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‘Uncontrolled escalation’: Russia warns war is spiraling out of control as battle for Kherson looms

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Moscow reportedly withdrew its military officers from the southern city of Kherson over the weekend ahead of an expected counterattack by Ukrainian troops, while civilians were urged to flee the area amid signs Russian fighters may be preparing for brutal urban combat.

The Institute for Study of War, a leading military think tank, said Sunday that Russian leadership has withdrawn its officers from Kherson, a key city in southern Ukraine along the Dnipro River.

The city and its surrounding villages have largely been under Russian control since the early weeks of the war in late February. Its recapture by Ukrainian troops would be both a strategic and symbolic victory for Kyiv, which has steadily retaken ground in eastern and southern Ukraine as part of a months-long coordinated counteroffensive aided by U.S.-made weapons.

Russian authorities in Kherson, installed shortly after the Russian occupation began, urged civilians to leave the city as soon as possible.

Citing Ukrainian defense officials, the Institute for Study of War over the weekend said that “some Russian elements are preparing Kherson City for urban combat, while other service members continue to flee the city via the ferry operating in the vicinity of the Antonivsky Bridge.”

With heavy fighting imminent, Western intelligence officials say that Russian forces have been scrambling to build new bridges around Kherson to help move troops and supplies in and out of the city quickly. 

The British Ministry of Defense said over the weekend that Russian troops recently completed a new barge bridge across the Dnipro outside Kherson.

“Although the use of heavy barge bridges was almost certainly included in Soviet-era planning for operations in Europe, it is likely this is the first time the Russian military have needed to utilize this type of bridge for decades,” the ministry tweeted. “Using civilian barges likely provides Russia additional material and logistics benefits, having lost significant quantities of military bridging equipment and engineering personnel during its invasion.” 

Kherson and its surrounding territory link Ukraine to the Crimean peninsula, which Russian troops forcibly annexed in 2015 and has become a key staging ground for Russian troops in their ongoing war in Ukraine.

The loss of Kherson would mark a major strategic defeat for Russian President Vladimir Putin and his army, as their positions in Crimea would be more easily within range of Ukrainian strikes.

Kherson province is one of four provinces that Mr. Putin claims to have annexed into Russia, though virtually the entire world rejects those claims and still considers the territories to be part of Ukraine.

Meanwhile, Russian troops over the weekend continued a massive drone-and-rocket attack campaign on Ukrainian energy infrastructure across the country.

With the aid of Iranian-made drones, Russian troops have targeted Ukrainian power-generation sites, water treatment plants and other facilities. The campaign is an effort by Russia to break the morale of Ukraine and to leave millions of Ukrainians without heat and hot water as winter approaches.

But Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said it won’t work.

“Russian propagandists are lying when they say that this terror against our infrastructure and people can somehow slow down the active actions of our military or create some difficulties for our defense,” Mr. Zelenskyy said in an address Saturday. “Ukrainians are united and know for sure that Russia has no chance of winning this war. Our defense forces are getting everything they need to defend the country and are pushing forward every day.”

• This article is based in part on wire-service reports.

Fears over Russian threat to Norway’s energy infrastructure

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STAVANGER, Norway — Norwegian oil and gas workers normally don’t see anything more threatening than North Sea waves crashing against the steel legs of their offshore platforms. But lately they have noticed a more troubling sight: unidentified drones buzzing in the skies overhead.

With Norway replacing Russia as Europe’s main source of natural gas, military experts suspect the unmanned aircraft are Moscow’s doings. They list espionage, sabotage and intimidation as possible motives for the drone flights.

The Norwegian government has sent warships, coastguard vessels and fighter jets to patrol around the offshore facilities. Norway’s national guard stationed soldiers around onshore refineries that also were buzzed by drones.

Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Støre has invited the navies of NATO allies Britain, France and Germany to help address what could be more than a Norwegian problem.

Precious little of the offshore oil that provides vast income for Norway is used by the country’s 5.4 million inhabitants. Instead, it powers much of Europe. Natural gas is another commodity of continental significance.

“The value of Norwegian gas to Europe has never been higher,” Ståle Ulriksen, a researcher at the Royal Norwegian Naval Academy, said. “As a strategic target for sabotage, Norwegian gas pipelines are probably the highest value target in Europe.”

Closures of airports, and evacuations of an oil refinery and a gas terminal last week due to drone sightings caused huge disruptions. But with winter approaching in Europe, there is worry the drones may portend a bigger threat to the 9,000 kilometers (5,600 miles) of gas pipelines that spider from Norway’s sea platforms to terminals in Britain and mainland Europe.

Since the start of the war in Ukraine in late February, European Union countries have scrambled to replace their Russian gas imports with shipments from Norway. The suspected sabotage of the Nordstream I and II pipelines in the Baltic Sea last month happened a day before Norway opened a new Baltic pipeline to Poland.

Amund Revheim, who heads the North Sea and environment group for Norway’s South West Police force, said his team interviewed more than 70 offshore workers who have spotted drones near their facilities.

“The working thesis is that they are controlled from vessels or submarines nearby,” Revheim said.

Winged drones have a longer range, but investigators considered credible a sighting of a helicopter-style bladed model near the Sleipner platform, located in a North Sea gas field 250 kilometers (150 miles) from the coast.

Norwegian police have worked closely with military investigators who are analyzing marine traffic. Some platform operators have reported seeing Russian-flagged research vessels in close vicinity. Revheim said no pattern has been established from legal marine traffic and he is concerned about causing unnecessary, disruptive worry for workers.

But Ulriksen, of the naval academy, said the distinction between Russian civilian and military ships is narrow and the reported research vessels could fairly be described as “spy ships.”

The arrest of at least seven Russian nationals caught either carrying or illegally flying drones over Norwegian territory has raised tensions. On Wednesday, the same day a drone sighting grounded planes in Bergen, Norway’s second-biggest city, the Norwegian Police Security Service took over the case from local officers.

“We have taken over the investigation because it is our job to investigate espionage and enforce sanction rules against Russia,” Martin Bernsen, an official with the service known by the Norwegian acronym PST. He said the “sabotage or possible mapping” of energy infrastructure was an ongoing concern.

Støre, the prime minister, warned that Norway would take action against foreign intelligence agencies. “It is not acceptable for foreign intelligence to fly drones over Norwegian airports. Russians are not allowed to fly drones in Norway,” he said.

Russia’s Embassy in Oslo hit back Thursday, claiming that Norway was experiencing a form of “psychosis” causing “paranoia.”

Naval academy researcher thinks that is probably part of the plan.

“Several of the drones have been flown with their lights on,” he said. “They are supposed to be observed. I think it is an attempt to intimidate Norway and the West.”

The wider concern is that they are part of a hybrid strategy to both intimidate and gather information on vital infrastructure, which could later be targeted for sabotage in a potential strike against the West.

“I do not believe we are heading for a conventional war with Russia,” Ulriksen said. “But a hybrid war … I think we are already in it.”

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Follow AP’s coverage of the war in Ukraine: https://apnews.com/hub/russia-ukraine

Copyright © 2022 The Washington Times, LLC.

Hemby’s career day propels banged-up Maryland to homecoming win over Northwestern

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COLLEGE PARK — For the first 30 minutes, Maryland’s offensive line didn’t give Billy Edwards Jr. — who started at quarterback in place of the injured Taulia Tagovailoa — much time to work. Of the Terrapins’ six first-half drives, only two made it past their own 28-yard line.

Part of that was due to absences that, in addition to Tagovailoa, went deep into the Maryland depth chart. Starting left guard Mason Lunsford didn’t play, setting off a game of musical chairs: Right guard Spencer Anderson took Lunsford’s place, center Johari Branch shifted right in Anderson’s stead, and freshman Colton Deery got his first staring nod over the ball. Running back Antwain Littleton II (and his five touchdowns this year) also didn’t play.

Starting linebacker Ruben Hyppolite II also didn’t play for the third consecutive game due to an ankle injury. That was the least of Maryland’s problems in the defense’s second level.

Standout freshman Jaishawn Barham missed his first game of the season, as did graduate transfer Vandarius Cowan. A linebacking hodgepodge resulted, with Ahmad McCullough, junior-college transfer Gereme Spraggins, and freshman Caleb Wheatland sharing time. 

The lack of depth allowed the Wildcats to take advantage on the ground. Northwestern ran for 111 yards in the first half after Maryland had only allowed 149 total in its last three games combined.

Then, the second stanza started, and the Terrapins looked more like their 2022 selves.

Edwards threw for 166 yards and a touchdown while rushing for 66, and Roman Hemby had a career day, rushing for 172 yards and three touchdowns, helping Maryland outlast Northwestern, 31-24 on homecoming Saturday.

Hemby ran like a grown man — and one with a skillset that can translate to playing on Sundays — defying tacklers on his first two touchdown runs of 14 and 18 yards. The Edgewood, Maryland, native then popped off for another home run score when the Terrapins needed it the most. 

After the Wildcats had marched 72 yards in less than 3:00 to tie the game at 24, Hemby had a 70-yard effort of his own in store. The redshirt freshman moved cleanly between blocks by left tackle Jaelyn Duncan and receiver Rakim Jarrett, made one cut at the next level, and left Northwestern defenders flailing their arms in his wake. 

Seventy-five yards later, Hemby was in the end zone, securing the win for the Terrapins (6-2, 3-2) and bowl eligibility for the second straight season. It’s the earliest date Maryland has reached the six-win mark since 2001 and the first time the Terrapins have been bowl eligible in back-to-back seasons since 2012-13.

Sacheen Littlefeather, famous for 1973 Oscar speech, made up her indigenous narrative, sisters claim

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Sacheen Littlefeather, who claimed to be Apache and whose 1973 speech at the Academy Awards denounced the treatment of Native Americans in Hollywood, faked her racial identity for decades, her sisters allege.

Littlefeather, who died on Oct. 3, gave her speech in place of Marlon Brando, who declined the award for Best Actor that year after playing Vito Corleone in “The Godfather.”

Her words were so incendiary that John Wayne had to be restrained from interrupting the speech, and boos echoed throughout the auditorium for the duration of the speech.

Her sisters have now come out and denounced her claims of indigeneity in an interview quoted in a San Francisco Chronicle opinion column. Littlefeather, born Mary Louise Cruz, was, like them, a Mexican-American, Rosalind Cruz and Trudy Orlandi allege.

The sisters’ father, Manuel Cruz, was born in Oxnard, California, to Mexican parents, Ms. Cruz and Ms. Orlandi say.

Ms. Cruz said it was “insulting to my parents” and “disgusting to the heritage of the tribal people,” according to the Chronicle column.

Ms. Orlandi pinned Littlefeather’s claim of being Apache on a desire for prestige.

“I mean, you’re not gonna be a Mexican American princess. You’re gonna be an American Indian princess. It was more prestigious to be an American Indian than it was to be Hispanic in her mind,” Ms. Orlandi told the Chronicle.

The two also claim that key parts of Littlefeather’s claimed upbringing were fabricated along with her status as a Native American.

For example, the two allege that Littlefeather lifted her accounts of being abused by an alcoholic, mentally ill father from her father’s own upbringing.

Ms. Orlandi and Ms. Cruz also explained the meaning behind Littlefeather’s assumed first name. “Sacheen,” the two said, was possibly inspired by the spools of thread sold by the Sasheen Ribbon Co.

Ms. Orlandi dismissed Littlefeather’s biographical account of where her assumed surname came from.

“That she danced in front of my father and always wore a feather in her hair, in her head? And that’s when my father called her ‘Littlefeather’? That’s another fantasy,” Ms. Orlandi explained to the Chronicle.

Littlefeather claimed to have received her name from Navajo activists during the 1969 occupation of Alcatraz.

LaNada Warjack, a then-student activist who was on Alcatraz during the entire 18-month occupation, said Littlefeather was not there and that activists only learned who she was during her Oscar speech.

“We never really knew her until Oscar night. … That same year she did a spread in Playboy magazine. We knew no Native would do that. … The last thing we as Native women wanted anyone to think of us was as sex objects,” Ms. Warjack told the Chronicle.

The sisters said they had withheld the truth until now because they thought Littlefeather’s fame would fade away.

In light of the positive coverage Littlefeather received after her death, as well as the official apology from the Motion Picture Academy she received earlier in 2022 for the backlash to her 1973 speech, her sisters said it troubled them to see her “being venerated as a saint.”

CDC director tests positive for COVID-19

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Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Director Rochelle Walensky tested positive for COVID-19 on Friday and is experiencing mild symptoms.

Dr. Walensky is up to date with her vaccinations and is isolating at home. She will participate in planned meetings virtually, according to the agency.

All other senior CDC staff and close contacts to her have been informed and are taking steps to monitor their own health.

Last week, U.S. health regulators estimated the variants of BQ.1 and BQ.1.1 are accounting for the breakthrough of 16.6% of COVID variants in the country at this time.

The European version of the CDC said variants are likely to drive up cases in the coming weeks across the European region.

The new variants stem from the Omicron BA.5 subvariant, which has been spreading across the United States.

Recently authorized booster shots are targeted to tackle the latest variant.

For more information, visit The Washington Times COVID-19 resource page.

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Commanders place Carson Wentz on injured reserve

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The Washington Commanders placed Carson Wentz on injured reserve Saturday, meaning the quarterback will miss at least the next four games with a broken finger.

Wentz fractured his ring finger on his throwing hand in a Week 6 win over the Chicago Bears. The quarterback underwent surgery in Los Angeles on Monday upon seeing a hand specialist. Coach Ron Rivera said the Commanders would wait to see how Wentz responded to his first few days of rehab after the operation before determining whether the signal-caller would need to be placed on injured reserve.

But now, by placing Wentz on the list, the quarterback won’t be eligible to return until at least Nov. 20 against the Houston Texans. 

Wentz will miss Sunday’s game against the Green Bay Packers, next week’s showdown in Indianapolis, a home game against Minnesota Vikings and a Nov. 14 matchup in Philadelphia against the Eagles. The injury will prevent Wentz from facing his former teams in the Colts and the Eagles. 

Taylor Heinicke will start in place of Wentz, Washington’s big offseason acquisition. 

Wentz had thrown for 1,489 yards, 10 touchdowns and six interceptions in six games. 

Joanna Simon, acclaimed singer, TV correspondent, dies at 85

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NEW YORK (AP) — Joanna Simon, an acclaimed mezzo-soprano, Emmy-winning TV correspondent and one of the three singing Simon sisters who include pop star Carly, has died at age 85.

Simon, the eldest of four, died Wednesday, just a day before her sister Lucy died, according to Lucy’s daughter, Julie Simon. Their brother Peter, a photographer, died in 2018 at 71. All three had cancer.

“In the last 2 days, I’ve been by the side of both my mother and my aunt, Joanna, and watched them pass into the next world. I can’t truly comprehend this,” Julie wrote on Facebook.

Joanna Simon, who died of thyroid cancer, rose to fame in the opera world and as a concert performer in the 1960s. She was a frequent guest on TV talk shows. After her retirement from singing, she became an arts correspondent for PBS’s “MacNeil-Lehrer News Hour,” where she won an Emmy in 1991 for a report on mental illness and creativity.

“I am filled with sorrow to speak about the passing of Joanna and Lucy Simon. Their loss will be long and haunting. As sad as this day is, it’s impossible to mourn them without celebrating their incredible lives that they lived,” Carly Simon said in a statement Saturday.

She added: “We were three sisters who not only took turns blazing trails and marking courses for one another. We were each other’s secret shares. The co-keepers of each other’s memories.”

Joanna Simon was married to novelist and journalist Gerald Walker from 1976 until his death in 2004. She was the companion of Walter Cronkite from 2005 until his death in 2009.

On stage, she made her professional debut in 1962 as Cherubino in Mozart’s “The Marriage of Figaro” at New York City Opera. That year, she won the Marian Anderson Award for promising young singers. Simon took on a range of material. As a concert performer, she leaned into classic and contemporary songs of her time.

The siblings were born to publishing giant Richard Simon and his wife, Andrea. Carly and Lucy once performed as the Simon Sisters, opening for other acts in Greenwich Village folk clubs.

“I have no words to explain the feeling of suddenly being the only remaining direct offspring of Richard and Andrea Simon,” Carly Simon said. “They touched everyone they knew and those of us they’ve left behind will be lucky and honored to carry their memories forward.”

Copyright © 2022 The Washington Times, LLC.

Dems push Medicaid expansion for left-behind rural Georgia

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ARLINGTON, Ga. (AP) — Nine years after the hospital closed in the southwest Georgia town of Arlington, the worry about health care lurks. Health insurance premiums are high, many residents report poor health and there’s no guarantee Calhoun County’s sole ambulance will arrive promptly if it’s taking a patient to a distant hospital.

“If it’s out on a call, you might as well throw them in the truck then and try to get somewhere,” said resident Sam Robinson.

Arlington, population 1,209, reflects the health care struggles of rural Georgia.

Democrats, including their nominee for governor, Stacey Abrams, are showcasing those problems as they run for office this year, pushing for Georgia to join 38 other states in expanding the Medicaid health insurance program to cover all able-bodied adults.

Abrams opened her campaign to unseat Republican Brian Kemp at a hospital that closed in nearby Cuthbert, underlining an issue that was a centerpiece of her narrow loss to Kemp in 2018.

“We’re talking about someone who goes in for a checkup and is told that they have stage one pancreatic cancer,” Abrams told reporters in a video news conference this month. “In Georgia, they are not entitled to a follow-up visit unless they can pay out of pocket.”

Experts project more than 450,000 uninsured Georgians would gain coverage if Medicaid were broadened. Many do not usually qualify for subsidies to buy individual policies, leaving them in what experts call the “coverage gap.”

Medicaid expansion is also an issue elsewhere this year.

In South Dakota, voters will decide a referendum on expansion that is opposed by Republican Gov. Kristi Noem. In Kansas and Wisconsin, Democratic governors are seeking reelection after failing to persuade Republican legislatures to broaden coverage.

In Georgia, Kemp has refused calls for expansion, instead proposing coverage for a smaller group of people who meet work, education or volunteering requirements. In an Oct. 11 letter to Georgia’s Democratic members of Congress, Kemp called full Medicaid expansion as “failed one-size-fit-none” policy.

But that refusal stings in Arlington, once home to the 25-bed Calhoun Memorial Hospital. It had been decades since babies were delivered at Calhoun Memorial and the facility struggled to afford the newest technologies. Although services were limited, local residents relied on it for emergencies.

“I used the emergency room with my son,” said Pam Conner. “He was like 4 years old when he got his first very first wasp sting. It put him into anaphylaxis. I don’t know what we would have done without a hospital.”

Conner chairs the county hospital board, nine years after the facility closed and laid off 99 employees. With many uninsured patients, Conner said the hospital was providing more than $2 million yearly in uncompensated care when it shut down.

The county government borrowed for a new roof in 2008, and it’s a sore point locally that taxpayers still owe nearly $500,000 on the building, now leased to a drug and alcohol rehabilitation facility. Local officials declined to raise property taxes to cover hospital deficits, unlike some Georgia counties. The hospital sold its nursing home, raising money but darkening long-term financial prospects. Finally, officials decided to close, joining eight other rural hospitals in Georgia since 2008.

Now, Arlington residents rely on the county’s one ambulance, based 12 miles away in Morgan. Calhoun County projects it will spend $537,000 to provide emergency medical services this year, more than one-eighth of its $4.2 million budget.

Health care problems run deeper in southwest Georgia, though. Private health insurance is so expensive that Conner, whose family owns an insurance agency, instead buys coverage through the federal health insurance marketplace. Robinson said he and his wife once paid a combined $1,000 a month for insurance.

Kemp has succeeded in reducing insurance rates and encouraging more insurers to offer coverage outside metro Atlanta with subsidies. But premiums remain high in southwest Georgia, with one large hospital in Albany dominating the market and residents often in poor health. Calhoun County has high rates of diabetes, obesity and births by teenagers, according to data from County Health Rankings. Black residents are much more likely to have preventable hospitals stays.

Sherrell Byrd of SOWEGA Rising, which tries to improve well-being in southwest Georgia, said COVID-19 highlighted the region’s poor health and rickety health care system. In early 2020, southwest Georgia drew national attention with one of the highest death rates from the respiratory virus.

“It really exposed how bad our health is,” Byrd said. “We had so many comorbidities here.”

Medicaid has also flared as an issue in Atlanta, where the WellStar system closed a hospital in suburban East Point and will by Nov. 1 close the 532-bed Atlanta Medical Center. That’s one of only five top-level trauma centers in Georgia. WellStar says Atlanta Medical Center was losing so much money that Medicaid expansion wouldn’t have helped, but Democrats persist in saying it could have made a difference over the long term.

Having states provide Medicaid coverage to residents with incomes of up to 138% of the federal poverty line was envisioned in President Barack Obama’s 2010 health care overhaul. But the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in 2012 that the federal government could not force states to act, and many Republican-led states balked.

President Joe Biden’s administration has been trying to block Kemp’s plan for a partial Medicaid expansion, but a judge in August ruled Georgia could proceed with the work requirement. Kemp calls his approach a “far better approach to increasing health care coverage than ‘full’ Medicaid expansion.”

Kemp notes Medicaid expansion would force some people now eligible for private health insurance subsidies onto Medicaid. Because Georgia has set low Medicaid payments and some doctors don’t take Medicaid, Kemp argues that would leave those people worse off while increasing competition for current Medicaid patients to find a doctor.

The governor also notes 600,000 more Georgians are on Medicaid now than when he took office, basically arguing Medicaid expansion has already happened. Many people, however, are covered because the federal government has blocked states from dropping people from Medicaid during the COVID-19 pandemic. They could be removed once the federal public health emergency ends.

Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock has tried to sweeten the deal, enticing lawmakers last year to boost the federal share of funding from 90% to 95% for the first two years of any new state Medicaid expansion. Warnock, seeking reelection on Nov. 8, has long called for broader coverage. He was arrested during protests over the issue at the Georgia Capitol in 2014 and the U.S. Capitol in 2017 before becoming a senator.

“Unfortunately, the state left that money on the table and left hundreds of thousands of working Georgians in the coverage gap,” Warnock said Oct. 12 in Atlanta. “And I intend to keep fighting for them.”

Warnock’s opponent, Republican Herschel Walker, said last month that he opposes expansion.

“Right now, Medicaid has not been good,” he told reporters. “Right now, the expansion is going to continue to bankrupt us. Everyone knows that.”

A key question underlying the debate is to what degree the government is obligated to provide health care and seek improved health outcomes. Democrats now largely believe health care is a human right and collective responsibility. Many Republicans still believe it’s an individual responsibility.

In Arlington, Conner says what actually existed was a mismatch – with hospitals legally required to provide emergency care, but not guaranteed payment.

“It makes me say that universal health care might actually be a right of our citizens,” Conner. “It’s a right for them to go to the emergency room whether they can pay for it or not. But it’s not a right for the hospital to get the money to pay for it.”

Copyright © 2022 The Washington Times, LLC.

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Federal appeals court blocks Biden’s student loan forgiveness plan

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A federal appeals court on Friday temporarily blocked the Biden administration from moving forward with its student loan forgiveness plan.

On Friday, the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals granted an emergency petition, blocking the feds from beginning to forgive millions of student loan borrowers’ debt until further briefing before the court, scheduled for next week. 

The president had planned to begin forgiving the debt this weekend. 

Six Republican-led states sued in September seeking to halt the move, arguing it would further damage the economy.

The Biden administration announced in August plans to cancel $10,000 to $20,000 of student debt per borrower for those who make less than $125,000 a year, or $250,000 for married couples.

The U.S. Supreme Court had refused to block the plan earlier this week through an emergency petition presented to Justice Amy Coney Barrett in a separate case involving a challenge by a Wisconsin taxpayer group.

President Biden cited the HEROES Act for supporting his move, which was passed after Sept. 11 and gave the executive branch authority to forgive certain debt regarding the military during emergencies.

The Biden administration says the COVID-19 pandemic is considered an emergency under the law, applying it to student loan borrowers.

Charlie Crist campaign manager out after arrest

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MIAMI — Florida gubernatorial candidate Charlie Crist’s campaign manager has left his position after being charged in a domestic violence case.

Austin Durrer was charged Tuesday with misdemeanor assault in Dorchester County, Maryland, according to online court records.

The Crist campaign announced in a Wednesday statement that Durrer had resigned, citing a family matter. But another statement released Friday said that Durrer was dismissed as soon as the campaign learned of his arrest.

Durrer and the woman he lives with released a joint statement.

“Very sadly, an incident took place this week at our home that we both regret,” the statement said. “We are both working to drop legal charges and move forward. Our primary focus at this time is our daughter, our greatest joy, and we appreciate privacy and respect as we navigate this as a family.”

Crist, who is a Democrat, canceled a campaign appearance on Friday in Gadsden County. Durrer’s exit comes less than three weeks before Election Day. Crist is challenging Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis, who has held a consistent lead in polls.

The campaign’s deputy manager, Sydney Throop, has taken over for Durrer.

Copyright © 2022 The Washington Times, LLC.