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The Dictatorship

Friends, family remember students slain in Brown shooting

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Friends, family remember students slain in Brown shooting

An aspiring neurosurgeon and a college sophomore remembered as a “bright light” by her church community died Saturday when a gunman entered a building on Brown University campus in Providence, Rhode Island, and began shooting.

Nine of their classmates were injured in the shooting, some critically.

As the manhunt for the gunman stretched into its third day, friends, family and members of their communities mourned Ella Cook and MukhammadAziz Umurzokov.

Ella Cook, 19, grew up in Mountain Brook, Alabama, just east of Birmingham.

She was a parishioner at Cathedral Church of the Advent in Birmingham. In a service at the church Sunday morning, the Rev. Craig Smalley honored Cook as an “incredible, grounded, faithful, bright light” to all who knew her, “not only here growing up at the Advent and the myriad ways in which she served faithfully, in the ways in which she encouraged and lifted up those around her, but at Brown University, she was an incredible light in that particular place, as well.”

At Brown, Cook was vice president of the College Republicans, according to a statement released by the campus organization’s president, Martin Bertao.

“Ella was known for her bold, brave, and kind heart as she served her fellow classmates. Our prayers are with her family, our Brown’s CR’s, and the entirety of the campus as they heal from this tragedy,” Bertao posted on X.

Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey said Monday that she directed flags to be flown at half-staff until sunset Friday in honor of Cook.

In a post on X, Alabama Lt. Gov. Will Ainsworth said Cook “was a devoted Christian and a committed conservative who represented the very best of Alabama. A bright future was ended much too soon. Join me in lifting up her family in prayers of comfort.”

Vice President JD Vance referred to Cook as “one of its bright young stars” in a post on X.

Sens. Katie Britt and Tommy Tuberville of Alabama also expressed condolences for Cook’s family.

“There are no words that can ease the pain Ella’s family and friends are enduring right now. Her beautiful life was taken far too soon,” Britt wrote in a statement.

Tuberville said he is “heartbroken” after learning about Cook’s death, adding, “Our hearts and our prayers are with the Cook family and everyone impacted by this senseless killing.”

MukhammadAziz Umurzokov, 18, an Uzbek national, was in his freshman year studying biochemistry and molecular biology at Brown. His sister, Samira Umurzokova, described him as “incredibly kind, funny, and smart” on the GoFundMe page she created to raise funds “for any expenses my family will have to face,” with the rest donated to charities. Donations had reached $337,000 as of early evening Monday.

“He had big dreams of becoming a neurosurgeon and helping people. He continues to be my family’s biggest role model in all aspects,” Umurzokova said. “He always lent a helping hand to anyone in need without hesitation, and was the most kind-hearted person our family knew.”

Jack Diprimio, a graduate student at Brown, told MS NOW that he met Umurzakov at a legal philosophy event earlier this year and would often help him navigate life as an undergraduate. Diprimio said his friend should be remembered as a passionate, intellectually gifted and curious individual,” adding, “He was at ease talking to new people, and he was very kind. He looked forward to hanging out with his friends after finals.”

Diprimio reflected on the last conversation he remembers having with Umurzakov, which he said involved a discussion about upcoming movies and the Oscar season.

“He was passionate about science and politics. He was eager to change the world in some way. The world lost a treasure,” Diprimio said.

The U.S. ambassador to Uzbekistan, Jonathan Henick, said in a statement on the embassy website that he is “deeply saddened” by the loss of Umurzokov. “We extend our sincere condolences to Mr. Umurzokov’s family, friends, and fellow students and mourn the loss of his bright future.”

Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin and Gov.-elect Abigail Spanberger offered prayers for the shooting victims and their families in statements posted on X on Monday.

“We are praying for the victims of the horrendous act of evil at Brown University: Ella Cook from Birmingham, Alabama, and Midlothian High School’s own Mukhammad Aziz Umurzokov,” Youngkin wrote.

“I am heartbroken to learn that Mukhammad Aziz Umurzokov — who just graduated from Midlothian High School — is among the victims of the horrific act of violence at Brown University. Adam and I are praying for his family and all those impacted by this tragedy,” Spanberger posted.

Also on XVice President Vance highlighted Umurzakov as “a brilliant young man who dreamed of being a surgeon. May God rest the soul of MuhammadAziz Umurzakov.”

Flowers laid by mourners at Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island.
Flowers laid by mourners at Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island. Ale Basalo / MS NOW

Ebony Davis is a breaking news reporter for MS NOW.

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The Dictatorship

Democrats’ ACA discharge petition picks up unexpected Republican support

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Democrats’ ACA discharge petition picks up unexpected Republican support

On Dec. 1, with time running out before tens of millions of Americans faced dramatic spikes in their health care coverage, House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries played the only card he had left: The New York Democrat launched a discharge petition on a bill to keep existing Affordable Care Act subsidies in place for three years.

“We only need a handful of Republicans to join us in order to save the healthcare of tens of millions of Americans,” Jeffries said in a letter to his members. “It’s time for the do-nothing Republican Congress to proceed with urgency.”

Realistically, it seemed unlikely that any GOP members would sign onto the Democratic discharge petition — right up until some surprising developments on Capitol Hill on Wednesday morning. NBC News reported:

Rebelling against their leaders, four House Republicans on Wednesday signed onto a ‘discharge petition,’ giving Democrats the 218 signatures needed to force a vote on a three-year extension of the Obamacare subsidies that are set to expire for millions of Americans on Dec. 31.

If the enhanced premium tax credits expire, as is expected, insurance costs are projected to double, on average, for about 22 million Americans who get their coverage through Obamacare.

How we arrived at this point is a little complicated, so bear with me.

Late last week, House GOP leaders unveiled what they described as a health care “plan” intended to address rising costs. The blueprint, however, was more of a hodgepodge of loosely connected conservative ideas than a serious, cohesive policy proposal.

At the time, a handful of Republican members from competitive districts, likely fearful about their electoral futures, pleaded with their party leaders to allow a vote on extending the existing tax credits that make ACA coverage affordable.

On Tuesday afternoon, House GOP leaders closed the door and ruled out the possibility of a vote on protecting the subsidies.

At that point, the Republican members from competitive districts faced a choice: They could meekly go along with their party’s regressive decision and accept that GOP leaders had ignored their wishes, or they could use their positions to actually do something.

On Wednesday morning, four chose the latter.

It started with Rep. Brian Fitzpatrick of Pennsylvania, who signed onto Jeffries’ effort, joining House Democrats and becoming the 215th signature on the discharge petition. He was then joined by Rep. Michael Lawler of New York. As the morning continued, two more Pennsylvania Republicans, Rob Bresnahan and Ryan Mackenzie, also added their signatures, bringing the total to 218which is the threshold needed to force a vote.

This, in turn, started the clock on a floor vote that House GOP leaders are powerless to stop. That said, the legislative procedures involved with a discharge petition can take a while, and the vote will probably be delayed until January — after key deadlines for health care consumers have come and gone.

As for House Speaker Mike Johnson, that four of his members signed onto the Democratic discharge petition is the latest in a series of embarrassments for the Louisiana Republican, following two other recent instances in which a majority of House members went around him to advance legislation he tried to keep off the floor.

“I have not lost control of the House,” Johnson told reporters on Blue Light News on Wednesday.

The funny thing about that is, House speakers in positions of strength don’t usually have to say, “I have not lost control of the House.” It’s assumed. No one ever heard Nancy Pelosi utter such a line because the idea that her leadership had deteriorated to such a degree was too preposterous to imagine.

And yet.

As for the road ahead, the House is likely to vote soon on the GOP’s pseudo plan, which is likely to be ignored in the Senate, if it can even make it out of the House. The Democratic plan for a three-year extension of the status quo, meanwhile, now has majority support in the House and Senateand polls suggest a majority of the public supports it, too.

Republicans appear determined to let costs spike anyway. Watch this space.

Steve Benen is a producer for “The Rachel Maddow Show,” the editor of MaddowBlog and an MS NOW political contributor. He’s also the bestselling author of “Ministry of Truth: Democracy, Reality, and the Republicans’ War on the Recent Past.”

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The Dictatorship

FBI’s No. 2 quietly tells colleagues he’s moving on

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FBI’s No. 2 quietly tells colleagues he’s moving on

Speculation and anticipation have gripped the nation’s premier law enforcement agency over the future of one of its top leaders, FBI Deputy Director Dan Bongino.

Bongino has quietly told confidants he plans to formally leave his job early in the new year and will not be returning to headquarters to work this month, according to eight people briefed on his account.

Bongino told his team and some senior FBI officials that he tentatively planned to announce his departure on Dec. 19, according to four people. Several people said some of Bongino’s personal effects have been cleared out of his office as of last week.

Bongino, a Trump ally and former Secret Service agent who built an enormous following as a conservative, pro-Trump radio and podcast host, was an unusual choice when President Donald Trump installed him in the post in February. He was the first deputy director in modern history who had no experience as an FBI agent. The deputy serves as the day-to-day operations chief of the agency.

Bongino has stayed mostly mum as media reportsteased a departure that could come “as soon as this week” or possibly “in the near future.”

When reached by MS NOW, Bongino declined to confirm or deny the reports of his plans, adding, “Print whatever you’d like. No one believes you anyway. Thanks.”

The FBI had no comment.

With word of an impending departure has come speculation that Bongino is returning to podcasting, which reportedlymade him worth $160 million.

In August, after Bongino privately sparredwith Attorney General Pam Bondi, Trump took the unprecedented step of naming a co-deputy directorto help share Bongino’s work, Missouri Attorney General Andrew Bailey. MS NOW reported last month that Trump and his White House aides have been weighing whether to remove FBI Director Kash Pateland replace him with Bailey in the new year.

Bongino expressed deep satisfaction earlier this month after the FBI arrested a suspect in the Jan. 6 pipe bombing case. He said he pressed the bureau to solve the case and got regular updates from the lead investigator. But the suspect’s identity refuted conspiracy theories he advanced on his podcast — and never publicly renounced once he got the job — asserting that the FBI had been covering up what it knew and that the planting of the bombs may have been an “inside job.”

Explaining his new thinking, Bongino said in an interviewwith Fox News Channel’s Sean Hannity that as a podcaster, he was paid to give his opinions, but now at the FBI, “I’m paid to be your deputy director, and we base investigations on facts.”

Bongino faced tremendous backlashfrom pro-Trump MAGA supporters related to the Jeffrey Epstein case, when he and fellow Justice Department leaders backtracked from earlier claims that the Epstein files contained a secret “client list” of prominent people that Epstein had kept as the fodder for potential blackmail.

Before he joined the bureau, Bongino promoted MAGA conspiracy theories about the Epstein matter, suggesting there were things being hidden.

“Listen, that Jeffrey Epstein story is a big deal, please do not let that story go. Keep your eye on this,” Bongino told his listeners in 2023. Bongino also suggested he had strong doubts about official government reports that Epstein had committed suicide in his jail cell.

Once inside the bureau, however, Bongino said in a television interview that he had concluded there was no evidence Epstein was murdered. The Justice Department and FBI issued a joint memo in July saying the Epstein files contained no client list, and the furor it unleashed from the MAGA movement led to an angry confrontation between Bongino and Attorney General Bondi in July.

Dec. 19 is the deadline by which the Justice Department is required to release investigative material related to Epstein, including unclassified records, documents and other communications, but can withhold those that would jeopardize other investigations or violate victims’ privacy, under the Epstein Files Transparency Act that Trump signed into law in November.

Bongino has drawn disdain and ridicule from a wide swath of FBI agents. The bureau personnel generally lean conservative in their political viewpoints but also includes some progressives. But they tend to agree that Bongino is out of his depth as a leader of the bureau, multiple sources told MS NOW.

“Agents are counting down the days,” one law enforcement source said of agents looking forward to Bongino’s departure.

Carol Leonnig is a senior investigative reporter with MS NOW.

Ken Dilanian is the justice and intelligence correspondent for MS NOW.

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The Dictatorship

The cost of Trump’s White House ballroom has doubled over the last five months

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The cost of Trump’s White House ballroom has doubled over the last five months

In late July, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt enthusiastically delivered the announcement “that the construction of the new White House ballroom will begin,” she told reportersand that Donald Trump and other donors “have generously committed to donating the funds necessary to build this approximately $200 million structure.”

By October, the price tag had grown to $250 million. Soon after, it was $300 million. As of Tuesday night, it’s $400 million.

In other words, the cost has doubled over the course of five months. The president acknowledged the new figure at a White House event where he boasted“I build under budget,” seemingly indifferent to the irony.

The revised total comes on the heels of the Republican bringing in a new architect as his ambitions grew. (The New York Times reported a few weeks ago, “What started as a 500-seat ballroom connected to the East Wing grew to 650 seats. Next, [the president] wanted a 999-seat ballroom, then room for 1,350.” This week, Trump said he wants the ballroom to be large enough to host an inauguration.)

It also comes after Trump said he and his team had raised $350 million for the wildly unnecessary vanity project and suggesting he’ll have to return to donors for at least $50 million in additional cash.

This is of particular interest, not only because the White House has been reluctant to reveal the identities of some of the donors, but also because congressional Democrats, including Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts, have opened an inquiry into whether any corporations have reached a quid pro quo arrangement with the administration with their financial support for the project.

As for the state of the endeavor, the National Trust for Historic Preservation filed a federal lawsuit in the hopes of blocking construction. The White House has pushed back, arguing, among other things, that delays might adversely affect national security.

For now, a federal judge is allowing the project to move forward. Watch this space.

This post updates our related earlier coverage.

Steve Benen is a producer for “The Rachel Maddow Show,” the editor of MaddowBlog and an MS NOW political contributor. He’s also the bestselling author of “Ministry of Truth: Democracy, Reality, and the Republicans’ War on the Recent Past.”

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