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This is just one example of a struggling community that has landed a major investment in clean energy since President Joe Biden signed the Inflation Reduction Act into law exactly one year ago Wednesday. The $750 billion law — the largest climate investment in US history — has helped spark a boom in private investment, especially in clean energy, electric vehicles and batteries. Importantly, many of these clean energy projects are set to be built in communities that really need the help. New plants could bring people into the labor force who have been left behind,” the Treasury analysis finds. The $4.4 billion investment is expected to create 300 new jobs and support countless existing ones.
Persons: Joe Biden, , Wally Adeyemo, , it’s, ” Daniel Yergin Organizations: New, New York CNN, Adams Fork Energy, CNX Resources, Treasury Department, CNN, Honda, LG Energy, Treasury, Bank of America, ” Bank of America, P, P Global Locations: New York, Mingo County , West Virginia, Mingo County, Fayette County , Ohio, Columbus, Marysville , Ohio
Rep. George Santos was supposed to file his annual financial disclosure on August 13. The House Ethics Committee is already investigating him over past issues with his disclosures. The scandal-plagued congressman, who has admitted to fabricating broad swaths of his background, is already facing scrutiny over past financial disclosures. Additionally, Santos' federal indictment also includes charges of making false statements on financial disclosures that he filed in 2020 and 2022. The congressman's latest financial disclosures, which would include the entire year of 2022, could offer a greater window into his enigmatic financial situation, especially given the ongoing scrutiny from federal prosecutors and House ethics officials.
Persons: George Santos, , Santos, Kevin McCarthy Organizations: Service, The New York Republican, Senate, The New York Times Locations: Wall, Silicon, Santos, New York
But at the same time, the key role lawyers played in buttressing the former president’s plans speaks to a troubling crisis in the legal profession. The lawyers he conspired with — whose alleged conduct breached a host of rules of professional ethics, in addition to provisions of criminal law — did not emerge from whole cloth. for the first time demanded that students at any American law school wishing to retain its A.B.A. Members of both parties said they supported the goal: to make sure government lawyers consistently uphold the highest standards of professionalism in the public service. Dozens of other lawyers who represented Mr. Trump in election litigation now face misconduct allegations in state disciplinary proceedings nationwide.
Persons: , Richard Nixon’s, lawyering, Gerald Ford’s, Eastman, Rudy Giuliani, Trump Organizations: American Bar Association, Washington , D.C Locations: Clarks, California, Washington ,
The battle for control of the sea could have implications for global energy markets and world food supplies. In Washington, Biden administration officials had expressed reservations early in the war about Ukraine striking targets or conducting sabotage inside Russia, including its Black Sea ports, fearing that such attacks would only escalate tensions with President Vladimir V. Putin. The United States has prohibited the use of American weapons in any attack against Russian territory, and American officials say they do not pick targets for Ukraine. But the United States and Western allies have long provided intelligence to Ukraine that, along with its own extensive intelligence-gathering networks, Kyiv uses to select targets. The Battle to Project PowerFor centuries, the Black Sea has been at the center of Russia’s efforts to extend its geopolitical and economic influence, leading to clashes with other world powers, including multiple wars with the Ottoman Empire.
Persons: Oleksiy Neizhpapa, Biden, Vladimir V, Putin Organizations: Ukrainian, NATO, United Locations: Russian, Washington, Ukraine, Russia, United States, Ottoman Empire
Mississippi lawyers successfully argued against a lifetime voting ban for felons. These Jim Crow-era laws included a lifetime voting ban on any Mississippi resident convicted of certain felonies. Previous challenges to the law have argued it violates the Equal Protection Clause of the 14th Amendment, the Post reports. While the law is still in effect, if this latest ruling sticks, it could restore voting rights to 30,000 people in the state, according to the Post. Additional requirements in these states include indefinite bans for some crimes or additional waiting periods after someone completes their sentence.
Persons: Jim Crow, Lynn Fitch, Organizations: Service, Circuit, Washington Post, Post, National Conference of State Legislatures Locations: Mississippi, Wall, Silicon
Here are 10 ways AI tools such as ChatGPT have entered the workplace — and what may come out of it. Nick Patrick, the owner of the music-production company Primal Sounds Productions, told Insider he used ChatGPT to fine-tune legal contracts for clients. "You really got to find time to, like, learn this skill," Nigam previously told Insider. Companies are using AI to write their performance reviewsManagers may find writing performance reviews for their employees a tough task. He told Insider: "Any technology that increases productivity, ChatGPT included, makes a shorter workweek more feasible."
Persons: OpenAI, Nick Patrick, Shannon Ahern, hadn't, Jensen Huang, Huang, Akash Nigam, Nigam, Neil Taylor, ChatGPT, Taylor, Insider's Beatrice Nolan, Nolan, would've, Jasmine Cheng, Cheng, WorkLife, Carl Benedikt Frey, Michael Chu, iHeartMedia, Goldman Sachs, Goldman, Suumit Shah, chatbot, Anu Madgavkar, Richard Baldwin, Fran Drescher, Jezebel — Organizations: Morning, IBM, Workers, Primal Sounds Productions, Google, Twitter, Companies, Employers, Nvidia, ChatGPT, Sky News, Hulu, Spotify, Mobile, Oracle, Columbia Business School, McKinsey Global Institute, Apple, JPMorgan, Northrop Grumman, AIs, Writers Guild of America, SAG, Journalists, GMG Union of, Media Locations: Taipei, Taiwan, Oxford
It was enacted as an amendment to one of Israel’s Basic Laws, which the justices have never previously struck down. Originally, Basic Laws, which can be passed by a simple parliamentary majority, were not necessarily superior to other laws. Then in 1992, the Knesset passed a Basic Law that guaranteed dignity and liberty. “Proportionality is a balancing test,” said Rivka Weill, another law professor at Reichman University. But if the government removed Ms. Baharav-Miara, it would “cross a red line for the court,” Professor Weill said.
Persons: Benjamin Netanyahu’s, Netanyahu, , Oded, Adam Shinar, , it’s, , Kim Lane Scheppele, Aharon Barak, Benjamin Netanyahu, Ronaldo Schemidt, Shinar, Rivka Weill, Weill, Gil Cohen Magen “, Aryeh Deri, Deri, Scheppele, Ronen Zvulun Organizations: Monday, Reichman University, Princeton University, ., Agence France, Princeton, Senate Locations: Israel, Israel’s, Tel Aviv, Herzliya, Jerusalem, Gali Baharav, Britain, United States
Former President Donald Trump has a week of campaign stops on the calendar as he gears up for another collision with the law — a departure from the lead-up to the first two criminal indictments he faced this year. Trump had no public official campaign stops in the five days before each of his first two indictments, in New York and Florida. On Tuesday, the former president will attend a campaign fundraising event in New Orleans, with tickets going for $23,200 per person/per couple. On Friday, Trump will speak at the Republican Party of Iowa’s 2023 Lincoln Dinner alongside most other 2024 GOP presidential candidates. Trump is also leveraging the specter of an indictment in his fundraising tactics.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, , Joe Biden’s, ” Trump, Steven Cheung Organizations: Republican Party of, Biden Department of Justice, NBC, White Locations: New York, Florida, New Orleans, Iowa, Pennsylvania
But so far there’s no sign that two and possibly more trials looming over Trump will convince most GOP primary voters he’s too much of a risk to nominate. In his first hours in the White House, Trump accused the media of falsely underestimating the size of his inaugural crowd. Some polls, for example, show substantial numbers of GOP voters who liked his presidency are open to supporting someone else. But DeSantis also assures Trump voters he’s not piling on the ex-president. But he added: “Let me be very clear: President Trump was wrong on that day.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, Ron DeSantis, Nikki Haley, Mike Pence, Jack Smith, DeSantis, , Hillary Clinton, ” Trump, , Christopher Wray, Smith, Robert Mueller, James Comey, Wray, Arizona Sen, Jeff Flake, Liz Cheney, Kevin McCarthy, Nancy Pelosi, McCarthy, “ Donald Trump, he’s, , “ I’m, Chris Christie, Asa Hutchinson, he’d, Jake Tapper, Russell Brand, ” Haley, ” Pence, rebutting Trump’s, Pence Organizations: Washington CNN, Republican White House, Republican, Trump, GOP, Florida Gov, South Carolina Gov, Democrats, Republican Party, House, CNN, Democratic, Washington, Justice Department, FBI, Pro, Trump House Republicans, Marxist Communists, and Freedom Coalition, New, New Jersey Gov, Arkansas Gov, Pence, Republicans Locations: Iowa, Washington, Russia, Florida, Arizona, Wyoming, “ State, New Jersey, United States, State
The Department of Justice has warned Texas that its border policies violate federal law. Texas' actions "violate federal law" and "present serious risks to public safety," it said. Of particular concern is a floating barrier that Texas recently placed in the Rio Grande. "This floating barrier poses a risk to navigation, as well as public safety, in the Rio Grande River, and it presents humanitarian concerns," the department said. Texas' actions "violate federal law, raise humanitarian concerns, present serious risks to public safety and the environment, and may interfere with the federal government's ability to carry out its official duties," the department said.
Persons: Biden, Greg Abbot, Abbot, Joe Biden, , Brett Kavanaugh, Aaron Reichlin Organizations: of Justice, Service, ABC News, US Department of Justice, Harbors, Houston, Rio Grande . Texas Gov, Republican, Twitter, Lone Star, American Immigration Council, Department of Justice Locations: Texas, Rio, Wall, Silicon, Rio Grande, Mexico, Rio Grande ., United States
Almost 90% of classic video games are critically endangered, according to a new study. My first video game console was the Game Boy, a portal to many hours of adventure and excitement. The study was conducted by checking the availability of 1,500 randomly selected video games released before 2010 across every type of console and PC. The study's author says the availability of these classic video games is even worse than the survival rate of silent-era films. The next discussion over video games' copyright law is slated for 2024, and the clock is ticking.
Persons: I'm, Organizations: Software Preservation Network, Federal Trade Commission
Regulators under administrations dating to President Lyndon Johnson have set out new guidelines, which serve largely as a matter of policy intent because they are not enforced by law. But the sweeping proposals introduced by Lina Khan, the F.T.C. The guidelines broaden the scope for evaluating deals. The regulators say that current laws are not fit for the contemporary age. (Critics of this approach argue that it is nearly impossible to know what threat young technologies may pose in the future.)
Persons: Lyndon Johnson, Lina Khan, Jonathan Kanter, Ms, Khan Organizations: Justice Department, Federal Trade Commission
Greg Abbott signed a law nixing mandated water breaks across the state. Now construction workers and their allies are protesting the move, calling it "the law that kills." As a result, construction workers and their allies are calling it "the law that kills," the Texas Tribune reports. "We really need to be allowed to work without problems, without any barriers," Luz Martínez, a Texas construction employee who was at the protest, told the Texas Tribune. There have been 42 heat-related workplace deaths in Texas since 2011, the most of any state, according to the Texas Tribune.
Persons: Greg Abbott, , Luz Martínez, Abbott, Felipe Pascual, Pascual Organizations: Texas Gov, Service, Privacy, Workers, Gov, Texas Tribune, ABC, CNN, Occupational Health, Safety Administration, New York Times Locations: Texas, Wall, Silicon, Houston
Some of the tax-prep companies still do not know whether the data they shared continues to be held by the tech platforms, the report said. The Warren aide told CNN it was unclear whether Meta knew it was inappropriately using taxpayer data at the time. The investigation found that all three tax-prep companies had discontinued their use of Meta’s pixel after The Markup’s report last November. “The scope of ‘taxpayer information’ is broad by design,” Rosenthal said, adding that tax-prep companies can be sued for “knowingly” or “recklessly” leaking that information. Depending on the strength of the allegations, the tax-prep companies could quickly be forced into a binding settlement, said a former FTC official who requested anonymity in order to speak more freely.
Persons: , , David Vladeck, Vladeck, Democratic Sen, Elizabeth Warren, Meta, Warren, , Sens, Ron Wyden, Richard Blumenthal, Tammy Duckworth, Sheldon Whitehouse, Sen, Bernie Sanders, Katie Porter, TIGTA didn’t, Block, TaxSlayer didn’t, TaxAct, TaxSlayer, TurboTax, Steven Rosenthal, ” Rosenthal Organizations: CNN, Meta, Google, Georgetown University, Federal Trade Commission, Democratic, FTC, Internal Revenue Service, Justice Department, Tax Administration, Intuit, IRS, Urban, Brookings Tax Locations: United States, Google’s
Jarrett, 38, has $101,000 in student debt and was hopeful for Joe Biden's loan forgiveness. He told Insider he didn't think Biden's new plan for relief would deliver for borrowers. For years after graduating, he struggled to find steady employment and placed his initial student-loan balance of about $60,000 on forbearance. "I'm never going to be able to pay it down," Jarrett told Insider. And I certainly don't think that what he's doing now is going to address the issue either."
Persons: Jarrett, Joe Biden's, Jarrett —, , doesn't, I'm, I've, Biden, Jarrett isn't, Alexandria Ocasio, Ro Khanna, he's Organizations: Service, Education Department, Higher, Democratic, CNN, Biden Locations: Wall, Silicon, Alexandria, Cortez
A new nonprofit, Protect Borrowers Action, launched to target Republicans who oppose student-debt relief in battleground districts. The Supreme Court struck down Biden's broad debt relief, and Biden is now pursuing alternate routes. "A majority of Americans support student debt relief and a super majority of people with loans support relief. "Biden's $400 billion student loan bailout has been STRUCK DOWN by the Supreme Court! Along with advocacy efforts to target Republican lawmakers, some Democratic lawmakers are targeting the Biden administration, urging him to provide relief to borrowers before they have to resume payments.
Persons: Biden, , Joe Biden's, Lauren Boebert, Don Bacon, Boebert, Bacon, Alexandria Ocasio, Cortez Organizations: Service, Higher, Republicans, Colorado, Nebraska Rep, Court, Twitter, Education Department, Rep Locations: , Alexandria
Lower court judges are bound by Supreme Court precedent, but they have some tools at their disposal. They can also give the historically permissive “rational basis” standard of review from the Dobbs opinion some teeth by more closely assessing abortion restrictions and the state’s purported rationales. Lawyers will need to bring cases raising novel issues so that judges can protect abortion rights in new ways. Even if cases and briefs in federal courts lose in the short term, having abortion cases in the pipeline is essential. The Supreme Court will not always look as it does today.
Persons: Biden, Dobbs, Roe Organizations: eventual Locations: Dobbs
Just over 1 in 4 workers is now entitled to salary transparency by law — and proposals could double that number in the next few years. Pay transparency has become a cornerstone of the labor force in recent years, with Colorado becoming the first state to require employers post pay ranges on job ads in 2021. So far, eight states have salary transparency laws on the books: California, Colorado, Connecticut, Maryland, New York, Nevada, Rhode Island and Washington. Several cities and counties like Cincinnati and Jersey City, N.J., have their own pay transparency requirements. Proponents of salary transparency say it's a crucial piece to closing racial and gender wage gaps, which have barely budged in years.
Persons: , J.B . Pritzker, Kelly Evans, ‘ They’ll Organizations: National Women's Law, Washington D.C, Gov Locations: Colorado, California , Colorado , Connecticut, Maryland , New York , Nevada, Rhode Island, Washington, Cincinnati, Jersey City, N.J, Alaska , Georgia, Hawaii , Illinois , Iowa , Kentucky, Maine , Massachusetts , Missouri, Montana , New Jersey , Oregon, South Dakota , Vermont, Virginia, West Virginia, Illinois, U.S
The proof of the existence of this bargain is the way people talk about prospective trades: Would you give up this for that? But the table feels like it’s tilting like that in the 21st century, the bargain rebalancing in unpredictable ways, even when unwanted by the public. Governors who sign laws that reverse older laws sometimes stay quiet; Republican presidential candidates remain vague about what policy should look like. We didn’t know if we’d be fined,” a Florida woman told CNN. A Republican participant said, “If they are demanding control here, where does it end?”
Persons: Roe, Wade, we’d, something’s, , Organizations: South, Republican, , CNN, Arizona Republican, Politico Locations: Kansas, Michigan, Ohio, Florida, Arizona
Texas is currently first in the nation for heat-related workplace deaths, the Texas Tribune reports. Greg Abbott signed a bill Tuesday that eliminated ordinances across the state requiring water breaks for construction workers — all while a record-setting heatwave sweeps across the state. Meanwhile, Bishop James Dixon — President of the NAACP Houston — condemned the bill, according to local news outlet KHOU 11. Ana Gonzalez, deputy director of policy and politics at the Texas AFL-CIO, a federation of labor unions, told the Texas Tribune the bill may prove fatal for construction workers. Texas has the highest rate of heat-related workplace deaths, the Texas Tribune reports.
Persons: Greg Abbott, , Bishop James Dixon —, NAACP Houston —, Ana Gonzalez, Gonzalez Organizations: Texas AFL, Texas Tribune, Service, Gov, Huffington, NAACP Houston, Washington Post, Teamsters, United Parcel Service, CNN Locations: Texas, Austin, Dallas
Student-loan borrowers will resume payments in October, the Education Department confirmed. Borrowers are awaiting a Supreme Court decision on Biden's broad debt relief in the coming weeks. Per the documents, the department was preparing to resume interest accrual on borrowers' student loans in September, and they would not be hit with a bill until October. A Supreme Court decision could come on Friday or the next two Thursdays of June, and additional days could be added to the calendar. "Our concern is only heightened by the prospect of an unfavorable ruling in coming days framed by a conservative, right-wing majority of the Supreme Court.
Persons: , Joe Biden's, Biden, Ayanna Pressley, Ro Khanna, Trump, Derrick Johnson, Wisdom Cole Organizations: Education Department, Service, Politico, Biden, An Education Department, Democratic, Supreme Court, Massachusetts, Washington Post, NAACP, Youth and College Locations: California
GOP presidential candidate Asa Hutchinson, however, called on Trump to drop out of the race. The indictment shows the need for Trump to "end his campaign" said Hutchinson in a press release. While Donald Trump is entitled to the presumption of innocence, the ongoing criminal proceedings will be a major distraction. With the indictment, Trump became the first current or former president in American history to face federal criminal charges. Hutchinson is the first — and so far only — Republican candidate to call for Trump to end his campaign in light of the indictment.
Persons: Donald Trump's, Asa Hutchinson, Hutchinson, , Donald Trump, weren't, Trump, MAGA, RealClearPolitics . Hutchinson Organizations: GOP, Trump, Service, Arkansas Gov, Republican Party, New York Times, Times, Department, New, Republican Locations: Arkansas, New York, RealClearPolitics .
CNN —A top European Union official plans to confront Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg in an in-person meeting over reports this week that the company has failed to prevent the spread of child sexual abuse material on its platform. Thierry Breton, a European commissioner who has led the charge on regulating digital platforms, will visit Meta’s California headquarters on June 23 and plans to raise the matter with Zuckerberg personally, he tweeted Thursday. “#Meta’s voluntary code on child protection seems not to work,” Breton said. “Child exploitation is a horrific crime,” the spokesperson said. A spokesperson for the European Commission didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.
Persons: Mark Zuckerberg, Thierry Breton, Zuckerberg, ” Breton, “ Mark Zuckerberg, Breton, Meta didn’t, Instagram, , Organizations: CNN, European Union, Digital Services, Meta, Wall Street Journal, Stanford University, University of Massachusetts Amherst, San, European Commission Locations: Meta’s California, San Francisco, California
As the L.G.B.T.Q. bills since 2018, and that number has recently accelerated, with the 2023 state legislative year being the worst on record. According to the Human Rights Campaign, in 2023 there have been more than 525 such bills introduced in 41 states, with more than 75 bills signed into law as of June 5. In Florida — the state that became known for its “Don’t Say Gay” law — just last month, Gov. Ron DeSantis signed legislation that banned gender transition care for minors and prohibited public school employees from asking children their preferred pronouns.
Persons: There’s, , Ron DeSantis, Kelley Robinson Organizations: Pride, Human Rights, Gov Locations: Florida
A Florida GOP lawmaker said the anti-immigration law he backed was supposed to tell new immigrants to "stay out." But now migrant families are fleeing the state, and it's a "big problem" for farmers and tourism, Rep. Rick Roth said. "The bill has a lot of negative consequences that I'm trying to mitigate," Florida Rep. Rick Roth told Insider. During the meeting, Roth told constituents that migrants have started moving to Georgia and other states. Roth told Insider that the bill came straight from Gov.
Persons: Rick Roth, Roth, , Alina Garcia, Juan Fernandez Barquin, Thomas Kennedy, they're, WPTV, Garcia, Kennedy, Ron DeSantis, Fernandez Barquin, DeSantis Organizations: Florida GOP, Twitter, Service, CBS News, New, Gov Locations: Florida, Hialeah , Florida, Georgia, New Republic
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