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uegm Gwen s Take: Making peace and making coffee
« le: Décembre 21, 2024, 06:03:07 am »
Cysh Cuba for the first-time visitor is both charming and complicated
 COLUMBIA, S.C.  stanley cup  AP  鈥?President聽Joe Biden聽has appointed former Columbia, South Carolina, Mayor Steve Benjamin as a top White House adviser, taking over from聽Keisha Lance Bottoms,聽the former Atlanta mayor who had assumed the role in June.Both Georgia and South Carolina have become crucial to the Democratic Party ahead of the 2024 election cycle. South Carolina holds the Democrats ; first nominating contest, and聽Georgia helped solidify the Democrats ; Senate majority聽during the 2022 midterms and in 2020 gave聽Biden a rare win in a southern state that hasn ;t backed a Democrat for president聽in 30 years.Benjamin will become director of the聽White House Office of Engagement, overseeing efforts  to ensure community leaders, diverse perspectives, and new voices have the opportunity to inform the work of the President in an inclusive, transparent and responsible way,  according to the White House. In a release Monday, Biden called Benjamin a  longtime public servant  whose  deep relationships across the country  would well serve the administration.REA stanley cup D MORE: Biden to nominate Julie Su as the next U.S. labor secretaryBenjamin, 53, has long been considered a rising star in Democratic politics, serving three terms as Columbias mayor, and the first Black mayor in the city   history. Serving as president of the U.S. Conference of Mayors and African Americans Mayors Association, Benjamin spoke at the 2016 Democratic National Convention and was among the stanley cup  candidates consid Clol Judge Cites Trade Secrets in Ruling Against Bloggers
 WASHINGTON  AP  鈥?The acting U.S. Capitol Police chief was pressed to explain Thursday why the agency hadn ;t been prepared to fend off a violent mob of insurrectionists, including white supremacists, who were trying to halt the certification of the presidential election last month, even though officials had compelling advance intelligence.Watch the hearing in the player above.Acting Chief Yogananda Pittman denied that l stanley cup aw enforcement failed to take seriously warnings of violence before the Jan. 6 insurrection. Three days before the riot, Capitol Police distributed an internal document warning that armed extremists were poised for violence and could af1  attack Congress because they saw it as the last chance to try to overturn the election results, Pittman said.But the assault was much bigger than they expected, she said.There was no such intelligence. Although we knew the likelihood for violence by extremists, no credible threat indicated that tens of thousands would attack the U.S. Capitol, nor did the intelligence received from the FBI or any other law enforcement partner indicate such a threat.Later, under questioning by the House subcommittee   chairman, Rep. Tim Ryan, Pittman said that while there may h stanley cup ave been thousands of people heading to the Capitol from a pro-Trump rally, about 800 people actually made their way into the building.Pittman conceded that the agency   incident command protocols were not adhered to, and that there