Morning Wire - Iowa GOP Caucuses & Texas Receives Cease And Desist | Afternoon Update | 1.15.24
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I'm Georgia Howe with Daily Wire Editor-in-Chief John Bickley.
It's Monday, January 15th, and this is your Morning Wire afternoon update.
The first presidential primary contest of 2024 is kicking off in Iowa this evening.
Republicans in the state are gathering for the GOP caucuses, which begin at 7 p.m. Central.
They're expected to last about an hour.
Daily Wire's senior editor, Cabot Phillips, has more.
Heading into the day, former president Donald Trump held a more than 30-point lead over his opponents,
with Nikki Haley and Ronda Santas vying for second and Vivek Ramaswami comfortably and fourth.
But extreme weather conditions in the state, with temperatures well below zero,
could end up keeping many would-be caucus goers at home and significantly impact turnout.
Democrats will also be gathering tonight to carry out some party business,
but will not be casting any ballots.
After mismanaging the process in 2020, the party pushed,
it's Iowa voting back a few weeks and has shifted to mail-in voting.
As dangerous Arctic blasts threatened to disrupt the nation's first presidential nominating
contest, the cold front is impacting life across several other states.
That includes New York, where an NFL playoff game between the Pittsburgh Steelers
versus the Buffalo Bills has been postponed.
Over the weekend, the bills invited diehard fans to come help clear off the field,
offering $20 an hour for their labor.
Here's one fan who helped out.
There was a lot more snow than we were expecting, but it was still fun.
We got a lot down and then it snowed more, but they're actually really clear and off the field pretty well.
The stadiums aren't fully clear, but they're getting there.
The National Weather Service says that wind chills are expected to push temperatures even lower in some areas.
In parts of Colorado, Kansas, and into Iowa, temperatures have dropped well below zero.
So far, Arctic storms have left four people dead and tens of thousands of people without power.
The Biden administration has ordered the state of Texas to cease and assist after it blocked federal officials from accessing part of the southern border.
Daily Wire reporter Amanda Prestaacamo reports.
In a letter sent Sunday to the Texas Attorney General, the Department of Homeland Security said the state is violating the Constitution by blocking immigration officials from part of the border in Eagle Pass.
Texas Governor Greg Abbott has deployed the state's National Guard and set up barriers blocking about two.
2.5 miles of the border at Shelby Park amid these record numbers of illegal crossings.
Those actions, Homeland Security says, conflict with the authority in duties of border patrol
under federal law and are preempted under the Supremacy Clause of the Constitution.
But Texas officials say they have the right to do with the Biden administration has failed
to do, protect their state's borders from illegal entry.
Meanwhile, up in Illinois, Governor J.B. Pritzker took out a full-page ad in a Texas newspaper
asking Governor Abbott to stop sending migrants to his state, especially during the cold weather.
I think that the president needs to do more, the Congress needs to do more.
Cities out here that are the target of this political game that Governor Abbott is playing are suffering.
And here in Illinois, it's minus 29 degrees outside with the wind chill.
We have migrants that arrive from Texas virtually every day, hundreds.
and we don't have places to put them.
Governor Abbott responded saying Pritzker was all too proud to call Illinois the most welcoming
state in the nation and that the Illinois governor should pressure President Biden to close the border.
Texas is also experiencing severe weather this week.
The U.S. shot down an anti-ship missile fired at the USS Laboon in the Southern Red Sea on Sunday.
U.S. Central Command says the missile was fired by Iranian-backed Houthi militants from
the area of Yemen. A U.S. fighter aircraft shot down the missile. No one was injured in the attack.
Meanwhile, British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak faced questioning from UK's parliament today
regarding why lawmakers didn't get a say in the royal military joining the U.S. in striking
Houthi targets. Sunak described the military action as limited, not escalatory. The prime
minister did not rule out future strikes on the Houthi militants.
Mr. Speaker, we shouldn't fall for their malign narrative that this is about Israel and
They target ships from around the world.
We continue to work towards a sustainable ceasefire in Gaza and to get more aid to civilians.
We also continue to support a negotiated settlement in Yemen's civil war.
But I want to be very clear that this action is completely unrelated to those issues.
It is a direct response to the Houthis' attacks on international shipping.
And we should also recognise the risks of inaction.
action.
Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin was released from the hospital today after a two-week stay,
which he initially had kept secret due to complications from prostate cancer surgery.
Officials say Austin will be working from home as he recovers.
His doctors have said in a statement that his prognosis is excellent.
The defense secretary released a statement expressing thanks to his doctors and that he is
eager to fully recover and return as quickly as possible to the Pentagon.
Austin's lack of transparency triggered a review of procedures for notifying the White House
in the event of a cabinet member power transfer.
German farmers gathered in Berlin today for what's being described as the climax of a
week of protests against a plan to scrap tax breaks on the diesel they use.
Over the past week, demonstrating farmers have blocked off highways and brought traffic across
Germany to a standstill.
Their hope pushing the government to abandon plans to end the diesel tax break.
Earlier this month, the German government made,
one concession and said they would stagger the cuts to diesel tax breaks over three years.
Chancellor Olaf Schultz released a video Saturday calling the deal a good compromise
and said that he has taken the farmer's concerns to heart. But many farmers aren't satisfied.
We use 120,000 liters of diesel per year, so to us this diesel refund was worth around 25,000
euros. I see in our family how tough it is to keep our business running, and if you don't have
additional income, it becomes increasingly difficult. If we lose the subsidy now, I really don't know
how we'll make ends meet. Those are your drive home updates this afternoon. To learn more about
these stories, go to dailywire.com. And for more in-depth discussion of the biggest stories of the day,
listen to the latest full episode of Morning Wire every morning.
