to manage the land, what to plant, and what trees to use for timber.

“I taught him how to produce cacao, how to ferment it and the time it takes to roast it,” Mr Aguilar recalls.

Mr Lijo says that the Ngäbe-Buglé have shown him “everything” he knows about how to manage the land. “They have a lot of knowledge – it’s generation after generation, hundreds and hundreds of years.”

He is not the only one who has realised the value of indigenous knowledge to forest conservation, especially as more than half of Panama’s mature forest is located in indigenous territory.

One of the world’s foremost tropical biology research institutes, the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute (STRI), runs several projects in which its scientists work alongside indigenous peoples.

Prof Catherine Potvin, a research associate at STRI who has worked with indigenous people in Panama for more than 20 years, explains why the approach works so well.

“Indigenous people cultivate to not necessarily become rich and make big enterprise. They don’t have this concept of economic growth,” she says.

“They’re just seeking sustainability. They want to sustain themselves and their territory over the long term.”

Indigenous land management also provides “green infrastructure” that can protect the environment, such as soil in intact forests which can absorb water to prevent flooding and release it during the dry season to prevent droughts.

Mr Lijo has noticed that the quality of the soil on his land has improved since he started reforesting. There is also more biodiversity with a variety of animals such as monkeys, birds, bees and armadillos returning to the farm which before was used to graze cattle.

Most notable are the strawberry dart frogs. A nearby beach is named after them, but their numbers had dwindled as tourism and clearing for farmland on the island threatened their habitat.

Image caption,

Strawberry dart frogs can now be spotted quite regularly

“For more than three years (after buying the land) we never saw the frogs but now they are everywhere,” Mr Lijo explains.

His work is a microcosm of what is taking place elsewhere in Panama.

Jefferson S Hall is a staff scientist at STRI who has led reforestation efforts which have protected the Panama Canal from floods.

In October, the institute reached an agreement with the Ngäbe-Buglé to create a reforestation project on their territory which will capture carbon and improve the ecosystem.

“People were initially sceptical as they have seen outsiders make lots of promises, promises that they did not keep,” Mr Hall says.

“We are at the beginning of a long-term relationship. We are at the start of our learning curve. We have been impressed, but not necessarily surprised, at how enthusiastic people are to plant trees.”

As for Mr Lijo’s project, Mr Hall is adamant that it may be small but he is convinced even small efforts have the potential to prove helpful.

“One of my often repeated phrases is that reforestation has to be done one landowner at a time,” he says. “So, good for the person who has done it.”

 

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[World] The Ghanaian giant reported to be the world’s tallest man

BBC News world 

When I heard rumours of a new contender for the world’s tallest man in northern Ghana, I set out to find out if it was true. The only problem? Measuring him.

A local hospital in northern Ghana told 29-year-old Sulemana Abdul Samed during one of his recent check-ups that he had reached the height of 9 ft 6in (2.89m).

This would make him the tallest man in the world, but there was a catch – the rural clinic could not be sure of his height because it did not have the correct measuring tools.

Diagnosed with gigantism a few years ago, the young man was attending a monthly appointment to deal with the complications of living as a giant when he was asked to stand straight against a measuring rod.

A shocked nurse told him: “You’ve grown taller than the scale.”

Better known to everyone by his nickname Awuche, which means “Let’s Go” in Hausa, he was bemused by the spectacle he was causing.

He was not surprised to hear he was taller, given he has never stopped growing – but it caused consternation for the staff, who were not prepared for such a scenario.

The duty nurse called out to her colleague, who in turn called out to another for help. Before long a group of nurses and health assistants gathered to solve the puzzle of determining his height.

One suggested they find a pole and use it as an extension above their stick to measure his height – and this is how they arrived at their estimate.

‘Still growing’

When I first came across Awuche a few months ago when travelling in northern Ghana, where his fame had spread across the area’s grasslands, I did not have a measuring tape on me to verify his height.

So in order to settle the matter – and armed with a 16ft measuring tape – I returned to the village of Gambaga last week.

Image caption,

A neighbour stood on a stool to mark the wall when measuring Awuche

The plan was to have him lean against a wall, mark it by the crown of his head and then determine his height using the measuring tape.

“The way they measure me, I cannot say everything is perfect,” Awuche admitted – happy with my plan to get an exact measurement.

He turned out to be taller than most of the houses in his neighbourhood, but after a good search we found a suitable building with a high-enough wall.

He took off his shoes – large slip-ons specially made from car tyres and nailed together for him by a local handyman as he has been unable to find shoes to fit him.

One of his neighbours clambered up on a wooden stool to reach Awuche’s height so he could mark the wall with a piece of charcoal.

After verifying the line, we stretched out the measuring tape firmly from the marked line to the ground as Awuche looked on in anticipation.

Image caption,

Awuche now lives with his older brother (L) in Gambaga

“Awuche, the measuring tape reads 7ft 4in,” I said.

Wearing his inimitable smile, he replied: “Wow, so what does it mean?”

“Well, the tallest man alive is 8ft 2.8in tall, he is barely one foot taller than you.”

I was referring to 40-year-old Sultan Kösen, who lives in Turkey and holds the current Guinness World Record.

“I’m still growing tall. Who knows, maybe one day I may get to that height too,” Awuche remarked – not at all upset by the discrepancy with the figure given to him by the hospital.

“Every three months of four months I grow… If you’ve not seen me for three months or four and you see me, you’d realised I have increased,” he explains.

Expanding tongue

This increase in height started to become noticeable when he was 22 years old and living in the capital, Accra.

Awuche had moved there to try his luck in the city, where one of his brothers lived, after finishing secondary school.

Image caption,

Marfan syndrome can cause the spine to become abnormally curved

He was working at a butchers, saving money to take lessons at a driving school.

But he woke up one morning in confusion: “I realised my tongue had expanded in my mouth to the extent that I could not breath [properly],” he recounts.

He visited a local pharmacy to get some medication, however days later he realised every other part of his body had started increasing in size.

When family and friends from his village visited the city, they would all remark on his growth spurt and it was at this point he realised he was gradually turning into a giant.

He began to tower over everyone – and he sought medical help as the growth brought other complications.

He has been left with an abnormally curved spine, one of the prominent symptoms of his condition, Marfan syndrome, a genetic disorder affecting the body’s connective tissues.

It results in abnormally long limbs.

More serious complications involve heart defects.

Doctors say he needs a surgical procedure in his brain to stop the growth.

Image caption,

Awuche had intended to get a driving licence but he cannot fit behind a steering wheel

But Ghana’s public healthcare insurance cannot cover this, providing only for basic treatment.

For each hospital visit he must still raise about $50 (£40).

His health problems eventually forced him to return to his home village six years ago and give up his dreams of becoming a driver.

“I was planning to go to driving school, but even when I shift the seat back, I can’t hold the steering wheel… I can’t stretch my leg because my knee will knock the wheel.”

He is now living with his brother – and gets by after setting up a small business selling mobile phone credits.

His height has also curtailed his social life.

“I used to play football like every other young man, I was athletic but now I cannot even walk short distances,” he explained.

Local celebrity

But Awuche does not let his problems get him down. He is full of soul as his tall slim frame weaves through the dusty paths of the village – smiling as people call out to him.

Image caption,

Awuche is almost two feet taller than BBC reporter Favour Nunoo (R)

He is a bit of a local celebrity.

A group of elderly people sitting by a shed exchange pleasantries, children wave, some women come up for a hug and share jokes with him.

Some people want to take selfies with him – even strangers come up to ask if he is the giant they have seen on social media.

“I usually will say: ‘Yes come closer’ – we stand and take nice pictures,” Awuche says.

He is most grateful to his family for their emotional support, saying that he knows of no other relatives, including his three brothers, who show any sign of having his condition.

“None of them are tall, I am just the tallest man.”

He would love to get married and have children one day but wants to first concentrate on sorting out his health.

BBC
I don’t have a problem with the way God created me”

Sulemana Abdul Samed, known as Awuche

His first priority is to try and raise money for plastic surgery to deal with a serious skin complaint on one leg, ankle and foot caused by the excess growth of the limb.

But looking at his bandaged toes, Awuche refuses to be disheartened by his predicament.

“That is how Allah chose it for me, I am OK. I don’t have a problem with the way God created me.”

 

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Commanders’ Ron Rivera suggests he was unaware team could be eliminated from playoffs with loss

Latest & Breaking News on Fox News 

Washington Commanders coach Ron Rivera raised eyebrows on Sunday with a puzzling answer to a question about the team’s playoff scenarios following a loss to the Cleveland Browns.

For the Commanders to make the playoffs on Sunday, the team needed to beat the Browns, get a Seattle Seahawks and Detroit Lions to lose and the Green Bay Packers to lose or tie. But they didn’t hold up their end of the bargain and by the end of the day were facing elimination.

CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM

Rivera suggested in his postgame press conference that he wasn’t aware of the threat of being eliminated from playoff contention before the game. He made the switch to go with Carson Wentz as the starting quarterback over Taylor Heinicke. Washington lost 24-10.

He was asked about the quarterback strategy for Week 18 if Washington was eliminated.

“We can be eliminated?” Rivera asked after pausing for several moments.

BROWNS’ DESHAUN WATSON THROWS 3 TOUCHDOWNS TO WIPE OUT COMMANDERS ON THE ROAD

According to ESPN, Rivera later said he was frustrated by the question and didn’t have any strategy for them losing because he didn’t think the team would.

By Sunday afternoon’s end, all the teams that the Commanders needed to lose won and brought their chances of making the postseason down to zero.

Washington lost two out of their last three games with a tie against the New York Giants in Week 13 their only plus on their recent docket.

 

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Family of suspect in Idaho stabbings say they’re trying to ‘promote his presumption of innocence’

Just In | The Hill 

The family of the suspect arrested this week in the deadly November stabbings of four University of Idaho students said they were cooperating with law enforcement in an effort to promote his “presumption of innocence” in the murder case.

In a statement released Sunday, the family of suspect Bryan Christopher Kohberger said they “care deeply for the four families who have lost their precious children.”

“There are no words that can adequately express the sadness we feel, and we pray each day for them. We will continue to let the legal process unfold and as a family we will love and support our son and brother,” the statement reads. “We have fully cooperated with law enforcement agencies in an attempt to seek the truth and promote his presumption of innocence rather than judge unknown facts and make erroneous assumptions.

“We respect privacy in this matter as our family and the families suffering loss can move forward through the legal process,” the statement continues.

The statement was released by Kohberger’s attorney Jason LaBar, the chief public defender in Monroe County, and shared online in full by several outlets.

Police arrested Kohberger on Friday in Pennsylvania, where he is awaiting extradition to Idaho to face four counts of first-degree murder and a felony burglary charge.

Authorities said they linked Kohberger to the crime through DNA evidence and his ownership of a white Hyundai Elantra that was allegedly seen near the crime scene in Moscow, Idaho, the night of the murder.

Police have not yet disclosed a possible motive or whether they believe Kohberger knew the victims. A murder weapon has also not been located.

LaBar said his client is eager to prove his innocence and that Kohberger will waive his extradition hearing to quicken the legal process.

Four University of Idaho students were found dead with stabbing wounds inside a rental home in the city of Moscow on Nov. 13.

The deaths of 21-year-olds Kaylee Goncalves and Madison Mogen and 20-year-olds Xana Kernodle and Ethan Chapin shocked the small town and college community just before Thanksgiving break.

All four college students were remembered as beloved members of the community and their families. The three women were roommates at the rental home and Chapin was dating Kernodle.

The case quickly grew into a national story, and authorities faced some criticism when weeks passed without a suspect being publicly identified or a murder weapon found.

Kohberger is a graduate at Washington State University (WSU) and lives in Pullman, Wash., not far from the border with Idaho. He is reportedly a doctoral student in the criminal justice and criminology department.

Kohberger traveled to his parent’s home in Pennsylvania for the holidays, according to LaBar. He was reportedly tracked by police for days before his arrest.

​State Watch, News, Bryan Kohberger, Idaho slayings, Jason LaBar Read More 

For $115,000, Will An 8k Mile 1991 Acura NSX Brighten Up The New Year For You?

Carscoops 

Yes, this 1991 Acura NSX is fitted with an automatic transmission rather than a stick shift. However, it could still be the perfect car for someone looking to pick up the keys to a JDM icon and either be driven as it was designed to be or stored in a collection.

The NSX has been listed up for sale through Beverly Hills Car Club on eBay with an asking price of $115,000. That’s a lot of money, particularly since there are numerous 2017 Acura NSX models listed through Auto Trader for less than $130,000 and one that is being sold by Stevenson-Hendrick Honda Wilmington for just $119,817.

So, what do you get for your money? Well, as first-generation Acura NSXs go, this one is in great shape and has only been driven 8,762 miles (14,101 km) since new. While the listing doesn’t provide many details about the car’s ownership history, the photos shared of the car show that it is in excellent condition and that the stunning red paint is free of any obvious signs of damage.

Read: These Two Low-Mileage Honda NSX Type Rs Are A Japanese Dream

The interior is also immaculate. Black leather adorns the seats, transmission tunnel, dashboard, and door panels, and despite the car’s age, the leather remains in good condition.

Powering the car is a 3.0-liter naturally-aspirated VTEC engine coupled to a four-speed automatic transmission. There’s no doubt that models with the available six-speed are more desirable but any NSX is special. This one is also being sold with the owner’s manual booklet, warranty booklet, service receipt copies from August 2008 through July 2019, a copy of the window sticker, and a clean Carfax report.

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Expanding supplier diversity can be a unifying issue for 118th Congress   

Just In | The Hill 

The 2022 mid-term elections have concluded, resulting in a “split decision” as Republicans won a majority in the House of Representatives, and Democrats maintained control of the U.S. Senate. In the wake of the most expensive and seemingly contentious mid-term elections in American history, the question remains as to what can we expect from the upcoming 118th Congress convening in this month. Will, as some are forecasting, a divided Congress result in legislative gridlock and further political division? Are there any issues related to public policy where members of Congress can find common ground, work together, and move a bipartisan agenda forward? 

USPAACC believes that the answers to both questions are an emphatic “Yes” and “Yes” – if Congress applies its energy and expertise toward a common sense, bipartisan, national, and unifying public policy priority such as increasing supplier diversity. Increasing supplier diversity — ensuring a robust pipeline of qualified, certified, minority and diverse businesses ready, willing, and able to work with Fortune 500 corporations, federal agencies, and large-scale nonprofits – is good for our economy, good for minority and diverse businesses, good for minority communities, and good for the global supply chain. 

Supplier diversity refers to the purchase of products and services from businesses owned by traditionally excluded and underserved groups (one that is at least 51 percent owned, controlled, and operated on a day-to-day basis) to ensure their inclusion in the supply chain and procurement opportunities provided by the government, corporations, and large nonprofits. Diverse business includes those that are minority-, women-, veteran-, disabled-, and LGBTQ-owned. And minority means African, Asian, Hispanic and Native Americans. This isn’t some new concept; it has its origins in the American civil rights movement when the federal government intentionally pushed agencies to grant minority-owned businesses access to supply chain contracts. It was the right policy then, and it’s the right policy now, as President Biden’s Executive Order 13985 issued January of 2021 directed federal agencies to work toward making contracting opportunities more readily available to all eligible minority-owned firms. 

Opening the doors to opportunities for minority-businesses and minority communities promotes innovation, fosters competition, cultivates new markets, and broadens the pool of potential suppliers while bringing in new, diverse voices, perspectives, and life experiences. In terms of our global supply chain that was fractured, fragmented and, some would argue, wholly exposed during the height of the pandemic, increasing supplier diversity can ensure a continuity of diverse, qualified, certified suppliers ready to meet tomorrow’s needs today.  

This issue goes far beyond mere “virtue signaling.” With America’s growing minority population projected to represent 70 percent of the total increase in purchasing power from 2020 to 2045, embracing supplier diversity is a long-term investment that strategically positions corporations for the changing marketplace where buying decisions will be increasingly driven by minority consumers.  

Increasing supplier diversity is one of USPAACC’s top priorities for 2023, which is why we recently announced the Supplier Diversity (“SD”) Champions program that will begin accepting applications in January of 2023 – right around the time the 118th Congress will convene.  

The SD Champions program allows for applications from any U.S.-based corporation with at least 750 U.S.-based employees and represents an intentional shift away from awards based solely on a corporation’s ability to spend.  

The program moves toward a new focus encouraging transparency, innovation, inclusion, impact, and integration in supplier diversity programs. The intent is to elevate corporate social responsibility to a higher standard of diverse supplier development and demonstrable economic impact on minority and diverse communities. USPAACC is proud to work with our chamber partners – Disability:IN, NaVOBA, NVBDC, US Black Chambers, and WBENC – in advancing this important initiative and underlying goals. More details on the SD Champions are available at https://sdchampions.org/

As evidenced during the midterms, there are deep political divisions within America. The election results confirmed the nation’s wish for both political parties to work together and focus on commonsense priorities such as reducing inflation, helping American families get back to normal, and strengthening our economy. These priorities are interconnected, and the Supplier Diversity Champions program will help achieve them. 

Now, more than ever, we need a renewed sense of national unity and purpose, fueled by commonsense policies that will command strong, bipartisan support. Expanding supplier diversity meets these criteria and we hope that the incoming 118th Congress will seize the opportunity by embracing this priority. USPAACC stands ready to work with both sides of the political aisle in making this a reality.  

Susan Au Allen is National President and CEO, US Pan Asian American Chamber of Commerce Education Foundation (USPAACC).

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DeSantis’ second inauguration as governor will have a ‘Free State of Florida’ theme, an intimate candlelight dinner, and a toast to moms supporting the GOP governor

Business Insider 

Then-Florida Governor-elect Ron DeSantis, left, arrives with his wife Casey during an inauguration ceremony, Tuesday, January 8, 2019, in Tallahassee, Florida.

DeSantis is being sworn in for his second term on January 3 in Tallahassee. 
Lots of onlookers will be watching for signs of his national political aspirations. 
Numerous events are scattered over the week, including a candlelight dinner and a ball. 

The political world will be watching Tallahassee this week as Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida prepares to kick off his second term. 

The governor will take the oath of office on the steps of the Historic Capitol on Tuesday at noon, and several other events will be scattered in Florida’s capital over two days. 

Eagle-eyed viewers will be closely watching for signs of DeSantis’ national ambitions. DeSantis is a favorite to run for the GOP nomination in 2024 behind former President Donald Trump, who made his White House bid official on November 15. 

“When he gives his speech I think that speech — although it will be for Florida — may be telling his projections for 2024,” Jennifer Carroll, who was lieutenant governor under former GOP Gov. Rick Scott, told Insider. “For the inauguration, that would be the thing to look for: What is he going to say in the speech? What is going to be the delivery and the tone?”

The inauguration festivities formally kick off Monday with an intimate candlelight cocktail hour and dinner. 

On Tuesday, after the noon swearing-in on the steps of the Historic Capitol, Florida first lady Casey DeSantis will hold “A Toast to One Million Mamas,” in recognition of the 1.1 million women she mobilized in support of her husband. 

The final event of the two-day bash is the inaugural ball, which typically takes place at the Donald L. Tucker Civic Center. The DeSantises want guests to stay late and dance at the ball, and got a band to perform, said a person briefed on the planning who spoke on condition of anonymity. 

Five people who donated $1 million will get the “inaugural chair” designation and access to multiple inaugural events, according to a breakdown of sponsorship packages obtained by Politico. The overarching theme is “The Free State of Florida,” the Florida Standard first reported.

“The Free State of Florida” is a motto mirroring DeSantis’ 2022 campaign theme. Ahead of Election Day, his campaign ran ads titled “My Florida Story” that featured people talking about how the governor’s policies on COVID-19, when he pushed to keep schools and workplaces open.

DeSantis carried the state by nearly 20 points on Election Day against former Democratic Rep. Charlie Crist. The victory was a stunning turnaround for the governor, who won his first gubernatorial race by just 33,000 votes. 

During his second term, DeSantis will have a supportive supermajority in the Republican legislature. So far, DeSantis pledged to undo sales taxes on certain items and pitched a plan to make it more difficult for teachers to enroll and stay in unions. He has called his priorities for the 2022 session his “Freedom Agenda.” 

DeSantis, 44, is currently the youngest state governor in the US, though he’s about to be unseated from that designation by Gov.-elect Sarah Huckabee Sanders in Arkansas, who is 40. 

Over the course of his two-day inauguration, lobbying offices and law firms also are expected to have their own events in Florida’s capital. 

Officials stand on stage during an inauguration ceremony where Ron DeSantis was sworn in as Florida Governor, Tuesday, January 8, 2019, in Tallahassee, Florida.

Inauguration tickets raise funds for the Republican Party of Florida 

The funds collected from ticket sales for the various official inauguration events will go toward the Republican Party of Florida. Under state law, individuals and corporations don’t have limits as to how much they can contribute to state political parties or committees. 

The inaugural chairs for the event, The Florida Standard reported, are Brian Ballard of Ballard Partners; Nick Iarossi of Capital City Consulting; Bill Rubin of Rubin Turnbull & Associates; and Jeff Hartley of Smith, Bryan & Myers. 

“Both the Governor and First Lady oversaw every detail,” Hartley told Insider of the forthcoming inauguration. “It was put together in a tight timeframe with a small staff who did an unbelievable job of pulling it all together over the holidays.”

Five donors who paid $1 million for tickets will get to attend the candlelight dinner and the ball, receive prime seats to the swearing-in, be able to take a photo with the governor, and get two tickets each to “A Toast to One Million Mamas,” according to Politico.

The toast is taking the place of what has traditionally been a tea with the first lady, according to a Republican strategist who spoke on condition of anonymity to protect invitee information. The event is expected to celebrate DeSantis’ successful endorsements of school board candidates who align with his agenda and to include members of the conservative “Moms for Liberty” group. 

Guests of the governor for various events will include conservative media influencers, three people told Insider. 

Major fundraising is typical for an inauguration, whether it be at the state or federal level. Numerous corporations that do business with the federal government also helped bankroll President Joe Biden’s made-for-TV inauguration celebrations, Insider reported.

DeSantis released a partial list of donors in 2019 that included now-political foe Disney and the private prison company the GEO Group.

This inauguration, DeSantis is considering turning down donations from Big Tech companies, The New York Times reported

DeSantis himself has become a prolific fundraiser who shattered records for a gubernatorial campaign, according to the money-in-politics nonpartisan research organization OpenSecrets. His political action committee, Friends of Ron DeSantis, raised nearly $206 million as of November 2, according to the Florida Department of State Division of Elections. 

During Tuesday’s ceremony, DeSantis is expected to appear alongside his wife and Lieutenant Governor Jeanette Nuñez.

Other top Florida officials also tend to appear at the inauguration, including the attorney general, the chief financial officer, and the commissioner of agriculture. 

The 2023 gubernatorial inauguration is the same day as the start of the new Congress up in Washington, DC, so not all of the Florida delegation will be attending. 

“I support Governor DeSantis and am honored to have been invited to his inauguration,” GOP Rep. Matt Gaetz of Florida told Insider. “Unfortunately, I have other pressing business in Washington on January 3rd.”

Emails inquiring about attendance were sent to the offices of other Republican members of the Florida delegation, including now-Sen. Rick Scott, Sen. Marco Rubio, as well as Reps. Byron Donalds and Brian Mast, were not answered in time for deadline. An email sent to a representative for former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush also was not met with a response. 

Then-Florida Gov.-elect Ron DeSantis, right, and his wife Casey wave to supporters as they walk onto the stage after he was declared the winner of the election at his party Tuesday, November 6, 2018, in Orlando, Florida.

Every inauguration has a different focus and events

DeSantis’ 2019 inauguration had roughly 3,000 guests in attendance, according to The Naples Daily News.

That inauguration included an appreciation event for military veterans and first responders at the Tallahassee Automobile Museum and a legislative luncheon at the state Capitol. The event was a nod to DeSantis’ experience given that he is a veteran who was a lawyer for the Navy. 

The events from the last inauguration also included a breakfast at Goodwood Museum in Tallahassee to recognize Nuñez as the highest-ranking Hispanic woman elected in Florida history.

When DeSantis was first sworn in in 2019, he and his wife opted not to hold a traditional inaugural parade. Instead, they held their son Mason’s baptism at the governor’s mansion with water they collected from the Sea of Galilee during a trip to Israel, according to The Tampa Bay Times.

“The pomp and circumstance is fine, but ultimately this is about putting the pedal to the metal,” the governor told the Associated Press about opting not to have a parade. 

There will be no parade in Tallahassee in 2023, either. The inauguration for Scott — who was DeSantis’ predecessor in the governor’s mansion, did include a parade. Asked by Insider to talk about Florida inaugurations, Scott smiled as he recounted his first swearing-in over a decade ago.

“It’s fun. We had a parade,” Scott said in an interview on Capitol Hill of the official celebrations he partook in.

The only low point that stuck out was a minor technical difficulty. “I walked out to use a teleprompter and it didn’t work,” Scott said of the communications snafu.

Scott said he kept things low-key after his swearing in. 

“They had a ball … but we didn’t have one,” he said, adding, “Every inauguration is different.”

Read the original article on Business Insider

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Marie Osmond debuts her new look in rare photo with husband Steve Craig at Disney World

Latest & Breaking News on Fox News 

You could have met Marie Osmond and her husband Steve Craig at Walt Disney World, as the couple has spent their entire week there.

In a rare photo of the duo shared to her Instagram, Osmond is seen smiling alongside Craig at the theme park. 

She wrote, “After we finished the #CandlightCelebration at Epcot, I’ve been blessed to spend the week with my family here at Walt Disney World!”

The “Meet Me in Montana” singer also showcased her new hair – straying away from her usual cascading brunette locks.

MARIE OSMOND SAYS ‘MY BELIEF IN GOD MADE ALL THE DIFFERENCE’ IN ESCAPING CHILD STAR CURSE, WEIGHT LOSS JOURNEY

Osmond was pictured with blonde hair – which she later revealed to be fake in the comments section of her Instagram.

One fan wrote to Osmond, “You changed your hair color. Looks good,” to which the singer replied, “No, it’s one of my fun wigs.”

Another follower wrote in part, “You make a beautiful blonde,” to which the “Donny & Marie” star answered, “Thanks! You should see my purple wig.”

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In another photo, Osmond showed a behind-the-scenes glimpse of the trip with her family, photographing her husband holding hands with her grandchildren as they strolled through the park.

Osmond and Craig were initially married in 1982, only to divorce in 1985. The couple share one son together, Stephen James Craig.

Osmond went on to have two biological children and five adoptive children with her second husband Brian Blosil, although they divorced in 2007. 

Osmond remarried Craig in 2011, months prior to their son’s wedding. 

Although photos with Craig are few and far between, photos of her children and grandchildren are abundant on Osmond’s social media.

 

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Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI body lying in state at Vatican

Top News: US & International Top News Stories Today | AP News 

The body of late Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI laid out in state inside St. Peter’s Basilica at The Vatican, Monday, Jan. 2, 2023. Benedict XVI, the German theologian who will be remembered as the first pope in 600 years to resign, has died, the Vatican announced Saturday. He was 95. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini)

VATICAN CITY (AP) — Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI ‘s body, his head resting on a pair of crimson pillows, lay in state in St. Peter’s Basilica on Monday as thousands of people filed by to pay tribute to the pontiff who shocked the world by retiring a decade ago.

As daylight broke, 10 white-gloved Papal Gentlemen — lay assistants to pontiffs and papal households — carried the body on a cloth-covered wooden stretcher up the center aisle of the mammoth basilica to its resting place in front of the main altar under Bernini’s towering bronze canopy.

A Swiss Guard saluted as the body was brought in via a side door after Benedict’s remains, placed in a van, had been transferred from the chapel of the monastery grounds where the increasingly frail, 95-year-old former pontiff had passed away on Saturday morning.

His longtime secretary, Archbishop Georg Gaenswein, and a handful of consecrated laywomen who served in Benedict’s household, followed the van by foot in a silent procession toward the basilica.

Just after 9 a.m. (0800 GMT), the doors of the basilica were swung open so the public, some who had waited for hours in the dampness before dawn, could pay their respects to the late pontiff, who retired from the papacy in 2013 to become the first pope to do so in 600 years.

Hub peek embed (PopeBenedictXVI) – Compressed layout (automatic embed)

Faithful and curious, the public strode briskly up the center aisle to pass by the bier after waiting in a line that by midmorning snaked around St. Peter’s Square.

Filippo Tuccio, 35, came from Venice on an overnight train to view Benedict’s body.

“I wanted to pay homage to Benedict because he had a key role in my life and my education. I arrived here at around 7:30, after leaving Venice last night,” Tuccio said.

“When I was young I participated in World Youth Days,” said the pilgrim, referring to the jamborees of young faithful held periodically and attended by pontiffs. Tuccio added that he had studied theology, and “his pontificate accompanied me during my university years.”

“He was very important for me: for what I am, my way of thinking, my values. This is why I wanted to say goodbye today.”

Public viewing lasts for 10 hours on Monday in St. Peter’s Basilica. Twelve hours of viewing are scheduled for Tuesday and Wednesday before Thursday morning’s funeral, which will be led by Pope Francis, at St. Peter’s Square.

Security officials expected at least 25,000 people to pass by the body on the first day of viewing.

Marina Ferrante, 62, was among them. The Roman arrived an hour before the doors were opened, and she grew emotional when she explained why she came.

“I think his main legacy was teaching us how to be free,” she said. “He had a special intelligence in saying what was essential in his faith and that was contagious” for other faithful. “The thing I thought when he died was that I would like to be as free as he was.”

While venturing that the shy, bookworm German churchman and theologian and the current Argentine-born pontiff had different temperaments, “I believe there’s a continuity between him and Pope Francis and whoever understands the real relationship between them and Christ can see that,” Ferrante said.

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Trisha Thomas contributed to this report.

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Follow AP’s coverage of Pope Benedict XVI: https://apnews.com/hub/pope-benedict-xvi

 

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