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Introduced: Sponsor: Rep. Gwen Moore [D-WI4]
This bill was referred to the House Committee on Agriculture which will consider it before sending it to the House floor for consideration.
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Introduced: Sponsor: Rep. Gwen Moore [D-WI4]
This bill was referred to the House Committee on Agriculture which will consider it before sending it to the House floor for consideration.
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Introduced: Sponsor: Rep. Ann Kuster [D-NH2]
This bill was referred to the House Committee on Energy and Commerce which will consider it before sending it to the House floor for consideration.


Britain records biggest ever daily increase for second day in a row, as new cases rise sharply
The daily number of coronavirus deaths has reached 1,820, the highest since the pandemic began.
The number of new cases rose sharply to 38,905, after a fall earlier in the week which inspired optimism that lockdown restrictions were working.
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President Joe Biden as he delivers his inaugural address on the West Front of the U.S. Capitol on January 20, 2021 in Washington, DC. | Alex Wong/Getty Images
In his first foreign policy move, Biden fired Michael Pack, the head of the US Agency for Global Media.
In his first foreign policy act, President Joe Biden followed through on his promise to fire the head of the US Agency for Global Media, who abused his eight months in power trying to turn the US government-funded international media agency into a pro-Trump propaganda machine.
Michael Pack, an ally of former President Donald Trump and Steve Bannon, resigned on Wednesday soon after Biden finished his inaugural address. In a letter, Pack said Biden’s team asked him to step down from his post as the head of the US Agency for Global Media (USAGM), a government department that oversees media organizations like Voice of America and Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty — and is collectively one of the largest media networks in the world.
“I serve at the pleasure of not one particular president, but the office of the president itself,” Pack wrote. “Your administration has requested my resignation, and that is why I am tendering it.”
Pack was slated to serve a three-year term after his Senate confirmation to the job last summer. But Biden was clearly displeased with how Pack ran the organization, which is responsible for broadcasting unbiased news to nations that struggle to get unfiltered information — which explains why Biden prioritized Pack’s ouster.
Pack made clear from the get-go that he would run the media agency by whim, not law.
In his first hours at the helm last June, Pack fired the heads of USAGM’s outlets because they were too soft on China and didn’t defend American values — as Trump would describe them — enough to the rest of the world.
For many people, especially the agency’s employees, that move violated USAGM’s “firewall,” enshrined in US law, that “prohibits interference by any US government official in the objective, independent reporting of news, thereby safeguarding the ability of our journalists to develop content that reflects the highest professional standards of journalism, free of political interference.”
Even though the government funds the news agencies, they still run independently when it comes to editorial decision-making. Pack, then, could ensure the day-to-day operations of USAGM operations went smoothly, but he couldn’t force himself into the editorial processes of the organization. But by firing the agency staffers without apparent cause, Pack inserted himself into the way the outlets did the news.
In case anyone thought Pack may have just had some growing pains and made mistakes, he was open about his designs on the agency.
“My job really is to drain the swamp, to root out corruption, and to deal with these issues of bias,” he said on The Federalist Radio Hour podcast last August, joking with the host that he’d “look into” doing so by turning off the air conditioning or banning masks. However, he did say it was not his goal “to tell journalists what to report” and that he was not purging employees.
But that last part just wasn’t true. Among other things, Pack fired senior officials for telling him that his actions violated “firewall” laws and did nothing as top Voice of America staff reassigned the outlet’s White House reporter for asking tough questions of Secretary of State Mike Pompeo.
The situation got so bad that 11 whistleblowers in 2020 sent complaints to the federal watchdog US Office of Special Counsel. After months of review, the agency found in December that USAGM leadership — and mainly Pack — “repeatedly violated the Voice of America firewall” and “engaged in gross mismanagement and abuse of authority.”
One VOA journalist I spoke to who worked under Pack these last eight months couldn’t have been happier with the news of his ouster. “There are a lot of people celebrating and breathing sighs of relief,” the person told me, speaking on the condition of anonymity to avoid retribution, citing the fact that Pack-allied staffers remain in leadership roles. The journalist hoped Biden and his team would oust those staffers soon, too.
Whether they will or not is still an open question. That means that USAGM may have lost its leader, but the agency could continue to face more problems, even with Biden at the helm.

The Biden administration has asked the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) general counsel to resign, Bloomberg Law reports.

A Connecticut man has been arrested on charges that he assaulted a Washington police officer, whom he pinned between two doors, during the Jan. 6 riot by Trump supporters at the U.S. Capitol.Source: Capitol riots: Patrick McCaughey arrested for assaulting cop amid Trump mob
Global COVID-19 cases declined a bit last week, but the number of deaths rose to record levels, as hot spots within world regions shift and more countries report the detection of variant SARS-CoV-2 strains, the World Health Organization (WHO) said yesterday in its regular weekly update.
Cases were down 6%, partly led by declines in parts of Europe and the Americas. Deaths, however, increased by 9%, with the world reporting a record weekly high of 93,000, the WHO said, noting that hospitalizations and deaths are a lagging indicator.
Illness levels rose in the Eastern Mediterranean, African, and Western Pacific regions. In the Middle East, countries reporting recent large spikes include Lebanon and the United Arab Emirates. In Africa, cases fell in South Africa, the continent’s main hot spot, but were up sharply in Nigeria and Zambia. And in the WHO’s Western Pacific region, Japan reported the most cases, but Malaysia and the Philippines reported steep rises.
In another example of shifts among regions, cases in the Americas were down slightly, by 2%, mainly due to a decline in the United States, but Brazil and Colombia both registered double-digit rises.
Source: Global COVID-19 deaths climb; hot spot locations shift | CIDRAP

Much of Wednesday’s inauguration ceremony for President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris felt like a balm to a wounded nation’s soul, especially 22-year-old Amanda Gorman’s beautiful recitation of the inauguration poem, “The Hill We Climb.”
At Wednesday’s inauguration, on the spot where insurrectionists barreled over Capitol Police officers and broke into the seat of representative government two weeks ago, superstar Jennifer Lopez at one point in her musical performance lifted a finger and proclaimed: “Una nación, bajo Dios, indivisible, con libertad y justicia para todos! Source: Biden inauguration 2021: What Jennifer Lopez said in Spanish – Los Angeles Times
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