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Abortion is the common thread in 2023 elections. That’s bad news for Republicans.

The GOP still hopes that the only voters who care about abortion rights are women.

Oct. 28, 2023, 5:00 AM CDT
By Andrea Grimes, journalist and activist

Americans haven’t forgotten that the ability to decide if and when to become a parent is one of the most essential, personal and life-changing decisions we’ll ever make. And we especially haven’t forgotten that the GOP is primarily responsible for wresting that decision away from many millions of us.

Because we remember both of these things, the issue of abortion remains a common thread in upcoming elections around the country — much to the consternation of Republicans. A year after the issue boosted Democrats in the midterms, the GOP is struggling to convince voters that the abortion bans the party has pushed for decades are some sort of collective fever dream. They want us to think abortion bans are a mass hysterical event that has caused us to hallucinate traveling far from home for abortion care, to invent the state-mandated traumas of forced birth, or to imagine that the pregnant people we’ve lost to poor maternal care were always ghosts, irrelevant and expendable, and never our living, loved ones.

Widespread (and growing) support for abortion rights has dulled the glory of what ought to be a victory lap for proponents of forced pregnancy.

The fever dream belongs entirely to the anti-abortion politicians who promised to overturn Roe v. Wade. Now that they’ve succeeded, widespread (and growing) support for abortion rights — which have won at the polls every time folks have been asked to weigh in since the Dobbs decision in June 2022 — has dulled the glory of what ought to be a victory lap for proponents of forced pregnancy. It’s not a question of whether proliferating abortion bans following the fall of Roe will continue to influence voters, but how much those voters — especially center-leaning Republicans and the ever-elusive (if at all extant) independent contingent — will take abortion restrictions into account when they head to the polls.

In Ohio, polls are already open for early voting on Issue 1, the constitutional amendment that would enshrine the right to abortion, as well as contraception and fertility and miscarriage care, in the Buckeye State.
Importantly, the passage of Issue 1 would block the Ohio Supreme Court from greenlighting a pending six-week abortion ban that would further decimate the availability of clinical abortion care in the Midwest. In the face of polls showing a likely defeat for abortion foes, Ohio’s anti-abortion Republican governor, Mike DeWine, and his allies have deployed a blatant misinformation campaign, hoping to recast Issue 1 as a measure that would empower fickle, homicidal pregnant people and abortion providers. (Of course it wouldn’t — later abortion care, like any and all abortion care, is a necessary component of reproductive autonomy for all of us.)

While Ohio is the only state that’s put abortion explicitly on the ballot this fall, abortion rights are also at the center of key elections in Kentucky and Virginia, and they’re playing a significant role in other states that appear to be less immediately urgent battlegrounds, such as Pennsylvania and New Jersey, where Democrats have had the foresight to lay important groundwork against anti-abortion Republicans trying to gain footholds in state politics.


In Kentucky, the contest for governor between incumbent Democrat Andy Beshear and Republican Attorney General Daniel Cameron has pitted Beshear’s support for reproductive rights against Cameron’s flip-flopping scramble to position himself as either very-anti-abortion or only-sort-of-very anti-abortion. In keeping with the contemporary GOP’s squeamishness on an issue they championed for decades, Cameron’s approach seems to depend, on any given day, on how receptive his campaign imagines voters to be on the question of rarely employed “exceptions” to abortion bans.

The House's new MAGA speaker was a final humiliation for the GOP's 'moderates

It turns out that there are no normies left.


Oct. 29, 2023, 5:00 AM CDT
By Charlie Sykes, MSNBC columnist

In the end, there were no normies left.

Last week, every Republican in the House voted for a man The New York Times described as “the most important architect” of the attempt to overthrow Donald Trump’s 2020 electoral defeat.

And yet, for a few naive days, it appeared that the center might actually hold.

After all, nearly two dozen GOP “moderates” had braved the bullying and threats from MAGAworld and blocked Rep. Jim Jordan from the speakership a few days earlier.

Some of these Jordan holdouts were institutionalists, who couldn’t stomach elevating someone that former Speaker John Boehner had described as a “legislative terrorist” to House leadership; others appeared to draw a line at election denialism and participation in the January 6 insurrection. Others simply couldn’t stand Jordan’s performative obnoxiousness.

As Mitt Romney notes in the new book by McKay Coppins, there are plenty of Republicans who know Trump is deranged and say so in private. And it appeared, briefly, that these lawmakers might actually take a stand in public.

There was even some scattered buzz about working with Democrats on a bipartisan power-sharing deal.
It was easy to mistake all of that for principles. But, in the end, those normies simply folded.

Just a week earlier, Rep. Ken Buck declared on CNN: “I don’t want someone who was involved in the activities of January 6 ... There’s no way we win the majority if the message we send to the American people is we believe the election was stolen, and we believe that January 6 was a tour of the Capitol.”

On Wednesday, like everyone else, he fell in line behind the fifth-strong choice, Rep. Mike Johnson.
Of course, we’ve seen this movie before. Over and over.

While Rep. Matt Gaetz and his right-wing confederates were filled with passionate intensity, the “moderates” once again lacked the conviction to the stand against them.

After three weeks of chaos, every “moderate”— Reps. Buck, Mike Lawler, Kay Granger, Don Bacon, Tony Gonzalez — all joined with Gaetz, Jordan and Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, and elected a new ultra-MAGA speaker.

And make no mistake about it: This new speaker is not a run-of-the-mill Trump toady.

Make no mistake about it: This new speaker is not a run-of-the-mill Trump toady. Johnson was a central player in pushing a lawsuit that would have thrown out tens of millions of votes in states that Trump lost. Even worse: Johnson touted some the wooliest of the Kraken-level conspiracy theories including the bizarre lie that voting software came from “Hugo Chavez’s Venezuela.”

Those were the kind of lies that cost Fox News $787 million, and resulted in guilty pleas from Trump co-defendants Jenna Ellis, Sidney Powell and Kenneth Chesebro.


And now those lies have propelled Johnson into the presidential line of succession.

On Tuesday, Trump and the MAGA caucus helped torpedo Rep. Tom Emmer’s speaker bid, seemingly in large part because Emmer had voted to certify President Joe Biden’s election win. The Big Lie is now a litmus test for leadership in the GOP, and every last Republican is going along with it.

When a reporter tried to ask Johnson about his role in the coup, fellow Republican Rep. Virginia Foxx shouted “Shut up!” while others booed. The Dispatch’s Nick Catoggio wrote: “That’s the whole party in one clip. There’s Johnson, smug at having been not merely absolved by his colleagues for abetting a coup attempt but commended for it with their nomination for speaker.”

In destroying Emmer and elevating Johnson, Trump emphatically reminded wavering Republicans that he remains the party’s apex predator — even while facing multiple criminal indictments.

And what about the “moderates”? In the best-case scenario, they may have avoided another government shutdown and won a short-term reprieve from the chaos. But their defeat was as thorough as it was humiliating. The head of the inaptly named “Problem Solvers Caucus” was reduced to claiming that Johnson was “temperamentally” a moderate.

But on one issue after another — abortion, gay rights, and slavish loyalty to Trump — Johnson has staked out positions far from the mainstream.

That stark reality was on full display this week.

“If you don’t think that moving from Kevin McCarthy to MAGA Mike Johnson shows the ascendance of this movement and where the power in the Republican Party truly lies, then you’re not paying attention,” Gaetz crowed on Steve Bannon’s podcast.

He’s right. The MAGA-fication of the GOP is complete. And the moderates? Who will ever take them seriously again? Because it turns out that there are no normies left.

Washington gave up 499 yards today

Could next week be another track meet or does SC’s D make everyone on UDUB look like All-America’s? Washington rushed for only 99 yards. Could be an interesting game. In my mind the wheels have come off for SC, but then I look at the scores and stats from around the league and it appears every games a toss up. Arizona (vastly improves defense and offense looking pretty darn good) 27-24 with 1: and change left.
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Autoworkers reach a deal with Ford, a breakthrough toward ending strikes against Detroit automakers

This is how Americans can avoid the "brink of financial meltdown"!

Autoworkers reach a deal with Ford, a breakthrough toward ending strikes against Detroit automakers

BY TOM KRISHER
Updated 11:09 PM CDT, October 26, 2023

DETROIT (AP) — The United Auto Workers union said Wednesday it has reached a tentative contract agreement with Ford that could be a breakthrough toward ending the nearly 6-week-old strikes against Detroit automakers.

The four-year deal, which still has to be approved by 57,000 union members at the company, could bring a close to the union’s series of strikes at targeted factories run by Ford, General Motors and Jeep maker Stellantis.

The Ford deal could set the pattern for agreements with the other two automakers, where workers will remain on strike. The UAW called on all workers at Ford to return to their jobs and said that will put pressure on GM and Stellantis to bargain. Announcements on how to do that will come later.

“We told Ford to pony up, and they did,” President Shawn Fain said in a video address to members. “We won things no one thought possible.” He added that Ford put 50% more money on the table than it did before the strike started on Sept. 15.

UAW Vice President Chuck Browning, the chief negotiator with Ford, said workers will get a 25% general wage increase, plus cost of living raises that will put the pay increase over 30%, to above $40 per hour for top-scale assembly plant workers by the end of the contract.

Previously Ford, Stellantis and General Motors had all offered 23% pay increases. When the talks started Ford offered 9%.

Assembly workers will get 11% upon ratification, almost equal to all of the wage increases workers have seen since 2007, Browning said.

Typically, during past auto strikes, a UAW deal with one automaker has led to the other companies matching it with their own settlements.

GM said in a statement it is “working constructively” with the union to reach an agreement as soon as possible. Stellantis also said it’s committed to reaching a deal “that gets everyone back to work as soon as possible.”

Browning said temporary workers will get more in wage increases than they have over the past 22 years combined. Temporary workers will get raises over 150% and retirees will get annual bonuses, he said.

“Thanks to the power of our members on the picket line and the threat of more strikes to come, we have won the most lucrative agreement per member since Walter Reuther was president,” Browning said. Reuther led the union from 1946 until his death in 1970.

Fain said that the union’s national leadership council of local union presidents and bargaining chairs will travel Sunday to Detroit, where they’ll get a presentation on the agreement and vote on whether to recommend it to members. Sunday evening the union will host a Facebook Live video appearance and later will hold regional meetings to explain the deal to members.

Auto workers strike is over as union as GM reach potential deal

Auto workers strike is over as union as GM reach potential deal

The United Auto Workers strike is set to end after it agreed to terms of a new contract with the third member of Detroit's Big Three.

UAW picket line strike union

United Auto Workers members hold picket signs near a General Motors Assembly Plant in Delta Township, Mich., on Sept. 29.Paul Sancya / AP file

By Marley Jay

The United Auto Workers strike is set to end as the union and General Motors announced a tentative agreement on a new contract Monday, according to sources cited by CNBC.

The pending deal comes just days after similar deals with Ford and Stellantis.

The union announced a framework agreement with Ford on Wednesday, followed by on Saturday by a deal with Stellantis, which makes Ram, Dodge, and Chrysler vehicles.

The pacts must be approved by local UAW leaders and then ratified by a simple majority of each automaker’s union-represented workers. That process will take several days.

About 13,000 UAW members went on strike September 15, following the expiration of their previous contract with the Big Three. That gradually expanded to about 40,000 of the union's 146,000 members walking off the job. That slowed production for each company, with the effects ramping up over time.

GM said last week the strike was costing it $200 million per week.

If members approve the contracts, they will last four and a half years. Union members will get an 11% initial wage increase and a pay bump of 25% over the course of the deal. The new contract also reinstates cost-of-living adjustments, lets workers reach top wages in three years instead of eight, and protects workers' right to strike over plant closures, among other significantly enhanced benefits.

UAW members agreed to give up on cost-of-living adjustments in the wake of the 2007-08 Great Recession, which nearly pushed GM and Chrysler into bankruptcy. That became a major point of contention in the current talks, with UAW President Shawn Fain saying that the automakers were making record profits while their employees struggled with the effects of the worst inflation in 40 years.

Ford and Stellantis workers ended their strike after those agreements were announced, while the union called for more GM employees to walk off the job at the same time it announced its proposed contract with Stellantis.

Auto workers union announces tentative agreement to end strike with Stellantis

The deal, which still has to be ratified by UAW members, leaves only General Motors without a contract with the union.

Oct. 28, 2023, 7:16 PM CDT
By Marley Jay

The United Auto Workers union and Stellantis say they've reached a tentative agreement on a new contract, leaving General Motors as the only one of the Big Three automakers without a contract with the union.

The deal, which still has to be ratified by members, follows a six-week strike by more than 14,000 workers at Stellantis assembly plants in Michigan and Ohio, and at parts warehouses across the nation.

“Once again, we have achieved what just weeks ago we were told was impossible,” UAW President Shawn Fain said in a written statement. “At Stellantis in particular, we have not only secured a record contract, we have begun to turn the tide in the war on the American working class."

The tentative agreement is patterned off a 4½-year agreement reached between the union and Ford on Wednesday, sources previously told CNBC.

Employees will return to work while the agreement goes through the ratification process, UAW said in a statement Saturday.

"We look forward to welcoming our 43,000 employees back to work and resuming operations to serve our customers and execute our Dare Forward 2030 strategic plan to maintain Stellantis’ position at the forefront of innovation," Stellantis North America COO Mark Stewart said in a written statement Saturday.

In a statement Saturday night, GM said it was "disappointed by the UAW's action in light of the progress we have made."

"We have continued to bargain in good faith with the UAW, and our goal remains to reach an agreement as quickly as possible," GM said.

United Auto Workers signs for a strike are shown at the Stellantis Sterling Heights Assembly Plant, in Sterling Heights, Mich., Monday, Oct. 23, 2023.
United Auto Workers signs for a strike are shown at a Stellantis assembly plant in in Sterling Heights, Mich., on Monday

Around 40,000 UAW members have gone on strike since their last contract with GM, Ford and Stellantis expired on Sept. 15. They shut down dozens of factories along the way, including GM's full-size truck plant in Arlington, Texas, on Tuesday.

UAW President Shawn Fain said in a video statement Wednesday that the move was part of a step to get negotiations over the finish line.

The deal, according to UAW, includes 25% in base wage increases through April 2028, and the starting wage will increase to over $30 an hour.

Both the Ford and Stellantis deals include a right to strike over plant closures, according to the union.

"The agreement reinstates major benefits lost during the Great Recession, including Cost-of-Living Allowances and a three-year Wage Progression, as well as killing divisive wage tiers in the union," the UAW said in a statement.

The agreement will need to be ratified by UAW members before it becomes binding, and that process will take time. On Wednesday night, Fain said a national committee will meet to review the Ford deal on Sunday. Local groups will review it after that, and then members will vote on the proposed contract.

Still, the proposal means Ford workers left the picket lines and will soon go back to work.

Talks between the union and Stellantis had appeared to be more contentious than those with GM and Ford. Fain repeatedly criticized Stellantis for what he called outsize profits and CEO pay, and on Friday he said on a livestream that the company was trying to "lowball" the union before throwing a ream of pages, which he said were Stellantis' proposal, in an office trash can.

On Monday, Fain called for workers at Stellantis' Ram 1500 truck plant to go on strike. The company responded that it was "outraged" by the move.

In a statement Saturday, President Joe Biden, who made history as the first sitting president to appear on a picket line, called the contract “groundbreaking.”

“This contract is a testament to the power of unions and collective bargaining to build strong middle-class jobs while helping our most iconic American companies thrive,” Biden said. “The final word on this tentative agreement will ultimately come from UAW Stellantis members themselves in the days and weeks to come.”

Pac 12 hopes - Wash game really doesn’t matter

The natty dream is over. That’s almost certain after the ND debacle and our generally crappy play. But the PAC 12 title is still very much in play with how wild the PAC 12 is right now. Zona beating Ore St and Utah getting thumped opened things up. With lots of games left to go and upsets possible every week, SC probably only needs to win the last 2 (Ore / UCLA) to make the title game with what everyone else is going to do to each other.

If we lose to Wash, but then beat Ore and UCLA, we end with 2 conference losses. Ore and UCLA would both have two losses at least so we’d have tiebreaker over them. Zona already has 2 so we have tiebreaker over them. We don’t play Ore St but they still have Ore and Wash left so they would just have to lose one of those. Utah has two already but has the win over us, so that’s the only team we have to have get one more loss.

Obviously win all 3 and we’re in (with a teeny tiny playoff hope) or lose 2 or 3 and we’re out and off to the Zaxby bowl with Caleb watching from the sidelines.

Football Caleb Williams' injured finger

I asked Caleb about the pinkie finger last night, specifically about him shaking his hand in pain after he recovered a fumble. This was his response:

"I got my hand hit on the helmet. It was like all of my fingers because he hit exactly when I was going up, so all my fingers are fine, to say the least. I've been ripping the ball the same as I usually do. It was just when you initially stub your toe thing like that, he just hit it and I felt it immediately. But the next play we threw a pass play. It got tipped, but it was going to land right on Zach's chest."

Labor wins bolster Biden’s strategy

Labor wins bolster Biden’s strategy


By Jennifer Rubin
Columnist|Follow
October 29, 2023 at 7:45 a.m. EDT

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President Biden addresses striking members of the United Auto Workers at a picket line outside a General Motors plant in Belleville, Mich., on Sept. 26. (Jim Watson/AFP via Getty Images)

Only a few weeks ago, Republicans, pro-business groups and some pundits chided the United Auto Workers for being greedy in their contract demands. They criticized President Biden for walking a picket line with workers. However, with the announcement on Wednesday of a tentative agreement on a generous new contract between Ford and the UAW (followed by word that the UAW was closing in on deals with two other companies), the union’s leadership will reap credit for aggressive bargaining and targeting excessive CEO salaries. Biden will get kudos for helping working Americans maximize earnings.

“Ford has agreed to a 25% increase over the life of the contract, which extends slightly beyond four years,” Bloomberg reported. “That isn’t the 40% sought originally but initial negotiating positions hardly ever make it through talks intact and it is still a huge win for the UAW. In addition, starting wages rise by 68%, according to the UAW, and top wages by a third.”

Other union wins included reinstating cost-of-living allowances, eliminating wage tiers and speeding up wage progression. “We told Ford to pony up, and they did. We won things nobody thought was possible,” UAW President Shawn Fain crowed after the deal was announced.

In a celebratory announcement Thursday that the economy grew 4.9 percent in the third quarter, Biden boasted that “the UAW and Ford reached a historic tentative agreement that provides a record raise to auto workers and is a testament to our strategy for a powerful manufacturing future made in America, with good, union jobs.” (A Treasury Department report released Thursday touted the administration’s gains: “The United States has seen a particularly strong GDP recovery and is on track this year to reach the level that would have been predicted by the pre-pandemic trend. Global labor markets continue to strengthen, and the United States has been especially resilient. U.S. inflation has cooled sooner and more quickly than in other advanced economies.”)

The tentative UAW agreement is not an isolated occurrence for labor. While 2023 saw an uptick in strikes, those work actions paid off. “Across the U.S., labor unions are winning surprisingly large contract settlements as workers have reset their expectations to demand considerably more than they did just a few years ago, and that has in turn pressured many corporations to reset — and increase — the pay packages they are giving in union contracts,” the Guardian noted. “The result has been a wave of impressive — sometimes eye-popping — union contracts over the past year, far more generous than in recent decades.”

These include especially rich deals for employees at UPS (340,000 workers), Kaiser Permanente (85,000) and American Airlines (15,000), as well as writers for Hollywood studios. Labor experts credit the tight labor market, rising worker dissatisfaction in the wake of the pandemic, outsize CEO pay (which provoked outcries from labor) and more-aggressive union negotiation.

“It’s critical to understand that these [auto] strikes are happening at the same time as other historic strikes,” Veena Dubal, a labor expert with the University of California at Irvine, recently told PBS. “Collectively, workers are withholding their labor to change the terms of the bargain — one might even say, the social contract — in the U.S.”

The strikes and major gains for workers also come as workers are making strides in organizing workplaces that previously resisted unions (e.g., Starbucks). When unions strike and make significant gains, other employees become motivated to organize as well. And although unionized workers still represent just about 10 percent of the labor force, gains for unions often spur increases for nonunion workers not only at those employers but also throughout the economy.

Democrats have long attacked “trickle-down” economics as disproportionately benefiting a few at the top while leaving workers behind. Given Biden’s emphasis on building the economy from the “bottom up and the middle out,” these deals signal some success in addressing the enormous disparity between the salaries of CEOs and ordinary workers. Moreover, Biden’s assertion that he is the most pro-union president in history allows him to claim a measure of credit for substantial increases in workers’ take-home pay. In short, these big union wins bolster the perception that “Bidenomics” is delivering as promised.

“President Biden has long believed, contrary to most Wall Street forecasts, that if we could maintain the strong job market while helping to ease inflation, we’d see real wage gains supporting solid consumer spending and strong GDP growth — and that’s precisely what we’ve seen,” Jared Bernstein, head of the president’s Council of Economic Advisers, told me. “Add on record gains in median net worth and unprecedented investments in domestic manufacturing, and you get a good picture of Bidenomics at work.”

Clearly, the U.S. economy is doing far better than public perceptions suggest. Maybe it is time to recognize the strength of the country’s economic recovery and some signs (in part due to labor contracts) that prosperity might be shared more widely than it has been in the past.

FLASHBACK: Democrats now sympathize more with Palestinians than Israelis, poll finds

Polling February 2023:

Views of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict have shifted sharply among Democrats, who said they sympathized more with Palestinians than Israelis for the first time in an annual Gallup survey.

The big picture: Overall, most U.S. adults sympathize more with Israelis (54%) than Palestinians (31%), and two-thirds of Americans continue to view Israel favorably. However, views on the Middle East conflict are becoming increasingly polarized in the U.S. by party and by generation.

Flashback: In 2016, 53% of Democrats said they sympathized more with the Israelis, and 23% with the Palestinians.

  • By 2022, that gap had virtually disappeared.
  • When Gallup conducted this year's poll from Feb. 1-23, just 38% of Democrats chose the Israelis while 49% said they sympathized more with Palestinians.
  • That shift has been driven largely by Americans born after 1980, a narrow plurality of whom are more sympathetic to Palestinians than Israelis. Americans from older generations are more than twice as likely to sympathize with the Israelis.
  • The progressive wing of the Democratic caucus in Congress has also grown increasingly vocal about the Palestinian cause.
Between the lines: Some Israeli officials and analysts have argued that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu made Israel a partisan issue in Washington by aligning so closely with the Republicans.

Yes, but: A majority of Democrats (56%) continue to view Israel favorably. That's down from 63% last year and far lower than the 82% among Republicans, but is broadly in line with previous findings for Democrats over the two decades Gallup has been conducting the survey.

State of play: There has been no movement toward a resolution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict for several years, and serious peace talks are highly unlikely any time soon, particularly with a new hard-right government in office in Israel. Tensions are running high in the occupied West Bank after an escalation in violence in recent weeks.


  • Israel's domestic politics are also highly contentious, with President Isaac Herzog warning Wednesday that the country was on brink of civil war as Netanyahu pushes ahead with a judicial overhaul plan that critics say will undermine Israel's democracy.
Methodology: Gallup polled 1,008 American adults across all 50 states, 75% of whom were contacted via cell phone and 25% via landline. The margin of sampling error is +/- 4% at a 95% confidence level.

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Biden is cooking the books at the border

Unfortunately, the Biden administration is now cooking the books on unlawful entries but is doing so to make the numbers look smaller and to try to convince the American people and the media that their border security strategy is working.

If you believe the administration, "border encounters remain low" after Title 42 ended on May 11. But don’t fall for this disinformation. The humanitarian and security crisis at the southern border is ongoing, and the overall illegal immigration problem is now far worse than the border numbers show.

EX-BORDER PATROL CHIEF SAYS LETTING MIGRANTS INTO US WAS ‘ONLY AGENDA’ OF DHS WHEN MAYORKAS TOOK OFFICE

Here is the reality the Biden administration is hiding from you and the media are failing to report accurately.

First, it is critical to understand that when DHS claims unlawful entries between the ports of entry are down, they are describing only the illegal aliens apprehended by Border Patrol agents. Intentionally omitted in their communications to the American people are the number of aliens found inadmissible at ports of entry by Office of Field Operations officers. Under U.S. immigration law, it is irrelevant which border officers intercept illegal aliens attempting to enter the U.S. because they are in violation of the same provision of law.

However, the Biden administration sees it differently and considers only illegal aliens "encountered" by Border Patrol agents are breaking the law. Consistent with this flawed philosophy, the administration’s new border strategy announced in January encourages illegal aliens to show up at ports of entry after scheduling an appointment through the CBP One app.

More than 99% of illegal aliens who used the app between January and April were waved through despite lacking a visa. This process is not discouraging illegal immigration but instead is diverting it to a controlled environment. In doing so, it spares the administration the negative optics of tens of thousands of illegal aliens flooding over the border. Nevertheless, the result is the same—the mass release of illegal aliens into American communities.

The combined 204,561 "encounters" in May 2023 were only slightly lower than the roughly 211,000 in April and mark the second-highest number in May ever recorded, trailing only May 2022.
Border "encounters" are hardly remaining low, as DHS claims. The key difference is where they are showing up, as the 35,317 inadmissible aliens at the ports of entry in May 2023 is the highest monthly level ever recorded at ports of entry and more than double the 16,766 inadmissible aliens in May 2022.

Since this new policy went into effect in January, DHS has averaged more than 29,000 inadmissible aliens each month. By comparison, the highest number of inadmissible aliens at the ports of entry in a single month during the Trump administration was about 12,000.

We longer need....

An opponent to get beat by. We beat ourselves before the game even starts. In fact if Cal forfeited the game we still find a way to lose this one. This year's a total waste, time to flush everything down the toilet. The only silver lining is that Riley has irrefutable proof to FIRE Grinch. We need a new DC period. There's just too much damage with Grinch. he must be let go after the game. Just have coach Nua finish out the year.
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