Business, International news, Politics

GM Saves 680 Jobs in Michigan, Adds 220 More as Trump Visits Detroit

IMG_8051


 

General Motors (NYSE:GM) said Wednesday it will create or keep 900 jobs in Michigan factories over the next 12 months, including some workers who were due to be laid off in May.
This is in addition to the 7,000 jobs and $1 billion investment announced in January, according to the automaker.
The announcement came Wednesday as executives from GM, Ford (NYSE:F) and Fiat Chrysler (NYSE:FCAU) are expected to appear at an event with President Donald Trump in Detroit. Trump is set to announce a review of federal fuel-economy rules that the Obama administration finalized a week before Trump took office. Automakers and federal authorities had previously agreed to review the CAFE standards this year.
GM said it plans to bring back 500 jobs to its Lansing Delta Township assembly plant by early 2018, when the automaker expects to complete the rollout of new SUVs.
GM also said it will redeploy 180 workers from Lansing to support production of heavy-duty Chevrolet Silverado and GMC Sierra pickup trucks in Flint, Michigan. Another 220 new jobs will be added to GM’s Romulus Powertrain Plant to ramp up production of a 10-speed automatic transmission.
The previously announced layoffs in Lansing are tied to GM’s decision to build the new GMC Acadia in Spring Hill, Tennessee, a move initially expected to impact 1,100 total employees before Wednesday’s announcement. GM will focus on building the Buick Enclave and the redesigned Chevrolet Traverse in Lansing. Rehiring 500 workers will help the company meet demand for the new vehicles, GM said.
Follow Matthew Rocco on Twitter @MatthewRocco
This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
©2017 FOX Business Network, LLC. All rights reserved.

Read More...

International news, News, Politics, US/World

Devin Nunes says “I don’t think there was an actual tap of Trump Tower”

CBS News is live, 24/7
Get the most important news stories of the day. Download our app for iPhone, iPad and Apple TV to watch for free
The House Intelligence Committee’s top members, Chairman Devin Nunes and Ranking Member Adam Schiff, both of California, have so far not been presented by the Justice Department with any evidence backing up President Trump’s tweeted allegation that former President Obama tapped Donald Trump’s phones during the election. Nunes on Wednesday suggested the president could be wrong.
“I don’t think there was an actual tap of Trump Tower,” he told reporters at the Capitol, and he said that if Mr. Trump’s allegations are taken literally, then “clearly the president was wrong.”
“To date, I’ve seen no evidence that supports that President Trump made that his predecessor had wiretapped he and his associates at Trump Tower. Thus far, we have seen no basis for that whatsoever,” Schiff told reporters Wednesday.
Schiff said that he and Nunes are still waiting for a response to their letter demanding proof from the Justice Department.
Nunes went on to say that if the tweets aren’t taken literally, “other surveillance activities looking at him and his associates — either appropriately or inappropriately — we want to find that out.” He said that communications from Americans, including Trump, may have been picked up through ongoing surveillance of foreigners. Nunes also reiterated his concern about data collection involving former National Security Adviser Michael Flynn, and the leaks of information about Flynn’s contacts with the Russian envoy during the campaign.
Mr. Trump has asked the congressional committees to investigate his explosive claims that President Obama wiretapped his New York skyscraper during the election. The Justice Department missed a Monday deadline to provide evidence to the House committee and now has until next Monday to respond.
Mr. Trump himself has provided no evidence that Trump Tower, where he lived and ran his campaign, was wiretapped by Obama. On Monday, the White House started softening his claims, with spokesman Sean Spicer saying the president was referring more broadly to general surveillance that may have been approved by the Obama administration.
McCain, Graham ask Trump for evidence of wiretapping claims
South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham confirmed that he and Rhode Island Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse gave FBI Director James Comey until Wednesday to inform them about whether or not the agency is investigating the Trump campaign’s contacts with Russia.
If Comey doesn’t provide the information, Graham said that his panel, the Judiciary Subcommittee on Crime and Terrorism, will issue subpoenas. The FBI and House and Senate committees are investigating Russia’s interference in the 2016 election and possible contacts between Trump associates and Russians. The House Intelligence Committee announced Wednesday that FBI Director James Comey and Admiral Mike Rogers, the director of the National Security Agency, will testify in public hearings next week.
Graham says he’s also waiting to hear from Comey whether a warrant was issued that would have allowed the Obama administration to tap Mr. Trump’s phones during the campaign. In addition to the threat of a subpoena, “we’ll hold up the deputy attorney general’s nomination until Congress is provided with the information to finally clear the air as to whether there was ever a warrant issued against the Trump campaign,” Graham, who heads the Judiciary Committee’s crime and terrorism subcommittee, said Wednesday on NBC’s “Today” show.
CBS News is live, 24/7
Download the free app

Read More...

International news, Local news, Politics, Regional News

Ambassadors/Commissioners

http://www.foreign.govt.kn/embassies-overseas/ #

Ambassadors/Commissioners

 

Embassies Overseas

H.E. Thelma Phillip-Browne

Ambassador to the United States of America

Embassy of the Federation of St Kitts and Nevis

1001 19th St, North #1260

Arlington, VA 22209

USATel No. (202) 686 2636

Fax No. (202) 686 5740

Email. [email protected]

Read More...

International news, Local news, News, Politics

Minister of Foreign Affairs, the Honourable Mark Brantley meets with Cuban Minister of Foreign Affairs

 

20170310_173642 (002)

(L-R) St. Kitts and Nevis’ Minister of Foreign Affairs and Aviation, the Hon. Mark Brantley; Minister of Foreign Affairs of Republic of Cuba, H.E. Bruno Rodriguez Parrilla

 

Minister of Foreign Affairs, the Honourable Mark Brantley meets with Cuban Minister of Foreign Affairs

By: MFA, Press Release

Basseterre, St. Kitts, March 13, 2017 (Ministry of Foreign Affairs): The Honourable Mark Brantley, Minister of Foreign Affairs met with His Excellency Bruno Rodriguez Parrilla in the margins of the XXII ACS Ministerial Council which concluded yesterday, 10th March 2017 in Havana, Cuba. In their encounter, Minister Brantley offered expressions of condolence to Minister Rodriguez, the Government and people of Cuba on the passing of the Commander in Chief, Fidel Castro who was a towering revolutionary figure and a global champion for the poor.

Read More...

Buckie Got It…. ANOTHER 4 SHIP DAY IN ST.KITTS-NEVIS …….SOMETHING GOOD IS HAPPENING !!!!!!!

Read More...