National Review,
by
Zachary Evans
Original Article
Posted by
Dreadnought
—
10/1/2021 9:24:28 PM
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House speaker Nancy Pelosi (D., Calif.) said Democrats need more time to pass a $1 trillion infrastructure bill and potential $3.5 trillion resolution to be passed via budget reconciliation, in a Dear Colleague letter released on Friday evening.
“While great progress has been made in the negotiations to develop a House, Senate and White House agreement on the Build Back Better Act, more time is needed to complete the task,” Pelosi wrote. “Our Chairs are still working for clarity and consensus. Clearly, the Bipartisan Infrastructure bill will pass once we have agreement on the reconciliation bill.”
Newsbusters,
by
Scott Whitlock
Original Article
Posted by
Dreadnought
—
10/1/2021 5:30:50 PM
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After the Democrats failed to pass their massive spending bill late Thursday night, the liberal news networks on Friday morning woke viewers with panic, fretting that a left-wing “civil war” and a “failure” of leadership by Joe Biden would lead to “chaos.” CBS offered a half-hearted attempt at salvaging the situation, saying that the President is a “couple stops away from humiliation.” Quite the compliment, huh?
Today show co-host Savannah Guthrie opened the show by warning, “Civil War. Democrats fail to come together on a deal for that massive trillion dollar infrastructure package.” She breathlessly related that “President Biden’s agenda hanging in the balance
Associated Press,
by
Zeke Miller *
Original Article
Posted by
Dreadnought
—
10/1/2021 5:29:06 PM
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Washington — When President Joe Biden proposed a massive expansion of federal services for Americans this year, he laid out lofty stakes — not only for his own presidential legacy but far beyond.
The imperative, he said in an April address to Congress, is to show “that our government still works — and can deliver for the people.”
It was an apt pitch for the long-held Democratic vision of government as a force for good, and for the idea that Washington has an obligation to improve the lot of Americans held back.
But five months later
PJ Media,
by
A.J. Kaufman
Original Article
Posted by
Dreadnought
—
10/1/2021 5:20:38 PM
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Despite lies and presidential defamation, the Border Patrol’s horse unit continues daily operations to keep the United States and illegal migrants safe.
The White House has spent nearly two weeks spreading false abuse allegations. The administration hoped to pander to racialists by suspending the vital unit even though PBS journalist Yamiche Alcindor’s Sept. 20 propaganda was quickly debunked.
U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) recently opened an investigation after images of agents pursuing Haitian migrants on horseback led to erroneous speculation that they “whipped” the border-crossers. A senior border official said this week that equestrian agents assigned to the Del Rio sector still operate despite the alleged ban, with the lone change
Hot Air,
by
Allahpundit
Original Article
Posted by
Dreadnought
—
10/1/2021 2:14:55 PM
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Pelosi and her team are so desperate to keep their promise to House moderates about holding a vote on Thursday that they declined to adjourn last night. Which means that today, legislatively, is still … yesterday. Centrist Dem leaders are participating in the charade too, to the embarrassment of everyone: Progressives couldn’t resist dunking on them for it: Through the magic of shameless gaslighting (the same magic by which a bill that costs $3.5 trillion actually costs nothing), Pelosi will have kinda sorta fulfilled her pledge to hold on September 30 if she holds it later this afternoon. And she sounded determined as she left the Capitol last night,
National Review,
by
Caroline Downey
Original Article
Posted by
Dreadnought
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10/1/2021 1:53:55 PM
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The Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation gauge, the core personal consumption expenditures price index, which excludes food and energy costs, soared to a 30-year high in August.
The measure increased 0.3 percent for the month and was up 3.6 percent from last year in its steepest climb since May 1991, a trend suggesting that the pandemic’s inflationary pressures, catalyzed by massive government spending, supply chain bottlenecks and surging demand, are not correcting as quickly as some economists anticipated.
With the more volatile staple categories of food and energy factored back in, PCE prices increased 0.4 percent for the month and 4.3 percent year over year, the highest hike since January 1991,
Breitbart,
by
Wendell Husebo
Original Article
Posted by
Dreadnought
—
10/1/2021 12:41:45 PM
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House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) reportedly offered the radical House Democrats a price tag of $2.1 trillion for the reconciliation package, down from $3.5 trillion but more expensive than Sen. Joe Manchin’s (D-WV) topline of $1.5 trillion.
The offered package to the House Democrats includes items such as child care, paid leave, health care, and climate change, according to Politico Playbook.
The offer presents which measures may survive the trimmed but still large package and which measures may be removed. “For instance, there was no mention of things like free community college or affordable housing or even Bernie Sanders’ prized expansion of Medicare to offer dental, vision and hearing benefits,” Playbook reports.
Business Insider,
by
Joseph Zeballos-Roig
Original Article
Posted by
Dreadnought
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9/30/2021 11:17:02 PM
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House Speaker Nancy Pelosi pulled a vote on President Joe Biden's $550 billion infrastructure originally planned for Thursday. It's a major setback for Democrats as moderate and progressive feuds deepened over Biden's domestic agenda.
Members are advised "the House is expected to complete consideration of the Senate Amendment to H.R. 3684 — Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, tomorrow," a floor notice read.
The vote was yanked after it became obvious that House Democrats did not have enough support to clear the bill and send it to Biden's desk.
National Review,
by
Brittany Bernstein
&
Zachary Evans
Original Article
Posted by
Dreadnought
—
9/30/2021 11:03:52 PM
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The House delayed a vote on the $1 trillion bipartisan infrastructure bill on Thursday as progressive Democrats refused to support the bill until Congress acts on a reconciliation package projected to cost $3.5 trillion.
An intraparty battle delayed the bipartisan infrastructure effort as progressives held out on supporting the bill in an effort to create leverage for passing the larger package, which includes climate-change initiatives, expansions of health care, public education, paid leave and child-care programs, as well as an array of tax increases. Moderate Senators Kyrsten Sinema (D., Ariz.) and Joe Manchin (D., W.Va.) have refused to support the cost of the reconciliation package
Fox Business,
by
Paul Conner
Original Article
Posted by
Dreadnought
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9/30/2021 3:35:58 PM
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The Senate on Thursday approved a bill to fund the government through Dec. 3 and avert a government shutdown for now.
It's one of several political issues being followed closely by the markets, which have fallen Thursday amid uncertainty about the passage of a bipartisan infrastructure bill and President Biden's $3.5 trillion spending package. Sixty-five senators voted in favor of the short-term funding bill, which did not include a provision to raise the debt ceiling. Thirty-five no votes were not enough to sink the bill, which needed 60 votes to pass. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen has said that the U.S. could run out of money
National Review,
by
Brittany Bernstein
Original Article
Posted by
Dreadnought
—
9/30/2021 3:29:52 PM
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Special Counsel John Durham, the attorney tapped by the Trump administration to audit the Russia investigation, has reportedly handed down a new set of subpoenas, including to a law firm with ties to Hillary Clinton’s 2016 campaign.
The grand jury subpoenas for documents were issued earlier this month, according to CNN, after Durham charged Clinton campaign lawyer Michael Sussmann for allegedly knowingly making a false statement to the FBI.
Investigators from the special counsel’s office are seeking additional documents from Sussmann’s former law firm, Perkins Coie, an indication that Durham may be looking to add to Sussmann’s charges or to bring cases against other defendants.
Al Jazeera [Doha, Qatar],
by
Staff
Original Article
Posted by
Dreadnought
—
9/30/2021 12:59:22 PM
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The economic recovery in the United States is still on track, but the labour market is signalling that growth is decelerating in the face of challenges ranging from the spread of the Delta variant of COVID-19 to stingier jobless benefits.
Weekly jobless claims, a proxy for layoffs, rose by a stronger-than-expected 11,000 last week to 362,000, the US Department of Labor said on Thursday. That is the third week in a row that initial claims have increased, and the highest reading since early August. The biggest jump by state came from California, where nearly 18,000 more people filed for initial unemployment benefits last week than the week before.