RawStory

Joe Biden

‘Disturbing’: Biden education secretary warns Florida after DeSantis signs anti-LGBTQ bill targeting ‘most vulnerable’

The Biden administration once again is warning Florida about its widely-criticized and possibly unconstitutional "Don't Say Gay" bill which Republican Governor Ron DeSantis signed into law Monday afternoon while surrounded by young children. Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona Monday afternoon warned he will be "monitoring this law upon implementation to evaluate whether it violates federal civil rights law."

"By signing this bill, Gov. DeSantis has chosen to target some of Florida’s most vulnerable students and families, all while under the guise of 'parents' rights,'" Secretary Cardona said in a statement. "Make no mistake: this is a part of a disturbing and dangerous trend across the country of legislation targeting LGBTQI+ students, educators, and individuals."

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Ukraine, Russia begin talks as evacuations resume

Ukrainian and Russian negotiators held face-to-face talks in Istanbul on Tuesday as Ukraine resumed evacuations from territory occupied by Russian forces and clung on in the besieged city of Mariupol.

The talks were taking place with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan in attendance and under the shadow of shock allegations that delegates were poisoned at a previous round of negotiations.

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Mitch McConnell slammed for claiming that the US spends too little on the military

United States Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Kentucky) caused an uproar on social media on Monday after he tweeted that President Joe Biden's request for an additional $31 billion in military spending is nowhere near enough.

The Department of Defense has asked Congress to allocate the extra funds – on top of the $782 billion already slated to be dumped down the "defense" drain – to aid Ukraine in its fight against Russian President Vladimir Putin's genocidal invasion. McConnell, however, signaled that even more money should be pumped into the coffers of corporate warmongers.

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Seth Meyers taunts Trump for low-energy Georgia rally where people left early

"Late Night" host Seth Meyers couldn't help but ridicule former President Donald Trump after a lackluster showing at his Georgia rally over the weekend.

Citing videos of the speech, Meyers said supporters were seen leaving early. One reporter from the Atlanta Journal-Constitution even tweeted that the crowd was much smaller than anything he'd seen in Georgia since 2016. Trump's staff scrambled to clean up the flub Sunday, claiming that there were 25-35,000 people in attendance. In fact, there were empty chairs.

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Regime change, the controversial strategy the US no longer wants

President Joe Biden caused a stir when, during an impassioned speech in Warsaw, said his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin 'cannot remain in power'

Washington (AFP) - The United States says it is not seeking a "regime change" in Russia, hasty clarification that shows the strategy once popular among neoconservatives has become a hot button issue after negative experiences in Iraq, Afghanistan and Libya.

President Joe Biden caused a stir Saturday when, during an impassioned speech in Warsaw, said his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin "cannot remain in power."

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'Fuming' billionaires issue profane denunciations of Biden's new minimum tax plan

America's billionaires would have to pay more taxes under President Joe Biden's latest proposal -- and they aren't happy about it.

Biden's plan is to issue a minimum of a 20 percent tax on billionaires. It comes after a 2021 report by ProPublica that revealed “a vast trove” of leaked Internal Revenue Service (IRS) documents that showed billionaires like Jeff Bezos and Elon Musk have all avoided paying any federal income tax for several years, despite raking in cash.

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'You disagree, comrade?' GOP shredded after bashing Biden for saying Putin shouldn't stay in power

The Republican Party is drawing criticism after its "research" Twitter account posted a video of President Joe Biden reaffirming that Vladimir Putin has no business being in power. It prompted many to ask if they were posting it as a criticism because the GOP believes Putin should stay in power.

It recalls the 2016 decision by the Republican Party to change the platform saying that they will not give weapons to Ukraine in a fight against Russia or rebel forces.

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Putin is more upset that Ukraine has 'really bloodied' his military than about any Biden statement: former ambassador

On Monday's edition of CNN's "The Lead," former U.S. Ambassador to Ukraine William Taylor pushed back on anchor Jake Tapper's suggestion that President Joe Biden's speech, saying that Vladimir Putin "cannot remain in power," is unlikely to matter in terms of Putin escalating his offensives in Ukraine.

"Ambassador Taylor, Ukraine's military intelligence head said Vladimir Putin could be looking to carve Ukraine into two, like North and South Korea, occupied Ukraine maybe to the south and east, free Ukraine to the west," Tapper said. "Do Biden's comments about who should be in power embolden Putin in any way, do you think?"

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Biden's condemnation of Putin will define his presidency — like 'Tear Down This Wall': Ronald Reagan's daughter

President Joe Biden's ad-libbed closing line of his speech in Warsaw last week condemning Vladimir Putin — "For God's sake, this man cannot remain in power" — has swiftly become a topic of intense debate in the media, with many sources pointing to White House sources trying to walk it back as evidence that it was an ill-considered line.

But on Monday, writing for The Daily Beast, Patti Davis — daughter of former President Ronald Reagan — argued that future historians and politicians will remember Biden's line quite differently. In fact, she argued, it will be remembered similarly to a phrase Reagan uttered in a June 1987 speech in Berlin that, for many, defined his entire presidency.

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'Why would I tell you!' Biden gets testy when Peter Doocy asks how he'd respond to Putin using chemical weapons

President Joe Biden on Monday got into a testy exchange with Fox News' Peter Doocy when he was asked about how the United States would respond to Russia using chemical weapons in its war against Ukraine.

At the start of the exchange, Doocy asked Biden about his administration having to walk back his statement over the weekend that Russian President Vladimir Putin should not remain in power.

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'I'm not walking anything back': Biden says he doesn't regret saying Putin has to go

President Joe Biden said on Monday he doesn't regret saying Russian President Vladimir Putin shouldn't remain in power -- but he emphasized that his words did not signal a policy change.

The Biden administration sought to walk back the president's statement over the weekend when he said, "For God's sake, [Putin] cannot remain in power," as they feared it would lead Putin to conclude the United States' goal was now to enact regime change in Russia.

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Trump’s allies are furious over reports of an ‘anemic’ turnout at Georgia rally

On Saturday, March 26, former President Donald Trump spoke at a MAGA rally in Commerce, Georgia, where he continued to promote the Big Lie and told the crowd, “I won twice, and I did much better the second time.” In reality, President Joe Biden outperformed Trump in 2020, picking up 306 electoral votes and defeating him by more than 7 million in the popular vote. Regardless, the Georgia crowd ate it up. But according to right-wing pundit Erick Erickson, the size of that crowd wasn’t as large as Trump and his allies are claiming.

Erickson tweeted, “The Trump turnout on a Saturday in Georgia was anemic. That does not bode well for his slate of candidates. Not all the people there were from Georgia or even able to vote.”

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US Capitol riot probe to press for charges against Trump allies

Lawmakers investigating the 2021 assault on the US Capitol were set to begin criminal contempt proceedings Monday against two key allies of former president Donald Trump for refusing to testify.

Former trade director Peter Navarro and deputy chief of staff Dan Scavino were subpoenaed to appear before the congressional panel probing the January 6 riot, but didn't show up.

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