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1. Coronavirus
2. Stimulus
The Senate debate on the Covid-19 relief bill, dubbed the U.S. recovery plan, will begin in earnest today after having performed some theaters yesterday on the Senate floor. Republican Sen. Ron Johnson forced Senate secretaries to read aloud the 628-page bill, a pit stop that took hours, and now Republicans will try to cast Democratic votes in a known process. as a “branch vote.” Basically, each amendment to the bill is introduced and debated for a few minutes, and then members have 10 minutes to vote. It’s part of the Democrats’ plan to pass the bill quickly, but Republicans hope to split Dems into parts of the bill along the way. Regardless, Democrats want to approve it this weekend with their narrow majority in the Senate. Want to know what you can earn from your bill? Here is a summary of offers for various situations.
3. Immigration
The Biden administration urges the Supreme Court to dismiss pending cases on “sanctuary cities,” which limit cooperation between local law enforcement and federal immigration authorities. The presentation is another impetus to change the positions of the Trump administration, which waged a long battle against the sanctuary cities. The lower courts had been divided by a Trump-era policy that directed the Justice Department to withhold federal money from jurisdictions over cooperation with immigration control. An appeals court eventually ruled that the administration could withhold those funds in seven states, as well as in New York City. There are three cases like this in the Supreme Court house and the Justice Department says an agreement has been reached with all parties involved.
4. Hong Kong
China’s political elite is meeting this week at a summit in Beijing and Hong Kong’s future is in balance. During the opening of twin meetings of the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Committee and the National People’s Congress, the NPC spokesman said the recent riots in Hong Kong “demonstrated the need to improve the electoral system” to ensure that ” govern the patriots “. The proposed changes include the expansion of the Electoral Committee, a Beijing-dominated body that elects the Hong Kong leader. This will likely dilute the influence of any pro-democracy member and hand over almost all of the candidacy and electoral power to Beijing. The imposition of a national security law and oaths of allegiance to Hong Kong officials has sparked widespread unrest in the autonomous city. Last weekend, 47 pro-democracy activists were charged under this new law.
5. Ethiopia
The UN High Commissioner for Human Rights said war crimes could have been committed in the Tigray region of Ethiopia after details of a massacre last year in the town of Dengelat were revealed. Witnesses told CNN that Eritrean soldiers opened fire during a religious festival, and ended the lives of priests, women, entire families and more than twenty Sunday school children. (Eritrea is a neighboring country and an ally of the Ethiopian government.) Amnesty International has also claimed that Eritrean forces killed hundreds of unarmed civilians in the city of Axum through indiscriminate bombing and extrajudicial killings in what the organization said. which could be mistaken for a crime against humanity. The Eritrean government has denied involvement in the atrocities reported by Amnesty, but has not responded to CNN’s request to comment on the Dengelat massacre. Thousands of civilians are believed to have died since Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed launched a military operation against leaders in the Tigray region.
EXPLORE BREAKFAST
Keep your eyes open to see Jupiter and Mercury lined up in the sky and an asteroid fly over this weekend
Isn’t it great that space always has something fun for us?
At Paris Fashion Week, Coperni transforms a colossal arena into an entryway
Sitting in the front row? Outside. Sitting in front lane? In.
The latest ‘Fast & Furious’ movie has been delayed again
“A little slower, just as furious”
The books of Dr. Seuss seizes Amazon’s bestseller list
They will buy them over the phone, they will buy them at home.
Amazon’s first physical store outside the U.S. has no shopping line and is known as “just going out” shopping
What is something that feels illegal but is not?
TODAY’S ISSUE
$ 297 million
That’s how Square, the payment company founded and run by Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey, has agreed to pay to acquire a majority stake in Tidal, the difficult music streaming service owned by Jay-Z.
TODAY’S BUDGET
“It’s pretty clear now that there’s still a high risk of violence.”
YouTube CEO Susan Wojcicki, which says former President Trump’s account will be restored when the threat of violence subsides
TODAY’S WEATHER
Check out the local forecast here >>>
AND FINALLY
Only good vibrations
Let this golden-tongued bird sing to you over the weekend. (Click here to see it.)