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Tag: 2024 election

  • Legal red flags raised by Trump campaign events at police stations in Michigan

    Legal red flags raised by Trump campaign events at police stations in Michigan

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    Michigan law makes it a crime to use public resources to support a political candidate, but that didn’t stop two brazen local police departments from hosting nationally televised events for Donald Trump’s presidential campaign over the past two weeks.

    The latest event was Tuesday at the Livingston County Sheriff’s Office in Howell, where Trump spoke in front of two banners each that read “Make America Safe Again” and “Michigan is Trump County.” Trump spoke from a podium emblazoned with the Trump 2024 campaign logo. Behind him were three shiny sheriff’s SUVs.

    With two-and-a-half months before the presidential election, Trump peddled lies about a fictitious spike in crimes and portrayed big cities “almost all run by Democrats” as lawless.

    “You can’t walk across the street to get a loaf of bread,” Trump said. “You get shot. You get mugged. You get raped. You get whatever it may be.”

    He dubbed this imagined increase in lawlessness as the “Kamala crime wave.”

    Trump delivered his fear-mongering fabrications from Howell, a small town where masked white supremacists rallied last month, chanting “We love Hitler. We love Trump.” The rally was part of a Trump tour of cities with links to the KKK.

    Are law enforcement officials breaking the laws that they took an oath to uphold? Well, without a hint of irony in his tone, Sheriff Michael Murphy claimed in a video Monday that this was not a political event.

    “Let me make a couple of things clear: One, this is not a political event. This is a press conference,” Murphy said.

    Oh, really? Trump speaking with political banners in the height of the political campaign season is not a… political event?

    The Michigan Campaign Finance Act makes it a crime punishable by up to 93 days in jail to use any public resources to support a political candidate.

    Mark Brewer, an attorney and former chairman of the Michigan Democratic Party, said the event violated election laws.

    “It looks like the Trump campaign and the Livingston County Sheriff’s Department are trying to set the record for the most campaign finance and election law violations at one event,” Brewer tweeted Tuesday.

    On Aug. 7, Trump’s running mate JD Vance made a campaign stop at the Shelby Township Police Department, where he blasted Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris as a “chameleon” whose words “can’t be trusted.

    “She’s a fake,” Vance said. “And the American people have to look at her record if we actually want to know how she stands on the issues because her words simply can’t be trusted.”

    By what stretch of the imagination is that not a political event?

    The Michigan Department of State (DOS), which is tasked with enforcing campaign laws, has so far done nothing about this or even weighed in.

    Asked whether the police departments violated the law, DOS spokeswoman Angela Benander tells Metro Times, “We can’t answer questions about whether a specific activity violates the Michigan Campaign Finance Act.”

    But there is a way to get state officials to investigate.

    “Anyone seeking a legal determination on that activity can file an official complaint through the Bureau of Elections or a request for Department of State to issue a declaratory ruling/interpretive statement,” Benander says.

    Here’s how you do that: Fill out the complaint form on the Bureau of Elections website.

    It’s more than a little ironic that the people claiming to be the most concerned about crime are the ones who appear to be breaking a state law.

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    Steve Neavling

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  • Michigan women rise in politics, but funding disparities exist

    Michigan women rise in politics, but funding disparities exist

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    Joe Maroon

    Gov. Whitmer was sworn in for a second term on Jan. 1, 2023.

    Michigan women are making gains in state politics, ranking 14th nationally for the number serving in the legislature.

    However, the latest analysis reveals funding disparities are a concern. The Center for American Women and Politics said men’s campaign donations are outpacing those from women and it could be limiting women’s voices and influence in the political arena.

    Kira Sanbonmatsu, a researcher at the center, said more women run as Democrats in Michigan and they are raising a higher percentage of funds from small contributions.

    “This is a pattern that we often see across states, particularly for Democratic women,” Sanbonmatsu reported. “What this means is, they may not have access to large-dollar donations to the same extent as men, and they may need to make it up by financing with these smaller contributions.”

    She noted women have historically faced financial challenges in politics, lacking the same access to funding as men. And with fewer women as incumbents, they miss out on the financial advantages of holding office.

    Sanbonmatsu pointed out the research showed the financial disparity in politics hits women of color the hardest but the challenges they face are different depending on where they live.

    “We’ve been finding that this depends on the state,” Sanbonmatsu explained. “In states where women are more established as candidates, they’re more likely to be incumbents, they have an easier time raising money.”

    She added early data show women are less likely to self-finance their campaigns, which creates more challenges compared to men, who often have had greater financial resources.

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    Chrystal Blair, Michigan News Connection

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  • Split Screen Moment: Kamala Harris Giving Milwaukee Speech On Second Night Of DNC

    Split Screen Moment: Kamala Harris Giving Milwaukee Speech On Second Night Of DNC

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    EXCLUSIVE: As delegates are holding a ceremonial roll call to nominate Kamala Harris — perhaps the first with a DJ’s soundtrack — the vice president will be giving a speech in Milwaukee.

    Expect a split screen moment, including Harris beamed into the United Center from the must-win Badger State, according to a source in the campaign. Networks also are expected to provide some coverage of Harris’ address.

    In the United Center, each seat was fitted with blinking lights as each state was called. Harris was officially nominated in a virtual roll call earlier this month, so this is ceremonial. Producers instead staged a much more jamming proceeding, with celebrities such as Sean Astin announcing the votes for Indiana and Wendell Pierce for Louisiana. When Georgia announced its vote, Lil Jon made a surprise performance in the aisles.

    With some Dr. Dre likely, California, Harris’ home state, is expected to put Harris over the top, with Governor Gavin Newsom announcing the tally.

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    Ted Johnson

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  • Democrats blast Trump’s rally in Michigan town with troubling KKK ties

    Democrats blast Trump’s rally in Michigan town with troubling KKK ties

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    Former President Donald Trump is scheduled to speak in Howell at 3 p.m. Tuesday.

    Michigan Democrats are slamming former President Donald Trump for choosing Howell as the location for his rally on Tuesday, a month after white supremacists rallied there, chanting “We love Hitler. We love Trump.”

    Trump plans to talk about “crime and safety” at the Livingston County Sheriff’s Office in the town of about 10,000 residents that has been called the “KKK Capital of Michigan.”

    Democrats say Trump is fueling racial divisions for political gain.

    “It’s no accident that Donald Trump chose to campaign in Howell less than a month after failing to condemn the Neo-Nazis who marched through town shouting their support for Hitler and Trump in the same breath,” Michigan Democratic Party Chairperson Lavora Barnes said in a statement Tuesday afternoon. “His visit here to talk about safety is laughable — violent crime spiked under his watch, and he’s running on an extreme Project 2025 agenda that would defund law enforcement, abolish common-sense gun safety measures, and give Trump unchecked power.”

    Barnes added, “Michiganders don’t want a convicted criminal in the White House who will make our communities less safe and stoke hatred and division at every turn — that’s why they will reject Trump and his racist agenda come November.”

    And Howell isn’t the only town with links to white supremacists that Trump is visiting. On Monday, Trump visited York, Pennsylvania, which has a long history with the KKK.

    On Wednesday, Trump is speaking in Asheboro, North Carolina, where the Loyal White Knights of the Ku Klux Klan held a rally in 2017. And on Friday, Trump is holding a rally in Glendale, Arizona, which is the global headquarters of the Aryan Nations Knights of the Ku Klux Klan.

    “This does not seem like a coincidence,” TikTok user and attorney Cheyenne Hunt, who has 99,400 followers, said. “We should all be talking about it. They are making an explicit play for the white supremacist vote.”

    On July 20 in Howell, masked white supremacists rallied and chanted, “We love Hitler. We love Trump.” One group chanted “Heil Hitler” during a march. During a second demonstration, participants waved flags with a swastika, the term “KKK,” and other antisemitic messages.

    Howell has been linked to the KKK for years, largely because of the rallies Michigan-based Grand Dragon Robert Miles held on a nearby farm in the 1970s and 1980s.

    During an appearance before the National Association of Black Journalists in Chicago on July 30, Trump came under fire for falsely suggesting his Democratic opponent, Vice President Kamala Harris, had misled voters about her race.

    “I didn’t know she was Black until a number of years ago when she happened to turn Black and now she wants to be known as Black. So, I don’t know, is she Indian or is she Black?” Trump said while addressing the group’s annual convention.

    Harris is the daughter of immigrant parents — her father from Jamaica and her mother from India. As an undergraduate, she studied at Howard University, a leading historically Black college, where she joined the historically Black sorority Alpha Kappa Alpha. During her time as a U.S. senator, Harris was part of the Congressional Black Caucus, advocating for voting rights and police reform legislation.

    Trump is scheduled to take the stage in Howell at 3 p.m.

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    Steve Neavling

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  • Lindsey Graham Warns Trump’s Unhinged Attacks on Harris May Lose Him the Election

    Lindsey Graham Warns Trump’s Unhinged Attacks on Harris May Lose Him the Election

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    How worried are Donald Trump’s Republican Party allies that his multiweek meltdown over Kamala Harris’s rise and bizarre attacks on her (looks, race, intelligence) could cost him a second term in the White House? So worried that one of his biggest allies—a man whose head maintains residency in the president’s ass—is sounding the alarm.

    Appearing on Meet the Press on Sunday, Republican senator Lindsey Graham told host Kristen Welker that while he believes “President Trump can win this election” if he focuses on policy, ”Donald Trump the provocateur, the showman, may not win this election.”

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    Graham’s comments follow similar remarks by former UN ambassador (and onetime GOP presidential contender) Nikki Haley, who said on Fox News last week that the Trump campaign “is not gonna win talking about crowd sizes. It’s not gonna win talking about what race Kamala Harris is. It’s not gonna win talking about whether she’s dumb. You can’t win on those things.”

    Unfortunately for Trump, and the people who want to see him return to the White House, crowd sizes, Harris’s race and intelligence, and other attacks not based on policy are all the ex-president wants to talk about these days. In addition to bizarrely claiming the VP only recently decided to be Black, Trump has also falsely and insanely accused her of faking her crowd sizes—a made-up offense for which he said she should be disqualified from the election. Then on Sunday, he told supporters that he is “much better looking than her. Much better. Much better. I’m a better looking person than Kamala.”

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    In related news, recent polls give Harris a 3% to 4% edge over Trump nationally.

    Sure sounds like he’s saying they would abolish the minimum wage if they could!

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    Bess Levin

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  • Trump Shares AI-Generated Images Claiming Swifties Are Supporting Him

    Trump Shares AI-Generated Images Claiming Swifties Are Supporting Him

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    Former president Donald Trump has shared AI-generated images that falsely claim Taylor Swift fans are supporting his campaign.

    In a post on Truth Social, Trump shared screenshots of four posts on X that purport to show a number of young women all wearing “Swifties for Trump” T-shirts in a variety of styles. One of the screenshots claimed that Swifties are supporting Trump now after Taylor Swift canceled her concert in Vienna due to security concerns. Another image included the phrase “Taylor wants you to vote for Donald Trump.”

    “I accept!” Trump captioned his post.

    However, Trump’s post appears to contain a mixture of real and AI-generated images that falsely suggest a widespread and coordinated movement of Swifties for Trump. Using a tool created by nonprofit True Media to detect the spread of election-related deepfakes, WIRED found that many of the images shared by Trump show “substantial evidence of manipulation.”

    One of the screenshots Trump shared was from an anonymous pro-Trump account with over 300,000 followers that regularly posts AI-generated images. Following its post about Swifties for Trump, this account shared a follow-up post that said the original Swifties for Trump post was “satire.”

    While there doesn’t appear to be an active Swifties for Trump campaign initiative, there is an active Swifties4Kamala group. “We do not represent every Swiftie, but I think there is a reason we don’t need AI to show our support for Kamala,” Irene Kim, cofounder of Swifties4Harris, tells WIRED.

    There is at least one public Swiftie for Trump. Among the images shared by Trump on Sunday on Truth Social was a real picture of Jenna Piwowarczyk, who wore a homemade T-shirt to a Racine, Wisconsin, Trump rally in June, emblazoned with the words “Swifties for Trump.” Piwowarczyk is now selling her homemade T-shirts on Etsy.

    Trump has consistently shared AI-generated images. Last week, Trump falsely claimed that the Harris campaign was using AI to artificially inflate crowd sizes at her rallies. Over the weekend, Trump also posted an AI-generated image on X of Harris speaking at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago with a Soviet Union flag hanging over the crowd.

    Disinformation experts have warned about the threat posed to the integrity of elections by generative AI tools. Already this year, WIRED has tracked dozens of examples of content created using generative AI in elections across the globe.

    Swift has not publicly endorsed any candidate for president, but she did endorse President Joe Biden in 2020. She has also strongly criticized Trump: After Trump made his infamous “when the looting starts, the shooting starts” comment in 2020 following Black Lives Matter protests in support of George Floyd, the pop superstar slammed the then-president for having “the nerve to feign moral superiority” after “stoking the fires of white supremacy and racism your entire presidency.”

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    David Gilbert

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  • “I’m A Better Looking Person Than Kamala”: Donald Trump’s Off Script Moments Are Getting More and More Unhinged

    “I’m A Better Looking Person Than Kamala”: Donald Trump’s Off Script Moments Are Getting More and More Unhinged

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    “You don’t mind if I go off teleprompter for a second, do you?” Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump asked his Pennsylvania crowd at a campaign rally on Saturday—less than four minutes into his speech.

    What followed was a long-winded, meandering address that featured Trump insisting that he is more attractive than his opponent, Vice President Kamala Harris.

    Time magazine’s latest cover features a sketch of Harris with the words “Her Moment,” accompanying an article by senior correspondent Charlotte Alter. Harris’s likeness, illustrated by Neil Jamieson, fades into images of supporters holding campaign signs. When Trump first saw the image, he claimed, “I said, ‘is that Sophia Loren?’ I couldn’t, who might that be? ‘Is that Elizabeth Taylor?’”

    He then calls Loren beautiful before warning U.S. Senate candidate Dave McCormick, who Trump was campaigning with, to “never call a woman beautiful because it’ll be the end of your political career.”

    Trump then goes after a “Ronald Reagan speechwriter,” presumptively Wall Street Journal columnist Peggy Noonan. Noonan has written about Harris’s appearance in recent weeks, saying that, “Her beauty, plus the social warmth that all who have known her over the years speak of, combines to produce: radiance.”

    “She said one thing that got me,” Trump began, seemingly talking about Noonan’s columns. “She said Kamala has one big advantage, she’s a very beautiful woman. She’s a beautiful woman.” The crowd boos.

    “But I say that I’m much better looking than her. Much better. Much better. I’m a better looking person than Kamala,” Trump continued, to cheers.

    As the Democratic National Convention kicks off in Chicago on Monday, Trump and his team have been trying to hone an effective defense against what has become an energized movement to elect Harris and Tim Walz, the governor from Minnesota and presumptive democratic vice presidential candidate. But Saturday’s remarks illustrate the challenge Trump’s campaign advisors face when pushing a strategy that requires Trump to focus on policy, rather than demeaning Harris’s intelligence and racial identity, or hurling other personal insults.

    Trump’s comments on Saturday critiquing Harris’s attractiveness were the latest attack in what has been a misogynistic and racist campaign against the first Black and South Asian woman selected to lead a major party ticket.

    During an interview at the National Association of Black Journalists in late July, Trump falsely claimed that Harris has misconstrued her multiracial identity. “She was always of Indian heritage and she was only promoting Indian heritage,” he said. “I didn’t know she was Black until a number of years ago, when she happened to turn Black and now she wants to be known as Black.”

    Harris is “not smart enough” to do a news conference and is “barely competent,” Trump has also said. In addition, according to reporting from The New York Times, he’s allegedly called Harris a “bitch” multiple times in private.

    On the eve of the DNC, a new CBS News/YouGov survey has the two candidates tied in battleground states, with Harris three points ahead nationally. Much of the divide among voters, the poll found, has to do with gender. Women respondents were more likely to see Harris as someone who “fights for people like you.” Only 29% of men said that Harris would fight “a lot” for people like them, while 43% of men answered that Donald Trump would do just that.

    And, when asked if efforts to promote gender equality between men and women have gone too far, men and Republicans were far more likely to say yes, with only 10% of Republicans answering that efforts are not going far enough.

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    Katie Herchenroeder

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  • JD Vance Again Defends Donald Trump, This Time From Insulted Veterans

    JD Vance Again Defends Donald Trump, This Time From Insulted Veterans

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    Republican vice presidential nominee JD Vance has once again come out in defense of controversial remarks made by his running mate, former president Donald Trump.

    When speaking to the Milwaukee Police Association on Friday, Vance—who spent four years in the Marines and served a tour in Iraq in 2005 as a combat correspondent—attempted to soften Trump’s recent remarks diminishing the importance of the Congressional Medal of Honor. The medal, which has been around for more than 150 years, is the country’s highest award for military valor in action. Trump equated that award with the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation’s highest civilian honor.

    During a campaign event Thursday at his golf club in New Jersey, Trump called out to Miriam Adelson in the crowd.

    Adelson, a prominent Republican donor and casino magnate who has an estimated net worth of $32.3 billion, was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2018 by Trump. During his failed 2020 bid for office, Adelson and her husband donated $90 million to Preserve America, a super PAC dedicated to electing Trump.

    This time around, she’s slated to give even more.

    “We gave Miriam the Presidential Medal of Freedom,” Trump began. “It’s the equivalent of the Congressional Medal of Honor, but civilian version.” He then goes on to say that freedom award is “actually much better because everyone gets the Congressional Medal of Honor, that’s soldiers, they’re either in very bad shape because they’ve been hit so many times by bullets—or they’re dead.”

    “She gets it and she’s a healthy beautiful woman,” Trump continued, noting that the two awards are “rated equal.”

    The former president may have been using the moment to make nice with Adelson after he reportedly had an aide send her a slew of angry text messages last month, according to The New York Times.

    “This is a guy who loves our veterans and who honors our veterans,” JD Vance said of Trump on Friday, claiming that he hadn’t seen the full remarks. “I don’t think him complimenting and saying a nice word about a person who received the Presidential Medal of Freedom is in any way denigrating those who received military honors,” Vance continued. “They are two different awards. And I think the president was saying some nice things about a person that he liked and that is a totally reasonable thing to do.”

    “The veteran community is very, very much behind Donald Trump,” Vance said after mentioning a meeting he had with veterans in Pennsylvania.

    Veterans across the nation have denounced Trump’s recent remarks and critiqued Vance for endorsing his running mate’s actions as a veteran himself.

    Veterans of Foreign Wars—a nonprofit serving active, guard, and reserve forces that has previously denounced language that Trump has used when discussing veterans—called the former president’s comments “asinine.”

    “When a candidate to serve as our military’s commander-in-chief so brazenly dismisses the valor and reverence symbolized by the Medal of Honor and those who have earned it, I must question whether they would discharge their responsibilities to our men and women in uniform with the seriousness and discernment necessary for such a powerful position,” the organization said in a statement, adding that Trump “should frankly already know better.”

    In an interview with MSNBC’s Joy Reid, Iraq war veteran and co-founder of the veterans advocacy group VoteVets.org Jon Soltz said of Vance: “Totally respect his service, but he’s a fraud.”

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    Katie Herchenroeder

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  • Tim Walz Has A Great Idea To Take Votes Away From Trump

    Tim Walz Has A Great Idea To Take Votes Away From Trump

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    Kamala Harris’s running mate Tim Walz wants to take votes away from Trump by campaigning at high school football games.

    Politico reported on the idea from Gov. Walz, “One idea from the Minnesota governor and former football coach: attending a series of Friday night high school football games in key districts, according to two people familiar with the discussions.”

    What a smart idea. Anyone who lives in a battleground state that is obsessed with high school football like Pennsylvania or Michigan can see what sending Walz and the local Democratic House candidate to campaign at the game could so.

    In many of the swing states the margins are going to be very close so every vote counts. If Walz can reach voters in key districts by spending Friday night going to the local high school football game, it will be a great move and something that it is impossible to imagine Donald Trump or JD Vance ever being interested in trying.

    Democrats should be campaigning in the places where regular people are.

    Whereas Donald Trump holds rallies and expects voters to come to him. Harris and Walz are going to the people in their communities to ask for their votes.

    In a close election, it’s the little things like going to a high school football game that can make all the difference.

    Jason Easley
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    Jason Easley

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  • Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene to host Pa. GOP poll-watcher recruitment event on Sunday via Zoom

    Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene to host Pa. GOP poll-watcher recruitment event on Sunday via Zoom

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    One of former President Donald Trump’s most outspoken and controversial supporters in Congress is slated to headline a pair of Pennsylvania GOP events in the coming weeks.  

    U.S. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Georgia) will be the special guest for the Republican National Committee’s “election integrity virtual training” on Sunday.


    MORE: N.J. Sen. Menendez ends independent bid for re-election days before he is expected to resign


    “The PA RNC Poll Watcher Training provides a comprehensive overview of Pennsylvania’s electoral process, as well as guidance on how Poll Watchers can play an important role in upholding election integrity. You will learn how to observe and report any potential problems that may arise during the voting and tabulation process,” according to a Zoom link promoting the event. That same link indicates the event is closed to the press.

    This screen capture shows the flyer for the Pennsylvania RNC event featuring U.S. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia.

    Punchbowl News first reported Friday that the training session is with the Lehigh County Republican Committee. The Pennsylvania GOP and Pennsylvania Democratic parties did not immediately reply to requests for comment Friday.

    Following Trump’s loss to Joe Biden in the 2020 election, Greene falsely claimed that the loss was due to the election being stolen. She also objected to certifying the election results, and has been a vocal supporter of Trump’s reelection campaign, and frequent critic of Democrats, particularly those in the progressive wing of the party.

    Sunday is not the first event that Republicans have held in Pennsylvania aimed at recruiting poll watchers. In June, RNC Chairman Michael Whatley, RNC Co-Chair Lara Trump, former Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi, and U.S. Rep. Dan Meuser (R-9th District) held the second stop of a “protect the vote tour” in Bucks County. The training portion of the program for that event was also closed to the press. 

    The RNC’s nationwide campaign seeks to recruit 100,000 poll watchers, poll workers, and legal experts for the 2024 election, with a goal of getting at least 5,000 volunteers in Pennsylvania alone.

    On Sept. 3, Greene is scheduled to be the keynote speaker for the Washington County Republican Party’s Fall dinner.

    “We will be asking her to speak her mind, totally unfiltered,” the Washington County Republican Party wrote on Facebook promoting the fundraiser. 

    There are several ticket packages available for the dinner which range from the $5,000 Donald package to the $100 dinner and dessert ticket.

    While Greene has become one of the most outspoken conservative voices in Congress since being elected, she’s also caused divisions within the Republican Party, and was removed from the conservative House Freedom Caucus in 2023. In a previous session of Congress, she lost her committee assignments with Democrats and a few Republicans voting to remove her from various committees. 

    Both Pennsylvania events are taking place on opposite sides of the commonwealth that feature different parts of the electorate in the Keystone State. 

    Lehigh County, located in the Lehigh Valley north of Philadelphia, voted for Biden by just under 8 points over Trump in 2020. Washington County, situated in the southwestern region of the state, voted for Trump by 22 points over Biden in 2020.

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    John Cole, Pennsylvania Capital-Star

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  • Kamala Harris Campaign Responds To Trump’s Nationally Televised Breakdown

    Kamala Harris Campaign Responds To Trump’s Nationally Televised Breakdown

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    Donald Trump had some sort of a episode that he disguised as a press conference in New Jersey, and the Harris campaign had the ideal response.

    The Harris campaign responded in a statement:

    We aren’t sure what we just watched and neither is America.

    From his member-only golf club, Donald Trump tried to read some paper for more than 40 minutes, while giving a stream of not-much-consciousness. It was quite boring. Networks cut from his speech (except Fox, he has Dominion over them).

    Then, he took some questions. It did not get better.

    To say that it didn’t get better is a vast understatement. It got much, much, much worse. Trump completely lost what marbles he has left and spent much of the question portion of the fiasco ranting about stolen elections, and the court cases against him.

    CNN fact checker Daniel Dale described it as a pile of nonsense:

    Harris-Walz campaign spokesman James Singer said:

    At his country club, Donald Trump, huffed and puffed his opposition to lowering food costs for middle and working class Americans and prescription drug costs for seniors before pivoting back to his usual lies and delusions.

    No surprise, Trump doesn’t want to defend his agenda that would raise costs for families by $3,900 a year, cut Social Security, and eliminate the Affordable Care Act – all so he can give his rich donors tax breaks.

    The American people cannot trust a word Donald Trump says, but they can trust Vice President Kamala Harris, who has spent her life taking on fraudsters, cheaters, and criminals like Donald Trump to make our country safer and lower costs for the middle class.

    Donald Trump is having some type of very public breakdown. It has been building since Joe Biden left the race. Trump knows he’s losing, doesn’t know how to reverse it, and can only watch as his return to power slips away from him, as America prefers normal to the nightmarish hellscape that is Donald Trump’s mind.

    Jason Easley
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    Jason Easley

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  • JD Vance Agrees “the Postmenopausal Female” Exists to Raise Grandchildren

    JD Vance Agrees “the Postmenopausal Female” Exists to Raise Grandchildren

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    By now you’ve likely heard JD Vance’s thoughts on Americans who do not have children, a segment of the population he has termed “childless cat ladies” who, he says, don’t have a stake in the future of the country and are more likely to be mentally unstable sociopaths. While the Ohio senator and VP hopeful does not discriminate in his take—he has criticized child-free women and men—he clearly appears to believe that the most important thing a woman can and must do with her life is have kids. Of course, that 1950s point of view only applies to ladies of child-bearing age—but don’t worry, Vance has got thoughts on what “postmenopausal” women should be doing with their lives too.

    In a 2020 podcast interview discussing the benefits of grandparents in children’s lives, Vance agrees when the host says, “That’s the whole purpose of the postmenopausal female.” But wait, the incredibly creepy takes don’t stop there! Later, while recounting that his wife’s mother lived with them for a year after the birth of their first son, Vance does not object to the host declaring that that is “this weird, unadvertised feature of marrying an Indian woman.” (Vance’s wife, Usha Vance, is of Indian descent.)

    Noting that his mother-in-law is a biology professor and took a yearlong sabbatical to help out, Vance says, “it’s just one of these things that…this is what you do.”

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    Is it great that Vance’s children get to spend quality time with their grandparents? Of course! Is being an active part of a grandchild’s life incredibly rewarding for many people? Sure is! Yet Vance’s notion that a grandmother’s entire purpose in life is to care for her grandchild—and in his family’s case, temporarily give up a job in order to do so—is just yet another one of his stomach-churning beliefs.

    Vance himself was famously raised by his mother’s parents when she was unable to care for him. That upbringing unsurprisingly informed his worldview, and not necessarily in a good way. In 2022, while running for Senate, Vance suggested that people should stay in violent marriages for the sake of their children, saying, “My grandparents had an incredibly chaotic marriage in a lot of ways. But they never got divorced. They were together to the end, till death do us part—that was a really important thing to my grandmother and my grandfather.” In his memoir, Hillbilly Elegy, Vance writes that his grandfather was a “violent drunk” and his grandmother a “violent non-drunk.” In one anecdote, he informs readers that his grandmother once tried to kill his grandfather by pouring gasoline all over him when he was sleeping and dropping a lit match on his chest. So, yeah, maybe take this guy’s opinions on how people should live their lives with several tons of salt.

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    Bess Levin

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  • New Poll Shows Harris Beating Trump in Pennsylvania, Among Women, and in “Personality” and Honesty

    New Poll Shows Harris Beating Trump in Pennsylvania, Among Women, and in “Personality” and Honesty

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    Donald Trump has visibly been in meltdown mode since Kamala Harris replaced Joe Biden on the Democratic ticket. And according to new polling results, that meltdown appears to be pretty warranted.

    A Quinnipiac poll conducted between August 8–12 and released on Wednesday shows Harris:

    • Beating Trump in Pennsylvania, 48% to 45%
    • Beating Trump among women, 54% to 41%
    • Beating Trump among independents, 46% to 42%
    • Beating Trump on caring about average Americans, 50% to 46%
    • Beating Trump on having the “personality and temperament it takes to serve effectively as president,” 52% to 46%
    • Beating Trump on honesty, 46% to 37%

    And the bad news, for Trump, doesn’t stop there. A Monmouth University poll also released on Wednesday shows that among “double haters,” i.e., voters who dislike both candidates, Harris receives 53% versus 11% for Trump; when the same question was asked in June, just 28% of respondents backed Biden, while 19% went for Trump. (The most recent Monmouth poll also finds that Harris has the support of 53% of voters between the ages of 18 and 35, versus Biden’s 33% in June, while essentially maintaining the support Biden had from voters 65 and older.)

    Rounding out the bad news for the former guy?

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    Incidentally, Trump’s VP pick, JD Vance, isn’t faring great in the polls either. According to the Quinnipiac poll, just 43% of those supporting Trump say Vance has made them more enthusiastic about the ex-president’s candidacy, while 59% of those supporting Harris say the choice of Tim Walz as her running mate has made them more enthusiastic about hers. Though, really, can you blame them?

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    Bess Levin

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  • Trump’s Shooting Led QAnon Believers to Double Down

    Trump’s Shooting Led QAnon Believers to Double Down

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    From the very first “Q drop” in 2017, which predicted Hillary Clinton’s imminent arrest, QAnon has made predictions that certain events were about to happen. When these events don’t happen, believers concoct some elaborate explanation for why the predictions didn’t come true and move on to the next event, with many becoming even more faithful—a classic pattern among believers in prophecy.

    Ahead of the Trump shooting, QAnon promoter Phil Godlewski predicted on his Rumble show to 200,000 followers that there would be “a scare event” or a “9/11–type event” in the coming weeks. When Trump was shot, many of Godlewski’s followers were quick to claim his prediction had come true.

    “My Q friend would call me and inform me that if this happens, to not be afraid, as it’s all part of The Plan,” says Jay, who asked to be referred to by his first name only to protect his privacy. “Once the shooting happened, my friend was quick to call to tell me that ‘it’ happened, the scare event. He told me that it’s totally staged, to not be afraid, and that I should believe that Phil is right, that his sources are correct.”

    Jay says his friend went on to claim a global financial reset would happen next, before Trump would be reinstated in November. “Phil has made plenty of other vague predictions that haven’t come true, but since this vague prediction did happen, my Q friend is doubling down,” says Jay.

    In at least one case, the shooting seemingly caused a former QAnon believer to slip back under the conspiracy’s spell.

    Amy, who asked to use her first name only to protect her privacy, says she has known her friend Jane since they met in college 20 years ago. During Trump’s first term in office, Jane began posting positive messages about the former president on Facebook, and when the Covid-19 pandemic hit, Jane went further into QAnon conspiracies.

    “Her posts became unhinged and wild,” Amy tells WIRED. “Speculation of deep-state-type conspiracies. She hated Democrats, Joe Biden, and the Clintons for vast and unhinged reasons.”

    Over the past couple of years, Jane had all but stopped posting conspiracies about Trump and the deep state, instead sharing photos and missives about her pets. Then the shooting happened.

    “Full-on unhinged posting hour after hour,” says Amy, describing Jane’s social media content. “She fully and publicly supported Trump. She blamed the shooting on a liberal in an alt-right shirt. She definitely believes Joe Biden or the Democrats arranged it.“

    Katrina Vaillancourt, a former QAnon believer who has written a book about her experience, says that had she still been under the spell, she thinks, she would have also doubled down in the wake of the Trump shooting.

    “I would have assumed this was a desperate attack by the evil cabal, using its tentacles of the deep state, including members of the FBI and Secret Service, and the fact that Trump survived it is as close as we get to evidence that God is on Trump’s side,” Vaillancourt tells WIRED. “I would be online doing ‘research’ for at least four hours a day, and up to 10 hours a day if something really got under my skin, as this one would have done.”

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    David Gilbert

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  • Gamergate’s Aggrieved Men Still Haunt the Internet

    Gamergate’s Aggrieved Men Still Haunt the Internet

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    Ten years ago, a flood of gamers attacked developers Zoë Quinn and Brianna Wu and media critic Anita Sarkeesian. The three were part of a growing chorus of people calling for a more inclusive culture within video games. The attackers doxxed and harassed their targets, doing all they could to stifle the women’s efforts. The incident, which became known as Gamergate, illuminated the toxicity women faced in gaming spaces and beyond.

    Eventually, the harassment faded from the news, but its residue was never fully removed from the internet and public life.

    Gamergate articulated a particular kind of aggrieved masculinity, an anger at losing the power of being the target audience. Since 2014, it has shaped everything from the men’s rights movement to the current iteration of the GOP, outlining what it means to be a man in certain corners of the internet.

    In many ways, says Adrienne Massanari, an associate professor at American University’s school of communications, Gamergate presaged a broader reaction on the right toward real changes happening in American society. Former Donald Trump adviser Steve Bannon latched onto this in 2015, harnessing the power of committed online fandoms to bolster Trump’s campaign.

    Within the community, Gamergate seemingly bifurcated men into distinct camps. Men who came to Sarkeesian’s defense, for example, were dubbed “white knights” and simps. Meanwhile, the people doing the harassing saw themselves as trying to protect the space from the “outside” influences of “social justice warriors,” who threatened to take away the elements that—they felt—made games fun.

    “Even though we know that a bunch of people play games, [the men involved in Gamergate] saw themselves as being the target demographic for games. When that started to shift, the reaction was, of course, anger,” says Massanari. “Now that’s reflected, refracted, and amplified by Trumpism and that kind of far-right strain of Republicanism reacting to demographic and societal shifts toward a more egalitarian society.”

    This same kind of anger and resistance can be seen now in figures like J.D. Vance and Elon Musk, who both decry “woke-ism” in politics and culture broadly. In interviews, Musk has said that he was motivated to purchase X, formerly Twitter, to fight the “woke mind virus” that he says is destroying civilization. The Heritage Foundation’s political road map Project 2025 repeatedly mentions “woke” progressivism as a threat that must be eliminated, particularly by doing away with diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives in government spaces.

    This connection comes full circle in what’s become “Gamergate 2.0,” a backlash to inclusion efforts where “DEI” is now a catchphrase. Ten years ago, gamers pushed back against critics like Sarkeesian for pointing out that many female characters in games were nothing more than tropes. In 2024, the campaigns are against video game consulting companies such as Sweet Baby for performing what some gamers believe is “forced diversification.” No matter the rallying cry, the reason is the same: Being upset that the characters in video games no longer represent your interests.

    While the politics of masculine grievance aren’t exactly new, says Patrick Rafail, professor of sociology at Tulane University, “the mainstreaming of it is.”

    Although Gamergate came out of a relatively niche subculture, its elements can now be found in influencers like Andrew Tate who have popularized “these very simplistic, archetypal, stereotypical extremes” of masculinity, says Debbie Ging, professor of digital media and gender at Dublin City University. A new era of podcasting, coupled with a rise in short-form video platforms like TikTok, “which are heavily algorithm-driven,” have been significant drivers of this form of rhetoric, Ging says.

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    Vittoria Elliott

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  • Trump Suggests He’ll Flee to Venezuela If Harris Wins the Election

    Trump Suggests He’ll Flee to Venezuela If Harris Wins the Election

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    Donald Trump has apparently considered the possibility that he might lose the 2024 election—and, if he does, his plans for the future involve a one-way ticket to Venezuela.

    Speaking to Elon Musk on Monday, the former president told the X owner, “If something happens with this election, which would be a horror show, we’ll meet the next time in Venezuela, because it’ll be a far safer place to meet than our country. So you and I will go and we’ll have a meeting and dinner in Venezuela.”

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    “Their crime rate is coming down and our crime rate is going through the roof,” Trump continued. “And it’s so simple. And you haven’t seen anything yet, because these people have come into our country and they’re just getting acclimated.” He added that Venezuela has cleared out “about 70% of their really bad people,” suggesting that said “really bad people” are now in the US. “Their jails are about 50%, put into the United States,” he said. “Same with other countries, over 30%. Some are at 50%. They’re all different. But the bottom line is they’re all going to be 100%. Why wouldn’t you put 100% of it?”

    Not surprisingly, Trump’s argument that Venezuela—which the State Department warns Americans not to travel to—will be safer than the US under Kamala Harris is, of course, not actually based on facts. For one thing, FBI data shows that violent crime is down significantly in the US. For another, Venezuela is widely considered to be dictatorship, where at least 1,260 people have been arbitrarily detained following last month’s presidential election, with nearly two dozen killed, according to advocacy groups. Meanwhile, Roberto Briceño-León, founder of the Venezuelan Observatory of Violence, told Factcheck.org in June that there was zero evidence that Venezuela is sending its criminals to the US, no matter how many times Trump says it. “We have no evidence that the Venezuelan government is emptying the prisons or mental hospitals to send them out of the country, whether to the USA or any other country,” he told the outlet.

    Elsewhere in Trump’s interview with Musk, the former president vowed, if reelected, to preside over the “largest deportation” in history, and, in a uniquely bizarre moment, said Harris looked like the “most beautiful actress ever to live” on a recent illustrated cover of Time. “It was a drawing, and actually, she looked very much like a great first lady, Melania,” he added.

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    Bess Levin

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  • UAW files federal charges against Trump and Musk for worker intimidation

    UAW files federal charges against Trump and Musk for worker intimidation

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    A United Auto Workers rally in downtown Detroit last year.

    The United Auto Workers (UAW) union has filed federal labor charges against former President Donald Trump and billionaire Elon Musk, accusing them of attempting to intimidate workers who engage in legally protected activities, such as striking.

    The charges come in the wake of a rambling, disorderly conversation between Trump and Musk on the social media platform X, formerly known as Twitter.

    On Monday evening, Trump and Musk participated in a live audio discussion that was marred by technical difficulties but managed to attract more than a million listeners. During the conversation, both men appeared to advocate for the illegal firing of workers who participate in strikes.

    “I mean, I look at what you do,” Trump said to Musk. “You walk in, you say, ‘You want to quit?’ They go on strike, I won’t mention the name of the company, but they go on strike and you say, ‘That’s OK, you’re all gone. You’re all gone. So, every one of you is gone.’”

    Under the National Labor Relations Act, it is illegal to fire workers for participating in a strike or to threaten such actions.

    The UAW argues that the comments made by Trump and Musk violate these federal protections and undermine workers’ rights.

    UAW President Shawn Fain condemned the statements from Trump and Musk, saying they reflect a broader pattern of anti-worker sentiment.

    “When we say Donald Trump is a scab, this is what we mean,” Fain said. “When we say Trump stands against everything our union stands for, this is what we mean. Donald Trump will always side against workers standing up for themselves, and he will always side with billionaires like Elon Musk, who is contributing $45 million a month to a Super PAC to get him elected. Both Trump and Musk want working-class people to sit down and shut up, and they laugh about it openly. It’s disgusting, illegal, and totally predictable from these two clowns.”

    The UAW’s decision to file charges highlights ongoing tensions between labor unions and corporate leaders, as well as the role of high-profile figures such as Trump and Musk in shaping public discourse around labor rights.

    The charges will likely proceed through the legal system, where the National Labor Relations Board will determine whether any violations of the law occurred.

    This development comes at a critical time for the UAW, which continues to advocate for better working conditions and fair wages in industries across the country. As the situation unfolds, the union and its members are watching closely to see how the allegations against Trump and Musk are addressed by the authorities.

    Trump’s remarks are an attack on many of his supporters, a disproportionate number of whom are blue-collar workers.

    Michigan is a swing state, and polls show Vice President Kamala Harris with a small lead.

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    Steve Neavling

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  • Donald Trump Doesn’t Need X—but Elon Musk Desperately Needs Him Back

    Donald Trump Doesn’t Need X—but Elon Musk Desperately Needs Him Back

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    In the hours leading up to the conversation on X Spaces, this seemed to be the case: Trump posted 10 times on X, his first posts on the platform since August 2023 and his first sustained period of activity since he was notoriously banned from the platform for his part in spreading election conspiracies ahead of the attack on the Capitol on January 6, 2021.

    But Trump, who also stayed online for hours after the event, instead returned to Truth Social, the platform he built after being kicked off of X. He shared more than a dozen updates—or “truths”—encouraging followers to go out and vote in primaries in Minnesota and Wisconsin for candidates he was endorsing.

    At around 1:20 am on Tuesday morning, hours after the event had wrapped, Trump finally posted a link on Truth Social to a recording of the conversation with Musk. But rather than a link directly to the recording on X, Trump posted a link to a recording of the event from his own YouTube channel. Later, Trump posted another link to the conversation, this time to a recording on video sharing site Rumble.

    While Trump has a much larger following on X than Truth Social—90 million versus 7.5 million—there are other considerations to take into account.

    Trump owns a 60 percent stake in Trump Media & Technology Group, which owns Truth Social. As part of his deal with the company, he is obligated to post on Truth Social before posting on any other platform, with exceptions for campaign and political content.

    The price of TMTG shares also fell on Monday after Trump began posting on X, which could also be a consideration for Trump, given that he has to wait until September 19, when a six-month lockout period expires, before he can sell any of the shares he holds in the company.

    Musk knows that keeping Trump happy and on his platform is possibly key to reinvigorating X. But at the end of the day, Musk is still looking out for himself: During the conversation on Monday, right after agreeing with Trump’s takes on electric vehicles and US oil drilling that would appear to directly contradict Musk’s own business interests, Musk proposed that he would take a role in a potential second Trump administration on a “government efficiency body.”

    “I’d love it,” Trump said in response.

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    David Gilbert

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  • Donald Trump and Elon Musk’s X Space Took Forever to Start, Then Never Ended

    Donald Trump and Elon Musk’s X Space Took Forever to Start, Then Never Ended

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    In a rambling, over two-hour conversation in an X Space, Elon Musk caved to former president Donald Trump on policy issues that directly affect the billionaire’s businesses, like energy policy and climate change.

    Trump dominated the conversation, appearing to speak with a pronounced lisp and at times leaving little room for Musk to speak. After starting the call discussing the July assassination attempt against Trump, Musk and Trump bemoaned millions of criminals from all over the world flooding into the US, which is not happening. The former president voiced views and support for policies at odds with Musk’s business interests, like increasing US oil drilling and universal electric vehicle adoption.

    “My views on climate change and oil and gas probably differ from what most people would assume, because my views are actually pretty moderate in this regard,” Musk said after Trump suggested the need for additional US oil drilling. “I don’t think we should vilify the oil and gas industry and the people that have worked very hard in those industries to provide the necessary energy to support the economy.”

    Musk then asked Trump to start a “government efficiency” body that he would be invited to join if the former president was reelected. “You’re the greatest cutter,” Trump told Musk.

    The X event was delayed by nearly 45 minutes after the launch was mired in technical difficulties. It’s not clear exactly what caused the X Space to fail for so long, but Musk blamed “a massive DDOS” attack targeting the platform right as the conversation was slated to begin at 8pm ET. By the time Musk started the conversation, around one million people were listening to it live, despite Trump’s suggestion that “millions” of people had joined the Space. Despite Musk’s claims of a cyberattack, the rest of X appeared to be working just fine at the time of the event.

    “A Distributed Denial of Service attack against our servers saturated about all of our data lines like, we had hundreds of gigabits of data saturated,” Musk said at the top of the call. “We think we’ve overcome most of that.”

    This isn’t the first time a political X Space glitched out. Florida governor Ron DeSantis planned to announce his presidential campaign in an X Space with Musk last year, but the platform couldn’t withstand the more than 660,000 listeners. Minutes after the conversation started, the link to the Space broke. When the audio stream worked, it was overwhelmed by screeching feedback. At the time, Musk said X’s servers were overloaded.

    In several follow-up X posts, Musk said that the platform was stress-tested to withstand at least “8 million concurrent listeners.” Musk delayed the conversation several times and said that the full audio would be made available after the call.

    The Kamala Harris campaign spent the evening on Trump’s social media platform, Truth Social, reposting comments the former president made disparaging DeSantis’ Space with Musk last year. On Truth Social at the time, Trump posted that “the DeSanctus TWITTER launch is a DISASTER! His whole campaign will be a disaster. WATCH!”

    “The two worst people you know are live this evening,” the Harris campaign wrote in a fundraising email subject line on Monday.

    Repeatedly, Trump and Musk vilified Harris and her family during the interview, citing debunked conspiracies about her past.

    Musk repeatedly stated throughout the interview that he previously considered himself a Democrat. However, in recent weeks he’s moved more explicitly towards the right. Moments after the July assassination attempt against Trump, Musk formally endorsed the former president in a post on X. Musk reportedly pledged to donate $45 million per month to the pro-Trump super PAC America PAC that the billionaire started. He’s since denied these reports, saying in a later interview that he would be making “lower level” donations.

    The interview reached 1.3 million listeners at its peak.

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    Makena Kelly

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  • Biden Dropped Out Because “The Most Important Thing” Is “We Must Defeat Trump”: CBS News

    Biden Dropped Out Because “The Most Important Thing” Is “We Must Defeat Trump”: CBS News

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    In his first sit-down interview since dropping his 2024 campaign, President Joe Biden told CBS News reporter Robert Costa that he bowed out because he feared being a distraction in the Democrats’ efforts to defeat Republican nominee Donald Trump. Their discussion, which aired on CBS Sunday Morning, touched on that infamous presidential debate, Biden’s plans for the rest of his campaign, and what another Trump presidency could look like.

    “Although it’s a great honor being president, I think I have an obligation to the country,” Biden said. “The most important thing,” he continued, is “we must, we must, we must defeat Trump.”

    The interview comes three weeks after Biden dropped out and swiftly endorsed Vice President Kamala Harris. What followed has been an expedited, energized whirlwind of a campaign for Harris and her newly minted VP pick, Minnesota governor Tim Walz. The Democrats revised ticket has shaken up their opponents’ strategy and thrown a wrench into what, prior to Biden’s decision, appeared to be a coordinated campaign. Much of Trump and Republican vice presidential nominee J.D. Vance’s response has been filled with misogynistic and racist attacks on Harris.

    Following Biden’s concerning debate performance in late June, Democratic legislators from across the country began calling for the president to rethink his campaign. Some of Biden’s closest allies, like former president Barack Obama, were getting remarkably worried. One main concern was that a lackluster response at the polls for Biden could negatively impact down-ballot races in tough competitions.

    “Look,” Biden said during the CBS interview, “I had a really, really bad day in that debate because I was sick. But I have no serious problem,” adding at one point that he “can’t even say how old I am; it’s hard for me to get it outta my mouth.”

    “What happened,” Biden began, explaining what led him to end his bid, “was a number of my Democratic colleagues in the House and Senate thought that I was gonna hurt them in the races. And I was concerned if I stayed in the race, that would be the topic.”

    “You’d be interviewing me about, ‘Why did Nancy Pelosi say?’ ‘Why did so and so say?’” Biden continued. “I thought it would be a real distraction.”

    Biden is planning to hit the campaign trail again in the coming months—but this time to cheer on his former running partner. The president said he is going to team up with Pennsylvania governor and veepstakes runner-up Josh Shapiro to secure that battleground state’s 19 electoral votes. Biden said he’ll visit other states, too, adding that he wants to do “whatever Kamala thinks I can do to help most.”

    “I talk to [Harris] frequently, and by the way, I’ve known her running mate is a great guy,” Biden said of Walz. “As we say, if we grew up in the same neighborhood, we’d have been friends. He’s my kind of guy. He’s real, he’s smart. I’ve known him for several decades. I think it’s a hell of a team.”

    In his remaining time in the office, Biden said he plans to focus on the ongoing war in Gaza and efforts to avoid additional escalations toward regional war, claiming that a ceasefire deal during his presidency is “still possible.” His remarks come after an Israel Defense Forces airstrike on a school where individuals were sheltering killed at least 100 people and injured dozens more Saturday morning, according to Gaza’s civil defense. After the attack, the White House released a statement urging Israel “to minimize civilian harm.”

    Biden also touched on his efforts to reform the Supreme Court, deeming the institution “so out of whack.” On July 29, the president released a three-part blueprint on how to ensure “that no one—neither the President nor the Supreme Court—is above the law.”

    First, pass “a constitutional amendment that makes clear no President is above the law or immune from prosecution for crimes committed while in office,” in response to the court’s recent immunity ruling siding with Trump.” Second, establish 18-year term limits for justices. Third, “Congress should pass binding, enforceable conduct and ethics rules” requiring that justices disclose gifts, refrain from public political activity, and recuse themselves from cases with conflicts of interest for their spouses or themselves.

    A USA Today/Ipsos poll from early August found that a majority of both Democrats and Republicans were in favor of the reforms.

    In Biden’s initial Oval Office address after leaving the race, he said that nothing “can come in the way of saving our democracy.” Even, he added, “personal ambition.” Throughout the interview between Biden and Costa, the president repeatedly returned to his anxieties about the future of American democracy should Trump win in November. “Mark my words,” Biden warned, “if he wins this [election], watch what happens, he’s a genuine danger to American security.”

    Trump has said it will be a “bloodbath” if he doesn’t get elected.

    When Costa asked the president if he was “confident” that there would be a peaceful transfer of power in 2025, Biden responded quickly.

    “If Trump loses, I’m not confident at all.”

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    Katie Herchenroeder

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