POLITICO Playbook: Trump’s winless first quarter

THE WINLESS FIRST QUARTER … It’s the middle of March — almost the end of the first quarter of 2019 — and here’s what PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP has going on:

THE NORTH KOREA summit blew up. … CONGRESSIONAL INVESTIGATIONS are finally taking hold, and getting more serious. … THE PRESIDENT’S party is turning on him on Capitol Hill. The White House is scrambling to convince Senate Republicans to stick by the president when it comes to his emergency declaration at the border. …

… THE PRESIDENT’S top trade adviser testified Tuesday that there are still “major issues” in the United States’ talks with China (NYT). … PROGRESSIVE HOUSE DEMOCRATS are saying that the trade deal the president cut with Mexico and Canada is not good enough, and talks should be reopened (POLITICO). …

… EVEN MORE SO, this White House does not appear to be driving for anything at the moment. Sure, divided government is tough — way tougher perhaps than the president’s advisers said in the wake of the election.

But here’s a THOUGHT EXERCISE: What is the White House’s top proactive priority at this moment? And what do you see them doing — either publicly or privately — to achieve this?

Happy Wednesday. WHAT’S ON TRUMP’S MIND — @realDonaldTrump at 12:27 a.m.: “So many records being set with respect to our Economy. Unemployment numbers among BEST EVER. A beautiful thing to watch!”

NEW POLITICO/MORNING CONSULT POLL — STEVE SHEPARD: “On the eve of Congress’ unprecedented rebuke of President Donald Trump, a majority of voters continue to oppose his national emergency declaration at the southern border, according to a new POLITICO/Morning Consult poll.

“The poll shows that Trump has failed to build support for his declaration in the face of congressional opposition, with the results essentially unchanged since he signed an order to reallocate military funds toward erecting a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border.

“Only 38 percent of voters support the declaration, the poll shows, down 1 point over the past three weeks. In the new poll, 52 percent of voters are opposed to the declaration, up 1 point from last month.” POLITICO

STATE OF PLAY — WAPO’S SEUNG MIN KIM and ERICA WERNER: “White House, GOP senators negotiating a deal to avert defeat on emergency order”: “The White House is privately negotiating with Senate Republicans who want to rein in the emergency powers of President Trump and his successors — which could lead to the surprise defeat of a Democratic resolution rejecting Trump’s emergency declaration at the border. That would mark a dramatic change in fortunes for Trump, who had been on track for an embarrassing defeat later this week in the GOP-controlled Senate in a confrontation with Congress over Trump’s border wall.

“Key to quelling the GOP revolt is legislation drafted by Sen. Mike Lee (R-Utah) that tries to claw back some emergency powers to Congress and whether the White House endorses some version of it. That would give Republicans who are uneasy about the constitutionality of the Feb. 15 declaration — yet nervous about publicly rebuking Trump — some political cover to side with the president.” WaPo

FOR YOUR RADAR — “Trump administration preparing to close international immigration offices,” by WaPo’s Maria Sacchetti and Nick Miroff: “The Trump administration is preparing to shutter all international offices of U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, a move that could slow the processing of family visa applications, foreign adoptions and citizenship petitions from members of the military stationed abroad.

“USCIS Director L. Francis Cissna said in an email to staff Tuesday that he is working to transfer those duties — now performed by employees worldwide — to domestic offices and the State Department’s embassies and consulates.” WaPo

IT’S NOT ALL ROSES FOR DEMOCRATS — “House Democrats struggle in Trump’s news cycle,” by Sarah Ferris, Heather Caygle and John Bresnahan

THE LATEST ON BOEING … KATHRYN WOLFE: “Pilots complained at least 5 times about Boeing 737 MAX problems, records show”: “Pilots in the U.S. complained at least 5 times in recent months about problems controlling their Boeing 737 MAX 8 jets during critical moments of flight, federal records show, adding to questions raised by deadly crashes involving that model of jetliner in Ethiopia and Indonesia.

“Some of the incidents appear to involve the same anti-stall system that has come up as a potential cause of October’s Indonesia crash, according to a review of a Federal Aviation Administration incident database that lets pilots self-report trouble. Investigators have not said whether the same technology had emerged as a possible cause of Sunday’s crash in Ethiopia, although both involved airliners that mysteriously plunged to the ground minutes after takeoff.” POLITICO

Former Transportation Secretary RAY LAHOOD to WaPo: “Those planes should be pulled down and inspected. The flying public is owed that.” WaPo

— WSJ’S SCOTT MCCARTNEY: “Boeing 737 MAX: The Latest Example of a Passive DOT”: “Thirty-five Congressional mandates sit unanswered, on everything from minimum seat space to secondary barriers protecting cockpits. The top job at the Federal Aviation Administration has been open for 14 months. Enforcement fines against major U.S. airlines have dropped 88% in the past two years, even as three-hour tarmac delays have more than doubled. The Transportation Department under Secretary Elaine Chao has seemingly been delayed on a number of issues important to travelers.” WSJ

— BOEING ROUNDUP: “Chao flew on a Boeing 737 MAX from Austin festival,” by Kathryn Wolfe … Boeing’s congressional base frays under pressure,” by Melanie Zanona and Brianna Gurciullo … “Boeing to Make Key Change in 737 MAX Cockpit Software,” by WSJ’s Andrew Tangel and Andy Pasztor

FLASHBACK … NOV. 6, 2018 (Election Night) … BLOOMBERG STORY, by Alan Levin, Julie Johnsson and Harry Suhartono: “Boeing Co. is preparing to send a safety warning to operators of its new 737 Max jets in response to the investigation of last week’s fatal crash off the coast of Indonesia that left 189 dead, said a person familiar with the matter.

“The bulletin from Boeing will alert airlines that erroneous readings from a flight-monitoring system can cause the planes to abruptly dive, said the person, who asked not to be named discussing details of the manufacturer’s plans. Boeing will warn pilots to follow an existing procedure to handle the problem.” Bloomberg

BEING MIKE PENCE … ELIANA JOHNSON and BURGESS EVERETT: “Pence takes GOP punches for Trump”: “In recent months, Pence has repeatedly found himself an even-tempered target for prominent Republicans needing to vent about Trump’s unorthodox style. ‘When he comes up here, unfortunately for him, he gets to be kind of the person that people take out some of their frustrations out on,’ said Sen. John Thune (R-S.D.), the Senate’s number-two leader. ‘But that’s a part of the job.’

“That has become more and more true of late. In multiple encounters with Republicans on Capitol Hill, on issues ranging from Syria to the government shutdown, Pence has swallowed his personal views, which have historically been far more in line with the GOP establishment than are Trump’s.” POLITICO

— NPR’S SUE DAVIS: “Speaker Pelosi Revokes Vice President Pence’s House Office Space”: “House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., has reclaimed office space her predecessor, Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., awarded to Vice President Pence. Republicans gave Pence, a former House member, a first-floor bonus office in the U.S. Capitol shortly after President Trump was inaugurated in 2017. The vice president rarely used the space, but it was a symbolic gesture of the warm relationship Pence enjoyed with Ryan and the House GOP. …

“A placard above the door identifying it as Pence’s House office was quietly removed in recent weeks. A House Democratic aide confirmed to NPR that the space will be reassigned. ‘Room assignments are reviewed and changed at the beginning of every Congress,’ the aide said.” NPR

THE STORY EVERYONE IS TALKING ABOUT — “From ‘master coach’ to a bribery probe: A college consultant who went off the rails,” by WaPo’s Nick Anderson: “He offers his services as a ‘master coach’ in a college counseling business called ‘The Key’ that aims to help teenagers develop a ‘personal brand,’ helping them stand out from tens of thousands of others seeking admission to elite schools. A website promoting the California-based business claims that founder Rick Singer has worked one-on-one with students and parents ‘on devising a game plan for life.’

“Over the past 20 years, the site says, Singer has helped numerous applicants attain ‘an undergraduate or graduate degree in every field imaginable.’ Federal authorities tell a darker story about William ‘Rick’ Singer: that he orchestrated a brazen scheme to facilitate cheating on admission tests and bribery of college athletics coaches, all to help children of wealthy parents obtain admission to prestigious universities.” WaPo

— BUZZFEED’S JULIA REINSTEIN and BRIANNA SACKS: “University athletic coaches and administrators were also allegedly bribed ‘to designate applicants as purported athletic recruits — regardless of their athletic abilities, and in some cases, even though they did not play the sport they were purportedly recruited to play,’ court documents state. In some cases, photos of the students playing sports were staged, and some even had their heads photoshopped onto the bodies of real athletes.” BuzzFeed

Who’s Been Charged in the College Admissions Cheating Scandal? Here’s the Full List,” by NYT’s Rebecca Halleck

2020 WATCH — “Beto O’Rourke plans extended Iowa trip,” by David Siders: “O’Rourke isn’t just headed to Iowa for a one-off campaign appearance with a state Senate candidate. He is planning a multi-day trip with multiple appearances in the first-in-the-nation caucus state, two Democrats familiar with his plans told POLITICO on Tuesday.” POLITICO

— CBS’S ED O’KEEFE (@edokeefe): “AT BIDEN EVENT: Other reporters and I caught him as he left IAFF event. One asked if there’s reason he wouldn’t run. Biden: ‘We’re making that decision now.’ When will he do it? ‘We’ll be announcing that pretty soon.’ I asked ‘What’s the hold up?’ ‘There’s no hold up,’ he said.”

— “Sanders aide apologizes for questioning American Jews’ ‘dual allegiance’ to Israel,” by Marc Caputo and Holly Otterbein: “A spokeswoman for Bernie Sanders’ presidential campaign apologized Tuesday after questioning whether the ‘American Jewish community has a dual allegiance to the state of Israel’ — a comment condemned by Jewish leaders across the political spectrum as having anti-Semitic overtones.

“‘In a conversation on Facebook, I used some language that I see now was insensitive. Issues of allegiance and loyalty to one’s country come with painful history,’ Belén Sisa, Sanders’ national deputy press secretary, told POLITICO.” POLITICO

THE INVESTIGATIONS …

— DARREN SAMUELSOHN: “Flynn still cooperating with government”: “Michael Flynn’s cooperation in Robert Mueller’s Russia investigation is ‘complete,’ lawyers for the special counsel said in a Tuesday night report to a federal judge presiding in the former Trump national security adviser’s case.

“In the same joint status report, Flynn’s lawyers asked for a 90-day delay in their client’s sentencing so he could continue to cooperate with the government in his former business partner’s upcoming trial in Alexandria, Va. Flynn expects to testify in the mid-July trial against Bijan Rafiekian on charges of conspiracy and acting as an unregistered foreign government agent for Turkey.” POLITICO

— NYT’S MAGGIE HABERMAN (@maggieNYT): “New letter from @MichaelCohen212 lawyer says he ‘could have been clearer’ in language about pardons in hearing but ‘stands by his statement.’” The letter

THE JUICE …

— HOUSE MAJORITY LEADER STENY HOYER (D-MD.) and HOUSE MINORITY LEADER KEVIN MCCARTHY (R-CALIF.) testified in front of the select committee for modernization of Congress on Tuesday. Rep. Derek Kilmer (D-Wash.) is the chair. The hearing

TRUMP’S WEDNESDAY — The president will be briefed on drug trafficking on the southern border at 1:45 p.m. in the Roosevelt Room. Trump will meet with Senate Republican lawmakers on trade at 3 p.m. in the Cabinet Room. He will take a photo with the 2019 spring White House internship class at 5 p.m. in the East Room.

NEW WOMEN RULE PODCAST — ANNA spoke with CMS ADMINISTRATOR SEEMA VERMA in the latest Women Rule podcast. Listen and subscribe

— NEWSY NUGGET: Verma said that the policy to allow states to offer a partial expansion of Medicaid that would cover fewer Americans than Obamacare requires is “still under review” despite Trump shutting down the effort last year.

“‘What I have said to states and to governors [is], “Tell me what you want to do, and it’s my job to help you get to where you want to go,”’ said Verma, who declined to comment further on White House discussions on the matter.” Full story by Zack Stanton

HACK ATTACK — “Navy, Industry Partners Are ‘Under Cyber Siege’ by Chinese Hackers, Review Asserts,” by WSJ’s Gordon Lubold and Dustin Volz: “The Navy and its industry partners are ‘under cyber siege’ by Chinese hackers and others who have stolen tranches of national security secrets in recent years, exploiting critical weaknesses that threaten the U.S.’s standing as the world’s top military power, an internal Navy review has concluded. The assessment, delivered to Navy Secretary Richard Spencer last week and reviewed by The Wall Street Journal, depicts a branch of the armed forces under relentless cyberattack by foreign adversaries and struggling in its response to the scale and sophistication of the problem.” WSJ

— “America’s Undersea Battle With China for Control of the Global Internet Grid,” by WSJ’s Jeremy Page in Beijing, Kate O’Keeffe in Washington and Rob Taylor in Canberra: “A new front has opened in the battle between the U.S. and China over control of global networks that deliver the internet. This one is beneath the ocean. While the U.S. wages a high-profile campaign to exclude China’s Huawei Technologies Co. from next-generation mobile networks over fears of espionage, the company is embedding itself into undersea cable networks that ferry nearly all of the world’s internet data. …

“Current and former security officials in the U.S. and allied governments now worry that these cables are increasingly vulnerable to espionage or attack and say the involvement of Huawei potentially enhances China’s capabilities.” WSJ

BEYOND THE BELTWAY — CARLA MARINUCCI in San Francisco: “Newsom to sign moratorium on executions in California”: “Gov. Gavin Newsom, arguing that the death penalty overwhelmingly discriminates against racial minorities and the poor, will sign an order Wednesday placing a moratorium on executions in California, according to his office. The move serves as an immediate reprieve for hundreds of prisoners currently housed on the nation’s largest Death Row.” POLITICO

SPOTTED: Ivanka Trump on Tuesday night at Matchbox on 14th Street. … Rep. Eric Swalwell (D-Calif.) at O-Ku for dinner Tuesday night.

BIRTHWEEK (was Monday): Tim Mack, who works for Rep. Madeleine Dean (D-Pa.) (hat tip: Tim Mak)

BIRTHDAY OF THE DAY: Ari Rabin-Havt, adviser for the Bernie Sanders campaign, is 4-0. What he’s been reading recently: “I’ve begun to keep a paperback fiction book with me that I pick up and read when I have an urge to scroll Twitter and look at nonsense. In February I read Orhan Pamuk’s ‘Snow,’ which was given to me by a friend. Now I’m rereading Robert Heinlein’s ‘Stranger in a Strange Land.’Playbook Plus Q&A

BIRTHDAYS: Sarah Makin … Madeline Seaman … Jeff Weiss … Kiki McLean (h/t Jon Haber) … Steven Hurst … Laurel Touby … Ali Howard … Sarah Mulcahy is 3-0 … Ashley Hoy, partner at Monument Policy Group … Shawn Turner … Erin Billings, SVP at Global Strategy Group … Nancy Soderberg (h/ts Ben Chang) … James Wesolek (h/t Tim Wesolek) … Matt Butler … Eddie Wytkind … Jennifer Morgan, SAP executive board member … John Kelly, VP for exec comms at SAP (h/ts Tom Hoare) … Sen. John Hoeven (R-N.D.) is 62 … former Rep. Alan Grayson (D-Fla.) is 61 … former Rep. Joseph Cao (R-La.) is 52 … former Rep. Rick Lazio (R-N.Y.) is 61 … Joe Rubin … Mike Dovilla is 44 … Trever Faden … Steve Rochlin … Pete Burger …

… Jamie Dimon, chairman and CEO of JPMorgan Chase, is 63 … WSJ’s Ryan Tracy is 35 … Facebook’s Caroline Chalmers (h/t Meredith Carden) … Mark McNulty … Doug Sachtleben … Scott Fear (h/t Ed Cash) … DeJuana L. Thompson … Hannah Chatalas … Dan Milich … Katelyn Polantz, CNN senior writer … Molly McNearney … James Russell, associate professor at the Naval Postgraduate School, is 61 … Kalen Pruss, DNC policy director … Lauren Smith … Erik Greathouse is 47 … Kristy Kolb … Lauren Inouye, VP for public policy and government affairs at the Council of Graduate Schools … Georgetown’s Christina Roberts … Brian Gaston … Theresa Zagnoli … Natalie McLaughlin … Diamond Naga Siu … David Pryor Jr. … Jonathan Bing … Tony Newman … Chris Gaspar … Joshua Phoebus … Rich Ransom … Mark Kitchens … Sabrina Fendrick

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Instagram fear

Image: mashable composite: Instagram and emojipedia

2016%252f09%252f16%252f56%252fhttpsd2mhye01h4nj2n.cloudfront.netmediazgkymde2lzax.6d630.jpg%252f90x90By Nicole Gallucci

I used to love Instagram Stories.

After long days at work, mindlessly tapping through Stories on the train home became my go-to way to unwind. They’re entertaining, carefully crafted, and the perfect way to stay up-to-date with acquaintances, friends, and celebrities. But just as I was about to crown Instagram Stories my favorite social media feature, I accidentally voted in a poll.

My idol, Mindy Kaling, asked followers to let her know if her new bag was cute or not, and because my thumb was recklessly skipping through Stories, I wound up telling her it was ugly. (Mindy if you’re reading this, I’m so sorry. I didn’t mean it.)

I’m sad to say this was not an isolated incident. I’ve accidentally voted rudely in several other polls since, and have had a number of close calls with Instagram’s emoji Quick Reactions feature, too. It’s reached a point where the anxiety of accidentally replying to Stories is preventing me from fully enjoying them.

Keep accidentally voting for the rudest option in Instagram polls when tapping through stories and it’s making me a lot of enemies.

— Nicole Gallucci (@nicolemichele5) July 7, 2018

SEE ALSO: Crush Twitter proves that sometimes subtweets can be good

I’m not the only one who’s had these unpleasant experiences with the app.

When I asked my colleagues if they’d ever fallen into the Instagram poll trap, many admitted they had. A few brave souls even offered up some memorable examples that haunt them to this day.

A fellow reporter recalled her most shameful accidental vote, when she disrespectfully said a puppy wasn’t a good boy — a nearly unforgivable act. Another colleague chimed in to say that he recently told our Executive Editor to throw out a sweater by unintentionally voting in her poll. Truly tragic. 

Did I actually vote on your poll or did I accidentally vote as I was clicking through stories on Instagram? You shall never know.

— Dayna Wong (@Wongerr) March 6, 2019

Can Instagram PLEASE make a feature that confirms whether or not you really wanted to vote on someone’s story poll? I just accidentally voted that some girl’s bangs look like shit and now I have to block her.

— Kate Matthews (@katemattz) May 15, 2018

Aside from insulting Mindy’s fashion sense, one of my most mortifying Instagram poll experiences happened when I accidentally voted to say a high school acquaintance’s baked goods looked like “trash” instead of “delicious.” I quickly reached out to her in an attempt to right my unintentional wrong, but she never replied. 

Just the other day accidentally voted that a casual acquaintance’s baked goods looked like trash instead of delicious and had to send this message. She prob hates me now it’s fine. pic.twitter.com/mDnJZ53omK

— Nicole Gallucci (@nicolemichele5) July 7, 2018

Though well-intentioned, Instagram’s Quick Reactions emoji feature isn’t much better. In certain cases having emoji at your fingertips is definitely more convenient than searching for one, but the feature is enabled by a gentle upward swipe on a phone screen, which can be dangerous.

If people aren’t fully paying attention to Instagram Stories, tapping through them too quickly, or using the  app when they’re about to fall asleep, the slightest move can inadvertently summon emoji reactions.

Instagram's Quick Reaction feature

Image: screenshot/instagram

Shortly after the Quick Reactions feature was introduced in 2018, an article from New York Magazine‘s Intelligencer highlighted users’ frustrations, but Instagram has yet to improve the design.

Though I’ve always been able to stop myself before accidentally sending emoji reactions, I have been on the receiving end of someone else’s mishap, and can confirm that’s not too fun either.

After watching the final scene in Season 2 of The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel, I posted an Instagram story to express what an absolute ride it was. The following morning, a former colleague replied to my story with an encouraging 💯. Turns out she’d accidentally sent the emoji, and immediately apologized, resulting in the following awkward exchange. 

An accidental emoji reaction to an Instagram Story

Image: screenshot/instagram

As far as social media platforms go, Instagram is still beloved by many, but users have been so impacted by the design flaws in Stories that they’ve actually taken the time to air their grievances on Twitter.

Yo that quick reactions feature on Instagram stories has got to go. I always accidentally reply to people’s stories. Today, I sent the 🔥 emoji to someone’s post about their aunt passing away 😭

— raBroke (@rabae__) March 8, 2019

Can we all agree that all the quick reactions feature on Instagram does is send accidental emoji responses to people’s stories

— mar (@marissarenegalz) November 26, 2018

So how do we stop embarrassing ourselves?

Ultimately, it’s up to Instagram to take the necessary steps to improve their app in a way that will enhance the user experience, but until then, here are some suggestions to avoid accidental Story replies and awkward exchanges with followers.

  • Let stories play on their own: It’ll take some extra patience, but rather than tapping through stories, let them naturally progress. You’ll waste a bit more time on the app, but it’ll ensure you don’t accidentally tap a poll or swipe up on your screen to send an emoji.

  • Create super safe win/win polls: If you’re thinking of posting a poll but aren’t really in the mood for any negative feedback consider making both options positive or slightly similar. If one option is “Yes!” and another is “100% DO IT RIGHT NOW,” for example, there’s zero chance someone will offend you with an accidental vote. This option essentially eliminates the need for a poll in the first place, but it’s still a fun, thoughtful move.

  • Think before you place your poll: If you like using polls you shouldn’t give them up just because Instagram didn’t fully think the feature through. Taking the location of the poll into consideration, however, can help prevent mistakes. Try to keep polls out of the areas on a phone screen that thumbs are most likely to tap. When in doubt, check out this helpful map I made to guide you.

Map on where to place Instagram polls

Image: nicole gallucci / instagram

  • If you mess up, don’t make it a big deal: After accidentally sending an emoji reaction, it can be tempting to message the person and tell them you didn’t mean to. But if it’s not a blatantly weird or offensive reaction, consider just letting them have the compliment. When my former colleague sent me 💯, for example, I thought it was so nice! It wasn’t until she called out her error that things got weird.

At the very least, Instagram users can take comfort in knowing these mistakes are widespread. It’s awkward as hell, but we’ll survive. If anyone who works at Instagram is reading this cry for help, though, making an update that allows us to undo votes and emoji replies would be 😢. Whoops, I meant, 💯.

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‘Racists see me as a threat to what Swedish society should be’

Leila Ali Elmi’s earliest memories of Sweden are as a two-year-old who fled civil war in Somalia with her family.

She remembers her favourite pair of yellow trousers and moments of her childhood spent in the school playground.  

“I had that fairy-tale mentality. I didn’t see colour, I didn’t see class differences,” she said, speaking to Al Jazeera.

Elmi is the first Swedish MP to wear a hijab and the first of Somali descent.

“[As a teenager] I remember two Somali classmates of mine,” she said. “One wanted to be a scientist and the other wanted to be a professional soccer player. Our teacher said to them: ‘You will never amount to that.’ Prior to that, I believed any dreams were possible. But that was a defining moment in my life, because vicariously, through those boys, my dreams were crushed.”

Now a member of parliament for the progressive Green Party, the 31-year-old has become an impassioned voice for Angered, a north-eastern suburb of Gothenburg that has been her home for 29 years. 

Angered is home to a large migrant population, high unemployment, poor education facilities, housing shortages, and rampant segregation.

Elmi works with the labour committee on integration and employment.

“I’m working against institutional racism, I’m working for equal job opportunities, I’m working for women to get the same opportunity to establish themselves in the workforce, and especially for women who are immigrants,” she said. 

I’ve become a symbol of hate for extremists and racists. They see me as a threat to what Swedish society should be.

Leila Ali Elmi, MP

The 2018 electoral campaign, which resulted in a months-long hung parliament until Social Democrat Prime Minister Stefan Lofven took office again in January, saw debates on healthcare, crime, and immigration – and the rise of the far right.

Sweden had adopted a liberal refugee policy; in 2015 it received over 160,000 asylum seekers, more per capita than any other European nation. 

Later that year, Lofven said Sweden needed “respite” from the tens of thousands of refugee arrivals. 

In August 2018, a wave of attacks involving young people, in which 80 cars were torched in a Gothenburg suburb, spurred the far-right Sweden Democrats to conflate immigration with criminality and set the tone for the electoral debate.

Support for the Sweden Democrats increased, from 12.9 percent in 2014 to 17.6 percent in 2018. 

Patricia Rodi, a researcher at Queen Mary University London told Al Jazeera: “The Sweden Democrats have vowed to protect the civil religion of the welfare state that the Social Democrats have long built upon and restore the concept of ‘folkehmmet’ (the people’s home), framing it as under threat by immigration, Islam and crime.”

Elmi said structural racism has led to social and racial inequality in Sweden, as she dismissed the populist claim that refugees and migrants have failed to integrate into society.

“It’s not a lack of integration. It’s a lack of opportunity and inclusion”, she said. “When you look for a job you will not be the first to get the job though you are qualified, sometimes even overqualified for a job, because your surname matters. The bar is much higher for the immigrant.”

Before becoming an MP, Elmi worked in civil society attempting to boost youth unemployment and steer vulnerable people away from hardline ideologies and criminality.

“I’ve become a symbol of hate for extremists and racists. They see me as a threat to what Swedish society should be. But I’m also a symbol of hope for others, because I represent an underrepresented people. My aim is to give young people political ambition, inspire them to be politicians, not just because they are black, immigrant, Muslim or LGBT,” she said.

The politician’s message has inspired members of her community.

“When we see one Somali woman with real-life experiences standing in parliament talking about issues that involve us, that’s why we want to vote for her, not because she is Somali,” said 22-year-old student and Somali-Swede Aeni Hussein.

“Even though there had been a rise of the far right in Swedish government, Leila’s election made me feel like we can all do something. I used to think once we elect politicians, we can sit back and watch them do something. But it’s important to understand that we, the people, have power because we choose them, and we can hold them accountable.”

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Your social media photos could be training facial recognition AI without your consent

If your face has ever appeared in a photo on Flickr, it could be currently training facial recognition technology without your permission.

As per a report by NBC News, IBM has been using around one million images from the image-hosting platform to train its facial recognition AI, without the permission of the people in the photos.

SEE ALSO: Surprise! Amazon’s suggestions for facial recognition laws wouldn’t govern them at all

In January, IBM revealed its new “Diversity in Faces” dataset with the goal to make facial recognition systems fairer and better at identifying a diverse range of faces — AI algorithms have had difficulty in the past recognising women and people of colour.

Considering the potential uses of facial recognition technology, whether it be for hardcore surveillance, finding missing persons, detecting celebrity stalkers, social media image tagging, or unlocking your phone or house, many people might not want their face used for this type of AI training — particularly if it involves pinpointing people by gender or race.

IBM’s dataset drew upon a huge collection of around 100 million Creative Commons-licensed images, referred to as the YFCC-100M dataset and released by Flickr’s former owner, Yahoo, for research purposes — there are many CC image databases used for academic research into facial recognition, or fun comparison projects.

IBM used approximately one million of these images for their own “training dataset.” According to NBC, which was able to view the collection, these have all been annotated according to various estimates like age and gender, as well as physical details — skin tone, size and shape of facial features, and pose.

But while IBM was using perfectly fine Creative Commons images, the company hadn’t actually informed those whose faces appear in the almost one million images what their actual faces, not just images, were being used for.

Sure, the image subjects may have given permission for a photo of themselves to be uploaded to Flickr and listed under a CC license, but those subjects weren’t given a chance to give consent for their faces to be used to train AI facial recognition systems.

NBC talked to several people whose images had appeared in IBM’s dataset, including a PR executive who has hundreds of images sitting in the collection.

“None of the people I photographed had any idea their images were being used in this way,” Greg Peverill-Conti told the news outlet. “It seems a little sketchy that IBM can use these pictures without saying anything to anybody.”

Flickr co-founder Caterina Fake also revealed IBM was using 14 of her photos.

“IBM says people can opt out, but is making it impossible to do so,” she tweeted.

Want to opt out? It’s not that easy, although IBM confirmed to NBC that anyone who would like their image removed from the dataset is able to request it by emailing a link to the company.

The only problem? The dataset isn’t publicly available, only to researchers, so Flickr users and those featured in their images have no way of really knowing if they’re included. 

Luckily, NBC created a handy little tool if you want to check whether you’re included, you just have to drop in your username.

Mashable has reached out to IBM for comment.

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Keira Knightley’s musical talent is…playing ‘Despacito’ with her teeth

You might be able to dust off a rendition of “Für Elise” on the piano, but it doesn’t come close to Keira Knightley’s utterly weird musical talent.

It turns out the Hollywood star can play music with her teeth, as she exhibited on The Tonight Show starring Jimmy Fallon on Tuesday, when she busted out a rendition of “Despacito” by appearing to tap her teeth with her fingers.

Knightley previously exhibited this talent before when she played “Raindrops Keep Fallin’ On My Head” on The Graham Norton Show back in January. 

There’s just no end to some people’s talent.

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Amazon removes books promoting misinformation on autism cures

Amazon has reportedly pulled books relating to autism cures and anti-vaccination misinformation.

As reported by NBC News, the titles Healing the Symptoms Known as Autism and Fight Autism and Win are no longer available on its marketplace.

SEE ALSO: Amazon pulls anti-vaccination documentaries from Prime Video

Accessing either of those titles turns a “page not found” on Amazon’s website, but it’s unclear if it’s part of a crackdown on books which promote health misinformation. Last week, Amazon pulled anti-vaccination documentaries from Prime Video.

The removal of these books followed a Wired report which highlighted how the site is rife with books promoting scientifically unproven and potentially dangerous treatments for autism. 

On the listing for Healing the Symptoms Known As Autism, author Kerri Rivera proclaims to be the “foremost expert” on using chlorine dioxide for spectrum disorders.

The Autism Research Institute has warned against the use of chlorine dioxide a.k.a. Miracle Mineral Solution, which shares properties with bleach and has damaging side effects.

In Fight Autism and Win, the authors instruct parents on chelation, which is usually a treatment for acute metal poisoning, like mercury. As noted by the Mayo Clinic, chelation therapy for autism is unproven, and can cause dangerous side effects like deadly kidney damage.

In case you haven’t noticed, Amazon’s removal is part of a spate of tech giants taking stronger action against health misinformation. 

Amid public pressure, Facebook last week decided to make anti-vaccination content harder to find, while YouTube pulled ads from videos which promoted these theories. In February, Pinterest opted to block searches on vaccination entirely.

Mashable contacted Amazon for further comment.

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Le’Veon Bell, Jets Reportedly Agree to Contract; RB Announces with Mixtape

PITTSBURGH, PA - JANUARY 14:  Le'Veon Bell #26 of the Pittsburgh Steelers runs with the ball during the second half of the AFC Divisional Playoff game against the Jacksonville Jaguars at Heinz Field on January 14, 2018 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Jaguars defeat Pittsburgh 45-42.  (Photo by Brett Carlsen/Getty Images)

Brett Carlsen/Getty Images

Free-agent running back Le’Veon Bell, who played five seasons for the Pittsburgh Steelers before sitting out the 2018 campaign because of a contract dispute with the team, will reportedly sign with the New York Jets.

Adam Schefter of ESPN reported Bell will sign a four-year, $52.5 million deal with the Jets. Schefter noted the deal could be worth up to $61 million, with $35 million guaranteed.

Bell gained 7,996 yards from scrimmage and scored 42 touchdowns in five years despite missing 18 games because of injuries or suspension.

A three-time Pro Bowler and two-time first-team All-Pro, Bell’s patient running style suited him well behind a stout offensive line that ranked top eight or better in run blocking from 2014 to 2017, per Football Outsiders‘ adjusted line yards metric.

He, quarterback Ben Roethlisberger and wideout Antonio Brown formed the Killer B’s in Pittsburgh and led an offense that finished top 10 in scoring from 2014 to 2017. Pittsburgh made the playoffs all four seasons, with the apex being an AFC Championship Game appearance in the 2016 season.

The Steelers could not come to a long-term agreement with Bell, however.

The 2013 second-round pick out of Michigan State played under the franchise tag in 2017. Bell did not put pen to paper for a second franchise tag in 2018 and sat out the whole season in hopes of a trade or a more suitable long-term deal.

In Bell’s absence, James Conner took over the backfield and dominated to the tune of 1,470 scrimmage yards and 13 touchdowns in 13 games.

The writing was on the wall before Bell’s tenure ended, but now he gets a fresh start again in New York, where he’ll be the lead bell cow once again.

Bell will replace a rotating group of Jets running backs from last season. Isaiah Crowell led the way with 685 yards, with Bilal Powell providing a change of pace before suffering a neck injury that ended his season after seven games.

The 30-year-old Powell is now a free agent, but the team also has third-year pro Elijah McGuire back in the mix. He rushed for only 3.0 yards per carry last year, but he caught 19 passes for 193 yards.

Crowell is still under contract with the Jets for two more years, as is McGuire. But with Bell in town, they’re mostly insurance in case he can’t play.

Bell should help second-year quarterback Sam Darnold as a safety valve out of the backfield.

The former USC signal-caller’s transition to the NFL hasn’t been easy. His first head coach (Todd Bowles) and offensive coordinator (Jeremy Bates) were fired after a 4-12 season. He now needs to acclimate to a new system with former Miami Dolphins head coach Adam Gase calling the shots.

Having a versatile talent like Bell can only help Darnold as the Jets look to make the playoffs for the first time since the 2010 season.

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Who’s afraid of Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez?

The Stream looks at “Knock Down the House” and two other acclaimed documentaries being screened at SXSW.

This is the second show in a week-long series highlighting themes from the 2019 SXSW Conference and Festivals.

In this episode, we’ll take a look at the below documentary films:

Knock Down the House
“Knock Down the House” follows the political aspirations of four progressive women – Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Amy Vilela, Cori Bush, and Paula Jean Swearengin – as they hit the campaign trail in 2018 to push for change in the United States.

We speak with New York Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez to find out how she plans to continue to change the face of US politics.

Send Me Home
Rickey Jackson was 18 years-old in 1975 when he was sent to prison for a crime he didn’t commit, serving 39 years before he was exonerated in 2014. Rickey recounts his experience behind bars in “Send Me Home” – a 360-degree immersive journey of his return to society.

We speak with Rickey Jackson and director Cassandra Evanisko to learn about his time as the longest-held US prisoner to be cleared of a crime.

For Sama
In “For Sama”, Syrian filmmaker Waad al-Kateab tells the story of besieged Aleppo during five years of the brutal war in Syria. As violence rages around her, al-Kateab finds love, gets married and gives birth, documenting the conflict for her newborn daughter, Sama, to whom she dedicates the film.

“I feel it does justice to our experience, our sacrifices and the unimaginable pain of what we, the Syrian people, endured during those years of the revolution”, al-Kateab told Channel 4 News. “It’s our story, our voices, and I’m proud of it. This film is also for the people lost — a testament to their sacrifices.”

We meet Waad al-Kateab and co-director Edward Watts to hear about the sacrifices that made “For Sama” possible.

On this episode of The Stream, we speak with:
Rickey Jackson @lonelyleap



Exoneree & documentary subject, Send Me Home

lonelyleap.com
Cassandra Evanisko @lonelyleap



Director, Send Me Home

lonelyleap.comRead more:
‘Knock Down the House’ stars AOC but all four stories shine – austin360



Good Kids, Bad City: Overturning One of the Longest Wrongful Convictions in History – The Takeaway


“For Sama”: New Film to Air on FRONTLINE in 2019 Makes Debut at SXSW – PBS

What do you think? Record a brief comment here, or leave your thoughts in the section below.

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The Browns Finally Are Super Bowl Contenders After Landing Odell Beckham Jr.

New York Giants wide receiver Odell Beckham reacts after throwing a touchdown pass to wide receiver Russell Shepard during the second half of an NFL football game against the Chicago Bears, Sunday, Dec. 2, 2018, in East Rutherford, N.J. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)

Seth Wenig/Associated Press

Welcome to contention, Cleveland Browns!

The decades-long wait is over. No more flailing helplessly or wandering in the wilderness. No more Moneyball thumb-twiddling. No more tantric tanking or doomsday hoarding. No more 0-16 parades or late-night talk show wisecracks.  

The Browns agreed to acquire star Giants wide receiver Odell Beckham Jr. on Tuesday in exchange for the 17th overall pick in this year’s draft, a 2019 third-round pick and safety Jabrill Peppers, per multiple reports. The trade will not become official until the start of the new league year Wednesday afternoon.

Trading for Beckham is an all-in move. It means the end of waiting until next year just to start planning for the following year.

The Browns, who went winless in 2017, have shifted into win-now mode.

And not win a few games and congratulate ourselves for making progress mode, either. The Beckham trade shows that the Browns are thinking big.

A wild-card berth? Oh, please. They were on their way to one of those without this trade. Think bigger.

The AFC North title? With the Steelers exiling their superstars, the Ravens shedding most of their payroll and the Bengals operating like some isolationist island government, a division crown looks like small potatoes, too.

The Super Bowl conversation? Yep, that’s where the Browns placed themselves with the Beckham deal, with the usual AFC caveat that every Super Bowl conversation starts with “Can anyone mount any challenge whatsoever to the Patriots?”

So welcome to the Super Bowl conversation, Cleveland Browns. You’re every bit as likely to reach the AFC Championship Game and have a puncher’s chance against the Patriots as the Chiefs were this year andchecks notes to verify this really happenedthe Jaguars were in 2017. That’s how far you’ve come in just over a year.

Also: Welcome to high expectations, to the pressures that come with them and to risk.

Trading for Beckham was risky. He’s prone to taking occasional mental/emotional journeys to Planet OBJ, where sideline equipment and stadium-tunnel walls have more to fear from him than opposing cornerbacks. He’s also often sidelined with injuries. And he’s expensive, thanks to the five-year, $90-million extension he signed with the Giants just seven months ago (though the Giants are still on the hook for $16 million of it).

Odell Beckham Jr. was a mercurial figure for the Giants, but he also caught 35 touchdowns in his first three seasons with the team.

Odell Beckham Jr. was a mercurial figure for the Giants, but he also caught 35 touchdowns in his first three seasons with the team.Chris Szagola/Associated Press/Associated Press

Giving up first- and third-round picks along with Peppers, a talented defender selected 25th overall in 2017, is a hefty premium to pay for a flighty superstar who a team with eight wins in the last two seasons made expendable.

Acquiring Beckham means quarterback Baker Mayfield must become much more than the shoulda-been Rookie of the Year. It means new head coach Freddie Kitchens must become much more than an interim coordinator with some funky play designs and nothing to lose.

The Browns must start winning big. Not someday. Not before everyone’s contract is up. Not when the analytical constellations align. This year. Right away.

But risk and expectations are what being a contender is all about.

Being the league’s perennial sad sack is easy. You get to sit on pallets of draft picks and gloat about how smart you will look someday. You get free beer for winning one measly game. You get to celebrate the kind of 7-8-1 season that would have other fanbases seething and get coaches and executives in other cities fired.

Past Browns regimes, especially the most recently deposed one, got a little too comfortable in that rut. There’s safety in always being at square one of the rebuild, with extra picks in the next draft, cap space to burn and no clear timetable for accomplishing anything (except the whims of a fickle, impatient owner).

Browns general manager John Dorsey could have proceeded slowly and safely this offseason. He could have acquired some drama-free and relatively inexpensive receiver like Tyrell Williams to upgrade Mayfield’s arsenal, drafted more puzzle pieces with the picks the Browns just traded away and approached Super Bowl contention more like a tortoise than a hare.

Instead, the Browns leapt into the deep end of the pool, where a 6-5 record in November is a problem, not a reason to start handing out extensions and bonuses; where Mayfield must be more than just “exciting” and “promising” to earn accolades; and where nobody gets credit for merely making the games close and fun anymore.

Browns general manager John Dorsey has accelerated the team's rebuilding timetable with the acquisitions of Beckham, linebacker Olivier Vernon and defensive lineman Sheldon Richardson.

Browns general manager John Dorsey has accelerated the team’s rebuilding timetable with the acquisitions of Beckham, linebacker Olivier Vernon and defensive lineman Sheldon Richardson.Tony Dejak/Associated Press/Associated Press

Becoming a contender raises the stakes, and taking bold risks is what sets contenders apart. The Dorsey-led Browns have proved they are willing to take those risks.

Cutting through the predraft chitter-chatter to select Mayfield was risky. Firing both head coach Hue Jackson and offensive coordinator Todd Haley and handing the offense over to a coach with no experience as a coordinator was risky. Retaining Kitchens this offseason instead of seeking a more experienced coach was risky. Doing it all on a quick timetableDorsey only took over the team in December 2017instead of hunkering down and talking about some job-security-friendly “three-year plan” was risky.

In Beckham, Dorsey has acquired one of the league’s most talented, thrilling, dangerous and enigmatic players. Dorsey’s Browns don’t play it safe or procrastinate. They gamble. And it’s likely to pay off.   

Mayfield-to-Beckham will be a score-from-anywhere tandem that rivals Patrick Mahomes and Tyreek Hill. The stacked offensive supporting cast includes Beckham’s college chum Jarvis Landry, running back Nick Chubb, tight end David Njoku and others. The defensive front four, featuring Myles Garrett and newcomers Olivier Vernon and Sheldon Richardson, may be the NFL‘s best pass-rushing unit next season. The Browns are poised to score a whole lotta points and pulverize opposing quarterbacks trying to play catch-up.

The Browns are now scary good. But you can’t get scary good without doing some things that are scary.

So welcome to a whole new world, Cleveland Browns. You don’t get points for trying anymore. An A-plus on draft grades will no longer be the highlight of your season. You are legitimate Super Bowl contenders now, with all the pressures, price tags and problems that come with that.

And you’ll likely find the payoff was worth the risk.

Mike Tanier covers the NFL for Bleacher Report. Follow him on Twitter:@MikeTanier.

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Syria: SDF militia predicts ISIL’s last fight to end imminently

A ferocious assault continued on ISIL’s final enclave on Wednesday as hundreds of fighters and their families surrendered poured out of the besieged Syrian town of Baghouz.

The US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) said the battle was as good as over and Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL, ISIS) faced imminent defeat.

Smoke billowed past burning buildings, lit orange by flares and raging fires, as tracer fire pounded the enclave amid the sound of constant shooting and blasts.

A Reuters journalist in Baghouz saw hundreds of people surrendering to the SDF, which is backed by US-led coalition air strikes, after weeks of siege.

The enclave is the last shred of territory held by ISIL fighters who have been driven from roughly one-third of Iraq and Syria over the past four years.

SDF official Mustafa Bali said on Twitter late on Tuesday the number of ISIL members who had surrendered has risen to 3,000.

“Once our forces confirm that everyone who wants to surrender has done so … the clashes will resume,” he said, adding the group’s defeat was very near.

Syria rebels slow down battle against ISIL to protect civilians

‘Burning in hell’

Even as the last shred of its “caliphate” crumbled, the armed group put out a new propaganda video – filmed in recent weeks inside Baghouz – insisting on its claim to leadership of all Muslims and calling on its supporters to keep the faith.

“Tomorrow, God willing, we will be in paradise and they will be burning in hell,” it showed an ISIL member identified as Abu Abd al-Azeem as saying. 

Live footage broadcast by the Kurdish Ronahi TV showed a series of large explosions lighting up the night sky over Baghouz, apparently from an ammunitions dump blowing up.

“The operation is over, or as good as over, but requires a little more time to be completed practically on the ground,” SDF spokesman Kino Gabriel told al-Hadath TV.

The SDF has laid siege to Baghouz for weeks but has repeatedly postponed its final assault to allow thousands of civilians, many of them wives and children of ISIL fighters, to leave. It resumed the attack on Sunday.

Dozens have been killed in clashes in recent days. Hundreds of ISIL soldiers are estimated to be holding out in Baghouz, ready to fight to the death. 

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