Georgia State senator reacts to corporate America slamming voting law
Coca-Cola and Delta Airlines slam Georgia voting law; reaction from state Sen. Matt Brass on ‘Fox News Live.’
FOX News contributor Ted Williams weighs in on the investigation into the deadly Capitol Hill attack on 'FOX News Live'
McDaniel said she wouldn’t be watching baseball after the MLB pulled the All-Star Game from Atlanta in response to Georgia's new election law.
The U.S. Capitol building was being fortified Saturday and security beefed up, as flags flew at half-mast, one day after a motorist rammed his car into a security barrier, killing 18-year Capitol Police veteran William Evans.Officials said another officer was hospitalized due to injuries, and was in a stable and non-life threatening condition.Work crews were busy reinstalling high, razor-wire-topped fencing around the Capitol complex and installing additional concrete barriers along the fencing. Some of those extra security measures were put in place after the deadly January 6th riots, where thousands of supporters of then-President Donald Trump stormed the Capitol. But some of the fencing and barriers had been taken down in recent weeks amid a political debate over how much was needed to guard what is known as The People’s House. Friday’s attack, however, reignited concerns that the Capitol building is not secure enough. Several media outlets identified the suspect, who was shot and killed at the scene, as 25-year-old Noah Green. A family member told the Washington Post that Green struggled with drug use and paranoia. Here’s Yogananda Pittman, acting chief of the U.S. Capitol Police:"The suspect exited the vehicle with a knife in hand. Our officers then engaged that suspect. He did not respond to verbal commands. The suspect did start lunging toward US Capitol Police officers, at which time US Capitol Police officers fired upon the suspect." Police said the attack did not appear to be terrorism-related. National Guard troops, however, who have been stationed at the Capitol since the January attack, were quickly deployed to the scene and retained a visible presence across the Capitol complex on Saturday.
Former President Donald Trump on Friday called on Major League Baseball fans to boycott the organization over its decision to move the 2021 All-Star Game and 2021 draft out of Atlanta in response to a Georgia voting law that critics claim makes it more difficult for individuals, particularly black voters, to exercise their constitutional right to vote. Trump accused MLB leadership of being “afraid of the Radical Left Democrats,” in a statement on Friday. “Baseball is already losing tremendous numbers of fans,” Trump wrote, “and now they leave Atlanta with their All-Star Game because they are afraid of the Radical Left Democrats who do not want voter I.D., which is desperately needed, to have anything to do with our elections. “Boycott baseball and all of the woke companies that are interfering with Free and Fair Elections,” he added. “Are you listening Coke, Delta, and all!” Georgia governor Brian Kemp, a Republican, signed the bill into law last week. The legislation calls for changing the rules and processes for requesting an absentee ballot, including mandating that voters present valid forms of photo identification. The measure also regulates the future use of drop boxes, which were implemented as a COVID innovation, and the early voting period for runoff elections and gives the state the authority to take over county elections or remove local elections officials. The bill, which passed along party lines in both chambers of the state legislature, also prohibits items, including food and beverages, from being offered by outside groups to voters waiting in line to cast their ballots. It does allow for water stations to be set up for voters in line. Proponents of the law deny accusations that it aims to suppress votes, pointing out that the legislation does not place new limits on voting hours and makes the state’s elections more secure without restricting voter access. It even expands weekend early voting. Supporters have argued that the law has been misrepresented. On Friday, MLB commissioner Rob Manfred said in a statement that after “thoughtful conversations with Clubs, former and current players, the Players Association, and The Players Alliance” he had decided that the “best way to demonstrate our values as a sport is by relocating this year’s All-Star Game and MLB Draft.” Manfred said MLB “fundamentally supports voting rights for all Americans and opposes restrictions to the ballot box.” During an appearance on Fox News’ Tucker Carlson Tonight on Friday, Kemp claimed that election laws in New York, where the league is headquartered, are “stricter” than those in the Peach State. “When you look at New York’s voting laws, you have to have an excuse to vote absentee by-mail in New York. You do not in Georgia,” Kemp said. The league’s decision came after President Joe Biden told ESPN on Wednesday that he would “strongly support” moving the July 13 game because of the law he described as “Jim Crow on steroids.”
The Final Four thriller between UCLA and Gonzaga belongs in the conversation for the best college basketball game of all time.
Former President Trump agreed to stay quiet on the sexual assault allegations against Matt Gaetz, a source told The Daily Beast.
Adriana Mejía lost half her family in just 83 days – now a huge death toll of 294,000 is being quietly acknowledgedCoronavirus – latest updatesSee all our coronavirus coverage Cemetery workers bury a victim of Covid-19 at Sueños Eternos cemetery in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico. Photograph: Mario Tama/Getty Images It took just 83 days for Adriana Mejía to lose half her family, as Covid unleashed a Mexican tragedy whose full impact is only now becoming clear. First to depart was her father, Juan, a 90-year-old carpenter who died at the family home in Mexico City last July after summoning his eight children to say goodbye. Two weeks later Mejía’s 55-year-old sister, Cecilia, who began feeling unwell as they buried their father, also lost her life. Two days later, on 3 August, Mejía lost her brother, Juan Carlos, then, 13 days after that, her brother-in-law, Germán. Even then, Mejía’s trials were not over. Two days after Germán’s death a second sibling, Miguel Roberto, died too. On 6 October she lost her mother. Graciela Murillo Altamirano was 89 when she was pronounced dead at the same home where her husband had expired almost three months earlier. “We’ve gone from rosary to rosary,” Mejía, a 46-year-old graphic designer from Mexico’s sprawling capital, said as she reflected on her family’s agony. “We just didn’t know when it would stop.” Mexico’s Covid crisis has made fewer international headlines than the catastrophes in the US and Brazil, where almost 900,000 people have died, accounting for about a third of the global total, and the reckless responses of rightwing populists Donald Trump and Jair Bolsonaro have been condemned. Bolsonaro’s anti-scientific handling of a disease he calls a “bit of a cold” and the spread of a more infectious variant linked to the Amazon has earned his nation particular infamy on the world stage. But the revelation this week that Mexico’s death toll was far higher than previously reported suggests a calamity of similar proportions has played out under its leader, the populist Andrés Manuel López Obrador. Last weekend Mexican officials discreetly acknowledged more than 294,000 Covid deaths – just shy of Brazil’s official death toll which was then 310,000. Brazil has a much larger population, with 212 million inhabitants compared with Mexico’s 126 million. Many believe a cavalier approach by the Mexican president, Andrés Manuel López Obrador, has hampered the country’s ability to control the virus. Photograph: Pedro Pardo/AFP/Getty Images Mexico’s Covid tsar Hugo López-Gatell defended his government in a recent interview, telling the Financial Times: “Our conscience is very clear.” “It’s a pandemic,” said the epidemiologist who in February caught Covid himself. “It would be senseless to think life would be normal.” Many, however, believe the president’s cavalier approach hampered Mexico’s ability to control its epidemic by confusing citizens – with terrible consequences for families such as the Mejías. Like Trump and Bolsonaro, López Obrador has downplayed the virus, continued to tour his country and embrace supporters and resisted containment measures such as lockdowns, social distancing and masks. “We’re doing well, the pandemic has been tamed,” the 67-year-old claimed last May when Mexico’s official death toll was about 9,000. In January, as Mexico was plunged into a devastating second wave, López-Gatell was photographed holidaying on an Oaxaca beach despite urging citizens to stay at home. “When we think about worst performers, I think you rank Mexico, Brazil and the US together now,” said Eduardo González-Pier, a former Mexican health undersecretary. “These are the three big bad performers – and I think that has to do with the way governments responded to the pandemic. “Before Biden, there were a lot of similarities in how these countries were run and how the pandemic was approached. Bolsonaro, Trump and López Obrador had a similar attitude: the denial, the delayed response, the minimisation of the severity, and also the idea of not suspending activities.” Many believe that approach helped create a disaster of needlessly large proportions. “I’m not claiming Mexico could have experienced something like Vietnam or Taiwan, which are best performers. But what if they had had just an average type of response with the same mortality you would see from an average country?” asked González-Pier, an economist and health specialist. “If you do the calculations you see … Mexico could have avoided 100,000 to 200,000 [deaths] … So that is the kind of damage that has been done.” Phase six of Mexico’s national vaccination plan began in Mexico City on 30 March, 2021. The country’s immunisation campaign is one of Latin America’s earliest. Photograph: Martin Gorostiola/NurPhoto/Rex/Shutterstock The behaviour and mixed messaging of politicians are not the only explanations for Mexico’s drama. Chronic underinvestment in healthcare meant hospitals were not adequately equipped or staffed when the pandemic hit. Some of the world’s highest rates of diabetes and obesity meant Mexico was especially vulnerable to Covid-19. “It just happened to be a virus that was particularly vicious with the type of chronic conditions that Mexicans have a high prevalence of – uncontrolled diabetes, hypertension, obesity, especially among younger and mature adults. And that, I guess, was bad luck,” González-Pier said. Public health expert Carlos Alonso Reynoso said he still believed Mexico had fared better than Brazil where “a tragedy of unimaginable proportions” was unfolding and nearly 70,000 people died last month. But Mexico’s “confused and ambiguous” communication had taken a toll. “If the government’s message had been clearer and more concise perhaps the number of cases could have been reduced,” Reynoso said. Five months after her mother’s death, Mejía said she believed her family had been “victims of the lack of information”. A psychologist is helping her come to terms with her bereavement. “I lost most of my family and yet I couldn’t cry until my mother died and the nightmare was over,” Mejía said. “That was the moment I was finally able to grasp everything that had happened.” González-Pier said he was encouraged to see Mexico’s immunisation campaign, one of Latin America’s earliest, gathering pace. Mexico’s epidemic has slowed in recent weeks although some fear Holy Week celebrations, when families gather and tourists flock to beaches, could trigger a painful third wave like the one now shaking Chile. “I think the Mexican population is still highly vulnerable,” the former health undersecretary warned, pointing to research suggesting only a quarter of the country had been exposed to the virus. “I wouldn’t be so sure we are through the worst.”
Manchin is the only Democratic senator who has not signed on as a cosponsor to S. 1 and opposes changing filibuster rules to aid the bill's passage.
Detroit Tigers manager AJ Hinch gives an update on Miguel Cabrera, who had his "whole body" cramp up Saturday and is not in Sunday's lineup.
Dolly Parton has received both doses of Moderna's COVID-19 shot, which she helped fund with a $1 million donation she made in 2020.
The Easter Bunny made a special visit to kids and single mothers at a shelter in Queens on Saturday.
Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp reacts on ‘Fox and Friends Weekend’ to Major League Baseball announcing it's pulling the All-Star game from the state over its new voting law.
Angels two-way star Shohei Ohtani will break ground when he starts on the mound and bats second in the lineup on ESPN Sunday Night Baseball
The Department of Health and Human Services has placed Johnson & Johnson in charge of a Baltimore factory where an ingredient mix-up between vaccines of that company and those of AstraZeneca ruined 15 million doses, the New York Times reported on Saturday. The factory, which is managed by Emergent BioSolutions, will only make vaccines designed by Johnson & Johnson and will cease production of AstraZeneca shots. Workers at the factory reportedly mixed up ingredients from the vaccines several weeks ago. The Food and Drug Administration, however, has not yet authorized the use of vaccines made at the facility, meaning that none of the botched doses were administered in the U.S. Johnson & Johnson is “assuming full responsibility regarding the manufacturing of drug substance” at the factory, the company said in a statement. Additionally, Johnson & Johnson “is adding dedicated leaders for operations and quality, and significantly increasing the number of manufacturing, quality and technical operations personnel to work with the company specialists already at Emergent.” AstraZeneca said in a statement that it “will work with the U.S .Government to identify an alternative location for domestic [vaccine] production.” The FDA gave emergency authorization to Johnson & Johnson’s vaccine in late February. AstraZeneca’s vaccine has not yet received emergency authorization. The U.S. government paid Emergent BioSolutions $628 million to reserve production space at its Baltimore facility in June 2020, as part of the Trump administration’s Operation Warp Speed. In the past, the FDA would usually allow production of only one vaccine at a given factory to avoid mix-ups between materials, experts on vaccine production told the Times.
Rep. Matt Gaetz is pursuing a risky strategy in publicizing a federal investigation against him, according to legal experts.
Jordanian authorities said Sunday they foiled a “malicious plot” by a former crown prince to destabilize the kingdom with foreign support, contradicting the senior royal's claims that he was being punished for speaking out against corruption and incompetence. Faced with rival narratives, the United States and Arab governments quickly sided with Jordan's King Abdullah II, reflecting the country's strategic importance in a turbulent region. Domestically, Prince Hamzah's unprecedented criticism of the ruling class — without naming the king — could lend support to growing complaints about poor governance and human rights abuses in Jordan.
We have to remember, as Derek Chauvin's trial unfolds, that courtrooms are another place where too many cases of murder of Black people go to die.
Alex Ovechkin moved into a second-place tie on the all-time list for NHL power-play goals and the Washington Capitals beat the New Jersey Devils 5-4 on Sunday, completing a sweep of their eight-game season series. Ovechkin's second-period goal was his 265th with the extra man, tying him with Brett Hull for second place and leaving him nine behind all-time league leader Dave Andreychuk (274). Ilya Samsonov was a big reason the Capitals finished off the sweep, making 35 saves, including 29 in the opening 40 minutes.
Johnson & Johnson said it was "assuming full responsibility regarding the manufacturing of drug substance" at Emergent BioSolutions.