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Tag: Maddie Gannon

  • Biden, Harris condemn Trump ‘unified Reich’ social media video

    Biden, Harris condemn Trump ‘unified Reich’ social media video

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    Vice President Kamala Harris called a recent social media post referencing a “unified Reich” shared on former President Donald Trump’s account “appalling” as she warned of “extremists” trying to divide the nation while delivering remarks at the SEIU’s quadrennial convention in Philadelphia on Tuesday. 

    Hours later, President Joe Biden condemned the video in a social media post showing him reacting to the video.

    “Is this on his official account?” Biden asks someone off camera, before adding: “A ‘unified Reich?’ That’s Hitler’s language, that’s not America’s.”


    What You Need To Know

    • Vice President Kamala Harris called a recent social media post on former President Donald Trump’s account “appalling” as she warned of “extremists” trying to divide the nation while delivering remarks at the SEIU’s quadrennial convention in Philadelphia on Tuesday 
    • A video posted on Trump’s Truth Social account on Monday that included references to a “unified Reich” among hypothetical news headlines if he wins the election in November
    • Hours later, President Joe Biden condemned the post in a social media video of his own: “A ‘unified Reich?’ That’s Hitler’s language, that’s not America’s.”
    • Harris also used Tuesday remarks in front of members of the Service Employees International Union to boast about the Biden administration’s record on setting minimum staffing standards in federally-funded nursing homes, banning noncompete clauses and making it easier for workers to organize on federal property

    Biden closes by saying that Trump “cares about holding on to power.”

    “I care about you,” he adds.

    Aat a fundraiser in Boston on Tuesday, Biden similarly hammered Trump over the “unified Reich” video, attacking his previous rhetoric echoing Nazi Germany and adding that losing the 2020 election “unhinged” the ex-president.

    “Trump and the MAGA Republicans are in disarray,” Biden said. “It’s clear when he lost in 2020 something snapped in this guy. I mean, really, there’s something different. He just can’t accept the fact that he lost.”

    “The threat that Trump poses is greater in the second term than it was in the first,” the president added, per the pool. “He’s only obsessed with one thing about losing in 2020. It unhinged him. I meant it. The guy’s a little unhinged.”

    “Trump isn’t running to lead America,” Biden later added. “He’s running on revenge. He really is.”

    Harris made a similar case at the Pennsylvania Convention Center earlier Tuesday, saying that “in this moment, extremists are trying to divide our nation and we see them as they encourage xenophobia and hate.”

    She then went on to discuss the video shared on Trump’s Truth Social account on Monday that included references to a “unified Reich” among hypothetical news headlines if he wins the election in November.

    “This kind of rhetoric is unsurprising coming from the former president and it is appalling and we got to tell him who we are,” Harris said. “And once again, it shows our freedoms and our very democracy are at stake.” 

    The headline appears among messages flashing across the screen such as “Trump wins!!” and “Economy booms!” Other headlines appear to be references to World War I. The word “Reich” is often largely associated with Nazi Germany’s Third Reich, though the references in the video Trump shared appear to be a reference to the formation of the modern pan-German nation, unifying smaller states into a single Reich, or empire, in 1871.

    On Tuesday morning, the post of the video had been deleted.

    “This was not a campaign video, it was created by a random account online and reposted by a staffer who clearly did not see the word, while the President was in court,” Karoline Leavitt, Trump’s campaign press secretary, told AP News in a statement, referencing the former president’s hush money trial taking place on Monday in New York. 

    “In the face of these attacks, let us remind each other of our collective power,” Harris said on Tuesday. “Let us continue to stand against those who dare to attack our freedoms.” 

    Harris also used Tuesday remarks in front of members of the Service Employees International Union to boast about the Biden administration’s record on setting minimum staffing standards in federally-funded nursing homes, banning noncompete clauses and making it easier for workers to organize on federal property. 

    The vice president also noted that the administration raised the minimum wage for federal contractors to $15 an hour and will continue to fight to lift the wage for all workers. 

    “November is gonna be about two choices, so let’s be clear about that, let’s be clear about that,” the vice president said. “And whereas the last administration buried our country in debt to pay for tax cuts for billionaires, we are helping dig families out of debt by telling billionaires to pay their fair share.”

    Harris praised the labor group – which consists of about two million members – for being on the “frontlines of every major expansion of rights to the American people” since its founding. 

    “When Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. marched on Washington, the workers of SEIU marched by his side to demand both racial justice and economic justice,” Harris said. “And long before others, this union, this union, fought, fought to protect the rights and freedoms, the basic dignity of women, immigrants, people with disabilities and LGBTQ Americans.”

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    Spectrum News Staff

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  • U.S. moves to end federal coal leases in Powder River Basin

    U.S. moves to end federal coal leases in Powder River Basin

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    The Biden administration proposed an end to new coal leasing on federal land in the nation’s largest coal producing region, a move aimed at curtailing greenhouse gas emissions when it’s burned at power plants.  


    What You Need To Know

    • The Biden administration proposed an end to new coal leasing on federal land in the nation’s largest coal producing region, a move aimed at curtailing greenhouse gas emissions when it’s burned at power plants 
    • The decision by the federal Bureau of Land Management would impact the Powder River Basin in Wyoming and Montana
    • It comes in response to a 2022 federal court order directing the BLM to research the effect of two land management plans in the region on public health and climate change
    • The proposal would not impact existing federal leases in the region and the agency specifically noted coal production is expected to continue at mines in Montana and Wyoming until 2060 and 2041 respectively but the move recieved swift pushback from the GOP 

    The decision by the federal Bureau of Land Management would impact the Powder River Basin in Wyoming and Montana. It comes in response to a 2022 federal court order directing the BLM to research the effects of two land management plans in the region on public health and climate change after it found such impacts were previously not given enough consideration. 

    The proposal would not impact existing federal leases in the region and the agency specifically noted coal production is expected to continue at mines in Montana and Wyoming until 2060 and 2041 respectively. 

    The plan will enter a 30-day public protest period before officially approved. 

    The move was met with swift pushback from the right, including from Wyoming’s entire congressional delegation, which blasted the proposal almost immediately after its unveiling.  

    “President Biden continues to wage war on Wyoming’s coal communities and families,” Sen. John Barrasso, R-Wyo., said in a statement. “This will kill jobs and could cost Wyoming hundreds of millions of dollars used to pay for public schools, roads, and other essential services in our communities.”

    “This decision to eviscerate Wyoming’s coal production will impact every American’s access to affordable and reliable energy, and only benefits the despots and dictators that this administration now relies on to meet our energy needs, while further weakening our economy and national security,” Rep. Harriet Hageman, R-Wyo., said in a statement. 

    Environmental groups celebrated the decision and declared it a victory. 

    “For decades, mining has affected public health, our local land, air, and water, and the global climate. We look forward to BLM working with state and local partners to ensure a just economic transition for the Powder River Basin as we move toward a clean energy future,” Lynne Huskinson, retired coal miner and board member of Powder River Basin Resource Council and Western Organization of Resource Councils said in a press release. 

    The BLM noted that production of coal in the area has been on the decline, noting the active mines in Wyoming produced approximately 220 million short tons of federal coal in 2022 compared to 400 million in 2008. The mines in the Miles City planning area in Montana produced 18.5 million short tons of coal in 2022, down from 28 million in 2007. 

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    Maddie Gannon

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  • Largest Latino advocacy group endorses Biden

    Largest Latino advocacy group endorses Biden

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    The political arm of the largest Latino civil rights and advocacy group threw its weight behind President Joe Biden for a second term in the White House as polls show support for the incumbent president among Hispanic voters could be slipping. 


    What You Need To Know

    • The political arm of the largest Latino civil rights and advocacy group threw its weight behind President Joe Biden for a second term in the White House
    • President of the UnidosUS Action Fund Janet Murguía officially announced the endorsement of Biden as well as Arizona Democratic Senate candidate Rep. Ruben Gallego at a press conference in Phoenix on Tuesday
    • The group will also work to turn out voters in Arizona’s urban areas and in communities along the U.S.-Mexico border with canvassing, signature collection and media buys, according to the organization
    • A poll from The New York Times, Siena College and The Philadelphia Inquirer released this week showed Biden and his likely 2024 Republican rival, former President Donald Trump essentially tied among Hispanic voters

    President of the UnidosUS Action Fund Janet Murguía officially announced the endorsement at a press conference in Phoenix on Tuesday, the organization said in a press release. The group will also work to turn out voters in Arizona’s urban areas and in communities along the U.S.-Mexico border with canvassing, signature collection and media buys, according to the organization.  

    “We’ve already seen what the Biden-Harris Administration has accomplished for the Latino community and all Americans, helping to successfully navigate a once-in-a-lifetime pandemic, creating millions of new jobs, and promoting access to health care and quality education for all,” Murguía said. “We know our country will continue to be on this path to progress if we choose Biden/Harris in November,”

    The organization also gave its official nod to Arizona Democratic Senate candidate Rep. Ruben Gallego, who is likely to face Kari Lake, former Republican candidate for governor in Arizona, as well as former Democratic State Senators Raquel Teran and Kirsten Engel for Congress. 

    The location of the endorsement announcement in Phoenix and general focus on Arizona, the group noted, speaks to the state’s “critical swing-state status.” Arizona, according to Pew Research Center, has the largest share of eligible Latino voters of the main battleground states. 

    Nearly a quarter of voters who cast a ballot in Arizona this November are expected to be Latino, according to the nonprofit NALEO Educational Fund. The nonprofit noted that figure mirrored the percentage who voted in the state in 2020. 

    Earlier this year, Biden used a stop at a Mexican restaurant in a predominantly Latino area of Phoenix to launch his reelection campaign’s national strategy to reach Hispanic voters, dubbed Latinos con Biden-Harris. 

    But it comes as signs from recent polls and data from recent election cycles showing Hispanic voters, who have historically backed Democratic candidates, may be increasingly more open to the GOP’s message. 

    A poll from The New York Times, Siena College and The Philadelphia Inquirer released this week showed Biden and his likely 2024 Republican rival, former President Donald Trump essentially tied among Hispanic voters. 

    While statistics from the most recent elections show Democrats still have a firm grip when it comes to the support of Latino voters, the margin by which Democrats have won among such communities has shrunk. 

    In 2020, former President Donald Trump – who, along with Biden already received enough delegates to earn his party’s nomination for president – got the support of 38% of Latino voters to Biden’s 59%, according to the Pew Research Center. By contrast, Hillary Clinton won Latino voters 66% over Trump (28%) in 2016. 

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    Maddie Gannon

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  • Biden campaign brings in medical providers to court voters

    Biden campaign brings in medical providers to court voters

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    President Joe Biden’s reelection campaign is partnering with doctors, nurses and other medical professionals to reach voters on the ground as part of a new national organizing strategy launching this week. 


    What You Need To Know

    • President Joe Biden’s reelection campaign is partnering with doctors, nurses and other medical professionals to reach voters on the ground as part of a new national organizing strategy launching this week
    • The new Health Care Providers for Biden-Harris program will seek to utilize the credibility of medical professionals within their communities to highlight the incumbent president’s health care agenda and contrast it with that of former President Donald Trump 
    • Expanding access to health care and lowering its costs for families has emerged as one of Biden’s key pitches to voters as he stares down a likely rematch with his 2020 rival, Trump
    • Trump floated a renewed push to repeal the Obama-era health care overhaul that polls show has risen in popularity

    The new Health Care Providers for Biden-Harris program will seek to utilize the credibility of medical professionals within their communities to highlight the incumbent president’s health care agenda and contrast it with that of former President Donald Trump. 

    “We know that in today’s fragmented media environment, our strongest route to voters is tapping into trusted  messengers,” Biden-Harris 2024 Communications Director Michael Tyler said on a call with reporters. “This diverse coalition of doctors and nurses have deep roots in their communities, and they’re well practiced at discussing one of the most critical issues of this election: protecting and expanding access to affordable health care.” 

    Expanding access to health care and lowering its costs for families has emerged as one of Biden’s key pitches to voters as he stares down a likely rematch with his 2020 rival, Trump. 

    On the campaign trail, the Democratic president frequently touts what he says as his biggest accomplishment in the health care space, such as capping insulin costs at $35 a month and enabling Medicare to negotiate prescription drug prices. The White House and Biden’s campaign have honed in on record Affordable Care Act enrollment during Biden’s presidency – particularly as the former president toys with a renewed push to repeal the Obama-era health care overhaul that polls show has risen in popularity. 

    “The choice for voters on this issue couldn’t be more stark: While Donald Trump is trying to rip away health care from millions of Americans, President Biden is expanding access to affordable care,” Illinois Democratic Rep. Lauren Underwood, who is also a registered nurse, told reporters. 

    As part of the effort, the campaign is particularly hoping to reach Black and Latino voters in which the issue of health care, the campaign says, is particularly salient. 

    “As someone who’s witnessed firsthand the destruction caused by Donald Trump’s health care agenda, I couldn’t sit on the sidelines in this election and as a Black woman in America, the stakes are that much higher,” Dr. Tyra Bryant-Stephens, a pediatrician from Philadelphia told reporters. “Black communities have the most to lose under a second Trump presidency.” 

    During the 2023 Affordable Care Act open enrollment period, enrollment of Black and Latino people increased 95% and 103% respectively since 2020, according to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. 

    Earlier this month, the Biden administration announced a new rule that will allow immigrants in the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program to become eligible for Affordable Care Act coverage. Biden touted the move – projected to help about 100,000 people gain health insurance – during a Cinco de Mayo reception last week at the White House. 

    It comes amid polls showing that while Democrats still have a firm grip on support from Black and Latino voters, such support could be slipping

    And new polling from The New York Times, Siena College and The Philadelphia Inquirer out on Monday shows Biden trailing Trump in a head-to-head match-up among registered voters in five of six critical battleground states. 

    Republicans’ crusade against Obamacare largely quieted in the years after three GOP senators voted against repealing it during the Trump administration in 2017. But the former president reawakened the fight last year when he warned the legislation could be on the chopping block again should he win back the White House in 2024. 

    “The cost of Obamacare is out of control, plus, it’s not good Healthcare. I’m seriously looking at alternatives,” Trump wrote in a post on his social media site Truth Social

    Amid the attention on his comment, Trump clarified that he doesn’t want to “terminate” the law, but wants to “replace” the landmark health care legislation.

    Along with seeking to court voters within their communities directly, the medical professionals will participate in press events in battleground states this week, according to the Biden campaign.

    Spectrum News’ David Mendez contributed to this report. 

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    Maddie Gannon

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  • House Democratic leaders say they’ll oppose motion to oust Johnson

    House Democratic leaders say they’ll oppose motion to oust Johnson

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    House Democratic leadership announced Tuesday that their conference will intervene to oppose far-right Georgia Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene’s motion to oust House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., if put up for a vote.


    What You Need To Know

    • House Democratic leadership said they will vote to kill an effort to oust House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., if put up for a vote
    • Democrats had previously indicated that they could come to Johnson’s rescue should the Louisiana Republican put forward a long-stalled bill to provide aid to Ukraine
    • The effort, led by far-right Georgia Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, has the support of just two other Republican lawmakers; some in the House GOP appear to be lukewarm about the pospect of plunging the House into the chaos that ensued last year after the ouster of Kevin McCarthy
    • Greene filed her motion last month after Johnson put forward a bill to fund the government and avert a shutdown


    “We will vote to table Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene’s Motion to Vacate the Chair,” House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., Minority Whip Katherine Clark, D-Mass., and Democratic Caucus Chair Pete Aguilar, D-Calif., said in a statement. “If she invokes the motion, it will not succeed.”

    In a press conference shortly after the release of the statement announcing the decision, Aguilar argued there was a “distinction” between voting in favor of Johnson and voting to table the motion to oust him. 

    “None of the discussion that we had in caucus was about saving Mike Johnson,” Aguilar told reporters. “The underlying motion to vacate was not discussed, the motion to table was.” 

    Aguilar noted that each member of the House Democratic caucus should “vote their district and their conscience.”

    Democrats had previously indicated that they could come to Johnson’s rescue should the Louisiana Republican put forward a long-stalled bill to provide aid to Ukraine. Given the House’s passage of the bill earlier this month and signature into law by President Joe Biden after quick Senate action, their intervention appeared all but assured.

    “At this moment, upon completion of our national security work, the time has come to turn the page on this chapter of Pro-Putin Republican obstruction,” the Democratic leaders wrote in their statement on Tuesday.

    Greene filed her motion last month after Johnson put forward a bill to fund the government and avert a shutdown. In the weeks since, two other hardline Republican lawmakers — Kentucky Rep. Thomas Massie and Arizona Rep. Paul Gosar — have joined Greene’s effort, citing the agreements Johnson has negotiated on foreign aid, federal spending and government surveillance.

    In a post on X, the platform formerly known as Twitter, Greene called the decision by House Democratic leadership to table the motion against Johnson an “official endorsement of his Speakership.”

    “Mike Johnson is officially the Democrat Speaker of the House,” Greene wrote, going on to question whether he made a “deal” to get their support. 

    The Georgia Republican went on to say Johnson should “resign” and “switch parties.” 

    Republicans have largely appeared lukewarm on the prospect of plunging the chamber into the chaos that engulfed the House last year after a group of GOP lawmakers rebelled against then-Speaker Kevin McCarthy and forced his ouster over a deal he cut with Democrats and Biden to avert a shutdown. 

    “She is a legislative arsonist and she is holding the gas tank and Kevin McCarthy allowed that to happen – that’s not lost on anybody,” Aguilar said on Tuesday of Greene. “What we are saying is we don’t need to be a part of that. Let’s turn the page.” 

    In his quest to win the speakership in Jan. 2023, McCarthy yielded to demands of members of the party’s right flank to allow just one member to force a vote to oust the speaker.   

    Greene, in her post on X on Tuesday, added she was a “big believer” in recorded votes so that Americans can see what every member of Congress decides. 

    “If the Democrats want to elect him Speaker (and some Republicans want to support the Democrats’ chosen Speaker), I’ll give them the chance to do it,” Greene wrote, indicating she will not drop her bid to force a vote on ousting Johnson. 

    Greene has threatened to force a vote on the matter for weeks but has yet to say when she will act. 

    Johnson on Tuesday said he has not spoken to Jeffries about the prospect of saving his speakership.

    “I have to do my job,” Johnson told reporters at a press conference. “We have to do what we believe to be the right thing. What the country needs right now is a functioning Congress.”

    “I have to do what I believe is right every day and let the chips fall where they may,” the Louisiana Republican said. “We shouldn’t be playing politics and engaging in the chaos that looks like palace intrigue here.”

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    Justin Tasolides

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  • Biden welcomes Japanese PM to the WH ahead of state dinner

    Biden welcomes Japanese PM to the WH ahead of state dinner

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    President Joe Biden on Wednesday welcomed Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida to the White House for an official visit, as Biden seeks to make clear his commitment to a secure Indo-Pacific region and the value the U.S. has placed on Japan as an essential partner in that endeavor. 


    What You Need To Know

    • President Joe Biden on Wednesday welcomed Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida to the White House for an official visit
    • Biden sought to make clear his commitment to a secure Indo-Pacific region and the value the U.S. has placed on Japan as an essential partner in that endeavor
    • Following the ceremony, the two leaders sat down in the Oval Office ahead of a scheduled joint press conference Wednesday afternoon; a formal state dinner will take place Wednesday night
    • Administration officials said the U.S. and Japan will announce more than 70 items on the official visit

    “The alliance between Japan and the United States is the cornerstone of peace, security and prosperity in the Indo-Pacific and around the world,” Biden said during an arrival ceremony that featured all the pageantry typically bestowed on a foreign leader ahead of an official U.S. visit with a state dinner.  

    “Closer, stronger and more effective than ever before in history,” the president added of the U.S.-Japan relationship. 

    During the South Lawn ceremony, Biden lauded his Japanese counterpart as a “visionary and courageous leader.” He praised Kishida for isolating and condemning Russia amid its invasion of Ukraine, presiding over “profound changes in defense” and his leadership of the G-7 last year. 

    Senior administration officials told reporters Tuesday that under Kishida, Japan has committed to raising its defense spending and acquired Tomahawk counterstrike capability, which they say will aid in our collective deterrence.

    “Today our economic relationship is one of the strongest and the deepest in the world,” Biden said. “Our democracies are beacons of freedom shining across the globe and the ties of friendship, family, connect the Japanese and American people.” 

    Kishida noted Japan would “join hands with American friends” to take on the challenges and difficulties facing the world. The Japanese leader announced he is sending an additional 250 cherry trees to the U.S. to mark the country’s upcoming anniversary. 

    Following the ceremony, the two leaders sat down in the Oval Office ahead of a scheduled joint press conference Wednesday afternoon. 

    Administration officials said the U.S. and Japan will announce more than 70 items on the official visit. 

    On Tuesday, White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan noted among the expected announcements will be measures to “enhance” our defense and security cooperation as well as “major deliverables” on space. He added there will be announcements on research partnerships on emerging technologies such as artificial intelligence, quantum semiconductors and clean energy.

    “Over the course of the visit, the president and the prime minister will highlight the high ambition of our alliance. Yes, in the defense and technology space, but also across the board, deepening our partnerships on space, technology, economic investment and fighting climate change,” Sullivan said, “coordinating global diplomacy and strengthening our people-to-people ties.”  

    On Monday, the Pentagon announced that the U.S., United Kingdom and Australia were considering having Japan join in on the AUKUS partnership, which aims to equip Australia with nuclear-powered and conventionally armed submarines – a move Beijing has opposed. 

    Military coordination will be a theme of the visit — and of the American-Japanese partnership moving forward. Over the weekend, the U.S. and Japan were among a quartet of nations participating in joint military exercises in the South China Sea. Those exercises are part of a change to the force structure in Japan, a senior official said Wednesday, as the U.S. seeks to integrate forces for joint protection in the region.

    The U.S. and Japan will also announce and promote research initiatives, including a a joint AI project between Carnegie Mellon University and Keio University in Tokyo, a venerable private research university; a second AI project between the University of Tsukuba, a national university; and a monetary scholarship to fund cultural exchange programs between American and Japanese high school students.

    Festivities will continue Wednesday night with a formal state dinner in the White House’s East Room. First lady Jill Biden and White House Social Secretary Carlos Elizondo told reporters on Tuesday that the dinner’s decor was partly inspired by Japanese gardens and will seek to celebrate springtime. 

    Wednesday will mark the fifth state dinner of Biden’s presidency, with four of the five honoring fellow Indo-Pacific nations: South Korea, India and Australia. Biden’s first state dinner went to France.  

    But Wednesday’s celebratory events also come at a moment of public disagreement between the leaders of the two nations after Biden announced last month that he does not support a planned sale of U.S. Steel to Nippon Steel of Japan. In December, Nippon Steel said it planned to buy the Pittsburgh-headquartered U.S. Steel for $14.1 billion. 

    Senior White House officials, speaking to reporters Wednesday, were quick to discount the idea of the steel deal becoming a major topic of discussion between the leaders.

    “We think the relationship is much bigger than that, and I think everybody understands everybody’s position,” an official said.

    The festivities kicked off Tuesday, when Biden and the first lady greeted Kishida and Mrs. Yuko Kishida at the White House. On Tuesday, Kishida laid a wreath at Arlington National Cemetery, which Biden noted during Wednesday morning’s ceremony he “truly” appreciated.

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    Maddie Gannon

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  • 20 people charged since 2021 for threats to election workers

    20 people charged since 2021 for threats to election workers

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    A task force within the Department of Justice dedicated to addressing threats against election workers has led to charges against roughly 20 people and has opened dozens of investigations into additional instances since its launch in 2021, officials announced on Monday. 


    What You Need To Know

    • A task force within the Department of Justice dedicated to addressing threats against election workers has led to charges against roughly 20 people and has opened dozens of investigations into additional instances since its launch in 2021, officials announced on Monday
    • DOJ official John Keller told reporters 13 of the 20 people charged have been convicted and seven individuals have received sentences between one and a half to three and a half years in prison
    • Officials on Monday also sentenced an Ohio man to two and a half years in prison for leaving a series of voicemails around the 2022 midterm elections threatening the life of then Arizona Secretary of State Katie Hobbs, who was elected governor of the state that year
    • Election workers have spoken about increased threats and instances of intimidation since the 2020 election 

    Speaking at a press conference in Arizona to lay out the sentence for an Ohio man for making death threats to an official in the Arizona Secretary of State’s Office, DOJ official John Keller told reporters 13 of the 20 people charged have been convicted. Seven individuals have received sentences between one and a half to three and a half years in prison, which, he added, signals “how seriously the federal courts are taking this conduct.” 

    “Our work is not done, our efforts will not wane, the department will continue to vigorously pursue anyone who criminally threatens or targets the election community,” Keller said. “This behavior is insidious with potentially grave consequences for individual victims and for the institution of election administration as a whole.” 

    “The public must know, any criminal threats to the election community will be prosecuted to the full extent of the law,” he added. 

    The Justice Department’s Elections Threats Task Force was formed in June 2021 in response to escalating reports of intimidation and threats to election workers following the 2020 election. Former President Donald Trump and his allies claimed, without evidence, there was widespread fraud in the 2020 election. (There is no evidence of widespread election fraud in the 2020 presidential election, a statement verified by officials on both sides of the aisle. Claims of fraud brought by Trump and his allies were rejected in courts nationwide, including the U.S. Supreme Court.) 

    A survey by Brennan Center for Justice in March 2022 found three in four election officials said threats have increased in recent years and one in six said they have experienced such threats. 

    “Death threats are not debate,” Keller said on Monday. “Death threats do not contribute to the marketplace of ideas. Death threats are not first amendment-protected speech.” 

    In the case of the Ohio man, officials on Monday laid out a sentence of two and a half years in prison for Joshua Russell for leaving a series of voicemails around the 2022 midterm elections threatening the life of then Arizona Secretary of State Katie Hobbs, who was elected governor of the state that year. 

    “Mr. Russell made three phone calls to the office of then Secretary of State Katie Hobbs threatening to put her in the ground or in a grave,” U.S. Attorney for the District of Arizona Gary Restaino said during Monday’s press conference. 

    “You’re the enemy of the United States, you’re a traitor to this country, and you better put your sh[inaudible], your [expletive] affairs in order, ’cause your days [inaudible] are extremely numbered,” Russell said in his first voicemail to Hobbs, according to the DOJ. “America’s coming for you, and you will pay with your life, you communist [expletive] traitor [expletive].”

    Hobbs, Arizona’s former top elections official, spoke about threats she received in the immediate aftermath of overseeing the state’s 2020 election. President Joe Biden defeated Trump in the major battleground state. 

    In 2022, Kari Lake, Hobbs’ Republican challenger for the governor’s seat, claimed there was fraud after she lost and unsuccessfully went to court to try to overturn the results. 

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    Maddie Gannon

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  • White House touts record Obamacare enrollment ahead of anniversary

    White House touts record Obamacare enrollment ahead of anniversary

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    President Joe Biden’s White House is touting record enrollment in the Affordable Care Act ahead of its 14th anniversary on Saturday as his reelection team looks to take the issue out on the campaign trail. 


    What You Need To Know

    • The Affordable Care Act, the sweeping health care overhaul also known as Obamacare, prepares to mark 14 years since then-President Barack Obama signed it into law in 2010
    • The White House is touting a record 21.4 million people enrolled in health insurance plans through the Affordable Care Act’s marketplaces during the 2024 open enrollment period
    • In the decade since the bill’s implementation in 2014, the White House noted a total of 45 million are enrolled in marketplace over Medicaid expansion coverage under the ACA
    • Biden’s reelection campaign is hoping the numbers give the incumbent president’s quest for another four years in the Oval Office a boost in the face of renewed GOP threats to repeal the health care law

    On a call with reporters ahead of the announcement, Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra noted a record 21.4 million people enrolled in health insurance plans through the Affordable Care Act’s marketplaces during the 2024 open enrollment period.

    Five million of those enrollees, he said, were new to the marketplace, a 41% increase from 2023. 

    “21.4 million people that’s almost an 80% increase from the end of the previous administration’s term with the Affordable Care Act,” Becerra said. 

    The 21.4 million sign-ups for 2024 marks a more than 30% increase from 2023, when 16.4 million people enrolled, according to data from the White House. The annual enrollment figure, the data shows, increased more than 78% from 12 million in 2021 when Biden first took office to 21.4 million this year.

    The White House pointed to the expansion of tax credits intended to increase the affordability of marketplace coverage included in two of Biden’s signature pieces of legislation – the American Rescue Plan and the Inflation Reduction Act – as aiding in the increase. 

    It comes as the sweeping health care overhaul, colloquially known as Obamacare, prepares to mark 14 years since then-President Barack Obama signed it into law in 2010. 

    “When I ran for president in 2020, I promised the American people that I would protect the Affordable Care Act from partisan attacks and build on it,” Biden said in a statement on Friday marking the bill’s anniversary. “That’s exactly what I’ve done: getting more people affordable health insurance, lowering prescription drug prices, and giving families more breathing room.”

    “Now more Americans have affordable health insurance than ever before, premiums are down, and enrollment is at an all-time high,” the statement continued. “We took on Big Pharma – and won, capping insulin at just $35 per month and out-of-pocket prescription costs at $2,000 per year for seniors.”

    In the decade since the bill’s implementation in 2014, the White House noted a total of 45 million are enrolled in marketplace over Medicaid expansion coverage under the ACA. About 12.6 million people were enrolled in 2014, according to White House data. 

    The overall rate of Americans uninsured in health coverage, according to the most recent federal survey, has dropped 16% from 2010 to 2023. Florida, for instance, saw its uninsured rate fall from 20% in 2013 to 11.2% in 2022. California recorded a drop of 17.2% in 2013 to 6.5% in 2022. Wisconsin dipped 9.1% in 2013 to 5.2% in 2022. 

    Biden’s reelection campaign is hoping the numbers give the incumbent president’s quest for another four years in the Oval Office a boost in the face of renewed GOP threats to repeal the health care law.

    Over the next few days, Biden’s team plans to host more than 20 events to mark the bill’s anniversary in eight battleground states. The campaign also plans to release ads and social media content surrounding the health care act. 

    On Saturday, the bill’s official anniversary, the president will bring in his former boss, Obama, and former Democratic Speaker Nancy Pelosi for a call with supporters and volunteers. 

    The campaign’s emphasis on the ACA builds on his team’s efforts to shine a light on the health care bill as Trump toys with a renewed push to repeal it. 

    “There are extremists out there who say they will destroy the ACA. They will take health care and the peace of mind that comes with it away from millions of Americans,” Becerra said on Thursday’s call. “Well, that’s what they’re saying. But we won’t let that happen.”

    Republicans’ crusade against the Obamacare largely quieted in the years after three GOP senators voted against repealing it during the Trump administration in 2017. But the former president reawakened the fight last year when he warned the legislation could be on the chopping block again should he win back the White House in 2024. 

    “The cost of Obamacare is out of control, plus, it’s not good Healthcare. I’m seriously looking at alternatives,” Trump wrote in a post on his social media site Truth Social

    That comment sparked a rapid response from the Biden campaign, which sent a flurry of emails warning about the impacts of the bill being repealed and calling on Pelosi to host a press call on the topic with North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper. 

    Amid the attention on his comment, Trump clarified that he doesn’t want to “terminate” the law, but wants to “replace” the landmark health care legislation.

    “I don’t want to terminate Obamacare, I want to REPLACE IT with MUCH BETTER HEALTHCARE. Obamacare Sucks!!!” Trump wrote on Truth Social. While a Trump-backed repeal passed the House during his sole White House term in 2017, the effort failed in the Senate when three Republican lawmakers sank it. He has not offered a replacement plan.

    “Trump wants to take us back to a time when health insurance companies could deny coverage to Americans with heart disease or diabetes or asthma. When you couldn’t leave a dead-end job because you couldn’t risk losing your health insurance. When a 22-year-old kid could be kicked off his parents’ plan because he graduated from college. When insurance companies could cut people off halfway through chemo because they’d reached the limit of what they were willing to pay,” Biden said in a statement marking the ACA’s anniversary. “I won’t let that happen.”

    Biden’s team on Friday released a digital ad arguing “45 million Americans could lose their health insurance” should Trump win the White House again. The ad, the campaign said, is set to run on digital platforms such as Meta and YouTube in English and Spanish in battleground states. 

    In December, Biden called in Obama to record a video message promoting the ACA, it still a “BFD” – a tagline Biden even gave a shoutout in his State of the Union address earlier this month. 

    Folks Obamacare, known as the Affordable Care Act is still a very big deal,” he said in the House chamber. 

    And speaking in New Hampshire earlier this month on the heels of his State of the Union address, the president sought to draw a contrast between himself and the GOP on health care. 

    “Over 100 million Americans can no longer be denied health insurance because of a pre-existing condition,” Biden said. “But my predecessor and many Republicans want to take that away – take that protection away by repealing the Affordable Care Act. I’m not gonna let that happen.”

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  • Planned Parenthood endorses five Senate candidates

    Planned Parenthood endorses five Senate candidates

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    The political arm of the reproductive rights group Planned Parenthood on Wednesday announced its endorsement of five House Democrats looking to secure seats in the upper chamber of Congress in November’s election. 

    In a press release, Planned Parenthood Action Fund announced it is backing 2024 U.S. Senate candidates Reps. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., Colin Allred, D-Texas, Ruben Gallego, D-Ariz.,  Lisa Blunt Rochester, D-Del., and Elissa Slotkin, D-Mich. 


    What You Need To Know

    • The political arm of the reproductive rights group Planned Parenthood on Wednesday announced its endorsement of five House Democrats looking to secure seats in the upper chamber in November’s election 
    • Planned Parenthood Action Fund is backing 2024 Senate candidates Reps. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., Colin Allred, D-Texas, Ruben Gallego, D-Ariz.,  Lisa Blunt Rochester, D-Del., and Elissa Slotkin, D-Mich. 
    • The group has already endorsed Democratic incumbents Sens. Jon Tester, Jacky Rosen, Sherrod Brown and Tammy Baldwin in the battleground states of Montana, Nevada, Ohio and Wisconsin as well as President Joe Biden for another four years in the White House
    • Democratic candidates across the country have sought to hone in on the issue of abortion access and reproductive rights following the Supreme Court’s overturning of Roe v. Wade in June 2022

    In deep-blue California, Schiff is looking to defeat a challenge from former Los Angeles Dodgers player Republican Steve Garvey to fill the late Sen. Dianne Feinstein’s seat. He beat out two other House Democrats in the primary contest earlier this month to advance to November’s general race. 

    In Texas, Allred, a civil rights lawyer and former NFL player, is seeking to oust Republican Sen. Ted Cruz. 

    In Delaware and battleground Michigan, Blunt Rochester and Slotkin are hoping to fill the seats of retiring Democratic Sens. Tom Carper and Debbie Stabenow, respectively.

    Meanwhile, in one of the west’s biggest swing states, Gallego is aiming to defeat Republican Kari Lake to take over for Democratic-turned-Independent Sen. Kyrsten Sinema. Sinema announced earlier this month that she would not seek reelection after leaving the Democratic party to become an independent following the 2022 midterms. Lake narrowly lost her race for governor of Arizona to Democratic Gov. Katie Hobbs in 2022. 

    “We don’t have time to waste while our freedom to control our own bodies hangs in the balance,” Alexis McGill Johnson, president and CEO of Planned Parenthood Action Fund said in a statement. “We know that if anti-abortion rights politicians gain control of the Senate, they will exploit their power to push through a national abortion ban.”

    “That is why this slate of unflappable reproductive rights champions must be elected to the Senate,” McGill continued. 

    The group has already endorsed Democratic incumbents Sens. Jon Tester, Jacky Rosen, Sherrod Brown and Tammy Baldwin in the battleground states of Montana, Nevada, Ohio and Wisconsin. It has also thrown its support behind Democratic incumbent Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, a staunch supporter of reproductive rights, in New York. 

    Democratic candidates across the country have sought to hone in on the issue of abortion access and reproductive rights following the Supreme Court’s overturning of Roe v. Wade in June 2022. The ruling sparked tight restrictions or bans on abortion in states around the country. 

    The issue has proved electorally fruitful for Democrats, who credit it for helping the party pull off a better-than-expected showing in the 2022 midterms and notch key victories in the 2023 off-year elections. 

    When the issue has appeared directly on the ballot, voters – even in red states like Kansas and Ohio – choose to keep abortion more widely accessible. 

    And Democrats are signaling they have no plans to take a step back on the issue in the first presidential election since Roe was overturned.

    “When reproductive freedom was on the ballot, the American people spoke in 2022,” President Joe Biden said at a reception at the White House on Monday in which he signed an executive order seeking to boost research on women’s health. He then pointed to Vice President Kamala Harris and declared that “with the leadership of this woman to my left here, they are going to speak out again in 2024.” 

    The Biden campaign’s first rally of the election year that featured both the president and vice president together was focused on restoring Roe v. Wade. 

    Last week, Harris became the first vice president or president to visit a facility that performs abortions when she toured a Planned Parenthood clinic in Minnesota. 

    Planned Parenthood Action Fund, along with two other major reproductive rights groups NARAL Pro-Choice America and Emily’s List, endorsed the Biden-Harris ticket for another four years in the White House back in June.

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  • Planned Parenthood endorses five Senate candidates

    Planned Parenthood endorses five Senate candidates

    [ad_1]

    The political arm of the reproductive rights group Planned Parenthood on Wednesday announced its endorsement of five House Democrats looking to secure seats in the upper chamber of Congress in November’s election. 

    In a press release, Planned Parenthood Action Fund announced it is backing 2024 U.S. Senate candidates Reps. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., Colin Allred, D-Texas, Ruben Gallego, D-Ariz.,  Lisa Blunt Rochester, D-Del., and Elissa Slotkin, D-Mich. 


    What You Need To Know

    • The political arm of the reproductive rights group Planned Parenthood on Wednesday announced its endorsement of five House Democrats looking to secure seats in the upper chamber in November’s election 
    • Planned Parenthood Action Fund is backing 2024 Senate candidates Reps. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., Colin Allred, D-Texas, Ruben Gallego, D-Ariz.,  Lisa Blunt Rochester, D-Del., and Elissa Slotkin, D-Mich. 
    • The group has already endorsed Democratic incumbents Sens. Jon Tester, Jacky Rosen, Sherrod Brown and Tammy Baldwin in the battleground states of Montana, Nevada, Ohio and Wisconsin as well as President Joe Biden for another four years in the White House
    • Democratic candidates across the country have sought to hone in on the issue of abortion access and reproductive rights following the Supreme Court’s overturning of Roe v. Wade in June 2022

    In deep-blue California, Schiff is looking to defeat a challenge from former Los Angeles Dodgers player Republican Steve Garvey to fill the late Sen. Dianne Feinstein’s seat. He beat out two other House Democrats in the primary contest earlier this month to advance to November’s general race. 

    In Texas, Allred, a civil rights lawyer and former NFL player, is seeking to oust Republican Sen. Ted Cruz. 

    In Delaware and battleground Michigan, Blunt Rochester and Slotkin are hoping to fill the seats of retiring Democratic Sens. Tom Carper and Debbie Stabenow, respectively.

    Meanwhile, in one of the west’s biggest swing states, Gallego is aiming to defeat Republican Kari Lake to take over for Democratic-turned-Independent Sen. Kyrsten Sinema. Sinema announced earlier this month that she would not seek reelection after leaving the Democratic party to become an independent following the 2022 midterms. Lake narrowly lost her race for governor of Arizona to Democratic Gov. Katie Hobbs in 2022. 

    “We don’t have time to waste while our freedom to control our own bodies hangs in the balance,” Alexis McGill Johnson, president and CEO of Planned Parenthood Action Fund said in a statement. “We know that if anti-abortion rights politicians gain control of the Senate, they will exploit their power to push through a national abortion ban.”

    “That is why this slate of unflappable reproductive rights champions must be elected to the Senate,” McGill continued. 

    The group has already endorsed Democratic incumbents Sens. Jon Tester, Jacky Rosen, Sherrod Brown and Tammy Baldwin in the battleground states of Montana, Nevada, Ohio and Wisconsin. It has also thrown its support behind Democratic incumbent Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, a staunch supporter of reproductive rights, in New York. 

    Democratic candidates across the country have sought to hone in on the issue of abortion access and reproductive rights following the Supreme Court’s overturning of Roe v. Wade in June 2022. The ruling sparked tight restrictions or bans on abortion in states around the country. 

    The issue has proved electorally fruitful for Democrats, who credit it for helping the party pull off a better-than-expected showing in the 2022 midterms and notch key victories in the 2023 off-year elections. 

    When the issue has appeared directly on the ballot, voters – even in red states like Kansas and Ohio – choose to keep abortion more widely accessible. 

    And Democrats are signaling they have no plans to take a step back on the issue in the first presidential election since Roe was overturned.

    “When reproductive freedom was on the ballot, the American people spoke in 2022,” President Joe Biden said at a reception at the White House on Monday in which he signed an executive order seeking to boost research on women’s health. He then pointed to Vice President Kamala Harris and declared that “with the leadership of this woman to my left here, they are going to speak out again in 2024.” 

    The Biden campaign’s first rally of the election year that featured both the president and vice president together was focused on restoring Roe v. Wade. 

    Last week, Harris became the first vice president or president to visit a facility that performs abortions when she toured a Planned Parenthood clinic in Minnesota. 

    Planned Parenthood Action Fund, along with two other major reproductive rights groups NARAL Pro-Choice America and Emily’s List, endorsed the Biden-Harris ticket for another four years in the White House back in June.

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    Maddie Gannon

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  • Biden meets with Teamsters Union weeks after Trump

    Biden meets with Teamsters Union weeks after Trump

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    President Joe Biden made his way to the Teamsters headquarters in Washington on Tuesday to make the case as to why he should win members’ support in November as both he and former President Donald Trump vie for the powerful union’s endorsement. 


    What You Need To Know

    • President Joe Biden made his way to the Teamsters headquarters in Washington on Tuesday to make the case as to why he should win the union’s support
    • Biden was expected to meet with Teamsters’ president Sean M. O’Brien, general secretary-treasurer Fred Zuckerman and the Teamsters General Executive Board as well as union members, behind closed doors according to the group
    • The Teamsters also met with former President Donald Trump in Washington and January and the union’s president sat down with Trump at Mar-a-Lago this year
    • Biden secured the endorsement of the United Auto Workers union in January

    Biden – who often touts himself as the most pro-union president in U.S. history – traveled less than two miles from the White House for the “rank-and-file Presidential roundtable,” as the union billed it. There, he is expected to meet with Teamsters’ president Sean M. O’Brien, general secretary-treasurer Fred Zuckerman and the Teamsters General Executive Board as well as union members, all behind closed doors, according to the group. 

    “We realize that President Biden’s time is limited and we appreciate that he is making it a priority to meet with Teamsters,” O’Brien said in a statement. “Our rank-and-file members and leadership are eager to have this conversation about the future of our country and the commitments that working people need from our next President.” 

    Tuesday’s discussion is expected to include conversations on workers’ wages and wealth inequality, antitrust enforcement in the warehouse and package delivery industries, and the freedom to form and join a union more quickly among other topics. 

    The 1.3 million-member union representing workers in a diverse range of industries endorsed Biden in 2020 and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in 2016. But the group has held off throwing its support behind Biden’s reelection bid early, meeting with Trump in Washington in January as well as other current or past candidates Robert F. Kennedy Jr., Asa Hutchinson, Marianne Williamson, Dr. Cornel West, and Dean Phillips. 

    “Stranger things have happened,” Trump told reporters following his meeting with the group in Washington in January regarding a possible endorsement in the face of the union passing him up in 2020 and 2016. 

    O’Brien also made the trip to Florida in January to sit-down with Trump at Mar-a-Lago, an event that featured the two posing for a picture together. The potent force in the labor world also drew headlines when its PAC donated $45,000 to a fund for the Republican National Committee in January. The Teamsters’ PAC also donated thousands to the Democratic National Committee’s fund in December. 

    Through these roundtable conversations, the Teamsters want to make sure that all our members’ voices are heard and our elected officials do not take for granted the power of the Teamsters vote,” O’Brien said in a statement ahead of his meeting with Biden. 

    Biden and Trump, both of whom have yet to officially lock up enough delegates to win their parties’ nominations but look all but certain to be headed for a 2020 rematch in November, are looking to shore up support from organized labor – something that could be crucial to winning the blue-collar workers in swing states like Michigan and Wisconsin. 

    Biden secured the endorsement of the United Auto Workers union in January, months after making history when he joined striking UAW members on the picket line in Michigan as they pursued better pay and benefits from the Big Three Detroit automakers.

    The president called out UAW Shawn Fain as a “great friend and a great labor leader” during his State of the Union address on Thursday. The White House invited Fain to the address to watch with the first lady from her viewing box. 

    The UAW leader has feuded with Trump, calling the former president a “scab” while endorsing Biden this year. 

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    Maddie Gannon

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  • Biden meets with Teamsters Union weeks after Trump

    Biden meets with Teamsters Union weeks after Trump

    [ad_1]

    President Joe Biden made his way to the Teamsters headquarters in Washington on Tuesday to make the case as to why he should win members’ support in November as both he and former President Donald Trump vie for the powerful union’s endorsement. 


    What You Need To Know

    • President Joe Biden made his way to the Teamsters headquarters in Washington on Tuesday to make the case as to why he should win the union’s support
    • Biden was expected to meet with Teamsters’ president Sean M. O’Brien, general secretary-treasurer Fred Zuckerman and the Teamsters General Executive Board as well as union members, behind closed doors according to the group
    • The Teamsters also met with former President Donald Trump in Washington and January and the union’s president sat down with Trump at Mar-a-Lago this year
    • Biden secured the endorsement of the United Auto Workers union in January

    Biden – who often touts himself as the most pro-union president in U.S. history – traveled less than two miles from the White House for the “rank-and-file Presidential roundtable,” as the union billed it. There, he is expected to meet with Teamsters’ president Sean M. O’Brien, general secretary-treasurer Fred Zuckerman and the Teamsters General Executive Board as well as union members, all behind closed doors, according to the group. 

    “We realize that President Biden’s time is limited and we appreciate that he is making it a priority to meet with Teamsters,” O’Brien said in a statement. “Our rank-and-file members and leadership are eager to have this conversation about the future of our country and the commitments that working people need from our next President.” 

    Tuesday’s discussion is expected to include conversations on workers’ wages and wealth inequality, antitrust enforcement in the warehouse and package delivery industries, and the freedom to form and join a union more quickly among other topics. 

    The 1.3 million-member union representing workers in a diverse range of industries endorsed Biden in 2020 and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in 2016. But the group has held off throwing its support behind Biden’s reelection bid early, meeting with Trump in Washington in January as well as other current or past candidates Robert F. Kennedy Jr., Asa Hutchinson, Marianne Williamson, Dr. Cornel West, and Dean Phillips. 

    “Stranger things have happened,” Trump told reporters following his meeting with the group in Washington in January regarding a possible endorsement in the face of the union passing him up in 2020 and 2016. 

    O’Brien also made the trip to Florida in January to sit-down with Trump at Mar-a-Lago, an event that featured the two posing for a picture together. The potent force in the labor world also drew headlines when its PAC donated $45,000 to a fund for the Republican National Committee in January. The Teamsters’ PAC also donated thousands to the Democratic National Committee’s fund in December. 

    Through these roundtable conversations, the Teamsters want to make sure that all our members’ voices are heard and our elected officials do not take for granted the power of the Teamsters vote,” O’Brien said in a statement ahead of his meeting with Biden. 

    Biden and Trump, both of whom have yet to officially lock up enough delegates to win their parties’ nominations but look all but certain to be headed for a 2020 rematch in November, are looking to shore up support from organized labor – something that could be crucial to winning the blue-collar workers in swing states like Michigan and Wisconsin. 

    Biden secured the endorsement of the United Auto Workers union in January, months after making history when he joined striking UAW members on the picket line in Michigan as they pursued better pay and benefits from the Big Three Detroit automakers.

    The president called out UAW Shawn Fain as a “great friend and a great labor leader” during his State of the Union address on Thursday. The White House invited Fain to the address to watch with the first lady from her viewing box. 

    The UAW leader has feuded with Trump, calling the former president a “scab” while endorsing Biden this year. 

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    Maddie Gannon

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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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    Joseph Konig

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  • Biden set to deliver high-stakes State of the Union address

    Biden set to deliver high-stakes State of the Union address

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    On Thursday night, President Joe Biden will leave the White House grounds to make the trip to the other end of Pennsylvania Ave. to deliver the annual State of the Union address – with plenty on his plate, and even more at stake.


    What You Need To Know

    • On Thursday night, President Joe Biden will deliver the annual State of the Union address at the U.S. Capitol 
    • It comes as Biden in the thick of a reelection campaign that looks increasingly likely to be a rematch between him and former President Donald Trump
    • Reproductive rights, the economy, immigration and foreign policy could be key topics for his address
    • Biden will outline an ambitious budget proposal to reduce the federal deficit $3 trillion over 10 years, the White House said Thursday, fueled in large part by raising taxes on wealthy corporations and billionaires
    • Spectrum News will open to viewers President Joe Biden’s State of the Union address and the Republican rebuttal; here’s how to watch live

    The president — in the thick of a reelection campaign that looks increasingly likely to be a rematch between him and former President Donald Trump — is attempting to broker a peace deal in Gaza, while convincing a thus far seemingly unmoved GOP House Speaker to put billions in aid to Ukraine up for a vote, fending off persistent questions about age and struggling to persuade the American public the economy is thriving and he deserves credit. 

    In short, as Todd Belt, Professor and Director of Political Management at George Washington, puts it, Thursday night for the president is “pretty high-stakes.” 

    “I wouldn’t call it make-or-break, but I would put the emphasis on ‘break’ more than ‘make,’” Belt said, adding: “There’s going to be a ton of scrutiny on the president.”

    Biden – as he did before last year’s speech, according to Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre – spent the weekend huddled with top advisors tucked away at Camp David, the historic presidential retreat in Maryland, preparing for Thursday’s address. 

    “This is something that he is personally involved in,” Jean-Pierre said of the president’s role in the preparation at Wednesday’s White House press briefing. “This is something that comes straight from having conversations with the American people.” 

    The president, she added, will continue to “fine-tune” the speech Wednesday and Thursday before he hits TVs in prime time. Biden had no public events on Wednesday. 

    Belt noted State of the Union addresses during election years in which the president is seeking another four years in the White House take on a different tone.

    While there may be no campaign banners or walk-up songs and the reason for the speech may stem from a constitutional requirement for the president to from “time to time give to the Congress information of the State of the Union,” Belt said such addresses offer incumbent president’s the chance to “take a victory lap” and make a direct appeal to voters. 

    “The State of the Union during an election year is a chance for the President to remind the public of the successes from the prior three years,” he said. “But it’s also a way for the president to say, ‘the job isn’t done, you need to send me back to complete the job.’” 

    And the White House has made clear Biden is preparing to do just that. 

    Jean-Pierre on Wednesday laid out the key goals Biden plans to focus on Thursday night: lowering costs for Americans and “giving people more breathing room;” preserving democracy; protecting reproductive health; and progress on the “unity agenda” he laid out in his first State of the Union, such as addressing cancer, delivering for veterans and beating the opioid epidemic. 

    “Fundamentally, the president will outline an agenda that is about continuing to build on the progress that we’ve made over the last three years,” she said. 

    Here are some key topics expected to play center roles in Biden’s Thursday address:

    Reproductive rights

    Demonstrators march and gather near the state capitol following the Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe v. Wade, Friday, June 24, 2022, in Austin, Texas. (AP Photo/Eric Gay)

    Since the Supreme Court overturned of Roe v. Wade in June 2022, Democrats have sought to put the issue of abortion front and center. As Belt notes, the issue has proven to be electorally fruitful for Democrats, who have credited the topic for helping blue candidates secure victories since the high court’s decision.

    “Democrats know that this is their kryptonite for Republicans,” Belt said. ”This is what they can use against Republicans that has helped them in the last two elections in 2022, as well as in the off-years in 2023.” 

    Biden – whose first campaign rally alongside Vice President Kamala Harris of the election year centered on “Restoring Roe” – is making clear he will continue to a spotlight on the issue by inviting Kate Cox as a guest to Thursday’s address. Cox’s story of having to leave her home state of Texas to get an abortion when her health was in danger due to the state’s restrictive abortion laws garnered national attention. 

    Recently, Democrats received fresh material to work with on the topic when the Alabama Supreme Court ruled that frozen embryos could be considered children, leading experts to warn of potential major implications for in vitro fertilization. 

    Immigration — and the dead Senate border deal

    President Joe Biden talks with the U.S. Border Patrol, as he looks over the southern border, Thursday, Feb. 29, 2024, in Brownsville, Texas, along the Rio Grande. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

    After Republicans in Congress killed a sweeping border policy deal that a bipartisan group of senators and the White House spent weeks negotiating, Biden has been hounding lawmakers to revisit the legislation. 

    The GOP had originally requested border changes be included in a package to provide Biden’s request for aid to Ukraine, Israel, allies in the Indo-Pacific and more. The president has blamed his predecessor former President Donald Trump – who vocally came out against the deal – for its downfall. 

    And just last week, as Jean-Pierre noted on a call with reporters on Wednesday – the president made a closely watched visit to the border in Brownsville, Texas, where he highlighted what was at stake without action from Congress. 

    “He’s tried to take that issue away from Republicans and to some degree, there’s been some success in that,” Belt said. “We’ll see more of that tomorrow.”

    “It’s a lie, everybody knows it’s a lie,” Rep. Chip Roy, R-Texas, told Spectrum News on Wednesday when asked about his response to the likelihood the president will criticize Republicans for killing the Senate border deal in his address Thursday. 

    “Anybody with a brain who looks at the Senate bill knows it was a purposeful effort to give them an excuse for why they could blame Republicans when it is they who have left the borders wide open,” he continued. 

    The economy

    A generator and its blades are prepared to head to the open ocean for the South Fork Wind farm from State Pier in New London, Conn., Dec. 4, 2023. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig, File)

    Despite consumer sentiment rising and numerous signs people are feeling better about the economy, polls show Biden has struggled to convince the American public he and his policies deserve the credit. 

    A poll conducted in January by the Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research put his economic approval rating at just 35%, despite his administration having now embarked on four “Investing in America” tours in which top officials hit the road to sell his economic agenda.

    “Biden has tried to message on jobs … and other aspects of the economy, but inflation remains the big sticking one,” Belt said. “And it’s difficult for Democrats, because when you ask people which party is better in handling inflation, they usually say Republicans. So this is not a good issue for him.” 

    To that end, Biden will outline an ambitious budget proposal to reduce the federal deficit $3 trillion over 10 years, the White House said Thursday, fueled in large part by raising taxes on wealthy corporations and billionaires. Biden’s proposal would call for billionaires to pay a minimum of 25% on their income, raise the corporate tax rate to 28% from 21%, and bar corporations from being able to deduct employee pay if they pay over $1 million to any employee. 

    He will also outline proposals to cut taxes for the middle class and use revenues from his proposals to pay for expansions of programs that aid lower-income families, like the Child Tax Credit and the Earned Income Tax Credit. Biden is also set to outline a plan to implement higher Medicare taxes on Americans making more than $400,000 annually to help the program remain financially solvent.

    Lael Brainard, director of the White House National Economic Council, said that Biden will contrast his proposals to Republicans’ plans of extending the 2017 Trump-era tax cuts while slashing corporate tax rates.

    In a briefing with reporters on Tuesday, White House domestic policy adviser Neera Tanden said Biden will seek to highlight his work to lower costs for American families while making sure they know the administration is aware some are feeling a “middle-class squeeze.” 

    “Americans want more breathing room,” Tanden said said, “and as the president has been focused on throughout his term, we will see the State of the Union as an opportunity to drive a robust policy agenda to address a range of costs.” 

    Tanden noted Biden will highlight his work to lower health care costs, such as securing the ability for Medicare to negotiate drug prices and capping insulin at $35 a month for seniors and other Medicare enrollees. 

    “The president will build on that agenda in the State of the Union with more action to take on big Pharma to reduce drug costs for more and more Americans,” Tanden said. 

    She also said Biden will address housing. She noted the administration recognizes “that housing is a real challenge in the country both in terms of affording a first home or being able to pay rent.” 

    “The president will speak to these issues and he has specific proposals that he will speak to in terms of housing affordability and ensuring we are addressing rent,” she said. 

    National Economic Council on Lowering Costs Deputy Director Jon Donenberg and Rohit Chopra, Director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau of the United States on Junk Fees, also noted Biden will call out companies over his belief that some are continuing to keep prices high despite declining costs as well as his self-proclaimed war on hidden or surprise fees at the end of purchases.  

    “Unfortunately it is going to be a lot of a spin on how Bidenomics has actually been a success,” Rep. Cory Mills, R-Fla., told Spectrum News on Wednesday when asked what he expects to hear from the president on Thursday.

    “You have people who can’t afford the American dream anymore, to own their own homes,” he added. 

    Foreign policy

    Palestinians visit their destroyed homes after Israeli forces left Khan Younis, Gaza Strip, Wednesday, March 6, 2024. (AP Photo/Mohammed Dahman)

    Thursday’s high-profile address also comes as Biden is navigating two wars overseas as his request to Congress for additional foreign aid still hangs in the balance.

    Biden has implored House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La. to put the Senate-passed $95 package providing aid to Ukraine amid Russia’s invasion, Israel as it battles Hamas, the Indo-Pacific as China grows its influence in the region and more up for a vote – thus far to no avail. 

    Jean-Pierre on Wednesday confirmed that Biden invited Ukraine’s first lady as well as the widow of Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny, who died last month in a Russian prison, to Thursday’s address. Both are not able to make it, she said. 

    Meanwhile, when it comes to the war in Gaza, Belt said, Biden may have to walk a finer line. 

    “This is something where he has to walk a delicate dance,” he said. 

    “There’s a big faction of the party that is not happy with support for Israel, given what’s going on in Gaza,” Belt added. “So that’s going to have to be something he’s going to have to diplomatically address.” 

    Biden has faced criticism from some in his party over his support for Israel amid the war in Gaza as the Palestinian death toll has risen and the humanitarian crisis has worsened. 

    Questions about Biden’s age

    While not a policy issue per se, Belt notes the 81-year-old president’s age could be a focus Thursday night. 

    Biden has faced mounting questions on the topic that were only heightened when a special counsel report recommending against charging Biden for his handling of classified information referred to him as a “well-meaning, elderly man with a poor memory.” 

    “People are waiting for him to have that ‘oops’ moment in terms of his memory, or his physical, stamina, posture what have you,” Belt said. “And so there’s gonna be a lot of people waiting to play the gotcha game with him if he does something wrong.”

    Belt, however, also noted Thursday is an opportunity for Biden to “reenergize those voters who have become a little bit disaffected.”

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    Maddie Gannon

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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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    Joseph Konig

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  • Florida social media restrictions passed; vape shops on bill

    Florida social media restrictions passed; vape shops on bill

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    Lawmakers in Tallahassee passed a revised version of the social media restriction bill. President Joe Biden reacts to the Alabama Supreme Court’s decision that frozen embryos are babies. 


    Social media restriction bill passes both chambers

    Both chambers in the Florida legislature passed a bill Thursday that would keep children under the age of 16 off popular platforms regardless of parental approval.

    The measure passed 108-7 in the House and 23-14 in the Senate.

    The measure will now go to Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, who has expressed displeasure in the wording of the bill.

    In Orlando, DeSantis told reporters the proposal still needed work. The bill would ban minors younger than 16 from social media with no parental exception to the rule.

    “I’m a critic of social media, but I have to look at this from a parent’s perspective, so we’re working through this,” DeSantis said. “I don’t think it’s there yet. Hopefully, we’ll be able to get there in a way that I think answers a lot of the concerns that a lot of folks have.”

    That warning came just hours after House Bill 1 passed in the Senate.

    The bill targets any social media site that tracks user activity, allows children to upload material and interact with others, and uses addictive features designed to cause excessive or compulsive use. Supporters point to rising suicide rates among children, cyberbullying and predators using social media to prey on kids.

    “We’re talking about businesses that are using addictive features to engage in mass manipulation of our children to cause them harm,” said the bill’s sponsor, Republican state Sen. Erin Grall.

    Other states have considered similar legislation, but most have not proposed a total ban. In Arkansas, a federal judge blocked enforcement of a law in August that required parental consent for minors to create new social media accounts.

    Supporters in Florida hope that if the bill becomes law, it would withstand legal challenges because it would ban social media formats based on addictive features such as notification alerts and auto-play videos, rather than the content on their sites.

    But opponents say it blatantly violates the First Amendment and that it should be left to parents, not the government, to monitor children’s social media use.

    “This isn’t 1850,” said Democratic state Sen. Jason Pizzo. “While parents show up at school board meetings to ban books, their kids are on their iPads looking at really bad stuff.”

    Some parents also have mixed feelings.

    Central Florida mother Angela Perry said she understands the rationale behind the bill, and noted that she and her husband didn’t let their daughter onto any major platforms until she turned 15. But Perry said she believes it should be up to every parent to make that decision based on the maturity of their children.

    “Whatever happened to parental rights?” Perry asked. “You are already selecting books my child can read at school. That is fine to a certain extent. But now you are also moving into their private life as well. It’s becoming intrusive.”

    The Florida bill would require social media companies to close any accounts it believes to be used by minors and to cancel accounts at the request of a minor or parents. Per the bill, any information pertaining to the account must also be deleted.

    Biden reacts to Alabama Supreme Court decision

    The Alabama Supreme Court’s recent decision that frozen embryos can be considered children is beginning to enter the fracas of the 2024 presidential campaign, becoming another flashpoint in the battle over reproductive health with the issue of abortion likely to remain a salient issue in November. 

    In an interview released Wednesday afternoon, Republican presidential candidate Nikki Haley responded to the ruling in an interview with NBC News, saying “Embryos, to me, are babies.”

    “When you talk about an embryo, you are talking about, to me — that’s a life, and so I do see where that’s coming from when they talk about that,” she added later in the interview. 

    Haley herself used artificial insemination to have her son, which is a different procedure from IVF. 

    By nightfall, the former U.N. Ambassador sought to clarify that her comment about considering embryos babies was not an endorsement of the Alabama Supreme Court’s controversial ruling. 

    “I didn’t say that I agreed with the Alabama ruling,” Haley said in a CNN interview on Wednesday night. “The question that I was asked is: do I believe an embryo is a baby? I do think that if you look in the definition an embryo is considered an unborn baby.”

    The former United Nations ambassador and South Carolina governor went on to emphasize that the “goal” when it comes to frozen embryos should be to “always do what parents want.”

    “So any physician that is in control of those embryos, they owe it to those people to make sure they protect that embryo,” she added. 

    The former South Carolina governor’s comments came as Haley has sought to position herself as more realistic than her former GOP rivals when it comes to abortion, arguing for a “consensus” on the issue that can get enough support in Congress to actually pass. Haley, however, has said she would sign a national abortion ban as president

    The Alabama Supreme Court – which is completely Republican-dominated – sparked attention around the country when it ruled that a state law giving parents the ability to sue over the death of a child “applies to all unborn children, regardless of their location.” That, according to the court, included embryos. 

    “Unborn children are ‘children,’” one justice wrote in the unanimous ruling. 

    Experts are now warning the decision could have major implications for in-vitro fertilization as Alabama’s largest hospital on Wednesday said it is halting the practice for now as it looks into the legal implications. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), roughly 4 million births annually in the U.S., or 1-2%, are from IVF. The treatment can be a costly one, with the average cost of a single IVF cycle costing between $10,000-15,000, per Penn Medicine, and experts are concerned that the Alabama ruling could raise those costs further.  

    Democrats have sought to tie the Alabama high court’s ruling to the Supreme Court’s decision in 2022 to overturn the nearly 50-year-old decision in Roe v. Wade, which guaranteed the right to an abortion.

    In a statement on Thursday, President Joe Biden made it clear that he thinks the two issues are connected: “Make no mistake: this is a direct result of the overturning of Roe v. Wade.”

    “Today, in 2024 in America, women are being turned away from emergency rooms and forced to travel hundreds of miles for health care, while doctors fear prosecution for providing an abortion,” Biden said. “And now, a court in Alabama put access to some fertility treatments at risk for families who are desperately trying to get pregnant. The disregard for women’s ability to make these decisions for themselves and their families is outrageous and unacceptable.”

    “I know that folks are worried about what they’re seeing happening to women all across America,” he added. “I am too. I hear about it everywhere I go. My message is: The Vice President and I are fighting for your rights. We’re fighting for the freedom of women, for families, and for doctors who care for these women. And we won’t stop until we restore the protections of Roe v. Wade in federal law for all women in every state.”

    Since the decision in the summer of 2022, abortion rights advocates have seen major wins in states nationwide, including traditionally red ones like Kansas, Kentucky and Montana. 

    Democrats, who have credited their full-throated defense of abortion for helping the party have strong showings in the 2022 midterm and 2023 off-year elections, have shown no signs of easing up on highlighting the issue on the trail. 

    Biden held a major reelection rally with all four White House principals last month focused specifically on the topic and “restoring Roe.” 

    Biden’s reelection team also seized on Alabama’s ruling, calling it “MAGA” Republicans’ “latest attack on reproductive freedom” and seeking to put the blame directly on Biden’s potential 2024 opponent former President Donald Trump. 

    The campaign responded to reports that the University of Alabama at Birmingham health system, which includes the state’s largest hospital, was pausing IVF treatments as it figured out how to respond to the ruling.

    “What is happening in Alabama right now is only possible because Donald Trump’s Supreme Court justices overturned Roe v. Wade. Across the nation, MAGA Republicans are inserting themselves into the most personal decisions a family can make, from contraception to IVF,” Biden-Harris 2024 Campaign Manager Julie Chavez Rodriguez said in a statement. 

    “If Donald Trump is elected, there is no question that he will impose his extreme anti-freedom agenda on the entire country,” she added. 

    Trump appointed three of the Supreme Court justices who were in the majority that overturned Roe. 

    Despite often boasting about his role in Roe’s end, for his part, publicly, Trump has not given details about what he would support if elected in terms of a national abortion ban. Instead, he has held that he would “sit down with both sides and negotiate a deal,” as Trump campaign National Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt reiterated in a statement last week. 

    However, a report from the New York Times sparked headlines last week after the outlet reported Trump privately supports a ban on abortion after 16 weeks of pregnancy. 

    When asked about the ruling on Thursday, South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott, a former GOP candidate for president-turned-Trump booster, declined to address it, saying instead: “I haven’t studied the issue so I’m going to let Nikki Haley continue to go back and forth on that issue.”

    While polling has shown abortion is extremely popular in the United States, there is less data surveying IVF specifically. The Pew Research Center found 61% of adults say health insurance should cover fertility treatments and 42% say someone they know or they themselves have received such treatments.

    Spectrum News’ Justin Tasolides contributed to this report

    Vape shop owners concerned over new proposal

    Florida Senate Bill 1006 and its counterpart House Bill 1007 are heading toward a floor vote. The bills would limit all vape shops to only carry FDA approved products.

    Florida State Sen. Keith Perry is a sponsor of SB 1006 and says the move is meant to protect children and consumers from unsafe products.

    “Florida now has the dubious distinction of being the number one state in the country for illegal and illicit vapes,” Perry said.

    Perry says illegal vape product sales are more than 360 million a year in Florida alone. The Bill would create a state registry and only FDA products will be eligible.

    Some vape shop owners oppose the legislation, including Nick Orlando. He owns four different stores, including Vapors Depot in Largo. Orlando is also President of Florida Smoke Free Association, and advocates for the vape industry at the state capital. He says the proposals will hurt shop owners.

    “Over 10,000 mom and pop businesses would shut down. Over 50,000 Floridians would lose their jobs and we would have a huge gap in our economy of $1.2 billion,” Orlando said.

    Orlando says the Food and Drug Administration is very tough when it comes to approving products.

    “What I mean is these people in our industry that have been around for years helping people get off combustible tobacco, who have filed these applications with our FDA, 99% of those companies have been denied market orders and cannot sell their product if this bill goes into effect,” Orlando said.

    He has been traveling to the state capital and trying to work with lawmakers to produce a compromise.

    SB 1006 now will head to the Senate Fiscal Policy Committee, then off to a floor vote. Its counterpart, HB 1007, is also heading toward a full vote.

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    Gary Darling

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  • Biden campaign launches ad on Trump’s NATO comments

    Biden campaign launches ad on Trump’s NATO comments

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    President Joe Biden’s reelection campaign is hoping former President Donald Trump’s recent comments about NATO countries will turn off voters in key so-called “blue wall” battleground states, launching a new ad seeking to paint his predecessor’s comments as dangerous for American security. 

    The new messaging blitz caps off a week in which the president and his reelection team have sought to highlight Trump’s suggestion that he would encourage Russia to attack delinquent allies, with Biden calling it “dumb,” “shameful,” “dangerous,” and “un-American” from the White House. 


    What You Need To Know

    • President Joe Biden’s reelection campaign is hoping former President Donald Trump’s threats against NATO countries will turn off voters in the key so-called “blue wall” states
    • The campaign on Friday announced it is launching a new ad seeking to paint his predecessor’s comments on the alliance as dangerous for American security
    • The new messaging blitz caps off a week in which the president and his reelection team have sought to highlight Trump’s suggestion that he would tell Russia to attack delinquent allies, a comment that Trump doubled down on this week 
    • The new one-minute spot will run in the battleground states of Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania – areas home to a large population of Americans from NATO countries bordering Russia and three states that flipped from red to blue in 2020 to help send Biden to the Oval Office 

    The new one-minute spot will run in the battleground states of Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania – areas home to a large population of Americans from NATO countries bordering Russia and three states that flipped from red to blue in 2020 to help send Biden to the Oval Office. 

    In total, the states are home to more than 2.5 million people with Polish, Finnish, Norwegian, Lithuanian, Latvian, or Estonian roots, according to the campaign. Biden’s reelection team made the case the countries could be at risk of invasion by Russia if Russian President Vladimir Putin is successful with his goals in Ukraine. 

    “For 75 years, NATO has been the most important military alliance in the world, it’s been the cornerstone of America’s security,” the ad starts. “It’s how we won the cold war and defeated the soviet union.”

    The spot goes on to note the only time Article 5 of the NATO treaty – which stipulates that an armed attack against one member country is an armed attack against all allies –  has been invoked was “to stand with America” after the terrorist attacks on 9/11. 

    “Every president since Truman has been a rock-solid supporter of NATO, except for Donald Trump,” the ad goes on to argue before pledging that Biden would stand up for the alliance. 

    Trump this week twice doubled down on his threat that he would not defend member countries of the alliance that do not meet defense spending targets. 

    The former president set off alarms across Europe when he said he would encourage Russia “to do whatever the hell they want” to NATO member countries that do not contribute enough to military spending. 

    “The bottom line is that the only person Donald Trump is loyal to is Donald Trump – not to our allies and certainly not to the American people. And while he thinks that sucking up to Putin and other dictators will make him strong, the American people know him for who he truly is: a coward and a loser,” Biden-Harris 2024 Campaign Manager Julie Chavez Rodriguez said in a statement. 

    The new ad will run for three weeks through Super Tuesday, when 15 states and one territory will cast 2024 primary ballots. 

    It comes as the future of additional U.S. aid to Ukraine hangs in the balance, hinging on a skeptical GOP House leadership as the country readies to enter its third year of war. 

    The Senate on Tuesday passed a $95 billion package with aid to Ukraine, along with Israel, the Indo-Pacific and more, after a border deal – negotiated over weeks by a bipartisan group of senators and the White House – was dropped from the bill amid GOP opposition. Republicans had initially insisted Biden’s foreign aid request be tied to significant border policy changes. 

    The fate of additional U.S. aid to Ukraine now appears to rest on whether GOP leadership will bring the bill up for a vote in the lower chamber – where many Republicans are against sending more assistance to the country, arguing Washington must address its own problems at the border first, the U.S. cannot keep spending money on the war and the Biden administration has not laid out a clear plan as it how Ukraine wins and the conflict ends. 

    Biden earlier this week urged House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., to put the package up for a vote “immediately,” making the case it will garner enough support from Democrats and Republicans combined to pass. 

    In that speech from the White House on Tuesday, Biden also offered a forceful condemnation of Trump’s comments on NATO, saying they “sent a dangerous and shocking and, frankly, un-American signal to the world.”

    Spectrum News’ Joseph Konig contributed to this report

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    Maddie Gannon

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  • The dismissal of Disney’s lawsuit against DeSantis

    The dismissal of Disney’s lawsuit against DeSantis

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    A federal judge ruled against Disney in its lawsuit against Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and his allies, and activists on both sides of the aisle are still waiting to hear from the Florida Supreme Court about a proposed abortion amendment ballot initiative.


    Judge rules against Disney

    A federal judge has dismissed Disney’s lawsuit against Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, the Florida Secretary of the Department of Commerce and members of the Central Florida Tourism Oversight Board.

    The company had sued in April, claiming the state retaliated against it for publicly opposing the Parental Rights in Education law — called “Don’t Say Gay” by opponents.

    The governor responded at the time by pushing the Florida Legislature to strip Disney of its longtime self-governing power under the Reedy Creek Improvement District.

    Disney claimed the move violated the company’s First Amendment rights because the governor was punishing it for disagreeing with him.

    But the judge has now thrown that lawsuit out.

    The case against DeSantis and the commerce secretary were dismissed because the judge ruled Disney didn’t have standing to sue them.

    The judge dismissed the case against the CFTOB on the merits of the case, saying that Disney failed to state a claim.

    “At the end of the day, under the law of this Circuit, ‘courts shouldn’t look to a law’s legislative history to find an illegitimate motivation for an otherwise constitutional statute’ …  Because that is what Disney seeks here, its claim fails as a matter of law,” the ruling said.

    Florida Supreme Court weighs abortion amendment

    The Florida Supreme Court is getting ready to hear arguments regarding placing an abortion amendment on the ballot. The organization, Floridians Protecting Freedom, received over 900,000 signatures qualifying that amendment for voters to decide the state’s future on the abortion issue.

    Current Florida law allows abortion up to 15 weeks of pregnancy, but some say that’s not the only barrier women face when seeking an abortion.

    A woman, who did not give her name out of fear of retribution, says since the overturning of Roe v. Wade, the violence is real and it’s not uncommon for an Orlando Police officer to be out front of the clinic protecting the peace.

    She is a volunteer with “Stand with Abortion Now” — also known as SWAN of Orlando. She’s a clinic escort, helping people needing to enter clinics.

    “Our main purpose for being here is shielding patients from harassment from protesters,” she said.

    Come November she’s hoping Florida voters can voice their opinion on the future of abortion in the state.

    “I’m born and raised in Florida, seeing the shift of the political landscape and the reproductive justice landscape in Florida change in a post-Roe world has made this so important for me,” she said. “Polls have shown that both democratic and republican voters in the state of Florida alike have signed onto this ballot initiative and believe this issue should be in the hands of the voters.”

    While her team at SWAN hope to continue defending what they say are reproductive rights in the state of Florida, they also know there are people who are always going to support anti-abortion policies.

    Some protesters show up at the clinic in hopes of changing a patient’s mind.

    “We understand the women are coming out here to make a hard decision,” said Alex Wright, who is against abortion rights. “But because we care and love for them, we want to see those babies be saved and see that mother not regret a decision she’s going to make.”

    Wright comes weekly, spreading the gospel, as well as adoption resources for potential patients. Wright says he’s for the Florida Supreme Court to strike down the potential amendment, but would love to see abortion illegal nationwide.

    “I hope that it gets struck down and hope they vote not to include it. I hope abortion never gets legalized fully. I hope it gets abolished,” said Wright.

    On Feb. 7, the Florida Supreme Court will hear the first oral arguments potentially allowing the abortion amendment on the November ballot.

    Lawmakers grill social media executives

    The top officers of some of the world’s biggest social media companies defended their commitment to protecting young people on their platforms on Capitol Hill on Wednesday as senators pressed the tech giants for less talk and more action. 

    “These companies must be reined in or the worst is yet to come,” Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., the committee’s top Republican, said.

    Wednesday’s Senate Judiciary Committee hearing, featuring the CEOs of some of the best-known platforms, including Meta, TikTok and X, formerly Twitter, opened with a video of people sharing personal stories about how they, or their children, faced exploitation on social media.

    Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., pressed Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg about whether he has personally compensated any of the victims and their families for what they have been through.

    “I don’t think so,” Zuckerberg replied.

    “There’s families of victims here,” Hawley said. “Would you like to apologize to them?”

    Parents attending the hearing rose and held up pictures of their children. Zuckerberg stood as well, turning away from his microphone and the senators to address them directly.

    “I’m sorry for everything you have all been through. No one should go through the things that your families have suffered,” he said, adding that Meta continues to invest and work on “industry-wide efforts” to protect children.

    The CEOs emphasized the existing tools they have in place on their platforms for users to report exploitation and protect children. The chief officer of Snap, Evan Spiegel, for instance, noted Snapchat does not have public friends lists and minors do not have public profile photos. 

    TikTok’s Zi Chew noted there is a specific experience on its app designed for younger children while Zuckerberg pointed out controls that allow parents to limit the time children spend on Meta’s services. 

    Ahead of the hearing, Snap announced it would support an act that would require platforms to report certain instances of drug trafficking. The CEO of X, formerly Twitter, Linda Yaccarino, said her site supports a bill that increases the ability of people who have experienced sexual exploitation to sue platforms. 

    Republican and Democratic senators came together in a rare show of agreement throughout the hearing, though it’s not yet clear if this will be enough to pass legislation such as the Kids Online Safety Act, proposed in 2022 by Democratic Sen. Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut and Republican Sen. Marsha Blackburn of Tennessee. 

    Google’s YouTube was notably missing from the list of companies called to the Senate Wednesday even though more kids use YouTube than any other platform, according to the Pew Research Center. Pew found that 93% of U.S. teens use YouTube, with TikTok a distant second at 63%.

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    Katie Streit

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