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Tuesday, January 12, 2021

Posted By on Tue, Jan 12, 2021 at 8:46 PM

click to enlarge Middlebury College Rescinds Rudy Giuliani's Honorary Degree
YouTube/C-SPAN2
Rudy Giuliani speaking to attendees at the Stop the Steal Rally last Wednesday
Middlebury College has made good on its threat to rescind the honorary doctor of laws degree that it conferred upon Rudy Giuliani in 2005.

On Sunday, the Middlebury Campus, the school newspaper, published an editorial urging the college to do just that. The writers noted that, in the wake of the violent storming of the U.S. Capitol building by extremists supporting President Donald Trump, two colleges had revoked honorary degrees previously given to Trump.

The paper also noted that Giuliani, Trump's personal lawyer, had addressed a Trump rally just hours before attendees headed to the Capitol, urging a "trial by combat" over the results of the 2020 presidential campaign.

College president Laurie Patton issued a statement Sunday calling the riot "an insurrection against democracy itself" and saying a decision on the degree would be made within days.

Tuesday evening, the college announced its decision using a method that the president has favored for years, up until his account was suspended: a tweet.

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Posted By on Tue, Jan 12, 2021 at 2:55 PM

click to enlarge Republican Lawmakers Call for VTGOP Leaders to Condemn Trump or Resign
File: Sophie Macmillan ©️ Seven Days
Deb Billado
Updated at 3:55 p.m.

Some Republican legislators in Vermont are calling for the resignation of the Trump-loving leaders of the state's GOP if they can’t support removing the president from office.

Lawmakers overwhelmingly passed a joint resolution last week calling for Donald Trump to resign or be removed from office by his cabinet or Congress for his role in inciting the violent insurrection at the U.S. Capital.

The move followed Gov. Phil Scott’s demand for Trump’s removal for “fanning the flames” that led to the mob storming Congress in a failed attempt to overturn the results of the presidential election.

The VTGOP released a statement last week condemning the violence. But it did not acknowledge Trump's role in inciting it, call for him to resign or be removed, or even acknowledge his electoral loss. Party officials need to do all of these things if they claim to represent Vermont Republicans, said Rep. Scott Beck (R-St. Johnsbury).

“I have had some pointed comments at VTGOP leadership, and I have said to them, ‘If you cannot cross these bridges, I think it’s time for you to move on,'” Beck told Seven Days on Tuesday.

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Monday, January 11, 2021

Posted By on Mon, Jan 11, 2021 at 7:03 PM

click to enlarge Vermont Braces for Armed Protests Leading Up to Inauguration
Dreamstime
The Vermont Statehouse
Vermont law enforcement officials are bracing for armed protesters at the Statehouse after the FBI warned of demonstrations in all state capitals between January 16 and January 20, the day of president-elect Joe Biden's inauguration.

Law enforcement agencies — including  Vermont State Police, Montpelier Police, Capitol Police and Vermont National Guard forces— are in close coordination “to monitor the threat stream” based on the “national chatter” since a violent mob of pro-President Donald Trump extremists stormed the U.S. Capitol, state Public Safety Commissioner Mike Schirling said Monday.

He declined, however, to describe the specific steps being taken to prepare for the prospect, noting that it’s still unclear what might develop. “We’re planning for a variety of potential eventualities," he said, but no specific threats have emerged.

While “we’re all feeling concern and unease as a result of what we saw last week,” Schirling said, Vermonters are used to working out their differences peacefully. Given the volatility of the political climate, however, Schirling suggested people who do come out to protest in coming days consider leaving their firearms at home.

While he said it’s “not my place to tell people where and when to protest,” he added it “makes sense to rethink the timing” of an anticipated January 17th armed rally, given recent events. “Think twice about whether this is the particular time you choose to bring a weapon to a protest, even if it is a Second Amendment issue,” Schirling said.

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Sunday, January 10, 2021

Posted By on Sun, Jan 10, 2021 at 8:45 PM

click to enlarge Middlebury College Might Revoke Rudy Giuliani's Honorary Degree
YouTube/C-SPAN2
Rudy Giuliani speaking to attendees at the Stop the Steal Rally last Wednesday
Middlebury College is considering revoking an honorary degree it conferred upon Rudy Giuliani, citing his role in "fomenting" the storming of the U.S. Capitol, college president Laurie Patton announced Sunday.

Giuliani, the former mayor of New York City, received the doctor of laws degree in 2005, long before he became President Donald Trump's personal attorney. In that role, he's been at the center of the president's effort to subvert the 2020 presidential election, which has been marked by false claims and failed lawsuits.

Giuliani spoke last Wednesday to those who trekked to D.C. for a Stop the Steal rally, just hours before attendees rushed the Capitol. He alleged, as he has for months, that the presidential election had been fraudulent.

"If we're wrong, we will be made fools of," he asserted. "But if we're right, a lot of them will go to jail. So, let's have trial by combat!"

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Friday, January 8, 2021

Posted By on Fri, Jan 8, 2021 at 4:24 PM

click to enlarge Vermont Senate Joins House in Call for Trump's Ouster
Associated Press
U.S. Rep. Peter Welch (D-Vt.) and others ducking for cover as rioters swarmed the U.S. Capitol
Vermont senators overwhelmingly joined their House colleagues Friday in approving a resolution calling for President Donald Trump to immediately resign from office or be removed from power.

The Senate’s 29-1 vote on the joint resolution follows its passage in the House Thursday afternoon by a 130-16 vote.

Senators did not debate the merits of the measure, but afterward, echoing comments she made the previous evening, Senate President Pro Tempore Becca Balint (D-Windham) issued a statement asserting that lawmakers’ oaths to defend the constitution obliged them to act.

“Regardless of party, we share a clear and public commitment to the rule of law, to the people, and to the ideals of this great state, which were violated by the President and the extremists who attacked the Capitol,” Balint said.

The resolution notes that Trump addressed supporters on Wednesday, “urging them to go to the U.S. Capitol in support of his false claim that he won the 2020 presidential election” before they "violently stormed the building, attacking police officers, ransacking offices, terrorizing the members of Congress, and forcing the stoppage of the certification of President-elect Biden’s electoral victory.”

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Posted By on Fri, Jan 8, 2021 at 3:48 PM

click to enlarge Vermont Officials Say They Can't Force D.C. Bus Passengers to Quarantine
File: Jeb Wallace-Brodeur
Public Safety Commissioner Mike Schirling
Vermont officials said on Friday that they have no way to ensure that dozens of people who rode a charter bus this week to a Trump rally in Washington, D.C., actually abide by state quarantine rules.

Those rules require anyone entering Vermont from out of state to quarantine for two weeks upon arrival. Rather than impose penalties for violations, the state has adopted a policy of educating people about the rules.

A busload of Trump supporters left South Burlington on Tuesday night, spent Wednesday at the rally — which morphed into a siege of the U.S. Capitol by pro-Trump extremists — before returning by bus early Thursday morning.

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Thursday, January 7, 2021

Posted By on Thu, Jan 7, 2021 at 7:50 AM

After Riots at the Capitol, Busload of Vermont Trump Supporters Returns From D.C.
Derek Brouwer ©️ Seven Days
Vermonters return from Washington, D.C., early Thursday morning
President Donald Trump’s most loyal Vermont supporters had advanced on Washington, D.C., Wednesday with high hopes and mulish conviction. They returned home early Thursday morning in much less of a celebratory mood.

A charter bus ferrying 50 or so Vermonters from the nation's capital pulled into a pitch-black parking lot in South Burlington after 3 a.m., just as Congress finished certifying results that confirmed Joe Biden as the next president. The foot soldiers in Trump’s campaign to overturn the election looked weary as they filed, one-by-one, into the cold, windy night.

They quietly retrieved their bags from luggage compartments, taking care not to grab someone else's "Trump 2020" flag, then offered brief goodbyes to their compatriots. None wore masks.

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Wednesday, January 6, 2021

Posted By on Wed, Jan 6, 2021 at 6:50 PM

Vermont Gov. Phil Scott Calls for Trump to 'Resign or Be Removed From Office'
FILE: JEB WALLACE-BRODEUR
Gov. Phil Scott
Updated at 7:11 p.m.

Republican Vermont Gov. Phil Scott called on President Donald Trump to "resign or be removed from office" for inciting Wednesday's riot at the U.S. Capitol. In a statement released Wednesday evening, Scott accused the president of blatantly trying to spark an "insurrection."

“This is a very disturbing time for our nation. What we are seeing today at the U.S. Capitol is not a peaceful protest — it is an unacceptable attack on our democracy," Scott wrote. “Make no mistake, the President of the United States is responsible for this event."

“President Trump should resign or be removed from office by his Cabinet, or by the Congress," Scott said.

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Posted By on Wed, Jan 6, 2021 at 2:59 PM

click to enlarge 'This Was Not a Drill': Welch Recounts Chaos as Trump Supporters Stormed U.S. Capitol
Associated Press
Rep. Peter Welch (far right) and others duck for cover in the U.S. House gallery

Updated 8:59 p.m.

Members of Congress, including Rep. Peter Welch (D-Vt.), were placed under lockdown on Wednesday after supporters of President Donald Trump breached barricades at the Capitol building, propelling the nation's government into a state of chaos on a day meant to certify President-elect Joe Biden’s victory.

Federal lawmakers were debating an attempt by some Republicans to overturn Trump’s election defeat when pro-Trump extremists stormed the Capitol building. Security rushed Vice President Mike Pence off of the Senate floor and placed both chambers on lockdown.

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Saturday, December 12, 2020

Posted By on Sat, Dec 12, 2020 at 1:18 PM

click to enlarge State Officials Slam Feds for Ending an Unemployment Benefits Program
Tim Newcomb
State officials on Saturday slammed the U.S. Department of Labor for removing Vermont from a federally funded unemployment insurance program that is currently providing payments to more than 800 Vermonters.

“For weeks, my Administration has called on the federal government to accept the bleak reality states are facing in combating this crisis and to act in support of its citizens, who were forced into unemployment through no fault of their own," Gov. Phil Scott said in a press release Saturday morning. "Instead, it appears it is turning its back on them."

"This decision comes at the height of a global pandemic, the middle of the holiday season and at the start of what will be a long winter," he said.

 The Extended Benefits program — which is unrelated to the two other federal unemployment programs that Congress created this spring to expand the social safety net amid the coronavirus pandemic — offers people who have already used up their 26 weeks of allotted state jobless benefits an additional 13 weeks of payments.

Only states with high reported unemployment rates are eligible for the program. Vermont's rate has steadily decreased since the summer, but state officials have argued that the way the feds calculate these figures — using surveys from the U.S. Census Bureau — misrepresents the actual number of people who are jobless.

Anticipating the state would trigger off the program this month, officials have repeatedly urged the U.S. Department of Labor to make an exception. But the department emailed state leaders Friday evening — at 5:52 p.m., the governor noted — to say the program would no longer be available in Vermont.

“We are extremely disappointed that the federal government has refused to recognize the real and distinct humanitarian crisis that this pandemic has created and instead is choosing to use outdated methodology resulting in benefits being cut for struggling Vermonters,” Labor Commissioner Michael Harrington said in a press release.

According to Harrington's department, more than two dozen other states have triggered off the Extended Benefits program since the initial blizzard of unemployment claims earlier this year.

The 885 people enrolled in the program in Vermont as of the first week in December will now see their benefits expire December 19. And nearly 20,000 more Vermonters relying on two other pandemic unemployment programs could lose their benefits a week later if Congress does not move to extend them.

While negotiations inched forward last week, there is still no clear picture of whether a deal will come together before the deadline.

“Thousands of families are relying on these benefits to simply survive," Harrington said. 

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