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Tag: J.D. Vance

  • Heated political rhetoric is usually not fatal

    Heated political rhetoric is usually not fatal

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    Having survived a second assassination attempt in as many months, former President Donald Trump knows precisely whom to blame: his political enemies, the media, and the Democrats. (Three sides of the same coin.)

    “He believed the rhetoric of [President Joe] Biden and [Vice President Kamala] Harris, and he acted on it,” Trump told Fox News—referencing Ryan Wesley Routh, the 58-year-old would-be assassin who was apprehended on Sunday after camping out at the Trump International Golf Course. “Their rhetoric is causing me to be shot at, when I am the one who is going to save the country, and they are the ones that are destroying the country—both from the inside and out.”

    Trump’s running mate, Sen. J.D. Vance (R–Ohio), has said similar things.

    “No one has tried to kill Kamala Harris in the last couple of months, and two people now have tried to kill Donald Trump in the last couple of months,” said Vance. “I think that’s pretty strong evidence that the left needs to tone down the rhetoric or somebody is going to get hurt.”

    It’s true that the other side increasingly talks about Trump in apocalyptic terms: a threat to democracy, fascist, Hitler, etc. But Trump’s own rhetoric is often quite inflammatory. He’s called Harris a Marxist, a communist, and, for good measure, a fascist. And back when he was a prominent Never Trumper, Vance himself called Trump every awful name in the book.

    Political figures often use heated rhetoric, make unfair comparisons, and aggressively inflate the views, statements, and character of their political enemies. This has gone on forever. Whether it exacerbates the problem of political violence is extremely unclear. Republicans once claimed to understand this, and correctly pushed back on Democrats and media figures who lazily and falsely blamed the right for inspiring the shooting of former Rep. Gabby Giffords (D–Ariz.). It’s demoralizing to see Trump and Vance easily succumb to the temptation to do the exact same thing.

    Calls to tamp down on inflammatory rhetoric are fine, but the public should be wary of attempts to draw any causal lines between heated language and real-world violence. As always, it’s important to remember that there is very, very little political violence in the U.S. Americans are far more likely to engage in violence against one another due to tensions in the workplace or the home—politically-motivated hatred is a component of shockingly few crimes.

     

    I’m joined by Amber Duke to discuss the second Trump assassination attempt, the pet-eating controversy, Hillary Clinton’s idea to criminalize the spreading of misinformation, and Anna Navarro’s latest hot take.

     

    I have finally had time to begin the second season of Amazon Prime’s The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power series, which opens with an extended sequence filling in the backstory of the antagonist, the Dark Lord Sauron.

    Of course, this isn’t his entire backstory. The Rings of Power takes place during an interim age; the previous dark lord, Morgoth, was vanquished, and Sauron was seemingly destroyed. We know that our heroes are destined to feud with Sauron and destroy him yet again so that he can ultimately return to power a third time during the better-known events of The Lord of the Rings films. As such, this all feels a bit tedious. Sauron’s conflict with Adar, the mysterious leader of the orcs, does not have particularly high stakes: We know definitively that Sauron will eventually beat out all the other bad guys, which include a dark wizard who seems suspiciously similar to—but is not, I don’t think?—Saruman, the rival of Gandalf. (At least, it would be very weird to have Saruman already being evil.)

    I am enjoying the performance of Charlie Vickers, the actor who portrays Sauron. And the storyline involving the Stranger—who is presumably young Gandalf—and his hobbit-like companions has an entertaining, whimsical quality. The rest of the show is a tad boring. The actors who portray Galadriel and Elrond have not imbued these characters with nearly enough vibrancy. (Though anyone would seem inadequately bad when compared with Cate Blanchett and Hugo Weaving.) The dwarf scenes are extremely dull, bordering on unwatchable. I am only two episodes in, and so far there hasn’t been much else.

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    Robby Soave

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  • Vance Scolds Dems for ‘Fascist’ Jab, Which Trump Uses Often

    Vance Scolds Dems for ‘Fascist’ Jab, Which Trump Uses Often

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    J.D. Vance sticks his foot in his mouth once again.
    Photo: Ryan Collerd/AFP/Getty Images

    From the moment a second assassination attempt against Donald Trump was foiled in Florida this week, Team Trump has been accusing Democrats of inciting violence against the 45th president by calling out his dangerous extremism. The idea, of course, is to neutralize a significant Kamala Harris campaign argument that Trump has proved himself again and again to be a threat to democratic norms.

    All the tut-tutting from the Trump campaign and its allies about name-calling is pretty rich coming from the camp of the politician who has raised personal insults and smears to a central place in every campaign he’s ever run. But the attempted shaming of people for being mean to the former president reached a new level in Atlanta at the hands of J.D. Vance, as the New York Times reports:

    In a speech on Monday in Georgia, Mr. Vance said that Mr. Trump’s political opponents had crossed a line with their language, which he suggested had played a role in what the authorities are investigating as an assassination attempt directed at Mr. Trump while he was golfing in Florida on Sunday.

    “Look, we can disagree with one another, we can debate one another, but we cannot tell the American people that one candidate is a fascist and, if he’s elected, it is going to be the end of American democracy,” Mr. Vance said at a Georgia Faith & Freedom Coalition dinner.

    Now, to be clear, in journalistic and progressive (and even “Never Trump” Republican) activist circles, there has been an eternal and ongoing debate about the extent to which Trump’s MAGA movement is fascist or at least fascist adjacent. It kind of comes with the territory when you have a political leader who just last week in a nationally televised event repeatedly touted the Hungarian authoritarian leader Viktor Orban as a role model and validator. But Kamala Harris and Tim Walz have not gone over the brink and publicly called Trump a fascist.

    You know who does throw around that particular f-word? That’s right, Vance’s running mate, as the Times noted:

    Mr. Trump has called Ms. Harris a “fascist” on at least five occasions, including at a rally on Thursday in Arizona and during a news conference on Friday near Los Angeles.

    “She’s a Marxist, communist, fascist, socialist,” Mr. Trump said in Tucson, Ariz.

    Now, it’s true that Trump and his allies don’t use the word “fascist” with any precision, as campaign spokesman Steven Cheung illustrated when asked about his boss’s use of “fascist”:

    “As President Trump correctly points out, Kamala Harris is a radical leftist, Marxist, communist and fascist because she is hell bent on destroying America by continuing her disastrous policies that have hurt people all across the country,” Mr. Cheung said. Mr. Trump has also called for Democrats to tone down their speech, using his own harsh language to do so.

    All these heavily freighted signifiers of ideological extremism are not interchangeable, even in the aggressively stupid lexicon of MAGA World, and none should be applied to politicians just because you believe (or want others to believe) their policies have failed. But if Trump wants to continue this calumny, his running mate should be estopped from complaining about its imagined use by others.


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    Ed Kilgore

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  • Gwen Walz Uses Her ‘Teacher Voice’ For Spectacular JD Vance Takedown

    Gwen Walz Uses Her ‘Teacher Voice’ For Spectacular JD Vance Takedown

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    And to make sure the crowd knew she was serious, she did it in her “teacher glasses.”

    The moment happened while Walz, the Minnesota governor and Kamala Harris’ running mate, was talking about a recently resurfaced comment by Vance criticizing Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers union, for trying to “brainwash” children while not having “a single child” of her own (she is a stepmother to two kids).

    Considering the Walzes struggled with fertility issues before having two children, she didn’t take too kindly to the Ohio senator’s hint that people who haven’t given birth to children shouldn’t be teachers.

    “JD Vance said he was ‘really disturbed’ by teachers who don’t have biological children,” Gwen Walz said before mentioning her own personal story.

    “For a long time, Tim and I were teachers who struggled with infertility. We were only able to start a family because of fertility treatments. We do not take kindly to folks like JD Vance telling us when or how to start our families,” she emphasized.

    She then paused to put on a pair of glasses.

    “So let me use my teacher voice. Mr. Vance, how about you mind your own business?”

    Many people were impressed by Walz’s takedown and the teacher glasses she put on before delivering it.

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  • Harris/Walz will make first Georgia visit on Wed., rally in Savannah on Thurs.

    Harris/Walz will make first Georgia visit on Wed., rally in Savannah on Thurs.

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    “I will proudly put my record against his any day,” U.S. VP Kamala Harris said of former U.S. President Donald Trump. Photo by Julia Beverly/The Atlanta Voice

    Fresh off the Democratic National Convention (DNC), United States Vice President Kamala Harris and Minnesota Governor Tim Walz will be in Georgia on Wednesday, August 28, according to their campaign. This will be the first time the Democratic presidential ticket will be in Georgia. Harris, both as a part of the Biden/Harris administration and as the Democratic presidential nominee, has made several appearances in the state this year.

    The Harris/Walz ticket will begin a bus tour in South Georgia, similar to what they did in Pennsylvania a few days before the DNC. The tour will end with a rally in Savannah on Thursday night. The location of that rally has not been disclosed yet.

    The Trump/Vance campaign recently touched down in South Georgia when Republican vice presidential nominee and Ohio Senator J.D. Vance held a rally in Valdosta on Thursday, August 22. Former United States President Donald J. Trump most recently held a rally in Atlanta earlier this month.

    The final night of the DNC, which saw Harris accept her party’s nomination for president, drew just over 26 million viewers across 15 networks.


    Born and raised in Brooklyn, New York, Donnell began his career covering sports and news in Atlanta nearly two decades ago. Since then he has written for Atlanta Business Chronicle, The Southern Cross…
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    Donnell Suggs

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  • A President for all people: Kamala Harris accepts party’s nomination at DNC

    A President for all people: Kamala Harris accepts party’s nomination at DNC

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    CHICAGO – While red, white, and blue balloons fell from the rafters at the United Center, Stevie Wonder’s voice could be heard over the arena loudspeakers, “…till I reach the highest ground..”

    The final night of the Democratic National Convention saw current United States Vice President Kamala Harris accept her party’s nomination for the presidency. After three and a half years of making history as the first Black vice president of the United States, Harris, who is part South Asian by way of her mother, and Jamaican on her father’s side, looks to make an even greater historic impact as the second ever Black and first female President of the United States. 

    During her acceptance speech Harris said she wanted to be a president for all Americans.

    “To be fair, for my entire career I’ve only had one client: the people,” she said. 

    If elected president, Harris will be the first female President of the United States. Photo by Donnell Suggs/The Atlanta Harris

    Harris took time to thank United States President Joseph R. Biden, her family, her husband, Second Gentleman Doug Emhoff (Thursday was the couple’s 10th wedding anniversary), and the many people in her life that helped her get to that point. That list includes her sister Mya and nieces, god-children, and extended family. 

    She also took time to answer Republican critiques that said that her campaign rallies failed to address issues that voters want to know her stances on. On the economy, Harris said she will implement an “opportunity economy” upon winning the presidency. She brought the crowd to its feet when she spoke of passing a “middle-class tax cut.” 

    “The middle class is where I came from,” she said. Harris talked about growing up in Oakland and in the other states that her family moved to when she and her sister Mya were kids. Mya was one of the featured speakers during the evening. So was North Carolina Governor Roy Cooper, who called Harris a fighter that America needs in the White House.

    During her speech, which began just after 9 p.m. (Central) and ended shortly after 10 p.m., Harris also addressed the border and the ongoing war in Israel and Palestine. A single heckler could be heard screaming, “Free Palestine” during that portion of her speech. Harris promised to make ending that war a priority of the Harris/Walz administration. 

    “I know where I stand and I know where the United States belongs,” she said. 

    Georgia State Rep. Lucy McBath spoke about getting gun laws in place that can help save lives during her time on stage on night four of the DNC. Photo by Donnell Suggs/The Atlanta Voice

    The state of Georgia was well represented on the speaker front this week. Senator Raphael Warnock spoke on Monday night and Congresswoman Lucy McBath (D-GA 7th District) was one of the featured speakers on Thursday night. McBath, a well-known gun control advocate, spoke about the topic alongside other state representatives. During her remarks McBath said electing leaders like Harris will go a long way to getting gun laws in place that will save lives. McBath was joined on stage by family members of gun violence victims. 

    Meanwhile, Republican Party vice presidential nominee J.D. Vance was in Georgia on Thursday. The Ohio Senator made a campaign stop in Valdosta, the 18th largest city in the state.

    The Democratic machine continued to demonstrate its celebrity and political star power with speakers such as Rev. Al Sharpton, Senator Elizabeth Warren, comedian D.L. Hughley, Senator Bob Casey, and the Pledge of Allegiance performed by Luna Maring, a sixth grader from Oakland, California, Harris’ hometown. 

    Sharpton said that the night’s proceedings were the realization of former presidential candidate Shirley Chisholm’s dreams, the culmination of the American experiment, and the end of the Trump era.

    “If we stay together, Black, white, Latina, Asian, joy, joy, joy, joy will come in the morning,” said Sharpton.

    Even legendary actor Morgan Freeman contributed to the final day of the convention by narrating a hype video that played on the arena’s big screens before the Chicks performed the National Anthem. 

    Award-winning singer/songwriter Pink, who was born and raised in Pennsylvania, a crucial battleground state this election season, performed one of her many hit songs, “What About Us,” on Thursday night. 

    Pink’s appearance anchored musical and artistic performances by Patti LaBelle, Stevie Wonder, and John Legend, and poet Amanda Gorman during the four-day celebration and coronation of the Democratic Party’s selection of Harris and Minnesota Governor Tim Walz. 

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    Donnell Suggs

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  • How the J.D. Vance–Tim Walz Debate Could Affect the 2024 Race

    How the J.D. Vance–Tim Walz Debate Could Affect the 2024 Race

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    The Biden-Palin debate of 2008, which upstaged the presidential candidates.
    Photo: Don Emmert-Pool/Getty Images

    With relatively little drama (other than a couple of taunts by the Republican about his rival’s alleged reluctance to face him), vice-presidential nominees J.D. Vance and Tim Walz agreed this week to a debate on October 1 in New York, to be sponsored by CBS News. The event will be co-moderated by Face the Nation host Margaret Brennan and CBS Evening News anchor Norah O’Donnell. While these two men are relatively high-profile running mates, the history of vice-presidential debates suggests the New York encounter is unlikely to make a lot of difference to the November election results.

    The main reason the Vance-Walz encounter might be of only passing interest is that there’s not much evidence veep candidates themselves make much difference — to the election results, at least. They may make a lot of difference to the administration in which they hope to serve, and quite a few eventually become presidential nominees and even presidents. As running mates, though, their main impact is typically to reinforce the message and persona of the presidential candidates who chose them, and thus it is difficult to untangle them from the overall success or failure of the campaign generally. The ideal veep candidate is so busy grinding away at the party line like a cicada that you don’t really see or hear them distinctly.

    Accordingly, you could not be blamed for failing to remember past vice-presidential debates. But they have been held once every four years since 1976 (with the sole exception of 1980, when a dispute over the inclusion or exclusion of independent candidate Pat Lucey — John Anderson’s running mate — led to the cancellation of the debate). Here’s a look at some notable,, if not game-changing, moments from previous VP face-offs.

    In the very first vice-presidential debate, Gerald Ford’s running mate, Bob Dole, created a stir by trying to deflect a question about his earlier criticism of Ford’s pardon of Richard Nixon by wheeling out an ancient isolationist trope of treating all the wars of the 20th century as “Democrat wars.”

    Fritz Mondale pounced on the gaffe right away, but the exchange, the debate itself, and the vice-presidential candidates were not generally credited with a major effect on the very close outcome of the Ford-Carter contest.

    The most notable exchange between George H.W. Bush and Geraldine Ferraro was her calling out Poppy for mansplaining foreign policy to her:

    But this moment was probably overshadowed by future First Lady Barbara Bush’s description of Ferraro as “something that rhymes with ‘rich’.”

    Mansplainer or not, Bush and his running mate, Ronald Reagan, won 49 states.

    Most likely the biggest smackdown in vice-presidential debate history occurred in 1988, when the very callow Dan Quayle continued a habit of comparing his credentials to John F. Kennedy’s. The wily veteran politician Lloyd Bentsen came prepared and delivered the blow decisively:

    The moment likely damaged Quayle’s already-shaky reputation, but it didn’t matter to the presidential race, which Quayle and George H.W. Bush won in a landslide over Bentsen and Mike Dukakis.

    Typically, vice-presidential debates draw significantly lower viewership than presidential debates, as you might guess. In 2000, for example, the debate between Dick Cheney and Joe Lieberman drew just over half the audience won by the first Gore-Bush debate. But there was one exception: In 2008, the Joe BidenSarah Palin debate has significantly higher viewership than any of the three Obama-McCain debates, likely reflecting Palin’s novelty and momentary pop-culture status. It was no blowout, but Biden did get in a dig at Palin by comparing a McCain health-care plan to a “bridge to nowhere,” a term Palin had made famous in criticizing a project in Alaska:

    You can also marvel at how sharp Biden was in 2008.

    Much like Geraldine Ferraro in 1984, in 2020 Kamala Harris had an opportunity to rebuke a mansplainer, in this case Mike Pence:

    Soon we will know if Vance and Walz will give us a memorable moment or two or fade into obscurity like the debates that truly have been forgotten (Like Pence-Kaine. Did it really happen? Who knows?)


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    Ed Kilgore

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  • What we know about suspected Iranian cyber intrusion in the US presidential race

    What we know about suspected Iranian cyber intrusion in the US presidential race

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    NEW YORK (AP) — Details emerged over the weekend of a suspected Iranian cyber intrusion into the campaign of Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump, potentially resulting in the theft of internal campaign documents.

    The FBI is investigating the matter as well as attempts to infiltrate President Joe Biden’s reelection campaign, which became Vice President Kamala Harris’ campaign after Biden dropped out of the race.

    Here’s what we know:

    What happened?

    Trump’s presidential campaign said Saturday that it had been hacked and that sensitive internal documents were stolen and distributed. It declared that Iranian actors were to blame.

    The same day, Politico revealed it had received leaked internal Trump campaign documents by email, from a person only identified as “Robert.” The outlet said the documents included vetting materials on Republican vice presidential nominee JD Vance and Sen. Marco Rubio, who also was considered as a potential vice president.

    Two other news outlets, The New York Times and The Washington Post, also said they received leaked materials. None of them revealed details about what they had, instead describing the documents in broad terms.

    It’s still unclear whether the materials the news outlets received were related to Trump’s alleged campaign hack. Trump campaign spokesman Steven Cheung indicated they were connected, saying the documents “were obtained illegally” and warning that “any media or news outlet reprinting documents or internal communications are doing the bidding of America’s enemies and doing exactly what they want.”

    The FBI on Monday confirmed that it’s investigating the intrusion of the Trump campaign. Two people familiar with the matter said the FBI also is investigating attempts to gain access to the Biden-Harris campaign.

    Why is Trump blaming Iran?

    Trump’s campaign didn’t provide specific evidence showing Iran was behind the hack. But it pointed to a Microsoft report released Friday that detailed an Iranian attempt to infiltrate a presidential campaign in June.

    Microsoft’s report said an Iranian military intelligence unit had sent “a spear-phishing email to a high-ranking official of a presidential campaign from a compromised email account of a former senior advisor.” Spear-phishing is a form of cyberattack in which an attacker poses as a known or trusted sender, often to install malware or gather sensitive information.

    The tech company wouldn’t disclose which campaign or adviser was targeted, but said it had notified them. Since then, both Trump and a longtime friend and adviser of the former president, Roger Stone, have said they were contacted by Microsoft related to suspected cyber intrusions.

    “We were just informed by Microsoft Corporation that one of our many websites was hacked by the Iranian Government – Never a nice thing to do!” Trump wrote on his Truth Social platform on Saturday.

    Grant Smith, an attorney for Stone, said his client “was contacted by Microsoft and the FBI regarding this matter and continues to cooperate with these organizations.” He declined further comment.

    What does the government say?

    U.S. State Department officials declined to speculate on allegations that Iran was behind the hack, but a spokesperson said it would be in keeping with Tehran’s past use of cyberattacks and deception.

    What to know about the 2024 Election

    “These latest attempts to interfere in U.S. elections are nothing new for the Iranian regime,” spokesperson Vedant Patel said on Monday.

    U.S. intelligence officials declined to comment on the incident and referred questions to the FBI, which has said only that it’s investigating.

    Iran’s mission to the United Nations, when asked about the claim of the Trump campaign, denied being involved.

    “We do not accord any credence to such reports,” the mission told The Associated Press. “The Iranian government neither possesses nor harbors any intent or motive to interfere in the United States presidential election.”

    However, Iran long has been suspected of running hacking campaigns targeting its enemies in the Middle East and beyond. Tehran also has threatened to retaliate against Trump over the 2020 drone strike he ordered that killed prominent Revolutionary Guard Gen. Qassem Soleimani.

    Was Harris targeted too?

    Harris’ campaign has declined to say whether it has identified any state-based intrusion attempts, only saying it vigilantly monitors cyber threats and wasn’t aware of any security breaches of its systems.

    But two people familiar with the matter said the Biden-Harris campaign also was targeted in the suspected Iranian cyber intrusion. The people spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the details of the investigation.

    At least three staffers in the Biden-Harris campaign were targeted with phishing emails, but investigators have uncovered no evidence the attempt was successful, one of the people said. The attempts came before Biden dropped out of the race.

    The FBI began investigating that cyber incident in June, and intelligence officials believe Iran was behind the attempts, that person said.

    Where have I heard this before?

    A suspected foreign hack-and-leak of campaign materials might sound familiar because it’s happened before — notably in 2016.

    That year, a Russian hack exposed emails to and from Hillary Clinton’s campaign manager, John Podesta. The website Wikileaks published a trove of the messages, which were reported on extensively by news outlets.

    Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer on Tuesday noted the repeated use of the tactic against the U.S. and said it shows foreign adversaries are “intent on sowing chaos and undermining our democratic process.”

    “So we have to stand firm to ensure our cybersecurity can withstand such intrusions as we head into November,” he said in a statement.

    Experts say that the recent apparent hack of the Trump campaign is not likely to be the last such attempt to influence the U.S. election, either through cyberattacks or online disinformation. Both Iran and Russia, for example, have begun targeting Americans with fake news websites and other social media content that appears intended to sway voters, Microsoft and U.S. intelligence officials have said.

    The nation’s former top election security official, Chris Krebs, warned on the social platform X that Americans should take this threat seriously.

    “You might not like the victim here, but the adversary gives zero Fs who you like or don’t like,” he said of the Trump campaign hack. “American voters decide American elections. Let’s keep it that way.”

    ___

    Associated Press writers Alanna Durkin Richer, David Klepper and Zeke Miller in Washington contributed to this report.

    ___

    The Associated Press receives support from several private foundations to enhance its explanatory coverage of elections and democracy. See more about AP’s democracy initiative here. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

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  • JD Vance has long been on a quest to encourage more births in the United States

    JD Vance has long been on a quest to encourage more births in the United States

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    MIAMI (AP) — Five summers ago, Donald Trump’s running mate JD Vance — then a 34-year-old memoirist and father of a 2-year-old boy — took the stage at a conservative conference and tackled an issue that would become a core part of his political brand: the United States’ declining fertility rate.

    “Our people aren’t having enough children to replace themselves. That should bother us,” Vance told the gathering in Washington. He outlined the obvious concern that Social Security depends on younger workers’ contributions and then said, “We want babies not just because they are economically useful. We want more babies because children are good. And we believe children are good, because we are not sociopaths.”

    Vance repeatedly expressed alarm about declining birth rates as he launched his political career in 2021 with a bid for the U.S. Senate in Ohio. His criticism then of Vice President Kamala Harris, now the Democratic presidential nominee, and other high-profile Democrats as “childless cat ladies” who didn’t have a “direct stake” in the country have drawn particular attention since Trump picked him as his running mate.

    The rhetoric could threaten the Republican ticket’s standing with women who could help decide the November election. But it’s delighted those in the pro-natalist movement that has, until now, been limited largely to policy wonks, tech executives and venture capitalists.

    “There’s no question the discussion around family life, childbearing and pronatalism has gotten a lot more popular and gotten media attention because of JD Vance,” said Brad Wilcox, the director of the National Marriage Project at the University of Virginia and author of “Get Married.” Vance once referred to Wilcox as “one of my favorite researchers.”

    Vance’s spokespeople did not respond to messages seeking comment.

    An aspiring politician’s war against ‘anti-child ideology’

    Vance, who wrote a bestseller about his working-class upbringing, has been clear about making family formation a policy priority. He has suggested ideas such as allowing parents to vote on behalf of their children or following the example of Hungary’s Viktor Orbán of giving low-interest loans to married couples with children and tax exemptions to women who have four children or more.

    In a May 2021 interview with The Federalist’s podcast in which he said he was exploring a Senate run, Vance described a society without babies and kids as “pretty icky and pretty gross.”

    “We owe something to our country. We owe something to our future. The best way to invest in it is to ensure the next generation actually exists,” he said. “I think we have to go to war against the anti-child ideology that exists in our country.”

    Vance has suggested people without children should pay higher taxes than people who have children. That’s the spirit of the existing child tax credit at $2,000 per qualifying child, which Vance has said he’d love to see raised to $5,000. He has also mentioned in interviews he wants to ban pornography for minors, citing it as one of the causes for why people are marrying less and having fewer children.

    His anti-abortion views, he has said, are separate from his concerns on birth rates, arguing the procedure is not really driving the decline in fertility.

    What to know about the 2024 Election

    In several interviews, he’s argued policymakers should make it easier for two-parent households to be able to live on a single wage so that one of the parents can stay home with their children.

    “The ruling class is obsessed with their jobs. Even though they hate a lot of their jobs, they are obsessed with their credentials and they want strangers to raise their kids,” he told then-Fox News host Tucker Carlson in 2021. “But middle-class Americans, whatever their station in life, they want more time with their children.”

    Vance had a chaotic childhood raised mainly by his grandparents in southwestern Ohio and a mother who battled substance abuse, and her “revolving door of father figures” as he described in his book. He is now married to a trial lawyer he met at Yale Law School. The couple has three young children, who he has said attend preschool. Usha Vance left the law firm where she worked shortly after her husband was chosen as Trump’s running mate.

    Declining births in an aging America

    The U.S. was one of only a few developed countries with a fertility rate that ensured each generation had enough children to replace itself — about 2.1 kids per woman. But the number has been sliding since 2008 and in 2023 dropped to about 1.6, the lowest rate on record.

    Earlier this year, Vance cited fertility rates in arguing against American support for Ukraine.

    “Not a single country — even the U.S. — within the NATO alliance has birth rates at replacement level. We don’t have enough families and children to continue as a nation, and yet we’re talking about problems 6,000 miles away,” he said.

    Vance as well as researchers and experts on the pro-natalist movement also argue that immigrants can’t provide a long-term fix to the decline in birth rates. He has separately blamed immigrants for crime and creating “inter-ethnic conflict.”

    Demographers and other experts for years had predicted declining fertility rates would pose challenges for the Social Security system as fewer workers are supporting a growing aging population.

    Tech executives such as Tesla CEO Elon Musk and venture capitalist Peter Thiel, who donated millions for Vance’s primary race, have also been vocal about the decline in birth rates.

    “We as a nation, as a society, policymakers can’t be neutral on the question of family,” said Oren Cass, who founded a conservative think tank, American Compass, that is closely aligned with the senator.

    Cass, a former policy adviser for U.S. Sen. Mitt Romney, said he has known Vance for a decade and partnered on several events but said he was not speaking on behalf of the vice presidential nominee. He criticized how progressives have celebrated what he described as a culture of “you do you” and “all choices are equally valid,” when he considered the work of forming a family and raising children an “indispensable foundation” for the country.

    “That’s not to say, obviously, that you mandate or criminalize the alternative, but it is to say that we shouldn’t be neutral about it,” he said.

    Vance on the defense

    Vance’s views on birth rates have contributed to his rocky rollout as Trump’s running mate. Democrats went from labeling Trump and his Republican allies as a collective “threat to democracy” to calling both men “weird,” a strategy that coincided with Vance’s comments coming to light.

    Other unlikely critics have also piled on. Trump-backing influencer Dave Portnoy said Vance “sounds like a moron.” Former Republican congressman Trey Gowdy tried unsuccessfully to force an apology out of Vance for his denigrating of childless women on his Fox News show, introducing him with a story about a pair of Catholic nuns he met at an airport.

    Actress Jennifer Aniston, who has been open about her fertility issues, weighed in by saying she hopes Vance’s daughter does not face the same problems and she “truly can’t believe that this is coming from a potential VP of the United States.” Vance responded by calling her Instagram reaction “disgusting.”

    Trump has come to his defense, accusing Democrats of spinning things and expressing empathy for people who don’t get married or have children and are “every bit as good.”

    “He likes family. I think a lot of people like family. And sometimes it doesn’t work out,” Trump said in one interview. “But you’re just as good, in many cases a lot better than a person that’s in a family situation.”

    Vance’s wife has also tried to do some damage control, saying Vance was not referring to those who struggle with fertility or can’t get pregnant for medical reasons, though the ideas he proposes don’t make that distinction.

    “The reality is he made a quip in service of making a point he wanted to make that was substantive,” Usha Vance told an interviewer on “Fox and Friends.”

    Can Vance advance this?

    Wilcox, the author of “Get Married,” said JD Vance now needs to focus on convincing a broader audience that his ideas are worth pursuing.

    “The challenge for JD Vance is taking that attention and translating it into more of a concrete policy agenda that would be compelling to ordinary Americans and articulating a clear and positive agenda around making family formation both more affordable and more appealing,” Wilcox said.

    Supporters at a recent Trump rally in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, shrugged off Vance’s assertion that parents should have more of a vote than childless adults and expressed complicated feelings about his views.

    Kenneth “Nemo” Niemann, 70, said Vance might be speaking figuratively about giving parents more votes. His wife, Carol, 65, disagreed, saying Vance has been crystal clear that that is exactly what he means.

    The Niemanns had children later in life — their twins are 16 — and they spent far more of their adult lives as childless adults. And while they talked about how adults with children can have more to say when it comes to policies affecting children or they can have a different worldview about the future than childless adults, they still disagreed with Vance.

    “My sister never had children, but I can’t imagine my vote means more than hers,” Carol Niemann said.

    ___

    Associated Press writers Michelle R. Smith in Providence, Rhode Island, Mike Schneider in Orlando and Marc Levy in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, as well as Associated Press researcher Jennifer Farrar in New York, contributed to this report.

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  • Small crowd, no problem: Trump rally in Asheville an intimate affair

    Small crowd, no problem: Trump rally in Asheville an intimate affair

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    Lieutenant Governor of North Carolina Mark Robinson (above) was one of several speakers during Tuesday’s rally in Asheville.
    Photo by Julia Beverly/The Atlanta Voice

    ASHEVILLE, N.C. – Thousands of supporters waited in a long line in the sun to see former United States President Donald J. Trump speak at a rally stop in downtown Asheville on Wednesday afternoon. Many would have to wait for another opportunity to see Trump because Thomas Wolfe Auditorium, located inside Harrah’s Cherokee Center, has a capacity of just 2,431.  

    Trump, the current Republican presidential candidate, was scheduled to hit the stage at 4 p.m. People had been waiting in line since before noon that afternoon. Awaiting the 45th president of the United States on stage that afternoon were two big signs that read, “No tax on Social Security” and “No tax on tips.” Both issues have been campaign staples for the Trump/Vance ticket, the latter becoming a part of the Harris/Walz campaign talking points since being made public in Nevada over the weekend.

    Chants of “We love Trump” and “USA, USA, USA” greeted Trump, who stood and watched feet from the dais when he took the stage. It only took him two minutes to start bad-mouthing current presidential opponent Kamala Harris, calling her “crazy” , a “socialist lunatic,” and making fun of her laugh, former opponent Joseph R. Biden and current vice presidential candidate Minnesota Governor Tim Walz, calling him a “clown”.

    Photo by Julia Beverly/The Atlanta Voice

    “They are a threat to democracy,” he said of the current President and Vice President of the United States. “Can you imagine, 83 days from now, we’re almost there. We’re going to defeat Kamala Harris and we’re going to win back the White House.”

    Trump added that he doesn’t think that Harris can’t win this election. “We’re going to beat her and maybe they will find another candidate,” Trump said. “I personally don’t think they will do well.”

    The economy was the first topic he started with, stating that “they say the economy is very important right now” and that the country is currently a “banana republic.”

    He made statements about rebuilding the “American Dream”, inflation, and lowering taxes and prices of food.

    “The Harris price hike has cost the typical American household $20,000,” Trump said. He asked the crowd if they were better off financially with him out of the White House. “We’ll bring back the American dream bigger and better than before,” Trump said.

    Thomas Wolfe Auditorium (above) is located inside Harrah’s Cherokee Center, and has a capacity of just 2,431.  
    Photo by Julia Beverly/The Atlanta Voice

    During his speech, Trump mentioned that a number of foreign dictators were friendly with the United States under his administration. He also insisted that he would reduce government spending, lower taxes, upgrade border security, and become totally energy-independent as a country.
    Before Trump took the stage, several speakers testified about how life was much better when Trump was in office. Glenda Wilson, a 73-year-old retired juvenile counselor, spoke about being able to pay her bills and save money under the Trump administration. She said she might have to move in with her adult children because of the high costs. 

    “I want to live in a Trump America again,” Wilson said. “The current administration cares nothing about how we live.” 

    Retired law enforcement officer and restaurant owner Jeff Willis echoed Wilson’s concerns and added that his business was also better off when Trump was president. Neither he nor Wilson mentioned Vance during their five minutes on stage. 

    North Carolina Congressman Chuck Edwards, Senator Ted Budd, who did mention Vance as a friend and colleague, and Lieutenant Governor Mark Robinson all took turns speaking about how Trump needs to be sent back to the White House. Robinson, who is in a tight race with Josh Stein for the state’s top seat, went as far as to say that the Republican Party has an obligation to help get Trump back in office.

    Photo by Julia Beverly/The Atlanta Voice

    “The Republican Party is the party that will make North Carolina great again,” added Robinson, who said he and his wife have been harassed for their political views. 

    “People should be able to work and run a business without fear of reprisal from their government,” he said. 

    Other than a campaign stop in Montana last week, he hadn’t been on the campaign trail in a week but did speak to the media at Mar-a-Lago Club in Palm Beach, Florida. Another press conference is scheduled for Bedminster, New Jersey on Thursday, a day before the Harris/Walz campaign makes its way to Raleigh for one of its last campaign rallies before the Democratic National Convention in Chicago next week.

    The Trump/Vance ticket was in Atlanta earlier this month, and Vance is scheduled to deliver remarks in Milwaukee, the location of the Republican National Convention, on Friday, according to the campaign. Wisconsin, Michigan, Pennsylvania, and to a certain extent, Georgia and North Carolina, are still in play as battleground states. 

    Prior to the rally in North Carolina, the Trump campaign had to pay the City of Asheville $82,247.60, including a fee of $22,500 for renting Thomas Wolfe Auditorium. In anticipation of the rally, which was announced on the city’s website, several road closures were announced. 

    Trump was recently released from Twitter jail by Elon Musk and co-hosted a Spaces with the South African billionaire for more than two hours on Monday. 

    Democratic vice presidential pick Tim Walz, the governor of Minnesota, took to the campaign trail beginning on Tuesday in Los Angeles. Walz, best known as a purveyor of joy and doing for your neighbor while on the trail with United States Vice President Kamala Harris, also crisscrossed the country, visiting Newport Beach (CA), Denver, Boston, Newport, Rhode Island, and Southampton, New York. The Harris/Walz ticket recently spent ad money in Georgia, debuting new billboards on major highways in Atlanta, Macon, and Savannah.

    Post Debate Notes:

    Shout out to Nicole at All Day Darling, a beautiful, local restaurant located a couple of blocks away from Harrah’s Cherokee Center. With my laptop down to single-digits worth of power, she helped me charge it behind the counter. If she is any reflection of the people of Asheville, then that is a wonderful place to live.

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    Donnell Suggs

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  • The Latest: Harris and Trump paint different pictures for voters as the White House intensifies

    The Latest: Harris and Trump paint different pictures for voters as the White House intensifies

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    Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump are painting much different pictures as they meet with voters on the campaign trail. Harris, by turns, is pushing “joy” — branding the Democratic ticket, which includes her running mate, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, “as joyful warriors.”

    Trump, meanwhile, has promoted a gloomier view for Republicans, saying at a news conference last week that, “We have a lot of bad things coming up.”

    Voters will more from both candidates and their running mates in the days ahead.

    Walz will hold his first solo events this week, traveling on Tuesday to Los Angeles to speak at the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees convention, before attending a series of fundraisers around the country.

    Trump is set to do a live interview Monday on X, the social platform from which he was banned for nearly two years following the Jan. 6, 2021, storming of the U.S. Capitol.

    Follow the AP’s Election 2024 coverage at: https://apnews.com/hub/election-2024.

    Here’s the Latest:

    Trump campaign says its emails were hacked

    Former President Donald Trump’s presidential campaign said Saturday that it had been hacked and suggested Iranian actors were involved in stealing and distributing sensitive internal documents.

    The campaign provided no specific evidence of Iran’s involvement, but the claim comes a day after Microsoft issued a report detailing foreign agents’ attempts to interfere in the U.S. campaign in 2024.

    It cited an instance of an Iranian military intelligence unit in June sending “a spear-phishing email to a high-ranking official of a presidential campaign from a compromised email account of a former senior advisor.”

    Trump campaign spokesperson Steven Cheung blamed the hack on “foreign sources hostile to the United States.” A spokesperson for the National Security Council said in a statement that it takes any report of improper foreign interference “extremely seriously” and condemns any government or entity that attempts to undermine confidence in U.S. democratic institutions, but said it deferred to the Justice Department on this matter.

    ▶ Read more here.

    Walz to hold first solo events as Harris’ running mate

    Tim Walz is holding his first solo events as Vice President Kamala Harris’ running mate, traveling on Tuesday to Los Angeles to speak at the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees convention, before attending a series of fundraisers around the country.

    After his speech in Los Angeles, the Minnesota governor will hit five states in three days, beginning with a fundraiser in Newport Beach, California.

    He will headline two more fundraisers on Wednesday in Denver and Boston. He’ll speak at fundraisers in Newport, Rhode Island, and Southampton, New York the following day.

    Harris introduced Walz as her running mate during a joint rally last week in Philadelphia, and the pair then campaigned together in Wisconsin, Michigan, Arizona and Nevada. The vice president is set to campaign with Biden in Maryland this week, and also has promised to detail her policy proposals on the economy.

    Copyright 2024 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.

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  • Donald Trump’s campaign says its emails were hacked

    Donald Trump’s campaign says its emails were hacked

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    Former President Donald Trump’s presidential campaign said Saturday that it has been hacked and suggested Iranian actors were involved in stealing and distributing sensitive internal documents.

    The campaign provided no specific evidence of Iran’s involvement, but the claim comes a day after Microsoft issued a report detailing foreign agents’ attempts to interfere in the U.S. campaign in 2024.

    It cited an instance of an Iranian military intelligence unit in June sending “a spear-phishing email to a high-ranking official of a presidential campaign from a compromised email account of a former senior advisor.”

    Trump campaign spokesperson Steven Cheung blamed the hack on “foreign sources hostile to the United States.” In a statement, a spokesperson for the National Security Council said it takes any report of improper foreign interference “extremely seriously” and condemns any government or entity that attempts to undermine confidence in U.S. democratic institutions, but said it deferred to the Justice Department on this matter.

    Politico first reported Saturday on the hack. The outlet reported that it began receiving emails on July 22 from an anonymous account. The source — an AOL email account identified only as “Robert” — passed along what appeared to be a research dossier the campaign had apparently done on the Republican vice presidential nominee, Ohio Sen. JD Vance. The document was dated Feb. 23, almost five months before Trump selected Vance as his running mate.

    “These documents were obtained illegally” and “intended to interfere with the 2024 election and sow chaos throughout our Democratic process,” Cheung said.

    He pointed to the Microsoft report issued Friday and its conclusions that “Iranian hackers broke into the account of a ‘high ranking official’ on the U.S. presidential campaign in June 2024, which coincides with the close timing of President Trump’s selection of a vice presidential nominee.”

    “The Iranians know that President Trump will stop their reign of terror just like he did in his first four years in the White House,” Cheung said, adding a warning that “any media or news outlet reprinting documents or internal communications are doing the bidding of America’s enemies and doing exactly what they want.”

    In response to Microsoft’s report, Iran’s United Nations mission denied it had plans to interfere or launch cyberattacks in the U.S. presidential election.

    Cheung did not immediately respond to questions about the campaign’s interactions with Microsoft on the matter. Microsoft said Saturday it had no comment beyond its blog post and Friday report.

    In that report, Microsoft stated that “foreign malign influence concerning the 2024 US election started off slowly but has steadily picked up pace over the last six months due initially to Russian operations, but more recently from Iranian activity.”

    The analysis continued: “Iranian cyber-enabled influence operations have been a consistent feature of at least the last three U.S. election cycles. Iran’s operations have been notable and distinguishable from Russian campaigns for appearing later in the election season and employing cyberattacks more geared toward election conduct than swaying voters.”

    “Recent activity suggests the Iranian regime — along with the Kremlin — may be equally engaged in election 2024,” Microsoft concluded.

    Specifically, the report detailed that in June 2024, an Iranian military intelligence unit, Mint Sandstorm, sent a phishing email to an American presidential campaign via the compromised account of a former adviser.

    “The phishing email contained a fake forward with a hyperlink that directs traffic through an actor-controlled domain before redirecting to the listed domain,” the report states.

    Vice President Kamala Harris’ campaign did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the reported hacking or on the Democratic nominee’s cybersecurity protocols.

    ___

    Associated Press writers Mae Anderson in New York and Fatima Hussein in Rehoboth Beach, Delaware, contributed to this report.

    Copyright 2024 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.

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    Bill Barrow, Associated Press

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  • Tim Walz vs. JD Vance: What the 2024 presidential running mates could mean for your wallet

    Tim Walz vs. JD Vance: What the 2024 presidential running mates could mean for your wallet

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    Democratic vice presidential candidate and Minnesota Governor Tim Walz (L), and Republican Vice Presidential candidate Sen. JD Vance (R-OH).

    Getty Images

    Housing

    Affordable housing is an important topic for many Americans and both Walz and Vance have addressed the issue.

    In May 2023, Walz signed housing legislation that included $200 million in down payment assistance. The bill also had $200 million for housing infrastructure and $40 million for workforce housing.

    “We expect Walz to be an advocate for demand-side approaches to housing,” Jaret Seiberg, analyst at TD Cowen wrote in a July statement. “These are the type of housing ideas we would expect in a Harris administration,” she wrote.

    Demand-side approaches to housing aim to help individual households by improving housing quality or reducing monthly housing costs.

    Meanwhile, Vance, who is also a proponent of affordable housing, highlighted the issue in his Republican National Convention acceptance speech and along the campaign trail.

    “Prior to running for Senate, Vance argued that one key to tackling poverty is to address affordable housing,” and he has opposed institutional ownership of rental homes and Chinese buyers for U.S. real estate, Seiberg wrote.

    Child tax credit

    Without action from Congress, trillions of tax breaks enacted by Trump are scheduled to expire after 2025, including the child tax credit, which will drop from $2,000 to $1,000 per child. 

    Congress in 2021 approved a temporary expansion of the child tax credit, including upfront monthly payments, which reduced the child poverty rate to a historic low of 5.2% for 2021, according to a Columbia University analysis.

    Following the federal policy, Minnesota enacted a refundable state-level child tax credit in 2023, which Walz described as “signature accomplishment.”    

    Minnesota’s new child tax credit is unusual in its narrowness, but it is the most generous in the nation for low-income households.

    Jared Walczak

    Vice president of state projects at the Tax Foundation

    “Minnesota’s new child tax credit is unusual in its narrowness,” said Jared Walczak, vice president of state projects at the Tax Foundation. “But it is the most generous in the nation for low-income households.” 

    However, a permanent federal child tax credit expansion could be difficult, particularly amid a divided Congress and increasing concerns over the federal budget deficit.

    Walz’s campaign did not respond to CNBC’s request for comment.

    Senate Republicans blocked a federal child tax credit expansion last week, and Sen. Mike Crapo, R-Idaho, the ranking member of the Senate Finance Committee, described the vote as a “blatant attempt to score political points.”

    Despite the failed procedural vote, Crapo voiced openness to negotiating a “child tax credit solution that a majority of Republicans can support.”

    Democrats scheduled the vote partially in response to Vance, who has positioned himself as a pro-family candidate. Vance was not present for the Senate vote, but has expressed support for the child tax credit.

    Vance’s campaign did not respond to CNBC’s request for comment. 

    Student loans

    Vance has spoken out against student loan forgiveness policies.

    “Forgiving student debt is a massive windfall to the rich, to the college educated, and most of all to the corrupt university administrators of America,” Vance, a Yale Law School graduate wrote on X in April 2022. “Republicans must fight this with every ounce of our energy and power.”

    Outstanding education debt in the U.S. stands at around $1.6 trillion. Nearly 43 million people — or 1 in 6 adult Americans — carry student loans. Women and people of color are most burdened by the debt.

    Vance does seem to approve of loan forgiveness in extreme cases. In May, he helped introduce legislation that would excuse parents from student loans they took on for a child who became permanently disabled.

    Jane Fox, chapter chair of the Legal Aid Society Attorneys union, UAW local 2325, said it was hypocritical and incorrect of Vance to frame debt relief as a benefit to those who are well off.

    “Student debt forgiveness is a working-class issue,” Fox said. “Those in the 1% who went to elite institutions and then worked in private equity as Senator Vance did rarely need debt relief.”

    Vance’s campaign did not respond to CNBC’s request for comment.   

    Meanwhile, Walz, a former school teacher, has supported programs to alleviate the burden of student debt on people, said higher education expert Mark Kantrowitz.

    He signed a student loan forgiveness program for nurses into law in Minnesota, Kantrowitz said, as well as a free tuition initiative for low-income students.

    “As my daughter prepares to head off to college next year, affordability and student loan debt are at the front of our minds,” Walz wrote on Facebook in 2018. “Every Minnesotan deserves a shot at a great education without being held back by soaring costs and student loan debt.”

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  • Tim Walz, Doug Emhoff, and the Nice Men of the Left

    Tim Walz, Doug Emhoff, and the Nice Men of the Left

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    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.

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    Rebecca Traister

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  • Vance Awkwardly Doesn’t Confront Harris on Plane Tarmac

    Vance Awkwardly Doesn’t Confront Harris on Plane Tarmac

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    As Vice-President Kamala Harris and her newly announced running mate, Minnesota governor Tim Walz, set off on their first joint battleground-state tour across the country, they’ve been shadowed on the campaign trail by one-half of their rival ticket: Republican vice-presidential hopeful J.D. Vance, who has scheduled a dueling series of events in the same areas.

    Hours before Harris and Walz appeared at their first rally together Tuesday evening in North Philadelphia, the Ohio senator held an event at the 2300 Arena in South Philadelphia. And on Wednesday, the two tickets nearly crossed paths when the Trump-Vance campaign plane arrived shortly after Air Force Two on the airport tarmac in Wisconsin ahead of events in Eau Claire for both candidates.

    Then things got a little awkward. Vance made a show of leaving his own plane and making his way toward Harris’s, prompting speculation that he was trying to speak to the vice-president or Walz. Instead, Vance headed to Harris’s assembled press pool to knock the vice-president for her lack of media appearances since ascending to the top of the Democratic ticket.

    “I figured I’d come by and, one, just get a good look at the plane because hopefully it’s going to be my plane in a few months, but I also thought you guys might get lonely because the vice-president doesn’t answer questions from reporters and hasn’t for 17 days,” he said.

    In a brief exchange with reporters, Vance accused Harris of changing her political positions and referred to her as the Biden administration’s “border czar,” a label that the vice-president has pushed back against. “I hope that she changes her mind because it would be good for the American people and I think it would be good for you all if she actually ran a real campaign instead of one from a basement with a teleprompter,” he said.

    Vance seemingly made no attempt to talk to Harris directly, telling his own press pool that he did not speak with the vice-president as her motorcade left the tarmac. But the Republican nominee did boast about the moment, sharing a photo of him and his team in front of Air Force Two with a reference to the HBO show Entourage. (It’s unclear who the Turtle is in this situation.)

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    Nia Prater

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  • Trump again tears into Georgia’s Republican governor on the same day he campaigns in the state

    Trump again tears into Georgia’s Republican governor on the same day he campaigns in the state

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    ATLANTADonald Trump picked a new fight Saturday with Georgia’s Republican governor as he campaigned in the key swing state where he’s looking to avenge his narrow 2020 loss — a defeat he continues to blame on GOP officials for not giving into his false theories of election fraud.

    Trump attacked Gov. Brian Kemp on his social media site before his rally and said Kemp should be “fighting Crime, not fighting Unity and the Republican Party.” He also criticized Kemp’s wife, Marty, for saying she would write in her husband’s name for president this fall instead of voting for the Republican nominee.

    At Saturday’s rally, Trump assailed Kemp in a roughly 10-minute tirade, blaming him for his loss to Democratic President Joe Biden and for not stopping a local district attorney from prosecuting him and several associates for his efforts to overturn the results.

    “He’s a bad guy. He’s a disloyal guy. And he’s a very average governor,” Trump said. “Little Brian, little Brian Kemp. Bad guy.”

    On X, Kemp told Trump to “leave my family out of it” and urged him to stop “engaging in petty personal insults, attacking fellow Republicans, or dwelling on the past.”

    Georgia is likely to see another closely contested election as both campaigns push hard in the state, with Democrats riding a new wave of enthusiasm after Biden dropped his reelection bid and endorsed Vice President Kamala Harris. To win this time, Trump will likely need the support both of Kemp’s political operation and from moderate and conservative voters who aren’t as committed to him as members of his base.

    Going to Atlanta put Trump in the state’s largest media market, including suburbs and exurbs that were traditional Republican strongholds but have become more competitive as they’ve diversified and grown in population. Thousands of supporters packed the same arena for a Harris rally days earlier.

    Draic Coakley, a 23-year-old who works in the trucking industry and drove from Heflin, Alabama, just across the western Georgia border to attend his third Trump rally, said he believes Trump “sees people like me,” while “Biden and Harris, well, are part of what I think of as the elite.”

    “President Trump may be a billionaire, but it’s OK to be rich,” Coakley said. “He gets us. He just gets us, and he gets the country.”

    Biden beat Trump in the state by 11,779 votes in 2020. Trump pressured Georgia’s Republican Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger to “find” enough votes to change the outcome and his allies tried to present slates of so-called “fake electors” that could replace the Democratic voters Biden won.

    Trump was later indicted in Georgia for his efforts to overturn the election, but the case remains on hold while courts decide whether the Fulton County district attorney can continue to prosecute it.

    Kemp certified the electors that Biden won four years ago and repeatedly rejected efforts by Trump allies to replace them. He’s since proven to be the rare Republican nationally who could hold his ground against Trump without sacrificing his power or popularity, with 63% of Georgians approving of his job performance in a June poll conducted for the Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

    Kemp won the governor’s office narrowly in 2018 after garnering Trump’s endorsement. But Trump backed a primary rival against Kemp in 2022 — former Sen. David Perdue, who spoke at Saturday’s rally. Kemp trounced Perdue on his way to defeating Democrat Stacey Abrams, a national star in her party, by 7.5 percentage points, a veritable blowout in a battleground state.

    Kemp will chair the Republican Governors Association for the 2026 election cycle, when he is leaving office. And he’s widely known to be national Republicans’ top choice to take on Democratic U.S. Sen. Jon Ossoff in that midterm cycle.

    Kemp has said he didn’t vote for anyone in this year’s primary but will vote for the Republican ticket in November.

    Erick Erickson, a prominent conservative host in Georgia, said of Trump, “He can’t help himself.”

    “Donald Trump is really trying to build unity in Georgia by attacking the sitting Republican Governor whose ground game he will need to win and also that Governor’s wife,” Erickson wrote on X. “And if he loses, it’ll be because of this stuff, not a stolen election.”

    Both parties are focusing on Georgia, a Sun Belt battleground that just two weeks ago, Democrats had signaled they would sideline in favor of a heavier focus on the Midwestern “blue wall” states. Biden’s decision to end his campaign and endorse Harris fueled Democratic hopes of an expanded electoral map.

    Trump’s Republican allies have urged him to focus on issues where they see an advantage over Harris, notably the economy and immigration. Trump attacked the likely Democratic nominee on both issues — also at times swinging from policy critiques to portraying Harris as “a dumb version of Bernie Sanders,” the progressive independent senator from Vermont.

    Taking the stage first, Trump’s running mate, Ohio Sen. JD Vance, credited Trump with “exposing a massive coverup of the president’s mental incapacity” during the fateful June debate that ultimately led to Biden’s exit from the 2024 campaign, before lighting into Harris as “a San Francisco liberal who is so far out of the mainstream.”

    The Harris campaign called out Trump before the rally for what it predicted would be a speech in which he would “deny the 2020 election results.” It also criticized Trump for his announcement earlier that he would not attend a September debate that he set up with Biden’s campaign before the president dropped out. Trump says he wants to debate Harris on Fox News instead.

    After the rally, the Harris campaign issued a statement from former Georgia Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan, who served alongside Kemp during the 2020 election and has since repudiated Trump.

    “If you were able to see through Donald Trump’s incoherence and vindictiveness tonight, you saw a Donald Trump who does not care about uniting this country or speaking to the voters who will decide this election,” Duncan said in the statement. “Millions of Americans are fed up with his grievance-filled campaign focused only on himself.”

    ___

    Meg Kinnard reported from Chapin, South Carolina. Barrow can be reached at https://x.com/BillBarrowAP and Kinnard can be reached at http://x.com/MegKinnardAP.

    Copyright 2024 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.

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  • “We’re taking America Back”: Donald Trump, J.D. Vance hold first joint rally in Atlanta

    “We’re taking America Back”: Donald Trump, J.D. Vance hold first joint rally in Atlanta

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    Former United States President Donald J. Trump (right) and his vice president nominee U.S. Senator J.D. Vance greet on stage in Atlanta on Saturday, August 3, 2024. This was the ticket’s first joint rally in Georgia’s capitol city. Photo by Kerri Phox/The Atlanta Voice

    Welcome to MAGA city! The streets of Atlanta were consumed with overwhelming red, painted Trump faces, MAGA hats, and Trump paraphernalia on Saturday afternoon. A sea of red MAGA hats, Trump paraphernalia, flags, signs and more filled the Georgia State University Convocation Center, the site of a rally in support of United States Vice President Kamala Harris on Tuesday

    Former United States President Donald J. Trump and his vice-president nominee, Senator J.D. Vance (R-Ohio) held their first joint rally in the battleground state.

    Outside of the center, lines stretched for miles as people awaited to get into the rally hours before the scheduled start time. The supporters held signs that read, “Trump/Vance”, “Never Surrender”, “Too Big Too Rig”, and of course, “Make America Great Again”. Throughout the rally, you could hear the supporters screaming “USA”, “Make America Great Again”, “We Want Trump”, and more. During intermissions, the crowd enjoyed country songs.

    Black Trump supporters in Atlanta during the rally inside the Georgia State University Convocation Center on Saturday, Aug. 3, 2024.
    Photo by Kerri Phox/The Atlanta Voice

    Trump’s campaign had several individuals speak on his behalf before the guest of honor appeared on stage, such as Congressman Mike Collins, U.S. Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene, Senator David Perdue, and more. A local Black artist named ARTlanta brought a painting on stage for Trump to sign. 

    Greene, a popular politician from North Georgia, had the entire rally screaming for her and she said the Trump administration and Republicans are going to “take America back” in the upcoming election.

    “This has nothing to do with race, gender, or politics,” she said. “We have to get comfortable with being uncomfortable, we’re so used to enjoying our normal lives doing normal things, but this time around, enough is enough.”

    Photo by Kerri Phox/The Atlanta Voice

    Greene even went as far to say Trump’s accusations and charges are all hoaxes. 

    Also, Collins urged the attendees to go out and vote. “You can’t come into these meetings and rallies and not vote, we have to make every vote count come November,” Collins said.

    Most of the vocal points of each speaker were about Harris, with Collins stating, “Georgia didn’t want Stacey [Abrams], and they don’t want Kamala.” 

    Every time Harris’ name was mentioned, the entire stadium was engulfed in boos and jeers. Throughout the night, a banner that said “Kamala is weak, failed, and dangerously liberal” was plastered within the stadium.

    Photo by Kerri Phox/The Atlanta Voice

    Vance criticized Harris telling the crowd the former California Attorney General and senator thinks she’s better than them.

    “She thinks she’s better than us, and better than you,” Vance said. “We need to tell Kamala to mind her own damn business. This is America and we believe in freedom.”

    He also critiqued her “southern belle” accent during her rally Tuesday and said she isn’t loyal to America.

    “Loyalty to this country is closing our borders, not opening them. Loyalty is taking a bullet for this country and Donald Trump did just that,” Vance said. “When he was shot, he didn’t falter, instead he raised his fist and said to fight. We’re going to rebuild America together.”

    Republican vice president nominee Ohio Senator J.D. Vance. Photo by Kerri Phox/The Atlanta Voice

    Vance, who has been in Congress for less than two years, also referred to Joe Biden’s former presidential campaign and Harris’ current presidential campaign and the last three and a half years of Biden’s presidency to the infamous Milli Vanilli scandal from decades earlier.

    Once Trump appeared, the crowd went wild chanting his name and “We Want Trump”, whistling, clapping, and more.

    “Trump gave up the easy life to make America great again. Trump wants to fight and will make this country great and thriving again,” Vance said.

    Trump called Harris a “lunatic”, “the worst vice president in history,” and referred to her as “Crazy Kamala”.

    “Crazy Kamala was here last week, lots of empty seats, and only brought a crowd with entertainers. I don’t need entertainers because I’ll make America Great Again,” Trump said. “She’s wrecking our nation, Joe [Biden] was the worst president in the history of our country and Crazy Kamala has been the worst vice president we have seen.”

    Trump further attempted to drive his point home by saying Harris is worse than Bernie Sanders and has a very low IQ. He also addressed the CNN presidential debate with Biden in June, saying Biden was “choking like a dog and that was the end of him”.

    Photo by Kerri Phox/The Atlanta Voice

    Additionally, Trump addressed his assassination attempt by saying “it was from God and it was something incredible.”

    “I think I was shot because people say I’m a threat to democracy, but actually, I’m saving democracy,” he said.

    At this point, the crowd is shouting “fight, fight, fight” and slamming their feet on the bleachers chanting. This was very evident when Trump said he would never defund the police, but instead “will always overfund the police”.

    Trump also said they have to go out and vote and stop the democrats from cheating.

    Lastly, Trump said come November, his campaign will win and the American dream will come back better, stronger, and bigger.

    “94 days from now, we’re going to win against Georgia. If we lose in Georgia, we lose it all and it’ll go to hell,” he said. “We’re going to evict this radical and incompetent administration come November. When we win, we’re going to see a Trump driven spike in everything.”

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  • Would Trump Really Dump J.D. Vance?

    Would Trump Really Dump J.D. Vance?

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    Second thoughts?
    Photo: Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call/Getty Images

    A lot of Democrats understandably look at J.D. Vance as a gift that just keeps on giving. He arrives on the national scene with a treasure trove of controversial and downright weird comments, many of them offensive to significant groups of voters. He has embraced some undeniably radical policy positions, particularly on the hot-button issues of contraception, IV treatments, and abortion, at a time when his patron, Donald Trump, is trying to avoid such issues. He came out of the Republican National Convention with the worst favorability ratio of any non-incumbent veep nominee since 1980, according to CNN. And on top of everything else, he’s diverting attention from Trump himself at a time when the shooting survivor is trying to position himself as a serene hero-martyr ready to heal the country from its current pathologies.

    But will Trump dump Vance from his ticket like a used ear bandage and go to a plan B? It is, in fact, technically feasible. Like Democrats, Republicans have a post-convention break-glass-in-emergency provision in party rules that allow for the replacement of either ticket mate, as a recent CRS report explained:

    Under the Rules of the Republican Party, Rule 9 authorizes the RNC to “fill any and all vacancies which may occur by reason of death, declination, or otherwise of the Republican candidate for President of the United States or the Republican candidate for Vice President of the United States, as nominated by the convention. Under Rule 9, RNC members representing their states would have the same number of votes as the state delegation at the national convention. The rule also permits division of votes if a state’s RNC members disagree about which candidates to support. A candidate must receive a majority of votes to be selected as the new nominee. The rule also permits the RNC to instead “reconvene the national convention for the purpose of filling any such vacancies.”

    It would appear dumping Vance would require his consent, but there’s not much of a future for a vice-presidential nominee who is repudiated by the person at the top of the ticket, so there’s no doubt the Ohioan would have to go along. And in a mood of high trolling, Chuck Schumer has already begun a ten-day countdown for a Trump dumping operation.

    But here are four reasons why that isn’t happening:

    If buyer’s remorse over Vance had happened after he was announced but before he was nominated, it’s possible he could have been replaced without enduring damage. But because the announcement and nomination happened almost simultaneously, that wasn’t possible. Reconvening the convention to undo the nomination clearly isn’t a realistic option either. And telling the RNC to defenestrate the vice-presidential nominee at a time when Republicans are blasting Kamala Harris as the radical-leftist beneficiary of a “coup” against poor old Uncle Joe is not a good look either.

    The only precedent for this sort of maneuver occurred on July 31, 1972, when Democrat George McGovern’s running mate, Missouri senator Thomas Eagleton, stepped down from the ticket after evidence emerged that the poorly vetted candidate had undergone electroshock-therapy treatments and had been popped for drunk driving. The whole episode came to epitomize the fecklessness of the McGovern campaign, and replacing Eagleton with Sargent Shriver almost certainly hurt rather than helped the ticket.

    While the idea that Appalachian or white working-class voters would vibrate like a tuning fork in response to Vance’s background and perspectives was always a bit ridiculous, he does have an influential constituency: conservative “populist” ideologues, a.k.a. national conservatives. These proto-authoritarian folk are a loud segment of Trump’s MAGA base who tend to love Vance (and Vance’s admired role model Viktor Orban) precisely for the outlandish views that make him controversial to normies.

    It’s worth remembering that the Vance fan club includes Trump intimates like Steve Bannon, Charlie Kirk, Tucker Carlson and — ahem — Donald Trump Jr. They’re not going to be happy about Doug Burgum replacing him on the GOP ticket.

    The consensus of political scientists is that vice-presidential nominees affect presidential elections on the margins if at all. That’s probably more true than ever in this period of partisan polarization. Even Sarah Palin, the 2008 Republican veep nominee viewed as a “high-risk, high-reward” choice by the presidential nominee who lifted her from obscurity, had at most a minor impact on the election outcome (she probably helped John McCain initially and then faded into irrelevance).

    If Trump loses, it is far more likely to be the product of his own words, deeds, conduct, and agenda than anything J.D. Vance adds to the MAGA mix.

    The single biggest reason the Dump Vance scenario makes no sense is that this is Donald Trump we are talking about. Yes, he has been known to blow hot and cold about various favorites and supplicants and can change Cabinet members and advisers like other pols change underwear. But naming a veep is not just any old appointment. It took an insurrection to get him to realize Mike Pence wasn’t the loyal subaltern he seemed to be. He chose Vance after a long, long selection process that seemed modeled on The Apprentice and cannot be rationalized as hasty or impulsive. Trump admitting he was wrong on this crucial decision is as unimaginable as Trump accepting an election defeat. And you know what? If Vance does cost Trump victory in this contest, there’s no reason to believe either of them will admit it.


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    Ed Kilgore

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  • What’s the Trump Strategy to Beat Kamala Harris?

    What’s the Trump Strategy to Beat Kamala Harris?

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    Do these two big weirdos know what they’re doing?
    Photo: Emily Elconin/Bloomberg/Getty Images

    The replacement of Joe Biden with Kamala Harris as Democrats’ presumptive presidential nominee has created a veritable frenzy of speculation about the new strategic options her candidacy might open up for her party. And it’s very clear from all the carping about a “coup” that Republicans who have been planning a campaign against Biden for years have been wrong-footed by the switcheroo. But does the new Democratic ticket significantly change the Trump-Vance strategy or message? Let’s consider the likely ramifications:

    To the extent he didn’t already undermine it with his nasty off-script rant at the RNC, Trump will likely abandon any further “national unity” messaging. It was based on the idea of a mellowed and softened 45th president offering a reasonably safe harbor for voters alarmed by Biden’s alleged senility-driven incompetence. So such talk likely went away for good the moment Biden withdrew from the contest.

    It might still make abundant good sense for Trump to make some unprecedented effort to “seize the center” with less rabid rhetoric, given the doubts that already exist about Harris’s ideological positioning. But it fits Trump’s personality vastly better to “seize the center” purely and simply by pushing Harris out with intense attacks on her as a “radical.”

    Early polling indicates that Harris may be within shouting distance of Trump in the Sun Belt battleground states (Arizona, Georgia, Nevada and North Carolina) where Biden was losing badly, in no small part because of her stronger appeal to Black, Latino and under-30 voters. This is very significant since Biden’s only path to 270 electoral votes appeared to be via a sweep of the Rust Belt battleground states of Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin.

    But just as Harris can recoup some of Biden’s impending losses among Democratic “base” voters, there’s an opportunity for the Trump campaign to keep her from hanging onto the small but critical slice of white working-class voters who voted for Biden in 2020 and were still open to supporting him in 2024. As Ron Brownstein points out, if Harris slips to Hillary Clinton levels of support among non-college-educated white voters she could lose the Rust Belt states just as HRC did.

    The Trump campaign has chosen to hold back its campaign treasury for the stretch drive to the general election even as the Biden campaign was spending freely to shore up his position. The odds are good now that Republicans will cut open the purse-strings and spend massively to define Kamala Harris before she can fully define herself.

    That means now, prior to Harris’s big moment in the sun at the Democratic National Convention that begins on August 19 (following a virtual roll call vote nominating her a couple of weeks earlier). Team Trump will want to get a clear sense of how vulnerable she is to pure negative messaging before re-framing the choice of candidates for the final stage of the campaign.

    Republicans have a lot of experience, both positive and negative, in waging pure ideological warfare on Democratic presidential candidates. Pounding them as “too liberal” worked extremely well against Mike Dukakis in 1988, and reasonably well against John Kerry in 2004. It did not work against Bill Clinton and Barack Obama at all, in part because both those candidates made impressive efforts to position themselves as moderates open to a bipartisanship that swing voters craved even if Republicans spurned it.

    It’s likely that the Trump campaign will calculate that Harris is more like Dukakis and Kerry than Clinton and Obama. They’ve done reasonably well in convincing voters that Joe Biden is “too liberal.” Harris with her California background and vulnerable issue positions should be an easier target, at least unless she counter-punches fiercely.

    Trump, to be clear, has a strong head start in labeling Harris as a lefty, having called her a “communist” in 2020. And just this week he said this about her at Truth Social: “We’re not ready for a Marxist President, and Lyin’ Kamala Harris is a RADICAL LEFT MARXIST, AND WORSE!” He’ll keep this up whether or not his campaign makes it a centerpiece. It’s objectively moronic, but that’s never stopped Trump before.

    We already know that Kamala Harris will lean on her extensive experience as a state and local prosecutor to depict herself as a tough defender of the law and of basic rights on a mission to hold the convicted felon Trump accountable and keep him out of office. So you can definitely expect Republicans to go directly after this strong point of her background by characterizing her as a rogue progressive prosecutor bent on justifying illegal behavior and emptying the prisons. Already the Trump campaign and its allies are scouring the public records for anything they can use to accuse her of wanting to “defund” or hamstring the police, secure short sentences or early release for violent criminals, or decriminalize misconduct entirely.

    For some persuadable voters the whole ballgame may boil down to whether Harris comes across as “Kamala the Cop” or “Kamala the Border Czar.” And it’s worth remembering that Trump’s co-campaign manager, Chris LaCivita, was a major player in the 2004 “Swift Boat” assault on the military record of war hero John Kerry.

    It’s been interesting to watch some Republicans shush other Republicans from going right to the racism and sexism with attacks on Harris as a “DEI hire” or someone strictly defined by her ethnicity and gender. But even if they mute the overt stuff (including, believe it or not, “birther” smears about her eligibility to serve as president), it’s going to linger in the background just as it did in Republican campaigns against Obama and HRC. Finding ways to reinforce personal fears about Harris among diversity-averse voters without diving directly into the cesspool will be a tricky business for Team Trump, particularly among the less-inhibited MAGA social media warriors (like X owner Elon Musk).

    The earlier question about Trump’s demographic strategy could help determine how far his fans go in drawing attention to Harris’s identity. If Republicans wind up doubling down on white working-class voters and largely abandoning Black voters, it could get really ugly.

    When Trump chose J.D. Vance as his running-mate, the idea was to display a young, vibrant, cerebral demagogue who could go feral against Uncle Joe and hold his own in a debate with Kamala Harris. Now it doesn’t look like as smart a move. Vance’s rich history of extremism and incautious rhetoric is becoming a problem for a Trump campaign trying to project stability, and it’s likely Vance will be debating someone resolutely normie like Roy Cooper, Mark Kelly, or Tim Walz. Given Trump’s own erratic personality, the last thing Republicans need is the perception that with a world of options to serve as the former president’s successor, they settled on a big weirdo.

    Probably the smartest strategy for the Trump-Vance ticket is to remember that substantive concerns about the condition of the country under Joe Biden’s administration (along with friendly amnesia about the Trump administration) have given Republicans the upper hand for most of this election cycle. Panicking and going medieval on Kamala Harris could squander that advantage and make the election a choice about the kind of change Americans want instead of a simple referendum on an unpopular presidency.

    What’s unclear is whether Trump and his MAGA minions have the temperament to stay the course instead of making the final stages of the 2024 campaign 100 days that feel like January 6.


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  • Trump and Vance team up to campaign in Minnesota, a state that hasn’t backed the GOP in 52 years

    Trump and Vance team up to campaign in Minnesota, a state that hasn’t backed the GOP in 52 years

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    ST. CLOUD, Minn. (AP) — As the presidential campaign enters a critical final 100 day stretch, Republican nominee Donald Trump and his running mate, JD Vance, rallied supporters on Saturday in a state that hasn’t backed a GOP candidate for the White House since 1972.

    The rally in St. Cloud, Minnesota, was designed as a sign of the campaign’s bullishness about its prospects across the Midwest, particularly when President Joe Biden was showing signs of weakness ahead of his decision to exit the campaign. Trump, who won Michigan and Wisconsin in 2016 only to lose them four years later, has increasingly focused on Minnesota as a state where he’d like to put Democrats on defense.

    The rally is something of a gamble, potentially forcing the likely Democratic nominee, Vice President Kamala Harris, and Democrats to devote resources in a state they would likely otherwise ignore. But it could also be a risk for Trump if he spends time in places that might prove to be a reach with Harris leading the ticket when he could otherwise focus on maintaining his support in more traditional battlegrounds.

    Trump spoke for more than an hour and a half to cheering crowds holding signs supporting police and calling for the deportation of migrants in the country illegally. He continued a pattern of escalating attacks against Harris on immigration and crime.

    He called her a “crazy liberal” and accused her of wanting to “defund the police,” while he said by contrast, he wants to “overfund the police.”

    “She has no clue, she’s evil,” Trump said, suggesting Harris had failed at her tasks related to the border as vice president. “Kamala Harris’ deadly destruction of America’s borders is completely and totally disqualifying for her to be president.”

    Trump called out Harris for a 2020 post she made after the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis at the hands of police. The post had encouraged people to help protesters by donating to the Minnesota Freedom Fund, which had been working on reforming the bail system and posted criminal bail for people as part of a campaign to address inequities in the system.

    Though Harris did not contribute to the fund herself, her tweet was among those from celebrities and high-profile people that helped donations flow into the cash-strapped nonprofit, helping it quickly raise $34 million. In the immediate aftermath of the protests and unrest, the group actually spent little bailing out protesters.

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    Ammar Moussa, a spokesperson for the Harris campaign, called Trump’s attack line “a desperate lie from a desperate campaign” that can’t change the fact that its candidate has been convicted of multiple felonies.

    Trump also knocked Harris as an “absolute radical” on abortion, seemingly sensing an opening to attack her on the issue after she has become the Biden administration’s most vocal proponent of abortion rights. He wrongly suggested Harris wants abortion “right up until birth and after birth.” Infanticide is criminalized in every state, and no state has passed a law that allows killing a baby after birth.

    Yet the former president also recycled much of his past material targeting Biden, showing how his campaign has sought to keep Biden’s pitfalls fresh in voters’ minds even after the president has ended his candidacy and endorsed Harris.

    Trump’s remarks followed a spirited speech from Vance, in which he leaned heavily into issues that animate the GOP base, particularly security at the U.S.-Mexico border and crime. He also took a broadside against the news media, arguing that journalists were comparing the first Black woman and person of south Asian descent to lead a major party ticket to Martin Luther King, Jr.

    In May, Trump headlined a GOP fundraiser in St. Paul, where he boasted he could win the state and made explicit appeals to the iron-mining range in northeast Minnesota, where he hopes a heavy population of blue-collar and union workers will shift to Republicans after years of being solidly Democratic.

    Appealing to that population has also helped Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz land on the list of about a dozen Democrats who are being vetted to potentially be Harris’ running mate.

    Walz posted on the social platform X on Friday poking fun at Trump’s visit to his state.

    “Donald Trump is coming back to the State of Hockey tomorrow for the hat trick,” Walz wrote. “He lost Minnesota in ’16, ’20, and he’ll lose it again in ’24.”

    Saturday’s rally took place at the Herb Brooks National Hockey Center, a 5,159-seat hockey arena. After surviving the July 13 assassination attempt on him at an outdoor rally in Butler, Pennsylvania, Trump has only had events at indoor venues. But he said in a post on his social media network Saturday that he will schedule outdoor stops and the “SECRET SERVICE HAS AGREED TO SUBSTANTIALLY STEP UP THEIR OPERATION.”

    Secret Service officials would not say whether the agency had agreed to expand operations at Trump’s campaign events or had any concerns about him potentially resuming outdoor gatherings. “Ensuring the safety and security of our protectees is our highest priority,” Secret Service spokesman Anthony Guglielmi said in a statement Saturday. “In the interest of maintaining operational integrity, we are not able to comment on specifics of our protective means or methods.”

    Earlier Saturday, Trump spoke at a bitcoin conference in Nashville, Tennessee, laying out a plan to embrace cryptocurrency if elected and promising to make the U.S. the “crypto capital of the planet” and a “bitcoin superpower.”

    Trump didn’t always support cryptocurrency but has changed his attitude toward the digital tokens in recent years and in May, his campaign started accepting donations in cryptocurrency.

    Also Saturday, Harris ramped up her campaign for president with her first fundraiser since becoming the Democrats’ likely White House nominee.

    The event in Pittsfield, Massachusetts, on Saturday was expected to raise more than $1.4 million, her campaign announced, from an audience of hundreds at the Colonial Theatre. That would be $1 million-plus more than the original goal set for the event before Biden dropped out of the race.

    ___

    Swenson reported from New York. Associated Press writers Aamer Madhani and Brian Slodysko in Washington and Kimberlee Kruesi in Nashville, Tennessee, contributed to this report.

    ___

    The Associated Press receives support from several private foundations to enhance its explanatory coverage of elections and democracy. See more about AP’s democracy initiative here. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

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  • J.D. Vance Vows To Fight For Forgotten Communities In Silicon Valley

    J.D. Vance Vows To Fight For Forgotten Communities In Silicon Valley

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    SAN FRANCISCO—Pledging to never leave behind the many millionaires and billionaires from the region who helped shape him into the person he is now, vice presidential candidate J.D. Vance vowed in a speech Tuesday that he would always fight for the forgotten communities in Silicon Valley. “Many of the Democratic elite are happy leaving behind this little tucked-away corner of America, but I will always remember what this place did for me—hell, half of you have probably donated to my campaign,” said Vance, looking at the faces of the tech entrepreneurs in the rally’s front row before tearing up as he described how venture capitalist Peter Thiel scraped together spare change to make a $15 million contribution to his 2022 Senate bid. “Many of you dropped out of college to invest in a unicorn startup. Some of you don’t have jobs because you retired at the age of 35. And if you are struggling to cobble together a pitch in an incubator somewhere, they still call you tech bros behind your back. Basically, this country doesn’t care about you. But I do. Know this, Silicon Valley—I will fight for you tirelessly from day one.” Vance added that despite this, he still felt those in Silicon Valley had no one but themselves to blame for the microdosing epidemic ravaging their community.

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