• Tesla found a way to get out of environmental regulations at its Texas gigafactory

    aerial image of massive gigafactory plant in Texas
    Tesla's gigafactory outside Austin, Texas in 2024.

    • Tesla's gigafactory outside Austin won't have to follow the city's environmental regulations. 
    • The EV company was granted an exemption thanks to a new state law.
    • Elon Musk has said the property will be an "ecological paradise," but Tesla has a history of violating the environment. 

    Tesla's massive gigafactory outside Austin, Texas will no longer have to follow local environmental regulations, thanks to a recent state law.

    Tesla's 2,500-acre property, which includes its 10-million-square-foot electric vehicle gigafactory, is in unincorporated land on the outskirts of Austin.

    Despite not being directly in the city, most of that land was still part of Austin's "extraterritorial jurisdiction" (ETJ), which allowed the city to regulate developments outside its limits.

    In February, Tesla applied for an exemption from Austin's ETJ, which the city's Planning Department approved in March.

    The exemption was first reported by the Austin Business Journal this week.

    The exemption was possible thanks to a new state law that went into effect in September and allows landowners to request to be removed from jurisdictions so that they can develop land with fewer regulations.

    Several cities in the state have already sued to block the law, including Grand Prairie, which argued in a filing that the law will hurt the city's ability to protect the health, safety, and welfare of those who live in and around its borders.

    But under the law, cities don't have much leeway to deny a landowner's request, Austin's director of planning previously said, according to the Austin Business Journal.

    Tesla's ETJ exemption will enable the electric vehicle company to further develop its land without having to follow the city's environmental restrictions, which an Austin city spokesperson acknowledged could harm locals.

    "Releasing properties from the ETJ impacts the City because development in the ETJ is subject to limited subdivision regulation as well as regulation of water quality and flooding issues," Shelley Parks, an Austin city spokesperson, said in a statement to Business Insider. "All affect people in both the ETJ and the City itself." 

    Tesla did not respond to a request for comment from Business Insider.

    When the Texas gigafactory was still under construction before its 2022 opening, Elon Musk promised it would be an "ecological paradise" with walking trails for the public along the neighboring Colorado River.

    Musk's companies have had issues with environmental regulations in the past, however. In February, Tesla settled a lawsuit accusing them of mishandling hazardous waste in California. Meanwhile, the Boring Company has been accused of letting untreated wastewater drain into the Colorado River.

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  • A billionaire drug kingpin escaped justice by paying a bond set at just $53K and then running away

    Spanish Civil Guards and Italian embassy employee at Madrid's Italian embassy
    Spanish Civil Guards and Italian embassy employees at the gates of the Italian embassy in Madrid, on January 31, 2023.

    • A billionaire cartel boss was arrested for his involvement in drug trafficking, reports say.
    • Karim Bouyakhrichan was released on bail by a Spanish court after paying a $53,000 bond.
    • He then fled, and his whereabouts remain unknown.

    A billionaire drug baron was arrested in Spain on money laundering charges but was released after paying a $53,000 bond, according to reports. He then simply vanished.

    During a press conference on Tuesday, Felix Bolaños, Spain's justice minister, described the development as "worrying news" but added that security forces would bring the man to justice "as soon as possible."

    Karim Bouyakhrichan was one of the most important leaders of a Dutch-Moroccan cocaine cartel, according to Spanish authorities, and was arrested along with five other suspects in January.

    They were accused of buying 172 properties in Spain worth more than €50 million, about $53 million, to launder the gains of drug trafficking operations, Spain's National Police said in a press release at the time.

    This followed a five-year investigation that police say showed the suspects had established a criminal organization involved in large-scale drug trafficking, including the smuggling of significant amounts of cocaine.

    The press release did not name Bouyakhrichan but described him as one of the leaders of the so-called Mocro Maffia — a nickname given to a network of drug gangs of Morrocan origin operating in the Netherlands, Belgium, Spain, and Morroco.

    According to the BBC, the Mocro Maffia is believed to have smuggled billions of dollars worth of drugs from South America into Europe over the past decade and a half.

    Politico referred to Bouyakhrichan as a billionaire who possesses bank accounts and properties around the world.

    It also reported that police obtained credible evidence that he'd planned to either kidnap or kill the heir to the Dutch throne, forcing her, out of safety, to move out of student accommodation and back into the royal palace in 2022.

    Bouyakhrichan was to be extradited to the Netherlands after authorities there filed an extradition order requesting he be returned to the Netherlands to stand trial for his drug trafficking empire, according to Spanish radio Cadena SER.

    But shortly after his arrest, Bouyakhrichan's lawyer challenged his detention, citing a lack of evidence of criminal activity to justify imprisonment and the absence of a risk of flight, per court records seen by Business Insider.

    The court rejected all of Bouyakhrichan's lawyer's grounds but ruled that preventing his risk of flight could be achieved with "less burdensome" security measures.

    The judge then imposed a €50,000 bond, roughly $53,000, took away Bouyakhrichan's passport, and ordered him to report to the authorities every fifteen days.

    According to the BBC, Bouyakhrichan was accidentally released amid confusion over the Dutch extradition request. It described him as one of the most wanted criminals in Europe.

    Vincent Veenman, a spokesman at the Dutch public prosecutor's office in The Hague, said it was "unknown" why Bouyakhrichan had not been held in custody pending his extradition, per multiple reports.

    "We are currently awaiting a decision on the extradition request," he said, adding that cooperation with the Spanish justice system was "generally good" and that "dozens of suspects are handed over every year."

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  • Billionaire investor Howard Marks says AI’s impact doesn’t make it immune to a crash

    Howard Marks
    • AI is transformative, but it's hard to determine its stock winners, Howard Marks told CNBC.
    • "Every bubble starts from widespread conviction," he said.
    • Many are betting on an AI wave to lift a number of sectors, from semiconductors to infrastructure.

    Artificial intelligence might end up changing the world, but that alone can't determine the success of its underlying assets, Howard Marks said.

    "Every bubble starts from widespread conviction," the market veteran told CNBC on Tuesday. "Everybody believes A, they bid the beneficiaries of A up to the moon. It turns out, it's overdone."

    When it comes to AI, Marks acknowledged the technology's transformative potential, and he himself can't say whether its beneficiaries are already under or overvalued. 

    But instead, AI investing reminded him of the internet's emergence 25 years ago, which also propelled markets sky-high:

    "Everybody was sure that the internet would change the world. And it did," he said, but added: "And yet the internet and E-commerce stocks that were the beneficiaries of that thinking in the TMT bubble of the late 90s — the vast majority are now worthless." 

    "So to say well, I think that AI will be very important, that's the easy part," the billionaire investor said. "But knowing how it should be reflected in portfolios that's the hard part."

    But forecasters are trying to meet this challenge. Just last week, Goldman Sachs outlined the sectors it thinks will win out in the long-term, from semiconductor producers to security software developers.

    Meanwhile, Wall Street's other heavy hitters have voiced their own predictions. That includes the "Big Short" investor Steve Eisman, who is betting big on infrastructure to get a boost from AI's electricity demand

    And looking at more immediate impacts, Bank of America raised its S&P 500 target last month, citing AI spending as a significant driver of growth.

    But Marks has generally demonstrated cynicism towards those who make macro predictions, and warned against relying too much on Wall Street forecasts — recently calling the practice an "organized religion."

    "Prices are not necessarily right, they're just the best consensus can do," he said in a speech this week.

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  • Tesla’s earnings report was worse than expected, but Elon Musk has a plan

    tesla stocks

    Hi! Costco shoppers who scooped up the store's gold bars are learning that being an amateur commodities trader is actually really hard!

    In today's big story, we're looking at Tesla's earnings report and what comes next for the EV maker.

    What's on deck:

    But first, the man with the plan.


    If this was forwarded to you, sign up here.


    The big story

    Tesla's turnaround plan

    tesla earnings image

    Bad news: Tesla's earnings report was worse than expected.

    Good news: Elon Musk has a plan.

    Tesla's disappointing earnings illustrated how bad a year it's having. The EV maker missed profit and revenue estimates, but those weren't the only ugly numbers.

    Tesla's free cash flow was negative $2.5 billion in the quarter, a shocking 674% year-over-year drop. (The company did point out it spent $1 billion on AI infrastructure investments this quarter.)

    Those figures aren't what you want to see from a public company. And even though Tesla tried to pin the blame on hybrids, such a bad earnings miss isn't usually something Wall Street overlooks.

    Except… that's exactly what investors did.

    Details on its robotaxis plan and news of expediting the release of an affordable model were all Wall Street needed to get back in on Tesla. Shares popped nearly 11% in premarket trading, a big win for a company down more than 40% on the year.

    The Tesla logo against a stock chart.

    Tesla's ambitions around robotaxis and an affordable model tap into key trends.

    Speeding up the launch of cheaper Tesla models — whenever that may be; details on a timeline were relatively scant — addresses a consumer that has shifted away from wanting big, expensive EVs.

    Discussion of robotaxis, meanwhile, allows Tesla to ride the stock market's AI wave that has sent other companies' stock prices skyrocketing over the past year.

    Perhaps that's why Musk spent so much of the earnings call discussing autonomy and the progress made with Tesla's Full Self-Driving software.

    But having a plan is one thing. Executing it is something else entirely. Musk, for all his accomplishments, hasn't always held firm to future milestones he's targeted.

    To that point, Business Insider's Linette Lopez suggested an even bigger initiative Tesla consider: Musk stepping down.

    The CEO, she argues, is ultimately responsible for Tesla squandering its lead in the EV market and not better insulating itself from threats when things were going well.

    Considering Musk's close ties with some of Tesla's board members, such a drastic move is a long shot. A more realistic request might be Musk pulling back on other responsibilities, but that also seems unlikely. Musk told analysts on the earnings call that Tesla is the majority of his work.

    Ultimately, Musk's fate could be decided by investors. Tesla is seeking shareholder approval for Musk's $55 billion pay package, which a Delaware judge has already struck down.

    If investors vote against the package at Tesla's annual meeting in June, who knows where Musk — and his AI ambitions — will end up.


    3 things in markets

    A $100 dollar bill with a declining graph overlayed on it.
    1. The March sell-off in stocks could be the start of something bigger. JPMorgan's Marko Kolanovic highlighted a "problematic backdrop" in equities that investors seem to be ignoring. Stubborn inflation and geopolitical concerns aren't going anywhere and "put additional pressure on investors to de-risk," Kolanovic wrote.

    2. Cathie Wood's investors are heading for the exits. Outflows for Wood's ARK funds are ramping up after a three-year decline. This year alone the suite of ARK ETFs has net outflows of $2.2 billion, triple what it endured last year.

    3. Stocks for a strong economy. Goldman Sachs highlighted 30 names that they think will outperform the market because they're investing heavily in future growth opportunities like artificial intelligence. Meta, Intel, and Micron Technology were among the stocks the bank flagged.


    3 things in tech

    A silhouette of Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella against a pink backdrop.
    1. Microsoft is blocking employee access to Perplexity AI. Perplexity AI is one of the largest customers of Microsoft's Azure OpenAI service. Other AI tools, like Google's Gemini chatbot, are also blocked on Microsoft's employee devices.

    2. Threads has overtaken X in one key metric. New data shows Meta's Threads is consistently surpassing Elon Musk's X in daily users in the United States. While X still has more monthly users, Threads could be on its way to becoming bigger than its competitor.

    3. Scoop: Navan's IPO. The a16z-backed travel and expense platform, which was valued at $9.2 billion back in October 2022, is targeting an April 2025 public listing, a person with direct knowledge of the matter told BI.


    3 things in business

    A photo illustration of the Earth in a shrink-wrapped plastic bag.
    1. America is drowning in plastic. In 2018, China stopped taking the United States' plastic imports. The US is now scrambling to find alternatives for the 40 million tons of plastic it produces each year.

    2. How Amazon won over skeptical advertisers. Since launching three months ago, Prime Video's ads have made a positive impression on advertisers, luring them in with generous price incentives and sponsorships.

    3. The Senate passed a bill that could ban TikTok. Joe Biden has signaled that he'll sign the legislation, which would effectively ban TikTok from the US app store. The final vote was 79 senators in favor, and just 18 opposed.


    In other news


    What's happening today

    • Today's earnings: Boeing, Meta, IBM, and other companies are reporting.

    • The US Supreme Court will hear the Idaho abortion ban case.


    The Insider Today team: Dan DeFrancesco, deputy editor and anchor, in New York. Jordan Parker Erb, editor, in New York. Hallam Bullock, senior editor, in London. George Glover, reporter, in London.

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  • S&P 500 is at risk of crashing 44% — and selling early could pay off, says elite forecaster

    Market crash graphic
    The S&P 500 could plunge and a mild recession is likely this year, Paul Dietrich said.

    • The S&P 500 is at risk of plunging 44% to around a four-year low, Paul Dietrich said.
    • The top strategist explained that selling stocks well before they crash can yield outsized returns.
    • Dietrich predicted a mild US recession this year based on multiple warning signs and threats.

    The stock market may be headed for a 44% crash — and getting out early could pay off, Paul Dietrich said.

    B. Riley Wealth Management's chief investment strategist moved his clients out of stocks and into bonds in 2000, and from stocks to cash, bonds, and gold in 2007, he recalled in his April market commentary.

    Dietrich's clients missed out on massive run-ups in stocks over the next year or so. But they also escaped staggering blows from the ensuing collapses of the dot-com and housing bubbles.

    They wound up netting 7% before fees during the 2000-2002 recession, when the S&P crashed by 49% and the Nasdaq plunged by 78%. They lost about 6% gross of fees during the 2008-2009 recession, but that performance trounced the S&P's 57% decline during the same period.

    "Despite the fun and excitement of participation in the current Mardi Gras-like stock market bubble completely untethered to any stock fundamentals, suppose an investor could miss most of a 49% or 57% decline in the S&P 500 index and then get back into the stock market when the leading economic indicators and long-term moving averages indicate the recession is over," Dietrich said.

    He emphasized that the "wildly overvalued" S&P would have to drop by 8% to return to its 200-day moving average, and the index has retreated by an average of 36% in past recessions.

    Thus, Dietrich said the benchmark could suffer a 44% rout to about 2,800 points — a level it last touched at the height of the pandemic in 2020.

    Dietrich also laid out why he still expects a mild recession this year. He pointed to heady stock valuations, charts flashing red, a historic jump in the so-called Buffett Indicator, the risk that interest rates stay higher for longer, and gold prices hitting record highs as signs that the market and economy are headed for trouble.

    The Wall Street veteran added that the recession has been delayed by vast amounts of government spending, consumers racking up debt to make purchases, and a historically tight labor market that's showing signs of cracking.

    Dietrich's latest warnings warrant skepticism, as the stock market and economy have defied his and other doomsayers' bleak forecasts for years now.

    Moreover, famed investors like Warren Buffett have warned against trying to time the market as it's virtually impossible, and steadily investing or "dollar-cost averaging" into an index fund is a far superior strategy.

    Yet several of Wall Street's biggest players, including JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon, Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon, and Citigroup CEO Jane Fraser, have all cautioned that markets aren't pricing in the risks posed by threats like inflation, recession, and geopolitical strife.

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  • Tommy Tuberville misses Ukraine aid vote after railing against it

    Sen. Tommy Tuberville spent nearly 10 minutes on Tuesday slamming a bill to provide aid to Ukraine. He wasn't even around to vote against it.
    Sen. Tommy Tuberville spent nearly 10 minutes on Tuesday slamming a bill to provide aid to Ukraine. He wasn't even around to vote against it.

    • Sen. Tommy Tuberville of Alabama has long been opposed to Ukraine aid.
    • He delivered a nearly 10-minute floor speech railing against it before the bill passed on Tuesday.
    • But during the actual vote, the Alabama senator was nowhere to be found.

    Ahead of a final Senate vote to send Ukraine aid to President Joe Biden's desk, Sen. Tommy Tuberville made one last stand against it.

    The Alabama Republican delivered a more than nine minute floor speech denouncing further aid on Tuesday, describing Ukraine as a "black hole with no accountability" while accusing House Republican leaders of having "sold out Americans" by allowing a vote on the bill in the first place.

    "The war in Ukraine is a stalemate. It has been for a while," said Tuberville. "We should be working with Ukraine and Russia to negotiate an end to this madness."

    But when the Senate actually held a voted on the bill shortly after 9 pm on Tuesday, Tuberville was one of just three senators who did not cast votes.

    https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js

    It's not clear why Tuberville missed the vote, and his Senate office did not immediately respond to Business Insider's request for comment. He was present earlier on Tuesday to cast procedural votes against the bill.

    Republican Sens. Rand Paul of Kentucky and Tim Scott of South Carolina also missed the final vote. Paul has long been an opponent of Ukraine aid, while Scott said in a statement on Tuesday that he supports the bill.

    Sen. Katie Britt, Tuberville's Alabama colleague, voted for the bill on Tuesday after voting against a previous version of the aid package in February.

    The more than $61 billion in Ukraine aid was wrapped up in a larger $95 billion package that included more than $14 billion for Israel, $9 billion in humanitarian aid, aid for Taiwan, and a bill to force a sale of TikTok. Tuberville said he supported the Israel aid.

    The Alabama senator has long been an opponent of Ukraine aid. In May 2022, he was one of just 11 Republican senators to vote against a $40 billion aid package for the country.

    He has incorrectly described Russia as a "communist" country, despite the country's history of capitalism since the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991.

    "He can't feed his people," Tuberville said in February 2022, referring to Russian President Vladimir Putin. "It's a communist country, so he can't feed his people, so they need more farmland."

    He has also dismissed the idea of even loaning Ukraine the money, an idea championed by former President Donald Trump.

    "I don't see Ukraine having anything unless they're gonna give us part of their country, and we don't want that," Tuberville told BI last month.

    On Tuesday, 15 of Tuberville's Republican colleagues voted against the foreign aid bill, while three members of the Democratic caucus did the same.

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  • 15 photos that show how divided Congress has become

    Marjorie Taylor Greene giving Biden a thumbs down
    Marjorie Taylor Greene gives a thumb down as President Joe Biden delivers the State of the Union address.

    • Photos show how breaches of decorum have become more common in an increasingly polarized Congress.
    • Marjorie Taylor Greene and Lauren Boebert heckled Joe Biden during the State of the Union.
    • In 2023, Kevin McCarthy lost 14 votes for House speaker before winning. He was ousted months later.

    Outbursts, scuffles, and statement outfits have become more common among members of Congress in an increasingly polarized political climate that's fueled an excess of election denialism, the House of Representatives struggling to elect a speaker twice in the same year, and legislative gridlock.

    Divisions are rife within the parties, too. Most recently, some Republicans have called for Mike Johnson to be booted from his speaker job over the Ukraine aid package, arguing that he is betraying the GOP by working with Democrats.

    Here are 15 photos that show how divided Congress has become in recent years.

    Many Democratic women wore white to President Donald Trump's 2019 State of the Union address, creating a stark contrast in the House Chamber seating.
    Democrats wear white to the 2019 State of the Union
    President Donald Trump delivers the State of the Union address in the chamber of the US House of Representatives at the Capitol Building.

    The white outfits were a nod to the women's suffrage movement and a message of "solidarity" with each other and women across the US, Florida Rep. Lois Frankel, the chairwoman of the Democratic Women's Working Group, wrote on X, formerly known as Twitter.

    At least one Republican woman, Rep. Elise Stefanik, also wore white for the event. However, party lines were clearly visible in the State of the Union seating arrangements.

    Rep. Dean Philips, a male congressman from Minnesota, also wore white to honor the cause.

    Nancy Pelosi appeared to clap sarcastically during Trump's speech, sparking memes.
    nancy pelosi state of union clap
    President Donald Trump turns to then-House speaker Nancy Pelosi as he delivers his State of the Union address to a joint session of Congress.

    Pelosi extended her arms and clapped at Trump with a smirk on her face. It earned her the nickname of "Queen of Condescending Applause" by some, The Washington Post reported. 

    Pelosi later told a group of reporters that the clap itself was not meant to be sarcastic and that she was applauding a comment Trump made about rejecting "the politics of revenge, resistance, and retribution, and embrace the boundless potential of cooperation, compromise, and the common good."

    When Pelosi made a guest appearance on "RuPaul's Drag Race" in 2022, drag queen Raja Gemini praised what they called a "sarcastic, shady clap," describing it as a "masterclass." 

    "It was completely unintentional," Pelosi said with a shrug and a laugh.

    Female Democratic lawmakers wore white again to the 2020 State of the Union.
    House Democrats wear white during the 2020 State of the Union
    Members from the House of Representatives, with most Democratic women wearing white, listen to President Donald Trump deliver the State of the Union address.

    In 2020, the white outfits marked the 100th anniversary of the ratification of the 19th amendment, which gave women the right to vote.

    At the end of Trump's 2020 address, Pelosi ripped up her copy of the speech.
    House Speaker Nancy Pelosi rips up President Donald Trump's State of the Union speech on Feb. 4, 2020.
    House Speaker Nancy Pelosi rips up President Donald Trump's State of the Union speech.

    Before his speech, Trump appeared to reject a handshake from Pelosi, who spearheaded his impeachment on charges of abuse of power and obstruction of Congress. (He was acquitted of the charges.)

    She told reporters that she ripped up the speech because "it was the courteous thing to do considering the alternatives" and that the move was not planned. 

    Pelosi's actions ultimately led Republican firebrand Rep. Matt Gaetz to file an ethics complaint for violating House decorum, The Hill reported. Trump also later shared a doctored video to millions of his followers of the incident that was edited to make it seem like she was ripping the speech up as the former president introduced one of the few remaining Tuskegee Airmen from World War II.

    Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene wore a "Trump won" face mask to take her oath of office after President Joe Biden won the 2020 election.
    Marjorie Taylor Greene
    Marjorie Taylor Greene wears a "Trump won" face mask as she arrives on the floor of the House to take her oath of office.

    Greene has repeatedly posted to X about her belief that Trump won the 2020 election, one of several conspiracy theories that she has promoted.

    In a video posted to X after the 2020 election, Greene told her followers that there could not be a peaceful transfer of power because Biden "did not win this election."

    Two days before the January 6 insurrection, Greene promised at a Trump rally that she would refuse to "certify fraudulent electoral college votes" for the incoming president.

    However, under oath in April 2022, Greene denied wanting Congress to vote against certifying Biden as the 2020 election winner.

    During Biden's 2022 State of the Union address, Greene and Rep. Lauren Boebert interrupted the speech with frequent outbursts.
    Lauren Boebert and Marjorie Taylor Greene yell during the State of the Union
    Lauren Boebert and Marjorie Taylor Greene scream "Build the wall" as President Joe Biden delivers the State of the Union.

    Greene and Boebert turned their backs and refused to applaud as Biden entered the House chamber.

    During Biden's speech, both tried to start a "build the wall" chant while the president spoke about immigration. Boebert also accused Biden of being responsible for the deaths of US soldiers during the withdrawal from Afghanistan as he spoke about his late son Beau's battle with cancer following his deployment to Iraq, yelling, "You put them there, 13 of them!"

    While their interruptions were widely condemned by Democrats and a few Republicans, the House of Representatives ultimately did not pass a resolution of disapproval the way it did when Republican Rep. Joe Wilson yelled "You lie!" at President Barack Obama during his first State of the Union address in 2009.

    "I think they should just shut up," former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi later said in response to Boebert and Greene.

    During a 2022 hearing, the House January 6 committee displayed a photo of Sen. Josh Hawley raising his fist towards rioters before they breached the Capitol.
    An image of Josh Hawley raising his fist on January 6 is projected during a House committee hearing
    A photograph of Josh Hawley pumping his fist toward the rioters on January 6, 2021, is shown during a prime-time hearing of the House January 6 committee.

    The committee juxtaposed the image with security footage of Hawley fleeing from rioters as they forced their way into the Capitol. 

    The Washington Post reported that Republican Sen. Mitt Romney yelled, "You have caused this!" at Hawley as senators sheltered in place during the insurrection.

    Hawley previously told The Huffington Post that the photo did not show him "encouraging rioters."

    "At the time that we were out there, folks were gathered peacefully to protest, and they have a right to do that," Hawley said. "They do not have a right to assault cops."

    It took 15 rounds of voting in January 2023 to elect Republican Rep. Kevin McCarthy as the next speaker of the House, highlighting tensions within the Republican party.
    Kevin McCarthy puts his face in his hands on the House floor
    Kevin McCarthy places his face in his hands as the House of Representatives votes for new speaker.

    Due to the GOP's slim majority in the House of Representatives, McCarthy needed the support of nearly all Republicans to reach the necessary 218 votes to become speaker.

    A group of 20 Republicans, members of the far-right House Freedom Caucus, repeatedly withheld their support at the start of the 118th Congress, bringing the proceedings to a standstill.

    The House cannot swear-in lawmakers, introduce any bills, or pass legislation until a speaker is elected.

    Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez was photographed smiling in the background as Republican lawmakers argued during the second day of the proceedings.
    Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez smiles in the background as Republicans argue about electing a new speaker
    Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez looks on as Republican House members speak to one another during the second day of elections for Speaker of the House.

    After GOP Rep. Kat Cammack said that Democrats had been drinking during the speaker vote, Ocasio-Cortez responded in a post on X: "If only! If Dems took a shot every time McCarthy lost a Republican, we'd all be unconscious by now."

    Photos from inside the House Chamber showed the growing frustration — and boredom — with the chaotic votes.
    Katie Porter reads "The Subtle Art of Not Giving A F*ck" during a session of Congress
    Katie Porter reads a book in the House Chamber during the fourth day of elections for Speaker of the House.

    Members of Congress were spotted yawning, reading comics, and bringing their pets to the House floor as the votes dragged on. Rep. Katie Porter read "The Subtle Art of Not Giving a F*ck" by Mark Manson during the 14th speaker vote.

    Porter told MSNBC that the book was actually the fourth book she had read that week, adding that she "read a book basically every day during those interminable, alphabetical votes, in which the Republicans struggled to find leadership."

    Porter's now running in the election to fill Sen. Dianne Feinstein's seat in the Senate after Feinstein died in late September, ultimately leading Gov. Gavin Newsom to appoint Sen. Laphonza Butler to temporarily fill the position.

    Rep. Mike Rogers appeared to lunge at Rep. Matt Gaetz, who opposed McCarthy's bid for speaker, during the 14th vote.
    Rep. Richard Hudson, R-N.C., left, pulls Rep. Mike Rogers, R-Ala., back as they talk with Rep. Matt Gaetz, R-Fla. during the 14th round of voting for speaker as the House on Friday, Jan. 6, 2023.
    Richard Hudson pulls Mike Rogers back as they talk with Matt Gaetz during the 14th round of voting for Speaker as the House.

    Rep. Richard Hudson held Rogers back.

    Rogers later told The New York Post that at the time, he was "exasperated" that Gaetz was "treating McCarthy so badly," which ultimately led him to walk over to where Gaetz was sitting to talk.

    As for the image, Rogers said he was actually about to walk away from Gaetz when Hudson yanked him away.

    As Biden delivered the 2023 State of the Union address, Greene rose from her seat and gave a thumbs-down gesture.
    Marjorie Taylor Greene giving Biden a thumbs down
    Marjorie Taylor Greene gives a thumb down as President Joe Biden delivers the State of the Union address.

    Before the State of the Union in February, McCarthy told CNN that there would be no "childish games" at the speech.

    "We're members of Congress. We have a code of ethics of how we should portray ourselves," McCarthy said. "And that's exactly what we'll do."

    McCarthy then struggled to maintain control of his caucus as Republicans repeatedly interrupted and heckled the president during his speech. McCarthy was seen shushing Republicans such as Greene, who shouted "China spied on us" and "Liar."

    The House voted to remove McCarthy as speaker in October, once again launching the chaotic process of electing a new speaker.
    George Santos and Lauren Boebert
    George Santos and Lauren Boebert on the House floor before the Republican nominee for Speaker of the House, Jim Jordan, failed to receive enough votes to win the position.

    During the first vote on Tuesday, 20 House Republicans voted against Rep. Jim Jordan's bid for speaker. In the second vote on Wednesday, that number rose to 22.

    During the first vote, Boebert was seated next to Rep. George Santos, who was photographed pointing and laughing. Santos was accused of stealing campaign donors' credit card information and paying his own campaign in a superseding indictment filed on October 10. He has denied wrongdoing.

    Divisions within the Democratic party were visible during the 2024 State of the Union when Reps. Rashida Tlaib and Cori Bush held signs calling for a cease-fire in Israel and Gaza.
    Democratic Reps. Summer Lee, Rashida Tlaib, and Cori Bush all voted against providing military aid to Israel.
    Democratic Reps. Summer Lee, Rashida Tlaib, and Cori Bush all voted against providing military aid to Israel.

    Tlaib and Bush held signs that read "Stop sending bombs" and wore traditional Palestinian scarves known as keffiyehs. Rep. Summer Lee, seated next to Tlaib, also wore a keffiyeh.

    Israel's military actions targeting Hamas operatives and infrastructure in Gaza have had a devastating human toll. The issue remains divisive among Democrats, with some in the party's progressive wing raising the possibility of conditioning US aid to Israel and some voters casting "uncommitted" ballots in primaries to protest Biden's handling of the war.

    Greene also heckled Biden's address as she had in the past, but this time, Biden responded.
    Marjorie Taylor Greene shouts at President Joe Biden during the 2024 State of the Union
    Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene shouts at President Joe Biden as he delivers the State of the Union address.

    Greene was heard repeatedly shouting, "Say her name," goading Biden to acknowledge a 22-year-old nursing student named Laken Riley who was killed in Georgia in February. A Venezuelan man who entered the US illegally was charged with kidnapping and murder in connection with her death.

    Biden responded to Greene by holding up a pin with Riley's name.

    "Laken Riley, an innocent young woman who was killed by an illegal. That's right," Biden said, though he mispronounced her name as "Lincoln."

    Biden later told MSNBC that he regretted using the term "illegal" and should have said "undocumented" instead.

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  • Banning TikTok could haunt Biden’s reelection campaign

    Pro-TikTok protest
    Participants hold signs in support of TikTok outside the US Capitol Building on March 13, 2024, in Washington, DC.

    • On Tuesday, the Senate passed a bill that could ban TikTok from US app stores.
    • Biden's already said he'd sign it into law.
    • Banning the app in the US could be disastrous to Biden's reelection chances.

    The Senate passed a multifaceted foreign aid bill in a bipartisan landslide vote on Tuesday that, if President Joe Biden signs it into law, could ban TikTok from US app stores.

    While Biden seems set to do just that — he said earlier in March that he'd sign the legislation — the move could easily backfire on his already-struggling 2024 reelection campaign.

    Referred to by most as a "ban," the bill gives any company owned by a "foreign adversary" 270 days to either divest or sell to a US-based company before facing a hefty fine and potential legal action. TikTok is certainly now closer to getting banned in the US, but the nearly yearlong timeframe the bill — as well as the likelihood this will lead to a lengthy legal battle — means a ban would only occur post-election.

    Pro-TikTok Americans and creators protested against an earlier version of the proposed ban for weeks in March, with some saying they worried their careers built on the app would be "deleted forever."

    The app even took an unusual step to rally its users to speak out against the legislation:

    "Stop a TikTok shutdown," the app said in a message to its users, linking them to their member of Congress' contact information. "Speak up now—before your government strips 170 million Americans of their Constitutional rights and free expression."

    Tiktok ban message

    Members of Congress reportedly said before a House vote that TikTok's push backfired, making them more likely to vote in favor of banning it.

    While Biden's been on board with the proposed TikTok ban for months, it's increasingly seeming like a political miscalculation with the November presidential election approaching.

    A severe political misstep

    For months, national polls have indicated that a rematch between Biden and Republican former President Donald Trump could be as close as the 2020 election, where five states won by Biden were decided by less than 85,000 votes. Many of those polls have shown that Trump appears to possess a slight advantage this go around.

    With Biden already struggling to win over younger voters, openly backing the demise of one of the most popular social media apps in the world doesn't seem like the wisest move campaign-wise.

    Trump, who tried and failed during his own presidency to ban the app, recently spoke out against the bill, noting that restricting it would likely benefit Facebook.

    Trump's change of heart occurred soon after he met with Jeff Yass, a billionaire Republican donor and a prominent investor in TikTok's parent company.

    While The New York Times reported in March that a "person close to the campaign" now expects Yass to make a pro-Trump donation, the former president's motives may be more than a way for his campaign to earn a quick buck. The closer the anti-TikTok bill gets to passing, the more easily he'll be able to convince young voters that Biden's behind the app shuttering, not him.

    The former president tried doing just that on Monday, telling his followers on Truth Social, "Just so everyone knows, especially the young people, Crooked Joe Biden is responsible for banning TikTok."

    In an election that could be extremely close, endorsing bills as decisive as the anti-TikTok one or gunning for Taylor Swift's endorsement — or lack thereof — could determine who wins control of the White House.

    Just as Biden's slogan goes, that's "no malarkey."

    Wednesday, April 24, 2024 — This story has been updated with news of the US Senate's passage of the bill that includes the TikTok ban.

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  • You’ll soon be able to get an automatic refund when your flight is delayed or canceled

    A person holds a suitcase in front of an airport departures board
    • Airlines must start providing passengers with automatic refunds when flights are delayed or canceled.
    • New regulations announced Wednesday mean passengers can also get automatic refunds on delayed baggage.
    • Previously, airlines set their own policies about when passengers were eligible for refunds.

    Airlines are to be required to provide passengers with "prompt" automatic refunds when their flights are delayed or canceled under a new rule from the Department of Transportation, announced on Wednesday.

    The regulations, which are being rolled out over the next six to 12 months, also entitle passengers to automatic refunds for delays to checked bags and for airlines' failure to provide paid-for extra services.

    Under the DOT regulations, passengers can get a refund if their flight is canceled or significantly changed and they don't accept alternative transportation or travel credits offered. This includes domestic flights delayed by more than three hours and international flights delayed by more than six hours.

    Significant changes that make passengers eligible for a refund include a change in the departure or arrival airport, an increase in the number of connections, and being downgraded to a lower traveling class. Passengers can also get a refund if they're switched to connections at different airports or flights on different planes that are less accessible for a person with a disability.

    Previously, airlines set their own standards for which circumstances passengers could get a refund in, which could make it confusing for passengers trying to figure out whether they were eligible for a refund and how to apply, the DOT said in a press release.

    It added that some airlines gave passengers a travel credit or voucher by default, meaning they couldn't use their refund to rebook on another airline "without navigating a cumbersome request process."

    Passengers are also entitled to a refund of their checked bag fee if their bag is delayed and they file a mishandled baggage report. The DOT says that the policy covers bags that aren't delivered within 12 hours of a domestic flight arriving at the gate, or 15 to 30 hours for an international flight, depending on the length of the flight.

    And if passengers pay extra for a service such as WiFi, seat selection, or in-flight entertainment and then don't receive this, they're entitled to a refund for the fee they paid.

    "The new rule makes it easy for passengers to obtain refunds when airlines cancel or significantly change their flights, significantly delay their checked bags, or fail to provide the extra services they purchased," the DOT said in a press release.

    As well as being automatic, the refunds must be "prompt," which it describes as within seven business days for credit card purchases and 20 calendar days for other payment methods.

    The refunds must be in whatever payment method the passenger originally used, whether cash, credit card, or airline miles, rather than substituting vouchers or travel credits unless the passenger accepts alternative compensation.  

    The DOT also noted that airlines must provide a full refund, including all government-imposed taxes and fees and airline-imposed fees.

    Many passengers have previously spoken to Business Insider about their troubles getting compensation for delayed and canceled flights and lost luggage. In 2020, when flights were canceled due to waves of COVID lockdowns, the DOT got more than 102,000 complaints from airline customers in total. Nearly 90,000 were related to refunds.

    Travel chaos spiked in the summer of 2022 as vacationers returned to the skies after the pandemic canceled their plans during the two prior years. Summer travel this year is also expected to be significantly disrupted, with Boeing delaying some plane deliveries.

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  • Live updates: Meta to report quarterly earnings today after market close

    Meta founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg speaks during the Meta Connect event on September 27, 2023
    • Meta reports first-quarter earnings on Tuesday.
    • The company recently released its latest AI chatbot, Llama 3.
    • Meta's stock is up roughly 40% in 2024.

    Meta will report first-quarter earnings on Wednesday after the closing bell.

    The company has had a strong start to 2024, riding the wave of interest in artificial intelligence. JPMorgan says that even though AI dominates investor chatter, the buzz is shifting towards recognizing Meta's early wins in coding efficiencies and cost savings.

    Meta's stock was up 40% year-to-date through Tuesday's close, handily outpacing the the S&P 500's 6% gain.

    Meta's consensus first-quarter revenue estimate is $36.12 billion.

    1st quarter

    • Revenue estimate: $36.12 billion

      • Advertising rev. estimate: $35.57 billion

      • Family of Apps revenue estimate: $35.52 billion

      • Reality Labs revenue estimate: $494.1 million

      • Other revenue estimate: $286.4 million

    • Adjusted operating income estimate: $13.45 billion

      • Family of Apps operating income estimate: $17.76 billion

      • Reality Labs operating loss estimate: $4.52 billion

    • Operating margin estimate: 37.2%

    • EPS estimate: $4.30

    • Facebook daily active users estimate: 2.11 billion

    • Facebook monthly active users estimate: 3.08 billion

    • Ad impressions estimate: +17.1%

      • Average price per ad estimate: +5.85%

    • Average Family service users per day estimate: 3.16 billion

    • Average Family service users per month estimate: 3.97 billion

    2nd quarter

    • Revenue estimate: $38.24 billion

    Full-year 2024

    • Total expenses estimate: $96.87 billion

    • Capital expenditure estimate: $34.5 billion

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