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Joe Biden

US declares fabled Ivory-billed woodpecker and 22 other species extinct

The United States on Wednesday declared 23 species extinct, including one of the world's largest woodpeckers, dubbed the "Lord God Bird."

The announcement came via the Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS), which proposed to remove the birds, mussels, fish, as well as a plant and fruit bat from Endangered Species Act protections because government scientists have given up on ever finding them again.

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Fight breaks out in House Afghanistan hearing as Dem calls BS on GOP lies about Biden

Republicans have attempted to twist President Joe Biden's interview with ABC's George Stephanopoulos to say that Biden claimed no military leader told him to keep 2,500 troops on the ground in Afghanistan.

Rep. Adam Smith (D-WA) paused the hearing of the House Armed Services Committee on Wednesday to quote the full conversation in the interview.

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WATCH: GOP congressman lashes out at Biden after Milley deflates his outrage over Pelosi call

Tennessee Republican Rep. Scott DesJarlais tried to put words in Gen. Milley's mouth during the House hearing on Afghanistan involving the account from Bob Woodward and Robert Costa's new book "Peril."

DesJarlais cited Sen. Marsha Blackburn's (R-TN) questions Tuesday about the conversations Gen. Milley had for the book. He cited the conversation Milley had with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who is cited asking if anyone was doing anything at the White House other than "kissing Trump's fat butt."

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Senate Democrats weigh bill to avert government shutdown

The US Senate could vote Wednesday on a stopgap funding bill to forestall a government shutdown, Democrats said, but without a provision to increase the federal debt limit and avert a credit default.

Funding for federal agencies runs out at the end of the day on Thursday and Senate Democrats are preparing temporary legislation to keep the lights on until December 3.

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Republicans furious that Biden official is exercising her power against corporations

President Joe Biden infuriated Republican senators by elevating law professor Lina Khan to chair the Federal Trade Commission, and they're even angrier now that she's on the job.

GOP senators confirmed the outspoken anti-monopolist June 15, thinking she would be one of the agency's five commissioners, but Biden instead tapped her to lead the FTC -- and she has quickly moved to scale back corporate power to the frustration of Republicans and business leaders, reported Politico.

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Trump faces another legal defeat after using Eddy Grant's 'Electric Avenue' without permission

A New York judge has declined to dismiss a lawsuit filed against Donald Trump by singer-songwriter Eddy Grant, over the former president's use of the artist's hit song "Electric Avenue" in a campaign video last year.

Trump's attorneys had asked the judge to throw out Grant's lawsuit, arguing that the campaign's use of "Electric Avenue" in a Twitter video — "alongside out-of-context excerpts from Joe Biden's past speeches and interviews" — was covered by the "fair use" principle of U.S. copyright law, according to Complete Music Update.

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DeSantis selects a Matt Gaetz ally who is embroiled in controversy as his new public safety czar

Former U.S. Attorney Larry Keefe -- an ex-law partner of Rep. Matt Gaetz -- has been named Florida's new "public safety czar" by Gov. Ron DeSantis.

DeSantis said what one might expect in giving Keefe his sendoff, as reported by the Tallahassee Democrat.

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Bob Woodward’s book reveals damning details about Josh Hawley’s role in Trump’s attempted coup: Missouri newspaper

Sen. Josh Hawley's hometown newspaper bashed the Missouri Republican for encouraging and supporting an attempted coup to keep Donald Trump in the White House.

The Kansas City Star editorial board lists all the Trump administration officials and others who pushed back against baseless claims of election fraud, as described in Bob Woodward and Robert Costa's book, "Peril," but noted that Hawley continued to side with the defeated president.

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Clock ticking for Congress as Friday government shutdown looms

By Richard Cowan

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Congress on Wednesday had just two days left before the federal government begins shutting many of its operations unless Democrats manage to pass a bill providing new funding for the fiscal year that begins on Friday.

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US generals say they recommended keeping 2,500 troops in Afghanistan

Top US generals said Tuesday that they advised President Joe Biden to keep American troops in Afghanistan and expressed concern that the Taliban has not severed ties with Al-Qaeda.

General Mark Milley, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and General Kenneth McKenzie, commander of US Central Command, said they had personally recommended that some 2,500 troops remain on the ground in Afghanistan.

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Arizona 'audit' backers hurl accusations and excuses to justify another 'dog and pony show'

Backers of Arizona's partisan "audit" of the 2020 election are hurling accusations and excuses after their efforts failed to turn up evidence to overturn Donald Trump's election loss.

The audit report showed President Joe Biden actually won the state by more votes than previously believed, and the right-wing Trump supporters who pushed the months-long probe are turning on one another and flinging more conspiracy theories to explain away their failure, a local reporter told The Daily Beast's "Fever Dreams" podcast.

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‘I’m sick of his face’: Stevie Van Zandt doesn't want to see Joe Manchin on TV ever again

Legendary entertainer Stevie Van Zandt had harsh words for Sen. Joe Manchin (D-WV) on Tuesday.

MSNBC's Brian Williams interviewed Van Zandt about his new memoir, Unrequited Infatuations and asked him of what he thought of the job Democrats have done governing the country.

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Could a trillion-dollar coin stop the GOP from plunging America into recession?

Talk of a trillion-dollar US coin has returned to Washington now that Congress is mired in another political impasse over raising the debt ceiling.

The idea for the pricey platinum -- which would be unprecedented but not necessarily illegal -- was originally floated in 2011 as a run-around in the recurring war between Democrats and Republicans over lifting the debt limit to enable the government to pay its bills.

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