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2022

Dallas Fed hires U.S. central bank markets expert as new chief

Dallas Fed hires U.S. central bank markets expert as new chief 150 150 admin

By Ann Saphir

(Reuters) -The Dallas Federal Reserve on Wednesday named Lorie Logan as its next president, filling the vacancy left by Robert Kaplan’s departure last fall after an outcry over the ethics of his active stocks trading during the coronavirus pandemic.

Logan, an executive vice president at the New York Fed and the manager of the Fed’s System Open Market Account, will start her new job on Aug. 22, the Dallas Fed said in a statement.

The U.S. central bank is in the midst of its most rapid policy tightening in decades to deal with inflation that is rising at its fastest pace since the early 1980s. Data released on Wednesday showed consumer prices rose at an annual pace of 8.3% in April.

Logan, 49, will join the presidents of the 11 other regional Fed banks and the Washington-based Fed Board of Governors in setting monetary policy for the world’s biggest economy. Her first policy meeting will be on Sept. 20-21.

She will be the Dallas Fed’s first permanent female chief.

A senior official in the New York Fed’s markets division since 2012, Logan currently manages the central bank’s $9 trillion portfolio of securities, cash and other assets.

Those holdings roughly doubled during the pandemic as the Fed sought to ease financial conditions and bolster the economy, and under Logan the Fed is now poised to trim those assets, beginning next month, as part of its overall bid to raise U.S. borrowing costs and slow growth.

“Lorie is a trusted colleague and dedicated public servant whose remarkable skill and experience with complex financial markets has informed our decisions and helped implement monetary policy to support the U.S. economy,” Fed Chair Jerome Powell said in the statement.

Powell has signaled that he and fellow policymakers will likely follow last week’s half-percentage-point interest rate hike with at least two more hikes of the same size at upcoming policy meetings.

The aim of the rises in borrowing costs is to slow household demand for goods and services and business demand for workers fast enough to cool price and wage pressures and bring inflation down to the Fed’s 2% target.

Fed policymakers hope that can be done without undercutting the strong labor market or sending the economy into a prolonged downturn.

As a Fed insider and a markets expert, Logan is a departure from the Dallas Fed’s last two presidents, both of whom came from outside the U.S. central bank’s system.

Meredith Black has run the Dallas Fed on an interim basis since October after Kaplan, along with Boston Fed President Eric Rosengren, retired before their terms were out. They stepped down amid revelations of personal trading even as the Fed was buying trillions of dollars of assets to stabilize markets, lifting the prices of the kinds of securities that both men were trading.

Four other Fed banks also have women leaders, including incoming Boston Fed President Susan Collins, currently provost of the University of Michigan. She will be the first Black woman to serve as a Fed bank chief when she starts on July 1.

U.S. Senator Bob Menendez and fellow lawmaker Raul Ruiz, a U.S. representative, said they were disappointed the Dallas Fed board did not pick what could have been the Fed’s first Latino policymaker.

“It missed an opportunity,” they wrote.

(Reporting by Ann Saphir in Berkeley, Calif.Editing by Paul Simao and Matthew Lewis)

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Russia demands formal Polish apology for Warsaw anti-war protest

Russia demands formal Polish apology for Warsaw anti-war protest 150 150 admin

WARSAW (Reuters) -Russia on Wednesday demanded a formal apology from Poland and threatened possible future reprisals for a protest in which Moscow’s ambassador to Warsaw was doused with red paint.

The ambassador, Sergey Andreev, was accosted by people protesting against Russia’s intervention in Ukraine as he went to lay flowers at the Soviet Military Cemetery in Warsaw on Monday, drawing a furious reaction from Moscow.

The Russian foreign ministry summoned Polish Ambassador Krzysztof Krajewski to receive its protest.

“Russia expects an official apology from the Polish leadership in connection with the incident and demands the safety of the Russian ambassador and all employees of Russian foreign institutions in Poland are ensured,” it said in a statement.

“A decision on further steps will be taken depending on Warsaw’s reaction to our demands.”

On Wednesday afternoon, red paint was splattered over the entrance to the Polish Embassy in Moscow, a spokesman for the Polish foreign ministry said. Polish Foreign Minister Zbigniew Rau said authorities had warned Andreev that attending the cemetery on Monday, when Russia was commemorating the Soviet Union’s victory over Nazi Germany in World War Two, risked provoking an incident, according to the state-run PAP news agency.

“However, what happened does not in any way change our position that diplomatic representatives of foreign countries are entitled to protection … no matter how much we feel the need to disagree with the policy of the government that the diplomat represents,” Rau was quoted as saying.

Relations between Russia and the West have become fraught since Moscow sent tens of thousands of troops into Ukraine on Feb. 24 in what it calls a “special military operation” to disarm the country and protect it from “fascists”.

More than 3 million Ukrainians have fled to Poland, which has consistently argued for the Western sanctions imposed on Moscow to be tough, and has expelled 45 Russian diplomats, prompting a tit-for-tat response from Moscow.

Ukraine and the West say the fascist allegation is baseless and that Moscow launched an unprovoked act of aggression against its neighbour.

(Reporting by Alan Charlish, Marek Strzelecki; Editing by Kevin Liffey, Nick Macfie and Mark Heinrich)

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"CODA" stars and real-life CODAs on portrayals of Deaf community

"CODA" stars and real-life CODAs on portrayals of Deaf community 150 150 admin

Fugitive planned shootout before officers rammed his car into ditch, sheriff says

Fugitive planned shootout before officers rammed his car into ditch, sheriff says 150 150 admin

Casey White and Vicky White had about $29,000 in cash, multiple wigs, four handguns and an AR-15 rifle when they were captured, the sheriff said.
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Nashville's historic Ernest Tubb Record Shop closes its doors

Nashville's historic Ernest Tubb Record Shop closes its doors 150 150 admin

Factbox-Key races in Nebraska, West Virginia primaries on May 10

Factbox-Key races in Nebraska, West Virginia primaries on May 10 150 150 admin

WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The Republican-leaning states of Nebraska and West Virginia held primary elections on May 10 for the U.S. House of Representatives and other offices.

Following are notable races that could help shape the Nov. 8 midterm elections when Republicans hope to win control of the U.S. Congress.

NEBRASKA GOVERNORSHIP

Trump’s endorsement power took a knock in the Republican gubernatorial primary in Nebraska, where Trump-backed Charles Herbster lost to University of Nebraska Regent Jim Pillen, according to a projection by Edison Research.

Herbster, a farming executive, was recently accused by several women, including a Republican state senator, of groping them. He denied the allegations but trailed Pillen across the largely rural state.

Pillen, who was endorsed by the departing Republican governor and the Farm Bureau, will face Democratic state senator Carol Blood in a contest seen as an easy win for Republicans.

WEST VIRGINIA’S 2ND CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT

Former President Donald Trump’s pick, U.S. Representative Alex Mooney, prevailed in a contest against fellow incumbent Republican Congressman David McKinley, according to a projection by Edison Research. The two were pitted against one another because their state, West Virginia, lost a U.S. House seat due to its shrinking population.

Mooney will likely win in November as the district is solidly Republican.

NEBRASKA 2ND CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT

Centered around Omaha, the state’s largest city, the 2nd district is seen as a potentially competitive race in November and has been held by Republican Don Bacon since 2017.

Bacon, who Trump had urged voters to oust from office, fended off a primary challenger and will face Democratic state Senator Tony Vargas in November, according to a projection by Edison Research.

(Reporting by Jason Lange; Editing by Scott Malone, Alistair Bell and Rosalba O’Brien)

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Trump's pick loses gubernatorial primary in Nebraska, but his candidate in West Virginia won

Trump's pick loses gubernatorial primary in Nebraska, but his candidate in West Virginia won 150 150 admin

In Nebraska, Trump had backed Charles Herbster, who was accused by multiple women of groping.
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Casey McQuiston on why they wrote a book they knew could be banned

Casey McQuiston on why they wrote a book they knew could be banned 150 150 admin

Trump-backed candidates lose in Nebraska, win in West Virginia

Trump-backed candidates lose in Nebraska, win in West Virginia 150 150 admin

By Andy Sullivan and Jason Lange

WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Donald Trump’s favored candidate fell short in Nebraska’s Republican primary election for governor on Tuesday, but the former president’s pick prevailed in a congressional primary contest in West Virginia.

Tuesday’s elections delivered a split result for Trump, who has endorsed more than 150 candidates as he tries to shape his Republican Party ahead of a possible 2024 presidential run.

In Nebraska, his choice for governor, Charles Herbster, lost to rival Jim Pillen, according to Edison Research, even though Trump had hosted a rally for him a little more than a week earlier.

But in West Virginia, voters opted for Representative Alex Mooney, a candidate who has backed Trump’s false claims about fraud in the 2020 presidential election.

Tuesday’s elections are part of a series of nominating contests that will set the stage for Nov. 8 elections in which Republicans are favored to win control of at least one chamber of Congress, which would give them the power to bring Democratic President Joe Biden’s legislative agenda to a halt.

Trump’s influence will be put to the test in high-profile Senate contests later this month in Pennsylvania, North Carolina and Georgia.

The Nebraska contest had been dominated in recent weeks by accusations that Herbster, an agriculture executive, had sexually harassed several women, which he has denied.

Edison Research projected that Pillen, a hog farmer and university board member, would defeat Herbster and win the nomination. Pillen was endorsed by the current governor, Pete Ricketts.

In West Virginia, Mooney, Trump’s preferred candidate, defeated rival David McKinley, who was backed by the state’s governor, Jim Justice.

McKinley had campaigned on his support for Biden’s infrastructure law, which will send billions of dollars to the state for roads, bridges and other projects. Both are incumbents in a state that has lost a seat due to a shrinking population.

“I am honored the voters of West Virginia’s new 2nd congressional district have chosen me to carry the conservative banner as we begin the sprint to November,” Mooney said on Twitter. “Tonight is a monumental night for West Virginians & I look forward to being their trusted conservative voice in Congress.”

Also in Nebraska, Representative Don Bacon was on track to win the Republican primary after Edison Research predicted he would hold off challenger Steve Kuehl. Trump had urged voters to reject Bacon due to his criticism of Trump’s role in the Jan. 6, 2021 attack on the U.S. Capitol.

Bacon will face a competitive November election in the Omaha-based district against Democrat Tony Vargas, who was projected by Edison Research to win his party’s primary.

(Reporting by Andy Sullivan, additional reporting by Jason Lange; Editing by Scott Malone, Alistair Bell, Rosalba O’Brien and Kim Coghill)

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New details emerge in capture of Alabama fugitives

New details emerge in capture of Alabama fugitives 150 150 admin

Casey White is back in jail after U.S. Marshals finally caught up with him and former jail official Vicky White. Investigators believe Vicky White shot herself as officers closed in. WTFV’s Chris Davis has the latest.
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