On Monday, the New York Times reported on widespread collection of extremely-detailed location data via mobile device apps. Democratic presidential candidate Congressman John K. Delaney (MD-6) says that the reporting by the Times is yet more evidence that social media and mobile consumers need new privacy protections.
Congressman John K. Delaney’s (MD-6) extensive campaign work in Iowa and policy-driven message of unity and finding common ground was highlighted in The Atlantic. Delaney has already campaigned in all 99 Iowa counties and has had staff in the state for over a year. Delaney has made 20 campaign trips to Iowa and 12 trips to New Hampshire.
This weekend, the United States joined a proposal by Russia, Saudi Arabia, and Kuwait at the global climate summit to weaken language in an alarming UN climate report that warned the world has a decade to cut carbon emissions by half to mitigate the effects of rising temperatures.
The Trump administration announced plans to reverse EPA carbon emission regulations just two weeks after a shocking U.S. government report warned that we are woefully behind our goals to curb the emission of greenhouse gasses and that aggressive action is needed to mitigate the impact of global warming.
On Wednesday, The Daily Beast reported that in a meeting with senior White House advisors to discuss the national debt crisis, President Trump said that he “won’t be here” when it blows up. The article cites multiple sources within the administration who say that Trump has repeatedly shrugged off the nation’s $21 trillion debt, implying that he will not be president when the debt blows up.
In Mr. Delaney’s view, America’s trouble isn’t capitalism but a dysfunctional federal government that has “stopped updating that basic social compact.”
Delaney… believes in returning to the assertive, values-promoting, alliance-building foreign policy approach that majorities in both parties once traditionally supported.