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Monthly Archives: July 2021
Donald Trump Isnt Letting It Go – The Atlantic
Posted: July 14, 2021 at 1:40 pm
Its July 2021, and the former president is still baselessly insisting that he won the 2020 election. Meanwhile, the Republicans who broke with Trump on his voting-fraud claims are still facing consequences.
Every weekday evening, our editors guide you through the biggest stories of the day, help you discover new ideas, and surprise you with moments of delight. Subscribe to get this delivered to your inbox.
Its July 2021, and former President Donald Trump is still baselessly insisting that he won the 2020 election. Meanwhile, the Republicans who broke with Trump on his voting-fraud claims are still facing consequences.
Donald Trump isnt letting it go. Yesterday, at a Conservative Political Action Conference event in Texas, the former president repeatedly told a cheering crowd that the 2020 election had been stolen from him.
Ahead of the 2022 midterm elections, that lie, along with other false allegations of voter fraud, forms a centerpiece of Republican strategy.
The conservatives who have broken with the former president on his fraud claims are having trouble finding their place in a Trump-controlled party.
Further reading: Foxs Tucker Carlson is peddling a warped version of patriotism from a fake log cabin.
The news in three sentences:
(1) Cubans are protesting en masse, with President Joe Biden offering his support. (2) A Florida-based doctor is being held as a suspect in the assassination of Haitian President Jovenel Mose. (3) Israel is offering COVID-19 vaccine booster shots to severely imunocompromised adults.
Tonights Atlantic-approved activity:
Sally Rooneys new novel is due out this fall. While you wait, revisit the Hulu adaptation of her last book, Normal People. The series appeared on our list of 25 great half-hour shows worth your time.
A break from the news:
Snails are helping archaeologists make sense of a 180-foot drawing of a naked man found on a hillside in England.
Every weekday evening, our editors guide you through the biggest stories of the day, help you discover new ideas, and surprise you with moments of delight. Subscribe to get this delivered to your inbox.
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Ann Arbor company leans on automation to maximize lifespan of wind turbines – MiBiz: West Michigan Business News
Posted: at 1:40 pm
ANN ARBOR A Southeast Michigan company that started by inspecting wind turbine components by drone has evolved to provide more complex asset management thats meant to maximize the output of a growing renewable energy sector.
Ann Arbor-based SkySpecs LLC, which organized less than a decade ago, has jumped into a rapidly growing renewable energy space thats being driven by declining costs, corporate demand and governmental policies.
As U.S. wind energy capacity grows, the industry still faces a shortage of skilled labor that can service the tens of thousands of turbines in operation. Automating that maintenance process can help turbines run more regularly and avoid unplanned downtime.
SkySpecs CEO Danny Ellis noted that wind turbines are sold based on a 35-year life span, but not a single turbine has ever gotten to that, creating a need for ongoing and predictive maintenance.
Renewable energy is finally reaching a maturity point where it can stand on its own, Ellis said, referring to cost comparisons with other fuel sources. It can be a revenue-generating asset. Its critical that the owners, operators, financiers and stakeholders have a thorough understanding of their health and maintenance records.
Thats where SkySpecs comes in.
The company is building a future of renewable energy asset management, building robotics and sensory systems to collect data on wind turbines, he said. Autonomous drones help identify external turbine defects or damages while custom-built rovers operate inside the turbine blades and drivetrains.
The inspections from drones and rovers provide numerous data points to build this whole ecosystem thats looking at all different aspects of the turbine, Ellis said. Effectively, its a health record, and were using that data to build a plan to identify when to fix something.
The purpose is to avoid operational downtime, which Ellis said has plagued the industry and prevents turbines from reaching higher production potential.
Unplanned downtime leads to over-budgeted repair costs, which leads to a loss of revenue, said Ellis, adding that the U.S. industry faces a shortage of skilled labor to service turbines. That unplanned downtime is what the industry is really trying to control.
The need to maximize wind turbines output comes as states, the federal government and utilities plan massive renewable energy investments in the coming years to address climate change. Particularly in Midwestern states, wind energy will play a crucial role in that process and can benefit states with fewer wind resources if more high-voltage transmission is built.
If we can further automate asset management so the industry can scale accordingly, that will be helpful for the world, Ellis said.
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Legal threats to Donald Trump more serious than ever before, experts say – The Guardian
Posted: at 1:40 pm
As a New York criminal investigation continues after bringing tax fraud charges against Donald Trumps business and a top executive, other prosecutors in Georgia, Washington DC and New York have inquiries under way that could also yield serious charges against Trump and his company, according to former prosecutors and public records.
For example, a Georgia district attorney is leading a wide ranging criminal probe into Trumps infamous call on 2 January to Georgias secretary of state beseeching him to find 11,780 votes to block Joe Bidens presidential election win there.
Meanwhile, separate prosecutors in New York and Washington DC are scrutinizing whether Trumps businesses benefited illegally during his 2017 inauguration. The Washington attorney general has sued the inaugural committee, the Trump International Hotel in DC and the Trump Organization alleging they schemed to make exorbitant and unlawful payments of over $1 million to Trumps DC hotel which hosted some inaugural events.
Further, Trump could be ensnared in a federal criminal investigation of his former personal lawyer, Rudy Giuliani, who Trump tapped to dig up dirt on Biden in Ukraine during the campaign. Giuliani is being investigated reportedly for possible violations of foreign lobbying laws that require registration, and for his role in Trumps firing of the US ambassador there in 2019.
On yet another legal front, Trump is facing several civil lawsuits, including one from writer E Jean Carroll, whose 2019 memoir alleged Trump once raped her. After Trump accused her of lying to sell books, Carroll filed a defamation lawsuit.
Former justice department prosecutors say these inquiries and lawsuits increase legal pressures on Trump, even as Manhattan district attorney Cyrus Vance and New York attorney general Letitia James investigates more allegations of illegal acts by Trumps business besides the June tax fraud charges against the Trump organization and its chief financial officer Allen Weisselberg, a scheme that allegedly gave him free cars, rent and other perks for years.
Trump denounced the New York charges as a political ploy by Democrats, and has attacked the others as witch-hunts. Weisselberg and the Trump Organization on July 1 both pled not guilty to the tax fraud charges.
But this cast of wide-ranging inquiries and lawsuits pose huge legal headaches for Trump and look far more serious than many others Trump has dodged over decades, say former prosecutors.
The current threats are more numerous and more serious than ever before and its hard to imagine that his good luck will continue, Michael Bromwich, an ex- prosecutor and former inspector general at the Justice Department, said in an interview.
Trump hates playing defense, which explains his baseless suit earlier this week against the major tech companies. We are very likely to see many more shoes dropping over the foreseeable future and Trump knows it. He has never more desperately needed top legal talent, and thats not who he has representing him.
Other justice department veterans foresee multiple legal travails for Trump.
Donald Trump is now facing more than a dozen separate civil lawsuits and criminal investigations, with more matters likely to follow, said Phillip Halpern, a former California prosecutor who spent three decades focused on corruption cases.
Halpern added that the criminal inquiries in Georgia, New York and Washington have the potential to drastically impact Trumps historical legacy, and result in his or various family members, associates, and attorneys spending considerable time in jail.
Halpern stressed that the civil lawsuits and the New York investigation by Vance and James carry the potential for sizable personal monetary penalties, and could subject Trumps companies to massive penalties.
These legal threats vary in risk to Trump, but the inquiry into Trumps call pressuring Georgia secretary of state Brad Raffensperger to reverse Bidens win, bears watching.
The district attorney leading that inquiry, Fani Willis, has written that prosecutors are examining potential violations of Georgia law prohibiting the solicitation of election fraud, the making of false statements to state and local governmental bodies, conspiracy, racketeering, violation of oath of office and any involvement in violence or threats related to the elections administration.
Cathy Cox, a former Georgia secretary of state and Dean of Mercer University School of Law, said that the Fulton county inquiry is nothing to take lightly.
Cox stressed that Willis is experienced with Georgias expansive Rico [Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act] law, she has a record of using it successfully in high-profile cases, and shes engaged the states undisputed Rico expert, attorney John Floyd, to assist her. Those factors ramp this case up even further in terms of its potential for serious criminal charges.
Moreover, Trumps business faces legal jeopardy from inquiries into spending by his inaugural committee that were separately launched by federal prosecutors in New York and by Washington attorney general Karl Racine. Racine has deposed Donald Trump Jr and Ivanka Trump, which could create other problems for the Trump family if they didnt answer truthfully.
In a court filing, Racines office stated that Trump Jrs testimony raised further questions about the nature of an invoice related to the inauguration and revealed evidence that defendants had not yet produced to the district.
More legal headaches for Trump may arise from the expanding inquiry into Giuliani, whose New York home and office were raided in April by federal agents who seized 10 electronic devices including cell phones and computers.
The inquiry is reportedly focused on Giulianis role in Trumps firing of US ambassador to Ukraine Marie Yovanovitch in May 2019, a move pushed by Giuliani and two Soviet-born associates indicted earlier on charges of campaign finance violations and a central issue in Trumps first impeachment.
Giuliani is under investigation to determine if he broke the Foreign Agents Registration Act requiring those who lobby the US government on behalf of foreign officials to register with the DoJ.
Giuliani has denied doing anything unlawful.
Looking ahead, ex-DoJ officials say that the detailed charges now brought against the Trump Organization and its chief financial officer could presage more legal problems for Trumps business.
The thoroughness and highly factual nature of the indictments give a lot of information about the deeply inappropriate practices of Trumps business, said Donald Ayer, a former deputy attorney general at the justice department in the George HW Bush administration. There is no particular reason to think that such inappropriate practices were confined to dealings with Allen Weisselberg.
Yet some former prosecutors predict that as his legal problems mount, Trump and his supporters will milk the inquiries for political gain.
Trump uses his legal problems to reinforce his image as an outsider (and) to fire up his base, said Barbara McQuade, a professor from practice at the University of Michigan Law School and ex-US attorney for the eastern district of Michigan.
She added: But for those who care about the rule of law, it is important to hold accountable individuals who engage in illegal activity, even former presidents.
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Legal threats to Donald Trump more serious than ever before, experts say - The Guardian
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Trump Is Very Disappointed in Brett Kavanaugh for Not Helping Him Steal the Election – Vanity Fair
Posted: at 1:40 pm
In one of Donald Trumps many attempts to steal the 2020 election, the former president called on the Supreme Court to take up his cause and fraudulently overturn Joe Bidens victory. Given that Trump, by appointing Justices Brett Kavanaugh, Neil Gorsuch, and Amy Coney Barrett, established the high courts 63 conservative majority, he presumably hoped the bench would remain loyal to him. But after the court declined to take up cases seeking to invalidate election results in multiple states, Trump channeled his rage at Kavanaugh, according to Michael Wolffs upcoming book, Landslide: The Final Days of the Trump Presidency.
Im very disappointed in Kavanaugh, Trump remarked in an interview with Wolff, per an excerpt. He just hasnt had the courage you need to be a great justice. Trump, who stood by Kavanaugh while the latter faced sexual-misconduct allegations during his confirmation process, added, Where would [Kavanaugh] be without me? I saved his life. He wouldnt even be in a law firm. Who would have had him? Nobody. Totally disgraced. Only I saved him.
Wolff also told Britains Channel 4 News this week that people close to Trump thought the former president was losing his mind. Virtually everyone around Trumpwere not talking Democrats here, were talking Trump aides, intimates, and supporterseveryone believes he has gone off his rocker, Wolff said. I mean, lets not put too fine a point here: They believe he is crazy. He continued: At the same time, he commands a, if not a majority of the country, a very, very substantial minority comes to believe that this election is stolen and whose support for him ever hardens.
Wolffs promotional tour has been sweeping, with regular excerpts and interviews shedding light on what the author says are the inner workings of Trumpworld. And it has gone on parallel to another bout of press for a similar Trump book: Washington Post reporters Philip Rucker and Carol Leonnigs I Alone Can Fix It: Donald J. Trumps Catastrophic Final Year, which, along with a slew of upcoming releases, indicates our collective inability to look away from the train wreck that was the previous administration. In an excerpt from the latter, to be published on Tuesday, Rucker and Leonnig reported that, among other things, some in Trumps circle were concerned about the drinking habits of Trumps former personal lawyer, Rudy Giuliani: Some people thought Giuliani may have been drinking too much and suggested to [campaign manager Bill]Stepien that he go talk to the former New York mayor.
A similar characterization has come from Wolff, who described the Trump-Giuliani relationship during a Tuesday appearance on CNN. Within days of November 3rd, [Trump] is absolutely alone, and he is fighting this effort to overturn the electionwhich would be one of the biggest legal efforts in the history of American jurisprudence, Wolff said. Its just him and Rudy Giuliani, who ismost of the time, franklydrunk. In Landslide, Trumpworld figures remark on Giulianis drinking. Giuliani was, many around Trump believed, always buzzed if not, in the phrase Steve Bannon made famous in the Trump White House, hopelessly in the mumble tank, writes Wolff, according to an excerpt published by Insider. (Giuliani's longtime personal assistant did not immediately respond to Insiders request for comment.) Many believed [Giuliani] had the beginnings of senility: focus issues, memory problems, simple logic failures. A vast disorganization of papers and files and tech malfunctions followed in his wake.
More Great Stories From Vanity Fair
Inside Jeffrey Epsteins Decades-Long Relationship With Leslie Wexner Trumps Deranged Replacement Theory Mightve Lost Him the Election Jeff Bezos and Elon Musk Want to Burn Their Cash in Space Three Texans Bust Myths About the Alamos Famous Last Stand The Guy Who Could Send Trump to Prison May Soon Cooperate With the Feds Bill and Melinda Gatess Epic Divorce Saga Enters Its Next Phase Juneteenth, Critical Race Theory, and the Winding Road Toward Reckoning Trump Is Now Urging People Not to Vaccinate Their Kids Against COVID From the Archive: Microsofts Odd Couple, in the Words of Paul Allen Not a subscriber? Join Vanity Fair to receive full access to VF.com and the complete online archive now.
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Trump Is Very Disappointed in Brett Kavanaugh for Not Helping Him Steal the Election - Vanity Fair
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Kanglim and Ridecell Partner to Create IoT Automation and Mobility Platform for Industrial Vehicles – PRNewswire
Posted: at 1:40 pm
SAN FRANCISCO and SEOWON-GU, Korea, July 14, 2021 /PRNewswire/ --Kanglim Co, Ltd, the 40 year-old global leader in specialty industrial vehicles, today announced a strategic alliance withRidecell Inc., the leading platform powering digital transformations and IoT automation for fleet-driven businesses. Ridecell will collaborate with Kanglim to develop an IoT automation and mobility platform for specialty industrial vehicle fleets. Kanglim's vehicles include industrial cranes, fire trucks, electrical work vehicles, aerial platforms, military and police equipment, and pump vehicles. Ridecell's Fleet IoT platform will transform Kanglim's specialty vehicles into the world's first connected and smart industrial vehicle fleet.
"Specialty vehicles are often delivering essential services, such as electricity repair, military or fire containment," said Dr. Seuk-Kyung Sung, Vice Chairman and CEO of Kanglim. "Automating maintenance requirements to minimize downtime is mission critical. Our digital network and the Ridecell automation and mobility platform lets our customers maximize their investment in Kanglim vehicles and keep essential infrastructure running."
Kanglim is an industry leader in embracing technology. They were one of the first to deliver a fleet of fully connected industrial vehicles. Their connectivity and remote monitoring combined with Ridecell's Fleet IoT platform will offer an industry breakthrough in automation of key functions such as maintenance and scheduling.
"Kanglim and Ridecell share a similar vision of a future where fleets composed of industrial specialty vehicles are achieving unparalleled utilization and uptime," said Aarjav Trivedi, founder and CEO of Ridecell. "Our tailored automation and mobility platform provides built-in connectivity and out-of-the-box efficiency that keeps Kanglim's vital fleet on the road. Digital transformation for specialty vehicles is the perfect use for the Ridecell Fleet IoT automation and mobility platform, and we look forward to working with Kanglim."
In addition to the strategic alliance, Kanglim is also now an investor in Ridecell. The two companies will continue to collaborate on long-term innovations for the industry.
About Kanglim
Since its establishment in 1979, Kanglim is the market leading manufacturer of heavy-duty special purpose vehicles - telescopic cranes, knuckle cranes, electric work vehicles, fire fighting vehicles, road cleaning vehicles and wrecker trucks with about 50% market share in Korea, 30% in Russia and fast-growing in Southeast Asia. Kanglim is part of SBW Group which consists of 8 public companies operating in various global business sectors including textile, biotech, semiconductor equipment, electrical parts, entertainment, and software.
About Ridecell
Ridecell Inc. is leading the way in the digital transformation of fleet businesses and operations. The company's IoT-driven automation and mobility platform helps businesses modernize and monetize their fleets by combining data insights with digital vehicle control to turn today's manual processes into automated workflows. The result is unmatched levels of efficiency and control for shared services, motorpool, rental, and logistic fleets.
Today, Ridecell powers some of the most successful fleet businesses in cities across Europe and North America, including Gig Car Share from AAA and KINTO by Toyota Sweden. Ridecell is headquartered in San Francisco, with offices in Madrid, Paris, Berlin, and India.
Media Contact:Jane GideonTel: 415-682-9292Email: [emailprotected]
SOURCE Ridecell Inc.
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The Trump Organization Desperately Tries to Distance Itself From Its Criminally Indicted CFO – Vanity Fair
Posted: at 1:40 pm
Donald Trump has a long history of suddenly pretending not to know people once its clear they could get him in serious trouble, despite indisputable evidence that he knows them quite well. Campaign adviser George Papadopoulos, who Trump openly praised to The Washington Post? After Papadopoulos was convicted of lying to the FBI about interactions with Russians, Trump told Fox News, I never even talked to the guy. I didnt know who he was.Matthew Whitaker, the guy the then president apparently wanted to do his bidding at the Justice Department (before Bill Barr came along)? Once it became clear that Trump seemingly wanted to use Whitaker to shut down Robert Mueller, Trump claimed, I dont know Matt Whitaker, even though theyd reportedly met more than a dozen times. Campaign manager Paul Manafort? After he was convicted and sentenced to prison, Trump said he didnt know Manafort well. Prince Andrew? I dont know him.Lt. Col. Alexander Vindman? Never even heard of [him]. Lev Parnas? I dont even know who this man is. Anyway, you get the idea.
So really, its not at all surprising that Trump appears to be putting some distance between himself and Allen Weisselberg, the Trump Organization CFO charged alongside the company this month, given the possibility of Weisselberg suddenly flipping and informing on Trump, or simply making the company look bad with a guilty conviction. Shortly after being terminated as director of Trumps Scottish golf club, Weisselberg has been removed from leadership roles at dozens of Trump Organization subsidiaries. Per The Washington Post:
The changes were made Thursday and Friday, a week after a grand jury in Manhattanindicted Weisselberg on 15felony counts, including grand larceny and tax fraud. Weisselberg was accused by New York prosecutors of helping run a 15-year scheme to evade income taxes by concealing executives salariesincluding more than $1.7million of his own incomefrom tax authorities. [The] subsidiaries included a holding company that owns many Trump businesses, a corporate entity that handles payroll for many Trump employees, and evena Trump project in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., that went bust more than a decade ago.
Previously, Weisselberg had shared the leadership of these companies with one of former president Donald Trumps adult sons or, in the case of the Mar-a-Lago Club in Palm Beach, Fla., with Trump himself. Now, records show, the Trump family members are left in charge. The removal of Weisselbergs name from these corporate filings could avoid questions from regulators, lenders, or vendors by leaving out the name of an indicted executive.
As former federal prosecutor Daniel Zelenko told The Wall Street Journal, its not generally realistic for a company to keep a CFO in place after a criminal indictment. How are insurers and lenders going to rely on what the CFO tells them? said Zelenko. It creates a lot of challenges for a company continuing to do business.
For now Weisselberg, who has been accused of evading $900,000 in taxes on more than $1.7 million of income, largely through fringe benefits that were never reported to the IRS, like cars, an apartment, and private school tuition, remains employed by the parent company, and a person familiar with the matter told The Washington Post, hes going to remain there. Weisselberg, who, like the Trump Organization, pleaded not guilty to all the charges, has also indicated that he will not cooperate with prosecutors against the ex-president.
On the other hand, hes facing more than a decade in prison if convicted. And as former federal prosecutorCynthia AlksnetoldMSNBC last week, The jury will hate [Weisselberg]. Hes not going to have a jury of people who go to MAGA rallies, hes going to have a cross section of people who live in Manhattan, who do pay Manhattan taxes, who dont get free Mercedes, who dont have somebody else paying for their childrens education and not have tax ramifications for that. So I think he will be a very hated defendant, Mr. Weisselberg, and Im sure his defense attorneys have told him so. Meanwhile, as former U.S. attorneyPreet Bhararaopined, I am optimistic hell be convicted. The law is fairly clear on what is income & what is taxable. Hes a sophisticated executive; mistake is implausible. The company booked much of it as income. And juries hate rich tax cheats. So its not out of the realm of possibility that Weisselberg is at least considering a scenario in which he cuts a deal, and that Trump will one day, in the not too distant future, claim of a man whos worked for his company for decades: Never heard of him.
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Biden takes big break from habit of avoiding Trump talk | TheHill – The Hill
Posted: at 1:40 pm
President BidenJoe BidenDemocrats reach deal on .5T price tag for infrastructure bill Texas family arrested for role in Capitol riot Key Senate Democrats undecided on Biden's ATF nominee MORE has made a habit of not talking too much about his predecessor, former President TrumpDonald TrumpTexas family arrested for role in Capitol riot Poll: McAuliffe holds 2-point lead over Youngkin in Virginia governor's race On The Money: Inflation spike puts Biden on defensive | Senate Democrats hit spending speed bumps | Larry Summers huddles with WH team MORE.
That changed big time on Tuesday, when Biden gave a spirited voting rights speech in Philadelphia. Biden didnt mention Trump by name but repeatedly criticized the man he unseated as president, slamming him for the big lie that the 2020 election was stolen.
We continue to see an example of human nature at its worst. Something darker and more sinister, Biden said in remarks from the Philadelphia speech directed toward Trump and his allies.
In America, if you lose, you accept the results. You follow the Constitution. You try again. You dont call facts fake and then try to bring down the American experiment because you are unhappy, he added in some of his more critical remarks toward Trump since he won office.
Thats not statesmanship, thats selfishness. Thats not democracy, thats a denial of the right to vote, he continued, calling the denial of free and fair elections un-American.
It was a rare attack on Trump from Biden, who seemingly has sought to turn the page on his predecessor.
Since taking office, Biden has made a habit of refraining from speaking about Trump, a strategy that some political observers say has been largely effective and on brand for Bidens messaging. But some Democrats say it may be necessary to bring Trump back into the fold as next years midterm elections draw closer.
As much as President Biden may prefer otherwise, theres no choice but to make Trump and the GOP the foil, said Democratic strategist Christy Setzer. Trump and his supporters including the vast majority of congressional Republicans are fighting to take down democracy for good.
There are heroes and there are villains in that story, and unless we create a narrative about it, voters wont know who is whom, she added. Advice for Biden and co.: Take the fight to them square-on. Dont mince words and dont think youll ever get credit for being bipartisan. Just do whats right.
Trump has been a powerful driver and fundraiser for Democrats who ran against him and his policies in both 2018 and 2020. When Biden ran for president, he repeatedly attacked Trump, saying the only reason he was running for the White House was to end the Trump presidency. He also centered his primary campaign on the argument that he was the Democrat best placed to defeat Trump, arguing it was too important a race to pass up and too important a contest for Democrats to nominate a riskier nominee.
But since taking office, Biden has largely sworn off the Trump talk, even generally avoiding the subject during the former presidents second impeachment trial earlier this year.
Last week, on the six-month anniversary of the insurrection on the Capitol, there was also no mention of Trump or even the former president.
Im tired of talking about Donald Trump, Biden said during a CNN town hall in February. For four years, all thats been in the news is Trump. For the next four years, I want to make sure the news is the American people.
The only time the president has talked about Trump is when he is asked about him point-blank by reporters during news conferences, including earlier this month when the former presidents top associate was indicted on tax fraud charges.
Some strategists say Bidens messaging on all things Trump has been pitch-perfect and that he should continue the same tack.
I dont know if he sees the value in giving oxygen to Donald Trump, said Democratic strategist Joel Payne. I know his election was about turning the page of the last four years, and giving additional light to Trump would be at loggerheads with that.
Another Democratic strategist, Jamal Simmons, said Biden should highlight how he has made government function again without mentioning the four tumultuous years of Trump.
Its a long way to 2022, but today Id expect Biden to talk about making government work for all Americans, with vaccines in arms, money in pockets and a growing economy, Simmons said.
Bidens approval rating has remained steady in recent months. A recent Gallup poll found 56 percent of Americans approve of his job performance, up 2 points from May. The approval ratings are largely reflective of his response to the COVID-19 pandemic and his handling of the economy.
Still, one of the lingering questions about the midterms is whether Democrats can hang on to independent and Republican voters, particularly in the suburbs. While Biden defeated Trump in the presidential race, Republicans gained seats in the House indicating ticket-splitting by some voters.
William Howell, a professor at the University of Chicago Harris School of Public Policy, said that Biden likely views talking about Trump as counterproductive to advancing his agenda.
I think hes trying as best he can to fix the publics attention on the work that lies ahead. There are huge challenges that the country faces, and weve got to find ways to productively meet them, Howell said. Stoking Democratic outrage while sticking it in the eye of Republicans, I dont think he sees that as a productive pathway forward.
Philippe Reines, the veteran political operative who served as Hillary ClintonHillary Diane Rodham ClintonYoungkin skipping Virginia gubernatorial debate over moderator's donation Jill Biden teaming with 'Sesame Street' to help military families discuss race with children McCarthy, GOP face a delicate dance on Jan. 6 committee MOREs longtime senior adviser, said no decisions need to be made yet because the race is still 16 months away.
So even if the president and his team decide to engage, it likely wont be evident until 2022, he said.
Ultimately, its not a binary choice. Theres a sweet spot somewhere in between, Reines said. The Biden campaign found it in 2020. They will find it again in 2022. And they will have something new they didnt last year: a record of significant and important accomplishments. Whats-his-names accomplishments were pathetic and criminal.
As a result, in 2018 he lost the House, Reines added, signaling his own optimism about 2022.
Morgan Chalfant contributed.
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Understanding and applying robotic process automation – ITProPortal
Posted: at 1:40 pm
Digital transformation is in full swing, driven by data and dramatically shaping how companies across industries work. Then again, you could have a mountain of clean, organized data, and as much as it could be a gold mine, it could be a bust if a company is unprepared for the work it takes to derive value from it.
Robotic process automation (RPA) is the use of technology to operate systems without the assistance of humans. Its foremost aim is to perform tasks that are repetitive and tedious, ones that dont advance a companys goals but still must take place because they underpin operations. RPA dont just mimic humans, it allows work to be performed with far greater speed and accuracy.
RPAs look nothing like larger-than-life robots from movies, in fact, theyre typically just computer applications. But because they can interact with computerized processes without constant supervision, theyre proving powerful in business. RPAs just need to be carefully designed and fed the right data to free their human co-workers of rote activities and enable them to focus on higher-level tasks that add greater value.
Like artificial intelligence (AI), there are two types of robotic process automation - specialized and general. Specialized RPA is designed to automate a particular task. This type of RPA, while highly customizable, works only on the process it was designed to take care of.
General RPA, on the other hand, can be used for a larger variety of processes and achieved via machine learning (ML). Further, it can be trained to understand and automate processes with unstructured, semi-structured and structured data. Companies that use general RPA software are often large enterprises that have the data flow to support automation.
However, with increased data in businesses of all sizes, and the competitive advantages it can provide, the possibilities are attracting a greater number and variety of companies.
The benefits of RPA are far-reaching. First off, when done right, itll automate tasks an employee would otherwise have to do, only faster, more accurately and with no training or ramp-up needed. This can add up to a lot of time and cost savings. At the same time, though, when it comes to money, you have to consider the cost of not automating; competitors that do will clearly be in a stronger position.
RPA mitigates human error to raise both the quantity and quality of work, too. Consider a high regulatory environment, like financial services, where mistakes can snowball into major issues. If youre an investment firm tracking different asset classes, youre facing a daily process that requires a lot of manual reconciliation. If a mistake is made, it might not be realized for weeks, and in the meantime, investment decisions would be based on flawed data.
Further, with settlements not causing issues - and processes moving in the right sequence, between the right people, at the right times - approvals come more quickly and checks and balances are in place to keep work running smooth.
Its pretty simple: costs are less and efficiency is high when everything is done right, the first time.
RPA can allow businesses to reallocate their employees, removing them from repetitive tasks and engaging them in projects that support true growth, both for the company and individual.
Work were human strengths such as emotional intelligence, reasoning and judgment are required typically bring greater value to the company, and, theyre also often more personally rewarding. This can raise job satisfaction and help retain employees. Further, the ability to reallocate employees can enable a business to apply their useful company knowledge to other value-adding areas, supplement talent gaps and more.
Of course, theres the attraction of being able to do ones job more efficiently, without manual processes that can make time drag. For instance, lets say youre at that same investment firm and there a rapidly growing hedge fund, requiring human resources (HR) to onboard a lot of people fast. Between provisioning accounts, providing access to the right tools, sending out emails and more, theres a lot of work involved. With a RPA bot, 20 new people could be processed at once, with the HR person monitoring progress through a window on the corner of their screen, which also notifies them if anything needs their attention.
Were talking about boiling a two-week process into days thats the time of time savings that can make an employee and company happy. And in a realm like investing, the ability to adapt and reallocate resources quickly can make all the difference.
I cant stress enough how important it is for organizations to create a prioritization framework and plan before plunging into RPA. Ive often seen executives say they need RPA, now, and so IT starts initiating various projects. Four months later, all they have is a thousand bots, costing many more thousands of dollars, and half of them dont work. This erodes executive confidence, budget and IT bandwidth.
That said, decide what project you want to do first, how to implement it and the ways youll measure results. Support it with a strong roadmap that keeps things moving ahead, incrementally. This will enable you to illustrate ROI and then build out your program further with the support and funding it deserves.
Rich Itri, SVP of Professional Services, ECI
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Trump’s Revenge on Brad Raffensperger in Georgia – The Atlantic
Posted: at 1:40 pm
To many Americans, Brad Raffensperger is one of the heroes of the 2020 election. Georgias secretary of state, who is a conservative Republican, refused then-President Donald Trumps direct pleas to find the votes that would overturn his defeat in the state. Ive shown that Im willing to stand in the gap, Raffensperger told me last week, and Ill make sure that we have honest elections.
As he bids for a second term as Georgias top election administrator, however, Raffensperger is not so much standing in the gap as he is falling through it. A Trump loyalist in Congress, Representative Jody Hice, is challenging him in a primary with the former presidents enthusiastic endorsement, and the state Republican Party voted last month to censure him over his handling of the election. GOP strategists in the state give Raffensperger no chance of prevailing in next Mays primary.
I would literally bet my house on it. Hes not going to win it, Jay Williams, a Republican consultant in Georgia unaffiliated with either candidate, told me. Another operative, speaking anonymously to avoid conflicts in the race, offered a similar assessment: His goose was cooked the day Georgias presidential-election margin was 12,000 votes and Trump turned on him.
Besides the one at Foggy Bottom, secretaries of state are not supposed to be famous. The job at the state level isnt high-stakes diplomacy but mostly mundane administration. Before Raffensperger, the last secretary of state to find the national spotlight was Katherine Harris, whose handling (or mishandling, depending on ones perspective) of the disputed 2000 election in Florida earned her a few punch lines on Saturday Night Live and two unremarkable terms in Congress.
Yet after Trumps postelection attempt to cling to power last yearand his ongoing and rancorous claims that the election was stolenthe office has taken on added importance. Secretaries of state will be and are the defenders of democracy, Jena Griswold, Colorados secretary of state, told me. Griswold is the chair of the Democratic Association of Secretaries of State, a national campaign organization that is significantly expanding its operations this year as the party gears up for a handful of crucial elections in 2022. The secretaries elected next year will oversee elections in 2024, and Democrats are prioritizing races in presidential battlegrounds such as Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, and Arizona, where the incumbent, Democrat Katie Hobbs, is forgoing a reelection bid to run for governor instead. The associations budget in 2020 was about $2 million; next year, its hoping to spend as much as $10 milliona sign of how urgent Democrats believe these races are.
With its higher profile, the secretary-of-state post has become more attractive to ambitious politicians in both parties. The declared candidates in Arizona include a Republican state legislator who was photographed near the Capitol after rioters breached police lines on January 6. Two other GOP contenders have introduced bills to restrict voting options and to make it easier for the state legislature to overturn presidential-election results.
In Georgia, Hice is making the unusual decision to give up a safe seat in the House that hes held for four terms to challenge Raffenspergertaking the opposite path that Harris did nearly two decades ago. A former Baptist pastor and talk-radio host, Hice joined the House Freedom Caucus in Congress but hasnt drawn much of a following beyond his district, east of Atlanta. He told me he had given no thought to running for secretary of state before last fall. This has never, ever, ever been on my radar, he said. It just came about due to the horrendous debacle of our election.
Hice denied that Trump asked him to run, but he has acknowledged that he called the former president before he declared his candidacy, and on the morning he launched his campaign, Trump issued a gushing statement offering his complete and total endorsement. Hice faults Raffensperger for his decision to send every registered Georgia voter an application for an absentee ballot before the primary last yeara decision Democrats viewed as a no-brainer during the pandemic.
Hice, who voted with a majority of House Republicans to object to the certification of presidential-election results in Arizona and Pennsylvania, boasted to me that he had been the tip of the spear in raising alarms about Georgias 2020 election and opposing Democratic efforts to expand voter access. I asked whether he believed that Trump had won the state last year. I certainly have my opinions about that, he replied. Pressed as to what those opinions were, he said, We need to investigate and find out. I do not believe we had fair elections in Georgia. One of Hices supporters, Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia, was more direct in saying that Trump had won. I believe he did, she told me. Ive lived in Georgia my entire life. I know my state, and it has not turned blue.
Read: Liz Cheneys unforgivable sin
Perhaps the most important question in the primary is how Hice would respond if he were secretary of state in 2024, and Trump, running to reclaim the White House, tried to pressure him to overturn another Democratic win in Georgia. Would he stand firm as Raffensperger did? I do not think Jody Hice is anybodys puppet, Representative Austin Scott, another Georgia Republican who has endorsed Hice, told me. The GOP operative I spoke with wasnt so sure, however. Theres no evidence to suggest that hed be his own man, the strategist said. Theres no evidence to suggest that hed think for himself. When I put the question to Hice, he didnt answer directly. Trump wouldn't need to call me, he said. I will abide by the law and abide by the Constitution, and when there are issues of potential fraud, and mismanagement in elections, we will investigate. That's the job of the secretary of state, which Raffensperger did not do.
If hes elected, Hice may find theres not much he can legally do after ballots are cast. Much of the offices power comes before an election, in overseeing the vote. Afterward, the secretary is merely responsible for certifying ballots counted in local jurisdictions and overseeing recounts if needed. Moreover, as part of Georgias contentious new election law, Republicans in the state legislature have already stripped the secretary of state of some of the offices remaining powers by replacing him as chair of the state election board with a leader appointed by lawmakers.
Democrats, fresh off their victories in the presidential race and Georgias two Senate runoffs in January, are hoping to win the secretary of states office for themselves and foreclose postelection shenanigans. Bee Nguyen, a state legislator who holds the Atlanta seat once occupied by Stacey Abrams, declared her candidacy in May and is seen as a formidable contender. The daughter of Vietnamese refugees, Nguyen would be the first Asian American elected to statewide political office in Georgia; she took the lead in knocking down Trumps false charges about the election late last year. Abrams, who is likely to make a second run for governor, and the newly elected Senator Raphael Warnock could both be on the ballot, helping to juice Democratic turnout.
Hice undoubtedly offers Democrats a richer target than Raffensperger, and his vulnerability in a general election goes beyond the perception that he would do Trumps bidding. The congressman wrote a 2012 book that contains long, derogatory passages about gays and Muslims; he compares the push for same-sex marriage to incest and bestiality and asserts that Islam does not deserve First Amendment protection. In 2014, he told a local newspaper that he didnt have a problem with women running for office as long as the womans within the authority of her husband. More recently, he was one of 21 House Republicans who voted against awarding congressional gold medals to the Capitol Police who protected lawmakers during the attack on January 6.
Raffensperger is trying to get back in his partys good graces by defending the new law that Republican legislators passed in response to an election that he insists was fair and honest. The law bars the secretary of state from sending out mass applications for absentee ballots in the way that he did last year, and even Raffensperger says the provisions stripping power from his office are retribution for how he handled the election fallout. Still, he says he supports the law overall, particularly its requirement of photo IDs for mailed ballots. When theres a bill thats 100 pages, therell be some items that you dont support, Raffensperger told me. Hes criticized the Biden administration for challenging the law in court, joining other Republicans in accusing Abrams and her allies of spreading misinformation and lies.
Im the most conservative secretary of state thats ever been elected in Georgia, he told me, as if to remind the voters who elected him in 2018 of why they did. Raffensperger endorsed Trump early in his bid for the presidency; while serving in the state legislature, Raffensperger was a right-wing irritant of the establishment party leaders.
For the moment, though, none of that matters, and he cuts a lonely figure in Georgia. Targeted by Trump and abandoned by the state party, Raffensperger has no prominent Republicans publicly in his corner, nor even much of a campaign apparatus. When I emailed the address listed on his campaign website to ask for an interview, my inquiry did not go to a volunteer or a spokesperson but to Raffensperger himself, who answered directly. The most revealing part of our half-hour conversation came at the end, when I asked him who else could speak on his behalfsurrogates, allies, etc. Raffensperger paused for a few seconds and then chuckled nervously. His supporters, he explained, are very private people who probably wouldnt want to talk publicly. He produced no names.
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Business Owners Save 38.4 Million Hours Per Year with ActiveCampaign Automation – Markets Insider
Posted: at 1:40 pm
CHICAGO, July 14, 2021 /PRNewswire/ --Following its Series C round, ActiveCampaign, the leader in Customer Experience Automation (CXA), revealed that its customers have saved 38.4 million hours over the last 12 months using its automations. The average business saved 20 hours per month when leveraging its automation tools, translating to more time spent on building 1:1 relationships with their customers, and ultimately powering their growth, which proves the power of ActiveCampaign CXA.
To ensure businesses of all sizes are successful with automations, ActiveCampaign continued to invest in its education, support and content in Q2 2021. The support organization's headcount will increase by 60% in 2021 to offer even more real-time support to customers. This investment also included an expanded automation library, now boasting more than 600 recipes that allow customers to easily implement automation without needing advanced technical skills. The newest 50 recipes are some of the most popular recipes among consumers localized in Portuguese, French, Italian, German, and Spanish. These recipes include Welcome Series, Abandoned Cart, Pre-Webinar Drip and Post Webinar Follow-Up and Contact Last Engaged Date all critical in creating ideal customer experiences. By localizing the recipe languages, ActiveCampaign is fulfilling its ongoing commitment to customer success around the world.
Offering further support, ActiveCampaign built out its customer experience across several languages, including English, Portuguese, French, Italian, German and Spanish. Now, nearly all of ActiveCampaign's users can seamlessly integrate new services into their campaigns and better connect with customers in their local language. ActiveCampaign also launched a new YouTube series "Growth Decoded" to help businesses of all types grow as well as an additional new series, Education Live! where ActiveCampaign's seasoned trainers present on a variety of topics, answer questions live and even award swag to some lucky attendees.
ActiveCampaign met a range of other milestones in Q2. Highlights include:
ActiveCampaign also received a range of industry recognition throughout the quarter, including:
Supporting quotes"I'm excited to see the time savings we have created with our industry-celebrated automation platform as our customers work to improve customer experience," said Jason VandeBoom, founder and CEO of ActiveCampaign. "Every minute saved with ActiveCampaign creates an opportunity for a business to develop more products and reach out to more customers, allowing them to achieve their goals faster. We plan to continue to develop the platform, automations, content and educational materials to ensure our customers are as successful as possible without sacrificing valuable time."
"ActiveCampaign allows us to do more sophisticated automations, enabling me to provide a student experience that feels very rich and attentive, guiding students along through the course," said Leah Neaderthal, founder of Smart Gets Paid. "Using ActiveCampaign for our automations frees me up to focus on providing content and messaging that matters to my clients. I spend up to 50% less time on admin tasks."
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About ActiveCampaign
ActiveCampaign's category-defining Customer Experience Automation Platform (CXA) helps over 150,000 businesses in 170 countries meaningfully engage with their customers. The platform gives businesses of all sizes access to 600+ pre-built automations that combine email marketing, marketing automation and CRM for powerful segmentation and personalization across social, email, messaging, chat and text. Over 70% of ActiveCampaign's customers use its 870+ integrations including Microsoft, Shopify, Square, Facebook, and Salesforce. ActiveCampaign scores higher in customer satisfaction than any other solution in Marketing Automation, CRM, and E-Commerce Personalization on G2.com and is the Top Rated Marketing Automation Software on TrustRadius. Pricing starts at just $9/month. Start a free trial at ActiveCampaign.com.
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Business Owners Save 38.4 Million Hours Per Year with ActiveCampaign Automation - Markets Insider
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