At Bloomberg Opinion, Patricia Lopez writes that “Latinos were motivated by the same concerns that drove other voters in the new Trump coalition: an economy that has eroded working-class buying power and a flood of immigrants who were feared as competitors for jobs”:
Trump shrewdly played on those fears with his “Black jobs” riff, which he later expanded to include “Hispanic jobs.” His anti-immigrant rhetoric drew a bright line between Hispanics on the one hand and migrants on the other. “They’re going to be attacking — and they already are — Black population jobs, Hispanic population jobs, and they’re attacking union jobs too,” Trump said. “So, when you see the border, it’s not just the crime. Your jobs are being taken away, too.” Never mind data that shows the claim is untrue.
The pitch drew Latinos into a universe where many longed to be, included in the mainstream, and allowed them to participate in otherizing the new enemy — recent immigrants. Trump’s attacks also exploited tensions within the Latino population itself. Mexicans by far represent the largest and most well-established group of Latino Americans and occupy all rungs of society, from entrepreneurial billionaires on down. Puerto Ricans are American citizens by birth and some — though by no means all — resent being associated with those here illegally.
Trump gave permission for each group to look down on newer waves of immigrants that now arrive mostly from Central and South America and have proved as much a headache to Mexico as to the US.
Republicans [were] organized, funded, and ambitious in Latino neighborhoods this year, especially in South Texas, Pennsylvania, and Florida. Democrats, meanwhile, keep prioritizing the most likely voters, in whiter, college educated suburbs. In low-turnout communities, door knocking and in-person outreach makes a huge difference.
And he explained that Latinos’ perceptions of Trump didn’t outweigh their basic economic concerns as a group that is 80 percent working class:
I’ve spoken with pro-Trump Latinos who aren’t shy about calling out his racist comments. They don’t have rose-colored goggles for the man. Still, many tend to assume his xenophobia is directed at undocumented immigrants, not them personally. Polling still find that most Latinos consider Democrats the more welcoming party. Republicans get read as racist. But Latinos vote strategically — the economy ranks as their #1 issue; racism trails far behind. And some think Democrats are also racist.
There’s another dynamic this year. In the past, the taboo for voting for Trump was intense. After Trump’s surprising success in 2020, however, the social consequences for openly supporting him are less severe. Do not underestimate how powerful this interpersonal element is.
He says that Democrats are losing Latinos in part because they are choosing not to court them:
Latino dealignment is a symptom of broader class dealignment. My argument, however, is that this transformation comes from electoral strategy as much as ideological shift. Democrats *could* win; but they’re not trying as hard as the GOP to win working class voters.
Bloomberg Opinion’s Patricia Lopez also concluded that Democrats are going to have take long hard look at how to appeal to this enormous and diverse group of voters:
Ronald Reagan used to joke that Latinos were Republicans, “they just don’t know it yet.” Democrats have long sought to make Latinos part of their coalition — fighting for Dreamers, a path to citizenship, and better wages and working conditions.
But they may have lost a step in recognizing that Latinos are no more a monolith than Black voters or any other identity group. The Latino red shift could be a fluke or a permanent realignment. But expect the priorities of this multi-faceted community to come into a much higher profile as the two parties battle over them.
Equis Research’s Stephanie Valencia and Carlos Odio, meanwhile, are pushing back on the idea that Latinos voters can be blamed for Trump’s victory, as his swing-state wins and the shift of the Latino vote are in fact two distinct stories:
The magnitude of the gains Trump made in places like New York, New Jersey, and Texas — states that don’t decide the presidential race – were surprising and point to deeper discontent and broader trends.
But the support Trump received among Latinos in the battleground states should not have been a surprise to anyone who was paying attention. Those shifts were present in polling throughout the cycle and since the early days of the Biden presidency. Harris ultimately had the support she needed with Latinos to win, if all else held according to plan. Yes, Trump did make big gains with Latinos, but those gains are not what decided his victory. What happened in this election is larger than Latinos – Trump’s win came from a broader erosion of support in key battleground states. Latinos in the battleground states are a critical part of winning but they do not alone determine the outcome.
They also argue that Trump “Trump should not misread any gains in Latino votes as support for his full agenda — in fact quite the opposite”:
The Latinos who did move to Trump were clear: they want him to bring down prices. They rejected Project 2025, and told us repeatedly in focus groups and polling that they didn’t believe he would do any of the things his opponents said he would, from banning abortion to repealing Obamacare to deporting long-term immigrants like Dreamers. They voted for Trump because they believed he would prioritize the economy over all else, just as they did in voting for him.
UCLA political psychologist Efrén Pérez adds that based on his research, Latinos and other people of color are simply becoming more polarized, just like everybody else already is:
What I think we’re seeing is polarization catching up to people of colr. We get two parties and two choices and all of the internal heterogeneity of various people of color must be channeled and expressed through these two (!) parties. Both parties currently “own” different identities. Eg, Democrats are the party of people of color while Republicans are the party of “real” Americans. Many people of color have clear identity priorities. Among Asian and Latino individuals, about 27 percent of them value their American identity over their racial identity.
Part of what is happening with party identity among these groups is that they are sorting into the “correct” party that they see reflecting how they view themselves.
The tightly contested 2024 presidential election could be defined by the gender gap with Vice President Kamala Harris polling better among women, according to a CBS News poll from late October.
Recent CBS News polling shows the race between Harris and former President Donald Trump is a toss-up in seven battleground states as more than 78 million Americans have already voted ahead of Election Day on Tuesday.
Harris is counting on suburban women to help her win the presidential election. She received unexpected help from some longtime Republicans with the Women4U.S. group, an organization aimed at outreach to conservative women.
Stephanie Sharp, a co-founder of the organization, is a self-proclaimed lifelong conservative. This year though, Sharp is urging fellow Republican women to vote for Harris.
“We’ll send Donald Trump packing, and then we can begin to have conversations again that are productive and have compromise on issues that are important to all of us,” Sharp said.
Her message is for women turned off by the former president’s rhetoric toward women and his role in reversing the landmark Supreme Court decision Roe v. Wade.
Trump recently said at a campaign stop in Wisconsin, “I want to protect the women of our country… Whether the women like it or not, I’m going to protect them.”
In Pennsylvania, the organization is targeting voters in the Philadelphia suburbs who helped President Biden win the state four years ago.
“There are, again, hundreds of thousands of Republican women out there who are ready to vote outside their party, but they don’t want to talk about it,” Jennifer Horn, chief strategist for Women4U.S., said.
Across battleground states, Post-it notes are popping up in women’s bathroom stalls, aimed at the so-called silent Harris supporters.
Campaign ads, including one narrated by actress Julia Roberts, remind voters that their vote is private.
Some Trump supporters are skeptical of polling that shows Harris with a big lead among women. They say it’s about policy, not personality.
“We’re not going home with him. We are not sitting and eating at the dining room table with him every night, but his actions speak louder than words and his actions are more aligned with my faith, with my family and the values that we hold dear,” Beth Scolis, a Trump supporter, said.
A senior Trump campaign official told CBS News that even if Harris performs better with women, they think Trump’s popularity among men is more impactful.
On the final day of the campaign, Trump will campaign in North Carolina and Pennsylvania, before holding his last rally in Michigan. Harris will crisscross Pennsylvania, a key battleground with 19 electoral votes. She has planned events in Allentown, Reading and Pittsburgh, before her final rally in Philadelphia.
Weijia Jiang is the senior White House correspondent for CBS News based in Washington, D.C. Jiang has covered the White House beat since 2018, including the transition between the Trump and Biden administrations. In 2023, Jiang won an Emmy Award for her contributions to “CBS Mornings.”
Josh Riley, the Democratic challenger running for Congress in New York’s 19th District, has a clear message on abortion: “I believe that women’s health care decisions are women’s health care decisions and that politicians should stay the hell out of it.”
And his Republican opponent, the incumbent Representative Marc Molinaro, is saying nearly the same thing: “I believe health care decisions should be between a woman and her doctor, not Washington.”
Across the country’s most competitive House races, Republicans have spent months trying to redefine themselves on abortion, going so far as to borrow language that would not feel out of place at a rally of Vice President Kamala Harris. Many Republicans who until recently backed federal abortion restrictions are now saying the issue should be left to the states.
At least a half-dozen Republican candidates have put out direct-to-camera ads declaring their opposition to a federal abortion ban. Instead, they say, they support exceptions to existing state laws and back protections for reproductive health care, such as I.V.F.
Republican candidates address abortion head-on in campaign videos
Click on any video in the grid to play it.
Anthony D’Esposito
Republican, N.Y. 4
Mike Lawler
Republican, N.Y. 17
Marc Molinaro
Republican, N.Y. 19
Joe Kent
Republican, Wash. 3
Michelle Steel
Republican, C.A. 45
Juan Ciscomani
Republican, Ariz. 6
Democrats have raised the possibility of a nationwide abortion ban should Republicans win in November, and they are framing the campaign as another referendum on the Supreme Court’s Dobbs decision, which overturned Roe v. Wade. They are hoping to continue their run of electoral successes since the 2022 decision to win back control of the House.
Any new federal legislation on abortion would have to pass both the House and the Senate and be signed by the president to become law. But whichever party emerges with a majority in the House will have the ability to dictate the legislative agenda, including whether measures to restrict or expand abortion access have the chance to pass.
Republicans in California and New York in particular, who are running in swing districts in blue states that favor abortion rights, have felt the most pressure to address the issue directly. “If we don’t talk about the issue, we become whatever the Democrats say we are,” said Will Reinert, the press secretary for the National Republican Congressional Committee.
To better understand how abortion is playing a role in these campaigns, The New York Times surveyed candidates from both parties in the most competitive House races about their support for federal limits on abortion. The Times also looked at voting records, issues listed on campaign websites, debate and media coverage, and endorsements from major abortion rights and anti-abortion groups.
The Times survey showed that while Republicans are notably focused on what they will not do on abortion at the federal level, their Democratic opponents are talking about what they will do to protect abortion rights. Nearly all the Democratic candidates said they supported restoring the protections of Roe v. Wade, which would allow access to abortion until fetal viability, or around 24 weeks, in every state.
In attack ads, Democrats are pointing to their opponents’ voting records or past statements as evidence of extremism — despite what they may be saying now.
Democratic candidates highlight Republicans’ records on abortion in campaign videos
Click on any video in the grid to play it.
Josh Riley campaign
Democrat, N.Y. 19
Will Rollins campaign
Democrat, Calif. 41
More broadly, abortion rights groups said Republicans are misleading voters by claiming they do not support an outright abortion “ban,” when they might support a federal “limit” or “standard,” such as the 15-week proposal put forward by Senator Lindsey Graham in 2022.
“They are playing around with the semantics; they are clearly testing out different framing and messaging in an attempt to try and deceive voters because they realize how politically unpopular their policy stances are,” said Jessica Arons, a director of policy and government affairs at the American Civil Liberties Union.
Republicans in the Times survey almost universally declined to answer questions about gestational limits. Only one, Representative Don Bacon of Nebraska, said he supported a specific federal limit, in the third trimester.
What Republican candidates are saying about abortion
“I do not support a federal abortion ban. The Dobbs decision decided this was an issue left to the states and that’s where I believe policy on the issue should be decided.”
David Valadao Republican, Calif. 22
“At the federal level, I would only support legislation to outlaw late-term abortion, with protections for the three exceptions. Otherwise, states must vote on this issue.”
Don Bacon Republican, Neb. 2
“I am pro-life, believe abortion stops a beating heart, and oppose taxpayer funded abortion. Since the U.S. Supreme Court has returned this issue to the states, I will not vote for a national abortion ban.”
As recently as 2021, a majority of House Republicans — including seven incumbents in this year’s tossup races — co-sponsored the Life at Conception Act, a bill that would have amounted to a nationwide abortion ban. This year, Representative Scott Perry of Pennsylvania’s 10th District was the only incumbent in a competitive race to stay on as a co-sponsor.
Two Republican incumbents who now say they oppose a national ban — Representatives Ken Calvert and David Valadao in California — voted in favor of a 20-week ban that passed the House in 2017. Representative Mariannette Miller-Meeks, an Iowa Republican, co-sponsored a 15-week ban on abortion in 2022. She did not respond to questions about whether she still supports it.
Other Republicans described themselves as personally “pro-life” but said they accepted the abortion laws in place in their states. Rob Bresnahan Jr., a challenger in Pennsylvania’s 8th District, said he supported the state’s current law, which allows abortion until 24 weeks.
Democrats, when they were not attacking Republicans, leaned into language about personal freedom, with many in the survey saying the government should not be involved in medical decisions.
Another common refrain was that the decision to have an abortion should be “between a woman and her doctor.” Two Democrats used similar language rather than explicitly calling for federal abortion protections.
What Democratic candidates are saying about abortion
“Abortion is health care. This is not a place for government interference. I trust every person I know and love, and any New Mexican to make that decision for themselves.”
Gabe Vasquez Democrat, N.M. 2
“I have always believed that this decision should be left between a woman, her doctor and within her own faith.”
Rudy Salas Democrat, Calif. 22
“I believe the decisions a woman makes for her body and her family are deeply personal and politicians have no place telling her what she can and cannot do.”
Tony Vargas Democrat, Neb. 2
By appearing to moderate their stance on abortion, candidates have risked losing the backing of prominent advocacy groups. Only three Republicans in the tossup races received an endorsement from Susan B. Anthony Pro-Life America, and seven received one from National Right to Life.
Two major abortion rights groups, by contrast, endorsed nearly all the Democratic candidates. Planned Parenthood — whose political action fund is pouring $40 million into the campaign — endorsed all but six candidates, while Reproductive Freedom for All endorsed all but four.
Endorsements from major anti-abortion groups
Candidate
District
Susan B. Anthony Pro-Life America
National Right to Life
Anderson
Va. 7
Va. 7
Bacon*
Neb. 2
Neb. 2
Buckhout
N.C. 1
N.C. 1
Begich
Alaska At-Large
Alaska At-Large
Ciscomani*
Ariz. 6
Ariz. 6
Miller-Meeks*
Iowa 1
Iowa 1
Nunn*
Iowa 3
Iowa 3
Perry*
Pa. 10
Pa. 10
Schweikert*
Ariz. 1
Ariz. 1
Barrett
Mich. 7
Mich. 7
Bresnahan Jr.
Pa. 8
Pa. 8
Calvert*
Calif. 41
Calif. 41
Chavez-DeRemer*
Ore. 5
Ore. 5
Coughlin
Ohio 13
Ohio 13
D’Esposito*
N.Y. 4
N.Y. 4
Duarte*
Calif. 13
Calif. 13
Evans
Colo. 8
Colo. 8
Garcia*
Calif. 27
Calif. 27
Herrell
N.M. 2
N.M. 2
Junge
Mich. 8
Mich. 8
Kean Jr.*
N.J. 7
N.J. 7
Kent
Wash. 3
Wash. 3
Lawler*
N.Y. 17
N.Y. 17
Mackenzie
Pa. 7
Pa. 7
Molinaro*
N.Y. 19
N.Y. 19
Steel*
Calif. 45
Calif. 45
Theriault
Maine 2
Maine 2
Valadao*
Calif. 22
Calif. 22
Endorsements from major abortion rights groups
Candidate
District
Planned Parenthood
Repro. Freedom for All
Altman
N.J. 7
N.J. 7
Baccam
Iowa 3
Iowa 3
Bohannan
Iowa 1
Iowa 1
Bynum
Ore. 5
Ore. 5
Caraveo*
Colo. 8
Colo. 8
Cartwright*
Pa. 8
Pa. 8
Davis*
N.C. 1
N.C. 1
Engel
Ariz. 6
Ariz. 6
Gillen
N.Y. 4
N.Y. 4
Gluesenkamp Perez*
Wash. 3
Wash. 3
Golden*
Maine 2
Maine 2
Gray
Calif. 13
Calif. 13
Hertel
Mich. 7
Mich. 7
Jones
N.Y. 17
N.Y. 17
McDonald Rivet
Mich. 8
Mich. 8
Peltola*
Alaska At-Large
Alaska At-Large
Riley
N.Y. 19
N.Y. 19
Rollins
Calif. 41
Calif. 41
Salas
Calif. 22
Calif. 22
Shah
Ariz. 1
Ariz. 1
Stelson
Pa. 10
Pa. 10
Sykes*
Ohio 13
Ohio 13
Tran
Calif. 45
Calif. 45
Vargas
Neb. 2
Neb. 2
Vasquez*
N.M. 2
N.M. 2
Vindman
Va. 7
Va. 7
Whitesides
Calif. 27
Calif. 27
Wild*
Pa. 7
Pa. 7
Representative Jared Golden, the Democratic incumbent in Maine’s 2nd Congressional District — an area Mr. Trump won by six points in 2020 — did not get Planned Parenthood’s endorsement this year. He said the reason was his vote for the 2024 defense policy bill, which included an amendment blocking reimbursement for abortion travel costs for service members.
Mr. Golden said he was not concerned about the lack of support from the group, pointing instead to his co-sponsorship of the Women’s Health Protection Act, a bill to restore the protections of Roe.
“I’m quite confident that voters in Maine know where I stand,” he said.
Compare statements from House candidates on abortion policy
The New York Times asked candidates and their campaigns about support for a federal minimum standard on abortion. Statements have been lightly edited for length and clarity.
District
Dem. position
Rep. position
Alaska At‑Large
Alaska At‑Large
Mary Peltola*
No response to survey.
“Roe v. Wade set a precedent that was the law of the land for 50 years. She believes that standard was the right one — furthermore we know the importance of having strong exceptions for rape, incest, life of mother and health of mother throughout.”
Nick Begich
No response to survey.
“While I strongly support efforts that defend the rights of those not yet born, the courts have made it clear, abortion is a state issue and not an issue for the federal government to decide.”
Ariz. 1
Ariz. 1
Amish Shah
No response to survey.
“As a doctor, I understand that these personal decisions should be made by women and their physicians. That’s why we need to codify Roe v. Wade and give women across the country the right to control their own bodies and health care.”
David Schweikert*
No response to survey.
“It’s pretty clear that it belongs to the states,” via Business Insider.
Ariz. 6
Ariz. 6
Kirsten Engel
No response to survey.
“Protecting women’s reproductive freedoms at the federal level will be one of my top priorities when elected to Congress. Women had those protections for over 50 years when Roe v. Wade was the law of the land, and that is what I will advocate for us to return to.”
Juan Ciscomani*
No response to survey.
“I’m pro-life, I reject the extremes, and I trust women. I’m against a federal ban on abortion. I’m for timetables and exceptions, including for rape, incest and the life of the mother,” via campaign site.
Calif. 13
Calif. 13
Adam Gray
No response to survey.
“What I support and will vote for is restoring Roe v. Wade into federal law so that women regain the federal rights they had for generations.”
John Duarte*
No response to survey.
“Congressman Duarte opposes federal abortion restrictions.”
Calif. 22
Calif. 22
Rudy Salas
No response to survey.
“I have always believed that this decision should be left between a woman, her doctor and within her own faith. Women should have the freedom to choose what happens with their own bodies and to determine their own health care.”
David Valadao*
No response to survey.
“I do not support a federal abortion ban. The Dobbs decision decided this was an issue left to the states and that’s where I believe policy on the issue should be decided.”
Calif. 27
Calif. 27
George Whitesides
No response to survey.
“I strongly support a woman’s right to make her own health care decisions, and if elected to Congress, I will vote to codify Roe v. Wade to ensure reproductive freedom for all Americans.”
Mike Garcia*
No response to survey.
“I oppose a national abortion ban — California’s law on abortion stays the law — and I support exceptions for rape, incest and life of the mother.”
Calif. 41
Calif. 41
Will Rollins
No response to survey.
“I support a federal minimum standard for abortion. In Congress, I will advocate for legislation that restores Roe v. Wade, which prohibits states from banning abortions before fetal viability. It’s critical that we protect a woman’s right to choose nationwide.”
Ken Calvert*
No response to survey.
“Congressman Calvert does not support a federal abortion ban and supports the right of Californians to determine this for themselves.”
Calif. 45
Calif. 45
Derek Tran
No response to survey.
“Derek Tran supports enshrining reproductive rights into law as California voters did through Proposition 1 in 2022.”
Michelle Steel*
No response to survey.
“Michelle’s position has always been, and remains, that this issue is best left up to the states, and she does not support a national ban on abortion.”
Colo. 8
Colo. 8
Yadira Caraveo*
No response to survey.
“Rep. Caraveo believes we need to codify Roe v. Wade. This was the law of the land for decades, and since the Dobbs decision, the lives of far too many women have been at risk.”
Gabe Evans
No response to survey.
“I am pro-life, believe abortion stops a beating heart, and oppose taxpayer-funded abortion. Since the U.S. Supreme Court has returned this issue to the states, I will not vote for a national abortion ban.”
Iowa 1
Iowa 1
Christina Bohannan
No response to survey.
“On Day 1 in Congress, I will work to codify Roe v. Wade and ensure women in Iowa and across the country once again have the freedom to make their own health care decisions.”
Mariannette Miller-Meeks*
No response to survey.
“The congresswoman has been clear that she is pro-life with the exceptions of rape, incest, and life of the mother.”
Iowa 3
Iowa 3
Lanon Baccam
No response to survey.
“It’s more important than ever to restore the protections of Roe v. Wade, and that’s why I’ll support the Women’s Health Protection Act in Congress. I believe women’s health care decisions should be between her and her doctor — not politicians.”
Zach Nunn*
No response to survey.
“He is pro-life, but has voted for exceptions. He’s fought for expanded access to contraception and IVF. He opposes a national abortion ban.”
Maine 2
Maine 2
Jared Golden*
No response to survey.
“I’m a cosponsor of the Women’s Health Protection Act, to restore Roe, and I would vote for it if it came to the floor again.”
Austin Theriault
No response to survey.
“Austin opposes and will vote against a national abortion ban.”
Mich. 7
Mich. 7
Curtis Hertel
No response to survey.
“When Roe was overturned and abortion rights came under attack in our state, I worked across the aisle to get rid of the 1931 abortion ban and fought to enshrine abortion rights in Michigan’s constitution. I’m running to make Roe the law of the land and protect reproductive freedom.”
Tom Barrett
No response to survey.
“Tom does not support a federal ban. He has consistently argued this is a decision for the states and while he disagrees with Prop. 3, Michigan voters have made that decision.”
Mich. 8
Mich. 8
Kristen McDonald Rivet
No response to survey.
“After Roe was overturned, I protected abortion rights in Michigan by helping to repeal our state’s 1931 ban without exceptions for rape or incest. In Congress, I’ll fight for a federal law restoring the Roe standard across America.”
Paul Junge
No response to survey.
“I would never and have never supported a national abortion ban.”
Neb. 2
Neb. 2
Tony Vargas
No response to survey.
“I believe the decisions a woman makes for her body, and her family, are deeply personal and politicians have no place telling her what she can and cannot do. In Congress, I’ll vote to codify the protections earned from the Roe v. Wade decision into federal law.”
Don Bacon*
No response to survey.
“I support the Nebraska law that puts a reasonable three-month restriction on abortions with exceptions for rape, incest and the health of the mother. At the federal level, I would only support legislation to outlaw late-term abortion, with protections for the three exceptions. Otherwise, states must vote on this issue.”
N.M. 2
N.M. 2
Gabe Vasquez*
No response to survey.
“Abortion is health care. This is not a place for government interference. I trust every person I know and love, and any New Mexican, to make that decision for themselves.”
Yvette Herrell
No response to survey.
“Yvette has been clear that since the Dobbs decision returned abortion policy to the states, she does not support a federal ban.”
N.J. 7
N.J. 7
Sue Altman
No response to survey.
“Sue will work to protect access to contraception, reproductive choice, and women’s health,” via campaign site.
Thomas Kean Jr.*
No response to survey.
“Tom is opposed to a national abortion ban. He has voted to protect access to mifepristone and believes any legislation should be left to the voters of each state to advocate for their positions to their legislatures.”
N.Y. 17
N.Y. 17
Mondaire Jones
No response to survey.
“We must enshrine protections for abortion into federal law.”
Mike Lawler*
No response to survey.
“He does not and never will support a national abortion ban.”
N.Y. 19
N.Y. 19
Josh Riley
No response to survey.
“I believe that women’s health care decisions are women’s health care decisions and that politicians should stay the hell out of it. In Congress, I will codify the right to abortion as it existed under Roe v. Wade into law.”
Marc Molinaro*
No response to survey.
“I believe health care decisions should be between a woman and her doctor, not Washington. I kept my promise to reject a national abortion ban — keeping New York’s laws in place.”
N.Y. 4
N.Y. 4
Laura Gillen
No response to survey.
“The standard should be the same as it was the day before the disastrous Dobbs decision. It worked for a half a century, and we should return to it.”
Anthony D’Esposito*
No response to survey.
“Congressman D’Esposito does not support a nationwide abortion ban and believes legislating on abortion should fall under the purview of state governments.”
N.C. 1
N.C. 1
Don Davis*
No response to survey.
“Congress must take action and codify Roe v. Wade. He firmly believes that a woman’s health decisions should remain private between her and her doctor,” via campaign site.
Laurie Buckhout
No response to survey.
“As the only candidate to be endorsed by the pro-life SBA (Susan B. Anthony) List, I believe every life is precious and would vote to preserve life, including the mother’s,” via The Perquimans Weekly.
Ohio 13
Ohio 13
Emilia Sykes*
No response to survey.
“Congresswoman Sykes has a strong record of supporting the protections provided under Roe that give women across the country the right to make decisions about what is best for their bodies.”
Kevin Coughlin
No response to survey.
“Issues related to abortion are best left to the states, and there should be no federal ban.”
Ore. 5
Ore. 5
Janelle Bynum
No response to survey.
“Rep. Bynum supports codifying Roe v. Wade into federal law so that women across the country can have those rights back. This is a decision that should be kept between a woman and her doctors.”
Lori Chavez-DeRemer*
No response to survey.
“The congresswoman doesn’t support any federal standard limiting Oregonians’ access to abortion.”
Pa. 7
Pa. 7
Susan Wild*
No response to survey.
“I have always believed that private medical decisions, including whether or not to receive abortion care, should be made by a woman, her doctor, her partner and her faith if she so chooses.”
Ryan Mackenzie
No response to survey.
“He’s opposed to a national abortion ban; he supports exceptions for rape, incest, and life of the mother.”
Pa. 8
Pa. 8
Matt Cartwright*
No response to survey.
“I strongly support the Women’s Health Protection Act, which would restore Roe’s protections into federal law. We should trust women with their health care decisions, not politicians.”
Rob Bresnahan Jr.
No response to survey.
“Rob Bresnahan does not support a national abortion ban and does support the current Pennsylvania protections of 24 weeks and exceptions for rape, incest, and the life of the mother. ”
Pa. 10
Pa. 10
Janelle Stelson
No response to survey.
“I think these most intimate health care decisions should be made by women and their doctors … If elected, I will put those decisions back in the hands of women, where they belong.”
Scott Perry*
No response to survey.
“Scott Perry believes firmly in the sanctity of Life — period. He makes exceptions for circumstances that involve rape, incest and danger to the life of the mother,” via campaign site.
Va. 7
Va. 7
Eugene Vindman
No response to survey.
“In Congress, I will fight to make sure that the rights of women and girls in Virginia are never dependent on politicians in Richmond or Washington by voting to restore the protections of Roe nationwide.”
Derrick Anderson
No response to survey.
“Derrick opposes and would vote against a national abortion ban.”
Wash. 3
Wash. 3
Marie Gluesenkamp Perez*
No response to survey.
“Marie is an original co-sponsor of the Women’s Health Protection Act and supports codifying the abortion protections of Roe v. Wade in federal law, as well as ensuring women have continued access to contraception and I.V.F.”
Joe Kent
No response to survey.
“Following the Supreme Court decision that made abortion a state issue, Joe Kent opposes any new federal legislation on the issue.”
Methodology
The New York Times survey asked candidates or their campaigns two questions: 1) Do you support any federal minimum standard on abortion? 2) If so, until how many weeks in pregnancy (i.e. 6 weeks, 15 weeks, viability, etc.)?
Those surveyed were major-party candidates for the U.S. House of Representatives whose races were rated “tossups” by the Cook Political Report at any point in October 2024. Alaska’s at-large congressional district includes four candidates and will be decided by ranked-choice voting; the two candidates who received the most votes in the primary were included in the survey. All but six candidates responded to emailed requests for comment. In these cases, position summaries were taken from campaign websites or from other public statements.
Note: Counts of candidate statements in the top graphic were taken from survey responses only.
ST. PAUL, Minn. — As the votes are tallied on election night and maps show which presidential candidate has a lead in each state, viewers likely won’t need an explanation on why some states and red and others blue.
Some voters know that a donkey represents the Democratic party while an elephant represents the Republican party. Animals aside, all you need nowadays are two colors. Blue flowed at this year’s Democratic National Convention, while red dominated at the Republic National Convention.
People WCCO talked with assumed the color distinctions have been that way for decades, if not centuries in the United States.
“But of course like so much about American politics, it’s got a history,” said Larry Jacobs, a politics professor at the University of Minnesota. “Even though we tend to associate the Democratic party with the color blue, it’s actually a color that goes back to the Civil War as associated with the Republican party.”
The Library of Congress has a U.S. map from 1880. It shows presidential election results from that year. In it, blue represents Republicans. The color is dominating areas now known as Democratic strongholds. That’s the opposite of how maps are shown in the modern era of election coverage.
Colors on election night weren’t as important in the mid-1900s since all viewers saw on TV for a long time was black and white.
That changed in 1976 when NBC News debuted a color-coded map with red representing states won by Democrat Jimmy Carter.
Four years later, CBS News followed suit, using blue to represent states won by Republican Ronald Reagan in the 1980 election. In the years that followed, media outlets lacked uniformity on which color should represent which party.
“It really wasn’t until around 2000 that you start to see the parties but also the media associating red with Republican and blue with the Democratic party,” said Jacobs.
It was during the 2000 election that the New York Times and USA Today are credited as leading the current color-coding system thanks to the electoral maps they printed in their papers.
That marked a turning point in how America’s major political parties are symbolized, well beyond the day voters cast their ballots.
“When you flip on the television on election night, and you see a map with red and blue, it simplifies things. You don’t really need to know a whole lot more,” said Jacobs.
One party has a color in its name: The Green Party. It was chosen to represent its ideals, like protecting the environment.
Jeff Wagner joined the WCCO-TV team in November 2016 as a general assignment reporter, and now anchors WCCO’s Saturday evening newscasts. Although he’s new to Minnesota, he’s called the Midwest home his entire life.
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.
Door County, Wisconsin voted for Bush, Obama, Trump and Biden. Here’s what voters are thinking in the battleground-state swing county ahead of the presidential election.
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For all the polarization in American politics, everyone can agree that seven states hold the key to next month’s election. These swing states contain a total of 513 counties, and among them only one has voted for the winning candidate in every presidential election this century. Door County, Wisconsin, offers a distinct shade of purple. Unencumbered by tribal loyalties, the citizenry has whipsawed from George W. Bush twice to Barack Obama twice; to Donald Trump and then to Joe Biden… consider Door a window into this critical election. Feverishly, Donald Trump and Kamala Harris have been campaigning in swing states, especially Wisconsin. But neither has visited America’s swingiest county. So, we decided to.
The Wisconsin tourism board could do worse than to anchor its next marketing campaign in Door County, the peninsula wedged between Lake Michigan and Green Bay– the water not the home of the Packers…. nicknamed “the Cape Cod of the Midwest,” Door County and its coastline come embroidered with limestone cliffs, trees that blaze to life in the fall and enduring traditions like the fish boil.
The population: 30,000….and no one knows more of the locals than 84-year-old Niles Weborg, long-time fire chief…
Jon Wertheim:: Tell me about Door County…
Niles Weborg: How far do you want to go back? My relatives landed here, in 1851, from Norway…
Weborg has a handy way of placing Door County on Wisconsin’s map…
Niles Weborg: And, uh, this is where we’re at. Door County is up the thumb of Wisconsin. And Nor, Green Bay is down here. Milwaukee is down here. And we’re right about here on the Peninsula.
Jon Wertheim: So we got, we got a bay side. And we got a Lake Michigan side.
Niles Weborg: There you go.
Jon Wertheim: Tell me, politically, what are people like.
Niles Weborg: Well, politically, we were strictly Republicans.
But then the transplants came and now Door County is the ultimate political weathervane…. in 2020, Joe Biden carried Door County by 292 votes…the tightest margin in any Wisconsin county.
Joel Kitchens: And it’s not just the presidential elections. It’s virtually every state-wide election, we seem to pick the winner. It’s, it’s kind of weird.
Joel Kitchens
60 Minutes
Republican Joel Kitchens represents Door County in the State Assembly.
Jon Wertheim: What do you attribute that to?
Joel Kitchens: I think a lot of it is that we are such a cross section of the state that we have a lot of people that came from the cities and from the suburbs and retired. We have a strong agricultural community. We have heavy manufacturing, and as you can see when you drive along the lake shore and the bay shore, there’s a lotta money here. But there are also a lot of people that are really struggling as well.
On our road trip through Door County last week, we saw this first hand. The county is 92% White, but politically diverse. In the rural south: abundant signs for Donald Trump and towering silos….
25-year-old Austin Vandertie is a sixth-generation dairy farmer.
Jon Wertheim: When you go into that voting booth, first Tuesday in November, what is the one issue that’s most going to impact how you vote?
Austin Vandertie: Inflation. You know, inflation affects the cost of my feed, my fuel, my seed, my fertilizer, everything that it takes for me to grow a crop and feed it to my cows to get a good product.
Like many of his neighbors, Vandertie is voting for Trump. But as we headed north, cows and deer blinds gave way to artists and rainbow flags…
Near the top of the thumb in Door County, in the tourist town of Sister Bay—where red gives ground to blue—we met Emma Cox, who runs Kindgoods, a new-age boutique.
Emma Cox speaks with Jon Wertheim
60 Minutes
Jon Wertheim: For this election, what is gonna be the issue that you’re most concerned about?
Emma Cox: I think the issue that has been driving the– work of activism that I’ve been doing for the last two years has been reproductive rights.
Charming as her little pocket of America might be, she understands: Door County may be the leading indicator in this most contentious election.
Emma Cox: Well, it feels like all eyes are on us. All eyes are on Wisconsin, all eyes have been on Door County. And it feels like there’s pressure for us to deliver. (laugh)
Inasmuch as you can have a bellwether town within a bellwether county, Sturgeon Bay is Door’s gravitational and political center. Shipbuilding is the big industry here. Sensibilities vary from one yard to the next…
Even the animals get into the act
Jon Wertheim: Tell me who we have here?
John Vincent: This is Ziva. She’s our dog for democracy.
We met Ziva, as well as her owners, John and Annette Vincent, who organized a pop-up rally, flanking both sides of the main drag in Sturgeon Bay, drumming up support for the Democratic ticket…. and this is where shabby stereotypes come to die….
Annette and John Vincent with their dog Ziva
60 Minutes
Jon Wertheim: I saw a truck with a gun rack honk and I saw a Prius–
John Vincent: Yes.
Jon Wertheim: –go by and give you a thumbs down–
John Vincent: Isn’t that interesting–
Annette Vincent: Isn’t that interesting–
John Vincent: It’s more than just coincidental. We’re s– we’re so (truck honking) on the edge that we’re–
Annette Vincent: I mean, here comes a truck.
John Vincent: Whoa–
Jon Wertheim: On cue.
Annette Vincent: We– we have–
John Vincent: We’re purple.
Jon Wertheim: On cue–
John Vincent: We’re purple–
Annette Vincent: We– we are very purple. That is our impression from moving up here, is that we are very, very purple.
Now retired, they relocated from Chicago. They come three days a week not just to rally, but to gauge the political winds swirling off the bay….
Jon Wertheim: What’s a positive response look like?
John Vincent: Well, positive response can be anything from just a nod of the head to an enthusiastic wave, a horn honk– a solid horn honk– thumbs up
Jon Wertheim: You have data on raised thumbs versus raised middle fingers?
John Vincent: Well, that happens, too–
Annette Vincent: Oh, we get those too.
John Vincent: But I would say on– keep– you know, I have a pretty good sample size, and we run well over 80% positive to the negative.
Charles Franklin
60 Minutes
For a more scientific assessment of the entire state of Wisconsin, we turned to the director of the Marquette Law School poll, Charles Franklin. His poll, widely considered Wisconsin’s best, currently has Kamala Harris up four—but, not so fast….
Jon Wertheim: What is it like being a pollster these days?
Charles Franklin: It’s challenging, because we’ve seen polling errors in 2016 and 2020. And those were major issues.
Memorably, in 2016 and 2020, most polls—CBS included— fell short when accounting for the Trump vote.
Jon Wertheim: There’s something specific, particular to Trump that makes his support hard to capture.
Charles Franklin: In these four most recent elections, the two big errors have both come when Trump’s on the ballot. And the two elections without him on the ballot, we’ve been as good or better than our long term average.
Jon Wertheim: Say more about why you think that is.
Charles Franklin: The people that Trump mobilizes to vote really do turn out for him. But they seem to drop out of the electorate in the midterm.
Brian Schimming: My suspicion is it keeps the Kamala Harris campaign up all night long.
Brian Schimming
60 Minutes
Jon Wertheim: That there’s this cohort that hasn’t been capturable.
Brian Schimming: Correct.
Brian Schimming, Wisconsin’s Republican Party chair, is shaking the trees to identify those hidden Trump voters… and, crucially, get them to the polls.
Jon Wertheim: How many potential Trump supporters are there in Wisconsin who have never voted before?
Brian Schimming: Well, I spoke at President Trump’s rally the other day, and I said to the folks there, “Look, there are hundreds of thousands of people in this state who think like us, they act like us, they live like us, they believe like us, but they don’t vote.” And I truly believe that.
Jon Wertheim: Is it risky to rely on this sector, these low-propensity voters who have been so unreliable in the past?
Brian Schimming: It’s risky not to.
For the Democrats the strategy entails running up the numbers in Milwaukee…. and booming Dane County – home to Madison, the state capitol and the University of Wisconsin – where Biden won more than 75% of the vote in 2020…. meanwhile, they’ll try to stanch the bleeding in rural swaths that have swung heavily towards Trump….
Ben Wikler – state Democratic Party chair – thinks it’s a complete jump ball right now for Wisconsin’s 10 electoral votes.
Ben Wikler: So on Election Night, expect to stay up very late. And when you find out who won Wisconsin, which might happen at 4:00 in the morning, you probably know who won the presidential election.
Jon Wertheim: It’s that pivotal?
Ben Wikler: Wisconsin was the state that tipped the Electoral College for Donald Trump in 2016. There is every possibility that Wisconsin could tip the presidential election again in 2024.
Ben Wikler
60 Minutes
Wisconsin was decided by less than 1% in the last two elections. But get this: around 80% of the state’s counties were decided by a double digit margin… which only magnifies Door County’s uncanny distinction.
Ben Wikler: I think in Door County this election’s almost perfectly tied as well. I was just looking at the county-by-county data before I joined you today. Whoever wins Door County on Election Day probably wins the state of Wisconsin yet again.
Jon Wertheim: You say whoever wins Door County likely wins Wisconsin. You also just said whoever wins Wisconsin likely wins the national election.
Ben Wikler: Yes–
Jon Wertheim: Not an exaggeration.
Ben Wikler: But–
Jon Wertheim: Door County, Wisconsin–
Ben Wikler: –historically the case. Whoever wins in Door County is probably the next president of the United States.
It got us thinking, is there one person in Door County who’s actually picked the winning candidate in each of the last six presidential elections?…..The county did collectively; but did any single voter? If so, finding this mystery figure might provide a heck of a clue into how this presidential election will go…. So we went on a search….
We started with an APB at the local radio station…
TIM KOWOLS: If you or someone you know in Door County has voted for the presidential winner of every election going back to the year 2000, please reach out to 920…
But no response…. from the airwaves to the rooftops, Al Johnson’s swedish restaurant is best known for the goats that graze on the grass roof…
Inside, we found the locals who beat the sunrise and the tourists, let themselves in through the back door and pour their own coffee…
Jon Wertheim: Do you know anyone that’s voted for presidents six straight years now and gotten it right?
Male Voice (unidentified): No. No–
Female Voice (unidentified): No. (laughter)
We were told to go to another table and ask the guy in the hat…
Jon Wertheim: We got a hot tip it was…
Male Voice (unidentified): No, I had some of them. George H. W. was– was my vote. But– not his son.
Next stop in our pursuit, the local watering hole.
Jon Wertheim: Do you know that person?
Female Voice: I’m out.
Female Voice: I did not.
Female Voice: You have your work cut out for you. (laughter)
Then suddenly: a promising lead…
Female Voice: I hear you found your voter. (laughter)
Jon Wertheim: Seriously?
Female Voice: Right over there. He’s down there–
Jon Wertheim: Seriously?
There at the end of the bar…sitting before something called a Badger Melt and a tall glass of milk—trucker, Joe Conlon.
Jon Wertheim: Bush, Bush, Obama, Obama, Trump, Biden.
Joe Conlon: I came close. Five out of six.
Jon Wertheim and Joe Conlon
60 Minutes
Jon Wertheim: Five out of six?
Joe Conlon: Yeah. Yeah, I didn’t vote for Biden.
Jon Wertheim: Can I ask you how you’re–gonna be votin’ this year?
Joe Conlon:: I think I’m gonna be voting for Trump again.
Jon Wertheim: Three times in a row?
Joe Conlon:: Yes.
We had come agonizingly close…
Our last stop: the Rotary Club of Sturgeon Bay.
Jon Wertheim: I’m curious: does anyone know someone, a voter, who actually voted for the winning candidate all six years? Anyone?
Female Voice: I think I did. (laughter) Now that you ask the question, yes, I think I did.
Behold! our Door County unicorn….
Female Voice: No, no, now– no, I didn’t, now that I’m thinking about it. (laughter)
Jon Wertheim: We thought you had all six?
Female Voice: I thought I did. But, no, now I’m thinking back, I didn’t.
After scouring Door County, we came up empty… which shows the improbability of it all…
But in our quest, maybe we stumbled across something even more rare, we found a place in America where family and community outrank party loyalty. In this divisive election season, we came to America’s ultimate battleground….except there was no battle … as they say here with pride, we live above the tension line.
Jon Wertheim: What’s your sense of how the tone in Door County compares to the tone nationally?
Emma Cox: You don’t wanna alienate your neighbors. You don’t wanna alienate your fellow business owners. You all come together.
Jon Wertheim: Do you have family members that are gonna vote differently from you?
Austin Vandertie
60 Minutes
Austin Vandertie: Oh, absolutely.
Jon Wertheim: Everyone invited to Thanksgiving, regardless?
Austin Vandertie: Absolutely. Politics is, you know, if we can’t talk about it that means it’s gone way too far in the wrong direction.
Jon Wertheim: You recognize that’s not necessarily the, the vibe in the country at large?
Austin Vandertie: Hey. We’re a little different in Wisconsin, I guess. We got that Midwest nice going on.
In keeping with the undulations of Highway 42, in Door County, Wisconsin, you swing back and forth and continue on down the road.
Produced by Draggan Mihailovich. Associate producer, Emily Cameron. Broadcast associate, Elizabeth Germino. Edited by Peter M. Berman.
John Fabbricatore enforced federal immigration laws in his position as an ICE field office director until two years ago, and now he hopes to help secure America’s borders as a congressman.
The Republican candidate in Colorado’s 6th Congressional District is drawing on his career with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement as he runs against U.S. Rep. Jason Crow in the Nov. 5 election. Crow, a Democrat, just finished his third term in Congress as the representative of the district, which includes Aurora, Littleton, Englewood, Greenwood Village and Centennial.
The odds weigh heavily in Crow’s favor. The nonpartisan Cook Political Report doesn’t consider the fight for the 6th District to be competitive. It’s ranked as solidly Democratic, in part because Crow, 45, won all three of his elections by double-digit percentages and redistricting in 2020 resulted in boundaries more favorable to Democrats.
That’s a change from 2018 when the district was seen as a battleground and Crow won his first race by unseating then-U.S. Rep. Mike Coffman, now Aurora’s mayor.
But this time, Fabbricatore, 52, says voters are looking for a candidate who will prioritize the economy and lower taxes — and he contends that he’s the person for the job.
“They want someone that wants to fight,” Fabbricatore said.
He and Crow share certain traits. They’re both veterans: Fabbricatore served in the U.S. Air Force, and Crow was an Army Ranger. They’re hunters, each having longstanding experience with firearms. Neither hails from Colorado originally, with Fabbricatore raised in New York City and Crow in Madison, Wisconsin.
And the candidates, both fathers of two children, reside in Aurora.
Beyond that, their stances on major issues diverge — including on immigration, which Fabbricatore refers to as his “subject matter expertise.”
He argues jobs are going to immigrants compensated with lower wages, taking positions that could be filled by Americans for higher pay. Fabbricatore says he supports “legal, vetted” immigration and more stringent enforcement of existing laws.
“If we actually just enforce those laws, we will be doing much better than we are doing today with immigration,” he said.
In recent weeks, Fabbricatore has raised the alarm alongside former President Donald Trump and other conservatives about the presence of Venezuelan gangs in Aurora — while Crow has called out exaggerations and criticized Trump for distorting the problems in certain apartment complexes.
Crow notes that he represents “one of the most diverse districts in the nation,” with nearly 20% of his constituents born outside of the U.S. He wants to use federal grants and other programs to help immigrants and defend them against racist rhetoric.
He said he backed a bipartisan immigration deal that ran aground earlier this year after failing to earn enough Republican support. It would have boosted the number of border patrol agents, immigration judges and officers that oversee asylum cases, as well as established more legal pathways for migrants and others without documentation.
Fabbricatore said in a Denver Post candidate questionnaire that he would not have supported the bipartisan bill, instead preferring another bill with a greater focus on border security.
Gun violence is what motivated Crow to run for office. He backs a ban on assault weapons and supports universal background checks. He’s also working to pass a bill that would apply the same restrictions to out-of-state residents when they purchase long guns and shotguns as they face when buying handguns — requiring that the gun be shipped to a federally licensed seller in their home state, with a background check performed there.
Gun violence is “just an unacceptable, avoidable, ongoing national tragedy,” Crow said. “We don’t have to live with mass shootings.”
Fabbricatore says he believes in gun rights and is instead pushing for investments in mental health.
The candidates differ on abortion. Crow favors abortion rights, saying he aligns with the majority of Coloradans who back legal access to abortion — and he would support a federal law establishing that as a right. Fabbricatore says Congress should leave abortion’s legal status to the states. He opposes abortion, but he says he recognizes a need for exceptions, including in cases of rape.
“Having been someone who worked in sex trafficking and saw what many women went through, I could never tell a woman that she couldn’t have a medical procedure to end what happened to her,” he said.
Fabbricatore points to the economy as his No. 1 issue, saying it’s impacted by energy policy and immigration. He sees Colorado’s potential to participate in the energy sector through solar, wind, fracking and coal.
He says he wants to leave the younger generations with a prosperous economy, reliable job market and reasonable housing prices.
Crow says the nation’s inflation and interest rates are dropping, but he contends that prices are still “way too high for many Coloradans.”
He points to corporate price gouging as a contributing factor. Crow argues that the labor shortage, which drives up prices, could be addressed through immigration reform.
“There’s more work to do, but we’re on a good path — and certainly need to keep on the path that we are to make sure things are affordable,” Crow said.
MIAMI — Democratic National Committee Chair Jaime Harrison is optimistic about his party’s chances in the Sunshine State, despite its electoral votes going to Republicans in the last two presidential elections.
“Florida is in play,” Harrison told CBS News Miami in an interview Saturday. “Florida, Florida, Florida.”
“For the first time in 30 years, you have Democrats running in every seat in the state House, the state Senate, and [at] the congressional level,” he added.
Both Miami-Dade and Broward counties went for President Biden in 2020, while former President Donald Trump won the state by about three percentage points that year.
Florida has about 5.38 million registered Republicans and 4.35 million registered Democrats, according to the latest numbers from the Florida Department of State’s website. There are also about 3.54 million unaffiliated voters.
Harrison argues that Florida Democrats were hampered in 2020 by the pandemic.
“Because of COVID, Democrats weren’t able to put a field operation on the ground, to knock on doors, to communicate with voters,” Harrison said.
Democrat Lucia Baez-Geller is challenging Republican Rep. Maria Elvira Salazar in the House, while former Democratic Rep. Debbie Mucarsel-Powell is trying to unseat Republican Sen. Rick Scott.
In the Senate race, Republicans are outspending Democrats on advertising by a four-to-one margin, according to AdImpact, which tracks spending on campaigns. Harrison isn’t fazed by this, however.
“I think you will see a surge of resources coming in,” Harrison said. “I’ve just done a few tweets…over the last few days for Debbie, and we’re seeing money coming in.”
About a week after the apparent assassination attempt on Trump in West Palm Beach, Harrison hopes that the political rhetoric can be toned down in the final stretch before Election Day.
“We have to turn it down on an individual basis,” Harrison said. “And it’s sad to see the attempts. And I know that there have been threats to Vice President Harris. There have been threats to President Biden in the past. There have been threats to President Obama in the past. This violence has to end.”
Florida Republican Party Chair Evan Power responded to Harrison’s remarks to CBS Miami, saying in a statement that “the Democrats can say whatever they want, but here are the facts: Florida Republicans have out-registered, out-raised, and out-worked the Florida Democrats. Anyone telling you Florida is in play for Democrats should not be taken seriously.”
The last time Florida went blue in a presidential election was for President Obama in 2012, when he won by about a single percentage point.
Steve Maugeri joined the CBS News Miami team in April 2024. Steve has always loved the beach and is excited to live this close to the ocean within a major city as well!
After a historic sit-in at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago in August, leaders of the Uncommitted National Movement urged Vice President Kamala Harris to respond by Sept. 15 to their request for a meeting with Palestinian American families in Michigan. These families, having lost loved ones to U.S.-supplied bombs in Gaza, hoped to discuss their demands for halting U.S. arms shipments to Israel and establishing a permanent ceasefire.
However, the Harris campaign has remained silent, prompting the Uncommitted Movement to issue a firm statement refusing to endorse her in the upcoming 2024 election.
The movement, which originated in Michigan, initially organized 1.5 million voter contacts and secured over 101,000 anti-war votes ahead of the February presidential primary. It has since grown into a national force, amassing 740,000 pro-peace voters and winning 30 delegates at the DNC.
According to the group’s leaders, their efforts are not about endorsing political candidates, but advocating for life-saving policies and peace.
“We came together, first in Michigan, and then in state after state, insisting that even through our pain and grief, we must organize to save lives, advance policies that build rather than destroy, and create a future where not another bomb from our country drops on a civilian anywhere in our world,” the statement said. “We are proud of the movement’s growth, even as our government continues sending bombs that tear apart families.”
Although the movement has declined to endorse Harris, it has also made clear that it strongly opposes her rival Donald Trump’s re-election, describing his policies as a direct threat to Palestinians and anti-war activists.
“Trump himself has bragged about accelerating the genocide against Palestinians and promised to intensify the suppression of pro-Palestinian activism in the U.S. We must block Donald Trump,” the group stated. “Our movement’s best hope for change lies in expanding anti-war organizing power, which would be severely undermined by a Trump administration.”
In addition to its anti-Trump stance, the movement cautioned against voting for third-party candidates, particularly in swing states, arguing that it could unintentionally help Trump win re-election.
“Pro-war forces like AIPAC [the American Israel Public Affairs Committee] may want to drive us out of the Democratic Party, but we’re here to stay,” the group continued. “Movements have long worked to rid the Democratic Party of hateful forces… and we will work in that legacy to rid our party of AIPAC’s pro-war extremism.”
The group’s “Not Another Bomb” campaign has mobilized over 100,000 people across 35 states, uniting progressives, civil rights advocates, and other Democratic Party members to advocate for peace. Now, the movement is inviting more groups to join them in their ongoing effort to push Democratic leadership to support a ceasefire and halt weapons transfers.
The statement concluded: “Building on the work of ‘Uncommitted,’ we invite stakeholders in the Democratic Party coalition — progressives, civil rights, labor, racial justice, reproductive rights, climate, immigrant rights, disability justice, people of faith, young people and more — to join us in our campaign to push our Democratic Party leadership to align with the majority of Democratic voters who support the urgent call for a stop to illegal and morally reprehensible weapons transfers through our campaign, ‘Not Another Bomb’ both now and in the next administration.”
Former President Donald Trump spoke with reporters in the spin room after he debated with Vice President Kamala Harris in Philadelphia on Tuesday night. CBS News chief election and campaign correspondent Robert Costa joins with analysis.
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Taylor Swift said she plans to vote for Vice President Kamala Harris in a post to Instagram shortly after the first presidential debate Tuesday between Harris and former President Donald Trump.
“I will be casting my vote for Kamala Harris and Tim Walz in the 2024 Presidential Election,” Swift said in the post, adding that she’s voting for Harris “because she fights for the rights and causes I believe need a warrior to champion them.”
Swift said Harris “is a steady-handed, gifted leader and I believe we can accomplish so much more in this country if we are led by calm and not chaos,” noting that she was “so heartened and impressed by her selection” of Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz as her running mate due to his support for LGBTQ+ rights, IVF, and “a woman’s right to her own body.”
The pop star also appeared to troll the Republican ticket by signing “Childless Cat Lady” below her name — echoing a phrase Trump’s running mate, JD Vance, has faced blowback over using in a 2021 interview, when he said the country was being run by “a bunch of childless cat ladies who are miserable at their own lives.” Vance later said he was being sarcastic.
The megastar said she had been made aware of recent AI-generated images Trump had promoted that falsely suggested she had endorsed him, adding that the incident “brought me to the conclusion that I need to be very transparent about my actual plans for this election as a voter.”
Swift said she watched the debate on Tuesday night and urged her fans to research the candidates and issues, while closing her statement by explaining that she had done her research and “made my choice.”
“Your research is all yours to do, and the choice is yours to make,” Swift said.
Swift’s possible endorsement has been the subject of intense debate in the political sphere. Earlier in Swift’s career, she had stayed out of political endorsements, but in 2018, she issued her first endorsement, for Democratic Tennessee Gov. Phil Bredesen in the Senate race against Republican candidate Marsha Blackburn, who won the race. In the 2020 election, she backed President Biden. And at this year’s Democratic National Convention, rumors swirled that Swift or Beyoncé would make an appearance to back the new Democratic nominee, though neither did so.
Appearing on MSNBC Tuesday night, Harris’ running mate, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, responded to Swift’s endorsement by saying he was “incredibly grateful,” and adding, “This would be your opportunity, Swifties — KamalaHarris.com, get on over there, give us a hand, get things going.”
Vice President Kamala Harris and her running mate, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, are looking to expand their ground game and bring on some 2,000 staffers in the crucial battleground states. Skyler Henry has the latest on both campaigns.
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Paid advertisements for major organizations affiliated with both the Republican and Democratic parties and some of their biggest names have appeared under pro-Nazi and racist posts shared on Elon Musk’s social media platform X, formerly Twitter, a CBS News investigation has found.
Advertisements for the Senate Republicans’ campaign arm, the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) and the right-wing Heritage Foundation think tank have appeared recently under racist or pro-Nazi posts from verified accounts on X.
Last week, the World Bank ceased all paid advertising on X after a CBS News investigation found a promoted advertisement from the organization showed up under a racist post from an account that prolifically posts pro-Nazi and white nationalist content. The World Bank made the decision to remove all paid advertising on X, calling the incident “entirely unacceptable,” after a promoted advertisement under a racist post was flagged to the organization by CBS News.
Republican and Democratic-affiliated ads under racist posts
One of the U.S. political ads found by CBS News was under a post by a verified account that prolifically posts pro-Nazi and racist content. The account, which has nearly 100,000 followers, shared a picture of Hitler rejecting a Star of David being held by an arm draped in a striped sleeve.
One of the U.S. political ads found by CBS News was under a post by a verified account that prolifically posts pro-Nazi and racist content.
X screenshot
Under the post, an ad appeared for the National Republican Senatorial Committee directing users to donate through WinRed, the prominent conservative online fundraising platform used by many GOP candidates and groups, including GOP presidential candidate Donald Trump’s campaign and the Republican National Committee.
The advertisement showed an image of Florida Sen. Marco Rubio with the caption saying it was “paid for by the NRSC.”
The NRSC is the chief fundraising committee dedicated to getting Republican Party candidates elected to the U.S. Senate. Multiple other promoted advertisements directing users to WinRed were posted under similar content. CBS News is not publicly identifying the accounts spreading racist content on X.
CBS News asked the NRSC and WinRed for comment about the placement of the fundraising ads on X. In response to questions about the ads on X, NRSC spokesman Mike Berg wrote in a post on the platform that CBS News was, “trying to pressure advertisers to stop spending money on X by associating advertisers and [Musk] with white nationalists,” which he called “patently absurd.”
Promoted advertisements for the congressional campaign of Jerrad Christan, the Democratic candidate for Ohio’s 12th district, also appeared under antisemitic posts. The seat is currently held by Republican Troy Balderson.
A post by a verified account with 150,000 followers showed a man with a boot on his neck underneath the Statue of Liberty. The text on the image read, “Land of Freedom. Where one is ruled by the Jews, Freedom is only an empty dream.”
Christian’s campaign ad appeared under the image with a link that redirected readers to ActBlue, a fundraising platform used widely by Democratic campaigns.
Under another post by the same account, CBS News found an ad for the National Republican Senatorial Committee – a paid advertisement from Mary Trump’s political action committee, the Democracy Defense Fund, with a link to the Democratic fundraising platform ActBlue. Mary Trump, the former U.S. president’s niece, has spoken out against her uncle for years.
The post in question depicted an Orthodox Jewish man dancing on a gravesite with the caption: “Your reminder to NOT die for shlomo. He’ll dance on your graves.”
The PAC advertisement under the post had an image of Mary Trump with a request to donate money to help “defeat Donald, defend the Senate, and flip the House.”
CBS News has sought comment from the Jerrad Christian for Congress campaign and Mary Trump’s PAC on the placement of the organizations’ ads.
Money for content on Elon Musk’s X
Since Musk’s October 2022 takeover of what was then Twitter, he has dismantled safeguards on the platform. That includes dramatic changes to the verification system and the removal of its Trust and Safety advisory group, as well as changes to broader content moderation and hate speech enforcement on X.
In its place, Musk has created a system in which X’s algorithms favor accounts that pay for the platform’s blue check subscription service. According to X’s own marketing for its verification service, X premium offers “reply prioritization” for all subscribers.
The changes also enable influencers who buy into the verification subscription program to monetize their content. Subscribers are eligible to receive a share of advertising revenue for their content if they “have at least 5M organic impressions on cumulative posts within the last 3 months” and “have at least 500 followers.”
Under X’s terms of use, accounts can do this without publicly disclosing their identity, provided the account holder privately discloses their ID to the platform.
“X allows the use of pseudonymous accounts, meaning an account’s profile is not required to use the name or image of the account owner. Accounts that appear similar to others on X are not in violation of this policy, so long as their purpose is not to deceive or manipulate others,” according to the platform’s guidelines.
A majority of the verified X accounts reviewed by CBS News that have political advertising under their content would, according to the company’s own guidelines, qualify for a share of its ad revenue under the policy.
Does X have the capacity to control hate speech?
Last week, the World Bank ceased all paid advertising on X after a CBS News investigation found a promoted advertisement from the organization showed up under a racist post from an account that prolifically posts pro-Nazi and white nationalist content.
Sander van der Linden, a professor of social psychology at the University of Cambridge who studies online misinformation, told CBS News on Friday that X’s algorithms may be determining where to place advertisements based on which accounts are getting the most engagement.
“When they’ve [X] had problems with companies like IBM or Disney where they had complained that their ads were appearing next to Nazi content, these Nazi accounts were getting millions of impressions,” van der Linden said. “I’m assuming what’s happening there is that the algorithm is recommending to place the ads next to content that’s getting a lot of engagement to try to maximize reach.”
Van der Linden has said that since Musk’s takeover of the social media platform in 2022, the removal of content moderation measures has led to an explosion in hate speech content.
“He [Musk] doesn’t have the tools to moderate, down rank and demonetize that content,” van der Linden told CBS News. “Musk has claimed that hate speech doesn’t get any ad revenue… but I think the fact of the matter is that there’s so much of it now that actually I haven’t seen any evidence that would suggest that people can’t profit off it.”
CBS News has repeatedly asked X whether the accounts flagged as part of its investigation are profiting from sharing pro-Nazi and racist content, and about the placement of advertising on its platform. There had been no reply from the company as of the time of publication.
While CBS News found advertisements from groups affiliated with both main U.S. political parties, far fewer Democratic political ads than Republican ads appeared under such racist content.
One post from a verified account with more than 160,000 followers showed an image of an animated superhero with the caption: “antisemites will save the world.”
A promoted advertisement for the NRSC came up under that post with a link guiding readers to donate and an image of Mr. Trump, with the caption: “Is the Media fair to Trump?”
In total, CBS News found political fundraising advertisements promoting GOP groups and candidates under at least 10 different posts from accounts known to promote pro-Nazi and racist content.
Advertisements for the conservative Heritage Foundation think tank have also appeared under an antisemitic post from an account known to share pro-Nazi content. The account in question has more than 150,000 followers. CBS News has asked The Heritage Foundation to comment on the placement of its advertisements on X.
It was one of the most fiery moments of the Democratic National Convention. Last Monday night, Shawn Fain, president of the United Auto Workers union, strode onto the stage at the United Center, took off his blazer and revealed a red t-shirt that read “Trump is a scab.”
The crowd, filled with party faithful who were also wearing the same T-shirt, roared with approval and began chanting “Trump’s a scab.” Fain, an electrician who worked in an Indiana automotive parts factory, is a throwback to the more bare-knuckled archetype of labor leaders. He exalted Democratic nominee Kamala Harris as a “fighter for the working class” and skewered Trump as a “lapdog for the billionaire class.”
But while Fain evoked the combative labor bosses of an earlier era, behind that vintage style was a state-of-the-art, tech-savvy campaign machine poised to capitalize on the moment. Before long, the digital foot soldiers of the Harris-Waltz team, along with the UAW, had plastered the Fain video across social media, garnering millions of views, thousands of the bright red t-shirts had been sold, and the word “scab” was trending online.
That bit of choreographed theater reflected the methodical planning and preparation by the Harris-Walz campaign to find every opportunity to amplify labor’s message and, just as importantly, to burnish its own pro-union credentials with the labor leaders they are aggressively courting. And for good reason — the union vote could be decisive in 2024.
Aware that Donald Trump’s strong performance with union households in battleground states like Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin may have cost Hillary Clinton the election in 2016, the Harris campaign understands that blue-collar voters may emerge as this campaign season’s version of the suburban soccer mom – a pivotal demographic for victory.
“There are 2.7 million union members in the battleground states,” wrote Julie Chavez Rodriguez, the Harris-Walz campaign manager, in an Aug. 8 memo shared with CBS News. “That means something when roughly 45,000 votes in key states decided the election four years ago.”
Last week, Democratic Party convention planners overlooked no detail in wooing labor. A record number — 20% — of Democratic delegates were union members; all delegation members from the 50 states and territories stayed in union hotels; almost all of the physical work at the convention drew from union labor, from building the sets to the electrical work, as well as the makeup for speakers and performers. And raucous callouts to unions were strategically placed in many of the celebratory roll call votes.
The Harris campaign sees its tight collaboration with labor as a force multiplier.
“We are in a fragmented media environment and it’s very hard to reach undecided voters,” one campaign official said. “Unions are the ultimate validator: they can break through the noise and misinformation and lay out the facts on our record vs. Trump.”
Once a staple of the Democratic Party, labor union members have splintered in the Trump era – with the Republican former president proving effective at drawing those traditional Democratic voters across the aisle. Backstage at the convention hall, it was clear the Harris campaign was employing old-school, hardball tactics to try to counter those gains.
When another prominent union boss, Teamsters president Sean O’Brien, addressed the Republican convention in Milwaukee late last month, Democrats took notice. O’Brien praised Trump as “one tough SOB” and said he “didn’t care about being criticized” for being the first Teamsters boss to speak at a Republican convention in its 121-year history.
But two weeks later, Trump was yukking it up with Elon Musk in a conversation on X about firing workers. The Republican nominee praised Musk as “the greatest cutter,” telling him “look at what you do, you walk in, you say ‘you want to quit?’ I won’t mention the name of the company, but they go on strike, and you go: ‘You’re all gone!’”
O’Brien quickly engaged in damage control, issuing a statement to Politico calling Trump’s remarks “economic terrorism.” But the Harris campaign and its labor allies saw an opportunity for payback. The next day, the UAW’s Fain filed a complaint against both Trump and Musk with the National Labor Relations Board charging them with unfair labor practices. The Harris campaign was delighted and urged Fain to hit the airwaves to talk about their move, according to a source close to Fain.
O’Brien scrambled for an opportunity to get back into the Democrats’ good graces. He asked to speak at their convention, but the Harris campaign froze him out, according to a labor source. Campaign officials didn’t even respond to his request. Then, in a move that appeared to be meant to undermine O’Brien, the Harris campaign invited multiple rank-and-file Teamsters members to participate in the convention festivities without their leader.
One labor source who asked not to be identified in order to speak freely about the episode called it “a snub.” Others suggested it was meant to send a gentle message that there could be consequences for backing Trump.
“They weren’t throwing a ball at his head, but maybe slightly inside to make him take a step back from the plate,” said Eddie Vale, a political and labor strategist who has represented unions including the AFL-CIO. A Harris campaign source simply said that it would not have made sense for O’Brien to address the convention, given that he was not prepared to endorse the Democratic ticket.
And yet, at the close of the convention, officials with Harris’ campaign said they were keeping the door open for a possible rapprochement with the Teamsters leadership. In what one labor source called “virtue signaling,” Harris accepted an invitation to meet with the union’s executive board, which is expected to include O’Brien.
“Both sides want it known that they are continuing to talk to each other,” the source said.
Harris faces a tougher challenge in courting union support than her predecessor. President Biden’s close relationship with unions took shape after years of cultivating his image as “Scranton Joe,” a politician whose middle-class roots helped him understand the plight and aspirations of workers. But Harris, a more cosmopolitan personality from California’s Bay Area, has had to do more work to define herself as a natural ally of the working class.
In 2020, Mr. Biden won 57% of the union vote in the key rust-belt states, compared to Trump’s 40%. Harris, by most accounts, will have to do at least as well as Biden to prevail in this election.
Trump has also been wooing big labor. In January, he participated in the Teamsters Rank-and-File Presidential Roundtable (Mr. Biden visited Teamsters headquarters a few weeks later) and heaped praise on the union, noting that many of his big projects have been built with Teamsters labor. And in a vintage bit of transactional politics, he vowed to give unions leaders a “seat at the table” if they endorse him in the election.
The Harris team is being strategic about its courtship of labor. At last week’s convention, speakers seemed to take every opportunity to point out that Harris had worked at a McDonald’s when she was in college, and the nominee herself also brought it up during her acceptance speech. Harris spoke sentimentally, but tactically, about the modest East Bay neighborhood she grew up in, calling it “a beautiful working-class neighborhood of firefighters, nurses and construction workers.”
And almost as soon as Harris had become the presumed nominee last month, her campaign sent her on a battleground state tour where she met with rank-and-file union members, including UAW workers in Detroit. The campaign has emphasized Harris’ pro-union record, pointing out that she walked the picket line with union strikers in 2019 during her first presidential run and that as vice-president, she broke the tie in the Senate that allowed passage of the Butch Lewis Act, which restored the pensions of more than a million workers.
Then there was Harris’ selection of Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz as her running mate. His plain-speaking Midwestern style, football coach persona and worn flannel shirts represent an appeal to lunch-pail voters. A Harris campaign official said it was no coincidence that Walz’s first solo trip of the campaign was to rally members of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees at their international convention in Los Angeles. And not insignificantly, Walz, a former high school teacher, is himself a card-carrying union member of a union — the American Federation of Teachers.
Ultimately, the labor vote is likely to follow the candidate workers feel can best address the economic of the working class. Harris will almost certainly win the labor vote, but what will really matter is Trump’s ability to cut into her margins with economic appeals to working-class voters, likely on immigration and trade.
Robert Forrant, a historian of the American labor movement, says the Harris campaign recognizes this, and it’s making those economic concerns part of her message.
“They’ve started to talk about how inflation really mattered, and you can’t pretend it doesn’t.” But he said the Harris campaign still needs to do more, like acknowledge that working people have increasingly had to hold down multiple jobs to get by, a reality that has third-order effects, including damaging family structures. “You have to thread the needle when appealing to the union vote,” Forrant said.
Daniel Klaidman, an investigative reporter based in New York, is the former editor-in-chief of Yahoo News and former managing editor of Newsweek. He has over two decades of experience covering politics, foreign affairs, national security and law.
Vice President Kamala Harris officially accepted the Democratic presidential nomination Thursday, framing the upcoming election as an opportunity for the nation to “chart a new way forward” and encouraging voters to write the “next great chapter in the most extraordinary story ever told.”
“My entire career, I’ve only had one client: the people. And so, on behalf of the people, on behalf of every American regardless of party, race, gender or the language your grandmother speaks, on behalf of my mother and everyone who has ever set out on their own unlikely journey, on behalf of Americans like the people I grew up with, people who work hard, chase their dreams, and look out for one another, on behalf of everyone whose story could only be written in the greatest nation on earth, I accept your nomination to be president of the United States of America,” she said.
Harris kicked off her speech by offering her thanks to President Biden, calling his character “inspiring,” and she predicted history would look favorably upon his record in office. The vice president used her remarks to share her life story about being raised by a single mother in California and the circumstances that motivated her to become a prosecutor. She also urged voters to look to a future that moves past division and embraces unity.
But she did not hold back in attacking her opponent in November, former President Donald Trump, whom she lambasted as an “unserious” person found guilty by a jury of his peers for committing felony crimes and who acts only in his own interests.
“With this election, our nation has a precious, fleeting opportunity to move past the bitterness, cynicism and divisive battles of the past, a chance to chart a new way forward, not as members of any one party or faction, but as Americans,” she said.
Vice President Kamala Harris, the Democratic presidential nominee, speaks during the Democratic National Convention in Chicago on Aug. 22, 2024.
Getty Images
The vice president said the upcoming election is “not only the most important of our lives, it is one of the most important in the life of our nation.”
“Let us show each other and the world who we are and what we stand for: freedom, opportunity, compassion, dignity, fairness and endless possibilities,” she said. “We are the heirs to the greatest democracy in the history of the world and on behalf of our children and our grandchildren and all of those who sacrificed so dearly for our freedom and liberty, we must be worthy of this moment.”
A promise of unity
Harris’ acceptance speech caps not only the four-day convention, but a whirlwind first four weeks of her presidential campaign, which launched after Mr. Biden announced he would be ending his bid for reelection. Harris quickly announced her own White House run and earned endorsements from Mr. Biden, the Obamas, the Clintons and a slew of other key figures in the Democratic Party.
The vice president’s newly minted campaign raked in more than $200 million in its first seven days, and Harris’ haul swelled to nearly $500 million raised in her first four weeks as a presidential candidate.
She announced Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz as her running mate earlier this month, and the pair quickly hit the campaign trail for a series of events together in battleground states.
Democrats officially nominated Harris for president with a virtual roll call vote of state delegations conducted earlier this month, a milestone as she became the first Black woman to top a major party ticket. If elected in November, Harris will shatter more barriers as the first woman to become president.
While Harris has served as vice president for the past three years and before that, as a U.S. senator from California, she used her speech to reintroduce herself to the American people and described how her middle-class upbringing shaped her views.
“The path that led me here in recent weeks was no doubt unexpected,” she said. “But I’m no stranger to unlikely journeys.”
She recalled moving often as a child, and eventually settling around San Francisco, where she was raised by a community of caretakers. Harris shared with the audience the lessons learned from her mother, including to “never do anything half-a**ed,” which she said was a “direct quote.”
The vice president also made an appeal directly to Republicans, independents and undecided voters with a pledge to unify the nation.
“I promise to be a president for all Americans. You can always trust me to put country above party and self, to hold sacred America’s fundamental principles, from the rule of law, to free and fair elections, to the peaceful transfer of power,” Harris told convention attendees. “I will be a president who unites us around our highest aspirations. A president who leads and listens, who is realistic, practical, and has common sense, and always fights for the American people. From the courthouse to the White House, that has been my life’s work.”
Democrats have focused on themes of unity and joy throughout their gathering in Chicago, and have sought to give voters a look at Harris’ personal life with a speech from her husband, second gentleman Doug Emhoff, and appearances by her family members, including her sister, Maya Harris. Emhoff described the vice president as a “joyful warrior” and worked to convince voters that she will look out for them as she has done for her own family.
Harris’ speech came on their 10th wedding anniversary, which she acknowledged to her husband at the beginning of her remarks.
Harris lays out her agenda
A former prosecutor and the top law enforcement official in California, Harris has fought back against criticism by Republicans about her record on crime and immigration, two issues that are focal points of Trump’s campaign.
“I know the importance of safety and security, especially at our border,” she said.
Harris noted that the White House negotiated with Senate Republicans and Democrats on a bipartisan immigration deal that Trump derailed when he announced his opposition to it earlier this year.
“I refuse to play politics with our security,” she said, pleading to revive the plan. “I know we can live up to our proud heritage as a nation of immigrants and reform our broken immigration system. We can create an earned pathway to citizenship and secure our border.”
Harris previewed her economic and health care agenda and pledged to pass a tax cut for the middle class that she said would benefit 100 million Americans.
“I will bring together labor and workers and small business owners and entrepreneurs and American companies to create jobs, to grow our economy and to lower the cost of everyday needs like health care and housing and groceries,” she said.
Harris also vowed to sign into law legislation that restores federal abortion protections, which the Supreme Court dismantled when it overturned Roe v. Wade in June 2022.
“I believe America cannot truly be prosperous unless Americans are fully able to make their own decisions about their own lives, especially on matters of heart and home,” she said.
Harris warned that if Trump were to be elected, his administration would outlaw medication abortion and enact a nationwide ban on the procedure. She also cited policy proposals from abortion rights opponents to require states to report rates of miscarriages and abortions.
“Simply put, they are out of their minds,” she said. “And one must ask, why exactly is it that they don’t trust women? Well, we trust women.”
On foreign policy, Harris vowed to support NATO allies and Ukraine in its war against Russian aggression, and, on the Israel-Hamas war, she called for a cease-fire deal that would include the release of Israeli hostages held captive by Hamas.
“Let me be clear, I will always stand up for Israel’s right to defend itself, and I will always ensure Israel has the ability to defend itself because the people of Israel must never again face the horror that a terrorist organization called Hamas caused on Oct. 7, including unspeakable sexual violence and the massacre of young people at a musical festival,” she said.
Still, Harris condemned the situation in Gaza and lamented the “innocent lives lost.”
“The scale of suffering is heartbreaking,” she said. “President Biden and I are working to end this war such that Israel is secure, the hostages are released, the suffering in Gaza ends and the Palestinian people can realize their right to dignity, security, freedom and self-determination.
Harris attacks Trump as an “unserious man”
The vice president lambasted the former president and warned the crowd about what his second term in office will bring, invoking Project 2025, the presidential transition initiative overseen by the The Heritage Foundation, a conservative think tank. While Trump has repeatedly distanced himself from the initiative’s policy agenda, many members of his administration were involved in it and hundreds of its proposals match his past policies and current campaign promises.
“In many ways, Donald Trump is an unserious man,” Harris said. “But the consequences of putting Donald Trump back in the White House are extremely serious.”
She pointed to the Supreme Court’s recent decision granting former presidents immunity from criminal prosecution for official acts as empowering Trump more. The ruling stemmed from federal charges Trump is facing in Washington, D.C., as a result of his alleged attempt to subvert the transfer of presidential power after the 2020 election.
“Just imagine Donald Trump with no guardrails and how he would use the immense powers of the presidency of the United States — not to improve your life, not to strengthen our national security — but to serve the only client he has ever had: himself,” she said.
Harris accused Trump of trying to throw away Americans’ votes after the 2020 election and, when his efforts failed, sending a mob of his supporters to the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. The crowd breached the Capitol building where lawmakers and then-Vice President Mike Pence were convened to tally state electoral votes, prompting their evacuation.
“He fanned the flames, and now for an entirely different set of crimes, he was found guilty of fraud by a jury of everyday Americans and separately found liable for committing sexual abuse,” she said.
Trump was convicted in New York of 34 felony counts of falsifying business records stemming from a hush-money payment made to adult film star Stormy Daniels after the 2016 election. A jury also found Trump liable for sexually abusing columnist E. Jean Carroll in 1996.
Melissa Quinn is a politics reporter for CBSNews.com. She has written for outlets including the Washington Examiner, Daily Signal and Alexandria Times. Melissa covers U.S. politics, with a focus on the Supreme Court and federal courts.
Illustration: Pablo Delcan/Source Photographs: Getty Images
What a split screen,” Doug Emhoff said to a crowd at a private fundraiser on the coast of Maine in the last days of July. The Second Gentleman was referring to Donald Trump’s remarks that afternoon to the National Association of Black Journalists in Chicago, where he berated Rachel Scott of ABC News for being “nasty” and suggested that Kamala Harris had only recently “turned Black.” Emhoff appeared gobsmacked by the raw vulgarity. “The contrast could not be clearer,” he said.
Since Joe Biden’s decision to step aside, the loudest contrast in the presidential race has been between the elderly white man at the head of the Republican ticket and the younger Black and Indian American woman on the other side. But a disparity of the intragender variety has also come to the fore: the difference between how the men of the right and the left define masculinity.
On the one hand is the Republican Party’s view of manhood: its furious resentments toward women and their power, its mean obsession with forcing women to be baby-makers. On the other hand is the emergence of a Democratic man newly confident in his equal-to-subsidiary status: happily deferential, unapologetically supportive of women’s rights, committed to partnership.
The new Democratic man is embodied by Harris surrogates like Emhoff, whose first solo public appearance since his wife became the de facto nominee was at a Planned Parenthood in Portland, Maine, and Harris’s vice-presidential pick, Governor Tim Walz, the former National Guardsman and football coach whom the right has taken to calling “Tampon Tim” for passing a law in his home state of Minnesota requiring public schools to stock free menstrual products in all school bathrooms.
This is not to suggest that these Democratic guys represent some perfect specimen of evolved masculinity. But taken as a whole, as male Democrats fall over one another in an effort to elect a woman to the presidency, they are presenting a different definition of masculine strength tied to women’s liberation and full civic participation and all but declaring it a new norm.
That Trump is terrible toward and for women hardly needs repeating. But the Republican convention in July was nevertheless a startling window into just how wholly unconcerned the GOP is about its abysmal reputation. Speakers included Hulk Hogan, the former professional wrestler accused of domestic abuse, and Dana White, the Ultimate Fighting Championship CEO who was once filmed engaging in a physical altercation with his wife. There were right-wing misogynists like Tucker Carlson, who lost his job at Fox News amid sexual-harassment allegations and has called women “extremely primitive and basic,” and Representative Matt Gaetz, who has been accused of having sex with a minor and has called reproductive-rights activists “odious on the inside and out.” Where Harris’s walk-out music is Beyoncé’s “Freedom,” both Trump and running mate J. D. Vance have been using James Brown’s “It’s a Man’s Man’s Man’s World.”
Trump and his buddies’ hoary views of women as either sexualized objects or pigs are almost old hat. What’s new is the way the contemporary right is practically vibrating with the creepier energies of the online manosphere, which tells young men that women have robbed them of their power. It’s the worldview of men like Andrew Tate, who has been arrested for human trafficking and rape and who tweeted in April, “Dear white men you’re fucked. You’re being replaced because none of you have children.” Elon Musk, who is a vocal supporter of Trump’s campaign (and has also been accused of harassment), has echoed this natalist version of the Great Replacement Theory, saying that “birth control and abortion” have put civilization at risk and suggesting that childless people should not be able to vote.
While the ideas that these men espouse have become common currency across the right, they remain somewhat foreign to the political mainstream. That’s why the discourse this summer was dominated by bewildered responses to unearthed remarks by Vance, who has described childless women as “deranged,” “sociopathic,” and “childless cat ladies” and argued that parents should get extra votes. Republicans’ recent obsession with overturning no-fault-divorce laws is also informed by incel culture and online sexist outrage. Vance has bemoaned the fact that people can more easily leave marriages, even violent ones, “like they change their underwear.”
This is not about ensuring that more babies are born. If it were, Republicans would be supporting child tax credits, federal paid-leave legislation, affordable housing, subsidized day-care programs, and maternal-health-care bills. They would not be imperiling IVF treatments. It’s about the domination of women and the reinscription of patriarchal power.
Then, on that split screen, there are the men of the Democratic Party. Emhoff takes care to emphasize, in a way that is new for Democratic men, that reproductive rights is “not just an issue for women,” it’s “an issue for all of us.” In Portland this summer, he described a “post-Dobbsian hellscape” in which “you can’t get a Pap smear; you can’t get basic care.” That’s right: Men in the post-Biden Democratic Party can comfortably say Pap smear.
As Harris weighed the decision of who would be her running mate, it was understood that she would be seeking a white man to balance out the historically disruptive nature of her candidacy, and the nation got a glimpse of an array of guys who seemed eager to serve a female boss. They were masculine in a lot of traditional ways: veterans and astronauts and high-powered lawyers who could talk about guns and fixing cars but also child care and parenthood. This is a version of masculinity that is open and optimistic and appears to really love women. To many of us, this winds up reading as a lot more manly than, for instance, Vance’s half-hearted attempts to defend his mixed-race marriage from white-supremacist criticism.
It is thus poetic that Harris encountered Walz, who as governor had signed a series of expansive protections of abortion and LGBTQ+ rights, at a Planned Parenthood in St. Paul in March, the first visit by any sitting vice-president to a facility that provides abortion care. Walz, 60, looks like a beardless Santa Claus and has the vibe of a neighbor who will fix your lawn mower. His lightning-strike audition for the veep slot was accompanied by photographs online showing him snuggling dogs, cats, and piglets and being embraced by groups of happy children after he signed new child-care-benefit laws. Walz speaks often, including at his first campaign rally with Harris in August, of the IVF struggles he and his wife, Gwen, experienced.
It is invigorating to see Walz’s traditional form of public masculinity — “big dad energy,” as Axios put it — in service of a party that seems finally to be taking women’s rights and liberation as a central moral concern. Just a few decades ago, that stance would have gotten Democrats derisively labeled “the mommy party.”
But this is where Walz’s great rhetorical contribution to the campaign comes in: his use of the word weird to describe the backward, bizarre positions of the opposition. It’s not just that weird is an effective descriptor that drives Republicans up the wall. It’s that it also reflects its inverse: normal. For while the right has been terrifyingly successful at rolling back laws and rights, it seems to be having a tougher time altering what have become new gender norms. When Vance describes child care as “class war against normal people,” it sounds weird. When Fox News’ Jesse Watters suggests that “when a man votes for a woman, he actually transitions into a woman,” it sounds really weird. And when Democratic men speak of women as their partners, friends, colleagues, and bosses, when they make it clear that people need Pap smears and tampons and abortion care, when they show themselves willing to work for a woman to become president, they sound, well, normal.
“Black Vote, Black Power,” a collaboration between Keith Boykin and Word In Black, examines the issues, the candidates, and what’s at stake for Black America in the 2024 presidential election.
I’m in Philadelphia for Kamala Harris’s campaign rally, and the energy here is electric.
Harris just picked Minnesota Governor Tim Walz to be her running mate, and I couldn’t be more excited.
Who is Tim Walz? He’s a small-town boy who grew up working on a farm. A patriot who joined the National Guard and served for 20 years. A high school social studies teacher. A high school football coach. A veteran. A hunter, a gun owner, and a skilled marksman. A midwesterner who knows rural America. He’s the type of man Republicans claim to love, but unlike the men who lead today’s Republican Party, Walz has a heart.
Thank you for bringing back the joy.
Tim Walz
Walz is pro-union, supports a strong minimum wage, and voted for President Obama’s Affordable Care Act when he served in Congress. And unlike the coach stereotype, he had the courage to serve as the faculty adviser for the student LGBTQ group on campus. He’s funny on the stump, but he’s a great attack dog. And he means business. Walz appointed Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison to prosecute Derek Chauvin, the Minneapolis police officer who murdered George Floyd. But even though progressives love him, he doesn’t come across as threatening to middle America.
“And in 91 days,” as Harris said today, “the nation will know Coach Walz by another name: Vice President of the United States.”
As soon as Walz was announced, independent progressive Bernie Sanders endorsed him on the left, and conservative Joe Manchin endorsed him on the right. Do you know how hard that is to get those two to agree on anything? That’s like a Nobel Peace Prize in Democratic politics. Heck, even AOC endorsed him.
Walz helps heal the party and avoids a big conflict at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago over Gaza. He keeps the momentum going for Harris, and he matches her joyful energy.
But isn’t he another old white guy? Um, hello. Tim Walz, Kamala Harris, and I are all about the same age. We were born 16 months apart. And all of us are younger than Barack Obama. So, in my biased opinion, he’s still a young guy. Yes, he looks a lot older than Kamala and me, but we all know black don’t crack.
And actually, his avuncular appearance and relatable life story make him much more appealing to the voters Harris needs to win the battleground states like Michigan, Wisconsin, and Pennsylvania. Comparing JD Vance to Walz is like a “matchup between the varsity team and the JV squad,” Harris said today.
He balances the ticket, and his energy matches Kamala’s.
I know some people wanted other candidates, and they all had different assets. Mark Kelly is an astronaut. Pete Buttigieg is a great communicator. Josh Shapiro is hugely popular in the critical state of Pennsylvania. And originally, I wanted Andy Beshear, the youthful governor of Kentucky.
But in the past few weeks of watching him campaign for Harris, Walz won me over.
“You’ve legalized recreational marijuana, you passed universal background checks on guns, you expanded LGBTQ protections, you implemented tuition-free college for low-income Minnesotans. There’s free breakfast and lunch for school kids,” Jake Tapper said to him in a recent CNN interview.
Walz didn’t skip a beat. “What a monster,” he said. “Kids are having full bellies so they can learn.” He didn’t shy away from his record. He firmly defended it.
Republicans are already trying to sow division in the party by claiming that Harris didn’t pick Shapiro because he’s Jewish and claiming, “No Jews allowed at the top of the Democratic Party.” Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer quickly put that argument to rest, but the nerve of the straight, Christian, white male-dominated Republican Party to complain about diversity in the Democratic Party. Give me a break.
The 60-year-old midwestern governor is pro-union, supports a strong minimum wage, and voted for President Obama’s Affordable Care Act when he served in Congress. (Photo by Andrew Harnik/Getty Images)
Democrats nominated the first woman for vice president in 1984 (Geraldine Ferraro, the first Jewish candidate for vice president in 2000 (Joe Lieberman), the first Black president in 2008 (Barack Obama), the first woman candidate for president in 2016 (Hillary Clinton), and now the first Black woman and first South Asian woman for president in 2024 (Kamala Harris). Meanwhile, Republicans have given us nothing but white men on the ticket for the past four elections.
That’s why I like Walz. He balances the ticket, and his energy matches Kamala’s. Other candidates are good on the attack, but Walz does the same with a smile. And when they join forces, they make a great team. As Walz said in Philadelphia today, “Thank you for bringing back the joy.”
Harris and Walz are happy warriors fighting for a hopeful future, while Trump and Vance are mean-spirited men stoking fear with a backward-focused campaign of doom and gloom.
Many of you don’t know who Tim Walz is, but trust me, when you see him in the next few weeks, you will not be disappointed. Kamala Harris made a bold choice in picking Walz. Now let’s go win.
Keith Boykin is a New York Times–bestselling author, TV and film producer, and former CNN political commentator. A graduate of Dartmouth College and Harvard Law School, Keith served in the White House, cofounded the National Black Justice Coalition, cohosted the BET talk show My Two Cents, and taught at the Institute for Research in African-American Studies at Columbia University in New York. He’s a Lambda Literary Award-winning author and editor of seven books. He lives in Los Angeles.
Despite a pandemic and social unrest in 2020 after the murder of George Floyd in Minnesota, voters gave Tim Walz a second term as governor. CBS News political reporter Hunter Woodall joins “America Decides” to look at Walz’s rise in politics as he joins the 2024 Democratic presidential ticket.
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Washington — The Democratic National Committee’s virtual roll call vote has closed, and the Democratic Party announced that Vice President Kamala Harris received the votes of 99% of the participating delegates.
In a statement late Monday, Democratic National Committee Chair Jaime Harrison and Minyon Moore, the Democratic National Convention committee chair, said that the roll call results would next be certified by the convention’s secretary, Jason Rae, formalizing Harris’ status as the Democratic nominee who will take on Republican nominee Donald Trump in November.
Harrison and Moore said there would be a “celebratory” roll call at the convention later this month.
The roll call of state delegations had long been planned to take place virtually and weeks before the Democratic National Convention in Chicago, which begins Aug. 19. Harris on Friday secured the requisite number of delegates needed for the spot at the top of the party’s presidential ticket, after virtual voting began Thursday.
“I am honored to be the presumptive Democratic nominee for president of the United States,” she said in a call with campaign supporters Friday.
The vice president said she would officially accept the nomination after voting closed.
Harris’ nomination in the roll call vote caps a whirlwind two weeks for the vice president, who launched her campaign after President Biden bowed out of the presidential race on July 21.
The roll call solidifies the general election match-up of Harris versus Trump, who received the Republican presidential nomination during the party’s convention last month. While the GOP spent its four-day gathering in Milwaukee lambasting Mr. Biden for his policies and taking aim at his age, the party has had to quickly pivot to refocusing its efforts on Harris.
The vice president announced her candidacy for the Democratic presidential nomination on the heels of Mr. Biden’s decision to end his reelection bid. She swiftly received the president’s endorsement and support from all Democratic leaders, including party elders and its rising stars.
To win the nomination, Harris needed to secure support from 2,350 out of more than 4,000 pledged and super delegates, her campaign said. She easily met that threshold Friday. The DNC said after the close of the virtual roll call, 4,567 delegates voted for Harris.
Harris has not yet announced her running mate, but is expected to unveil her pick on Tuesday. Her campaign vetted about a dozen contenders, including a number of governors from battleground states that are crucial for winning in November.
Results of the DNC roll call of states for 2024
Democratic National Committee
Democratic National Committee
How did the Democratic National Committee’s roll call of states work?
The electronic voting by delegates began at 9 a.m. ET on Aug. 1 and closed at 6 p.m. ET on Aug. 5. Voting took place through an online platform operated by the Democratic National Committee.
Voting delegates received a personalized and watermarked form to cast their vote. Votes were tallied by the DNC.
What happened to delegates for candidates who dropped out?
Mr. Biden amassed enough delegates in March to clinch the Democratic presidential nomination, and the committee’s rules didn’t explicitly address how those delegates should be allocated after his withdrawal. Party rules state that delegates pledged to a candidate “shall in all good conscience reflect the sentiments of those who elected them.”
But within days of launching her presidential campaign, Harris had received endorsements from nearly all state delegations, amounting to more than 3,700 pledged delegates. That support held, and Harris easily clinched the presidential nomination.
Melissa Quinn is a politics reporter for CBSNews.com. She has written for outlets including the Washington Examiner, Daily Signal and Alexandria Times. Melissa covers U.S. politics, with a focus on the Supreme Court and federal courts.