Why an MSNBC Analyst Had to Run for the Hills After Her Atrocious Remarks About JD Vance thumbnail

Why an MSNBC Analyst Had to Run for the Hills After Her Atrocious Remarks About JD Vance

2024-08-01 10:00:00, http://s.wordpress.com/mshots/v1/https%3A%2F%2Ftownhall.com%2Ftipsheet%2Fmattvespa%2F2024%2F08%2F01%2Fwhy-a-liberal-writer-had-to-run-for-the-hills-after-her-atrocious-remarks-about-jd-vance-n2642822?w=600&h=450, , , , , Why an MSNBC Analyst Had to Run for the Hills After Her Atrocious Remarks About JD Vance, https://media.townhall.com/cdn/hodl/2024/199/2d0c6ec9-066c-48f4-846e-21aa5e2507e0.jpg, Townhall, Townhall is the leading source for conservative news, political cartoons, breaking stories, election analysis and commentary on politics and the media culture. An information hub for conservatives, republicans, libertarians, and liberty-loving Americans., , https://townhall.com/feed, ,

Surprise: Kamala Is a 'Pack the Court' Zealot, Too thumbnail

Surprise: Kamala Is a ‘Pack the Court’ Zealot, Too

2024-07-31 14:05:00, http://s.wordpress.com/mshots/v1/https%3A%2F%2Ftownhall.com%2Ftipsheet%2Fguybenson%2F2024%2F07%2F31%2Fsurprise-kamala-is-a-pack-the-court-zealot-too-n2642723?w=600&h=450, , , , , Surprise: Kamala Is a 'Pack the Court' Zealot, Too, https://media.townhall.com/cdn/hodl/2022/132/1c7d77a2-dd45-4e2d-bc90-fd333b4d6f97.jpg, Townhall, Townhall is the leading source for conservative news, political cartoons, breaking stories, election analysis and commentary on politics and the media culture. An information hub for conservatives, republicans, libertarians, and liberty-loving Americans., , https://townhall.com/feed, ,

Iran Vows Revenge for Assassination of Hamas Leader thumbnail

Iran Vows Revenge for Assassination of Hamas Leader

2024-07-31 13:35:00, http://s.wordpress.com/mshots/v1/https%3A%2F%2Ftownhall.com%2Ftipsheet%2Fleahbarkoukis%2F2024%2F07%2F31%2Firan-vows-revenge-n2642770?w=600&h=450, , , , , Iran Vows Revenge for Assassination of Hamas Leader, https://media.townhall.com/cdn/hodl/2020/9/7fd3a542-e177-4f24-b894-e7d2e813a2c0.jpg, Townhall, Townhall is the leading source for conservative news, political cartoons, breaking stories, election analysis and commentary on politics and the media culture. An information hub for conservatives, republicans, libertarians, and liberty-loving Americans., , https://townhall.com/feed, ,

What Trump Said About Kamala That Set Off a Total Meltdown of an MSNBC Panel thumbnail

What Trump Said About Kamala That Set Off a Total Meltdown of an MSNBC Panel

2024-07-31 11:00:00, http://s.wordpress.com/mshots/v1/https%3A%2F%2Ftownhall.com%2Ftipsheet%2Fmattvespa%2F2024%2F07%2F31%2Fmsnbc-panel-gets-into-a-frenzy-over-trump-calling-kamala-a-bum-n2642626?w=600&h=450, , , , , What Trump Said About Kamala That Set Off a Total Meltdown of an MSNBC Panel, https://media.townhall.com/cdn/hodl/2024/198/83c74dd7-d187-491a-a97b-f244796272e8.jpg, Townhall, Townhall is the leading source for conservative news, political cartoons, breaking stories, election analysis and commentary on politics and the media culture. An information hub for conservatives, republicans, libertarians, and liberty-loving Americans., , https://townhall.com/feed, ,

Social Security update: August direct payment worth $943 goes out today thumbnail

Social Security update: August direct payment worth $943 goes out today

August’s Supplemental Security Income payment, worth up to $943, will go out to millions of beneficiaries today.

The first August SSI payments are distributed on Aug. 1. They are given to those living with a debilitating disability that affects one’s income, according to the Social Security Administration.

Applicants who file individually can receive up to $943 per month, couples filing jointly can receive up to $1,415, and essential persons receive up to $472. Inflation has caused these amounts to increase by 3.2% since last year.

Filers need to be at least partially blind or have a “physical or mental condition(s) that seriously limits their daily activities for a period of 12 months or more, or may be expected to result in death,” to be eligible.

CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER

The maximum amount received is affected by how they apply, with varying amounts given to individual filers, joint filers, and essential persons who provide SSI recipients with needed care.

SSI payments and regular Social Security benefits are separate. Those who receive Social Security payments don’t automatically qualify for SSI payments and vice versa. Recipients can use a calculator from the SSA to figure out their payment total.

2024-08-01 09:30:00, http://s.wordpress.com/mshots/v1/https%3A%2F%2Fwww.washingtonexaminer.com%2Fpolicy%2Ffinance-and-economy%2F3106495%2Fsocial-security-august-direct-payment-out-today%2F?w=600&h=450, August’s Supplemental Security Income payment, worth up to $943, will go out to millions of beneficiaries today. The first August SSI payments are distributed on Aug. 1. They are given to those living with a debilitating disability that affects one’s income, according to the Social Security Administration. Applicants who file individually can receive up to,

August’s Supplemental Security Income payment, worth up to $943, will go out to millions of beneficiaries today.

The first August SSI payments are distributed on Aug. 1. They are given to those living with a debilitating disability that affects one’s income, according to the Social Security Administration.

Applicants who file individually can receive up to $943 per month, couples filing jointly can receive up to $1,415, and essential persons receive up to $472. Inflation has caused these amounts to increase by 3.2% since last year.

Filers need to be at least partially blind or have a “physical or mental condition(s) that seriously limits their daily activities for a period of 12 months or more, or may be expected to result in death,” to be eligible.

CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER

The maximum amount received is affected by how they apply, with varying amounts given to individual filers, joint filers, and essential persons who provide SSI recipients with needed care.

SSI payments and regular Social Security benefits are separate. Those who receive Social Security payments don’t automatically qualify for SSI payments and vice versa. Recipients can use a calculator from the SSA to figure out their payment total.

, August’s Supplemental Security Income payment, worth up to $943, will go out to millions of beneficiaries today. The first August SSI payments are distributed on Aug. 1. They are given to those living with a debilitating disability that affects one’s income, according to the Social Security Administration. Applicants who file individually can receive up to $943 per month, couples filing jointly can receive up to $1,415, and essential persons receive up to $472. Inflation has caused these amounts to increase by 3.2% since last year. Filers need to be at least partially blind or have a “physical or mental condition(s) that seriously limits their daily activities for a period of 12 months or more, or may be expected to result in death,” to be eligible. CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER The maximum amount received is affected by how they apply, with varying amounts given to individual filers, joint filers, and essential persons who provide SSI recipients with needed care. SSI payments and regular Social Security benefits are separate. Those who receive Social Security payments don’t automatically qualify for SSI payments and vice versa. Recipients can use a calculator from the SSA to figure out their payment total., , Social Security update: August direct payment worth $943 goes out today, https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/iStock-1155492869.jpg.optimal.jpg, Washington Examiner, Political News and Conservative Analysis About Congress, the President, and the Federal Government, https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/cropped-favicon-32×32.png, https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/feed/, Ross O'Keefe,

Jon Tester quietly praised Pearl Jam poster depicting Trump dead, records show thumbnail

Jon Tester quietly praised Pearl Jam poster depicting Trump dead, records show

Sen. Jon Tester (D-MT) praised an apocalyptic Pearl Jam concert poster that depicted former President Donald Trump dead in front of the White House, records show.

In 2018, as Tester was seeking a third term, controversy swirled over promotional materials for an Aug. 13 concert fundraiser for the senator’s campaign featuring a drawing of Trump lying dead on the ground, with the White House, Washington Monument, and Lincoln Memorial ablaze. At the time, Tester’s campaign insisted it neither condoned violence nor approved of the poster, which also depicted a gleeful Tester flying on a tractor above the word “vote” etched in the sky. The poster was co-created by Jeff Ament, a longtime friend of Tester and Pearl Jam’s bassist, Jeff Ament, the Washington Post reported in 2018.

However, despite the Tester campaign condemning the anti-Trump art in 2018, the senator hummed to a different tune in a passage buried in his 2020 book Grounded: A Rural Democrat’s Fight to Unite a Divided America, the Washington Examiner found. In the book, Tester revealed that he “actually loved” the Pearl Jam poster. Pearl Jam, a rock band whose lead vocalist is Eddie Vedder, was formed in Seattle in 1990.

“As soon as word spread of how wild the posters were, fans stood in line for hours to buy them all up at $35 a pop. Christie showed me a copy, gritting her teeth,” Tester wrote in his book, referring to his then-campaign manager, Christie Roberts.

“And there’s an unmistakable image of me, flying on my tractor above the fire and fury, waving with my two-fingered left hand,” the senator continued. “‘This is so … interesting,’ I told Christie. Though the poster was off message, I didn’t want to admit to her that I actually loved it. None of us knew about the posters before we saw them on sale at the concert.”

The New Atlantis
Sen. Jon Tester (D-MT) walks to a vote on Capitol Hill, Wednesday, Sept. 6, 2023, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

Tester also wrote in his book that “the big news” during the event “wasn’t the music; it was the artwork.”

News of Tester’s embrace of the artwork comes after the recent assassination attempt on Trump in Butler County, Pennsylvania. The senator said in July he was “appalled by the violence at the political rally” and wrote a letter to other lawmakers requesting an investigation into the event, which he called a “tragedy.”

In the aftermath of the attempted assassination, Republicans have cast blame on Democrats for their rhetoric, calling Trump an “existential threat” to democracy, arguing that such claims could fuel extremist activity.

President Joe Biden said in June at a rally in North Carolina that Trump “is a genuine threat to this nation.” Days later, at a Wisconsin rally, Biden said, “I mean what I said: We cannot let Trump win. No, I mean, that’s not hyperbole. We can’t. This is the most dangerous election in American history.”

Tester’s campaign declined a request for comment, pointing the Washington Examiner to his statement in July following the assassination attempt.

“Tester’s violent rhetoric toward President Trump is sick,” said Mike Berg, a spokesman for the National Republican Senatorial Committee.

The spokesman for the NRSC, which works to elect Republicans to the upper chamber, also pointed to comments Tester made in 2019 declaring that the way to beat Trump was to “punch him in the face.”

“I don’t think, even in states where Donald Trump won big, that it does you any good running away from Donald Trump,” Tester said during an interview on MSNBC’s Morning Joe in 2019. “I think you need to go back and punch him in the face. I mean, the truth is this guy is bad for this country.”

CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER

On Aug. 21, Tester will appear alongside Ament, the Pearl Jam bassist, for a fundraiser in Missoula, Montana. The event is included in a package for “Big Sky Rocker” and “Super Fan” donors giving at least $400 to Tester, the Montana Free Press reported. The 2024 election fundraiser is one day before an Aug. 22 Pearl Jam concert at the University of Montana.

Tester faces a competitive challenge in Montana this year from Tim Sheehy, a businessman and ex-Navy SEAL. The Senate seat is widely viewed as a toss-up. Sheehy led Tester by five percentage points in a recent poll.

2024-08-01 09:01:00, http://s.wordpress.com/mshots/v1/https%3A%2F%2Fwww.washingtonexaminer.com%2Fnews%2Fsenate%2F3106054%2Fjon-tester-pearl-jam-poster-trump-dead%2F?w=600&h=450, Sen. Jon Tester (D-MT) praised an apocalyptic Pearl Jam concert poster that depicted former President Donald Trump dead in front of the White House, records show. In 2018, as Tester was seeking a third term, controversy swirled over promotional materials for an Aug. 13 concert fundraiser for the senator’s campaign featuring a drawing of Trump,

Sen. Jon Tester (D-MT) praised an apocalyptic Pearl Jam concert poster that depicted former President Donald Trump dead in front of the White House, records show.

In 2018, as Tester was seeking a third term, controversy swirled over promotional materials for an Aug. 13 concert fundraiser for the senator’s campaign featuring a drawing of Trump lying dead on the ground, with the White House, Washington Monument, and Lincoln Memorial ablaze. At the time, Tester’s campaign insisted it neither condoned violence nor approved of the poster, which also depicted a gleeful Tester flying on a tractor above the word “vote” etched in the sky. The poster was co-created by Jeff Ament, a longtime friend of Tester and Pearl Jam’s bassist, Jeff Ament, the Washington Post reported in 2018.

However, despite the Tester campaign condemning the anti-Trump art in 2018, the senator hummed to a different tune in a passage buried in his 2020 book Grounded: A Rural Democrat’s Fight to Unite a Divided America, the Washington Examiner found. In the book, Tester revealed that he “actually loved” the Pearl Jam poster. Pearl Jam, a rock band whose lead vocalist is Eddie Vedder, was formed in Seattle in 1990.

“As soon as word spread of how wild the posters were, fans stood in line for hours to buy them all up at $35 a pop. Christie showed me a copy, gritting her teeth,” Tester wrote in his book, referring to his then-campaign manager, Christie Roberts.

“And there’s an unmistakable image of me, flying on my tractor above the fire and fury, waving with my two-fingered left hand,” the senator continued. “‘This is so … interesting,’ I told Christie. Though the poster was off message, I didn’t want to admit to her that I actually loved it. None of us knew about the posters before we saw them on sale at the concert.”

The New Atlantis
Sen. Jon Tester (D-MT) walks to a vote on Capitol Hill, Wednesday, Sept. 6, 2023, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

Tester also wrote in his book that “the big news” during the event “wasn’t the music; it was the artwork.”

News of Tester’s embrace of the artwork comes after the recent assassination attempt on Trump in Butler County, Pennsylvania. The senator said in July he was “appalled by the violence at the political rally” and wrote a letter to other lawmakers requesting an investigation into the event, which he called a “tragedy.”

In the aftermath of the attempted assassination, Republicans have cast blame on Democrats for their rhetoric, calling Trump an “existential threat” to democracy, arguing that such claims could fuel extremist activity.

President Joe Biden said in June at a rally in North Carolina that Trump “is a genuine threat to this nation.” Days later, at a Wisconsin rally, Biden said, “I mean what I said: We cannot let Trump win. No, I mean, that’s not hyperbole. We can’t. This is the most dangerous election in American history.”

Tester’s campaign declined a request for comment, pointing the Washington Examiner to his statement in July following the assassination attempt.

“Tester’s violent rhetoric toward President Trump is sick,” said Mike Berg, a spokesman for the National Republican Senatorial Committee.

The spokesman for the NRSC, which works to elect Republicans to the upper chamber, also pointed to comments Tester made in 2019 declaring that the way to beat Trump was to “punch him in the face.”

“I don’t think, even in states where Donald Trump won big, that it does you any good running away from Donald Trump,” Tester said during an interview on MSNBC’s Morning Joe in 2019. “I think you need to go back and punch him in the face. I mean, the truth is this guy is bad for this country.”

CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER

On Aug. 21, Tester will appear alongside Ament, the Pearl Jam bassist, for a fundraiser in Missoula, Montana. The event is included in a package for “Big Sky Rocker” and “Super Fan” donors giving at least $400 to Tester, the Montana Free Press reported. The 2024 election fundraiser is one day before an Aug. 22 Pearl Jam concert at the University of Montana.

Tester faces a competitive challenge in Montana this year from Tim Sheehy, a businessman and ex-Navy SEAL. The Senate seat is widely viewed as a toss-up. Sheehy led Tester by five percentage points in a recent poll.

, Sen. Jon Tester (D-MT) praised an apocalyptic Pearl Jam concert poster that depicted former President Donald Trump dead in front of the White House, records show. In 2018, as Tester was seeking a third term, controversy swirled over promotional materials for an Aug. 13 concert fundraiser for the senator’s campaign featuring a drawing of Trump lying dead on the ground, with the White House, Washington Monument, and Lincoln Memorial ablaze. At the time, Tester’s campaign insisted it neither condoned violence nor approved of the poster, which also depicted a gleeful Tester flying on a tractor above the word “vote” etched in the sky. The poster was co-created by Jeff Ament, a longtime friend of Tester and Pearl Jam’s bassist, Jeff Ament, the Washington Post reported in 2018. However, despite the Tester campaign condemning the anti-Trump art in 2018, the senator hummed to a different tune in a passage buried in his 2020 book Grounded: A Rural Democrat’s Fight to Unite a Divided America, the Washington Examiner found. In the book, Tester revealed that he “actually loved” the Pearl Jam poster. Pearl Jam, a rock band whose lead vocalist is Eddie Vedder, was formed in Seattle in 1990. “As soon as word spread of how wild the posters were, fans stood in line for hours to buy them all up at $35 a pop. Christie showed me a copy, gritting her teeth,” Tester wrote in his book, referring to his then-campaign manager, Christie Roberts. “And there’s an unmistakable image of me, flying on my tractor above the fire and fury, waving with my two-fingered left hand,” the senator continued. “‘This is so … interesting,’ I told Christie. Though the poster was off message, I didn’t want to admit to her that I actually loved it. None of us knew about the posters before we saw them on sale at the concert.” Sen. Jon Tester (D-MT) walks to a vote on Capitol Hill, Wednesday, Sept. 6, 2023, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon) Tester also wrote in his book that “the big news” during the event “wasn’t the music; it was the artwork.” News of Tester’s embrace of the artwork comes after the recent assassination attempt on Trump in Butler County, Pennsylvania. The senator said in July he was “appalled by the violence at the political rally” and wrote a letter to other lawmakers requesting an investigation into the event, which he called a “tragedy.” In the aftermath of the attempted assassination, Republicans have cast blame on Democrats for their rhetoric, calling Trump an “existential threat” to democracy, arguing that such claims could fuel extremist activity. President Joe Biden said in June at a rally in North Carolina that Trump “is a genuine threat to this nation.” Days later, at a Wisconsin rally, Biden said, “I mean what I said: We cannot let Trump win. No, I mean, that’s not hyperbole. We can’t. This is the most dangerous election in American history.” Tester’s campaign declined a request for comment, pointing the Washington Examiner to his statement in July following the assassination attempt. “Tester’s violent rhetoric toward President Trump is sick,” said Mike Berg, a spokesman for the National Republican Senatorial Committee. The spokesman for the NRSC, which works to elect Republicans to the upper chamber, also pointed to comments Tester made in 2019 declaring that the way to beat Trump was to “punch him in the face.” “I don’t think, even in states where Donald Trump won big, that it does you any good running away from Donald Trump,” Tester said during an interview on MSNBC’s Morning Joe in 2019. “I think you need to go back and punch him in the face. I mean, the truth is this guy is bad for this country.” CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER On Aug. 21, Tester will appear alongside Ament, the Pearl Jam bassist, for a fundraiser in Missoula, Montana. The event is included in a package for “Big Sky Rocker” and “Super Fan” donors giving at least $400 to Tester, the Montana Free Press reported. The 2024 election fundraiser is one day before an Aug. 22 Pearl Jam concert at the University of Montana. Tester faces a competitive challenge in Montana this year from Tim Sheehy, a businessman and ex-Navy SEAL. The Senate seat is widely viewed as a toss-up. Sheehy led Tester by five percentage points in a recent poll., , Jon Tester quietly praised Pearl Jam poster depicting Trump dead, records show, https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/07/Jon-Tester-Montana-Donald-Trump-2024-scaled-1024×683.webp, Washington Examiner, Political News and Conservative Analysis About Congress, the President, and the Federal Government, https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/cropped-favicon-32×32.png, https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/feed/, Gabe Kaminsky,

These are your rights on Title IX: Campus due process after the Biden-Harris overhaul thumbnail

These are your rights on Title IX: Campus due process after the Biden-Harris overhaul

As the Biden administration’s controversial Title IX rules go into effect Thursday, many due process protections afforded under the Trump era rules are being retracted and returning to what critics called the “kangaroo courts” of the Obama years.

President Joe Biden’s rules have been blocked by federal judges across the country, pausing their implementation in numerous states and hundreds of schools, with more cases pending. But for far more states and schools, the rewritten rules go into effect Aug. 1, and how schools approach handling sexual assault allegations will be dramatically changed.

While most of the court cases and media coverage about Biden’s Title IX rewrite has focused on how it changed the definition of sex to include claimed gender identities — thereby shuttering private spaces for girls and boys to use restrooms and locker rooms separately, for example — the new rules also strip away many major due process protections for alleged Title IX violations on college campuses and diminish the presumption of innocence for the accused.

“The Biden-Harris Title IX rule is a stunning reversal of the due process protections found in the 2020 DeVos rule. Their new regulatory regime does not serve students — not survivors of sexual assault, and not those accused of sexual misconduct,” Bob Eitel, co-founder and president of Defense of Freedom Institute, told the Washington Examiner. “Survivors will be forced to re-live their experiences through repeated court challenges, and the accused will be left with little alternative but to seek redress in court from the Kangaroo-style Title IX campus investigations and disciplinary proceedings encouraged by the rule.”

“Educational institutions should take measures now to increase their liability insurance coverage, because they’re going to need it,” he added.

Eitel served in the Trump administration as senior counselor to Education Secretary Betsy DeVos when the original rules governing Title IX were written, with a distinct focus on ensuring the due process protections of accusers and the accused on college campuses. Prior to those rules, Title IX was governed by a hodgepodge of directives, primarily through a 2011 “Dear Colleague” letter which stacked Title IX adjudication heavily in favor of the accusers, without much regard for the accused even in cases where accusations were false.

The “Dear Colleague” letter created a confusing and unfair framework for both men and women, critics say. When DeVos announced her plans to create rules governing Title IX in 2017, she referenced multiple failures under the Obama-era system, which is largely reinstituted under Biden’s overhaul.

For example, at Stony Brook University, a female sexual assault victim reported the incident to her school in 2013 and was told she would have to prosecute the case herself. “Without any legal training whatsoever, she had to prepare an opening statement, fix exhibits, and find witnesses,” DeVos said in a speech.

In a 2017 case from the University of Southern California, a man’s life was turned upside down by a neighbor claiming that he had sexually assaulted his girlfriend. Despite the consensual nature of what the couple described as “playfully roughhousing” and the girlfriend repeatedly telling the Title IX office that she had not been abused in any way, administrators overruled her, kicked her boyfriend off the football team, and expelled him from school.

“When I told the truth,” the girlfriend said. “I was stereotyped and was told I must be a ‘battered’ woman, and that made me feel demeaned and absurdly profiled.”

The upcoming Title IX rules are set to return campuses to the old system, which was rife with examples of mistreatment of the accused and accusers.

“Justice is only possible when hearings are fair for everyone,” Will Creeley, legal director for the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression, said when the rules were initially finalized. “Today’s regulations mean one thing: America’s college students are less likely to receive justice if they find themselves in a Title IX proceeding.”

“When administrators investigate the most serious kinds of campus misconduct, colleges should use the time-tested tools that make finding the truth more likely,” Creeley added. “But the new regulations no longer require them to do so.”

Under the Biden framework, a student can be found guilty of sexual assault without ever being able to see the full scope of evidence against them. Instead, the accused student would only have to be provided with a description of what the university considers “relevant evidence,” and the school can deliver that information orally as opposed to in writing.

During the adjudication process, or grievance procedure, conducted by the Title IX office, an accused student’s guaranteed right to a live hearing, with the ability to cross-examine the accuser, has also been taken away.

While the Biden administration argues that the hearing and cross-examination could re-traumatize an alleged victim and dissuade others from coming forward with complaints, the ability to do so is a central component to resolving competing claims fairly, as the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled in 2018.

The new Title IX rules also return the investigation process to what is known as the “single investigator” model, which allows only one Title IX officer to both investigate and decide the outcome of the case — or, critics say, act as judge and jury. Under the Trump-era rules, at least three people — a coordinator who receives reports of misconduct, an investigator, and a decision-maker — were required for each investigation.

The Biden administration defended returning to the single-investigator model by noting that “requiring separate staff members to handle investigation and adjudication is burdensome for some recipients.”

Opponents of the due process change say concerns about fairness should outweigh concerns about administrative resources.

“Considering how vital a neutral and fair final decision-maker is to the fairness of the process, the accuracy of the fact-finding, and the integrity and robustness of the final decision, any additional administrative inconvenience and cost are more than justified (and are likely to save money and headaches down the road),” Perkins Coie attorneys T. Markus Funk and Jean-Jacques Cabou pointed out.

The evidentiary standard for misconduct has also been lowered by the Biden administration, making it much easier for the accused to be found guilty of wrongdoing. Under the Trump rules, a standard known as “clear and convincing” was used, meaning the evidence would have to be strong enough to remove any serious doubts about the legitimacy of the allegations. Under the Biden administration’s “preponderance of the evidence” standard, the evidence must present as more likely than not that the allegation occurred — sometimes compared to an above 50% chance. The only way a school can now use the clear and convincing standard in a Title IX investigation is if they use it in most other comparable proceedings.

Despite the 2020 rules requiring the same high burden of proof for everyone, the Biden rules actually require a greater burden of proof when the accused is an employee than when the accused is a student, making it harder for faculty members to be found guilty of wrongdoing, but easier for students.

As Eitel alluded to, litigation is likely to come from the diminished due process standards under the Biden framework. Some lawsuits have already mentioned the due process issues.

CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER

Only days after the Biden administration finalized the ruling, a number of plaintiffs, including Alabama, Florida, Georgia, and South Carolina, filed a challenge arguing, “The elimination of a parties’ right to a live hearing with cross-examination, even when credibility is a key issue, is arbitrary and capricious. The challenged rule states that college students accused of misconduct — charges that could ruin their academic and professional careers if they are found guilty — no longer have a right to be accompanied by counsel at all proceedings. … The Department has not reasonably considered these concerns.”

The Biden administration did not “adequately consider the significant due-process concerns of a single-investigator model, let alone how its interests militate the grave dangers of allowing a single person [to] investigate, prosecute, and convict,” the lawsuit stated.

2024-08-01 08:00:00, http://s.wordpress.com/mshots/v1/https%3A%2F%2Fwww.washingtonexaminer.com%2Fnews%2F3104372%2Frights-on-title-ix-campus-due-process-biden-harris-overhaul%2F?w=600&h=450, As the Biden administration’s controversial Title IX rules go into effect Thursday, many due process protections afforded under the Trump era rules are being retracted and returning to what critics called the “kangaroo courts” of the Obama years. President Joe Biden’s rules have been blocked by federal judges across the country, pausing their implementation in,

As the Biden administration’s controversial Title IX rules go into effect Thursday, many due process protections afforded under the Trump era rules are being retracted and returning to what critics called the “kangaroo courts” of the Obama years.

President Joe Biden’s rules have been blocked by federal judges across the country, pausing their implementation in numerous states and hundreds of schools, with more cases pending. But for far more states and schools, the rewritten rules go into effect Aug. 1, and how schools approach handling sexual assault allegations will be dramatically changed.

While most of the court cases and media coverage about Biden’s Title IX rewrite has focused on how it changed the definition of sex to include claimed gender identities — thereby shuttering private spaces for girls and boys to use restrooms and locker rooms separately, for example — the new rules also strip away many major due process protections for alleged Title IX violations on college campuses and diminish the presumption of innocence for the accused.

“The Biden-Harris Title IX rule is a stunning reversal of the due process protections found in the 2020 DeVos rule. Their new regulatory regime does not serve students — not survivors of sexual assault, and not those accused of sexual misconduct,” Bob Eitel, co-founder and president of Defense of Freedom Institute, told the Washington Examiner. “Survivors will be forced to re-live their experiences through repeated court challenges, and the accused will be left with little alternative but to seek redress in court from the Kangaroo-style Title IX campus investigations and disciplinary proceedings encouraged by the rule.”

“Educational institutions should take measures now to increase their liability insurance coverage, because they’re going to need it,” he added.

Eitel served in the Trump administration as senior counselor to Education Secretary Betsy DeVos when the original rules governing Title IX were written, with a distinct focus on ensuring the due process protections of accusers and the accused on college campuses. Prior to those rules, Title IX was governed by a hodgepodge of directives, primarily through a 2011 “Dear Colleague” letter which stacked Title IX adjudication heavily in favor of the accusers, without much regard for the accused even in cases where accusations were false.

The “Dear Colleague” letter created a confusing and unfair framework for both men and women, critics say. When DeVos announced her plans to create rules governing Title IX in 2017, she referenced multiple failures under the Obama-era system, which is largely reinstituted under Biden’s overhaul.

For example, at Stony Brook University, a female sexual assault victim reported the incident to her school in 2013 and was told she would have to prosecute the case herself. “Without any legal training whatsoever, she had to prepare an opening statement, fix exhibits, and find witnesses,” DeVos said in a speech.

In a 2017 case from the University of Southern California, a man’s life was turned upside down by a neighbor claiming that he had sexually assaulted his girlfriend. Despite the consensual nature of what the couple described as “playfully roughhousing” and the girlfriend repeatedly telling the Title IX office that she had not been abused in any way, administrators overruled her, kicked her boyfriend off the football team, and expelled him from school.

“When I told the truth,” the girlfriend said. “I was stereotyped and was told I must be a ‘battered’ woman, and that made me feel demeaned and absurdly profiled.”

The upcoming Title IX rules are set to return campuses to the old system, which was rife with examples of mistreatment of the accused and accusers.

“Justice is only possible when hearings are fair for everyone,” Will Creeley, legal director for the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression, said when the rules were initially finalized. “Today’s regulations mean one thing: America’s college students are less likely to receive justice if they find themselves in a Title IX proceeding.”

“When administrators investigate the most serious kinds of campus misconduct, colleges should use the time-tested tools that make finding the truth more likely,” Creeley added. “But the new regulations no longer require them to do so.”

Under the Biden framework, a student can be found guilty of sexual assault without ever being able to see the full scope of evidence against them. Instead, the accused student would only have to be provided with a description of what the university considers “relevant evidence,” and the school can deliver that information orally as opposed to in writing.

During the adjudication process, or grievance procedure, conducted by the Title IX office, an accused student’s guaranteed right to a live hearing, with the ability to cross-examine the accuser, has also been taken away.

While the Biden administration argues that the hearing and cross-examination could re-traumatize an alleged victim and dissuade others from coming forward with complaints, the ability to do so is a central component to resolving competing claims fairly, as the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled in 2018.

The new Title IX rules also return the investigation process to what is known as the “single investigator” model, which allows only one Title IX officer to both investigate and decide the outcome of the case — or, critics say, act as judge and jury. Under the Trump-era rules, at least three people — a coordinator who receives reports of misconduct, an investigator, and a decision-maker — were required for each investigation.

The Biden administration defended returning to the single-investigator model by noting that “requiring separate staff members to handle investigation and adjudication is burdensome for some recipients.”

Opponents of the due process change say concerns about fairness should outweigh concerns about administrative resources.

“Considering how vital a neutral and fair final decision-maker is to the fairness of the process, the accuracy of the fact-finding, and the integrity and robustness of the final decision, any additional administrative inconvenience and cost are more than justified (and are likely to save money and headaches down the road),” Perkins Coie attorneys T. Markus Funk and Jean-Jacques Cabou pointed out.

The evidentiary standard for misconduct has also been lowered by the Biden administration, making it much easier for the accused to be found guilty of wrongdoing. Under the Trump rules, a standard known as “clear and convincing” was used, meaning the evidence would have to be strong enough to remove any serious doubts about the legitimacy of the allegations. Under the Biden administration’s “preponderance of the evidence” standard, the evidence must present as more likely than not that the allegation occurred — sometimes compared to an above 50% chance. The only way a school can now use the clear and convincing standard in a Title IX investigation is if they use it in most other comparable proceedings.

Despite the 2020 rules requiring the same high burden of proof for everyone, the Biden rules actually require a greater burden of proof when the accused is an employee than when the accused is a student, making it harder for faculty members to be found guilty of wrongdoing, but easier for students.

As Eitel alluded to, litigation is likely to come from the diminished due process standards under the Biden framework. Some lawsuits have already mentioned the due process issues.

CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER

Only days after the Biden administration finalized the ruling, a number of plaintiffs, including Alabama, Florida, Georgia, and South Carolina, filed a challenge arguing, “The elimination of a parties’ right to a live hearing with cross-examination, even when credibility is a key issue, is arbitrary and capricious. The challenged rule states that college students accused of misconduct — charges that could ruin their academic and professional careers if they are found guilty — no longer have a right to be accompanied by counsel at all proceedings. … The Department has not reasonably considered these concerns.”

The Biden administration did not “adequately consider the significant due-process concerns of a single-investigator model, let alone how its interests militate the grave dangers of allowing a single person [to] investigate, prosecute, and convict,” the lawsuit stated.

, As the Biden administration’s controversial Title IX rules go into effect Thursday, many due process protections afforded under the Trump era rules are being retracted and returning to what critics called the “kangaroo courts” of the Obama years. President Joe Biden’s rules have been blocked by federal judges across the country, pausing their implementation in numerous states and hundreds of schools, with more cases pending. But for far more states and schools, the rewritten rules go into effect Aug. 1, and how schools approach handling sexual assault allegations will be dramatically changed. While most of the court cases and media coverage about Biden’s Title IX rewrite has focused on how it changed the definition of sex to include claimed gender identities — thereby shuttering private spaces for girls and boys to use restrooms and locker rooms separately, for example — the new rules also strip away many major due process protections for alleged Title IX violations on college campuses and diminish the presumption of innocence for the accused. “The Biden-Harris Title IX rule is a stunning reversal of the due process protections found in the 2020 DeVos rule. Their new regulatory regime does not serve students — not survivors of sexual assault, and not those accused of sexual misconduct,” Bob Eitel, co-founder and president of Defense of Freedom Institute, told the Washington Examiner. “Survivors will be forced to re-live their experiences through repeated court challenges, and the accused will be left with little alternative but to seek redress in court from the Kangaroo-style Title IX campus investigations and disciplinary proceedings encouraged by the rule.” “Educational institutions should take measures now to increase their liability insurance coverage, because they’re going to need it,” he added. Eitel served in the Trump administration as senior counselor to Education Secretary Betsy DeVos when the original rules governing Title IX were written, with a distinct focus on ensuring the due process protections of accusers and the accused on college campuses. Prior to those rules, Title IX was governed by a hodgepodge of directives, primarily through a 2011 “Dear Colleague” letter which stacked Title IX adjudication heavily in favor of the accusers, without much regard for the accused even in cases where accusations were false. The “Dear Colleague” letter created a confusing and unfair framework for both men and women, critics say. When DeVos announced her plans to create rules governing Title IX in 2017, she referenced multiple failures under the Obama-era system, which is largely reinstituted under Biden’s overhaul. For example, at Stony Brook University, a female sexual assault victim reported the incident to her school in 2013 and was told she would have to prosecute the case herself. “Without any legal training whatsoever, she had to prepare an opening statement, fix exhibits, and find witnesses,” DeVos said in a speech. In a 2017 case from the University of Southern California, a man’s life was turned upside down by a neighbor claiming that he had sexually assaulted his girlfriend. Despite the consensual nature of what the couple described as “playfully roughhousing” and the girlfriend repeatedly telling the Title IX office that she had not been abused in any way, administrators overruled her, kicked her boyfriend off the football team, and expelled him from school. “When I told the truth,” the girlfriend said. “I was stereotyped and was told I must be a ‘battered’ woman, and that made me feel demeaned and absurdly profiled.” The upcoming Title IX rules are set to return campuses to the old system, which was rife with examples of mistreatment of the accused and accusers. “Justice is only possible when hearings are fair for everyone,” Will Creeley, legal director for the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression, said when the rules were initially finalized. “Today’s regulations mean one thing: America’s college students are less likely to receive justice if they find themselves in a Title IX proceeding.” “When administrators investigate the most serious kinds of campus misconduct, colleges should use the time-tested tools that make finding the truth more likely,” Creeley added. “But the new regulations no longer require them to do so.” Under the Biden framework, a student can be found guilty of sexual assault without ever being able to see the full scope of evidence against them. Instead, the accused student would only have to be provided with a description of what the university considers “relevant evidence,” and the school can deliver that information orally as opposed to in writing. During the adjudication process, or grievance procedure, conducted by the Title IX office, an accused student’s guaranteed right to a live hearing, with the ability to cross-examine the accuser, has also been taken away. While the Biden administration argues that the hearing and cross-examination could re-traumatize an alleged victim and dissuade others from coming forward with complaints, the ability to do so is a central component to resolving competing claims fairly, as the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled in 2018. The new Title IX rules also return the investigation process to what is known as the “single investigator” model, which allows only one Title IX officer to both investigate and decide the outcome of the case — or, critics say, act as judge and jury. Under the Trump-era rules, at least three people — a coordinator who receives reports of misconduct, an investigator, and a decision-maker — were required for each investigation. The Biden administration defended returning to the single-investigator model by noting that “requiring separate staff members to handle investigation and adjudication is burdensome for some recipients.” Opponents of the due process change say concerns about fairness should outweigh concerns about administrative resources. “Considering how vital a neutral and fair final decision-maker is to the fairness of the process, the accuracy of the fact-finding, and the integrity and robustness of the final decision, any additional administrative inconvenience and cost are more than justified (and are likely to save money and headaches down the road),” Perkins Coie attorneys T. Markus Funk and Jean-Jacques Cabou pointed out. The evidentiary standard for misconduct has also been lowered by the Biden administration, making it much easier for the accused to be found guilty of wrongdoing. Under the Trump rules, a standard known as “clear and convincing” was used, meaning the evidence would have to be strong enough to remove any serious doubts about the legitimacy of the allegations. Under the Biden administration’s “preponderance of the evidence” standard, the evidence must present as more likely than not that the allegation occurred — sometimes compared to an above 50% chance. The only way a school can now use the clear and convincing standard in a Title IX investigation is if they use it in most other comparable proceedings. Despite the 2020 rules requiring the same high burden of proof for everyone, the Biden rules actually require a greater burden of proof when the accused is an employee than when the accused is a student, making it harder for faculty members to be found guilty of wrongdoing, but easier for students. As Eitel alluded to, litigation is likely to come from the diminished due process standards under the Biden framework. Some lawsuits have already mentioned the due process issues. CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER Only days after the Biden administration finalized the ruling, a number of plaintiffs, including Alabama, Florida, Georgia, and South Carolina, filed a challenge arguing, “The elimination of a parties’ right to a live hearing with cross-examination, even when credibility is a key issue, is arbitrary and capricious. The challenged rule states that college students accused of misconduct — charges that could ruin their academic and professional careers if they are found guilty — no longer have a right to be accompanied by counsel at all proceedings. … The Department has not reasonably considered these concerns.” The Biden administration did not “adequately consider the significant due-process concerns of a single-investigator model, let alone how its interests militate the grave dangers of allowing a single person [to] investigate, prosecute, and convict,” the lawsuit stated., , These are your rights on Title IX: Campus due process after the Biden-Harris overhaul, https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/07/Harris_Biden_Campaign_771.webp, Washington Examiner, Political News and Conservative Analysis About Congress, the President, and the Federal Government, https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/cropped-favicon-32×32.png, https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/feed/, Breccan F. Thies,

U.S. swimmer wins gold and sets Olympic record thumbnail

U.S. swimmer wins gold and sets Olympic record

U.S. swimmer Katie Ledecky reminded the world that two American Olympic legends are competing in this year’s games in Paris. After the world saw gymnast Simone Biles dominate on Tuesday, Ledecky won her eighth gold medal in her career on Wednesday.

Ledecky turned in a masterful performance in Wednesday’s 1,500-meter freestyle competition. She set an Olympic record, finishing the event in 15:30.02, an astounding ten seconds of her next closest competitors, France’s Anastasiia Kirpichinikova, who finished in 15:40.35, and Germany’s Isabel Gose, who finished in 15:41.16.

The victory puts Ledecky in elite company. It was her 12th Olympic medal overall, which tied her with former U.S. swimmers Natalie Coughlin, Jenny Thompson, and Dara Torres for the most medals ever awarded to a female swimmer.

“Each means a lot, and each one is challenging in its own way, and I try not to really dwell on history or the magnitude of things again; I’ll just let you guys do that,” the Olympic champion said. “But yeah, I mean those women that I’m up there with now, they’re people that I’ve looked up to for so many years. I consider many of them friends, supporters, people that I was watching swim when I was just starting out in the sport, so that’s very special to me to share that with them, and they definitely inspired me, so I hope that some little girl out there is watching and will come along and get up there with all of us someday too.”

CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER

This is Ledecky’s second medal at the Paris Games. She won a bronze medal in the 400m freestyle on July 27. Ledecky is expected to compete in two more swimming events at these Olympics, the 800m freestyle and the 4x200m relay. Moreover, Ledecky, 27,  said she has no plans of slowing down or retiring after these games. She said she plans to compete again in the 2028 Olympics, when the games will be in Los Angeles.

“I’ve been consistent over these last few months and last few years in saying that I would love to compete in L.A. and that hasn’t changed,” Ledecky said. “That could change. I mean, you never know. So, I really just take it year by year at this point and I really haven’t thought much beyond this week in terms of what my fall is going to look like, what my next year is going to look like. But yeah, I don’t feel like I’m close to being finished in the sport yet.”

2024-08-01 07:35:00, http://s.wordpress.com/mshots/v1/https%3A%2F%2Fwww.washingtonexaminer.com%2Fnews%2F3106998%2Fu-s-swimmer-wins-gold-and-sets-olympic-record%2F?w=600&h=450, U.S. swimmer Katie Ledecky reminded the world that two American Olympic legends are competing in this year’s games in Paris. After the world saw gymnast Simone Biles dominate on Tuesday, Ledecky won her eighth gold medal in her career on Wednesday. Ledecky turned in a masterful performance in Wednesday’s 1,500-meter freestyle competition. She set an,

U.S. swimmer Katie Ledecky reminded the world that two American Olympic legends are competing in this year’s games in Paris. After the world saw gymnast Simone Biles dominate on Tuesday, Ledecky won her eighth gold medal in her career on Wednesday.

Ledecky turned in a masterful performance in Wednesday’s 1,500-meter freestyle competition. She set an Olympic record, finishing the event in 15:30.02, an astounding ten seconds of her next closest competitors, France’s Anastasiia Kirpichinikova, who finished in 15:40.35, and Germany’s Isabel Gose, who finished in 15:41.16.

The victory puts Ledecky in elite company. It was her 12th Olympic medal overall, which tied her with former U.S. swimmers Natalie Coughlin, Jenny Thompson, and Dara Torres for the most medals ever awarded to a female swimmer.

“Each means a lot, and each one is challenging in its own way, and I try not to really dwell on history or the magnitude of things again; I’ll just let you guys do that,” the Olympic champion said. “But yeah, I mean those women that I’m up there with now, they’re people that I’ve looked up to for so many years. I consider many of them friends, supporters, people that I was watching swim when I was just starting out in the sport, so that’s very special to me to share that with them, and they definitely inspired me, so I hope that some little girl out there is watching and will come along and get up there with all of us someday too.”

CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER

This is Ledecky’s second medal at the Paris Games. She won a bronze medal in the 400m freestyle on July 27. Ledecky is expected to compete in two more swimming events at these Olympics, the 800m freestyle and the 4x200m relay. Moreover, Ledecky, 27,  said she has no plans of slowing down or retiring after these games. She said she plans to compete again in the 2028 Olympics, when the games will be in Los Angeles.

“I’ve been consistent over these last few months and last few years in saying that I would love to compete in L.A. and that hasn’t changed,” Ledecky said. “That could change. I mean, you never know. So, I really just take it year by year at this point and I really haven’t thought much beyond this week in terms of what my fall is going to look like, what my next year is going to look like. But yeah, I don’t feel like I’m close to being finished in the sport yet.”

, U.S. swimmer Katie Ledecky reminded the world that two American Olympic legends are competing in this year’s games in Paris. After the world saw gymnast Simone Biles dominate on Tuesday, Ledecky won her eighth gold medal in her career on Wednesday. Ledecky turned in a masterful performance in Wednesday’s 1,500-meter freestyle competition. She set an Olympic record, finishing the event in 15:30.02, an astounding ten seconds of her next closest competitors, France’s Anastasiia Kirpichinikova, who finished in 15:40.35, and Germany’s Isabel Gose, who finished in 15:41.16. The victory puts Ledecky in elite company. It was her 12th Olympic medal overall, which tied her with former U.S. swimmers Natalie Coughlin, Jenny Thompson, and Dara Torres for the most medals ever awarded to a female swimmer. “Each means a lot, and each one is challenging in its own way, and I try not to really dwell on history or the magnitude of things again; I’ll just let you guys do that,” the Olympic champion said. “But yeah, I mean those women that I’m up there with now, they’re people that I’ve looked up to for so many years. I consider many of them friends, supporters, people that I was watching swim when I was just starting out in the sport, so that’s very special to me to share that with them, and they definitely inspired me, so I hope that some little girl out there is watching and will come along and get up there with all of us someday too.” CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER This is Ledecky’s second medal at the Paris Games. She won a bronze medal in the 400m freestyle on July 27. Ledecky is expected to compete in two more swimming events at these Olympics, the 800m freestyle and the 4x200m relay. Moreover, Ledecky, 27,  said she has no plans of slowing down or retiring after these games. She said she plans to compete again in the 2028 Olympics, when the games will be in Los Angeles. “I’ve been consistent over these last few months and last few years in saying that I would love to compete in L.A. and that hasn’t changed,” Ledecky said. “That could change. I mean, you never know. So, I really just take it year by year at this point and I really haven’t thought much beyond this week in terms of what my fall is going to look like, what my next year is going to look like. But yeah, I don’t feel like I’m close to being finished in the sport yet.”, , U.S. swimmer wins gold and sets Olympic record, https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/07/YL.ledecky.webp, Washington Examiner, Political News and Conservative Analysis About Congress, the President, and the Federal Government, https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/cropped-favicon-32×32.png, https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/feed/, Washington Examiner Staff,

Gas prices: Consecutive days of decreases at the pumps to end July thumbnail

Gas prices: Consecutive days of decreases at the pumps to end July

Gas prices decreased again on Wednesday to officially end the month of July with a string of decreases at the pumps.

The average price of a gallon of regular gas fell to $3.492, according to AAA, matching a low from a month ago. The latest gas prices mark a week of price drops, with the cost of a gallon of regular gas going from $3.513 a week ago to the current price.

Gas prices remain a vital topic heading into the 2024 presidential election. With President Joe Biden deciding not to seek reelection, Vice President Kamala Harris, now the likely Democratic nominee, will have to indicate how she will address the country’s high gas prices and energy costs and how both affect the economy and people’s finances.

While prices have fluctuated in 2024, there has been a decrease in the pumps in recent weeks and months. Nevertheless, gas prices remain significantly higher than when former President Donald Trump was in office.

Gas prices vary significantly among states. To see how expensive gas is in each state, click here. Here are the gas prices for a gallon of regular-grade gas in and around Washington, D.C.

Washington, D.C.

The average price for a gallon of regular gas in the nation’s capital on Wednesday was $3.692. This was a decrease from Tuesday when the cost was $3.696. Regular gas is also less expensive in Washington, D.C. than a week ago when the average price was $3.713 per gallon. Prices are more expensive, however, than a month ago, when drivers paid $3.654 per gallon.

Virginia

On Wednesday, the average price for a gallon of regular-grade gas in Virginia was $3.369. This decreased from Tuesday’s average price of $3.38 per gallon. Gas prices are also less expensive in the state than a week ago when regular-grade gas was $3.416 per gallon. Prices, however, are more expensive now compared to a month ago when the price for a gallon of regular was $3.332.

Maryland

The average price for a gallon of regular gas in Maryland on Wednesday was $3.464. This was a decrease from Tuesday when the price of regular gas averaged $3.472 per gallon. Prices are also less expensive than a week ago, when the price was $3.487 per gallon. Moreover, gas prices are cheaper today compared to a month ago when people in Maryland paid $3.565 for a gallon of regular gas.

Delaware

On Wednesday, the average price for a gallon of regular gas in Delaware was $3.372, a decrease from Tuesday’s price of $3.377. Both prices are less expensive than a week ago when the average price was $3.398 for a gallon of regular gas. Gas prices have seen a sizable drop from a month ago when drivers in the First State paid $3.515 for a gallon of regular gas.

CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER

Hawaii

Hawaii is the state with the most expensive gas in the nation, coming in with an average of $4.677 per gallon for regular gas on Wednesday. The Aloha State has recently overtaken California for the dubious distinction of the state with the most expensive gas prices for a gallon of regular gas. In California, a gallon of regular gas averaged $4.649 on Wednesday.

Mississippi

Mississippi continues to be the state with the least expensive gas prices. On Wednesday, the average price for a gallon of regular gas in Mississippi cost $2.968. It is the only state in the nation with an average price for regular gas under $3.

2024-08-01 06:41:00, http://s.wordpress.com/mshots/v1/https%3A%2F%2Fwww.washingtonexaminer.com%2Fnews%2F3106988%2Fgas-prices-decreases-at-the-pumps-to-end-july%2F?w=600&h=450, Gas prices decreased again on Wednesday to officially end the month of July with a string of decreases at the pumps. The average price of a gallon of regular gas fell to $3.492, according to AAA, matching a low from a month ago. The latest gas prices mark a week of price drops, with the,

Gas prices decreased again on Wednesday to officially end the month of July with a string of decreases at the pumps.

The average price of a gallon of regular gas fell to $3.492, according to AAA, matching a low from a month ago. The latest gas prices mark a week of price drops, with the cost of a gallon of regular gas going from $3.513 a week ago to the current price.

Gas prices remain a vital topic heading into the 2024 presidential election. With President Joe Biden deciding not to seek reelection, Vice President Kamala Harris, now the likely Democratic nominee, will have to indicate how she will address the country’s high gas prices and energy costs and how both affect the economy and people’s finances.

While prices have fluctuated in 2024, there has been a decrease in the pumps in recent weeks and months. Nevertheless, gas prices remain significantly higher than when former President Donald Trump was in office.

Gas prices vary significantly among states. To see how expensive gas is in each state, click here. Here are the gas prices for a gallon of regular-grade gas in and around Washington, D.C.

Washington, D.C.

The average price for a gallon of regular gas in the nation’s capital on Wednesday was $3.692. This was a decrease from Tuesday when the cost was $3.696. Regular gas is also less expensive in Washington, D.C. than a week ago when the average price was $3.713 per gallon. Prices are more expensive, however, than a month ago, when drivers paid $3.654 per gallon.

Virginia

On Wednesday, the average price for a gallon of regular-grade gas in Virginia was $3.369. This decreased from Tuesday’s average price of $3.38 per gallon. Gas prices are also less expensive in the state than a week ago when regular-grade gas was $3.416 per gallon. Prices, however, are more expensive now compared to a month ago when the price for a gallon of regular was $3.332.

Maryland

The average price for a gallon of regular gas in Maryland on Wednesday was $3.464. This was a decrease from Tuesday when the price of regular gas averaged $3.472 per gallon. Prices are also less expensive than a week ago, when the price was $3.487 per gallon. Moreover, gas prices are cheaper today compared to a month ago when people in Maryland paid $3.565 for a gallon of regular gas.

Delaware

On Wednesday, the average price for a gallon of regular gas in Delaware was $3.372, a decrease from Tuesday’s price of $3.377. Both prices are less expensive than a week ago when the average price was $3.398 for a gallon of regular gas. Gas prices have seen a sizable drop from a month ago when drivers in the First State paid $3.515 for a gallon of regular gas.

CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER

Hawaii

Hawaii is the state with the most expensive gas in the nation, coming in with an average of $4.677 per gallon for regular gas on Wednesday. The Aloha State has recently overtaken California for the dubious distinction of the state with the most expensive gas prices for a gallon of regular gas. In California, a gallon of regular gas averaged $4.649 on Wednesday.

Mississippi

Mississippi continues to be the state with the least expensive gas prices. On Wednesday, the average price for a gallon of regular gas in Mississippi cost $2.968. It is the only state in the nation with an average price for regular gas under $3.

, Gas prices decreased again on Wednesday to officially end the month of July with a string of decreases at the pumps. The average price of a gallon of regular gas fell to $3.492, according to AAA, matching a low from a month ago. The latest gas prices mark a week of price drops, with the cost of a gallon of regular gas going from $3.513 a week ago to the current price. Gas prices remain a vital topic heading into the 2024 presidential election. With President Joe Biden deciding not to seek reelection, Vice President Kamala Harris, now the likely Democratic nominee, will have to indicate how she will address the country’s high gas prices and energy costs and how both affect the economy and people’s finances. While prices have fluctuated in 2024, there has been a decrease in the pumps in recent weeks and months. Nevertheless, gas prices remain significantly higher than when former President Donald Trump was in office. Gas prices vary significantly among states. To see how expensive gas is in each state, click here. Here are the gas prices for a gallon of regular-grade gas in and around Washington, D.C. Washington, D.C. The average price for a gallon of regular gas in the nation’s capital on Wednesday was $3.692. This was a decrease from Tuesday when the cost was $3.696. Regular gas is also less expensive in Washington, D.C. than a week ago when the average price was $3.713 per gallon. Prices are more expensive, however, than a month ago, when drivers paid $3.654 per gallon. Virginia On Wednesday, the average price for a gallon of regular-grade gas in Virginia was $3.369. This decreased from Tuesday’s average price of $3.38 per gallon. Gas prices are also less expensive in the state than a week ago when regular-grade gas was $3.416 per gallon. Prices, however, are more expensive now compared to a month ago when the price for a gallon of regular was $3.332. Maryland The average price for a gallon of regular gas in Maryland on Wednesday was $3.464. This was a decrease from Tuesday when the price of regular gas averaged $3.472 per gallon. Prices are also less expensive than a week ago, when the price was $3.487 per gallon. Moreover, gas prices are cheaper today compared to a month ago when people in Maryland paid $3.565 for a gallon of regular gas. Delaware On Wednesday, the average price for a gallon of regular gas in Delaware was $3.372, a decrease from Tuesday’s price of $3.377. Both prices are less expensive than a week ago when the average price was $3.398 for a gallon of regular gas. Gas prices have seen a sizable drop from a month ago when drivers in the First State paid $3.515 for a gallon of regular gas. CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER Hawaii Hawaii is the state with the most expensive gas in the nation, coming in with an average of $4.677 per gallon for regular gas on Wednesday. The Aloha State has recently overtaken California for the dubious distinction of the state with the most expensive gas prices for a gallon of regular gas. In California, a gallon of regular gas averaged $4.649 on Wednesday. Mississippi Mississippi continues to be the state with the least expensive gas prices. On Wednesday, the average price for a gallon of regular gas in Mississippi cost $2.968. It is the only state in the nation with an average price for regular gas under $3., , Gas prices: Consecutive days of decreases at the pumps to end July, https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/07/Gas-Prices_676359.webp, Washington Examiner, Political News and Conservative Analysis About Congress, the President, and the Federal Government, https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/cropped-favicon-32×32.png, https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/feed/, Washington Examiner Staff,

Vance accuses Harris of pandering to southern crowd thumbnail

Vance accuses Harris of pandering to southern crowd

Sen. J.D. Vance (R-OH), former President Donald Trump’s running mate, blasted Vice President Kamala Harris in remarks to reporters before a rally, saying she pandered to southern crowds by utilizing a southern accent.

Harris used one in remarks to a crowd in Atlanta, Georgia, on Tuesday night.

”And you guys saw yesterday she was in Georgia, and she put on a southern accent for a Georgia audience,” Vance said to reporters. “She grew up in Vancouver. What the hell is going on here? She is not who she pretends to be.”

Vance has been under heavy fire in recent days from Democrats for his past comments on “childless cat ladies,” and has been mocked for bizarre allegations involving couches and dolphins.

Harris appeared to use a southern accent when she said, “You all helped us win in 2020 and we gonna do it again in 2024.” She’s from California, and worked in the state as a senator, attorney general, and district attorney among other things.

Vance is likely trying to point out to voters that Harris is being inauthentic with her usage of the fake southern accent.

Trump suggested something similar at the NABJ convention Wednesday, saying she used to be Indian, and now is black. It appears Trump is trying to label her as inauthentic to her racial identity, though.

CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER

Vance has been an unpopular vice-presidential choice since Trump chose him with some viewing him as dragging down Trump with voters rather than elevating him. Harris has yet to pick her running mate.

Trump also said at the convention that the vice-presidential pick has not usually mattered to a presidential race. He says that voters are voting for the president rather than the ticket.

2024-08-01 04:29:00, http://s.wordpress.com/mshots/v1/https%3A%2F%2Fwww.washingtonexaminer.com%2Fnews%2Fcampaigns%2Fpresidential%2F3106979%2Fvance-accuses-harris-of-pandering-to-southern-crowd%2F?w=600&h=450, Sen. J.D. Vance (R-OH), former President Donald Trump’s running mate, blasted Vice President Kamala Harris in remarks to reporters before a rally, saying she pandered to southern crowds by utilizing a southern accent. Harris used one in remarks to a crowd in Atlanta, Georgia, on Tuesday night. ”And you guys saw yesterday she was in,

Sen. J.D. Vance (R-OH), former President Donald Trump’s running mate, blasted Vice President Kamala Harris in remarks to reporters before a rally, saying she pandered to southern crowds by utilizing a southern accent.

Harris used one in remarks to a crowd in Atlanta, Georgia, on Tuesday night.

”And you guys saw yesterday she was in Georgia, and she put on a southern accent for a Georgia audience,” Vance said to reporters. “She grew up in Vancouver. What the hell is going on here? She is not who she pretends to be.”

Vance has been under heavy fire in recent days from Democrats for his past comments on “childless cat ladies,” and has been mocked for bizarre allegations involving couches and dolphins.

Harris appeared to use a southern accent when she said, “You all helped us win in 2020 and we gonna do it again in 2024.” She’s from California, and worked in the state as a senator, attorney general, and district attorney among other things.

Vance is likely trying to point out to voters that Harris is being inauthentic with her usage of the fake southern accent.

Trump suggested something similar at the NABJ convention Wednesday, saying she used to be Indian, and now is black. It appears Trump is trying to label her as inauthentic to her racial identity, though.

CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER

Vance has been an unpopular vice-presidential choice since Trump chose him with some viewing him as dragging down Trump with voters rather than elevating him. Harris has yet to pick her running mate.

Trump also said at the convention that the vice-presidential pick has not usually mattered to a presidential race. He says that voters are voting for the president rather than the ticket.

, Sen. J.D. Vance (R-OH), former President Donald Trump’s running mate, blasted Vice President Kamala Harris in remarks to reporters before a rally, saying she pandered to southern crowds by utilizing a southern accent. Harris used one in remarks to a crowd in Atlanta, Georgia, on Tuesday night. ”And you guys saw yesterday she was in Georgia, and she put on a southern accent for a Georgia audience,” Vance said to reporters. “She grew up in Vancouver. What the hell is going on here? She is not who she pretends to be.” Vance has been under heavy fire in recent days from Democrats for his past comments on “childless cat ladies,” and has been mocked for bizarre allegations involving couches and dolphins. Harris appeared to use a southern accent when she said, “You all helped us win in 2020 and we gonna do it again in 2024.” She’s from California, and worked in the state as a senator, attorney general, and district attorney among other things. Vance is likely trying to point out to voters that Harris is being inauthentic with her usage of the fake southern accent. Trump suggested something similar at the NABJ convention Wednesday, saying she used to be Indian, and now is black. It appears Trump is trying to label her as inauthentic to her racial identity, though. CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER Vance has been an unpopular vice-presidential choice since Trump chose him with some viewing him as dragging down Trump with voters rather than elevating him. Harris has yet to pick her running mate. Trump also said at the convention that the vice-presidential pick has not usually mattered to a presidential race. He says that voters are voting for the president rather than the ticket., , Vance accuses Harris of pandering to southern crowd, https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/07/Vance-4.webp, Washington Examiner, Political News and Conservative Analysis About Congress, the President, and the Federal Government, https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/cropped-favicon-32×32.png, https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/feed/, Ross O'Keefe,