
Aerial firefighting bill may soon become law
The House plans to vote this week on bipartisan legislation that seeks to bolster aerial firefighting.
S. 160, the 'Aerial Firefighting Enhancement Act,' from Sen. Tim Sheehy (R-Mont.), passed the Senate by unanimous consent in April. House passage this week would send it to the White House for President Donald Trump's signature.
The bill would reauthorize until 2035 a program that allows the Department of Defense to sell excess aircraft and parts to fight wildfires. Authorization for the program lapsed in 2017.
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Sheehy, who unseated Democrat Jon Tester last year, founded an aerial firefighting company. The bill is co-sponsored by Energy and Natural Resources ranking member Martin Heinrich (D-N.M.).
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Trump Is Using the National Guard as Bait
The Atlantic Daily, a newsletter that guides you through the biggest stories of the day, helps you discover new ideas, and recommends the best in culture. Sign up for it here. President Donald Trump is about to launch yet another assault on democracy, the Constitution, and American traditions of civil-military relations, this time in Los Angeles. Under a dubious legal rationale, he is activating 2,000 members of the National Guard to confront protests against actions by ICE, the immigration police who have used thuggish tactics against citizens and foreigners alike in the United States. By militarizing the situation in L.A., Trump is goading Americans more generally to take him on in the streets of their own cities, thus enabling his attacks on their constitutional freedoms. As I've listened to him and his advisers over the past several days, they seem almost eager for public violence that would justify the use of armed force against Americans. 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Those are his toy soldiers, and he's going to get a show from his honor guard in a birthday parade next weekend. In the meantime, he's going to flex that muscle, and prove that the officers and service members who will do whatever he orders are the real military. The rest are suckers and losers. During the George Floyd protests in 2020, Trump was furious at what he saw as the fecklessness of military leaders determined to thwart his attempts to use deadly force against protesters. He's learned his lesson: This time, he has installed a hapless sycophant at the Pentagon who is itching to execute the boss's orders. Third, Trump may be hoping to radicalize the citizen-soldiers drawn from the community who serve in the National Guard. (Seizing the California Guard is also a convenient way to humiliate California Governor Gavin Newsom and L.A. Mayor Karen Bass, with the president's often-used narrative that liberals can't control their own cities.) 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Mullin fires back at Newsom over National Guard in Los Angeles: ‘Words are cheap'
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