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Harris wasn’t originally slated to address the AFT, a union with more than 1.7 million members working in education, healthcare and government, during its four-day annual convention this week. But, then again, she also wasn’t originally expected to formally become the 2024 Democratic presidential candidate until last Sunday when President Joe Biden endorsed his vice president shortly (27 minutes, to be exact) after his announcement that he would not accept the nomination at the Democratic National Convention next month in Chicago.
In other words, it’s been a week of surprises, and, so far, Harris has handled every twist and turn like the political genius she just might be.
“It all happened so fast,” Nandi Riley, a college freshmen English teacher from Tallahasee, Florida, said.
Riley was already in Houston on Sunday when the news broke that Biden was stepping aside. “It’s thrilling. It feels like divine intervention,” she said. “I, of course, didn’t know when I got here on Sunday that Joe Biden would drop out and that Vice President Kamala Harris would be here and would be the nominee, but here we are.”
Many people came to the event wearing Biden-Harris signs, so the AFT organizers had stacks of Harris for President signs waiting in the hall. Going through check-in, one security official tensely explained that security was tighter than usual for this “because it happened so fast.”
Shortly after Biden endorsed the vice president, the AFT became the first union to officially back Harris, making a resolution on Sunday afternoon that union members ratified with roaring approval when the convention opened on Monday. Within hours of the union’s official endorsement, Riley was hearing rumors that Harris would make an appearance in Houston, a plan that was quickly confirmed on Tuesday.
Harris – who managed to corral enough Democratic delegate support to, barring any more surprises, win the Democratic nomination next month by Monday, and has raised more than $126 million in donations since Sunday – arrived in Houston on Wednesday afternoon, and didn’t waste a minute.
After landing at Ellington Field, Harris met with Houston Mayor John Whitmire (the two hadn’t met before) and Harris County Commissioner Rodney Ellis (he’s known Harris for years). From there, she zipped over zipped over to the Office of Emergency Management to get an update on Hurricane Beryl recovery efforts.
Ahead of the vice president’s address, the line for admittance to the convention hall stretched along the length of the George R. Brown Convention Center’s third floor, with hundreds of AFT attendees waiting to go through security.
“I stood in line for two hours and 15 minutes to make sure I’d get in and see her,” Terra Colgrove, an operating room nurse from Anchorage, Alaska, said. She noted that the media pen, which has been mostly empty all week, was packed on Thursday. “I feel like there’s a buzz, a different energy, because Kamala Harris was going to be here in the hall today.”
State Rep. Jolanda Jones managed to meet with the vice president before her keynote address, she said. Jones was full of praise for Harris who is now all-but-certainly being the top of the Democratic ticket. “I’m team Kamala all the way,” State Rep. Jolanda Jones said. “I was going to vote for Biden because I’m a good Democrat, but I was talking to my constituents, and they weren’t excited about President Biden. It’s another story with Vice President Harris on the ticket.”
And then, on Thursday morning, the vice president launched into what is technically known as a helluva good speech.
Harris started out recalling Biden’s oval office address on Wednesday night.
“Last night, our president addressed the nation, and he showed, once again, what true leadership looks like,” she said, praising Biden and threading a difficult needle. “He thinks and talks about his work in our country, understanding what it means in terms of what we do now and how that will impact the future. Over the past three-and-a-half years, and over his entire career, Joe has led with grace and strength and bold vision and deep compassion.”
Harris hit some of the same points she has been making since she went out to Harris campaign headquarters (formerly Biden’s campaign headquarters) in Wilmington, Delaware on Sunday. But she has already managed to sharpen that message since then.
As she addressed the AFT, Harris dug into her platform, touting her plans to forgive student loan debt, expand childcare access and back a strong public education system. She drew a stark comparison between her own platform and GOP plans, as they’ve been laid out in Project 2025.
The 900-page-long tome lays out what Republicans plan to do if former President Donald Trump is re-elected in November, including getting rid of the U.S. Department of Education and ending Head Start, the project that provides thousands of children across the country with free pre-kindergarten, Harris said.
(Trump has recently denied any knowledge of Project 2025.) “We want to ban assault weapons and they want to ban books,” she said. “Can you imagine?”
She then deftly turned to the future, calling the presidential race a choice between two different visions of the United States. “We each in our country face a question, that question being, what kind of country do we want to live in? A country of compassion, freedom and the rule of law or a country of fear, chaos and hate?”
The AFT audience – the appearance was open to convention attendees and media only – responded with roaring approval, with people chanting her name and springing to their feet repeatedly throughout her speech and a final, giddy roar of approval as Harris wrapped up and ducked away, slipping offstage so quickly it seemed like she’d gone through a trapdoor. (She’s due back in Washington D.C. for a private meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu later today.)
Clarence Reynolds, a retired U.S. history high school teacher who taught in New York City schools for years, sang Harris’ praises, saying, “She’s fantastic up there. She’s smart, she’s fierce and she’s ready to go.”
Mayra Segovia, a special education teacher in Houston ISD, was beaming after Harris finished up. “This is what we need,” she said. “The vice president is open to listening to what we at AFT need, what we teachers need. The opponent isn’t listening about anything.”
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Dianna Wray
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The Capitol Hill building where Democratic senators heard from top Biden aides Mike Donilon, Steve Richetti, and Jen O’Malley Dillon had two exits, one on a side street with a nice view of the Supreme Court and the other emptying out onto four lanes of traffic on Constitution Avenue with no shade from the July sun. Most senators invariably used the second, because it was the one where they wouldn’t be interrogated by reporters.
The few who trickled out of the first exit were reluctant to answer any questions at all about the meeting where they sought reassurance from the president’s team that there was a way he could win reelection. They didn’t even answer questions about what was for lunch.
Connecticut’s Richard Blumenthal offered the cryptic answer that “some of my concerns are allayed, some others have been deepened” after the meeting — which Politico reported didn’t seem to have changed anyone’s minds. Still, Blumenthal insisted ahead of Biden’s press conference that he has to “go to American people, not just in one meeting, in one press conference, or in one speech but consistently and constantly.”
“Tonight will be important,” he said. “The press conference will be potentially a turning point, but there has to be more than one.”
Maggie Hassan of New Hampshire offered a panglossian spin, rare among Democrats who have been increasingly stone-faced in recent days. “The best way to defeat Donald Trump is to reelect President Biden,” she said. “I thought the presentation we had was a really excellent one.”
The windows of the building, which was headquarters of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, were plastered with stickers encouraging passersby to look up www.goponabortion.com — a campaign website where they criticized Republicans for their opposition to Roe v. Wade. No one outside was pulling up the website though. They were too busy reading the statement from the latest House member to demand that Biden drop out.
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Intelligencer Staff
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Democrats may not believe Joe Biden is the strongest candidate to defeat Donald Trump in November, but there seemed to be a grim resignation on Capitol Hill on Monday night that none were willing to take the steps that might actually push Biden to drop out. If Democrats could simply wave a magic wand to remove the president from the ticket, they would. But all they have are knives, and few are inclined to use them.
The fretting was based on the calculus that while Biden was likely to lose if he remained on the ticket, an unsuccessful effort to oust him would just widen the margin of defeat (and the resulting down-ballot casualties). Many took an abstract view of the process as if it was some intellectual question that needed to be worked out on a blackboard. Senator Chris Van Hollen of Maryland told reporters “I think we are having an important national conversation and I am confident that the president will make a decision in the best interest of the country.” There was no sense that Biden has already announced that decision a number of times, including hours before in a letter to Congressional Democrats and again during a phone interview with Morning Joe.
Fatalism gripped the Democratic Party on Monday, fueling a desire among many just to resolve all of this quickly. As one donor said “the longer it lingers, the worse it is going to be in November.” Only Joe Biden could really decide to remove himself from the ticket, and barring a shocking turn of events, he wasn’t going to relinquish that grip. In the meantime, the more the media feeding frenzy continued, the tougher it would be for Democrats in competitive races. After all, the last thing Democrats want to do is spend day after day answering questions about Joe Biden’s cognitive abilities, and until there was a definitive resolution, they wouldn’t have a choice. There would be no open convention, no Sorkinesque sacrifice — just another grim four months of plodding along with a flawed nominee.
One senior Democratic aide invoked the T.S. Eliot line that became a cliche long before even Biden was born: “This won’t end with a bang but a whimper.”
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There’s no spinning it — Thursday night’s presidential debate was just plain painful to watch.
Donald Trump spouted a firehouse of lies that President Joe Biden, plagued with a cough, was too frail and feeble to properly fend off. Too many clips saw Biden mumbling meandering non-sequiturs in a near-whisper or trailing off as he repeatedly lost his train of thought.
Both candidates were cringe-inducing when faced with the task of discussing issues like abortion or immigration, and both also spent a disturbing and reckless amount of time talking about war. Incredibly, at one point, they even argued about who has the better golf game.
Unsurprisingly, many Democrats are reportedly now freaking out with fresh concerns over Biden’s fitness for office, even though pundits like Ezra Klein and Jon Stewart were lampooned for raising this very issue months ago, in February. At 81, Biden is the oldest U.S. President ever.
As soon as the debate ended, nearly the entire panel of anchors at host news organization CNN seemed to be in agreement that Biden’s performance was poor, with many suggesting he should drop out of the race for the good of the nation. It was a similar situation even at the typically Democrat-friendly MSNBC. We didn’t tune in, but we’re sure Fox News had an absolute field day with the clips.
Other outlets joined the pile on, with The New York Times opinion section churning out at least five columns urging Biden to step down in the ensuing hours. (Sample headlines: “To Serve His Country, President Biden Should Leave the Race”; “Biden Cannot Go On Like This”; “The Best President of My Adult Life Needs to Withdraw”; “Is Biden Too Old? America Got Its Answer.”; and “Joe Biden Is a Good Man and a Good President. He Must Bow Out of the Race.”, in which the columnist confessed to weeping while watching the debate.)
There’s no debate over the fact that Biden is vulnerable against Trump, 78, who the President and other Democrats maintain poses an urgent threat to democracy due to his role in the attempted coup on Jan. 6, 2021. Polls have found the candidates to be neck and neck, with Trump having an edge in swing states like Michigan.
Of course, it’s too late for another Democratic candidate to formally run against Biden since the primary election is over (though we’ll save for another day a discussion about how more Democrats should have stepped up to respectfully challenge the incumbent; voters deserve choices based on merit, not a system that defers to seniority). There is, however, an alternative option, albeit a somewhat far-fetched one.
As many pundits have pointed out, the party could choose to run an open convention at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago in August. But Biden would have to first willingly step aside, something he has not yet indicated he would do. If he did, however, the delegates who have pledged to nominate him at the convention could vote for someone else. This would likely kick off a free-for-all of candidates scrambling for the nomination and could get messy. There would likely be large protests from anti-war activists opposed to continuing to support Israel’s attacks on Gaza, for example. Plus, the idea of delegates choosing a candidate and not the American voters feels undemocratic.
This hypothetical scenario echoes the infamous 1968 DNC, which descended into chaos after incumbent Lyndon Johnson dropped out due to the unpopular war in Vietnam. That convention was also held in Chicago, and sparked seven days of protests and a police crackdown that resulted in one death and hundreds of injuries. The eventual Democratic nominee, Hubert Humphrey, would go on to lose to Richard Nixon in November.
If Biden were to drop out, a number of names have been floated as possible alternatives. Vice President Kamala Harris is the obvious choice from a succession of powers perspective, but Democratic governors like California’s Gavin Newsom, J.B. Pritzker of Illinois, and Michigan’s Gretchen Whitmer have all also been floated as strong contenders for the Oval Office.
As Biden struggled to answer a question about abortion on Thursday night — which should have been a slam dunk considering the widespread backlash to Trump’s Supreme Court overturning Roe v. Wade in 2022 — it was hard not to imagine how much better it would have been if someone like Whitmer was up there on stage instead. An articulate, energetic orator, Whitmer has made reproductive rights one of her signature issues, dramatically revealing her own experience with sexual assault to oppose a controversial “rape insurance” bill as a state senator in 2013 and repealing Michigan’s 1931 abortion ban in the aftermath of Roe v. Wade in 2023. And Whitmer, 52, who has a propensity for hopping on viral social media trends like last summer’s Barbie-mania, would likely have a much better time connecting with the ever-elusive bloc of young voters, who we can’t imagine are excited to cast their ballots in November.
For now, though, it seems such a scenario is unlikely. The Biden campaign says he’s not dropping out, and on Friday, the President doubled down on his reelection effort while also acknowledging his poor performance.
“I know I’m not a young man, to state the obvious,” he said. “I don’t walk as smoothly as I used to, I don’t speak as smoothly as I used to, I don’t debate as well as I used to, but I know how to tell the truth. I know right from wrong. I know how to do this job. And I know how to get things done. When you get knocked down, you get back up.”
And Whitmer, a co-chair of Biden’s re-election campaign and staunch supporter of the President, has also said she stands by him. On Friday, she released a statement in defense of Biden’s campaign:
“For hardworking people in Michigan and across the country, this election is about which candidate can do the most to make life easier for them and their families, stand up for our rights and freedoms, and leave a better country for our kids and grandkids. On these questions, the difference between Joe Biden and Donald Trump as people, and as presidents, could not be clearer.
President Biden’s focus is on lowering families’ costs, building an economy that works for working people, and restoring the reproductive freedom women lost the last time Donald Trump was in the White House.
Donald Trump is a convicted felon whose focus is on Donald Trump. And he’s told us what he will do if he gets back into the White House. He will take his attacks on women’s reproductive rights even further, try to get rid of the Affordable Care Act and spike families’ health costs, and send auto jobs to China.
Joe Biden is running to serve the American people. Donald Trump is running to serve Donald Trump. The difference between Joe Biden’s vision for making sure everyone in America has a fair shot and Donald Trump’s dangerous, self-serving plans will only get sharper as we head toward November.”
Whitmer has also been hailed as a serious contender for the White House in 2028, so maybe we just have to wait until next time. Still, we hope that Biden and those closest to him give serious consideration to what’s at stake in November. We deserve better than what we got on Thursday evening.
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Lee DeVito
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Photo-Illustration: Intelligencer; Photos: Getty Images
George Latimer ousted Representative Jamaal Bowman, a two-term leftist and critic of Israel, in what’s believed to be the most expensive congressional primary ever fought. For moderates hoping to check the power of the Squad in Congress, it was a joyous night; for the many progressives who hoped to save one of their most prominent politicians, it was a deeply dispiriting — if no longer shocking — turn of events.
Latimer was technically an insurgent but didn’t campaign like one. Recruited by the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, the Westchester County executive targeted Bowman for failing, in his view, to adequately support Israel in the wake of the Hamas attacks. AIPAC spent at least $14 million on behalf of Latimer, an extraordinary sum, drowning television and radio stations with advertisements lacerating Bowman and propping up the more conservative Latimer. Notably, the AIPAC-funded ads said nothing about Israel, instead focusing on Bowman’s alleged lack of loyalty to Joe Biden, who is liked enough by many Democrats. Bowman’s embrace of the Democratic Socialists of America, who are explicitly anti-Zionist, may have alienated moderate Jewish voters even more. While outside groups like Justice Democrats managed to contribute more than $1 million in ads to help Bowman, the spending was remarkably lopsided: By one tally, Latimer-aligned PACs had outspent Bowman seven to one. Rallies with Bernie Sanders and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez in the campaign’s final days could not save him, either.
Bowman, a charismatic and unapologetic leftist with a penchant for controversy, would have had a tough reelection fight even if AIPAC hadn’t emerged to add so much rocket fuel to Latimer’s campaign. He faced a House censure for pulling a false fire alarm when Democrats were trying to stall a vote. Blog posts he wrote more than a decade ago appeared to give credence to 9/11 conspiracy theories, and his YouTube page following conspiracy accounts became news. He was forced to apologize after lavishing praise on Norman Finkelstein, the acerbic anti-Israel scholar, at a panel discussion. And he initially claimed reports of Hamas raping Israeli women on October 7 were “propaganda.”
In a suburban, racially diverse seat roping in large chunks of Westchester and a northern sliver of the Bronx, these controversies collectively weighed Bowman down, especially in the district’s sizable Jewish community. Four years ago, Bowman, a former middle-school principal, had unseated Eliot Engel, a high-ranking congressman and staunch Israel hawk. Many of Engel’s allies were out for revenge.
AIPAC and other pro-Israel groups have been casting about for challengers to defeat as many Squad Democrats — the AOC-aligned House group that has been willing to forcefully criticize the Israeli military’s actions in Gaza — as possible, and they’ve had, until Bowman, little to boast about. Summer Lee, a progressive from Pennsylvania, breezed to reelection earlier in the year, and threats to take on Rashida Tlaib, the Palestinian American congresswoman who supports the BDS movement, went nowhere.
But in Latimer, AIPAC had an ideal recruit. Until this race, he had been a liberal in good standing, working well with activist groups in Westchester and even campaigning with the support of the Working Families Party. Left-leaning Democrats celebrated him for defeating Rob Astorino, a right-wing Republican, and returning the county to Democratic control in 2018. If he was, more subtly, unwilling to ruffle the feathers of the county’s more reactionary forces, he rarely picked fights with the left and mostly focused on hyperlocal issues. Like a suburban version of Chuck Schumer, Latimer was known for showing up everywhere in the county, and no ribbon cutting or potluck dinner seemed too small for the hustling, neighborly pol to make an appearance. A former state legislator, he had been winning elections for three decades.
Even as Latimer swerved rightward in the primary, he was well positioned to deflect attacks from the Bowman campaign. In 2020, Bowman had won by portraying Engel, who waited out the pandemic in Maryland, as aloof and out of touch with the struggles of the district. Like Joe Crowley, who claimed a Queens residence but raised his family in Virginia, Engel was no longer active among his constituents. Latimer, though, was everywhere in Westchester, and he campaigned aggressively throughout the county.
Latimer’s triumph could come at a cost. He defeated Westchester’s first Black congressman in a primary that polarized around race. He angered many Democrats by claiming Bowman’s real constituencies were in San Francisco and Dearborn — Bowman and his allies accused Latimer of race-baiting. Black and Latino voters could view him as the new congressman for white, wealthy Westchester, where he resides, and not someone looking out for them. “I’m an outspoken Black man,” Bowman said during a recent debate. “His supporters don’t want that, because it challenges their power.”
On foreign policy, Latimer’s unstinting alliance with AIPAC might put him on the rightward fringe of his own party, alienated even from Schumer, who called for Benjamin Netanyahu to step aside earlier this year. Democrats in Congress have grown increasingly uneasy with the war there, as Israel continues to slaughter civilians and openly rejects the concept of a Palestinian state. For now, Latimer fits comfortably with the Israel hawks in New York’s House delegation, including the Bronx’s Ritchie Torres. But life for him in Congress may only get more complicated. The Netanyahu government continues to antagonize the Biden administration, and Latimer’s views on Israel bring him into closer alignment with Donald Trump.
Progressives, meanwhile, have been dealt a grievous blow. Bowman was a rising star and someone who could have, with enough time in the House, run for higher office. When he first ran against Engel, he was able to forge coalitions between working-class voters of color and college-educated activists. The Squad, without him, is still large enough and may grow in the coming years — even if Cori Bush, another prominent member, also loses this summer. But Bowman’s defeat marks the loss of a rare — if undisciplined — political talent. AIPAC and other moneyed forces will hope they’ve found a new blueprint for success: Recruit a willing, well-known lawmaker to run against a progressive and pump many millions into the primary.
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Ross Barkan
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PRESIDENT Joe Biden has been caught bizarrely freezing again after awkwardly shuffling away from world leaders at a G7 meeting.
The global powerhouses, including the UK’s Rishi Sunak, were set to get a photo before a wayward Biden tried to escape the shoot before being shepherded back by Italian PM Giorgia Meloni.
Awkward footage shows the president and other world leaders watching on as parachute jumpers descend from the sky with the flags of allied nations.
But, the show of unity and military prowess is quickly overshadowed when Biden decides to turn his back on the group as they clap for the latest jumper.
The 81-year-old stands still with a huge grin on his face for a few seconds before deciding to shuffle away from the pack.
After taking several small, limbering steps he begins to talk to someone and offers them a thumbs up.
The remaining heads of state all stand watching Biden with a puzzled look on their faces as Emmanuel Macron, Rishi Sunak and Giorgia Meloni stare in his direction before all looking at each other.
Meloni then makes a dart towards the president as she speaks to Macron before tugging on Biden’s arm.
By this point the commander-in-chief is looking completely in the opposite direction with his back to everyone else.
Quick-thinking Meloni manages to shepherd Biden back towards the photographers as the G7 members all make a move left so they are surrounding the US leader.
As all the leaders smile and look towards the camera, Biden decides to slowly put on his aviator sunglasses before posing for the picture.
White House press secretary Andrew Bates claimed Biden was simply congratulating a diver on the floor who was collecting his things.
Bates went on to blame the “desperate” media for using “an artificially narrow frame” to make Biden look bad.
It comes as earlier this week, Biden appeared to freeze again for a moment during a Juneteenth celebration at the White House.
He looked statuesque at the event – sparking further concern just months before the presidential election.
The Democrat’s term has been plagued with gaffes and blunders.
He has fallen up the stairs of Air Force One and has stumbled on countless occasions.
Last year, Biden took a tumble at the Air Force Academy graduation ceremony.
In February, Biden confused the leaders of Mexico and Egypt while delivering a rambling address to the nation after it emerged he wouldn’t face criminal charges over storing secret docs.
Last week, Biden seemed to fumble for his seat while on stage with the Macrons and his wife, Jill, at the D-Day event.
But, there was no chair behind Biden.
Biden looked like he was crouching down before Jill then put her hand over her mouth.
It looked like she was going to tell him something.
It’s not known if she uttered anything to the president.
Questions continue to swirl over Biden’s health and competency for office – just months before Americans go to the polls.
And polling suggests Biden’s re-election bid could be tricky.
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Georgie English
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CHICAGO — A follow-up report to a 2021 review of the Chicago Police Department’s response to civil unrest following George Floyd’s murder was released by the Chicago Office of the Inspector General Thursday, which found CPD to be underequipped and underprepared for large-scale public demonstration.
While the overarching conclusion was that more work needs to be done to prepare CPD to handle mass gatherings surrounding major political events, like the upcoming Democratic National Convention, Inspector General Deborah Witzburg did say good news came from the report.
“The city is better situated in terms of planning, interagency citywide comprehensive planning for these events,” Witzburg said. “We’re in a better place now than in 2020.”
Where improvements still need to happen lay with CPD’s guidance to its officers to ensure consistent messaging, according to the report.
The report also points toward CPD’s Coordinated Multiple Arrest policy, which said the policy draws on outdated crowd control tactics.
CPD Superintendent Larry Snelling rebuked the OIG’s report and defended the preparedness of his officers.
“It’s very inaccurate,” Snelling said. “If you wanna come here, if you wanna protest if you wanna show up and you wanna have your voice heard the Chicago Police Department will protect your rights to do that.
“As long as you’re not engaging in any criminal activity which is not protected by the first amendment.”
Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson expressed optimism as the 2024 DNC fast approaches.
“I’m confident that the work we are doing to secure a peaceful safe energetic convention that that work is ongoing. We’re confident we’ll be prepared and ready when the day comes.”
The Chicago Office of the Inspector General has not returned WGN TV News’ requests for comment on this story.
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Julian Crews
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