Donald Trump. But she can help prosecute him.
The non-voting delegate from the Virgin Islands is among the impeachment managers selected by House Speaker
Nancy Pelosi to argue the case that Trump incited a deadly insurrection at the U.S. Capitol. It’s an extraordinary moment that places Plaskett in the center of just the fourth impeachment trial of an American president.
But there will also be a familiar dynamic when Plaskett walks into the Senate chamber, one that she’s experienced from elementary school through her legal career: being one of the only Black women in the room. Now that
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Booz Allen Hamilton (NYSE: BAH) announced today that Maisha Glover has joined the firm as a senior vice president and market strategy leader in the firm’s National Security business.
Glover brings more than 25 years of experience with clients in the intelligence community (IC), Department of Defense (DoD), and others in the public and private sectors with a focus on large-scale transformation. As an expert advisor on topics including digital and analytics strategy; the future of work; and diversity, equity, and inclusion in the IC, Glover will help Booz Allen clients advance their missions through innovative technologies and workforce readiness. She was most recently a senior client development advisor in the Public Sector practice of McKinsey & Company.
US awaits an unparalleled and ugly Trump trial
05 Feb 2021 Former US President Donald Trump speaks to reporters at the White House in Washington. File/Agence France-Presse
Andrew Feinberg,
The Independent
It’s one week now since all but five Republican Senators called former President Donald Trump’s second impeachment trial an unconstitutional exercise. It’s days before opening arguments will be delivered. And what’s become clear is that the quasi-legal battle on the upper chamber’s floor is set to be both unprecedented and ugly.
The last time Trump was impeached, that time for a quid pro quo connected to now-President Biden and Ukraine, was just under a year ago. Yet in many ways, not much has changed since the last time Trump found himself in the senatorial dock. While Democrats now hold a majority in the upper chamber by virtue of Vice President Kamala Harris’ tie-breaking vote, there do not appear to be more than a handful of Republicans who ar