Katharine McPhee : Toutes les photos du mariage avec David Foster

Katharine McPhee et David Foster se sont mariés le 28 juin 2019, au cours d’une cérémonie organisée à Londres, en l’église arménienne St Yeghiche de South Kensington. L’actrice de 35 ans et le compositeur de 69 ans avaient uniquement convié le magazine Vogue à couvrir l’événement mais des photos ont fuité…

Lors de la cérémonie, l’ex-star de la série Smash recasée ensuite dans Scorpion est apparue dans une robe volumineuse, en tulle blanc. Une création spécialement conçue pour l’occasion par le couturier new-yorkais Zac Posen. Une robe sur laquelle était brodée de le titre de la chanson The Coulour of My Love, chantée par Céline Dion… écrite et produite par David Foster. Quant au marié, il était très élégant en simple costume noir, noeud papillon et pochette blanche. Un costume signé Stefano Ricci.

Plus de 150 invités étaient présents, dont les cinq filles du marié (qui a été marié quatre fois auparavant), Allison, Amy, Sara, Erin et Jordan. “C’était super d’avoir la fille très talentueuse de David, Jordan, qui est déjà une styliste émérite, pour m’aider dans les essayages“, a confié Katharine McPhee à Vogue. Le tennisman Roger Federer était également présent lors de cette belle union au côté de sa femme Mirka.

Après leur mariage, Katharine McPhee et David Foster se sont envolés vers l’Italie, pour leur lune de miel. C’est d’ailleurs dans la péninsule que le producteur avait demandé la main de sa compagne, avec une bague de fiançailles en émeraude.

a HIGHER LOVE @davidfoster

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House Ethics panel to drop $5K metal detector fines against Clyburn, Rogers

The House Ethics Committee announced Thursday that its members have agreed to drop $5,000 fines issued to both Majority Whip James Clyburn (D-S.C.) and Rep. Hal RogersHarold (Hal) Dallas RogersHouse Ethics panel to drop K metal detector fines against Clyburn, Rogers Three GOP lawmakers fined 0 for flouting House floor mask rules Fourth House GOP lawmaker issued ,000 metal detector fine MORE (R-Ky.) for allegedly failing to complete security screenings before entering the House chamber.

Fines for evading the metal detectors stationed outside the House chamber after Jan. 6 are upheld unless a majority of the evenly split Ethics Committee agrees to an appeal. The move to drop the fines indicates that the decisions regarding Clyburn and Rogers were bipartisan.

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Both Clyburn and Rogers filed appeals to the Ethics Committee after the House sergeant-at-arms issued the fines.

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Thursday’s move marks the first time that fines issued to House members for evading security screenings have been successfully appealed.

The Capitol Police report filed with the fine issued to Clyburn last month alleged that the third-ranking House Democrat went into the chamber after returning from the restroom during a vote “without being screened by the officer” and “deliberately avoided being screened.”

Clyburn denied the allegation and wrote in his appeal that “at no time did I refuse any officer’s request to submit to screening.”

The Capitol Police report against Rogers, meanwhile, stated that the Kentucky Republican set off the metal detector outside a door to the House chamber but continued walking. A Capitol Police officer told Rogers he needed to be wanded with a manual metal detector. But Rogers replied, “Maybe later, I have to vote.”

Rogers then returned to the security checkpoint and asked what he needed to do. The officer clarified that security screenings needed to be completed before entering the House chamber, not after.

Rogers wrote in his appeal that “I dispute the facts as presented and request the opportunity to appear before the Committee to explain the facts.”

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Three other House members have also been issued metal detector fines: Republican Reps. Louie GohmertLouis (Louie) Buller GohmertMassie, Greene trash mask violation warnings from House sergeant at arms House Ethics panel to drop K metal detector fines against Clyburn, Rogers House rejects GOP effort to roll back chamber’s mask mandate MORE (Texas), Andrew Clyde (Ga.) and Virginia FoxxVirginia Ann FoxxHouse Ethics panel to drop K metal detector fines against Clyburn, Rogers Three GOP lawmakers fined 0 for flouting House floor mask rules Fourth House GOP lawmaker issued ,000 metal detector fine MORE (N.C.).

But unlike with Clyburn and Rogers, the House Ethics Committee did not uphold the appeals filed by Gohmert and Clyde.

Gohmert’s situation was similar to Clyburn’s — he was accused of avoiding a security screening after returning to the House chamber from the restroom.

Gohmert argued in his appeal that he had complied with a screening upon first entering the House chamber, but was unaware he needed to undergo another one after his brief restroom break. But Gohmert acknowledged that a Capitol Police officer had asked him to undergo another screening before returning to the chamber.

“There are not even any tanks on toilets so someone could hide a gun in them like in The Godfather movie,” Gohmert wrote.

“The officer said I needed to be wanded but since I had already been through the metal detector thoroughly and having never before been required to be wanded after already having entered the floor properly, I returned to the House floor to engage in my turn to debate the bill under consideration,” he continued.

Clyde did not deny in his appeal that he had evaded the metal detectors, but instead argued that the fines were unconstitutional. After the Ethics panel upheld his fines for two offenses — $5,000 for the first offense and $10,000 for the second — Clyde said he would challenge them in federal court.

Foxx was issued a fine late last week for allegedly continuing into the House chamber despite setting off the metal detector, but, similar to Rogers, returned to the checkpoint to retrieve her bag. Foxx told a Politico reporter who witnessed the incident that she was running late for the vote.

House Democrats voted in February to make noncompliance with the security screenings punishable by fine after several Republicans defied Capitol Police officers and pushed their way into the chamber anyway.

Members of Congress are generally exempt from the metal detector screenings required of all visitors and staff to the Capitol complex. Aside from the metal detectors outside the House chamber, lawmakers can still skip the screenings to enter the main Capitol building or office buildings in the complex.

Updated 4:34 p.m.

Nevada weighs public option as blue states eye health care reform

Nevada’s Democratic-controlled legislature is racing to finish work on a bill that would create a government-run health insurance plan in what may be the most ambitious effort to overhaul health care policy in any state this year.

Legislators are working on a bill to create a public option that would compete with private insurers through the state-run insurance marketplace, established under the Affordable Care Act. The measure would require companies that provide Medicaid services to offer public option plans, a notion supporters say would increase access to affordable care.

“People are struggling to ensure they will have access to health care if they get sick,” state Sen. Nicole Cannizzaro (D), the state Senate majority leader and the bill’s lead sponsor, said during committee testimony earlier this month. “Now is an opportune moment to take advantage of the state’s considerable bargaining power to make health care more affordable and more accessible.”

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The bill would set up publicly available plans that would cover either 70 percent or 80 percent of health care costs. Health care providers that accept either state employee health insurance plans or Medicaid patients would also be required to take on patients on the public option.

About 350,000 Nevada residents still do not have health insurance, a decade after then-President Barack ObamaBarack Hussein ObamaKamala Harris grapples with unique challenges as vice president Prevailing ‘anti’ campaigns lead to disunity and volatility Michelle Obama portrait coming down Sunday ahead of national tour MORE signed the Affordable Care Act into law. Supporters of the public option say about two-thirds of those uninsured would be eligible for the public option plan.

Opponents of the measure worry about the costs a public option would impose on hospitals, providers and patients who have private health insurance.

“The most important concern that we have is cost. Cost on implementation, cost on creating, cost on managing this new public option. The second biggest issue that we have is access to care,” Tom Clark, a lobbyist who represents the Nevada Association of Health Plans, told a state Senate committee hearing testimony on the bill earlier this week. “Health care costs for all Nevadans will increase. Access will decline.”

Some experts believe the public option might not have the sweeping effect its supporters envision. The vast majority of those who remain without health care coverage in Nevada are already eligible for Medicaid or for subsidized health plans under the Affordable Care Act. More could be covered if Nevada followed a path like California and allowed undocumented residents to access those options.

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In testimony before the state Senate this week, several opponents of the bill revisited that theme: If people are not signing up for the plans for which they are already eligible, adding a public option is a solution to the wrong problem.

“If your goal is to reduce the number of uninsured in the state of Nevada, I am not sure that this bill is going to have a really dramatic impact,” Sabrina Corlette, co-director of the Center on Health Insurance Reforms at Georgetown University, who has not been involved in the legislation, told The Nevada Independent.

Because the government would set reimbursement rates for care at levels below those set by private insurance companies, with the goal of making premiums more affordable, opponents also said they feared the new plan would leave gaps in hospital budgets.

“Any shift in patients from commercial plans to a public option that would almost certainly reimburse at a far lower rate threatens the ability of hospitals like Sunrise to offer services the most vulnerable members of our community rely upon so heavily,” said Connor Cain, a lobbyist who represents Sunrise Hospital and Medical Center in Las Vegas.

Prominent progressive groups have rallied to the proposal. The powerful Culinary Workers Union backs the bill, too, after an amendment would allow them to offer their own health care plan on the state exchange.

Only one other state, Washington, has implemented a public option plan, after Gov. Jay InsleeJay Robert InsleeWashington bans open carry of weapons at state capitol, public protests Washington state to provide free menstrual hygiene products in school bathrooms Cuomo signs legislation restoring voting rights to felons upon release from prison MORE (D) signed a version into law in 2019. The first open enrollment period that included the public option began earlier this year.

Progress toward reducing the number of uninsured has been low — fewer than 1,900 Washington residents signed up for one of the public option plans, known as Cascade Care, offered by five different private insurers, out of 222,000 people who signed up for new plans this year.

Cannizzaro is running up against a ticking clock to get her legislation passed: Nevada’s legislature is set to adjourn on June 1. The state is one of a few remaining that holds legislative sessions only biennially, making next week the last time for two years that legislators have a chance to pass the bill.

But Nevada’s move may presage a wave of public option proposals in blue states. Lawmakers in Colorado, Connecticut, New Mexico and Oregon considered public option bills during sessions this year.

“There’s momentum from a number of other states that are looking at public options and looking at responding to the needs that states are having,” said Liz Hagan, director of policy solutions at United States of Care, a health care reform organization. “We’re going to continue seeing a lot of states trying to push the envelope in the innovative space of what they can do under the Affordable Care Act.”

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Omar says Facebook refusing to take down 'hate speech' ad

Facebook is refusing to take down an ad that Rep. Ilhan OmarIlhan OmarOn The Money: Biden tries to navigate bumpy recovery | Jobless claims hit another post-pandemic low | Treasury calls for 15 percent minimum global tax Hillicon Valley: Amazon facing lawsuits alleging racial, gender bias | Senate Commerce panel advances Biden’s top science nominee | Colonial Pipeline CEO to testify on Capitol Hill in June Will the Squad break away from the Democrats over Israel? MORE’s staff is calling inaccurate and disparaging to Muslims, according to the Minnesota Democrat’s office.

Omar’s office has requested that Facebook remove an ad paid for by the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) that features Omar’s face on Hamas rockets and says, “When Israel Targets Hamas Rep. Omar calls it an ‘act of terrorism.’”

In a tweet last week, Omar stated, “Israeli air strikes killing civilians in Gaza is an act of terrorism.”

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The tweet went on to say: “Palestinians deserve protection. Unlike Israel, missile defense programs, such as Iron Dome, don’t exist to protect Palestinian civilians. It’s unconscionable to not condemn these attacks on the week of Eid.” 

Omar’s office says the ad badly misstates Omar’s tweet, and that it incites people in a way that endangers Omar and other Muslims.

“Given the number of threats of death and violence the Congresswoman receives on a near-daily basis, it’s not just irresponsible – its incitement. Facebook should immediately remove these ads which blatantly peddle both anti-Muslim hate speech and disinformation, and AIPAC should apologize,” Omar’s deputy communications director, Isi Baehr-Breen, said in a statement.  

Facebook determined the ad did not violate company policies, according to The Washington Post, which first reported on Omar’s complaints.

Facebook does reject ads that its fact-checking partners determine are false and has told Omar’s office the ad would be eligible for a fact check, according to the Post. 

A Facebook spokesperson declined to comment, but confirmed the Post’s reporting is accurate.

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AIPAC defended the ad as “fair and accurate” in a statement.

“The ad concerning Representative Omar is completely fair and accurate,” AIPAC spokesman Marshall Wittmann said in a statement. “It is not a personal attack but highlights her outrageous characterization of Israel’s efforts at self defense as ‘terrorism.’ Israel targets Hamas terrorists, not civilians.”

Speaker Nancy PelosiNancy PelosiMassie, Greene trash mask violation warnings from House sergeant at arms Why we need a new 9/11 Commission for Jan. 6 Capitol attack Biden signs anti-Asian hate crimes bill into law MORE (D-Calif.) and House Majority Leader Steny HoyerSteny Hamilton HoyerOmar says Facebook refusing to take down ‘hate speech’ ad Israel arms sale exposes Democratic fault lines Mask rules spark confusion, tensions in Congress MORE (D-Md.) both criticized the ad. 

Pelosi told reporters she didn’t agree with Omar’s position but said it was disappointing to see a “deeply cynical” and “inflammatory” ad distorting what Omar said, according to the Post.

“It’s dangerous, plain and simple,” Baehr-Breen said in the statement. 

The ad, part of a three-part series that also features Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-CortezAlexandria Ocasio-CortezOn The Money: Biden tries to navigate bumpy recovery | Jobless claims hit another post-pandemic low | Treasury calls for 15 percent minimum global tax Will the Squad break away from the Democrats over Israel? Omar says Facebook refusing to take down ‘hate speech’ ad MORE (D-N.Y.), Rep. Rashida TlaibRashida Harbi TlaibOn The Money: Biden tries to navigate bumpy recovery | Jobless claims hit another post-pandemic low | Treasury calls for 15 percent minimum global tax Will the Squad break away from the Democrats over Israel? Omar says Facebook refusing to take down ‘hate speech’ ad MORE (D-Mich.) and Sen. Bernie SandersBernie SandersWill the Squad break away from the Democrats over Israel? Nina Turner campaign surrogate: Progressive movement needs to show up Omar says Facebook refusing to take down ‘hate speech’ ad MORE (I-Vt.), potentially reached more than 1 million people, according to Facebook’s ad library. 

Omar’s office first reached out to Facebook on Tuesday after viewing the ad, the Post reported. 

 

 

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Democrats offer bill to encourage hiring of groups hard-hit by pandemic

A group of Democrats on the House Ways and Means Committee introduced a bill Thursday aimed at encouraging businesses to hire workers who have been hard hit by the coronavirus pandemic.

The legislation would expand the work opportunity tax credit — a tax break designed to incentivize employers to hire people from groups who often face barriers to employment, such as the long-term unemployed, veterans, ex-felons and recipients of certain federal benefits.

“The Work Opportunity Tax Credit is a proven program that has long given veterans and vulnerable Americans the help they need to get back to work,” Rep. Tom Suozzi (D-N.Y.) said in a statement. “This expansion will make it even better and more effective!” 

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Rep. Steven HorsfordSteven Alexander HorsfordDemocrats offer bill to encourage hiring of groups hard-hit by pandemic Lawmakers react to guilty verdict in Chauvin murder trial: ‘Our work is far from done’ Congressional Black Caucus members post selfie celebrating first WH visit in four years MORE (D-Nev.) said the bill “will make the largest difference for those hit the hardest by pandemic unemployment, including people of color, young workers, women, people with disabilities, veterans, and underserved communities.”

Currently, the work opportunity tax credit amount is 40 percent and is limited to the first $6,000 in wages per employee for one year for most types of eligible workers. The bill introduced Thursday would increase the credit amount to 50 percent for the first $10,000 in wages for two years for all eligible groups.

In addition to Suozzi and Horsford, other supporters of the bill include Democratic Reps. Don Beyer (Va.), Brad SchneiderBradley (Brad) Scott SchneiderDemocrats offer bill to encourage hiring of groups hard-hit by pandemic America’s Jewish communities are under attack — Here are 3 things Congress can do Lawmakers demand justice for Adam Toledo: ‘His hands were up. He was unarmed’ MORE (Ill.) and Gwen MooreGwen Sophia MooreDemocrats offer bill to encourage hiring of groups hard-hit by pandemic Shining a light on COINTELPRO’s dangerous legacy Lawmakers urge IRS to boost outreach about tax credits for low-income Americans MORE (Wis.), who all serve on the Ways and Means Committee. The panel has jurisdiction over taxes and is poised to play a key role in crafting legislation based on President BidenJoe BidenTrump slams ‘weak’ Republicans who don’t want to talk about Arizona audit FDA advises against Chinese-made syringes citing safety issues On The Money: Biden tries to navigate bumpy recovery | Jobless claims hit another post-pandemic low | Treasury calls for 15 percent minimum global tax MORE’s economic recovery proposals.

The bill is also supported by outside groups like the International Franchise Association, National Restaurant Association and American Health Care Association.

Experts see new roles for artificial intelligence in college admissions process

This story is from The Hill’s Changing America publication.

The job of a college admissions officer is not an easy one. For any competitive higher learning institution, the admissions process used to hand-pick each incoming student has also come under increasing scrutiny in recent years.

To ensure the ongoing success of an institution, admissions officers are tasked with the nearly impossible task of efficiently evaluating thousands of applications each school year, with the expectation that their choices will reflect the institution’s standards, grow diversity and inspire enough students to enroll.

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The process is a balancing act, and one that is expected to proceed without gender-based or racial bias. The problem? Humans are inherently biased, and schools are now beginning to realize the faults in their traditional approach to admissions — one that has placed an outweighed emphasis on test scores and transcripts, and often fails to find the human factor in their applicants. The flaws in this system also tend to leave underprivileged groups behind and keep underrepresented demographics as anomalies.

Surprisingly, the solution to this issue — to this lack of humanity — might be found in artificial intelligence.

“The mission of the organization is to bring a human aspect back into the admissions process,” said Andrew Martelli, the chief technology officer at Kira Talent, a Canadian-founded company that works with learning institutions around the world in hopes of delivering a more holistic approach to reviewing candidates.

Hopeful students applying to institutions that partner with Kira undergo a video interview process in which they will not encounter another live person. Instead, video- and text-based prompts lead applicants through a series of questions. Their answers are then used to evaluate things like leadership potential, verbal and written communication skills, comprehension of key concepts, drives and motivations, and professionalism.

Martelli said artificial intelligence has entered the picture in a beta phase, and one way it is used is not to evaluate students but rather the admissions officers and their possible biases.

“It’s almost more of a science experiment, to understand things like: Are people accidentally or inadvertently introducing bias?” he said. “When schools express interest in it, they are presented with an AI-based tool that takes video data, and analyzes personality traits and behaviors. We take the very same footage that you view as an admissions person to get a sense of the applicant, and we have them run it through a series of algorithms. Schools are then able to run the algorithms, which give them AI-based data to then compare to what their human reviewers said.

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“The idea behind the technology is to help the human reviewer ask questions of themselves: Did I see these traits or qualities? Am I missing something? So the emphasis is not on using AI to replace the human aspect of the process. Our whole focus is on helping the human be a better evaluator of other humans.”

It’s those principles that the company used last year in its partnerships with schools such as California State University Fullerton. Members of the admissions committee were able to pre-record questions for the students to answer through video interviews.

“Kira allowed us to bring our own personality,” said Deanna Jung, assistant professor of nursing and coordinator of pre-licensure programs. “We have a diverse faculty, so there was a diverse group of individuals reading the questions. Students were able to watch those videos and think, ‘OK, there are faculty who teach here who are like me.’ ”

Not all AI systems are created equal, nor are they without unconsciously programmed biases. At the end of the day, data scientists are still human, meaning many of the subjective choices they make as they create and refine training data can lead to racial bias in machine learning systems.

Human bias is an issue that pervades nearly every industry and facet of life, certainly not just in the process of college admissions. Over the past few years, society has become acutely more aware of how human prejudices can affect people’s lives. These biases can slip into AI systems creating what is called algorithmic bias, taking various forms from gender bias to racial prejudice and age discrimination. 

Researchers are working to figure out how to mitigate the possibility of introducing racial bias into AI-based systems. One postgraduate researcher at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Joy Buolamwini, founded the Algorithmic Justice League with the objective of highlighting the social and cultural implications of AI bias using both art and scientific research.

One AI program that’s proven valuable addressed what’s known as “summer melt,” when enrolled students drop out during the summer, before their first fall semester even begins.

Georgia State University a few years ago used an AI chatbot called Pounce, which was designed to combat summer melt.

According to the university, Pounce was able to reduce the occurrence of summer melt by an impressive 22 percent one year, which translated to an additional 324 students showing up for their first day of classes in the fall.

Realizing the power of communicating with their students through text message but not having the human power to implement it, Georgia State partnered up with the Boston-based education technology company AdmitHub.

Over half of the university’s students hail from low-income backgrounds and many of them are first generation college students — a demographic that has shown the need for individual attention and financial aid, both of which aid enrolled students in showing up ready to start classes once the semester starts.

The admissions team worked with AdmitHub to identify these obstacles and fed information and answers into Pounce, which students could then direct their questions to at any time of the day or night by text message. In the first year of implementing Pounce, the AI-based system, had answered more than 200,000 questions by incoming freshmen.

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“Every interaction was tailored to the specific student’s enrollment task,” Scott Burke, assistant vice president of undergraduate admissions at Georgia State, said on the university’s website. “We would have had to hire 10 full-time staff members to handle that volume of messaging without Pounce.”

What experts seem to agree on is that the sole use of artificial intelligence won’t be best practice for college admissions decisions anytime soon, if ever. Nevertheless, AI-based systems can serve an increasingly important purpose for schools, not only streamlining teams and processes but also promoting education about unconscious biases amongst admissions officers.

“I do believe that schools continuously look for ways to adjust their practices. I think COVID has also caused people to take a hard look at the processes that they use — to try to find ways to make them more convenient, to make them more accessible, to make them safer because of the social distancing and other requirements,” said Martelli. “I also think a lot of the social movements that we see in place today have asked for schools to take a harder look into their practices and the processes, and the ways they make these admissions decisions.”

As far as the future of AI-based systems, Martelli preaches cautious optimism, saying that it has to be implemented in the right ways. He said that along with the promise that AI shows, there is a lot of danger as well. Experiments over the years have shown just how easy it is for algorithmic bias to make its way into an AI-based system, and Martelli said a biased sample could perpetuate some of the problematic decisionmaking of the past.

“When you think about using those kinds of tools, we still think it needs a person at the heart of the whole system to make the judgment about another human,” he said. “Do I think there’s promise there? For sure. Do I think we have to be careful about how we apply it? 100 percent.”

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US Navy denies warship was 'expelled' from South China Sea

The U.S. Navy’s 7th Fleet issued a lengthy statement on Thursday describing what it called a “freedom of navigation operation” by the USS Curtis Wilbur, a guided-missile destroyer, made in the South China Sea near the Paracel Islands earlier this week.

The unusually long statement also rejected the statement from the Chinese Southern Theater Command that said the destroyer had been “expelled” from the contested waters.

“The PLA’s statement about this mission is false. USS Curtis Wilbur was not ‘expelled’ from any nation’s territory. USS Curtis Wilbur conducted this FONOP [freedom of navigation operation] in accordance with international law and then continued on to conduct normal operations in international waters,” read the Navy’s statement.

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“The operation reflects our commitment to uphold freedom of navigation and lawful uses of the sea as a principle. The United States will continue to fly, sail and operate wherever international law allows, as USS Curtis Wilbur did here,” it continued.

Chinese military officials denounced the U.S. Navy’s operations in the South China Sea on Wednesday after the USS Curtis Wilbur conducted a similar operation in the Taiwan Strait, a contested area of the sea near Taiwan, which Beijing claims as its territory. The U.S. asserts Taiwan’s right to self-governance and has shown increased support for Taipei in recent years.

“The U.S. actions sends the wrong signals to Taiwan independence forces, deliberately disrupting the regional situation and endangering peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait,” China’s Eastern Theatre Command said in a statement Wednesday.

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Southwest fares approaching pre-pandemic levels as bookings improve

Southwest Airlines is starting to see an increase in bookings and fares that approaches pre-pandemic levels.

The company said Wednesday that June bookings and fares are getting closer to pre-pandemic levels, as there will only be a 20 percent to 25 percent drop in revenue in June compared to two years ago, The Associated Press reported.

April’s operating revenue was 42 percent below April of 2019.

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The increase in the number of people on flights is being driven by leisure travel, as business travel is still down 80 percent for the airline.

Southwest says there have been “fairly typical” booking patterns, with the company selling 55 percent of the seats that are expected to be used in June and 35 percent of the seats that are expected to be used in July, according to AP.

June flights are expected to be 85 percent full, while April only saw flights 79 percent full.

In April, the company was losing $6 million a day and is expected to break even, excluding capital spending, debt service and other expenditures, in June, the AP noted.

Southwest was recently named the best carrier in 2020, a year that crushed the airline industry as many did not travel due to the coronavirus. 

The airline industry has been seeing a rise in travel this year with the increased availability of vaccines, and more places are beginning to fully reopen. However, it has yet to hit pre-pandemic levels.

Senators introducing bill to penalize Pentagon for failed audits

A bipartisan group of Senators have introduced a bill that would penalize the Pentagon for failing to pass an audit.

The Audit the Pentagon Act of 2021, led by Senate Budget Committee Chairman Bernie SandersBernie SandersSenators introducing bill to penalize Pentagon for failed audits Sanders to offer resolution on Israeli-Palestinian cease-fire Briahna Joy Gray: Pentagon’s reported plans for monitoring personnel’s social media is ‘warrantless surveillance’ MORE (I-Vt.), centers around the Pentagon’s failure to pass an independent financial audit for the past several decades.

The bill would require military agencies to pass a full independent look at their finances every year beginning in fiscal 2022. Each year that any of the agencies fails to obtain a clean audit, one percent of their budget would be returned to the Treasury Department.

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“The Pentagon and the military industrial complex have been plagued by a massive amount of waste, fraud and financial mismanagement for decades. That is absolutely unacceptable,” Sanders, who co-sponsored the bill with Sens. Chuck GrassleyChuck GrassleySenators introducing bill to penalize Pentagon for failed audits Democratic AGs write to Senate backing Biden ATF nominee Bipartisan agreement on need for better information about college costs MORE (R-Iowa), Ron WydenRonald (Ron) Lee WydenSenators introducing bill to penalize Pentagon for failed audits Senators express bipartisan interest in reviving infrastructure financing tool Democrats urge DOJ to stop searching journalists’ phone records MORE (D-Ore.) and Mike LeeMichael (Mike) Shumway LeeSenators introducing bill to penalize Pentagon for failed audits Overnight Energy: Colonial Pipeline says it has restored full service | Biden urges people not to panic about gasoline shortages | EPA rescinds Trump-era cost-benefit rule Senate panel advances Biden’s deputy Interior pick MORE (R-Utah), said in a statement. “If we are serious about spending taxpayer dollars wisely and effectively, we have got to end the absurdity of the Pentagon being the only agency in the federal government that has not passed an independent audit.”

The Defense Department in December 2017 launched a major effort to meticulously comb its books — the first comprehensive audit of the agency in its history — but failed that audit, as well as the next two that were held. All three efforts received a “disclaimer of opinion,” as the accounting records needed to complete the assessment were not available. 

Congress since 1990 has mandated federal agencies to comply with annual audits by the Government Accountability Office. All have been able to satisfy such requirements since fiscal 2013. 

But the Pentagon, which makes up for more than half of the U.S. discretionary budget, remains the only federal agency unable to pass such scrutiny, as it has never detailed its assets and liabilities in a given year. 

The lawmakers who cosponsored the bill reason that the Pentagon has been unable to have a successful independent audit due to years of financial mismanagement stemming from program cost overruns, redundant efforts and misplaced funds.

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“We’ve seen example after example of excessive and inefficient spending by the Pentagon, and every dollar squandered is a dollar not being used to support our men and women in uniform,” Grassley said in the statement. “After 30 years to get ready, this bill pushes the Defense Department to finally achieve a clean annual audit– a requirement that every other federal agency is held to.”

Pentagon officials, meanwhile, say the department is difficult to audit due to its massive size and numerous assets that range from personnel and supplies to bases and weapons. 

In the 2017 audit, for example, at least 2,400 Pentagon auditors surveyed the department’s estimated $2.4 trillion in resources across more than 24 stand-alone audits and an overarching consolidated audit. The effort took nearly a year to complete and cost $367 million.

“We failed the audit, but we never expected to pass it,” then-Deputy Secretary of Defense Patrick ShanahanPatrick Michael ShanahanSenators introducing bill to penalize Pentagon for failed audits Overnight Defense: National Guard boosts DC presence ahead of inauguration | Lawmakers demand probes into troops’ role in Capitol riot | Financial disclosures released for Biden Pentagon nominee Biden Pentagon pick could make up to .7M from leaving Raytheon MORE told reporters at the time. He added that with each audit, the department would gain more clarity on its finances. 

Only a handful of Defense Department agencies have since met auditing requirements as of 2021.

Sanders to offer resolution on Israeli-Palestinian cease-fire

Sen. Bernie SandersBernie SandersSenators introducing bill to penalize Pentagon for failed audits Sanders to offer resolution on Israeli-Palestinian cease-fire Briahna Joy Gray: Pentagon’s reported plans for monitoring personnel’s social media is ‘warrantless surveillance’ MORE (I-Vt.), a leading progressive voice in Congress, will offer a resolution on the Senate floor Wednesday calling for an immediate cease-fire between the Israel Defense Forces and Hamas.

Sanders will ask senators to adopt his resolution by unanimous consent at 4:30 p.m. Wednesday.

It states that “whereas every Palestinian life matters” and “every Israeli life matters,” the Senate urges an immediate cease-fire to prevent further loss of life and further escalation of the conflict in Israeli and Palestinian territories.

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The resolution also says the Senate supports diplomatic efforts to resolve the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, to uphold international law and to protect the human rights of Israelis and Palestinians.

Sanders’s proposal is worded more moderately than recent statements by other high-profile progressives, such as Reps. Alexandria Ocasio-CortezAlexandria Ocasio-CortezOvernight Defense: Progressives launch long-shot bid to block Israel arms sale | Top GOP lawmakers oppose DC National Guard quick reaction force | DHS requests Pentagon extend southern border deployment Sanders to offer resolution on Israeli-Palestinian cease-fire Ocasio-Cortez leading effort to block arms sale to Israel MORE (D-N.Y.) and Rashida TlaibRashida Harbi TlaibOvernight Defense: Progressives launch long-shot bid to block Israel arms sale | Top GOP lawmakers oppose DC National Guard quick reaction force | DHS requests Pentagon extend southern border deployment Sanders to offer resolution on Israeli-Palestinian cease-fire Ocasio-Cortez leading effort to block arms sale to Israel MORE (D-Mich.).

Ocasio-Cortez is planning to introduce a resolution to disapprove of a $735 million U.S. weapons sale to Israel. The Democratic chairmen of the Senate Foreign Relations and House Foreign Affairs committees have already signed off on the sale.

“The United States should not be rubber-stamping weapons sales to the Israeli government as they deploy our resources to target international media outlets, schools, hospitals, humanitarian missions and civilian sites for bombing. We have a responsibility to protect human rights,” Ocasio-Cortez tweeted on Wednesday.