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Tag: Joseph Konig

  • Trump honors Charlie Kirk as a martyr for the nation, pledges crackdown

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    GLENDALE, Ariz. — President Donald Trump flew to Arizona on Sunday with a cohort of his administration’s most senior officials, the speaker of the House and a slew of Republican lawmakers to eulogize and memorialize his ally Charlie Kirk in a front of tens of thousands packed into an NFL stadium less than two weeks after the 31-year-old right-wing activist was assassinated in Utah.

    Capping off the five-hour service, Trump reiterated what he said the night the founder of the influential conservative youth organization Turning Point USA was killed: Kirk was a “a martyr now for American freedom” and, in his name, the federal government will crackdown on political foes and lead “not just a political realignment, but also a spiritual reawakening.” The remarks came a day after the president publicly demanded Attorney General Pam Bondi expedite the prosecution of his enemies.


    What You Need To Know

    • President Donald Trump flew to Arizona on Sunday with a cohort of his administration’s most senior officials, the speaker of the House and a slew of Republican lawmakers to eulogize and memorialize his ally Charlie Kirk
    • Trump said Kirk was a “a martyr now for American freedom” and, in his name, the federal government will crackdown on political foes and lead “not just a political realignment, but also a spiritual reawakening”
    • The remarks came a day after the president publicly demanded Attorney General Pam Bondi expedite the prosecution of his enemies
    • Erika Kirk, Charlie Kirk’s widow and successor as Turning Point USA’s leader, said that she forgives the shooting suspect accused of killing her husband
    • Other speakers included Vice President JD Vance, Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth, Kennedy, director of national intelligence Tulsi Gabbard, White House chief of staff Susie Wiles, Kirk’s friends and colleagues, former Fox News host Tucker Carlson and Donald Trump Jr.

    Erika Kirk, Charlie Kirk’s widow and successor as Turning Point USA’s leader, spoke right before Trump and eulogized her husband by speaking of their shared Christian faith and saying that she forgives the shooting suspect who prosecutors say told friends and family he killed Kirk “because it was what Christ did and is what Charlie would do.”

    “The answer to hate is not hate,” Erika Kirk said. “The answer we know from the gospel is love and always love, love for our enemies and love for those who persecute us.”

    A half an hour later, halfway through his remarks, Trump said he hates his opponents and apologized to the grieving widow before touting that the Justice Department is “investigating networks of radical left maniacs who fund organized fuel and perpetrate political violence.”

    “He was a missionary with a noble spirit and a great, great purpose. He did not hate his opponents. He wanted the best for them,” Trump said. “That’s where I disagreed with Charlie. I hate my opponent, and I don’t want the best for them. I’m sorry. I am sorry Erica.”

    “I can’t stand my opponent,” Trump added.

    A banner for conservative activist Charlie Kirk is seen during a memorial service for Kirk, Sunday, Sept. 21, 2025, at State Farm Stadium in Glendale, Ariz. (AP Photo/John Locher)

    On Saturday, in a message addressed to “Pam” on his Truth Social platform, Trump demanded Bondi accelerate investigations and prosecutions into his enemies, including former FBI director James Comey, California Sen. Adam Schiff and New York Attorney General Lettia James. He cited the criminal prosecutions of him in between his terms in office and the impeachments from his first time as reasons why “​​we can’t delay any longer, it’s killing our reputation and credibility.”

    “JUSTICE MUST BE SERVED, NOW!!!” Trump wrote on Saturday evening after forcing out a U.S. attorney in Virginia over his frustration with a lack of criminal charges brought against James, who has led many legal fights against Trump’s administration and businesses. 

    On Sunday in Arizona, Trump said the Justice Department was attempting to investigate the “very bad people” that he claimed funded “paid agitators” to protest Kirk and him, dubiously claiming “the violence comes largely from the left.” Neither Trump nor the Justice Department has produced evidence that crimes committed by left-wing actors are being funded by wealthy benefactors or connected to advocacy organizations that oppose the administration.

    ‘A martyr for the Christian faith’

    The framing of Kirk as a martyr for the president’s movement who played a key role in the campaign to get him back into the White House, as well as the intertwining of Christianity and right-wing politics in the U.S. were common themes echoed by the speakers throughout the day, including Vice President JD Vance, Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth, Kennedy, director of national intelligence Tulsi Gabbard, White House chief of staff Susie Wiles, Kirk’s friends and colleagues, former Fox News host Tucker Carlson and Donald Trump Jr.

    Kirk “became convinced that we needed not just a political realignment, but also a spiritual reawakening,” Trump said. “We have to bring back religion to America, because without borders, law and order and religion, you really don’t have a country anymore. We want religion brought back to America. We want to bring God back into our beautiful USA like never before. We want God back.”

    Hegseth declared Kirk “a warrior for country, a warrior for Christ” and said the activist not only “started a political movement, but unleashed a spiritual revival.” Trump also referred to the memorial as “an old time revival.”

    Vance said he’s “talked more about Jesus Christ in the past two weeks than I have my entire time in public life” because of Kirk. In response to critics of Kirk’s politics, the vice president said that if he were still alive, he believed that Kirk “would encourage me to be honest that evil still walks among us, not to ignore it for the sake of a fake kumbaya moment, but to address it head on and honestly as the sickness that it is.”

    “My friends, for Charlie, we must remember that he is a hero to the United States of America, and he is a martyr for the Christian faith,” Vance said.

    Comments about Kirk have become a Trump administration target

    The right-wing activist had a long, well-documented history of statements and policy positions about race, Islam, Judaism, women and LGBTQ people that Democratic politicians and other critics have described as racistbigoted and antisemitic, Since his death, the administration and their allies have promised retaliation and applied pressure on organizations to fire or punish workers who voice criticisms of Kirk’s work, including getting Disney to pull late night show host Jimmy Kimmel off the air.

    In response to Kirk’s killing — by a 22-year-old Utah man who officials have said disagreed with Kirk’s politics from a left-wing perspective but have not alleged he he was aligned with any groups, other individuals or even a specific ideology — Trump also said last week he was going to designate “antifa” as a “major terrorist organization” to expedite prosecutions of left-wing activists and organizations.

    It’s unclear how Trump will do so in practice because antifa, short for “anti-fascist,” is an umbrella term for a variety of groups and ideological movements who use a wide-range of tactics, both legal and illegal. Additionally, there is no current federal law or legal framework for designating domestic groups as terrorists due to the broad First Amendment protections for political activity.

    “But law enforcement can only be the beginning of our response to Charlie’s murder,” Trump said, laying blame for “atrocities of this kind that we saw in Utah of all places” at the feet of liberals and leftists. 

    Trump’s deputy chief of staff and longtime speechwriter Stephen Miller put it in much starker terms during his speech at the service earlier in the day.

    “The day that Charlie died, the angels wept, but those tears had been turned into fire in our hearts, and that fire burns with a righteous fury that our enemies cannot comprehend or understand,” Miller said. “You have no idea the dragon you have awakened. You have no idea how determined we will be to save this civilization, to save the West, to save this republic. Because our children are strong and our grandchildren will be strong, and our children’s children’s children will be strong.”

    A man listens during a worship song before the start of a memorial for conservative activist Charlie Kirk, Sunday, Sept. 21, 2025, at State Farm Stadium in Glendale, Ariz. (AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin)

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    Joseph Konig

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  • Massive immigration detention camp officially opens at Texas’ Fort Bliss

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    EL PASO, Texas — The Trump administration’s latest immigration detention camp has officially opened at a major military base in El Paso, Texas, with the goal of becoming the largest facility of its kind as the military embraces an increasingly expansive role in immigration and domestic law enforcement.


    What You Need To Know

    • The Trump administration’s latest immigration detention camp has officially opened at a major military base in El Paso, Texas, with the goal of becoming the largest facility of its kind as the military embraces an increasingly expansive role in immigration and domestic law enforcement
    • Rep. Veronica Escobar, a Democrat who represents the El Paso area, visited the site Monday for nearly 2½ hours and said migrants began being detained at the facility as early as Aug. 1 and that it now houses nearly 1,000 people
    • She said at a news conference that she was unable to speak to detainees, but saw elderly men detained at the facility and added that, while it was just housing men for now, there are plans to hold women and potentially women with children in the future
    • Democrats and civil rights groups are raising the alarm about the human rights conditions and lack of transparency; one local official described it as a “concentration camp for migrants”

    Rep. Veronica Escobar, a Democrat who represents the El Paso area, visited the site Monday for nearly 2½ hours and said migrants began being detained at the facility as early as Aug. 1 and that it now houses nearly 1,000 people. She said she is pushing federal officials to allow local officials, faith leaders and media to conduct oversight visits to the camp and observe the conditions, expressing concerns the “massive” facility is understaffed and improperly equipped to humanely house the detained migrants. 

    She said at a news conference that she was unable to speak to detainees but saw elderly men detained at the facility and added that, while it was just housing men for now, there are plans to hold women and potentially women with children in the future. 

    “We will finish construction for up to 5,000 beds in the weeks and months ahead,” Pentagon press secretary Kingsley Wilson said earlier this month. “Upon completion, this will be the largest federal detention center in history for this critical mission — the deportation of illegal aliens.” 

    The presently 1,000-bed tent camp officially began operations Sunday with temperatures in the mid-90s and just days after the region saw readings as high as 105 degrees. Democrats and civil rights groups are raising the alarm about the human rights conditions and lack of transparency. El Paso County Commissioner David Stout described it as a “concentration camp for migrants.”

    “I have very, very many doubts about how people are going to be treated in these facilities,” Stout, a former television reporter for Telemundo and Univision, told NewsNation earlier this month. “I think we are going down the road to becoming a fascist country. I think it’s a very slippery slope, and the actions that are taking place at this point in time are comparable to [Nazi Germany].”

    The American Civil Liberties Union noted that Fort Bliss housed an internment camp for Japanese Americans during World War II, imprisoned thousands of Mexican refugees fleeing war earlier in the century and was the site where imprisoned migrant children were separated from their parents during President Donald Trump’s first term and into President Joe Biden’s time in office. A Department of Health and Human Services inspector general’s report published in 2022 found the conditions at Fort Bliss “caused children to experience distress, anxiety, and in some cases, panic attacks” and documented cases of self-harm by children.

    Texas Sen. John Cornyn said after visiting the facility last week that he was told by federal officials that “no families and no children” would be imprisoned at the camp, “just single adults.”

    “We’re not talking about gardeners, housekeepers or people like that,” Cornyn said. “We’re talking about as many as … 291,000 individuals who are called criminal aliens, who are people either with criminal charges pending or criminal convictions, and who have exhausted all of their legal remedies.

    “In other words, there’s no due process issue involved here,” said Cornyn, a Republican with the backing of Senate leadership, but who faces a formidable primary challenge from Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton.

    Escobar disputed Cornyn’s characterization, saying that “there are folks inside the facility who have recently been apprehended, maybe even here at the border, or apprehended as far away as Miami or as far away as LA in enforcement operations that ICE is conducting inside the U.S.”

    The U.S. Army bills Fort Bliss as a military installation that “proudly offers the highest standards of living within the Department of Defense” for soldiers and their families. According to the Army, about 70,000 soldiers and their family members live on the base, which is larger than the state of Rhode Island. 

    Federal officials, the Pentagon and Republicans touted the new detention camp as vital to Trump’s goal of rounding up and deporting millions of migrants, framing the vast majority of those imprisoned and deported as dangerous and criminals, though federal data released publicly shows the vast majority have no criminal conviction and only about 12% of those deported between January and May were convicted of violent crimes or crimes that could be considered potentially violent, according to the Marshall Project

    Trump’s signature taxes and spending legislation signed into law in July and nicknamed the “big, beautiful bill” included $45 billion for immigrant detention facilities and more than $170 billion total for immigration and border enforcement. Bloomberg and Military.com reported the Fort Bliss facility will cost at least $1.26 billion to construct.

    The new camp is already under investigation by an independent government watchdog for the process its contracts were awarded to private companies, the Army confirmed to NBC News. And a 38-year-old worker, Hector Gonzalez, employed by a subcontractor on the project died in a workplace accident in July, the company Disaster Management Group said. The Army is investigating the circumstances. 

    The camp, officially known as Camp East Montana and dubbed “Lone Star Lockup” by Cornyn, has drawn comparisons to the similarly outrage-inducing “Alligator Alcatraz” tent camp in Florida where the ACLU, detainees and detainees’ lawyers have reported abuseunsanitary and unsafe conditions, and unconstitutional restrictions of migrants’ legal rights — claims the Department of Homeland Security has denied

    During his visit to Fort Bliss last week, Cornyn did not actually go inside the tent camp — “We saw it from a distance” — but assured the public, “These are humane, safe facilities, and in many instances, a vast improvement over what many of these folks are used to.”

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    Joseph Konig

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  • Harris accepts Democratic presidential nomination, charts ‘a new way forward’

    Harris accepts Democratic presidential nomination, charts ‘a new way forward’

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    There were signs, funny costumes, and silly hats. There was a roll call vote that turned into a dance party. There were chants and cheers from “U-S-A” to “We’re Not Going Back,” and even “Lock Him Up.”

    There was an oversized copy of Project 2025. There were accolades about records as a prosecutor, as a U.S. Senator and as vice president. There were speeches about freedom and democracy, about abortion and education and every issue in between. There were protests and demonstrations and arrests.

    There were Obamas. There were Clintons. There was Joe Biden, passing the torch to his former running mate and vice president. There were would-be, passed-over running mates. There was a pep talk, as actual running mate Tim Walz channeled his high school football coaching days — complete with a fight song andcameo from his former players. 

    There were accolades and anecdotes from governors, senators, congressmen, activists, advocates, vice presidential hopefuls, former presidential candidates, and everything in between.

    There were celebrities, from Lil Jon to Kerry Washington, Mindy Kaling to Steph Curry (and his Olympic gold medal to boot) and even his coach in Golden State, Chicago Bulls legend Steve Kerr. There were musical performances, from Stevie Wonder’s “Higher Ground” to John Legend and Sheila E. paying tribute to Prince with “Let’s Go Crazy,” a nod to Minnesota’s Walz.

    And there were more than a few pointed comments about former President Donald Trump and his running mate, Ohio Sen. JD Vance.

    But at the end of the final night of the Democratic National Convention, it came down to Vice President Kamala Harris, accepting the party’s nomination for president of the United States — becoming the first Black and South Asian woman to accept a major party’s nomination — and making the case for her vision of America’s future.

    Harris, who before ascending to Capitol Hill then the vice presidency, was a career prosecutor. And, as a prosecutor, she said she “charged every case not in the name of the victim, but in the name of the people, for one reason: in our system of justice, a harm against any one of us is a harm against all of us.”

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

    “And so on behalf of the people, on behalf of every American, regardless of party, race, gender, or the language your grandmother speaks, on behalf of my mother and everyone who has ever set out on their own unlikely journey, on behalf of Americans like the people I grew up with, people who work hard, chase their dreams and look out for one another, on behalf of everyone whose story could only be written in the greatest nation on Earth, I accept your nomination to be president of the United States of America.”

    ‘From the courthouse to the White House’: Harris leans on experience as a prosecutor

    Democratic presidential nominee Vice President Kamala Harris during the Democratic National Convention Thursday, Aug. 22, 2024, in Chicago. (AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast)

    “The path that led me here in recent weeks was no doubt unexpected, but I’m no stranger to unlikely journeys,” Harris said of her march to the Democratic nomination, recounting the journey of her mother, Shymala, who immigrated to California from India with the “unshakable dream to be the scientist who would cure breast cancer.”

    Harris said that her mother was intended to return home for a traditional arranged marriage — but then she met Donald Harris, a student who emigrated from Jamaica. “They fell in love and got married, and that act of self-determination made my sister Maya and me.”

    She idolized her mother (“a five-foot-tall brown woman with an accent,” she said) who insisted that young Kamala never complain about injustice but “do something about it.”

    Harris said that when she learned that her high school best friend Wanda was being sexually abused by her stepfather, she did something. She said she insisted Wanda stay at the Harris family home, and she did.

    Harris told the audience that fighting for the American people, “from the courthouse to the White House, that has been my life’s work.”

    “I will tell you, these fights were not easy, and neither were the elections that put me in those offices,” Harris said. “We were underestimated at practically every turn, but we never gave up, because the future is always worth fighting for.”

    ‘Now is the time to get a hostage deal and a cease-fire deal done’: Harris calls for an end to the war in Gaza

    Democratic presidential nominee Vice President Kamala Harris speaks during the Democratic National Convention Thursday, Aug. 22, 2024, in Chicago. (AP Photo/Erin Hooley)

    After vowing to keep the country’s military strong and pledging to stand up to Russian President Vladimir Putin and defend the people of Ukraine, Harris turned to the war between Israel and Hamas in Gaza, an issue that has been somewhat of a third-rail within Democratic politics — as evidenced by the protests in Chicago over the course of the DNC’s four days.

    Harris said that she and President Joe Biden are working “around the clock” to get a deal done to end the fighting in Gaza.

    “Now is the time to get a hostage deal and a cease-fire deal done,” she said, before vowing steadfast support for Israel.

    “And let me be clear — I will always stand up for Israel’s right to defend itself and I will always ensure Israel has the ability to defend itself, because the people of Israel must never again face the horror that a terrorist organization called Hamas caused on Oct. 7, including unspeakable sexual violence and the massacre of young people at a music festival.”

    She then immediately turned to the situation in Gaza.

    “At the same time, what has happened in Gaza over the last 10 months is devastating. So many innocent lives lost. Desperate, hungry people fleeing for safety over and over again, the scale of suffering is heartbreaking. President Biden and I are working to end this war, such that Israel is secure, the hostages are released, the suffering in Gaza ends and the Palestinian people can realize their right to dignity, security, freedom and self-determination.”

    That last line garnered one of the largest cheers of the night.

    “And know this, I will never hesitate to take whatever action is necessary to defend our forces and our interests against Iran and Iran-backed terrorists,” she vowed. “I will not cozy up to tyrants and dictators like Kim Jong Un, who are rooting for Trump — who are rooting for Trump. Because they know he is easy to manipulate with flattery and favors, they know he won’t hold autocrats accountable because he wants to be an autocrat himself.”

    “Because in the enduring struggle between democracy and tyranny, I know where I stand and I know where America belongs,” she concluded.

    On immigration, Harris says U.S. ‘can create an earned pathway to citizenship and secure our border’

    AP Photo

    Harris said her goal was to have the U.S. “live up to our proud heritage as a nation of immigrants and reform our broken immigration system” by implementing a “earned pathway to citizenship” while simultaneously securing the border.

    She pointed to the failed bipartisan border deal negotiated earlier this year with some of the most right-wing Republicans in the Senate as evidence of her intentions. That deal would have included tougher asylum standards and hiring more border agents, immigration judges and asylum officers.

    Former President Trump opposed it, and other Republicans, like House Speaker Mike Johnson, joined him in that effort.

    “I refuse to play politics with our security, and here is my pledge to you as president, I will bring back the bipartisan border security bill that he killed, and I will sign it into law,” Harris said, noting “after decades in law enforcement, I know the importance of safety and security, especially at our border.”

    Harris has endorsed comprehensive immigration reform, seeking pathways to citizenship for immigrants in the U.S. without legal status, with a faster track for young immigrants living in the country illegally who arrived as children.

    As he watched the speech, Trump responded on social media, calling the border bill “one of the worst ever written” and claimed that Harris “wants to spend all of our money on Illegal Immigrants,” calling her a “RADICAL MARXIST.” 

    On abortion rights, Harris blames Trump for overturning Roe

    Democratic presidential nominee Vice President Kamala Harris speaks during the Democratic National Convention Thursday, Aug. 22, 2024, in Chicago. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

    Harris said Americans cannot be prosperous unless they can make their own decisions about their own lives — including women’s control over their own bodies.

    “Too many women are not able to make those decisions,” Harris said, more than two years after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, which guaranteed a woman’s right to an abortion.

    Harris, who has championed the Biden administration’s abortion rights efforts, said she had met with women across the country who shared stories of miscarrying in parking lots and losing their ability to have children because doctors are too afraid to treat pregnant women.

    “Couples just trying to grow their family, cut off in the middle of IVF treatments, children who have survived sexual assault, potentially being forced to carry a pregnancy to term,” she said.

    She contended that Trump will continue to erode women’s rights by limiting access to birth control, ban medication abortion and enact a nationwide abortion ban with or without Congress. She said he also plans to create a national anti-abortion coordinator that would force states to report on women’s miscarriages and abortion.

    “Simply put, they are out of their minds,” she charged.

    ‘Let us write the next great chapter’: Harris urges Americans to move forward with optimism

    Balloons are released after Democratic presidential nominee Vice President Kamala Harris spoke on the final day of the Democratic National Convention in Chicago, Thursday, Aug. 22, 2024. (Mike Segar/Pool via AP)

    Shyamala Harris had another lesson for her daughters: “‘Never let anyone tell you who you are. You show them who you are.’ America, let’s show each other, and the world who we are.”

    This is the moment, Harris said, to demonstrate the hope, the privilege, the pride of being an American.

    “Everywhere I go, in everyone I meet, I see a nation that is ready to move forward, ready for the next step in the incredible journey that is America.”

    She continued the narrative, pushed throughout the convention, that a Trump presidency was about negativity and moving backward.

    “We are the heirs to the greatest democracy in the history of the world,” she said. “And on behalf of our children and our grandchildren and all those who sacrificed so dearly for our freedom and liberty, we must be worthy of this moment.”

    “Let’s get out there, let’s vote for it, and together, let us write the next great chapter in the most extraordinary story ever told.”

    AP Photo

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    Joseph Konig

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  • Takeaways: Tim Walz accepts the VP nomination as ‘freedom’ takes center stage

    Takeaways: Tim Walz accepts the VP nomination as ‘freedom’ takes center stage

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    Across the many speakers on the third night of the Democratic convention — from a former president to the national youth poet laureate, from the former House Democratic leader to the current one, senators, representatives, governors and even Oprah Winfrey — “freedom” was a common theme.

    “Let us choose truth,” Winfrey said. “Let us choose honor. And let us choose joy. But more than anything else, let us choose freedom. Why? Because that’s the best of America.”

    And freedom came in many forms, whether it was speakers pledging to protect reproductive and LGBTQ rights, railing against book bans, or underlining the right to free and fair elections as they invoked the Jan. 6, 2021, riot at the U.S. Capitol.

    “It’s not freedom to tell our children what books they’re allowed to read. No, it’s not,” said Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro, a finalist to be Vice President Kamala Harris’ running mate. “And it’s not freedom to tell women what they can do with their bodies. And hear me on this: It sure as hell isn’t freedom to say you can go vote, but [former President Donald Trump] gets to pick the winner.”

    Or as Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel, who is openly gay, put it: “I’ve got a message for the Republicans and the justices of the U.S. Supreme Court: You can pry this wedding band from my cold, dead, gay hand.”

    Wednesday night even featured Republicans telling other Republicans that they had the freedom to cross party lines to vote their conscience.

    “To my fellow Republicans, you are not voting for a Democrat, you are voting for democracy,” said former Trump administration official Olivia Troye. “You aren’t betraying our party, you are standing up for our country.”

    “If you vote for Kamala Harris in 2024, you’re not a Democrat,” concurred former Georgia Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan, who said he faced a slew of attacks for standing up to Trump’s efforts to subvert the state’s election results. “You’re a patriot.”

    While the climax of the penultimate night of the DNC was Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz’s vice presidential acceptance speech — and Harris’ running mate’s introduction to the American people — it was the message of “freedom” that stole the spotlight.

    “Freedom,” Walz said, was what let him start his family when he and his wife struggled with fertility.

    “When we Democrats talk about freedom, we mean the freedom to make a better life for yourself and the people that you love,” he said.

    And National Youth Poet Laureate Amanda Gorman said freedom is what unites all Americans: “We are one family regardless of religion, class or color. For what defines a patriot is not just a love of liberty but our love for one another. This is loud in our country’s call because while we all love freedom, it is love that frees us all.”

    Bill Clinton says Harris ticket a ‘breath of fresh air,’ takes jabs at Trump

    AP Photo

    Former President Bill Clinton, the  made his case for a Kamala Harris presidency while taking several digs at former President Donald Trump.

    “Kamala Harris is the only candidate in this race who has the vision, the experience, the temperament, the will and, yes, the sheer joy to get something done,” Clinton said. “What does her opponent do with his voice? He mostly talks about himself, right? So the next time you hear him, don’t count the lies. Count the ‘I’s.’”

    Among the jabs he took at Trump, Clinton asked: “Do you want to build a strong economy from the bottom up and the middle out? Or do you want to spend the next four years talking about crowd size?”

    Clinton also said he wondered what world leaders watching Trump on the campaign trail are “supposed to make to these endless tributes to the late, great Hannibal Lecter?”

    But Clinton also found a way to poke fun at himself. Noting that Harris worked at McDonald’s while in college, the former president said, “I’ll be so happy when she actually enters the White House as president because she will break my record as the president who spent the most time at McDonald’s.”

    ‘Choose joy’: Oprah Winfrey, in surprise DNC appearance, endorses Harris, rallies Democrats

    AP Photo

    In a surprise appearance on Wednesday night, Oprah Winfrey made a vigorous appeal to independent and undecided voters to get behind Vice President Kamala Harris. She spoke of the “best of America” and using “common sense” to decide who to vote for, while taking a couple of implicit jabs at the GOP ticket. This was Winfrey’s first time speaking at a national political convention.

    “Since I was eligible to vote, I’ve always voted my values and that is what is needed in this election now more than ever,” Winfrey said. “Decency and respect are on the ballot in 2024.”

    Winfrey noted that she herself is registered as an independent voter who is “proud to vote again and again and again,” taking a swipe, without naming him, at former President Donald Trump’s recent comment to Christians that they just need to vote in this one election. (Trump and his campaign sought to clarify that, despite the alarm from Democrats and democracy advocates, he was talking about evangelical Christians not voting en masse.)

    The former daytime television host and Chicago native also used her remarks to tell the story of Tessie Prevost Williams, who helped integrate public schools in New Orleans in 1960 and who died last month. 

    “And soon and very soon, we’re going to be teaching our daughters and sons about how this child of an Indian mother and a Jamaican father – two idealistic, energetic immigrants – immigrants – how this child grew up to become the 47th president of the United States,” Winfrey said of Harris. 

    ‘The honor of my life’: Walz accepts vice presidential nomination

    Democratic vice presidential nominee Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, second from right, poses with his wife Gwen Walz, from right, son Gus Walz and daughter Hope Walz after speaking during the Democratic National Convention Wednesday, Aug. 21, 2024, in Chicago. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

    “It’s the honor of my life to accept your nomination for vice president of the United States,” Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz said at the start of his speech.

    Walz shared his story of growing up in a small Nebraska town, joining the Army National Guard and becoming a high school teacher and football coach.

    He said his players and students inspired him to run for Congress in 2006, when he won in a historically red district.

    “They saw in me what I had hoped to instill in them: a commitment to the common good, an understanding that we’re all in this together and the belief that a single person can make a real difference for their neighbors,” Walz said.

    Walz listed his proudest accomplishments from his time as governor, including cutting taxes, passing paid family and medical leave, investing in law enforcement and affordable housing, lowering prescription drug costs, and guaranteeing free school breakfast and lunches for students. 

    “While other states were banning books from their schools, we were banishing hunger from ours,” he said.

    He also signed a bill into law protecting abortions and other reproductive health care. 

    “Because in Minnesota, we respect our neighbors and the personal choices they make,” Walz said. “And even if we wouldn’t make those same choices for ourselves, we’ve got a golden rule: Mind your own damn business.”

    Walz framed his pitch of Democrats’ “freedom agenda” around his struggle with having children with his wife Gwen.

    “If you’ve never experienced the hell that is in fertility, I guarantee you you know somebody who has, and I can remember praying each night for a phone call, the pit in your stomach when the phone had rung, and the absolute agony when we heard the treatments hadn’t worked,” Walz said. “It took Gwen and I years, but we had access to fertility treatments, and when our daughter was born, we named her Hope.”

    He then turned to his wife, daughter and son Gus. “You are my entire world and I love you.”

    “I’m letting you in on how we started a family, because this is a big part about what this election is about: freedom. When Republicans use the word freedom, they mean that the government should be free to invade your doctor’s office. Corporations, free to pollute your air and water, and banks, free to take advantage of customers,” Walz said. “But when we Democrats talk about freedom, we mean the freedom to make a better life for yourself and the people that you love, freedom to make your own health care decisions, and, yeah, your kids freedom to go to school without worrying about being shot dead in the hall.”

    Walz’s family joined him on stage after the speech, as Neil Young’s ‘Rockin’ in the Free World’ played.

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  • Walz accepts vice presidential nomination on DNC’s penultimate night

    Walz accepts vice presidential nomination on DNC’s penultimate night

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    On the penultimate night of the Democratic National Convention, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz took the stage in Chicago and said that, “it’s the honor of my life to accept your nomination for vice president of the United States.”


    What You Need To Know

    • Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz accepted the Democratic vice presidential nomination on Wednesday night, calling it “the honor of my life”
    • Delving into his backstory, Walz talked about growing up in a small Nebraska town, joining the Army National Guard and becoming a high school teacher and football coach; he said his players and students inspired him to run for Congress in 2006, when he won in a historically red district
    • Walz framed his pitch of Democrats’ “freedom agenda” around his struggle with having children with his wife Gwen
    • Per C-SPAN, at about 15 minutes, Walz’s VP acceptance speech was the shortest in the last 30 years, but he closed with a pep talk as he sought to rally Democrats



    Delving into his backstory, Walz talked about growing up in a small Nebraska town, joining the Army National Guard and becoming a high school teacher and football coach.

    He said his players and students inspired him to run for Congress in 2006, when he won in a historically red district.

    “They saw in me what I had hoped to instill in them: a commitment to the common good, an understanding that we’re all in this together and the belief that a single person can make a real difference for their neighbors,” Walz said.

    “There I was, a 40-something high school teacher with kids, zero political experience, and no money, running in a deep red district,” he continued. “But you know what? Never underestimate a public schoolteacher. Never.”

    Walz listed his proudest accomplishments from his time as governor, including cutting taxes, passing paid family and medical leave, investing in law enforcement and affordable housing, lowering prescription drug costs, and guaranteeing free school breakfast and lunches for students. 

    “While other states were banning books from their schools, we were banishing hunger from ours,” he said.

    He also signed a bill into law protecting abortions and other reproductive health care. 

    “Because in Minnesota, we respect our neighbors and the personal choices they make,” Walz said. “And even if we wouldn’t make those same choices for ourselves, we’ve got a golden rule: Mind your own damn business.”

    Walz talks of his family’s fertility struggles as he pitches Democrats’ ‘freedom’ agenda

    Democratic vice presidential nominee Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, second from right, poses with his wife Gwen Walz, from right, son Gus Walz and daughter Hope Walz after speaking during the Democratic National Convention Wednesday, Aug. 21, 2024, in Chicago. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

    Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz framed his pitch of Democrats’ “freedom agenda” around his struggle with having children with his wife Gwen.

    “If you’ve never experienced the hell that is in fertility, I guarantee you you know somebody who has, and I can remember praying each night for a phone call, the pit in your stomach when the phone had rung, and the absolute agony when we heard the treatments hadn’t worked,” Walz said. “It took Gwen and I years, but we had access to fertility treatments, and when our daughter was born, we named her Hope.”

    He then turned to his wife, daughter and son Gus and told them “you are my entire world and I love you.”

    His children, looking on at their dad giving his speech, were in tears. Hope made a heart sign with her hands, while Gus stood up, sobbing, and shouted, “That’s my dad!”

    Gus Walz cries as Democratic vice presidential nominee Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz speaks during the Democratic National Convention Wednesday, Aug. 21, 2024, in Chicago. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke)

    “I’m letting you in on how we started a family, because this is a big part about what this election is about: freedom. When Republicans use the word freedom, they mean that the government should be free to invade your doctor’s office. Corporations, free to pollute your air and water, and banks, free to take advantage of customers,” Walz said. “But when we Democrats talk about freedom, we mean the freedom to make a better life for yourself and the people that you love, freedom to make your own health care decisions, and, yeah, your kids freedom to go to school without worrying about being shot dead in the hall.”

    Walz then spoke of his relationship with guns as a veteran and a hunter and how he evolved on the issue of gun control. He boasted of being “a better shot than most Republicans in Congress, and I got the trophies to prove it.”

    “That’s what this is all about, the responsibility we have to our kids, to each other and to the future that we’re building together, in which everyone is free to build the kind of life they want, but not everyone has that same sense of responsibility,” Walz said. “Some folks just don’t understand what it takes to be a good neighbor.”

    Among those folks, Walz named Trump and his running mate Ohio Sen. JD Vance, pinning them to the right-wing presidential transition plan Project 2025 crafted by Trump allies and former administration officials that they’ve attempted to distance themselves from.

    “Look, I coached high school football long enough to know and trust me on this. When somebody takes the time to draw up a playbook, they’re going to use it,” Walz said. “Here’s the thing, it’s an agenda nobody asked for. It’s an agenda that serves nobody except the richest and the most extreme amongst us. it’s an agenda that does nothing for our neighbors in need.”

    “Is it weird? Absolutely, absolutely,” he continued. “But it’s also wrong and it’s dangerous.”

    ‘Coach’ Walz closes with a pep talk, urging Dems to fight for every inch on the campaign trail

    Democratic vice presidential nominee Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz speaks during the Democratic National Convention Wednesday, Aug. 21, 2024, in Chicago. (AP Photo/Brynn Anderson)

    In his short time on the campaign trail, Walz hasn’t been known for long, drawn out orations – in fact, per C-SPAN, his speech was the shortest in the last 30 years, beating Lloyd Bentsen in 1988, Dan Quayle in 1992 and, ironically, Kamala Harris in 2020, who each spoke for 18.5 minutes – which he was happy to admit fairly quickly into his truncated acceptance speech.

    “You might not know it, but I haven’t given a lot of big speeches like this…but I have given a lot of pep talks, so let me finish with this, team,” Walz said, before breaking deep into football metaphors.

    “It’s the fourth quarter. We’re down a field goal, but we’re on offense and we’ve got the ball; we’re driving down the field, and boy, do we have the right team,” Walz said, boasting about his quarterback. “Kamala Harris is tough, Kamala Harris is experienced and Kamala Harris is ready. Our job, for everyone watching, is to get in the trenches, do the blocking and tackling, one inch at a time, one phone call at a time, one door knock at a time.”

    In other words, he said, this campaign won’t be won by long-bomb Hail Mary passes to a streaking receiver over the outstretched hands of a pack of defenders — it’ll be won in a scrap, bulldozing forward, just the way Walz (who, as he noted, ran a big lineman- and linebacker-heavy 4-4 defense as a high school football coach) likes it.

    “We got 76 days. That’s nothing. There’ll be time to sleep when we’re dead. We’re going to leave it on the field,” he said, building toward a raspy-voiced football coach’s crescendo. “That’s how we’ll keep moving forward, that’s how we’ll turn the page on Donald Trump, that’s how we’ll build a country where workers come first, health care and housing are human rights and the government stays the hell out of your bedroom…that’s how we’re going to fight. 

    “And as the next President of the United States always says, when we fight, we win!” Walz said, as Neil Young’s anthem “Rockin’ in the Free World” began to blare.

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  • Takeaways from Day 1 of the Republican National Convention

    Takeaways from Day 1 of the Republican National Convention

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    The first day of the Republican National Convention was, perhaps, one of the most dizzying days in recent memory — coming on the heels of an already tumultuous weekend after the attack on former President Donald Trump’s Pennsylvania rally.

    One shockwave came before the convention even formally started, when U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon dismissed the classified documents case against Trump, calling the appointment of Justice Department special counsel Jack Smith — who also brought the federal election subversion case against Trump — unlawful. Despite the Justice Department vowing to appeal the decision, which could result in it being overturned, the judge’s order is a massive victory for Trump.

    Hours later, Trump named Ohio Sen. JD Vance — a fierce critic-turned-convert and staunch ally — as his running mate, ending months of speculation as to which Republican loyalist would join his ticket as he looks to win back the White House from President Joe Biden.

    And both Trump and Vance were formally nominated as the Republican candidates for president and vice president, setting up a showdown with President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris with 113 days to go until Election Day.

    Trump made an appearance toward the end of the night, with rally attendees seeing him for the first time with a bandage on his right ear after it was grazed by a would-be-assassin’s bullet.

    Serenaded by Lee Greenwood singing his seminal patriotic hit “God Bless the U.S.A.,” Trump stood with Vance, House Speaker Mike Johnson and other top Republican officials, as well as family members like Donald Trump Jr. and his fiancée Kimberly Guilfoyle and allies like former Fox News host Tucker Carlson.

    The crowd showered him with cheers of “USA! USA!” and “fight, fight, fight,” echoing comments he made after the shooting on Saturday.

    Despite outward calls for unity from Trump and other officials, including Republican National Committee chair Michael Whatley, in the wake of Saturday’s assassination attempt, that courtesy did not extend to Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris, with numerous speakers using incendiary rhetoric to attack the Democratic administration.

    As Republicans gathered in Milwaukee, Biden, meanwhile, sat for a wide-ranging interview with NBC News’ Lester Holt at the White House, which included questions about his “bullseye” comment about Trump from earlier this month, which Republicans criticized in the wake of Trump’s shooting.

    Here are some takeaways from the first day of the Republican National Convention:

    Classified documents case dismissed

     

    This image, contained in the indictment against former President Donald Trump, shows boxes of records stored in a bathroom and shower in the Lake Room at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate in Palm Beach, Fla. (Justice Department via AP)

    While not a part of the RNC per se, the ruling in the classified documents case no doubt helped lead to the jubilant mood in Milwaukee on Monday.

    The decision by U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon, who was nominated to the bench by Trump, is a massive victory for the former president, who faced dozens of felony charges accusing him of mishandling classified documents after leaving office and hampering the federal government’s efforts to retrieve them. Trump pleaded not guilty last year and has denied any wrongdoing.

    “The Framers gave Congress a pivotal role in the appointment of principal and inferior officers,” Cannon wrote in her ruling. “That role cannot be usurped by the Executive Branch or diffused elsewhere — whether in this case or in another case, whether in times of heightened national need or not.”

    “Upon careful study of the foundational challenges raised in the Motion, the Court is convinced that Special Counsel’s Smith’s prosecution of this action breaches two structural cornerstones of our constitutional scheme–the role of Congress in the appointment of constitutional officers, and the role of Congress in authorizing expenditures by law,” she added.

    Cannon faced widespread scrutiny for delays in bringing the case against Trump. The case was set to go to trial in May, but it was indefinitely delayed as she reviewed motion after motion put forth by Trump’s attorneys.

    “Both the Appointments and Appropriations challenges as framed in the Motion raise the following threshold question: is there a statute in the United States Code that authorizes the appointment of Special Counsel Smith to conduct this prosecution?” Cannon wrote. “After careful study of this seminal issue, the answer is no.”

    “In the end, it seems the Executive’s growing comfort in appointing ‘regulatory’ special counsels in the more recent era has followed an ad hoc pattern with little judicial scrutiny,” she added.

    In a statement, Peter Carr, a spokesperson for the special counsel, confirmed the Justice Department authorized an appeal, which could result in Cannon’s decision being overruled by a higher court.

    “The dismissal of the case deviates from the uniform conclusion of all previous courts to have considered the issue that the Attorney General is statutorily authorized to appoint a special counsel,” Carr said.

    In a post on his Truth Social platform, Trump said the ” dismissal of the Lawless Indictment in Florida should be just the first step” in moving to dismiss all the cases against him, which he baselessly called “Witch Hunts.”

    “The Democrat Justice Department coordinated ALL of these Political Attacks, which are an Election Interference conspiracy against Joe Biden’s Political Opponent, ME,” Trump charged. “Let us come together to END all Weaponization of our Justice System, and Make America Great Again!”

    Read more about the ruling here

    The pick is in: Ohio Sen. JD Vance

    Lt. Gov. Jon Husted, R-Ohio, nominates Republican vice presidential candidate Sen. JD Vance, R-Ohio, during the Republican National Convention Monday, July 15, 2024, in Milwaukee. (AP Photo/Morry Gash)

    Former President Donald Trump selected Ohio Sen. JD Vance, a Trump critic-turned-convert, to be his running mate in November’s election, succeeding former Vice President Mike Pence as Trump’s No. 2.

    “After lengthy deliberation and thought, and considering the tremendous talents of many others, I have decided that the person best suited to assume the position of Vice President of the United States is Senator J.D. Vance of the Great State of Ohio,” Trump wrote on his Truth Social platform on Monday afternoon. “J.D. has had a very successful business career in Technology and Finance, and now, during the Campaign, will be strongly focused on the people he fought so brilliantly for, the American Workers and Farmers in Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin, Ohio, Minnesota, and far beyond.”

    Trump called Vance about 20 minutes before he made his social media post to let him know his selection, sources confirmed to Spectrum News.

    Shortly after Trump announced his pick, Vance was officially selected by delegates at the Republican National Convention to be the party’s nominee for vice president. He was approved by a voice vote without opposition.

    Moments earlier, Vance entered the convention floor at Milwaukee’s Fiserv Forum to cheers, hugs and handshakes alongside his wife, Usha Vance, an attorney who he met while both attending Yale Law School.

    He was nominated by Ohio Lt. Gov. Jon Husted, who described Vance as “a man who loves America and will represent our people with moral courage, strength and honor.”

    “JD is a living embodiment of the American Dream,” Husted said. “He came from humble beginnings and even as his life took him to places he might never have imagined, he never forgot where he came from. Ohio values are in his blood.”

    In an interview with Fox News’ “Hannity” on Monday night, his first since becoming Trump’s running mate, Vance said the call from Trump was “a moment I’ll never forget.”

    The Biden campaign immediately slammed the pick, labeling Vance as the favored choice of billionaires and corporations and as a Trump loyalist who will “bend over backwards to enable Trump and his extreme MAGA agenda, even if it means breaking the law and no matter the harm to the American people,” as Biden campaign chair Jen O’Malley Dillon said on a press call on Monday afternoon.

    “A clone of Trump on the issues,” President Joe Biden said at Maryland’s Joint Base Andrews before boarding Air Force One for a campaign trip to Las Vegas. “I don’t see any difference.”

    On the press call, Reproductive Freedom for All president Mini Timmaraju called Vance an “extreme anti-abortion politician” and O’Malley Dillon warned that Vance’s addition to the Republican ticket makes it “more clear than ever that our rights, our freedoms and our democracy are on the line.”

    Republican presidential candidate former President Donald Trump and Republican vice presidential candidate Sen. JD Vance, R-Ohio, appear during the Republican National Convention Monday, July 15, 2024, in Milwaukee. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke)

    Vance, a Trump critic-turned-convert, has emerged as a leader on the Republican Party’s rightmost reaches and a favorite among some of the more radical figures in Trump’s world. Prior to winning his Senate race in 2022, Vance was a Marine and venture capitalist who wrote a bestselling memoir, “Hillbilly Elegy,” that garnered bipartisan praise for its depiction of his tumultuous upbringing in Middletown, Ohio, and path to Yale University Law School.

    “I was a convert in 2019 to the cause of Trump’s America First agenda,” Vance said in a speech at the National Conservatism Conference in Washington last week. “I was cognizant of the fact that, because I was a convert, Trump had not yet taken over the Republican Party, even in Washington, D.C., even in 2019 even though he was the president of the United States.”

    “There were people who were aggressively pushing back against his influence, who were already planning a return to basically reimplementing the Wall Street Journal editorial page’s preferred positions in 2019. I think that’s over now.”

    In 2016, Vance notably called Trump an “idiot,” “noxious” and “reprehensible,” labeling himself as “a Never Trump guy” and telling a friend that Trump could be “America’s Hitler” as the then-businessman made his first run for president. Now, as Trump is just days away from receiving the Republican nomination for the first time, he has chosen the man who has become one of his most loyal supporters in Washington as his running mate.

    “I always wish his memory was as bad as Joe Biden’s, because he would forget about what I said about him in 2016,” Vance said in his speech last week.

    Sen. J.D. Vance, R-Ohio, right, points toward Republican presidential candidate former President Donald Trump at a campaign rally, March 16, 2024, in Vandalia, Ohio. (AP Photo/Jeff Dean)

    Republicans were quick to praise Trump’s pick, with House Speaker Mike Johnson saying in a statement that Vance “possesses a profound understanding of the anxieties of working families and has both the lived experience and the policy expertise to help President Trump deliver a government worthy of the people it is supposed to serve.” New York Rep. Elise Stefanik, a member of House leadership and a vice presidential contender herself, said Trump “made a strong VP choice” and called Vance “a strong America First leader and proven conservative.”

    If elected, Vance would be the youngest vice president since Richard Nixon, who was just a few months younger when he took office in 1953 as part of the Eisenhower administration. Vance has three children with his wife, Usha Vance. She previously clerked for Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts and for now-Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh when he served on a lower court.

    The Ohio senator, who turns 40 in August, will now be pitted against Vice President Kamala Harris as both junior partners will attempt to make the case to the American people that they are fit to assume the presidency if the 78-year-old Trump or the 81-year-old Biden can no longer serve. Both campaigns have agreed to a CBS News debate later this summer.

    Trump officially becomes GOP nominee

    While not a surprise in the slightest, Trump received enough delegates on Monday to formally become the Republican presidential nominee.

    The delegation from Florida, led by his son, Eric Trump, gave him enough votes to put him over the top.

    Speakers invoke Trump’s shooting…

    Sen. Tim Scott, R-SC, speaking during the first day of the Republican National Convention, Monday, July 15, 2024, in Milwaukee. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

    The assassination attempt on Donald Trump was top of mind for many of the speakers at Monday night’s event.

    Few of the speeches Monday electrified the crowd as much as the one delivered by South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott — a former 2024 presidential hopeful-turned-staunch Trump backer — got the crowd on their feet by invoking shooting at Trump’s rally on Saturday.

    “If you didn’t believe in miracles before Saturday, you better be believing right now!” he told the crowd in an exchange heavily laden with his Christian faith. “And our God still saves, he still delivers, and he still sets free. Because on Saturday the devil came to Pennsylvania holding a rifle, but an American lion got back up on his feet and he roared!”

    “Oh yeah, he roared!” Scott said to cheers from the crowd of “fight, fight, fight,” echoing Trump’s comments — a cheer that RNC attendees used throughout the day.

    Georgia Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, a far-right firebrand and staunch ally of Trump, opened her speech at the RNC by calling it a “somber moment” for the country in the aftermath of the assassination attempt on Donald Trump.

    “Evil came for the man that we love and admire so much,” Greene said, adding: “I thank God that his hand was on President Trump.

    She also paid tribute to Corey Comperatore, the ex-fire chief and Trump supporter who was killed in the attack, saying he “embodied the spirit of America First” and said Republicans should “honor Corey’s memory by building the country he wanted.”

    …but unity was hard to come by for Biden and Democrats

    Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-GA., speaking on the first day of the Republican National Convention, Monday, July 15, 2024, in Milwaukee. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

    As he kicked off the evening session of the first day of the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee, Republican National Committee Chairman Michael Whatley called for unity in the aftermath of the “horrifying assassination attempt” against former President Donald Trump.

    “We are praying for President Trump. We are praying for the injured. We are praying for the family of Corey Comperatore,” he said. “We must unite as a party and we must unite as a nation. We must show the same strength and resilience as President Trump and lead this nation to a greater future world.”

    But that courtesy did not extend to Biden and the Democrats, clearly.

    The very next speaker, the next speaker, Wisconsin Sen. Ron Johnson, did not appear to have gotten the memo on the greater “unity” message of the convention, quickly calling Democratic policies a “clear and present danger to America,” accusing his opposition party of having a “fringe agenda” that includes “biological males competing against girls and the sexualization and indoctrination of our children.”

    “Democrats have forgotten American families, they have abandoned the working-class,” Johnson charged, adding that under Trump, those forgotten Americans are forgotten no more.”

    (Speaking to PBS News later Monday, Johnson later blamed the teleprompter loading a previous version of his speech.)

    Johnson wasn’t the only Republican to invoke anti-trans rhetoric for cheers from the crowd. Greene shifted gears after her comments about Trump’s shooting to condemn the “establishment in Washington,” which she said has “sold us out.”

    “They promised unity and delivered division,” Greene said. They promised peace and delivered war. They promised normalcy, and they gave us Transgender Visibility Day on Easter Sunday.” (President Joe Biden’s proclamation marking Transgender Day of Visibility on Easter Sunday was not intentional; the holiday is marked on March 31 every year, and Easter Sunday falls on different days each year, it just happened to fall on the same day in 2024.)

    “And let me state this clearly: There are only two genders,” she said to cheers.

    Sen. Katie Britt, R-AL., speaks on the first day of the Republican National Convention, Monday, July 15, 2024, in Milwaukee. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

    Alabama Sen. Katie Britt, who delivered the Republican rebuttal to President Joe Biden’s State of the Union speech earlier this year, charged that the Democratic incumbent is “in decline” and “Donald Trump is the change we need.”

    “We see how Biden and Harris keep making things worse,” she said. “And we know the current president is not capable of turning things around.”

    “His weakness is costing us. Our opportunity, our prosperity, our security, our safety — each diminished, all in decline,” Britt said. “Just like the man in the Oval Office.”

    Scott said that President Joe Biden is “asleep at the wheel and we’re heading over a cliff,” blaming him for a number of issues, including “weakness” that “has invited world wars all around our world.”

    “America is not a racist country,” Scott later said to cheers, adding: “But if you are looking for racism today, you’d find it in cities run by Democrats.”

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  • In interview, RNC chair distances party from Project 2025

    In interview, RNC chair distances party from Project 2025

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    Republican National Committee chair Michael Whatley distanced his party from the Heritage Foundation’s Project 2025 — an administration-in-waiting crafted by the right-wing think tank — telling Spectrum News in Milwaukee on Monday that “we have absolutely nothing to do with Project 2025.”


    What You Need To Know

    • In an interview with Spectrum News in Milwaukee on Monday, Republican National Committee chair Michael Whatley distanced his party from the Heritage Foundation’s Project 2025
    • Whatley’s comments come as Trump, in a separate interview taped last week and released Monday, named one of the report’s authors, Tom Homan, as someone he would appoint in a second term to help oversee his immigration policies
    • According to a CNN analysis, at least 140 veterans of the Trump administration, including six former Cabinet secretaries, helped craft Project 2025’s “Mandate for Leadership” report
    • Whatley also discussed the impact the assassination attempt on Trump over the weekend will have on the convention



    “That project is a complete standalone entity. It has nothing to do with the RNC. It has nothing to do with the Trump campaign,” Whatley said. “There may or may not be some good ideas in there, but right now, we’re focused on our platform, which we adopted at the RNC and is going to be taken up by the convention.”

    The RNC’s platform committee approved a 16-page policy document last week, far shorter than previous iterations of the party’s platform and a fraction of the size of Project 2025’s 922-page planning document — which was authored by dozens of Trump allies and former administration and campaign officials. Trump has also distanced himself from the project and some of the hard-right policies it proposes that have become a focal point of the Biden campaign.

    But in an interview taped last week and that aired on Monday morning, Trump named one of the report’s authors, Tom Homan, as someone he would appoint in a second term to help oversee his immigration policies. Homan is a visiting fellow at the Heritage Foundation and served as acting director of Immigration and Customs Enforcement during the first Trump administration, when he was a key figure behind the policy of separating migrant children from their parents.

    “I have Tom Homan lined up, we have the greatest people,” Trump told Fox News host Harris Faulkner when discussing Vice President Kamala Harris and border policy. Trump also said “we’re bringing back Tom Homan” at a Florida rally last week.

    According to a CNN analysis, at least 140 veterans of the Trump administration, including six former Cabinet secretaries, helped craft Project 2025’s “Mandate for Leadership” report.

    In his interview with Spectrum News, Whatley also discussed the impact the assassination attempt on Trump over the weekend will have on the convention.

    “I think obviously the president has said that he intends to write a new speech and have a different conversation with the voters, but our conversation with all American families really doesn’t change, because this entire convention is about speaking directly to the American people about the issues that they’re worried about, right?” Whatley said. “This is about jobs and the economy. It’s about safety. It’s about security. And certainly safety takes on a whole other connotation in light of an event like this.”

    When asked if Americans would hear from Trump each of the four nights of the convention, which runs through Thursday, Whatley said “stay tuned.”

    Whatley, who was handpicked by Trump to run the party after the former president successfully beat back his primary rivals, spoke of the importance of his home state North Carolina, whose state Republican Party he ran. 

    “We’re very proud of the role that North Carolina is playing in this convention. Both [RNC vice chair] Lara Trump and I, coming from North Carolina, obviously, have a very soft spot in our heart for it,” Whatley said. “North Carolina is a very, very critical, important battleground state and the state party down there, led by Jason Simmons, is doing a fantastic job of making sure that we’re in a position to be able to carry it for the third time in a row for Donald Trump.”

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  • Trump says he’s ‘OK’ with possible imprisonment

    Trump says he’s ‘OK’ with possible imprisonment

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    Days after he became the first former president convicted of a crime in U.S. history, Donald Trump said he would be “OK” with house arrest or jail.

    But the presumptive 2024 Republican presidential nominee warned that “it’d be tough for the public to take,” adding: “At a certain point there’s a breaking point.”


    What You Need To Know

    • Days after he became the first former president convicted of a crime in U.S. history, Donald Trump said he would be “OK” with house arrest or jail
    • But the presumptive 2024 Republican presidential nominee warned “it’d be tough for the public to take” and “at a certain point there’s a breaking point”
    • Trump’s warning comes as multiple media outlets have reported about threats of violence towards the judge, the district attorney and the 12 jurors who voted to convict him on 34 felony counts of falsifying business records in his criminal hush-money trial in New York City last week
    • The judge scheduled sentencing for July 11, with both the prosecution and defense expected to make their case in court filings in the interim
    • Each count of falsifying business records is punishable by up to four years behind bars, but it’s possible that Trump will get only fines or probation. Trump’s attorneys say they will appeal regardless


    “I’m OK with it,” Trump said at his Bedminister, N.J., golf club when asked by a host of Fox News’ “Fox & Friends” about facing possible imprisonment. “I don’t know that the public would stand it.”

    “I think it’d be tough for the public to take,” the former president said in the interview which aired Sunday. “You know, at a certain point there’s a breaking point.”

    Trump’s warning comes as multiple media outlets have reported about threats of violence — including on Trump’s social media network Truth Social — towards the judge, the district attorney and the 12 jurors who voted to convict him on 34 felony counts of falsifying business records in his criminal hush-money trial in New York City last week. Trump himself frequently attacked Judge Juan Merchan, Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg, witnesses and the judge’s daughter in public remarks and social media posts.

    Merchan scheduled sentencing for July 11, with both the prosecution and defense expected to make their case in court filings in the interim. Each count of falsifying business records is punishable by up to four years behind bars, but it’s possible that Trump will get only fines or probation. Beyond the unprecedented complications of imprisoning a former president and current candidate for president months before November’s election, Trump’s attorneys have said they will appeal and will fight the state case all the way to the Supreme Court if they can.

    “We’re going to be vigorously challenging this verdict on appeal. We think we have ample grounds,” said Will Scharf, a Republican candidate for Missouri secretary of state and an attorney for Trump in other cases, on ABC News’ “This Week” on Sunday. “I think Judge Merchan should have clearly recused, I think he was irretrievably biased and I think that came through in decisions throughout the conduct of this trial.”

    “I don’t think President Trump is going to end up being subjected to any sentence whatsoever,” he later added.

    But Trump’s lead trial attorney in the Manhattan case, former federal prosecutor Todd Blanche, acknowledged in an interview with The Associated Press this weekend that Trump may face jail time.

    “On the one hand, it would be extraordinary to send a 77-year-old to prison for a case like this. A first-time offender who was also president of the United States, I mean, I think almost unheard of,” Blanche said, while noting the “highly publicized” nature of the case and Trump’s three other yet-to-be-resolved prosecutions may weigh against his favor. “It’s going to be a very, I think, contentious sentencing where we’re going to obviously argue strenuously for a non-incarceratory sentence.”

    Trump faces a federal prosecution centered on his attempts to stay in power after his 2020 election loss and the Jan. 6, 2021, riot at the U.S. Capitol, as well as a racketeering prosecution in Georgia for his attempts to overturn his 2020 loss there and another federal prosecution in Florida for his handling of classified documents after leaving office. Those cases are in limbo as Trump’s legal team makes appeals and, for the federal cases, awaits word from the Supreme Court on their argument that presidents have total immunity for official acts conducted while in office. 

    In an interview of his own with “Fox News Sunday,” House Speaker Mike Johnson said congressional Republicans would continue investigations into Bragg and special prosecutor Jack Smith, who is overseeing Trump’s federal cases. Johnson said he believes Smith was “abusing his authority” and noted Judiciary Committee Chair Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, is trying to get Bragg and another Manhattan prosecutor to testify at Congress later this month.

    “We have to fight back and we will with everything in our arsenal, but we’ll do that within the confines of the rule of law,” Johnson said. “We’re not going to tolerate this you had and at the end of the day, people are losing their faith in our system of justice itself. And that’s a serious threat.”

    After Trump was arrested and arraigned last April, Bragg’s offices received racist emails, death threats and two packages containing white powder. Last August, the FBI killed a Utah man during an attempted arrest for violent threats to President Joe Biden, Bragg and others. The Long Island home of another New York judge overseeing Trump’s civil fraud trial received a bomb threat in January. 

    During the Manhattan criminal trial, Merchan hit Trump with a gag order preventing him from publicly addressing witnesses, jurors, court staff, Bragg’s staff and Merchan’s daughter, a Democratic operative who came under attack by Trump and his allies. Bragg and Merchan themselves were not protected by the order. Trump was held in contempt of court, fined $10,000 and threatened with jail time for violating the gag order ten times.

    Adapting to the gag order, Trump invited campaign surrogates, vice presidential hopefuls and members of Congress — including Johnson — to do his criticizing and insulting for him in remarks to the press outside the courthouse.

    Scharf argued on Sunday that Trump’s attacks on Merchan, often from a rally stage, and witnesses like his former attorney Michael Cohen shouldn’t factor into the sentencing.

    “I think it’s really important to note that President Trump is running for president of the United States of America and he has an absolute constitutional right to comment on matters of public importance,” Scharf said. “I think the fact that he labored under a gag order for as long as he did, was manifestly unjust… and I don’t see how anyone can really poke holes at that.”

    In his Fox News interview, Trump said the guilty verdicts were “tougher” on his family than him.

    “They’ve good people, all of them, everyone. I have a wonderful wife who has to listen to this stuff all the time. They do that for this reason. They do that, all these salacious names that they put in of these people. And I’m not even allowed to defend myself because of a gag order,” Trump said. “She’s fine, but I think it’s very hard for her. I mean, she’s fine. But it’s, you know, she has to read all this crap.”

    Trump was convicted of falsifying business records to cover up payments made during the 2016 campaign to adult film actress Stormy Daniels who testified she had an affair with the newly married businessman in 2006. Former First Lady Melania Trump did not attend the six-week trial.

    The former president blames much of his legal woes on President Joe Biden, who has no role in local New York City prosecutions and who refrained from commenting on the case publicly until after the verdict. On Saturday, he said “revenge will be success, and I mean that,” but did not rule out wielding the Department of Justice in the way he claims without evidence that Biden does.

    “It’s awfully hard when you see what they’ve done,” Trump said. “These people are so evil.”

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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  • Trump says it’s up to states if they want to prosecute women for abortions

    Trump says it’s up to states if they want to prosecute women for abortions

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    Former President Donald Trump, the 2024 GOP presumptive presidential nominee, said in an interview with TIME magazine he would defer to individual states if they want to enforce abortion laws by monitoring women’s pregnancies and prosecuting them if they get abortions.


    What You Need To Know

    • Former President Donald Trump told Time magazine he would defer to individual states if they want to enforce abortion laws by monitoring women’s pregnancies and prosecuting them if they get abortions
    • When asked if states “should monitor women’s pregnancies so they can know if they’ve gotten an abortion after the ban,” Trump said. “I think they might do that”
    • He wouldn’t say if he believed the federal government should ban the shipping of abortion drugs across state lines
    • On a House GOP proposal to grant full legal rights to embryos, Trump said “I’m leaving everything up to the states. The states are going to be different. Some will say yes. Some will say no”

    “It’s irrelevant whether I’m comfortable or not. It’s totally irrelevant, because the states are going to make those decisions,” Trump said when asked if he would be comfortable with states criminally charging women for getting abortions. “And by the way, Texas is going to be different than Ohio. And Ohio is going to be different than Michigan.”

    Trump has proudly taken credit for appointing three of the six judges who authored the Supreme Court’s Dobbs decision, which undid the 50-year precedent of Roe v. Wade and allowed states to implement abortion bans, but has tempered his enthusiasm for the most severe state laws and proposals, arguing they can be political liabilities as he seeks to return to the White House. 

    But in the TIME interview published Tuesday and conducted over the course of two conversations this month, Trump said his personal level of comfort did not matter and he would leave those decisions up to the states if he were elected president again.

    On a proposal by the Republican Study Committee — which includes around 80% of House Republican lawmakers, including Speaker Mike Jorhnson, R-La. — to grant full legal rights to embryos, Trump said “I’m leaving everything up to the states. The states are going to be different. Some will say yes. Some will say no.” He did not say he would veto federal legislation if it reached his desk, arguing again it would be left up to state governments.

    When asked if states “should monitor women’s pregnancies so they can know if they’ve gotten an abortion after the ban,” Trump said. “I think they might do that” before launching into an aside where he falsely claimed “every legal scholar, Democrat, Republican and other” wanted the question of abortion’s legality sent back to statehouses and state courts.

    Trump described his adopted home state of Florida’s six-week ban, which is set to take effect on Wednesday, as “too severe,” but wouldn’t say how he would vote on a state referendum in November that would undo the ban by codifying abortion rights in the state constitution. He also wouldn’t say if he believed the federal government should ban the shipping of abortion drugs across state lines, telling TIME he would have an announcement on his views within two weeks (and then delaying it another week or two as of Saturday). And he refused to entertain a hypothetical national abortion ban, pushed by many Washington Republicans, by arguing his party would “never” have the 60 votes in the Senate required to pass that kind of legislation.

    “It’s all about the states, it’s about state rights. States’ rights. States are going to make their own determination,” Trump insisted. “And you know what? That’s taken tremendous pressure off everybody… it was ill-defined. And to be honest, the Republicans, a lot of Republicans, didn’t know how to talk about the issue. That issue never affected me.”

    Despite his unwillingness to publicly offer his own distinct opinions on a national abortion ban or  the prosecutions of women who have abortions, Democrats were not willing to let him off the hook on Tuesday morning.

    “All of this cruelty and chaos can be traced back to Donald Trump,” Florida Democratic Party chair Nikki Fried said on a pre-scheduled Democratic National Committee press call. “He repeatedly refused to rule out a national abortion, ban endorsed the prosecution of women and doctors and left the door open to legislation that could rip away access to” in-vitro fertilization.”

    Vice President Kamala Harris will be in Jacksonville, Fla., on Wednesday for a rally focused on the fight for abortion rights. The Biden campaign said she will be there to “continue to make the case that Donald Trump did this.”

    Biden, Harris and Democrats across the country are campaigning against abortion restrictions in the hopes of repeating their electoral successes since Roe v. Wade was overturned in June 2022. A stronger-than-expected showing congressional Democrats that fall and in federal and local special elections since, as well as a successful series of statewide referendums protecting abortion rights in states like Ohio and Kansas, has encouraged them that the issue can be a winner for them this year.

    Biden, a devout Catholic who has long held personal objections to abortion, has said he would work to restore Roe v. Wade as the law of the land.

    “Donald Trump’s latest comments leave little doubt: if elected he’ll sign a national abortion ban, allow women who have an abortion to be prosecuted and punished, allow the government to invade women’s privacy to monitor their pregnancies, and put IVF and contraception in jeopardy nationwide,” Biden’s campaign manager Julie Chavez Rodriguez said in a statement. “The horrific and devastating stories in states like Florida, Texas and Arizona with extreme abortion bans unleashed by Trump overturning Roe are just the beginning if he wins.”

    “Simply put: November’s election will determine whether women in the United States have reproductive freedom, or whether Trump’s new government will continue its assault to control women’s health care decisions,” she added.

    Polling suggests most Americans agree with Biden and Democrats on the issues, even as the president runs about even with Trump in national polls and lags behind him in key swing states. 

    Two-thirds of Americans, including 67% of independents, would support a federal law codifying the right to an abortion, according to a February poll from the health policy nonprofit KFF. Nearly 60% of respondents said they oppose a 16-week abortion ban. And 41% of women said they trusted Biden more to “move abortion policy in the right direction,” compared to 25% for Trump and 22% who said neither. 

    Last month, Fox News’ polling outfit found a record high number of voters — 59% —  believe abortion should be legal in all or most cases. Compared to April 2022, the poll found double-digit increases in support for the legal right to an abortion among voters 65 and older, conservatives, Republicans and white evangelical Christians. Majorities opposed six-week and 15-week abortion bans.

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  • EPA imposes first-ever national limit for ‘forever chemicals’ in drinking water

    EPA imposes first-ever national limit for ‘forever chemicals’ in drinking water

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    On Wednesday, the Biden administration and the Environmental Protection Agency announced a new national standard that will limit the levels of toxic “forever chemicals” linked to cancers and other diseases in Americans’ drinking water.

    It’s the first time a limit has been imposed on PFAS, or per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances, which often contaminate the water, soil, food and air near industrial and chemical plants. PFAS chemicals are hazardous because they don’t degrade in the environment, lingering and contributing to health issues such as low birth weight and kidney cancer.


    What You Need To Know

    • On Wednesday, the Biden administration and the Environmental Protection Agency announced a new national standard that would limit the levels of toxic “forever chemicals” linked to cancers and other diseases in Americans’ drinking water
    • It’s the first time a limit has been imposed on PFAS, or per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances, which are often contaminating the water, soil, food and air near industrial and chemical plants
    • The EPA  says it will reduce exposure for 100 million people and prevent thousands of illnesses, including cancer. Utilities groups, however, say the EPA is underestimating the rule’s cost and overestimating its benefits
    • The EPA also announced $1 billion in new funding to help water systems across the country — including private wells — test and treat their water supply

    The new rule, the Biden administration claims, will protect around 100 million people and “prevent thousands of premature deaths and tens of thousands of serious illnesses” and protect infants and children from harmful impacts on their immune systems and development.

    “For decades, PFAS, or forever chemicals, have been widely used in industry and consumer products,” EPA Administrator Michael Regan said on a press call Tuesday. “They can be found in everything from nonstick cookware to cleaning and personal care products. There’s no doubt that these chemicals have been important for certain industries and consumer uses. But there’s also no doubt that many of these chemicals can be harmful to our health and our environment.

    “These forever chemicals can accumulate in the body over time, and long-term exposure to certain types of PFAS have been linked to serious illnesses, including cancer, liver damage and high cholesterol,” he added.

    Between 6% and 10% of the country’s 66,000 public drinking water systems may be affected by this rule, meaning they will have five years to implement water treatment plans — including the installation of new filtration technologies. EPA officials said they will work closely with local and state-level drinking water agencies to guide them through the testing and, if necessary, treatment processes.

    The new rule is enforceable through the long-standing Safe Drinking Water Act, which empowers the EPA and states to take legal action and fine utilities if they are out of compliance. It’s the first new standard for drinking water contaminants since 1996.

    The EPA also announced $1 billion in new funding, drawn from the $1.2 trillion Bipartisan Infrastructure Law signed in 2021, to help water systems across the country — including private wells — test and treat their water supply.

    Regan and White House Council on Environmental Quality Chair Brenda Mallory were set to officially announce the new national standard in Fayetteville, North Carolina, where the drinking water source for 1 million people has been contaminated with forever chemicals from the local Chemours chemical plant where fluoropolymers are produced. Used in electronics, airplanes, cars and other products, a well-known fluoropolymer is known by the brand name Teflon (which is produced by another company).

    “We asked for this because we know science-based standards for PFAS and other compounds are desperately needed,” North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper, a Democrat, said in a statement Wednesday. Before leading the EPA, Regan was North Carolina’s top environmental official.

    Utility groups warn the rules will cost tens of billions of dollars and fall hardest on small communities with fewer resources. Legal challenges are sure to follow.

    The new regulation is “going to throw public confidence in drinking water into chaos,” said Mike McGill, president of WaterPIO, a water industry communications firm.

    The American Water Works Association, an industry group, said it supports the development of PFAS limits in drinking water but argues the EPA’s rule has big problems. The agency underestimated its high cost, which can’t be justified for communities with low levels of PFAS, and it’ll raise customer water bills, the association said. Plus, there aren’t enough experts and workers — and supplies of filtration material are limited.

    But the Biden administration said the new rule is vital to ensuring every American has access to clean drinking water. Officials framed it as part of President Joe Biden’s larger effort to put the country on the road to cutting the cancer death rate in half by 2047. Biden lost his eldest son, Beau Biden, to cancer in 2015. 

    “Studies have shown that over 30 percent of cancers diagnosed today could be prevented through methods like decreasing environmental and toxic exposures to carcinogens,” as well as making lifestyle changes, the president wrote in a proclamation last month. “Beating cancer is personal to my family, as it is to millions of families across America and around the world.

    “Ending cancer is the kind of big and ambitious goal that America has always embraced,” Biden continued. “Let us recommit to this vital work.”

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  • Biden lays out ambitious agenda in fiery State of the Union speech

    Biden lays out ambitious agenda in fiery State of the Union speech

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    “Let me close with this,” President Joe Biden said as he wrapped up his fiery State of the Union speech, his last before November’s election, which will be an all but certain rematch between himself and former President Donald Trump, the Republican frontrunner who has a thrall on the party.

    He delivered the line to cheers from Republicans in the room, and jokingly threw up his fists as if to challenge the nearly 270 GOP House and Senate lawmakers in the room — some of whom, throughout his hour-plus speech, booed, jeered and at least one shouted out “liar!”

    Biden then addressed his old Republican friend and colleague, South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham, and quipped: “I know you don’t want to hear any more, Lindsey, but I’ve got to say a few more things,” to laughter, grabbing back the attention of the room.

    “I know I may not look like it, but I’ve been around a while,” he joked. “When you get to be my age, certain things become clearer than ever.”

    “I know the American story,” Biden continued. “Again and again I’ve seen the contest between competing forces in the battle for the soul of our nation, between those who want to pull America back to the past and those who want to move America into the future. My lifetime has taught me to embrace freedom and democracy. A future based on core values that have defined America: honesty, decency, dignity, equality, to respect everyone, to give everyone a fair shot, to give hate no safe harbor.”

    “Now some other people my age see a different story,” Biden continued, one of the last references he made to his predecessor without ever mentioning him by name. “The American story of resentment, revenge and retribution.”

    “That’s not me,” he added, underscoring the contrast between himself and Trump and pushing for a note of optimism. “My fellow Americans, the issue facing our nation isn’t how old we are, it’s how old our ideas are. Hate, anger, revenge, retribution are the oldest of ideas. But you can’t lead America with ancient ideas that only take us back. To lead America, the land of possibilities, you need a vision for the future of what America can and should be.”

    The president touched on several key themes throughout his 67-minute speech. He charged that his predecessor and likely November opponent “derailed” a bipartisan border bill for political gain. He vowed to restore the provisions of Roe v. Wade if Americans elect a Congress in favor of abortion rights. He condemned threats to democracy at home and abroad. He didn’t shy away when a conservative firebrand challenged him to invoke the name of a nursing student killed by a non-U.S. citizen. He called for an assault weapons ban, higher taxes on the wealthiest Americans and corporations and laid out an ambitious list of policy proposals. 

    All the hallmarks of a campaign speech, complete with chants of “four more years,” jokes and jabs at his opponents, and, indeed, the occasional gaffe. 

    Here are takeaways from Biden’s State of the Union:

    Defending democracy at home and abroad: Jan. 6 and the Russia-Ukraine war

    President Joe Biden points to Sweden’s Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson, as delivers the State of the Union address to a joint session of Congress at the U.S. Capitol, Thursday March 7, 2024, in Washington, as Vice President Kamala Harris and House Speaker Mike Johnson of La., watch. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik)

    President Joe Biden made it a point in the first part of his speech to address threats to democracy, both those around the world and right here at home. 

    Right out of the gate, he called on Congress to pass funding to support Ukraine as it repels Vladimir Putin’s invasion while taking aim at Trump’s recent comments about NATO, where the former president said he would allow Russia “to do whatever the hell they want” to member countries who don’t pay their obligations to the alliance.

    Biden has been trying for months to secure a new funding package for Ukraine, and U.S. aid to Kyiv ran out earlier this year. Last month, the Senate passed a $95.3 billion foreign aid bill that would include $60 billion for Ukraine, but the Republican-led House has not taken up the legislation.

    “Ukraine can stop [Russian President Vladimir] Putin if we stand with Ukraine and provide the weapons they need to defend themselves,” Biden said. “That is all Ukraine is asking. They’re not asking for American soldiers.

    “We have to stand up to Putin,” he added. “Send me a bipartisan national security bill.”

    Biden said “history is watching” and that if the U.S. abandons Ukraine, it would put Ukraine, Europe and the free world at risk.

    The president had a message for Putin: “We will not walk away. We will not bow down. I will not bow down.”

    Biden also sought to draw contrast between former President Ronald Reagan, a conservative icon, and ex-President Donald Trump, whom Biden is set to square off against in a general election rematch in November. 

    He said Reagan famously told former Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev in 1987 to “tear down this wall,” referring to the Berlin Wall.

    “Now my predecessor, a former Republican president, tells Putin ‘do whatever the hell you want,’” Biden said. “That’s a quote. A former president actually said that, bowing down to a Russian leader. I think it’s outrageous, it’s dangerous, and it’s unacceptable.”

    He then moved on to threats to U.S. democracy, not mincing words when he brought up the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol, nor did he shy away from who he thinks is responsible.

    “Jan. 6 lies about the 2020 election and the plots to steal the election pose the gravest threat to U.S. democracy since the civil war,” President Biden said.

    Calling former President Trump, his once and (likely) future election opponent, “my predecessor” without naming him by name, Biden said he would not bury the truth about the day rioters stormed the capitol on behalf of Trump seeking to overturn an election that Biden won.

    “Here’s the simple truth: You can’t love your country only when you win.”

    He called on all Americans “without regard to party to join together and defend democracy” against all threats foreign and domestic.

    Biden calls on Congress to protect IVF, bashes Trump, GOP on Roe reversal

    Supreme Court Justices and members of Congress, listen as President Joe Biden delivers his State of the Union address to a joint session of Congress, at the Capitol in Washington, Thursday, March 7, 2024. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

    Biden called on Congress to “guarantee the right” to in vitro fertilization and bashed former President Donald Trump for “bragging” about overturning Roe v. Wade. 

    “To my friends across the aisle, don’t keep families waiting any longer, guarantee the right to IVF nationwide,” Biden said. 

    The president highlighted the story of one of the first lady’s guests, Latorya Beasley, a woman from Bringingham, Alabama who had to stop IVF treatments for her second baby when the state supreme court ruled frozen embryos were considered children, putting access to the fertility treatment in question across the state. 

    Biden said Beasley’s circumstance was “unleashed by a supreme court decision overturning Roe v. Wade.”

    “Unless Congress acts, it could happen again,” he said. 

    The president then went on to promise that he would fight for abortion access if he is given a Congress “that supports the right to choose.” 

    “If you, the American people, send me a congress that supports the right to choose, I promise you I’ll restore Roe v. Wade as the law of the land again,” he said. 

    The president went on to slam Trump for his role in Roe’s reversal, again without mentioning him by name. The former president appointed three of the Supreme Court justices who were in the majority that overturned Roe. 

    “Many of you in this chamber and my predecessor are promising to pass a national ban on reproductive freedom,” Biden said. “My god, what freedom else would you take away?” 

    Biden also pointed out one of the first lady’s other guests: Kate Cox, the Texas woman who had to leave her state to get an abortion due to Texas’ restrictive laws on the practice despite her health being in danger.

    “What her family went through should have never happened as well,” he said. 

    Since the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in June 2022, sparking abortion bans and restrictions in Republican-led states across the country, Democrats have sought to put the issue of abortion front and center. Democrats have credited the issue for helping them pull off a better-than-expected showing in the 2022 midterms and notch some key victories in the 2023 off-year elections. 

    This year, a new front in the reproductive freedom message opened for Democrats when the Alabama Supreme Court ruled that frozen embryos are considered children, leading experts to warn of potential major implications for in vitro fertilization. 

    Some Republicans have rushed to say they support IVF following the Alabama high court’s decision and on Wednesday the state legislature passed a bill protecting IVF treatments. 

    The first family inviting Cox and Beasley was a clear display that Biden will continue to put the issue in the spotlight as he seeks another four years in the Oval Office. 

    Biden jabs Republicans over federal deficit, vows to lower costs

    President Joe Biden holds a Laken Riley Botton as delivers the State of the Union address to a joint session of Congress at the U.S. Capitol, Thursday March 7, 2024, in Washington, while Vice President Kamala Harris and House Speaker Mike Johnson of La., watch. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik)

    Biden, who entered office as the COVID-19 pandemic entered its second year, boasted of a U.S. economy that has made major strides since the virus kept millions at home, out of work and fearful of both disease and economic woes.

    “Remember the fear. Record job losses. Remember the spike in crime and the murder rate. A raging virus that would take more than one million American lives and leave millions of loved ones behind. A mental health crisis of isolation and loneliness,” Biden said. “A president, my predecessor, who failed the most basic duty. Any President owes the American people the duty to care. That is unforgivable.”

    “It doesn’t make the news but in thousands of cities and towns the American people are writing the greatest comeback story never told,” he added.

    He referenced unemployment being at a 50-year low and 16 million Americans who have started small businesses during his administration, as well as job growth for Black, Hispanic and Asian-Americans and in the manufacturing sector.

    He also bragged about the CHIPS and Science Act, passed in 2021, that set aside tens of billions for domestic semiconductor production after pandemic shortages due to supply chain constraints and reliance on foreign sources. And he pointed to the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law launching tens of thousands of projects across the country to refurbish and build roads, bridges, ports, airports, public transit systems and other key infrastructure.

    Biden gave a shout out to UAW President Shawn Fain, specifically referencing thousands of jobs created at an electric car battery plant in Belvedere, Ill., claiming pressure from his administration convinced automaker Stellantis to keep and expand their operations in-country. Biden became the first president to join a picket line when he marched with UAW workers in Michigan last year.

    “The middle class built this country, and unions built the middle class,” he said, using one of his oft-repeated refrains. “When Americans get knocked down, we get back up.”

    Biden said his administration has cut the federal deficit by $1 trillion and signed a bipartisan deal to cut another $1 trillion from the deficit in the next decade.

    “It’s my goal to cut the federal levels another $3 trillion by making big corporations and the very wealthy finally begin to pay their fair share,” he said. 

    The Congressional Budget Office projected last month that the federal deficit will grow 63% over the next ten years from $1.6 trillion in 2024 to $2.6 trillion in 2034.

    “I’m a capitalist,” Biden said. “You can make $1 million bucks, that’s great. Just pay your fair share in taxes. A fair tax code is how we invest to make this country great.”

    Biden said the “last administration” had enacted $2 trillion in tax cuts that “overwhelmingly benefited” the top 1% and big corporations and exploded the federal deficit.

    “They added more to the national debt than any presidential term in American history.”

    As he has so many times over the past four years, Biden harkened back to his father’s kitchen table — a table, he said, where trickle-down economics didn’t trickle down to his family. 

    “I’m determined to turn things around so the middle class does well, the poor have a way up, and the wealthy still do well. We all do well,” Biden said.

    He didn’t just recall his administration’s moves to save Americans money, but vowed to expand on them.

    Biden promised to expand on Medicare’s ability to negotiate lower prescription drug prices, vowing to “cap the cost of insulin at $35 a month for every American who needs it,” then called on the government to give Medicare negotiation power on 500 more drugs over the next 10 years.

    That move, he said, will save taxpayers another $200 billion.

    “I probably shouldn’t say this, but folks, if any of you want to come with me and fly on Air Force 1, we can go to Toronto, Berlin, Moscow — well, maybe not Moscow,” he said, stopping short and chuckling. “Bring your prescription drugs, and I promise you’ll get it for 40% of the cost you’re paying now.”

    He said that he seeks to cap prescription drug costs at $2,000 per year for all Americans, and that he wants to protect and expand the Affordable Care Act — otherwise known as Obamacare, which he joked is “still a very big deal.”

    Beyond prescription drugs, Biden said he sought to make permanent the $800 per year working family tax credits, that he seeks to provide an annual, $400 monthly tax credit to help homebuyers pay for mortgages on a first home “or trade up for a little more space.”

    He said the White House will seek to eliminate title insurance fees for federally backed mortgages, to help people save on home refinancing. 

    Biden called on Congress to pass a plan to renovate and build 2 million affordable homes and bring rents down. And, he said, he wants to give public school teachers a raise, which drove much of the joint session of Congress to their feet.

    Biden announces port to facilitate aid into Gaza, emphasizes two-state solution

    House Speaker Mike Johnson of La., left, and Vice President Kamala Harris applaud as President Joe Biden delivers the State of the Union address to a joint session of Congress at the U.S. Capitol, Thursday March 7, 2024, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon, Pool)

    Biden called for Israel to allow more aid into Gaza and announced the U.S. will build a “temporary pier” to facilitate the flow of additional assistance into the Palestinian territory. 

    Biden noted the pier will enable a “massive increase” of aid into Gaza while emphasizing “No U.S. boots will be on the ground.” 

    “Israel must do its part,” Biden said. “Israel must allow more aid into Gaza and ensure humanitarian workers aren’t caught in the crossfire.”

    The president, who has recently put additional stress on saying not enough aid is reaching civilians in the territory, went on to say he had a message for Israeli leadership: “Humanitarian assistance cannot be a secondary consideration or a bargaining chip.” 

    Biden has faced pressure from abroad and at home over his continued support of Israel as the civilian death toll in Gaza has risen and the humanitarian crisis has worsened amid the war.

    The president on Thursday reiterated his belief that Israel has the right to defend itself against Hamas while noting that it also has the responsibility to protect innocent civilians in Gaza. 

    “The last five months have been gut wrenching for so many people, for the Israeli people, for the Palestinian people and so many here in America,” Biden said.

    He noted more than 30,000 Palestinians have been killed since Oct. 7, most of whom, he said, are not Hamas. 

    The president acknowledged the families of hostages still being held by Hamas who were in the audience as the guests of some lawmakers at Thursday’s address. 

    “I pledge to all the families that I will not rest until we bring all of your loved ones home,” he said, also mentioning Americans Paul Whelan and Evan Gershkovich, who are jailed in Russia. 

    Biden said he is “working around the clock” to put in place a new cease-fire deal that would facilitate the release of the hostages and reiterated that the “only real solution” to the conflict is a two-state solution. 

    “I say this as a lifelong supporter of Israel,” Biden said, adding “my entire career, no one has a stronger record on Israel than I do.” 

    Biden, Republicans spar over border security

    Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., watches as President Joe Biden delivers the State of the Union address to a joint session of Congress at the U.S. Capitol, Thursday March 7, 2024, in Washington. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik)

    The president got into a spirited back-and-forth with Republicans when he urged Congress to pass a border security bill.

    The Senate last month announced a bipartisan agreement to impose tougher immigration and asylum laws and better secure the southwest border. But Republicans quickly panned the plan, at least in part because President Donald Trump urged them to reject it. 

    Biden said the bill had “the toughest set of border security reforms we’ve ever seen,” a comment that was met with jeers from Republicans.

    “You don’t think so?” Biden told Republicans. “Oh, you don’t like that bill, huh? That conservatives got together and said was a good bill? I’ll be darned. That’s amazing.”

    GOP lawmakers who oppose the deal insist it was too weak on border security. 

    Biden said he believes there would be bipartisan support for the legislation if Trump hadn’t pushed against it.

    “He viewed it would be a political win for me and political loser for him,” the president said. “It’s not about him. It’s not about me.”

    At one point, Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., heckled Trump by invoking the name of Laken Riley, the Georgia nursing school student who was killed last month while jogging. The suspect in her death is a man who police say illegally entered the country.

    Greene challenged Biden to say Riley’s name. Biden did not back down, repeating her name. 

    “Laken Riley, an innocent young woman who was killed by an illegal,” Biden said. “That’s right! But how many of the thousands of people are being killed by illegals!”

    “To her parents, I say my heart goes out to you. Having lost children myself, I understand,” he said.

    Biden’s comments on the border created a scene that would have seemed unthinkable several months ago: Democratic lawmakers chanting in support of a border security bill while Republicans sat in their seats shaking their heads in disapproval. 

    “We can fight about fixing the border or we can fix it,” Biden said. “I’m ready to fix it. Send me the border bill now.”

    The president, however, made clear he would not vilify immigrants. 

    “I will not demonize immigrants saying they are poison in the blood of our country,” Biden said, referring to comments made by Trump. “I will not separate families. I will not ban people because of their faith.”

    Biden: ‘We have more to do’ on public safety, mass shootings

    President Joe Biden delivers his State of the Union address to a joint session of Congress, at the Capitol in Washington, Thursday, March 7, 2024. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

    Last year, Biden said, saw the sharpest decrease in the murder rate in American history, and violent crime fell to one of the lowest levels in 50 years.

    “But we have more to do,” he said.

    Biden promised to ramp up federal enforcement of the Violence Against Women Act, first passed in 1994 and — after expiring in 2019 — reauthorized during his administration in 2022, and to further invest in community polcing, community violence intervention and in more mental health workers.

    He noted that he has directed his cabinet to review federal classification on cannabis — which began in 2022 — and that he has repeatedly expunged federal cannabis convictions for simple use or possession of the drug.

    Biden also promised to stop another kind of violence — that of mass shootings, which America has seen with disappointing and increasing regularity. He is demanding, he said, a ban on assault weapons and high-capacity magazines, and demanding the passage of universal background checks on gun sales.

    None of that, he said, violates the Second Amendment, despite the jeers he faced from Republicans in the gallery.

    “I’m proud we beat the NRA when I signed the most significant gun safety law in nearly 30 years, now we must beat the NRA again,” Biden said.

    Biden: ‘There are forces taking us back in time’ on voting rights

    President Joe Biden delivers the State of the Union address to a joint session of Congress at the U.S. Capitol, Thursday March 7, 2024, in Washington. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik)

    Nearly 60 years after the Voting Rights Act was passed, President Joe Biden encouraged Congress to pass further voter protections in the face of “forces taking us back in time.”

    “Voter suppression. Election subversion. Unlimited dark money. Extreme gerrymandering,” Biden said, rattling off aspects of the U.S. electoral system he hopes to reform. “Pass and send me the Freedom to Vote Act and the John Lewis Voting Rights Act!”

    Named for former Rep. John Lewis, R-Ga., who was beaten and bloodied by police on “Bloody Sunday” in Selma, Ala., in 1965, the voting rights legislation Biden wants Congress to pass would require states and localities with histories of violating Americans’ voting rights to receive federal approval before changing election laws.

    Republicans on the local, state and federal level have moved to restrict access to voting, inspired by false conspiracy theories about election fraud and rigging.

    Betty May Fikes, who marched with Lewis and other civil rights activists in Selma in 1965, was in attendance at the State of the Union and received a shout out for 

    “A daughter of gospel singers and preachers, she sang songs of prayer and protest on that Bloody Sunday,” Biden said, continuing “to help shake the nation’s conscience. Five months later, the Voting Rights Act was signed into law.”

    “But 59 years later, there are forces taking us back in time,” he added.

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  • Biden, Trump cruise to victory in Super Tuesday contests

    Biden, Trump cruise to victory in Super Tuesday contests

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    Anyone expecting a major surprise on Super Tuesday was likely to be disappointed — unless you were betting on an upset in American Samoa.


    What You Need To Know

    • President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump won the vast majority of the contests held on Super Tuesday, receiving hundreds of delegates on their way to cementing a likely 2020 election rematch in November
    • Former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley won her first state victory of the 2024 campaign, scoring an upset over Trump in Vermont
    • There were several other prominent down-ballot races on the Super Tuesday docket, including the North Carolina governor’s race, which will feature Democratic Attorney General Josh Stein and Republican Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson squaring off in a purple state both parties are hoping to win in November
    • In the race to replace the late U.S. Sen. Dianne Feinstein, California Rep. Adam Schiff, who became a household name during the Trump administration as a prominent critic of the former president, will face off against Steve Garvey, a former player for the Los Angeles Dodgers and San Diego Padres running for the Republican nomination


    President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump, the Democratic and Republican frontrunners, respectively, cruised to victory in the vast majority of the Super Tuesday contests, which accounted for nearly a third of the overall delegates needed to clinch the nomination.

    While neither candidate received enough delegates to clinch, both frontrunners are well on their way to cementing a 2020 election rematch in November, leaving any potential long shot challengers in the dust.

    The night was no doubt a disappointment for former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley, who did score an upstate over Trump by winning Vermont.

    The former president, on the other hand, won contests in Maine, Massachusetts, Virginia, North Carolina, Tennessee, Alabama, Minnesota, Arkansas, Oklahoma, Texas, Colorado, Utah and California. A Republican primary in Alaska had not yet been called as of midnight Wednesday. 

    “They call it Super Tuesday for a reason. This is a big one,” Trump said in remarks at his Florida estate, later adding: “This was an amazing night, an amazing day.”

    Trump attacked Biden over his usual stump topics, including the situation at the U.S.-Mexico border, while contending that his victories on Tuesday will help to unify the party.

    “We have a great Republican party with tremendous talent and we want to have unity and we are going to have the unity and it will happen very quickly. I’ve been saying lately, success will bring unity to the country.”

    Despite Trump’s calls for unity, Haley’s Vermont victory — her first state win in the election cycle, just days after she won the Washington, D.C, primary — denied Trump a 50-state sweep in the Republican primary. But she was unable to pick up other states that might have offered her more favorable demographics, like Vermont and Maine.

    Her campaign’s future is unclear after Tuesday, with no public events scheduled as of yet. A spokesperson for Haley’s campaign seemed to reject those calls for unity.

    “Unity is not achieved by simply claiming ‘we’re united.’ Today, in state after state, there remains a large block of Republican primary voters who are expressing deep concerns about Donald Trump,” said Haley national spokesperson Olivia Perez-Cubas. “That is not the unity our party needs for success. Addressing those voters’ concerns will make the Republican Party and America better.”

    Biden similarly barnstormed the evening’s contests, winning all of the states up for grabs, including Vermont, though he lost to an unknown challenger in American Samoa’s caucuses, a contest in which less than 100 people participated. (Biden lost the contest by 11 votes.)

    “Tonight’s results leave the American people with a clear choice: Are we going to keep moving forward or will we allow Donald Trump to drag us backwards into the chaos, division, and darkness that defined his term in office?” Biden asked in a statement Tuesday night, painting his 2020 opponent and likely 2024 foe as an enemy of both progress and American democracy writ large.

    “Today, millions of voters across the country made their voices heard — showing that they are ready to fight back against Donald Trump’s extreme plan to take us backwards,” Biden said. “My message to the country is this: Every generation of Americans will face a moment when it has to defend democracy. Stand up for our personal freedom. Stand up for the right to vote and our civil rights.

    “To every Democrat, Republican, and independent who believes in a free and fair America: This is our moment. This is our fight. Together, we will win,” he vowed.

    Vice President Kamala Harris, Biden’s running mate, called the results “an energizing moment for our campaign.”

    “Americans of all backgrounds are showing that they sense the urgency of this election, and that they are ready to stand with President Biden and me in this fight to protect our fundamental freedoms,” she said. “Donald Trump has vowed to be a dictator on Day One. He has promised to weaponize the Department of Justice. And he has bragged that he is proud of his role in robbing women of their reproductive freedom. He poses a fundamental threat to our democracy, and he must be stopped.”

    Signaling the unusual nature of this primary election, Biden and Trump campaigned on the same day last week at the U.S.-Mexico border, trading blame for the current state of immigration, rather than stumping in states holding primary contests.

    And after Super Tuesday, both candidates will be heading to battleground states: Trump and Biden will both be heading to Georgia on Saturday for another dueling visit. Biden will also be traveling to Philadelphia on Friday, while Vice President Harris will be heading to Wisconsin, Nevada and Arizona “in the coming days.”

    There were several other prominent down-ballot races on the Super Tuesday docket, including the North Carolina governor’s race, which will feature Democratic Attorney General Josh Stein and Republican Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson squaring off in a purple state both parties are hoping to win in November.

    In the race to replace the late U.S. Sen. Dianne Feinstein, California Rep. Adam Schiff, who became a household name during the Trump administration as a prominent critic of the former president, will face off against Steve Garvey, a former player for the Los Angeles Dodgers and San Diego Padres running for the Republican nomination.

    California has a top two primary system, meaning that the two candidates who receive the most votes regardless of party affiliation make it to the general election ballot. While Republicans have not won a U.S. Senate race in California since the 1980s, Garvey, a GOP challenger with major name recognition in the Golden State, is hoping to change that.

    There was also a tight Democratic primary to challenge Texas Sen. Ted Cruz. The Republican will face U.S. Rep. Colin Allred, a former NFL player and moderate Democrat who broke with his party over President Biden’s handling of the U.S.-Mexico border.

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  • Biden, Trump visit border; antisemitism gets attention

    Biden, Trump visit border; antisemitism gets attention

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    Both President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump visited the border on Thursday, and lawmakers in Tallahassee passed a bill to combat antisemitism. 


    Trump and Biden visit the border

    Former President Donald Trump spoke alongside Texas and border patrol officials near the U.S.-Mexico border on Thursday, describing the humanitarian crisis there as a “war” and spouted false conspiracy theories that the flow of migrants into the country was an “invasion” orchestrated by President Joe Biden to import “entire columns of fighting-age men.”

    Biden is “allowing thousands and thousands of people to come in from China, Iran, Yemen, the Congo, Syria and a lot of other nations. Many that nations are not very friendly to us,” Trump baselessly charged. “He’s transported the entire columns of fighting-age men and they’re all at a certain age and you look at them, and I said, ‘They look like warriors to me, something’s going on.’ It’s bad.”

    The baseless claims and insinuations echo the white supremacist conspiracy theory known as “The Great Replacement.” The theory, which posits Democrats and other elites are intentionally bringing nonwhite migrants into the country to “replace” white Americans and sow chaos, has inspired racist mass shootings with death tolls in the hundreds in the U.S. and across the world in the last decade.

    “I think they’re looking for votes, they’re looking for something, nobody’s really been able to tell me how anybody could want it,” Trump charged, before stumbling through a commentary on non-English speaking migrants. “Allowing millions of people from places unknown, from countries unknown, who don’t speak languages — we have languages coming into our country, we have nobody that even speaks those languages. They’re, they’re truly foreign languages. Nobody speaks them.”

    Trump and his campaign have pledged that his second administration will orchestrate the largest deportation operations in U.S. history, attempt to end the constitutional right to birthright citizenship and bring troops home from abroad to be deployed at the southern border — including using the U.S. Navy to “impose a full naval embargo on the cartels,” as his campaign said this week.

    The 2024 GOP frontrunner’s visit to the border came simultaneously to Biden’s visit to Brownsville, Texas, where he also addressed border and immigration issues and appealed to Republicans — including Trump — to embrace bipartisan solutions. Trump opposed a bipartisan border deal and helped convince Republicans, including some negotiators, to abandon it earlier this month.

    “Here’s what I would say to Mr. Trump: Instead of playing politics with this issue, instead of telling members of Congress to block this legislation, join me, or I’ll join you, in telling the Congress to pass this bipartisan border security bill,” Biden said Thursday. “We can do it together.”

    “Let’s remember who the heck we work for. We work for the American people. Not the Democratic Party, the Republican Party. The American people,” the president added.

    The proposed deal would have given Biden the authority to shut down the border if the number of migrant crossings in a given day crossed 8,500, or an average of 5,000 over a seven-day period. It also would have provided $20 billion in funding to facilitate the hiring of an additional 1,500 border patrol personnel, 4,300 asylum officers and 100 immigration judges, as well as allocated funds for 100 machines to help detect fentanyl and around $1.4 billion for cities and municipalities struggling to address their community’s ballooning migrant populations, per the White House.

    “Trump said, ‘Blame it on me.’ And so I will. Trump’s need to boost his own fragile political ego has gotten us here with another manufactured logjam,” Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker said on a press call organized by the Biden campaign on Wednesday, quoting Trump directly. “A few weeks ago, there was a chance for a real breakthrough on immigration policy. President Biden and congressional Democrats did what voters say they want from leaders: They sat down at a table with Republicans and negotiated a bipartisan compromise.”

    “But the same Republicans who helped write and were prepared to vote for it suddenly opposed it. Why? Because Donald Trump told them to because Donald Trump doesn’t want a solution,” Pritzker continued.

    Trump spoke at Shelby Park in Eagle Pass, Texas, a park on the Rio Grande where migrants — including children — have died attempting to reach since Gov. Greg Abbott seized it, kicked out U.S. Border Patrol and set up miles of razor wire. The federal government successfully sued to regain access and cut the wire, but Abbott’s administration has continued to defy the Supreme Court order and challenge Biden’s authority. While in Eagle Pass, Trump met with Abbott, border patrol agents and state and local law enforcement officials.

    “Biden is using every tool that he can to tear down the borders that Texas is putting up in our state,” Abbott said on Thursday. “What our National Guard has done, they have sealed off this entire park and taken it over, because this area was being used by the Biden administration to violate the laws of the United States of America.”

    Abbott, Texas National Guard Maj. Gen. Thomas Suelzer and border patrol union president Brandon Judd spoke alongside Trump when he addressed the media after touring the heavily fortified park. Judd described his members, federal employees who answer to Biden administration appointees, as “your agents” to Trump, who has not been president for over three years.

    “Your agents, Mr. President, are pissed. Border Patrol agents are upset that we cannot get the proper policy,” Judd said. “Thank goodness we have a governor like Gov. Abbott. Thank goodness we have somebody that’s willing to run for president of the United States, forgo everything else that he’s been doing to serve the American people.”

    Abbott and Trump both played up the menace of crime from migrants, with the Texas Republican also claiming his state was the subject of an “invasion.” Both referenced rapes, assaults and murders by undocumented immigrants, though the high-profile cases do not reflect years of data and analyses that conclude migrants, regardless of their legal status, commit less crimes than natural-born U.S. citizens.

    “Immigrants are 30% less likely to be incarcerated than are U.S.-born individuals who are white,” a Stanford University report from last year found. The right-wing Cato Institute reported in 2020 that immigrants, regardless of their legal status, were less likely to commit crimes than native-born Americans.

    “This immigrant crime narrative is racist. It’s not true,” California Rep. Robert Garcia said on the Wednesday press call. “Trump is out here saying that we’re poisoning the blood of this country. And the facts actually don’t bear that out.”

    Trump directly addressed the murder of University of Georgia nursing student Laken Riley last week. Police have arrested a Venezuelan migrant who entered the country illegally, but was allowed to stay as his immigration case was processed. Trump and other Republicans have seized on the case as an example of the dangers migrants pose to U.S. citizens. 

    On Thursday, Trump said he had spoken to Riley’s parents.

    “She was a beautiful young woman. She was a great person, best nursing student there was. I spoke to her parents yesterday. They’re incredible people that are devastated beyond belief,” Trump said. “The monster that was charged in the death is an illegal alien migrant who was let into our country and released into our communities by crooked Joe Biden. He’s crooked — I took the name away from Hillary [Clinton]. Because she’s no longer relevant, I guess.”

    According to an AP-NORC poll in January, the share of voters concerned about immigration rose to 35% from 27% last year. Fifty-five percent of Republicans say the government needs to focus on immigration in 2024, while 22% of Democrats listed immigration as a priority. That’s up from 45% and 14%, respectively, from December 2022.

    The number of people who are illegally crossing the U.S. border has been rising for years for complicated reasons that include climate change, war and unrest in other nations, the economy, and cartels that see migration as a cash cow.

    The administration’s approach has been to pair crackdowns at the border with increasing legal pathways for migrants designed to steer people into arriving by plane with sponsors, not illegally on foot to the border.

    Arrests for illegal crossings fell by half in January, but there were record highs in December. The numbers of migrants flowing across the U.S-Mexico border have far outpaced the capacity of an immigration system that has not been substantially updated in decades. Trump and Republicans claim Biden is refusing to act, but absent a law change from Congress, any major policies are likely to be challenged or held up in court.

    “I am an immigrant myself, I came to the U.S. when I was a young kid. I know how difficult it is to go through the immigration process, to become a citizen, to to struggle with poverty and to struggle through the process,” said Garcia, the California Democrat who came to the U.S. from Peru as a young child. “We actually could fix our system, but Donald Trump is not interested in it, so I personally take great offense to the way he characterizes people like myself and my family. And the way he is essentially characterizing essentially going back to a system where he would forcibly remove people like me, like my family from our homes and neighborhoods into detention or to be deported.”

    “It is sick,” Garcia added. 

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    Lawmakers pass antisemitism bill in Tallahassee

    The Florida Legislature unanimously approved legislation Thursday adopting a new definition of antisemitism. 

    The final version of the bill was passed by the House during the first-ever “Israel Day” at the Florida Capitol. The Senate passed its version of the bill on Wednesday.

    The International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance drafted the definition Florida is adopting. If approved, Florida would become the 13th state to do so.

    The legislation’s definition of antisemitism is as follows:

    “Antisemitism is a certain perception of Jews, which may be expressed as hatred toward Jews. Rhetorical and physical manifestations of antisemitism are directed toward Jewish or non-Jewish individuals and/or their property, toward Jewish community institutions and religious facilities.”

    More information on the IHRA definition is available online.

    Supporters say Florida’s legislation empowers prosecutors and police to address hate crimes more effectively.

    The bill, House Bill 148, now awaits Gov. Ron DeSantis’ consideration. 

    “We will continue this fight to tempt down inequality in the State of Florida and raise up those who need to be raised,” said the bill sponsor, Democratic State Rep. Mike Gotlieb.

    Antisemitism nationwide is on the rise, according to the Anti-Defamation League.

    “When conflict erupts in Israel, antisemitic incidents soon follow in the U.S. and globally,” said ADL CEO Jonathan Greenblatt.

    “You can use the definition when there is a hate crime,” said Boynton Beach Democratic State Sen. Lori Berman. “You can use the definition when there’s discrimination.” 

    Despite bipartisan support, at least one lawmaker voiced concern.

    Palm Bay Republican Rep. Randy Fine said he supports the bill, but fears that some local leaders may not utilize it.

    “It will not matter if we don’t demand that they act on these laws as we pass them,” said Fine, a Jewish lawmaker. 

    DeSantis often touts Florida as the “most pro-Israel state” in the nation. 

    To date, he’s embarked upon two Israeli trade missions and provided logistical support to Israel after the Oct. 7 attack. 

    “Florida is doing everything right, and it should be done across the country and across the world,” said Consul General of Israel to Florida, Maor Elbaz-Starinsky. 

    Other pro-Israel legislation this session includes policy boosting security at Jewish schools and a new state holiday — Holocaust Remembrance Day.

    The 2024 Legislative Session ends March 8.

    Short-term spending bill passes both chambers of Congress

    The Senate and the House have both passed another short-term spending measure Thursday that would keep one set of federal agencies operating through March 8 and another set through March 22, narrowly avoiding a shutdown for parts of the federal government that would otherwise kick in Saturday.

    The measure now heads to President Joe Biden’s desk, where he is expected to sign it quickly.

    In a 320 to 99 vote, the House passed a short-term funding agreement to avoid a partial government shutdown Friday. Florida Republicans were divided on the measure. 

    Twelve of the 20 Florida Republicans in the House voted against the short-term spending bill, including Reps. Anna Paulina Luna and Matt Gaetz.

    “If it were up to me, if I was a speaker, I’d say look, we need those 12 standalone appropriations bills, we need to determine exactly where we can make some of those cuts,” Luna said. “And frankly, remember, it’s been a really long time since we’ve balanced the budget.”

    The short-term deal followed a meeting between congressional leaders of both parties with President Joe Biden at the White House earlier this week. It sets new funding deadlines for March 8 and March 22.

    It does not include the $95 billion foreign aid package for wartime funding to Ukraine and Israel that passed the Senate earlier this month.

    The funding agreement also does not include any new border provisions as both Biden and former President Donald Trump took dueling visits to the U.S. Southern Border Thursday.

    House Freedom Caucus members, including Luna, had sought a 1% across the board cut to discretionary spending.

    House Speaker Mike Johnson defended the deal opposed by many in his own party Thursday.

    “The appropriations process is ugly. Democracy is ugly. This is the way it works every year, always has, except that we’ve instituted some new innovations,” Johnson said. “We broke the omnibus fever, right? That’s how Washington has been run for years. We’re trying to turn the aircraft carrier back to real budgeting and spending reform. This was an important thing to break it up into smaller pieces.”

    This is the fourth extension of the government funding deadline since September. Lawmakers say they are hopeful a fifth won’t be needed, and that funding for the full budget year that began five months ago will soon be approved.

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