Showing posts with label GUN RIGHTS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label GUN RIGHTS. Show all posts

Sunday, November 27, 2022

FOCUS: At Protests Across America, Guns Are Doing the Talking

 

 

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Beto O’Rourke, on the campaign trail this summer during his gubernatorial run in Texas, spoke with Rod Parker, a revivalist preacher with a handgun who had been protesting outside. (photo: Allison V. Smith/NYT)
FOCUS: At Protests Across America, Guns Are Doing the Talking
Mike McIntire, The New York Times
McIntire writes: "Across the country, openly carrying a gun in public is no longer just an exercise in self-defense — increasingly it is a soapbox for elevating one’s voice and, just as often, quieting someone else's."



Armed Americans, often pushing a right-wing agenda, are increasingly using open-carry laws to intimidate opponents and shut down debate.

Across the country, openly carrying a gun in public is no longer just an exercise in self-defense — increasingly it is a soapbox for elevating one’s voice and, just as often, quieting someone else’s.

This month, armed protesters appeared outside an elections center in Phoenix, hurling baseless accusations that the election for governor had been stolen from the Republican, Kari Lake. In October, Proud Boys with guns joined a rally in Nashville where conservative lawmakers spoke against transgender medical treatments for minors.

In June, armed demonstrations around the United States amounted to nearly one a day. A group led by a former Republican state legislator protested a gay pride event in a public park in Coeur d’Alene, Idaho. Men with guns interrupted a Juneteenth festival in Franklin, Tenn., handing out fliers claiming that white people were being replaced. Among the others were rallies in support of gun rights in Delaware and abortion rights in Georgia.

Whether at the local library, in a park or on Main Street, most of these incidents happen where Republicans have fought to expand the ability to bear arms in public, a movement bolstered by a recent Supreme Court ruling on the right to carry firearms outside the home. The loosening of limits has occurred as violent political rhetoric rises and the police in some places fear bloodshed among an armed populace on a hair trigger.

But the effects of more guns in public spaces have not been evenly felt. A partisan divide — with Democrats largely eschewing firearms and Republicans embracing them — has warped civic discourse. Deploying the Second Amendment in service of the First has become a way to buttress a policy argument, a sort of silent, if intimidating, bullhorn.

“It’s disappointing we’ve gotten to that state in our country,” said Kevin Thompson, executive director of the Museum of Science & History in Memphis, Tenn., where armed protesters led to the cancellation of an L.G.B.T.Q. event in September. “What I saw was a group of folks who did not want to engage in any sort of dialogue and just wanted to impose their belief.”

A New York Times analysis of more than 700 armed demonstrations found that, at about 77 percent of them, people openly carrying guns represented right-wing views, such as opposition to L.G.B.T.Q. rights and abortion access, hostility to racial justice rallies and support for former President Donald J. Trump’s lie of winning the 2020 election.

The records, from January 2020 to last week, were compiled by the Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project, a nonprofit that tracks political violence around the world. The Times also interviewed witnesses to other, smaller-scale incidents not captured by the data, including encounters with armed people at indoor public meetings.

Anti-government militias and right-wing culture warriors like the Proud Boys attended a majority of the protests, the data showed. Violence broke out at more than 100 events and often involved fisticuffs with opposing groups, including left-wing activists such as antifa.

Republican politicians are generally more tolerant of openly armed supporters than are Democrats, who are more likely to be on the opposing side of people with guns, the records suggest. In July, for example, men wearing sidearms confronted Beto O’Rourke, then the Democratic candidate for Texas governor, at a campaign stop in Whitesboro and warned that he was “not welcome in this town.”

Republican officials or candidates appeared at 32 protests where they were on the same side as those with guns. Democratic politicians were identified at only two protests taking the same view as those armed.

Sometimes, the Republican officials carried weapons: Robert Sutherland, a Washington state representative, wore a pistol on his hip while protesting Covid-19 restrictions in Olympia in 2020. “Governor,” he said, speaking to a crowd, “you send men with guns after us for going fishing. We’ll see what a revolution looks like.”

The occasional appearance of armed civilians at demonstrations or governmental functions is not new. In the 1960s, the Black Panthers displayed guns in public when protesting police brutality. Militia groups, sometimes armed, rallied against federal agents involved in violent standoffs at Ruby Ridge and Waco in the 1990s.

But the frequency of these incidents exploded in 2020, with conservative pushback against public health measures to fight the coronavirus and response to the sometimes violent rallies after the murder of George Floyd. Today, in some parts of the country with permissive gun laws, it is not unusual to see people with handguns or military-style rifles at all types of protests.

For instance, at least 14 such incidents have occurred in and around Dallas and Phoenix since May, including outside an F.B.I. field office to condemn the search of Mr. Trump’s home and, elsewhere, in support of abortion rights. In New York and Washington, where gun laws are strict, there were none — even though numerous demonstrations took place during that same period.

Many conservatives and gun-rights advocates envision virtually no limits. When Democrats in Colorado and Washington State passed laws this year prohibiting firearms at polling places and government meetings, Republicans voted against them. Indeed, those bills were the exception.

Attempts by Democrats to impose limits in other states have mostly failed, and some form of open carry without a permit is now legal in 38 states, a number that is likely to expand as legislation advances in several more. In Michigan, where a Tea Party group recently advertised poll-watcher training using a photo of armed men in camouflage, judges have rejected efforts to prohibit guns at voting locations.

Gun rights advocates assert that banning guns from protests would violate the right to carry firearms for self-defense. Jordan Stein, a spokesman for Gun Owners of America, pointed to Kyle Rittenhouse, the teenager acquitted last year in the shooting of three people during a chaotic demonstration in Kenosha, Wis., where he had walked the streets with a military-style rifle.

“At a time when protests often devolve into riots, honest people need a means to protect themselves,” he said.

Beyond self-defense, Mr. Stein said the freedom of speech and the right to have a gun are “bedrock principles” and that “Americans should be able to bear arms while exercising their First Amendment rights, whether that’s going to church or a peaceful assembly.”

Others argue that openly carrying firearms at public gatherings, particularly when there is no obvious self-defense reason, can have a corrosive effect, leading to curtailed activities, suppressed opinions or public servants who quit out of fear and frustration.

Concerned about armed protesters, local election officials in Arizona, Colorado and Oregon have requested bulletproofing for their offices.

Adam Searing, a lawyer and Georgetown University professor who helps families secure access to health care, said he saw the impact on free speech when people objecting to Covid restrictions used guns to make their point. In some states, disability rights advocates were afraid to show up to support mask mandates because of armed opposition, Mr. Searing said.

“What was really disturbing was the guns became kind of a signifier for political reasons,” he said, adding, “It was just about pure intimidation.”

Armed Speech

The Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project has been tracking such incidents in the United States for the past few years. Events captured by the data are not assigned ideological labels but include descriptions, and are collected from news sources, social media and independent partners like the Network Contagion Research Institute, which monitors extremism and disinformation online.

The Times’s analysis found that the largest drivers of armed demonstrations have shifted since 2020. This year, protesters with guns are more likely to be motivated by abortion or L.G.B.T.Q. issues. Sam Jones, a spokesman for the nonpartisan data group, said that upticks in armed incidents tended to correspond to “different flash-point events and time periods, like the Roe v. Wade decision and Pride Month.”

In about a quarter of the cases, left-wing activists also were armed. Many times it was a response, they said, to right-wing intimidation. Other times it was not, such as when about 40 demonstrators, some with rifles, blocked city officials in Dallas from clearing a homeless encampment in July.

More than half of all armed protests occurred in 10 states with expansive open-carry laws: Arizona, Georgia, Kentucky, Michigan, North Carolina, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Texas, Virginia and Washington. Three of them — Michigan, Oregon and Texas — allowed armed protesters to gather outside capitol buildings ahead of President Biden’s inauguration, and in Michigan, militia members carrying assault rifles were permitted inside the capitol during protests against Covid lockdowns.

Beyond the mass gatherings, there are everyday episodes of armed intimidation. Kimber Glidden had been director of the Boundary County Library in Northern Idaho for a couple of months when some parents began raising questions in February about books they believed were inappropriate for children.

It did not matter that the library did not have most of those books — largely dealing with gender, sexuality and race — or that those it did have were not in the children’s section. The issue became a cause célèbre for conservative activists, some of whom began showing up with guns to increasingly tense public meetings, Ms. Glidden said.

“How do you stand there and tell me you want to protect children when you’re in the children’s section of the library and you’re armed?” she asked.

In August, she resigned, decrying the “intimidation tactics and threatening behavior.”

A Growing Militancy

At a Second Amendment rally in June 2021 outside the statehouse in Harrisburg, Pa., where some people were armed, Republican speakers repeatedly connected the right to carry a gun to other social and cultural issues. Representative Scott Perry voiced a frequent conservative complaint about censorship, saying the First Amendment was “under assault.”

“And you know very well what protects the First,” he said. “Which is what we’re doing here today.”

Stephanie Borowicz, a state legislator, was more blunt, boasting to the crowd that “tyrannical governors” had been forced to ease coronavirus restrictions because “as long as we’re an armed population, the government fears us.”

Pennsylvania, like some other states with permissive open-carry laws, is home to right-wing militias that sometimes appear in public with firearms. They are often welcomed, or at least accepted, by Republican politicians.

When a dozen militia members, some wearing skull masks and body armor, joined a protest against Covid restrictions in Pittsburgh in April 2020, Jeff Neff, a Republican borough council president running for the state senate, posed for a photo with the group. In it, he is holding his campaign sign, surrounded by men with military-style rifles.

In an email, Mr. Neff said he had since left politics, and expressed regret over past news coverage of the photo, adding, “Please know that I do not condone any threats or action of violence by any person or groups.”

Across the country, there is evidence of increasing Republican involvement in militias. A membership list for the Oath Keepers, made public last year, includes 81 elected officials or candidates, according to a report by the Anti-Defamation League. Most of them appear to be Republicans.

Another nationwide militia, the American Patriots Three Percent, recently told prospective members that it worked to support “individuals seeking election to local G.O.P. boards,” according to an archived version of its website.

More than 25 members of the Oath Keepers and Three Percenters have been charged in the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol. Those organizations, along with the Proud Boys and Boogaloo Boys, make up the bulk of organized groups in the armed-protest data, according to The Times’s analysis.

Shootings were rare, such as when a Proud Boy was shot in the foot while chasing antifa members during a protest over Covid lockdowns in Olympia last year. But Mr. Jones said the data, which also tracked unarmed demonstrations, showed that while armed protests accounted for less than 2 percent of the total, they were responsible for 10 percent of those where violence occurred, most often involving fights between rival groups.

“Armed groups or individuals might say they have no intention of intimidating anyone and are only participating in demonstrations to keep the peace,” said Mr. Jones, “but the evidence doesn’t back up the claim.”

Competing Rights

In a landmark 2008 decision in District of Columbia v. Heller, the Supreme Court held that the Second Amendment conveyed a basic right to bear arms for lawful purposes such as self-defense at home. It went further in a decision this June that struck down New York restrictions on concealed-pistol permits, effectively finding a right to carry firearms in public.

But the court in Heller also made clear that gun rights were not unlimited, and that its ruling did not invalidate laws prohibiting “the carrying of firearms in sensitive places.” That caveat was reiterated in a concurring opinion in the New York case.

Even some hard-line gun rights advocates are uncomfortable with armed people at public protests. Alan Gottlieb, founder of the Second Amendment Foundation, told The Washington Times in 2017 that “if you are carrying it to make a political point, we are not going to support that.”

“Firearms serve a purpose,” he said, “and the purpose is not a mouthpiece.”

But groups that embrace Second Amendment absolutism do not hesitate to criticize fellow advocates who stray from that orthodoxy.

After Dan Crenshaw, a Republican congressman from Texas and former Navy SEAL, lamented in 2020 that “guys dressing up in their Call of Duty outfits, marching through the streets,” were not advancing the cause of gun rights, he was knocked by the Firearms Policy Coalition for “being critical of people exercising their right to protest.” The coalition has fought state laws that it says force gun owners to choose between the rights to free speech and self-defense.

Regardless of whether there is a right to go armed in public for self-defense, early laws and court decisions made clear that the Constitution did not empower people, such as modern-day militia members, to gather with guns as a form of protest, said Michael C. Dorf, a constitutional law professor at Cornell University who has written about the tension between the rights to free speech and guns.

Mr. Dorf pointed to an 18th-century Pennsylvania Supreme Court ruling that a group of protesters with firearms had no right to rally in public against a government tax. Some states also adopted an old English law prohibiting “going armed to the terror of the people,” still on the books in some places, aimed at preventing the use of weapons to threaten or intimidate.

“Historically,” said Mr. Dorf, “there were such limits on armed gatherings, even assuming that there’s some right to be armed as individuals.”

More broadly, there is no evidence that the framers of the Constitution intended for Americans to take up arms during civic debate among themselves — or to intimidate those with differing opinions. That is what happened at the Memphis museum in September, when people with guns showed up to protest a scheduled dance party that capped a summer-long series on the history of the L.G.B.T.Q. community in the South.

While the party was billed as “family friendly,” conservatives on local talk radio claimed that children would be at risk (the museum said the planned activities were acceptable for all ages). As armed men wearing masks milled about outside, the panicked staff canceled all programs and evacuated the premises.

Mr. Thompson, the director, said he and his board were now grappling with the laws on carrying firearms, which were loosened last year by state legislators.

“It’s a different time,” he said, “and it’s something we have to learn to navigate.”

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Tuesday, June 28, 2022

She told a British reporter to “Go Back to Your Country”

 


Marjorie Taylor Greene Boasts Telling Reporter to 'Go Back to Your Country' When Pressed on U.S. Gun Violence

Marjorie Taylor Greene is again making headlines for telling a British reporter to "go back to your country" after being asked about gun control.

The heated exchange, which occurred during a press conference, was proudly shared by the Georgia Republican on Twitter.

"When British press wants to argue about our God-given American gun rights, my answer is: 'go back to your own country,'" Greene wrote.

The reporter questioned Greene about her stance on gun control, saying that in the U.K., "we don't have guns ... but we don't have mass shootings either."

Greene then snapped at her, claiming that the U.K. has "all kinds of murder" and adding, "you have mass stabbings, lady."

"Well, you can go back to your country and worry about your no guns," Greene continued. "We like our guns here."

This is an embarrassment -- and she must be held accountable at the ballot box this November. That’s why we’re supporting Marcus Flowers, the Democrat and Army Veteran running to unseat her.

Marcus set a goal of raising $250,000 by the end of June -- and we need at least 35 more contributions by midnight to stay on track and reach it.

Can you chip in today help our campaign reach this goal?

We know Marjorie Taylor Greene is beatable. She didn’t even have an opponent in 2010, but this year, Marcus will unseat her once and for all.

This is a winnable race. Let’s show the country that Georgia is much better than Marjorie Taylor Greene has demonstrated.

Team Flowers for Congress

 

 

 

Paid for by Marcus for Georgia
PO Box 532 Rome, GA 30162 United States

 

Marcus Flowers for Georgia · GA 30162, United States





Friday, June 24, 2022

POLITICO NIGHTLY: The expanding Second Amendment

 


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POLITICO Nightly logo

BY MYAH WARD

Presented by American Edge Project

New York Gov. Kathy Hochul speaks.

‘BIGGER THAN HELLER’ — The Supreme Court’s 6-3 decision today to strike down New York’s century-old gun law was “probably the most significant expansion of gun rights from the Supreme Court in the country’s history,” says Michael Waldman, the author of “The Second Amendment: A Biography,” which was cited in Justice Stephen Breyer’s dissent, and the president of the Brennan Center for Justice at NYU Law.

The decision stripped local officials of broad authority to deny permits to gun owners who want to carry weapons outside of their home for almost any reason. The ruling is also set to nullify laws in a handful of other states that have similarly strong concealed-carry licensing laws.

To break down the ruling’s impact, Nightly called Waldman. This conversation has been edited.

I think your initial reaction on Twitter really captured how big of a deal you feel this is. 

In its practical impact, it will be bigger than Heller. And it’s not just the New York law, but what it does and will do to gun laws of all kinds, all across the country.

What it really means is that the NRA and gun rights advocates will be in court tomorrow, challenging hundreds of gun laws all across the United States.

It will be very hard for states and cities and Congress to know what is allowed right now. What kind of regulation of firearms is even constitutional? The court did not offer clarity here.

Are there particular regulations that you see as now at risk? 

Any kind of gun regulation can be challenged now. If you look at what kinds of things were upheld in the past decade, there were bans on assault weapons, there were background check requirements, there were restrictions on magazines and ammunition. Anything that states did in the last 12 years, which was upheld by the courts — federal courts and state courts upheld about 90 percent of the gun laws that were challenged since they said: “Yes, it’s an individual right, we’re taking that right very seriously. We’re balancing it against public safety.” And 90 percent of the time they were upheld.

Clarence Thomas and the other Supreme Court justices have now said: “You all did it wrong. You’re not supposed to weigh public safety in that way. You’re supposed to look for analogies in history.”

So more legal challenges for existing gun laws are coming because of today’s ruling?

There are going to be dozens of lawsuits challenging existing laws. Judges are going to scratch their heads and try to figure out what history and tradition means in this context. This was a 100-year-old law. That sounds like history and tradition to me.

It will be much harder for states and cities and even the federal government to know what they’re allowed to do.

How will gun safety advocates respond to this ruling? 

Because New York doesn’t allow the concealed carrying of these weapons, but now will have to in some respects allow it, they can and will try to limit the carrying of those weapons from sensitive places — like the subway, like schools, like Times Square. I’m sure they will look at what kind of requirements for getting a license — training, background checks, insurance, that kind of thing — since now, many more people will have access to these licenses.

Are you at all concerned about the constitutionality of the gun legislation senators are working to pass in Congress? 

I don’t know that there’s any concern. It’s just that it was clearly constitutional yesterday. Now they’re going to have to look at it again.

Welcome to POLITICO Nightly. Reach out with news, tips and ideas at nightly@politico.com. Or contact tonight’s author at mward@politico.com or on Twitter at @MyahWard.

ADDED: 

MONOPOLIES DON'T BENEFIT AMERICANS!

Call Congress: End Big Tech monopolies

Passing antitrust reform is so important and puts the power back in the hands of users while making it more difficult for corporations to skirt accountability and regulation from agencies like the FTC and the DOJ.1

Big Tech has spent $36 million trying to shut down these bills and we need your help to put as much pressure as possible on Congress.2 Legislators need to hear from you, their constituents, that taking on Big Tech will give back to users the fundamental freedom to choose — to choose how to experience the internet, to choose how to spend our money, to choose how to connect with other people around the world.

Kairos is joining Fight for the Future and dozens of organizations across the country in urging our elected officials to take action on Big Tech monopolies. Will you join us?

Click here to call your Senators and urge them to support antitrust reform.

Until tech works for all,

Rico, Kairos Campaign Manager

 

Sources:

1. “What the antitrust proposals would actually mean for tech,” Protocol, 1 October 2020.

2. “Big Tech Has Spent $36 Million on Ads to Torpedo Antitrust Bill,” The Wall Street Journal, June 9, 2022.

Sources:
1. Gizmodo, "Horror Stories From Inside Amazon's Mechanical Turk," January 28th, 2020.
2. The Washington Post, "Online labor markets may look competitive. They aren’t.," August 2nd, 2018.

Sources:
1. The Atlantic, "How Amazon Helped Kill a Seattle Tax on Business," June 13th, 2018.
2. Mother Jones, "Amazon Spent a Ton of Money on Seattle Elections. It Probably Wasn’t Worth It.," November 8th, 2019.
3. Reuters, "How Amazon.com moved into the business of U.S. elections," October 15th, 2019.
4. Reuters, "Where U.S. presidential candidates stand on breaking up Big Tech," October 29th, 2019.
5. The Verge, "‘Beat the Machine’: Amazon warehouse workers strike to protest inhumane conditions," July 16th, 2019.
6. Mijente, "New Report Exposes Tech & Data Companies Behind ICE," October 23rd, 2018.
7. BBC News, "Amazon 'threatens to fire' climate change activists," January 3rd, 2020.
8. Partnership for Working Families, "Bad Deal, Bad Company, Bad Billionaire: How Proposed Taxpayer Subsidies for Amazon HQ2 Can Still Be Stopped," December 19th, 2018.
9. Reuters, "How Amazon.com moved into the business of U.S. elections," October 15th, 2019.
10. Bloomberg, "Amazon Faces Widening U.S. Antitrust Scrutiny in Cloud Business," December 4th, 2019.
11. U.S. House Committee on the Judiciary, "Investigation of Competition in Digital Markets," Accessed December 18th, 2019.
12. The New York Times, "Activists Build a Grass-Roots Alliance Against Amazon," November 26th, 2019.


 

A message from American Edge Project:

Voters Focused on Inflation – Not Breaking Up Tech 

Midterm voters’ top priorities for Congress are inflation (88%), national security (86%), and jobs (85%). 84 percent of voters agree “there are other, bigger problems facing the United States, we should not be focused on breaking up U.S. tech companies right now .” Read more from our poll in partnership with Ipsos.

 
WHAT'D I MISS?

— Jan. 6 hearing reveals multiple House Republicans sought pardons after Capitol riot: Days after Jan. 6, 2021, Republican lawmakers who strategized with former President Donald Trump asked top White House officials to help arrange for pardons, according to testimony released today by the select panel investigating the Capitol attack. Several top Trump White House aides at the time described outreach from several lawmakers seeking clemency: Reps. Andy Biggs (R-Ariz.), Louie Gohmert (R-Texas), Scott Perry (R-Pa.), Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) and Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.). Additionally, according to the former Trump aides’ testimony, Rep. Mo Brooks (R-Ala.) sent an email on Jan. 11, 2021, asking for “all-purpose” pardons for every lawmaker who objected to electoral votes from Arizona and Pennsylvania.

— New York lawmakers scramble to counteract SCOTUS gun ruling: Minutes after the release of the opinion, Gov. Kathy Hochul vowed to call state lawmakers back into session, and City Council announced it would pass a resolution seeking Albany’s help. Broad plans include tightening the firearm-permitting process, empowering private businesses to ban weapons and deeming swaths of the state gun-free zones.

— DOJ searches home of ex-official who aided alleged pro-Trump ‘coup’: Law enforcement officials searched the Virginia home of former top Justice Department official Jeffrey Clark, according to his employer and former Trump administration colleague. Russ Vought, who served as Trump’s White House budget director and now works with Clark at the Center for Renewing America, tweeted that on Wednesday “more than a dozen DOJ law enforcement officials searched Jeff Clark’s house in a pre dawn raid, put him in the streets in his pjs, and took his electronic devices.”

— Senate clears major hurdle toward passing gun safety bill: The Senate took a critical step today on the bipartisan gun safety legislation, clearing the way for a passage vote no later than the end of the week. In a 65-34 vote, 15 Republicans joined all Senate Democrats in moving forward. Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said the Senate could pass the final bill as soon as today with GOP cooperation.

— Republicans launch super PAC to stop Greitens in Missouri: The group, called Show Me Values, is set to start running TV advertisements targeting disgraced former Gov. Eric Greitens, beginning Friday. Greitens is running in their upcoming Missouri Senate primary. The outfit is set to air more than $1 million worth of commercials through the end of June, and a person involved with the organization said it planned to remain involved in the race up until the Aug. 2 primary. Top Republicans have spent much of the last year expressing deep concerns about Greitens, who stepped down as Missouri governor in 2018 amid allegations that he sexually assaulted his hairdresser. Polls have consistently shown Greitens ahead his primary rivals, including state Attorney General Eric Schmitt, Rep. Vicky Hartzler and Rep. Billy Long.

— Education Department unveils Title IX rule boosting protections for transgender students: Education Secretary Miguel Cardona unveiled his plan today to codify safeguards for transgender students and overhaul the Trump-era version of the rule that mandates how schools must respond to sexual misconduct complaints. The proposal would ban “all forms of sex discrimination, including discrimination based on sex stereotypes, sex characteristics, pregnancy or related conditions, sexual orientation and gender identity.” It is unclear how the rule would apply to athletics.

 

DON'T MISS DIGITAL FUTURE DAILY - OUR TECHNOLOGY NEWSLETTER, RE-IMAGINED:  Technology is always evolving, and our new tech-obsessed newsletter is too! Digital Future Daily unlocks the most important stories determining the future of technology, from Washington to Silicon Valley and innovation power centers around the world. Readers get an in-depth look at how the next wave of tech will reshape civic and political life, including activism, fundraising, lobbying and legislating. Go inside the minds of the biggest tech players, policymakers and regulators to learn how their decisions affect our lives. Don't miss out, subscribe today.

 
 
AROUND THE WORLD

UKRAINE’S NEXT TOP SPY — You think you know someone, and then Russia invades your country and your childhood friend turned top intelligence official flubs it and some of his senior spies flee their posts, apparently helping the Kremlin’s forces avoid landmines and direct its attack aircraft to blast your cities.

President Volodymyr Zelenskyy isn’t getting a lot of sleep these days, and the man he appointed to lead Ukraine’s domestic intelligence and security agency can’t be helping matters. Ivan Bakanov — his friend from way back who once ran his entertainment company and then his presidential campaign — is on thin ice in Kyiv, writes Christopher Miller.

Zelenskyy is looking to replace Bakanov, who now runs Ukraine’s spy agency, with someone more suitable to serve as the wartime chief of the Security Service of Ukraine (SBU), according to four officials close to the president and a Western diplomat who has advised Kyiv on reforms needed to revamp the SBU.

Some said the old friends rarely speak these days, save for government business. Ensuring a smooth transition may be tricky with the war still raging, with one official telling POLITICO that Zelenskyy is worried about the optics of sacking someone from his inner circle. For now, much of the SBU’s daily operations are being run from the presidential office and people still in good graces of Zelenskyy and his chief of staff, Andriy Yermak.

BIDEN’S LATIN AMERICA JUGGLING ACT — The election of guerilla-turned-politician Gustavo Petro as the first leftist president of Colombia last weekend marked a historic turn for the Latin American nation. It could become a historic headache for President Joe Biden as well, writes Sabrina Rodriguez.

Petro’s leftist politics poses new hurdles for the U.S., as it holds the potential to rearrange the two countries’ longstanding alliance that has garnered bipartisan support for decades. He has sought to reestablish diplomatic ties with Venezuela’s authoritarian regime, which the Biden administration does not recognize. He’s criticized a decadeslong partnership with the U.S. on the forced eradication of coca, the base ingredient of cocaine, and the extradition of drug cartel leaders. He’s also suggested cutting oil exploration at a time Biden has asked nations to produce more.

His election has sparked uproar among conservatives and some moderates in the U.S. But for now, Biden administration officials appear to be taking a cautious approach, looking for points of shared interest. In a call to Petro on Tuesday, 48 hours after his victory, Biden congratulated him and Francia Márquez, a longtime environmental activist who will become the country’s first Black vice president. Biden “welcomed the opportunity to discuss bilateral security and counternarcotics cooperation,” according to a White House readout.

 

A message from American Edge Project:

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NIGHTLY NUMBER

3 million

The number of adults who use Juul vapes, according to an estimate by University of Michigan’s Tobacco Research Network Director Cliff Douglas. The FDA today ordered Juul to take all of its vapes off the market. Juul said it plans to litigate the order.

 

STEP INSIDE THE WEST WING: What's really happening in West Wing offices? Find out who's up, who's down, and who really has the president’s ear in our West Wing Playbook newsletter, the insider's guide to the Biden White House and Cabinet. For buzzy nuggets and details that you won't find anywhere else, subscribe today.

 
 
PARTING WORDS

An image of John Eastman and Rudy Giuliani is displayed on a screen.

An image of John Eastman, left, and Rudy Giuliani is displayed on a screen during the third Jan. 6 hearing on June 16, 2022. | Tom Brenner-Pool/Getty Images

JOHN EASTMAN’S CRIMINAL EXPOSURE IS REAL Few people have gone from relative obscurity to public pariah as quickly as Eastman. A year and a half ago, he was an oddly dressed rally speaker fulminating about imaginary voter fraud. He stood on the same stage as Trump before a crowd in Washington that included many who would go on to take part in the siege of the U.S. Capitol. The former Trump adviser now finds himself in the deeply uncomfortable but well-deserved position of being one of the most reviled lawyers in America. And, if the Jan. 6 committee has its way, he’ll be the target of a criminal investigation for his central role in what committee chair Rep. Bennie Thompson (D-Miss.) described as an “attempted coup,” writes Ankush Khardori.

Before November 2020, Eastman was a lawyer comfortably situated in the constellation of conservative legal institutions and media outlets. A former clerk for Judge J. Michael Luttig and Justice Clarence Thomas, Eastman was a professor and onetime dean of the law school at Chapman University who was prominently affiliated with the Federalist Society, the National Organization for Marriage, the Public Interest Legal Foundation and the Claremont Institute. His résumé may imply some semblance of seriousness, but prior to his presidential transition shenanigans, Eastman’s best known piece of legal analysis was an op-ed questioning Kamala Harris’ eligibility to be vice president that was such obvious and detestable junk that the outlet that ran it had to apologize.

Viewers of the Jan. 6 House select committee’s hearings could be forgiven for thinking the clearest case of criminal misconduct is being made against Eastman — and that perhaps proving his guilt is the best path toward implicating Trump.

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MONOPOLIES DON'T BENEFIT AMERICANS!

Call Congress: End Big Tech monopolies

Passing antitrust reform is so important and puts the power back in the hands of users while making it more difficult for corporations to skirt accountability and regulation from agencies like the FTC and the DOJ.1

Big Tech has spent $36 million trying to shut down these bills and we need your help to put as much pressure as possible on Congress.2 Legislators need to hear from you, their constituents, that taking on Big Tech will give back to users the fundamental freedom to choose — to choose how to experience the internet, to choose how to spend our money, to choose how to connect with other people around the world.

Kairos is joining Fight for the Future and dozens of organizations across the country in urging our elected officials to take action on Big Tech monopolies. Will you join us?

Click here to call your Senators and urge them to support antitrust reform.

Until tech works for all,

Rico, Kairos Campaign Manager

 

Sources:

1. “What the antitrust proposals would actually mean for tech,” Protocol, 1 October 2020.

2. “Big Tech Has Spent $36 Million on Ads to Torpedo Antitrust Bill,” The Wall Street Journal, June 9, 2022.

Sources:
1. Gizmodo, "Horror Stories From Inside Amazon's Mechanical Turk," January 28th, 2020.
2. The Washington Post, "Online labor markets may look competitive. They aren’t.," August 2nd, 2018.

Sources:
1. The Atlantic, "How Amazon Helped Kill a Seattle Tax on Business," June 13th, 2018.
2. Mother Jones, "Amazon Spent a Ton of Money on Seattle Elections. It Probably Wasn’t Worth It.," November 8th, 2019.
3. Reuters, "How Amazon.com moved into the business of U.S. elections," October 15th, 2019.
4. Reuters, "Where U.S. presidential candidates stand on breaking up Big Tech," October 29th, 2019.
5. The Verge, "‘Beat the Machine’: Amazon warehouse workers strike to protest inhumane conditions," July 16th, 2019.
6. Mijente, "New Report Exposes Tech & Data Companies Behind ICE," October 23rd, 2018.
7. BBC News, "Amazon 'threatens to fire' climate change activists," January 3rd, 2020.
8. Partnership for Working Families, "Bad Deal, Bad Company, Bad Billionaire: How Proposed Taxpayer Subsidies for Amazon HQ2 Can Still Be Stopped," December 19th, 2018.
9. Reuters, "How Amazon.com moved into the business of U.S. elections," October 15th, 2019.
10. Bloomberg, "Amazon Faces Widening U.S. Antitrust Scrutiny in Cloud Business," December 4th, 2019.
11. U.S. House Committee on the Judiciary, "Investigation of Competition in Digital Markets," Accessed December 18th, 2019.
12. The New York Times, "Activists Build a Grass-Roots Alliance Against Amazon," November 26th, 2019.

 

A message from American Edge Project:

From our midterm voter poll in partnership with Ipsos:

74 percent of voters agree that “breaking up U.S. tech companies will only hurt America’s competitiveness on the global stage, at a time when our adversaries are becoming bolder.”

69 percent of voters agree that “breaking up U.S. tech companies threatens our national security by letting China gain a technological upper hand.”

Learn more.

 
 

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Chris Suellentrop @suellentrop

Myah Ward @myahward

 

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