Wednesday, May 6, 2026
Home Blog Page 859

COVID-19: FEC Approves N8.49bn For Procurement Of Test Kits

0

The Federal Executive Council (FEC) has approved N8.49 billion for the procurement of COVID-19 test kits.

Osagie Ehanire, Minister of Health, said this after the meeting presided over by President Muhammadu Buhari on Wednesday.

He said he presented a memo to the council on behalf of the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control (NCDC). He said the diagnostic materials to be procured will help the country respond properly to community transmission.

“The Minister of Health presented a memo on behalf of the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control to procure materials for preparation for the COVID-19 pandemic, which is ravaging every part of the world including our country,” he said.

“This is part of the preparedness for community transmission which is going on now and has affected over 586 Local Government Areas and we need the materials so as to be able to expand our testing and diagnostic capabilities.

“This memo is as a result of the Presidential task Force (PTF) on COVID-19 and the Special Intervention Funds managed by the PTF, which allocated these resources for the NCDC preparedness.

“We are procuring these materials to be able to respond properly to community transmission phase.

“This is to ensure that persons in rural areas are not excluded and to ensure that not only the big cities or towns are attended to.”

Senator Tolu Odebiyi Hails the youths on International Youth Day

0

The Senator representing Ogun West Senatorial District at the National Assembly, Sen. Tolu Odebiyi congratulates the Youths in his Senatorial District and Nigeria in general, as the World celebrates International Youth Day 2020, with the theme “Youth Engagement  For Global Action”.

In a goodwill message released from the Senator’s Office, Sen. Tolu Odebiyi said, “Today, August 12th 2020, the World is coming together to celebrate our young people for their commitment to making the world a better place to live in”.

“Our Youth population is rising and because of their versatility and creativity, investing in technology and fibre optics won’t be a bad idea to further open up our economy for our young people to tap into. Our Youths are a force to be reckoned with, hence the need to create good opportunities for them to strive and be the best they can be”

He further notes that all hands must be on deck to ensure that we create an atmosphere needed for a safe and protected environment as well as the attitude needed in a wider society, for fairness, equality and the progress of our country Nigeria.

[Ondo 2020 LGA Election]: HRH Oba V.O Adetona, the Owa of Ogbagi Akoko shower Royal blessings on APC candidate, Elder Ayodele Akande

0

 

The Owa of Ogbagi Akoko, His Royal Highness, Oba Adetona has showered royal blessings and prayers on the chairmanship candidate of the All Progressives Congress, APC, in the coming Local Government election in Akoko North West, Ondo state.

Elder Ayodele received the blessings during a courtesy call at the palace of Oba  Adetona on Wednesday, August 12.

Oba Adetona who appreciated the LGA caretaker chairman, Elder Ayodele for his unalloyed support to the Local government, also prayed that he would not be disappointed on his mindset.

According to him, “You did not disappoint our people with this little opportunity and you will not be disappointed. You helped our communities, you are people’s lover. I and Akoko North West in general acknowledge and appreciate you. I pray you will not be disappointed on your mindset.”

Earlier in his opening speech, Elder Ayodele Akande urged residents of the Local Government Area to vote for the party, APC at the polls, adding that they should not allow unfit people to get into the realm of power.

[Ondo LGA 2020 Election]: Elder Ayodele visits Regent of Afin Akoko, Others

0

Ahead of the coming Local government election in Ondo State, the candidate of APC and the caretaker chairman of Akoko North West Local Government Area, Elder Ayodele Akande today paid an unscheduled visits to regent of Afin Akoko, Akoko North-West Princess Funmilayo Oloruntogbe, Ese Akoko HRH Oba D.O Adewunmi, Elese of Ese Akoko. HRH Oba D.O Adewunmi, APC chieftain Chief Olisa Ajakaye in Odo Irun.

The chairman, Elder Ayodele led his campaign team to the regent to receive royal blessings for his coming election.

The regent, while blessing Elder Ayodele prayed for success of his quest.

Speaking on his visitation, Elder Ayodele said his past experience in governing the Local government speaks volume of him and he is ready to take the Local Government to it promised land.

“I know where we started. I know where we are. I am not a candidate who needs any tutorial to lead this Local Government again, my success in this our present tenure speaks volume of me, I am the most suitable person to continue from where we are, and I am ready to take it to where it supposed to be ” the APC candidate said.

Addressing the crowd after leaving, Elder Ayodele said their coming was for two reasons – to seek royal blessings and seek the votes of Akoko people.

UK officially enters recession for first time in 11 years

0

Britain’s economy contracted by a record 20.4 percent in the second quarter with the country in lockdown over the coronavirus pandemic, official data showed Wednesday.

“It is clear that the UK is in the largest recession on record,” the Office for National Statistics said.

Britain officially entered recession in the second quarter after gross domestic product (GDP) contracted by 2.2 percent in the first three months of the year.

The technical definition of a recession is two quarterly contractions in a row.

The ONS said that the contraction for the first six months of 2020 “was slightly below the 22.7 percent seen in Spain but was more than double the 10.6 percent fall in United States”.

It added that Britain’s dire second quarter was driven by a 20-percent drop in output in April, “the biggest monthly fall on record reflecting widespread… declines in output across the services, production, and construction industries”.

– Rebound begins –

The economy is beginning to rebound, however, as the government eases its lockdown restrictions.

GDP output growth was 8.7 percent in June, the ONS said.

“The economy began to bounce back in June, with shops reopening, factories beginning to ramp up production and house-building continuing to recover,” noted Jonathan Athow, deputy national statistician as the statistics office.

“Despite this, GDP in June still remains a sixth below its level in February, before the virus struck.

“Overall, productivity saw its largest-ever fall in the second quarter. Hospitality was worst hit, with productivity in that industry falling by three-quarters in recent months,” he added.

Britain’s recession is its first since the 2008 global financial crisis.

The grim economic news comes despite unprecedented government interventions, including spending tens of billions of pounds on job support schemes in a bid to avoid mass layoffs.

The Bank of England (BoE) is meanwhile pumping out hundreds of billions of pounds in cash stimulus and has slashed its main interest rate to a record-low 0.1 percent.

ONS data released Monday showed that around 730,000 workers have been removed from the payrolls of British companies since March.

Announcements of job cuts have become a daily occurrence, with companies expected to pick up the pace of layoffs as the government’s key employment support scheme ends in October.

The BoE expects the unemployment rate to shoot higher to around 7.5 percent by the end of the year from 3.9 percent currently.

The central bank forecasts also that the UK economy will have contracted by 9.5 percent for the whole of 2020.

It estimates that UK gross domestic product will rebound in 2021 by nine percent.

(AFP)

‘I Shall Continue To Offer My Shoulders For You To Climb,’ Atiku Tells Nigerian Youths

0

Former Vice President Atiku Abubakar has assured Nigerian youths of his commitment to supporting them at all times. 

Atiku gave the assurance on Wednesday in a message to mark the 21st anniversary of the International Youth Day (IYD).

“I shall stay the course and continue to offer my shoulders for you all to climb because as youths, you are Leaders of Today,” he said.

former presidential candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) hailed Nigerian youths for their doggedness and drive towards a better nation, saying this year’s theme, “Youth Engagement for Global Action,” captures how important young people are in the scheme of things.

“I salute the Nigerian youth in particular for their commitment and perseverance towards the attainment of a greater Nigeria,” Atiku added.

“This global picture, which has been on my mind, informed my decision of 40% youth inclusion in my 2019 presidential campaign; a promise I am committed to keeping for the futuristic benefit of our great Nation.”

He explained that with the Covid-19 pandemic ravaging the world, youths have a huge responsibility in fighting the disease as the future of humanity rests on their shoulders.

“Indeed, the survival of humanity rests largely on the shoulders of the youths, as vigour is required to wear out this plague,” the former vice president explained.

“The vigour and spirit that you embody as youth will play a crucial role in the socio-economic survival of the world, and its rejuvenation, post-COVID19.”

As a future leaders, Atiku called on young people to preach and embrace peace, show patriotism, shun nepotism and promote competence.

“Only then can we truly have the Nigeria of our dream,” he said.

According to the United Nations (UN), the 2020 International Youth Day theme is to buttress the “ways in which the engagement of young people at the local, national and global levels is enriching national and multilateral institutions and processes, as well as draw lessons on how their representation and engagement in formal institutional politics can be significantly enhanced.”

Pantami unveil 11 completed projects to drive digital economy

0

Nigeria’s Minister of Communications and Digital Economy, Dr. Isa Pantami, has commissioned eleven projects, which is the phase two of completed projects for the Digital Economy sector.

The projects, which are located across the country was commissioned virtually on Tuesday, 11th August, 2020, in a bid to diversify Nigeria’s economy, ensure security and fight corruption through Information Communications Technology (ICT) and Telecommunications solutions.

It will be recalled that the Minister, Dr. Pantami on Thursday, July 23, 2020 commissioned six completed projects across the country to drive a digital Nigeria.

The projects commissioned were carried out by the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC), National Information Technology Development Agency, (NITDA) Nigerian Postal Services (NIPOST ) and The Universal Service Provision Fund (USPF) under the supervision of the Ministry of Communications and Digital Economic.

These projects include :

– Tertiary Institution Knowledge Centre (TIKC), Delta State.
– New Neighborhood Post Office, Delta State.
– Remodelled National Mail Exchange Centre, Bayelsa State.
– e-Health/Data Sharing Centre, Bauchi State.
– Virtual Examination Centre, Borno State.
– Information Technology Innovation Centre, Kogi State.
– Information Technology Capacity Building Centre, Jigawa State.
– Information Technology Capacity Building Centre, Imo State.
– Emergency Communications Centre (ECC) llorin, Kwara State.
– Emergency Communications Centre (ECC) Calabar, Cross River State.
– School Knowledge Centre (SKC), Gombe State.

Source: Voice of Nigeria

BREAKING: [Ondo] Sanwo-Olu heads 104-man APC campaign team for Akeredolu [Full list]

0

Chairman, Caretaker Committee of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Governor Mai Mala Buni, has approved the appointment of Lagos State Governor, Babajide Sanwo-Olu, to chair the Campaign Council for the Ondo State governorship election.

The announcement was made Tuesday night by APC spokesman, Yekini Nabena.

Plateau State Governor, Simon Lalong, will serve as Deputy Chairman.

Also, Mustapha Salihu is Secretary of the 104-member council.

The campaign council will be inaugurated on Saturday, August 15, 2020 at the APC national secretariat at 2pm.

Full list below:

1. Governor Babajide Sanwoolu – Chairman

2. H.E Simon Lalong – Deputy Chairman

3. Rt. (Hon.) Femi Gbajabiamila – Member

4. Senator Ovie Omo-Agege – Member

5. Governor Gbenga Isiaka Oyetola – Member

6. Governor Dapo Abiodun – Member

7. Governor Kayode Fayemi – Member

8. Governor Abubakar Badaru – Member

9. Governor Mallam Nasir El-rufai – Member

10. Governor, Babagana Zulum – Member

11. Senator George Akume – Member

12. Senator Aliyu Wammako – Member

13. H.E Abdulazeez Yari – Member

14. H.E Muhammed Bindow Jibrilla – Member

15. Rt. (Hon.) Yakubu Dogara – Member

16. H.E M. A Abubakar – Member

17. H.E Rotimi Amaechi – Member

18. Senator Ibikunle Amosun – Member

19. Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola – Member

20. Babatunde Raji Fashola – Member

21. H.E Otunba Niyi Adebayo – Member

22. Chief Timipre Sylva – Member

23. H.E Rochas Okorocha – Member

24. Senator Ajayi Boroffice – Member

25. Mrs. Stella Okotete – Member

26. Barr. Ismail Ahmed – Member

27. Chief Ayiri Emami – Member

28. Dr. Mahmud Halilu (Modi) – Member

29. Hajiya Sadiya Umar Farouq – Member

30. Hon. Aliyu Ugbane – Member

31. Mrs. Kemi Nelson – Member

32. Chief Omotayo Alasoadura – Member

33. Speaker, Bauchi State House of Assembly – Member

34. Chief Ekechi Emenike – Member

35. Hon. Emeka Nwajuba – Member

36. Senator Osita Izunaso – Member

37. Chief Victor Giadom – Member

38. Garba Maigudu – Member

39. Chief Enyi C. Enyi – Member

40. Hon. Khadija Bukar Abba Ibrahim – Member

41. Senator Sani Abubakar Danladi – Member

42. Senator Andy Uba – Member

43. Senator Olorunminbe Mamora – Member

44. Hassan Kafayos – Member

45. Hon. Gololo – Member

46. Hon. Mailantariki – Member

47. Hon. Abdullahi Bello (USD) – Member

48. Hon. Dakuku Peterside – Member

49. Osita Okechwuku – Member

50. Sen. Ifeanyi Ararume – Member

51. Chief Akin Ricketts – Member

52. Engr. Abdullahi Garba Ramat – Member

53. Senator Jibrin Wowo – Member

54. Alh. Yakubu Saidi – Member

55. Alh. Ubale Hashim – Member

56. Hon. Muhammed Bello Nasarawa – Member

57. Hon. Umar Konto – Member

58. Sen. Abubakar Gieri – Member

59. Sen. Jonathan Zwingina – Member

60. Rt. (Hon.) Nse Ntuen – Member

61. Patrick Akaiso – Member

62. Hon. Bashir Malami Wurno – Member

63. Hon. Muhammed Sani Ibrahim – Member

64. Hon. Farouq Adamu Aliyu – Member

65. Amb. OlusolaIji – Member

66. Hon. Shina Peller – Member

67. Chief Olusola Oke – Member

68. Chief Uche Ogah – Member

69. Hon. Prince Akinremi Alaide – Member

70. Comrade Tony Nwoye – Member

71. Otuekong Nathaniel Uyio – Member

72. Precious Sunday Effiong – Member

73. Prince Ekerendu Esitikot – Member

74. D. O Olusegun – Member

75. Ayo Oyelowo – Member

76. Musa Haro Daura – Member

77. Dr. Usain Kangiwa – Member

78. Engr. (Hon.) Abdullahi Muslim – Member

79. Engr. Sale Danyaro – Member

80. Barr. Bodunde Opeyemi Adam – Member

81. Hon. Motunrayo Akintomide – Member

82. Hon. Gbenleke Olawore – Member

83. Dr. Ahmadu Attai – Member

84. Rt. (Hon.) Emah Bassey – Member

85. Hon. (Prince) Emmanuel Inwang – Member

86. Hon. (Arc.) Akpovoka Efeni Julius – Member

87. Hon. Pam Ishaya Rondong – Member

88. Pastor Bankole Oluwajana – Member

89. Hon. Nelson Alapa – Member

90. Abubakar Sadiq – Member

91. Chief Rita Begho – Member

92. Hon. Hadi Ametuo – Member

93. Barr. Alex Onwudiamu – Member

94. Chief Cosmas Ighoraye – Member

95. Barr. Raymond Guana – Member

96. Hon. Doris Uboh – Member

97. Chief Paulinus Akpeki – Member

98. Chief Claudius Enegesi – Member

99. Mrs. Julie Okah-Donli – Member

100. Chief Dekivie Ikiogha – Member

101. Dr. Hinks Dumbo – Member

102. Hon. Israel Sunny-Goli – Member

103. Patrick Okomiso – Member

104. Comrade Mustapha Salihu – Secretary

JUST IN: Joe Biden picks Kamala Harris as his running mate

0

Joe Biden has named Kamala Harris as his running mate, making the California senator the first Black and South Asian American woman to run on a major political party’s presidential ticket.

“I’ve decided that Kamala Harris is the best person to help me take this fight to Donald Trump and Mike Pence and then to lead this nation starting in January 2021,” the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee wrote in an email on Tuesday.

The two are set to appear together for the first time for a speech Wednesday in Wilmington, Delaware. Biden’s campaign has not yet said what time that speech will take place.

In selecting Harris, Biden adds to the Democratic ticket a former primary rival who centered her own presidential bid on her readiness to take on Donald Trump and show Americans she would fight for them. She rose to national prominence within the Democratic Party by interrogating Trump nominees during Senate hearings, from former Attorney General Jeff Sessions to Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh.

US Sen. Kamala Harris speaks during an economic forum in Las Vegas in April 2019.

A young Harris is seen with her mother, Shyamala, in this photo that was posted on Facebook page in March 2017.

My mother was born in India and came to the United States to study at UC Berkeley, where she eventually became an endocrinologist and breast-cancer researcher,” Harris wrote.

“She, and so many other strong women in my life, showed me the importance of community involvement and public service.”

Vice presidential pick Kamala Harris
US Sen. Kamala Harris speaks during an economic forum in Las Vegas in April 2019.

Harris’ selection comes months after Biden committed to picking a woman to join him on the Democratic ticket. Harris, 55, is now the third woman to serve as a vice presidential candidate for a major political party, following Geraldine Ferraro as the Democratic vice presidential pick in 1984 and Sarah Palin as the Republican vice presidential pick in 2008.

Aware that his age could be a concern to some voters, Biden, 77, has said that he is “a bridge” to a new slate of Democratic leaders, and by selecting Harris, more than 20 years his junior, he has elevated a leading figure from a younger generation within the party.

Biden’s selection unfolded with the utmost secrecy after a period in which he spoke with the contenders either in person or in face-to-face meetings. He notified several close advisers on Tuesday, two people familiar with the matter told CNN. After considering some 11 women for the post, he and his aides spent time on Tuesday afternoon notifying the vice presidential prospects who he did not choose.

His calls included California Rep. Karen Bass, the chairwoman of the Congressional Black Caucus, as well as Georgia Democrat Stacey Abrams, Illinois Sen. Tammy Duckworth, Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren, New Mexico Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham and Florida Rep. Val Demings, sources familiar with the matter told CNN.

As part of the selection process, the former vice president spoke directly to the final contenders, according to people familiar with the process, through either face-to-face meetings or remote conversations. Officials would not say which of the candidates visited Biden in person, but CNN confirmed last week that Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer had flown to Delaware for a meeting. Harris and former Obama national security adviser Susan Rice were among the others seen as the most serious contenders.

CNN had previously reported that Biden was also believed to be considering Bass, Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts and Sen. Tammy Duckworth of Illinois, people familiar with the search say.

In another sign that the pick was imminent, a Biden campaign official told CNN on Tuesday that they have assembled the staff for Biden’s future running mate.

Karine Jean-Pierre, who joined the Biden campaign as a senior adviser in May, will lead the Harris’ team as chief of staff. Jean-Pierre had previously worked for Barack Obama and Martin O’Malley’s presidential campaigns.

Two veterans of the Obama-Biden administration are also joining the team. Liz Allen, who served as deputy communications director for Biden as vice president as well as deputy communications director in the White House, is joining as communications director to Harris. And Sheila Nix, who was chief of staff to Biden’s reelection campaign in 2012 and served as Jill Biden’s chief of staff in the White House, will be a senior adviser to Harris and her husband, Douglas Emhoff. The vice presidential pick is expected to also add a few of her own advisers to the team.

The last time Biden and Harris shared the stage was March 9 in Michigan, the eve of a primary that would prove decisive in Biden’s primary battle. On a stage in a Detroit high school gymnasium, Biden gestured to Harris, Whitmer and New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker and called himself a “bridge” to “an entire generation of leaders” within the Democratic Party.

The spouses of Biden and Harris, Jill Biden and Emhoff, had an exchange over Twitter as Biden welcomed Harris to the ticket.

“Hey @DouglasEmhoff Are you ready?” Jill Biden tweeted.

“America, let’s do this!” Emhoff said.

Progressives also quickly welcomed Harris to the Democratic ticket. Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders tweeted that Harris “will make history as our next Vice President.”

“She understands what it takes to stand up for working people, fight for health care for all and take down the most corrupt administration in history. Let’s get to work and win,” he said.

Why Harris was chosen
Democratic presidential candidate U.S. Sen. Kamala Harris (D-CA) speaks at the National Forum on Wages and Working People: Creating an Economy That Works for All at Enclave on April 27, 2019 in Las Vegas, Nevada. Six of the 2020 Democratic presidential candidates are attending the forum, held by the Service Employees International Union and the Center for American Progress Action Fund, to share their economic policies.
Democratic presidential candidate U.S. Sen. Kamala Harris (D-CA) speaks at the National Forum on Wages and Working People: Creating an Economy That Works for All at Enclave on April 27, 2019 in Las Vegas, Nevada. Six of the 2020 Democratic presidential candidates are attending the forum, held by the Service Employees International Union and the Center for American Progress Action Fund, to share their economic policies.
Harris started out in the vice presidential search process as a favorite because of her experience as a senator, California attorney general and district attorney in San Francisco and her extensive vetting as a presidential candidate. Ultimately, she was chosen by Joe Biden the “common sense pick” who everybody could agree would “do no harm,” a source familiar with the vetting process told CNN.

With her multi-racial background as the child of two immigrants to the United States, her allies believed she could complement Biden as a symbol of a changing America.

She also proved to be a hardworking surrogate for Biden in recent months, taking part in everything from virtual policy events with voters in swing districts to a live DJ dance party fundraiser with Diplo and D-Nice online.

When Trump tweeted about delaying the election in late July, she responded on Twitter by saying he is “terrified” because “he knows he’s going to lose to @JoeBiden. It will require every single one of us to make that happen.”

Still, some members of Biden’s team resisted choosing Harris. A recent Politico story noted that former Sen. Chris Dodd of Connecticut, who was helping vet candidates, was still galled by her attack on Biden during a June 2019 debate in Miami, when she criticized his work with segregationist senators and highlighted his fight against busing to desegregate schools decades ago.

The pushback against Harris apparently became so strong that Biden felt the need to defend her during his July 28 press conference, where an Associated Press photo captured the talking points about her on his notecard that included “do not hold grudges” and “great help to campaign.”

Harris also benefited from being a running mate who could match this turbulent moment in American history.

Many of the issues at the center of her life’s work — including criminal justice reform, improving health care for Black Americans and tackling income inequality — have come to the forefront in the three-pronged crisis America is now facing: the coronavirus pandemic (which has disproportionately affected communities of color), the fight against systemic racism and an economic recession.

The protests against police brutality of Black people in the wake of George Floyd’s death also gave Harris an opening to more succinctly explain her decision to become a prosecutor as a young lawyer, despite the deep mistrust of that profession among Black Americans who have been wronged by the criminal justice system.

During the recent “Live Free” forum, the California senator was asked what she says to activists and voters who contend that as attorney general, she was part of the system and don’t trust her to be part of the change within it.

Harris said she grew up experiencing some of the abuses of the system, noting that every Black man she knows has experienced “some form of profiling, of excessive force, of unreasonable stop or seizure.”

She noted that she made a very conscious decision to become a prosecutor: “I said why do we only have to be on the outside, trying to knock down doors to change the system? … Isn’t there a role for us to go inside the system and try to change it?”

She pointed to aspects of her record as California’s attorney general that she said were incremental steps toward police reform: arguing that she “opened up California’s data system” to assist activists who were trying to “claw that information out” through public records requests — making data around deaths, custody and arrest rates by race more accessible.

Harris also highlighted her work improving re-entry initiatives for the formerly incarcerated, and a program that required implicit racial bias and procedural justice training for law enforcement officers under her command when she was California’s attorney general.

“These are just a few of the things that we were able to accomplish, certainly not enough, which is why I keep working on it. It has been my life’s work to keep working on this and I’m not going to stop,” she said.

Rise to becoming a prosecutor
As the half-Jamaican, half-Indian-American daughter of immigrants who sought higher education in the United States, Harris and her sister Maya Harris grew up steeped in the world of academia and the Black intellectual circles of Oakland and Berkeley, California.

Harris’ mother, Shyamala Gopalan Harris, a breast cancer specialist who pursued her graduate studies at UC-Berkeley, and her father, Donald Harris, who became an economics professor at Stanford, both protested during the Civil Rights Movement, giving Harris what she has called “a stroller-eye view” of activism from a very young age.

She attended Howard University in Washington, DC, a place that taught students, she has said, “that we could be anything — that we were young, gifted, and Black, and we shouldn’t let anything get in the way of our success.”

After graduating from UC-Hastings College of the Law, she prosecuted child sexual assault, robbery, homicide and three strikes cases in the courtrooms of Alameda County and San Francisco.

One of her proudest achievements was her work as California attorney general pursuing predatory lenders after the financial crash of 2008 and her decision to hold out for a larger settlement from the big banks for Californians after the foreclosure crisis.

The banks initially offered what she has referred to as crumbs on the table, she held out for what become a $20 billion settlement, relishing the chance to take on the top officials at the big banks who “seemed to be under the misimpression that I could be bullied into submission.”

She has often described the shouting match that ensued when she decided to directly dial Jamie Dimon, the then-chairman and CEO of JPMorgan Chase — how she took off her earrings because of “the Oakland in me” and yelled at one another “like dogs in a fight,” she wrote in her memoir “The Truths We Hold.”

Harris has also written at length about being repeatedly underestimated as a political candidate. One political strategist told her there was no way she could win, according to her memoir, “because I was ‘a woman running for attorney general, a woman who is a minority, a woman who is a minority who is anti-death penalty who is DA of wacky San Francisco.’ Old stereotypes die hard.” (Ultimately, she edged out her Republican opponent in a race so close it took weeks to tally the ballots.)

As California’s junior senator, she has championed immigration issues, including the cause of the so-called “Dreamers” who were brought to America as young children.

She created viral moments as a senator by demonstrating her prosecutorial demeanor when Trump nominees came before the Senate Judiciary Committee that elevated her profile within the Democratic Party.

A rocky presidential bid
Presidential candidates Joe Biden and Kamala Harris participate in the CNN Democratic debate in Detroit on Wednesday, July 31.

When she entered the 2020 presidential race in January 2019, Harris appeared to be a formidable contender, but like many others, she struggled to maintain a position at the top of the polls within a crowded field of candidates.

Fundraising, as well as power struggles within her campaign — which was directed in part by her sister Maya, the campaign chairwoman — proved to be difficult hurdles to overcome. In a last-ditch effort to revive her bid, the campaign decided to go “all in” on Iowa in September, then slashed staff and redeployed aides in October from New Hampshire, California and Nevada to the Hawkeye State.

Aides had privately questioned the campaign’s abrupt shifts in strategy, Harris’ swerving message and a lack of clear leadership at the top.

The moment that captured the most attention during her presidential bid was also the one that injected the most uncertainty into her ability to rebuild a strong working relationship with Biden.

As rivals, Biden and Harris had been on friendly terms in part because of her friendship with Biden’s late son, Beau; the two met when they served as attorneys general together, she from California and he from Delaware.

But during that Miami debate, Biden looked stunned when Harris delivered her unexpectedly harsh blow by noting that she had been one of the children who benefited from busing. The moment went viral and she shot up in the polls. But her strong standing did not last — and Biden and his wife Jill were both clearly blind-sighted by what Biden allies perceived as a vicious and opportunistic attack.

Harris has tried to mend those relationships in the months since her departure from the presidential race as she has campaigned with Biden and joined forces with Jill Biden to highlight issues like Black maternal mortality.

“You’re a role model to women and girls across this country, including my granddaughters, and it’s no secret that you and our son Beau worked closely together and shared a special connection,” Jill Biden said to Harris during a recent virtual event with Milwaukee voters that focused on the threats to the Affordable Care Act.

In that same event, Harris demonstrated the fierceness she has often shown when taking on Trump. She called out the President’s decision to once again ask the Supreme Court to strike down the ACA at a time when so many Americans face have lost their insurance due to layoffs and tens of thousands are dealing with new pre-existing conditions after contracting the coronavirus

“People are dying,” Harris said. “But Donald Trump is prioritizing his political prospects and playing games.”

During a recent appearance on NBC’s “Late Night with Seth Meyers,” Harris said she would do anything to get Biden elected.

“We need to save the soul of our country, we really do,” she said. “We need a president who cares about the people and loves the people.”

This is a breaking news story and will be updated.

Source: CNN

BREAKING: Court Orders Substituted Service Of Disqualification Suit On Ize-Iyamu

0

A Federal High Court in Abuja has ordered substituted service of a suit seeking the disqualification of the governorship candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in the forthcoming election in Edo State, Mr Osagie Ize-Iyamu, and his running mate, Audu Ganiyu.

Justice Taiwo Taiwo gave the order on Tuesday after granting the plaintiffs’ application for substituted service on the defendants in the case – Ize-Iyamu and Ganiyu.

Giving his ruling, the judge ordered that the defendants be served with the suit by pasting the court documents and the hearing notice for next sitting at their residences in Benin, the Edo State capital.

He, thereafter, fixed August 24 for the hearing of the suit.

The plaintiffs in the suit, who are also APC members, Momoh Abdul-Razak and Zibiri Muhizu, had asked the court to disqualify their party’s candidates in the poll scheduled to hold on September 19, 2020.

They filed the suit on the ground that Ganiyu gave false information to the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), to aid his qualification for the governorship election.

In the suit filed on July 10, 2020, through their lawyer, Friday Nwosu, the plaintiffs also alleged irregularities in Ganiyu’s name and academic credentials.

The APC and INEC were listed as the first and second defendants respectively in the suit while Ganiyu and Ize-Iyamu were the third and fourth respondents.

Ize-Iyamu, who was defeated by incumbent Governor Godwin Obaseki in the 2016 governorship election, ran on the platform of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

In a bid to achieve his ambition of becoming the governor of Edo State, he defected to the APC in 2019 amid the crisis in the state chapter of the party.

He was later cleared to contest for the APC primary where he won the party’s ticket, but Governor Obaseki was disqualified by the screening committee.

The governor, who is seeking re-election, later defected to the PDP where he emerged as the party’s flagbearer in the election.

Ize-Iyamu, on his part, recently got the endorsement of President Muhammadu Buhari and Vice President Yemi Osinbajo to represent the APC in the poll.

Source: Channels