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Sam Knight - page 41

Sam Knight has 859 articles published.

Obama: Alito Filibuster Vote Not Comparable to Post-Scalia Fight

President Obama on Tuesday brushed aside a suggestion that he shouldn’t object to Republicans’ Supreme Court obstructionism because he backed a move in 2006 to filibuster the nomination of Samuel Alito. Obama discussed inner-party workings to justify his decision as a lawmaker and said that the situation facing his next nominee isn’t comparable to the opposition Alito faced. “Some people take strategic decisions. I understand that,” he said. “What is also true is that Justice Alito is on the bench right now.” Alito was approved… Keep Reading

Bailout Architect: Dodd-Frank Won’t Stop Another “Reactor Melt Down”

The president of the Minneapolis Federal Reserve and a former Treasury Department official who helped craft the 2008 Wall Street bailout warned that Dodd-Frank financial reforms won’t stop the US government from rescuing “Too Big to Fail” banks. Neel Kashkari said Tuesday in Washington that the landmark legislation has helped “strengthen our financial system” with a variety of new regulations, but that they won’t prevent federal officials from extending publicly-funded emergency lifelines to crucial industry actors. “[N]o rational policymaker would risk restructuring large firms and… Keep Reading

Elizabeth Warren, Sherrod Brown Press Fed to Implement Crucial “Too Big To Fail” Rule

Democratic lawmakers are pushing the Federal Reserve to implement Dodd-Frank rules that were supposed to have already eroded the “too big to fail” status of the nation’s largest financial institutions. Sens. Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio) and Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) asked Fed Chair Janet Yellen on Thursday for updates on the Fed’s final assessment of resolution plans that the firms were ordered to draft by the landmark 2010 law. Yellen told Brown that the ruling would come “in the not too distant future,” but declined to specify when. Warren reminded the Fed… Keep Reading

Despite Recent Financial Tremors, Yellen Stands Firm on “Gradual” Interest Rate Increases

Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen said Wednesday that the central bank is unlikely to consider backing off planned interest rate increases, despite recognizing the recent uptick in financial turmoil both at home and abroad. She made the remarks on Wednesday before the House Financial Services Committee in response to questions asked by Rep. Carolyn Maloney (D-N.Y.). “We have not yet seen a sharp drop-off in growth, either globally or in the United States. But we certainly recognize that global market developments bear close watching,” Yellen… Keep Reading

Frequency, Size of Labor Disputes Up In 2015 For First Time In Years

Industrial unrest in the United States was more frequent and widespread last year, according to annual data released Wednesday by the Bureau of Labor Statistics. There were twelve “major work stoppages” measured by BLS, up from eleven the year before. The disputes involved about 47,000 workers—a year-over-year increase of 13,000. It was the first year since 2011 that saw the number of major work stoppages increased in the US, and the first year since 2012 to see the number of workers involved in industrial disputes… Keep Reading

CIA Director Melts Down After Wyden Asks Him to Apologize for Senate Spying

The Director of the CIA reacted furiously on Tuesday to a call by Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) to apologize for agents’ spying on Senate Intelligence Committee (SSCI) staffers in January 2014, during the staffers’ compilation of a report on Bush administration torture programs. John Brennan struggled to compose himself in response to Wyden’s request in a hearing before the committee, taking exception to both the subject matter of the inquiry and its reference to espionage. He scowled at the senator throughout the exchange. “This is… Keep Reading

IRS Allows Post-Citizens United Karl Rove Group to Continue Concealing Source of Donors

The Internal Revenue Service decided to grant “social welfare” tax-exempt status to Crossroads GPS, an influential conservative political action group co-founded by Karl Rove in 2010, in the wake of the Supreme Court’s Citizens United decision. The confirmation of the 501(c)(4) status by the IRS came last November after five years of deliberation. It was first reported on Tuesday by the Center for Responsive Politics (CRS). The determination means that Crossroads will be able to continue raising unlimited sums of money from individuals and corporations… Keep Reading

Amid Corporate College Lawsuits, Obama Admin Looks to Establish “Student Aid Enforcement Union”

The Department of Education announced Monday that it is creating a new organization to “respond more quickly and efficiently to allegations of illegal actions” by American colleges. Department officials said that President Obama has included $13.6 million for the new office in his fiscal year 2017 budget proposal. Called the Student Aid Enforcement Union, it is slated to be led by one of the Federal Trade Commission’s top lawyers, Jeffrey Kaye; the current lead attorney for the commission’s Bureau of Consumer Protection. “When Americans invest… Keep Reading

Greyhound Settles with U.S. for Illegally Discriminating Against Disabled Passengers

The biggest intercity bus operator in the United States agreed to settle claims that it routinely violated the Americans with Disabilities Act. Greyhound Lines Inc. agreed to pay at least $375,000 in fines and said it “will implement a series of systemic reforms” to become ADA compliant, according to the Justice Department. “The alleged violations include failing to maintain accessibility features on its bus fleet such as lifts and securement devices, failing to provide passengers with disabilities assistance boarding and exiting buses at rest stops,”… Keep Reading

Senate Committee Advances Legislation Enhancing Both Trade Secret Lawsuits and Corporate Whistleblower Protections

The Senate Judiciary Committee on Thursday unanimously approved of increased protections for corporate whistleblowers. The panel marked up the proposal as an amendment to a bill that itself would grant companies more power to sue alleged trade secret thieves in federal court. Authored by the committee’s chair and its ranking member, Sens. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) and Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.), the amendment would seek to explicitly prevent bosses from retaliating against whistleblowers by filing litigation against them with powers that would be expanded under the broader legislation. Drafted… Keep Reading

In Proposal for Flint Relief, Dems Appeal to GOP, Chastise Right-Wing Ideology that Caused Crisis

Senate Democrats on Thursday touted four proposals they’re asking Congress to advance in response to the water crisis in Flint, Mich. Led by Sens. Debbie Stabenow (D-Mich.) and Gary Peters (D-Mich.), the lawmakers pleaded with their colleagues across the aisle to agree to the emergency initiatives, but did not shy from pointing the finger at the hardline conservative policies that caused the catastrophe. “If one of the governor’s supporters in a wealthy part of Michigan called up and said: ‘Our water looks like this. It… Keep Reading

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