Manchin appears to sink Biden agenda on climate and tax reform

Manchin appears to sink Biden agenda on climate and tax reform
Manchin appears to sink Biden agenda on climate and tax reform
Tom Williams-Pool/Getty Images

(WASHINGTON) — Sen. Joe Manchin appears to have torpedoed a cornerstone of President Joe Biden’s economic agenda, telling Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer Thursday evening that he won’t support moving forward on proposed tax hikes on wealthy Americans and corporations that would pay for a package of climate change and energy policies, at least not right away, this according to two aides familiar with the matter.

Democrats were hopeful they could move on a slimmed-down version of the once-sweeping social and economic spending agenda, formerly known as Build Back Better, before they depart for a month-long August recess.

Manchin had agreed to allow Medicare to negotiate prescription drug prices, potentially saving the federal government $288 billion and bringing down costs for seniors, in addition to a two-year extension of pandemic-era premium subsidies for lower income Americans enrolled in Obamacare.

But Manchin, a West Virginia Democrat who has for months warned of deep concerns about record-high inflation and the effects of more federal spending, effectively shelved tax and climate change reforms until he sees data on July inflation rates due out early next month.

“Until we see the July inflation figures, until we see the July … Federal Reserve rates, interest rates, then let’s wait until that comes out so we know that we’re going down a path that won’t be inflammatory to add more to inflation,” Manchin said Friday during a radio interview with West Virginia radio host Hoppy Kercheval. “I am where I have been.”

The Consumer Price Index showed prices 9.1 percent higher in June compared to a year ago — worse than expectations and the largest yearly increase since November 1981, a new four-decade high.

“We have an opportunity to address the climate crisis right now,” Sen. Martin Heinrich, a Democrat on the Senate Energy and Natural Resources committee, which Manchin chairs, tweeted Friday. “Senator Manchin’s refusal to act is infuriating. It makes me question why he’s chair of ENR.”

“It’s infuriating and nothing short of tragic that Senator Manchin is walking away, again, from taking essential action on climate and clean energy. The world is literally burning up while he joins every single Republican to stop strong action,” Sen. Tina Smith, D-Minn., said in a statement.

One progressive group said in a statement Thursday night that the move by Manchin was akin to a political “death sentence.”

“This is nothing short of a death sentence. Our democracy is broken when one man who profits from the fossil fuel industry can defy the 81 million Americans who voted for Democrats to stop the climate crisis. It’s clear appealing to corporate obstructionists doesn’t work, and it will cost us a generation of voters,” said Sunrise Movement Executive Director Varshini Prakash.

Democrats are running out of time and know that after the monthlong August recess they must return with a focus on funding the government by Oct. 1, nearly always a fraught process.

Also, with health care premiums in many states set in August, and with pandemic era ACA subsidies set to expire by year’s end, Democrats could be facing angry voters if health care costs skyrocket — amid already high inflation — ahead of the midterm elections where control of Congress is at stake.

Democratic leaders hoped to pass their proposals using a fast-track budget procedure that requires only a simple majority of senators to pass. This tool is only available for Democrats to use until Sept. 30, the end of the fiscal year, and with Manchin’s vote in the 50-50 Senate necessary to move forward with any measure, his delays are running out the clock.

Democratic leaders must now choose whether to try to further pressure Manchin or to push through the only remaining health care-related provisions of their plan that the West Virginian has blessed.

One influential progressive told reporters this week that maybe half a loaf should be celebrated.

“There is so much we need to do, but we do as much as we can get 50 votes for, and I will celebrate what we can get done and work harder than ever for the part that are still not done,” said Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass.

The White House had no official comment Friday, though the press secretary was pressed for a reaction as the president made his way to Saudi Arabia.

“We’re just not going to negotiate in public,” Karine Jean-Pierre told reporters during a gaggle on Air Force One.

“The president has always been very clear that he’s going to use every tool in his toolbox, every authority that he has, to make sure that we deal with the climate change — the climate crisis that we are currently in, but as far as the negotiations, I’m just not going to say much more about that,” said Jean-Pierre.

Pressed further to give any kind of reaction Biden had to this blow to his agenda, Jean-Pierre refused to go there.

“I’m just not going to negotiate in public,” she repeated.

ABC News’ Justin Gomez contributed to this report

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Oliver Tree premieres new, Travis Barker-produced single, “Placeholder

Oliver Tree premieres new, Travis Barker-produced single, “Placeholder
Oliver Tree premieres new, Travis Barker-produced single, “Placeholder
Atlantic Records

Oliver Tree has premiered a new single called “Placeholder,” co-produced by Blink-182‘s Travis Barker.

“This song is about a placeholder at a dinner I went to a few months back,” the “Life Goes On” artist explains. “The person who was supposed to be sitting next to me didn’t show up and it was the most beautiful, elegant plate and utensils set up that went completely unused. Afterwards I drove directly to the studio and wrote a song about it.”

You can listen to “Placeholder” now via digital outlets. It’s also set to appear on a deluxe edition of Tree’s new album Cowboy Tears, due out later this summer. The original record, which features the single “Cowboys Don’t Cry,” dropped in February.

Tree is launching a U.S. tour in support of Cowboy Tears in August. The outing kicks off with Tree’s Fire Festival — a play on the infamous Fyre Festival — which takes place August 4 in San Diego with a lineup featuring Smash Mouth, Huddy and Sueco among others.

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Co-ed sex ed classes prompt protests in Virginia

Co-ed sex ed classes prompt protests in Virginia
Co-ed sex ed classes prompt protests in Virginia
Willie B. Thomas/Getty Images

(FAIRFAX, Va.) — Students in Virginia are calling on school administrators to combine genders in their Family Life Education, or sex education, courses.

Members of the Pride Liberation Project, a student-led LGBTQIA+ advocacy group in Fairfax County, protested on Thursday ahead of the Fairfax County School Board’s meeting.

The group’s leader, Rivka Vizcardo-Lichter, told ABC affiliate WLJA that the recent Supreme Court decision on Roe v. Wade galvanized students to protest.

Vizcardo-Lichter said a decision to create co-ed sex education courses would be a “step forward” for advancing the inclusivity of transgender and non-binary people in schools and in recognizing that “queer people need to learn about their sexual health in a safe way.”

“We’re not asking anyone to take on any crazy reforms,” Vizcardo-Lichter added.

Fairfax County schools currently hold sex education classes that separate students into two genders during the fourth through eighth grades.

The Family Life Education Curriculum Advisory Committee issued a number of recommendations in May, including a mix in genders in sex education classes during grades four through eighth.

“The main criticism is that it makes students uncomfortable. We have to ask ourselves, ‘Why are students uncomfortable learning about their bodies?’ People who are afraid of FLE [family life education] have the option to opt their children out,” Willow Woycke, president of the Transgender Education Association, said at a May school board meeting in favor of the recommendations.

Nearby schools have implemented mostly gender-combined sex education, including Virginia’s Arlington County and Alexandria City, as well as Maryland’s Prince George’s County. Some Metro D.C. districts have also adopted the practice of combining genders in such courses.

Several other districts in the region continue to separate genders in sex education classes.

It’s not yet clear if the Fairfax County School Board will make a decision on changes to sex education classes.

“All advisory groups outline recommendations at the end of each school year,” Julie Moult, a spokesperson for the FCSB, told ABC News. “Some are acted on and some are not. The board may choose to review this recommendation at some point this coming school year.”

Kathleen Mallard, a Fairfax County resident, told ABC affiliate WLJA that a move to combine genders for students in grades four through eight would be wrong.

“Some of the discussions are about activities I think almost are sexualizing our children to some extent, up to the point of almost grooming them,” said Mallard. “I think this is not a good idea to have them both all in the same class, boys and girls.”

No changes came at Thursday’s board meeting but newly appointed superintendent Michelle Reid did acknowledge that new members would be appointed to the advisory committee.

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Delfonics lead singer William “Poogie” Hart dead at age 77

Delfonics lead singer William “Poogie” Hart dead at age 77
Delfonics lead singer William “Poogie” Hart dead at age 77
Scott Dudelson/Getty Images

William “Poogie” Hart, the lead singer of legendary Philadelphia soul group The Delfonics, died Thursday at age 77.

TMZ reports that, according to Hart’s son Hadi, William died of complications from surgery after he was recently brought to a Philadelphia hospital with breathing difficulties.

Hart co-founded The Delfonics with his brother Wilbert around the mid-1960s under the name The Orphonics, and the group began to take off after working with famed Philadelphia-based producer Thom Bell.

The Delfonics then went on to become one of the early purveyors of the classic Philly soul sound.

In January 1968, The Delfonics released “La-La (Means I Love You)” — co-written by William and Bell — which became the group’s biggest hit, peaking at #4 on the Billboard Hot 100 and at #2 on Billboard‘s R&B singles chart.

William continued to co-write most of the group’s original songs with Bell. Over the next few years, The Delfonics would score several other top-40 hits, including “Break Your Promise,” “Ready or Not Here I Come (Can’t Hide from Love),” “You Got Yours and I’ll Get Mine” and “Didn’t I (Blow Your Mind This Time).”

“Didn’t I (Blow Your Mind This Time)” reached #10 on the Hot 100 and won a Grammy Award for Best R&B Vocal Performance by a Duo or Group.

The original Delfonics broke up in 1975, and in the ensuing years, William and his brother both led various spinoff lineups of the group.

“Didn’t I (Blow Your Mind This Time)” was featured prominently in Quentin Tarantino‘s 1997 film Jackie Brown.

Meanwhile, the chorus of “Ready or Not Here I Come” served as the basis of the popular 1996 Fugees song “Ready or Not.”

In 2014, The Delfonics were inducted into the National Rhythm & Blues Hall of Fame.

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See what it took to bring that galaxy far, far away to life in Vice’s new documentary ‘Icons Unearthed: Star Wars’

See what it took to bring that galaxy far, far away to life in Vice’s new documentary ‘Icons Unearthed: Star Wars’
See what it took to bring that galaxy far, far away to life in Vice’s new documentary ‘Icons Unearthed: Star Wars’
Marcia Lucas – Courtesy Nacelle Company

Most Star Wars fans are familiar with the struggles it took to bring George Lucas‘ groundbreaking 1977 film to life, but a new Vice TV documentary is revealing details even die-harders may not know. 

Icons Unearthed: ‘Star Wars’ was produced by Nacelle Company, the folks behind the Netflix hits Movies That Made Us and Toys That Made Us.

The new two-part project boasts never-before-seen interviews with those who helped bring the film and its two sequels to life — including Marcia Lucas

Now 76, the ex-wife of George Lucas was one of the editors who won an Oscar for helping shape the original film, following a production fraught with failing droids, crushing studio pressure, and a disastrous rough cut. 

Nacelle Company CEO Brian Volk-Weiss, tells ABC Audio Marcia Lucas was a galaxy-sized “get.”

“There’s a very good reason you’ve never heard her speak, and that is because we got her first ever recorded interview.”

Marcia gave “great insight” into the production, revealing, for example, that 20th Century Fox wanted to shut down Star Wars so badly, it was ready to entirely cut out the movie’s unforgettable climactic Death Star battle to save money. 

In other words, the film would have closed with Luke, Han, Leia, and Chewie flying out of the battle station, without, arguably, one of the greatest endings in movie history.

It would have ended in the belly of the Millennium Falcon just — ‘Hey, we did it. Yay!'” Volk-Weiss laughs. “Cut to black. Like that, that’s what was on the table.”

Instead, Lucas stuck to his guns, and to the ownership of the blockbuster franchise, and the rest is history.

Marcia Lucas also brought into focus with the “complicated” relationship Lucas had with his father — which helped inspire the fatherly dynamics between Darth Vader and Luke Skywalker, Volk-Weiss says. 

“As complicated as George’s relationship was with his father, it was his father just over and over again saying, ‘Bet on yourself…be your own boss.’ And…I don’t think he gets any credit or not nearly enough of the credit he deserves for the risks he took over, and over, and over again…” 

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From “Paradise City” to Prince of Darkness: Carrie Underwood covers Ozzy’s “Mama, I’m Coming Home”

From “Paradise City” to Prince of Darkness: Carrie Underwood covers Ozzy’s “Mama, I’m Coming Home”
From “Paradise City” to Prince of Darkness: Carrie Underwood covers Ozzy’s “Mama, I’m Coming Home”
ABC

After her trip to “Paradise City,” Carrie Underwood is taking the “Crazy Train” to cover another hard rock artist.

The country star has released a rendition of the classic Ozzy Osbourne power ballad “Mama, I’m Coming Home.” The performance is included on Underwood’s new Apple Music Sessions EP, which was recorded exclusively for the streaming service.

“I have always been an Ozzy Osbourne fan and ‘Mama, I’m Coming Home’ is one of my all-time favorite songs,” Underwood says.

“I’ve always thought it felt a lot like a country song, and I’ve wanted to cover it for a long time,” she adds. “This was a really fun opportunity for me to be able to finally make that happen. I hope we’ve done Ozzy proud and I hope he likes it.”

As previously reported, Axl Rose joined Underwood for performances of the Guns N’ Roses classics “Paradise City” and “Sweet Child O’ Mine” during her set at the Stagecoach festival in April. She then joined all of GN’R to sing both songs during the band’s concert in London earlier this month.

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J-Hope says his new album is a re-introduction of who he is: “I really poured everything into this album”

J-Hope says his new album is a re-introduction of who he is: “I really poured everything into this album”
J-Hope says his new album is a re-introduction of who he is: “I really poured everything into this album”
Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic

J-Hope just released his debut album, Jack in the Box, and says this marks a new chapter.

With BTS currently on an extended break, the K-pop artist spoke to Variety about how he plans to establish himself as an independent artist while juggling his responsibilities to his bandmates.

“I’m the first one to release a solo album. I do feel the weight on my shoulders. And I do want to start off successfully for all of our team members as well,” he admitted. “I don’t want to risk or undermine our reputation as a team with BTS. However, overall, I’m very confident and content with the album. I really poured everything into this album and conveyed the messages that I wanted to convey.”

J-Hope also revealed why he wanted “More” to be the first track released off his solo work. The song is moodier and infuses a mixture of rap and hip hop elements, which complements the “overall flow or style” of his upcoming work.

“I wanted to express a little bit of a darker side of me, as J-Hope, as an individual. This song is very powerful,” he explained. “This album is full of this type of particular style, and it definitely reveals a little darker side of me, a different aspect of myself.”

J-Hope also assuages fans’ concerns that BTS’ hiatus is indefinite — much like when One Direction split apart so its members could pursue solo ventures. “We’re not on hiatus. The team is going to remain active,” he assured. 

The pause, he said, is to allow everyone to hone their craft at their own pace so that when it is time to reassemble, BTS “will have a greater synergistic effect as a team.”

Jack in the Box is out now.

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Maryland man indicted for allegedly targeting gay men

Maryland man indicted for allegedly targeting gay men
Maryland man indicted for allegedly targeting gay men
Jahi Chikwendiu/The Washington Post via Getty Images

(WASHINGTON) — A Maryland man faces federal hate crime charges for allegedly posing as a federal officer and targeting gay men in a series of attacks at a Washington, D.C., park, the Department of Justice announced Thursday.

Federal prosecutors allege that Michael Thomas Pruden, 48, assaulted five men with a “chemical irritant” at Meridian Hill Park on five separate occasions between 2018 and 2021.

A federal grand jury indicted Pruden last month on five counts of assault on federal land, one count of impersonating a federal officer and a hate crimes sentencing enhancement “alleging that Pruden assaulted four of the victims because of their perceived sexual orientation,” the Justice Department said.

Meridian Hill Park is informally known in the D.C. community as “cruising” spot for gay men, according to the indictment. Pruden allegedly frequented the park at night on multiple occasions and assaulted men “by approaching them with a flashlight, giving police-style commands, and spraying them with a chemical irritant,” the indictment states.

Pruden was arrested on Thursday in Norfolk, Virginia. He faces a maximum sentence of 10 years for each assault count — which could be increased by the hate crimes sentencing enhancement — and a three-year maximum sentence for impersonating a federal officer, the Justice Department said.

Court records do not list any attorney information for the suspect.

Pruden was arrested last year in connection with a similar attack at a federal park in Alexandria, Virginia, in March 2021.

Prosecutors allege that Pruden falsely presented himself as a police officer and sprayed victims with pepper spray at Daingerfield Island, also informally known as a cruising spot for gay men.

Pruden was indicted in a Virginia district court on a charge of assault with a dangerous weapon and acquitted in August 2021.

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US men sicker than those abroad, study says

US men sicker than those abroad, study says
US men sicker than those abroad, study says
Thomas Barwick/Getty Images

(NEW YORK) — American men are sicker and die earlier than men living in other developed nations, according to a new report from The Commonwealth Fund, a non-profit organization focusing on public health issues.

The study looked at men from the U.S, Switzerland, Norway, New Zealand, Germany, Australia, the U.K., France, the Netherlands, Canada and Sweden and found that rates of avoidable deaths, chronic conditions and mental health needs are among the highest with American men.

Around 29% of American men reported they have multiple chronic illnesses, followed closely by Australian men at 25%, according to the study. Men living in France and Norway were the lowest at 17%.

Experts reveal how likely reinfection is from COVID with spread of omicron subvariant BA.5
“Whether it’s stubbornness, an aversion to appearing weak or vulnerable, or other reasons, men go to the doctor far less than women do,” the study’s authors wrote.

Men in the U.S. also die from avoidable deaths, classified as deaths before 75 years old, at a higher rate than men from the 10 other countries listed in the report.

The study showed that income disparities also play a factor in one’s health. Men with lower incomes tend to partake in unhealthy habits more frequently, such as drinking and smoking, leading to chronic conditions such as diabetes, obesity and heart disease.

Low-income earners are least likely to afford adequate care and can’t visit the doctor regularly, which contributes to worsening health issues, the study added. Men stressed because they are low-income earners were less likely to have a regular doctor.

The U.S. remains an outlier being the only industrialized nation without universal healthcare and has led to men avoiding getting the care they need because costs are too high, researchers noted.

Long Island school district found to have higher rates of cancer cases: Study
“Roughly 16 million U.S. men are without health insurance and affordability is the reason that people most often cite for why they do not enroll in a health plan,” they wrote.

American men also don’t think highly of the U.S. health care system, with only 37% giving it a high rating. It’s even worse among men with a below-average income, with only 32% approving the healthcare system.

There was a silver lining among men in the U.S. They have the lowest rate of prostate cancer-related deaths among the other countries studied, largely because the U.S. offers wide-ranging cancer testing and advanced treatments, the authors of the study said.

ABC News reached out to the authors of the study for comment but have not heard back.

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Jewish community in Highland Park grieves, takes action after mass shooting

Jewish community in Highland Park grieves, takes action after mass shooting
Jewish community in Highland Park grieves, takes action after mass shooting
Demetrius Freeman/The Washington Post via Getty Images

(HIGHLAND PARK, Ill.) — Rabbi Michael Sommer’s congregation has been “in a state of shock” ever since seven people were killed in a mass shooting during a July Fourth parade in Highland Park, Illinois.

Sommer, the leader of the Har Shalom congregation, told ABC News that both he and the majority of his congregants are from Highland Park. The congregation meets in nearby Northbrook.

Many of his congregants were at the suburb’s Fourth of July parade where a shooter opened fire from a rooftop.

“Everyone is in a state of grief. Everyone is looking how lucky they were to have their family safe… So everyone is trying to pull together, we hope; we all know each other here. It’s a very warm community,” Sommer said.

Highland Park is among a group of suburbs north of Chicago, including Skokie, Glencoe, and Deerfield, that have large Jewish communities and a constellation of synagogues, Kosher and Jewish restaurants, and organizations serving the Jewish community.

In the aftermath of the shooting, the Jewish community there is trying to grieve and find meaning through Jewish institutions and practice, even though leaders say that it is too soon to truly be healing.

Jewish news outlet The Forward reported that five of the seven victims were either Jewish or members of Jewish families.

One of them was Katherine Goldstein, who was a mother to two adult daughters, an avid bird watcher, and a lover of travel, according to a friend of hers who spoke with ABC News. She was 64.

Her synagogue’s rabbi, Ike Serotta, described her and her family as “just remarkable people.”

“All of them are the most incredible, gentle, kind, caring people that you could ever want to meet,” said Serotta, who leads the Makom Solel Lakeside congregation in Highland Park, told ABC News. “And Katie was just a delightful, funny, vibrant person who was really just one of the kindest people you could ever expect to meet in this world.”

While authorities have not said what motivated the suspect, investigative groups have pointed to the suspect’s social media posts as gravitating towards far-right ideas. The suspect also reportedly visited the Central Avenue Synagogue, a Chabad Jewish center in Highland Park, around Passover, leaving on his own after his presence raised concerns.

Michla Tzipporah Schanowitz, who runs the Central Avenue Synagogue with her husband Rabbi Yosef Schanowitz, described dealing with the events of July 4 as “kind of overload, trying to process the sorrow and the pain of what happened, and the shock. But also at the same time, knowing that we can do so much to bring so much light and goodness into the world.”

In the immediate aftermath of the shooting, Jewish leaders in the community scrambled to provide support to their congregants and to the broader community.

For Sommer, that meant helping out with social services at the local high school, as well as calling congregants to check in with them to see how they are doing. “I dread the phone calls I miss, or the phone number I don’t have, or who I should have called that I didn’t,” Sommer said.

And for Rabbi Yosef Schanowitz, that meant rushing to Highland Park’s hospital, where he regularly volunteers as a chaplain. He went from door to door, with “no time for small talk… I didn’t even ask people their names. They urged me to go from from door to door, and it was [for people of] all faiths,” Schanowitz said.

“I just poked my head into the door and just being introduced as I’m clergy and I just want to wish you all the best; our prayers are with you and God give you strength and bless you, and went on to the next room unless somebody needed to talk,” he added. “But in most cases, they were all traumatized, and there wasn’t a lot of back and forth discussion.”

The Jewish Sabbath, which runs from Friday night at sundown to Saturday night at sundown, exemplifies rest and joy in Jewish tradition.

“We’re supposed to celebrate Shabbat with with song and joy, and it was very subdued. And I added some outside readings to express our pain… and God’s presence in our lives to help us on this journey of healing and through our grief,” Sommer said.

Michla Tzippora Schanowitz said that ahead of the Shabbat, she worked with others to give out Shabbat candlestick kits, used for the ritual lighting of Shabbat candles at sundown on Friday. “And people were very receptive… it felt like it was able to channel their feeling of yes, bring light, spiritual light” after such a dark week.

Rabbi Yosef Schanowitz said that at the Seudah Shlishit, a third meal of the Sabbath that is usually held in synagogue between afternoon and evening services on Saturday, the congregation took some time to reflect.

“We also went around the table, and people had an opportunity to express themselves–where they had been [during the shooting], and the effect that it had on them, and who they knew that may have been hurt, and so on,” Rabbi Yosef Schanowitz said.

Serotta cautioned against speaking about the Jewish community being ready to heal so soon after the shooting.

“When something as evil and unnatural as this, I can’t say how long it will be until people are ready to start talking about the word healing,” he said.

Looking ahead, some of leaders emphasized discussions around enhancing synagogue security in light of the shooting, staying connected and finding strength with the broader community.

“We’ve always felt a responsibility one for another as a Jewish community, and also responsibility to other people who live in our community,” Michla Tzippora Schanowitz told ABC News. “We always rise to the occasion and support each other. And we’re doing that here and we’ll continue to do that.”

ABC News’ Will McDuffie and Aaron Katersky contributed to this report.

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