Supreme Court Rejects Challenge to Ban on Gun ‘Bump Stocks’

Supreme Court Rejects Challenge to Ban on Gun 'Bump Stocks' A bump-stock device that fits on a semi-automatic rifle to increase the firing speed, making it similar to a fully automatic rifle, is installed on a AK-47 semi-automatic rifle, at a gun store on Oct. 5, 2017 in Salt Lake City, Utah. (George Frey/Getty Images)

By Charlie McCarthy | Monday, 03 October 2022 10:37 AM EDT

The Supreme Court announced Monday it will not hear a case that challenged the Trump-era regulation classifying "bump stocks" as machine guns.

The court began its new term by releasing its order list of cases. W. Clark Aposhian v. Merrick B. Garland, Attorney General, et al. was among the "certiorari denied" cases. The high court also rejected a separate challenge pressed by people and groups led by Gun Owners of America.

The justices made no comments in declining to hear the cases that were among many the court rejected.

Bump stocks are devices attached to semiautomatic firearms so that a shooter can fire multiple rounds more rapidly.

The Trump administration banned bump stocks in 2019 after a sniper in Las Vegas used the devices with weapons in the massacre of dozens of concert goers in 2017.

The move was an about-face for the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives. In 2010, under the Obama administration, the agency found that bump stocks should not be classified as a "machine gun" and therefore should not be banned under federal law.

The justices' decision Monday not to hear the cases comes on the heels of a decision in June in which the justices by a 6-3 vote expanded gun-possession rights, weakening states' ability to limit the carrying of guns in public.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Trump Objects to Expediting DOJ Appeal in Special Master Case

Trump Objects to Expediting DOJ Appeal in Special Master Case mar-a-lago seen from across the intracoastal waterway Former President Donald Trump's private resident at Mar-a-Lago in Florida was raided by the FBI in August when he was away. (Lynne Sladky/AP)

Monday, 03 October 2022 10:43 AM EDT

Donald Trump objected to a Justice Department request for an expedited ruling in the special master case involving documents seized by the FBI in an August search of the former president's Florida home, a court filing Monday showed.

"The government has not and cannot possibly articulate any real risk of loss or harm resulting from a more deliberative process," Trump's lawyers said in a filing in the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

"Oral argument in January 2023 or thereafter is appropriate," according to the filing.

Original Article

Trump Objects to Expediting DOJ Appeal in Special Master Case

Trump Objects to Expediting DOJ Appeal in Special Master Case mar-a-lago seen from across the intracoastal waterway Former President Donald Trump's private resident at Mar-a-Lago in Florida was raided by the FBI in August when he was away. (Lynne Sladky/AP)

Monday, 03 October 2022 10:43 AM EDT

Donald Trump objected to a Justice Department request for an expedited ruling in the special master case involving documents seized by the FBI in an August search of the former president's Florida home, a court filing Monday showed.

"The government has not and cannot possibly articulate any real risk of loss or harm resulting from a more deliberative process," Trump's lawyers said in a filing in the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

"Oral argument in January 2023 or thereafter is appropriate," according to the filing.

Supreme Court Won’t Take Up MyPillow Head’s Defamation Case

Supreme Court Won't Take Up MyPillow Head's Defamation Case Newsmax

Monday, 03 October 2022 10:33 AM EDT

The Supreme Court says it won't intervene in a lawsuit in which Dominion Voting Systems accused MyPillow chief executive Mike Lindell of defamation for accusing the company of rigging the 2020 presidential election against former President Donald Trump.

As is typical, the high court did not say anything Monday about the case in rejecting it among a host of others. Monday is the first day the high court is hearing arguments after taking a summer break.

Lindell is part of a case in which Dominion also accused Trump allies Sidney Powell and Rudy Giuliani of defamation for claiming that the election was "stolen." The Denver, Colorado-based Dominion has sought $1.3 billion in damages from the trio.

A lower court judge in August of last year declined to dismiss the case and instead said it could go forward. Lindell had appealed that determination, but a federal appeals court said his appeal was premature. The Supreme Court declined to take up that issue.

Powell and Giuliani, both lawyers who filed election challenges on Trump’s behalf, and Lindell, who was one of Trump’s most vocal public supporters, made various claims about the voting machine company during news conferences, election rallies and on social media and television.

A range of election officials across the country, including Trump’s attorney general, William Barr, have said there was no voter fraud. Republican governors in Arizona and Georgia, key battleground states crucial to Biden’s victory, also vouched for the integrity of the elections in their states. Dominion machines tabulated ballots in 28 states.

In September, a judge in Minnesota declined to dismiss a separate defamation lawsuit by a different voting machine maker, Smartmatic, against Lindell. Smartmatic's machines were used only in Los Angeles County during the 2020 election. MyPillow is based in Minnesota.

Biden to Announce $60 Million in Hurricane Aid for Puerto Rico

Biden to Announce $60 Million in Hurricane Aid for Puerto Rico (Newsmax)

Jeff Mason Monday, 03 October 2022 07:52 AM EDT

President Joe Biden plans to announce more than $60 million in aid to help Puerto Rico during a visit Monday to survey damage as the island grapples with the aftermath of Hurricane Fiona.

The president has pledged the U.S. government's firm support for Puerto Rico as well as the states of Florida and South Carolina, which have also been hit hard in recent days by Hurricane Ian. Biden will travel to Florida on Wednesday.

Biden will announce more than $60 million in funding through the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law "to shore up levees, strengthen flood walls, and create a new flood warning system to help Puerto Rico become better prepared for future storms," a White House official said on condition of anonymity.

Federal Emergency Management Agency Administrator Deanne Criswell and first lady Jill Biden will accompany him on the trip to Puerto Rico, a U.S. territory.

"Our hearts, to state the obvious — it can’t go without saying — are heavy from the devastating hurricane and storms in Puerto Rico, Florida, and South Carolina," Biden said on Saturday night at an event in Washington.

"We owe Puerto Rico a hell of a lot more than they've already gotten," he said.

Costly

Storm-ravaged residents in Florida and the Carolinas alone face a disaster recovery expected to cost tens of billions of dollars.

Hundreds of thousands of people have struggled without power since Fiona hit Puerto Rico some two weeks ago.

Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm said via Twitter on Sunday that power had been restored to 90% of customers on the island.

"This is an important milestone, coming just 13 days after Fiona made landfall," she said. "While we're grateful for this progress, we realize the work is not over. Efforts to rebuild and help those impacted will continue."

Last week the Biden administration approved a waiver of U.S. shipping rules to address Puerto Rico's immediate energy needs.

Residents of the island in 2017 accused then President Donald Trump of being slow to dispatch aid in the wake of Hurricane Maria.

Original Article

Biden to Announce $60 Million in Hurricane Aid for Puerto Rico

Biden to Announce $60 Million in Hurricane Aid for Puerto Rico (Newsmax)

Jeff Mason Monday, 03 October 2022 07:52 AM EDT

President Joe Biden plans to announce more than $60 million in aid to help Puerto Rico during a visit Monday to survey damage as the island grapples with the aftermath of Hurricane Fiona.

The president has pledged the U.S. government's firm support for Puerto Rico as well as the states of Florida and South Carolina, which have also been hit hard in recent days by Hurricane Ian. Biden will travel to Florida on Wednesday.

Biden will announce more than $60 million in funding through the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law "to shore up levees, strengthen flood walls, and create a new flood warning system to help Puerto Rico become better prepared for future storms," a White House official said on condition of anonymity.

Federal Emergency Management Agency Administrator Deanne Criswell and first lady Jill Biden will accompany him on the trip to Puerto Rico, a U.S. territory.

"Our hearts, to state the obvious — it can’t go without saying — are heavy from the devastating hurricane and storms in Puerto Rico, Florida, and South Carolina," Biden said on Saturday night at an event in Washington.

"We owe Puerto Rico a hell of a lot more than they've already gotten," he said.

Costly

Storm-ravaged residents in Florida and the Carolinas alone face a disaster recovery expected to cost tens of billions of dollars.

Hundreds of thousands of people have struggled without power since Fiona hit Puerto Rico some two weeks ago.

Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm said via Twitter on Sunday that power had been restored to 90% of customers on the island.

"This is an important milestone, coming just 13 days after Fiona made landfall," she said. "While we're grateful for this progress, we realize the work is not over. Efforts to rebuild and help those impacted will continue."

Last week the Biden administration approved a waiver of U.S. shipping rules to address Puerto Rico's immediate energy needs.

Residents of the island in 2017 accused then President Donald Trump of being slow to dispatch aid in the wake of Hurricane Maria.

Sen. Rubio Fears Venezuelan Prisoner Swap ‘Puts Americans … in Danger’

Sen. Rubio Fears Venezuelan Prisoner Swap 'Puts Americans … in Danger'

(Newsmax/"National Report")

By Nick Koutsobinas | Sunday, 02 October 2022 06:45 PM EDT

A recent prisoner swap between the United States and Venezuela puts Americans "in danger" worldwide, Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., said on Sunday.

During an interview with Dana Bash, host of CNN's "State of the Union," Rubio expressed concern that a prisoner swap involving two Venezuelan drug dealers exchanged for seven Americans held on trumped-up charges sets a dangerous precedent for future prisoner swaps.

"Well, the two Venezuelans that were released are the nephews of [Venezuela President Nicolás] Maduro who happen to be convicted drug dealers," Rubio told Bash. "They were put in jail after being convicted after a fair trial in the United States. Evidence was produced and it was overwhelming.

"The seven Americans were hostages. And here's my problem with it. That has now put a price tag on Americans. Every time you do one of these deals — and I wanted those people released as much as anybody. But every time you do this, now others know, I can take Americans, I can hold them until I need something as a bargaining chip.

"So what that has done is now sent a message to tyrants and dictators all over the world to go ahead and trump up some charges and arrest Americans, because, when the time comes, we will be able to exchange them," Rubio added.

"So I think seven innocent American hostages in exchange for two convicted drug dealers who happen to be the nephews of Maduro is a huge win for Maduro and, unfortunately, puts Americans all over the world now in danger."

According to The Hill, on Saturday, President Joe Biden stated that Venezuela freed seven U.S. residents who were asked to visit Venezuela for a business meeting in 2017 but were detained upon arrival and sentenced to eight years in prison on embezzlement charges.

In exchange, the U.S. released two nephews of Maduro's wife, Cilia Flores. The two dealers came under U.S. detainment after the Drug Enforcement Agency arrested them in a sting operation in Haiti in 2015. They were convicted a year later on drug trafficking charges in New York.

"I am grateful," Biden said in his statement, "for the hard work of dedicated public servants across the U.S. government who made this possible, and who continue to deliver on my administration's unflinching commitment to keep faith with Americans held hostage and wrongfully detained all around the world."

Original Article

McMaster: ‘Never Uncomfortable’ With Trump Handling Classified Info

McMaster: 'Never Uncomfortable' With Trump Handling Classified Info

(Newsmax/"Eric Bolling The Balance")

By Nick Koutsobinas | Sunday, 02 October 2022 05:02 PM EDT

Former President Donald Trump's national security adviser, H.R. McMaster, said he "did not see any problems" with how officials handled classified documents in the former president's administration.

Speaking to host Margaret Brennan of CBS's "Face the Nation" on Sunday, McMaster said, "[T]here were systems in place. I don't know what happened to those systems. But … I was never uncomfortable with it while I was there. But, you know, that was a long time ago now."

McMaster, a retired U.S. Army lieutenant general, departed the Trump administration in the spring of 2018 after serving as counsel for nearly a year.

Early in August, the FBI searched Trump's Mar-a-Lago estate, pulling out boxes of documents, including some labeled top secret, The Hill reported. In February, the National Archives and Records Administration asked the Department of Justice to launch an investigation into Trump's handling of records after officials recovered 15 boxes of documents from Mar-a-Lago in January, as reported by The Washington Post.

After what Matt Taibbi described as the "most consequential American news events since 9/11," a Florida district court granted Trump the right to hire a special master to parse through classified and unclassified materials to decide which records are protected under attorney-client privilege or otherwise shielded from the DOJ's review.

Last week, the National Archives announced that it was still missing records from Trump.

Original Article

Rep. Mike Turner: Expect ‘Wild West’ Spending Spree if Dems Lose House

Rep. Mike Turner: Expect 'Wild West' Spending Spree if Dems Lose House

(Newsmax/"Prime News")

By Sandy Fitzgerald | Sunday, 02 October 2022 04:28 PM EDT

Democrats will stage a "Wild West" spending spree in Washington if Republicans win the House in November while trying to push through every package they can before having to relinquish their gavels, Rep. Mike Turner said Sunday.

"They're going to see this as an opportunity to get through a bunch of things they've been waiting patiently on the sides to get done," the Ohio Republican told Fox News' Maria Bartiromo on "Sunday Morning Futures." "We're going to see some unbelievable contortions by Democrats to get things over the line before they lose power."

The extra spending will come while President Joe Biden blames Republicans for the national deficit and inflation, noted Bartiromo, but Turner said it's clear to see how out of control Democrat spending has been under his White House.

"We can see it in the grocery store and at the gas pump, the effects of his out-of-control spending," said Turner. "You can't say [you're] going to spend $10 trillion, then spend $9 trillion, and then say, 'I saved you a trillion.' That's what he's doing, and now he's raising the interest rates on families and businesses, which is only going to result in a recession."

Turner also on Sunday panned the Biden administration's foreign policy moves on Russia, Iran, China and more.

Where Russia is concerned, President Vladimir Putin's fiery speech last week likely reflects more of his thinking than other declarations he's made, and the Biden administration must heed his warning signs, Turner said.

"This administration needs to step up its game on missile defense," he added. "We have assets in Europe. We need to engage them so that they can provide protection to our allies, including Ukraine. We need to move other missile defense as assets into the area, so that we're not just a casual observer if Putin makes good on these threats and we see the use of these catastrophic weapons."

Meanwhile, when it comes to North Korea, Vice President Kamala Harris was "out of her realm" with her visit to the Demilitarized Zone between North and South Korea.

"She is confused on many things," he said. "When she goes into any international situation, it's as if it's the first time she's ever heard of it, which is very dangerous for someone in the vice president's position, to be learning on the job."

Turner said he has visited the region, and said he knows from experience that there are significant briefings one must go through, but he doesn't think Harris was listening.

The White House is also in trouble with China, Turner said, calling its policies in "shambles."

"They've been fearful to even continue policies from the prior administration, claiming that in their wokeness that they're concerned that they could be targeting individuals," he said. "Well, of course, they would be targeting our adversary, China."

The administration is "not doing anything" to try to stop China's threats to Taiwan, including echoing Russia's threats by promising "unbelievable consequences" against anyone who opposes them.

"That's the same type of language you're getting out of Russia," he said. "You're seeing where the gap in what the administration is doing to try to deter these two aggressive nations and authoritarian regimes."

When it comes to Iran, the administration's policies are "misplaced," Turner said.

"While they're strengthening the Iranian regime, the Iranian regime is under attack from its own people," said Turner, adding that Iran nuclear deal, which former President Donald Trump stopped, "was not serving Israel and our allies in the area. It was permitting Iran to continue its march to place the United States at risk."

Biden wants to reenter the agreement, but "going back into a failed deal does not protect the United States, said Turner.

Original Article

Trump Staffers Not Returning White House Records, National Archives Says

Trump Staffers Not Returning White House Records, National Archives Says

Doina Chiacu Sunday, 02 October 2022 03:53 PM EDT

Former President Donald Trump's administration has not turned over all presidential records and the National Archives will consult with the Justice Department on whether to move to get them back, the agency has told Congress.

A congressional panel on Sept. 13 sought an urgent review by the National Archives and Records Administration after agency staff members acknowledged that they did not know if all presidential records from Trump's White House had been turned over.

"While there is no easy way to establish absolute accountability, we do know that we do not have custody of everything we should," acting Archivist Debra Wall said in a letter Friday to the House Committee on Oversight and Reform.

The Archives knows some White House staffers conducted official business on personal electronic messaging accounts that were that were not copied or forwarded to their official accounts, in violation of the Presidential Records Act, Wall said.

"NARA has been able to obtain such records from a number of former officials and will continue to pursue the return of similar types of presidential records from former officials," Wall said in the letter, first reported by The Wall Street Journal.

She said the Archives, the federal agency charged with preserving government records, would consult with the Department of Justice on "whether to initiate an action for the recovery of records unlawfully removed."

The Oversight Committee shared a copy of the letter with Reuters but has not issued a statement on it yet.

Representatives for Trump did not immediately return a request for comment on the matter.

Trump is facing a criminal investigation by the Justice Department for retaining government records — some marked as highly classified, including "top secret" — at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida after leaving office in January 2021.

The FBI seized more than 11,000 records, including about 100 documents marked as classified, in a court-approved Aug. 8 search at Mar-a-Lago.

The Justice Department and Trump's lawyers have been locked in a legal battle over how the records are handled. Government lawyers have been granted access to the classified documents but on Friday asked an appeals court to expedite its ability to access the non-classified documents seized in Florida.

Original Article

Trump Staffers Not Returning White House Records, National Archives Says

Trump Staffers Not Returning White House Records, National Archives Says

Doina Chiacu Sunday, 02 October 2022 03:53 PM EDT

Former President Donald Trump's administration has not turned over all presidential records and the National Archives will consult with the Justice Department on whether to move to get them back, the agency has told Congress.

A congressional panel on Sept. 13 sought an urgent review by the National Archives and Records Administration after agency staff members acknowledged that they did not know if all presidential records from Trump's White House had been turned over.

"While there is no easy way to establish absolute accountability, we do know that we do not have custody of everything we should," acting Archivist Debra Wall said in a letter Friday to the House Committee on Oversight and Reform.

The Archives knows some White House staffers conducted official business on personal electronic messaging accounts that were that were not copied or forwarded to their official accounts, in violation of the Presidential Records Act, Wall said.

"NARA has been able to obtain such records from a number of former officials and will continue to pursue the return of similar types of presidential records from former officials," Wall said in the letter, first reported by The Wall Street Journal.

She said the Archives, the federal agency charged with preserving government records, would consult with the Department of Justice on "whether to initiate an action for the recovery of records unlawfully removed."

The Oversight Committee shared a copy of the letter with Reuters but has not issued a statement on it yet.

Representatives for Trump did not immediately return a request for comment on the matter.

Trump is facing a criminal investigation by the Justice Department for retaining government records — some marked as highly classified, including "top secret" — at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida after leaving office in January 2021.

The FBI seized more than 11,000 records, including about 100 documents marked as classified, in a court-approved Aug. 8 search at Mar-a-Lago.

The Justice Department and Trump's lawyers have been locked in a legal battle over how the records are handled. Government lawyers have been granted access to the classified documents but on Friday asked an appeals court to expedite its ability to access the non-classified documents seized in Florida.

Rubio Fears Russian Attack on NATO Over Nuke Threat

Rubio Fears Russian Attack on NATO Over Nuke Threat (Newsmax)

By Sandy Fitzgerald | Sunday, 02 October 2022 01:20 PM EDT

The risks are higher now than they were a month ago that Russian President Vladimir Putin could order the use of a tactical nuclear weapon against Ukraine, Sen. Marco Rubio acknowledged Sunday, but he said his "bigger fear" is that Putin could order an attack on a NATO ally.

"If he decides that the NATO arming and the European arming is causing him not to just lose his war and undermine his grip on power, but perhaps threatening his own forces inside of Russia, I think it's quite possible that he could end up striking some of these distribution places where these supplies are coming through, including inside Poland," the Florida Republican said on CNN's "State of the Union."

He added that Ukraine is on a path to regaining territory seized by Russia after the February invasion, and while he can't say how much Ukraine will advance, the bigger issue is that "there is no way for Russia and Putin to win this war or any of their objectives."

That means Putin has two choices: to design defensive lines or to retreat and continue to lose territory.

"The worry becomes the unpredictability of what Putin does in a situation like that," said Rubio. "There is a lot of talk about nuclear, but the thing I worry about is a Russian attack inside NATO, including aiming at the airport in Poland or some other distribution point."

NATO would then have to respond, but whether it would respond with a counterattack would depend on the nature of Russia's attack and the size and scale of it, said Rubio.

Rubio is the top Republican on the Senate Intelligence Committee and said he wouldn't comment on what the intelligence community is seeing, and he's also not saying the risk of Putin detonating a nuclear device as a demonstration of power is zero.

"What's the purpose of a tactical nuclear weapon detonated for demonstration purposes? It's to send a message," he said. "I think if he believes this arming of Ukraine is what's causing him to lose this war and potentially his position of power, he may strike one of these logistical points, and that logistical point may not be inside of Ukraine. To me, that is the area I focus on the most because it has a tactical aspect to it. I think he probably views it as less escalatory. NATO may not."

Rubio also commented on the leaks that are springing up in the Nord Stream pipelines from Russia to Europe, and said "logic and common sense will tell you these things don't blow up on their own."

"The only people in the region who had the motive and the capability to do it are Russian forces," said Rubio. "To me, it's not an intelligence matter at this point, it's a common sense matter."

The senator on Sunday also spoke out about the prisoner exchange between the United States and Venezuela, with the Venezuelans Saturday freeing seven Americans in exchange for two nephews of President Nicholas Maduro's wife."

The released Venezuelans had been convicted of drug trafficking in the United States, Rubio pointed out, while the Americans had been held as hostages.

"That now has put a price tag on Americans," said Rubio. "I wanted those people released as much as anybody."

But now, other countries know they can use Americans as a bargaining chip, and that sends "a message to tyrants and dictators all over the world to trump up charges," said Rubio. "I think seven innocent American hostages for two convicted drug dealers, unfortunately, puts Americans all over the world in danger."

Original Article

Biden Pledge to Make Federal Fleet Electric Faces Slow Start

Biden Pledge to Make Federal Fleet Electric Faces Slow Start Biden Pledge to Make Federal Fleet Electric Faces Slow Start President Joe Biden drives a Cadillac Lyriq through the showroom during a tour at the Detroit Auto Show, Sept. 14, 2022, in Detroit. Biden, a self-described “car guy,'' often promises to lead by example by moving swiftly to convert the sprawling federal fleet to zero-emission electric vehicles. (AP)

HOPE YEN, MATTHEW DALY and DAVID SHARP Sunday, 02 October 2022 09:04 AM EDT

President Joe Biden, a self-described “car guy,'' often promises to lead by example by moving swiftly to convert the sprawling U.S. government fleet to zero-emission electric vehicles. But efforts have lagged in helping meet his ambitious climate goals by eliminating gas-powered vehicles from the federal fleet.

Biden last year directed the U.S. government to purchase only American-made, zero-emission passenger cars by 2027 and electric versions of other vehicles by 2035.

“We’re going to harness the purchasing power of the federal government to buy clean, zero-emission vehicles,” the president said soon after his January 2021 inauguration. He has since used photo ops — taking a spin in Ford Motor Co.'s electric F-150 pickup truck, or driving GM’s Cadillac Lyriq electric SUV at the Detroit auto show — to promote their potential. Cabinet officials have hawked a first set of Ford Mustang Mach-E SUVs in use at the departments of Energy and Transportation.

The White House frequently describes the 2027 timeline as on track. But the General Services Administration, the agency that purchases two-thirds of the 656,000-vehicle federal fleet, says there are no guarantees.

Then there is the U.S. Postal Service, which owns the remaining one-third of the federal fleet. After initially balking and facing lawsuits, the agency now says that half of its initial purchase of 50,000 next-generation vehicles will be powered by electricity. The first set of postal vehicles will hit delivery routes late next year.

Climate advocates say that agency can do even better.

“USPS should now go all-electric or virtually all electric with its new vehicles,'' said Luke Tonachel, senior director of clean vehicles and buildings at the Natural Resources Defense Council, citing an additional $3 billion in federal spending targeted for the postal fleet under the landmark climate law Biden signed last month.

About 30% of U.S. greenhouse gas emissions come from the transportation sector, making it the single largest source of planet-warming emissions in the country.

Electrification of the federal fleet is a “cornerstone” of Biden’s efforts to decarbonize the federal government, said Andrew Mayock, chief federal sustainability officer for the White House.

“The future is electric, and the federal government has built a strong foundation … that’s going to deliver on this journey we’re on over the next decade,″ he said in an interview.

Excluding the Postal Service, about 13% of new light-duty vehicles purchased across the government this year, or about 3,550, were “zero emissions,” according to administration figures provided to The Associated Press. The government defines zero emissions as either electric or plug-in hybrid, which technically has a gas-burning engine. That compares with just under 2% in the 2021 budget year and less than 1% in 2020.

Nationwide, about 6% of new car sales are electric.

When it comes to vehicles actually on the road, the federal numbers are even smaller. Many of the purchases in recent months won't be delivered for as long as a year due to supply chain problems.

Currently just 1,799 of the 656,000-vehicle federal fleet are zero-emissions vehicles.

At a rate of 35,000 to 50,000 GSA car purchases a year, it will take years, if not decades, to convert the entire fleet.

“It hasn’t been exactly a fast start,” said Sam Abuelsamid, principal mobility analyst for Guidehouse Insight. "It’s going to be challenging for them probably for at least the next year or two to really accelerate that pace.”

Christina S. Kingsland, who directs the business management division for the federal fleet at GSA, said “the federal fleet is a working fleet.”

The agency pointed to a limited EV supply from automakers with big upfront costs. In addition, it said the needs of agencies are often highly specialized, from Interior Department pickup trucks on large rural tribal reservations to hulking Department of Homeland Security SUVs along the U.S. border.

Agencies also need easy access to public EV charging stations. The White House has acknowledged agencies are “way behind” on their own charging infrastructure, with roughly 600 charging stations and 2,000 total chargers nationwide.

While Biden's bipartisan infrastructure law provides $7.5 billion to states to build out an EV charging network of up to 500,000 chargers over several years along interstate highways, no money from that law was earmarked for federal agencies' specialized needs. Money for charging stations must be allocated in each department's budget.

Meeting Biden's goal for the federal fleet is contingent on industry increasing production as predicted beginning in 2025 and 2026, analysts say. By that time, the effects of big federal investments to build public chargers and boost EV manufacturing in the U.S. will likely be felt alongside tougher rules for automakers to curtail tailpipe emissions.

GM, for example, has set a target of 1 million EV annual production capacity worldwide by 2025, while Ford expects to make 2 million EVs globally by 2026. Stellantis also is cranking up production capacity and is getting ready to launch a whole slate of new EVs.

The White House has declined to set a specific goal for EV purchases in 2023, but Mayock said he expects the number to be higher than 13%.

While the Postal Service is an independent agency, it plays an essential role in fleet electrification, not only because it owns 234,000 vehicles in the federal fleet, but also because the familiar blue-and-white mail trucks are by far the most visible federal vehicle, rolling into neighborhoods across America each day.

The agency plans to buy up to 165,000 of next-generation vehicles over a decade. The Postal Service remains "committed to reducing our carbon footprint in many areas of our operations and expanding the use of EVs in our fleet is a priority,'' said spokesperson Kim Frum.

White House officials say government EV purchases can only increase exponentially after a near-zero baseline a few years ago under President Donald Trump, who sought to loosen fuel economy requirements for gas-powered vehicles and proposed doing away with a federal tax credit for electric cars.

At a recent EV demonstration at a Federal Law Enforcement Training Center outside Washington, officers test-drove EVs outfitted for police use, including the Ford Mustang Mach-E. Mayock called it “a big change-management moment″ for the government.

Original Article

Trump: ‘We Are on a Mission to Restore the Republic to Greatness’

Trump: 'We Are on a Mission to Restore the Republic to Greatness' Trump: 'We Are on a Mission to Restore the Republic to Greatness'

By Eric Mack | Saturday, 01 October 2022 08:23 PM EDT

Blasting President Joe Biden's inflation and open border, former President Donald Trump vowed at his Save America rally in Warren, Michigan, on Saturday night to continue his "mission to restore the republic to greatness."

"No matter what the left-wing tyrants throw at us, no matter what they do to us, we have no choice, we have to keep on going," Trump told his rally at Macomb County Community College, which aired live on Newsmax. "We have to keep on fighting because we are on a mission to restore the republic to greatness. We're on a mission to bring it back, and it's really down and it's down very big – bad, very bad – very precarious what's going on."

Trump reissued his mantra for teasing his 2024 presidential campaign, which he has yet to officially announce because of "stupid" campaign finance laws.

"The election was rigged and stolen, and now our country is being absolutely destroyed because of it," Trump said. "I ran twice. I want twice. I did much better the second time than I did the first, getting millions and millions of more votes in 2020 than we did in 2016, and likewise getting more votes than any sitting president in the history of our country, as I said.

"And now, we might just have to do it again."

Trump did not announce his campaign once again, only promising his supporters in Michigan were "going to be very happy."

" I think you'll be very happy, but first we have to win a historic victory for the Republican Party this November," Trump said.

"Coming up, job number one for a Republican Congress is to stop the invasion of our southern border. It's an invasion. We're being invaded."

Trump also predicted record inflation will go even higher after the midterm elections.

"Under the Trump administration we had the greatest economy in the history of the world with no inflation," Trump said. "We had no inflation. Biden and the Democrat Congress created the worst inflation in 51 years: 9.2%.

"Now, I have to say that the inflation is going to get much higher now. It's going to get much higher right after the election. Watch what happens."

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Original Article

Trump Hails ‘Courage and Strength’ of Ginni Thomas

Trump Hails 'Courage and Strength' of Ginni Thomas Trump Hails 'Courage and Strength' of Ginni Thomas

By Eric Mack | Saturday, 01 October 2022 07:55 PM EDT

The wife of Justice Clarence Thomas, Ginni Thomas, was hailed by former President Donald Trump for her "courage and strength" at his Save America rally in Warren, Michigan, on Saturday night.

"I would like to thank a great woman named Ginni Thomas," Trump told his rally at Macomb Community College, which aired live on Newsmax.

Thomas testified before the House Jan. 6 select committee this week and reportedly stood fast in saying the 2020 presidential election was "rigged."

Trump denounced the "standard and routine leaks from the committee."

"You know everything leaks out of those committees," he continued. "They're like a leaking sieve. They're just like a leaking sieve. But she said that she still believes the 2020 election was stolen. She didn't say, Oh, well, I'd like not to get involved; of course, it was a wonderful election.

"It was a rigged and stolen election. She didn't wait and sit around and say, Well, let me give you maybe a different answer than I've been saying for the last two years now."

Trump blasted critics and Republicans in name only (RINOs) for folding on the issue of election integrity under pressure from Democrats in Congress and their partners in the media.

"Now, she didn't wilt under pressure, like so many others that are weak people and stupid people," Trump said. "Because once they wilt, they end up being a witness for a long time. She said what she thought. She said what she believed in, and too many Republicans are weak and they're afraid."

Trump warned Republicans weak on election integrity are going to continue to allow Democrats to control Congress after the midterms.

"They better get strong fast or you're not going to have a Republican Party, and you're not going to have a country anymore," Trump said.

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Bernie Kerik to Newsmax: Wouldn’t Be Surprised if DOJ Arrests Trump Before Election Day

Bernie Kerik to Newsmax: Wouldn't Be Surprised if DOJ Arrests Trump Before Election Day Bernie Kerik to Newsmax: Wouldn't Be Surprised if DOJ Arrests Trump Before Election Day Former President Donald Trump speaks at a Save America Rally at the Aero Center Wilmington on September 23, 2022 in Wilmington, North Carolina. (Allison Joyce/Getty)

By Sandy Fitzgerald | Saturday, 01 October 2022 07:07 PM EDT

Former New York Police Commissioner Bernie Kerik told Newsmax Saturday that he wouldn't be surprised if former President Donald Trump were arrested in the days before the November election.

"I would have said (I didn't believe it could happen) until the morning I heard that the FBI had raided the former president's residence," Kerik said on Newsmax's "The Count."

"This Department of Justice, this FBI, you know what? No one knows because it's been weaponized. It's politically corrupt."

And now, Kerik says it would not surprise him if Trump is arrested five or six days before Election Day, which falls on Nov. 8.

"There are things going on that no one on both sides of the aisle, Democrat and Republican, nobody has ever seen before, so I don't think anybody really knows the answer," said Kerik.

Meanwhile, the DOJ is opposed to the special master process being used to examine the documents that were seized from Trump's home, and Kerik said he wants to know what the government is looking for or what it wants to hide.

"They're supposed to be transparent," he said. "If they were transparent, they would not be opposing any of this. They would move forward the way they're supposed to in accordance with the law and get the review done, but they're throwing a monkey wrench every step of the way going forward."

Kerik also spoke out about the rising number of violent crimes in New York City, including the stabbing death of a 9/11 first responder in Queens this week and the beating of a woman in a random attack in a subway, who blamed Mayor Eric Adams for not fulfilling his promises on crime.

"Eric Adams worked for me," Kerik said about the mayor, a former NYPD officer.

"He's intentionally allowing this to happen. He knows how to fix it. He worked for me. He worked for [Rudy] Giuliani. He was there for the renaissance. He worked during the biggest, most substantial reduction in violent crime and murder in the history of New York City. He knows how to do it. He knows what we did to accomplish that. He's done absolutely nothing."

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Trump: ‘I Am Their No. 1 Target,’ But I ‘Will Continue Fighting a Long Time’

Trump: 'I Am Their No. 1 Target,' But I 'Will Continue Fighting a Long Time' former president donald pumps his fist at a save america rally Former President Donald Trump (Charlie Neigbergall/AP)

By Eric Mack | Saturday, 01 October 2022 07:35 PM EDT

Teasing another presidential campaign, former President Donald Trump promising his Save America rally crowd in Warren, Michigan, on Saturday night he will "continue fighting for you."

"I am their number one target, but I am proud to be fighting for you, and I'm going to be fighting for you a long time," Trump told his crowd at Macomb Country Community College.

Trump came to stump for his America First candidates, including GOP gubernatorial nominee Tudor Dixon.

"Six weeks from now, the people of Michigan are going to vote to fire your radical left Democrat Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, and you're going to send a very good person a very, very good woman, Tudor Dixon to the governor's mansion," Trump said.

"The choice in this election is simple: If you want the decline and fall of America, then vote for the radical left Democrats, that's what's happening," he continued. "We have a nation, as they say, in decline. If you want to stop the destruction of our country and save the American dream, you must vote Republican."

Trump said two more years of "Democrat rule" will "obliterate our country."

"They will abolish the filibuster, obliterate election integrity – which they've already done, to be totally honest with you – gut our military, bankrupt the Treasury, trashed our currency and incinerate trillions of dollars in middle class wealth, and it's happening to all the time," he said.

Trump rebuked President Joe Biden's "criminal injustice system."

"I think they'd like to see me in prison," he said. "Can you imagine? I think that they'd like that, you know why? You know why? Because they're sick. They're sick people. The Biden administration is completely corrupt, jailing political opponents just like the Soviet Union, now Russia."

Trump rebuked the "political persecution" of still-jailed Jan. 6 protesters, denouncing inhumane conditions.

"Likewise, the Biden administration has locked up dozens and dozens of political prisoners in horrific conditions – horrible horrible conditions in Washington," he said. "So filthy, so dirty that people don't even want to go there to look. They don't want to look, they get sick."

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GOP Attacks Georgia’s Abrams on Voting as Judge Rejects Suit

GOP Attacks Georgia's Abrams on Voting as Judge Rejects Suit GOP Attacks Georgia's Abrams on Voting as Judge Rejects Suit Stacey Abrams speaks onstage during the Beautiful Noise Live Equality on the Ballot panel at Buckhead Theatre on September 19, 2022 in Atlanta, Georgia. (Marcus Ingram/Getty)

Associated Press Saturday, 01 October 2022 06:03 PM EDT

When Democrat Stacey Abrams narrowly lost the Georgia governor's race to Republican Brian Kemp four years ago, she didn’t go quietly.

She ended her campaign with a non-concession that acknowledged she wouldn't be governor, while spotlighting her claims that Kemp had used his post as secretary of state to improperly purge likely Democratic voters. Abrams founded Fair Fight Action, a group focused on fair elections, which within weeks filed a wide-ranging federal lawsuit alleging "gross mismanagement" of Georgia’s elections.

That lawsuit sputtered out Friday with Fair Fight losing its last remaining arguments, more than a year after the judge had tossed most earlier claims.

People are already voting by mail in a Georgia governor’s race that again pits Abrams and Kemp against each other, with fewer than 40 days remaining before voting ends on Nov. 8.

And Republicans are now using the loss to attack what they see as the “big lie” that underlies Abrams' career. They label her claims that Georgia’s election system has been discriminatory as a fraud she used to enrich herself and aggrandize her political career after her 2018 loss.

"This is existential to who Stacey Abrams has become as a public and political figure," Georgia Attorney General Chris Carr, a Republican who defended the case, told The Associated Press on Saturday. "She put herself in the political spotlight nationally, potentially globally, all over the narrative that she lost the governor’s race because of voter suppression. And here you have a federal judge saying, it’s all untrue. It didn’t happen."

Carr and Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger are among a faction of Georgia Republicans who say that Democratic President Joe Biden beat Donald Trump fair and square in 2020 for Georgia's 16 electoral votes and that Kemp also beat Abrams fairly in 2018. They argue that Trump's claims about voter fraud in 2020 and Abrams' claims about voter suppression in 2018 both corrode faith in democracy.

"Stolen election and voter suppression claims by Stacey Abrams were nothing but poll-tested rhetoric not supported by facts and evidence," Raffensperger said Friday in a statement.

Abrams, though, has said from the dawn of her current campaign that her actions in 2018 are not equivalent to what Trump did.

"I will never ever say that it is OK to claim fraudulent outcomes as a way to give yourself power," Abrams told news outlet The 19th last month. "That is wrong. I reject it and will never engage in it. But I do believe that it is imperative, especially those who have the platform and the microphone, to talk about the access."

She is far from backing down from her position, and says she won a number of victories that made elections fairer.

In 2019, less than six months after the Fair Fight lawsuit was filed, legislators passed a law that addressed some of the issues. The law’s biggest change was to replace the state’s antiquated, paperless touchscreen voting machines with a new system that uses touchscreen machines to print paper ballots that are scanned.

The plaintiffs also count as wins the reinstatement of 22,000 voters who were removed from the rolls in 2019, an end to people being excluded from voting rolls if their records didn't exactly match their driver's license, an audit that identified people wrongly excluded because of incorrect citizenship information, and improvements to a voter's ability to cancel a mailed ballot and vote in person.

"As the judge says in his first sentence, 'This is a voting rights case that resulted in wins and losses for all parties,'" Abrams said in a Friday statement. "However, the battle for voter empowerment over voter suppression persists, and the cause of voter access endures. I will not stop fighting to ensure every vote can be cast, every ballot is counted and every voice is heard."

And despite the loss, the idea that Republicans are trying to restrict voting is a powerful current running through the most bitter disputes in Georgia politics — not only Abrams’ 2018 loss, but also a 2021 Republican election law that shortened the period to request an absentee ballot and limited ballot drop boxes, and harsh clashes over redrawing election districts this year that led one Democrat to accuse Republicans of seeking to preserve "white power."

Jermaine House, director of communications for political research firm HIT Strategies, said that "because there’s been so much energy and excitement and conversation" around voting rights in Georgia, it's an issue that drives Democrats, especially African Americans, to the polls. His firm has done work for liberal voter mobilization group New Georgia Project, the NAACP and Democratic efforts to reelect Sen. Raphael Warnock.

"If you look at polls across the country about voter suppression, you may find that voter suppression may not reach the top 10 issues among Black voters," House said. "But one exception that is the case is definitely Georgia. Georgia voters are well aware of voter suppression efforts, very attuned to it, and Black voters are really mobilized by the issue."

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Dick Morris to Newsmax: Inflation a Big Issue for Young Voters

Dick Morris to Newsmax: Inflation a Big Issue for Young Voters

(Newsmax/"Wake Up America")

By Charles Kim | Saturday, 01 October 2022 02:48 PM EDT

Political commentator and best-selling author Dick Morris told Newsmax Saturday that inflation woes are becoming a "bigger and bigger issue" among younger voters as the midterm elections loom.

"Polling with McLaughlin & Associates shows that this is particularly potent as an issue with under 40-year-old voters," Morris said during "Saturday Report." "When you and I pay more for gas, it's inconvenient. Sometimes it's a hardship. But they can't buy a car, and they can't have kids; they can't get married; they can't move out of mom's basement. Inflation is so impinging on their ability to start their lives that voters in their 20s and 30s are reacting horribly against inflation. It's overwhelmingly the biggest issue for them."

The poll to which Morris referred was conducted with 1,000 likely voters between Sept. 17-22 and did not report a margin of error for the survey.

It found 62% of voters, of which 33% were between the ages of 18-40, believe the country is on the wrong track and 49% of the total surveyed blame President Joe Biden and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., pushing Democratic policies for the shape the country is in.

Eighty-one percent of those surveyed said their individual households are impacted by inflation and higher prices, with 43% saying they are "struggling" and another 38% reporting a "small" impact.

"It's not just a spectator sport for them," said Morris, author of "The Return: Trump's Big 2024 Comeback." "It's something that they have to not only feel every day, which each of us do, but … it [affects] the ability to live their lives. … and I think that that's becoming [an] enormous issue. And as Election Day approaches, it's becoming bigger and bigger."

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Morris said he thinks Democrats bet too heavily on the abortion issue turning voters away from Republicans in the looming midterm elections, which could cost them the majority in both houses of Congress.

"I think that the Democrats basically bet on abortion as opposed to inflation. And they're losing that bet, both because inflation is getting worse and because people are getting used to the abortion decision," he said. "They're saying, 'It's not affecting me and my state,' and there will be some reasonable compromise worked out most of the time. So I think that this is absolutely roiling the Democrat chances for this election."

Morris said the "disconnect" between Democrats and the Biden administration with young voters is because they are feeling "desperate" as inflation forces prices higher and rising interest rates put financing basics like homes and cars out of reach, as well as the increasing possibility of losing their jobs.

"They are in a desperate economic situation," he said. "And they are not happy about the president."

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Trump Blasts Dems for ‘Weaponizing’ Justice Against ‘Political Opponent’

Trump Blasts Dems for 'Weaponizing' Justice Against 'Political Opponent' (Newsmax/"Greg Kelly Reports")

By Eric Mack | Saturday, 01 October 2022 11:39 AM EDT

Democrats are continuing their "weaponization" of justice in order to tarnish their leading "political opponent," former President Donald Trump wrote excoriating the nonstop efforts to keep him from running again in 2024.

"The Document Hoax Lawsuit, which is the 'weaponization' of the Justice Department and the FBI, is yet another scam against me, much like Russia, Russia, Russia, Impeachment Hoax #1, Impeachment Hoax #2, the Mueller Report (no collusion!), spying on my campaign (and getting caught!), lying to the FISA court, lying to Congress, illegally breaking into my home in Florida in violation of the Fourth Amendment, also violating the Presidential Records Act, and so much more," Trump wrote in a Save America PAC statement posted to Truth Social on Saturday.

"This is all being done in order to hurt a political opponent, me, who is leading in all of the polls by over 50 points against Republicans, and from 5 to 10 points against the two primary Democrats, Biden and North Korea sympathizer Kamala Harris," Trump's statement continued. "They have been doing this to me for six years ever since my wonderful journey down the 'golden escalator.' The radical left Democrats are out-of-control, and our country is going to hell!"

Trump also took pointed aim at The New York Times' Maggie Haberman for spin-doctoring an interview for her attack book into another activist weapon for Democrats in these midterm elections.

"Maggot Hagerman of the unfunded liability plagued New York Times is my self-appointed biographer, even though she got the Russia, Russia, Russia Hoax & the Mueller Report conclusion completely wrong, & refused to write about the FACT that the Democrats spied on my campaign, lied to Congress, & cheated and lied to the FISA court," Trump wrote in another Save America PAC statement.

"Maggot was also duped on Impeachment Hoax #1 & Impeachment Hoax #2, & said in 2016 that, 'Trump will NOT run for president.' She is a bad writer with very bad sources!"

Trump has often given interviews to activist journalists in liberal media to try to get his side of the story told, as former Amb. Ric Grenell has noted on Newsmax, but some conservatives warn the story will always be spun against him in the end.

Trump has effectively admitted the same in the above statement.

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