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Senators revive bipartisan criminal justice reform bill

Photo: Manuel Balce Ceneta, Pablo Martinez Monsivais / AP

Sens. Chuck Grassley (R-IA) and Dick Durbin are (D-IL) re-introducing a bipartisan criminal justice reform bill that never made it to the floor last year. It calls for lower minimum sentences for drug offenders, targets violent criminals and calls for a National Criminal Justice Commission to conduct a review of the criminal justice system.

Why it matters: The Senators hope that the bill can receive bipartisan support by reducing sentences for non-violent drug offenders, but still enforcing harsher sentences for violent criminals. "This bill strikes the right balance of improving public safety and ensuring fairness in the criminal justice system," Sen. Grassley said in the press release.

Here are highlights from the bill:

  • Drug felons would have a reduced minimum mandatory sentence — 15 years instead of 20. This would be applied retroactively, after a court's review of the prisoner, as long as there is no past conviction of a violent felony.
  • Someone who has received "three strikes" and has been convicted of a drug felony would have a minimum mandatory sentence of 25 years instead of a life sentence.
  • Anyone who was not an importer, exporter, high-level distributor or supplier, wholesaler, manufacturer, or any participant in conspiracy are eligible for less than the 10-year mandatory minimum. Even those with up to four points on their criminal record could qualify for less than the minimum sentence where there are non-violent crimes.
  • The bill raises the maximum sentence from 20 to 25 years for those who commit interstate domestic violence which results in permanent disfigurement or life-threatening injury. The maximum would be increased from 10 to 15 years when serious bodily injury occurs or when a dangerous weapon is used. If death results, there would be with a 10-year minimum sentence.
  • Those who have been convicted of using a firearm during a violent crime or drug crime and have previously been convicted of the same offense would face a mandatory minimum sentence of 25 years instead of 15, which could be applied retroactively.
  • The bill requires the DoJ to assess all federal inmates' risks of recidivism and assign them to proper programs, including work and education programs, drug rehabilitation, job training, and faith-based programs.
  • It calls for the creation of a National Criminal Justice Commission made up of 16 members, and gives $14,000,000 over two years for a comprehensive review of the justice system.
Read more details, here.
Featured

Trump gives somber address with Las Vegas first responders

President Trump and First Lady Melania visited with first responders on Wednesday in Las Vegas, following the shooting on Sunday night.

"In the months ahead, we will all have to wrestle with the horror of what has unfolded this week," Trump said. "But we will struggle through it together. We will endure the pain together. And we will overcome together as Americans."

More from the press conference:

  • "In the depths of horror we will always find hope in the men and women who risk their lives for ours."
  • "We pray for the recovery of the injured and those injured officers who so bravely threw themselves into danger when duty called."
  • "We struggle to explain to our children how such evil can exist. How there can be such cruelty and such suffering."
  • "The example of those whose final act was to sacrifice themselves for those they loved, should inspire all of us to show more love every day for the people who grace our lives."
Featured

Corker: Tillerson, generals "separate our country from chaos"

Chairman Bob Corker pauses before a hearing of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. Photo: Alex Brandon / AP

Senator Bob Corker told reporters Wednesday he thinks "Secretary Tillerson, Secretary Mattis, and Chief of Staff Kelly are those people that help separate our country from chaos." Corker added that Tillerson is not being supported in the way that I would hope" and "is in an incredibly frustrating place."

The backdrop: Corker's comments followed a report that Secretary of State Rex Tillerson called Trump a moron — which the State Department has since refuted — and considered resigning.

Go deeper: Between the lines on Tillerson

Featured

Britain's Conservative Party had a bad few days

Theresa May coughs during her keynote speech to the Conservative Party conference. Photo: Rui Vieira / AP

U.K. Prime Minister Theresa May endured what multiple international outlets branded a "nightmare" during her keynote speech at the Conservative Party's annual conference — as she talked through a prankster, a crumbling background set, and a persistent cough.

Why it matters: May's "British dream" speech was a huge moment for her to project strength and control to her party after her Tories disastrously lost their majority in June's snap general election. But the distractions stole the headlines, putting her already tenuous position as prime minister in further jeopardy and capping off a few days of terrible press for her party.

May's disastrous speech

  • May was handed a P45 form, the British equivalent of a pink slip, by a comedian in the audience, who managed to get just feet away from her before being detained by security. The comedian said, "Boris asked me to give you this," referencing Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson's oft-rumored desire to become prime minister.
  • The prime minister lost her voice and began coughing during her speech, prompting Chancellor Philip Hammond to run on stage and hand her a cough drop. She later joked about the moment on Twitter.
  • And there was an embarrassing background malfunction as the slogan "Building a Country That Works for Everyone" behind May started losing letters.

Boris Johnson's Libya comment

  • The conference was Boris Johnson's moment to shine and cement himself as a formidable challenger to May for the party's leadership.
  • Instead, it ended with calls for May to fire him as foreign secretary after he said that a Libyan city only needs to "clear the dead bodies away" before it can become a resort destination, per The Guardian:
  • "There's a group of UK business people, wonderful guys who want to invest in Sirte, on the coast, near where Gaddafi was actually captured and executed as some of you may have seen. And they literally have a brilliant vision to turn Sirte, with the help of the municipality of Sirte, to turn it into the next Dubai. The only thing they've got to do is clear the dead bodies away and then they'll be there."

Jacob Rees-Mogg takes aim

  • Jacob Rees-Mogg, a backbencher from the right wing of the Tories, is also seen as a potential challenger to May's position.
  • He took aim at her leadership and the Conservative Party as a whole by delivering a scathing rebuke of the conference, per The Express:
  • "It's now become like an American presidential convention where you're expected to just turn up and cheer the great and the good. It isn't even American but Kim Jong-un style – if you don't clap for long enough you'll get in real trouble."

Rees-Mogg under fire of his own

  • Rees-Mogg's arch-conservative views, especially on abortion, have garnered extreme controversy in the U.K., leading to his speech at a pro-Brexit event being disrupted by protestors who labeled him "disgusting" and "despicable."
  • He called the disruption a "glorious thing" and was later described by The Telegraph as "chatting to [the protestor] as calmly as if they were standing in a queue at the Post Office."
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Trump: I have "total confidence" in Tillerson

"I was very honored by [Rex Tillerson's] comments," President Trump said, delivering remarks at a Las Vegas hospital. "It was fake news. It was a totally phony story ... It was made up by NBC ... [I have] total confidence in Rex."

Context: Tillerson said "I have never considered leaving this post" earlier today, after an NBC report said the Secretary of State called Trump a "moron" and contemplated resigning over the summer.

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Facebook and Twitter will testify in Russian election meddling probe

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg. Photo: Noah Berger / AP

Facebook and Twitter confirmed they will answer questions at a November hearing that's part of a Senate committee's investigation into Russian election meddling. Alphabet has also been invited to the hearing that's part of a larger Senate Intelligence Committee investigation into Russian election inference but haven't confirmed their attendance.

Why it matters: Facebook staffers, specifically, have rarely testified on Capitol Hill despite its ascendance as one of the most valuable technology companies in the world. And many tech companies are still largely represented by trade groups in Washington. But tech is under unprecedented pressure on several fronts, and the big companies want to be seen as taking concerns seriously.

What they're not saying: Whether it will be Mark Zuckerberg in the hot seat for Facebook. Several top Facebook employees, like security executive Alex Stamos and policy chief Elliot Schrage, have been part of the public response to concerns about Russia, Facebook, and the 2016 presidential race. Twitter has also declined to say who will testify.

Go deeper: Senate Intelligence Committee leaders said there's still a long way to go in this investigation, per Axios' Alayna Treene.

This post has been updated to reflect Twitter's planned participation in the hearing.

Featured

Senate Intel: Russia probe has "expanded"

Senate Intelligence Committee chair Richard Burr (on right) and vice chair Mark Warner brief reporters on the Russia investigation. Photo: J. Scott Applewhite / AP

Senate Intelligence Committee chairman Richard Burr (R-NC) and vice chair Mark Warner (D-VA) made it clear Wednesday that they still have a lot of work to do regarding the Russia investigation, including learning more about the extent of Moscow's impact on the 2016 election and whether any Trump campaign members colluded in the interference.

"It's safe to say that the inquiry has expanded slightly," Burr said. He said he still hopes the committee can complete its probe by the end of 2017, but emphasized they must be finished and "make our facts public" prior to the 2018 midterm primaries.

Investigation progress

  • Burr said the committee has conducted more than 100 interviews over 250 hours, reviewed more than 400 pages of transcripts, and scrutinized more than 1000 pages of classified documents.
  • "We have interviewed every official of the Obama administration" to learn more about what they saw, what they did, and what they didn't do, said Burr.
  • Investigation into former FBI director James Comey's memos is over. Burr said the panel "is satisfied that our involvement with this issue has reached a logical end" in relation to Russia probe.

What they know

  • Russia successfully hacked Democratic National Committee emails with the intent of making them public.
  • The 2016 vote tallies are accurate, and in no way will the committee's report overturn the results of the election. "That's how it's gonna stay," said Burr.
  • Russia tried to "open the door" in 21 states' electoral systems. It took the Department of Homeland Security 11 months to reveal this attempt.
  • There's a "consensus" that Russians hacked into political files during the 2016 presidential campaign.

What they don't know

  • If there has been "any hint of collusion": "I won't even discuss initial findings, because we haven't any...we still have a lot of transcripts to go through... there are 25 individuals booked for interviews with this staff this month alone in relation to the Russia investigation," said Burr.

Key quotes

  • "The Russian intelligence service is determined, clever — and I recommend that every campaign and election official take this very seriously," said Burr.
  • "There needs to be a more aggressive, whole-of-government approach in terms of protecting our electoral system," said Warner.
  • "Russian interference was to create chaos at every level," not targeted at the right or left, Burr said. "Given we're standing here 9 months later, it seems they were pretty successful."
Featured

Trump and First Lady arrive in Las Vegas

Trump arrives in Las Vegas. Photo: Evan Vucci / AP

President Trump and First Lady Melania Trump have touched down in Las Vegas, beginning their visit at the University Medical Center, where they'll meet with staff and victims. UMC took in over 100 victims of Sunday's shooting. Four have since lost their lives, and 12 patients are in critical condition.

Featured

Google unveils new Pixel phones, Home speakers, laptop

Some of the new hardware announced by Google in San Francisco. Photo: Ina Fried / Axios

Google introduced a parade of new hardware products Wednesday, including second-generation Pixel phones and Pixelbook, a high-end Chromebook with built-in Google Assistant and support for Android apps.

It also introduced Google Home Mini, a smaller version of its Amazon Echo rival, and Google Home Max, a high-end model that is poised to rival Apple's forthcoming HomePod.

Why it matters: Google just doubled down on its hardware effort, spending $1.1 billion to acquire a significant chunk of HTC's phone operations and know-how. Now it needs to make the bet pay off.

While much of what Google is due to introduce leaked out, including new Pixel phones, Google hardware chief Rick Osterloh promised there would still be "a few surprises." Google delivered with new wireless earphones that can do on-the-fly language translation and Google Clips, a new accessory camera for automatically capturing photos.

Here are details on the new products as they are being unveiled:

  • Google Home Mini, $49, pre-orders now, in stores Oct. 19.
  • Google Home Max, $399, coming in December, includes 12 months of its YouTube Red subscription music service.

Google also announced new kid-friendly features for Google Home, including a partnership with Disney, to bring voice-powered stories and games to the Google Home family.

  • Google Pixelbook, a high-end Chromebook, with support for Google Assistant and Android apps. Can fold up to tablet and supports up to 512GB of storage. It will start at $999, with pre-orders now and devices in store Oct. 31. An optional $99 Pixelbook Pen stylus can be used to draw or highlight a photo or word and pull up Google Assistant.
  • Google's Pixel 2 will come in both a 5-inch and 6-inch XL model. It's got a bunch of new features, but as rumored, it also ditches the headphone jack found on last year's model. Though it has only a single rear camera, Google has its own take on portrait mode, using machine learning to create a blurred background. The phones will also get a preview version of Google Lens, a visual search tool Google previewed at its I/O conference earlier this year. As was the case last year, Verizon will be the only carrier selling the Pixels in store, though it's expected to work with others when bought unlocked from Google.
    • Pixel 2 will start at $649 and Pixel 2 XL at $849. For a limited time, both will come with a Google Home Mini.
  • Pixel Buds, a new pair of wireless headphones. with built-in Google Assistant support, including real-time language translation. Unlike AirPods, though there is still a cord connecting the two earpieces. They will come in three colors and be available in November for $159.
  • Google Clips, an accessory camera for capturing spontaneous moments, especially of kids and pets, using artificial intelligence. It will sell for $249 and is "coming soon," Google said.
Featured

Children’s health bill advances in the Senate

The Finance Committee agreed to reauthorize CHIP. Photo: Jacquelyn Martin / AP

The Senate Finance Committee this morning approved, without dissent, a bill to reauthorize the Children's Health Insurance Program. Federal funding for CHIP expired at the end of September; Congress is hoping to pass an extension before states start running out of money and are forced to reduce coverage.

The details: The Senate's bill would reauthorize CHIP for five years and gradually wind down a funding bump from the Affordable Care Act. Senators haven't yet said how they would pay for the extension, while offsets offered in the House's version of the bill have already attracted Democratic opposition. The House Energy and Commerce Committee is slated to mark up that bill this afternoon.