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U.S. House tries anew to force sale or ban for TikTok, a ‘spy balloon in your phone’ • Louisiana Illuminator

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lailluminator.com – Ashley Murray – 2024-04-18 18:44:20

by Ashley Murray, Louisiana Illuminator
April 18, 2024

WASHINGTON — U.S. House leadership has packaged more than a dozen bipartisan bills into a so-called “sidecar” agreement meant to attract isolationist lawmakers' support for long-stalled foreign aid to Ukraine, Israel and Taiwan.

The wide-ranging catchall, introduced as the 21st Century Peace through Strength Act, would force the split of the hugely popular app TikTok from its Chinese owner, divert frozen Russian assets to Ukraine's reconstruction, and sanction international traffickers of deadly fentanyl.

Also among the proposals wrapped into the “sweetener” bundle are several anti-Iran measures quickly passed by the House Monday and Tuesday in reaction to Iran launching hundreds of missiles and drones toward Israel over the weekend.

A widely backed measure in the package that could potentially ban TikTok is garnering significant attention. Supporters of the measure cite national security concerns that China's government could access user data and manipulate algorithms. The app has over 170 million users in the U.S., according to the company.

The proposal to force Chinese-owned ByteDance to sell TikTok received a bipartisan endorsement in March when it passed the House on a 352-65 vote, but has been stalled in the U.S. Senate.

This time around, House lawmakers have extended a provision that would now give TikTok 270 days, up from 180 days, to find a buyer and remain in compliance if the bill is enacted. Also tucked in the new language is the authority for the president to grant an additional one-time extension up to 90 days.

Under the provision, if TikTok does not split from its Chinese parent-company within that time frame, app stores and web hosting platforms would be committing a crime by distributing, maintaining or updating the sharing site.

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‘Spy balloon in your phone'

Rep. Michael McCaul, chair of the House Committee on Foreign Affairs, on Thursday likened TikTok to having a “spy balloon in your phone,” referring to the February 2023 incident when a surveillance balloon from China drifted over the U.S. before being shot down off the coast of South Carolina.

U.S. Speaker of the House Mike Johnson of Louisiana, center, listens as Rep. Mike McCaul of Texas, left, speaks during a press conference at the U.S. Capitol on April 16, 2024 in Washington, D.C. Also pictured is House Majority Leader Rep. Steve Scalise of Louisiana. (Win McNamee/Getty Images)

“If you're worried about privacy, as I know you are extremely worried about that, and if we don't think Congress should be using TikTok, why in the world would we let our children use it or the American people?” the Texas Republican said to House Rules Committee member Rep. Thomas Massie during a Thursday hearing.

Congress banned TikTok from government-issued devices last year.

Massie said he opposed the addition of the TikTok bill into the larger national security package.

“This was not unanimously supported on the floor of the House. It's been described as a sweetener in the bill. It doesn't sweeten the package for me at all. It's kind of sour if you ask me,” the Kentucky Republican said.

Massie cited concerns that the bill would grant too much power to the president and executive branch agencies in determining when an application owned by a foreign adversary has been divested.

“I'm just afraid that we are creating another authority for the executive branch where we could have withheld some discretion,” Massie said. “The president, whoever that may be, we don't know who's going to win the next election, whoever that may be, may abuse that authority.”

An email sent Thursday to Congress members by the House Select Committee on the Chinese Communist Party highlighted talking points to counter criticism. The message underscored that only applications owned by specifically designated foreign adversaries would be subject under the bill, if enacted.

“Congress is the only one that can change the (foreign adversary) definition used in this bill, not the Biden administration,” read an email from Allison Aprahamian, the committee's communications director.

The bill's sponsor, Rep. Mike Gallagher, who chairs the committee, is set to leave Congress on Friday. However, an aide said the Wisconsin Republican has the flexibility to stay and support the package through Saturday, when votes are expected.

Senate hesitation

While the bill sailed through the powerful House Committee on Energy and Commerce with unanimous support in March and landed on the House floor days later, the Senate has not followed with speed.

Sen. Maria Cantwell, a Washington Democrat who chairs the Senate Committee on Commerce, told reporters she doesn't want to rush through the process.

“I think it's important to get it right,” Cantwell told reporters outside a classified briefing on TikTok on March 20.

It remains unclear if the upper chamber would let the House TikTok bill go through as part of the national security supplemental package.

A TikTok spokesperson said Thursday that the company finds it “unfortunate that the House of Representatives is using the cover of important foreign and humanitarian assistance to once again jam through a ban bill that would trample the free speech rights of 170 million Americans, devastate 7 million businesses, and shutter a platform that contributes $24 billion to the U.S. economy, annually.“

Other pieces of the package

Another provision gaining attention is the Rebuilding Economic Prosperity and Opportunity for Ukrainians Act, otherwise known as the REPO Act.

The McCaul bill introduced nearly a year ago with Ohio Democrat Marcy Kaptur, among other sponsors, would liquidate confiscated Russian assets into a fund for humanitarian and reconstruction efforts in Ukraine.

House Speaker Mike Johnson, of Louisiana, vowed during recess that he would attach the REPO Act to the administration's Ukraine aid request as a way to attract skeptical conservatives who largely oppose helping the war-torn European ally.

Other bills in the package include:

FEND Off Fentanyl Act, introduced in May 2023Protecting Americans' Data from Foreign Adversaries Act, passed the House 414-0 on March 13Stop Harboring Iranian Petroleum Act, passed the House 342-69 in November 2023Fight and Combat Rampant Iranian Missile Exports Act, passed the House 403-8 in September 2023Mahsa Amini Human Rights and Security Accountability Act, passed the House 410-3 in September 2023Hamas and Other Palestinian Terrorist Groups International Financing Prevention Act, passed the House 363-46 in November 2023No Technology for Terror Act, passed the House 406-19 on April 16, 2024Strengthening Tools to Counter the Use of Human Shields Act, passed the House 419-4 on April 16, 2024Illicit Captagon Trafficking Suppression Act, passed the House 410-13 on April 16, 2024End Financing for Hamas and State Sponsors of Terrorism Act, introduced November 2023, passed out of committee 36-13Holding Iranian Leaders Accountable Act, passed the House 419-4 on April 16, 2024Iran-China Energy Sanctions Act of 2023, passed the House 383-11 on April 15, 2024

Louisiana Illuminator is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Greg LaRose for questions: info@lailluminator.com. Follow Louisiana Illuminator on Facebook and Twitter.

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Gambling on a constitutional convention • Louisiana Illuminator

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lailluminator.com – Robert Collins – 2024-05-16 09:31:15

by Robert Collins, Louisiana Illuminator
May 16, 2024

Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry recently requested that the Legislature call a constitutional convention. He says the current constitution is too restrictive, and forbids cuts to most agencies, resulting in most cuts falling on higher education and healthcare. He also says that most of the amendments in the constitution should be statutes that can be changed by the state Legislature.

The enabling legislation that made it out of the House proposes to hold a two-week convention starting Aug.1, with convention committees meeting prior to the convention to receive public comments.

The current Louisiana constitution is a flawed and excessively-amended document and should be rewritten at some point. However, the legislation being sent over to the Senate for debate is setting up a rushed, high-risk process that makes it difficult for ordinary citizens to have their voices heard. It would increase the influence of the governor by giving him more discretionary power over how state money is spent, but it's unclear how it would help ordinary citizens.

The first problem with current convention legislation is the lack of public input. The constitutional convention of 1973 had a long series of open meetings that stretched over an entire year. Meetings were not only held in Baton Rouge. Committee members traveled to all parts of the state to make sure that any citizen who wanted to participate in a public meeting received the opportunity.

The 1973 convention was composed primarily of elected delegates. Some were state lawmakers, some were local officeholders, but many were simply private citizens who chose to run for a delegate seat. The current legislation calls for a convention of strictly state legislators and gubernatorial appointees. It's not really a recipe for broad public participation.

This is especially problematic for the urban areas of the state. The main protection that a city such as New Orleans, a heavily Democratic city in a Republican state, has is a home rule charter. The central structure of city government is shielded from state interference by the home rule charter rights written into the constitution. A hostile group of delegates could weaken the home rule charter provisions in the document. They could choose to change the form of government of the city altogether, taking away the power of the mayor and City Council to appoint members of city boards and commissions, such as the City Planning Commission or Sewerage & Water Board, and give those powers to the state.

The governor's legislative floor leaders have responded to criticism that the time period allocated to write a new constitution is too short to allow broad public participation by describing the new constitution as a refresh or a streamlining. They argue that their goal is not to write a new constitution from scratch, but simply to remove all of the provisions that should be legislative statutes. Their stated plan is a “limited convention.”

There is no such thing as a limited convention. There is nothing in Louisiana law that would stop delegates from immediately expanding the scope of the convention once they go into session. History indicates that governors and legislative floor leaders usually lose control of these conventions.

Veteran political journalist Jeremy Alford, in his book, “The Last Constitution,” said that the last time the state wrote a new constitution, in 1973, newly-elected Governor Edwin Edwards ran on a very specific set of constitutional reforms. Since Edwards was a popular and powerful governor, everyone expected the delegates to follow his charge. Alford said: “The delegates, however, ignored that charge and penned a plan for drafting their own constitution on the back of a cocktail napkin from Pastime Lounge, which in turn became one of the first official documents entered into the convention record.”

Given the high stakes of getting this convention wrong, it is time for the Senate to slow the process down, stretch it out, schedule public meetings across the state, and bring more private citizens into the process.

Ultimately, the voters will have the final say because a new constitution must be approved by a simple majority in a statewide vote. It would be preferable to bring broad public participation at the start of the process rather than waiting until the end. Rushing the process and excluding most of the voters runs the risk of dealing the state a losing hand in the end.

This article first appeared on Verite News and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

Louisiana Illuminator is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Greg LaRose for questions: info@lailluminator.com. Follow Louisiana Illuminator on Facebook and Twitter.

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More students could have access to tutoring vouchers, but few expected to use them • Louisiana Illuminator

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lailluminator.com – Allison Allsop – 2024-05-16 05:00:43

by Allison Allsop, Louisiana Illuminator
May 16, 2024

Louisiana lawmakers advanced a bill Wednesday that would expand a voucher program for students not meeting state math and reading standards, and state officials are hoping demand for them will increase.  

House Bill 244, authored by Rep. Jason Hughes, D-New Orleans, would increase the amount of voucher money families receive, expand the grades from which students can access the program and add numeracy tutoring to the program. The bill unanimously passed out of the Senate Education Committee. 

The vouchers are currently worth $1,000. Hughes' bill would increase the amount to $1,500. 

The Legislative Fiscal Office estimates the expanded program will cost the state nearly $4.5 million starting in 2025. The program has previously been paid for with federal Elementary and Secondary School Relief (ESSR) funds. 

The last round of ESSR funds expire in September, so the state must use the money by then or lose any remaining amount. 

The Louisiana Department of Education originally invested $40 million of ESSR funds in the tutoring program, but the money was steered toward other needs once it became clear students would use only around $2 million. 

Under the Hughes bill, students in kindergarten through 12th grade could use vouchers for either math or literacy tutoring. Currently, the vouchers are only available to kindergarten to fifth-grade students. 

In order to be eligible, students must score below their grade level or fall short of mastery in math or English on state assessment tests and be considered at risk for learning difficulties. Priority is given to low-income families. 

The vouchers can only be used for tutoring services the Louisiana Department of Education has approved. The state does not anticipate Hughes' proposal to increase the percentage of students who will use the program. It's estimated more than 300,000 students will be eligible but fewer than 3,000 students are expected to obtain tutoring. 

According to a NOLA.com report, education advocates say the program is not well-known among teachers or parents. The availability of tutors has been sparse, and critics say unnecessary burdens such as the application process make it difficult to take part. As a result, only 0.8% of eligible students have been reached since the services were first offered in 2021. 

Hughes' bill would also change the name of the program to the Steve Carter Education Program. The former state representative, who died in 2021, chaired the House Education Committee from 2011 to 2025. 

The proposal now moves to the Senate Finance Committee.

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Also on Wednesday, the Senate Education Committee passed a bill that would create a screening for numeracy, or math basics, in kindergarten through third grade. 

House Bill 267, authored by Rep. Kim Carver, R-Mandeville, mimics the system already in place for literacy screenings. It would require students to be tested three times a year and for parents to be notified if their children do not meet grade-level expectations. 

Carver's bill would also require numeracy intervention and support for students testing below grade level. They would also be given an improvement plan created in concert with their parents, teachers and other necessary school personnel. 

The legislation carries a $2.5 million cost for the first year and $3 million every year after. The expense is associated with assigning new vendors to performing the screenings three times a year. 

The proposal passed committee unanimously and now moves to the Senate Finance Committee. The legislation would be implemented in the 2026-27 school year if approved.

This story's headline and lede were updated for clarity. 

Louisiana Illuminator is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Greg LaRose for questions: info@lailluminator.com. Follow Louisiana Illuminator on Facebook and Twitter.

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Ranked-choice voting close to being illegal in Louisiana • Louisiana Illuminator

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lailluminator.com – Wesley Muller – 2024-05-15 18:28:24

by Wesley Muller, Louisiana Illuminator
May 15, 2024

Louisiana House lawmakers approved a bill Wednesday to outlaw ranked-choice voting, a method of elections they claim is too susceptible to fraud even though thousands of military members have used it for decades. 

Senate Bill 101, sponsored by Sen. Blake Miguez, R-New Iberia, passed the House in a 74-22 vote and will return to the Senate for concurrence before heading to Gov. Jeff Landry, who is expected to sign it into law.  

The vote fell mostly along party lines with every Republican voting in favor of the proposal and most Democrats voting against it except for Reps. Roy Daryl Adams of Jackson, Marcus Bryant of New Iberia, Robby Carter of Amite and Steven Jackson of Shreveport.

Miguez's bill prohibits local governments from holding ranked-choice elections, with an exception for out-of-state military members who have used it in Louisiana elections for decades. 

Ranked-choice voting, also called “instant-runoff” voting, allows voters to list candidates in order of preference rather than select just one. It has grown increasingly popular across the country for its ability to temper extreme partisanship and give moderates and third-party candidates a better chance in elections.

When ballots are tallied on Election Day, the race is over if any candidate nets more than 50% of the first-place votes that are cast. If no candidate gets a majority in the first round, then the candidate with the fewest votes is eliminated. If a voter's first choice is eliminated, rather than his vote being wasted, it is applied to his second favorite candidate. The process continues with the lowest ranking candidates being tossed out until one candidate gets more than half of the votes. 

During committee hearings on the bill, Miguez falsely claimed ranked-choice voting “guarantees that ballots are thrown in the trash.” It echoes national lobby groups that have blamed ranked-choice voting for helping defeat their preferred candidates and are now trying to get states to ban it. 

Miguez's arguments against ranked-choice voting lean on misinformation

Military service members stationed out of state or overseas have used ranked choice to vote in Louisiana elections with no issues since the 1990s. There has never been evidence that their ballots have been disposed of without being counted as Miguez claimed. 

Rep. Beau Beaullieu, R-New Iberia, presented the bill to the House floor Wednesday on behalf of Miguez, claiming ranked choice disenfranchises voters. He was unable to offer specifics when House Democrats pressed him on the claim and asked why, if the claim is true, has it never disenfranchised Louisiana's military voters.  

Miguez's bill is part of Republican Secretary of State Nancy Landry's legislative agenda. Landry has argued ranked-choice voting can sometimes be complex and confusing, which is believed to have been the case in some elections. 

An analysis of a 2004 ranked-choice election in San Francisco found that it might have led to lower engagement among African Americans, Latinos, less educated voters and those whose first language was not English, according to the Alaska Policy Forum. 

However, other states and municipalities report success with ranked choice. Polling after the 2021 election in Utah found 86% of voters liked the system, and 81% said it was easy or somewhat easy to use, according to the Salt Lake Tribune

Ranked-choice voting is used in more than 50 cities across 14 states. Colorado, Nevada and Oregon are on track to consider adopting it this year for statewide elections. It is even credited with helping Republicans break a decade-long losing streak in Virginia with the 2021 election of Gov. Glen Youngkin.

Like Miguez's bill, legislation in four other southern states seeking to ban ranked-choice voting includes exceptions for overseas military voters.

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Louisiana Illuminator is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Greg LaRose for questions: info@lailluminator.com. Follow Louisiana Illuminator on Facebook and Twitter.

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