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GOP Looks to Other States for Republican Convention While Holding Out Hope for North Carolina

Pro-Beijing Groups in Canada Support Hong Kong National Security Law

The Chinese regime’s approval of highly controversial security legislation in Hong Kong that triggered an outcry around the world and mass protests in the territory is being supported by pro-Beijing groups in Canada. The new law, which makes it a crime to undermine Beijing’s authority in the territory, mainly targets four areas: subversion of state power, division of the country, terrorist activities, and interference by external forces. The law, enacted by bypassing the local legislative process, means the end of the “one country, two systems” principle in Hong Kong that has been in place since Britain returned control of the territory to China in 1997, and which was supposed to remain unchanged for 50 years. Groups Side With Beijing As democracy supporters in Hong Kong continue to fight against the…

GOP Looks to Other States for Republican Convention While Holding Out Hope for North Carolina

Update: President Donald Trump announced Tuesday night that he is seeking a new state to host the Republican National Convention in the summer, after North Carolina refused to guarantee the event could be held in Charlotte without restrictions amid the CCP virus pandemic.

A top Republican official said the party is moving forward with considering other cities and states for its key summer convention while expressing hope that Charlotte, North Carolina, the GOP’s first choice, would still materialize.

Republican National Committee (RNC) chairwoman Ronna McDaniel said in a June 2 statement that the GOP would start visiting the cities and states that have offered to host the party’s four-day nominating convention, scheduled to open on Aug. 24, at which Republicans are expected to officially nominate President Donald Trump for a second term.

McDaniel said the party still hopes to “conduct the business of our convention” at the Spectrum Center in Charlotte, which Trump, the RNC, and North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper, a Democrat, have all indicated is their first choice.

“We have now communicated to Governor Cooper’s office multiple times that we would like to showcase Charlotte and the wonderful state of North Carolina to the world by hosting the convention we contracted for nearly two years ago,” McDaniel said, calling the convention a “historic event to show that America is open for business.”

GOP Looks to Other States for Republican Convention While Holding Out Hope for North Carolina

But the type of “full convention” that Trump and the RNC are seeking, which Cooper said in a letter (pdf) Tuesday includes around 19,000 people attending along with “full hotels and restaurants and bars at capacity,” will be “highly unlikely.”

Cooper instead insisted the Republicans plan for a lower-key event due to the pandemic.

“The people of North Carolina do not know what the status of COVID-19 will be in August so planning for a scaled-down convention with fewer people, social distancing, and face coverings is a necessity,” he wrote.

GOP Looks to Other States for Republican Convention While Holding Out Hope for North Carolina

“As much as we want the conditions surrounding COVID-19 to be favorable enough for you to hold the convention you describe in late August, it is very unlikely,” Cooper added.

Republican officials so far have submitted proposals for a “full convention” rather than one with fewer participants and social distancing as requested by the state, Cooper said.

“Neither public health officials nor I will risk the health and safety of North Carolinians by providing the guarantee you seek,” he said in his letter, referring to a guarantee that convention attendance would not be limited by social distancing restrictions.

GOP Looks to Other States for Republican Convention While Holding Out Hope for North Carolina

In a back-and-forth that has gone on for weeks, McDaniel said Tuesday Cooper was “dragging his feet on giving us any guidance as to how to move forward” with organizing the convention safely.

Trump told reporters at the White House on May 26 that he wanted assurances that a full convention could be held, and pressed Cooper to commit.

“We need a fast decision from the governor,” Trump said. “If he feels that he’s not going to do it, all he has to do is tell us and then we’ll have to pick another location, and I will tell you a lot of locations want it.”

In a letter to Cooper last week, McDaniel asked him to approve a series of safety protocols and logistical measures that Republicans agreed to, including health questionnaires and thermal scans for fever.

She later told former state Governor Pat McCrory on his radio show that it seemed Cooper was stalling.

“It’s starting to feel like they are dragging their feet and they don’t want to give us their guidelines,” McDaniel said on the show a day after she sent the letter, which asked him to commit to a full event by a June 3 deadline. “We are hoping to make it work but we are not going to wait indefinitely.”

Cooper, in essentially rejecting the possibility of a full convention, called for the Republicans to provide detailed plans for a way to hold the event in line with CDC-approved health and safety protocols (pdf) in place.

“We are happy to continue talking with you about what a scaled-down convention would look like and we still await your proposed plan for that,” Cooper wrote, adding that his office had not received answers to safety questions posed by the state’s health officials, “specifically regarding social distancing and face coverings.”

Republicans in Georgia, Texas, and Florida have offered to host the convention.

Focus News: GOP Looks to Other States for Republican Convention While Holding Out Hope for North Carolina

UK Warns China: Do Not Destroy the Jewel of Hong Kong

LONDON—The United Kingdom warned Beijing on June 2 to step back from the brink over an “authoritarian” national security law in Hong Kong that it said risked destroying one of the jewels of Asia’s economy while ruining the reputation of China. China’s rubber-stamp parliament last week approved a decision to create laws for Hong Kong to curb sedition, secession, terrorism, and foreign interference. Mainland security and intelligence agents may be stationed in the city for the first time. “There is time for China to reconsider, there is a moment for China to step back from the brink and respect Hong Kong’s autonomy and respect China’s own international obligations,” British Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab told parliament. “The sad reality is that if China continues down this track, it will be strangling…