Friday, September 15, 2023

Turkey’s Erdogan to Meet UK’s Prince Edward as Ties Develop


Selcan Hacaoglu
Fri, September 15, 2023

(Bloomberg) -- Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan will host the UK’s Prince Edward, Duke of Edinburgh, later this month as the two countries discuss ways to develop defense and trade relations, according to people familiar with the matter.

Turkey and the UK have been working to boost ties since Brexit and the rare meeting with a member of the British royal family comes on the heels of a visit by UK Foreign Secretary James Cleverly.

Prince Edward is also expected to attend a gala dinner and visit a British school during his stay, said the people, who asked not to be named as the trip has yet to be announced.

Buckingham Palace and UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s office declined to comment.

Turkey is engaged in talks with the UK to extend the scope of an existing free trade agreement and is also in discussions with Rolls-Royce Holdings Plc over the joint production of engines for its tank and warplane projects, the people said.

While talks with Rolls-Royce are at an advanced stage, no announcement is expected during the trip, the people said.

Turkey is hoping to secure a deal with Rolls-Royce to boost its domestic program to develop a fifth-generation fighter jet, dubbed TAI Kaan, or TF. Rolls-Royce already has a joint venture with Turkish industrial conglomerate Kale Group in Turkey, where the future engine would be produced if an agreement is reached.

The TAI Kaan is a stealth, twin-engine, all-weather fighter plane being developed by Turkish Aerospace Industries with assistance from BAE Systems.

Turkey has also expressed interest in buying three Type 23 frigates currently in use by the Royal Navy to replace some of its aging ships, the people said.

Cleverly, the most senior UK minister to visit Turkey since a new government was formed in May, held talks with its foreign and defense ministers in Ankara earlier this week.

His discussions with Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan focused on preliminary preparations to expand the scope of the free trade deal and diversify bilateral trade, which stands at close to $20 billion.

--With assistance from Emily Ashton.


BIRDS OF A FEATHER




CRIMINAL CAPITALI$M
Jared Kushner's Father Just Made This Shady Financial Move That Has Everyone Questioning His Pardon From Donald Trump

Kristyn Burtt
Fri, September 15, 2023 


Donald Trump has been depleting his funds at a rapid pace due to the legal bills he has amassed after his four indictments. The former president is seeking major donations to replenish his dwindling coffers, however, one recent contribution is raising eyebrows because it might have some ethical implications.

Jared Kushner’s father, Charles, recently donated $1 million to Donald Trump’s Make America Great Again Political Action Committee (PAC) and that’s cause for concern in some political circles. Just as a refresher, Jared is married to the former president’s daughter, Ivanka, and Charles was pardoned by Donald Trump after serving two years in federal prison for illegal campaign contributions, tax evasion, and witness tampering. He was also disbarred from practicing law in three states: New York, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania.


Charles Kushner and Jared Kushner attend LORD & TAYLOR Launches IVANKA TRUMP’s Spring 2012 Collection at Lord & Taylor on March 28, 2012 in New York City.


While there isn’t “any law directly prohibiting the recipient of a pardon from making a huge political contribution to benefit the politician who issued the pardon,” according to AbovetheLaw.com, there is a questionable aspect to the donation. Charles’ gift to Donald Trump does give the impression that he’s “paying for a pardon” — and that is problematic in an era when there’s a lack of trust in the government.

‘Breaking History: A White House Memoir’ by Jared Kushner

Click here to read the full article.

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Donald Trump probably won’t address the issue since he needs all of the financial support he can get in the wake of his upcoming trials. It’s a shady move by Charles and it creates a moral dilemma that won’t be addressed as he is happily enjoying his pardon-free life, thanks to his son’s close familial ties to the former president. Power and privilege benefitted Charles and he’s rewarded Donald Trump after one of his final executive moves as president.

IMF warns Lebanon that the country is still facing enormous challenges, years after a meltdown began

BASSEM MROUE
Fri, September 15, 2023 



 Lebanese caretaker Minister of Economy and Trade Amin Salam, second left, meets with a delegation from the International Monetary Fund in Beirut, Lebanon, Tuesday, Sept. 20, 2022. Four years after Lebanon's historic meltdown began, the small nation is still facing "enormous economic challenges," with a collapsed banking sector, eroding public services, deteriorating infrastructure, and worsening poverty, the International Monetary Fund warned Friday, Sept. 15, 2023.
 (AP Photo/Bilal Hussein, File)


BEIRUT (AP) — Four years after Lebanon’s historic meltdown began, the small nation is still facing “enormous economic challenges,” with a collapsed banking sector, eroding public services, deteriorating infrastructure and worsening poverty, the International Monetary Fund warned Friday.

In a statement issued at the end of a four-day visit by an IMF delegation to the crisis-hit country, the international agency welcomed recent policy decisions by Lebanon's central bank to stop lending to the state and end the work in an exchange platform known as Sayrafa.

Sayrafa had helped rein in the spiraling black market that has controlled the Lebanese economy, but it has been depleting the country's foreign currency reserves.

The IMF said that despite the move, a permanent solution requires comprehensive policy decisions from the parliament and the government to contain the external and fiscal deficits and start restructuring the banking sector and major state-owned companies.

In late August, the interim central bank governor, Wassim Mansouri, called on Lebanon's ruling class to quickly implement economic and financial reforms, warning that the central bank won’t offer loans to the state. He also said it does not plan on printing money to cover the huge budget deficit to avoid worsening inflation.

Lebanon is in the grips of the worst economic and financial crisis in its modern history. Since the financial meltdown began in October 2019, the country’s political class — blamed for decades of corruption and mismanagement — has been resisting economic and financial reforms requested by the international community.

Lebanon started talks with the IMF in 2020 to try to secure a bailout, but since reaching a preliminary agreement with the IMF last year, the country's leaders have been reluctant to implement needed reforms.

“Lebanon has not undertaken the urgently needed reforms, and this will weigh on the economy for years to come,” the IMF statement said. The lack of political will to “make difficult, yet critical, decisions” to launch reforms leaves Lebanon with an impaired banking sector, inadequate public services, deteriorating infrastructure and worsening poverty and unemployment.

Although a seasonal uptick in tourism has increased foreign currency inflows over the summer months, it said, receipts from tourism and remittances fall far short of what is needed to offset a large trade deficit and a lack of external financing.

The IMF also urged that all official exchange rates be unified at the market exchange rate.

Elon Musk’s monopoly over the space race could ‘choke’ the sector if left unchecked, top Lazard investment banker warns

Eleanor Pringle
Wed, September 13, 2023 

SpaceX rockets are soaring into the skies with ever-increasing frequency, and while it might be a boon for Elon Musk, not everyone's happy about it.

Over the past couple of years, interest in—and the untapped potential of—space has captured the attention of some of the biggest names in business: Musk, Jeff Bezos, Richard Branson and Andy Jassy to name a few.

The space race—be it for commercial "tourism" services or to launch satellites for internet—has one clear winner, however: Musk's SpaceX, with 263 launches to date.

That's a problem, says Vikram Nidamaluri, managing director of telecom, media, and entertainment at Lazard, because a potential early monopoly could hamstring the industry in the future.

Speaking at the World Satellite Business Week in Paris this week, Nidamaluri said: “I think it’s a huge concern. Having such a dominant launch provider is probably not healthy just in general for the commercial prospects of the industry."

“No one wants a monopoly choking out one point of the value chain. There are obviously other players that are ramping up capacity but I think the timeline hasn’t moved forward rapidly enough,” he continued, CNBC reports.

Pushing back

During a separate panel, SpaceX's Vice President Tom Ochinero pushed back on being branded a monopoly, pointing out that the company had launched satellites other than Starlink—a subsidiary of the brand.

The company has previously launched satellites for London-based OneWeb, mobile network operator EchoStar and global communications company Viasat.

Responding to the question of if SpaceX would launch satellites outside of its own interests, CNBC reports Ochinero said: “We’ve proven that, yeah, we will. We’re a launch company first, we’re here to provide launches.”

Although acknowledging that Starlink—a low-orbit satellite internet service—is a "big internal customer" Ochinero also pointed out SpaceX had previously moved such launches in order to prioritize work for competitors.

“I’m not super worried about this–we’re here to launch,” Ochinero finished.

Space X did not immediately respond to Fortune's request for comment.
Who is the competition?

Of those determined to stop Musk dominating the space race, Amazon founder Bezos might have the most motivation.

The long-established rivals have previously sparred about their launches, with Musk claiming Bezos is a “copycat” for founding Blue Origin, an American aerospace manufacturer that will be among three companies that launch Amazon’s Kuiper internet satellites.

Indeed, the rivalry between the pair is so heated that some Amazon shareholders are claiming it may have lost them money: they launched a suit earlier this month alleging SpaceX had been overlooked by the online giant because of the feud.

However, while SpaceX races ahead with the number of launches—predominantly thanks to its "workhorse" model, the Falcon 9—Blue Origin has had just 22.

The closest rival to SpaceX is actually United Launch Alliance (ULA), which has had near-160 launches to date and is creating its own new rocket, the Vulcan.

Speaking at the summit, ULA CEO Tory Bruno also shut down rumors of a monopoly and threw down something of a gauntlet, saying: “I appreciate the sentiment that [SpaceX] will be a benevolent monopoly, I don’t think you’re a monopoly and I don’t think it’s our plan for you to become one.”

This story was originally featured on Fortune.com
Soyuz MS-24 spacecraft launches to International Space Station from Kazakhstan

The Independent
Fri, September 15, 2023 at 10:36 AM MDT
The Soyuz MS-24 spacecraft launches to the International Space Station from Kazakhstan.
Source: NASA TV/Reuters
 

BBC


ASTRONAUT INTERVIEWS

Russia rolls Soyuz rocket to the pad ahead of Sept. 15 astronaut launch to ISS (photos)

Josh Dinner
Wed, September 13, 2023

People in hardhats are gathered along a railroad track with a car that carries a green/grey soyuz rocket laying on its side.


Tuesday was an active day at Russia's Baikonur Cosmodrome, in Kazakhstan, as the Soyuz rocket for the next astronaut launch to the International Space Station was rolled to the launchpad.

A Soyuz 2.1a rocket will launch the Soyuz MS-24 mission on Sept. 15, at 11:44 a.m. EDT (1544 GMT).

The spacecraft will carry three crew members of ISS Expedition 70 to relieve crewmembers delayed aboard the International Space Station (ISS) more than six months past their scheduled return to Earth.

Related: NASA astronaut Loral O'Hara ready for Soyuz launch to relieve delayed crew in space

MS-24's Soyuz 2.1a rocket was rolled via railcar from the Russian Space Corporation (Roscosmos) integration facilities, in Baikonur, to the Cosmodrome's Launch Complex 31.NASA photographer Bill Ingals was able to capture Soyuz's Sept. 12 journey, as the train pulled the rocket down the tracks.

People in hardhats are gathered along a railroad track with a car that carries a green/grey soyuz rocket laying on its side. MS-24, Sept. 12, 2023.

A leak aboard the MS-22 spacecraft extended its crew's mission while their empty spacecraft was undocked and returned to Earth. The MS-23 Soyuz was then repurposed for an uncrewed launch to the space station in order to bring the stranded astronaut and cosmonauts home.

Four people stand in the dirt as a soyuz rocket laying down on a train car passes by. MS-24, Sept. 12, 2023.

The Expedition 70 crew members launching this week were originally slated to fly that spacecraft, but were bumped to Soyuz MS-24 as a part of the schedule adjustment. That rocket is scheduled to kickoff Friday morning, and is now standing at pad ready to launch.

A blue train carries a white-tipped green/grey Soyuz rocket along train tracks. MS-24, Sept. 12, 2023.

Roscosmos cosmonaut Oleg Kononenko will fly as mission commander for MS-24. He will be joined by fellow cosmonaut Nikolai Chub and NASA astronaut Loral O'Hara, both of whom are headed to space for the first time.

Two people a standing in front of the chrome bottom of a soyuz rocket. the quintuple-cored rocket has four primary engines on each bottom stage.

This will be Kononenko's fifth mission, and will add six months to his already accumulated 736 days in orbit. As Kononenko and his crewmates reach the latter half of their stay onboard the ISS, the cosmonaut will surpass Gennadi Padalka as the most traveled human in space. Padalka set the record in 2015, returning to Earth after hitting accumulated 879 days.

A green/grey soyuz rocket with a white pointy top is laying diagonally as a green support arm that stretches the rocket's height lifts the vehicle vertical.

The Sept. 15 launch is scheduled for 11:44 a.m. EDT (1544 GMT). A short two hours later, Soyuz MS-24 will be preparing to rendezvous with the ISS.

A green/grey rocket with a pointy white top stands surrounded by diagonal support arms, leaning as they are raised to encapsulate the launch vehicle for access before launch.

A hatch opening and welcome ceremony is scheduled to begin at 4:45 p.m. (2045 GMT), later that day.


A green cage of support arms and structural access levels encase a green/grey soyuz rocket. People in white hard hats wearing blue stand at the base of the rocket. Six people closer to the foreground wearing yellow highlighter vests, but one is barely visible, as they are standing behind a small structure on the left.

Soyuz MS-24 is scheduled to dock to the space station's Rassvet module, on the Russian section of the orbital laboratory. With the arrival of MS-24, crewmembers of MS-22/MS-23 will prepare to return to Earth.

An upward view from inside the flame trench for a soyuz rocket.

Related Stories:


Leaky Soyuz spacecraft at space station returns to Earth in speedy landing

Russian Progress cargo spacecraft launches toward the ISS

Soyuz rocket: Russia's venerable booster

As a result of the Soyuz MS-22 leak, NASA astronaut Frank Rubio, and cosmonauts Sergey Prokopyev and Dmitry Petelin have all now spent an entire year in orbit, putting them alongside a select few human space travelers whose missions have lasted as long.

Rubio has now officially broken the U.S. record for continuous days in space, logging a total of 355 days. "My family has been the cornerstone that's inspired me to hopefully keep somewhat of a good attitude while I've been up here," Rubio said in a video recorded on Sept. 5. that aired on NASA Television's media channel Tuesday (Sept. 12).



Ex-Guatemala anti-corruption prosecutor granted asylum in US

SONIA PÉREZ D.
Thu, September 14, 2023

In this April 3, 2019 file photo, Juan Francisco Sandoval, Guatemala's lead prosecutor against impunity, poses for a photo during an interview in Guatemala City. Sandoval, the former anti-corruption prosecutor whose ouster led the U.S. to reduce cooperation with Guatemala's legal system, said on Sept. 14, 2023 that the US government has granted him political asylum two years after he went into exile due to threats stemming from his investigations. 
(AP Photo/Moises Castillo, File) 

GUATEMALA CITY (AP) — The United States government has granted asylum to Guatemala’s former lead anti-corruption prosecutor two years after he was fired and fled the country under threat of arrest.

An internationally respected prosecutor, Juan Francisco Sandoval had participated in the prosecution of former President Otto Pérez Molina and his Vice President Roxana Baldetti, who resigned and was convicted and sentenced of corruption, as well as four other presidents, including outgoing President Alejandro Giammattei.

“Granting me political asylum is additional proof of the political persecution of which I am a victim for having participated in the investigation of illegal political-economic networks that are embedded in the state," Sandoval said in a telephone interview with The Associated Press. He said those networks have involved six administrations, “including the current one of Giammattei.”

The deterioration of Guatemala’s justice system accelerated in 2019 when then-President Jimmy Morales forced the exit of the United Nations-backed anti-corruption mission. Sandoval, as the attorney general’s special prosecutor against impunity, worked closely with the foreign prosecutors working under the auspices of the U.N. to dismantle corrupt networks that controlled Guatemala. More than a thousand people, including former presidents, judges, lawmakers and other public officials were prosecuted.

But under Giammattei, the Attorney General’s Office began to pursue the same judges and prosecutors like Sandoval who had led the fight against corruption. More than 40 former justice system figures are in exile.

“After two years away I understand better that the Guatemalan state is a seized state and any person who questions it or puts at risk the corrupt system is going to be a victim of exile, will lose his freedom or risk his life,” Sandoval said.

Sandoval fled Guatemala under cover of darkness just hours after being fired by Attorney General Consuelo Porras in July 2021. He was accompanied by Sweden’s ambassador as he crossed to El Salvador. Porras had accused him of “abuses” without specifying what they were.

Sandoval said that pressure on him inside the Attorney General’s Office increased after he received information related to alleged acts of corruption by Giammattei, including an allegation of taking bribes from a Russian mining company.

Giammattei has denied the allegations.

Sandoval said Porras, who has been sanctioned by the U.S. government as an undemocratic actor for obstructing corruption investigations, spent days in his office reviewing his case files to see what he had on Giammattei.

Since fleeing Guatemala, Sandoval has been the subject of dozens of complaints to the Attorney General’s Office and six arrest orders.

President-elect Bernardo Arévalo, who campaigned on an anti-corruption platform, has said he would allow Sandoval and others who were forced into exile to return, and that he would listen to their ideas about how to take up the corruption fight again.

This week Arévalo publicly called for Porras to resign as her office continues to investigate the registration of his party and the election.


NATO NATION BUILDING
'They knew' - fury of Libyans that warnings went unheeded before flood

Reuters
Fri, September 15, 2023 



Aftermath of the floods in Derna


(Reuters) -"They knew."

When hydrologist Abdul Wanis Ashour began researching the system of dams protecting the eastern Libya port town of Derna 17 years ago, the peril facing residents was already no secret, he said.

"When I gathered the data, I found a number of problems in the Derna Valley: in the cracks present in the dams, the amount of rainfall and repeated floods," he told Reuters. "I found also a number of reports warning of a disaster taking place in the Derna Valley basin if the dams were not maintained."

In an academic paper he published last year, Ashour warned that if the dams were not urgently maintained, the city faced a potential catastrophe.

"There were warnings before that. The state knew of this well, whether through experts in the Public Water Commission or the foreign companies that came to assess the dam," he said. "The Libyan government knew what was going on in the Derna River Valley and the danger of the situation for a very long time."

This week, the "catastrophe" that Ashour had warned of in the pages of the Sebha University Journal of Pure & Applied Sciences, unfolded just as he said it would.

On the night of Sept. 10, the Derna Wadi, a dry riverbed most of the year, burst the dams built to hold it back when rains pour into the hills, and swept away much of the city below. Thousands of people are dead and thousands more still missing.

Abdulqader Mohamed Alfakhakhri, 22, said he made it to the roof of his four-storey building and was spared, watching as neighbours on their own rooftops were washed out to sea: "holding their phones with lights on and shaking their hands and screaming."

With the bodies still being gathered from underneath flattened buildings and the seashore where they have been washing up, many Libyans are angry that warnings were ignored that could have possibly prevented the worst disaster in the country's modern history.

"A lot of people are responsible for this. The dam wasn't fixed, so now it's a disaster," said Alwad Alshawly, an English teacher who had spent three days burying bodies as a rescue volunteer, in an emotional video uploaded to the internet.

"It is human error, and no one is going to pay a price for it."

Spokespeople for the government in Tripoli and the eastern administration which governs Derna did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

CONTRACTS

Authorities tried to repair the dams above Derna as far back as 2007, when a Turkish company was awarded a contract to work on them. In his report, hydrologist Ashour cites an unpublished 2006 study from the Water Resources Ministry on "the danger of the situation."

But in 2011, Libya's long-serving ruler Muammar Gaddafi was toppled in a NATO-backed uprising and civil war, and for years after Derna was held by a succession of militant Islamist factions, including Al Qaeda and Islamic State.

The Turkish company, Arsel, lists a project on its website to repair the Derna dams as having begun in 2007 and been completed in 2012. The company did not answer its phone or respond to an emailed request for comment.

Omar al-Moghairbi, spokesperson for a Water Resources Ministry committee investigating the dams' collapse, told Reuters the contractor had been unable to complete the works because of the security situation, and had not returned when requested.

"Budgets were allocated but the contractor was not there," he said.

Even if the renovation work had been carried out, the dams would have failed, Moghairbi said, because the water level after Storm Daniel's deluge exceeded the structure's capacity, although the damage to Derna would not have been as severe.

Two officials at Derna municipality also told Reuters work on the dams contracted before Gaddafi's fall had been impossible to carry out afterwards because the city was occupied by Islamic State and besieged for several years.

Even after the city was recaptured by the administration running the east of the country, work did not resume.

In 2021, a report by Libya's Audit Bureau cited "inaction" by the Water Resources Ministry, saying it had failed to move forward with maintenance work on the two main dams above Derna.

The report said that 2.3 million euros ($2.45 million) had been earmarked for maintenance and rehabilitation of the dams but only part of the funds were deducted. It did not say whether those funds had been spent, or on what.

STORM WARNING

Critics of the authorities say they are to blame not only for failing to repair the dams, but for leaving residents of Derna in harm's way as the storm approached.

Speaking on the pan-Arab al-Hadath channel, Derna mayor Abdulmenam al-Ghaithi said on Friday he "personally ordered evacuating the city three or four days before the disaster."

However, if such an order was given, it does not appear to have been implemented. Some residents reported hearing police tell them to leave the area, but few seem to have left.

Other official sources told residents to stay: a video posted by the Derna Security Directorate on Sunday announced a curfew from Sunday night "as part of the security measures to face the expected weather conditions".

Even as the catastrophe was unfolding on Sunday night, the Water Resources Ministry issued a post on its Facebook page telling residents not to worry.

"The dams are in good condition and things are under control" it said. The ministry spokesperson did not immediately respond to a request for comment about the post.

The head of the World Meteorological Organization in Geneva, Petteri Taalas, said on Thursday that in a country with a functioning weather agency, the huge loss of life could have been avoided.

"The emergency management authorities would have been able to carry out evacuation of the people. And we could have avoided most of the human casualties."

FAILED STATE

Apportioning blame is never simple in Libya, where dozens of armed factions have waged war on-and-off with no government having nationwide authority since Gaddafi fell.

The internationally recognised Libyan government based in the capital Tripoli in the west of the country has no sway in the east, under a rival administration controlled by the Libyan National Army of Khalifa Hafter.

In Derna, the situation is even more troubled. Haftar's forces captured it from the Islamist groups in 2019 and still control it, but uneasily.

Libya's problem is not a lack of resources. Despite 12 years of chaos it is still a comparatively wealthy country, sparsely populated and pumping out oil that yields a decidedly middle-income per capita GDP above $6,000.

It has a decades-long history of massive engineering projects, above all on managing water in the desert. Gaddafi's Great Manmade River, for example, brings water some 1,600 km (1,000 miles) from aquifers deep under the Sahara to the coast.

But since Gaddafi's fall, the oil wealth has been disbursed among competing groups that control the administrative apparatus, becoming almost impossible to trace.

Prime Minister Abdulhamid al-Dbeibah, head of the Tripoli government, on Thursday blamed negligence, political divisions, war, and "lost money" for uncompleted work on the dams.

In the eastern-based parliament in Benghazi, speaker Aguila Saleh sought to deflect blame from authorities, describing what happened as an "unprecedented natural disaster" and saying people should not focus on what could or should have been done.

In Derna, residents have known about the danger posed by the dams for generations, said history teacher Yousef Alfkakhri 63, who rattled off the years of smaller floods dating back to the 1940s. But the terror of Sunday night was incomparable.

"When the water started flowing into the house, me and my two sons with their wives escaped to the roof. The water was faster than us and flowing between the stairs," he recalled.

"Everyone was praying, crying, we saw the death," he said, describing the rushing water as sounding "like a snake."

"We lost thousands in all the wars in the past ten years, but in Derna we lost them in one day."

(Additional reporting by Tom Perry, Angus McDowall, Maya Gebeily, Laila Bassam, Tarek Amara, Emma Farge and Mariana Sandoval; Writing by Peter GraffEditing by Frank Jack Daniel)


Newsom in the hot seat after California passes bill to give striking workers unemployment benefits

Queenie Wong
Thu, September 14, 2023 

Striking Writers Guild of America workers picket outside the Sunset Bronson Studios in May. (Luis Sinco / Los Angeles Times)

Striking workers in California, including writers and actors still picketing Hollywood studios, would be eligible for unemployment benefits under legislation state lawmakers passed on Thursday.

Gov. Gavin Newsom now faces a critical decision on whether to sign the bill into law and help provide financial relief to striking entertainment workers and other union members walking out during an era of rising tensions between labor and employers in California.

Under Senate Bill 799, California would become one of the few states that allow striking workers to collect unemployment benefits, joining New York and New Jersey. The bill, as strongly supported by labors unions as it was opposed by the California Chamber of Commerce, would allow striking workers to collect unemployment benefits after being on strike for two weeks.

If the governor signs the bill, it would take effect in January.

Newsom has been taking a backstage role as the Hollywood strikes drag on for more than 100 days, emphasizing he’s working with both sides.

At an event hosted by Politico on Tuesday, the governor expressed concerns about the unemployment insurance fund's debt but didn't say whether he would veto the bill. California's unemployment fund is more than $18 billion in debt after it borrowed money from the federal government to pay for unemployment benefits.

"I think one has to be cautious about that before you enter the conversation about expanding its utilization," Newsom said.

Democrats, on the other hand, have been voicing their support for the unions.

“We want people to be able to pay their rent and want people to be able to put food on their table during a strike or not during the strike. It's the right thing to do,” said Sen. Anthony Portantino (D-Burbank), who wrote the bill, on the Senate floor.

The bill cleared the Senate on Thursday with Republicans opposing the legislation because of concerns it would harm businesses and "put the thumb on the scale" in favor of labor unions.

In California, unemployment pay is $450 per week for a maximum of 26 weeks. To be eligible for unemployment, Californians have to meet other requirements such as conducting a reasonable effort to search for work.

Labor unions, including the Writers Guild of America and SAG-AFTRA, have been pushing for the bill’s passage in committee hearings. On Sept. 7, members of those unions also held a rally about SB 799, urging lawmakers to pass the legislation. Unions have strike funds to help workers pay their bills, but union leaders say that isn’t enough, especially as strikes drag on for months.

The Assembly passed the bill on Monday.

Assemblymember Bill Essayli (R-Corona) said on the Assembly floor that the legislation was fundamentally unfair to businesses since the state would in essence be taking the side of striking union members during a labor dispute.

“By doing this, we're giving one side an advantage,” said Essayli, who voted against the bill along with other Republicans. “You're subsidizing, with tax dollars, the labor side.”

Assemblymember Lori D. Wilson (D-Suisun City) voted for SB 799 but also expressed concerns about the unemployment fund’s debt and who is eligible for those benefits.

“We have to deal with this issue of it being underfunded. We have to deal with this issue of who it encompasses,” she said on the Assembly floor.

The California Chamber of Commerce argued that expanding unemployment benefits to striking workers would be akin to a tax increase for employers, since they fund the benefit. Businesses pay state and federal payroll taxes on each employee’s first $7,000 in annual wages to fund the unemployment insurance program.

But those tax dollars haven’t been enough to fund unemployment benefits. The state also borrowed $20 billion from the federal government in 2020 to fund unemployment claims. To repay that loan, employers would pay additional taxes annually.

Read more: As Hollywood strikes drag on, California lawmakers consider unemployment pay for striking workers

Money from the state’s general fund also goes toward the interest on the loan, which could be paid off by 2032, according to estimates from the Legislative Analyst’s Office. The amount of time it takes to pay off the loan could be longer if more job losses happen in California.

Determining the bill’s impact on the unemployment fund is tough to predict because it depends on various factors including the number of workers on strikes and how long the strike lasts. The cost to the state’s unemployment insurance fund is “likely in the low millions to tens of millions of dollars," according to the Assembly Appropriations Committee’s bill analysis.

Get the best of the Los Angeles Times’ politics coverage with the Essential Politics newsletter.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

SAG WGA STRIKE SCABS

Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez Slams Drew Barrymore and Bill Maher: ‘I Don’t Support People Who Break Picket Lines’

Sharon Knolle
Thu, September 14, 2023 


Democratic New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez joined the hordes of people condemning talk show hosts Bill Maher and Drew Barrymore for resuming production on their series despite the ongoing WGA and SAG-AFTRA strikes.

“‘I don’t support people who break picket lines,” Ocasio-Cortez told British outlet The Independent on Thursday. She has previously joined striking writers and actors on the picket lines in New York.

Maher’s decision to go back on the air without his writing staff was condemned by the WGA as “disappointing.” The guild announced they will be picketing his show “Real Time,” which tapes at Television City studio lot in Los Angeles.

Barrymore, meanwhile, was dropped as the host of the National Book Awards after her announcement and her show, which is filmed at CBS Broadcast Center in New York, has also been picketed by some of her own staff.

Ocasio-Cortez has been an outspoken union advocate, speaking earlier this summer in support of UPS drivers who approved a new contract after walking off the job in July, as well as supporting the United Automobile Workers union, which is poised to go on strike Thursday night if a new contract is not settled on by the midnight deadline.

Cristina Kinon, who is co-head writer of “The Drew Barrymore Show,” told The Daily Beast on Thursday, “I would love to see the show stand in solidarity with us, and it’s not too late… Unions only work when you stick together with unions across the labor spectrum.”

She continued, “Now, there’s word that maybe some other shows are coming back. So it is frustrating, because it will prolong the strike, and we just want it to end.”

Maher has claimed that he will be honoring the spirit of the strike by not writing a monologue or his trademark “New Rules” segment.

“If he goes forward with his plan, he needs to honor more than ‘the spirit of the strike,’” the WGA’s statement shared to X read. “As a WGA member, Bill Maher is obligated to follow the strike rules and not perform any writing services. It is difficult to imagine how [‘Real Time’] can go forward without a violation of WGA strike rules taking place.”

Talk show hosts are under a different contract than other actors, so they are not currently on strike. However, the WGA considers any writing work done during the strike, which began on May 2, to be “struck work.”

The Talk” resumed production on Wedensday and has also been picketed at Radford Studios (aka CBS Studio Center) in Studio City.

The post Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez Slams Drew Barrymore and Bill Maher: ‘I Don’t Support People Who Break Picket Lines’ appeared first on TheWrap.



UK
'I’m an NHS doctor and I’ve been sexually assaulted by my male colleagues – I’m far from the only one'

As told to Amber O’Connor, Jade Biggs
Fri, September 15, 2023 

"I was sexually assaulted by a fellow NHS doctor"Solskin - Getty Images


It took a few years of working as a doctor before I realised there was something very wrong with how I – and other female colleagues – were being treated by the men working alongside us.

Straight out of medical school, I spent two years rotating around various hospitals, trying out different specialities and getting a feel for life on the wards, before joining my current team. I was immediately in awe of the dedication I saw in those around me. Our days were tough, working long shifts and in challenging circumstances, but helping our patients kept us going. It was a massive deal in my family that I became a doctor – no one I knew had been to university – and I was excited to join a profession that enabled me to care for others and make a change.

Looking back, I now see it wasn’t quite the team I thought it was.

Derogatory comments about our appearance were commonplace. Snide remarks intended to embarrass us were normalised. Unwanted physical touching became expected. All of which, sadly, means that a new report highlighting that 30% of female surgeons have been sexually assaulted by a colleague came as little surprise to me.

Of the 1,434 registered surgeons who responded anonymously to researchers, 90% of women and 81% of men also said they’d witnessed some form of sexual misconduct, and referred to a "culture of silence" in hospitals – wherein people feared that speaking up could jeopardise their future careers.

In my experience, female staff were frequently warned about which male staff members to be wary of. ‘Don't go in a room alone with this consultant’. ‘Make sure you're not in the locker room with that surgeon’. Comments like these were whispered to us by female colleagues as we passed in the corridor.

At the time, we didn’t really stop to process how wrong these situations were, and there was no safe space in which to spotlight such behaviour. We figured we just had to shut up and put up with it, and we were too busy focusing on our patients to overthink it.

As a junior doctor, I was groped by a consultant at a conference and seriously sexually assaulted by another doctor. Having to spend all day, every day in the same environment that I’d been assaulted in was traumatic.

The abuse I suffered at the hands of male colleagues impacted my career, regardless of whether I spoke out – against the “culture of silence” – or not. Because, while we had supervisors to whom we were supposed to go with any concerns, these are most often consultants – many of them men. The medical profession is a small, interconnected world, hospitals even more so, and the medical field is a deeply patriarchal institution.

According to NHS figures, 66% of consultants are men and 54% of chief executive or director roles in the NHS are held by men. We all knew that if we raised a complaint to one consultant, they were most likely friends with our abuser – or worse, they were the one doing it in the first place.



Eventually, struggling to cope, I dropped out of surgical training and moved into general practice instead. Moving away from the physical location in which my abuse took place helped to a degree, but my mental health still suffered. I took months off work and had therapy to process and cope.

That’s why I decided to launch a campaign with my colleague Dr Chelcie Jewitt, to prevent what happened to me from happening to other women in the NHS. Surviving in Scrubs is exposing the sexism that so many are dealing with when they go to work in the NHS to care for patients every day.

As part of the campaign, we're encouraging women and non-binary people from all ethnic backgrounds and with all physical abilities working in our field to come forward and share their story. Since kicking off the campaign last year, we’ve had more than 170 testimonies submitted to us – with multiple stories contained within each submission. Over the last twelve months, we’ve also been busy amplifying our campaign to reach senior healthcare leaders and the government.

And that’s not all: we’ve launched a new website with guidance, support and blogs, and continue to receive stories from survivors. We have been working with NHS England, the ambulance service, the BMA, the GMC, medical schools, medical royal colleges, and universities to push for change. Change which is happening, albeit slowly. While the NHS has introduced a new charter (an agreement with 10 pledges that healthcare organisations voluntarily sign up to in order to tackle sexual misconduct in healthcare) and the General Medical Council has issued new guidance, we’re still waiting on stronger policies to be put in place, along with better education and reporting systems.

While the surgeon's report published this week shows the appalling misogyny and abuse women experience working in surgery, it’s only a small part of the medical sphere’s gigantic problem with misogyny: it is an incredibly widespread issue and one that exists across healthcare in general. At Surviving in Scrubs, we’ve heard stories from numerous nursing and allied health professionals – and devastatingly, many survivors are not listened to, despite raising their voices again and again.

We’re now urgently calling on the NHS and relevant colleges to stop this behaviour, take action against those who perpetuate it and support those who experience it.

Sexism and abuse is a societal issue, yes, but it’s also an NHS issue – and we won’t stop telling our stories until it has been stamped out.

Following the British Journal of Surgery report published on 12 September 2023, Dr Binta Sultan, Chair of NHS England’s National Clinical Network of Sexual Assault and Abuse Services said: "No one should experience sexual abuse or assault in the workplace but unfortunately, we know inequality and sexual misconduct exists and is experienced disproportionately by our female colleagues across the NHS.

"While this report makes incredibly difficult reading, it presents clear evidence of why we must take more action to better understand and address these issues.

"We are committed to working with our partners to ensure that healthcare environments are safe for all staff and patients. We are already taking significant steps to do this, including through commitments to provide more support and clear reporting mechanisms to those who have suffered harassment or inappropriate behaviour, thanks to a first of its kind sexual safety charter, which was produced collaboratively with people with lived experience."

In response to Cosmopolitan UK's request for comment, Charlie Massey, Chief Executive of the GMC, said they have a "zero tolerance" policy towards sexual harassment and that they "Welcome this report and the wider work WPSMS have done to highlight and address the serious issue of sexual misconduct in healthcare. There can be no place for any form of sexual harassment, discrimination, misogyny or bullying in the medical profession.

"Our updated professional standards for doctors, Good medical practice, set out our zero tolerance of sexual misconduct. The standards are clear that acting in a sexual way towards patients or colleagues is unacceptable. We have also produced support materials on our website to help doctors identify and tackle sexual misconduct.

"In many cases involving sexual allegations, the GMC’s position will be that such serious misconduct is incompatible with continued registration. In those cases, we will submit that erasure is the appropriate sanction."

Dr Becky Cox and Dr Chelcie Jewitt thank all those who have submitted their stories, and continue to encourage others to share their own. Read more about the Surviving in Scrubs campaign, and submit your own story, here. You can support the campaign’s GoFundMe fundraiser here.