The Senate can’t do charges — that takes the House impeaching him or the Justice Department filing criminal charges. A senate committee can however, gather evidence, and then pass it to the Justice Department with a recommendation that they prosecute. That’s what’s going on here.
Probably can’t do one new set of crimes per day (the Senate doesn’t move that fast) but it’s definitely happening.
To be fair, this is an investigation of a solicitation for a bribe which happened 15 days ago, and was reported by the Washington Post the morning after it happened.
It was at a political fundraiser; people there are supposed to be US citizens are have a green card (or be working as staff). So it was probably mainly the US oil companies, but they actively cooperate with overseas ones to push up prices.
Climate change is piling on to the challenge. Insurance companies are refusing to cover natural disasters in some disaster-prone regions, or pulling out of those places altogether, as State Farm did in California last year....
Over the past year, an ongoing and severe drought has parched most of Mexico, draining reservoirs and leaving parts of the country grappling with an acute water crisis. Since mid-March, scorching temperatures have led to at least 26 heat-related deaths, according to the nation’s health ministry. The double-whammy of weather...
Democrats ask DOJ to investigate Big Oil | Here's what to know, and why it's important. (heated.world)
Trump just made more promises to oil industry campaign donors (wapo.st)
The pledges to oil executives came a day before Senate Democrats launched a probe of Trump seeking $1 billion in donations from the oil industry.
Memo to Joe: Fight a Climate Election (billmckibben.substack.com)
The Biden Clean Energy Boom | The president’s signature 2022 climate law has sparked a rapid clean energy boom but its political impact is a lot less clear. (www.nytimes.com)
N.J. pharmacies can now sell birth control pills without prescriptions (www.nj.com)
ExxonMobil lost a bid to sue its own climate-focused shareholders | One suit was dismissed, though another will continue (qz.com)
Climate scientist leaves ExxonMobil’s board with little to show for it | Advocates had hoped Susan Avery’s nomination would be a turning-point moment for the company’s climate approach. It wasn’t. (www.exxonknews.org)
Anyone Want to Be a College President? There Are (Many) Openings | The job is not what it used to be. There are openings at U.C.L.A., Yale, Harvard, Cornell, Penn … and many, many others. (www.nytimes.com)
Ohio Elections Official Threatens to Exclude Biden From the Ballot (www.nytimes.com)
Senate Democrats Open Inquiry Into Trump’s $1 Billion Request of Oil Industry: Committees are seeking information from oil executives about a dinner where the former president proposed a quid pro quo (www.nytimes.com)
Key context:...
Supreme Court Sides With Republicans Over South Carolina Voting Map (www.nytimes.com)
Home-insurance payouts are shrinking. Here’s how to prevent the worst | Thanks to inflation and climate change, homeowners are getting less money back from their insurers to repair and rebuild (wapo.st)
Climate change is piling on to the challenge. Insurance companies are refusing to cover natural disasters in some disaster-prone regions, or pulling out of those places altogether, as State Farm did in California last year....
U.S. Calls for Breakup of Ticketmaster Owner (www.nytimes.com)
The brutal heat in Mexico is causing howler monkeys to drop dead from trees (wapo.st)
Over the past year, an ongoing and severe drought has parched most of Mexico, draining reservoirs and leaving parts of the country grappling with an acute water crisis. Since mid-March, scorching temperatures have led to at least 26 heat-related deaths, according to the nation’s health ministry. The double-whammy of weather...
These bricks conduct electricity and combine to create a powerful thermal battery | Backed by federal funding, MIT spin-off Electrified Thermal Solutions says its bricks can replace fossil fuels. (www.fastcompany.com)
Another Provocative Flag Was Flown at Another Alito Home: his beach house displayed an “Appeal to Heaven” flag, a symbol carried on Jan. 6 and associated with a push for Christian-minded government (www.nytimes.com)