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MALUMA GARNERS TWELVE 2021 PREMIO LO NUESTRO NOMINATIONS 

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Global Latin music idol MALUMA has garnered twelve Premio Lo Nuestro nominations, once again positioning himself among the most nominated artists for the prestigious awards.

His nominations include: 

Premio Lo Nuestro Artist of the Year
Album of the Year (for PAPI JUANCHO)
Song of the Year (for “ADMV”)
Remix of the Year (for “HAWÁI” Remix)
Remix of the Year (for “Porfa” Remix)
“Crossover” Collab of the Year (for “HAWÁI” Remix)
Song of the Year – Pop (for “ADMV”)
Song of the Year – Pop/Ballad (for “ADMV”)
Male Artist of the Year – Urban
Song of the Year – Urban (for ” HAWÁI”)
Collab of the Year – Urban (for “Qué Pena”)
Album of the Year – Urban (for PAPI JUANCHO)
Fans have until January 25th to vote for their favoites by visiting: https://premiolonuestro.com/vota/The 33rd edition of Premio Lo Nuestro will air live on Thursday, February 18th at 7pm on the Univision Network. 

MALUMA RECIBE DOCE NOMINACIONES A PREMIO LO NUESTRO 2021

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 El ídolo global de la música latina MALUMA ha recibido doce nominaciones a Premio Lo Nuestro 2020, posicionándose nuevamente entre los artistas mas nominados de la prestigiosa premiación anual.Sus nominaciones incluyen:

Artista Premio Lo Nuestro Del Año
Álbum Del Año (por PAPI JUANCHO)
Canción Del Año (por “AMDV”)
Remix Del Año (por 
“HAWÁI” Remix)
Remix Del Año (por “Porfa” Remix)
Colaboración “Crossover” Del Año (por “HAWÁI” Remix)
Canción Del Año – Pop (por “ADMV”)
Canción Del Año – Pop/Balada (por “ADMV”)
Artista Masculino Del Año – Urbano
Canción Del Año – Urbano (por “HAWÁI”)
Colaboración Del Año – Urbano (por “Qué Pena”
Álbum Del Año – Urbano (por PAPI JUANCHO)

Los fans tienen hasta el 25 de enero para votar por sus favoritos visitando: https://premiolonuestro.com/vota/

La 33ra edición de Premio Lo Nuestro se transmitirá el jueves, 18 de febrero de 2020, a las 7pm por Univision.

 

Harvard removes Republican congresswoman from advisory committee

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Harvard University has announced it is removing Elise Stefanik, a Republican congresswoman of New York, from an advisory committee over her role in promoting baseless claims of widespread fraud in the presidential election.

Doug Elmendorf, the dean of Harvard Kennedy School, said Stefanik would no longer serve on the school’s Senior Advisory Committee, following a review by school leaders.

“Elise has made public assertions about voter fraud in November’s presidential election that have no basis in evidence, and she has made public statements about court actions related to the election that is incorrect,” Elmendorf said in a statement.

“Moreover, these assertions and statements do not reflect policy disagreements but bear on the foundations of the electoral process through which this country’s leaders are chosen.”

Elmendorf said he asked Stefanik, who graduated from Harvard in 2006, to step aside from the board. After she declined to do so, Elmendorf removed her from the post.

In characteristic fashion, Stefanik blamed Harvard’s decision to hold her accountable for spreading lies that culminated in a riot at the Capitol on cancel culture.

  • “As a conservative Republican, it is a rite of passage and badge of honor to join the long line of leaders who have been boycotted, protested, and canceled by colleges and universities across America,” Stefanik said.

 

Trump rejects responsibility for Capitol riot, says his words were ‘totally appropriate’

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Donald Trump refused to take responsibility for his role in the riot at the Capitol, claiming his words to supporters shortly before the violence were “totally appropriate”.

Speaking to reporters shortly before leaving for Texas to champion his work on the border wall, the president was asked about a pro-Trump mob storming the Capitol last week.

“We want no violence,” Trump said. “On the impeachment, it’s really a continuation of the greatest witch hunt in the history of politics.” He added, “I think it’s causing tremendous danger to our country, and it’s causing tremendous anger. I want no violence.”

During a separate gaggle with reporters shortly after he made those comments, Trump was asked what his role was in the violent riot.

“People thought that what I said was totally appropriate,” Trump said of his speech to supporters shortly before the riot.

In that speech, the president explicitly told his supporters to march to the Capitol as lawmakers certified Joe Biden’s victory in the presidential race. Five people have died as a result of the violence.

Third House member tests positive for coronavirus after Capitol riot

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A third member of the House of Representatives has tested positive for coronavirus after lawmakers were forced to shelter in place together during the violent riot at the Capitol last week.

Brad Schneider, a Democrat of Illinois, announced his diagnosis in a statement that specifically called out Republicans who refused to wear masks during the lockdown.

“Last Wednesday, after narrowly escaping a violent mob incited by the President of the United States to attack the Capitol and its occupants, I was forced to spend several hours in a secure but confined location with dozens of other members of Congress,” Schneider said in a statement.

“Several Republican lawmakers in the room adamantly refused to wear a mask, as demonstrated in the video from Punchbowl News, even when politely asked by their colleagues. Today, I am now in strict isolation, worried that I have risked my wife’s health and angry at the selfishness and arrogance of the anti-maskers who put their own contempt and disregard for decency ahead of the health and safety of their colleagues and our staff.”

Schneider is the third House member to test positive since last Wednesday. Fellow Democrats Pramila Jayapal and Bonnie Watson Coleman have also announced they were diagnosed with coronavirus.

Schneider said he has thankfully not yet experienced any symptoms and is receiving excellent medical care.

“Wearing a mask is not a political statement, it is public health guidance, common courtesy, and simply what should be expected of all decent people,” Schneider added in the statement.

“We can no longer tolerate Members coming to the floor or gathering in the halls of Congress without doing the bare minimum to protect those around them.”

Biden’s HHS to Inherit Legal Fights

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Legal battles leftover from the prior administration is likely to dictate which health-care policy priorities President-elect Joe Biden and his officials must focus on first.

Fights are ongoing over the scope of Trump administration rules that scaled back Obamacare’s anti-discrimination protections, gave health-care workers the right to refuse patients care based on their religious beliefs, and expanded access to skimpier health plans. Court schedules in the cases could force the new administration to make some quick decisions come Jan. 20.

“The Biden administration is going to be pretty quickly put in a position where it has to decide whether it’s going to defend Trump-era regulations, including at the Supreme Court,” said Katie Keith, a health law professor at Georgetown University.

Officials will have to decide whether to drop appeals, seek extensions, or ask for cases to be put on hold. If confirmed as Health and Human Services Secretary, Xavier Becerra could have to rely on his deputy to determine what to do with the cases he brought against the agency as California attorney general.

The justices agreed on Dec. 4 to hear the Trump administration’s appeal of court decisions tossing out approvals of state Medicaid programs that impose a work requirement on its beneficiaries. The government’s opening briefs are due just days before Biden is set to take office.

“They are walking into an incredible situation where the government will be on record arguing for the legality of experiments that the administration considers neither legal nor found policy,” said Sara Rosenbaum, a professor of health law and policy at George Washington University.

While the Biden administration is expected to notify the justices that the government has changed its position in the case, “it’s literally going to be an incredible race against the clock,” she said. Respondents’ briefs are due Feb. 17 under the court’s rules and the arguments will likely be held in March. Read more from Lydia Wheeler.

HHS Starts Reviewing All Rules in Last Trump Days: Health regulations that aren’t reviewed every 10 years to consider whether they are still needed would expire under a rule finalized on Friday. The final rule exempts some Food and Drug Administration rules and yearly ACA rules, in addition to procedural rules, regulations issued jointly with other agencies, and regulations around internal management. The move comes just a week before Biden’s inauguration and adds additional duties to his incoming HHS staff. Biden’s transition team said it plans to issue a memo on Jan. 20 to block regulations from taking effect that hasn’t yet, Shira Stein reports.

Biden Says He’ll Release More Second Doses

Biden said he will distribute more available doses of coronavirus vaccines, reversing the Trump administration’s practice of holding back second doses to make sure they’re available for people who’ve already had their first shot.

The move unveiled by Biden’s office Friday and endorsed by several Democratic governors is his response to the current sluggish federal vaccine rollout. “He supports releasing available doses immediately, and believes the government should stop holding back vaccine supply so we can get more shots in Americans’ arms now,” Biden spokesman TJ Ducklo said Friday in a written statement.

Trump’s administration has so far withheld about half of the allocated doses of vaccines made by Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna, both two-dose regimens. The Trump administration has said it wants to ensure doses are actually available when people return weeks later for their second dose to fortify efficacy. Second shots are needed after 21 days for the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine, and 28 days for the Moderna shot.

Biden’s statement did not make clear how many vaccines he would still withhold. Biden will release additional details this week, Ducklo said. The move risks that a hiccup in the delivery of vaccines may leave the administration without enough when people’s second doses are due. Biden’s team is confident that manufacturers can meet the demand, a transition official said. They’ll use the Defense Production Act to force production if needed, the official said. Josh Wingrove, Jordan Fabian, and John Tozzi have more.

  • Meanwhile, the U.S.’s vaccine distribution plan relies too heavily on hospitals and chain drug stores to ensure everyone in the country has access, the head of the National Urban League said. Drug store representatives say they are up to the task once enough vaccines are available to distribute widely. But that claim may be hard to back up. There are about 40,000 drug stores signed up to participate in an expanded vaccine rollout that started this week.

Biden’s Stimulus Plans Set Up Fresh Fight: Biden’s plan to pass a multi-trillion dollar economic stimulus package early in his administration faces challenges in a closely divided U.S. Senate, with a potential impeachment trial for Donald Trump that could add to delays. Biden is set to release his proposals — the price tag for which has yet to be unveiled — on Thursday. The package will feature a range of support for state and local authorities long blocked by Republicans, a bump in direct payments to $2,000, and expanded unemployment benefits, along with funding for vaccine distribution, school re-opening, tax credits, rental relief, and aid to small businesses.

Divided Senate Looks to Bush-Era Power-Sharing: Senate leadership may look to a power-sharing agreement forged two decades ago as they begin negotiations over the daily running of the chamber and its committees. Democrats’ two victories in Georgia last week mean the Senate will be split 50-50. Soon-to-be majority leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) said that changes in how the Senate is run can’t be made until Georgia certifies the wins of Democrats Raphael Warnock and Jon Ossoff, new senators are sworn in, and Harris presides over the Senate. “But I look forward to sitting down with Leader McConnell,” Schumer told reporters.

Members of both parties said a starting point is likely to be the agreement used by the parties in 2001 when they were also at parity and Vice President Dick Cheney provided tie-breaking votes to get Bush administration priorities through.

The Coronavirus Pandemic

Connecticut Outpaces N.Y. in Race to Vaccinate Residents: Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) has insisted that New York’s health-care workforce be fully vaccinated before others in the state are immunized, but in neighboring Connecticut, a looser approach is drawing results faster. Cuomo on Friday reversed course after criticism, saying that New York will start scheduling vaccine appointments for seniors, teachers, and first responders. According to Bloomberg’s vaccine tracker, New York had administered just 38% of the doses it’s received from the U.S. government as of Jan. 7. Connecticut was through 46% of its supply.

  • New York City had 270,000 unused vaccine doses it was seeking to administer to residents over age 75, Mayor Bill de Blasio (D) said Friday. The city has about 565,000 vulnerable New Yorkers in the eldest category “who need this help right now,” he said, continuing to push for state approval to expand the criteria of eligibility.

College Openings Coincide With Community Surges: The reopening of college campuses last fall coincided with new coronavirus outbreaks in surrounding communities, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said. New cases increased by over 56% in counties where large colleges were located, 21 days after classes restarted, a CDC report released on Friday found. Meanwhile, counties, where large colleges opted for remote instruction, saw Covid-19 cases decline by 17.9%. Campus leaders hoped improved mitigation efforts adopted during the fall—such as mask-wearing, rapid testing, and quarantining of affected students—would allow them to continue in-person classes safely.

Holiday travel stoked fears over a surge in cases, leading many schools to reconsider spring start dates. The CDC’s report underscores public health risks linked to returning to classes in person. The CDC study didn’t adjust for mitigation strategies adopted at state or local levels or on campuses. It also couldn’t determine whether new cases were connected to campuses or community transmission.

CONGRESSWOMAN SHEILA JACKSON LEE INTRODUCES HOUSE RESOLUTION 26 ARTICLES OF IMPEACHMENT AGAINST PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP

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Congresswoman Sheila Jackson Lee, a senior member of the House Committees on Judiciary, Homeland Security, and the Budget introduces articles of impeachment against President Donald Trump.

“Our Constitution was written as a guide for governing our democracy and to protect it from authoritarian and tyrannical control.  It also serves as a tool to protect our nation from foreign and domestic enemies who intend to harm our Republic.

“On Wednesday, January 6, 2021, we saw domestic enemies incite violence and invade the people’s house with intent to harm provoked by President Trump. This attack on our democracy led to the death of 6 people, including two U.S. Capitol Police Officers. Officer Brian D. Sicknick passed away Thursday, January 7, 2021, due to injuries sustained while on-duty. Saturday, January 9, 2021, Officer Howard Liebengood took his life after responding to the Capitol’s domestic terror attack. The President has completely lost whatever moral authority he had and is unfit as Commander in Chief. His actions to incite violence against his own government and against the entire Congress warrants removal from office.  And if Administration officials refuse to invoke the 25th Amendment, I am moving forward with Articles of Impeachment to remove him from office for the following reasons:

Therefore, included in the submission by Congresswoman Jackson Lee was the second of two articles that includes the following:”

  1. Refusing continuously to acknowledge to the American people that he would accept and be bound by the verdict rendered in the 2020 Presidential election, instead claiming that any outcome in which he was not declared the winner was fraudulent, rigged, and illegitimate.
  2. Taking active measures to impede and undermine the ability of American citizens to convey their disapproval of his continuance in office by exercising their rights as voters, including misusing the United States Postal Service to prevent the 16 timely delivery of mail-in ballots.
  3. Instituting frivolous lawsuits to overturn the results of the 2020 Presidential election, falsely alleging wide-spread voting fraud but producing no evidence in support of his spurious allegations.
  4. Exhorting and inciting his supporters to believe falsely that victory in the 2020 Presidential election had been stolen from him and that constitutionally required Joint Meeting of Congress for the purpose of counting the votes of electors and announcement of the result by the President of the Senate was illegitimate and intended to complete the theft of his victory.
  5. Failing to take action to protect and defend Federal officers and personnel, property, buildings, and institutions on January 6, 2021, at the U.S. Capitol that was besieged by supporters of Donald John Trump, resulting in extensive damage to the property of the United States and the deaths of at least four persons.

 

“Wednesday, January 6th will go down as a day in infamy, where six Americans died because of the actions of President Donald J Trump, partly in his words of provoking mobs to leave his rally and rushed to the Capitol and attack the sitting leadership of the United States House and Senate, The Vice President of the United States and federally elected Members of Congress. The violence was unspeakable; the destruction was widespread.  The disregard for this historic and continuous symbol of democracy was fueled by the words they had just heard from the President, ‘you have to show strength and you have to be strong,’ from Trump’s lawyer, Rudy Giuliani, who urged the mob to engage in  ‘trial by combat,’ and then from the words of his oldest son, Donald Trump Jr. ‘The people who did nothing to stop the steal — this gathering should send a message to them.’ And they violently attacked the U.S. Capitol and as video has evidenced, it was more devastating and more violent than we might have imagined. More people could have lost their lives; had it not been for the many brave men and women of law enforcement that personally and physically battled this mob and this group of domestic terrorists.”

 

It is clear that under this resolution of impeachment, he should be impeached. And Congresswoman Jackson Lee will join her colleagues on the floor to work for an impeachment resolution to pass.

FBI internal bulletin: Armed protests planned at all 50 state capitals, U.S. Capitol

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Armed protests are reportedly being planned at all 50 state capitals and the U.S. Capitol starting this week, according to an internal FBI bulletin.

The internal bulletin, states that starting this week and running through at least Inauguration Day, armed protests are being planned at all 50 state capitals and the US Capitol.

“As of 10 January, armed protests are being planned at all 50 state capitols from 16 January through at least 20 January, and at the US Capitol from 17 January through 20 January,” the bulletin said.

The FBI has also received information in recent days on an identified group calling for “storming” state, local, and federal government courthouses and administrative buildings in the event POTUS is removed as President prior to Inauguration Day.

According to the bulletin, the group is also planning to “storm” government offices in every state on Inauguration Day January 20, regardless of whether the state-certified electoral votes for Biden or Trump.

The news comes as the FBI continues searching for all the suspects involved in the riot at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6.

The riot happened just 14 days before President-elect Biden’s inaugural ceremony on the West Steps of the Capitol.

Four people, Ashli Babbit, Benjamin Philips, Kevin Greeson, and Rosanne Boyland, and Capitol Police Officer Brian Sicknick were killed in the incident.

The FBI is continuing to look for individuals who may have incited or promoted violence of any kind during the riots. Anyone with digital material or tips can call 1-800-CALL-FBI (800-225-5324) or submit images or videos at fbi.gov/USCapitol.

President-elect Biden to release every available dose of Covid-19 vaccine

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A spokesperson from the Biden transition team said that Joe Biden wants to ensure that all Americans who need vaccines get access to it as soon as possible.

President-elect Joe Biden will aim to release every available dose of coronavirus vaccine when he takes office, a departure from Trump administration strategy of holding back doses to make sure second doses are available.

“The President-elect believes we must accelerate the distribution of the vaccine while continuing to ensure the Americans who need it most get it as soon as possible,” TJ Ducklo, a spokesman for Biden’s transition, told.

“He supports releasing available doses immediately, and believes the government should stop holding back vaccine supply so we can get more shots in Americans’ arms now.”

Biden will reveal more next week about how his administration will begin releasing the available doses once he takes office on Jan. 20, Ducklo said.

The Trump administration fell far short of its goal of vaccinating 20 million Americans with a first of two required doses by the end of 2020.

In a letter Friday to Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar and Operation Warp Speed Chief Operating Officer General Gustave Perna, a group of state governors urged the federal government to tap into the “reserved doses” of COVID-19 vaccine and send them to states that need them.

 

Trump faces shameful prospect of second impeachment with Democrats set to move quickly this week

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Donald Trump’s presidency is set to torment America up to and even beyond his final hours in power with Democrats moving inexorably towards making him the first President to be impeached twice after he incited a mob assault on Congress.

The horror of last week’s attack on the citadel of US democracy is only growing as frightening new details emerge of the chaos and anarchy inside the US Capitol and fears mount of more violence by radicalized Trump supporters and right-wing extremists in the run-up to Joe Biden being inaugurated as the 46th president next week.
Trump’s actions have again put the nation on the traumatic path of impeachment — an always contentious process that leaves its own bitter legacy of political pain. Before Trump came to Washington, only two Presidents had been impeached in the near two-and-a-half century history of the United States. He is now staring at the shameful distinction of being impeached by the House of Representatives twice in just over a year — a sequence that will leave a deep scar in Washington for a generation — not least because, despite his aberrant behavior, Trump retains strong support among Republican lawmakers because of his near-mystical hold on the party’s populist base.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s Democrats will first implore Vice President Mike Pence to invoke the 25th Amendment to declare the President unable to fulfill his duties. If, as expected, Pence and the Cabinet balk at that step, Democrats will again unleash the inexorable machinery of impeachment less than a year after Trump’s previous acquittal of high crimes and misdemeanors in a Senate trial.
Democrats introduced a resolution to impeach Trump on a charge of incitement of insurrection on Monday morning.
The single charge points to Trump’s repeated false claims that he won the election and his speech to the crowd on January 6 before pro-Trump rioters breached the Capitol. It also cited Trump’s call with the Georgia Republican secretary of state where the President urged him to “find” enough votes for Trump to win the state.

But the compressed calendar as Trump enters his last nine days in office — and the reticence of Republicans in the Senate, who have faced one again with a loyalty test they have always failed when choosing between Trump’s base and the Constitution — seems certain to thwart Democratic efforts to quickly eject Trump from power. This means the drama surrounding Trump’s fate, and the possibility of another Senate trial, could outlast his presidency and his turbulent term could cast a toxic shadow over President-elect Joe Biden’s first days in office.

The aftershocks of the breaching of the US Capitol are being exacerbated by disturbing new accounts and footage of alarming scenes inside the insurrection that suggested an even worse tragedy was only narrowly averted.
But it was also an eerily quiet weekend. For the first time in years, Americans were spared the extreme rhetoric and tantrums of Trump’s Twitter feed after the social media platform muzzled the President over fears of more violence.
As he begins his last full week in office, Trump is scheming to reclaim his megaphone with plans for a trip to visit his border wall — a concept that was one of the earliest precursors of his divisive presidency. The White House is also readying a new attempt to rein in big social media firms that have purged Trump after his inflammatory posts. And Trump is expected to unleash new and controversial pardons that may further test the rule of law before his time is up.