The Atlanta Journal-Constitution will stop publishing a print newspaper at the end of the year and divert all of its resources into the digital news operation, the New York Times reports.
The company has published in print since 1868.
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution will stop publishing a print newspaper at the end of the year and divert all of its resources into the digital news operation, the New York Times reports.
The company has published in print since 1868.
“I am unable to serve in an environment that treats CDC as a tool to generate policies and materials that do not reflect scientific reality and are designed to hurt rather than to improve the public’s health.”
— Former CDC official Demetre Daskalakis, announcing his resignation.
“Federal Reserve governor Lisa Cook sued President Trump on Thursday, seeking to block his move to fire her from the central bank,” the Wall Street Journal reports.
“The lawsuit filed in Washington, D.C., federal district court alleges Trump violated the law by attempting to remove Cook from her post without a valid reason.”
“The case sets up an unprecedented legal battle testing Trump’s power over the independent central bank’s seven-member board.”
Politico: Fired Fed board member sues Trump to try to keep her job.
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Argentina president Javier Milei was whisked away from a rally by security when protesters started lobbing rocks and bottles at him, the Daily Beast reports.
“The investigation into President Trump’s former national security adviser, John Bolton, began to pick up momentum during the Biden administration, when U.S. intelligence officials collected information that appeared to show that he had mishandled classified information,” the New York Times reports.
“The United States gathered data from an adversarial country’s spy service, including emails with sensitive information that Mr. Bolton, while still working in the first Trump administration, appeared to have sent to people close to him on an unclassified system.”
“France, Germany, and the U.K. sent a letter Thursday morning to members of the UN Security Council announcing they are triggering the ‘snapback’ mechanism to reimpose UN sanctions on Iran, which had been suspended under the 2015 nuclear deal,” Axios reports.
“The ongoing National Guard mission in Washington, DC, as part of President Donald Trump’s crime crackdown in the city, is costing roughly $1 million a day,” CNN reports.
“Donald Trump did exactly what he said he’d do,” CNN reports.
“There was no weekslong debate in the West Wing, no careful coordination with congressional allies, no intensive staff presentations detailing arcane legal authorities. There was just a social media post from the president suggesting a Federal Reserve governor should resign and then, a few days later, another one announcing she’d been fired.”
“In interviews with more than a dozen Trump administration officials across Washington and Republican lawmakers back home in the final days of their August recess, they all shared a similar refrain in the hours after Trump moved to terminate a Federal Reserve governor for the first time in history: They had no idea it was coming.”
“Support for labor unions among Republicans declined this year, finds a Gallup survey out Thursday morning,” Axios reports.
“The party traditionally opposed organized labor, but in recent years had been moving in a different direction — with the Trump campaign actively courting the union vote last year.”
“The latest numbers mark a return to form.”
“Drone swarms are a nightmare for security officials all over the world, whether they’re overwhelming a Russian air base or hovering near an American airport,” Axios reports.
“Defense contractor Epirus this week demonstrated its drone-frying Leonidas to observers from various U.S. military services and foreign countries, including some in the Indo-Pacific.”
“In the climax of the two-hour show, Leonidas went up against 49 quadcopters, the largest grouping it’s ever faced. The ‘forcefield system,’ which weaponizes electromagnetic interference, crippled all of them at once. No pricey projectiles. No fireballs.”
Fox News host and former Rep. Trey Gowdy (R-SC) questioned stricter gun control legislation when he was in office and took money from the National Rifle Association, the HuffPost reports.
But live on air, in the wake of the deadly shooting in Minnesota, he appeared to have a change of heart: “We’re going to have a conversation of freedom versus protecting children… We’ve got to decide whether or not we want to live like this.”
“House Republicans are expected to take the lead as the GOP moves to fulfill President Trump’s call for a ‘comprehensive crime bill’ that coincides with his crackdown on Washington, D.C., and threats to extend his efforts to other cities,” The Hill reports.
“Exactly what the bill will include is unclear, but it’s expected to take aim at issues such as cashless bail, which Trump has blamed for crime.”
“Sen. Susan Collins of Maine is the latest Republican to face angry constituents while home this August recess,” NOTUS reports.
“Collins made a surprise appearance at an infrastructure project ribbon-cutting event in Searsport on Tuesday, and was met with a rowdy group of residents shouting, ‘Shame, shame, shame.'”
Paul Krugman: “Nations in which central banks lose their independence sooner or later suffer high inflation, especially when they are taken over by autocrats who buy into crackpot economic doctrines. And Trump, who has been demanding large rate cuts because, he claims, the economy is running hot — which almost every economist would say is a reason to raise rates, not cut them — certainly fits that pattern. Yet although there have been small tremors in the bond and currency markets, there have been no significant upheavals in financial markets that reflect the severity of the situation we are in. Throughout this episode, the stock market has remained fairly flat and bond yields haven’t spiked.”
“Why not? Do financial markets doubt that Trump will get his way? Or do they reject mainstream economics and the clear examples of countries like Turkey and Argentina?”
“Neither. My read of economic and financial history is that market pricing almost never takes into account the possibility of huge, disruptive events, even when the strong possibility of such events should be obvious. The usual pattern, instead, is one of market complacency until the last possible moment. That is, markets act as if everything is normal until it’s blindingly obvious that it isn’t.”
“Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. on Wednesday gave medical schools less than two weeks to ‘immediately’ add more nutrition education to their curricula,” Axios reports.
“Kennedy previously threatened the schools with loss of funding if they don’t beef up their nutrition education as part of his ‘Make America Healthy Again’ agenda, which also includes a planned revamp of federal dietary guidelines.”
“Russia launched a deadly barrage against Kyiv on Thursday, punctuating a lull during President Trump’s peace efforts and damaging buildings across the capital, including the British Council and EU delegation building, and prompting angry responses from European leaders,” the Wall Street Journal reports.
“The attack, which left at least 15 people dead, was the highest death toll in the capital since Trump held talks in Alaska earlier this month with Vladimir Putin, the Russian president who increasingly appears to be defying White House threats of sanctions and pressing on with his war on Ukraine.”
“President Trump took to Truth Social on Wednesday afternoon to attack a Utah court ruling that ordered new congressional maps pursuant to an anti-gerrymandering lawsuit,” Axios reports.
“Trump claimed Monday’s order by state judge Dianna Gibson is ‘absolutely’ unconstitutional.”
Said Trump: “How did such a wonderful Republican State like Utah, which I won in every Election, end up with so many Radical Left Judges?”
Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) warned the country is on the precipice of tipping into authoritarianism, predicting that President Donald Trump does not want to leave office after his term ends and accusing federal immigration officials of acting as “the largest private police force in history,” Politico reports.
Said Newsom: “I don’t think Donald Trump wants another election.”
Taegan Goddard is the founder of Political Wire, one of the earliest and most influential political web sites. He also runs Political Job Hunt, Electoral Vote Map and the Political Dictionary.
Goddard spent more than a decade as managing director and chief operating officer of a prominent investment firm in New York City. Previously, he was a policy adviser to a U.S. Senator and Governor.
Goddard is also co-author of You Won - Now What? (Scribner, 1998), a political management book hailed by prominent journalists and politicians from both parties. In addition, Goddard's essays on politics and public policy have appeared in dozens of newspapers across the country.
Goddard earned degrees from Vassar College and Harvard University. He lives in New York with his wife and three sons.
Goddard is the owner of Goddard Media LLC.
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