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Harvard’s Newspaper Defends Contacting ICE for Comments in the Face of Angry Student Groups

Geoff Regan Looks to Keep Role as Speaker of the House of Commons in Canada

OTTAWA—Geoff Regan, who presided over the House of Commons as Speaker for the past four years, is looking to reprise his role in the new session of Parliament. The Halifax Liberal MP plans to let his name stand among those who want to be the referee in what is likely to be a fractious Commons following last month’s bruising election campaign that returned Justin Trudeau’s Liberals with a minority government. The new session is to start on Dec. 5 and the first order of business will be for MPs to elect a new Speaker. Speaker’s office spokeswoman Heather Bradley said Regan “would welcome the opportunity to place his experience as Speaker in the [last] 42nd Parliament at the service of the House of Commons and will therefore be letting his name stand as a candidate for…

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Despite being under heavy fire from several student groups, The Crimson, Harvard University’s student newspaper, continues to defend its standard journalistic practices, refusing to apologize for asking federal immigration officials for comments on coverage of activity at the school.

According to The Crimson, the student-run publication came under fire after they reached out to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) this September for comment on an on-campus student rally calling for the agency’s dismantlement. The Crimson’s coverage, which came out the day after the rally, notes that ICE did not respond to the request for comment.

In the following weeks, The Crimson has been repeatedly attacked by several student organizations at the school, particularly the immigration advocacy group Act on a Dream that organized the September anti-ICE rally. “In this political climate, a request for comment is virtually the same as tipping [ICE] off, regardless of how they are contacted,” reads an online petition started by Act on a Dream, denouncing the newspaper’s decision. “The Crimson…must reexamine and interrogate policies that place students under threat.”

The latest criticism came from Harvard’s undergraduate student government, which voted over the weekend to pass a statement in support of Act on a Dream, whose members want The Crimson’s editors to apologize.

“It is necessary for the Undergraduate Council to acknowledge the concerns raised by numerous groups and students on campus over the past few weeks and to recognize the validity of their expressed fear and feelings of unsafety,” reads the statement, which was posted to the student government’s Facebook page.

In response, the newspaper’s president, Kristine Guillaume, wrote in an e-mailed statement after the vote that they won’t sacrifice the basic values of journalism just because some students want the view from only one side to be read.

“Fundamental journalistic values obligate The Crimson to allow all subjects of a story a chance to comment,” Guillaume wrote. “This policy demonstrates a commitment to ensuring that the individuals and institutions we write about have an opportunity to respond to criticisms in order to ensure a fair and unbiased story.”

“We welcome feedback from our readers and from those we cover. In this case, we met with representatives of Act on a Dream to hear their concerns and explain our approach,” she added.

Meanwhile, Act on a Dream, according to The Crimson, have instructed their members not to speak to the newspaper unless it “changes its policies.”

In its “Note to Readers,” The Crimson’s editors call for reporters to “contact any person or organization relevant to a story to seek that entity’s comment” a “core tenet that defines America’s free and independent press.”

“A world where news outlets categorically refuse to contact certain kinds of sources—a world where news outlets let third-party groups dictate the terms of their coverage — is a less informed, less accurate, and ultimately less democratic world,” The Crimson said.

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Trump Expected to Delay European Auto Tariff Decision, Say EU Officials

U.S. President Donald Trump is expected to announce this week he is delaying a decision on whether to slap tariffs on cars and auto parts imported from the European Union, likely for another six months, EU officials said. “We have a solid indication from the administration that there will not be tariffs on us this week,” one EU official said on Monday. The Trump administration has a Thursday deadline to decide whether to impose threatened “Section 232” national security tariffs of as much as 25 percent on imported vehicles and parts under a Cold War-era trade law. U.S. Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross, whose agency is overseeing an investigation into the effect of auto imports on U.S. national security, said on Nov. 3 the United States may not need such tariffs…