Jose Garcia
Jose Garcia's JournalTrade groups push Congress to reverse NLRB joint employer ruling
Source: The Hill
More than 50 business and trade groups are asking Congress to pass legislation to repeal the National Labor Relations Boards (NLRB) new joint employer standard.
In August 2015, the NLRB ruled that indirect and potential control over workers terms and conditions makes a company a joint employer.
In a letter to members of the House Education and Workforce Committee Tuesday, the groups including the International Franchise Association, the National Restaurant Association and the National Retail Federation said the rule change has exposed a broad range of businesses, from contractors and subcontractors, to franchisors and franchisees, to workplace liability for another employers actions and for workers they do not employ.
And they say the NLRB wont be reversing the new standard anytime soon.
Read more: http://thehill.com/regulation/319373-trade-groups-push-congress-to-reverse-nlrb-joint-employer-ruling
Group forms to 'Resist Trump' in Tallahassee
A new #ResistTrump group is drawing a sizable crowd in Tallahassee.
Organizers of Resist Trump Tallahassee were expecting only a few dozen people when they met for the first time last month at the LeRoy Collins Public Library. But 138 people showed up. And that was before Donald Trump was even sworn in as the 45th president.
The group held its first meeting Jan. 15 as part of a national day of action sponsored by groups including Moveon.org. It has since become its own grassroots organization, said Cheryl Gratt, a real estate agent who's organizing the effort with retired librarian Marianne Ryan.
"What we are trying to do is basically stop any initiative that Trump is doing which is just about everything that is detrimental to our country, Gratt said.
more: http://www.tallahassee.com/story/news/2017/02/13/group-forms-resist-trump-tallahassee/97869448/
Netanyahu adviser wants 'no gaps' with US on key issues
Source: The Hill
Ahead of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu trip to Washington, a top adviser says the prime ministers staff will work to ensure there are no gaps between the United States and Israel on key issues.
"There isn't going to be any daylight, no gaps," an adviser told Reuters.
President Trump and Netanyahu will meet on Wednesday.
"Donald Trump and I see eye-to-eye on the dangers emanating from the region but also on the opportunities, Netanyahu said on Monday, according to Reuters. We'll talk about both as well as upgrading the relations between Israel and the United States in many, many fields.
Read more: http://thehill.com/policy/international/319376-netanyahu-adviser-no-gaps-between-us-and-israel
British government rejects petition to stop Trump's visit
Source: The Hill
The British government has rejected a petition demanding a visit from U.S. President Trump to be canceled.
In a response posted onto an online petition, the government's Foreign and Commonwealth Office says it should extend its full courtesy to the U.S. and Trump.
"HM Government recognises the strong views expressed by the many signatories of this petition, but does not support this petition," the statement reads. HM Government believes the President of the United States should be extended the full courtesy of a State Visit. We look forward to welcoming President Trump once dates and arrangements are finalised."
The final dates for Trumps visit have not yet been determined.
Read more: http://thehill.com/blogs/blog-briefing-room/news/319375-uk-rejects-petition-to-stop-trumps-official-visit
As trial date draws near, FBI releases more about secretive 9/11 Review Commission
Source: Florida Bulldog
In moves aimed at heading off an unusual Freedom of Information Act trial in Miami next month, the FBI has released new information about the secretive work of its 9/11 Review Commission.
In one disclosure, the FBI made public how much it paid Reagan-era Attorney General Edwin Meese and two other men who served on the Review Commission, and staff. In another, the FBI put a human face on its effort to discredit a dramatic April 16, 2002 FBI report that said agents had found many connections between Saudis living in Sarasota and the 9/11 hijackers.
The FBI withheld the 2002 report from both Congress and the National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States, more simply known as the 9/11 Commission.
Late last year, in response to FOIA litigation brought by Florida Bulldog, the FBI made public copies of its personal services contracts with Meese, former ambassador and congressman Timothy Roemer and Georgetown professor Bruce Hoffman, but blacked out their pay.
Read more: http://www.floridabulldog.org/2017/02/trial-date-draws-nears-fbi-releases-new-details-about-secretive-911-review-commission/
Journalist Claims Omarosa Manigault Threatened Her, Said White House Has Dossier on Her
Source: New York Magazine
Somehow Gateway Pundit bloggers showing off their new White House press credentials in a tweet featuring a Pepe the Frog emoji was not the most troubling report about the White House press corps on Monday. A reporter claims that during an argument just outside the Oval Office last week, Omarosa Manigault, Apprentice star turned White House communications official, physically intimidated her. She said Manigault also told her that the Trump administration has collected dossiers of negative information on her and several other journalists.
According to the Washington Post, the exchange between Manigualt and April Ryan, American Urban Radio Networks White House correspondent, took place outside White House Press Secretary Sean Spicers office. She stood right in my face like she was going to hit me, Ryan told the paper. I said, You better back up.
She thought I would be bullied. I wont be.
Post reporter Abby Phillip was one of several people who witnessed the incident. Phillip said she didnt hear every word, but Ryan told her afterward that she felt Manigaults behavior was Secret Serviceable, meaning it warranted intervention by law enforcement.
Ryan also said that during the encounter Manigault told her she was one of several African-American journalists whom the White House is keeping dossiers on. I said, Good for you, good for you, good for you, Ryan said.
Read more: http://nymag.com/daily/intelligencer/2017/02/journalist-says-omarosa-threatened-her-has-dossier-on-her.html
New immigration measures prompts surge in number of residents seeking U.S. citizenship
Source: The Miami Herald
Demand for help to apply for U.S. citizenship has increased in recent weeks across South Florida, according to activists and organizations that serve immigrants.
Hundreds of people have attended citizenship workshops and some said they are taking the step because they are worried about their future in a country now under new immigration measures touted by President Donald Trump.
In Lauderhill, some 200 people were expected to attend a naturalization workshop on Saturday hosted by several organizations. But twice as many showed up.
Ive been here for over 30 years, and Ive never thought about going through this process, said Yves Darbouze, who applied for citizenship. Now theyre sending people home. I have family here. I have my kids, who were born here. Even though Im a permanent resident, Im afraid that they might send me back. Thats why Im here. I dont want to be separated from my family.
Read more: http://www.miamiherald.com/news/local/immigration/article132516229.html
Scott playing budget hardball over repeal of EFI, Visit Florida, members say
TALLAHASSEE Gov. Rick Scotts staff is sending an indirect but unmistakable message to Florida lawmakers, according to several House members: If you support legislation abolishing two economic development entities strongly backed by the governor, you can kiss your budget items goodbye.
The governors office says the notion that it is tying the fate of House members' pet projects to how they vote on legislation that would shutter Enterprise Florida and Visit Florida is absolutely false. None of the lawmakers interviewed by POLITICO Florida have indicated that their discussions were held directly with the governor.
"The word threat was not used, but the message was clear, said a House member lobbied on the economic development reform bill. Its a pretty hardline approach so early in the process. If they want the House to work with them [governors office] in the future, they might want to rethink it.
For veteran political observers, a governor using his line-item veto pen as leverage to muscle policy priorities out of the Legislature is nothing new.
more: http://www.politico.com/states/florida/story/2017/02/some-house-members-say-they-are-feeling-scott-squeeze-over-repeal-of-efi-visit-florida-109540
Corcoran weighs potential suit against Scott administration over massive Florida Lottery contract
TALLAHASSEE House Speaker Richard Corcoran is considering suing the Scott administration because he says a new massive lottery contract worth more than $700 million violates the state law that gives the Legislature budget writing authority, according to a draft complaint reviewed by POLITICO Florida.
In the potential lawsuit, Corcoran says that the Florida Department of Lotterys agreement with Nevada-based International Gaming Technology would force the Legislature to fund a big increase in certain types of ticket terminals. Department officials have made the case that the new deal will boost overall sales and state revenues.
Though the Legislature is responsible for crafting the state budget, House General Counsel Adam Tanenbaum says that the contract should be found void because it represents an executive agency binding lawmakers to provide a funding boost, according to a complaint being drafted by House attorneys.
Simply put, the Florida Lottery cannot enter into a contract that obligates the agency to pay more in subsequent fiscal years than its current budget authority allows, reads the complaint.
more: http://www.politico.com/states/florida/story/2017/02/corcoran-considering-suing-scott-administration-over-massive-lottery-contract-109580
DOJ asks to postpone district court proceedings on travel ban
Source: The Hill
The Trump administration is seeking to delay district court proceedings on the presidents travel ban until after an appeals court decides whether to rehear the case, suggesting that the government may not ask the Supreme Court to step in just yet.
A three-judge panel on the San Francisco-based U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit decided last Thursday not to reinstate Trumps executive action on immigration and refugees while the policy works its way through the legal system.
But an unknown judge on the appeals court has requested that the entire court vote whether to rehear the case through en banc review. That process would task an 11-judge panel to review the case and could result in another hearing. A majority of the active judges would need to agree to review the case.
The Ninth Circuit asked both the defendants and plaintiffs to file briefs by this Thursday about whether they think the case should be heard en banc.
Read more: http://thehill.com/homenews/administration/319284-doj-asks-to-postpone-district-court-proceedings-on-travel-ban
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