66.2 F
Memphis
Sunday, September 29, 2024

Buy now

Akbari rises up, again, at 2020 Democratic Convention

0
Tennessee Sen. Raumesh Akbari speaking during the 2020 Democratic National Convention. (Image: Screen capture)

by Jennifer L. Sharp —

From former first lady Michelle Obama’s compelling speech to the heartwarming stories from everyday people, the 2020 Democratic National Convention (DNC) has been a trending topic on social media this week.

The DNC, which was held virtually due to the COVID-19 pandemic, is a series of presidential nominating conventions held every four years by the United States Democratic Party and administered by the Democratic National Committee. During the DNC, the committee and the Party officially nominate a candidate for president and vice president and adopt a comprehensive party platform.

This year’s virtual DNC is giving the viewing audience an opportunity to experience the entire convention from the safety and comfort of their homes.

“This is a neat experience and it is well-produced,” said Tennessee State Sen. Raumesh Akbari of Memphis. “This convention is very inclusive, and it has shattered viewing records.”

Tennessee State Sen. Raumesh Akbari settles into the setting from which she delivered a segment of Tuesday’s 17-person keynote address. (Screen capture image)

During the second night of the convention, Akbari was among the 17 “rising stars” engaged to deliver the keynote address. In the spotlight, Akbari talked about the constituents who build this country, especially during the pandemic.

“The nurses in Memphis who came out of retirement to treat patients during this pandemic, you built this country,” said Akbari.

She also talked about how Joe Biden fought for women’s rights and how he will continue to fight for women’s rights if elected as the 46th President of the United States.

“Joe Biden has been fighting for women his entire career. As senator, he authored the Violence Against Women Act. And as president, he’ll restore funding for Planned Parenthood. He will codify Roe v. Wade and make reducing maternal mortality, especially for women of color, a top priority,” said Akbari, the only local politician to represented Memphis during the DNC’s keynote address.

“This was a tremendous honor to share our vision for America and to share a virtual stage with amazing people such as Stacy Abrams,” she said.

A measurement of the DNC’s success will be whether eligible voters will be stimulated to cast ballots during this year’s presidential and local elections.

“The Democratic ticket is super exciting. Senator Kamala Harris is a strong woman who does not back down from a fight, and she will give Pence a run for his money (as vice president,” she said.

“My advice for voters is to vote early in person or request an absentee ballot and turn it in early, visit the candidates’ websites to do your research regardless of who you are voting for and find ways to support your candidates by donating or volunteering.”

(To view the full keynote address, visit https://bit.ly/3iP98o2. To view all of the 2020 Democratic National Convention videos, visit https://bit.ly/322IFfW.)

Non-partisan collective targets voter registration, turnout in November

0
Memphis Branch NAACP Executive Director Vickie Terry and Ian Randolph, who heads the political action committee, detail the voting initiative that involves partners to get voters to the polls in November. (Photo: Dr. Sybil C. Mitchell)

A multi-pronged coalition has launched a local voter registration and Election Day turnout drive.

Representatives of the NAACP, AFL-CIO, Teamsters, MICAH (Memphis Interfaith Coalition for Action and Hope) and the A. Phillip Randolph Institute (APRI) on Tuesday announced their apolitical partnership aims to get more voters registered for a massive turnout in the general election on Nov. 3.

The “Continue the Dream Voter and Volunteer Alliance” is a substantial, local response to threats of voter suppression through mail-in and absentee voting, which has developed on the national front.

President Donald Trump said in a White House briefing last week that he plans to block additional funding and election assistance for the U.S. Postal Service to thwart efforts to expand mail-in voting capacity.

Kendra Lee, political fellow coordinate of the APRI, said her organization is “ecstatic” to be joining in the Voter and Volunteer Alliance.

“It is important to return power back to the people,” Lee said. “Memphis has a history of advocacy and a history of organizing. Politics are about people, and power should be in the hands of the people.”

APRI successfully sued the Tennessee Election Commission to ease excuse requirements for absentee ballots during COVID pandemic, stating in filing documents that people “should not have to choose between staying safe and exercising their right to vote.”

NAACP Political Chair Ian Randolph said the coalition wants to ensure that “all people get to flex their power on Nov. 3.”

“Voting is power. And the time to exercise that power is by marching to the voting booth to vote. Our role in the alliance is focusing on voter registration, encouraging early voting, and educating people about absentee voting,” Randolph said.

NAACP Memphis Chapter President Van Turner said absentee voting can be exercised by anyone over the age of 60 and allowances are being made for the pandemic.

“Of course, anyone over 60 may request an absentee ballot,” Turner said. “Also, those who are caring for a COVID-19 patient, as well as those who have COVID-19, may also vote absentee. But no one will be given an absentee ballot for fear of catching COVID-19.”

The NAACP has continuously sponsored voter registration drives throughout the year. Memphis Executive Director Vickie Terry said those who do not choose absentee voting and need transportation to the polls would be safely transported in vehicles that have been thoroughly sanitized.

“Everyone will be wearing a mask and social distancing will be observed,” Terry said. “We want people to feel confident that they can be transported to the polls in a clean and safe environment. We want to take the fear out of voting.”

MICAH’s Meggan Kiel said the organization is still open for volunteers who can work in the virtual phone bank.

“We have the complete list of those who have been purged from voter rolls in Shelby County,” Kiel said. “Everyone on the list will be contacted to inform them that they have been purged because many don’t know that. They get an opportunity to re-register in time for the Nov. 3 election.”

Teamsters Local 66 AFL-CIO President James Jones said the concerted voting effort is needed now like it has never been needed.

“We are coming together as a collective so that everyone who wishes to vote will have that opportunity,” said Jones. “Purging voters and other voter suppression tactics must be fought aggressively to make sure those tactics do not succeed.”

Suzanne Thompson, Shelby County Election Commission public relations, acknowledged that some Republican-run states have used purging and other suppression strategies that are not lawful.

“We want to give all voters in Shelby County every opportunity to exercise their right to vote,” said Thompson. “Our administrator, Linda Phillips, goes out to give talks about how individuals can go about getting their voter rights restored. People can register to vote online at: GoVoteTN.com. Everyone must be registered by Oct. 5, to be eligible to vote in the general election.”

Early voting will run Oct. 14-27. Requests for absentee ballots must have a postmark of Oct. 5 to be honored.

To volunteer for the Vote and Volunteer Alliance, or to secure a ride to the polls, call the NAACP office at: 901-521-1343. All community organizations and churches are encouraged to join.

 

‘Code of care’ advocated as gun violence claims another teenager

0
Dr. Kevin Brooks, social justice minister at Providence AME Church, led a handful of marchers to the site where 17-year-old Brandon Fleming (family photo) was fatally shot on Sunday. (Photo: Gary S. Whitlow/GSW Enterprises)

The recent slaying of yet another child in Memphis this year sparked a call to action by a local clergyman and community advocates.

Brandon Fleming, 17, was fatally shot Sunday (Aug. 16). He is among the 24 children killed by gun violence in Memphis this year, according to police, compared to 14 children last year.

“The news was so devastating; the burden was just too great. I had to do something,” said Dr. Kevin Brooks, Providence AME Church Social Justice Minister.

Fleming’s death was one of nine homicides recorded between last Friday (Aug. 14) and Monday, and one of 173 homicides in Memphis this year. Last year at this time, the homicide count was 111.

The weekend also yielded numerous aggravated woundings. The assault victims included Elijah Mitchell Lewis, the oldest son of Lawrence “Boo” Mitchell, the Grammy-winning engineer and producer, who runs South Memphis’s historic Royal Studios, the music recording facility tied to Hi Records and the legendary Willie Mitchell.

Lewis was shot and critically wounded Saturday in Cordova. Glenn Smith, 32, has been charged with aggravated burglary, attempted second-degree murder, and possession of a firearm during the commission of a dangerous felony in connection with the shooting, according to Shelby County court records.

Fleming’s slaying moved Brooks and a handful of others to rally against violence on Memphis’ streets Monday (Aug. 17).

Like many of his peers, Fleming was not only excited about going into his senior year at Booker T. Washington High School, but he had signed up for the Black Male Achievement program, an after-school and Saturday mentoring initiative for males aged 8-21.

Science was his favorite subject, and Fleming had high hopes of playing basketball as a senior.

“Brandon was kind of a quiet guy,” said Ladazier Mathis, 18, Brandon’s sister. “He played a lot of basketball. We have a basketball goal at home. He had a best friend, but he really didn’t talk to me about any girlfriends.”

Although few in number, marchers called out Brandon’s name as they proceeded from Booker T. Washington High School to Boyd Street, where Fleming died.

“Mario called and told me that Brandon Fleming, one of our young men participating in Black Male Achievement, was killed Sunday,” Brooks recalled, referencing Mario Byers, a former Boys and Girls Club director, who worked with Fleming and other boys growing up in that community.

“The sense of apathy and a ‘life goes on’ attitude elicited a response in me that compelled me to do something,” said Brooks. “So, I called for a march on Monday evening — 100 men and women, anyone who believes that black lives do matter.”

Byers said it was heartbreaking to find out that Fleming had been killed.

“The Boys and Girls Club was closed in this community because of the violence, the poverty and the crime. But these are children who need that club the most.

“Closing it in this community was not the right move. Our elected officials and others in leadership should reinvest in this community.”

Brooks said the pandemic most detrimental to the African-American community is the “pandemic of violence.”

According to police, no witnesses have come forward with information on Fleming’s death.

“We are losing our humanity because it’s business as usual when there is a new murder victim,” Brooks said. “We need to say his name – Brandon Fleming.

“He mattered. His life mattered. His mother is distraught. His sister is distraught. We have become so used to murder that we are desensitized to it.”

First responder Malcolm Robinson, who is both a firefighter and a registered nurse, said young people need to know that their community cares about them.

“I felt it was important to be there (at the march/rally) because I have a son, I have nephews,” said Robinson. “There are all these other black, young people who look like me. They are reflections of me. I feel it is my duty, both on and off the job, to show up in the communities we serve, and to make myself available.”

Deke Pope makes the point that it is important to show young people that “there is a way out of poverty and these dire circumstances.” (Photo: Gary S. Whitlow/GSW Enterprises)

Deke Pope, 78, marched with Brooks and other residents and supporters. He helped to organize one of the first Black Student Associations at Memphis State University (now, the University of Memphis).

“As an elder in the community, as a father, a husband, and long-standing resident of Memphis, I felt it was important to be there at the march Monday to support Rev. Brooks and to show that we are concerned about our young people,” said Pope.

“They are our children, and we want to show them that there is a way out of poverty and these dire circumstances. I came from meager beginnings, myself.”

In the Mitchell shooting, police found Mitchell after responding to a shooting at a residence at 1510 Beaver Trail Drive in Cordova. It belongs to Samantha Wilson, who was Lewis’ girlfriend, according to a Memphis Police Department affidavit attributing the assertion.

In a Monday (Aug. 16) social media post, Boo Mitchell wrote:

“This is the most difficult thing for me to post. Please excuse me if I’m a little scattered. Yesterday our oldest son Elijah Mitchell (Elijah Lewis) was taken to Regional One Health for a gun shot wound to the back, broken ribs and other injuries.

“Suspect, his girlfriend’s ex lover, broke in her house and waited for him, shot him in the back then beat him after he was down. His front teeth were all beaten out.

“Unfortunately the bullet went through his spinal cord and he has lost all of the feeling in his legs. Suspect has been arrested and is in custody. We are grateful and thankful that Elijah is alive. We have a lot of work ahead of us.

“This is the most devastating (thing) that has ever happened to me or my family. We are thankful for the amazing team of doctors and nurses at Regional One Health; they have been nothing less than angels through this. Please keep Elijah and my family in your thoughts and prayers. We know that God is in charge and we are praying and hopeful that one day he will fully recover.”

Elijah Mitchell was carrying on the family music tradition by working as an engineer at Royal.

 

MLGW gives OK to speed up process of getting energy-supplier proposals

0
TVA has been MLGW’s power source for 80 years. Whether that continues is linked to requests from proposals involving other power suppliers.

Memphis Light, Gas & Water Division President J. T. Young now has the approval of the utility’s board to quicken the process of hiring a consultant to help attract proposals that could lead to a new power supplier.

MLGW President/CEO J.T. Young.

At a meeting Wednesday, MLGW’s commissioners let Young know he had their approval to hire the consultant without going through every aspect of the normal of process. That move came after several registered their concerns about what already has been a lengthy process of deciding whether to stick with the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) as the city’s power supplier or take its business elsewhere.

“We don’t want to move fast or wrong,” Young said. “Of course, we will do all we can to accommodate moving as quickly and efficiently as possible.”

A request-for-proposals process embraced by Young was projected to have extended into October. A majority of the board’s members are looking to have a consultant selected before September runs its course.

TVA has been MLGW’s power source for 80 years.

Receiving bids from multiple energy suppliers will allow Memphis to “ground truth to the findings” that savings would amount to “at least $120 million dollars, and up to several hundred million dollars annually,” if MLGW were to break from TVA, Young said.

In a statement released later, TVA officials said the power supplier respects and supports MLGW’s decision to pursue RFPs as it looks to its long-term energy supplier.

“We are excited about the opportunity to engage in the RFP process – put the facts on the table – and prove that TVA in partnership with MLGW is the best option for the people of Memphis and Shelby County,” the statement read.

“When it comes to energy costs, Memphis starts from a position of strength. In partnership with TVA, MLGW today provides the third-lowest energy costs in the nation among its peers. TVA’s commitment is to keep energy costs stable over the next decade.”

An Integrated Resource Plan made public in early August gave a projection of what a switch of power supplies might mean for Memphis. It was presented to the Memphis City Council at its regular meeting on Tuesday.

Dr. Stephen A. Smith, executive director of the Southern Alliance for Clean Energy (SACE), called Wednesday’s meeting by the MLGW a “shot across the bow,” signaling that MLGW is “setting the stage to break loose from TVA’s dictatorial, long-term contract arrangements.”

In its released statement, TVA stressed a recently announced plan to deliver “$2 billion in value to the people of Memphis focused on investing in core communities, regional economic development, and addressing energy burden challenges for small businesses and residential customers.

“These are real, tangible investments, not hypothetical figures in a study,” the TVA statement asserted. “These are commitments TVA will deliver, not unbacked promises.”

AAC champion Tigers know ‘nothing will be handed to us’

0
First year head coach Ryan Silverfield puts the UofM Tigers football team through practice paces. (Screen capture: gotigersgo.com)
Terry Davis

While there are skeptics to whether there will be college football in the South this fall because of COVID-19, the University of Memphis is planning on there being a season.

The play-or-not play question has been answered in some conferences. The Big 10 and the Pac 12 already have agreed to postpone their seasons.

Others, like the ACC, Big 12 and SEC plan to play.

The University of Memphis football program has returned to the practice field and is preparing for their season-opening game against Arkansas State on Sept. 5 at Liberty Bowl Stadium.

The game now is only one of five football games slated for that day.

The Tigers play in the American Athletic Conference and the conference has issued protocols on how to conduct practices.

The U of M returned for the fall semester this week. The football team has a policy of not announcing, who if anyone, has been infected with the COVID-19 virus, so it is not known if any placers has contracted the virus.

Memphis has announced that there will no tailgating allowed for the home opener.

There are several options for a limited number of fans to be attend for the game, including a limited attendance option for season ticket holders.

The Tigers are coming off their most successful season. An appearance in the Cotton Bowl capped off the season and they raised the banner of the American Athletic Conference Champions at their practice center.

Memphis returns most of their offensive weapons, including Brady White and Kenny Gainwell as weapons. Memphis has put three star running backs in the league over the last couple of years — Darrell Henderson, Tony Pollard and Antonio Gibson.

White, who passed for 4,013 yards and 33 touchdowns, has been named to many watchlists this season.

He was named a finalist for the 2019 Johnny Unitas Golden Arm Award and the Manning. He is one of the top returning quarterbacks in the conference.

With the absence of the Big 10 and Pac 12 not playing this season, the door could be open for NFL scouts to give White more consideration as a possible NFL-caliber quarterback.

“Chemistry-wise things are going really good. We haven’t skipped a beat with timing. We are getting little things down pat. We go against a good defense every day. We get unique looks in certain situations that we can work on,” White said on the development of the offense during camp.

White will have some great targets to target this season. Returning is the leading receiver from last season in Domante Coxie. Coxie had 1,276 yards and he had nine touchdown receptions.

Gainwell was the second leading receiver with 610 yards and three touchdown receptions. Gainwell had 1,459 rushing and 13 rushing touchdowns last season.

“My personal goal this season is to get at least five yards every time I get my hands on the ball. I have the mindset of going hard every time I get on the field, and learn everything I can from my coaches.

“I want to teach everyone behind me and teach them everything that I have learned,” Gainwell said.

Calvin Austin III was a breakout star last season. The track star had 315 receiving yards and three touchdowns.

Memphis got some experience for Rodrigues Clark. Because he only played in four games, he was allowed to keep his redshirt season.

Newcomer Kalyn Grandberry was a first-team NJCAA All-American after rushing for 1,289 yards and 10 touchdowns as a freshman last season.

Defensive lineman O’Bryan Goodson and T. J. Carter will look to keep the defense in the top 10 in the nation from season. Carter, a senior defensive back from Nashville and was a freshman All-American, looks to continue to be one of the best defensive backs in the country.

Ryan Silverfield (Screen capture image)

First year head coach Ryan Silverfield knows that depth will be a key asset in this COVID-season.

Memphis has plenty of depth at all positions, most notably at the running back and receiving positions.

The defense also returns many key pieces, as well.

Every returning player on the team has not known a losing season. Keeping the players hungry is going to be a task for the coaching staff.

“I don’t like to talk about the past, but I asked the team if anyone could raise their hand if they had won a bowl game and no one could raise their hand,” said Silverfield.

“We talk about having a chip on our shoulder. It is the grit and grind mentally of Memphis. Nothing will be handed to us. We challenge them every day,” Silverfield said.

Last season, many of the most of the Tigers’ faithful expected the team to go undefeated. This year most just want the season to be played.

“No one will put more expectation and pressure on us than ourselves. We have some great opponents starting on Sept. 5. We want to play at a high level,” said Silverfield.

Memphis has a new top to play under this season. The new indoor practice facility has finally been completed.

This has a dream of many prior coaches to have a facility to show recruits and to have as a daily practice option.

Community Power Up Days to test virtual space before SCS starts academic year

0
The first Power Up Hour is set for August 20 from 9 a.m.-10 a.m. A second will take place the following Thursday, August 27, during the same time slot.

Shelby County Schools (SCS) is partnering with the City of Memphis and Shelby County Government to conduct what is being dubbed a community-wide Power Up Hour in advance of the fully virtual opening of schools on Aug. 31.

The goal of the Power Up Hour is to have all virtual and in-person students and staff across each organization log onto devices, simultaneously. This will allow Internet providers to gauge broadband capacity, troubleshoot and respond accordingly to any challenges.

The first Power Up Hour is set for August 20 from 9 a.m.-10 a.m. A second will take place the following Thursday, August 27, during the same time slot.

“This is a historic endeavor and we encourage everyone to participate in this pressure test as we gear up for virtual learning,” says SCS Supt. Dr. Joris M. Ray. “We want to ensure our teams are prepared to support our students and families in the event any technical issues arise.”

The backdrop, according to SCS, is the recognition that students will be joining the virtual space with other schools, community organizations and businesses across the county – ushering in more than 95,000 students and staff using the same Internet networks.

“In these uncertain times, ensuring our young people have certainty in regards to their education is paramount,” Mayor Jim Strickland said. “By everyone working together on this inaugural ‘Power Up Hour,’ we’re helping to stress test the system and work out any potential issues so our children hopefully don’t have to experience any once their school starts back in a couple of weeks.”

Shelby County Mayor Lee Harris said, “Online capacity in our community is an important part of bridging the digital divide. … “We are grateful for the hard work of Shelby County Schools and local Internet service providers to ensure there is enough online capacity for virtual learning across the County.”

Here’s what is being asked of all citizens of Memphis/Shelby County during the Power Up Hour:

  • Download and play a 3-minute video (ie. YouTube, a video sent via email, etc.)
  • Engage on a streaming platform (ie. Microsoft Teams, Zoom, Google Hangouts, etc.)
  • Engage with an interactive website (ie. Khan Academy, etc.)

During the test hour, IT personnel and Internet providers will closely monitor the network for any crashes, capacity issues or troubleshooting needs.

 

GRITGRINDGRIZZ: Despite missing playoffs, #GRZNXTGEN gives us hope for next season – whenever that is

0
(Image: Grizzlies on Twitter)
TSD columnist Lee Eric Smith.

Quick show of hands: If I’d told you at the end of the 2019 NBA season that your freshly blown up and rebuilding Memphis Grizzlies would narrowly miss the 2020 NBA Playoffs in Orlando by losing an August play-in game to the Portland Trailblazers, would you have believed, Memphis?

And the answer is: Of course not. There’s so much wrong in that last paragraph, you would have been scratching your head – phrases like “NBA Playoffs in Orlando” and “play-in” game? What the heck is a play-in game? But that’s not why you wouldn’t have believed.

The real reason? Rebuilding a roster into a good team, let alone a playoff contender is a dicey proposition. It requires a savvy front office, patience and a whole helluva lot of good luck – and at the end of the 2019 season, there was no reason to believe that Memphis had any of those things.

Literally a day after their 2019 finale (a 132-117 win over Golden State) and only hours after media exit interviews with then-coach J.B. Bickerstaff and then-GM Chris Wallace, both men were ejected from their positions.

That summer, Mike Conley, the last member of the Grit N Grind Core Four, was traded to Utah. A few weeks later, the Grizzlies hired some nobody named Taylor Jenkins as their head coach and drafted some flashy kid out of Murray State with the No. 2 pick.

Truth is, a successful rebuild may depend on luck more than anything else. Ask the New York Knicks, who have been rebuilding for most of the past 20 years. Or the Chicago Bulls.

And prior to becoming a dynasty, even the Golden State Warriors had been a perennial bottom feeder for decades.

I understand why Chris Wallace was skittish about disbanding a successful Core Four before he had to. There’s no guarantee you’ll find your way out of the woods. So many things have to go just right – things which depend on sheer luck.

Lately, your Memphis Grizzlies have been EXTREMELY lucky.

First, it was lucky ping-pong balls that changed the narrative from sending Boston an owed pick to salivating over the possibility of Memphis landing its first true NBA Superstar in Ja Morant. And even though new GM Zach Kleimann had clearly done his homework in assembling the roster, you still don’t know if the pieces will fit together.

Will Jaren Jackson Jr. and Ja Morant get along? Or will they clash over whose team it is?

Will player chemistry help or hurt the team? Would Jenkins be in over his head?

Of course, we know these answers now.

The team jelled faster and better than anyone could have reasonably expected, playing a run-n-fun style of basketball that would have given the Core Four fits in a head-to-head matchup.

Jackson finally gave Memphis a stretch four, Morant was a walking highlight GIF, Jonas Valanciunas quenched our thirst for a big man who posts up on the block. And, yes . . . WINNING!

With the Grizzlies firmly in the No. 8 spot back in March, this season was already a rollicking success before COVID-19 pressed pause on the season. That’s why a disappointing 2-7 record in the NBA bubble is really no reason to be sad – especially considering that injuries sidelined Jackson, backup point guard Tyus Jones and newcomer Justise Winslow, who has yet to suit up.

And in a nationally televised play-in game on ABC, Morant gave tantalizing glimpses of what Grizz fans certainly hope to see for years to come in the playoffs – 35 points, eight assists and four boards; not flinching or choking despite facing NBA Bubble MVP Damian “Dame Dolla” Lillard.

Despite missing Jackson, Jones and Winslow, the Grizzlies had a chance to win until the very end. I can’t wait to see what team does next season when healthy.

Ah, next season. September is usually the time of media days and training camps. This year, it’s Conference championships. The NBA Finals may well be played in October, which is when the regular season would ordinarily start.

Understandably, the league is heavily focused on completing this season; tentatively a new NBA season would start on Christmas Day.    But like everything else affected by COVID-19, there’s just no way to say for sure when that will happen, or what it will look like.

Will there be another bubble? Will fans get to settle in at FedExForum and enjoy the show with masks on? There are just too many unknowns.

Let me be clear: Like every Grizz fan, I wanted a Grizz-Lakers matchup in the first round – a playoff baptism of fire that would accelerate the team’s development even further.      The eight seeding games certainly simulated the intensity of a late-season playoff battle. The young cubs have added valuable experience to their already precocious talent.

I can’t wait to see how they grow, how they evolve into the league powerhouse we want them to be. I can’t wait to watch them play again.

Whenever that is.

Michelle Obama delivers ‘electrifying moment’

0

by Steve Peoples and Michelle L. Price —

NEW YORK — Michelle Obama delivered a passionate condemnation of President Donald Trump during the opening night of the Democratic National Convention, declaring him “in over his head” and warning that the nation’s mounting crises would only get worse if he’s reelected over Joe Biden.

“Donald Trump is the wrong president for our country,” she said. “He cannot meet this moment. He simply cannot be who we need him to be for us.”

The former first lady was the headliner at the first presidential nominating convention of the coronavirus era. There was no central meeting place or cheering throng during the all-virtual affair Monday night. But it was an opportunity for Democrats — and some Republicans — to rally behind Biden, the party’s presidential nominee.

Bernie Sanders, the progressive Vermont senator who was Biden’s last standing rival during the primary, encouraged his loyal supporters to vote for the former vice president in November, arguing the nation can’t survive another four years of Trump. He notably backed Biden’s plan for tackling health care, one of their most substantive differences in the past. Sanders backs a Medicare for All plan while Biden has called for expanding the current “Obamacare” law.

But it was Michelle Obama, making her fourth convention appearance, who once again delivered an electrifying moment. Wearing a necklace that said “vote,” she tapped into her enduring popularity among Black voters and college educated suburban women — voters Biden will need to show up in force.

She issued a stark warning to a country already navigating health and economic crises along with a reckoning on racism.

“If you think things possibly can’t get worse, trust me, they can and they will if we don’t make a change in this election,” she said as she issued a call to action for the coalition of young and diverse voters who twice sent her family to the White House.

Trump responded to Obama Tuesday, tweeting that he wouldn’t be in the “beautiful White House” today if it “weren’t for the job done by her husband,” former President Barack Obama. He ended with a sarcastic thanks to Michelle Obama for her “very kind words.”

The president sought to steal focus from the convention on Monday by hosting a political rally in Wisconsin, where Biden’s party had originally planned this week’s convention. He will be on the road again Tuesday, traveling to the southern border in Arizona and reviewing recent storm damage in Iowa.

Biden’s wife, Jill, will get top billing at the Democratic convention on Tuesday. A longtime teacher, she’ll speak from her former classroom at Brandywine High School near the family home in Wilmington, Delaware.

The convention will culminate with Biden formally accepting the nomination on Thursday.

As the week unfolds, Biden faces questions about whether the convention will energize the disparate factions he hopes to thread into a coalition. He used the opening night to demonstrate the broad ideological range of his supporters.

On the same night he was praised by Sanders, a self-described democratic socialist who championed a multitrillion-dollar universal health care plan, Biden also won backing from Ohio’s former Republican Gov. John Kasich, an anti-abortion conservative who spent decades fighting to cut government spending.

Monday’s speeches were framed by emotional appearances from average Americans touched by the crises that have exploded on Trump’s watch.

Philonise and Rodney Floyd led a moment of silence in honor of their brother, George Floyd, the Minnesota man whose death while in police custody sparked a national moment of awakening on racial injustice.

“George should be alive today,” Philonise Floyd said.

Also speaking was Kristin Urquiza, an Arizona woman who lost her father to COVID-19, which has killed more than 170,000 people in the United States.

“My dad was a healthy 65-year-old,” she said. “His only preexisting condition was trusting Donald Trump, and for that, he paid with his life.”

And Rick Telesz, a Pennsylvania farmer, warned that Trump’s trade war has had a “truly a devastating effect” on his farm before the coronavirus brought another blow with what he called “misinformation” coming from the country’s leadership.

“My biggest concern is that if these trends continue with this type of leadership, I will be the last generation farming this farm,” he said.

Democrats abandoned their plans for an in-person gathering in Milwaukee because of the pandemic. The unprecedented gathering is not only testing the bonds of the diverse coalition Biden is building with his running mate, California Sen. Kamala Harris — it’s also an experiment in how to run a presidential campaign in the midst of a pandemic.

At this moment, Biden sits in a stronger political position than Trump, who has struggled to expand his political coalition under the weight of his turbulent leadership and prolonged health and economic crises. But 77 days before votes are counted, history is not on the Democratic challenger’s side. Just one incumbent president has been defeated in the last four decades.

Polls also suggest that Biden, a 77-year-old lifelong politician, is on the wrong end of an enthusiasm gap. His supporters consistently say they’re motivated more by opposition to Trump, who is 74, than excitement about Biden. Democrats hope to shift that dynamic beginning with the convention.

Mrs. Obama, whom Gallup determined was the nation’s most admired woman last year, wowed Democrats at the 2016 presidential convention by coining the phrase: “When they go low, we go high.” She insisted on Monday she was not abandoning that tack, explaining that taking the high road doesn’t mean staying silent.

With no live audience for any of the speakers, convention organizers were forced to get creative in their high-stakes quest to generate enthusiasm. There were live appearances from speakers in Texas, South Carolina, Wisconsin and Michigan, but many of the speeches that aired Monday night were prerecorded.

Seeking to inject some family fun into an otherwise serious two-hour video montage, the campaign hosted drive-in viewing stations in six states, much like drive-in movies, where viewers could watch on a big screen from the safety of their vehicles. There were also many online watch parties featuring celebrities and elected officials to make the experience more interactive.

It was unclear how many people attended the parties. In most, only the speakers were visible on screen. In one watch party, Washington Rep. Pramila Jayapal and Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren rallied progressives, many of whom had preferred Sanders over Biden.

“We must do everything we can to energize and excite our base about the choice before us,” Jayapal said

The Monday speakers included plenty of Democratic politicians: Rep. Jim Clyburn of South Carolina, who is the highest ranking African American in Congress; New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo; Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer; Alabama Sen. Doug Jones; Nevada Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto and two former presidential contenders: Minnesota Sen. Amy Klobuchar and Sanders.

Beyond Kasich, other Republicans backing Biden got speaking slots: California businesswoman Meg Whitman, former New Jersey Gov. Christine Whitman and former New York congresswoman Susan Molinari.

It was impossible to fully gauge America’s interest in the all-virtual format on the first night. Broadcast TV networks are showing the final hour each night live, cable news is showing both hours and many viewers plan to stream from the rivals’ websites or on social media.

___

Associated Press writer Kathleen Ronayne in California contributed to this report.

Environmental groups sue TVA over long-term power agreements

0
The Allen Combined Cycle Plant in Memphis began supplying power in April 2018. (Photo: tva.com)

by Adrian Sainz — 

Environmental groups are suing the Tennessee Valley Authority over long-term partnership agreements signed by local power companies that receive electricity generated by the nation’s largest public utility.

A lawsuit filed in Memphis federal court Monday claims the 20-year deals signed by more than 130 companies lock the power distributors into exclusive, “never-ending” contracts with the TVA and “will forever deprive distributors and ratepayers the opportunity to renegotiate with TVA to obtain cheaper, cleaner electricity,” the Southern Environmental Law Center said in a statement.

Protect Our Aquifer, Energy Alabama and Appalachian Voices also allege the deals hurt the ability of local power companies to use renewable power from sources outside the TVA.

TVA is the nation’s largest public utility, providing power to more than 10 million people in parts of Tennessee, Alabama, Georgia, Kentucky, Mississippi, North Carolina and Virginia.

TVA spokesman Scott Brooks said 141 of 153 local power companies have agreed to the deals voluntarily.

“Nobody is being forced to sign up for anything,” Brooks said Tuesday. “All the local power companies have a choice whether they want to sign up for this long term partnership.”

TVA President and CEO Jeff Lyash said during a Board of Directors meeting in November that the deals carry a 3.1% monthly rebate on wholesale power rates. Lyash said the local companies could pass on those savings to their customers, invest in infrastructure and give companies flexibility to receive some of their power through locally sourced options.

The deals replace existing agreements of varying lengths, or follow expiring ones. Contracts require a 20-year notice to terminate, and they renew automatically each year, the plaintiff’s lawyers said.

TVA officials say many smaller utilities have agreed, as have larger ones, including Nashville Electric Service.

But TVA’s biggest customer, Memphis, Light, Gas & Water, has not signed a long-term deal. The Memphis utility is exploring other power generation options, including alternate suppliers. Memphis has been a TVA customer for 85 years and represents about 10% of TVA’s revenue, Lyash has said.

The suit also alleges that the contracts could have significant effects on the environment, “including influencing TVA’s decisions to invest in energy resources, increasing greenhouse gases and other pollution, and increasing water usage across the Tennessee Valley,” the statement said.

MLG&W plans a Wednesday meeting to discuss the TVA decision. A consultant report says the Memphis power company could save as much as $122 million per year by joining the MISO transmission system, which delivers power across 15 U.S. states and the Canadian province of Manitoba.

However, the TVA option provides a “somewhat higher level of reliability,” the Siemens Industry Inc. report said.

Postal Service halts some operational changes after outcry

0
In this Aug. 5, 2020, file photo Postmaster General Louis DeJoy, left, is escorted to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's office on Capitol Hill in Washington. The U.S. Postal Service has sent letters to 46 states and the District of Columbia, warning it cannot guarantee all ballots cast by mail for the November election will arrive in time to be counted, The Washington Post reported Friday, Aug. 14. DeJoy, a former supply-chain CEO and a major donor to President Donald Trump and other Republicans, has pushed cost-cutting measures to eliminate overtime pay and hold mail until the next day if postal distribution centers are running late. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster, File)

by Lisa Mascaro and Matthew Daly — 

WASHINGTON (AP) — Facing public pressure and state lawsuits, the Postmaster general announced Tuesday he is halting some operational changes to mail delivery that critics warned were causing widespread delays and could disrupt voting in the November election.

Postmaster General Louis DeJoy said he would “suspend” his initiatives until after the election “to avoid even the appearance of impact on election mail.”

The abrupt reversal comes as more than 20 states, from New York to California, announced they would be suing to stop the changes. The states, along with lawmakers and others, want to ensure voters are able to use mail-in ballots if they prefer to avoid polling places due to health risks from COVID-19.

“The Postal Service is ready to handle whatever volume of election mail it receives,” DeJoy said in a statement.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. AP’s earlier story follows below.

WASHINGTON (AP) — Backlash mounting, President Donald Trump’s embattled Postmaster General Louis DeJoy will appear Friday before the Senate to testify on mail delivery delays and service changes that lawmakers and others are warning could imperil the November election.

Trump has flatly denied he was asking for a slow-walk of the mail. But his newly-installed postmaster, a Republican donor with no previous postal management, is facing pressure by Democrats to halt any changes as millions of Americans prepare to vote by mail during the COVID-19 crisis. Demonstrations are being held Tuesday in several cities.

Key Republicans are now sounding the alarm.

 

In the pivotal swing state of Ohio, Attorney General Dave Yost pleaded with Trump to postpone any needed changes to the Postal Service until after Election Day. GOP Sen. Rob Portman and other Republicans in Ohio’s congressional delegation urged DeJoy to “ensure timely and accurate delivery of election-related materials.”

The crisis at the Postal Service has erupted as a major election year issue as DeJoy, a Trump ally who took control of the agency in June, has swiftly engineered cuts and operational changes that are disrupting mail delivery operations and raising alarms among workers.

At the White House, Trump leveled fresh assaults Tuesday on mail-in voting and universal ballots. More Americans than ever are expected to choose to vote absentee this year instead of risking health concerns by voting at polling places during the coronavirus outbreak.

“You can’t have millions and millions of ballots sent all over the place, sent to people that are dead, sent to dogs, cats, sent everywhere,” Trump told reporters.

“This isn’t games and you have to get it right,” Trump said.

Trump made clear last week that he was blocking $25 billion emergency aid to the Postal Service, acknowledging he wanted to curtail election mail operations, as well as a Democratic proposal to provide $3.6 billion in additional election money to the states to help process an expected surge of mail-in ballots.

Congress is not in session but Speaker Nancy Pelosi is calling the House back to Washington over the crisis at the Postal Service, setting up a political showdown amid growing concerns that the Trump White House is trying to undermine the agency ahead of the election.

The House is expected to vote Saturday on legislation that would prohibit changes at the agency. The package will also include $25 billion to shore up the Postal Service, which faces continued financial losses.

DeJoy and the head of the Postal Service board of governors are also set to testify Monday in the House.

“We have to save the Post Office from the President now,” Pelosi said late Monday on MSNBC.

The top Democrat on the Homeland Security panel seeking DeJoy’s testimony, Sen. Gary Peters of Michigan, called the Postal Service “a lifeline” to Americans.

“We must ensure they can continue to count on dependable and timely delivery,” said Peters.

The Postal Service is among the nation’s oldest and more popular institutions, strained in recent years by declines first-class and business mail, but now hit with new challenges during the coronavirus pandemic. Trump routinely criticizes its business model, but the financial outlook is far more complex, and includes an unusual requirement to pre-fund retiree health benefits that advocates in Congress want to undo.

Ahead of the election, DeJoy, a former supply-chain CEO who took over the Postal Service in June, has sparked nationwide outcry over delays, new prices and cutbacks just as millions of Americans will be trying to vote by mail and polling places during the COVID-19 crisis.

Trump has defended DeJoy, but also criticized postal operations and claimed that universal mail-in ballots would be “a disaster.”

Experts say examples of ballot fraud have been overstated. The Brennan Center for Justice in 2017 ranked the risk of ballot fraud at 0.00004% to 0.0009%, based on studies of past elections.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, who sent senators home for a summer recess, distanced himself Monday from Trump’s complaints about mail operations. But the Republican leader also declined to recall senators to Washington, vowing the Postal Service “is going to be just fine.”

Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer and other Democrats, meanwhile, urged the postal board to use authority under a 1970 law to reverse operational changes put in place last month by DeJoy. If he declines to cooperate, “you have the authority, under the Postal Reorganization Act, to remove the postmaster general,″ the senators said in a letter to board members.

The Postal Service said it has stopped removing mailboxes and mail-sorting machines following complaints from lawmakers and customers. It said it would stop removing its distinctive blue mailboxes through mid-November.

The legislation set for Saturday’s vote, the “Delivering for America Act,” would prohibit the Postal Service from implementing any changes to operations or level of service it had in place on Jan. 1. The package would include the $25 billion approved as part of the COVID-19 rescue that is stalled in the Senate.

DeJoy, the first postmaster general in nearly two decades who was not a career postal employee, has pledged to modernize the money-losing agency to make it more efficient. He eliminated most overtime for postal workers, imposed restrictions on transportation and reduced of the quantity and use of mail-processing equipment.

Meanwhile, the Postal Service is seeking a short-term rate increase that would raise prices on commercial domestic competitive parcels, including Priority Mail Express, Priority Mail, first-class package service, Parcel Select and Parcel Return Service. The agency cited increased expenses, heightened demand for online packages due to the coronavirus pandemic and an expected increase in holiday mail volume.

Postal workers are increasingly worried about their ability to deliver for the fall election.

In a letter to postal staffers last week obtained by The Associated Press, DeJoy said his policies have brought “unintended consequences that impacted our overall service levels,” but added that the Postal Service “must make a number of significant changes which will not be easy, but which are necessary.”

Nate Castro, a postal staffer and union shop steward in Florida with more than three decades of experience, said the rationale behind DeJoy’s policy changes has been unclear.

“He’s on express mode where he’s not even taking the advice of people that are experienced for years,” said Castro.

___

Associated Press writers Anthony Izaguirre in Charleston, W.Va., Kevin Freking, Darlene Superville and Jill Colvin in Washington and Bruce Schreiner in Frankfort, Ky., contributed to this report.