Jammu Lok Sabha constituency: Know polling date, candidates and past results

The Jammu Constituency of Jammu & Kashmir, one of the state’s six Lok Sabha seats, will be up for election this year in the 2024 Lok Sabha.
‘Squad’ member under DOJ investigation is still paying her husband with campaign funds, filings show

Rep. Cori Bush, D-Mo., paid her husband another $15,000 from her candidate committee this year even as she faces a Justice Department probe into her campaign spending, new filings show. The progressive “Squad” member’s campaign made two $2,500 wage payments to her spouse, Cortney Merritts, each month between January 1 and March 29, according to documents submitted to the Federal Election Commission and released on Monday. In total, the Bush campaign has now paid Merritts $135,000 for security services since January 2022, which have been listed as “wage expenses” since April 2023. The Bush campaign did not immediately respond to a request for comment. CORI BUSH’S CAMPAIGN PAYS $17,500 MORE TO HER HUSBAND, BRINGING HIS TOTAL TO $120k, NEW FILINGS SHOW In January, Bush released a statement that confirmed Department of Justice investigators were reviewing her campaign committee’s spending on security services. “As a rank-and-file member of Congress I am not entitled to personal protection by the House, and instead have used campaign funds as permissible to retain security services,” Bush said. “In accordance with all applicable laws and House rules, I retained my husband as part of my security team to provide security services because he has extensive experience in this area, and is able to provide the necessary services at or below a fair market rate.” Politicians can pay family members from their committees as long as they provide “bona fide” services at fair market value. However, Merrits pocketed the money as Bush’s campaign simultaneously spent significantly more on St. Louis-based companies, such as PEACE Security, for private detail. She has spent over $770,000 on such services. Merritts, whose online accounts and posts have indicated he worked at a railroad company for years before starting a moving company, did not have a private security license as of late February 2023. He also did not appear in a Washington, D.C., database of licensed security specialists, Fox News Digital previously reported. CORI BUSH’S CAMPAIGN CONTINUES TO SHELL OUT THOUSANDS OF DOLLARS TO HER HUSBAND FOR PRIVATE SECURITY Watchdog groups have filed at least two complaints against Bush over the security payments. The first complaint, filed by the Foundation for Accountability and Civic Trust last year, is still pending. The House Ethics Committee has since cleared Bush in a second complaint from the Committee to Defeat the President. Bush’s campaign has declined to respond to multiple Fox News Digital inquiries about the payments. In October, Fox News Digital confronted Merritts as the couple left a Washington, D.C., fundraiser for California Democrat candidate Derek Marshall. During the exchange, Merritts appeared to backtrack about his role in the campaign after telling the videographer he does not have one. “I don’t have a role in the campaign, man,” Merritts told a videographer when asked what his role in the campaign is. CORI BUSH’S CAMPAIGN PAID HER HUSBAND FOR SECURITY SERVICES – BUT HE DOESN’T HAVE A PRIVATE SECURITY LICENSE However, when pressed, he said he was employed with the campaign. “I’m still in the campaign; I still do security with the campaign. Have a good night, man. Be safe,” Merritts said before getting into a car with Bush. FEC filings also show Bush is still at a significant cash disadvantage in the Democratic primary for Missouri’s 1st Congressional District. Ahead of the Aug. 6 primary, Bush reported $528,622 cash on hand as of March 31. Her opponent, Wesley Bell, a progressive prosecuting attorney for St. Louis County who differs from Bush in his Israel stance, has more than double at his disposal, with $1.14 million in his war chest. Bell is backed by wealthy Democratic donors, including LinkedIn co-founder Reid Hoffman, who contributed the maximum of $6,600 to his campaign for the primary and general elections, filings show. A recent poll found that Bush may also be in trouble come August. Bell is currently up by 22 points over the “Squad” member, the New York Post reported. Fox News Digital’s Joe Schoffstall contributed to this report.
House Republicans excoriate Ilhan Omar suggesting Columbia University protests not ‘anti-Jewish’

House Republicans excoriated progressive “Squad” Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn., for suggesting during the House Education and the Workforce Committee’s hearing tackling antisemitism at Columbia University that none of the demonstrations deriding Jews on campus have been “anti-Jewish.” Fox News Digital caught up with two Republicans on the committee at the Capitol after the hearing, asking their thoughts about Columbia University President Dr. Nemat “Minouche” Shafik initially testifying that she had not seen any campus protests that were explicitly “anti-Jewish.” Omar argued that campus demonstrations were merely “pro-war” or “anti-war,” but House Republican Conference Chair Rep. Elise Stefanik, R-N.Y., further pressed Shafik on whether she considered anti-Israel agitators’ chants of “F– the Jews” and “Death to the Jews” in fact anti-Jewish. Shafik conceded that those slogans heard on campus were “completely anti-Jewish,” amending her earlier testimony. “I thought her answer to that was wrong to begin with, and she had a chance to correct it. I was flabbergasted, actually, when she said no,” committee Chair Rep. Virginia Foxx, R-N.C., told Fox News Digital at the Capitol after the hearing. “She said there had been no anti-Jewish, incidents. Well, what is this whole hearing about? The whole hearing is about that.” STEFANIK SLAMS COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY ‘ARROGANCE,’ ‘INCONSISTENT TESTIMONY’: ‘RECKONING OF ACCOUNTABILITY’ “What I found interesting is the leadership’s response to that. And you saw Representative Stefanik really follow up with that,” Rep. Brandon Williams, R-N.Y., told Fox News Digital of the exchange. “They are in deep denial that they cover with these clever phrases … just because everything inside the protest was antisemitic, well, it wasn’t an antisemitic protest because it wasn’t labeled as such. Now that’s absurd. You know, I think a third grader would be able to discern, you know, the deception. But, but evidently that’s hard for, you know, the professors and the leadership at Columbia.” As the hearing was underway, protesters could be heard yelling outside demanding entry to the Capitol proceeding. Back at Columbia University’s campus in New York City, hundreds of anti-Israel agitators staged an “occupation” protest calling for the Ivy League school to “divest” from Israel. Video captured demonstrators lighting flares after nightfall, and the New York City Police Department arrested at least four people Thursday morning when crowds defied the school’s order to cease the “encampment,” which included tents set up on a campus lawn. “I think it’s very important that the Jewish students know that this committee has their back, that we will continue to fight with them against antisemitism,” Foxx told Fox News Digital. “And that’s my commitment to them. I think they understand that commitment. They’ve seen the other hearings that we’ve had. They’ve heard the things that we’ve said. And I think it’s important that they know they’re not alone on that campus, that we are going to be with them, whether we’re there physically with them, we’re there, mentally, psychologically and morally with them.” HOUSE REPUBLICANS GRILL COLUMBIA PRESIDENT OVER EMPLOYMENT OF PROF WHO CALLED OCT 7 HAMAS ATTACK ‘AWESOME’ Foxx and other House Republicans hosted a group of Jewish students at the Capitol, offering them the opportunity to speak at a press conference before hearing kicked off Wednesday morning. One of those students, Eden Yadegar, the daughter of Iranian immigrants, described recent instances of antisemitism on campus, including how a tenured Columbia professor allegedly told students that Jews who regularly attend temple are “indoctrinated,” a Jewish student having a Star of David necklace ripped from her neck, and on several occasions Jewish students being accosted by other students at the law school or in the kosher section of the dining hall yelling, “F— the Jews.” She said Jewish students have grown fearful of reporting instances of discrimination and harassment because “of how little faith they have that the university will take the necessary steps to protect them,” arguing the “university’s action has left Jewish students abandoned” after months of silence from the school leadership. Another student who spoke at the press conference, Yola Ashkenazi, described how Columbia has recognized clubs that say things like, “Zionists not invited,” and, “the Holocaust wasn’t that special.” She cited how swastikas have been drawn in campus buildings and said, “Columbia permits hate rallies on our campus that call for violence and eradication of the Jewish state” and call for “intifada revolution.” Ashkenazi described how on Feb. 2, when one of her friends was physically held outside the wall of the campus fitness center by demonstrators, Columbia public safety officers told him afterward to “not wear anything identifying him as Jewish when tensions are high.” Speaking with Fox News Digital ahead of the hearing, Yadegar said she was not surprised by the anti-Israel demonstrations happening again back on campus. “I think that we’ve gotten to a point where these student demonstrators feel that anything is fair game because they have not been disciplined adequately, and so I’m hoping that this hearing will shift us away from that direction,” Yadegar said outside the committee room. “We’ve been isolated on campus in certain organizations, in the classroom. It’s been incredibly difficult, but the Jewish people are incredibly resilient, and as Americans, as Jews, it’s our duty to continue to participate in these spaces that we’ve worked so hard to get to,” she said. “I do have a little bit of faith left in their leadership, and I do hope that they will follow through. They claim that antisemitism is abhorrent and that it has no space in our university, and our campus. The action over the past five months doesn’t coincide with that rhetoric, however the actions taken over the past couple of weeks are edging in that direction.”
Soldiers charged with violent crimes will now face more scrutiny before they can leave the Army

The change comes after reporting from ProPublica, The Texas Tribune and Military Times revealed that hundreds of soldiers charged with offenses like sexual assault and domestic violence left the Army without facing courts-martial.
Texas families could lose at-home nursing under stricter Medicaid rule

Some children who receive private duty nursing, a more continuous type of medical care in their homes, could lose their ability to live at home if an HHSC rule change goes into effect.
Texas is struggling to diversify its mental health workforce as the state becomes less white

More than 40% of the state’s population is Hispanic, but its mental health provider population is more than 80% white.
Remarks on Allopathy: SC asks yoga guru Ramdev to include complainants in plea for stay of criminal probe

The bench granted liberty to Ramdev to implead the complainants and posted the matter for hearing after the summer vacations of the apex court, which are starting from May 20.
Best IVF clinic in Pune: Femcare Fertility

With a steadfast commitment to excellence, Femcare Fertility’s ICSI clinic in Pune is poised to revolutionise the landscape of assisted reproductive technology in the region.
Why blindly emulate digital competition regulations and what are the risks, rewards

To go or not go ex-ante way as proposed in the new Digital Competition bill ( DCB ) or to wait and watch the outcome of Digital Markets Act (DMA) enforced by EU, is the debate in India during this open consultation process that ends on 15th May, 2024
What is the difference between CPI, PPI and PCE?

Inflation is an economic term that describes the general increase in prices and fall in the purchasing value of money over time.