Tag: failed
Mike Waltz

Trump's Failed National Security Adviser Gets UN Consolation Post

Hours after nearly every major news outlet reported that national security adviser Mike Waltz was the first big casualty of the Trump administration, President Donald Trump announced that—surprise!—he’s nominating Waltz to be ambassador to the United Nations.

“I am pleased to announce that I will be nominating Mike Waltz to be the next United States Ambassador to the United Nations,” Trump wrote in a post on Truth Social. “From his time in uniform on the battlefield, in Congress and, as my National Security Advisor, Mike Waltz has worked hard to put our Nation’s Interests first. I know he will do the same in his new role.”

The U.N. ambassador role requires Senate confirmation, so Waltz—who is responsible for inadvertently adding a journalist to an unsecured group chat in which top Trump administration officials shared highly secret attack plans—will have to publicly defend his egregious mistakes as national security adviser.

This will also put Republican senators on the record about whether they’ll support someone who so carelessly jeopardized national security. And it will allow Democrats to highlight the “Signalgate” scandal, giving them an easy way to attack the Trump administration.

It’s hard to see how voters will approve of this switcheroo, either.

A Civiqs poll conducted for Daily Kos found that voters wanted accountability for the group-chat snafu—not a promotion for one of the people involved in it.

The poll found that 51 percent of registered voters wanted the person who was responsible for sharing classified information to be fired, with another 24 percent saying that person should face disciplinary action. Just 17 percent of voters said there should be no consequences for the scandal.

Getting a promotion to be U.N. ambassador—which comes with a sick residence on the Upper East Side of Manhattan—doesn’t sound like accountability.

As for who will serve as Trump’s next national security adviser, the president announced that Secretary of State Marco Rubio will take on the role.

“Secretary of State Marco Rubio will serve as National Security Advisor, while continuing his strong leadership at the State Department,” Trump wrote in the Truth Social post. “Together, we will continue to fight tirelessly to Make America, and the World, SAFE AGAIN. Thank you for your attention to this matter!”

It’s unclear how Rubio will be Trump’s main adviser on national security as well as the country’s top diplomat, the acting archivist of the United States, and the acting head of the United States Agency for International Development, an organization the Trump administration is trying to shut down.

But amid all of this, the maddest person must be Rep. Elise Stefanik, Republican of New York, who Trump initially nominated as U.N. ambassador before pulling her nomination because he feared Republicans would lose her seat in Congress.

Stefanik remains in the House without her top House leadership role and without the sweet mansion in New York.

Sad!

Reprinted with permission from Daily Kos.

Bill On Soft Drink Health Warning Hits Snag In California

Bill On Soft Drink Health Warning Hits Snag In California

Washington (AFP) – A bill in California that would require soft drinks to have health warning labels failed to clear a key committee on Tuesday.

Under the measure, sugary drinks sold in the most populous U.S. state would have to carry a label with a warning that sugar contributes to obesity, diabetes and tooth decay.

The legislation, which would have been the first of its kind in the United States, passed the state Senate in May.

But on Tuesday it failed to win enough votes in the health commission of the California State Assembly, the Los Angeles Times reported.

“We’re in the midst of a diabetes and obesity epidemic that is wreaking havoc on the public’s health and driving up healthcare costs,” said Senator Bill Monning, the bill’s author, in remarks before the Assembly Health committee, according to the newspaper.

The bill’s supporters included the California Medical Association and an array of public health groups. They argued that labels would help consumers make healthier choices.

But an industry group said it would be unfair to single out sugary drinks as a cause of obesity and diabetes.

The bill garnered seven ‘yes’ votes but needed 10 to pass, the Times said.

However, the bill did receive reconsideration, which means Monning can try once more to get it through the panel.

©afp.com / Justin Sullivan

Read A Book, Change A Life

It’s hotter than Dante’s nine rings of hell outside.

Crank up the fans, and pass the pile of books.

Most of us have triggers for childhood memories. These dog days of summer do it for me.

During the precious weeks of summer vacation, I’d pedal my bike back and forth to the library in a continuous cycle of return and borrow. I can still see skinny 10-year-old me, left foot dangling over the back of the porch swing, right foot pushing against the dusty floorboards as I floated in midair, immersed in the adventures of other people’s lives.

An early love for books changes the trajectory of lives. My own kids spent as much time in bookstores as in libraries. In my leanest years as a single mother, I never said no to a book for my son or daughter.

Sad news this week: Another national bookstore chain has failed.

Borders Group is going out of business. All 399 stores will close. In the dead of summer, too.

About 10,700 employees will lose their jobs. I’ve come to know dozens of them in Ohio over the years. To a person, they were smart and kind and full of big ideas. What a loss to the communities they served.

“We were all working hard towards a different outcome,” Borders President Mike Edwards said, “but the headwinds we have been facing for quite some time, including the rapidly
changing book industry, e-reader revolution and turbulent economy, have brought us to where we are now.”

Borders has been in trouble for a while. It closed 200 stores in February as part of its bankruptcy restructuring.

That same month, Publishers Weekly reported that the bookstore chain owed $41 million to Penguin Group, $36.9 million to Hachette, $33.8 million to Simon & Schuster, $33.5 million to Random House and $25.8 million to HarperCollins.

Still, a lot of us refused to see this collapse coming.

Others, such as Sari Feldman, already are brainstorming ways to fill the void.

“I’m crushed for the reading community,” Feldman said Tuesday. “Borders was a place for a lot of readers to congregate. I hope they’ll find another place.”

She has a suggestion: How about your local library?

Feldman is past president of the national Public Library Association and executive director of the Cuyahoga County Public Library in Ohio. She’s been tracking the setbacks and innovations of public libraries across the country for years. Despite budget cuts, many library systems are becoming increasingly creative, she says, and returning to their roots as the go-to place for readers.

“We don’t see bookstores as competitors,” Feldman said. “They’re important in keeping people aware and enthusiastic about books. But libraries are reclaiming our core value, which is promoting books to our readers.

“We should always be at the ready to help them find their next great read.”

Public libraries always have been at the forefront of child literacy, but they also are looking for new ways to reach adults, too. Earlier this year, Feldman borrowed an idea from Multnomah County Library in Portland, Ore., and started a Facebook “Night Owls” book discussion. It convenes on Thursdays at 9 p.m. Last week’s discussion logged 85 comments.

“We have 28 branches,” she said. “Last year, 7.6 million people walked through our doors. We have lots of book groups, but some readers want to talk about books at night, from home. We did this to include them, too.”

Feldman laughed when I suggested that most of us remember the library as a place where people read but never chat.

“Libraries are not the quiet sanctuaries they used to be,” she said. “We have to set aside quiet spaces in our buildings these days. We welcome the civic engagement.”

When citizens read, their communities prosper.

“People who read are voters,” Feldman said. “They patronize museums and theaters. They’re more likely to volunteer.”

They’re also more inclined to pass on their love of reading to the next generation.

Forecasters are predicting no break soon in the heat and humidity.

What perfect weather for children to curl around books and hitch a ride.

Connie Schultz is a Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist for The Plain Dealer in Cleveland and an essayist for Parade magazine. To find out more about Connie Schultz (cschultz@plaind.com) and read her past columns, please visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2011 CREATORS.COM

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