Russian, Chinese, and Iranian state-backed hackers have been active throughout the 2024 United States campaign season, compromising digital accounts associated with political campaigns, spreading disinformation, and probing election systems. But in a report from early October, the threat-sharing and coordination group known as the Election Infrastructure ISAC warned that cybercriminals like ransomware attackers pose a far greater risk of launching disruptive attacks than foreign espionage actors.
While state-backed actors were emboldened following Russia’s meddling in the 2016 US presidential election, the report points out that they favor intelligence-gathering and influence operations rather than disruptive attacks, which would be viewed as direct hostility against the US government. Ideologically and financially motivated actors, on the other hand, generally aim to cause disruption with hacks like ransomware or DDoS attacks.
The document was first obtained by the national security transparency nonprofit Property of the People and viewed by WIRED. The US Department of Homeland Security, which contributed to the report and distributed it, did not return WIRED’s requests for comment. The Center for Internet Security, which runs the Election Infrastructure ISAC, declined to comment.
“Since the 2022 midterm elections, financially and ideologically motivated cyber criminals have targeted US state and local government entity networks that manage or support election processes,” the alert states. “In some cases, successful ransomware attacks and a distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attack on such infrastructure delayed election-related operations in the affected state or locality but did not compromise the integrity of voting processes … Nation-state-affiliated cyber actors have not attempted to disrupt US elections infrastructure, despite reconnaissance and occasionally acquiring access to non-voting infrastructure.”
According to DHS statistics highlighted in the report, 95 percent of “cyber threats to elections” were unsuccessful attempts by unknown actors. Two percent were unsuccessful attempts by known actors, and 3 percent were successful attempts “to gain access or cause disruption.” The report emphasizes that threat intelligence sharing and collaboration between local, state, and federal authorities help prevent breaches and mitigate the fallout of successful attacks.
In general, government-backed hackers may stoke geopolitical tension by conducting particularly aggressive digital espionage, but their activity isn’t inherently escalatory so long as they are abiding by espionage norms. Criminal hackers are bound by no such restrictions, though they can call too much attention to themselves if their attacks are too disruptive and risk a law enforcement crackdown.
During Donald Trump’s rally at Madison Square Garden on Oct. 27, 2024, podcast host and comedian Tony Hinchcliffe, who referred to Puerto Rico as “a floating island of garbage” — a line that drew some groans from the crowd — and crudely claimed Latinos “enjoy making babies.”
REUTERS/Andrew Kelly
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As counterprotesters picketed outside, loyalists of Donald Trump gathered inside Madison Square Garden for an hours-long rally on Sunday that saw one speaker after another praise the former president and denigrate his opponents, often with racist or dehumanizing terms.
Trump used the iconic venue to deliver his closing argument against Democratic Vice President Kamala Harris as the clock ticked down toward the Nov. 5 general election. While Trump has insisted New York state is in play this year, recent polls have him trailing Harris by nearly 20 points, and the Empire State has not gone for a Republican presidential candidate since Ronald Reagan in 1984.
Trump’s campaign said the event at the 19,500-seat arena, which can cost upwards of $1 million to rent, was sold out. Tickets were free and available on a first-come-first-served basis.
Her comments drew a rebuke from Trump and Republican leaders.
“She said it’s just like the 1930s. No, it’s not,” Trump said at a rally in Michigan on Friday. “This is called Make America Great Again, that’s all this is.”
Tucker Carlson, a former Fox News broadcaster, mocked Kamala Harris’ ethnicity.REUTERS/Brendan McDermid
Nevertheless, the parade of speakers who took the microphone ahead of Trump on Sunday delivered speeches dripping in offensive rhetoric and hateful terms — perhaps none more so than podcast host and comedian Tony Hinchcliffe, who referred to Puerto Rico as “a floating island of garbage” — a line that drew some groans from the crowd — and crudely claimed Latinos “enjoy making babies.”
“There’s no pulling out. They don’t do that. They c– inside, just like they did to our country,” Hinchcliffe told the crowd, which garnered more laughter.
That drew the ire of the League of United Latin American Citizens, which demanded an apology from the Trump campaign over Hinchcliffe’s remarks.
“We are shocked but not surprised that the Trump campaign in New York today has stooped to allow a speaker to call the island of Puerto Rico ‘floating garbage,’” said Roman Palomares, LULAC National President. “LULAC does not care how they spin it; these words spewed by a so-called comedian should have never been allowed and should have been immediately rejected and condemned by Donald Trump.”
Frankie Miranda, president and CEO of the Hispanic Federation, urged Latinos voting in the election “make it clear that these remarks are as unacceptable as the candidate who gave it a national platform today.”
“Millions of Puerto Ricans in states like Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Florida, and New York may no longer live on the island, but they still revere it as their ancestral and cultural home, and you cannot continue to disrespect us and think that we are not going to remember that when we go to the ballot box,” Miranda said.
More than 1.1 million people of Puerto Rican descent live in New York. US Rep. Ritchie Torres sought to speak on their behalf Sunday night, urging all to “ignore the haters heaping scorn on Puerto Rico at Donald Trump’s rally.”
House Minority Leader and Brooklyn US Rep. Hakeem Jeffries sought to tie Hinchcliffe’s remarks to Republican House members in the city suburbs who are up for re-election. Their fate could determine which party controls the House in January.
“Desperate House Republicans from Long Island and the Hudson Valley shamefully invited this filth into our community,” Jeffries posted on X (formerly Twitter). “Vote them all out.”
But Hinchcliffe was only one of several speakers Sunday at the Trump rally who were comfortable using offensive language about their fellow Americans, often receiving rapturous applause from the crowd.
Mike Johnson, Speaker of the House of Representatives, gestures during a rally for Republican presidential nominee and former U.S. President Donald Trump, at Madison Square Garden, in New York City, U.S. October 27, 2024. REUTERS/Carlos Barria
It came days after Republican House Speaker Mike Johnson and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell called for a lowering of the rhetoric, especially after Trump has been called a fascist by Harris and other Democrats. (Johnson also spoke at Sunday’s MSG rally.)
Former Trump aide Stephen Miller: “The criminal migrants are gone. The gangs are gone. America is for Americans, and Americans only.”
Former Fox News broadcaster Tucker Carlson: “In a country that has been taken over by a leadership class that actually despites them and their values and their history, and really hates them… to the point where they’re trying to replace them.” He went on to mock Harris as “the first Samoan, Malaysian, low-IQ, former California prosecutor” while attempting to preemptively question the legitimacy of a potential Harris victory over Trump. (Harris is the first Black and south Asian female vice president in US history.)
Radio host Sid Rosenberg: “She is some sick bastard, that Hillary Clinton. The whole f***ing party, a bunch of degenerates — lowlifes and Jew-haters, every one of them.” He also called Second Gentleman Doug Emhoff, Harris’ husband, “a crappy Jew.”
David Rem, a friend of Trump (upon hearing epithets shouted by an audience member): “She is the devil, whoever screamed that out. She is the anti-Christ.”
David Rem, a childhood friend of Republican presidential nominee and former U.S. President Donald Trump speaks during a Trump rally at Madison Square Garden, in New York, U.S., October 27, 2024. REUTERS/Andrew Kelly
Other speakers at Trump’s Sunday event include Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the former independent presidential candidate who dropped out of the race and backed Trump; billionaire Elon Musk; and Howard Lutnick, who is chair and CEO of the financial services firm Cantor Fitzgerald.
The Democratic National Committee plans to project unmissable messages in giant, all-capital letters on the New York City landmark, while Trump delivers his closing argument inside, that read “TRUMP PRAISED HITLER,” “TRUMP=UNSTABLE,” “TRUMP=UNHINGED,” “TRUMP=UNFIT,” and “TRUMP=CHEAT.”
As early voting begins in many states and Tuesday, November 5, looms, Democratic candidate Kamala Harris has leaned hard on Trump’s shortcomings as part of her own final press. During Wednesday night’s town hall broadcast on CNN, Harris said outright that she believes Trump is a fascist and a “danger to the well-being and security of the United States of America.”
Retired Marine Gen. John Kelly, who served first under Trump as his secretary of homeland security, then as his chief of staff, delivered interviews this week in which he described his former boss as a fascist as well, offering up alternate descriptors of “authoritarian” and “dictator,” for the thesaurus-minded among readers. He also recalled that Trump “commented more than once that, ‘You know, Hitler did some good things, too,’” a replay of a 2021 sound bite, and in another interview recalled Trump speaking wistfully of “Hitler’s generals,” resurfacing another old chestnut that made headlines in 2022 and subsequently appears to have vacated the population’s minds.
Kelly recalled asking for clarification that Trump meant Hitler’s generals, and upon receiving it, Kelly reminded Trump, “You do know that they tried to kill Hitler three times and almost pulled it off?” There have been two apparentassassination attempts on Trump in the past three months alone.
Trump’s admiration of Hitler is so old-hat that his late ex-wife Ivana Trump revealed in a 1990 Vanity Fair article that Trump kept a collection of Hitler’s speeches, My New Order, in a cabinet beside his bed.
When asked about the book, Trump responded, “If I had these speeches, and I am not saying that I do, I would never read them.”
“It is deeply troubling and incredibly dangerous that Donald Trump would invoke Adolf Hitler, the man who is responsible for the deaths of 6 million Jews and hundreds of thousands of Americans,” she said. “All of this is further evidence for the American people of who Donald Trump really is. This is a window into who Donald Trump really is from the people who know him best, from the people who worked with him side by side in the Oval Office and in the Situation Room.”
Not much seems funny about the upcoming presidential election, but comedian Paula Poundstone is coming to Phoenix on Monday to generate some laughs — and some money for the Harris/Walz campaign. Poundstone, along with fellow comedians Jimmy Tingle and Tony Tripoli, will appear in the Valley in a program called “Headliners for Harris,” presented by Mark Robert Gordon (DNC National Committeeman, AZ) and the Maricopa County LGBTQ+ Committee…
Madison Square Garden, the iconic venue known for Knicks basketball games and Billy Joel concerts, will host Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump tonight in deep-blue New York City. With Election Day just over a week away, more than 40 million voters have already weighed in on whose vision of America they hope prevails.
Trump’s choice of venue—in a solidly Democratic city in a state that hasn’t gone red since electing Ronald Reagan—appears to have more to do with gaining media attention, bringing in big fundraising numbers, and staking a kind of claim on the former president’s birthplace than changing hearts and minds.
The city has amped up security presence around the “World’s Most Famous Arena,” where eager supporters have been outside since before sunrise.
“It’s the New York, but it’s also, you know, it’s MSG, it’s Madison Square Garden,” Trump said during a recent FOX News Radio interview. “Guys like you and I, that means a lot, those words. Madison Square Garden, right? Don’t you think so? … It’s a very big stop.”
Joining Trump on stage, according to a lineup the campaign provided, is a star-studded cast of MAGA loyalists who are all in. This group—ranging from elected officials to personal friends of Trump—have been instrumental in maintaining his campaign, defending his increasingly inflammatory remarks, and pushing right-wing ideology into seemingly every corner of the internet. While some of tonight’s speakers hold personal, political, and professional relationships with the former president, they also represent particular spheres of influence in the ever-evolving MAGA Republican Party.
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Here’s a look at the who’s who for tonight:
ELECTED OFFICIALS
After spending the morning on Sunday’s news shows, Republican vice presidential candidate JD Vance will be at MSG tonight. He’s joined by Speaker of the House Mike Johnson, who recently claimed that Trump’s medical records are “irrelevant.”
Other House representatives, Elise Stefanik of upstate New York and Byron Donalds of Southwest Florida, will also speak. Stefanik has gone from a moderate to a MAGA spokeswoman, giving an impassioned speech at the 2020 GOP Convention about “the Democrats’ baseless and illegal impeachment sham and the media’s endless obsession with it.” Donalds was reportedly on the phone with Trump when he got the news that the classified documents case had been dismissed, noting that he personally thought the case was “insane.”
FORMER AND CURRENT TRUMP ADMINISTRATION
Former New York City mayor Rudy Giuliani, who has had a lot of Ls recently, will be at MSG today. After Trump lost to President Joe Biden in the 2020 presidential election, he chose Giuliani to head the legal efforts challenging the results. As a result of his actions in pursuit of that goal, Giuliani has been ordered by a federal judge to turn over, as Vanity Fair’s Bess Levinput it, “Basically All Earthly Possessions to Election Workers He Defamed.”
Pennsylvania governor Josh Shapiro greets supporters in Lititz. Photo: Alex Kent for New York Magazine
Rallies of serious electoral consequence aren’t usually held deep in a farm on Butter Road at 10 a.m. on a weekday. But last Thursday morning, in Lititz, Pennsylvania, a few hundred mostly older white voters gathered outside a barn covered in solar panels, clutching “Eagles Fans for Harris” signs, and swaying as they heard a parade of local Republicans reveal their support for Kamala Harris and their revulsion with Donald Trump. Jim Greenwood, who’d been recruited to run for Congress by Newt Gingrich three decades ago, diagnosed Trump with malignant narcissism and reassured anyone who worried that Harris was too liberal that Congress would have plenty of Republicans so she’d have to reach across the aisle. Speaker after speaker, including Georgia’s former Republican lieutenant governor Geoff Duncan, brought up John Kelly’s warning that his former boss is a fascist. Men in t-shirts identifying themselves as veterans nodded quietly next to guys in Teamsters hoodies and a grave-looking woman holding a “Republicans for Harris” sign as Georgia senator Raphael Warnock, the first Democrat to speak, declared the election would be a “moral moment in America” and a test of the country’s character. The crowd of a few hundred nodded and applauded politely, and lit up a bit as Warnock spoke.
But these voters were clearly waiting for the keynote speaker.
When Josh Shapiro stepped forward to the lectern, he seemed unsurprised by the volume of cheers, like he was used to it. Pennsylvania’s governor, dressed in a dark suit with no tie and black leather dress sneakers, thanked Duncan and Warnock for coming to conservative Lancaster County, talked up Harris’s economic agenda, and quickly pivoted to Trump. The ex-president, he argued, didn’t even have the baseline “level of respect that we try and teach our kids every day,” he said. “Donald Trump is constantly trying to create ‘others’ in our society, trying to separate people out.”
He celebrated the country’s and state’s recent economic gains, then built towards a patriotic crescendo, nearly yelling: “This is a great nation, and we should have leaders that want to lift us up, not tear us down! I’m proud to be an American and I want a president who’s proud of his nation!” He was clearly playing for the cameras at the back of the crowd, abutting a sprawling pasture, not far from a leftover cow pie. It was obvious that the voters who’d traveled to the out-of-the-way event on a working morning were likely already converted to the Harris cause, but his real audience was current and former Republicans who might be watching on the local news and may prove critical to delivering the state to Harris.
The final campaign stretch is proving to be a practically sleepless one for Shapiro, who was scheduled to criss-cross the state for in-person events and interviews for the remainder of the election. By the end of the week, he was slated for his 60th appearance for Harris since she became their party’s nominee three months ago, the vast majority of them in Pennsylvania, where he is unquestionably her top surrogate after falling just short of being selected as her running mate. It’s a strange position for Shapiro, who is still celebrated by Democrats for his blowout win in the governor’s race two years ago, but who is now a prominent face of a campaign that will likely be won or lost not on the airwaves, but with door-knocking and voter mobilization — operations over which he has no significant influence.
That morning, a poll conducted by Franklin and Marshall College, just 25 minutes away from the farm, also in Lancaster County, was the latest to call the Trump-Harris race an effective tie. For days I’d been hearing Democrats sigh that they wouldn’t be surprised if the state’s final margin ended up in the area of 20,000 votes, a quarter the size of Joe Biden’s historically tight win four years earlier. Yet those same Democrats all had the same reason for cautious confidence: the campaign’s 2 million door-knocks, its 50 offices and more than 475 staffers in Pennsylvania, compared to the mysterious absence of Trump’s ground game, which appears to have been largely outsourced to Elon Musk’s super PAC.
“Why am I optimistic, and why am I not worried about polls that show it to be a statistical dead heat? I think the groundwork has been laid more effectively by Kamala Harris,” Shapiro, 51, told me a few minutes after he left the stage in Lititz. “I think the Harris ground game is far more effective than Donald Trump in driving up the turnout, and I really do think at the end of the day, for those voters who are going to walk into the polls on November 5, they do not want to go back to the chaos of Donald Trump. All of those things combined are going to lead to a Harris victory.”
Shapiro has been at the center of the Democrats’ push from the start, but especially since Harris, who is far less familiar to Pennsylvanians, took over the ticket from Biden, a native son who represented neighboring Delaware in the Senate for decades. Shapiro’s blitz on TV and on the campaign trail was to support her candidacy, but also to pursue his own ambition to become her running mate, though he has kept at it even after Harris picked Tim Walz. Notably, he introduced Harris in Philadelphia when she introduced Walz as her veep candidate, and other tentpole moments followed: He was ubiquitous at her convention in Chicago the next month and was the first person in the spin room to declare victory for her after her debate with Trump in September. More recently, he addressed Harris’s top donors at their final retreat in Philly and joined governors Gretchen Whitmer of Michigan and Tony Evers of Wisconsin on a bus tour through their states. But most of his campaign work has been less splashy. In addition to barnstorming, he has done more than 30 television, radio, and podcast interviews, including on local stations that have been featuring him for years but draw no national attention.
Harris’s Pennsylvania operation has been happy to rely on him to do public messaging, for obvious reasons. Most Democratic research shows that Shapiro is by far the most popular political figure they have in the state, and at least some suburban voters have been selecting his name on their ballots since he first won a seat in the statehouse 20 years ago. And the internal data also show that many voters perceive Shapiro as a moderate. His 15-point win in 2022’s governor’s race came partially thanks to Republicans who couldn’t stomach his far-right conspiracist opponent, Doug Mastriano. So Shapiro has married events like the one in Lancaster County with appearances on Fox News and the conservative WSBA radio in York.
Shapiro has been accused of copying Barack Obama’s speaking style, and he can sometimes come across like a walking Pennsylvania tourism ad. (At one point on Thursday, as we talked about what distinguishes his state’s voters, he started a sentence with, “This is an incredible, beautiful, wonderful tapestry of America right here in Pennsylvania.”) But in Lititz, his audience was rapt.
“This is a familiar-looking coalition for me. A bunch of Democrats — we got some Democrats in the house — and a bunch of like-minded Republicans and independents who are here as well. You all helped power me forward to give me the opportunity to serve as the 48th governor of this great commonwealth,” he told the crowd from the stage. Now, he continued, “this coalition is being called upon to again do the hard work of winning an election, yes, of helping us get stuff done in this country, yes, but of also saving the nation.”
Still, a few minutes later, off-stage, Shapiro cautioned against directly comparing this race to his last one. For one thing, it might raise expectations unduly in a contest likely to be decided by just a point or less. More specifically, Harris and Trump are known quantities in a race with a much higher likely turnout, and Shapiro is far from the point this time. If anything, some Pennsylvania Democrats say, he is risking his own standing by campaigning so aggressively for Harris given that he won more votes than Biden did when they were both on the ballot in 2020, with Shapiro up for re-election as attorney general. “It would be kind of easy to sit back, not really take a side, and preserve all his gains with Republicans and independents,” says Conor Lamb, the former Pittsburgh-area congressman.
But some longtime Democratic officeholders who’ve watched Shapiro’s rise aren’t so sure. In their eyes, he is a hyper-ambitious political operator who is probably happy to help, but who is also well aware that he could rise to the top of Democrats’ 2028 presidential lists if Harris loses but he maintains visibility in the most hotly contested battleground. This group has long been skeptical of Shapiro, who has occasionally clashed with colleagues in Pennsylvania, including Senator John Fetterman, who himself has appeared repeatedly for Harris within the state — but not alongside Shapiro. To this crowd, it’s gospel that Harris chose Walz over Shapiro not because of personal chemistry with the Minnesota governor or, as the rumor went, because of fear of backlash over Shapiro’s past positions on Israel and his Jewish faith. Rather, they thought he was ruled out because of her discomfort with Shapiro’s apparent ambitions to be president himself one day. Yet Shapiro and Harris have in fact kept in touch since she chose Walz.
There’s little doubt among top Democrats in Pennsylvania that Shapiro does have a unique connection to the state’s voters, but they also believe that it would be stupid to rely on him too much. “I always try to caution people to remember that though he won by a lot, it’s unfair to assign him a burden to try to deliver something outsized,” says Lamb. It’s lost on none of these people that for all his popularity, when he won two years ago Shapiro still received fewer votes than Trump had when he lost Pennsylvania in 2020.
Despite Shapiro’s political stature, he has had relatively little to do with the day-to-day direction of Harris’s statewide campaign. Unlike in states such as North Carolina, where Harris’s campaign is mostly run by advisors to Democratic governor Roy Cooper, the governor’s inner orbit and the Harris campaign’s stateleadership have little overlap. (Many of her Pennsylvania campaign aides have worked in recent cycles for other statewide leaders, like Fetterman.) As a result, he has stayed out of a recent spat that has shadowed the Harris campaign in Pennsylvania.
Philadelphia is the heart of the party’s vote in the state, and one place where Harris will need blockbuster turnout. Some operatives close to the mayor, Cherelle Parker, have groused about Nikki Lu, Harris’s state director who comes from Pittsburgh, specifically blaming her for organizational shortcomings like insufficient yard sign distribution and campaign literature not being translated into the right language. In recent days, some Democrats critical of Lu have been whispering about how not long ago a bus of Chinese Americans fluent in various native languages arrived from New York to canvas Philly’s Chinatown — only to be dispatched to largely Black neighborhoods on the north side of the city.
To hear people close to the Harris operation tell it, these complaints are overblown — and more about specific Philadelphia operatives wanting jobs and credit than any fundamental strategy or expertise problem. (The doors of Chinatown did not need another round of knocking, some Democrats told me this week, so the entire bus saga had been exaggerated in importance.) More than one local Democrat pointed out that many of the complaints — published most prominently in Politico and the Inquirer, but also in the Wall Street Journal — appeared to come from allies of Mayor Parker, and that two of Harris’s in-state leaders managed mayoral campaigns against her last year. Parker herself has appeared with Harris as recently as this week and Harris is slated to spend Sunday campaigning across Philadelphia yet again. Still, Harris supporters have remained concerned about turnout in Philadelphia and this fall Lu’s team brought in a handful of longtime Philly-based strategists, and in recent weeks Paulette Aniskoff, an Obama confidant who ran the state’s field program for him in 2008, joined up to help manage the get-out-the-vote push.
Many Democrats have largely chalked the Philly issues up to what they call organized chaos. “Let’s not forget that in a relatively short period of time we’ve had to coordinate the Biden-Harris team, the Harris-Walz team, the Philadelphia Democratic City Committee, the Pennsylvania State Committee, and a number of former President Obama’s highly successful top team members,” says former mayor Michael Nutter. “On the best day, coordination is always a challenge. But at the end of the day, we always get our shit together.”
Still, the example of 2016 — when Hillary Clinton became the first Democratic nominee to lose the state since 1988 — is never far from anyone’s mind, and everyone on the ground working for Harris believes, as Nutter put it, “the candidate who wins Pennsylvania becomes the next President of the United States of America.” This is not technically true, but it is basic electoral math. The state’s 19 electoral votes are the most of any of the seven battlegrounds, and both parties see their candidate’s likeliest path to victory running through the commonwealth. This has been the case for well over a year, but this fall, the race has become completely unavoidable there: Every suburban street is lined with yard signs and every highway with political billboards, every screen is inundated with campaign ads proclaiming Trump unfit for office, Harris a California extremist, and both candidates the savior of the American economy and your children’s future. When Obama was ready to return to the campaign trail this month, the Harris campaign made sure his first stop was Pittsburgh.
Harris supporters in conservative Lancaster County. Photo: Alex Kent for New York Magazine
But there is no single closing message about Trump for Pennsylvania’s Democrats, perhaps because there can’t be when they’re trying to appeal to so many different kinds of voters who have so many different kinds of thoughts on the ex-president. A simple drive through the state reveals the diversity of messages. In Philadelphia, Richard Hooker Jr., the leader of the city’s Teamsters, considers Trump “a wild man trying to be a dictator.” But when it comes to turning out union members and mobilizing their families and friends in coordination with local Democrats, the labor activist, a UPS package handler and the first Black leader of his local, takes a different tack, telling them that Trump “is the ultimate employer, and he is very anti-worker.” He argues that “Your employer does not want you to have a pension, does not want you to have the right to strike, does not want you to have union wages, does not want you to have a contract. And neither does Trump.”
Shapiro suggested to me that he had yet another preferred approach. His own focus in the final days would be on genuinely undecided voters who are just now beginning to pay attention to the election in the first place. “We live and breathe this stuff, but a lot of folks are just tuning in and they want to know what she’s really like, what she’s really gonna do,” he said in Lititz. For these voters, Shapiro continued, the case against Trump has little to do with fascism. “I think if you’re undecided right now, you care about the future of this country, but you also care about what’s happening in your home, at your job, with your kids, and I want to make sure that there is a clear understanding with those folks about the clear contrast that exists between Kamala Harris and Donald Trump when it comes to those economic issues.”
Lancaster County, which is home to Amish country, is a prime example of the kind of Republican-heavy area where Harris has no real expectation of winning, but where she instead wants to minimize her margin of loss. (Trump won it by 20 points when he first ran and 16 points in 2020.) It’s a significant part of any responsible Democratic strategy in a state whose electoral geography has shifted rapidly in recent years. Both campaigns are spending big chunks of time and energy fighting for votes in the historically Democratic area around Pittsburgh that now skews red — an area where organized labor leaders had been close to Biden but where their rank-and-file has been less convinced by Harris. Meanwhile, though he has focused primarily on immigration and inflation, Trump’s campaign against Harris has also zeroed in on her past support for banning fracking, an important part of the state’s economy. (She has backed away from that position.)
Yet with such a tight expected margin, the campaign has spread far beyond traditional lines, both sides figuring that any small slice of voters could make the difference. Each party has courted the growing Puerto Rican vote around the state, including in mid-sized cities like Bethlehem, as Trump seeks to replicate the kind of inroads with Latino voters he’s seen elsewhere in the country. Harris has spent time in rural corners but has trained much of her focus on building her support in suburban areas, especially those where white women play a significant electoral role — even if they have tended to lean more conservative in previous years. Private polling in congressional races shows Harris taking advantage of a bigger than expected gender gap, largely thanks to her focus on abortion.
Democrats have put an extra emphasis on abortion in the counties around Philadelphia that represent a huge portion of the state’s overall vote. Delaware, Bucks, Chester, and Montgomery — Shapiro’s home base — have more than 2.5 million voters. In 2020, Biden overperformed in these counties, which saved him from slippage within Philadelphia. Now, Harris organizers and advertisers have been fanning out across the counties and saturating the local media market with messaging about Trump’s threat to abortion rights.
It’s Philly itself that still concerns some Democrats. Though Harris is still very likely to win it by a huge margin, many local officeholders remain on edge about turnout there being on a long-term downward trajectory, and how Harris will fare among Black men. Still, some strategists believe the agita about Democrats’ local operation are of the quadrennial anxiety variety rather than serious cause for immediate concern, and that a Harris victory would be the result of Philadelphians turning out in large numbers.
A few hours before we spoke, Shapiro had done an interview on a Philadelphia radio show with a large Black audience and showed up at a barbershop with Warnock. Shapiro has also spent time talking to Jewish Democrats about anti-Semitism, and he is a regular presence on Spanish-language radio in the state. “Any time I can have real, meaningful conversations with people who weren’t expecting to see me, who weren’t expecting to have the ear of their governor, you get for-real for-real from that, and that tells me a lot about the direction a campaign is going to go,” Shapiro said. “You get real talk.”
In Lititz, he was single-minded about trying to appeal to Republicans. Relentlessly on-message, he insisted that he’s just a good soldier, if an especially influential one. “I’ve worked hard to create a bipartisan coalition to get stuff done in Pennsylvania. Well, to win elections, and you see part of that coalition here, but also to govern effectively,” he told me. “So anything I can do to be able to say to independents, and in Republicans in particular, ‘Y’all trusted me, you gave me the keys to the office and I’m delivering for you, I believe Kamala Harris can do the same, so give her a shot” — I’m going to continue to do that, all over Pennsylvania.”
Shapiro and I were standing alone in a field with just his press secretary and a photographer. Across the field, a handful of voters were still staring over at us, hoping for selfies with the governor over half an hour after the event had ended. Warnock, who’d been at Shapiro’s side all morning, was already on his way back to Atlanta, where he’d meet up with Harris, Obama, Bruce Springsteen, Samuel L. Jackson, Spike Lee, and Tyler Perry for a rally with 20,000 Georgians.
Before she joined Warnock in Georgia, Harris spent the morning in Philadelphia. The next morning, as the Democrats were ironing out plans for Bernie Sanders to visit, Walz was scheduled to touch down in Philly himself. About 24 hours after that, it was the Republican ticket’s turn in the state: J.D. Vance was headed to nearby Harrisburg and Trump to State College. But both campaigns are now trying to be everywhere in the state, all the time. That night, not far from the field where Shapiro and I were standing, the Trump team would host its own Lancaster event — a “Make America Healthy Again” town hall in neighboring Manheim with Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and Dr. Phil.
As I drove away from the farm a few minutes after the event ended, I passed an Amish man driving a horse and buggy along the side of the truck-filled highway. He rolled past one Trump 2024 poster — not far from an array of signs accusing Harris of opening the border — turned his carriage away from a cluster of “Republicans for Harris” yard signs, and waited for a while for the traffic to slow down.
With millions of Americans already voting, and just over a week until Election Day, here’s a snapshot of what Rogan and Trump covered on Friday:
Rogan Says Trump Has Been Attacked More Than Anyone In History
Rogan started the interview by talking about Trump’s appearance on The View when running for president for the first time. Back then, the crowd cheered as Trump received a warm welcome on the show.
“They all loved you,” Rogan began. “And then you actually started winning in the polls and then the machine started working towards you—there’s probably no one in history that I’ve ever seen that’s been attacked the way you’ve been attacked.”
Trump responded by discussing his work on The Apprentice, later denigrating the all-female cast of The View, “I was very popular, and all those people loved me. I mean this, some of these women, they’re so, they’re so stupid.”
Election Denialism
Throughout the entire interview, Trump continued to bring up the 2020 election, reiterating his Big Lie—that he won despite an alleged coordinated effort against him. At one point, Rogan bemoans that people always “cut off” Trump when he talks about how he won four years ago—something he wouldn’t do.
“I did great the second time. I did much better. I don’t want to get you in any disputes, but I won that second election so easy,” Trump said. The two also discussed how supposed censorship against Trump on social media and Hunter Biden’s laptop led to election interference.
“I won by like, I lost by like—I didn’t lose,” Trump said later. Rogan laughed again.
The host also compared questioning the election results and being labeled an election denier to questioning Covid-19 vaccinations and being branded anti-vax.
In 2022, Rogan was “criticized for spreading what was widely seen as misinformation about the coronavirus,” the New York Timesreported.
Trump Again Goes After Harris’s Intelligence
“Can you imagine Kamala doing this show?” Trump asked.
“She was supposed to do it, and she might do it, and I hope she does. I will talk to her like a human being,” Rogan responded.
Vice President Kamala Harris had been in talks to do a spot with Rogan, but it “didn’t pan out,” according to NBC News. Campaign spokesperson Ian Sams told MSNBC on Thursday that they “talked with Rogan and his team about the podcast, unfortunately, it isn’t going to work out right now because of the scheduling of this period of the campaign.”
“It’s time to sing a new song, a song that began 248 years ago,” she continued later. “The old notes—of downfall, discord, despair—no longer resonate. Our generations of loved ones before us are whispering a prophecy, a quest, a calling, an anthem. Our moment right now—it’s time for America to sing a new song. Our voices sing a chorus of unity. They sing a song of dignity and opportunity.”
As usual, Harris entered the stage to the sound of Beyoncé’s “Freedom.” This time, she was greeted by Queen Bey herself along with her blaring song. Harris hugged Rowland and then Beyoncé, then took the podium to stump in a state with some of the nation’s most restrictive abortion laws.
Until Friday, Beyoncé herself had kept mum on her choice of candidate. Rumors of a performance by Queen Bey on the final night of the 2024 Democratic National Convention back in August turned out to be greatly exaggerated, but, months later, in the final days before voters head to the polls, it came to fruition in Bey’s hometown.
The singer endorsed the Biden-Harris ticket back in the 2020 election, and in 2016, headlined a performance with her husband, Jay-Z, in support of Hillary Clinton’s presidential bid. Audiences have long waited for Beyoncé to speak out officially, though she’s signaled her support in other ways.
The singer’s endorsement is more than just symbolic—her stamp of approval could actually sway voters. A recent poll conducted by Newsweek found that some 40% of surveyed Gen Z voters said that they were “more likely” or “significantly more likely” to vote for a candidate who had earned Beyoncé’s endorsement.
Ahead of the full launch next week of Apple’s AI platform, Apple Intelligence, the company debuted tools this week for security researchers to evaluate its cloud infrastructure known as Private Cloud Compute. Apple has gone to great lengths to engineer a secure and private AI cloud platform, and this week’s release includes extensive detailed technical documentation of its security features as well as a research environment that is already available in the macOS Sequoia 15.1 beta release. The testing features allow researchers (or anyone) to download and evaluate the actual version of PCC software that Apple is running in the cloud at a given time. The company tells WIRED that the only modifications to the software relate to optimizing it to run in the virtual machine for the research environment. Apple also released the PCC source code and said that as part of its bug bounty program, vulnerabilities that researchers discover in PCC will be eligible for a maximum bounty payout of up to $1 million.
Over the summer, Politico, The New York Times, and The Washington Post each revealed that they’d been approached by a source offering hacked Trump campaign emails—a source whom the US Justice Department says was working on behalf of the Iranian government. The news outlets all refused to publish or report on those stolen materials. Now it appears that Iran’s hackers did eventually find outlets outside the mainstream media that were willing to release those emails. American Muckrakers, a PAC run by a Democratic operative, did publish the documents after soliciting them in a public post on X, writing, “Send it to us and we’ll get it out.”
American Muckrakers then published internal Trump campaign communications about North Carolina Republican gubernatorial candidate Mark Robinson and Florida Republican representative Anna Paulina Luna, as well as material that seemed to suggest a financial arrangement between Donald Trump and Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the third-party candidate who dropped out of the race and endorsed Trump. Independent journalist Ken Klippenstein also received and published some of the hacked material, including a research profile on Trump running mate and US senator JD Vance that the campaign assembled when assessing him for the role. Klippenstein subsequently received a visit from the FBI, he’s said, warning him that the documents were shared as part of a foreign influence campaign. Klippenstein has defended his position, arguing that the media should not serve as “gatekeeper of what the public should know.”
As Russia has both waged war and cyberwar against Ukraine, it’s also carried out a vast campaign of hacking against another neighbor to the west with whom it’s long had a fraught relationship: Georgia. Bloomberg this week revealed ahead of the Georgian election how Russia systematically penetrated the smaller country’s infrastructure and government in a yearslong series of digital intrusion operations. From 2017 to 2020, for instance, Russia’s military intelligence agency, the GRU, hacked Georgia’s Central Election Commission (just as it did in Ukraine in 2014), multiple media organizations, and IT systems at the country’s national railway company—all in addition to the attack on Georgian TV stations that the NSA pinned on the GRU’s Sandworm unit in 2020. Meanwhile, hackers known as Turla, working for the Kremlin’s KGB successor, the FSB, broke into Georgia’s Foreign Ministry and stole gigabytes of officials’ emails over months. According to Bloomberg, Russia’s hacking efforts weren’t limited to espionage but also appeared to include preparing for disruption of Georgian infrastructure like the electric grid and oil companies in the event of an escalating conflict.
For years, cybersecurity professionals have argued about what constitutes a cyberattack. An intrusion designed to destroy data, cause disruption, or sabotage infrastructure? Yes, that’s a cyberattack. A hacker breach to steal data? No. A hack-and-leak operation or an espionage mission with a disruptive clean-up phase? Probably not, but there’s room for debate. The Jerusalem Post this week, however, achieved perhaps the clearest-cut example of calling something a cyberattack—in a headline no less—that is very clearly not: disinformation on social media. The so-called “Hezbollah cyberattack” that the news outlet reported was a collection of photos of Israeli hospitals posted by “hackers” identifying as Hezbollah supporters that suggested weapons and cash were stored underneath them and that they should be attacked. The posts seemingly came in response to the Israeli Defense Forces’ repeating similar claims about hospitals in Gaza that the IDF has bombed, as well as another more recently in Lebanon’s capital city of Beirut.
“These are NOT CYBERATTACKS,” security researcher Lukasz Olejnik, the author of the books The Philosophy of Cybersecurity and Propaganda, wrote next to a screenshot of the Jerusalem Post headline on X. “Posting images to social media is not hacking. Such a bad take.”
Tim Marchman: This is rooted as you write in white supremacist beliefs. Can you unpack that a little bit?
David Gilbert: It is, and you can trace it back from the late-1960, early-1970s to a movement called Posse Comitatus, which was founded some say by a guy called William Potter Gale. He was at the time a minister in this militant anti-Semitic white nationalist quasi-religion, kind of known as Christian Identity. He believed that the sheriffs were these protectors of the citizens and that they had the power to call up militias and that they should be enshrined in law as the ultimate power law enforcement anywhere in the country. We’ve seen across the years that these far-right or Constitutional Sheriffs, no matter what they’ve done in terms of the extreme actions they’ve taken, if they have a base of supporters in their locality or in their county who believe in what they’re doing, they will be voted back into office for decades at a time.
Tim Marchman: The mandate of the public is pretty powerful, but some of these sheriffs are citing a higher source of authority. They say their power derives from God, which seems pretty unconstitutional given the separation of church and state in America. How do they respond to that?
David Gilbert: Well, they respond by saying that the separation of church and state is not something that really exists. They say that, that again is a misreading of the Constitution, and the entire Constitutional Sheriff’s movement is deeply infused with Christian nationalist beliefs and ideology. Most of the Constitutional Sheriffs who I’ve spoken to over the last six months or so are eager for the US to return to being a nation rooted in Christianity, where Christianity is at the center of all aspects of life, be that law enforcement or education or government or culture. They believe that in that society because they believe they got their power from God, that they will be the most powerful law enforcement individuals across the country.
Tim Marchman: Under this constitutional order as they understand it, is there a role for constitutional governors or constitutional mayors, or are these powers unique to sheriffs?
David Gilbert: They seem to believe that these powers are unique to sheriffs. In all the time I’ve been covering this, I’ve never heard any of them speak about other figures, whether in government or law enforcement that would hold similar powers to a sheriff. Again, that comes back to the idea that this is somehow enshrined in the Constitution. As we said, it’s not, but in their belief system, in their ideology, they can trace the sheriff. It’s one of the oldest law enforcement offices in the world. It goes right back to the UK where the sheriff did the bidding of the local magistrates and collected taxes and stuff like that. It’s obviously been exported from England to the US and it has persisted since the beginning of the US nation. They believe that, that is key to giving them the power that no one else in the US has because at a local level, they’re there to protect their citizens, and the citizens are the ones who elect them, and therefore, that is their duty. Even if other positions like a governor is elected by the people, they don’t seem to believe that, that position should have the similar kind of constitutional protections.
The Gavel outside the Supreme Court of the State of Ohio.
Even though all six Ohio Supreme Court candidates were invited to speak at a recent forum held in partnership by the City Club of Cleveland and the Ohio Debate Commission, only the Democratic candidates showed up.
The three Democratic candidates — incumbent Justice Michael Donnelly, incumbent Justice Melody Stewart, and Judge Lisa Forbes — spoke at the forum on Tuesday. Ohio Statehouse Bureau Chief Karen Kasler moderated the forum.
Republican Hamilton County Court of Common Pleas Judge Megan Shanahan, Republican Justice Joseph Deters and Republican Judge Dan Hawkins were not at the forum.
The candidates, the ballot measures, and the tools you need to cast your vote.
The three Supreme Court races are Donnelly against Shanahan, Stewart vs. Deters, and Forbes against Hawkins. Deters is not running for his current seat and is instead going against Stewart for a full six-year term. Hawkins and Forbes are vying for Deters’ open seat, a term that will expire on Dec. 31, 2026.
The Ohio Supreme Court currently has a 4-3 Republican majority. This election could either flip the court Democratic or Republicans will add to their numbers.
Donnelly and Stewart were elected to the Ohio Supreme Court in 2018. This is Forbes first running for Ohio Supreme Court.
“I’m running because I want to do my part to make sure that the Supreme Court is a firewall that protects our democracy, the rule of law and your rights,” Forbes said. “I stepped up to the plate because I’m concerned about some rulings. I’m concerned about the way in which the Court has the power to define words and to interpret laws that may be more result oriented than true to the law or to the intent behind the law.”
Donnelly and Stewart did not miss an opportunity to point out their opponents’ absences.
“I implore (Deters) to just show up anywhere with me — a street corner, a candidates forum, an editorial board, anywhere, and just discuss the substance of our candidacies,” Stewart said.
Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine appointed Deters to the Ohio Supreme Court in January 2023, despite having no previous experience as a judge.
Donnelly also noted his opponent’s absence while discussing bond issues and the 2022 DuBose case, in which he wrote the concurring opinion.
“If someone’s a threat to public safety, you should have a hearing and hold them with no bond,” he said. “Don’t set it at some astronomical amount that you think they can’t make.”
Donnelly noted his opponent Shanahan wasn’t there to discuss the subject. “I would like to talk to my opponent about that,” he said. “She doesn’t want to talk.”
Stewart, who was also on the Ohio Supreme Court at that time, said that decision was “the absolute dog whistle for the 2022 election for the Supreme Court.”
“That was a case that totally misconstrued the law,” she said.
DuBose and a co-defendant were charged with murder from an armed robbery. The state asked the judge to impose $1.5 million in bail at the bond hearing. Prosecutors highlighted the type of crime, fears of the victim’s family members and DuBose’s potential flight risk since he was arrested in Las Vegas and returned to Ohio to face trial.
However, DuBose argued that setting bail beyond what he could financially afford essentially denied him bail and violated the Eighth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. The appeals court reduced the bail to $500,000 and put non-financial requirements in place including turning over his passport, agreeing to 24-hour house arrest with electronic monitoring, and no contact whatsoever with the victim’s family.
The state appealed the bail reduction to the Ohio Supreme Court, who sided with the appeals court — pointing to judicial rules that draw a distinction between financial and non-financial conditions of release.
By making this ruling, the Ohio Supreme Court made a distinction between the dollar amount and other conditions of bail, like wearing an ankle monitor. Regardless of the financial conditions, judges could still consider risk to public safety and order a defendant held without bond.
Nevertheless, Ohio Republican lawmakers drew up a constitutional amendment for the 2022 election that requires Ohio judges to consider factors such as public safety, the seriousness of the crime, the person’s criminal background, and a person’s likelihood of returning to court when setting bail.
Seventy-eight percent of Ohioans voted for it.
“(Bond and bail) is to allow release and ensure return for your hearings of the court,” Stewart said. “So if you set an amount that is unattainable, you’re not allowing release. And if someone is dangerous and poses a threat to public safety, how about we just keep them pretrial with no bond?”
Forbes said the situation is ironic.
“The people who recognize that dangerous criminals should, under no circumstances, be given an opportunity to be released pretrial, which is what Justice Stewart and Justice Donnelly just said, are the ones being tagged as soft on crime,” she said. “Hard on crime and protective of the community is making the assessment that says under no circumstances may you be released pretrial.”
“The word boneless was defined as a matter of law to mean it’s a cooking style and was taken to mean that you should expect bones if something is labeled as boneless, and I think that’s concerning,” Forbes said. “If I am elected to the Supreme Court and I need to define a word, I promise you that I will use a dictionary.”
Partisan races
A 2021 law added party labels to Ohio Supreme Court races, which had previously been nonpartisan. All three Democrats objected to this Tuesday.
“If we’re going to have an elected judiciary, it should be nonpartisan,” Donnelly said. “I’d like to see us move towards some type of retention system where we don’t have to run each other against each other and raise money. … I don’t take an oath to any political party.”
Stewart agreed, saying the partisan labels are politicizing the Supreme Court even more.
Forbes said it gives the idea justices are political actors.
“The biggest concern I have about it is that it creates the impression that perhaps affiliation with a party is going to impact an outcome of a case, and that degrades the public confidence in the courts as a whole, and that’s very disturbing,” she said.
All three Democrats also disagreed with legislating from the bench.
“The law is the law,” Donnelly said.
Forbes said her job is to apply the law, not create new ones.
“Legislating from the bench is creating new laws to achieve a particular outcome,” she said.
Stewart said it’s up to her to say what the law is, not what it should be.
“There are times we have to make decisions and vote on a judgment based on what the law says and we hold our nose doing it,” she said.
Originally published by the Ohio Capital Journal. Republished here with permission.
When WIRED asked Mack how many sheriffs were currently members of the CSPOA, he said 300 sheriffs could be described as “really solid.” He would not divulge how many paying members the group has.
While Mack and the CSPOA are the most prominent part of the Constitutional Sheriff movement, there are many other sheriffs who espouse the same beliefs. A 2022 survey conducted by the Marshall Project found that close to 50 percent of the sheriffs polled agreed with the constitutional sheriff mantra that “their own authority, within their counties, supersedes that of the state or federal government.”
Many sheriffs have also shied away from publicly aligning themselves with Mack, something the former sheriff readily admits. And yet Trumpworld, the election denial movement, and some of the most prominent far-right influencers are now seeking to team up with the sheriffs to influence the outcome of the US election.
In September, election denial group True the Vote told its followers that it was working with sheriffs to monitor drop boxes. While Mack told WIRED he hasn’t spoken to True the Vote about this specific plan, he has confirmed that the CSPOA is still actively working with True the Vote, though he declined to say in what capacity. Bushman also wouldn’t give details of their collaboration, but said: “It’s more than just supporting what they’re doing.”
In multiple conversations with Mack over the last six months, he repeatedly asserted that the CSPOA advocates only for nonviolent action in efforts to combat the alleged (and unproven) widespread voter fraud that is now the group’s driving force.
But Mack also maintains deep ties to Stewart Rhodes and the Oath Keepers and is publicly meeting with figures like Raiklin, who in August also posted an ominous threat on X referencing the recent assassination attempt against Trump: “In a duel, each side gets one shot. They missed 36 days ago. Now it’s [our] turn.”
Earlier this month, the FBI and Department of Homeland Security warned that “election-related grievances” could motivate domestic extremists to engage in violence around the election.
In a recent phone conversation, Mack’s tone sounded more deflated than antagonistic; he admitted that he was “frustrated” that more sheriffs were not taking a more active role in policing elections, a practice that has led to voters feeling intimidated in the past.
“President Biden and his administration have just caused so much extra work for the sheriffs, it’s really hard to get them to focus on elections,” says Mack. Every sheriff in this country should verify the security and integrity of the voting in their county. Every single one.”
Dar Leaf, for one, remains focused. As he prepares to police an election while continuing to investigate the last one, he is clear-eyed about where the threat is coming from: immigrants and Democrats. He claims that America has received “other countries’ garbage,” and as a result, he needs to act.
“Any police officer who thinks that machine is bad or something criminal is going on,” Leaf says, “we have a duty to seize it.”
Sarah Jessica Parker announced her endorsement of Kamala Harris in an Instagram post today that made reference to her Sex and the City character Carrie Bradshaw.
She wrote, “For the climate, For hope, For friends and loved ones in the LGBTQ+ community, For freedom, For science, For affordable healthcare, For our union members, For democracy, For my daughters, For my son, For all of our children, For equality, For dignity, For hope, For the constitution, For me, For love, For choice, And for a certain childless cat lady I play on TV. With an abundance of joy, optimism and prideI am voting for Vice President Kamala Harris and Governor Tim Walz. X, SJ”
Parker also showed a picture of herself hanging a Harris Walz sign on her window.
The “childless cat lady” comment is a reference to a statement that JD Vance, Trump’s running mate, made in a 2021 interview on Fox News. Vance had criticized Democrats and said that its leadership was run by “a bunch of childless cat ladies who are miserable at their own lives and the choices that they’ve made, and so they want to make the rest of the country miserable too.”
She endorsed Joe Biden in his 2020 presidential run, and campaigned for him that cycle. She previously supported Barack Obama. She served on Obama’s President’s Committee for the Arts and Humanities.
In the final days of the presidential race, Harris has tapped celebrities such as Eminem and Bruce Springsteen for campaign appearances, while promoting a get-out-the-vote concert with a mystery guest performer.
With 13 days to go until the election, Kamala Harris laid out in the starkest terms possible the choice Americans face when they head to the ballot box in less than two weeks: They can vote to elect a man who thinks Adolph Hilter is someone to emulate, or they can vote for a woman who has never said a good thing about a genocidal maniac.
Speaking outside the Naval Observatory on Wednesday, Harris responded to a new story from The AtlanticdetailingDonald Trump’s infatuation with dictators, the negative things he has allegedly had to say about members of the armed forces, and the positive remarks he has allegedly made about people like Hitler, all of which he of course denies.
“Yesterday, we learned that Donald Trump’s former chief of staff John Kelly, a retired four-star general, confirmed that while Donald Trump was president, he said he wanted generals like Adolf Hitler had,” Harris told reporters. “Donald Trump said that because he does not want a military that is loyal to the United States Constitution. He wants a military that is loyal to him. He wants a military who will be loyal to him personally, one that will obey his orders even when he tells them to break the law or abandon their oath to the Constitution of the United States. In just the past week, Donald Trump has repeatedly called his fellow Americans the ‘enemy from within’ and even said that he would use the United States military to go after American citizens.”
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She continued: “And let’s be clear about who he considers to be the enemy from within. Anyone who refuses to bend a knee or dares to criticize him would qualify, in his mind, as the enemy within, like judges, like journalists, like nonpartisan election officials. It is deeply troubling and incredibly dangerous that Donald Trump would invoke Adolf Hitler, the man who is responsible for the deaths of 6 million Jews and hundreds of thousands of Americans. All of this is further evidence for the American people of who Donald Trump really is. This is a window into who Donald Trump really is from the people who know him best, from the people who worked with him side by side in the Oval Office and in the Situation Room.”
Harris added that Kelly has said Trump meets the definition of a fascist, and would rule like one if given the chance. The vice president ended her remarks by telling voters: “Donald Trump is increasingly unhinged and unstable. And in a second term, people like John Kelly would not be there to be the guardrails against his propensities and his actions. Those who once tried to stop him from pursuing his worst impulses would no longer be there and no longer be there to rein him in.
“So, the bottom line is this. We know what Donald Trump wants. He wants unchecked power. The question in 13 days will be: What do the American people want?”
As November 5 draws closer, the Microsoft Threat Analysis Center (MTAC) warned on Wednesday that malicious foreign influence operations launched by Russia, China, and Iran against the US presidential election are continuing to evolve and should not be ignored even though they have come to feel inevitable. In the group’s fifth report, researchers emphasize the range of ongoing activities as well as the inevitability that attackers will work to stoke doubts about the integrity of the election in its aftermath.
In spite of escalating conflict in the Middle East, Microsoft says that Iran has been able to keep up its operations targeting the US election, particularly targeting the Trump campaign and attempting to foment anti-Israel sentiment. Russian actors, meanwhile, have been focused on targeting the Harris campaign with character attacks and AI-generated content, including deepfakes. And China has shifted its focus in recent weeks, researchers say, to target down-ballot Republican candidates as well as sitting members of Congress who promote policies adversarial to China or in conflict with its interests.
Crucially, MTAC says it is all but certain that these actors will attempt to stoke division and mistrust in vote security on Election Day and in its immediate aftermath.
“As MTAC observed during the 2020 presidential cycle, foreign adversaries will amplify claims of election rigging, voter fraud, or other election integrity issues to sow chaos among the US electorate and undermine international confidence in US political stability,” the researchers wrote in their report.
As the 2024 campaign season enters its final phase, the researchers say that they expect to see AI-generated media continuing to show up in new campaigns, particularly because content can spread so rapidly in the charged period immediately around Election Day. The report also notes that Microsoft has detect Iranian actors probing election-related websites and media outlets, “suggesting preparations for more direct influence operations as Election Day nears.”
Chinese actors focusing on US congressional races and other figures also indicates a fluency and far-reaching approach to deploying influence operations. China-backed groups have recently launched campaigns against US representative Barry Moore, and US senators Marsha Blackburn and Marco Rubio (who is not currently up for re-election), pushing corruption allegations and promoting opposing candidates.
MSTAC says that many influence campaigns from all of the actors fail to gain traction. But the efforts are still significant, because the narratives that do break through can have significant impact and the activity in general contributes to the volume and intensity of false and misleading claims circulating in the information landscape surrounding the election.
“History has shown that the ability of foreign actors to rapidly distribute deceptive content can significantly impact public perception and electoral outcomes,” MSTAC general manager Clint Watts wrote in a blog post on Wednesday. “With a particular focus on the 48 hours before and after Election Day, voters, government institutions, candidates and parties must remain vigilant to deceptive and suspicious activity online.”
In 388 places across the U.S. where English isn’t the primary language among communities of voters, the federal Voting Rights Act requires that all elections information be made available in each community’s native language.
Such translations are meant to help non-native English speakers understand what they’re voting for. But vague or technical terms can be challenging, even more so when it comes to Indigenous languages that have only limited written dictionaries.
For example, New York’s referendum doesn’t even use the word “abortion,” complicating efforts to convey intent — advocates complain that the official Korean translation means “drop the fetus.” And how exactly should the science of “viability” in the Florida and Nevada measures be explained in the oral traditions of the Seminole and Shoshone tribes?
The Navajo and Hopi tribes get more material translated than most, and they have more than enough voters to sway outcomes. Under a federal court settlement with the Arizona Secretary of State, county elections officials gather community representatives to reach consensus on written translations. Navajo, Hopi and Spanish interpreters then do outreach and create spoken recordings for the touchpads also used by blind voters.
In most other places, other official English-language material including explanations of the measures’ impacts aren’t getting the same attention, said Allison Neswood, an attorney with the Native American Rights Foundation, which monitors compliance.
“Native language speakers should have access to all the information that English speakers have, including the language that explains the ballot initiatives,” Neswood said.
Other tribes have decided against written translations and instead post tribal translators inside polling stations. The law allows this, despite questions about ballot secrecy and potential bias that even the interpreters say can be problematic.
For example, Colorado’s Amendment 79 seems relatively straightforward: A “yes” vote would enshrine “a right to abortion” in the state constitution.
Politics
Amendment 79 would make abortion access a constitutional right in Colorado
But there’s no single word for abortion in the native language of the Ute Mountain Ute tribe in Colorado’s Montezuma County, whose written dictionary has fewer than 10,000 words, so Ute language teacher Helen Munoz will translate in person on Election Day.
One phrase describing abortion in Ute means “your baby, you’re killing it,” Munoz explained. Another points to ending a pregnancy before the embryo develops, as in, “your baby, before it grows, it’s done.”
“I would explain to them that that’s what abortion is — it kills it before it grows into full term,” she said. “I would ask them: ‘What do you think? You’re the one who’s going into that ballot box to mark the one you want. What do you think?’”
Section 203 of the Voting Rights Act requires translations in a county or city where the U.S. Census Bureau has determined that more than 10,000 people are “limited English proficient” voting-age citizens who speak the same language, or that these citizens represent at least 5% of the population and their illiteracy rate exceeds the national illiteracy rate.
Most such places must translate into Spanish. Among states with reproductive rights measures this election, several Arizona counties must provide translations in the languages of the Navajo, Hopi, Apache, Paiute and Pueblo tribes. Other federally required languages include Shoshone and Filipino in counties in Nevada; Seminole in Florida; Ute in Colorado; and Chinese, Korean and Bengali in New York.
Spanish shouldn’t be that difficult, as it is a Latin-derived language like English, but even these can fail when election administrators depend on computer translations. Attorney Cesar Ruiz says his group, LatinoJustice PRLDEF, pushes for human translators instead. “It’s a constant work in progress,” he said.
In Florida, Glades County Elections Supervisor Aletris Farnam said Seminole leaders told her not to bother with written translations — a decision she wants documented so that she’s covered if compliance questions arise.
“I met with the tribe and they told me their language doesn’t convert like that — they don’t have enough words in their language to write the ballot language,” Farnam said. “So what I do is hire a Creek translator to work at the polling station where all the Creek vote.”
Munoz knows it’s important to keep her opinions to herself when people are voting. She’s a 76-year-old Ute Mountain Ute elder who said she’s done this elections work for 17 years. Still, cultural sensitivities come into play, and she said Utes tend to be anti-abortion.
“Our tribe here, we really don’t believe in things like that,” she explained. “The young kids — even if something bad happens, they get raped — it’s up to the mother if she wants to keep it or give it up, but we’re conservative on abortion.”
New York’s Prop 1 would protect against unequal treatment based on “sexual orientation, gender identity, gender expression, pregnancy, pregnancy outcomes, and reproductive healthcare and autonomy.” Supporters say this covers abortion. A judge declined their request to make the official English description say so explicitly. Official translations are using the word anyway.
Because the characters in the official Korean version translate roughly to “drop the fetus,” civic engagement coordinator Lucky Ho with the Asian American Federation says her group’s own materials instead use symbols that mean “stopping the pregnancy.”
“It’s a more respectful way of talking about the body of the woman who is undergoing the experience,” Ho explained.
New York City goes beyond the federal mandate by also requiring translations in Arabic, French, Haitian Creole, Italian, Polish, Russian, Urdu and Yiddish. Literal word-for-word translations don’t make sense in some of these languages, according to Asher Ross, a senior strategist for the New York Immigrant Coalition, which tried it in Creole.
“The phrase ‘pregnancy outcomes’ doesn’t really translate, was the feedback we got,” Ross said. “I don’t know how the final translation looked, but they did their best.”
While some elections departments struggle to meet language requirements, Coconino County, Arizona, covers much more ground. It hires tribal interpreters and sends a mobile unit to remote Navajo and Hopi gathering places, first to register voters and explain what’s being voted on, and then later to accept their ballots.
“If they need language assistance, they can go there and get it,” said the county recorder, Patty Hansen. “You can’t mail the interpreter, you know.”
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It comes as no surprise that when Taylor Swift passes notes, they’re on custom stationery with a bespoke wax “13” seal. What is surprising is that the recipient of a handwritten note on that “from the desk of Taylor Swift” cardstock was Dave Portnoy, the Barstool Sports founder who is known for being a Swiftie—and a supporter of Donald Trump’s 2024 presidential aspirations.
Portnoy, who attended the second show of Swift’s Miami leg of her Eras Tour Saturday night wearing his special sparkly jacket, shared that Swift’s younger brother, Austin Swift, hand-delivered the note to him in the VIP tent at the show, and that he shared a nice hug with Swift’s mom, Andrea Swift. The note (with its footer that describes Swift as a “songwriter/feline enthusiast,” by the way) thanked Portnoy for his longtime support, and hinted at some of the blowback she’s gotten since endorsing Kamala Harris for president.
“Dave, I’m so happy to have you at the show tonight!” Swift wrote. “I wanted to say thank you for always being so supportive, so loyal, and for having my back when a lot of people didn’t. I hope you have a blast tonight!! Love, Taylor”
“I’ll never criticize someone for talking about politics,” he said in an interview on Fox News ahead of the debate between Harris and Trump, on whether he thought Swift would make an endorsement. As we know now, it was shortly after that debate ended that Swift released her statement voicing her support for Harris. “I don’t see the upside for her, but to each their own,” Portnoy said of whether Swift would speak out on the election. He also disclosed then that, “Yeah, I’m voting for Trump. I don’t know that I’d call myself a Trump guy.”
“It’s the gaslighting that the left is doing with Kamala Harris, making it sound like she’s some great, groundbreaking candidate,” he said in part. “She is the worst candidate to ever run for president ever.”
However, the morning after Swift released her own endorsement, Portnoy stood up for her on social media. “As the king of the Swifties people are asking me what I think of her Kamala endorsement,” he wrote on X (formerly Twitter). “I don’t care at all. People can vote for whoever they want in this country. How somebody votes will never change my opinion of a person. I’m voting the other way but to each their own.”
When is the presidential election? | 2024 election guide
Updated: 11:42 AM EDT Oct 21, 2024
Election Day is right around the corner. Before you know it, it’ll be time to cast ballots in the 2024 presidential election.This year’s presidential election will take place on Nov. 5, 2024.Even though Election Day is that Tuesday, there are plenty of other opportunities to cast your vote for president — including vote-by-mail or early voting.While Election Day is the same everywhere, these options may vary by location. Use the links below to learn more about vote-by-mail and early voting in your area.Related: What amendments will be on Florida’s ballot?Key datesDeadline to send vote-by-mail ballots to domestic voters: Sept. 26 – Oct. 3Deadline to register to vote: Oct. 7Deadline to request that ballot be mailed: Oct. 24Early voting period (mandatory period): Oct. 26 – Nov. 2, 2024Election Day: Nov. 5Commitment 2024Commitment 2024 is WESH 2’s long-running political initiative to bring the most comprehensive, fact-based information to viewers.Commitment 2024 debate series: General election races>> More Commitment 2024 headlinesRelated: What to know about mail-in voting in FloridaRelated: When does early voting start in Florida’s presidential election?
Election Day is right around the corner. Before you know it, it’ll be time to cast ballots in the 2024 presidential election.
This year’s presidential election will take place on Nov. 5, 2024.
Even though Election Day is that Tuesday, there are plenty of other opportunities to cast your vote for president — including vote-by-mail or early voting.
While Election Day is the same everywhere, these options may vary by location. Use the links below to learn more about vote-by-mail and early voting in your area.
“So, I have a surprise for you,” Elon Musk said with a grin at an event he hosted in Pennsylvania on Saturday, aimed at getting people in the swing state to vote early and for Donald Trump. “We’re going to be awarding a million dollars, randomly, to people who have signed the petition everyday from now until the election.”
We refers to America PAC, a political action organization Musk founded and bankrolled to get Trump elected, and the petition in question asks signees to pledge their support to the First and Second Amendments. Those who sign the petition will also reportedly receive $47 for each registered voter they refer who also puts their name down.
Only registered voters of Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, or Wisconsin—key swing states—can sign the petition to qualify for Musk’s election-related lottery.
“One of the challenges we’re having is how do we get people to know about this petition,” Musk continued on Saturday. “The legacy media won’t report on it; not everyone’s on X. So, I figure, how do we get people to know about it? This news, I think, is really gonna fly.”
Musk’s remarks were punctuated by a roaring response from the crowd.
The billionaire then handed a giant check with AMERICA PAC and two flags across the top to the day’s lucky winner: John Dreher. Dreher appeared from the crowd, fist-pumping as he made his way on stage in a Make America Great Again hat.
“By the way, John had no idea, so um, anyway, you’re welcome,” Musk said before asking if Dreher wanted to say any words.
“Thanks, Elon, this is great, I’m really ecstatic,” he began. “I’ve been following you for 10 years, got your biography ten years ago and been watching ever since. Big fan.”
The event in Pennsylvania was Musk’s third in as many days, stumping for Trump and this new petition, while he stoked fears about what would happen if the former president doesn’t win in just a couple short weeks. Musk claimed—without clear evidence—that “if the Kamala machine wins” there would be widespread censorship, and that it would be “the last election.”
Some experts have questioned the legality of Musk’s stunt—with one calling it “vote buying.”
“Though maybe some of the other things Musk was doing were of murky legality, this one is clearly illegal,” Rick Hasen, a law professor at UCLA, wrote Saturday evening on Election Law Blog.
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