Confidant of Israel’s Benjamin Netanyahu ‘turns state witness’ in corruption case 

A confidant of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has agreed to turn state’s witness in one of several corruption investigations posing a serious threat to the conservative leader’s political survival, local media said.

Shlomo Filber’s decision to testify for the state against his former boss is a dramatic turn for Netanyahu, whose inner circle had so far seemed watertight.

Filber’s change of heart could leave the tough-talking Netanyahu at his most vulnerable yet, with one critic writing him off as a "political corpse".

The development has also fuelled speculation that Netanyahu, 68, will call a snap election to try to stall legal proceedings during the campaign and rally his right-wing power base behind him.

Israel’s dominant political figure for a generation – in power since 2009 and for 12 years total since 1996 – Netanyahu calls the allegations against him a "witch hunt" and has said he will seek a fifth term in a national ballot due in late 2019.

Filber, who was appointed by Netanyahu to head the Communications Ministry, was arrested this week along with top executives at Bezeq Telecom, Israel’s largest telecommunications company.

In unsourced reports, Israeli media said Filber has now agreed to testify for the state in the case, in which police allege that Bezeq’s owners offered favourable coverage on media they controlled in return for favours from regulators.

Bezeq, its owners and executives deny wrongdoing. A spokesman for the police fraud squad declined to comment.

Filber’s lawyer was not immediately available to comment on whether a deal had been reached.

Click Here: camiseta river plate

Police recommended last week that Netanyahu himself be indicted in two unrelated corruption investigations. The attorney-general must decide whether to accept the police recommendation to charge him.

Trump, Biden build legal armies for electoral battlefield

President TrumpDonald John TrumpBiden to pay tribute to Lewis at Capitol on Monday Cotton called out for remarks on slavery in criticism of 1619 Project Congress set for messy COVID-19 talks on tight deadline MORE and former Vice President Joe BidenJoe BidenBiden to pay tribute to Lewis at Capitol on Monday Trump lashes out at Reagan Foundation after fundraising request Approval of Trump’s handling of coronavirus hits new low MORE with help from allies have amassed an expansive legal war chest and marshaled armies of attorneys for what is on track to be the most litigated election season in U.S. history. 

The Republican National Committee (RNC) has pledged $20 million this cycle to oppose Democratic-backed efforts to ease voting restrictions while Biden, the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee, said his campaign has assembled 600 attorneys as a bulwark against election subterfuge.

With a little more than three months until Election Day, the voting rules in key battleground states are the focus of bitterly partisan court fights that could influence the outcome of the presidential race. These include lawsuits to expand mail-in voting in Texas, extend vote-by-mail deadlines in key Rust Belt swing states and restore the voting rights of up to one million indigent Floridians with felony records. 

ADVERTISEMENT

Hundreds of smaller scale feuds that could help shape down-ballot races are playing out across the country over issues like witness and signature requirements for absentee ballots — procedural fights with added significance as mail-in voting operations ramp up amid the pandemic. 

“2018 set a record for election litigation and I have no doubt that 2020 will beat it, in part because of virus-related litigation,” said Rick Hasen, an election law expert and law professor at the University of California Irvine.

Ultimately, though, some analysts worry these pre-election disputes are merely a prelude to the showdown that could ensue if the Nov. 3 election result is contested, raising the specter of the conservative-majority Supreme Court being called upon to help determine the winner of the White House race.

Trump has repeatedly stoked these concerns. Without evidence, he has claimed that mail-in voting opens elections to potential widespread fraud, and recently refused to say he would accept the election results.

“I have to see,” Trump said mid-July in response to a question from Fox News’s Chris WallaceChristopher (Chris) WallaceKansas City mayor: White House ‘dogwhistles’ give city residents ‘grave concerns’ about federal presence Mnuchin: It ‘wouldn’t be fair to use taxpayer dollars to pay more people to sit home’ Trump brags about performance on cognitive test for second time in a week MORE about whether he would commit to accepting the outcome. “No, I’m not going to just say yes. I’m not going to say no.”

ADVERTISEMENT

Biden, for his part, has warned repeatedly that Trump is prepared to “steal” the election.

“This president is going to try to indirectly steal the election by arguing that mail-in ballots don’t work. They’re not real. They’re not fair,” Biden told donors Thursday, according to press reports. 

Biden has previously described such a scenario as “my single greatest concern.” Earlier this month he announced his campaign had recruited a network of lawyers to stand sentry against election-related impropriety. 

“We put together 600 lawyers and a group of people throughout the country who are going into every single state to try to figure out whether chicanery is likely to take place,” Biden told donors in a video conference, according to press reports.

A number of Democratic Party members, as well as Democratic-allied lawyers and voting rights groups, are engaged in litigation across the U.S. Their general aim, they say, is to expand voting rights, fight voter suppression and make it easier to cast ballots amid the coronavirus pandemic.

ADVERTISEMENT

One of the higher-profile disputes involves a lawsuit brought by Texas Democrats against Republican state officials to expand mail-in voting. Texas currently only allows absentee ballots from elderly, disabled, incarcerated or traveling voters. The state’s Democrats have been seeking to expand the definition of “disabled” to include those who fear coronavirus exposure during in-person voting ahead of the general election — but so far without success.

“Texas Democrats will never stop fighting for the right for everybody to vote,” Abhi Rahman, a Texas Democratic Party spokesman, said after a recent setback before the U.S. Supreme Court. “Every Texan should be able to vote safely and without the fear of contracting a deadly disease.”

Additionally, the law firm of Marc Elias, a top election lawyer for Democratic candidates and causes, is engaged in some 35 election-related lawsuits. A number of nonprofit voting rights advocacy groups such as Common Cause, the Brennan Center for Justice and the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights are also pursuing legal action.

According to a database maintained by Justin Levitt, an election law expert and associate dean at Loyola Law School in Los Angeles, there are around 160 election cases in 41 states and D.C. that relate to the pandemic.

Many of the pending cases pit Democrats and voting rights advocates against Republicans and GOP-allied interest groups. 

The Trump campaign says the voter expansion effort opens up the U.S. election system to fraud, and that Democratic messaging around the danger of in-person voting amid the pandemic could suppress the vote.

“The left’s rhetoric is irresponsible and likely to suppress the right to vote by scaring many citizens from safely going to the polls on or before Election Day,” a spokesperson for the Trump campaign, speaking on background, told The Hill. 

Underscoring the high stakes of court fights playing out this election season, the RNC in May doubled its legal budget to $20 million after initially committing $10 million earlier this year before the pandemic was in full swing.

“This will be a knockdown, drag-out fight to the very end. I spent election night 2016, not in the hotel ballroom, but rather in election headquarters sending recount lawyers to states because the races were so tight in so many places,” Trump campaign manager Bill Stepien told reporters Friday. “I expect our campaign will be doing the same exact thing in just about 100 days.”

Click Here: Bape Kid 1st Camo Ape Head rompers

White House, Senate GOP race to finalize coronavirus package ahead of Monday rollout

The White House and Senate Republicans are working to finalize a coronavirus relief package ahead of a Monday rollout.

Treasury Secretary Steven MnuchinSteven Terner MnuchinWhite House, Senate GOP race to finalize coronavirus package ahead of Monday rollout Congress set for messy COVID-19 talks on tight deadline Sunday shows – Coronavirus relief, stimulus talks dominate MORE and White House chief of staff Mark MeadowsMark Randall MeadowsWhite House, Senate GOP race to finalize coronavirus package ahead of Monday rollout Congress set for messy COVID-19 talks on tight deadline Sunday shows – Coronavirus relief, stimulus talks dominate MORE were back in the Capitol on Sunday for a second day of meetings with GOP staff as they work to lock down the forthcoming proposal.

As he left the Capitol, Meadows told reporters that they had “been working through just some of the technical language” and had reached “an agreement in principle.”

ADVERTISEMENT

“We have a few modifications that we’re looking for clarity on, but we’ve gotten those down to a handful that hopefully will be resolved in the next hour or so,” he added.

He also said he expected the remaining open issues to be “resolved” before Republicans introduce their package Monday.

“It’s just down to a handful of items where we believe a phone call here and there should be able to resolve it,” he added.

Mnuchin said there were “no outstanding issues” but noted that “there’s some language that people are just double-checking.”

Senate Republicans are expected to unveil their roughly $1 trillion proposal on Monday after punting last week amid ongoing negotiations with the White House on key provisions of the package. 

“The administration has requested additional time to review the fine details, but we will be laying down this proposal early next week. We have an agreement in principle on the shape of this package,” Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnellAddison (Mitch) Mitchell McConnellWhite House, Senate GOP race to finalize coronavirus package ahead of Monday rollout Congress set for messy COVID-19 talks on tight deadline AFSCME launches ad calling for trillion in relief aid for local governments MORE (R-Ky.) said from the Senate floor about the decision.

ADVERTISEMENT

The package is expected to include $105 billion for schools, $16 billion in new testing money, more flexibility for how states and local governments can use $150 billion appropriated by Congress in March, and a five-year shield from coronavirus lawsuits except in the case of gross negligence or intentional misconduct. 

It’s also expected to include a second round of stimulus checks. Mnuchin has said it will mirror the language in the March bill that provided a one-time check of $1,200 to individuals who make up to $75,000 per year. The amount of the check was scaled down until it hit an income ceiling of $99,000 per year for an individual, where it was phased out altogether. 

Republicans are also expected to nix the $600-per-week increase in unemployment benefits from the March bill, which began to expire on Saturday. 

Instead, they are proposing a system that would match the unemployment benefits to approximately 70 percent of what a person was making before being laid off, according to Mnuchin.

States have warned that it could take weeks or months to transition to the new system, given the antiquated technology in many offices. Some Republican lawmakers have said there needs to be a transition period during which the federal government would provide a flat amount per week, potentially $200. 

Both Mnuchin and Meadows declined on Sunday to get into details of the unemployment language beyond providing a 70 percent match. 

Click Here: cheap Cowboys jersey

The introduction of the GOP proposal is expected to mark the start of bipartisan negotiations, which will likely be largely carried out by administration officials shuttling between leadership offices. 

Meadows and Mnuchin met with House Speaker Nancy PelosiNancy PelosiWhite House, Senate GOP race to finalize coronavirus package ahead of Monday rollout Congress set for messy COVID-19 talks on tight deadline Sunday shows – Coronavirus relief, stimulus talks dominate MORE (D-Calif.) and Senate Democratic Leader Charles SchumerChuck SchumerGOP senators push for stimulus checks to almost 2M excluded Americans White House, Congress talk next coronavirus relief bill as COVID-19 continues to surge Schumer announces Blue Jays will play season in Buffalo MORE (D-N.Y.) last week, but both sides acknowledged they were waiting on text from Senate Republicans. 

Congress is under a tight time frame to craft an agreement without the talks spilling into the August recess. 

The House had been expected to leave on Friday, July 31, until early September. But House Majority Leader Steny HoyerSteny Hamilton HoyerWhite House, Senate GOP race to finalize coronavirus package ahead of Monday rollout Mnuchin, Meadows make rare weekend trip to Capitol as GOP prepares coronavirus package Pelosi, McConnell announce John Lewis will lie in State MORE (D-Md.) has warned members to keep their travel plans for the first week of August flexibile, and Pelosi reiterated on Sunday that lawmakers could not leave Washington, D.C., without a deal. 

“We can’t go home without” a deal, she told CBS’s “Face the Nation.” “It’s so sad that people should have this uncertainty in their life.” 

Meadows and Mnuchin, during separate TV interviews on Sunday, floated the idea of passing a “skinny” relief bill that would pair the unemployment piece with one or two other issues such as school funding and liability protection. 

ADVERTISEMENT

“I see us being able to provide unemployment insurance, maybe a retention credit to keep people from being displaced or brought back into the workplace, helping with our schools,” Meadows told ABC’s “This Week.”

“If we can do that along with liability protection, perhaps we put that forward and get that passed as we can negotiate on the rest of the bill in the weeks to come,” he added.

Pelosi previously rejected the idea of breaking the next coronavirus bill into pieces. Meadows told reporters late last week that he was floating the idea without Pelosi or McConnell weighing in first. 

“We cannot piecemeal this,” Pelosi told reporters late last week.

Slip in job growth raises fear of broader relapse

The job market recovery from the coronavirus recession is faltering as the U.S. braces for a steep decline in fiscal support from Congress despite the burgeoning pandemic.

As the rapid spread of the novel coronavirus smothers economic activity across the U.S., two months of stellar job gains have begun to slip and lawmakers remain far apart on a new round of federal aid.

The Friday lapses of a $600 weekly boost to jobless benefits and a national eviction ban bode poorly for the growing number of Americans seeking unemployment aid.

ADVERTISEMENT

New weekly applications for unemployment insurance increased last week for the first time since March, according to the Labor Department, and the number of employed Americans declined by 4.1 million between the first and second weeks of this month, according to weekly Census Bureau data released Thursday.

Those dire signs of deepening economic damage could spell trouble for the July jobs report, which some economists fear will show the first net decline in U.S. employment since April.

With lawmakers far apart on sorely needed aid, economists worry that partisan squabbling and the steady pace of COVID-19 infections could wipe out the ground gained since the onset of the crisis.

“Because of the inability of the political sector to put in place another round of aid in a timely manner, investors should anticipate a significant slowing in household spending and another round of permanent job losses,” wrote Joe Brusuelas, chief economist at audit and tax firm RSM, in a Wednesday research note.

“Although we think the worst of the economic shock is in the rear-view mirror, this economy is not yet out of recession and could very well remain in negative terrain if there is not sufficient policy support.”

The onset of the coronavirus pandemic spurred the quickest and deepest economic collapse in modern U.S. history. More than 20 million Americans lost their jobs between March and April, pushing the unemployment rate to a post-Great Depression high of 14.7 percent.

ADVERTISEMENT

Congress responded by spending roughly $3 trillion on pandemic-related stimulus and support for various sectors, with hundreds of millions aimed at shoring up small businesses that employ millions of Americans across the country. 

While the U.S. has since recovered 8 million of the jobs lost to the immediate shock of the pandemic, a resurgence of coronavirus cases is threatening that progress.

The U.S. eclipsed 4 million confirmed cases of the novel coronavirus Thursday, far more than any other nation even when accounting for increased testing capacity. California and Florida both reported record numbers of daily coronavirus deaths soon after.

White House coronavirus task force coordinator Deborah Birx said Friday that the health crises in those two states and Texas mean the country faces epicenters in multiple areas, compared to earlier in the pandemic when New York accounted for a large number of the country’s cases.

“What we have right now are essentially three New Yorks with these three major states,” Birx told NBC’s “Today” show.

“We’re really having to respond as an American people, and that’s why you hear us calling for masks and increased social distancing to really stop the spread of this epidemic,” she added.

Governors in hard-hit states have gradually reimposed orders to close restaurants, bars and gyms that likely spurred the rebound in coronavirus cases. But economists have warned for months that rising virus infections hamper the economy even when state and local governments don’t impose new business closures. 

A range of real-time private sector data released this week make the case.

The number of shifts worked by U.S. frontline workers increased by just 0.7 percent each week on average in July after rising by 1.9 percent in June and 2.7 percent in May, according to Kronos, which provides timekeeping and payroll software for businesses. The data, which Kronos says is drawn from 3.2 million employees across 30,000 businesses, appears to show business activity plateauing after two months of steady gains. 

Job postings from businesses have also declined through July, according to Homebase, a workforce management software company that tracks 60,000 businesses with 1 million employees for labor force changes.

The number of new jobs posted by businesses was down roughly 16.6 percent in June from the first two weeks of March, according to the company’s data. From July 1 to July 9, job postings were down an average of 22.7 percent from the first two weeks of March.

“Areas that have seen a spike in coronavirus cases are seeing declines in business activities, although the declines are not as steep as during the first wave of cases. Hiring for hourly workers, however, is now below the levels we saw before the coronavirus pandemic,” wrote Ray Sandza, vice president of data and analytics at Homebase.

As the economic recovery from the first wave of coronavirus cases slows, pressure is building on lawmakers to deliver relief as millions of vulnerable Americans approach the edge of a fiscal cliff.

The White House and Senate Republicans are aiming for a package of roughly $1 trillion to balance the need for further fiscal support with the objections of GOP debt hawks opposed to piling onto the roughly $3 trillion already spent on the pandemic.

Democrats, meanwhile, are countering with a more than $3 trillion bill passed by the House in May that Republicans have ripped as a liberal wish-list.

There are roughly 30 million Americans receiving some form of unemployment insurance whose earnings will plunge without the $600 weekly boost that sustained them. Millions of Americans who do not live in housing backstopped by the federal government can also face eviction proceedings over the next few weeks with less money to fund a move.

Along with unemployment benefits and housing issues, lawmakers will also need to strike a deal on further aid for small businesses. Republicans are set to propose a third round of Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) loans, likely tapping the roughly $130 billion leftover from the $659 billion total authorized by Congress.

“Mismanagement of the public health crisis has led to a renewed slowdown in activity as households and businesses voluntarily limit their activity and governments are forced to re-impose restrictions. To make matters worse, Congress is still debating the next round of fiscal aid,” Nancy Vanden Houten and Gregory Daco of Oxford Economics wrote in a Friday research note.

“We believe a decline in payrolls in July is a now distinct possibility with claims rising, hours worked plateauing and the Household Pulse survey pointing to a net job loss.”

Click Here: cheap Cowboys jersey

WWE Announces That Dean Ambrose Has Suffered An Injury

On last night’s episode of RAW, it was speculated that Dean Ambrose may have legitimately suffered an arm injury. That has not been confirmed yet but WWE announced the following after the show:
Dean Ambrose suffers arm injury on Raw

The Samoan Submission Machine and The Bar exacerbate The Lunatic Fringe’s arm injury.
Dean Ambrose sustained an injury to his right arm during Raw’s Six-Man Tag Team Match, and the damage was exacerbated when his opponents, Samoa Joe and Raw Tag Team Champions Cesaro & Sheamus, assaulted The Lunatic Fringe in the trainer’s room. The attack culminated when Joe slammed a road case onto Ambrose’s arm, leaving him writhing in pain.

Ambrose was taken to a nearby medical facility for X-rays and evaluation, and more details on his condition should be available tomorrow.

Click Here: Fjallraven Kanken Art Spring Landscape Backpacks