St. Louis mayor complains FEMA isn't on the ground after major tornadoNew Foto - St. Louis mayor complains FEMA isn't on the ground after major tornado

St. Louis Mayor Cara Spencer says FEMA still has no presence on the ground, several days after a mile-wide tornado cuta nearly 23-mile path through the areaand damaged an estimated 5,000 buildings. Five people died in the city. Dozens were injured. "On the local level, every organization, community member, elected official, has been on point. What we need right now is federal assistance," Spencertold MSNBCMay 19. "This is what the federal government is for." Spencer, a Democrat, estimated the damage at approximately $1 billion. At a press conference Sunday, she said her office worked with the St. Louis Community Foundation to create the City of St. Louis Tornado Response Fund,which is collecting donations. Spencersaid on social mediathat the city is actively working with state and federal authorities to get FEMA resources, but it could take weeks. FEMA doesn't automatically provide assistance after a storm or disaster. Their presence must be requested by the state. Agency officials generally take a few days to arrive, during which time state and local emergency officials manage the disaster. On Monday, Gov. Mike Kehoe,a Republican, asked President Donald Trump to issue a federal Emergency Declaration and requested that FEMA participate in joint Preliminary Damage Assessments. Kehoe visited the city earlier in the day. Altogether, storms on May 16 caused seven deaths across Missouri and widespread damage in St. Louis and other areas of southeast Missouri. More:Weather forecast calls for even more storms in central US Accordingto a news releasefrom the governor's office, Kehoe has been in direct contact with Trump and other administration officials about getting federal help. On Capitol Hill Tuesday, Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) pushed Homeland Security SecretaryKristi Noemto get the request for Friday's storm and two other unanswered disaster declaration requests before Trump as soon as possible. "We are desperate for assistance in Missouri," he said. Noem promised to get the disaster declarations to Trump and expedite FEMA assistance once he approves them. Missouri is still waiting for a response to requests for federal disaster declarations related to storms, tornadoes or flooding on March 14 and 15, March 30 through April 8 and April 29,according to the governor's office. On the afternoon of May 20, at the first meeting of a new FEMA review council created by Trump, Noem spoke about how FEMA is sometimes politicized, saying that governors submit disaster declaration without filling out the application or providing the proper supporting documents "so that they could say they did their part when necessarily even the basics weren't provided." A spokesperson for the Department of Homeland Security did not immediately respond to a request for more information. At least2,000 of FEMA's roughly 6,100 full-time employeesare believed to have either left or plan to leave because of terminations and voluntary retirements ordered by Elon Musk's Department of Governmental Efficiency. Further layoffs are expected in the coming weeks as the Trump administration's review of FEMA continues. USA TODAY reporter Dinah Pulver contributed. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:St. Louis mayor: FEMA isn't helping after tornadoes' historic damage

St. Louis mayor complains FEMA isn't on the ground after major tornado

St. Louis mayor complains FEMA isn't on the ground after major tornado St. Louis Mayor Cara Spencer says FEMA still has no presence on t...
JD Vance's papal diplomacy: From the Politics DeskNew Foto - JD Vance's papal diplomacy: From the Politics Desk

Welcome to the online version ofFrom the Politics Desk, an evening newsletter that brings you the NBC News Politics team's latest reporting and analysis from the White House, Capitol Hill and the campaign trail. In today's edition, Henry J. Gomez interviews Vice President JD Vance in Rome. Plus, Steve Kornacki breaks down the latest polling showing Andrew Cuomo in the lead in the Democratic primary for New York City mayor. Sign up to receive this newsletter in your inbox every weekday here. — Adam Wollner Have a question for the NBC News Politics Desk about Trump's "big, beautiful bill" as it makes its way through Congress? Or next month's elections in New Jersey and New York City? Send your questions topoliticsnewsletter@nbcuni.comand we may answer them in a future edition of the newsletter. ROME — Vice President JD Vance shuffled between presidents and prime ministers this week, tending to complicated relationships with U.S. allies and puzzling over two wars. But it was his meeting Monday with newly installed Pope Leo XIV that could prove to be most consequential on the world stage, Vance said in an interview with NBC News. Vance, who is Catholic, said he found the pope to be "extremely sweet." He described their conversation as substantive — a promising sign given how Leo had, in his previous service as a cardinal, signaled disapproval of Trump administration immigration policies. Here are some of the highlights from our interview with Vance. Seeking a diplomatic partner:Vance spoke of Leo as a key potential partner in President Donald Trump's efforts to broker peace between Russia and Ukraine and in other conflict areas. "We talked a lot about what's going on in Israel and Gaza. We talked a lot about the Russia-Ukraine situation," Vance said of the nearly hourlong audience he and Secretary of State Marco Rubio had with Leo. "It's hard to predict the future, but I do think that not just the pope, but the entire Vatican, has expressed a desire to be really helpful and to work together on facilitating, hopefully, a peace deal coming together in Russia and Ukraine." An expanding portfolio:Vance has now been to Italy twice as vice president. He has also visited India, represented the White House at conferences in Paris and Munich and touched down in Greenland to reinforce Trump's interest in annexing the island from Denmark. And the White House nearly sent Vance from Rome on a last-minute mission to Israel, but said the logistics could not be worked out in time. "I definitely think the president has a lot of trust in me, and I'm honored by it, and I think it makes me a more effective vice president," Vance said. "A lot of people always asked me between the election and the inauguration: What would my role be? I would always say … I think it'll be being an extra set of eyes and ears for the president, doing the things that he thinks that I need to do, and that's largely how it's worked out." Relationship with Rubio:Vance's expansive role has placed him alongside Rubio, the administration's chief diplomat, as a face of Trump's foreign policy. But Vance dismissed any notion of competition or friction. "My attitude is, if I do end up running in 2028, I'm not entitled to it," Vance said. "But I really think that Marco and I can get a lot done together over the next few years. That's how I think about our friendship and our relationship. And I would be shocked if he thought about it any differently." Read more from the interview → By Steve Kornacki Andrew Cuomo's political comeback attempt is on track, at least for now. With just over a month until New York City's Democratic mayoral primary, the former governor retains a commanding lead over a crowded field of candidates. And he may stand to benefit further from the recent surge of one of his rivals, Assemblyman Zohran Mamdani, a democratic socialist who is drawing from a demographically narrow set of voters. Thelatest poll from Marist Universityshows Mamdani separating from the rest of the pack but still trailing Cuomo. Under New York City's ranked-choice system, voters are asked to list their preferred candidates in order on the ballot. After the initial votes are tabulated (and assuming no one crosses 50%), the lowest vote-getter is eliminated and his or her votes are reallocated based on second preference selections. Tabulation continues, round by round, until one candidate receives a majority of the votes. Usefully, Marist's poll asked respondents to rank their preferences and then simulated this process. Even though it took multiple rounds, the contours remained consistent: Cuomo and Mamdani remained in the top two slots in each round, with Cuomo about 20 points ahead of Mamdani, who himself remained well clear of the rest of the pack. Ultimately, Cuomo reached 53% in the fifth round, with Mamdani at 29%. This is similar to what unfolded in 2021, the first time New York used this system. In that year's Democratic primary, the final polling put now-Mayor Eric Adams ahead, with Kathryn Garcia and Maya Wiley duking it out for second place — the same dynamic that prevailed when the actual voting tabulations took place. In other words, while the ranked-choice system is certainly complicated, it doesn't mean that it produces chaos. And that makes the Marist poll even better news for Cuomo, since it suggests that Mamdani may be emerging as the clear second-place candidate. The 33-year-old Mamdani's rise is being powered by a coalition that's not well suited for victory. With voters under 45, he's running laps around the field. But the primary electorate skews much older, with more than two-thirds likely to be over 45. He has near-majority support from voters who call themselves very liberal, but they make up only a quarter of the electorate. And he fares best with white voters, who will most likely be outnumbered 2-to-1 by nonwhite voters in the primary. Cuomo, by contrast, is scoring with groups that typically deliver primary wins, faring best with older, working-class and less ideological voters. His giant margin comes from nonwhite voters, especially African Americans. No doubt, Cuomo's foes will spend the next month turning up the heat on him and reminding voters of his controversial handling of Covid as governor and the sexual harassment claims that knocked him out of office. Media scrutiny figures to intensify, too, and TV ads will feature prominently. It's also possible that a different Cuomo rival will gain traction, one with broader appeal than Mamdani, making Cuomo's path to 50% more perilous. But one month out, Cuomo's position appears as strong as it did when he entered the race. ➡️ ️Bringing in the big guns:During a closed-door meeting, Trump pushed blue-state Republicans to relent on their SALT demands and warned conservatives, "Don't f--- around with Medicaid." But it's unclear if his trip to Capitol Hill managed to sway any of the House Republicans holding out on supporting the party's massive bill for his agenda.Read more → ☑️ Surprise vote:The Senate unexpectedly passed the "No Tax on Tips Act" by unanimous consent after Sen. Jack Rosen, D-Nev., brought it to the floor.Read more → 🛡️Golden Dome:Trump officially announced his plans for a new missile defense system, saying it should be fully operational by the end of his term.Read more → 💸 Scaling back:Elon Musk said he plans to spend "a lot less" on political causes after he was one of the biggest donors of the 2024 election.Read more → ⚖️New Jersey fallout:The Justice Department charged Rep. LaMonica McIver, D-N.J., with two counts of assaulting, resisting and impeding law enforcement officials following a confrontation this month at a federal immigration detention facility in Newark.Read more → 🩺 Tone change:Trump's allies quickly shifted their comments on Biden's cancer diagnosis from well wishes to suggestions that the former president hid his condition while he was in office.Read more → 🪑In the hot seat:Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. returned to Capitol Hill for his third congressional hearing in a week to face more heated questions from lawmakers about his department's drastic funding cuts.Read more → 👀 Pressure test:FBI leaders Kash Patel and Dan Boningo are under pressure from MAGA voters to act on their claims that the Biden administration and corrupt "deep state" actors "weaponized" the agency against Trump.Read more → 🗳️ 2026 watch:Former Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms became the highest-profile Democrat yet to enter the race for Georgia governor.Read more → 🗳️ 2026 watch, cont.:Democratic Rep. Jared Golden announced he is running for re-election in Maine's 2nd District, which Trump carried in 2024, squashing speculation that he would run for governor or the Senate.Read more → Follow live politics updates → That's all From the Politics Desk for now. Today's newsletter was compiled by Adam Wollner and Bridget Bowman. If you have feedback — likes or dislikes — email us atpoliticsnewsletter@nbcuni.com And if you're a fan, please share with everyone and anyone. They can sign uphere.

JD Vance's papal diplomacy: From the Politics Desk

JD Vance's papal diplomacy: From the Politics Desk Welcome to the online version ofFrom the Politics Desk, an evening newsletter that br...
Former Capitol riot defendant is convicted of gun charges stemming from his arrest near Obama's homeNew Foto - Former Capitol riot defendant is convicted of gun charges stemming from his arrest near Obama's home

WASHINGTON (AP) — A military veteran whose Capitol riot case was erased by a presidential proclamation was convicted Tuesday of charges that he illegally possessed guns and ammunition in his van when he was arrested near PresidentBarack Obama'shome in the nation's capital. U.S. District Judge Carl Nichols also convicted Taylor Taranto of recording himself making a hoax threat to bomb a government building in Maryland. The judge decided the case without a jury after a bench trial that started last week in Washington, D.C. Taranto was arrested in Obama's neighborhood on the same day in June 2023 thatTrumpposted on social media what he claimed was the former president's address. Investigators said they found two guns, roughly 500 rounds of ammunition and a machete in Taranto's van. Taranto was livestreaming video on YouTube in which he said he was looking for "entrance points" to underground tunnels and wanted to get a "good angle on a shot,"according to prosecutors. He reposted Trump's message about Obama's home address and wrote: "We got these losers surrounded! See you in hell, Podesta's and Obama's." He was referring toJohn Podesta, who chairedHillary Clinton's2016 Democratic presidential campaign. Taranto wasn't charged with threatening Obama or Podesta. But the judge convicted him of making a hoax bomb threat directed at the Gaithersburg, Maryland-based National Institute of Standards and Technology, which is part of the U.S. Department of Commerce. Taranto's lawyers said he didn't have any bomb-making material and wasn't near the institute when he made those statements on a livestreamed video. During the trial's opening statements, defense attorney Pleasant Brodnax said the video shows Taranto was merely joking in an "avant-garde" manner. "He believes he is a journalist and, to some extent, a comedian," Broadnax said. But the judge concluded that a reasonable, objective observer might have believed Taranto's statements on the video. While some viewers may have thought his words were of a "madcap nature," others could have interpreted them as coming from "an unbalanced narrator willing to follow through on outlandish claims," Nichols said. Nichols, who was nominated by Trump, didn't immediately schedule a sentencing hearing for Taranto. He has been jailed for nearly two years since his arrest because ajudge concludedthat he poses a danger to the public. After reading his verdict from the bench, the judge said he would entertain a request by defense attorney Carmen Hernandez to release Taranto from custody until his sentencing. Nichols said he intends to rule on that request later this week. Taranto, a Navy veteran from Pasco, Washington, is one of only a few people charged in the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol who remained jailed after PresidentDonald Trump's sweeping act on clemency in January. Trump pardoned, commuted the prison sentences or ordered the dismissal of charges for all of the more than 1,500 people charged with crimesin the riot. Before Trump's pardons, Taranto also was charged with four misdemeanors related to the Jan. 6 attack. Prosecutors said he joined the crush of rioters who breached the building. He was captured on video at the entrance of the Speaker's Lobby around the time that a rioter,Ashli Babbitt, was shot and killed by an officer while she tried to climb through the broken window of a barricaded door.

Former Capitol riot defendant is convicted of gun charges stemming from his arrest near Obama's home

Former Capitol riot defendant is convicted of gun charges stemming from his arrest near Obama's home WASHINGTON (AP) — A military vetera...
Van Hollen slams Rubio in contentious exchange over deportations and Abrego GarciaNew Foto - Van Hollen slams Rubio in contentious exchange over deportations and Abrego Garcia

Secretary of State Marco Rubio returned to the Senate Foreign Affairs Committee on Wednesday, appearing before his former colleagues for the first time since his confirmation to defend the president's foreign policy and the administration's budget priorities for the year ahead. Rather than a warm homecoming, Rubio was quickly on defense, with several Senate Democrats pressing the secretary on the State Department's reorganization and spending cuts, as well as Middle East policy and El Salvador detentions. Sen. Chris Van Hollen, D-Md., spent much of his allotted time criticizing Rubio on a number of issues, including his coziness with El Salvador's President Nayib Bukele and the Trump administration's failure to "facilitate" in returning Kilmar Abrego Garcia, a migrant who was erroneously deported to El Salvador, to the United States. Abrego Garcia was living in Maryland at the time he was deported. "In the case of El Salvador, absolutely, absolutely, we deported gang members, gang members -- including the one you had a margarita with. And that guy is a human trafficker, and that guy is a gang banger, and that and the evidence is going to be clear," Rubio asserted, referring to Van Hollenmeeting with Abrego Garciain El Salvador in April. MORE: Van Hollen describes dramatic meeting with Abrego Garcia in El Salvador upon return to US "Mr. Chairman, he can't make unsubstantiated comments like that," Van Hollen protested. "Secretary Rubio should take that testimony to the federal court of the United States because he hasn't done it under oath!" Van Hollen has said neither man drank from the glasses that he said officials put on the table during the meeting that appeared to have liquid inside with salt or sugar rims. "No judge and the judicial branch cannot tell me or the president how to conduct foreign policy," Rubio shot back. "No judge can tell me how I have to outreach to a foreign partner or what I need to say to them, and if I do reach that foreign partner and talk to them, I have under no obligation to share that with the judiciary branch. Diplomacy doesn't work that way." "You're just blowing smoke now," Van Hollen said. Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Jim Risch, R-Idaho, had to intervene in the at-times contentious conversation as Van Hollen compared Rubio's policy on deportations and the El Salvador detentions of migrants to the "shameful era" of McCarthy-era witch hunts and the red scare, saying the administration's "campaign of fear and repression is eating away at foundational values of our democracy." "Back then, it took one voice, attorney Joseph Welch, to cut through the hysteria with a simple question that marked the beginning of the end of that shameful era: 'Have you no sense of decency?'" Van Hollen said as he concluded his line of questioning. "And I would ask you the same, Secretary Rubio. You have shown, with your words and your actions what your answer is. I have to tell you directly and personally that I regret voting for you as secretary of state." Van Hollen slams Rubio in contentious exchange over deportations and Abrego Garciaoriginally appeared onabcnews.go.com

Van Hollen slams Rubio in contentious exchange over deportations and Abrego Garcia

Van Hollen slams Rubio in contentious exchange over deportations and Abrego Garcia Secretary of State Marco Rubio returned to the Senate For...
Rubio may have revoked thousands of visas as crackdown continuesNew Foto - Rubio may have revoked thousands of visas as crackdown continues

By Daphne Psaledakis, Patricia Zengerle and Simon Lewis WASHINGTON (Reuters) -U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio said on Tuesday the number of visas he has revoked was probably in the thousands, adding that he believed there was still more to do. Republican President Donald Trump's administration has sought to ramp up deportations and revoke student visas as part of its wide-ranging efforts to fulfill his hardline immigration agenda. "I don't know the latest count, but we probably have more to do," Rubio told a Senate appropriations subcommittee that oversees foreign affairs. Asked to give an estimate, he said it was probably in the thousands at this point, an increase from March, when he said the State Department may have revoked more than 300 visas. Rubio said the 300 revoked visas were a combination of student and visitor visas. He said he signed each action. "A visa is not a right. It's a privilege," Rubio said on Tuesday. Trump administration officials have said student visa and green card holders are subject to deportation over their support for Palestinians and criticism of Israel's conduct in the war in Gaza, calling their actions a threat to U.S. foreign policy and accusing them of being pro-Hamas. Trump's critics have called the effort an attack on free speech rights under the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. "I know this will be adjudicated in court, but the idea that one individual could on their opinion of someone's future activity or expected activity ... toss somebody's visa, seems to me an extraordinary violation of due process," Democratic Senator Jeff Merkley told Rubio at the hearing. Earlier this month, a Tufts University student from Turkey was held for over six weeks in an immigration detention center in Louisiana after co-writing an opinion piece criticizing her school's response to Israel's war in Gaza. She was released from custody after a federal judge granted her bail. U.S. District Judge William Sessions during a hearing in Burlington, Vermont, ordered the immediate release of Rumeysa Ozturk, who is at the center of one of the highest-profile cases to emerge from Trump's campaign to deport pro-Palestinian activists on American campuses. (Reporting by Patricia Zengerle, Daphne Psaledakis and Simon Lewis; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)

Rubio may have revoked thousands of visas as crackdown continues

Rubio may have revoked thousands of visas as crackdown continues By Daphne Psaledakis, Patricia Zengerle and Simon Lewis WASHINGTON (Reuter...

 

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