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Tag: President Joe Biden

  • President Biden’s health and age under even further scrutiny amid questions over his political future

    President Biden’s health and age under even further scrutiny amid questions over his political future

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    Washington (CNN) — As President Joe Biden isolates at his Delaware beach home after testing positive for Covid-19, he is growing increasingly isolated from many corners of his Democratic Party as he faces deepening questions about whether he should continue his reelection campaign.

    The announcement of Biden’s positive test on Wednesday came as calls from his party for him to step aside in the 2024 race are growing louder. CNN reported that former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi privately told the president that polling shows Biden cannot defeat former President Donald Trump in November and that continuing his run for the presidency could destroy Democrats’ chance to take back the House.

    Following Biden’s campaign-changing performance in last month’s presidential debate, his age and health — which have long been his biggest political weakness, dating back to his third run for the presidency starting in 2019 — have been under the microscope. In the last week, multiple incidents have been held up as signs that Biden is not sharp enough to convince voters that he could defeat Trump, let alone serve another four years as commander-in-chief.

    An interview with BET that taped on Tuesday and aired in full late Wednesday night is the latest moment that’s being scrutinized by nervous Democrats. In that interview, Biden said that only a “medical condition” would convince him to leave the race — a statement made just one day before he tested positive for Covid.

    He stumbled while referring to Black members of his administration, describing Lloyd Austin as the secretary of defense rather than saying his name.

    “For example, look at the heat I’m getting because I named a, uh … the — secretary of defense, a Black man. I named Ketanji Brown, because of the people I’ve named,” Biden said, also referring to Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, whom he appointed to the high court.

    The White House said Wednesday the president had “upper respiratory symptoms, to include rhinorhea (runny nose) and non-productive cough, with general malaise” as a result of his Covid infection. Video of the president leaving Las Vegas showed him slowly walking up the steps to enter Air Force One, including pausing on the second step to gather himself before continuing into the plane.

    Biden on Thursday is experiencing “mild upper respiratory symptoms” and is continuing to receive Paxlovid, according to a note from his physician Dr. Kevin O’Connor. O’Connor notes that Biden does not have a fever and his vitals remain “normal.”

    Additional video shot by pool reporters who met Biden in Delaware late Wednesday also shows the president appearing to have difficulty getting situated in his SUV for the drive to his Rehoboth Beach, Delaware, home, where he is planning to isolate. The video shows Biden taking half a minute to get into the SUV and requiring the assistance of Secret Service agents to get situated in the car. The president was not wearing a face mask while he was interacting with the agents, despite having Covid. He eventually did put on a mask.

    Earlier on Wednesday, while visiting a local restaurant, the president appeared to mistake Nevada Attorney General Aaron Ford for the state’s governor. While speaking to a guest, Biden pointed to Ford and asked, “You know the gov?” Individuals nearby laughed at the statement, but it was unclear whether Biden was joking.

    CNN has reached out to the Biden campaign and White House for comment on the moment in Nevada and the president’s arrival in Delaware. Biden’s deputy campaign manager Quentin Fulks on Thursday said the campaign is “not working through any scenarios” where Biden is not the presidential nominee.

    “The vice president is a part of the Biden-Harris ticket. Our campaign is not working through any scenarios where President Biden is not the top of the ticket. He is and will be the Democratic nominee,” he said during a DNC news conference in Milwaukee when asked if the campaign was working on any plans should Vice President Kamala Harris take the lead.

    Asked if Biden’s receptive to conversations about leaving the race, Fulks replied, “The president has said it several times, he’s staying in this race.”

    “The president is in this race. He’s going to and we look forward to him accepting the delegates in Chicago and continuing with this race to talk about what’s at stake,” he added.

    Polling shows a problem

    As calls for Biden to reconsider his candidacy are poised to grow even louder on Thursday, some of the reasons why are coming into sharper focus: Not only is Biden falling short to Trump, but Democratic candidates are afraid voters could see their own defenses of Biden as dishonest.

    “Defending Biden’s fitness for office is an untenable position for down-ballot Democrats,” according to a memo a leading Democratic research firm released Wednesday. It details that voters are “likely to see other Democrats’ defense of him as fit as dishonest” by a wide margin.

    CNN obtained a polling memo from Blue Rose Research, which is distributed daily to operatives and officials across the Democratic Party. Pelosi is among those who pore over the details and findings in documents like this that are rarely shared.

    The memo dated Wednesday shines a brighter light on the reasons behind the calls for Biden to step aside.

    “Concerns about President Biden’s fitness for office are pervasive,” the memo says, pointing to polling data that shows a remarkable low number of voters — even those who supported Biden in 2020 — who believe he is capable of serving a second term.

    While partisan polling does not meet CNN standards, the 16-page document has value because it offers a window into the panic and alarm across the Democratic Party.

    An AP-NORC poll released Wednesday found 14% of all Americans are extremely or very confident that Biden has the “mental capacity to be an effective president.” Among Democrats, that number is 27%.

    The internal polling data shows an expanding battleground in the presidential race, with New Hampshire, Minnesota, New Mexico, Virginia and Maine becoming highly competitive in the race between Biden and Trump, in addition to the seven current top battleground states.

    Worrying moments for Democrats

    The president has had several moments over the last week that have worried Democrats even more about whether he can effectively continue to campaign.

    On July 11, the president had back-to-back slip-ups on the last day of the NATO summit in Washington, referring to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky as “President Putin” before correcting himself at one event and then referring to Harris as “Vice President Trump” in a press conference, a mistake he did not correct or acknowledge.

    In that same press conference, Biden also appeared to back away from his previous assertion that only the “Lord Almighty” could convince him to leave the race, saying he would not leave the race “unless they came back and said there’s no way you can win.”

    Several calls with key groups of lawmakers on Friday and Saturday also did not seem to convince skeptical lawmakers that Biden was able to win. CNN reported Wednesday night that a Democratic lawmaker told CNN that Biden’s full court press in recent days following Saturday’s assassination attempt on Trump has only exacerbated the panic inside the party. “Getting worse” is how the member put it.

    Another House Democrat who watched Biden’s interview with NBC News’ Lester Holt on Monday described feeling “profound sadness watching an admirable man tread water instead of leading us through it.”

    While the assassination attempt on Trump eased the political pressure on Biden for a few days, that pressure has kicked up again over the last several days as CNN and others reported that some Biden allies were making a quiet push for the Democratic National Committee to speed up Biden’s virtual nomination process — with the hope of beginning the roll call vote as soon as next week.

    Concerned Democrats bought themselves a little more time by convincing the DNC to not move up the timeline — voting will not begin before August 1, CNN reported. The delay stopped a draft letter circulating among House Democrats that, if made formal, would have exposed further cracks in the party. House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer both pushed the DNC to delay the process, multiple sources told CNN.

    Behind the scenes, the president is not as defiant as he is in public, multiple Democratic sources told CNN.

    “The private conversations with the Hill are continuing,” a senior Democratic adviser told CNN, speaking on condition of anonymity to avoid alienating the campaign and the White House. “He’s being receptive. Not as defiant as he is publicly.”

    “He’s gone from saying, ‘Kamala can’t win,’ to ‘Do you think Kamala can win?’“ the adviser said. “It’s still unclear where he’s going to land but seems to be listening.”

    The Biden campaign, which is also facing a growing outcry from Democratic donors, dismissed the suggestion the president was rethinking his candidacy.

    “If the facts matter — and they should — here is one: President Biden is the Democratic nominee and he is going to win this November,” Kevin Munoz, a Biden spokesman, told CNN.

    Biden on defense

    Biden has been growing increasingly defensive over his political standing in recent days. CNN has reported that calls over the weekend with groups of Democratic lawmakers did not go well when the president was confronted with polling data that lawmakers said showed his standing in the race had fallen dramatically.

    On Wednesday night, CNN reported Pelosi had told Biden within the last week that the polling data showed he could not win reelection. The president responded by pushing back, telling Pelosi he has seen polls that indicate he can win, one source said. Another one of the sources described Biden as getting defensive about the polls. None of the sources indicated whether Pelosi told Biden in this conversation that she believes the president should drop out of the 2024 race.

    When asked for comment, White House spokesperson Andrew Bates did not respond to the details of CNN’s reporting on the recent Pelosi-Biden call. “President Biden is the nominee of the party. He plans to win and looks forward to working with congressional Democrats to pass his 100 days agenda to help working families,” Bates said.

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    Itoro N. Umontuen and CNN

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  • Biden says he’s grateful Trump is safe after rally shooting, denounces political violence

    Biden says he’s grateful Trump is safe after rally shooting, denounces political violence

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    Washington (CNN) — President Joe Biden said he is grateful former President Donald Trump is safe after a shooting at his rally in Pennsylvania.

    Speaking from Rehoboth Beach, Delaware, about two hours after the shooting, Biden said, “There’s no place in America for this kind of violence.”

    “It’s sick,” the president added.

    With the apparent shooting threatening to further inflame political rhetoric in the months ahead of November, Biden took the opportunity to call for the country to unite.

    “We cannot allow for this to be happening. We cannot be like this,” he said.

    Biden and Trump spoke late Saturday night, a White House official said.

    The shooting – which is being investigated as an attempted assassination, according to law enforcement officials – left Trump bleeding from the ear. A spokesperson said the former president was doing “fine” and being treated at a medical facility. The suspected shooter and at least one rally attendee were killed, Butler County, Pennsylvania, District Attorney Richard Goldinger told CNN.

    Biden was attending mass at St. Edmond’s Catholic Church in Rehoboth Beach when the shooting occurred. The president is due to return to the White House late Saturday night, cutting short his planned weekend in Delaware. He’ll receive an updated briefing from homeland security and law enforcement officials on Sunday, the White House official said.

    The shooting marks a massive turning point not only for the country, but for Biden’s role as president: he entered the church as a president fighting for his political future and exited in a familiar role – the nation’s counsellor in chief now tasked with bringing the United States together during a serious crisis.

    The shooting at Trump’s rally is a shocking turn in what has been a highly charged political season for both of the major-party candidates. Biden has pitched the race as the decision between the continuation and possible destruction of democracy in the United States. That rhetoric will now be closely examined in the aftermath of the apparent attack, including comments that the president made in a call with donors on July 8, during which he said, “It’s time to put Trump in the bullseye,” according to a summary of the call provided by his campaign.

    Biden said in a statement earlier Saturday that he was praying for Trump: “Jill and I are grateful to the Secret Service for getting him to safety. There’s no place for this kind of violence in America. We must unite as one nation to condemn it.”

    Inside Biden campaign’s response

    Moments after the incident, Biden campaign officials huddled and decided to pull down all TV ads and limit their public campaign messaging.

    Bidens campaign manager Julie Chávez Rodríguez and chair Jen O’Malley Dillon sent a note to campaign staff Saturday evening in the immediate aftermath of the shooting, urging staff to “refrain from issuing any comments on social media or in public.”

    “We’re also asking everyone to pause any proactive campaign communication across all platforms and in all circumstances until we know more,” they wrote in a note, which was obtained by CNN.

    Chávez Rodríguez and O’Malley Dillon began the note by saying that as more information comes in, they are “grateful to the members of law enforcement who immediately jumped into action and wishing Trump a quick and full recovery.”

    Mood inside the White House is ‘shock’

    The mood inside the White House is “shock” as officials responded to the shooting, according to a senior administration official, and who added that officials wanted “to be responsive and serious.”

    Biden’s chief of staff, Jeff Zients, sent a brief note to White House staff Saturday evening, saying that the president was “closely” tracking the situation and would continue to provide updates, according to the note obtained by CNN.

    Biden told his staff that he wanted to address the nation as soon as he was briefed, according to a source familiar with the matter.

    “It is just really horrible,” the senior administration official said, responding to how the reaction has been within the White House following the incident.

    “It should never happen. It’s unconscionable,” a senior White House official told CNN.

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    CNN

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  • WATCH: President Joe Biden Calls Out Donald Trump At Detroit Rally & Outlines His Strategy For 2024 Election

    WATCH: President Joe Biden Calls Out Donald Trump At Detroit Rally & Outlines His Strategy For 2024 Election

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    President Joe Biden is standing on business when it comes to Donald Trump. He recently stated that he doesn’t deserve “no more free passes.”

    RELATED: Wayment! President Joe Biden Goes Viral For Referring To VP Kamala Harris As Donald Trump At NATO Summit (WATCH)

    President Joe Biden Calls Out Donald Trump

    On Friday, July 12, President Biden held a rally in a Detroit high school gymnasium.

    The politician promptly addressed his recent name mix-ups at the NATO Summit earlier this week. Biden didn’t hesitate to criticize Donald Trump and call him out for making similar mistakes.

    “People would rather talk about how I mix up names. I guess they don’t remember that Trump called Nikki Haley, Nancy Pelosi. No more! Donald, no more free passes,” Biden said during the rally.

    He even went as far as labeling Trump as a “convicted criminal” and discussed the businessman’s guilty verdict in the hush money trial.

    “Today we’re going to shine the spotlight on Donald Trump. We’re gonna do what the press so far hasn’t, but I think they’re gonna soon. Folks Donald Trump is a convicted criminal. He was convicted by a jury of his peers of 34 felonies for paying hush money,” Biden continued.

    According to The Detroit News, when President Biden mentioned Trump, the crowd erupted in chants of “Lock him up!” 

    The outlet also reported that Biden remained firm in his decision to continue in the election and expressed confidence in his ability to succeed against Trump.

    “I am running. And we’re going to win,” Biden affirmed.

    Social Media Reacts To President

    The Roomies quickly responded to Biden’s remarks at his Detroit rally. Even Fat Joe joined The Shade Room comment section to give the president props writing,That’s the Joe i know🔥” 

    Instagram user @aguilo.ju wrote, They increased his dosage today.” 

    Instagram user @_suckafreesi wrote, My mans took his meds and had a nap and woke up swinging 😭”

    While Instagram user @nadiamonyea wrote, I was scared a little bit when he started coughing but he pulled it together real quick. Yeah Joe 😅🦾🦾🎉” 

    Then Instagram user @_honey.bai wrote, That was damn near a tongue twister and he said it without stuttering. Let me find out they flipped his switch at the debate.” 

    Instagram user @iron_barbii wrote,Retrumplicans will take anything and twist it when it fits their agenda. He’s speaking just fine to me…..” 

    Lastly, Instagram user @nonsky wrote, Where was this energy at the debate? lol” 

    Biden Goes Viral For Mistakes At Summit

    Despite his recent mistakes and ongoing speculation about the future of his campaign, Biden appeared to be in good spirits during the rally.

    Earlier this week, President Biden went viral and raised concerns after accidentally confusing Vice President Kamala Harris with Donald Trump at the NATO Summit.

    “Look, I wouldn’t have picked Vice President Trump to be Vice President if I think she’s not qualified to be president,” Biden stated while onstage.

    As if that wasn’t enough, he then went on to introduce Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky as Russian President Vladimir Putin.

    “And now I want to hand it over to the president of Ukraine, who has as much courage as he has determination. Ladies and gentlemen, President Putin. “He’s going to beat President Putin. President Zelensky. I’m so focused on beating Putin. We got to worry about it. Anyway, Mr. President.”

    RELATED: To Be Clear! President Biden Shares Firm Response On His Position In The 2024 Election Bid

    What Do You Think Roomies?

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    Ashley Rushford

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  • OPINION: You might have just missed Earth-shattering economic news

    OPINION: You might have just missed Earth-shattering economic news

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    New York (CNN) — We did it, y’all! Get the Champagne on ice and gather the townsfolk because America hath slain the beast known as inflation. (Or, at least, it’s hit a turning point.)

    ICYMI: Last month, for the first time in four years, prices on everyday goods and services actually fell. In other words, this June was the first time since the pandemic started that we paid less for stuff compared with the previous month.

    The surprise price decline is seismic news, at least among econ wonks and a narrow strata of reporters who follow this stuff with the fervor of a tween Swiftie.

    “Inflation is dead, and jobs are alive,” labor economist Aaron Sojourner tells me. “We have a very good chance right now of sticking the soft landing.”

    Huzzah! Maximum employment and price stability? Let’s party.

    But wait — what’s that I hear? Not the riotous cheers of American consumers dancing in the streets. Not a chorus of workers singing about the strongest labor market of their lifetimes, and no — I can’t even pick up on the sound of what I’m sure is an army of economists demanding sainthood for Jay Powell.

    Instead, the single best economic news of the past decade is but a murmur of chit-chat, barely audible against a clamor of politicos shouting about President Joe Biden’s age.

    And that has got to drive the Biden campaign absolutely nuts.

    Bidenomics worked and no one cares

    For the past three years, President Biden’s biggest political liabilities have been painfully obvious: his age and inflation.

    One those problems has more or less evaporated — inflation has been steadily cooling, from 9% to 3% on annualized basis, for the past two years. Consumers are finally expressing some optimism, if not for the economy as a whole then at least for their own personal financial situations, the stock market and cooling inflation.

    Of course, everyone knows intellectually that the president doesn’t control the economy. But that’s never stopped voters from blaming whoever’s in office for, well, just about anything, and similarly no party would miss an opportunity to claim credit for an economic boom.

    To be sure, American households aren’t suddenly going to forget the whiplash of inflation that has strained their finances. It remains true, as my colleague Alicia Wallace notes, that overall prices are a good 20% higher than they were in February 2020. (In recent history, the index would typically rise about 10% over a 54-month period, Labor Department data shows.)

    And nothing in economics goes in a straight line. Just 24 hours after the jaw-dropping consumer price report, Friday brought some unexpected bad news around producer prices, which rose 0.2% in June after holding flat in May.

    Still, Thursday should have been a day for the White House to spike the football and double down on a message that has, historically, fallen flat — that Bidenomics is working.

    Unfortunately, if you’re in the Biden camp, age — unlike inflation — only goes one direction.

    Rather than doing a victory lap, Biden on Thursday was preparing for a high-stakes news conference in front of a ravenous White House press corps that focused their questions almost entirely on his fitness to lead. During the press conference, he touted the inflation numbers repeatedly, comparing the positive economic situation now to the pandemic mess he inherited when he started the job. But the press’ questions focused mostly on his verbal slipups and chances of beating former President Donald Trump.

    Bottom line: Thursday’s inflation report is an indisputably positive development that could put some wind in the sails of a Democratic campaign — a powerful blow against the fictional Republican narrative about a US economy in the gutter. The White House can finally cross out “inflation” on its list of presidential liabilities. But as long as Biden’s age dominates the conversation, it’ll just be the econ nerds sipping Champagne alone.

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    Analysis by Allison Morrow and CNN

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  • President Biden seeks to reassure lawmakers after meeting with Minority House Leader Jeffries

    President Biden seeks to reassure lawmakers after meeting with Minority House Leader Jeffries

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    Washington (CNN) — President Joe Biden is launching a delayed outreach campaign to key groups of lawmakers – the kind of effort Democrats have long called for – after he met Thursday with House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries following the president’s closely watched solo news conference.

    In the meeting, Jeffries “directly expressed the full breadth of insight, heartfelt perspectives and conclusions about the path forward that the Caucus has shared in our recent time together,” the New York Democrat wrote in a letter to his colleagues on Friday.

    But Jeffries did not offer Biden one key thing: His endorsement.

    A person familiar with the meeting said Jeffries “bluntly” shared the views of the caucus – as he stated in his letter – but intentionally did not offer an endorsement or say publicly that the decision is Biden’s to make.

    While it is uncertain if Biden directly asked Jeffries for his tacit endorsement, a person familiar with the matter said, Jeffries did not extend it at the meeting or in the public letter released Friday morning.

    Following the conversation, the president has embarked on a series of calls to key groups of Democratic lawmakers – the kind of enterprise that many in Congress asked him to make weeks ago following his disastrous debate performance. CNN reported Friday that Biden had calls with the political wings of the Congressional Asian Pacific American Caucus and the Congressional Hispanic Caucus on Friday and a Saturday virtual meeting with both the New Democrat Coalition and the Congressional Progressive Caucus, according to sources familiar with those meetings.

    Ahead of those meetings, defections in Biden’s Democratic coalition in Congress continued.

    Biden’s performance during his news conference, which lasted just under an hour and during which he fielded 19 questions from reporters on topics ranging from his mental capabilities to foreign policy, was much stronger than his appearance during the CNN presidential debate, but it did not stem the steady stream of House Democrats coming out against Biden’s efforts to seek a second term.

    More than a dozen Democratic House members and at least one Democratic senator have publicly called on Biden to withdraw from his reelection campaign. That list includes multiple House members in the nation’s most competitive congressional districts, but also senior Democrats on influential committees and members in safely Democratic seats.

    One of those Democrats, Rep. Mike Levin of California, told Biden directly on the Congressional Hispanic Caucus call that he should step aside, according to someone briefed on the call. It’s the first time CNN has reported on a member of Congress directly telling Biden to drop out of the race.

    Dozens of other Democrats have stopped short of calling for Biden to end his campaign, but have either expressed concerns about Biden’s chances, said he’ll lose out right or remain publicly undecided. Still, more than 70 members of the House and Senate have publicly reaffirmed their support for Biden as the party’s presidential nominee following his disastrous debate performance late last month.

    The top Democrats in Congress – Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer and Jeffries – have made a series of public statement supporting Biden’s bid this week. Former Speaker Nancy Pelosi – who remains in Congress and is among the most influential members of the party – has privately expressed her concerns, CNN reported Thursday night.

    Biden last night was able to provide incisive remarks on everything from Israel to Russia to China to gun control in the United States. But he also had two notable flubs: During a NATO event before the presser, Biden introduced Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky as “President Putin,” and repeated a similar mistake during the presser, using Donald Trump’s name to refer to Vice President Kamala Harris.

    The evening served as a sort of Rorschach test for Democrats’ feelings on Biden. Those who remain firmly in his corner seized on his extended answers on wonky foreign policy issues to prove he still has what it takes to lead the country effectively, while his Democratic doubters used his verbal miscues to reinforce their calls for someone to replace the president on the top of the ticket.

    Biden, for his part, came off as chastened during the news conference and was less defiant than in previous appearances. While he told ABC’s George Stephanopoulos last week that only the “Lord Almighty” could convince him to remove himself from the race, Biden on Thursday night opened the door for other scenarios in which he would drop out of the contest. Pressed on whether he might reconsider his stance if he was shown data that had Harris performing better against Trump, he offered some openness to that possibility.

    “No, unless they came back and said there’s no way you can win,” Biden said.

    Biden’s campaign, meanwhile, has bluntly acknowledged the challenges it has faced since his debate performance two weeks ago.

    Biden campaign chair Jen O’Malley Dillon acknowledged to staff in a call Thursday that the period after Biden’s disastrous debate performance have been “hard,” “very bad” and “bad f***ing weeks,” a source who was on the call said. Some of the details of what O’Malley Dillon said were first reported by Axios.

    O’Malley Dillon acknowledged when she fumbled words that she had not slept much recently. She tried to rally the troops on this call after first bluntly accepting that the most recent stretch has been deeply challenging, the source said.

    Her case, as this source described it, was: “It’s not just that we feel like we can win. We have a plan to get there.”

    She laid out both external and internal polling numbers, and made the case that the data still backs up that Biden can defeat Trump.

    O’Malley Dillon argued to her team that the Biden reelection campaign is going through a moment that they are “built for,” and that it is because of the team that the president would ultimately win.

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    Itoro N. Umontuen

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  • ‘He’s All In’: First Lady is in Georgia to support BIden-Harris campaign

    ‘He’s All In’: First Lady is in Georgia to support BIden-Harris campaign

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    A large crowd of supports filled a room inside the Bibb Mill Event Center in Columbus, Georgia to hear U.S. First Dr, Jill Biden (foreground in white and black) speak on Monday night. Photo by Julia Beverly/The Atlanta Voice

    COLUMBUS, GA. – United States First Lady Dr. Jill Biden came to Georgia’s third largest city on Monday night to speak in front of a crowd of Biden-Harris administration supporters at a Veterans & Families for Biden-Harris event at the Bibb Mill Event Center.

    When it came to what her husband, United States President Joseph R. Biden, was planning to do Dr. Biden’s message to the dozens of supporters in the warehouse-style space was clear: “He’s all in.”

    A number of veterans took the stage before Biden arrived in order to share their thoughts on former United States President Donald J. Trump’s past comments on veterans, such as the oft-used “losers and suckers” comment.

    Retired veteran Bill Martin (above) shared a story of getting a draft notice at his parent’s home in 1969. “We got to show up on November 5,” Martin said. “This election is about a lot more than veteran’s benefits. This election is about the survival of democracy.” Photo by Julia Beverly/The Atlanta Voice

    First to take the stage on Monday night, retired veteran Bill Martin shared a story of getting a draft notice at his parent’s home in 1969. Along with Martin, there were several veterans, lick Columbus resident Gloria Tyson, that mentioned Trump avoiding being drafted because of perceived or actual medical issues.

    “He’s all in,” said Dr. Jill Biden about her husband, U.S. President Joe Biden’s plans to continuing campaigning for a second term. Photo by JUlia Beverly/The Atlanta Voice

    “We got to show up on November 5,” Martin said. “This election is about a lot more than veteran’s benefits. This election is about the survival of democracy.”

    Tyson, a retired veteran of 21 years of service, said she was there or support the Biden-Harris administration. She took the stage and yelled into the microphone, “Good evening, democrats.” Tyson took the stage alongside Dr. Biden.

    “You don’t define a president in 90 minutes,” Tyson said. “We are a democracy and we are going to continue to be part of a democracy.” Tyson and her husband Kennedy, who was also in attendance, are both veterans and have been married for over 40 years.

    Dr. Biden opened by thanking the crowd and the community, which was made up of many veterans and seniors. “I’m glad to be back to visit with this community that so many veterans and veteran families call home,” she said. Biden’s father was a military veteran. “Does Donald trump know anything about being in the military?,” she asked.

    She took a few moments to list some of the pro-military accomplishments of the Biden-Harris administration, including health care and Pact Act .

    “You are what this election is all about,” Biden said. “We cannot trust Donald Trump…..the military community deserves better.”

    Phyllis Leggett (left) and Denise Ellis, a pair of Biden-Harris supporters in Columbus on Monday, both say that Biden is the best choice to run this country. Photo by Donnell Suggs/The Atlanta Voice

    Denise Ellis, a democrat and Minneapolis native, said she moved to Georgia in the wake of the George Floyd incident and because she wanted to get directly involved in local politics in a battleground state. She now works with the Muskogee County Democrats.

    “It’s a dangerous time and we’re not getting off the horse in the middle of the stream,” Ellis said. “We can’t take Trump, so we have to have get Biden back into office.”

    Phylis Leggett, a Biden-Harris supporter, added that she supports Biden and Harris because, “They stand for the values of what America should be. That’s what I want for my four grandchildren.”

    Throughout her 15-minute speech Biden was crystal clear about what the campaign needed from veterans and their families this election season. “Together Georgia, together, we are going to win this,” she said before leaving the stage.

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    Donnell Suggs

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  • TipRanks’ ‘Perfect 10’ Picks: 2 Top-Scoring Stocks for the Second Half of 2024

    TipRanks’ ‘Perfect 10’ Picks: 2 Top-Scoring Stocks for the Second Half of 2024

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    Now that the first half of the year is fully behind us, we can take its measure – and what we see illuminates both hopes and risks. On the positive side, the stock markets have posted strong first-half gains; the S&P 500 is up nearly 17% and the tech-heavy NASDAQ has gained 24%. On the negative side, the gains are narrow, and concentrated in the tech sector; semiconductor maker Nvidia, up more than 150% so far this year, alone accounts for approximately one-third of the S&P gains.

    The narrow base alone might not spook investors – it’s based on the latest AI technologies, which are rapidly proving their worth in new products and services. But it’s also an election year, and as we all know, anything can happen at the polls in November. The recent debate between President Joe Biden and former President Trump, the presumptive challenger, only served to muddy those waters further.

    We can filter out some of those muddy waters with the right tool – such as the Smart Score, from TipRanks. This AI-based data collection and collation algorithm gathers and sorts the accumulated data of the stock market – and uses it to rate every stock according to a set of factors that have proven accurate forecasters of future performance. The result is given as a simple score, on a scale of 1 to 10, with the ‘Perfect 10s’ being stocks that deserve a closer look.

    So let’s give two top-scoring stocks – ‘Perfect 10s’ – just that close look that they deserve. According to the TipRanks database, the Street’s analysts recognize these shares as Strong Buys and are predicting plenty of upside for both. Here are the details.

    Janus International Group (JBI)

    We’ll start with a construction-related company, a firm focused on a product that most of us never even think about, although we use it every day: doors. Janus, a design and manufacturing company, provides solutions for doors and entryways to the commercial, industrial, and construction sectors. The company works with builders and contractors, offering a variety of doorway solutions, ranging from basic to high technology. Janus incorporates leading technologies in materials, electronics, and sensors, making sure that its doors are more than simple portals.

    Getting to specifics, Janus offers lines of doorways and entry systems for self-storage facilities, light industrial structures, and commercial buildings. These product lines include rolling steel doors, smart entries, hallway systems, and a range of doors made from varying materials and with varying levels of weatherproofing and security protection. Janus typically deals with enterprise clients.

    Janus is also noted for its Nokē system, a smart entry system designed to enhance doors and entryways in the self-storage niche. The Nokē system provides benefits for both storage facility owners and customers, including improved security, automated lock checks, and overlocking processes. Janus advertises this system as one of many it can offer to bring new technological innovations to its best-in-class self-storage door systems.

    In addition to its commitment to providing the best quality in top-end doorway products, Janus is also committed to expanding its footprint in the business. In late May, the company announced that it had acquired Terminal Maintenance and Construction, or TMC, a leading provider of terminal maintenance services in the trucking industry. TMC operates primarily in the Southeast US, and its acquisition will provide support for the expansion of Janus’ Facilitate business division, which provides a full range of facility maintenance services.

    Earlier in May, Janus beat expectations when it reported its financial results for 1Q24. The company’s earnings release showed a top line of $254.5 million. While up only 1% from the prior year period, this revenue total was $1.6 million better than had been anticipated. At the bottom line, Janus’ non-GAAP EPS of 21 cents per share was 2 cents above the estimates – and the total net income of $30.7 million was up more than 18% year-over-year.

    This stock has been covered by Jefferies analyst Philip Ng, who sees plenty of potential here for continued growth. He notes that Janus is executing well on its business, and writes, “Despite a mixed backdrop for self-storage REITs, JBI has seen continued momentum particularly in new construction and its backlogs have remained stable. JBI is delivering solid growth & strong margins, and capital deployment provides good optionality. With the stock trading at 7.0x 2025E EV/EBITDA, we see a path for JBI to re-rate higher now that its float has improved, and it becomes discovered by a broader shareholder base.”

    The five-star analyst goes on to give these shares a Buy rating, with a $20 price target that indicates room for a 63% share appreciation on the one-year horizon. (To watch Ng’s track record, click here)

    While Janus has only 3 recent analyst reviews, they are unanimously positive – for a Strong Buy consensus rating from the Street. The stock is selling for $12.25, and its $20.50 average target price implies a one-year gain of 67%. (See JBI stock forecast)

    Atmus Filtration Technologies (ATMU)

    Next on our list, Atmus, is an industrial firm offering a portfolio of high-quality, differentiated filtration solutions on the global market. In short, the company offers a full line of filter and filtration products to a variety of industries, including customers in the fields of agriculture; power generation; rail, marine, and truck transport; mining, oil, and gas extraction – it is a long list, as Atmus boasts hundreds of thousands of end users.

    Atmus started out, and for a long time remained, a subsidiary of the major diesel engine firm Cummins. In May of 2023, Cummins began the process of spinning Atmus off as a fully independent entity; that process was completed earlier this year, when Cummins sold off its remaining interest in the filtration firm.

    As an independent operator, Atmus can boast a market cap of $2.38 billion. The company is a leader in filtration technology, and protects its product portfolio and intellectual property with more than 1,250 patents – active or pending – worldwide, as well as some 600 trademark registrations and applications. The company’s filtration tech is used in a wide range of fuel, lubricant, and air systems, connected to a variety of engines and power plants. Atmus has 5 technical centers and 10 manufacturing facilities, and saw more than $1.6 billion in sales last year.

    Atmus recently reported its 1Q24 results, its fourth financial release since its stock first went public last year. At the top line, the company reported $427 million in revenue, while at the bottom line it reported non-GAAP earnings of 60 cents per share.

    Northland analyst Bobby Brooks covers Atmus, and he explains why investors should pay attention here: “ATMU’s Fleetguard is the premier brand for emission/efficiency parts in medium/heavy duty, on/off-highway vehicles. ATMU split off from CMI (NR) last year, with CMI exiting its remaining stake this March. Ultimately, we think ATMU’s extremely macro-resilient business, upside to accelerating top-line growth, margin expansion opportunities post-split, and clean BS create a compelling investment case.” (To watch Brooks’ track record, click here.)

    To this end, Brooks gives the shares an Outperform (Buy) rating, with a $36 price target that implies a one-year upside potential of 26%.

    Zooming out a bit, we find that ATMU shares have acquired 6 recent analyst reviews – and that they are all positive, giving the stock its Strong Buy consensus rating. The shares are priced at $28.55, and their average price target, $36.17, suggests that the stock has room to gain 27% over the next 12 months. (See ATMU stock forecast)

    To find good ideas for stocks trading at attractive valuations, visit TipRanks’ Best Stocks to Buy, a tool that unites all of TipRanks’ equity insights.

    Disclaimer: The opinions expressed in this article are solely those of the featured analysts. The content is intended to be used for informational purposes only. It is very important to do your own analysis before making any investment.

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  • Vice President Kamala Harris highlights impact of abortion bans and HBCU investments at ESSENCE Festival

    Vice President Kamala Harris highlights impact of abortion bans and HBCU investments at ESSENCE Festival

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    NEW ORLEANS – Vice President Kamala Harris is keeping up a busy schedule these days. Before traveling to her sorority’s annual conference, Alpha Kappa Alpha’s Boule, in Dallas, she made a stop in the Crescent City to speak at the 30th Annual ESSENCE Festival of Culture. 

    Harris’s visit to the Global Black Economic Forum comes at a time after President Joe Biden faces questions regarding his age and mental acuity. While Harris was not asked from the age debate during her conversation with Caroline Wanga, CEO of ESSENCE Ventures. The Vice President did point out the ramifications of another President Trump administration and its threats on Democracy. 

    “Who has talked about being proud of taking from the women of America a most fundamental right to make decisions about your own body,” Harris asked the audience.  “And then last week, understand, sadly, the press has not been covering it as much as they should, in proportion to the seriousness of what just happened when the United States Supreme Court. Essentially telling this individual who has been convicted of 34 felonies that he will be immune. Essentially the Activity he has told us he is prepared to engage in if he gets back into the White House. Understand we all know: 122 days, we each have the power to decide what kind of country we want to live in.”

    The Vice President of the United States, Kamala D. Harris, speaks with Caroline Wanga, CEO of ESSENCE Ventures, during a roundtable discussion inside the Global Black Economic Forum at the 2024 ESSENCE Festival of Culture on Saturday, July 6, 2024 in New Orleans, Louisiana. (Photo: Itoro N. Umontuen/The Atlanta Voice)

    However, during the lead-in fireside chat, U.S. Representative Maxine Waters, D-Ca., laid out why she’s not having any of the ageist debate. 

    “But we’re now at a point in time where people are talking about how Biden is too old. Hell, I’m older than Biden,” exclaims Waters. 

    Harris also pointed out the hypocrisy among those on the right. She said there is a direct connection between strict abortion bans in southern States  and the high Black maternal mortality rates. 

    “And what I find is the hypocrisy by some of these extremists who are saying they’re passing these abortion bans because they care about women and children,” Harris explained. “So don’t come to us gaslighting us about where you’ve been and where you haven’t been on important issues that relate to what we know every day affects our sisters, our mothers, our aunties, our grandmothers, and could affect our daughters.”

    The ESSENCE Festival’s importance in Black Culture

    The ESSENCE Festival has been a place for African-Americans to have frank and honest conversations regarding issues in the community. The crowd was filled with mostly Black women, a group that has been the moral backbone of the Democratic Party.  Saturday, Harris discussed to a standing room audience that her background has prepared her for this moment. 

    “When I talk about the family that raised me: yes, they took me in a stroller as they were marching and shouting for justice,” Harris said. “Knowing that justice will not be achieved unless we are prepared to march and shout and fight for it. And one of the ways we do that is through our vote.”

    Actress Jenifer Lewis took the microphone during the lead-in conversation and instructed the crowd to do one thing: vote.

    “So repeat this: I will vote because I love my children,” Lewis instructed. “Now, get your ass out and vote.”

    The Vice President of the United States, Kamala D. Harris, speaks during a roundtable discussion inside the Global Black Economic Forum at the 2024 ESSENCE Festival of Culture on Saturday, July 6, 2024 in New Orleans, Louisiana. (Photo: Itoro N. Umontuen/The Atlanta Voice)

    The Biden Campaign goes after undecided and Trump-leaning Black voters

    The Biden-Harris administration successfully capped the cost of insulin for $35 for seniors. They expanded the child tax credit to $300 per child, per month, and $1,400 in-person checks to Black families. Moreover, According to PolitiFact and The Poynter Institute, the Biden administration invested more than $7 billion in HBCUs. 

    “Our Vice President has shown up talking about the issues that matter to us,” said U.S. Congresswoman Nikema Williams, D-Ga. “She reminds us who has been at the forefront of defending our freedoms every day and that is the Biden-Harris administration. I could not be more grateful to call her my Vice President, my Soror and my friend.”

    Included is $1.7 billion for grants to support low-income students and make HBCUs more affordable. By comparison, former President Trump did reauthorize the $250 million funding stream that lapsed under his watch. 

    The Biden-Harris campaign will continue to speak directly African-Americans who are on the fence during election season. The campaign is highlighting the clear differences between theirs and the Trump campaign. Representative Waters, the former leader of the House Financial Services Committee, supported more African-Americans to enter financial services. Also, she pushed for equal representation in lending and funding, which will allow more African-Americans to own homes and businesses. 

    What’s next?

    According to a 2021 study by the National Association of Realtors, the Black American homeownership rate is 44%. It lags far behind Hispanic Americans (50.6%), Asian Americans (62.8%) and White Americans (72.7%). Waters believes there is a solution. 

    “Ladies and gentlemen, we can do all of this,” exclaimed Waters. “If you don’t vote, you don’t understand your power. If you don’t vote, you don’t understand your influence. And don’t tell me when you see me in the street, ‘you got my back,’ if you ain’t voting!” 

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  • 6 takeaways from President Joe Biden’s high-stakes ABC interview

    6 takeaways from President Joe Biden’s high-stakes ABC interview

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    Washington (CNN) — A defiant President Joe Biden on Friday downplayed his poor performance in last week’s debate in what had become a high-stakes interview on ABC, as questions swirled over the future of his candidacy.

    During his interview with anchor George Stephanopoulos, Biden shot down any notion of dropping from the ticket while also offering shifting excuses for his poor performance.

    The conversation was Biden’s first televised interview since his debate performance, a key moment for his political future as a mounting list of Democrats – lawmakers, donors and voters – express concerns about the viability of his candidacy.

    Here are six takeaways from Biden’s interview with ABC News.

    Biden says debate was a ‘bad night,’ not a bigger problem

    The president said in the interview that he was “sick” and “feeling terrible” before the debate. Asked whether it was a bad episode or a sign of a more serious condition, Biden dismissed those concerns.

    “It was a bad episode. No indication of any serious condition. I didn’t listen to my instincts in terms of preparing, and I had a bad night,” he said.

    In the interview, Biden gave more details about how he was feeling at the time of the debate, saying he was fatigued from illness and had even been tested for Covid-19. The White House did not immediately respond to CNN’s inquiry as to whether the president took the test before or after the debate.

    He said, “I was feeling terrible. As a matter of fact, the docs with me I asked if they did a Covid test, they were trying to figure out what’s wrong. They did a test to see whether or not I had some infection, you know, a virus. I didn’t. I just had a really bad cold.”

    The comment about his illness marked the latest turn in the White House’s description of the president’s physical condition during the debate. White House officials told reporters during the debate that the president had a cold, and then on Wednesday, press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre dismissed the idea that Biden had been seen by his doctor, repeatedly saying that the president has had no medical exams since his February physical.

    “It’s a cold, guys. It’s a cold,” she said at the time. “I know that it affects everybody differently. We’ve all had colds, and so no, he was not checked out by the doctor.”

    A day later, the White House confirmed that the president had, in fact, seen a doctor about his illness, and on Friday Jean-Pierre told reporters aboard Air Force One that Biden had a “verbal check-in” with his doctor after the debate.

    She cast Biden’s check-in as “a conversation” with his physician, Kevin O’Connor, after reporters noted that the president told a group of Democratic governors that he saw a doctor.

    The president takes ownership of poor performance, but offers a new excuse

    The president said he has not watched a replay of his performance. When he was asked whether he knew how badly it was going, he said it was “nobody’s fault but mine.”

    As he answered the question, Biden offered a confusing tangent on New York Times polling.

    “I prepared what I usually would do sitting down as I did come back as foreign leaders or National Security Council – for explicit detail. And I realized, about partway through that – you know, all that I get quoted is The New York Times had me down 10 points before the debate, nine now, or whatever the hell it is. The fact of the matter is that – what I looked at is he also lied 28 times,” he said.

    Pressed on his performance, he said, “Well I was just having a bad night.”

    But later in the interview, Biden offered a different explanation. He said he was distracted by Trump talking out of turn even though Trump’s microphone was muted.

    “It came to me I was having a bad night when I realized that even when I was answering a question, even when they turned his mic off, he was still shouting. And I let it distract me. I’m not blaming it on that, but I realized that I just wasn’t in control,” Biden told Stephanopoulos.

    Biden and Trump and their teams agreed to the rules ahead of the debate.

    Biden won’t take a cognitive test and release it to voters

    Biden said that “no one said I had to” have cognitive and neurological exams, telling Stephanopoulos that “I get a full neurological test every day” – referring to the demands of his job.

    “I have medical doctors traveling everywhere. Every president does, as you know. Medical doctors from the best of the world travel with me everywhere I go. I have an ongoing assessment of what I’m doing. They don’t hesitate to tell me if they think there’s something else is wrong,” he said.

    When asked whether he’s had cognitive tests and an exam by a neurologist, Biden said no.

    “No one said I had to. … They said I’m good.”

    In an analysis published Friday, CNN Chief Medical Correspondent Dr. Sanjay Gupta – a practicing neurosurgeon – urged Biden to undergo thorough cognitive and neurological testing and to share his results.

    Gupta wrote that it was concerning to watch Biden’s performance at the debate. Detailed testing “can help determine whether there is a simpler explanation for the symptoms displayed or if there is something more concerning,” he said.

    Biden denies polls show him losing to Trump

    Asked by Stephanopoulos whether he was being honest with himself about his ability to beat Trump, Biden said, “Yes. Yes, yes, yes.”

    He pointed to previous polls that showed he couldn’t win in 2020 as proof and subsequent down-ballot elections, denying extensive polling that reflects a race where he is trailing.

    Pressed on his low approval rating and whether it would be tougher to win four years later, Biden said, “Not when you’re running against a pathological liar. Not when he hasn’t been challenged in the way he’s about to be challenged.”

    The president said that all of his pollsters characterize the race as a “toss up” as he began to point to specific polls before trailing off.

    Biden brushes off nervous Dems: Only the ‘Lord Almighty’ could get him to leave the race

    Asked during his interview whether he would step down if he became convinced he could not beat Trump, Biden said he would only do so “if the Lord Almighty comes down” and tells him to.

    “If the Lord Almighty came down and said, ‘Joe, get out of the race,’ I’d get out of the race,” Biden said.

    “The Lord Almighty’s not coming down,” added Biden, who is a devout Catholic.

    Stephanopoulos responded: “I agree that the Lord Almighty is not going to come down. But if you are told reliably from your allies, and your friends and supporters in the Democratic Party, in the House, in the Senate that they’re concerned you’re going to lose the House and the Senate if you stay in, what will you do?”

    Biden declined to answer the question. “It’s not going to happen,” he added.

    The president later questioned whether any other Democratic leader would have his foreign policy acumen.

    “Who’s going to be able to hold NATO together like me? Who’s going to be able to be in a position where I’m able to keep the Pacific basin in a position where we’re at least check being in China now? Who’s going to – who’s going to do that? Who has that reach?” Biden asked.

    Four Democratic members of Congress have called on Biden to step aside. Massachusetts Gov. Maura Healey issued a statement Friday asking Biden to “carefully evaluate” whether he is the party’s best choice to defeat Donald Trump. And Virginia Sen. Mark Warner is looking to get Senate Democrats on the same page about the future of Biden’s reelection bid, sources told CNN, putting further pressure on the White House.

    Warner, who is taking on a leadership role in the effort, is reaching a place where he thinks it is time for Biden to suspend his reelection campaign, a source familiar with his efforts told CNN.

    Asked about Warner’s efforts, Biden responded: “Mark is a good man. … He also tried to get the nomination.” Warner had been considered a vice presidential contender in 2008, the slot that Biden would eventually win, but withdrew himself from consideration.

    “Mark’s not – Mark and I have a different perspective,” Biden told Stephanopoulos.

    Asked whether he would reconsider his stance if more high-ranking Democrats, including Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi or House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries pushed him to drop out, Biden responded: “They’re not going to do that.”

    Biden gets fired up and shows off his energy at Wisconsin rally

    Biden came face-to-face with voter concerns just before the ABC interview, as he was taking the stage at a campaign rally in Wisconsin. A rally attendee unfurled a sign reading, “Pass the torch, Joe.” The sign was visible for a few moments before someone else tried to cover part of it with a Biden-Harris sign.

    Biden’s speech during that rally was animated and energetic – though he seemed to realize that each of his words would be parsed and carefully scrutinized in this politically crucial period. He vowed to “beat Trump again in 2020” before quickly realizing his mistake and correcting himself: “By the way, we’re gonna do it again in 2024.” Slamming Trump’s economic policy, Biden said his opponent “wants another 5 billion – trillion, trillion, not billion – $5 trillion tax cut.”

    He directly addressed criticisms about his age: “I wasn’t too old to create over 50 million new jobs, to make sure 21 million Americans are insured under the Affordable Care Act, to beat Big Pharma. … Was I too old to relieve student debt for nearly 5 million Americans? Too old to put the first Black woman on the Supreme Court of the United States of America? To sign the Respect for Marriage Act?”

    Biden said unnamed forces are “trying to push him out of the race.”

    “Well, let me say this as quick as I can,” he added. “I’m staying in the race.”

    That point was punctuated by the song that played as Biden’s speech concluded: Tom Petty’s “I Won’t Back Down.”

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  • Analysis: Supreme Court grants Trump ‘absolute’ immunity, raising concerns about potential dictatorship

    Analysis: Supreme Court grants Trump ‘absolute’ immunity, raising concerns about potential dictatorship

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    Happy Independence Day! Where’s the potato salad and the ribs?

    July 2, 1776 was the day that the Continental Congress actually voted for independence. John Adams noted that July 2 would be remembered in the annals of American history. 248 years later, the United States Supreme Court extended sweeping powers to the executive branch in a way that would make King George III blush.

    The Supreme Court in TRUMP vs. United States, the high court granted the executive branch “absolute” presidential immunity for “his core constitutional powers.” Additionally, the president “enjoys no immunity for his unofficial acts, and not everything the President does if official.” The six conservatives voted for and the three liberal-minded justices dissented.

    In layman’s terms, the executive branch has a greater level of immunity than police officers. Police officers can be charged with murder. However, the President is cloaked by the separation of powers as outlined in Article II of the United States Constitution, according to the Supreme Court decision. 

    So, what does that mean for the Republican nominee, Donald J. Trump? It means he can fulfill his promise of being a dictator on ‘day one.’

    One historical figure compares to Trump in this moment

    Secretary of Defense Caspar W. Weinberger meets with President Mobutu of Zaire in his Pentagon office in 1983.

    In 1960, Mobutu Sese Seko was the second in command in the Congolese Army. In November 1965, Mobutu led two successful coups, with the backing of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA). And in 1971, Mobutu Sese Seko consolidated power unto himself. He launched a ‘national authenticity’ program in Congo, previously known as the Democratic Republic of Zaire. He rid his country of all colonial influence and re-established a national identity. 

    In a speech in Dakar, Mobutu described his plan as, “an experience drawn from the anarchy caused by the plurality of political parties and by the ascendancy of imported ideologies, spread through empty slogans. We have had to wipe the slate clean of all previously existing parties.”

    Essentially, Mobutu Sese Seko established a unitarian government. He had the backing of Chairman Mao and the support from Apartheid South Africa. He was a major cult of personality, an overseer of a bereft kleptocracy, while his government was full of corruption. His friends, family members, and benefactors ran government agencies. Mobutu embodied big man rule. What he said was law. 

    During his thirty-two year rule, Mobutu plundered nearly $5 billion of his country’s wealth and resources. He would take himself shopping in Paris, fly the famed Concorde supersonic jet, and entertain the world’s best and brightest. Meanwhile, his country was crumbling. The paved roads his country had in the sixties, devolved into bush in less than twenty years. In the mid-1990s, the AIDS epidemic and famine ravaged his nation. In a country that did not have clean drinking water, affordable medical infrastructure, and lacked security, the disease brought the country and Mobutu to its collective knees.  According to UNAIDS, an estimated 410,000 Congolese children have been orphaned by HIV/AIDS. 

    Mobutu’s government fell in 1997 when he was forced into exile. He was suffering from prostate cancer and he died from his illness on September 7, 1997. 

    Mobutu and Donald Trump love what the government could do for them. Both men had an insatiable desire for power and established autocracies. And both men were willing to destroy the economic prospects of their countries in the name of putting their pursuits first. 

    Project 2025 is happening right now

    Kevin Roberts, the President of the Heritage Foundation and architect of Project 2025, said this on national television: 

    “The reason that so many anchors on MSNBC, for example, are losing their minds daily is because our side is winning. And so I come full circle on this response and just want to encourage you with some substance that we are in the process of the second American Revolution, which will remain bloodless if the Left allows it to be.”

    Project 2025 will destroy women’s rights, civil rights, voting rights, plus LGBTQ+ rights and protections. It will slice and dice environmental protections and regulations. And it does not stop there. The Family Research Council is leading a new initiative called the “Platform Integrity Project.” It calls on the public to pressure the Republican Party to adopting a hardline anti-abortion, anti-LGBT stance ahead of the election.

    Donald Trump, after the Supreme Court handed immunity over to him, amplified calls for mass violence directed at his enemies. He also “ReTruthed” a post using the QAnon slogan, “Where we go one, we go all.” Trump’s MAGA movement believes African-Americans, women, and ethnic minorities, will “replace” White people in society. 

    This goes on while the corporate and mainstream media continue to shake their hands and whine about how President Biden is too old to be president. And yes, the corporate and mainstream media is still whining over the President’s poor debate performance. Why? They need a two-horse race in order to drive ratings and ad sales while ignoring what will be the most nakedly obvious power grab in the history of western civilization.

    What’s Next?

    Here is the good news: The choice will be yours on November 5, 2024. It may be the last chance for Americans to exercise that right at the ballot box. 

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  • Stock market today: Asian shares are mixed after gains on Wall Street

    Stock market today: Asian shares are mixed after gains on Wall Street

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    HONG KONG (AP) — Asian stocks were mixed Tuesday after stocks advanced on Wall Street and yields jumped in the U.S. bond market as election-related issues swayed markets worldwide.

    U.S. futures fell and oil prices rose. The Japanese yen fell to near a fresh 38-year low, reaching 161.67 yen to the dollar early Tuesday.

    Tokyo’s benchmark Nikkei 225 added 1.1% to 40,074.69, as the weaker yen spurred buying of export-oriented shares.

    Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 shed 0.4% to 7,718.20. South Korea’s Kospi dropped 0.8% to 2,781.92 despite data from Statistics Korea showing the country’s consumer inflation slowed to an 11-month low in June.

    Hong Kong’s market was higher after a holiday break on Monday. The Hang Seng climbed 0.3% to 17,775.84 and the Shanghai Composite index edged up 0.1% to 2,995.78.

    Elsewhere, Taiwan’s Taiex gained 0.6%, while the SET in Bangkok slipped 0.4%.

    On Monday, the S&P 500 rose 0.3% to 5,475.09. The Dow Jones Industrial Average edged up 0.1% to 39,169.52, and the Nasdaq composite gained 0.8% to 17,879.30.

    Some of the world’s strongest action was across the Atlantic, where the CAC 40 index in Paris jumped as much as 2.8% before settling to a gain of 1.1%. Results from France suggested a far-right political party may not win a decisive majority in the country’s legislative elections. That bolstered hopes for potential gridlock in the French government, which would prevent a worst-case scenario where a far-right with a clear majority could push policies that would greatly increase the French government’s debt.

    This is a big year for elections worldwide, with voters heading to the polls in the United Kingdom later this week and soon elsewhere. In the United States, pollsters are measuring the fallout from last week’s debate between President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump.

    Investors are also eyeing the potential impact from a Supreme Court ruling Monday that former presidents have broad immunity from prosecution, likely extending the delay in a criminal case against Donald Trump to after the November election.

    Trump Media & Technology Group, whose stock has been rising and falling with Trump’s White House chances, climbed 1% to $33.08. Shares of the company behind Trump’s Truth Social platform, though, are still well below their perch of roughly $70 reached earlier this year.

    Treasury yields jumped, as they did Friday immediately following the Biden-Trump debate. Increased prospects for a Republican sweep in November sent traders back to moves from 2016, according to strategists at Morgan Stanley. Besides pushing rates higher, traders also piled into stocks of energy and financial companies.

    The yield on the 10-year Treasury climbed to 4.46% from 4.39% late Friday and from 4.29% late Thursday. It’s a reversal of the general trend since the spring, when the 10-year Treasury yield had topped 4.70% in late April.

    Yields had been largely easing on hopes inflation will slow enough to convince the Federal Reserve to cut its main interest rate later this year, down from the highest level in more than two decades. High rates have been grinding on the U.S. economy by making it more expensive to borrow money for a house, car or anything else.

    Hopes for rate cuts held after a report on Monday showed U.S. manufacturing weakened last month by more than economists expected. Perhaps even more importantly for Wall Street, the report from the Institute for Supply Management also said price increases are decelerating. Taken together, the data could offer more of the evidence that the Federal Reserve wants to see of lessening pressure on inflation before it will cut rates.

    This week’s economic highlight will likely arrive Friday, when the U.S. government will say how many workers employers hired during June. Economists predict overall hiring slowed to 190,000 from May’s 272,000. That would get the number closer to what Bank of America calls the “Goldilocks” figure of roughly 150,000, give or take 25,000.

    At that level, the U.S. economy could continue to grow and avoid a recession without being so strong that it puts too much upward pressure on inflation.

    In other dealings, benchmark U.S. crude rose 15 cents to $83.53 a barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Brent crude, the international standard, added 23 cents to $86.83 per barrel.

    The euro cost $1.0729, down from $1.0738.

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  • You’re Not In A Time Machine, Biden and Trump Are Going Head-To-Head Again

    You’re Not In A Time Machine, Biden and Trump Are Going Head-To-Head Again

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    Those tuning into Thursday night’s presidential debate may feel a sense of deja vu as President Joe Biden and former president Donald Trump take the stage in similar positions they did four years ago.

    The event, hosted by CNN—not the Commission on Presidential Debates—will not occur in front of a live audience, and the network will have the ability to mute either opponent’s mics if needed to avoid potential cross-talk.

    “I think the public has had such a build-up towards this debate that if it turns out to be a normal, boring debate, where they really exchange issues, it’ll disappoint people, ” said Nancy Sims, political science lecturer at the University of Houston. “It’s almost like the hype around the debate has led some people to expect a train wreck.

    Tensions between the two opponents ran high in 2020 when Biden asked Trump to shut up during a presidential debate in late September after the former president and convicted felon continuously interrupted him.

    There is some voter fatigue with this Groundhog’s Day-esque race. Biden and Trump flip-flop in the polls, usually leading over the other by a single percentage point or otherwise slim margin.

    Sims says uncertainty has been brewing amongst voters throughout the 2024 campaign trials regarding whether either candidate can serve as the next sitting president.

    “I don’t think it will move the needle much in either direction. One of them makes a faux pas or something,” she said. “It’s almost as if everybody’s tuning in to watch it to see if that happens.”

    According to Sims, this would likely look like either Biden or Trump confusing a world leader’s name or misstating a fact they are referring to during Thursday night’s 90-minute discourse.

    “The real vulnerability is if either of them has a momentary memory lapse or misstates a fact,” Sims said. “That will be your viral video if one exhibits a misstep of that nature.”

    “That’s the thing about debates today, it’s not just watching the debate,” she added. “I question how many Americans will tune in to watch it or will they rely on the clips they see following the debate.”

    Brandon Rottinghaus, a political science professor at the University of Houston, said Trump would likely weaponize the ongoing narrative that Biden is too old or mentally unfit for office. Biden would use Trump’s wildcard tendencies to his advantage.

    “Biden’s biggest liability is perceptions that he’s too old to be president, but this debate can either confirm that or reorient that for voters,” Rottinghaus asserted. “For former President Trump, he’s politically unpredictable, that can be attractive for some people, but it makes other people nervous. He has to use this debate to settle people’s nerves regarding his second-term priorities.”

    Rottinghaus noted that it would be interesting to see how each of the opponents handles respective scandals that they are either directly or indirectly involved in if they are brought up. In late May, Trump was found guilty on 34 felony counts in a case involving falsified business records.

    Earlier this month, Hunter Biden, the president’s son, was convicted on all three felony charges he faced regarding a gun he purchased under the pretense that he was not illegally using or addicted to drugs at the time of the sale.

    “The way that these get brought up and discussed is important because these are elements that each partisan base cares a lot about. The strategy for both candidates is to make sure the base is happy and that they understand that there’s grievance involved in this event,” Rottinghaus said. “But they can’t go too far because they may make people who otherwise don’t pay that much attention to tune out of their message.

    Topics expected to be discussed between Biden and Trump include the economy, immigration, crime, democracy and abortion. Sims noted that they may fall into the culture war debate—or hot-button sociopolitical issues—which could make things dicey.

    “If abortion is Biden’s strength, then immigration is Trump’s strength. Trump has been consistent in his position, and Biden has been a little bit all over the board with it,” Sims said. “ If I were Trump, I was asked a question on abortion, I would quickly answer it and then move back to immigration. Focus on what you know.”

    Sims acknowledged that foreign affairs seem less of a priority for both opponents, particularly in comparison to past candidates in other presidential campaigns. However, she said she was sure Israel-Hamas War would be addressed.

    “Foreign affairs is something they should both be well versed in and willing to discuss,” she said. “It doesn’t seem to be high in polling data. It’s not high on the voters’ minds, and it’s a little bit interesting to see that.”

    The debate will start at 9 p.m. ET/8 p.m. CT on CNN. It will be the first televised debate between a current and former president in U.S. history.

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    Faith Bugenhagen

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  • Biden, Trump to face off in historical presidential debate

    Biden, Trump to face off in historical presidential debate

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    Biden, Trump to face off in historical presidential debate

    Tonight’s debate between President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump differs from any other in U.S. history. The first-ever debate between a sitting president and a former president, which begins at 9 p.m. ET, is also a matchup of the two oldest candidates in U.S. history. There will be no audience and the candidates’ microphones will be muted when it’s not their turn to speak.The debate is also the first since 1988 not sponsored by the Commission on Presidential Debates. Instead, it’s being hosted by CNN and moderated by Jake Tapper and Dana Bash.Lastly, tonight’s debate is the earliest in history. The prior record was Sept. 21, 1980.The last time Biden and Trump shared the stage was for their last debate on Oct. 22, 2020. Check back for live updates during tonight’s debate.

    Tonight’s debate between President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump differs from any other in U.S. history.

    The first-ever debate between a sitting president and a former president, which begins at 9 p.m. ET, is also a matchup of the two oldest candidates in U.S. history.

    There will be no audience and the candidates’ microphones will be muted when it’s not their turn to speak.

    The debate is also the first since 1988 not sponsored by the Commission on Presidential Debates. Instead, it’s being hosted by CNN and moderated by Jake Tapper and Dana Bash.

    Lastly, tonight’s debate is the earliest in history. The prior record was Sept. 21, 1980.

    The last time Biden and Trump shared the stage was for their last debate on Oct. 22, 2020.

    Check back for live updates during tonight’s debate.

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  • How to watch Thursday’s CNN Presidential Debate

    How to watch Thursday’s CNN Presidential Debate

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    (CNN) — A historic showdown between President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump is set for Thursday on CNN when the presumptive major party nominees meet for their first debate this election cycle.

    The debate will be the earliest such event in US history. Televised presidential debates between general election candidates have always started in September or early October, going back to the first one between John F. Kennedy and Richard Nixon in 1960.

    Here’s how to watch the debate:

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    CNN

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  • Judge lifts parts of Trump gag order ahead of sentencing in New York criminal case

    Judge lifts parts of Trump gag order ahead of sentencing in New York criminal case

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    (CNN) — The judge in Donald Trump’s hush money trial has lifted portions of the gag order restricting what the former president can say about witnesses in the trial, such as Michael Cohen and Stormy Daniels, two days before Trump will square off against President Joe Biden at the CNN Presidential Debate.

    Trump, however, cannot discuss any prosecutor, court staffer or their family members, according to a court order on Tuesday from Judge Juan Merchan that rolls back parts of the gag order imposed before the trial began. That aspect of the gag order remains in effect at least until his sentencing, which is set for July 11.

    The new order Tuesday also lifts the bar on public statements about jurors but notes disclosure of any personally identifying information of any juror is still prohibited.

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    Lauren del Valle, Jeremy Herb and CNN

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  • Georgia Democrats warn of additional abortion rights threats under second Trump term

    Georgia Democrats warn of additional abortion rights threats under second Trump term

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    On the second anniversary of the Dobbs decision, former Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms, and IVF advocate Latorya Beasley joined Georgia State Representative Shea Roberts, Dr. Shawana Moore plus television host Padma Lakshmi to discuss the ramifications of a potential abortion ban in a second term under Donald J. Trump.

    As Thursday’s presidential debate quickly approaches here in Atlanta, Democrats along various political spectrums are centering their pushes for President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris around abortion rights.

    During her remarks, former Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms discussed the effects of Georgia’s ban on abortions after six weeks. She says there are young women that are refusing to go to college in Georgia because they no longer have bodily autonomy. 

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    Itoro N. Umontuen

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  • NNPA Annual Convention Ignites with Powerful Civil Rights Exhibit at Baltimore City Hall

    NNPA Annual Convention Ignites with Powerful Civil Rights Exhibit at Baltimore City Hall

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    In a stirring commencement to its annual convention, officials from the National Newspaper Publishers Association (NNPA) were feted during the unveiling of the “Marylanders Cry Freedom, Civil Rights at Home and Abroad” exhibit at Baltimore City Hall.

    This unveiling of the touching exhibit included remarks by Baltimore Mayor Brandon Scott, Democratic Maryland Rep. Kweisi Mfume, NNPA President and CEO Dr. Benjamin F. Chavis Jr., National Chairman Bobby Henry, AFRO Publisher Dr. Toni Draper, and other dignitaries. The exhibit marked the 40th anniversary of Maryland’s groundbreaking divestment from South Africa’s apartheid regime in 1984, a pioneering act of defiance that set a powerful precedent for other states.

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    Stacy M. Brown, NNPA Newswire Senior National Correspondent

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  • Fact check: Trump falsely claims almost all new jobs under Biden have gone to ‘illegal aliens’

    Fact check: Trump falsely claims almost all new jobs under Biden have gone to ‘illegal aliens’

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    (CNN) — Former President Donald Trump, who has promised to conduct mass deportations if he is elected to a second term in November, continued his angry rhetoric about illegal immigration at a campaign rally in Nevada in early June.

    “Virtually 100% of the new jobs under Biden have also gone to illegal aliens,” Trump said.

    Facts First: Trump’s claim that nearly all the new jobs under Biden have gone to immigrants, whether or not they are allowed to legally work in the US is false. The number of US-born workers increased about 3.5% between May 2021, just after Biden took office, and last month, though it did decline 0.2% over the past year, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. 

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    Tami Luhby and CNN

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  • Joe Biden taps Hollywood orbit for $28 million fundraiser, a new record for Democrats

    Joe Biden taps Hollywood orbit for $28 million fundraiser, a new record for Democrats

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    Los Angeles (CNN) — Joe Biden has raised $28 million heading into a star-studded fundraiser Saturday, campaign officials told CNN, as the president leans on his Hollywood friends to help boost his campaign war chest.

    The president’s Los Angeles event with former President Barack Obama, George Clooney and Julia Roberts marks the campaign’s latest effort to tap into celebrity appeal to help Biden win a second term in the White House. The LA fundraiser sets a new record for Democrats, raising more than an event at Radio City Music Hall in March that Biden campaign officials said brought in the party’s biggest haul ever.

    The Biden campaign ran a contest geared toward small-dollar donors to win a chance to attend Saturday’s fundraiser and meet Biden, Obama, Roberts and Clooney, who all sent emails or texts encouraging supporters to chip in. The campaign has also provided grassroots supporters at home an opportunity to tune into the event virtually with a donation of $20 or more.

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    Arlette Saenz and CNN

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  • Fed decision buys more time for savers to profit from high interest rates

    Fed decision buys more time for savers to profit from high interest rates

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    New York (CNN) — As was widely expected, the Federal Reserve left its benchmark interest rate unchanged for its seventh meeting in a row on Wednesday.

    People carrying variable-rate debt like credit cards and those seeking a loan won’t be happy given that the Fed’s rate, which directly and indirectly affects consumers’ borrowing costs, remains at a 23-year high.

    Those rates will likely stay high for a while. At this point, only one cut is seen as likely before the end of the year, according to US central bankers’ latest summary of economic projections. But whenever the cuts start, they may be small.

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    Jeanne Sahadi and CNN

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