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Amanda Gorman, prominent female activists call on Biden to support Afghan women and girls

Prominent women's right advocates, including poet laureate Amanda Gorman, are calling on the Biden administration to protect and support Afghan women and girls and "honor its commitment to gender equity."

Why it matters: The activists — including the actors Connie Britton and Charlize Theron, fashion designer Diane von Furstenberg, and Facebook’s Sheryl Sandberg — are the latest advocates to try to increase pressure on President Biden to do more for Afghans who could face persecution from the Taliban.


  • “We join a growing chorus of global leaders and advocates in raising up the voices of Afghan women’s rights activists who are under imminent threat,” the activists write in an open letter to the White House.
  • “Immediate action must be taken to safeguard Afghan women most at risk: women’s rights activists, journalists, educators, civil society leaders, human rights defenders and direct service providers.”

The big picture: While the U.S. is ramping up the airlift in Kabul, it is still only using a fraction of its total capacity to evacuate Americans and Afghans.

  • The U.S. has enough aircraft available to meet its goal of getting 5,000–9,000 people out of the country each day, Gen. Hank Taylor told reporters on Thursday, but it has only evacuated 7,000 people in total since Saturday — 2,000 of them in the previous 24 hours.
  • “No flight out of Kabul should have empty seats,” more than 300 former national security officials, organized by members of the Truman National Security Project, wrote to Biden and Congress in a separate letter.

Driving the news: The Gorman letter was organized by Vital Voices and Women for Women International, a group of celebrities, policy experts, NGO leaders and activists.

  • They are demanding that Biden take four concrete steps: provide direct evacuation flights for women; include a category for at-risk women for Special Immigrant Visas and raise the refugee cap; provide more resources for assistance and resettlement; and protect and invest in women who remain in Afghanistan.

Go deeper: Exclusive: Inside the White House scramble to protect Afghan allies

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Inside Democrats' $3.5 trillion budget resolution

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Why it matters: Democratic leaders' plan is nearly begging for a challenge, not just from Republicans, but potentially from some fellow Democrats as well as the Senate parliamentarian.

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Study shows high cost of carbon emissions measured in lives lost

Adding projected heat-related deaths into cost-benefit analysis of federal rules would tilt policymaking in favor of more aggressive carbon emissions cuts, a new study finds.

Why it matters: The social cost of carbon helps determine the outcome of cost-benefit analyses that underpin federal regulations. Adding in global warming's potential to cause more heat-related fatalities would tilt the policy calculus from supporting a gradual phaseout of emissions starting in 2050, to fully decarbonizing by the same year.

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Newsmax apologizes to Dominion employee for false voter manipulation claims

Newsmax apologized to a Dominion Voting Systems employee for airing false allegations that he manipulated the 2020 presidential election results.

The big picture: Eric Coomer, Dominion's security director, in return dropped Newsmax from a defamation lawsuit, which he filed "after being named in false charges as a key actor in 'rigging' the election," AP writes.

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