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Trump impeachment: Memo reveals how Republicans will try to defend president


Trump impeachment: Memo reveals how Republicans will try to defend president


Donald Trump speaks during a ceremony in which he awarded the Presidential Citizens Medal posthumously to veteran Rick Rescorla in the East Room of the White House in Washington, DC, on 7 November 2019: Michael Reynolds/EPA

Republicans who sat in on closed-door impeachment hearings have reportedly drafted a memo with key talking points to defend Donald Trump as the proceedings are set to go public this week.
The memo was penned by GOP staff on the three House committees spearheading an impeachment inquiry into the president over accusations he withheld crucial military aid to Ukraine while seeking investigations from the country into one of his political rivals, Joe Biden.

Four talking points included in the memo, which was shared with Republicans on the three House panels and obtained by CNN, all largely echo the president’s previous statements defending his dealings with Ukraine.
The first defence included in the memo for Mr Trump’s 25 July phone call – in which he asked for a “favour” from Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky – was that a White House memorandum of the call “shows no conditionality or evidence of pressure”.

Mr Trump has long said his phone call with Mr Zelensky was “perfect” and that a transcript would prove his innocence in the matter. The public has still not seen a transcript of the call, despite the president’s claims; key impeachment witnesses have instead told House investigators a verbatim transcript of the call was moved to a more secure server hosting highly-classified intelligence.

The memo also reportedly encourages Republicans to defend Mr Trump by repeating his own claims: “President Zelensky and President Trump have both said there was no pressure on the call.”
A third central defence in the memo reportedly stated that “the Ukrainian government was not aware of the hold on US assistance”, despite the White House reportedly withholding military aid to the country, according to CNN.

Impeachment witnesses who worked on US-Ukraine relations under Mr Trump have said the White House was demanding public statements from Mr Zelensky announcing investigations into the Bidens and the origins of the Russia probe led by former Special Counsel Robert Mueller.
Finally, the memo reportedly seeks to defend the president by reminding Republicans on the House committees that a hold on security assistance to Ukraine was lifted on 11 September – so the money and military resources in question were eventually delivered.

However, that money arrived only after reports of the phone call and a subsequent whistleblower complaint were leaked to the media.
Impeachment witnesses like Bill Taylor, the former US ambassador to Ukraine, has testified that there was a “clear understanding” the White House was requesting political investigations in exchange for the military assistance, which aids Ukraine against Russia.

Mr Trump has seemingly attempted to divert the public’s attention and scrutiny towards an earlier call he had in April with the new president of Ukraine, in which he congratulated Mr Zelensky on his victory.
The president claimed last week that he was considering releasing a transcript of that call, which he said “no one knows about” – despite having previously discussed it openly with reporters at the United Nations General Assembly earlier in the year.

On Tuesday morning – a day before the impeachment hearings were to set to go public – Mr Trump tweeted: “I will be releasing the transcript of the first, and therefore more important, phone call with the Ukrainian President before week’s end!”
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Rep. Connolly says Democrats already have 'smoking gun' to impeach Trump


Rep. Connolly says Democrats already have 'smoking gun' to impeach Trump

A Democrat who attended most of the closed-door depositions over the past month said that while the beginning of public hearings will be instructive for Americans, President Trump has already given Congress all the evidence it needs to impeach him.

The reconstructed partial transcript of Trump’s July 25 phone call with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky “is the smoking gun,” said Rep. Gerry Connolly, D-Va., who has represented the Northern Virginia suburbs for the last decade. 
“It’s right in front of us,” Connolly said in an interview with Yahoo News. 
He also announced that he has jumped into the contest to succeed Rep. Elijah Cummings, D-Md., as the chairman of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee following the lawmaker’s recent death.

“I miss him terribly. It would be a great honor to succeed him,” Connolly said. “I am running right now. I’m speaking to a number of different parts of our caucus this week, and we’ll see where that takes us.”
Connolly will not be part of the impeachment hearings on Wednesday because he is not on the House Intelligence Committee. But his seat on Oversight allowed him to sit in on close to a dozen closed-door depositions that were conducted by three committees conducting the investigation under the leadership of Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam Schiff, D-Calif.

Most of the transcripts of those depositions have been released, and Connolly said they paint “a very, very disturbing picture of a president using his office and using taxpayer-funded military assistance for a country that is under siege from active Russian combat to further his own private political purposes, to get dirt on a prospective political opponent. That is abuse of office on its face.
“It’s also extortion,” he said. “Extortion doesn’t have to be successful to be a crime.”

Republicans defending Trump have said that because nearly $400 million in assistance to Ukraine was released on Sept. 11, and Zelensky never made a public statement about investigating Hunter Biden, the son of former Vice President Joe Biden, there was never a delivery of the “favor” that Trump had requested.
Connolly said there is “zero chance” that the Senate, where Republicans have a 53-seat majority, will find Trump guilty of the charges brought against him in the House. The U.S. Constitution requires that two-thirds of the Senate vote in favor of conviction, which would result in the president being removed from office.

“That requires at least 20 Republicans to vote to convict,” Connolly said. “There’s no likelihood of that, in my private opinion.”
So why impeach in the first place? Connolly said Congress has a “constitutional responsibility to protect our form of government from abuse.”
“And when we have an executive, president, who is in fact abusing his office and jeopardizing that constitutional framework, we have an obligation to act,” he said.
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The story behind Bonfire Night and Guy Fawkes: Gunpowder, treason and plot


The story behind Bonfire Night and Guy Fawkes: Gunpowder, treason and plot

It's nearly that time of year again - when we Britons gather in parks and gardens to watch dummies burn on bonfires and fireworks light up the sky, wrapped up in woolly hats and gloves. 
The jovial atmosphere is a far cry from the origins of November 5, which are shrouded in religious tension and a foiled assassination attempt.

November 5 is a date when Britons commemorate events that nearly changed the course of the nation's history. But what actually happened that night, and what part did Guy Fawkes play?
November 5 commemorates the failure of the November 1605 Gunpowder Plot by a gang of Roman Catholic activists led by Warwickshire-born Robert Catesby.
When Protestant King James I acceded to the throne, English Catholics had hoped that the persecution they had felt for over 45 years under Queen Elizabeth I would finally end, and they would be granted the freedom to practice their religion. 

When this didn't transpire, a group of conspirators resolved to assassinate the King and his ministers by blowing up the Palace of Westminster during the state opening of Parliament.
Guy (Guido) Fawkes, from York, and his fellow conspirators, having rented out a house close to the Houses of Parliament, managed to smuggle 36 barrels of gunpowder into a cellar of the House of Lords - enough to completely destroy the building.

(Physicists from the Institute of Physics later calculated that the 2,500kg of gunpowder beneath Parliament would have obliterated an area 500 metres from the centre of the explosion).
The scheme began to unravel when an anonymous letter was sent to William Parker, the 4th Baron Monteagle, warning him to avoid the House of Lords.
The letter (which could well have been sent by Lord Monteagle's brother-in-law Francis Tresham), was made public and this led to a search of Westminster Palace in the early hours of November 5.
Explosive expert Fawkes, who had been left in the cellars to set off the fuse, was caught when a group of guards discovered him at the last moment.

Fawkes was arrested, sent to the Tower of London and tortured until he gave up the names of his fellow plotters.
Lord Monteagle was rewarded with £500 plus £200 worth of lands for his service in protecting the crown.

Guy Fawkes, Thomas Bates, Robert and Thomas Wintour, Thomas Percy, Christopher and John Wright, Francis Tresham, Everard Digby, Ambrose Rookwood, Robert Keyes, Hugh Owen, John Grant and the man who organised the whole plot - Robert Catesby.
The conspirators were all either killed resisting capture or - like Fawkes - tried, convicted, and executed.
The traditional death for traitors in 17th-century England was to be hanged, drawn and quartered in public. But this proved not to be the 35-year-old Fawkes' fate.
As he awaited his punishment on the gallows, Fawkes leapt off the platform to avoid having his testicles cut off, his stomach opened and his guts spilled out before his eyes.
Mercifully for him, he died from a broken neck but his body was subsequently quartered, and his remains were sent to "the four corners of the kingdom" as a warning to others.

The aftermath

Following the failed plot, Parliament declared November 5th a national day of thanksgiving, and the first celebration of it took place in 1606.
King James I also sought to control non-conforming English Catholics in England. In May 1606, Parliament passed 'The Popish Recusants Act' which required any citizen to take an oath of allegiance denying the Pope's authority over the king.
Observance of the 5th November Act, passed within months of the plot, made church attendance compulsory on that day and by the late 17th Century, the day had gained a reputation for riotousness and disorder and anti-Catholicism. William of Orange's birthday (November 4th) was also conveniently close.

Remember, remember...

The actions of Guy Fawkes are immortalised in the nursery rhyme 'Remember, remember'. Although several different versions exist, the first five lines remain to same in all.
Remember, remember, the fifth of November Gunpowder treason and plot
We see no reason
Why Gunpowder treason
Should ever be forgot ….
Guy Fawkes, guy, t'was his intent
To blow up king and parliament.
Three score barrels were laid below
To prove old England's overthrow.
By god's mercy he was catch'd
With a darkened lantern and burning match.
So, holler boys, holler boys,
Let the bells ring.
Holler boys, holler boys,
God save the king.
And what shall we do with him?
Burn him!
 
Another version, which is said to have been penned around 1870, displays - or perhaps parodies - anti-Catholic sentiment which is said to have risen following the passing of the 5th November Act.
A rope, a rope, to hang the Pope,
A penn'orth of cheese to choke him,
A pint of beer to wash it down,
And a jolly good fire to burn him. 

Guy Fawkes Day today

The Houses of Parliament are still searched by the Yeomen of the Guard before the state opening. The idea is to ensure no modern-day Guy Fawkes is hiding in the cellars with a bomb, although it is more ceremonial than serious. And they do it with lanterns.
The cellar that Fawkes tried to blow up no longer exists. In 1834 it was destroyed in a fire which devastated the medieval Houses of Parliament. The lantern Guy Fawkes carried in 1605 is in the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford.

Bonfire night traditions

Guy Fawkes Day is celebrated in the United Kingdom, and in a number of countries that were formerly part of the British Empire, with fireworks, bonfires and parades. Straw dummies representing Fawkes are tossed on the bonfire, as well as those of contemporary political figures.
Dummies have been burned on bonfires since as long ago as the 13th century, initially to drive away evil spirits. Following the Gunpowder Plot, the focus of the sacrifices switched to Guy Fawkes' treason.
Traditionally, these effigies called 'guys', are carried through the streets in the days leading up to Guy Fawkes Day and children ask passers-by for "a penny for the guy." Today the word 'guy' is a synonym for 'a man' but originally it was a term for a "repulsive, ugly person" in reference to Fawkes.
The fireworks represent the explosives that were never used by the plotters.
In Ottery St Mary, south Devon, in a tradition dating from the 17th century, barrels soaked in tar are set alight and carried aloft through parts of the town by residents. Only Ottregians - those born in the town, or who have lived there for most of their lives - may carry a barrel.
Lewes, in southeastern England, is also the site of annual celebration. Guy Fawkes Day there has a distinctly local flavour, involving six bonfire societies whose memberships are grounded in family history stretching back for generations.
The only place in the UK that does not celebrate Guy Fawkes Night is his former school St. Peter’s in York. They refuse to burn a guy out of respect for one of their own.

The origins: fireworks and bonfires

During the 10th century a Chinese cook discovered how to make explosive black powder when he accidentally mixed three kitchen ingredients – potassium nitrate or saltpetre (a salt substitute used in the curing of meat), sulphur and charcoal.
The cook noticed that if the concoction was burned when enclosed in the hollow of a bamboo shoot, there was a tremendous explosion.
Fireworks arrived in Europe in the 14th century and were first produced by the Italians. The first recorded display was in Florence and the first recorded fireworks in England were at the wedding of King Henry VII in 1486.
The word ‘bonfire’ is said to derive from 'bone-fire', from a time when the corpses of witches, heretics and other nonconformists were burned on a pyre instead of being buried in consecrated ground.
Fireworks should be enjoyed at a safe distance and adults should deal with firework displays and the lighting of fireworks. They should also take care of the safe disposal of fireworks once they have been used.

Here are the 10 firework rules to follow

  1. Plan your firework display to make it safe and enjoyable.
  2. Keep fireworks in a closed box and use them one at a time.
  3. Read and follow the instructions on each firework using a torch if necessary.
  4. Light the firework at arm's length with a taper and stand well back.
  5. Keep naked flames, including cigarettes, away from fireworks.
  6. Never return to a firework once it has been lit.
  7. Don't put fireworks in pockets and never throw them.
  8. Direct any rocket fireworks well away from spectators.
  9. Never use paraffin or petrol on a bonfire.
  10. Make sure that the fire is out and surroundings are made safe before leaving.

'Anonymous' protests

November 5th has become an important date globally now that political activists all over the world are wearing Guy Fawkes masks to protect their identity. These masks were inspired by Alan Moore's dystopian 'V for Vendetta', the 1988 graphic novel whose main character is loosely based on Guy Fawkes.

Traditional Bonfire Night food

The traditional cake eaten on Bonfire Night is Parkin Cake, a sticky cake containing a mix of oatmeal, treacle, syrup and ginger.Parkin ginger cake - Credit: Simon Reddy/AlamyParkin ginger cake - Credit: Simon Reddy/Alamy

Parkin ginger cake
Credit: Simon Reddy/Alamy
Proper parkin is a dark, sticky cake-cum-flapjack, not just a gingerbread. It’s good warm with custard as a pudding, perhaps with some poached pears, too.
  • 4 1/2oz /125g butter
  • 4oz/110g caster sugar
  • 5oz/ 140g black treacle
  • 4oz/ 110g golden syrup
  • 8oz/225g medium oatmeal or porridge oats blended in a food processor to a coarse sandy consistency
  • 4oz/ 110g self-raising flour
  • 3 tsp ground ginger
  • 1 tsp ground mixed spice
  • Pinch of salt
  • 2 eggs, beaten
  • 1 tbsp milk
Preheat the oven to 140C/Gas 1. Grease and line a 20cmx20cm cake tin.
Put the butter, sugar, treacle and syrup and heat gently until the butter is melted. Don’t let it boil.
Mix the oats, flour, ginger, spice and salt together in a bowl and add the contents of the pan, stirring well until the dry ingredients are well coated.
Mix in the eggs and milk. Scrape the mixture into the prepared baking tin. Bake for an hour, checking often that it doesn’t get too dark on top (cover it with paper or foil if it threatens to burn).
Leave to cool in the tin, then wrap it well and store in an airtight container. If you can leave it a few days, so much the better – it’ll get stickier with time.
Cut into squares to serve.
If you can't be bothered to do this, go to a shop and buy a toffee apple.

Bonfire Night isn't the world's weirdest cultural celebration...

In other parts of the globe certain countries commemorate events in their own unique way.

El Colacho (Spain)

Catholics are usually baptised to absolve them of Original Sin, but in the Spanish Village of Castrillo de Murcia, babies are laid on pillows on the street, whereupon men dressed as the devil jump over them to rid them of their sins. The bizarre ritual dates back to the 17th century and while surprisingly there have been no reports of injuries, unsurprisingly it is not advocated by The Vatican…

Setsubun (Japan)

This festival is held each year on the last day of winter, 3rd February, where people throw beans to ward away bad luck and bring happiness into their homes. Traditionally they will throw roasted soy beans called fuku mame (fortune beans), while shouting “oni-wa-soto” (get out demons) and “fuku-wa-uchi” (come in happiness).

Battaglia delle Arance (Italy)

The highlight of the historical carnival of Ivrea is the “Battle of the Oranges,” a medieval reenactment that commemorates the city's defiance against an evil tyrant.Let battle commence!Let battle commence!

Let battle commence!
Teams of orange-throwers on foot fight an army of orange-throwers on horse-drawn carts, adding up to a total of 5,000 people involved in this sweet, sticky mess. It is estimated that nearly 600,000 pounds of oranges are carted up to the northern city, making it one of the largest food fights in Italy.

Surströmming (Sweden)

Ever smelt something so bad you can taste it? Try eating fermented Baltic herring. In the High Coast of Sweden, a festival is held every August where rotten fish is the main event. This noxious culinary 16th Century tradition takes place outside – for obvious stinky reasons – and the tops are literally popped off of the surströmming (sour herring) tins to the delight of party attendants. Recently cited as one of the most putrid food smells in the world, no wonder it’s an acquired taste. 

Rouketopolemos (Greece)

Translated into "Rocket War"; this annual event celebrates Easter by firing off tens of thousands of rockets. What started as a rivalry between two opposing rival Greek churches on the island of Chios, has turned into a yearly fireworks showcase where over 60,000 rockets are fired into the air, in an attempt to hit the bell tower of the church on the opposing side.
Each side claims victory from hitting the other church’s bell tower, but they agree to settle it next year to continue the Easter tradition another year.
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Mum Who Drank 40 Cuppas A Day Buried In Giant Box Of Tea Bags


Mum Who Drank 40 Cuppas A Day Buried In Giant Box Of Tea Bags
Mum Who Drank 40 Cuppas A Day Buried In Giant Box Of Tea Bags
BPM Media
A tea-lover has been granted her final wish by being buried in a coffin that looks like a giant box of tea bags.
Tina Watson, 73, drank as many as 40 cups of tea day, and so she asked her daughter Debs Donovan for the unusual send off.
‘It’s typical of Mum,’ Debs, from Leicestershire, said of her mother’s final wish. ‘She had a wicked sense of humour and drank about 30 or 40 cups of tea a day, every day. She just loved having a cuppa.’
Debs said her mum was always able to have a big smile on her face, despite fighting cancer twice and having both legs amputated.
She said:
We got chatting about her coffin after the funeral of my stepdad Peter four years ago.
She just blurted out, ‘I want to be buried in a coffin that looks like a giant box of tea bags.’
I burst out laughing and said, ‘Okay, but it’s got to be Typhoo because you only get an “oo” with Typhoo’.
Mum cracked up at that and we just fell about laughing. She said she was deadly serious about the coffin so that was that.
Mum Who Drank 40 Cuppas A Day Buried In Giant Box Of Tea Bags
BPM Media
A funeral service was held on Friday (November 1) at Gilroes Crematorium in Leicester, where Tina was brought in by family members in her giant tea bag box.
Debs talked about how her mother never let ill health get in the way of her incredible humour.
She said:
She lost one leg after the bite got infected after being bitten by an insect in Spain 14 years ago.
Mum then lost the other leg when the infection spread further. She never let anything get her down. She always saw the funny side of things even when there wasn’t a funny side.
Mum Who Drank 40 Cuppas A Day Buried In Giant Box Of Tea Bags
BPM Media
Funeral director Paul Pender said:
It was one of our more unusual requests but we were happy to be able to make it happen.
I got in touch with the guy that helps us with customised coffins and he produced the goods.
It is always nice when the customer gets what the customer wants.
Debs said:
I just know mum would be looking down and laughing like a drain at her coffin.
What an incredible woman. Rest in peace, Tina.
NEWS CREDIT
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Solange Knowles and husband Alan Ferguson announce split


Solange Knowles and husband Alan Ferguson announce split

Solange Knowles announces split from husband Alan Ferguson, talks 'spiritual transition'

Solange Knowles and Alan Ferguson have called it quits.
The 33-year-old singer and sister to Beyoncé announced she and the 56-year-old music video director she married in Nov. 2014, have "separated and parted ways."
On Instagram Friday, Knowles wrote that "the past 2 years have brought me more physical and spiritual transition and evolution than ever before...my body left me with no choice but to listen and be still. within that stillness i begin my journey in confronting my worst enemy, fear."
Knowles said she's "lived (her) best and worst moments in front of the lens and gaze of the world" since adolescence.
"ive always tried to live in my truth no matter how ugly or full of love it is," she added. "ive also tried to carve out the space to protect my heart, and my life as it unfolds, evolves, and changes."
Knowles then disclosed she and Ferguson have split.
"11 years ago i met a phenomenal man who changed every existence of my life. early this year we separated and parted ways," she wrote. "i find it necessary to protect the sacredness of my personal truth and to live in it fully just as I have before and will continue to do. it is unfair to not have power of your own story as you shape and mold and rewrite it yourself.
'When I Get Home': Solange's new album is one of 2019's best releases yet
Knowles said she's "leaning into the fear of the unknown."
"may all of your transitions no matter how big or small, be kind to you and filled with incredible love and light!" she capped off her post.
Solange Knowles drops surprise album and her mom Tina is so proud
At their wedding, Knowles and Ferguson both wore ivory, a color also worn by key attendees, including the bride's mother Tina, brother-in-law Jay Z, niece Blue Ivy and big sis Beyonce.
Knowles told Vogue at the time the New Orleans nuptials were a labor of love.
SOURCE
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Orinda California: Four dead in Halloween shooting


Orinda California: Four dead in Halloween shooting

60 people have died and a further 527 injured in a mass shooting at a music festival in Las Vegas.
60 dead in worst mass shooting in US history
Four people have been killed and several have been injured in a shooting at a Halloween party in an Airbnb rental property in California.
The Contra Costa County Office confirmed the news on Friday, after saying it had an “active investigation” at the Orinda home that is around 30km north of San Francisco.
Video from the scene posted by local media outlets showed patients being loaded into ambulances while others limped away from the scene.
Police were also filmed speaking to those who apeared injured.
Orinda police chief David Cook told the East Bay Times officers responded to a call around 10:45pm after shots were fired. They found a party with around 100 people there.
The area is reportedly lined with multimillion-dollar homes and the property is believed to have been rented out on Airbnb.
The owner of the home told local media they would not comment on the shooting. Airbnb’s head of trust and safety said it was “urgently investigating” what happened.
Local media reports claim an Instagram post advertising an “Airbnb Mansion Party” had been circulated ahead of the event with guests told to “BYOB” and “BYOW”.
They were also told to direct message the host for the address, the East Bay Times reports.
San Francisco Chronicle managing editor Tim O’Rourke said the shooting ocured in “one of East Bay’s most exclusive communities”.
It was “just hours after parents and their children were trick-or-treating on the same streets,” he said.
It comes after three people were killed and nine others wounded in a Halloween party south of Los Angeles late Tuesday, local media reported.
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