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Sixth Democrat enters race for Pennsylvania Congressional seat

Sixth Democrat enters race for Pennsylvania Congressional seat

Yahoo04-08-2025
(WHTM) – A sixth Democrat has entered the race to succeed retiring Philadelphia Congressman Dwight Evans (D).
Karl Morris of Philadelphia formally filed with the Federal Elections Commission to run for the 3rd District seat in 2026. According to his campaign website, Morris has worked as a computer scientist, consultant, researcher, and teacher.
Morris currently works at Temple University as an Associate Professor of Instruction in the Department of Computer and Information Sciences.
'For far too long Philadelphia has been the victim of politics as usual, where the establishment serves itself before the people,' says the Morris campaign website. 'We need modern leadership, not run-of-the-mill politicians!'
Morris highlighted the issues of education, women's health, technology, climate, and criminal justice as some of the many issues he hopes to run on.
The race for Pennsylvania's 3rd District stands to be one of the most competitive primaries next spring. State Senator Sharif Street, who also serves as Chair of the Pennsylvania Democratic Party, and State Representative Christopher Rabb both announced their candidacies in July.
Intensive care physician David Oxman, former government employee Robin Toldens, and Gabriel Caceres have also filed to run for Evans' seat in a heavily Democratic district.
Evans, 71, ran unopposed in 2024 and received at least 90% of the vote in his previous four elections. Evans, who suffered a stroke last year, announced his retirement in June after serving nearly 10 years in Congress.
No Republicans have filed to run in the 3rd District at this time.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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Immigration enforcement needs oversight. ICE can't just ban lawmakers
Immigration enforcement needs oversight. ICE can't just ban lawmakers

Los Angeles Times

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Immigration enforcement needs oversight. ICE can't just ban lawmakers

As the Trump administration continues to ramp up immigration enforcement actions, a group of lawmakers is suing Immigration and Customs Enforcement for placing restrictions on detention center visits — obstructing Congress' role in overseeing government functions. Twelve House Democrats filed a lawsuit challenging new guidelines that require advance notice for oversight visits and render certain facilities off-limits. 'No child should be sleeping on concrete, and no sick person should be denied care,' said Rep. Jimmy Gomez (D-Los Angeles). 'Yet that's exactly what we keep hearing is happening inside Trump's detention centers.' These lawmakers are right to seek access to detention facilities. Detention centers have long been plagued by poor conditions, so the need for oversight is urgent. With record numbers of migrants being detained, the public has a right to know how people in the government's custody are being treated. 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In the former, one detainee reported being fed only once a day, at 3 a.m. In the latter, as many as 80 detainees have been crammed into a single room amid sweltering summer temperatures. These offices were never set up to house people overnight or for days or weeks. If they are functioning as de facto detention centers, then they must be subject to inspections. Congressional oversight of immigration detention is vital right now. The current capacity for U.S. detention facilities is 41,000. Yet the government was holding nearly 57,000 people as of July 27. That means facilities are far over capacity, in a system that the Vera Institute of Justice describes as 'plagued by abuse and neglect.' No matter who is president, conditions in immigrant detention are generally abysmal. Migrant detention centers have been cited for their lack of medical care, poor treatment of detainees, and physical and sexual violence. 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Here's why you don't want the Trump administration to buy stock in Intel
Here's why you don't want the Trump administration to buy stock in Intel

Los Angeles Times

time26 minutes ago

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Here's why you don't want the Trump administration to buy stock in Intel

Back in 1935, the drafters of Social Security told Congress of their plans to build up a government pension reserve that would reach $47 billion. The number shocked lawmakers. It was nearly three times the outstanding federal debt of the time. 'What in heaven's name are you going to do with $47 billion?' Sen. Arthur Vandenberg, Republican of Michigan, asked Arthur Altmeyer, one of the drafters. 'You could invest it in U.S. Steel and some of the large corporations,' Altmeyer suggested. Vandenberg threw up his hands in horror. 'That would be socialism!' he exclaimed. Yet the idea of federal government investments in public corporation stock has never died. It walks among us like a zombie today, with the Trump administration talking about taking a 10% ownership stake in the chipmaker Intel and musing about creating a sovereign wealth fund akin to those established by Saudi Arabia, Singapore, Norway and other countries. 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As I wrote in 2005, when the idea of allowing Social Security to invest its trust fund in equities was under consideration again, the potential for conflicts of interest is inescapable. The government might be a major shareholder in a corporation it was prosecuting for criminal activity. The government might end up on one side of an international issue as a member of a coalition of nations, and on the opposite side as a shareholder. Its financial interests might stand in opposition to its social interests: In his 1999 State of the Union message, for example, President Clinton simultaneously threatened to sue the tobacco industry over its threat to public health, and advocated allowing Social Security to invest in all equities — tobacco included. In 1935, Congress addressed the conundrum by mandating that the Social Security Administration invest its reserves only in U.S. Treasury securities, a rule that exists to this day. Social Security's would-be reformers periodically revive proposals to shift some of the program's trust fund — which held more than $2.7 trillion in treasuries at the end of last year — into equities, pointing to their superior long-term returns compared with bonds. But those efforts have never come to fruition. The federal government taking an equity stake in a public company wouldn't be unprecedented. In 2009, the Obama administration acquired a 60.8% ownership of General Motors in return for almost $50 billion in bailout funds. The government also acquired a smaller stake in Chrysler, which was subsequently sold to Fiat. The government sold the last of its GM holdings in 2013, booking a direct loss of about $10.5 billion. But its bailout has been deemed a success, given that it saved as many as 1.9 million jobs at GM, Chrysler and their suppliers. The auto bailouts were emergency initiatives, taken to stave off what was shaping up as the auto industry's imminent collapse. Obama made clear that these were temporary measures and that the government would sell off its stockholdings as soon as that was practicable. The government abjured any control over GM's day-to-day operations, but it did orchestrate the exit of GM Chief Executive Rick Wagoner, oversaw the replacement of a majority of its board members and imposed compensation limits on its top executives. The auto bailouts followed numerous examples of U.S. government takeovers, or attempted takeovers, of private businesses. In 1791, Congress authorized the government to take a 20% stake in the Bank of the United States, and in 1816, to take the same stake in the Second Bank of the United States. These are seen today as precursors to the creation of the Federal Reserve Bank as a central banking authority. During the Great Depression, the Reconstruction Finance Corp., a Hoover creation that lived well into Franklin Roosevelt's New Deal, took preferred shares in numerous impaired banks in return for capital infusions they needed to survive. By the end of 1935, RFC-owned preferred stock amounted to nearly 40% of total bank common stock in the United States; the RFC's hard-charging chairman, Texan Jesse Jones, was not shy about imposing 'reasonable' compensation caps on its executives or replacing them when they faltered, or prodding their managements to make loans to private borrowers, a key element of FDR's program of economic recovery. The government also exercises effective control over Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, two government-sponsored mortgage companies, via a conservatorship implemented in 2008, when the housing crash heralded the outset of the Great Recession. Stock in both companies remains in private hands, but warrants allow the government to acquire up to 79.9% of the common stock of each. Those warrants haven't been exercised, but they equate to firm government authority over the firms' activities. Trump's proposed Intel investment would occur in a very different economic environment and have very different features from any of those precursors. The terms of the plan have been murky. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick confirmed during an appearance on CNBC Tuesday that the government would demand Intel shares in return for the roughly $10 billion in funds allocated to Intel via the Biden-era CHIPS Act, which aimed to shore up America's position in high-tech hardware. 'We'll deliver the money, which was already committed under the Biden administration,' Lutnick said. 'We'll get equity in return for it.' He quoted Trump as saying, 'If we're going to give you the money, we want a piece of the action.' 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As my colleague Queenie Wong reported, its strategic blunders have included missing out on the artificial intelligence investment boom that has made Nvidia, the maker of chips for AI development, a darling of today's stock market. Intel hasn't commented on the White House's interest in taking an equity stake, but Intel investors don't appear to know what to make of the idea. Shares in the company gained about 7% on Aug. 19, after Bloomberg first reported on the possibility, but have since fallen back, despite news that the Japanese investment firm SoftBank would take a $2-billion stake in the company. Intel shares fell 7% Wednesday in Nasdaq trading, closing at $23.54, a hair below their price prior to the Bloomberg report. Whether Trump could resist jawboning Intel, or any other companies in which the government holds shares, into instituting policies he favors is doubtful. He has frequently tried to exert pressure on CEOs of companies in which the government has no ownership, after all. That concern would be heightened if the administration has control over a sovereign wealth fund. Trump aired that proposal via an executive order in February. The order called on Lutnick and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent to submit a plan by the beginning of May, but none has yet surfaced. A U.S. sovereign wealth fund wouldn't be based on the same principles as those of many other such ventures. 'SWFs have traditionally been set up by states rich in natural resources to manage their budgetary surplus, diversify their economies, and protect their wealth for future generations,' observed the Carnegie Endowment's Feldstein and Vittori. That's the case with the funds of both Saudi Arabia and Norway. The U.S., however, 'doesn't have excess funds to put into a SWF,' Feldstein and Vittori write. In a fact sheet accompanying the executive order, Trump mentioned $5.7 trillion in government assets, including 'natural resource reserves.' He has also talked about profits from crypto investments and the government take from tariffs — though the latter are essentially a tax on American consumers, who might have different ideas about how to spend the money. The Carnegie researchers note that the most successful sovereign wealth funds such as Norway's 'maintain operational independence and make investments based on rigorous financial criteria.' Neither quality is a hallmark of the Trump administration. Feldstein and Vittori point out that by building a U.S. fund via tariff income or income from Trump's 'gold card' proposal, which would give rich foreigners the right to live in the U.S. for a $5-million fee, might allow Trump to evade Congress's constitutional monopoly on raising and spending money and even allow him to manage the fund behind closed doors. Still, it would be up to Congress to establish the fund and oversee its operations. Will the lawmakers accept their responsibility? If not, Trump's idea is a dangerous one. 'Giving a president who aspires to be a king a potent financial weapon with ill-defined purposes and methods,' Feldstein and Vittori write, 'presents a grave risk to American democracy.'

Trump's federal takeover is disrupting Washington, DC's ailing economy
Trump's federal takeover is disrupting Washington, DC's ailing economy

CNN

time28 minutes ago

  • CNN

Trump's federal takeover is disrupting Washington, DC's ailing economy

Business has never been this slow for Jovan Richards, who sells shirts, hats and souvenirs emblazoned with the likeness of the nation's capital. Every day for the past four years, Richards and her husband have set up a table to sell merchandise near the Washington Monument. Richards, 56, said she made made less than $100 in sales last week, when President Donald Trump announced plans for a federal takeover of the city's police force. On a good day of sales, she typically makes around $1,500. 'I'm not making any money, so I'm just sitting here wasting my time,' Richards told CNN on Sunday. Federal troops have descended near tourist attractions and bustling neighborhoods in Washington, DC, on Trump's command to crack down on crime (which, according to police data, is down compared to recent years). In response, residents and visitors are hunkering down, directly cutting into the profits of businesses around the city. But the takeover could have a more severe effect on Washington's ailing economy — already strained by mass federal layoffs — if convention planners pull the plug on future events. 'If there's a perception that DC is turning into a police state, then there's going to be some hesitancy to go out and explore the city,' said Adam Kamins, director of regional economics at Moody's. 'That would be true of visitors from overseas but also of local residents who just want to steer clear of all of this.' 'But the bigger concern if this persists for longer is if conference organizers start to look elsewhere,' he added. Washington's streets have been quieter than usual over the past week. Despite Trump's claim earlier this week that DC restaurants have been 'busier than they've been in a long time,' reservations tracked by OpenTable have been down recently. On August 11, when Trump announced the takeover, seated diners dropped 16% compared to a year ago. Two days later, when troops mobilized around the city, seated diners fell 31% compared to a year ago. 'Definitely a huge drop in our weekday business, for sure,' Patrick Marshall, assistant general manager of a popular sports and betting bar in Washington, told CNN. 'We used to see huge crowds walking by, but it's just been very, very quiet. People aren't coming out like they used to.' And the takeover couldn't come at a worse time for DC restaurants. It's currently the district's annual summer 'Restaurant Week,' in which restaurants offer deals and special menus. Restaurant visits were down 22% compared to last year, as of Monday, according to OpenTable. 'We've already had a record number of restaurant closures happening this year,' said Shawn Townsend, president and CEO of the Restaurant Association of Metropolitan Washington, which organizes Restaurant Week. 'We are still grappling with pandemic-like issues that other industries have have been able to move past, and now there's this.' And it's not just restaurants. Visits at various different kinds of stores in Washington have been down over the past week, according to data provided to CNN by pass_by, a retail technology firm. In the week starting August 11, foot traffic was down about 81% of retail-store categories in Washington compared to data from a year ago, according to pass_by, with car dealerships, department stores, convenience stores and beauty-supply shops seeing some of the steepest drops. 'There are no lines on the street to get into clubs,' said Miguel Trinidade Deramo, an advisory neighborhood commissioner for a district in Northwest Washington. 'Everyday people just don't want to be out there when there are masked federal agents who refuse to identify which agency they're with.' Several DC bars have detailed in media interviews how business has tanked since Trump announced his takeover. Mark Rutstein, a co-owner of Crush Dance Bar on U Street and 14th, a hub of DC nightlife, told WUSA9 that the gay bar just had its 'worst Friday in history.' 'We lost a little more than $15,000 that night,' he said. 'Three more weeks of this? I mean, we're talking about a couple hundred grand.' Conventions play a crucial role in fueling Washington's hospitality industry, which employs tens of thousands of people. But the increased law enforcement presence has some organizers on edge. The American Chemical Society, which held its annual fall conference this week, emailed attendees about Trump's attempted takeover of the city police department, several attendees told CNN. The organization said in a statement that it was trying to offer 'clear guidance to attendees to ensure a safe, respectful, and inclusive environment.' Elliott Ferguson, president and CEO of Destination DC, the city's tourism marketing arm, said he has reached out to convention planners with upcoming events to tell them that the data doesn't back up Trump's claim that the city is experiencing a crime surge. 'Convention are extremely important because they're tied to the economics of our city,' Ferguson said. 'Now we're dealing with a depiction of Washington as a crime infested city, which is not accurate, and there was already a lot of hesitancy before that.' Saifullah Omar Nasif, a PhD student from Australia, is visiting Washington for the first time to attend the ACS conference. He told CNN that he's uneasy about the increase in police presence, planning to only stay in his hotel and attend conference sessions. 'As a foreign citizen visiting here, I don't feel comfortable roaming around,' Nasif said on Saturday at the Walter E. Washington Convention Center while picking up his badge for the conference. For now, the full economic impact of Trump's police takeover of Washington remains in up in the air. 'It's safe to say that the leisure and hospitality sector could be seeing signs of a slowdown with fewer international travelers, concerns about federal job cuts, as well as concerns about national guard personnel patrolling popular nightlife spots, but most evidence is anecdotal at best,' said Barbara Denham, a senior economist at Oxford Economics. 'But a continued or growing presence of (law enforcement) personnel could hurt the sector if they were to stay through the busier fall season when Congress is back in session and business travel resumes,' she added. CNN's Brian Todd contributed reporting.

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