Wednesday, 29 March 2023

Republicans Face Setbacks in Push to Tighten Voting Laws on College Campuses

Republicans Face Setbacks in Push to Tighten Voting Laws on College Campuses

Republicans Face Setbacks in Push to Tighten Voting Laws on College Campuses




Students walking between classes at the University of Idaho. The state will ban student ID cards as a form of voter identification, one of few successes for Republicans targeting young voters this year. Credit... Rajah Bose for The New York Times






Alarmed over young people increasingly proving to be a force for Democrats at the ballot box, Republican lawmakers in a number of states have been trying to enact new obstacles to voting for college students.







In Idaho, Republicans used their power monopoly this month to ban student ID cards as a form of voter identification.


But so far this year, the new Idaho law is one of few successes for Republicans targeting young voters.


Attempts to cordon off out-of-state students from voting in their campus towns or to roll back preregistration for teenagers have failed in New Hampshire and Virginia. Even in Texas, where 2019 legislation shuttered early voting sites on many college campuses, a new proposal that would eliminate all college polling places seems to have an uncertain future.


“When these ideas are first floated, people are aghast,” said Chad Dunn, the co-founder and legal director of the UCLA Voting Rights Project. But he cautioned that the lawmakers who sponsor such bills tend to bring them back over and over again.


“Then, six, eight, 10 years later, these terrible ideas become law,” he said.


Turnout in recent cycles has surged for young voters, who were energized by issues like abortion, climate change and the Trump presidency.


They voted in rising numbers during the midterms last year in Kansas and Michigan, which both had referendums about abortion. And college students, who had long paid little attention to elections, emerged as a crucial voting bloc in the 2018 midterms.


But even with such gains, Sean Morales-Doyle, director of the voting rights program for the Brennan Center for Justice, said there was still progress to be made.







“Their turnout is still far outpaced by their older counterparts,” Mr. Morales-Doyle said.


Now, with the 2024 presidential election underway, the battle over young voters has heightened significance.


Between the 2018 and 2022 elections in Idaho, registration jumped 66 percent among 18- and 19-year-old voters, the largest increase in the nation, according to the Center for Information and Research on Civic Learning and Engagement. The nonpartisan research organization, based at Tufts University, focuses on youth civic engagement.


Out of 17 states that generally require voter ID, Idaho will join Texas and only four others — North Dakota, Ohio, South Carolina and Tennessee — that do not accept any student IDs, according to the Voting Rights Lab, a group that tracks legislation.


Arizona and Wisconsin have rigid rules on student IDs that colleges and universities have struggled to meet, though some Wisconsin schools have been successful



Politics Across the United States



From the halls of government to the campaign trail, here’s a look at the political landscape in America.


  • Expanding Medicaid: North Carolina became the 40th state to expand Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act, the latest sign of how Republican opposition to the health measure has weakened.


  • Forgoing Funds: Mississippi is one of 10 states, all with G.O.P.-led legislatures, that continue to reject federal funding to expand Medicaid, a political choice that is intensifying financial pressure on hospitals.


  • A.I. on the Campaign Trail: The swift advance of artificial intelligence in politics is already blurring the boundaries between fact and fake in the 2024 presidential race. Judicial Elections: A costly race for a swing seat on Wisconsin’s Supreme Court — officially nonpartisan but positively awash in partisanship — offers a preview of what might be to come for judicial politics.


Proponents of such restrictions often say they are needed to prevent voter fraud, even though instances of fraud are rare. Two lawsuits were filed in state and federal court shortly after Idaho’s Republican governor, Brad Little, signed the student ID prohibition into law on March 15.








“The facts aren’t particularly persuasive if you’re just trying to get through all of these voter suppression bills,” Betsy McBride, the president of the League of Women Voters of Idaho, one of the plaintiffs in the state lawsuit, said before the bill’s signing.



A fight over out-of-state students in New Hampshire



In New Hampshire, which has one of the highest percentages in the nation of college students from out of state, G.O.P. lawmakers proposed a bill this year that would have barred voting access for those students, but it died in committee after failing to muster a single vote.


Nearly 59 percent of students at traditional colleges in New Hampshire came from out of state in 2020, according to the Institute for Democracy and Higher Education at Tufts.


The University of New Hampshire had opposed the legislation, while students and other critics had raised questions about its constitutionality.


The bill, which would have required students to show their in-state tuition statements when registering to vote, would have even hampered New Hampshire residents attending private schools like Dartmouth College, which doesn’t have an in-state rate, said McKenzie St. Germain, the campaign director for the New Hampshire Campaign for Voting Rights, a nonpartisan voting rights group.


Sandra Panek, one of the sponsors of the bill that died, said she would like to bring it back if she can get bipartisan support. “We want to encourage our young people to vote,” said Ms. Panek, who regularly tweets about election conspiracy theories. But, she added, elections should be reflective of “those who reside in the New Hampshire towns and who ultimately bear the consequences of the election results.”



A Texas ban on campus polling places has made little headway



In Texas, the Republican lawmaker who introduced the bill to eliminate all polling places on college campuses this year, Carrie Isaac, cited safety concerns and worries about political violence.


Voting advocates see a different motive.


“This is just the latest in a long line of attacks on young people’s right to vote in Texas,” said Claudia Yoli Ferla, the executive director of MOVE Texas Action Fund, a nonpartisan group that seeks to empower younger voters.


Students at the University of Texas at Austin lined up to cast their ballots on campus during the 2020 primary. A new proposal would eliminate all college polling places in the state. Credit... Tamir Kalifa for The New York Times


Ms. Isaac has also introduced similar legislation to eliminate polling places at primary and secondary schools. In an interview, she mentioned the May 2022 school shooting in Uvalde, Texas, where a gunman killed 19 children and two teachers — an attack that was not connected to voting.


“Emotions run very high,” Ms. Isaac said. “Poll workers have complained about increased threats to their lives. It’s just not conducive, I believe, to being around children of all ages.”







The legislation has been referred to the House Elections Committee, but has yet to receive a hearing in the Legislature. Voting rights experts have expressed skepticism that the bill — one of dozens related to voting introduced for this session — would advance.



G.O.P. voting restrictions flounder in other states



In Virginia, one Republican failed in her effort to repeal a state law that lets teenagers register to vote starting at age 16 if they will turn 18 in time for a general election. Part of a broader package of proposed election restrictions, the bill had no traction in the G.O.P.-controlled House, where it died this year in committee after no discussion.


And in Wyoming, concerns about making voting harder on older people appears to have inadvertently helped younger voters. A G.O.P. bill that would have banned most college IDs from being used as voter identification was narrowly defeated in the state House because it also would have banned Medicare and Medicaid insurance cards as proof of identity at the polls, a provision that Republican lawmakers worried could be onerous for older people.


“In my mind, all we’re doing is kind of hurting students and old people,” Dan Zwonitzer, a Republican lawmaker who voted against the bill, said during a House debate in February.


In Ohio, which has for years not accepted student IDs for voting, Republicans in January approved a broader photo ID requirement that also bars students from using university account statements or utility bills for voting purposes, as they had in the past.


The Idaho bill will take effect in January. Scott Herndon and Tina Lambert, the bill’s sponsors in the Senate and the House, did not respond to requests for comment, but Mr. Herndon said during a Feb. 24 session that student identification cards had lower vetting standards than those issued by the government.


“It isn’t about voter fraud,” he said. “It’s just making sure that the people who show up to vote are who they say they are.”


Republicans contended that nearly 99 percent of Idahoans had used their driver’s licenses to vote, but the bill’s opponents pointed out that not all students have driver’s licenses or passports — and that there is a cost associated with both.


Mae Roos, a senior at Borah High School in Boise, testified against the bill at a Feb. 10 hearing.


“When we’re taught from the very beginning, when we first start trying to participate, that voting is an expensive process, an arduous process, a process rife with barriers, we become disillusioned with that great dream of our democracy,” Ms. Roos said. “We start to believe that our voices are not valued.”














LIVE UPDATES - Russian forces grinding down Ukrainian army in battle for Artyomovsk, says Wagner founder

LIVE UPDATES - Russian forces grinding down Ukrainian army in battle for Artyomovsk, says Wagner founder

LIVE UPDATES - Russian forces grinding down Ukrainian army in battle for Artyomovsk, says Wagner founder




Wagner PMC founder Yevgeny Prigozhin
©Konkord Company Press Service/TASS






Russian forces are persistently grinding down the Ukrainian army with foreign mercenaries in the battle for Artyomovsk (called Bakhmut in Ukraine), Wagner private military company founder Yevgeny Prigozhin said on Wednesday.







After the seizure of Popasnaya, the battle for Artyomovsk was imminent back last summer, he pointed out.


"And we are persistently moving along this pathway. The battle for Bakhmut has practically destroyed the Ukrainian army today," the Wagner press office quoted Prigozhin as saying on its Telegram channel.


Foreign units are also incorporated into the Ukrainian army, Prigozhin added.


All the Russian units positioned in the flanks, the south and the north must "move forward," the Wagner founder said.


Artyomovsk is located on the Kiev-controlled part of the Donetsk People’s Republic and is a major transportation hub for the Ukrainian army’s supplies in Donbass. Fierce fighting for the city is underway.


Yan Gagin, military-political expert and adviser to the acting head of the Donetsk People’s Republic (DPR), said on March 22 that the city had been practically sealed off by Russian forces and all approaches to Artyomovsk were under Russian artillery control. He earlier said that Russian forces controlled about 70% of the city.


Acting DPR Head Denis Pushilin has repeatedly said that there is no evidence of the Ukrainian army’s plans to leave Artyomovsk. Meanwhile, Kiev claims that the city’s defense will be bolstered. Ukrainian President Vladimir Zelensky earlier said that Ukrainian troops would not surrender Artyomovsk and would fight for it as long as they could.








Special operation, 27 March. Main:



▪️The Russian Defense Ministry reported that more than 580 Ukrainian militants were destroyed in the main directions;


▪️In Mariupol, an attempt was made on the head of the Mariupol Main Directorate of the Ministry of Internal Affairs for the DPR, Mikhail Moskvin, a criminal case was initiated;


▪️Ukrainian troops fired six HIMARS missiles at Melitopol, two of them were shot down, Balitsky said;


▪️The Permanent Representative of the Russian Federation in Vienna, Ulyanov, said that Kyiv today is not ready to confirm that it will not expose the ZNPP to shelling;


▪️18 Leopard 2 tanks promised by Germany delivered to Ukraine, German authorities said;


▪️Ukrainian Defense Minister Reznikov said that the British Challenger tanks have already entered service;


▪️British and American instructors taught Ukrainian troops how to use depleted uranium shells, according to Declassified UK;


▪️The British Times, referring to an unnamed American official, claims that the United States could tighten its strategy in the Ukrainian conflict, Washington allegedly wants Ukraine to return "lost territories";


▪️Ukraine handed over five seriously wounded servicemen to Russia, Moskalkova said;


▪️The reaction of the West will not affect Russia's plans to deploy tactical nuclear weapons in Belarus, Peskov said;


▪️NATO countries have made one big military camp out of Ukraine, they are a party to the conflict, Patrushev said.








Special operation, March 28. Main:



▪️The Russian Ministry of Defense reported that Shoigu checked the progress of the implementation of the state defense order at defense industry enterprises in the Chelyabinsk and Kirov regions;


▪️The Ministry of Defense of the Russian Federation for the first time reported a GLSDB MLRS guided projectile shot down in the NMD zone - a "smart" air bomb with an engine;


▪️In the Donetsk, Krasnolimansk, Kupyansk, Kherson, Yuzhno-Donetsk, Zaporozhye directions, the losses of Kyiv per day amounted to about 468 military killed;


▪️Pushilin said that Russian forces had almost completely cleared the industrial zone in Artemovsk;


▪️Ukraine received three Leopard 2A6 tanks from Portugal, the republic's Ministry of National Defense announced;


▪️Peskov noted that relations between Russia and Germany now leave much to be desired, Berlin's decision to increase assistance to Kyiv does not bode well;


▪️The Belarusian Foreign Ministry stated that the deployment of nuclear warheads on the territory of the country without transferring control over them to Minsk does not contradict the Non-Proliferation Treaty;


Blinken said the US would continue drone flights over the Black Sea, but declined to say if routes would be adjusted after the Reaper incident.














Iran, Russia Agree JCPOA Has No Alternatives

Iran, Russia Agree JCPOA Has No Alternatives

Iran, Russia Agree JCPOA Has No Alternatives




©Sputnik/ Aleksey Nikolskyi/ Go to the mediabank






Tehran and Moscow agree that the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) has no alternatives and needs to be implemented as soon as possible, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said on Wednesday.







"We talked about the situation around the JCPOA on the Iranian nuclear program. We have a common understanding that there is no alternative to this international agreement, which was written down in the unanimously adopted UN Security Council Resolution 2231. We are in favor of the early resumption of the full implementation of this resolution and oppose actions that prevent this," Lavrov said after his meeting with Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amirabdollahian.


The Russian minister added that the US needs to lift sanctions from Iran and return to its obligations under JCPOA.


The Russian diplomat also said that new ontacts between Russian President Vladimir Putin and his Iranian counterpart, Ebrahim Raisi, are planned.


"Last year the presidents met in person four times. This year they have already spoken on the phone three times. And more additional contacts are planned," Lavrov said.


Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amirabdollahian, in turn, said that Tehran hopes that the foreign ministries of Iran and Russia will finalize a draft agreement on comprehensive partnership between the countries next month.


"I am very grateful that the draft of a comprehensive agreement on strategic partnership between our countries has been reviewed and finalized in Russia. We are now reviewing it again as well. I very much hope that within the next month, the legal departments of the foreign ministries of our two countries will finalize this draft," said at a meeting with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov.


Russia and Iran are in the final stages before this agreement is signed, the minister added.







During the press conference, Hossein Amirabdollahian also revealed that the deputy foreign ministers of Iran, Russia, Syria and Turkey will hold a meeting in Moscow next week.


"We talked with my colleague Mr. Lavrov (about the quadrilateral ministerial meeting). Just here (in Moscow) next week, this quadrilateral meeting will take place at the level of deputy ministers. And the main goal of this meeting is, of course, the rapprochement of Turkey's and Syria's views," Amirabdollahian told reporters after talks with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov.


Both Tehran and Moscow will also make efforts to bring these views closer together, the minister added.


Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian ©Artem Geodakyan/TASS


Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian said on Wednesday he hoped that the draft of a comprehensive strategic cooperation agreement between Tehran and Moscow will be finalized next month.


"I am very grateful that the draft of a comprehensive agreement on strategic partnership between our countries has been reviewed and finalized in Russia," he said at a meeting with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov in Moscow.


"I sincerely hope that within the next month the legal departments of our countries’ foreign ministries will finalize the draft of this agreement," the Iranian foreign minister stated.








"I would like to point out that we are, of course, in the final stages before signing this agreement," he continued.


The Iranian foreign minister stressed that various delegations from the two countries, including at the highest level, are meeting on a regular basis and discussing various issues.


"Our presidents [Russia’s Vladimir Putin and Iran’s Ebrahim Raisi] maintain constant and direct contact. Our interaction in regional and international organizations continues swimmingly," Hossein Amir-Abdollahian added

















Miracle in the Mines: Congolese Miners Trapped in Collapse Emerge Unharmed in Viral Video

Miracle in the Mines: Congolese Miners Trapped in Collapse Emerge Unharmed in Viral Video

Miracle in the Mines: Congolese Miners Trapped in Collapse Emerge Unharmed in Viral Video




©Photo : Twitter/@MvembaDizolele






The Democratic Republic of Congo is one of the richest countries in natural resources, and mining plays a serious role in its economy. However, the mining industry in the DRC has a long history of accidents that have had a devastating impact on the lives of workers, with many resulting in serious injuries or fatalities.







A video of nine Congolese miners emerging from a collapsed gold mine and tumbling down a steep slope to safety has gone viral in the Democratic Republic of Congo.


This rare occurrence is a happy ending to an all-too-common story in a country where mining accidents are frequent, particularly in small artisanal sites such as the one that collapsed in Nyange, South Kivu province, during heavy rainfall on Saturday.


The video shows a man frantically digging with a spade on the side of a slope of rubble, while a group of men watch in a large circle around him. Suddenly, a miner appears from the rubble and slides down the slope as onlookers break out in cheers of surprise and joy.




The rescuer then switches to digging through the rubble with his bare hands, and another miner emerges, followed by seven others in the next two minutes. "We quickly got people working to clear the rubble that was blocking the entrance. It was on Saturday morning... that they managed to save these nine souls," stated Crispin Kayuka, a local civil society representative, to the media.


Traditional mining in the DRC is often informal and conducted by small-scale artisanal miners, who use basic tools and techniques to extract minerals such as gold, cobalt, tin, and coltan. These miners typically work in hazardous conditions, with little or no safety equipment, training, or oversight.


Accidents in traditional mining in the DRC are common and can have severe consequences. The most common types of accidents include cave-ins, landslides, and collapses of mine shafts or tunnels. Workers may also be exposed to toxic chemicals or gases, or suffer from heat exhaustion or dehydration.


The exact number of traditional mining accidents in the DRC is difficult to determine, as many of these operations are informal and unregulated. However, estimates suggest that thousands of miners are injured or killed in mining accidents every year.


Earlier in the month, at least two miners died in a similar incident at a nearby informal mining site in the eastern DRC.


















China Urges US to Stop Interfering in Other Countries' Affairs Under Pretext of Democracy

China Urges US to Stop Interfering in Other Countries' Affairs Under Pretext of Democracy

China Urges US to Stop Interfering in Other Countries' Affairs Under Pretext of Democracy




©AFP 2023/WANG ZHAO






China urges the United States to stop interfering in other countries’ internal affairs under the pretext of democracy and creating divisions in today's world, the spokeswoman for the Chinese Foreign Ministry, Mao Ning, said on Tuesday.







"We advise the US to stop pointing fingers at other countries and stop interfering in their internal affairs in the name of promoting democracy," Mao said at a briefing.


She noted that today's world does not need creation of divisions in the name of democracy and promote a policy of unilateral action, but to strengthen solidarity and cooperation based on the purposes and principles of the UN Charter, advocating true multilateralism.


"What our world needs today is not to interfere in other countries’ internal affairs under the guise of democracy, but to advocate genuine democracy, reject pseudo-democracy and jointly promote greater democracy in international relations," the diplomat said.


She added that the world today needs not summits that create confrontation, but solidarity and cooperation that can really solve the problems faced by the international community.


"We have stated our position on the so-called 'Summit for Democracy' on multiple occasions. Despite the many problems at home, the US is hosting another 'Summit for Democracy' in the name of promoting democracy, an event that blatantly draws an ideological line between countries and creates division in the world. The act violates the spirit of democracy and further reveals the US’ pursuit of primacy behind the façade of democracy," Mao added.


Earlier in the day, the Russian Foreign Ministry said Moscow regrets the participation of UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres in the Summit for Democracy, an "unworthy show" staged by the United States, adding that it is the second attempt to form a coalition of so-called "democratic states" with Washington in the leading role.


The first Summit for Democracy, also organized by the United States, was held in December 2021. The second summit is scheduled for March 28-30.




















Russia Says US Downplays Role in 'Crime of the Century' Nord Stream Attacks, Ignores Environment

Russia Says US Downplays Role in 'Crime of the Century' Nord Stream Attacks, Ignores Environment

Russia Says US Downplays Role in 'Crime of the Century' Nord Stream Attacks, Ignores Environment




©Photo: Danish Defence Command






The United States wants to downplay information about the possible involvement of US security services in last year's blasts on Russia's Nord Stream gas pipelines, the Russian Embassy to the US said in a statement.







The statement seemed to reference the bombshell report by journalist Seymour Hersh that the United States was behind the attack.


“We see this as an obvious attempt… to soft-pedal information, which is dangerous for the United States, obtained from reputable journalists about the likely direct involvement of American security services in organizing the 'crime of the century' against critical infrastructure in the Baltic Sea,” the embassy said.


The embassy also accused the United States and media outlets in the country of avoiding the issue of environmental disaster due to the pipeline sabotage.


"The problem of potentially colossal damage to the environment from incidents on the pipelines is completely hushed up in the local information space," the embassy said.


The statement said the damage was not limited to the large-scale fuel leaks due to act of sabotage.


"We would like to remind you of the hundreds of thousands of munitions with toxic chemical agents sunken at the bottom of the Baltic Sea after World War II... explosions in this water area threaten to turn into an unprecedented environmental disaster and irreparable damage to regional states," the embassy said.


In September 2022, underwater blasts occurred at three of the four strings of the Nord Stream 1 and 2 pipelines built to carry a combined 110 billion cubic meters of Russian gas to Europe annually.







Seymour Hersh, a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist, in a series of articles, claimed the United States was behind the Nord Stream blasts.



US, UK and EU Will Never Allow Impartial Probe Into Nord Stream Bombing, Security Analyst Says



Russia's attempt to hold the West accountable for the sabotage of its Baltic Sea gas pipelines supplying Germany was always doomed to failure, said international relations and security analyst Mark Sleboda, but served to keep the story in the headlines.


The Western powers have no intention of allowing an independent probe into the Nord Steam pipeline bombing, a security expert has said.


Russia's push at the United Nations Security Council (UNSC) for a credible, independent probe into the sabotage of the Nord Stream 1 and 2 gas pipelines in September 2022 failed — despite support from China and Brazil — after other member states abstained in the vote.


Moscow's delegation pointed to the recent exposé by award-winning US investigative journalist Seymour Hersh, which detailed how the White House recruited a team of former US Navy divers to plant the explosives months before they were detonated remotely.


Hersh later said in an interview that the sabotage was a warning to Germany — which enjoyed cheap and plentiful high-quality gas from Russia through the pipeline — not to go soft on support for Ukraine in its conflict with Russia.


Mark Sleboda told Sputnik that the Russian draft resolution always had "zero chances of success."








"It is obviously not an investigation that the US, the United Kingdom or France, who are all permanent members of the UN Security Council, would allow to go forward," Sleboda pointed out. "This is an internal European matter that European investigations can quietly cover up all on their own."


But the aim of Russia and its fellow BRICS group members may have been political rather than legal, the analyst said. "I think the real goal of the Russian and Chinese efforts here is simply to draw attention to it, because they know very well who did it," Sleboda argued. "Any attempt of an independent or international investigation will not be allowed. And they're simply attempting to play into that."


The expert said that recent media reports that the pipelines were blown up by a "pro-Ukrainian" group of divers on a private yacht, quoting an anonymous US intelligence sources, was just part of the West's ongoing "information war."


"A little random Ukrainian story that the US has come up with now is just some random pro-Ukrainian set that blew up the pipeline," he scoffed.


"I think Russia and China are simply trying to keep the heat on that particular topic, even if this draft resolution has zero chances of success," Sleboda said.