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As Biden signed the $1.2 trillion infrastructure bill into law on Monday, Pete Buttigieg finds himself overseeing $210 billion in discretionary grants, making him the most powerful transportation secretary ever.
Here's what's happening.
For the next few years, he'll dole out those funds to projects across the country, including megaprojects like the Brent Spence Bridge connecting Kentucky and Ohio, a key reason why Republican Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell voted for the bill.
https://t.co/fs0gmeoJfL
Now, Buttigieg's Department of Transportation will get to pick and choose which projects to back.
https://t.co/ifVDN4axFf
Buttigieg's rise from Midwestern mayor to presiding over administering hundreds of billions of dollars in a historic infrastructure package illustrates his dramatic political arc.
He's now one of Biden's go-to Cabinet members on
Buttigieg's childhood pal and presidential campaign manager, Mike Schmuhl, said the infrastructure bill represents Buttigieg's grounding belief that politics should, at core, address the mundane issues of everyday life.
https://t.co/ifVDN4axFf
Here's what's happening.
For the next few years, he'll dole out those funds to projects across the country, including megaprojects like the Brent Spence Bridge connecting Kentucky and Ohio, a key reason why Republican Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell voted for the bill.
https://t.co/fs0gmeoJfL

Now, Buttigieg's Department of Transportation will get to pick and choose which projects to back.
https://t.co/ifVDN4axFf

Buttigieg's rise from Midwestern mayor to presiding over administering hundreds of billions of dollars in a historic infrastructure package illustrates his dramatic political arc.
He's now one of Biden's go-to Cabinet members on
Buttigieg's childhood pal and presidential campaign manager, Mike Schmuhl, said the infrastructure bill represents Buttigieg's grounding belief that politics should, at core, address the mundane issues of everyday life.
https://t.co/ifVDN4axFf

Tasha Adams devoted her life to supporting her husband.
She was an exotic dancer to pay for his college, took care of him when he accidentally shot himself in the face, and when he was looking for direction in life, she helped him start the Oath Keepers.
https://t.co/89Vdfu63tU
With congressional committees & federal investigators examining the threat posed by domestic extremists and their contribution to the insurrection, Adams has been conducting an exploration of her own life and culpability in the forming of the Oath Keepers.
https://t.co/89Vdfu63tU
Stewart Rhodes, the founder of the Oath Keepers, and Tasha Adams’ estranged husband, did not respond to our interview requests.
He has not been charged in the insurrection and has said the Oath Keepers were in town to provide security on Jan.
Adams, who says her husband became emotionally and physically abusive while the Oath Keepers, a group they founded together, became more extreme and took stances that showed racial & ethnic biases, says it took years for her to see the truth about Rhodes.
https://t.co/89Vdfu63tU
Through interviews with Adams, reviews of court records, interviews with 2 of her adult children and some of the few people she had contact in her isolated Montana town, @DelWilber reconstructs the founding of the Oath
She was an exotic dancer to pay for his college, took care of him when he accidentally shot himself in the face, and when he was looking for direction in life, she helped him start the Oath Keepers.
https://t.co/89Vdfu63tU

With congressional committees & federal investigators examining the threat posed by domestic extremists and their contribution to the insurrection, Adams has been conducting an exploration of her own life and culpability in the forming of the Oath Keepers.
https://t.co/89Vdfu63tU

Stewart Rhodes, the founder of the Oath Keepers, and Tasha Adams’ estranged husband, did not respond to our interview requests.
He has not been charged in the insurrection and has said the Oath Keepers were in town to provide security on Jan.
Adams, who says her husband became emotionally and physically abusive while the Oath Keepers, a group they founded together, became more extreme and took stances that showed racial & ethnic biases, says it took years for her to see the truth about Rhodes.
https://t.co/89Vdfu63tU

Through interviews with Adams, reviews of court records, interviews with 2 of her adult children and some of the few people she had contact in her isolated Montana town, @DelWilber reconstructs the founding of the Oath
2 minute highlight reel form the Kyle Rittenhouse trial
Wait I have Twitter blue so why is there a typo in my tweet? Guess I wasted my $3 😭
Shout out to @TitusNation for the fingerprint line!
Did you have a laugh? I'm happy to give away my work for free, BUT if you had a laugh and think it's worth it, as a college student I happily accept tips at the link below! ✌️😇
Captions!

Wait I have Twitter blue so why is there a typo in my tweet? Guess I wasted my $3 😭
Shout out to @TitusNation for the fingerprint line!
More pictures of Kyle Rittenhouse providing first aid to victims. Notice the gloves so he doesn\u2019t infect them with fingerprints. pic.twitter.com/dzQwsf1rjb
— Titus (@TitusNation) November 10, 2021
Did you have a laugh? I'm happy to give away my work for free, BUT if you had a laugh and think it's worth it, as a college student I happily accept tips at the link below! ✌️😇
Captions!
\U0001f44b we updated @anthonycwalker\u2019s tweet to include *automatic* captions\u2026 pic.twitter.com/pV5JNTwGVV
— HeadlinerClip Caption (@HeadlinerClip) November 10, 2021