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Tag: 2024 election

  • Joe Biden on J.D. Vance, His Call With Trump, and Why He’s Staying in the Race

    Joe Biden on J.D. Vance, His Call With Trump, and Why He’s Staying in the Race

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    President Joe Biden sat down with NBC Nightly NewsLester Holt on Monday in an exclusive interview, his first since the failed assassination attempt on former president Donald Trump just two days before.

    Holt began the interview by asking Biden about the call that the two leading presidential nominees shared following Saturday’s shooting at a Trump rally in Butler, Pennsylvania—which left one attendee and the gunman dead.

    “Very cordial,” Biden began, “I told him how concerned I was, and wanted to make sure I knew how he was actually doing. He sounded good, he said he was fine, and he thanked me for calling him. I told him he was literally in the prayers of Jill and me.”

    Holt then began to ask Biden about how he is thinking about political rhetoric in the wake of the assassination attempt and the swift blame that followed from some of Trump’s allies. On a recent private call with donors, Biden had said that it is “time to put Trump in a bull’s-eye.” Holt gave Biden the chance to respond.

    “It was a mistake to use the word,” Biden said, before noting, “I didn’t say crosshairs. I meant bull’s-eye. I meant focus on him. Focus on what he’s doing, focus on his policies, focus on the number of lies he told in the debate.”

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    Their interview takes place as the Republican National Convention kicks off in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Just shortly before Holt and Biden sat down, Trump officially announced that Ohio Senator J.D. Vance, who reportedly once called Trump “America’s Hitler,” will be his vice presidential pick.

    Before a suspect was identified or a motive determined, Vance took to X to blame Biden and the Democrats for inciting the shooting. “The central premise of the Biden campaign is that President Donald Trump is an authoritarian fascist who must be stopped at all costs,” he wrote. “That rhetoric led directly to President Trump’s attempted assassination.”

    When asked to respond to the news that Vance will be on the 2024 ticket, Biden said that it’s unsurprising that Trump would “surround himself with people who agree completely with him, have a voting record, that support him.”

    “Even though, if you go back to look at the things J.D. Vance said about Trump,” Biden continued, with a laugh. In 2016, Vance said “I can’t stomach Trump” and that he was “a ‘Never Trump’ guy,” referring to his now running mate as “cultural heroin”

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    Katie Herchenroeder

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  • Militias Are Recruiting Off of the Trump Shooting

    Militias Are Recruiting Off of the Trump Shooting

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    Militia and anti-government groups across the United States are using the attempted assassination of former president Donald Trump as an opportunity to organize, recruit, and train.

    “An attack on President Trump was an attack on us, people like us—like-minded American patriots,” says Scot Seddon, the Pennsylvania-based founder of the American Patriots Three Percenters (APIII), in a video posted to TikTok on Sunday. APIII is a decentralized militia network with chapters across the US. “There comes a point in time where everybody in this group needs to start being accountable for what they’re doing to help grow the organization and building a network of like-minded people in their area. Because they’re coming for us.”

    Seddon goes on in the video to say that he’s looking at coordinating a meeting with other militias around Pennsylvania. “This is not going to just go away. We need to become fuckin’ strong, fuckin’ lions,” says Seddon. “Start reaching out to individuals in your state that are trustworthy, that have the like-minded vision of local strong communities, to hold down the fort, just in case [of] war, or for when shit hits the fan.”

    In the aftermath of the shooting at Trump’s campaign rally in Butler, Pennsylvania—which left the former president wounded in his ear, one person dead, and two people injured—incendiary rhetoric and calls for retaliatory violence exploded online.

    Katie Paul, director of the Tech Transparency Project, says that this type of rhetoric has been pretty commonplace in online spaces since 2020, especially since January 6. But she’s particularly concerned about the heightened rhetoric in tandem with aggressive recruitment efforts by militia groups, who historically have opportunistically pounced on moments of national chaos to encourage organizing and training. Paul says the confluence of militia activity and heightened rhetoric could inspire “individuals who are susceptible to online influence and acceleration” who “could be triggered to act on their own.” She also sees militias’ emphasis on organization over knee-jerk calls for retaliatory violence as a sign that the movement is focused on long-term goals and growth.

    In the past year, APIII has made a significant recruitment push across major social media platforms, such as Facebook, X, TikTok, and even NextDoor, according to research from the Tech Transparency Project shared exclusively with WIRED. Despite featuring “Three Percenters” in its name—a clear nod to the militia movement—APIII touts a disclaimer on its website insisting that it is not a militia. That’s in line with the broader trend seen since January 6, 2021, when paramilitary activists scrambled to distance themselves from the militia movement implicated in the Capitol riot.

    But groups like APIII have increasingly been trying to rebuild the militia movement from the ground up, urging people to get organized in their communities. According to Seddon, APIII and the Light Foot Militia, another decentralized paramilitary group with chapters nationwide, have been coordinating closely. Last month, a video circulated on TikTok and Facebook purporting to show a training meetup with APIII and Light Foot in an undisclosed location. About 100 heavily armed men and women in fatigues are shown standing in formation. Text over the video reads: “Now is the time to join a MF’in Militia, Not a Political Party,” and “We came into this world screaming covered in blood and will be leaving the same way. No retreat no surrender.”

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    Tess Owen

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  • Joe Biden Calls for “Unity” After Trump Assassination Attempt

    Joe Biden Calls for “Unity” After Trump Assassination Attempt

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    “From Fascism, to Hitler, to dictator,” Meuser continued, “so I can easily point that out, but I’m willing to state at the same time, we all need to take responsibility to cool things down. To say what we mean, but don’t say it mean. To not get personal. To have dialogue, rather than attacks.”

    NBC’s Dasha Burns, who was reporting live from the Pennsylvania rally, shared that in the moments following the shooting, after she was reunited with her crew, “some people in the crowd started to come to the risers, they started to get heated with the press.”

    “This crowd gathered near the media,” she continued, “and started blaming the press for what had just happened—some screaming at journalists and getting pretty aggressive.

    Early Sunday morning, Trump released a statement on his social media platform Truth Social, thanking everyone for their thoughts and prayers, writing, “it was God alone who prevented the unthinkable from happening. We will FEAR NOT, but instead remain resilient in our Faith and Defiant in the face of Wickedness. Our love goes out to the other victims and their families. We pray for the recovery of those who were wounded, and hold in our hearts the memory of the citizen who was so horribly killed.”

    The attendee who was killed at the rally was 50-year-old Corey Comperatore, according to his sister, Dawn Comperatore Schafer, and Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro. “The hatred for one man took the life of the one man we all love the most,” she said in a brief interview, per reporting from the Times. “We watched him die on the news,” she said. “That’s how we found out. We saw my brother die on the news.”

    Just over six minutes into his speech began, witnesses heard the sound of cracking shots, one after the other, as Trump reached for his ear and ducked behind the podium— where he was quickly surrounded by Secret Service agents. He emerged with blood on the right side of his face. Before exiting the stage, Trump raised a fist to the crowd—some of whom raised one in return—and seemed to shout the word “Fight.”

    On Truth Social, Trump wrote that a bullet had “pierced the upper part of my right ear,” saying, “I knew immediately that something was wrong in that I heard a whizzing sound, shots.”

    The shooting suspect, Crooks, from Bethel Park, Pennsylvania, was a registered Republican, his mother was a Democrat, and his father a Libertarian, according to voter-registration records and Dan Grzybek, who represents the area Crooks lived in on the county council. Crooks had used ActBlue to donate $15 to a liberal group called the Progressive Turnout Project in January 2021, according to campaign finance records.

    The Times reported that the AR-type semiautomatic rifle found next to Crooks’s body was “purchased by a family member, possibly his father, according to an official briefed on the investigation.”

    Appearing to graduate from high school just two years ago, Crooks reportedly has an incredibly low online social media presence, according to NBC investigative reporter Tom Winter, who also noted that other online forums, like chatrooms, were still being sifted through.

    New pieces of information regarding the assassination attempt are continuing to be released as local and federal lawmakers, as well as newsrooms across the country, continue to investigate the shooting.

    “Former F.B.I. officials said the bureau’s behavioral analysis unit would try to build out a profile of the gunman to understand his motivations and why he decided to carry out the attempted assassination. The F.B.I., which is running the investigation, will cast a wide net, interviewing friends and family members and scouring the internet for clues he might have left online or in a journal,” the Times’ writes.

    “This remains an active and ongoing investigation,” the FBI said in a statement early Sunday.

    In a statement immediately following the shooting, Biden called the violence “sick.” Later on, the two leading presidential candidates shared a reportedly “short and respectful” phone call, according to the White House.

    Biden’s campaign announced that it would pause “outbound communications,” attempting to take down television ads, a campaign official said. The Democratic National Committee similarly paused both television and billboard ads against Trump.

    The Republican National Convention is set to kick off Monday in Milwaukee, Wisconsin and, according to Trump and his campaign, he will still be in attendance. “I truly love our Country, and love you all, and look forward to speaking to our Great Nation this week from Wisconsin,” Trump wrote on Truth Social.

    Previously, attempts to ban firearms from the convention sites, where items like tennis balls and gas masks are prohibited, have failed due to concerns over violating state laws or riling up Trump’s base. As Axios noted last month, “Guns will be allowed within walking distance of the Republican National Convention,” but not within the event’s inner security perimeter.

    When asked whether there might be changes to guns being allowed in some areas near the convention site, Chief Jeffrey Norman of the Milwaukee police said, “We’re going to see whether there are going to be the opportunities in regards to dealing with that particular challenge,” in an interview with WISN-TV.

    In a joint statement released by the Trump campaign and the RNC on Saturday night after the shooting, the teams said that Trump “looks forward to joining you all in Milwaukee as we proceed with our convention to nominate him to serve as the 47th President of the United States.”

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    Katie Herchenroeder

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  • Influencers Are Racing to Profit From the Trump Shooting

    Influencers Are Racing to Profit From the Trump Shooting

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    Pro-Trump influencers and supporters raced to put out merchandise featuring the image of Trump with blood on his face and a fist in the air just hours after the deadly shooting and assassination attempt on Saturday.

    By Sunday afternoon, right-wing activist Candace Owens and former Trump administration official Sebastian Gorka had released shirts with the image. “For God and Country,” Owens’s read. “The President of America,” said Gorka’s.

    Neither Owens or Gorka immediately responded to requests for comment from WIRED asking if they would donate their proceeds to Trump’s reelection campaign or to the families of those who were shot at the rally.

    David Portnoy, founder and owner of Barstool Sports, linked to a similar shirt on X made by the Southern fraternity brand Old Row, which was acquired by Barstool in 2016. “If you come at the king you best not miss,” it read.

    “Dam you guys already making money off the shooting?” one X user said in a reply to Portnoy. By Sunday afternoon, it appeared as though Old Row removed the shirt listing. The company did not immediately respond to requests from WIRED to confirm that the shirt was removed after backlash.

    Popular YouTubers and influencers launched their own related merch as well. The Hodge Twins, a pair of influencers with more than three million subscribers on YouTube who host The Twins podcast, released a shirt featuring the image with the words “FIGHT! FIGHT! FIGHT!” on Saturday night.

    “100% of profits from this shirt go to Trump’s campaign,” they said in a post.

    Dozens of TikTok users were also hawking shirts featuring the infamous image on TikTok Shop over the weekend. Some hosted livestreams where they encouraged viewers to purchase their shooting-related merch as if they were hosting a television shopping show.

    “Ohhh look another Trump shirt selling today!! 100th one,” one user wrote on a livestream where shirts were being sold.

    Richard “FaZe Banks” Bengston, CEO of the esports brand FaZe Clan, appeared to endorse Trump shortly after the shooting, writing “TRUMP 2024” on X. Bengston has more than five million subscribers on YouTube. Later, FaZe Clan advertised red MAGA-style hats that read “MAKE FAZE GREAT AGAIN.” FaZe Clan did not immediately respond to a request for comment from WIRED asking if the posts from Bengston and his company were official endorsements.

    The incident prompted a number of influencers to endorse Trump. “I pray for peace and prosperity for the world and I believe Trump gives us the best chance at that,” wrote Jake Paul, YouTuber and pro boxer, on Saturday. “When you try and kill God’s angels and saviors of the world it just makes them bigger.” In April, Paul invited Trump to attend his upcoming fight against Mike Tyson. At the time, a Trump official told WIRED that the former president was “seriously” considering attending. Tyson was later injured and the fight was canceled.

    Logan Paul, Jake’s older brother, stopped short of endorsing Trump on Saturday, but did write, “To survive an assassination attempt by mere millimeters then stop your security so you can raise your fist in defiance of death is the most badass thing I’ve ever seen in my life.”

    “Voting for the bulletproof outlaw,” Tristan Tate, misogynist influencer and alleged human trafficker, wrote on X on Saturday. Andrew Tate, Tristan’s brother who was also charged with human trafficking in Romania, also posted messages in support of Trump.

    Less than two hours after Trump had his mugshot taken at a Fulton County, George jail last year, his campaign had already released merch featuring the image. While the campaign has issued multiple fundraising texts and emails following the shooting, they have not put out any related merch.

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    Makena Kelly

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  • Trump Shooting Conspiracies Are Coming From Every Direction

    Trump Shooting Conspiracies Are Coming From Every Direction

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    Alex Jones, the school shooting conspiracist, ranted in a video posted to X that this was the beginning of a much wider effort by the deep state to kill powerful figures in America, including Biden and Musk.

    “Elon you should get to your bunker immediate [sic], this is a live coup,” Jones wrote on X in a post that has been viewed 6.4 million times.

    Others stopped short of directly implicating the Biden campaign but claimed that campaign rhetoric inspired the shooter, though none of the accounts boosting this narrative shared examples to back up their claim.

    “Today is not just some isolated incident,” Senator J. D. Vance of Ohio, who is among those in consideration to be Trump’s running mate, wrote in a post on X that has been viewed almost 9 million times. “The central premise of the Biden campaign is that President Donald Trump is an authoritarian fascist who must be stopped at all costs. That rhetoric led directly to President Trump’s attempted assassination.”

    No reports about the shooter’s motivations have been released at this time.

    In conspiracy channels online, many Trump supporters pointed to an interview with a witness who saw the gunman climbing onto the roof with a rifle and told police about it minutes before the shooting. Law enforcement’s failure to act, posters claimed, is a sign that the apparent assassination attempt was coordinated by the “deep state.”

    “Deep-State how do you miss a roof 160 yards away? He got 5 shots off then he dies!” one X user wrote.

    Other Republican lawmakers blamed the media for the attack.

    “The Democrats and the media are to blame for every drop of blood spilled today,” Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia wrote on X. “For years and years, they’ve demonized him and his supporters. Today, someone finally tried to take out the leader of our America First and the greatest President of all time.”

    “Trump-deranged Left wing LUNATICS that parade around MSNBC and other FAKE NEWS ‘outlets’ demonizing Trump and calling him Hitler are DIRECTLY RESPONSIBLE for this violent attack on President Trump’s life!! They have BLOOD on their hands,” Representative Ronny Jackson of Texas, who was previously Trump’s White House doctor, wrote on X. Jackson also said that his own nephew was grazed by one of the bullets fired at the rally.

    In more conspiratorial corners of the internet, posters blamed everyone from China, to Mossad, billionaire philanthropist George Soros, former president Barack Obama, and former secretary of state Hillary Clinton for the attack—all claims that are not backed up by any evidence.

    One of the wilder conspiracies spreading about the shooting involves a man named Vincent Fusca, who has been a major figure in the QAnon world for years. Fusca, who many QAnon adherents believe is John F. Kennedy Jr. in disguise, was sitting behind Trump at the rally on Saturday, and when the shots are fired he doesn’t move. This, according to people in QAnon Telegram channels, is proof that he was orchestrating the entire incident.

    A number of pro-Trump accounts also flagged a video from three months ago as evidence that this was part of some grand scheme. In the video, an evangelical “prophet” claimed to have had a dream about an assassination attempt on Trump, where the bullet passed so close to his head that it shattered his eardrum.

    Pro-Trump message boards were also celebrating Trump’s survival and lionizing the image of Trump surrounded by his Secret Service agents with a fist raised to the crowd.

    “This will be a statue some day,” one member of the far-right message board known as The Donald wrote. “Just ordered a shirt with it on there. It’s iconic enough to win an election if enough people see it,” another wrote, referring to a T-shirt featuring the image of Trump with his fist raised being sold for $35, with all profits going to the Trump campaign, according to the seller.

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    David Gilbert

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  • Elon Musk ‘Fully Endorses’ Donald Trump After Deadly Rally Shooting

    Elon Musk ‘Fully Endorses’ Donald Trump After Deadly Rally Shooting

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    Elon Musk endorsed Donald Trump for reelection Saturday evening shortly after gunshots appear to have been fired at the former president’s campaign rally in Pennsylvania. Trump was escorted off the stage by the Secret Service and seen with blood on his face afterwards.

    “I fully endorse President Trump and hope for his rapid recovery,” Musk wrote on X Saturday.

    A few minutes later, Musk posted “Last time America had a candidate this tough was Theodore Roosevelt.” The X, formerly Twitter, owner also shared a photograph of Trump raising his fist with blood on his face, as Secret Service agents surrounded him.

    Trump was only minutes into his Saturday rally speech before Secret Service officers swarmed him after a series of popping noises. As of publication, the Secret Service is investigating the noises, but has yet to officially identify them as gunshots. Pennsylvania District Attorney Richard A Goldfinger told the Associated Press that the suspect and one attendee are dead. In a statement to WIRED, Trump spokesperson Steven Cheung confirmed that Trump was “fine.”

    “President Trump thanks law enforcement and first responders for their quick action during this heinous act,” says Cheung. “He is fine and is being checked out at a local medical facility. More details will follow.”

    Musk made a donation to the pro-Trump America PAC on Friday, Bloomberg reported. The report did not specify the amount Musk donated, but the donation was characterized as a “sizable amount.” The PAC is required to disclose its donors by the end of next week.

    Musk’s Friday donation was his first this election cycle after he declined to endorse any presidential candidate in multiple interviews. In March, Musk told former CNN anchor Don Lemon that he was “leaning away” from President Joe Biden when asked for his preferred candidate.

    In a statement, the White House said that Biden had received an “initial briefing on the incident.”

    This is a developing story. Please check back for updates.

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    Makena Kelly

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  • Fears of a Purple Wave in Democratic Strongholds Cast Doubt on Biden’s Campaign

    Fears of a Purple Wave in Democratic Strongholds Cast Doubt on Biden’s Campaign

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    As President Joe Biden’s campaign viability faces new critiques and daily defections, solidly blue states may be shifting toward purple, according to polling and local officials across the country.

    Still months away from the general election, some Democratic leaders and polls show that Minnesota, New Hampshire, New Mexico, and Virginia—all of which Biden won by several percentage points in 2020—are potentially ebbing closer to battleground states for Biden and former president Donald Trump.

    “The dynamics are different in each of the four possible battleground states: Minnesota, for instance, has a knack for voting for third-party candidates, while New Mexico has a large population of Hispanic men, a group that Mr. Biden has struggled to win over,” The New York Times’s Nicholas Nehamas and Kellen Browning wrote on Friday. “But consistent across all four states are widespread fears about Mr. Biden’s age, unhappiness with inflation and electorates that are more closely divided than many national observers realize, according to interviews with local Democratic officials and strategists.”

    This apparent transition of Democratic stronghold states comes after weeks of contentious commotion surrounding Biden’s fitness to lead the party’s ticket—and this country for another four years—following a poor debate performance at the end of June. As of July 12, according to tracking from the Times, 19 representatives, one senator, and a growing number of powerful donors and business leaders have all called on the president to step aside, with even more expressing concern for whether Biden could effectively prevent another Trump administration.

    “I believe the time has come for President Biden to pass the torch,” Representative Mike Levin of California said. “I fear if he fails to make the right choice, our democracy will hang in the balance,” Illinois Representative Brad Schneider said Thursday. “I understand why President Biden wants to run. He saved us from Donald Trump once and wants to do it again,” Peter Welch, the first Senator in the country to push for Biden to drop out, wrote in a Washington Post editorial, “But he needs to reassess whether he is the best candidate to do so. In my view, he is not.”

    Since the immediate fallout from Biden’s poor debate performance, the president has been consistent in his insistence that he is going to stay in the race.

    In a post-debate interview with ABC’s George Stephanopoulos, Biden dismissed concerns that his cognitive health was declining and attempted to use his policy legacy as an assurance of his potential future successes.

    “If you can be convinced that you cannot defeat Donald Trump, will you stand down?” Stephanopoulos asked.

    “If the Lord Almighty comes down and tells me that, I might do that,” later adding, “The Lord Almighty’s not comin’ down.”

    Multiple polls have forecasted a tight nationwide race in November, even with the growing discontent about the Democratic ticket. The latest ABC News/Washington Post/Ipsos poll has Biden and Trump in a tie. A new national NPR/PBS NewsHour/Marist poll found that Biden actually gained a point since last month’s pre-debate survey. And that poll, taken among registered voters, including leaners, puts Biden at 50 percent to Trump’s 48 percent in a two-way presidential matchup.

    State-by-state contests, though, are still causing Democratic leaders to stress.

    A Fox News Poll found that in Virginia, where Biden won by over 450,000 votes in 2020, the race is tied—with the two men each standing at 48 percent. Virginia hasn’t sided with a Republican in two decades, since George W. Bush won reelection in 2004.

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    Katie Herchenroeder

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  • WATCH: President Joe Biden Calls Out Donald Trump At Detroit Rally & Outlines His Strategy For 2024 Election

    WATCH: President Joe Biden Calls Out Donald Trump At Detroit Rally & Outlines His Strategy For 2024 Election

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    President Joe Biden is standing on business when it comes to Donald Trump. He recently stated that he doesn’t deserve “no more free passes.”

    RELATED: Wayment! President Joe Biden Goes Viral For Referring To VP Kamala Harris As Donald Trump At NATO Summit (WATCH)

    President Joe Biden Calls Out Donald Trump

    On Friday, July 12, President Biden held a rally in a Detroit high school gymnasium.

    The politician promptly addressed his recent name mix-ups at the NATO Summit earlier this week. Biden didn’t hesitate to criticize Donald Trump and call him out for making similar mistakes.

    “People would rather talk about how I mix up names. I guess they don’t remember that Trump called Nikki Haley, Nancy Pelosi. No more! Donald, no more free passes,” Biden said during the rally.

    He even went as far as labeling Trump as a “convicted criminal” and discussed the businessman’s guilty verdict in the hush money trial.

    “Today we’re going to shine the spotlight on Donald Trump. We’re gonna do what the press so far hasn’t, but I think they’re gonna soon. Folks Donald Trump is a convicted criminal. He was convicted by a jury of his peers of 34 felonies for paying hush money,” Biden continued.

    According to The Detroit News, when President Biden mentioned Trump, the crowd erupted in chants of “Lock him up!” 

    The outlet also reported that Biden remained firm in his decision to continue in the election and expressed confidence in his ability to succeed against Trump.

    “I am running. And we’re going to win,” Biden affirmed.

    Social Media Reacts To President

    The Roomies quickly responded to Biden’s remarks at his Detroit rally. Even Fat Joe joined The Shade Room comment section to give the president props writing,That’s the Joe i know🔥” 

    Instagram user @aguilo.ju wrote, They increased his dosage today.” 

    Instagram user @_suckafreesi wrote, My mans took his meds and had a nap and woke up swinging 😭”

    While Instagram user @nadiamonyea wrote, I was scared a little bit when he started coughing but he pulled it together real quick. Yeah Joe 😅🦾🦾🎉” 

    Then Instagram user @_honey.bai wrote, That was damn near a tongue twister and he said it without stuttering. Let me find out they flipped his switch at the debate.” 

    Instagram user @iron_barbii wrote,Retrumplicans will take anything and twist it when it fits their agenda. He’s speaking just fine to me…..” 

    Lastly, Instagram user @nonsky wrote, Where was this energy at the debate? lol” 

    Biden Goes Viral For Mistakes At Summit

    Despite his recent mistakes and ongoing speculation about the future of his campaign, Biden appeared to be in good spirits during the rally.

    Earlier this week, President Biden went viral and raised concerns after accidentally confusing Vice President Kamala Harris with Donald Trump at the NATO Summit.

    “Look, I wouldn’t have picked Vice President Trump to be Vice President if I think she’s not qualified to be president,” Biden stated while onstage.

    As if that wasn’t enough, he then went on to introduce Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky as Russian President Vladimir Putin.

    “And now I want to hand it over to the president of Ukraine, who has as much courage as he has determination. Ladies and gentlemen, President Putin. “He’s going to beat President Putin. President Zelensky. I’m so focused on beating Putin. We got to worry about it. Anyway, Mr. President.”

    RELATED: To Be Clear! President Biden Shares Firm Response On His Position In The 2024 Election Bid

    What Do You Think Roomies?

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    Ashley Rushford

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  • The Obama Fantasy and the Biden Reality

    The Obama Fantasy and the Biden Reality

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    Joe Biden and Barack Obama at a Los Angeles fundraiser 12 days before the debate that imperiled the current president’s campaign.
    Photo: Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty Images

    The fantasy has been repeated thousands of times in the last two weeks, shared not-so-quietly up and down the Democratic Party: Barack Obama is the one person who can talk Joe Biden into stepping off the presidential ticket. What if he marches over to the White House and puts an end to this?

    The scheme has all the hallmarks of the best Washington dramas — a tortured relationship, a presidential election in the balance, and a dramatic secret meeting. But it’s still just that: a fantasy.

    It’s true that Obama spoke with Biden soon after the debate. He’s also been in touch with Nancy Pelosi and Chuck Schumer and has caught up with Hakeem Jeffries in New York at a fundraiser the day after Biden’s debate disaster. For two weeks now, he’s been receiving calls from old colleagues, friends, and supporters wondering what he can do. But since that fateful Thursday night, he’s also consistently answered those calls by dismissing the idea that he would be able to single-handedly push Biden out the door or convince him to stay in. He has been careful, even on these calls with close allies, not to tip his hand.

    In the frenzied days since the debate, a fundamental misinterpretation of Obama’s post-presidential role, and of his self-conception, has set in across the party. It’s been visible in the fantasizing about some sort of come-to-Jesus meeting with Biden, but also in the suspicious whispers among some Biden allies that he’s organizing a pressure campaign on his old veep to drop out. Take the word of one person who’s spoken with the president since the debate, Joe Scarborough: “The Biden campaign and many Democratic officials do believe that Barack Obama is quietly working behind the scenes to orchestrate this,” he said on his show on Thursday. That was the same morning as official D.C. interpreted Obama’s silence over George Clooney’s plans to publish his now-famous op-ed calling on Biden to quit as tacit approval.

    This has all been frustrating, if not surprising, to many of the people around Obama, who has said nothing publicly about Biden or the party’s conundrum since he initially tweeted to indicate his support of the president and, charitably, compared Biden’s debacle to his own bad debate against Mitt Romney in 2012. It’s the same studied silence he’s insisted on since leaving office. That posture has often infuriated supporters, but he believes it allows him to keep a distance from politics, letting his party move on from him, and to maintain his own influence for when he really needs to use it, usually in the form of rallies and TV ads right before Election Day. Though he and Biden have not spoken frequently in the last two years — and though Obama’s concerns about Biden’s reelection chances are widely known — he has made clear to his former partner that he is available to talk whenever Biden wishes and that he is happy to offer advice and to serve as a “sounding board.” (Biden took him up on the offer multiple times as his campaign ramped up.) Further, Obama has made clear to allies that he believes nothing good can come of his personal advice to Biden, or his political concerns, coming to public light. As a result, he has often been reticent to do much at all in private beyond one-on-one conversations.

    He knows the secrecy creates a vacuum that can quickly fill up with rumors, yet this insistence on silence is also because he is intensely wary of feeding the idea, first shared by Donald Trump, that he is pulling any strings behind the scenes. Obama’s disdain for day-to-day politics hasn’t abated since he left the presidency, he has been loath to organize any kind of campaigns at all since 2017, and he has stayed busy with other projects. In the time since the debate, he has been working on the second part of his memoir, filming nonpartisan videos about democracy for his foundation, appearing with the American men’s Olympic basketball team for their 50th-anniversary celebration in Las Vegas, and filming a video for Willie Mays’s funeral, before now heading to Martha’s Vineyard for the rest of the summer.

    But Obama has not been in a political coma. He is aware of the arguments that he has a responsibility to treat this moment differently, and he has discussed the state of the race with other Democrats who are terrified that Biden could stay in and lose to Trump. He’s stayed in regular touch with Pelosi since leaving office, and some of his allies closely watched her Tuesday appearance on Scarborough’s show, in which she seemed to suggest Biden should reconsider his decision to stay in the race. Yet even some of his friends have also wished to get a clearer signal of his feelings about Biden’s place in the race, since a number of his former aides have spoken out and others within the party have been eager to interpret those opinions as coming from Obama himself. “The idea that the Pod guys are speaking for him? Ridiculous,” said one friend, referring to the hosts of Pod Save America, former Obama staffers who have been notably critical of Biden. The same goes for David Axelrod, he added.

    Much of this paranoia about Obama has come from longtime Biden allies who never bought into the idea of an Obama-Biden “bromance.” For many of these people — including Biden himself — the memory of 2016, when Obama effectively backed Hillary Clinton over his own vice-president to be the Democratic nominee, is still raw and explains why Obama would be in no position to talk Biden out of this race even if he wanted to do so. The two presidents both know this and also that Biden remembers Obama’s early skepticism about his 2020 campaign. Yet after Scarborough’s comment, even some top Biden-backing Democrats were aghast at the idea that some of the president’s advisers would accuse Obama, one of the party’s most popular figures, of organizing against Biden. Still, even these very senior Democrats — Biden fans who miss Obama and are scared of Trump’s return — concede that Obama could have spoken up to support Biden if he wanted to at any point since that initial post-debate tweet. Strategic or not, his continued public silence during Biden’s worst political hours doesn’t read like confidence.

    The truth is that, like at other critical moments of the Biden presidency, Obama has kept the number of people with whom he’s discussing politics — and Biden — to a bare minimum. The state of his relationship with Biden has always been a sensitive topic for both of them, and while the pair have been personally affectionate and Obama was grateful to Biden for booting Trump from office, they still view how politics works differently and have harbored their own criticisms of each other’s time in office. Obama has been helpful to the Biden campaign this time around, but is also clearly concerned about the political state of play and far less involved on an operational level as Biden has relied more on his own White House team than in 2020. (One of the awkward complications of the moment: Obama’s main point of contact on the campaign is Jen O’Malley Dillon, one of his former aides who is the Biden campaign’s effective leader.)

    Now Obama is more wary than ever of letting his feelings about Biden’s political future or the campaign leak on someone else’s terms or in someone else’s words. And few of the people who have remained close to him in his post-presidency have said much on the matter, with the exception of Eric Holder. The former attorney general at first boosted Biden after the debate by reminding his followers to remember that the alternative is Trump. Before long, though, he was arguing on X that Democrats were the strong and responsible party for engaging “in a difficult determination about who our nominee for President should be,” as opposed to being “a pathetic, dangerous cult.”

    The move to return focus to Republicans is a lot like Obama’s long-preferred approach. For months, those close to him have maintained that his concerns about the election are largely focused on the threat of Trump and the very real possibility of his return to power. It’s a convenient way for him to avoid opining on Biden, but it’s also his preoccupation. Earlier this year, at a tech festival in Antwerp, Flemish media reported that Obama was clear with event organizers that he didn’t want to talk politics. Yet onstage, even though he referred to Trump only as “my successor,” his message was unmistakable. In the words of the local press, he argued that “Trump is leading us to the abyss.”

    The intensified interest in Obama has come as Democratic lawmakers, aides, and donors realize that their public-pressure campaigns are running into the tiny but stubborn phalanx surrounding Biden. He appears to be taking counsel from a smaller group than ever — this is saying something for a politician who’s become famous for maintaining a tight group of advisers who in some cases have had his ear for decades. They now include his wife, sister, and son, and a very small handful of confidants on his payroll: Mike Donilon, Steve Ricchetti, Bruce Reed, and on campaign matters specifically, O’Malley Dillon. Other longtime advisers like Ron Klain and Anita Dunn are not out of the circle but not exactly at the family-adjacent level.

    Since the debate, some of these innermost advisers have mostly remained physically near Biden in Washington, Camp David, and on the campaign and money trails. Donors at Biden’s fundraisers in East Hampton and New Jersey were surprised to see Donilon, the president’s senior-most political adviser but a famously private and quiet figure, at his side. And the president this week dispatched Donilon, Ricchetti, and O’Malley Dillon to brief worried senators on the plan to win the election. But lawmakers walked away unimpressed, according to senators and advisers, feeling the trio had failed to articulate a convincing plan that addressed their significant worries about Biden’s ability to campaign effectively.

    Few senators walked into the meeting expecting a totally convincing answer to Biden’s problems. Many influential Democrats have in recent days begun wondering aloud why it took Biden a few days to reach out to party leaders after the debate, why it took two weeks to hold a press conference, why he made only a handful of reassuring calls to lawmakers over last weekend — then stopped — and why his campaign operation didn’t immediately brief allies on a serious reboot plan. “The debate was bad, the last week and a half was worse,” said one top party operative. “If they had a halfway decent response, we wouldn’t be here.”

    Mike Donilon arrives on Marine One in East Hampton for a fundraiser where he was at Biden’s side, 48 hours after the debate.
    Photo: Haiyun Jiang/The New York Times/Redux

    For ten days, rumors have circulated on Capitol Hill about some sort of coordinated flood of statements urging him to step aside — enough to force him to pay attention. Yet that didn’t come on Monday or Tuesday as expected, held off in part by Biden’s defiant letter to the Hill insisting that his decision had been made and in part by his surprise appearance on Morning Joe, where he said much the same. With many lawmakers suddenly reluctant to put their names to the kinds of statements they were considering over the weekend, people close to Biden felt the momentum swinging their way. It was only after Pelosi’s own appearance on Morning Joe that Democrats on the Hill detected a new opening. It all added up to a series of wild swings between confidence and pessimism for the lawmakers desperate to get Biden out, with some believing by Thursday that he would screw up a high-stakes press conference that would finally shut the door on his candidacy. Many watched to gauge how aggressively they could come out against Biden in the ensuing days, but found that it exceeded their expectations aside from a few verbal flubs.

    Biden’s band of true believers signaled almost immediately after the press conference that they had only been buoyed by it — not forced to reckon with any sort of grim political reality like the one described by Biden skeptics across the party. “To answer the question on everyone’s minds: No, Joe Biden does not have a doctorate in foreign affairs. He’s just that fucking good,” tweeted the White House’s senior deputy press secretary, Andrew Bates. Deputy campaign manager Rob Flaherty tweeted a GIF of Biden in 2020 telling the New York Times’ editorial board, “I ain’t dead, and I’m not gonna die.”

    What’s not clear now is precisely how many Biden ride-or-die types remain below the most senior or most public parts of the White House and campaign. Multiple donors reported this week that high-level campaign and party fundraisers told them they no longer believe Biden has a path to victory, but other candidates might. Some mid- to senior-level campaign aides have expressed disbelief at the confidence coming from the top of the operation. Four Democrats closely aligned with the campaign used the word “delusional” with me on Thursday. One said he felt like everyone with power in the political operation “is just pretending this isn’t happening. It’s insane.”

    Down at the delegate level, the Biden camp has tried calling around to ensure that the individuals who are headed to Chicago will stick with Biden. But among this crowd of loyal Democrats, too, schisms have emerged. In the Facebook group for the California delegation, after some discussion over whether Biden should stay on the ticket, the group’s moderators announced they would “prohibit any organizing for a new candidate for president in this group” and would delete any post in favor of a ticket other than Biden-Harris — prompting a new wave of outraged comments from delegates in favor of an open discussion about their roles and responsibilities.

    To some longtime Biden advisers outside the innermost orbit, this has all provided an occasion to vent about an insularity they say has long worried them. Ahead of the press conference, one such Democrat sighed that Biden had been poorly served by the advice to avoid media events and interviews for so long. “If they had done this shit for four years, people would be used to it. It’s maddening,” he said. Biden’s circle of advice-givers, he continued, is “way too small. People don’t even know how to help them right now. And I don’t know if he understands it.”

    That’s one reason why the “Joe’s gotta go” drumbeat kept going after the press conference: If doubters weren’t getting through to him via his advisers, they might as well try applying pressure in public. Four House members added their name to the “drop out now” rolls in the hours after the presser, even as some of their colleagues expressed renewed support for Biden. Some prominent donors also doubled down on their calls for a new plan. Bruce Heyman, a longtime party fundraiser and ambassador to Canada under Obama, wrote on LinkedIn after the press conference that while he knew and respected Biden, he now believed the party needed to hold “a series of town halls, debates, and interviews to showcase” alternatives before the convention in Chicago.

    Still, after Thursday’s performance viewed by over 22 million people, a new consensus seemed to be settling on lawmakers and other high-ranking Democrats: that this saga would likely now last a while longer, with Biden’s insistence on staying in the race getting new fuel. These liberals and progressives like Biden and almost uniformly wish him well personally. But their patience is gone. They had half-hoped he would crash and burn at the microphone. It would have been hard to watch, but at least it would have made the perils of his continued candidacy impossible to ignore.

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    Gabriel Debenedetti

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  • As Donald Trump’s Prospects Soar, Ivanka Inches Back to the National Stage

    As Donald Trump’s Prospects Soar, Ivanka Inches Back to the National Stage

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    Ivanka Trump is set to return to the national stage. According to her spokesperson and two sources close to the Trump campaign, Donald Trump’s eldest daughter is planning to attend next week’s 2024 Republican National Convention in Milwaukee to personally show support for her father. The Trump campaign did not respond to a request for comment.

    Ivanka’s presence at the convention would mark a dramatic return to the campaign trail that she has conspicuously avoided this election cycle. She famously skipped her father’s low-energy campaign launch at Mar-a-Lago in November 2022 and released a statement at the time declaring: “I am choosing to prioritize my young children and the private life we are creating as a family. I do not plan to be involved in politics.” She also did not attend his recent criminal trial in Manhattan, which saw him convicted of 34 felony counts.

    To some observers, Ivanka has served as something of a political weather vane. Early in the GOP primary, many interpreted her absence from the campaign as a sign that Trump faced insurmountable headwinds: Trump-endorsed candidates were blown out in the 2022 midterms; billionaire Republican donors like Ken Griffin and Stephen Schwarzman announced that they would support a non-Trump candidate in 2024; and Rupert Murdoch’s New York Post splashed a photo of DeSantis on the cover with the headline “DeFuture.” (Meanwhile, the Post mocked Trump’s 2024 rollout with the front-page teaser “Florida Man Makes Announcement,” story on page 26.)

    That was then. Next week Trump will be coronated in Milwaukee. Democrats, meanwhile, remain paralyzed over what to do about Joe Biden’s evident cognitive decline and failing candidacy. The Trump campaign is, privately at least, feeling confident that Trump will win in a landslide if Biden stays in the race. In other words, Ivanka would be jumping on a bandwagon that looks destined for victory. One source said Trump is annoyed that Ivanka would wait until now to get involved. “He didn’t like how she took credit for things and disappeared when things got tough,” the source said. But another source close to Ivanka disputed this, saying Trump himself has been asking Ivanka to speak at the convention. Ivanka’s polished mien would presumably appeal to independents and women, voters with whom Trump polls poorly. However, Ivanka’s spokesperson confirmed that she will not be speaking.

    Coincidentally or not, Ivanka has been boosting her public profile recently. On July 2, podcaster Lex Fridman released a three-hour interview with Ivanka (Fridman said the two became friends over their shared love of reading philosophers like Joseph Campbell, Marcus Aurelius, Alan Watts, and Viktor Frankl). Ivanka reiterated on the podcast that she doesn’t plan to formally join the campaign. “Politics, it’s a pretty dark world…. It’s just really at odds with what feels good for me as a human being,” she said.

    But sources I talked to wonder if Ivanka would be able to resist the pull of power should Trump return to the White House. After all, her husband, Jared Kushner, could be under consideration to serve as Trump’s secretary of state.

    This article was updated with confirmation that Ivanka Trump will not give a speech at the convention.

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    Gabriel Sherman

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  • The Kamala Harris Conspiracies Are Here

    The Kamala Harris Conspiracies Are Here

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    Leah Feiger: Well, yeah, no, in your reporting, you shared posts of people calling her the DEI candidate. That’s what’s going around, and it’s not just Trump in the public sphere sharing this. These were conspiracies that were legitimately being repeated on Fox and all over the place.

    David Gilbert: After those fringe platforms, we saw people like Laura Loomer, who would typically be called fringe normally.

    Leah Feiger: Yeah, a very fun pipeline from the Republican nominee in Florida for Congressional district to becoming an American far right activist.

    David Gilbert: But she’s become kind of more mainstream now because she’s got links to the Trump platform. She…

    Leah Feiger: Oh, my God, the idea of calling Laura Loomer mainstream actually gives me full body chills.

    David Gilbert: I know, but I think we have to because she’s just integral now to the discourse online in the Republican Party that, from my point of view, at least she’s mainstream GOP now, rather than some fringe character we can ignore.

    Leah Feiger: Yeah, I mean…

    David Gilbert: But yeah, you were saying about Fox News, it very quickly moved from private Telegram channels, to fringe message boards, to X, to, as you say, Fox News.

    Leah Feiger: Mm-hmm.

    David Gilbert: I think it was on a show called Outnumbered, which I’d never heard of before, but it was a host called Julie Banderas, and she was talking about how her daughters speak more eloquently than Harris, before adding that, I think she said, “I’m sorry, just being a minority does not make you fit for president.” I think a day later, New York Post posted an op-ed saying, “America may soon be subjected to the country’s first DEI president.”

    Leah Feiger: Right.

    David Gilbert: So this is a narrative that is being spread overnight, practically, from very fringe, pro-Trump, extremist message boards to the front pages of newspapers and on mainstream TV.

    Leah Feiger: Is there any content moderation at all? I mean, in your reporting, and we should talk about this, these posts were not small. This really, as you said, went from fringe to mainstream pretty fast and millions and millions of views.

    David Gilbert: Yeah, so as I said earlier, the platforms like Gab, and Telegram, none of the racist or misogynistic content is taken down or was taken down. In fact, that’s why people go there because they can post that stuff.

    Leah Feiger: Right.

    David Gilbert: On X, there is kind of this veneer that it is a mainstream platform, in that there is some sort of rules, and there are some sort of content moderation in place. But as you said, some of the posts around this, and one of the conspiracies that really took hold on X more than anywhere else was that she’s ineligible to be president because both her parents were not born in the US. Now, this has been debunked so many times.

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    Leah Feiger

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  • Before He Was a VP Contender, J.D. Vance Suggested Trump’s Sexual Assault Accuser Was Telling the Truth

    Before He Was a VP Contender, J.D. Vance Suggested Trump’s Sexual Assault Accuser Was Telling the Truth

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    Up until a few years ago, J.D. Vance viewed Donald Trump like a person who hadn’t been brainwashed by the MAGA movement, which is to say: He knew Trump was a dangerous individual who should absolutely not be in a position of power over the country. Fast-forward to 2021, though, and the Ohio senator was suddenly full of praise for a guy he’d literally once likened to Adolf Hitler. And now, if you ask him about his past comments, he’ll say things like “I just think the results [of Trump’s presidency] were so good…. I was critical of Trump in 2016, but he proved me wrong.”

    Still, it’s important to remember exactly what Vance has said about the guy he’s working very hard to reelect. Like, for example, his thoughts on Trump being accused of sexual assault: In February, after the ex-president was found liable for defaming writer E. Jean Carroll the previous month, Vance claimed the verdict was BS. But in 2016, when he was asked about an accusation from Jessica Leeds, who said Trump groped her, he had a very different take.

    Per Mediaite:

    In a comment that had yet to be unearthed until now, Vance went so far as to signal on MSNBC that he believed the story of Jessica Leeds…. Leeds came forward with several other women who claimed they were sexually assaulted by Trump. She testified in the E. Jean Carroll civil trial of which Trump was found liable for sexual assault. Her account was dismissed by Trump and his media surrogates at the time of the 2016 race, but Vance argued during an October 2016 appearance on Hardball with Chris Matthews that he was inclined to believe Leeds’s claim.

    According to the transcript of the show, after being asked what he thought of Leeds’s allegation, Vance responded, “This is sort of he-said, she-said, right? And at the end of the day, do you believe Donald Trump, who always tells the truth? Just kidding. Or do you believe that woman on the tape?”

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    To that end, CNN’s KFile reported last month that after the Access Hollywood tape came out, Vance liked a tweet that read “Maybe the Central Park 5 could take out a full-page ad to condemn the coddling of thug real estate barons who commit serial sexual assault.” (Trump famously took out an ad calling for the death penalty following the 1989 rape of a jogger in Central Park; while he never directly name-checked the group of young men dubbed the Central Park Five, who were later exonerated, many believe he was clearly referring to them.)

    In addition to his comments regarding Trump and sexual assault, Vance has also previously said, of the ex-president:

    Vance also previously liked a tweet featuring a photo of Trump and O.J. Simpson that read, “Here is an old picture of one of USA’s most hated, villainous, douchey celebs. Also in picture: OJ Simpson.”

    But now? Can’t say enough good things about the guy.

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    Bess Levin

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  • Reid Hoffman Hasn’t Given Up on Biden Just Yet

    Reid Hoffman Hasn’t Given Up on Biden Just Yet

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    Reid. Very much. A lot of people are following the calculus, which is that Trump is quite operative and you can buy influence with him. The crypto industry is all about the economics on this stuff. They’ll sort it out if it’s Biden, but they can buy influence with Trump. I think there’s a big move from the crypto side to being pro-Trump.

    Makena: Does Biden’s debate performance risk alienating more donors and people in Silicon Valley?

    Reid: Sadly, yes. Silicon Valley, maybe even more vigorously than most places in the world, tends to focus on leaders. Who’s the founder? Who’s the CEO? It’s how we operate. I’ve been working to remind them about how the CEO is stronger because of their team composition.

    Now it’s not just how do they stand up and speak in a debate, but how do they compare a strong team. You have to remind them it’s Gina Raimondo, Pete Buttigieg, and Jennifer Granholm. They think Lina Khan is terrible. I agree. But the overall team, including the chief of staff and all the rest, when you compare that with Trump, [Trump’s] overall team is terrible.

    Makena: But another part of investing is betting that a company will be successful. In this case, donating to the campaign is betting that Biden can win. Are donors starting to withhold their support over doubts Biden could beat Trump?

    Reid: It’s definitely caused a bunch of turmoil. I have seen emails from people in Silicon Valley who say they won’t donate more until they have more confidence. It’s a negative factor. Unequivocally, part of what I’m trying to be a voice for in this stuff is to say elections are a composition of negative factors and positive.

    The fact is, people calling for Biden to step down should, frankly, call for both Biden and Trump to step down. You can say one should step down because he’s slow and the other should step down because he’s a lying felon.

    [Last month, Democratic donors Lauren Powell Jobs and Ron Conway were looking for ways to convince Biden to drop out, according to The New York Times.]

    Makena: What I’m hearing is that some donors aren’t completely dropping their support for Biden but are taking a beat to reevaluate. But does this go far enough to turn people toward Trump?

    Reid: Absolutely zero. Part of the reason you hear such loud complaints about how Biden should release his delegates and open up the convention is because people are so frenetic about the dangers of Trump winning.

    Makena: When it comes to folks like David Sacks supporting Trump, what is it that you think these people are hoping to receive in the end?

    Reid: Ultimately, influence. Whether it’s crypto-favorable laws, ambassadorships in different countries, an ability to go to the White House, or maybe getting a Rush Limbaugh Medal of Freedom, it’s all about trying to buy influence.

    Makena: What do you think the Biden campaign needs to do to counteract all of this?

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    Makena Kelly

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  • How Donald Trump Echoes Joe McCarthy

    How Donald Trump Echoes Joe McCarthy

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    On one of my near-daily calls with my younger brother, who lives in Los Angeles, I mentioned my anxiety about November’s election—and maybe having to leave the country after it’s all over.

    “I might just want to have a small apartment in Canada or Mexico or something, just in case Trump comes back into power,” I said.

    He scoffed, albeit in a very loving and gentle way. “You know, the worst case would be something like what happened to Grandpa,” he said, pausing. “And you know that kind of made his career.”

    What happened to my grandpa, Howard Fast, is that his government deemed him a radical and in 1950 threw him in jail. Howard had been a best-selling novelist, whose books, like Citizen Tom Paine and Freedom Road, explored race, class, and revolutionary ideals. During World War II, he did his part for the US Office of War Information, writing and editing Voice of America broadcasts.

    But where Howard went astray, at least in the eyes of Senator Joseph McCarthy and his fellow red-baiters, was that he joined the Communist Party and refused to provide records of an anti-fascist organization to the House Un-American Activities Committee. This was a time of heightened fear and paranoia, just months after McCarthy delivered his infamous “Enemies From Within” speech in which he claimed to have a list of known communists working in the State Department. (And since history rhymes, later McCarthy hired as his chief counsel Roy Cohn, who would go on to mentor a young Donald Trump.)

    Howard spent three months at Mill Point Federal Prison, where he began what would be his best-known work, Spartacus. He was forced to self-publish because he was blacklisted, with his epic story of a slave uprising later immortalized onscreen by actor Kirk Douglas and director Stanley Kubrick. So yes, Grandpa became much more famous after being jailed.

    When I recently spoke to my father, Jonathan, who is also a writer, he noted that Howard’s appearance before the House Un-American Activities Committee made him a household name. “He was on the cover of The New York Times,” said my father. (A front-page Times headline from June 1950: “11 ‘Anti-Fascists’ Are Sent to Jail”). “Before that he was famous, but after that…”

    “But it fucked him up, right?” I asked.

    “I don’t know,” he responded. “I think he found jail scary.”

    Howard went on to write more than 80 books before dying in 2003, a year before The Apprentice would beam Cohn’s apprentice into the homes of millions of Americans, helping transform a cartoonish New York tabloid fixture into the image of a decisive business mogul and laying the groundwork for an unlikely path to the White House.

    Trump has made vengeance the cornerstone of his 2024 campaign. “I am your justice, and for those who have been wronged and betrayed, I am your retribution,” he told a crowd in March 2023. I wrote for Vanity Fair at the time how dangerous Trump’s behavior was, even as some pundits were writing off his chances of a comeback. He stepped up the menacing rhetoric in a Veterans Day speech. “We will root out the communists, Marxists, fascists, and the radical left thugs that live like vermin within the confines of our country, that lie and steal and cheat on elections. They’ll do anything, whether legally or illegally, to destroy America and to destroy the American Dream,” Trump said, later adding: “The threat from outside forces is far less sinister, dangerous, and grave than the threat from within.”

    I was already sure Trump would be terrible for democracy—we watched him sic a mob on the Capitol, after all—and that he had little regard for the rule of law. (The latter was made even more clear during Trump’s hush money trial in New York, where he was found guilty of 34 felony counts.) Not to mention, Trump’s continued demonizing of the media—a.k.a. “THE ENEMY OF THE PEOPLE!”—on Truth Social.

    But the November speech left me convinced that he would target his perceived domestic foes, with journalists among them. It’s not like Trump and his allies are hiding anything. Kash Patel, a close Trump ally expected to land a key national security role in a future administration, said in December on Steve Bannon’s War Room podcast, “We will go out and find the conspirators, not just in government but in the media. Yes, we’re going to come after the people in the media who lied about American citizens, who helped Joe Biden rig presidential elections—we’re going to come after you. Whether it’s criminally or civilly, we’ll figure that out.”

    Such a menacing scenario looks only more plausible in light of last month’s Supreme Court ruling giving presidents presumptive immunity from prosecution when carrying out “official” acts—a decision that could effectively put Trump, if elected, above the law. In her dissent, Justice Sonia Sotomayor argued that, by the conservative majority’s reasoning, a president would have immunity even if ordering “the Navy’s Seal Team 6 to assassinate a political rival.” Since that historic ruling, Trump has raised the threat level by amplifying social media posts calling for Liz Cheney, a Republican critic, to be brought before a televised military tribunal. Trump also promoted a post calling for various political figures to be jailed, including Biden, Kamala Harris, Chuck Schumer, Mitch McConnell, Nancy Pelosi, and Mike Pence.

    Now, whether I—a liberal writer, podcaster, and MSNBC commentator—would make such a Trump “enemies” list remains to be seen, and for the record, my second son thinks I’m being hysterical. But it’s certainly not out of the range of possibilities that visible members of the media, the types regularly warning against the dangers of Trump on social media and cable news shows, would be targets of a second administration hell-bent on revenge.

    I remember once, when I was young, asking my grandmother Bette about her husband’s time in jail. Toward the end of Howard’s sentence, she said, he started gardening, a peaceful image. She also told me how people used to throw rocks at her window during this period. Bette said that no one felt like heroes when all this was going on. She was raising two young children, and everything felt out of control. My grandmother wasn’t a wildly dramatic person. I knew if she was saying that, it had to have been bad.

    Growing up, I was aware that my grandfather and mother, the feminist writer Erica Jong, were of a strange species of political novelist. “Since I believe that a person’s philosophical point of view has little meaning if it is not matched by being and action, I found myself willingly wed to an endless series of unpopular causes,” Howard said in a 1972 interview, “experiences which I feel enriched my writing as much as they depleted other aspects of my life.”

    My grandfather truly believed that his political work was the best thing he ever did and took pride in his 1,100-page FBI profile for detailing “every—or almost every—decent act I had performed in my life.”

    If I were to seek some testament to leave to my grandchildren, proving that I had not lived a worthless existence but had done my best to help and nourish the poor and oppressed, I could not do better than to leave them this FBI report. In those pages, there is no crime, no breaking of the law, no report of an evil act, an un-American act, an indecent act—and I was no paragon of virtue, and I did enough that I regret—but the lousy bits and pieces of my life are nowhere in those pages, only the decent and positive acts: speaking at meetings for housing, for trade unionism, for better government, for libertarianism, for a free press, for the right to assemble, for higher minimum wages, for equal justice for black and white, against lynching, against the creation of an underclass, against injustice wherever injustice was found, and for peace, and walking picket lines, and collecting signatures.

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    Molly Jong-Fast

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  • Biden’s candidacy faces new peril as Pelosi, Clooney and more Democrats weigh in

    Biden’s candidacy faces new peril as Pelosi, Clooney and more Democrats weigh in

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    By Lisa Mascaro, Associated Press

    WASHINGTON (AP) — President Joe Biden’s imperiled re-election campaign hit new trouble Wednesday as House Speaker Emerita Nancy Pelosi said merely “it’s up to the president to decide” if he should stay in the race, celebrity donor George Clooney said he should not run and Democratic senators and lawmakers expressed fresh fear about his ability to beat Republican Donald Trump.

    The sudden flurry of grave pronouncements despite Biden’s determined insistence he is not leaving the 2024 race put on public display just how unsettled the question remains among prominent Democrats. On Capitol Hill, an eighth House Democrat, Rep. Pat Ryan of New York, publicly asked Biden to step aside.

    “I want him to do whatever he decides to do,” Pelosi said Wednesday on MSNBC’s “Morning Joe” rather than declaring Biden should stay in. While Biden has said repeatedly that he’s made his decision, she said, “We’re all encouraging him to make that decision, because time is running short.”

    FILE – President Joe Biden shakes hands with actor, director and producer George Clooney during the Kennedy Center honorees reception at the White House in Washington, Dec. 4, 2022. Movie star and lifelong Democrat George Clooney is adding his voice to calls for Joe Biden to leave the presidential race. Clooney says in a New York Times opinion piece Wednesday that he loves Biden, but the party would lose the presidential race as well as any control in Congress with him as the nominee. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)

    It’s a crucial moment for the president and his party, as Democrats consider what was once unthinkable — having the incumbent Biden step aside, just weeks before the Democratic National Convention that is on track to nominate him as their candidate for reelection.

    Biden is hosting world leaders in Washington for the NATO summit this week with a crowded schedule of formal meetings, sideline chats and long diplomatic dinners showcasing his skills. His party at a crossroads, Biden faces the next national public test Thursday at a scheduled news conference that many Democrats in Congress will be watching for signs of his abilities.

    To be sure, Biden maintains strong support from key corners of his coalition, particularly the Congressional Black Caucus on Capitol Hill, whose leadership was instrumental in ushering the president to victory in 2020 and is standing by him as the country’s best choice to defeat Trump again in 2024.

    “At this moment, the stakes are too high and we have to focus,” Rep. Ilhan Omar of Minnesota told The Associated Press on Tuesday, saying Democrats are “losing ground” the longer they fight over Biden’s candidacy. “Democracy is on the line. Everything we value as Democrats, as a country, is on the line, and we have to stop being distracted.”

    Pelosi has been widely watched for signals of how top Democrats are thinking about Biden’s wounded candidacy, her comments viewed as important for the party’s direction as members weigh possible alternatives in the campaign against Trump.

    Because of her powerful position as the former House speaker and proximity to Biden as a trusted longtime ally of his generation, Pelosi is seen as one of the few Democratic leaders who could have influence on the president’s thinking.

    The lack of a full statement from Pelosi backing Biden’s continued campaign is what lawmakers are likely to hear most clearly, even as she told ABC later she believes he can win. Her remarks came as actor Clooney, who had just hosted a glitzy Hollywood fundraiser for the president last month, said in a New York Times op-ed that the Biden he saw three weeks ago wasn’t the Joe Biden of 2020. “He was the same man we all witnessed at the debate.”

    Sen. Michael Bennet, a Democrat from Colorado, spoke forcefully late Tuesday about the danger of a second Trump presidency and said it’s for the president “to consider” the options.

    Stopping just short of calling for Biden to drop out, Bennet said on CNN what he told his colleagues in private – that he believes Trump “is on track to win this election — and maybe win it by a landslide and take with him the Senate and the House.”

    Bennet said, “It’s not a question about politics. It’s a moral question about the future of our country.”

    Another Democrat, Sen. Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut, said Wednesday he was “deeply concerned” about Biden winning the election, which he called existential for the country.

    “We have to reach a conclusion as soon as possible,” Blumenthal said on CNN.

    And Sen. Tim Kaine of Virginia told reporters, “I have complete confidence that Joe Biden will do the patriotic thing for the country. And he’s going to make that decision.”

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    Associated Press

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  • Why the election may slow plans to replace lead pipes

    Why the election may slow plans to replace lead pipes

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    With the Environmental Protection Agency’s latest — and strictest — plan to minimize the risk of Americans drinking lead-contaminated water on the horizon, the debate over whether the rules go too far or not nearly far enough is reaching a tipping point.

    Although lead was banned from new water service lines in 1986, it’s estimated that more than 9 million such lines still carry drinking water to homes and businesses throughout the country. Under the EPA’s Lead and Copper Rule Improvements proposal, water utilities would be required to replace all lead-containing lines within 10 years.

    The proposal from the Biden administration builds on different rules put out in the waning days of the Trump term that allowed up to 30 years for service line replacement, triggered only when lead levels test higher than 15 parts per billion. The new proposal, which would largely supplant the Trump rules, calls for stricter monitoring, enhanced public education, and the 10-year pipe replacement mandate regardless of lead levels.

    An October deadline looms for the new rules to be adopted; otherwise, enforcement of the less-stringent Trump administration rules will begin. And complicating matters more: November’s election results could shake up whose rules the nation must follow.

    While many cities and states have begun to replace their lead pipes, some utilities and officials say the 10-year time frame is unfeasible and too expensive. They say it would be difficult for water utilities to follow the rules while dealing with new EPA limits on five PFAS contaminants, known as “forever chemicals,” and failing pipes, among other issues.

    “Nobody will tell you that having lead in contact with water is a great idea,” said Steve Via, director of federal relations for the American Water Works Association, the country’s largest nonprofit water utility industry group. “The question becomes: How urgent a matter is it, and at what pace does it need to be done?”

    Already, 15 Republican state attorneys general have argued that the proposed rules infringe on states’ rights and chase “speculative” benefits. On the other side, 14 Democratic attorneys general said that the EPA should find more ways to ensure pipes are quickly replaced in low-income areas.

    To be sure, no amount of lead is considered safe to consume. Lead is a neurotoxin known to cause irreversible long-term organ damage, lower IQs, higher risk for miscarriage, asthma, cardiovascular disease, impotence, and elevated blood pressure.

    Public health advocates say societal costs — in health care, social services, and lost productivity — far outweigh the cost of replacement. They say corrosion controls that have limited lead exposure can and do fail, pointing to human and systemic errors that prompted the water crisis in Flint, Michigan, where thousands of people were exposed to high lead levels in their drinking water.

    “That’s the whole thing about lead pipes: They unexpectedly release lead into drinking water,” said Roya Alkafaji, who manages an initiative focused on reducing lead exposure from water with the Environmental Defense Fund, a national advocacy group. “I don’t think kicking the can down the road is the solution.”

    According to a 2023 analysis by Ronnie Levin, an instructor at Harvard’s T.H. Chan School of Public Health, the benefit of replacing lead pipes outweighs the costs by a 35:1 ratio.

    Using the EPA’s estimated $335 million annual costs from the Trump rules, which include water sampling, corrosion control treatments, inventorying and replacement of lead service lines, and educational outreach, Levin’s analysis shows that $9 billion in annual health care costs could be avoided. An additional $2 billion in spending — through upgraded infrastructure and reduced corrosion damage to appliances — could be saved. The broad spectrum of health-related costs has historically been ignored in analyzing the actual costs of leaving lead service lines in place, said Levin, a former EPA scientist.

    Estimates of the cost to replace the nation’s lead pipes range from $46 billion to more than $90 billion, far higher than the $15 billion set aside in the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law. The Biden administration has framed those funds as a down payment, 49% of which will be grants or principal forgiveness loans allocated on the basis of the estimated number of lead pipes per state. Other funding programs can also be tapped.

    Replacement costs vary widely by location, with average costs ranging from the EPA’s 2019 estimate of $4,700 per service line to $12,500 from Via’s utilities trade group.

    Carolyn Berndt, legislative director for sustainability at the National League of Cities, said funding challenges could render the EPA’s 10-year timeline unrealistic. While her organization is encouraging local leaders to secure as much funding as possible, what’s available won’t be enough to cover replacement costs for some localities — especially low-income areas, which often have older infrastructure and more lead pipes.

    Some direct costs could fall to property owners, such as replacing the lines connecting their water meters to their homes. And people could face indirect costs if utilities increase customer rates to offset the expense.

    Still, some communities, such as Olathe, Kansas, are finding ways to move forward with a patchwork of funding. Out of 37,000 service lines there, 266 galvanized pipes were found serving downtown properties, where many of the city’s most vulnerable residents live. The coating for galvanized pipes typically contains lead.

    Workers will replace the lines at no cost to property owners in the city of 147,000 people outside Kansas City, said Megan Spence, who is overseeing the city project. It is expected to cost around $2.3 million, paid for with a loan from the Kansas Department of Health and Environment and about $1.2 million in federal infrastructure funding. About $500,000 for lawn restoration is included.

    “We’re really looking at this as an opportunity and another way to protect public health,” said Spence. “There shouldn’t be any lead lines in any drinking water distribution systems.”

    Elsewhere, some Republicans, such as Indiana state Sen. Eric Koch, are leading the charge to replace the pipes despite historical pushback in conservative states against federal mandates. He said lawmakers should consider the harm — and long-term costs — caused by delaying the cleanup of lead from drinking water.

    In March, Indiana’s Republican Gov. Eric Holcomb signed a unanimously approved bill, which Koch authored, designed to lower costs for replacing customer-owned lead service lines. Under the law, landlords are required to enroll in a state-approved program to have their lead pipes removed at no cost by their water utility or pay for replacement themselves.

    Koch said estimates for replacing customer-owned service lines are around $8,000, though the cost could be significantly higher for some properties. But by starting the work now, Koch said, utilities can avoid price inflation and ultimately remove pipes more cost efficiently.

    Meanwhile, time is running out to publish the Biden administration’s proposed rules in the Federal Register. Water utilities will be required to comply with the Trump rules as of Oct. 16 unless the EPA publishes the newer rules before then, said Erik Olson, a senior strategic director of the National Resources Defense Council, an advocacy group. It remains unknown what the June 28 Supreme Court ruling on agency rulemaking, known as the “Chevron deference” decision, will mean for either set of rules.

    A deadline is also looming for the 60-day “look-back” period under the Congressional Review Act, during which a regulation can be repealed. If control of Congress or the White House flips with the November election, the Biden administration’s rules could be repealed under an emboldened Congress even before the January swearing in of new officeholders.

    “Depending on how the election goes, it could become a hot issue,” said Tom Neltner, national director of the advocacy organization Unleaded Kids.

    KFF Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at KFF—an independent source of health policy research, polling, and journalism. Learn more about KFF.

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    Sandy West, KFF Health News

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  • Donald Trump, Famously Beard-Averse, Has Reservations About J.D. Vance’s Facial Hair: Report

    Donald Trump, Famously Beard-Averse, Has Reservations About J.D. Vance’s Facial Hair: Report

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    There are many reasons to fear Donald Trump naming Ohio senator J.D. Vance as his 2024 running mate. For one thing, there’s Vance’s regurgitation of right-wing lies about the 2020 election. For another, there’s the fact that he has not committed to accepting the results of the upcoming election. In between, there’s his stance on abortion (he’s compared it to slavery and has said, of exceptions for rape and incest, that “two wrong don’t make a right”); his stance on gender-affirming care (he wants to ban it for minors and has introduced legislation that would make providing such care to them a felony punishable by up to 25 years in prison); his views on marriage (he’s suggested people should stay in violent marriages for their children and has criticized no-fault divorce); and his views on America’s epidemic of gun violence (he’s called efforts to ban bump stocks a “huge distraction”). Among other things!

    But for Trump, there appears to be just one thing about Vance to lose sleep over, and that’s the Ohio lawmaker’s facial hair. Yes, really.

    The Bulwark’s Marc Caputo and Tim Miller report that while Trump has praised Vance’s “beautiful” blue eyes and long lashes, the hair on the senator’s face gives the ex-president pause. “J.D. has a beard. But Trump is a clean-shaven guy. He just doesn’t like facial hair,” a person familiar with Trump’s thinking, who supports Vance as VP, told the outlet. “You just never know.” As for why Vance wouldn’t just take a razor to his face and never look back, well, it’s apparently not so simple. “It’s probably out of the question for Vance because of how young he is and looks,” The Bulwark notes, and Trump “wants someone who is experienced—or at least looks experienced.” Sans beard, a Trump adviser said, “Vance looks like he’s 12.”

    Does all of this sound completely absurd? Yes. But is it completely in line with what we’ve long known regarding (1) Trump’s views on facial hair and (2) the surface-level details he cares about when he hires people? Also yes.

    Here’s The Bulwark again:

    Trump’s aversion to facial hair is legendary. On Father’s Day in 2020, Trump told his son Don Jr. to shave his COVID quarantine beard and compared it unfavorably to Ted Cruz[’s] and Rand Paul’s. And in 2016, The Washington Post reported, John Bolton might not have made the cut for secretary of state because of his trademarked mustache. But then Trump’s pick for national security adviser, Michael Flynn, fell apart. And Trump seemed to overcome his facial trichophobia by choosing Bolton as a replacement.

    “Look, this mustache thing, well, my father had a mustache,” Trump told Bolton at a meeting [at] Mar-a-Lago, according to Bolton, who relayed the vignette to The Bulwark. “That was like him saying, ‘Don’t worry about it.’ I’m not sure it was a Freudian thing. But that was the sum total of the conversation,” said Bolton. [As for] whether a full beard would be simply too much for Trump, Bolton was honest: “I don’t know.”

    As president, Trump reportedly chose not to reappoint Janet Yellen as Federal Reserve chair in part because he thought she was too short for the job. He also described Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh, two of his Supreme Court nominees, as being out of “central casting,” suggesting senators should have supported them because of that. Speaking to Fox News in 2019, he said he found it “tough” to stick to his guns on withdrawing from Afghanistan when “great-looking” generals advised him not to.

    So yeah, this beard thing checks out.

    They’re afraid of him because they think he might start WW III for the f–k of it

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    Bess Levin

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  • The Far Right Is Already Demonizing Kamala Harris

    The Far Right Is Already Demonizing Kamala Harris

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    Far-right communities online are already demonizing Vice President Kamala Harris after speculation that she may replace President Joe Biden as the Democratic nominee in the US election.

    But rather than focusing on her policies, experience, or ability to do the job, the vicious attacks have focused instead on her sex life, her race, and rethreading old conspiracies about her eligibility to be president.

    These attacks have been spurred on by former President Donald Trump. “He just quit, you know—he’s quitting the race,” Trump said of Biden, in a video first reported by the Daily Beast last week and subsequently posted by Trump to his Truth Social account. “That means we have Kamala,” Trump adds. “She’s so bad. She’s so pathetic. She’s so fucking bad.”

    On July 4, Trump posted about Harris on Truth Social. “She did poorly in the Democrat Nominating process, starting out at Number Two, and ending up defeated and dropping out, even before getting to Iowa, but that doesn’t mean she’s not a ‘highly talented’ politician!” he wrote. “Just ask her Mentor, the Great Willie Brown of San Francisco.”

    Trump’s comments referenced Harris’ relationship with Brown, the former mayor of San Francisco, in the mid-1990s. Though right-wing critics have accused her of having an affair with Brown because he was married at the time, a Reuters fact check from 2020 outlines how Brown had been separated from his wife for a decade before he began dating Harris.

    The White House pushed back against Trump’s attacks. “I think it’s gross, I think it’s disturbing,” Karine Jean-Pierre, White House press secretary, told reporters on Friday. “She should be respected in the role that she has as vice president. She should be respected like any other vice president before her who was in that room. It is appalling that, I’m going to be careful here, that a former president is saying that about a current vice president. And we should call that out—it is not OK.”

    But after Trump’s comments, the former president’s supporters and far-right figures quickly began to attack Harris.

    Harris has served in elected office for decades as a district attorney, state attorney general, senator, and vice president. Still, the vast majority of the attacks were both racist and sexist, and made some reference to her performing sexual acts and insinuating that they had to do with her success.

    “Kamala is just as brain dead as Biden,” far-right troll Laura Loomer wrote on X on Wednesday. “She pretends to be black, she has a documented history of giving blowjobs to Willie Brown to climb the ladder, and she’s obsessed with killing babies.”

    “Willi Brown’s F–k toy makes good,” one member of the extremist message board The Donald wrote in response to a post about her possibly replacing Biden as the Democratic nominee.

    Far-right posters also suggested that her race has played a major role in her success.

    “This is why DEI is particularly dangerous: idiots like her are lifted up above far smarter people so she starts to believe she’s the smartest one in the room,” a member of The Donald wrote last week.

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    David Gilbert

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  • Senator J.D. Vance, Echoing Donald Trump, Is Claiming He’s Alright With Abortion Pills

    Senator J.D. Vance, Echoing Donald Trump, Is Claiming He’s Alright With Abortion Pills

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    On NBC’s Meet the Press Sunday morning, Ohio Senator and vice presidential hopeful J.D. Vance said he supports access to the abortion pill mifepristone—echoing what Donald Trump said just over a week ago on the debate stage.

    “On the question of the abortion pill,” Vance began, “the Supreme Court made a decision in saying that the American people should have access to that medication, Donald Trump has supported that opinion, I support that opinion.”

    He was referring to the court’s recent rejection of an attempt to limit access to mifepristone—which is safer than both penicillin and Viagra. Their ruling still left open the possibility for future attacks on the medication, which accounted for 63 percent of all abortions in 2023 and has been a lifeline for pregnant people in states with strict bans.

    When asked by CNN debate moderator Dana Bash if he would block abortion medication, the former president said, “first of all, the Supreme Court just approved the abortion pill. And I agree with their decision to have done that, and I will not block it.” Earlier that week, Trump told a crowd of evangelicals, “You have to go with your heart. You have to also remember you have to get elected.”

    With the Republican National Convention kicking off on July 15 in Milwaukee, those on the right seem to be trying to get on the same page about how they should talk about abortion—which about 1 in 8 voters have said is the most important issue driving their vote.

    Vance’s response came after Meet the Press host Kristen Welker asked the senator about his position on Project 2025—a GOP playbook for how another four years of Trump should go. The project is organized by The Heritage Foundation, a conservative think tank, and is made up of a coalition of other conservative organizations. Despite former Trump administration alums like housing secretary Ben Carson, White House trade adviser Peter Navarro, and director of the Office of Management and Budget Russ Vought being involved in Project 2025, the former president has attempted to distance himself from the playbook, claiming he has “no idea who is behind it.”

    “Abortion pills pose the single greatest threat to unborn children in a post-Roe world,” Project 2025’s “Mandate for Leadership: The Conservative Promise” reads. “Now that the Supreme Court has acknowledged that the Constitution contains no right to an abortion,” it continues, “the FDA is ethically and legally obliged to revisit and withdraw its initial approval.”

    “The Heritage Foundation does a lot of good work. It does a lot of things that I disagree with, a lot of things that I agree with,” Vance told Welker. “I guarantee there are things that Trump likes and dislikes about that 900-page document,” he continued, referring to the mandate. “But he is the person who will determine the agenda into the next administration.”

    Vance said he hasn’t gotten the call from Trump asking him to officially run with him. “Most importantly, Kristen, we’re just trying to work to elect Donald Trump. Whoever the vice president is, he’s got a lot of good people he could choose from.”

    Previously, Vance has been vehement in his anti-abortion stances.

    In 2021, after the Texas legislature passed a near-total abortion ban, Vance heralded the move. “My view on this has been very clear,” he said, “it’s not whether a woman should be forced to bring a child to term” but “whether a child should be allowed to live even though the circumstances of that child’s birth are somehow inconvenient or a problem to society.”

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    Katie Herchenroeder

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  • President Biden will speak at Philly church on Sunday after canceling teachers union speech

    President Biden will speak at Philly church on Sunday after canceling teachers union speech

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    President Joe Biden has new plans to speak at a predominantly Black church in Philadelphia on Sunday after his reelection campaign canceled initial plans elsewhere.

    The campaign said that Biden will give remarks after Sunday services in the morning, though it did not specify which church or what time the speech will take place. In the afternoon, Biden will then travel to the Harrisburg area for an ice cream social at a Biden-Harris campaign office.


    MORE: Wharton State Forest wildfire in South Jersey is 60% contained, says fire service


    Biden was originally going to speak at the National Education Association’s annual conference, pulling out because the union representing NEA’s staffers declared a strike. NEASO, the staff union, is picketing outside the Pennsylvania Convention Center and the NEA has halted its remaining programming.

    Sunday’s campaign stop comes at a crucial time for Biden, who is facing calls from within his own party to drop out from the presidential race after a highly criticized debate performance on June 27. 

    On Friday, Biden appeared in Madison, Wisconsin, telling the crowd at a campaign speech that he would not step down. Also that night, ABC News aired an interview with Biden, with George Stephanopoulos asking the president questions about his age, cognitive ability and polling against former President Donald Trump.

    Speaking to Stephanopoulos, Biden characterized the debate as a “bad night” and had a “really bad cold,” and that his poor performance was “nobody’s fault” but his own. As to what would convince him to stand aside from the race, Biden said only “the Lord Almighty” could do so.

    As of Saturday morning, five Democrats in the U.S. House of Representatives have called for Biden to exit the race.

    Biden has campaigned in Philadelphia several times for the 2024 presidential race, most recently at Girard College in May with Vice President Kamala Harris in an effort to court Black voters. Recently, Trump made a speech at Temple University on June 22.

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    Chris Compendio

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