CBS News
Rep. Cori Bush, member of “The Squad,” fights for her seat in fierce Democratic primary challenge
When Democratic Rep. Cori Bush was elected in 2020, she became the first Black woman to represent Missouri, the first nurse and and the first organizer from the Black Lives Matter movement in Congress. And she’s hoping Tuesday’s primary will go her way, but it’s been a difficult journey — and the second most expensive House primary in 2024 — against challenger Wesley Bell, the St. Louis County prosecutor.
“My community knows who I am,” Bush told CBS News. “This district has seen me for the last 10 years going from the activist to the ‘politivist,’ which is what I call myself. They know that about me. They know that I am going to fight for the people in the streets.”
Bush rose to national prominence after defeating longtime incumbent Rep. Lacy Clay in 2020. She cruised to victory in 2022 but the two-term congresswoman is now facing her toughest political fight yet against Bell.
“The congresswoman is not doing her job,” Bell said in an interview with CBS News. “She is not working with others, and it’s hurting our district.”
The competitive match-up for Missouri’s First Congressional District comes weeks after incumbent New York Rep. Jamaal Bowman became the first Squad member to lose a primary this year when moderate Westchester County Executive George Latimer defeated him in June. Nearly $25 million was spent on ads, making it the most expensive primary race in the country. According to Ad Impact, Tuesday’s contest ranks second, with roughly $19 million in total spending.
“There is concern which is why we, you know, have such a ground game that is just amazing,” Bush told CBS News. “We understand what’s at stake.”
Bowman joined Bush in a virtual campaign call Monday, along with several other fellow Squad members, including Reps. Alexandria Ocasio Cortez, Ilhan Omar, Rashida Tlaib and Summer Lee.
“I know exactly what you’re going through,” said Bowman, who called his loss “unfortunate.” “I know what it feels like to be constantly bombarded with ads and mailers and lies and B.S. that completely distorts who you are and your record.”
The pro-Israel super PAC United Democracy Project, an affiliate of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, or AIPAC, spent more than $14.8 million criticizing Bowman’s record. The same organization doled out more than $9 million in support of Bell and opposing Bush. The group has targeted Bush over her early calls for a ceasefire in Gaza and her criticism of Israel’s offensive against Hamas. At one point, she accused Israel of conducting an “ethnic cleansing campaign.” Most of the super PAC’s ads have centered around her vote against the Democratic infrastructure bill and her overall record.
“This level of spending is a testament to the strength of Cori Bush — that one individual former nurse and single mother fighting for working people in her district is such a threat to right-wing interests, corporate power and Republican megadonors, that they have to drag our democracy through the mud to even have a shot at challenging her,” said Usamah Andrabi of Justice Democrats, which has spent roughly $2.4 million to boost Bush.
“These are some of the same donors and donations that the congresswoman went after in her last elections,” Bell responded. “So, it seems a little bit like sour grapes. It seems a little bit hypocritical that when I get that kind of support it must be for nefarious reasons.
Bush and Bell did not debate during the primary, but the two have tangled over a range of issues. Last week a recording of a phone call between the two candidates in June 2023 was leaked, and according to the recording posted online at Drop Site, Bell told Bush, “I am not running against you.”
“I just wish he would have told the truth from the beginning,” Bush quipped. “It was no reason to say ‘no,’ and to say, you know, in his words, ‘you have my word.'”
Bell claims he was “secretly recorded” while he was exploring a Senate run last year. He said his perspective changed after speaking with voters.
“This isn’t anything personal with the congresswoman,” Bell explained. “It’s personal because I care about this district and this region.”
Another flashpoint is the handling of Michael Brown’s death in Ferguson, Missouri, in 2014. Friday marks the 10th anniversary since the 18-year-old was shot by a local police officer, Darren Wilson, sparking massive demonstrations. Bush was one of the key organizers on the ground and has remained close to the Brown family. Bell, a former municipal prosecutor and judge, served on the Ferguson City Council. When Bell became county prosecutor, he reopened an investigation into Brown’s death, but in 2020 announced that no charges would be brought against Wilson.
In one of Bush’s closing ads, Brown’s father, Michael Brown Sr., claims Bell “lied to us” because of his failure to charge Wilson.
“I don’t know what else we could have done,” Bell countered. “We promised to look into it, and we did that. We did a thorough investigation, looked into it, but without any new evidence, unfortunately, it is what it is. And I made a promise as county prosecutor that we don’t prosecute people without evidence.”
If elected, Bell says he plans to focus on an array of issues including jobs, gun safety and affordable healthcare.
“That’s what I intend to take to D.C., that spirit of working together and getting things done,” Bell said.
Bush remains hopeful Democrats can secure the majority in November. If she wins another term, she plans to continue her work around reproductive rights, helping the unhoused and advancing the Equal Rights Amendment.
“There’s quite a few things on my list,” Bush said.
CBS News
Can Trump impose tariffs without Congress? It’s complicated, according to experts.
President-elect Trump, who has said he thinks “tariff” is “the most beautiful word in the dictionary,” has proposed a variety of taxes on goods imported from other countries.
His aim is to deter American companies from relying on parts and goods from overseas, including from China, by making it more expensive for them to do so.
He’s also claimed that he doesn’t need Congress’ support to impose the tariffs he’s floated. The reality is more complicated, according to economists and foreign trade experts.
What has Trump proposed?
On the campaign trail, Trump proposed tariffs of between 60% and 100% on Chinese goods. He’s offered few additional details, however, such as whether the tariffs would apply to all goods, or just certain categories of products.
He’s also proposed a sweeping tariff policy including a universal tax of between 10% to 20% on all imports, and has promised reciprocal tariffs on any country that imposes tariffs on American-made goods.
Can Trump unilaterally impose tariffs?
Once he takes office, President-elect Trump has a few different pathways through which he could try to implement the types of tariffs he has proposed.
The U.S. Constitution gives Congress the authority to impose tariffs in Article 1, Section 8, which states that “The Congress shall have Power To lay and collect Taxes, Duties…To regulate Commerce with foreign Nations.” But Congress can also selectively delegate tariff-setting authority to the President, which it has done for decades.
Trump, in his first term as president from 2017-2021, made use of this presidential authority to increase tariffs: Duties paid on U.S. imports doubled from roughly $37 billion in 2015 to $74 billion in 2020, according to the Congressional Research Service.
“Looking at his previous four years in office, he seems to believe he has the authority to impose tariffs,” said Jake Colvin, president of the National Foreign Trade Council, a group dedicated to advocating for U.S. companies in international commerce. “If they decide on day one that they want to use executive authority to put tariffs on Chinese goods, they could probably go ahead and do that.”
Colvin added that it will be important for the incoming Trump administration to provide businesses with more specifics so that companies can plan accordingly. “A lot has been proposed in the course of the campaign, so it’s important for the administration to give a signal about the path it intends to pursue, for clarity and planning purposes for American businesses,” he said.
Presidential authority to impose tariffs
The president has authority to impose a range of trade restrictions on foreign nations, said Inu Manak, a trade policy fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations.
“It seems pretty clear that he would pursue tariffs soon after taking office. During his last term, tariffs were a tool of choice in the trade war against China and against allies, too. So I believe that is a strategy he’ll replicate in his next term,” Manak told CBS MoneyWatch.
Manak added that he would likely be able to do so without support from Congress. “The president has quite a bit of discretion to do what he wants,” she said.
Legal powers at Trump’s disposal include Section 301 of the Trade Act of 1974, under which the president may impose retaliatory tariffs when “an act policy, or practice of a foreign country … violates, or is inconsistent with, the provisions of, or otherwise denies benefits to the United States under, any trade agreement, or … is unjustifiable and burdens or restricts United States commerce.”
Trump has already relied on Section 301 to impose tariffs on China throughout 2018 and 2019, and he could, simply, expand upon existing tariff actions he’s already taken, according to Manak.
“That would require no action from Congress, because they are already in place,” she said.
In his previous term as president, he also made use of Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act of 1962 to impose tariffs on steel and aluminum imports. It grants the president the authority to adjust imports, including by imposing tariffs, when they are found to be a threat to national security.
Threats to national security
There’s also the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA), which hasn’t been used to restrict trade since President Nixon was in office, from 1969 until his resignation in 1974.
The act says “Any authority granted to the President by … this title may be exercised to deal with any unusual and extraordinary threat … to the national security, foreign policy, or economy of the United States, if the President declares a national emergency with respect to such threat.”
“The authorities granted to the President … may only be exercised to deal with an unusual and extraordinary threat with respect to which a national emergency …” it adds in part.
In other words, in order to use IEEPA to impose tariffs, Trump would have to declare a national emergency through an executive order, claiming that the U.S.’s trading partners pose an unusual and extraordinary threat.
Alan Wm. Wolff, former deputy director-general of the World Trade Organization and a distinguished visiting fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics (PIIE), is skeptical that Trump has the authority to impose sweeping tariffs under IEEPA.
“Can it be used against trade with all countries, our allies and friends in Europe and Asia, in the Americas, not to mention the poorest countries in Africa? That would simply be too large a power grab to have been within what Congress intended in this statute,” he wrote in a recent blog post.
Discrimination against U.S. commerce
Manak said that Section 338 of the Tariff Act of 1930 could also conceivably give the president the authority to unilaterally raise tariffs.
The rarely used act allows the president to impose duties of up to 50% of a product’s value, and is triggered when a president finds that a foreign country has imposed an unreasonable charge on, or discriminated against U.S. commerce.
Typically, though, the finding has to come from the U.S. International Trade Commission (ITC). “But the statute’s language is ambiguous in terms of what that would look like, and I would imagine he could pursue this without a final finding from ITC, or pursue it while a finding is being made,” she said.
Impact of tariffs on consumer prices
Some companies have already said they’re aiming to move production out of China to avoid Trump’s proposed tariffs.
Shoemaker Steve Madden, for example, says it plans to import fewer goods made in China to the U.S., and replace them with items made in other countries.
If imposed, the proposed tariffs on imports could lead to consumers losing between $46 billion and $78 billion in spending power each year on products including apparel, toys, furniture, household appliances, footwear and travel goods, according to the National Retail Federation.
By another estimate, a 20% general tariff on all imported goods, combined with a 60% tariff on goods imported from China, would cost the typical U.S. households more than $2,600 a year. If Trump imposes a 10% tariff across the board instead, that would cost families $1,700 more, according to PIIE.
More concrete data on what the cost will be on consumers may soon be available, as experts expect Trump’s proposed tariffs to be implemented rather quickly.
“We would imagine that within a few months of him taking office, we would see the first tranche of tariffs taking effect,” Manak said.
CBS News
Man kills self in explosions outside Brazil’s Supreme Court
A man who failed in an attempt to break into Brazil’s Supreme Court killed himself in explosions outside the building Wednesday that forced justices and staff to evacuate, authorities said.
The two strong blasts were heard about 7:30 p.m. after the day’s session finished and all the justices and staff left the building safely, Brazil’s Supreme Court said in a statement.
Local firefighters confirmed one man died at the scene in the capital Brasilia, but did not identify him.
Celina Leão, the lieutenant governor of Brazil’s federal district, said the suspect had earlier detonated explosives in a car in a Congress parking lot, which did not cause injuries.
“His first action was to explode the car. Then he approached the Supreme Court and tried to get in the building. He failed and then there were the other explosions,” Leão said in a news conference.
Local media reported that the car that exploded belonged to a member of Brazil’s Liberal Party, the same of former President Jair Bolsonaro. Leão said only investigations will determine whether the owner of the car is the same man who died in the blasts.
Leão recommended that Congress be closed Thursday to avoid new risks. Brazil’s Senate heeded her call and the lower house will be shut until noon, speaker Arthur Lira said.
“It could have been a lone wolf, like others we’ve seen around the world,” Leão said in a news conference. “We are considering it as a suicide because there was only one victim. But investigations will show if that was indeed the case.”
Leão added only forensics will be able to identify the body, which remained outside the Supreme Court for three hours after the blasts.
The blasts outside the Supreme Court took place about 20 seconds apart in Brasilia’s Three Powers Plaza, where Brazil’s main government buildings, including the Supreme Court, Congress and presidential palace, are located.
President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva was not in the neighboring presidential palace at the time, spokesman José Chrispiniano said.
Police blocked all access to the area and the presidential security bureau was conducting a sweep of the grounds around the presidential palace.
Brazil’s federal police said it is investigating and did not provide a motive.
The Supreme Court in recent years has become a target for threats by far-right groups and supporters of Bolsonaro’s due to its crackdown on the spread of false information. In particular, Justice Alexandre de Moraes has been a focus for their ire.
Lula’s spokesman said that late on Wednesday the leftist leader was gathering at the presidential residence with federal police chief Andrei Rodrigues, and Supreme Court Justices de Moraes and Cristiano Zanin.
CBS News
11/13: CBS Evening News – CBS News
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