2 Polls Split on Who Is Winning US Senate Race in Alabama

Four-decade-old sexual misconduct allegations against Alabama Republican Roy Moore are playing a major role for voters in his campaign for a U.S. Senate seat, but nine days ahead of the election two major polls are split whether he is ahead of Democrat Doug Jones.  

A CBS News/YouGov poll on Sunday said Moore, twice deposed from the Alabama Supreme Court for failing to adhere to federal court rulings, is ahead of Jones, a former federal prosecutor, by a 49-to-43 percent margin among likely voters.  A day earlier, The Washington Post-Schar School survey showed Jones ahead, 50-47.

The December 12 contest has been roiled by accusations from two women who alleged that Moore, when he was a local prosecutor in early 30s, sexually abused them when they were teenagers, while other women, now also in their 50s, said that Moore pursued them for dates when they were teens.

The CBS poll said that Republicans, by a 71-17 percent margin, think the allegations are false and that they believe Democrats and the media are behind the accusations.  One of the accusers, one of whom was 14 at the time, first told her account in the Post, while a second woman held a news conference.  The Post’s poll similarly showed Republicans’ disbelief about the allegations, with fewer than one in six Republican-leaning likely voters believing that Moore made unwanted sexual advances against the girls.

The CBS poll said half of Moore’s supporters are backing him because they want a senator who would cast votes for conservative causes, rather than because they think he is the best candidate in the election.  The Post said its survey showed that a quarter of voters say moral conduct will be the deciding factor if how they decide to vote, with Jones winning such voters over Moore by a 67-30 margin.

The election is for the last three years of the seat once held by Jeff Sessions, who resigned it to join President Donald Trump’s Cabinet as attorney general, the country’s top law enforcement official.

Trump has said Jones would prove to be an unwanted liberal vote in the Senate representing a deeply conservative state.  Other key Republicans have called for Moore to drop out of the race, including Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and House Speaker Paul Ryan and two former Republican presidential nominees, Mitt Romney and Senator John McCain.

Some Republicans say that Moore, if he wins and is seated in the Senate, should then be immediately expelled because of the sexual misconduct allegations.  McConnell on Sunday said it is up to Alabama voters to decide the election and that should Moore win, it would be up to the Senate Ethics Committee to consider the women’s accusations.

Kushner: Trump Yet to Decide on Recognizing Jerusalem as Israel’s Capital

U.S. President Donald Trump has not yet made a decision on whether he will officially recognize Jerusalem as the capital of Israel, his adviser and son-in-law Jared Kushner said Sunday.

“He’s still looking at a lot of different facts, and when he makes his decision, he’ll be the one to want to tell you, not me,” Kushner said at an annual conference on U.S. policy in the Middle East in Washington, D.C.

Kushner’s comments follow reports in the past few days that Trump will most likely declare Jerusalem as the capital of Israel during a speech scheduled for next Wednesday.

The move, which comes after months of internal deliberations, would likely to inflame tensions across the Middle East and complicate the administration’s efforts to negotiate a peace deal between Israelis and Palestinians.

Under a law signed by President Bill Clinton in 1995, the embassy must be relocated to Jerusalem from Tel Aviv unless the president signs a waiver every six months stating that the matter is to be decided between the Israelis and Palestinians. Every president since Clinton has signed the waiver, including Trump, who did so when it came due in June.

Саакашвілі закликає українців знову зібратися на акцію наступної неділі

Лідер партії «Рух нових сил», екс-президент Грузії Міхеїл Саакашвілі закликає українців зібратися наступної неділі, 10 грудня на Майдані Незалежності.

Виступаючи 3 грудня на мітингу на Європейській площі, Саакашвілі повідомив, що його «Рух нових сил» разом з іншими організаціями створюють комітети з імпічменту у всіх регіонах України і анонсував новий мітинг 10 грудня вже на Майдані Незалежності, якщо за тиждень не будуть виконані висунуті раніше до влади вимоги – ухвалення у парламенті закону про імпічмент президента, створення антикорупційного суду.

«Я не закликаю ставити намети. Але ми будемо стояти на Майдані. Може, трохи зрушимо наверх (до президентської адміністрації, – ред.) і не будемо допускати президента до робочого місця. Навіть якщо мене витиснуть з України, зберіться разом і витисніть цих чиновників з їхніх кабінетів», – закликав Міхеїл Саакашвілі.

29 листопада Міхеїл Саакашвілі заявив, що президент Порошенко віддав розпорядження Генпрокуратурі і СБУ про його арешт найближчим часом, а 30 листопада Державна міграційна служба України продовжила термін перебування в країні позбавленого українського громадянства Саакашвілі ще на три місяці, до 1 березня 2018 року. Проте, лідер «РНС» не виключає, що в будь-який момент його можуть видворити з України в Грузію або в Польщу.

Після завершення 3 грудня акції так званого «народного імпічменту» президента України Петра Порошенка, яку влаштувала партія Саакашвілі «Рух нових сил» і ще деякі політичні організації, учасники розійшлися, поліція відновила рух транспорту.

Поліція Києва повідомляла, що в перебігу акції ситуація була спокійна і контрольована. Публічну безпеку і правопорядок на центральних вулицях Києва забезпечували 1 тисяча 200 правоохоронців – працівників Нацполіції і військовослужбовців Нацгвардії.

Поліція повідомила про 2 з половиною тисячі учасників акції.

Агентства і засоби інформації переважно повідомляли про три – п’ять тисяч учасників.

У «Русі нових сил» натомість стверджували, що в акції брали участь 20 тисяч осіб.

Mattis Won’t ‘Prod’ Pakistan During Visit

U.S. Defense Secretary Jim Mattis says he does not plan to “prod” Pakistan, but expects it adhere to its promises to combat terrorism, as he embarks on his first visit to Islamabad as Pentagon chief.

Speaking aboard a military plane, Mattis said he does not expect to butt heads during his Monday meetings with Pakistani Prime Minister Shahid Khaqan Abbasi and Army Chief Qamar Javed Bajwa.

“That’s not the way I deal with issues,” Mattis said. “I believe that we [can] work hard on finding common ground and then we work together.”

In October, Mattis warned the United States is willing to work “one more time” with Pakistan before taking “whatever steps are necessary” to address its alleged support for militants.

But on Sunday, Mattis said he is focused on trying to find “more common ground … by listening to one another without being combative.”

The United States has for a decade accused Pakistan of sheltering or having ties to terrorists, such as the Haqqani Network and the Afghan Taliban, which attack NATO coalition forces in neighboring Afghanistan.

Islamabad rejects the accusation, saying Washington is scapegoating Pakistan for its own failures in Afghanistan, where the United States remains in a stalemate after 16 years of war.

Tougher stance

Before Mattis’ visit, other Trump administration officials are taking a harder public stance on Pakistan.

Speaking at a defense forum Saturday, CIA director Mike Pompeo said, “We are going to do everything we can to ensure that safe havens no longer exist,” if Pakistan does not heed the U.S. message on militants.

Since 2004, the CIA has conducted drone strikes – mostly against al-Qaida and Pakistani Taliban targets – in northwest Pakistan, near the border with Afghanistan.

The United States is considering expanding those strikes, along with several other measures, according to media reports.

Other options include downgrading Pakistan’s status as a major non-NATO ally or sanctioning individual Pakistani leaders suspected having ties with the Taliban.

But any kind of punitive action wouldn’t take place for at least a few weeks at minimum, predicts Michael Kugelman, a South Asia analyst with the Woodrow Wilson Center.

“I think [the administration] wants to give the Pakistanis a bit more time to see if they’re responding to the various demands the United States made of them when it comes to cracking down on terrorists,” said Kugelman.

One of the likelier U.S. responses, according to Kugelman, is expanding not only the geographic scope of the drone war, but also widening the type of targets the United States goes after.

“I think we could start seeing the U.S. trying to target more Haqqani Network and Afghan Taliban targets,” especially in the sparsely populated Baluchistan and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa provinces, he said.

The Trump administration has also threatened cut off aid to Pakistan. Since 2002, the United States has given over $33 billion in assistance to Pakistan. But the aid has already been cut sharply in recent years.

Pakistani leverage?

If ties were to deteriorate, the United States also has much to lose. Pakistan controls U.S. military supply routes to landlocked Afghanistan, and could close them down, as they did in 2011. The United States would also like Pakistan to scale back its nuclear modernization, improve ties with India, and stay engaged in the broader fight against Islamic militants.

But despite the risks, Michael O’Hanlon, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, warns Washington appears to be running out of patience.

“For many years we were trying to hold out hope that the Pakistanis would change their mind about Afghanistan and our role there,” he said. “But those kinds of hopes aren’t as prevalent anymore. And on balance, therefore, I think we are closer to using some of those tougher methods.”

Mattis, who is on a regional tour that also took him to Egypt, Jordan, and Kuwait, wouldn’t elaborate on any possible U.S. action. But he says the situation is pressing.

“There’s always an urgency to something when 39 nations plus Afghanistan have their troops in the midst of a long war where casualties are being taken,” he said.

Радник США з нацбезпеки підтвердив дотеперішній курс щодо надання військової допомоги України

Радник адміністрації США з національної безпеки Герберт Раймонд МакМастер підтвердив, що США продовжують свій курс на надання Україні нелетальної військової допомоги.

Виступаючи 2 грудня на Форумі з національної оборони імені колишнього президента США Рональда Рейгана, який проводить Фонд Рейгана у США, на запитання ведучого: «Під час передвиборчої кампанії допомога Україні була одним із її моментів. Чи політика адміністрації США щодо цього далі така сама?» МакМастер відповів: «Так, ми продовжуємо зміцнювати обороноздатність України. Як усі знають, це ґрунтується на наданні нелетальної допомоги».

Але, за його словами, «українці самі дуже здатні». Як сказав МакМастер, в Україні нині здійснюють значні реформи урядування, а також військові реформи.

«Я думаю, російським маріонеткам, Росії було б надзвичайно важко отримати якісь значні здобутки, якби вони вирішили розширити території, які вони контролюють після вторгнення в Україну», – додав він.

За повідомленнями, під час передвиборної кампанії Дональд Трамп, пізніше обраний президентом США, особисто наполіг на тому, щоб із програми Республіканської партії США вилучили вимогу про надання Україні озброєнь летальної дії. Таку вимогу республіканці хотіли внести на противагу позиції тодішнього президента Барака Обами, представника Демократичної партії, який виступав проти надання Україні летальних озброєнь.

Після приходу Трампа до влади він наразі продовжує лінію свого попередника. Тим часом серед американських політиків і високопосадовців, зокрема й військових, дедалі частіше лунають заклики змінити цей підхід. За повідомленнями, в адміністрації Трампа вже розглядають можливість таки надати Україні й озброєння летальної дії, але рішення ще не ухвалене, і невідомо, коли таке рішення в той чи інший бік може настати.

Російський викривач допінгу: на іграх-2014 у Сочі хотіли «підставити» українку Віту Семеренко

За словами Родченкова, заступник міністра спорту Росії був особливо занепокоєний українськими біатлоністками, які становили найсерйознішу загрозу російській команд

Nevada Gambling Leaders Grapple with Pot’s Future in Casinos

A committee exploring the effects of recreational marijuana on Nevada’s gambling industry is wrestling with how the state’s casinos might deal with the pot business while not running afoul of federal law.

Lured by a potential economic impact in the tens of millions of dollars, Gov. Brian Sandoval’s Gaming Policy Committee is trying to figure out how casinos can host conventions and trade shows on marijuana.

The 12-member committee ended its meeting Wednesday without a formal decision on the matter, but Sandoval said he hopes to have committee recommendations for possible regulations by February.

The Nevada Gaming Commission has discouraged licensees in the past from becoming involved with the marijuana business, fearing legal backlash. Committee members have also voiced opposition to the idea of allowing marijuana use at resorts.

However, events like MJBizCon, a conference on various aspects of the marijuana growing industry, have drawn the attention of the gambling industry because of their strong turnout.

Cassandra Farrington, who started the conference, told the committee that the event brought about 18,000 people to the Las Vegas Convention Center last month and it’s only expected to grow. She noted that marijuana products are not allowed on the show floor, and people who violate that ruled are expelled.

Trade shows like Farrington’s conference can generate millions of dollars in tax revenue, said Deonne Contine, the director of the Nevada Department of Taxation. Contine told the committee that a show with about 15,000 people can produce a $28.2 million economic impact on the city.

Attorney Brian Barnes said any marijuana business in gambling facilities could be considered racketeering or money laundering under federal regulations.

“Marijuana business is illegal under virtually every aspect of federal law,” Barnes said.

Rising Number of Young Americans Are Leaving Jobs to Farm

Liz Whitehurst dabbled in several careers before she ended up on a Maryland farm, crating fistfuls of fresh-cut arugula in the November chill.

The hours were better at her nonprofit jobs. So were the benefits. But two years ago, Whitehurst, 32 — who graduated from a liberal arts college and grew up in the Chicago suburbs — abandoned Washington for a three-acre plot in Upper Marlboro, Maryland.

She joined a growing movement of highly educated, ex-urban, first-time farmers who are capitalizing on booming consumer demand for local and sustainable foods and who, experts say, could have a broad impact on the food system.

For only the second time in the last century, the number of farmers under 35 years old is increasing, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s latest Census of Agriculture. Sixty-nine percent of the surveyed young farmers had college degrees — significantly higher than the general population.

This new generation can’t hope to replace the numbers that farming is losing to age. But it is already contributing to the growth of the local-food movement and could help preserve the place of midsize farms in the rural landscape.

“We’re going to see a sea change in American agriculture as the next generation gets on the land,” said Kathleen Merrigan, the head of the Food Institute at George Washington University and a deputy secretary at the Department of Agriculture under President Barack Obama. “The only question is whether they’ll get on the land, given the challenges.”

The number of farmers aged 25 to 34 grew 2.2 percent between 2007 and 2012, according to the 2014 USDA census, a period when other groups of farmers — save the oldest — shrank by double digits. In some states, such as California, Nebraska and South Dakota, the number of beginning farmers has grown by 20 percent or more.

New to farming

A survey that the National Young Farmers Coalition, an advocacy group, conducted with Merrigan’s help shows that the majority of young farmers did not grow up in agricultural families.

They are also far more likely than the general farming population to grow organically, limit pesticide and fertilizer use, diversify their crops or animals, and be deeply involved in their local food systems via community-supported agriculture (CSA) programs and farmers markets.

Today’s young farmers also tend to operate small farms of less than 50 acres, though that number increases with each successive year of experience.

Whitehurst took over her farm, Owl’s Nest, from a retiring farmer in 2015.

The farm sits at the end of a gravel road, a series of vegetable fields unfurling from a steep hill capped by her tiny white house. Like the farmer who worked this land before her, she leases the house and the fields from a neighboring couple in their 70s.

She grows organically certified peppers, cabbages, tomatoes and salad greens from baby kale to arugula, rotating her fields to enrich the soil and planting cover crops in the off-season.

On Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays, she and two longtime friends from Washington wake up in semidarkness to harvest by hand, kneeling in the mud to cut handfuls of greens before the sun can wilt them. All three young women, who also live on the farm, make their living off the produce Whitehurst sells, whether to restaurants, through CSA shares or at a D.C. farmers market.

Finances can be tight. The women admit they’ve given up higher standards of living to farm.

“I wanted to have a positive impact, and that just felt very distant in my other jobs out of college,” Whitehurst said. “In farming, on the other hand, you make a difference. Your impact is immediate.”

Larger impact

That impact could grow as young farmers scale up and become a larger part of the commercial food system, Merrigan said.

Already, several national grocery chains, including Walmart and SuperValu, have built out local-food-buying programs, according to AT Kearney, a management consulting firm.

Young farmers are also creating their own “food hubs,” allowing them to store, process and market food collectively, and supply grocery and restaurant chains at a price competitive with national suppliers.

That’s strengthening the local and organic food movement, experts say.

“I get calls all the time from farmers — some of the largest farmers in the country — asking me when the local and organic fads will be over,” said Eve Turow Paul, a consultant who advises farms and food companies on millennial preferences. “It’s my pleasure to tell them: Look at this generation. Get on board or go out of business.”

There are also hopes that the influx of young farmers could provide some counter to the aging of American agriculture.

The age of the average American farmer has crept toward 60 over several decades, risking the security of midsize family farms where children aren’t interested in succeeding their parents.

Between 1992 and 2012, the country lost more than 250,000 midsize and small commercial farms, according to the USDA. During that same period, more than 35,000 very large farms started up, and the large farms already in existence consolidated their acreage.

Midsize farms are critical to rural economies, generating jobs, spending and tax revenue. And while they’re large enough to supply mainstream markets, they’re also small enough to respond to environmental changes and consumer demand.

If today’s young farmers can continue to grow their operations, said Shoshanah Inwood, a rural sociologist at Ohio State University, they could bolster these sorts of farms — and in the process prevent the land from falling into the hands of large-scale industrial operations or residential developers.

“Multigenerational family farms are shrinking. And big farms are getting bigger,” Inwood said. “For the resiliency of the food system and of rural communities, we need more agriculture of the middle.”

Numbers are still small

It’s too early to say whether young farmers will effect that sort of change.

The number of young farmers entering the field is not nearly large enough to replace the number exiting, according to the USDA: Between 2007 and 2012, agriculture gained 2,384 farmers between ages 25 and 34 — and lost nearly 100,000 between 45 and 54.

And young farmers face formidable challenges to starting and scaling their businesses. The costs of farmland and farm equipment are prohibitive. Young farmers are frequently dependent on government programs, including child-care subsidies and public health insurance, to cover basic needs.

And student loan debt — which 46 percent of young farmers consider a “challenge,” according to the National Young Farmers Coalition — can strain already tight finances and disqualify them from receiving other forms of credit.

But Lindsey Lusher Shute, the executive director of the coalition, said she has seen the first wave of back-to-the-landers grow up in the eight years since she co-founded the advocacy group. And she suggested that new policy initiatives, including student loan forgiveness and farm transition programs, could further help them.

“Young farmers tend to start small and sell to direct markets, because that’s a viable way for them to get into farming,” Lusher Shute said. “But many are shifting gears as they get into it — getting bigger or moving into wholesale.”

Just last year, Whitehurst was approached by an online grocery service that wanted to buy her vegetables. Because While Owl’s Nest produces too little to supply such a large buyer on its own, the service planned to buy produce from multiple small, local farmers.

Whitehurst ultimately turned the deal down, however. Among other things, she feared that she could not afford to sell her vegetables at the lower price point the service wanted.

“For now, I’m focused on getting better, not bigger,” she said. “But in a few years, who knows? Ask me again then.”

China’s Ceramics Capital Struggles to Adapt Amid War on Smog

The city of Zibo, China’s ceramics capital, is undergoing environmental shock therapy to clear its filthy skies and transform its economy — and not everyone is happy.

Much of Zibo’s sprawling industrial district has become a ghost town of shuttered factories, empty showrooms and abandoned restaurants after a cleanup campaign that began last year intensified this winter. Dozens of chimneys stand inactive.

“There used to be a lot of workers here, but now they are demolishing the entire place,” said a caretaker who gave his surname as Wei, pointing at the deserted warehouse of an abandoned factory he was guarding. “We have no idea what they will build here — that’s the boss’s decision.”

Zibo, home to 4.5 million people about 260 miles south of Beijing in Shandong province, is one of 28 northern Chinese cities targeted in an unprecedented six-month anti-pollution blitz as China scrambles to meet air quality targets.

The city is also at the heart of a wider, long-term government effort to upgrade China’s heavy industrial economy.

Once responsible for about a quarter of China’s ceramic output, mainly floor and wall tiles, Zibo has slashed capacity by 70 percent and shut more than 150 companies and 250 production lines as part of a ruthless war on pollution.

Surviving plants have rushed to comply with tough new standards, but business is still threatened by constant production suspensions ordered by the government, as well as natural gas shortages this winter as northern cities switch to the fuel from coal.

“It is a brave step that China is taking, but they have to take it,” said Alex Koszo, the founder of Vecor, a Hong Kong-based company that has built a joint-venture plant in Zibo to manufacture environmentally friendly tiles from fly ash.

“They have the will, the money, and access to technology, so I think we are looking at a very different Zibo, and a very different Shandong, in five to 10 years.”

The local environmental bureau declined to be interviewed, telling Reuters that cleanup efforts were “still at an early stage” — but changes are already conspicuous.

With old factories marked for demolition, new apartment blocks, shopping complexes and roads are being built. The city registered growth of 7.8 percent in the first three-quarters of this year, driven by the service sector, according to the local government. Displaced workers have shifted to construction sites and other industries like textiles, residents said.

Zibo has also established a “greentech” incubator in the old district and opened a new high-tech industrial park in order to attract companies and encourage innovation in ceramics.

But some local businessmen accuse Beijing of running roughshod over local industry and paying too little heed to circumstances on the ground, with one boss accusing inspectors of behaving like “imperial envoys.”

“There is a ring of 28 cities, and pollution only needs to appear in Beijing — even just medium-level pollution — and all our factories have to shut,” said the owner of a large local factory who declined to be named, fearing repercussions. “It doesn’t matter whether you meet the standards or not, you have to shut.”

Upgrades

Over the past decade, Zibo’s ceramics makers took advantage of closures elsewhere to drive up output and seize market share in China. Zibo’s tiles were used throughout China and exported around the world. In recent years, however, the industry was weighed down by poor quality and chronic overcapacity that eroded prices and exposed the sector to European Union anti-dumping measures.

Beijing’s war on pollution served as an opportunity to tackle those problems. Now, the mainstay of the local economy is a shadow of its former self.

With annual production capacity slashed to 246 million square meters, compared with 827 million square meters before the campaign began, the government hopes surviving manufacturers can upgrade and compete with higher-end producers.

“I think the steps the government is taking now will push the costs up, and therefore the price of the goods will be up and the quality will meet international standards,” said Koszo.

But the local factory owner said the campaign has inflicted long-term damage, eroding cost advantages and driving customers away.

“If Zibo was the only place producing tiles in the whole country, then it wouldn’t be a problem. But this is an unfair policy. They are closing us but not others,” he said.

Stop-start production

Environmental officials deny the pollution crackdown or the heightened vigilance of inspectors will cause deep harm to China’s economy, saying any losses would be compensated by the long-term benefits of clean investment.

But in Zibo, even environmentally compliant manufacturers are losing customers. The factory owner said he has lost 80 percent of domestic clients and half his overseas ones, with many frustrated by the stop-start nature of production.

Zibo’s ceramics companies are not only hit by emergency closures aimed at curbing smog. A year ago, they were ordered to switch from coal to gas, but suppliers are giving priority to residential winter heating.

“People are losing patience and manufacturing is shifting to the south,” said Bryan Vadas, director at the Tile Agencies Group in Australia, which used to source products for export from Zibo but has now started buying elsewhere.

Environment Minister Li Ganjie said this year that China would not adopt an “indiscriminate one-size-fits-all approach,” adding that companies have plenty of leeway to clean up and survive.

“Only enterprises that have no clear survival value, pollute heavily and have no hope of being rectified will be shut down,” Li said.

But local enterprises have struggled to cope with repeated policy changes, with industry entry requirements adjusted four times in less than two years, the local factory owner said.

“I have worked hard to build up this business,” he said.

“Personally, I just think the government should tell us directly that they don’t want us to stay in operation. There’s no need for them to torture me.”

Palestinians to US: Don’t Recognize Jerusalem as Israeli Capital

The Palestinians are warning the United States against recognizing Jerusalem as the capital of Israel.

Mahmoud Habash, an adviser to Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, said Saturday that if President Donald Trump were to do so, it would amount to a “complete destruction of the peace process.”

Speaking in Abbas’ presence, Habash said “the world will pay the price” for any change in Jerusalem’s status.

Officials in Washington say Trump is considering recognizing Jerusalem as Israel’s capital as a way to offset his likely decision to delay his campaign promise to move the U.S. Embassy there. 

Israel regards Jerusalem as its capital, a position nearly the entire world rejects, saying its status should be determined in peace talks with the Palestinians. The Palestinians claim the eastern part of the city as their future capital.

Greece, Creditors Agree on New Package of Reforms

Greece’s finance minister said Saturday that an agreement had been reached between the heavily indebted country and its creditors on its progress in implementing reforms.

The agreement on the so-called Third Assessment of Greece’s latest bailout program will allow Greece to receive fresh funds next year, after implementing workplace reforms, speeding up the settlement of bad loans, tightening up rules for family subsidies and selling off state-owned power plants.

European monetary affairs commissioner Pierre Moscovici also announced that a “staff-level agreement” had been reached, meaning that although creditor representatives were involved, the European Union’s finance ministers must approve the agreement, which they are expected to do Monday.

Finance minister Euclid Tsakalotos said Greece would have to vote on at least two major bills by January 22 to implement the agreement.

У Росії пообіцяли швидко відновити «нормандські» контакти щодо України

Міністр закордонних справ Росії Сергій Лавров заявив, що переговори про врегулювання в Україні в так званому «нормандському форматі», а саме за лінією помічників керівників держав, відновляться «ближчим часом».

Говорячи про це в інтерв’ю білоруському телеканалові «СТВ», Лавров не уточнив, коли саме можуть поновитися ці контакти.

При цьому, сказав Лавров, «абсолютно безальтернативним документом, що дозволяє врегулювати цю кризу», залишається Мінський комплекс заходів – одна з трьох мінських домовленостей, ухвалена в лютому 2015 року.

Він не згадав про дві попередні мінські домовленості, від вересня 2014 року, що так само лишаються чинними.

Москва уникає згадок про них, зокрема, тому, що Комплекс заходів, узятий окремо, передбачає повернення Україні контролю за її кордоном на нині окупованій частині Донбасу лише як найостанніший крок урегулювання. Нині через цю ділянку кордону здійснюється неконтрольоване переміщення на окуповані території все нових озброєнь, боєприпасів і живої сили для гібридних російських сил у регіоні. Київ нагадує, що, за вересневими домовленостями, на цій ділянці кордону ще тоді мала бути створена зона безпеки з обох його сторін під контролем і за верифікації ОБСЄ – що унеможливило б безконтрольність згаданого пересування.

«Нормандським» називають створений іще 2014 року формат переговорів про врегулювання на окупованій частині сходу України у складі представників чотирьох держав: України, Росії, Німеччини і Франції.

Раніше зустріч зовнішньополітичних радників керівників чотирьох держав анонсували на серпень, але повідомлень про те, чи відбулася вона, не було. Самі керівники держав час від часу проводять чотиристоронні телефонні переговори, востаннє наразі наприкінці серпня.

Москва підтвердила можливість зустрічі Тіллерсона з Лавровим із обговоренням України

У Москві заявили про можливість зустрічі голів зовнішньополітичних відомств США і Росії наступного тижня, про яку раніше як про вже досягнену домовленість повідомляв Вашингтон.

Як заявили в Міністерстві закордонних справ Росії, зустріч голови МЗС Сергія Лаврова і державного секретаря США Рекса Тіллерсона під час перебування обох в австрійському Відні 7–8 грудня «проробляється».

За словами представника прес-служби міністерства, Тіллерсон і Лавров «продовжать жваві переговори з багатьох міжнародних тем, включно з КНДР, Україною і Сирією».

Попереднього дня, 1 грудня, у Державному департаменті США у Вашингтоні повідомили, що зустріч Тіллерсона з Лавровим у Відні на полях саміту голів зовнішньополітичних відомств країн-членів Організації з безпеки і співпраці в Європі вже запланована, лише узгоджується її дата – найімовірніше, 7 грудня.

Представник Держдепартаменту, що виступав перед журналістами на умовах анонімності, повідомив, що переговори будуть стосуватися багатьох глобальних питань, зокрема Північної Кореї, України і Сирії.

За словами представника, в перебігу зустрічі ОБСЄ також значна увага буде приділена Україні, у врегулюванні в якій ОБСЄ, зокрема її Спеціальна моніторингова місія в Україні, відіграє значну роль.

«Держсекретар дійсно сприймає близько до серця… безпеку українського народу на сході, на окупованих територіях, які далі лишаються ціллю воєнних операцій із заохоченням і участю сил із Росії», – сказав посадовець.

Крім того, додав представник, США продовжують переговори з російською стороною щодо України через зустрічі спецпредставника Держдепартаменту Курта Волкера і помічника президента Росії Владислава Суркова.

Як сказав посадовець Держдепартаменту, майбутнє врегулювання в Україні має відповідати мінським домовленостям, які укладалися у вересні 2014 і в лютому 2015 року.

При цьому представник наголосив: «Це має бути результат, за якого сили ООН охопили б усю спірну територію (тобто окуповану територію – ред.), а не просто затвердили б успіхи, яких там досягли росіяни».

США в переговорах із Росією щодо України повністю підтримують позицію Києва, зокрема в тому, що стосується очікуваних миротворчих сил ООН для окупованої частини Донбасу: що ці сили повинні розташуватися на всій окупованій території, включно з нині непідконтрольною Києву ділянкою українсько-російського кордону, і мати широкий мандат, зокрема стосовно відведення сил і роззброєння незаконних збройних формувань, контролю за зданими озброєннями тощо. Росія продовжує наполягати на своїй версії: щоб сили ООН ні в якому разі не контролювали кордону, а лише охороняли спостерігачів ОБСЄ в точках їхнього патрулювання, головно біля лінії контакту, і не мали ніяких інших повноважень.

Trump Applauds Senate Passage of Republican Tax Overhaul Bill

U.S. President Donald Trump praised the Senate’s early Saturday morning passage of an immense Republican tax overhaul bill, telling reporters outside the White House the measure calls for “the biggest tax cuts in the history of our country.”

Later Saturday at a Republican fundraiser in New York, Trump attributed passage of the bill to semantics.

“For years I said I wonder why they (lawmakers) use the word reform. Because nobody knows what reform means. Reform could mean your taxes are going up. And I said to my guys, I called everybody and we had a meeting — senators, Congress, everybody. I said we have to use the word, ‘tax cuts.’”

Earlier Saturday, Trump praised two top Senate Republicans, Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and Senate Finance Committee Chairman Orrin Hatch, for securing enough votes for passage.

“We are one step closer to delivering MASSIVE tax cuts for working families across America. Special thanks to @SenateMajLdr Mitch McConnell and Chairman @SenOrrinHatch for shepherding our bill through the Senate. Look forward to signing a final bill before Christmas!,” Trump said on Twitter.

The Senate passed the legislation by a 51 to 49 margin without a single Democratic vote, a development Trump said was a political mistake that will haunt Democrats in the 2018 midterm election.

“We got no Democratic help and I think that’s going to cost them very big in the election because basically they voted against tax cuts. And I don’t think politically it’s good to vote against tax cuts.”

The Senate passed the legislation without Democratic support and congressional reaction was also divided along party lines.

House Speaker Paul Ryan commended the Senate and urged congress to act quickly to get a final bill signed into law.

“I look forward to a conference committee so we can get a final bill to the president’s desk,” the Republican lawmaker tweeted.

House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi tweeted that the bill is a “scam” and would result in “Tens of millions of middle class families” being “slapped with a tax hike.”

“In passing the #GOPTaxScam, @SenateGOP has sealed its betrayal of the American middle class. https://goo.gl/fBvQrH.”

Many Democrats, including Senator John Tester, were angry over the way Republicans approved the hastily-written bill in the wee hours of the morning without any public debate.

“I was just handed a 479-page tax bill a few hours before the vote. One page literally has hand scribbled policy changes on it that can’t be read. This is Washington, D.C. at its worst.  Montanans deserve so much better,” Tester wrote on Twitter.

A few more hurdles must be overcome before a final tax package can become law. The Senate bill and a version passed earlier by the House of Representatives must now be reconciled. The reconciled measure must then be approved by both chambers of Congress before it is submitted to the president for him to sign into law.  

Negotiations over the tax measures will take place as Congress simultaneously tries to meet a December 8 deadline for government funding to expire, putting additional pressure on Republicans to get a new tax law on the books before Christmas as requested by Trump.

Українські військові викрили фальшивий лист до ОБСЄ нібито від мешканців Гладосова

Українська сторона Спільного центру контролю і координації повідомила, що викрила фальшивку угруповання «ДНР» у вигляді нібито листа від мешканців селища Гладосова, яке нещодавно взяли під контроль Збройні сили України, до Організації з безпеки і співпраці в Європі.

Як повідомили у прес-центрі штабу української антитерористичної операції проти гібридних російських сил на окупованій частині Донбасу із посиланням на інформацію УС СЦКК, засоби інформації «окремих районів Донецької області» стверджували, ніби мешканці Гладосова звернулися з відкритим листом до першого заступника голови Спеціальної моніторингової місії ОБСЄ в Україні Александра Гуґа. У тому листі, як стверджувалося, «мешканці селища» закликали представника ОБСЄ зафіксувати «факт незаконного захоплення» території і дій українських військовослужбовців, які нібито заарештували і вивезли в невідомому напрямку частину мирного населення.

«Опитування місцевих мешканців показало, що особи, які підписали це звернення, у зазначеному населеному пункті ніколи не проживали. При цьому навіть без проведення спеціалізованої графологічної експертизи видно, що підписи зроблені однією рукою», – повідомили військові.

«Дії керівництва ОРДО щодо фабрикування таких «фейкових» інформаційних повідомлень демонструють свідоме невиконання мінських домовленостей, намагання перекласти відповідальність за загострення ситуації на Збройні сили України та свідчать про зацікавленість у подальшому загостренні конфлікту», – мовиться в повідомленні.

Про листа до Гуґа такого змісту в незаконному сепаратистському збройному угрупованні «ДНР», що підтримується Росією і визнане терористичним в Україні, повідомили 24 листопада. За тим твердженням, Гуґ отримав цього листа попереднього дня, але не коментував його змісту.

Збройні сили України повернули під свій контроль селища Гладосове і сусіднє Травневе неподалік окупованої Горлівки, які, за мінськими домовленостями, належать до територій, підконтрольних Києву, але фактично перебували в так званій «сірій зоні», на початку 20-х чисел листопада.

Останнім часом гібридна російська пропаганда повідомляла про кілька «листів до ОБСЄ» зі скаргами на дії української влади чи військових від нібито мешканців прифронтових міст чи сіл. Зокрема, про принаймні ще один такий лист, нібито від мешканців міста Красногорівки, що поблизу Мар’їнки і окупованого Донецька, заявляли наприкінці листопада.

Trump Says Fired National Security Adviser Michael Flynn’s Actions During Transition ‘Were Lawful’

U.S. President Donald Trump said Saturday the actions of former national security adviser Michael Flynn during Trump’s transition to the White House “were lawful.”

“I had to fire General Flynn because he lied to the Vice President and the FBI. He has pled guilty to those lies. It is a shame because his actions during the transition were lawful. There was nothing to hide!” Trump tweeted between Republican fundraising events in New York.

Flynn pleaded guilty Friday to lying to federal agents, and he has agreed to cooperate with investigators examining allegations of Russian meddling in the 2016 U.S. presidential election and collusion between Moscow and the Trump campaign.

Earlier Saturday, in his first remarks since Flynn entered the guilty plea, Trump said there was “absolutely no collusion” between his presidential campaign and Russia.

“What has been shown is no collusion, no collusion,” Trump told reporters as he left the White House for New York.

Appearing before a federal judge in a packed courtroom in Washington, Flynn, a 59-year-old retired army general, pleaded guilty to one count of making false statements to the Federal Bureau of Investigation about a series of private conversations he had in December 2016 with Russia’s then-ambassador to Washington, Sergey Kislyak.

 

The charge carries a sentence of up to five years in prison, but under U.S. sentencing guidelines the average sentence for the offense ranges from zero to six months.

The guidelines are advisory, but prosecutors agreed to seek a reduced sentence if Flynn provides “substantial assistance” with the investigation being led by special counsel Robert Mueller. No sentencing date was announced.

Guilty plea

As part of his guilty plea, Flynn agreed to “cooperate fully” with  Mueller’s team of investigators, answering questions, providing written statements, taking polygraph exams, and “participating in covert law enforcement activities.” In return, Mueller’s office agreed that Flynn “will not be further prosecuted criminally.”

Flynn is the fourth member of Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign to be charged by Mueller’s team and the first former White House to plead guilty in connection with the Russia investigation.

On Oct. 30, Paul Manafort, a former Trump campaign chairman, and Rick Gates, another senior campaign official, were charged in a 12-count indictment unrelated to the Russia investigation.

 

Another Trump campaign surrogate, George Papadopoulos, secretly pleaded guilty to lying to the FBI about his contacts with the Russian government and is cooperating with the special counsel as well.

Flynn’s decision to cooperate with a probe that could implicate others close to Trump marks a dramatic turnaround for a man who staunchly campaigned for the real estate mogul and promised a hard edge in U.S. foreign policy before being fired for lying about his Kislyak interactions to Vice President Mike Pence.

 

Flynn didn’t know at the time but his phone conversations with Kislyak were all recorded by the FBI as part of its probe into Russian interference.

White House reaction

The White House sought to play down the significance of Flynn’s guilty plea.

White House lawyer Ty Cobb said Flynn’s plea does not implicate “anyone other than Mr. Flynn” and added Flynn was a “former Obama administration official” who served in the Trump White House for only 25 days.

But the plea agreement provided an indication that Mueller sees Flynn’s cooperation as critical to his investigation.

“The trick is we won’t know perhaps for some time how significant it is,” said Steve Vladeck, a professor of law at the University of Texas who closely follows the Russia investigation. “But it’s a strong sign that more is coming. And what’s coming down the pipe probably involves more senior officials and individuals closer to President Trump himself.”

In a statement released after his court appearance Friday, Flynn said, “The actions I acknowledged in court today were wrong, and, through my faith in God, I am working to set things right.”

Flynn was swept up in the Russia probe as the FBI began examining contacts between Russia and Trump campaign officials.

Flynn admitted to lying to the FBI about the conversations he had with the Russian ambassador at the behest of senior Trump transition officials shortly after the election.  

The conversations focused on two foreign policy issues the Trump transition team sought to influence before coming into office: a pending U.N. Security Council resolution condemning Israel for its settlement activities in Palestinian territories and a possible Russian retaliation to sanctions imposed by then-President Barack Obama.  

In two separate conversations — Dec. 22 and Dec. 23, 2016 — Flynn, directed by a “very senior” member of the Trump transition team, called Kislyak to urge him that Russia “vote against or delay” the Security Council resolution. Kisliyak later called back to say Russia would not vote against the resolution.

‘Very senior’ member of transition team

Several U.S. news outlets have identified as the “very senior” member of the transition team as Jared Kushner, Trump’s son-in-law and senior adviser who is leading the White House’s Israeli-Palestinian peace efforts.

Five days later, on Dec. 28, after Obama announced punitive sanctions against Russia over its interference in the election, Kislyak called Flynn, according to prosecutors.

The next day, Dec. 29, Flynn contacted an unnamed senior transition official who was at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort to discuss what to tell Kislyak about the sanctions.

The two discussed the impact of sanctions on Trump’s foreign policy. Immediately after the conversation, Flynn called Kislyak and urged him to “refrain from escalating the situation.”

On Dec. 31, the day after Putin announced that Russia would not retaliate to the U.S. sanctions, Kislyak called Flynn to say that “Russia had chosen not to retaliate” in response to Flynn’s request.  

When confronted by the FBI four days after Trump’s inauguration, Flynn, then the president’s national security adviser, denied everything, according to court documents filed on Friday.

The filing also says Flynn falsely stated he did not remember Kislyak informing him the Kremlin had decided to “moderate its response to those sanctions” in response to Flynn’s request.

The court document says Flynn also falsely claimed the Russian ambassador never described Moscow’s response to that request.

Kusher is scheduled to make public comments about the administration’s Middle East strategy on Monday in Washington, his first expected public remarks since Flynn pleaded guilty, according to VOA’s  Nike Ching.

“Jared Kushner will speak publicly for the first time about the #Trump administration’s approach to the #MiddleEast on Sunday at the Saban Forum in Washington, an annual conference organized by the Center for Middle East Policy at  @BrookingsInst focused on U.S.- #Israel relations.”

 

Risk of Volcanic Ash Cancels Some Bali Flights

Airlines canceled more flights leaving the Indonesian island of Bali on Saturday, citing forecasts of deteriorating flying conditions because of a risk of volcanic ash from the erupting Mount Agung volcano.

A Bali airport spokesman said the airport was operating normally, but airlines such as Jetstar and Virgin Australia had opted to cancel some flights.

“Bali flying conditions expected to be clear throughout the day, but forecast for tonight has deteriorated so several flights have been canceled,” Australian budget airline Jetstar said on its Twitter account Saturday.

Thousands stranded

The erupting volcano had closed the airport for much of this week, stranding thousands of visitors from Australia, China and other countries, before the winds changed and flights resumed. 

Twenty flights were canceled Friday evening because of concerns over ash. Some airlines, including Malaysia’s AirAsia, have said they would only operate out of Bali during the day, because the ash could impair visibility at night and wind conditions in the area were unpredictable.

Airlines avoid flying through volcanic ash because it can damage aircraft engines, clogging fuel and cooling systems, hampering pilot visibility and even causing engine failure.

There are also concerns over changing weather conditions with a tropical cyclone south of Java island affecting weather and wind in the area, including for Bali, the Indonesian Meteorological, Climatological and Geophysics agency said.

Consulates offer aid

Several foreign consulates have set up booths in the international departures area to assist stranded passengers.

Subrata Sarkar, India’s vice consul in Bali, told Reuters at the airport’s international departure area that they had helped around 500 passengers so far this week.

“We have advised citizens the volcano may erupt. We never say ‘please don’t come.’ But we have issued travel advisories. If it’s urgent business, then OK, but if it’s only tourism, then plans should be reconsidered,” Sarkar said.

Former Trump Advisr Michael Flynn Pleads Guilty to Lying to FBI

President Donald Trump’s former national security advisor, retired General Michael Flynn, pleaded guilty Friday to charges of lying to the FBI in connection with the ongoing probe into Russian meddling in the 2016 U.S. presidential election. Flynn has become the first former Trump White House official to face charges and admit guilt in connection with the investigation led by special counsel Robert Mueller. VOA National correspondent Jim Malone has details from Washington.

San Diego Opens Giant Tents for Homeless to Battle Hepatitis A Outbreak

The U.S. city of San Diego has opened the first of three large tents that together will house 700 homeless people in an effort to contain an outbreak of hepatitis A that is being spread among the homeless population.

About 20 people made the tent their temporary home Friday. The first tent erected will house 350 single men and women. The other two tents, which will open later this month, will be for families and veterans.

Bob McElroy of the Alpha Project, the nonprofit group that is operating the tent that opened Friday, said he expects the tent to be filled to capacity by the middle of next week.

City officials are using the tents as a way to get people off the streets where they have been living in such poor conditions that it has led to one of the worst outbreaks of hepatitis A in years. The disease, which is spread through feces, has left 20 people dead and sent hundreds to the hospital.

The new tents will provide a range of services to the homeless, including help with mental health issues, addiction and employment. The tent grounds also include portable showers and toilets.

The tents are not the first of their kind in the city. Officials had previously erected two large tents as winter shelters but took them down two years ago and moved the residents to a local shelter.

Feds Seek to Arrest Immigrant Acquitted of Murdering San Francisco Woman

The U.S. Justice Department has filed an amended arrest warrant for Jose Ines Garcia Zarate, the undocumented Mexican immigrant found not guilty Thursday of murdering a San Francisco woman, in a case highlighted by President Donald Trump in his crackdown on illegal immigrants.

U.S. prosecutors on Friday announced Garcia Zarate’s conviction on a lesser charge, felon in possession of a firearm, meaning he had violated the terms of his supervised release from prison after nearly four years in custody.

Garcia Zarate’s arrest warrant says he violated his release agreement by possessing the gun that killed Kate Steinle on a San Francisco pier two years ago.

A San Francisco Superior Court jury on Thursday acquitted Garcia Zarate of first-degree murder and manslaughter charges, but convicted him of weapons possession. Garcia Zarate had been deported five times and was set to be sent back to Mexico a sixth time when the shooting took place.

He had also been in federal prison for illegally entering the U.S.

With both the arrest warrant from federal prosecutors and a pending sentencing from San Francisco Superior Court, it is not clear which jurisdiction will take precedence.

Garcia Zarate shot and killed Steinle as she was walking across a pier with her father and Garcia Zatare was sitting on a nearby bench.

Prosecutors argued he was playing with a gun, twirling it around his finger, and deliberately fired it intending to hurt anyone passing by.

The defense said the shooting was accidental. It said Garcia Zarate found the weapon wrapped in a cloth under the bench and that it went off when he picked it up.

The lawyers cited testimony from a ballistics expert who said the bullet ricocheted off the ground and hit Steinle in the back.

The gun had been stolen out of the car of a federal Bureau of Land Management ranger. Prosecutors have not challenged the notion that Garcia Zarate had nothing to do with the theft.

As a presidential candidate and after he was elected, Trump repeatedly pointed to Steinle’s killing by an illegal immigrant.

He used the crime as an argument for building a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border and also for signing an executive order denying federal funds to sanctuary cities.

Authorities in sanctuary cities refuse to enforce federal immigration laws that could result in deportation. San Francisco is one such city.

A federal judge recently ruled in favor of San Francisco County in its suit against Trump’s executive order. The administration has appealed.

US Officials Drop Mining Cleanup Rule After Industry Objects

President Donald Trump’s administration announced Friday that it won’t require mining companies to prove they have the financial wherewithal to clean up their pollution, despite an industry legacy of abandoned mines that have fouled waterways across the U.S.

 

The move came after mining groups and Western-state Republicans pushed back against a proposal under former President Barack Obama to make companies set aside money for future cleanup costs.

 

U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Scott Pruitt said modern mining practices and state and federal rules already in place adequately address the risks from mines that are still operating.

Requiring more from mining companies was unnecessary, Pruitt said, and “would impose an undue burden on this important sector of the American economy and rural America, where most of these jobs are based.”

 

The U.S. mining industry has a long history of abandoning contaminated sites and leaving taxpayers to foot the bill for cleanups. Thousands of shuttered mines leak contaminated water into rivers, streams and other waterways, including hundreds of cases in which the EPA has intervened, sometimes at huge expense.

 

The EPA spent $1.1 billion on cleanup work at abandoned hard-rock mining and processing sites across the U.S. from 2010 to 2014.

 

Since 1980, at least 52 mines and mine processing sites using modern techniques had spills or other releases of pollution, according to documents released by the EPA last year.

 

In 2015, an EPA cleanup team accidentally triggered a 3-million gallon spill of contaminated water from Colorado’s inactive Gold King mine, tainting rivers in three states with heavy metals including arsenic and lead.

 

The Obama-era rule was issued last December under court order after environmental groups sued the government to enforce a long-ignored provision in the 1980 federal Superfund law.

 

“It’s galling to see the Trump administration side with industry polluters over the America taxpayer,” said Bonnie Gestring with Earthworks, one of the plaintiffs in the case.

 

“We’ll see them back in court,” she added.

 

The proposal applied to hard-rock mining, which includes precious metals, copper, iron, lead and other ores. Coal mines already were required to provide assurances that they’ll pay for cleanups under a 1977 federal law

 

Hard-rock mining companies would have faced a combined $7.1 billion financial obligation under the dropped rule, costing them up to $171 million annually to set aside sufficient funds to pay for future cleanups, according to an EPA analysis.

 

The mining industry and members of Congress from Western states welcomed Friday’s announcement.

 

National Mining Association President Hal Quinn said the Obama proposal resulted from environmentalists using litigation to force the government into what he said was an unnecessary rule.

 

“Today’s action shows that reason can prevail,” Quinn said.

 

Hard-rock mines in the U.S. produced about $26.6 billion worth of metals in 2015, according to the association. Of those mines, the EPA had said 221 would be subject to the dropped rule.

After Flurry of Deals, Senate GOP Passes Tax Bill

Republicans used a burst of eleventh-hour horse-trading Friday to edge a $1.4 trillion tax bill to passage in the Senate. The bill, passed mostly along party lines, is a giant step toward giving President Donald Trump one of his top priorities by Christmas.

“We have the votes,” Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., declared after leaders swayed holdout senators by agreeing to fatten tax breaks for millions of businesses and let people deduct local property taxes.

Party leaders received Senate approval later Friday on a measure that focuses the bulk of its tax reductions on businesses and higher-earning individuals, gives more modest breaks to others and would be the boldest rewrite of the nation’s tax system since 1986. Debate stretched into Saturday morning as lawmakers waited for Republicans to unveil the final version of their measure.

​Corker balks at debt increase

Republicans touted the package as one that would benefit people of all incomes and ignite the economy. Even an official projection of a $1 trillion, 10-year flood of deeper budget deficits couldn’t dissuade nearly all GOP senators from rallying behind the bill.

“Obviously I’m kind of a dinosaur on the fiscal issues,” said Sen. Bob Corker, R-Tenn., the only announced GOP opponent, who battled to keep the measure from worsening the government’s accumulated $20 trillion in IOUs.

The Republican-led House approved a similar bill last month in what has been a stunningly swift trip through Congress for legislation that impacts the breadth of American society and is hundreds of pages long.

After spending the year’s first nine months futilely trying to repeal President Barack Obama’s health care law, GOP leaders were determined to move the measure rapidly before opposition Democrats and lobbying groups could blow it up. The party views passage as crucial to retaining its House and Senate majorities in next year’s elections.​

​Democrats deride gift to wealthy

Democrats derided the bill as a GOP gift to its wealthy and business backers at the expense of lower-earning people. They contrasted the bill’s permanent reduction in corporate income tax rates from 35 percent to 20 percent to individual tax breaks that would end in 2026.

Congress’ nonpartisan Joint Committee on Taxation has said the bill’s reductions for many families would be modest and said by 2027, families earning less than $75,000 would on average face higher, not lower, taxes.

“Every time the choice is between corporations and families, the Republicans choose corporations,” said Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y.

Democrats took to the Senate floor and social media to mock what they said was a 479-page, amended version of the bill that included changes in barely legible handwriting. They also criticized Sen. Patrick Toomey, R-Pa., for a proposed amendment they said would give a tax break to only conservative Hillsdale College in Michigan. Toomey, one of the chamber’s more conservative members, acknowledged the language would help Hillsdale but said other schools might benefit, too.

​Tax panel: $1 trillion added to debt

The bill hit rough waters Thursday after the Joint Taxation panel concluded it would worsen federal shortfalls by $1 trillion over a decade, even when factoring in economic growth that lower taxes would stimulate.

Trump administration officials and many Republicans have insisted the bill would pay for itself by stimulating the economy. But the sour projections stiffened resistance from some deficit-averse Republicans.

But after bargaining that stretched into Friday morning, McConnell and other leaders said victory was assured in a chamber they control 52-48. Facing unyielding Democratic opposition, Republicans could lose no more than two GOP senators and prevail with a tie-breaking vote from Vice President Mike Pence.

Under the changes leaders agreed to, millions of companies whose owners pay individual, not corporate, taxes on their profits would be allowed deductions of 23 percent, up from 17.4 percent. That helped win over GOP Sens. Ron Johnson of Wisconsin and Steve Daines of Montana.

People would be allowed to deduct up to $10,000 in property taxes, a demand of Sen. Susan Collins of Maine. That matched a House provision that chamber’s leaders included to keep some GOP votes from high-tax states like New York, New Jersey and California.

Collins, a moderate and frequent maverick who opposed her party’s Obamacare repeal drive, said she’d back the tax bill.

The changes added more than $300 billion to the tax bill’s costs. To pay for that, leaders agreed to reduce the number of high-earners who must pay the alternative minimum tax, rather than completely erasing it.

They’d also increase a one-time tax on profits U.S.-based corporations are holding overseas and require firms to keep paying the business version of the alternative minimum tax.

Deal on DACA?

Sen. Jeff Flake, R-Ariz., who, like Corker, had been a holdout and has sharply attacked Trump’s capabilities as president, said he’d back the bill. He said he’d received commitments from party leaders and the administration “to work with me” to restore protections, dismantled by Trump, for young immigrants who arrived in the U.S. illegally as children. That seemed short of a pledge to actually revive the safeguards.

Overall, the Senate bill would drop the highest personal income tax rate from 39.6 percent to 38.5 percent. The estate tax levied on a few thousand of the nation’s largest inheritances would be narrowed to affect even fewer.

Deductions for state and local income taxes, moving expenses and other items would vanish, the standard deduction — used by most Americans — would nearly double to $12,000 for individuals and $24,000 for couples, and the per-child tax credit would grow.

The bill would abolish the “Obamacare” requirement that most people buy health coverage or face tax penalties. Industry experts say that would weaken the law by easing pressure on healthier people to buy coverage, and the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office has said the move would push premiums higher and leave 13 million additional people uninsured.

It would also explicitly let parents buy tax-advantaged 529 college savings accounts for fetuses, a step they can already take but which anti-abortion forces hailed as a victory by inscribing that right into law.

Venezuela Arrests Relative of Powerful ex-Oil Boss Ramirez in Graft Probe

Venezuela has arrested Diego Salazar, a relative of former oil czar Rafael Ramirez, as part of an investigation into a money laundering scandal in Andorra, the South American country’s state prosecutor said on Friday night.

President Nicolas Maduro is overseeing what his administration calls a “crusade” against corruption in the member of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC). Some 65 oil executives have been detained in a deepening purge that could also see the leftist leader consolidate his grip over the energy sector and sideline rivals.

The Salazar case appears to relate to what the United States in 2015 said were some $2 billion in laundered funds from Venezuelan state oil company Petróleos de Venezuela, S.A., known as PDVSA, at the private bank Banca Privada D’Andorra (BPA).

Saab did not specify Salazar’s role or details on the money laundering, except that it involved around 1.35 billion euros in 2011 and 2012, but he said the case was bound to grow.

“I want to highlight that this citizen will likely not be the only one detained and the only one investigated,” Saab said in a phone call to state television announcing the arrest.

The arrest is bound to cast the spotlight on Ramirez, who was the powerful head of PDVSA and the oil ministry for a decade before Maduro demoted him as a envoy to the United Nations in 2014.

A protracted rivalry between Maduro and Ramirez has increased in the recent weeks, sources close to the situation said this week, especially after Ramirez wrote online opinion articles criticizing PDVSA’s production slump and the government’s handling of Venezuela’s crisis-hit economy.

Maduro sacked Ramirez, who was thought to have presidential ambitions, from his job this week and summoned him back to Caracas from New York, the people with knowledge of the situation said.

Ramirez and PDVSA did not respond to a request for comment on Friday. Salazar could not immediately be reached for comment.

Балух про рішення суду: маленька перемога вже є

Український активіст Володимир Балух після виходу з будівлі суду в анексованому Росією Криму, який замінив йому тримання під вартою на домашній арешт, висловив невдоволення рішенням суддів, але при цьому назвав його «маленькою перемогою», повідомляє кореспондент Радіо Свобода.

«Ну це маячня, звичайно. Ви уявіть, мати буде гній кидати, господарством управляти, а я буду в будинку сидіти. Тому що мені заборону наклали … буду тільки в будинку перебувати. Ми, звичайно, будемо оскаржувати це все. А взагалі, перебір це (рішення суду – ред.) має. Хоча маленька перемога вже є», – сказав Балух 1 грудня після виходу з будівлі Роздольненського суду анексованого Криму.

На питання кореспондента, який стан здоров’я Балуха, той коротко відповів: «Жити будемо. Нормально все. Переживемо».

Підконтрольний Кремлю Роздольненський районний суд у Криму 1 грудня вирішив відпустити під домашній арешт українського активіста Володимира Балуха, який перебував у СІЗО.

Як повідомляє кореспондент Радіо Свобода, Балухові заборонили залишати житло, спілкуватися зі свідками й користуватися інтернетом і поштою.

Днями підконтрольний Кремлю Верховний суд Криму задовольнив апеляцію захисту активіста і скасував рішення Роздольненського суду про його арешт.

У серпні 2017 року суд постановив засудити Балуха на три роки і сім місяців колонії. Однак під час розгляду апеляції вирок скасували, і справу відправили на повторний розгляд.

ФСБ Росії затримала а Балуха рік тому, заявивши, що на горищі будинку, де він живе, виявили патрони і тротилові шашки.

Захист активіста і правозахисники заявляють, що він став жертвою репресій за свою проукраїнську позицію.

 

 

Кримський правозахисник заявляє про тортури з боку ФСБ

Житель Ялти в анексованому Росією Криму, правозахисник Юнус Машаріпов заявляє про тортури з боку співробітників Федеральної служби безпеки Росії.

Як повідомляє кореспондент Радіо Свобода, Машаріпов заявив, що в управлінні ФСБ в Ялті його допитували про часті поїздки на материкову Україну. Він розповів, що з 2014 року він займався правозахисною діяльністю, «повідомляючи організаціям про порушення прав дітей, інвалідів, пенсіонерів». Після цього Машаріпова, за його словами, почали бити і катувати електричним струмом. Правозахисник стверджує, що йому довелося обмовити себе. У свідченнях, які, за словами Машаріпова, були отримані під тортурами, він вказав, що був «агентом СБУ і виконував його завдання».

Проти Машаріпова була порушена кримінальна справа за звинуваченням у виготовленні вибухового пристрою.

Раніше Машаріпов у своїй заяві, яку має Радіо Свобода, розповів, що 27 вересня 2017 року невідомі напали на нього, побили, а потім доставили в будівлю управління ФСБ в Ялті. 27 вересня він був заарештований підконтрольним Кремлю Ялтинським міським судом на два місяці за звинуваченням у виготовленні вибухового пристрою. Під час засідання суду обвинувачений заявляв про тортури, однак реакції суду не було. Від надання свідчень Машаріпов відмовився.

«На даний момент співробітники ФСБ загрожують мені розправою, доправленням у психлікарню на все життя через те, що за статтею 51 я відмовився від даних мною показань внаслідок тортур», – зазначив обвинувачений.

У своїй заяві Машаріпов попросив президента України Петра Порошенка захистити його і зробити все можливе для його звільнення. Аналогічну заяву було направлено на ім’я керівника управління ФСБ Росії по анекосваному Криму Віктора Палагіна. Реакція відомства на даний момент невідома.

Верховна Рада України офіційно оголосила 20 лютого 2014 року початком тимчасової окупації Криму і Севастополя Росією. 7 жовтня 2015 року президент України Петро Порошенко підписав відповідний закон. Міжнародні організації визнали окупацію і анексію Криму незаконними і засудили дії Росії. Країни Заходу запровадили низку економічних санкцій. Росія заперечує окупацію півострова і називає це «відновленням історичної справедливості».

Бут: НАЗК неправомірно передало до суду мій протокол

Заступник керівника управління розслідування корупційних злочинів Головного слідчого управління Нацполіції України Дмитро Бут заявляє, що Національне агентство з питань запобігання корупції «неправомірно» передало до суду його протокол, попри негативне рішення комісії. Заява Бута розміщена на сайті Міністерства внутрішніх справ.

Раніше НАЗК повідомило, що направило до суду протокол про адміністративне правопорушення щодо Бута, який «одержав у грудні 2015 року подарунок у негрошовій формі вартістю 160000 (сто шістдесят тисяч) гривень для своєї близької особи, чим порушив вимоги, встановлені абзацом першим частини другої статті 23 «Про запобігання корупції». При цьому НАЗК не уточнюється, про який саме подарунок йдеться.

За словами Бута, мова йде про подарунок, отриманий для дитини – собаку породи померанський шпиц, відомості про якого були внесені ним до декларації.

«21 серпня НАЗК, перевіривши декларацію, встановило, що у декларації за 2015 рік відсутні будь-які правопорушення, ознаки незаконного збагачення та підстави для притягнення мене до адміністративної чи кримінальної відповідальності. У рішенні лише зазначалася необхідність внести уточнення щодо подарунку. Їх я виконав і вніс уточнення відповідно до вимог закону», – цитує Бута сайт МВС.

Бут заявив, що на засіданні 30 листопада НАЗК ухвалило рішення не передавати його протокол до суду. «Не зрозуміло, хто та з яких причин порушив ухвалене НАЗК рішення і передав до суду протокол. Можливо, хтось має велике бажання за будь-яких обставин, навіть всупереч вимогам закону, безпідставно притягнути мене до відповідальності?», – заявив слідчий Нацполіції.

У МВС заявили, що проти Бута почалася «інформаційна кампанія» відтоді, коли слідство Нацполіції зареєструвало кримінальне провадження і розпочало слідчі дії щодо телеканалу «Інтер».

Раніше журналісти програми «Схеми», спільного проекту Радіо Свобода і телеканалу «UA:Перший» виявили, що слідчий на початку 2017 року, ймовірно, проживав у одній із двох квартир, яку його дружина разом із двома гаражами роком раніше оформила на свою матір за договором дарування (тобто по факту майно залишилось у родині).

Знімальна група програми зафіксувала, як Дмитро Бут на автівці Volkswagen Touareg виїжджав вранці з «Новопечерських липок» та їхав до будівлі МВС. Однак, у НАЗК проблем із цією нерухомістю не побачили.

Разом із тим перевірка встановила, що при поданні декларації за 2015 рік посадовець не вказав як цінне рухоме майно свого собаку, вартість якого «перевищує встановлений поріг декларування», чим порушив, вимоги частини першої статті 46 закону України «Про запобігання корупції».

Квартири в елітному комплексі – не єдине придбане в останні роки майно родичів Бута. За даними сайту «Гарна хата», в грудні 2014 року слідчий став власником будинку на понад 300 квадратів у селі Гореничі під Києвом. А вже восени 2015-го подарував будинок своєму батькові Сергію Буту, який заявив, що насправді будинок був куплений за його гроші, а не за гроші сина.

На початку 2016 року Дмитро Бут проходив переатестацію і комісія вирішила звільнити його «через службову невідповідність». Однак невдовзі Окружний адміністративний суд Києва поновив його на службі, що колишня очільниця Нацполіції Хатія Деканоїдзе назвала «міліцейським реваншем».

Дмитрові Буту надана можливість повторно подати декларацію за 2015 рік з уже достовірними відомостями.