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US Jews battle new 'mainstreamed' anti-Semitism

President Donald Trump meets with rapper Kanye West in the White House Oval Office in 2018

Washington (AFP) - President Joe Biden's emphatic condemnation of anti-Semitism Friday was driven by an alarming normalization of anti-Jewish tropes and hate speech by influential public figures and on social media, experts said.

One day after hip-hop and fashion mogul Kanye West voiced a "love" for Nazis and 10 days after ex-president Donald Trump dined with West and white supremacist Nick Fuentes, Biden blasted a message about open anti-Semitism on Twitter.

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Buckle up: DNC in for a fight as it moves South Carolina primary before New Hampshire

WASHINGTON — Democrats are in for a presidential primary fight in 2024—and that’s even if President Joe Biden isn’t challenged from his left. On Friday evening a key rulemaking wing of the Democratic National Committee (DNC) voted to knock Iowa and New Hampshire out their coveted first-in-the-nation status in presidential elections.

Biden proposed this overhaul of the DNC’s nominating process, which will now see South Carolina Democrats—including many Black voters credited with breathing new life into then-candidate Biden’s ailing 2020 campaign— take the lead in picking the party’s standard bearer every four years. Three days later, both New Hampshire and Nevada Democrats take their turns. The following week now goes to Georgia voters who have proven all-important in general elections, even as their presidential preferences haven’t mattered as much. Then Michigan voters will cast their ballots the following week.

The reshuffling of the DNC’s primary map is already causing identity crises in these storied early-voting states, while it also promises an interparty battle yet to come because New Hampshire state law requires its residents vote first in presidential primaries.

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Dethroned: Manchin and Sinema are on the verge of losing power

On Friday, Newsweek analyzed how Sens. Joe Manchin (D-WV) and Kyrsten Sinema (D-AZ) could be on the brink of losing their status as the Senate's most powerful members.

"Both notably denied Democrats' efforts to overturn Republicans' blockade of their party's sweeping reforms to the country's election laws, drawing scorn from their president and their party," wrote Nick Reynolds. "Manchin used his vote to strong-arm both into concessions for a natural gas pipeline in his home state in a massive domestic spending bill earlier this year (he later pulled that bill under bipartisan pressure) and has had a prolonged flirtation with the Republican Party, going as far as attending events with Republican donors in red states like Texas. And Sinema, labeled by Time magazine in one article as 'Republicans' Favorite Democrat,' has used her position in the middle to cut deals across the aisle as well as within her own party, which regularly found itself at the negotiating table with her to broker legislation that could get to 50 votes."

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Macron caps US state visit with New Orleans trip

French President Emmanuel Macron greets people in the historic French Quarter of New Orleans, Louisiana, on December 2, 2022

New Orleans (AFP) - President Emmanuel Macron arrived on Friday in New Orleans, a city emblematic of historic Franco-American ties, to promote the French language and conclude his three-day state visit to the United States.

The day after a lavish reception at the White House that sealed the "friendship" of the French president with his US counterpart, Joe Biden, he landed in the Louisiana city for a brief stop.

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Biden, Prince William meet in chilly Boston

US President Joe Biden meets with Britain's Prince William in Boston

Boston (AFP) - US President Joe Biden met briefly Friday with Britain's Prince William in Boston where the two quickly hit on the most British of conversation topics -- the bad weather.

As the heir to Britain's throne strode up outside the John F. Kennedy Library and Museum without an overcoat, Biden remarked that it was "freezing."

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Mike Pence issues new statement regarding his conversations with Trump on Jan. 6

Speaking to PBS Newshour this Thursday, former Vice President Mike Pence said soon after the 2020 election was called for Joe Biden, he approached then-President Donald Trump to suggest that “he ought to be prepared to accept the outcome of the election and move forward.”

Pence defended the more than 60 legal challenges brought by Trump to challenge the election's results, as well as the "Stop the Steal" rally that was held before the Capitol riot on Jan. 6, saying, “I actually thought there might be some use in having people come and draw attention to the legal process that would take place in the Congress, that we’d have an opportunity to vent concerns about irregularities that did occur and look at any fraud evidence that ultimately did not come."

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EU strikes deal on oil price cap to starve Russia's war machine

Kyiv (Ukraine) (AFP) - The EU on Friday joined the G7 in agreeing a cap on the price of Russian oil to starve the Kremlin of resources for its Ukraine war, as Vladimir Putin said strikes on Ukraine's infrastructure were "inevitable".

The price cap of $60 per barrel, previously agreed on a political level with the United States and the G7 group of wealthy democracies, will come into effect with an EU embargo on Russian crude oil from Monday.

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Biden slaps down Hitler-praising Kanye West while subtly knocking Trump for his silence

President Joe Biden on Friday slapped down Hitler-praising rapper Kanye West while at the same time taking a subtle shot at former President Donald Trump for hosting him at his Mar-a-Lago resort.

In a post on Twitter, Biden directly addressed the multiple false and offensive statements made by West during his anti-Semitic tirade during his appearance on Alex Jones' InfoWars on Thursday.

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‘Another happy jobs day’: Economists thrilled with ‘amazing’ report as jobs growth beats expectations, wages increase

The Biden economy added a whopping 263,000 jobs last month, crushing expectations of 200,000, and wages are growing as well, leading one economist to declare "another happy jobs day."

The U.S.Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) adds that unemployment remains at a near-historic low of 3.7% in November, "and has been in a narrow range of 3.5 percent to 3.7 percent since March."

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'Treated very unfairly': Trump vows solidarity with Capitol rioters in fundraising video

Former President Donald Trump this week recorded a video for a fundraiser on behalf of the people who are currently serving jail sentences for violently rioting on his behalf.

The Washington Post reports that Trump this week sent a recorded message to a fundraising event for the Patriot Freedom Project, which bills itself as "a non-profit organization providing legal, financial, mental-health, and spiritual support for individuals and their families — including young children — who are suffering at the hands of a weaponized justice system."

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Biden, Macron pledge US-French alliance on Ukraine, democracy

US President Joe Biden and French President Emmanuel Macron emerged from White House talks Thursday pledging to close ranks in helping Ukraine and pressuring Russia's Vladimir Putin to make peace.

Following lengthy Oval Office talks they also signaled they'd calmed the waters on a burgeoning US-EU trade dispute.

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Supreme Court to rule on Biden's student debt cancellation

The US Supreme Court agreed Thursday to rule on the legality of President Joe Biden's landmark effort to cancel hundreds of millions of dollars in student debt.

The court will hear the case in February or March, according to a short statement it posted online.

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Kremlin says Putin open to talks but U.S. stance on Ukraine makes it difficult

(Reuters) - The Kremlin said on Friday that President Vladimir Putin is open to negotiations to secure Russia's interests, but that finding a mutual basis for talks is difficult as the United States does not recognise the "new territories" in Ukraine that Russia claims as its own. U.S. President Joe Biden said on Thursday he had no immediate plans to contact Putin but was prepared to speak with the Russian president if he showed an interest in ending the war in Ukraine. Biden said he would only do that in consultation with NATO allies. (Reporting by Reuters)