Prosecutors are trying to preserve President-elect Donald Trumps hush money conviction as he returns to office, and they’re suggesting various ways forward.
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Check out the 207 interview with Lisa Wolfinger, producer and director of the series, and York County Sheriff Bill King.
But anew poll conducted by the Ronald Reagan Institute shows that Americans still want our nation to lead, invest in the military and support our allies.
President-elect Donald Trump said in an interview that aired on Sunday that he has no plans to remove Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell.Appearing on NBCs Meet the Press with Kristen Welker, Trump was asked if he would try to replace Powell.No, I dont think so. I dont see it, Trump said. I think if I told him to, he would. But if I asked him to, he probably wouldnt. But if I told him to, he would.Welker followed by asking Trump if he had plans to ask Powell to resign. Trump responded, No, I dont.The comments mark the first time since the presidential election that Trump has publicly backed Powell. In July, Trump said he would not fire Powell if he won the election and in November, a senior adviser to Trump reaffirmed that Trump would likely allow Powell would finish his term as chairman.Trump, however, has threatened to remove Powell from his post on several occasions after the central bank raised interest rates in 2018 and even called Powell the enemy in 2019. In March 2020, Trump told reporters he had the right to remove (Powell) as chairman and that he has, so far, made a lot of bad decisions, in my opinion, after markets tanked amid the pandemic. But he also praised Powell for cutting rates to zero to prevent an economic collapse.Trump nominated Powell to serve as head of the U.S. central bank in November 2017. Powell was later reappointed by President Joe Biden to serve another term.Not permitted under the lawBarely 48 hours passed after Trumps election before a reporter asked Powell if hed resign if Trump asked him to. Powell responded that he would not.Not permitted under the law, Powell repeated twice.There are legal barriers for Trump, and any other president, to remove or fire a Fed chair. It requires what Americas central bank refers to as for cause.Ultimately, the Supreme Court could have the final say on what merits a for cause firing of a Fed chair. But while that fight, which would probably be lengthy, plays out, Powell would likely still get to stay in his job until his term ends.Trump wants input on interest ratesTrump had accused Powell of being political, and said that the Fed has considered rate cuts for the sake of maybe getting people elected in a February interview with Fox Business Networks Maria Bartiromo.Trump has also said that his threats to remove Powell were because interest rates were too high, but the Fed chair went too far by cutting rates too much.Trump has also shared another plan if he cant fire Powell: getting the central bank to consult him on interest rate decisions.I feel the president should have at least a say in there. I feel that strongly, Trump said at a news conference in August about the Feds interest rate decisions. I made a lot of money. I was very successful. And I think I have a better instinct than, in many cases, people that would be on the Federal Reserve or the chairman.The Fed is intended to be an independent governing body free from political influence so that it doesnt make decisions that could upset the scale of job creation and low inflation.Its unclear whether Trump would need congressional approval to take away the Feds independence. Either way, Powell is against the idea, and told reporters in September that independent central banks typically have lower inflation.Its a good institutional arrangement, which has been good for the public, and I hope and strongly believe that it will continue, he said.
Six Yorkton business have come together to encourage people to donate items in-need to Shelwin House by offering their services free of charge through a draw.
What if you could capture energy from the dance floor? It was an unconventional idea conceived and brought to life by two Scottish business leaders from completely different sectors. The result was Bodyheat, a heating and cooling system which captures the heat produced by patrons at the iconic SWG3 venue in Glasgow, Scotland – and then stores it underground until it needs to be reused.
Airline fees are a growing part of the travel experience, from checking bags to picking seats. Fees now account for more than 20% of airline revenue.
Spartanburg County officials have broken ground on the county’s new multimillion-dollar pet resource center, which, they say, could help owners keep their pets.Members of Spartanburg County Council and other local leaders were on hand for the event on Thursday. “Spartanburg County has a lot of animal resources. There’s just no one to bring us together, and I think that this resource center is going to be the place,” County Council Member Jessica Coker said. The $24.6 million facility is located along Southport Road near the Spartanburg Downtown Memorial Airport. Officials said it is paid for via American Rescue Plan Act funds and interest earned through county investments.Since 2011, Spartanburg County has been transporting its stray animals to Greenville County as part of a temporary agreement.In 2022 and 2023 combined, Greenville County took in more than 3,100 stray animals from Spartanburg County. “In the past, we’ve really gotten a deal with contracting with Greenville County Animal Care, but it’s time we take care of our own, and so I’m very excited that we are able to do so debt-free,” Coker said. Officials said the pet resource center will have a variety of medical services as well as an adoption center. “For so many years, we taught the public, ‘Bring us all your animals. Bring us all your animals,’ and that was a really terrible idea,” said Kim Sanders, the director of animal welfare services. “There’s no way that one team of 30 to 50 staff members can handle the animals for one county’s population.”Coker hopes the resource center can be another tool to help both humans and animals in the county.”We want to have all kinds of programs in place and ordinances to keep animals with their owners,” she said. “We want to make it hard for people to have animal cruelty.”Coker said the county continues to hire staff who will operate the facility. The center is scheduled to open by the end of next year.
Sylvia Brownlee is the founder of Skin by Brownlee and Company.
The nominating phase for the 2025 Siouxlands Choice Awards is now over. The voting phase will begin Dec. 9, continuing through Dec. 29. For more than 20 years, The Sioux
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