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Tag: Social issues

  • North Shore women honored as 2025 Commonwealth Heroines

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    The Massachusetts Commission on the Status of Women recently honored 125 women from across the state as 2025 Commonwealth Heroines based on their acts of public leadership and volunteerism to help advance the status of women.

    A handful of effective North Shore women — Ana Nuncio of Salem, Jeannette McGinn of Peabody, Martha Morrison of Topsfield, and Jessica Brown and Marybelle Hollister, both of Marblehead — were among those honored


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    By Michael McHugh | Staff Writer

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  • First round of ‘dirty deeds’ cleaned up in Essex County

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    BEVERLY — Essex County’s “dirty deeds” containing discriminatory covenants are finally being cleaned up.

    The Southern Essex Registry of Deeds recorded its first round of affidavits Monday to remove discriminatory covenants from real estate deeds in this area of the county. These covenants restricted people of certain ethnic or racial groups, particularly Black people, from buying homes or moving into specific neighborhoods years ago.


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  • Panel to study impact of SNAP cuts

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    BOSTON — Gov. Maura Healey has created a task force aimed at helping the state fill an expected gap in federal funding for food insecurity programs.

    President Donald Trump’s newly minted domestic policy bill extends federal tax cuts and implements his agenda to improve border security, cut taxes and slash government spending, but it also calls for deep cuts to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP, formerly known as food stamps.


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    By Christian M. Wade | Statehouse Reporter

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  • NY man pleads guilty to rape charges

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    SALEM — A New York man pled guilty to charges of rape, open and gross lewdness, and distributing obscene matter to a minor on Monday in Superior Court in Salem, according to the Office of Essex County District Attorney Paul F. Tucker.

    Anthony Bowden, 34, of Albany, New York, was sentenced to four years in state prison to be followed by three years probation, during which time he must stay away and have no contact with the victim, have no unsupervised contact with anyone under the age of 16, undergo a sex offender evaluation, and register with the sex offender registry board (SORB). Bowden was represented by attorney Christina Rose Kenney.


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  • Rockport school board updated on opioid prevention

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    The Rockport School Committee, along with the town’s Public Health Department, is aiming to eliminate the effects of possible substance abuse in Rockport schools.

    During the committee’s meeting on June 4, members heard from Dr. Ray Cahill, director of the Rockport Public Health Department, who updated those gathered about the “RIZE Mosaic Opioid Recovery Partnership Grant.” The grant aims to support children and families affected by the opioid crisis.


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  • Abortion group asks judge to toss out lawsuit

    Abortion group asks judge to toss out lawsuit

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    BOSTON — An abortion rights group is asking a federal judge to toss out a lawsuit against them and Gov. Maura Healey by anti-abortion groups in response to a state-funded campaign targeting pregnancy ‘crisis’ center operators.

    In a motion to dismiss filed in U.S. District Court in Boston on Tuesday, lawyers for the Reproductive Equity Now Foundation argue that the plaintiffs “lack standing” to file the lawsuit and blasted the legal challenge as an attempt to “silence” their advocacy work.

    “Contrary to the allegations in the complaint, this case is not about any wrongful deprivation of the First Amendment or other constitutional rights …” lawyers for the foundation wrote in a court filing. “Instead, it is a blatant attempt to enlist this court’s assistance in its effort to silence Reproductive Equity Now Foundation and its president Rebecca Hart Holder, by enjoining them from exercising their constitutional rights.”

    The lawsuit, filed in August by the Massachusetts Liberty Legal Center on behalf of Your Options Medical Center and others, alleges that the state and Equity Now violated their constitutional rights with a “campaign of harassment, suppression, and threats” against the Revere-based facility and other pregnancy centers.

    At issue is a taxpayer-funded education campaign by the state Department of Health warning the public to avoid pregnancy crisis centers, which have emerged as the latest battleground in abortion access following the Supreme Court’s 2022 ruling overturning federal protections.

    The $1 million campaign, which began earlier this year, has blanketed social media platforms, billboards and radio, with ads emblazoned on MBTA buses, trains and depots.

    The plaintiffs allege the campaign has forced them “to operate in a culture of fear and harassment” and that they continue to face “unprecedented investigations, including unnecessary subpoenas,” despite a prior state investigation clearing the operators of any wrongdoing.

    But lawyers for Holder and Equity Now argue in court filings that the public education campaign hasn’t deprived the pregnancy centers of their free speech rights or interfered with their operations.

    “To be clear, the public has not been prevented from seeking out and receiving YOM’s services, and YOM has not been prevented from expressing its viewpoints or fulfilling its mission consistent with those viewpoints,” they wrote.

    The plaintiffs “utterly failed to allege facts that plausibly demonstrate this is one of those rare instances in which the conduct of private parties constitutes state action,” they added.

    Hart-Holder calls the lawsuit “an attempt to silence our organization and prevent us from exercising our First Amendment protected right to free speech.”

    “We will not be intimidated by this lawsuit, and we will always fight for New England patients and their ability to access the reproductive health care that is right for them,” she said in a statement.

    Pregnancy crisis centers have emerged as the latest battleground in abortion access following the Supreme Court’s ruling overturning federal protections.

    The centers, which advertise free services and counseling for women struggling with unplanned pregnancies, have proliferated in the wake of the high court’s decision overturning the landmark 1973 Roe v. Wade ruling.

    But Healey and women’s reproductive rights groups claim the facilities are funded by anti-abortion groups with the intention of blocking women from getting abortions.

    In June, the state Department of Public Health partnered with the advocacy groups on a new campaign to educate the public about the “dangers and potential harm” of anti-abortion centers that advocates say are providing misleading information to women.

    The $1 million taxpayer-funded public campaign features ads on social media platforms, billboards, radio and transit warning women about the pregnancy crisis centers.

    Some communities have moved to limit or ban the centers amid complaints that they are using deceptive advertising and providing misinformation.

    But anti-abortion groups say the centers are providing options to women other than abortions and being unfairly targeted by a “smear campaign” by proponents of the procedure.

    The Pregnancy Care Alliance of Massachusetts said the network of pregnancy care centers in the state “provides millions of dollars in no-cost support and care for thousands of women annually who face planned and unplanned pregnancies.”

    The alliance has accused Healey and other state leaders of “furthering their extreme abortion agenda by using a taxpayer-funded campaign to discredit our centers.”

    “Our pregnancy resource centers are paying close attention to the case and look forward to learning the outcome, since a decision will directly impact our service to women and communities across the state,” the alliance said in a statement.

    The conservative American Center for Law and Justice, which has helped former President Donald Trump fight his legal battles, is also a plaintiff in the lawsuit. It argues that the campaign targeting pregnancy centers is part of a strategy to “silence the anti-abortion movement.”

    Healey, who is being represented by the Attorney General’s office, hasn’t formally responded to the lawsuit’s claims but was granted an extension this week to file her response until Dec. 13, according to federal court filings.

    Christian M. Wade covers the Massachusetts Statehouse for North of Boston Media Group’s newspapers and websites. Email him at cwade@cnhinews.com.

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    By Christian M. Wade | Statehouse Reporter

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  • Vocational school admission reforms under spotlight

    Vocational school admission reforms under spotlight

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    BOSTON — The state Board of Early and Secondary Education is preparing to reexamine the admissions process for vocational technical high schools, three years after they overhauled their regulations to promote more “equitable access” to the career-oriented schools.

    Demand at the state’s vocational schools far outpaces the available space, as more and more students and families are seeing career-driven high school education as a pathway to steady, well-paying jobs.

    The board voted in 2021 to reform the admissions process for vocational schools and districts, after advocates said policies disproportionately excluded students of color and those who were learning English, had disabilities or came from low-income families. Those changes removed requirements that grades, attendance, discipline records and counselor recommendations had to be used as admissions criteria.

    The board held a special meeting on Monday night, and has another scheduled next month, to “discuss the impact of these regulatory changes” and “address a key question: What impact has the most recent regulation change had on addressing equitable access to (career technical education) admissions?” according to a meeting agenda.

    The agenda adds that the information discussed at the meetings, “will contribute to any further changes to state regulations.”

    The regulation changes ended the requirement that vocational technical schools use criteria such as disciplinary records; it did not, however, ban their use. The reforms did soften some of the selective criteria, for example, career technical schools now can only count non-excused absences against an applicant, and only suspensions of 10 days or more count against them.

    Of the 29 career technical districts in Massachusetts, 25 kept selective criteria in their admissions process after 2021 — meaning, they still use information such as grades, attendance and discipline records from middle school to choose which applicants should come to their high school programs. Most still require a recommendation or an interview, according to a presentation given at the Monday meeting.

    Many adjusted how they score, or shifted the weight assigned to criteria under the 2021 reforms.

    In February 2023, Lawyers for Civil Rights and Center for Law and Education filed a civil rights complaint arguing that the process for admitting students into the limited slots was still not fair, and still disproportionately prioritized white, higher-income, English speaking students. Low-income students, students of color, students with disabilities, and English language learners are more likely to be disciplined at school and be absent for long periods of time.

    They urged the Department of Elementary and Secondary Education to implement a lottery system, which would randomly select which of the 8th grade students who applied to a vocational school got to attend.

    “The changes that BESE introduced in June 2021, fell short. While these revisions mirrored federal civil rights standards on paper, they failed to make meaningful changes in practice,” said Lawyers for Civil Rights attorney Mirian Albert at a board meeting on Tuesday. “Vocational schools are still permitted to rank applicants based on grades, attendance, disciplinary records and recommendations — criteria that research in three years of DESE’s own data shows disproportionately excludes students from protected classes.”

    Two of the 29 career technical education districts in the state opted to adopt a full or partial lottery system to admit students after 2021, and two agricultural schools fully removed grades and recommendations as selective criteria.

    Shaun Dougherty, an education and policy professor at Boston College, gave a presentation to the board Monday night on research comparing a random lottery system to selecting students for the schools.

    He ran a simulation based on Massachusetts’s vocational school’s 2019’s admissions data, and found that random admission generates more equitable access among demographic groups.

    His study also found that students with similar grades going into high school had vastly different outcomes based on their admittance into a vocational technical school. Those who were admitted into a career program had a 5 percentage point higher chance of graduating, and significantly higher earnings after graduation.

    Board members had plenty of questions for Dougherty, but they held back on outwardly sharing their opinions on whether further reform of the system is needed.

    On Tuesday morning, however, advocates from both sides of the debate came to the board meeting in Everett to share their opinions.

    Albert reinforced Lawyers for Civil Right’s view that a lottery is the only fair way to offer opportunities when seats are limited.

    Sky Kochenour from the Center for Law and Education, who filed the 2023 complaint alongside LCR, said, “I’m very heartened that DESE and the board are seriously revisiting the critical issue of equity and admission.”

    A number of superintendents of vocational schools also came to speak, sharing their view that using selective criteria is important.

    “Our schools only consider the most serious disciplinary offenses. In the absence of such criteria, our vocational community would have concerns. Attendance: we cannot send tutors home with large equipment. Students cannot succeed in co-op programs if they are not present and can’t earn credentials without the requisite number of hours,” said Aaron Polansky, superintendent of Old Colony Regional Vocational Technical in Rochester.

    Others argued that they have taken measures to make admissions more equitable, like using data to analyze potential bias. Jonathan Evans, superintendent of Keefe Regional Technical School in Framingham, said he has concerns about a blind admissions lottery for his school, which services five different communities: Ashland, Framingham, Holliston, Hopkinton and Natick.

    Currently, he said the regional school does not have a minimum designated number of seats for any one of its member communities, but may need to implement that policy if required to do a blind lottery.

    “A possible outcome of a regional agreement with apportionment would be that all applicants from our smallest and least diverse communities would all receive acceptance offers. A blind lottery would only apply to our one very diverse city. In our case, implementation of a blind lottery could very well result in the opposite of what proponents of a lottery and we seek to achieve,” Evans said.

    The board of education’s next special meeting on vocational school admissions is Nov. 18.

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    Sam Drysdale | State House News Service

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  • Trump vows to deport millions. Builders say it would drain their crews and drive up home costs

    Trump vows to deport millions. Builders say it would drain their crews and drive up home costs

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    Construction of a KB Home single-family housing development is shown in Menifee, California, on Sept. 4, 2024.

    Mike Blake | Reuters

    Both presidential candidates promise to build more homes. One promises to deport hundreds of thousands of people who build them.

    Former President Donald Trump’s pledge to “launch the largest deportation operation in the history of our country” would hamstring construction firms already facing labor shortages and push record home prices higher, say industry leaders, contractors and economists.

    “It would be detrimental to the construction industry and our labor supply and exacerbate our housing affordability problems,” said Jim Tobin, CEO of the National Association of Home Builders. The trade group considers foreign-born workers, regardless of legal status, “a vital and flexible source of labor” to builders, estimating they fill 30% of trade jobs like carpentry, plastering, masonry and electrical roles.

    Either I make half as much money or I up my prices. And who ultimately pays for that? The homeowner.

    Brent Taylor

    President of Taylor Construction Group, Tampa, Fla.

    Nearly 11 million undocumented immigrants were living in the U.S. as of 2022, the latest federal data shows, down from an 11.8 million peak in 2007. The construction sector employs an estimated 1.5 million undocumented workers, or 13% of its total workforce — a larger share than any other, according to data the Pew Research Center provided to NBC News. Industry experts say their rates are higher in Sun Belt states like Florida and Texas, and more pronounced in residential than in commercial construction.

    For Brent Taylor, home building has been “a very, very difficult industry the past few years, and it seems to only be getting worse.” His five-person, Tampa-based business hires subcontractors to perform all the labor, and if those firms’ employees “show up on my jobsite because they work for that company, I don’t know if they’re legal or not,” he said.

    The labor pool is tight already, with the U.S. construction industry still looking to fill 370,000 open positions, according to federal data. If work crews dwindle further, “now I can only do 10 jobs a year instead of 20,” Taylor said. “Either I make half as much money or I up my prices. And who ultimately pays for that? The homeowner.”

    Rhetoric or reality?

    Trump hasn’t detailed how his proposed “whole of government” effort to remove up to 20 million people — far more than the undocumented population — would work, but he has made it central to his housing pitch. The Republican nominee claims mass deportations would free up homes for U.S. citizens and lower prices, though few economists agree. The idea has also drawn skepticism on logistical grounds, with some analysts saying its costs would be “astronomical.”

    Doubts also run high among homebuilders that Trump would deliver on his promise.

    “They don’t think it’s going to happen,” Stan Marek, CEO of the Marek Family of Companies, a Texas-based specialty subcontracting firm, said of industry colleagues. “You’d lose so many people that you couldn’t put a crew together to frame a house.”

    You’d lose so many people that you couldn’t put a crew together to frame a house.

    Stan Marek

    CEO of the Marek Family of Companies

    Bryan Dunn, an-Arizona based senior vice president at Big-D Construction, a major Southwest firm, called “the idea that they could actually move that many people” out of the country “almost laughable.” The proposal has left those in the industry “trying to figure out how much is political fearmongering,” he said.

    But while Trump has a history of floating outlandish ideas without seriously pursuing them — like buying Greenland — he has embraced other once-radical policies that reset the terms of political debate despite fierce criticism and litigation. That is especially true with immigration, where his administration diverted Pentagon money to build a border wall, banned travel from several Muslim-majority countries and separated migrant children from their parents.

    Trump has emphasized his deportation pitch on the stump, at times deploying racist rhetoric like claiming thousands of immigrants are committing murders because “it’s in their genes.” This month he accused immigrant gangs of having “invaded and conquered” cities like Aurora, Colorado, which local authorities deny, saying they need federal assistance but want no part in mass deportations. Still, recent polling has found broad support for removing people who came to the U.S. illegally.

    “President Trump’s mass deportation of illegal immigrants will not only make our communities safer but will save Americans from footing the bill for years to come,” Taylor Rogers, a Republican National Committee spokesperson for the campaign, said in a statement, referring to undocumented people’s use of taxpayer-funded social services and other federal programs.

    Trump campaign press secretary Karoline Leavitt said in a statement that the former president’s remarks about genetics were “clearly referring to murderers, not migrants.”

    Tobin said the NAHB has real concerns about the deportation proposal but is engaging with both campaigns. It has called on policymakers to “let builders build” by easing zoning and other regulatory hurdles and improving developers’ access to financing.

    We have to have a serious conversation in this country about immigration policy and reform, and we can no longer delay it.

    Jim Tobin

    CEO of the National Association of Home Builders

    “The rhetoric on immigration, it’s at 11,” Tobin said. “We have to have a serious conversation in this country about immigration policy and reform, and we can no longer delay it.”

    Marek, who has long advocated for more ways for undocumented people to work legally in construction, said reforms are decades overdue. As an employer, “I do everything I can to make sure everybody’s legal,” he said, even as the industry’s hunger for low-cost labor has created a shadow economy that he says often exploits the undocumented workers it depends upon.

    “We need them. They’re building our houses — have been for 30 years,” he said. “Losing the workers would devastate our companies, our industry and our economy.”

    ‘The math is just not there’

    There is evidence that foreign-born construction workers help keep the housing market in check. An analysis released in December 2022 by the George W. Bush Institute and Southern Methodist University found U.S. metro areas with the fastest-growing immigrant populations had the lowest building costs.

    “Immigrant construction workers in Sun Belt metros like Raleigh, Nashville, Houston, and San Antonio have helped these cities sustain their housing cost advantage over coastal cities despite rapid growth in housing demand,” the authors wrote.

    But builders need many more workers as it is. “The math is just not there” to sustain a blow from mass deportations, said Ron Hetrick, a senior labor economist at the workforce analytics firm Lightcast. “That would be incredibly disruptive” and cause “a very, very significant hit on home construction,” he said.

    Private employers in the field have been adding jobs for the past decade, with employment levels now topping 8 million, over 1 million more since the pandemic, according to payroll processor ADP. But as Hetrick noted, “the average high school student is not aspiring to do this work,” and the existing workforce is aging — the average homebuilder is 57 years old.

    Undocumented workers would likely flee ahead of any national deportation effort, Hetrick said, even though many have been in the U.S. for well over a decade. He expects such a policy would trigger an exodus of people with legal authorization, too.

    “That’s exactly what happened in Florida,” he said.

    Past as prologue

    Last year, the state’s Republican governor, Ron DeSantis, enacted a series of restrictions and penalties to deter the employment of undocumented workers. Many immigrant workers hastily left the state even before the policies took effect, with social media videos showing some construction sites sitting empty.

    “These laws show that they have no idea what we do,” said Luciano, a carpenter who is originally from Mexico and has worked on residential builds across South Florida for the past decade.

    “No one else would work in the conditions in which we work,” the 40-year-old said in Spanish, asking to be identified by his first name because he lacks legal immigration status, despite living in the U.S. for over 20 years. Workers on jobsites “have an entry time but no exit time,” often logging 70-hour weeks in rain and extreme heat, he said.

    Taylor recalled fellow Florida builders’ panic at the time of the statewide crackdown but said he reassured them, “Look, just give it six months. We don’t have enough people to enforce it, so they’re coming back.”

    Republican state Rep. Rick Roth, who voted for the measure, later conceded that Florida was unprepared for the destabilization it would cause and urged immigrant residents not to flee, saying the law “is not as bad as you heard.”

    Some workers returned after realizing the policies weren’t being rigorously enforced, Taylor said: “Sure enough, now things are more normal.”

    DeSantis’ office didn’t respond to a request for comment.

    When Arizona in 2010 enacted what were then some of the toughest immigration restrictions in the country, Dunn was working in Tempe as an executive at a construction management firm. As the legislation rolled out, he said, “a lot of people moved away, and they just never came back.”

    By the time much of the law was overturned in 2012, he said, “Arizona had a bad rap” relative to other states that “were a lot more open and just less of a hassle to go work in.”

    Dunn, a Democrat, said he’s “definitely” backing Vice President Kamala Harris, but other construction executives sounded more divided. Marek, a “lifelong Republican,” declined to share how he’s voting but noted that “a lot of Republicans aren’t voting for Trump.”

    Taylor also wouldn’t say which candidate he’s supporting but praised Trump’s ability to “get things done.”

    “There are many other issues with the economy that we are fighting daily that have nothing to do with immigration reform,” he said. “I am not a one-policy voter.”

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  • Partnership provides mental health first aid training to 9th graders

    Partnership provides mental health first aid training to 9th graders

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    A new program meant to certify all Gloucester High ninth-graders in Teen Mental Health First Aid was kicked off Monday.

    The program is a new partnership among Gloucester Public Schools, the city’s Health Department, the Cape Ann YMCA and the Justice Resource Institute.

    Powering implementation of the program is funding from The Tower Foundation awarded to the Health Department, according to Amy Kamm, the school department’s director of mental health and social-emotional learning.

    Teen Mental Health First Aid is an evidence-based training that teaches teens to identify, understand and respond to signs of mental health and substance use challenges in their friends and peers. The training is designed to provide teens with the skills for supportive conversations with their friends and emphasizes the importance of getting help from a responsible and trusted adult, according to a statement from the partnership.

    “Last year this program was piloted with 10th graders in homerooms,” Gloucester High Principal James Cook said. “To ensure a more comprehensive implementation this year it will be embedded into our standard ninth-grade health and wellness curriculum.”

    “Certified trainers,” he said, “will present to five classes a week for six weeks and topics include mental health challenges and their impact, effective treatments, helping a friend in crisis, where and how to get the help of a trusted adult, and recovery and resiliency.”

    At issue, teens tend to turn to each other when stressed or upset and try to help, sometimes taking on too much. Teen Mental Health First Aid teaches teens they don’t have to take on these problems alone.

    “By offering the Teen Mental Health First Aid program,” Kamm said, “Gloucester High School and the Gloucester Health Department aim to promote help-seeking behavior; improve a young person’s ability to identify resources of support; and to increase mental health literacy including improved ability to identify mental health struggles in themselves and their peers and when needed, to connect to a trusted adult.”

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    By Times Staff

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  • Harris attacks Trump abortion record in sex-positive podcast ‘Call Her Daddy’ interview

    Harris attacks Trump abortion record in sex-positive podcast ‘Call Her Daddy’ interview

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    Vice President Kamala Harris sits for an interview with Alex Cooper on the “Call Her Daddy” podcast.

    Call Her Daddy

    Vice President Kamala Harris was all business in an interview on the sex-positive “Call Her Daddy” podcast that aired Sunday.

    Harris, the Democratic presidential nominee, spent the bulk of the roughly 40-minute conversation litigating her case against Donald Trump, blasting the Republican nominee’s track record on abortion and women’s rights.

    “There are now 20 states with Trump abortion bans,” Harris told “Call her Daddy” host Alex Cooper. “This is the same guy that said women should be punished for having abortions.”

    In 2022, three Supreme Court justices whom Trump nominated during his presidency were part of a majority that overturned Roe v. Wade, the Supreme Court decision that for a half-century had said there was a federal right to abortion. The decision allowed individual states to restrict or permit abortions as they saw fit.

    The “Call Her Daddy” podcast is largely popular with young women, a voter base Harris already polls strongly with.

    But the podcast does not typically broach political topics, Cooper noted.

    “I am so aware I have a very mixed audience when it comes to politics, so please hear me when I say my goal today is not to change your political affiliation,” Cooper said on the podcast before she began interviewing Harris.

    Read more CNBC politics coverage

    Harris’ appearance on “Call Her Daddy” is part of a larger media storm her campaign has scheduled for the upcoming week, an attempt to elbow Trump out of the news cycle.

    Earlier Sunday, Trump’s wife, former first lady Melania Trump, doubled down on her own pro-choice abortion stance, bucking the Republican party line in a Fox News interview.

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  • Latina wage gap widens to $1.3 million for full-time and part-time workers

    Latina wage gap widens to $1.3 million for full-time and part-time workers

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    San Diego city officials and activists came together to call on business and government officials to address pay inequities for Latinas in San Diego, CA on Dec. 8, 2022.

    Matthew Bowler | KPBS | Sipa USA

    Latina women working full time, year-round earn 58 cents for every dollar paid to white, non-Hispanic men, according to data collected by the National Women’s Law Center.

    Latina Equal Pay Day, which this year falls on Oct. 3, marks the additional days into the new year that Latinas must work to earn as much as the typical annual salary of white, non-Hispanic male workers.

    That gap in pay translates to a loss of nearly $1.3 million over a 40-year career. Break that down further and Latinas lose $32,070 in wages per year, or $2,672 every month, compared with the dominant cohort.

    While 58 cents per dollar is a penny improvement compared with the previous year, NWLC notes that even though wages have been increasing, so too has the total wage gap over a lifetime — which last year totaled $1,218,000.

    “The increase in lifetime losses and widening of the wage gap for all Latina workers, including part-time workers, is likely because white men’s wages are increasing at a faster rate than other demographic groups,” said Ashir Coillberg, NWLC senior research analyst.

    Assuming a Latina and her white, non-Hispanic male counterpart both begin work at age 20, NWLC notes, the wage gap means a Latina would have to work until she is 89 years old — eight years beyond her life expectancy — to be paid what a white, non-Hispanic man has been paid by age 60.

    Despite the narrow improvement for full-time workers, the gap actually widens for part-time and part-year Latina workers, falling to 51 cents on the dollar compared with 52 cents last year.

    Many groups see wage gap widen

    The wage gap varies widely for certain Latina communities, and for some in the United States it’s even more extreme.

    While full time, year-round Argentinean and Spanish Latina workers remain closest to parity at 84 cents and 81 cents, respectively, wages for Honduran, Guatemalan and Salvadoran women remained the widest at 47 cents, 48 cents and 51 cents, respectively.

    “Most other marginalized populations — and women as a whole — saw a slight widening of the wage gap this year, for both full-time, year-round workers as well as when including part-time workers,” Coillberg said.

    Guatemalan, Cuban and Spanish women saw the greatest increase in losses over a 40-year career.

    Pay disparities at all education levels

    Latinas are more likely to hold low-wage jobs, but NWLC research finds pay disparities at all education levels.

    While continued education can be a benefit to earnings potential, NWLC data suggests getting more education does not shield them from the wage gap. Latinas are typically paid less than white, non-Hispanic men with the same educational attainment and are often paid less than white, non-Hispanic men with less educational attainment.

    Some of the most educated Latinas have some of the most striking pay gaps compared to their white non-Hispanic men counterparts, according to the NWLC. For example, the center said a Latina with a professional degree stands to lose more than $2.9 million to the wage gap over a 40-year career.

    “Unequal pay means Latinas have less money to cover current expenses and forces them to miss key opportunities to build wealth and build economic security throughout their lifetimes,” the NWLC notes in the report.

    Instead of prioritizing continued education, pay equity experts are advocating for comprehensive legislative reform.

    “A comprehensive approach includes requiring equal pay for equal work, pay transparency policies from lawmakers, eliminating the subminimum tipped wage, protection from caregiver discrimination, safety from harassment and health hazards for all workers, prohibiting salary history to determine future pay, and increased access to higher-paid jobs for women,” said Noreen Farrell, Equal Pay Today chair. “That’s how you actually close the gap.”

    With the 2024 presidential election quickly approaching and both Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump trying to woo Latina women, a key voting bloc, Farrell said the data gives insight into what that group of voters care about most: the economy.

    “The widening gap underscores the urgency of tackling this issue to ensure equitable economic opportunities for Latinas,” Farrell said. “Latinas do not have one more day to wait for equal pay.”

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  • State uncovers $2.3M in welfare, food stamp fraud

    State uncovers $2.3M in welfare, food stamp fraud

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    BOSTON — Investigators uncovered more than $2.3 million in welfare fraud in the most recent quarter, according to state Auditor Diana DiZoglio’s office.

    The office’s Bureau of Special Investigations looked into more than 1,235 cases during the final quarter of the fiscal year, from April 1 to June 30, and identified at least 176 instances of public assistance fraud, about 80% of which was in the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, previously known as food stamps.

    The bureau, which has the power to investigate welfare fraud, said benefits paid from the food stamp program amounted to more than $1.9 million of the fraudulent activity in the previous quarter. At least $245,858 in fraudulent activity was related to MassHealth, the state’s Medicaid program, the agency said.

    Another $138,081 was uncovered in the state’s primary cash assistance program, known as Transitional Aid to Families with Dependent Children, DiZoglio’s office reported.

    Of the $2 million in welfare fraud, federal and state courts have so far recovered only $103,142 in restitution, the auditor’s office said.

    In the previous fiscal year, the auditor’s office uncovered more than $12.3 million worth of welfare fraud from about 780 cases that were looked into by investigators.

    DiZoglio said the bureau’s investigations are “making government work better by identifying fraud, waste, and abuse of tax dollars so that residents actually in need have access to support and services.”

    In fiscal 2022, the auditor’s office uncovered more than $13.5 million worth of welfare fraud from about 600 cases that were investigated.

    That was a 120% increase in the dollar value from a year earlier, when investigators uncovered about $6.1 million in fraud.

    Demand for food stamps and other public assistance has risen amid the economic fallout of the COVID-19 pandemic, and has remained high amid inflationary costs.

    As of April, more than 111,000 people in Massachusetts were receiving basic welfare benefits from the state’s main cash assistance program, according to the latest state data.

    Meanwhile, an additional 1 million people were getting food stamps as of March, according to the latest federal data. That’s more than double the pre-pandemic average of about 450,000 recipients.

    Under current law, a recipient is limited to receiving welfare for two years in any five-year period. A family of three in the program collects roughly $593 per month.

    In the fiscal year that gets underway July 1, the state plans to spend more than $300 million on cash assistance programs for welfare recipients.

    The state has tightened its welfare fraud rules in recent years following previous audits showing widespread abuse, including the names of dead people being used to claim benefits. The penalty for welfare fraud is up to 10 years in prison, in addition to repayment of the money.

    Advocates for the benefits programs point out that welfare fraud only accounts for a fraction of the cash assistance the state provides every year. They argue that the money devoted to investigating fraud would be better spent on expanding benefits for the needy.

    Christian M. Wade covers the Massachusetts Statehouse for North of Boston Media Group’s newspapers and websites. Email him at cwade@cnhinews.com.

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    By Christian M. Wade | Statehouse Reporter

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  • Bringing hope to many: Lazarus House fundraiser held in Andover

    Bringing hope to many: Lazarus House fundraiser held in Andover

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    ANDOVER — Perfect late summer weather and the desire to support a good cause helped attract a large crowd to the 26th Hike for Hope walk on Saturday at The Park.

    The daylong event kicked off with the annual walk and was followed by a family-friendly festival with live music, games and food trucks. Money raised through the walk supports those facing poverty, homelessness and hunger through programs offered at Lazarus House in Lawrence. Lazarus House, which opened its doors in 1983, has already served more than 30,000 guests in 2024. Among the participants were Micki LeBlanc, 84, and Denise Labrecque, 66, of Salem, N.H., who have raised more than $200,000 since the walk began.

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  • Student charged with making threat involving Triton-Amesbury football game

    Student charged with making threat involving Triton-Amesbury football game

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    NEWBURY — A student has been charged with making a threat involving the football game Friday night between Triton Regional and Amesbury high schools.

    Newbury police Chief Patty Fisher announced Saturday that the unidentified student was charged following an investigation that involved the Newbury, Amesbury and Salisbury police departments. There were no issues at the game, she said.

    Newbury police were notified by Triton on Wednesday that a student may have made a verbal threat about the upcoming football game, Fisher said in a release. 

    Salisbury police made sure the student did not have access to any weapons and Amesbury police were notified so they could ensure safety at the football game and that the student stayed away from the school, Fisher said.

    “There are currently no credible threats toward public safety at Triton Regional High School or Amesbury High School,” Fisher said in the release Saturday. “Social media rumors can inflate understandable alarm amongst the community.”

    “When there is a valid threat toward public safety, the police and school district will communicate those threats with the public and will work to cancel events we feel are unsafe,” Fisher added.

    The Newbury Police Department uses its social media platforms and CodeRED to communicate with the public, she said. If an issue involves the school district, police work with the administration to communicate through the district broadcast notification system.

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  • Sheriff expands inmate drug treatment program to The Farm

    Sheriff expands inmate drug treatment program to The Farm

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    LAWRENCE — Sheriff Kevin Coppinger plans to stand before hundreds of police chiefs this month and tell them how he’s bringing drugs into Essex County jails.

    It may sound odd as keeping illicit drugs and contraband out of jails and prisons will always be an issue, Coppinger noted.

    But Middleton Jail now has a nationally acclaimed Medication Assisted Treatment (MAT) program where addicted inmates can receive their medically prescribed doses of Suboxone, methadone and Vivitrol on a daily basis.

    In large part, such doses are used to treat the opioid addiction that has plagued the region for the past two decades. And many local crimes are drug driven.

    Last week, the MAT program expanded when a second treatment site opened at an Essex County Sheriff’s Department location — The Correctional Alternative Center, known as The Farm, off Marston Street in Lawrence.

    Adding a second MAT unit “allows us to get the medication to the inmates easier and increases public safety in the community,” Coppinger said.

    About two-thirds of Essex County inmates are diagnosed with both substance abuse and mental health disorders. The sheriff’s department was housing 819 inmates as of Friday’s count.

    At Middleton Jail, 180 inmates receive MAT. About another 35 are treated through MAT at The Farm, which includes females from the Women In Transition program, who are driven there from the Salisbury facility.

    “Abundant evidence” shows the drugs used in MAT programs “reduce opioid use and opioid use disorder-related symptoms, and they reduce the risk of infectious disease transmission as well as criminal behavior associated with drug use,” according to the National Institute on Drug Abuse.

    “These medications also increase the likelihood that a person will remain in treatment, which itself is associated with lower risk of overdose mortality, reduced risk of HIV and Hepatitis C transmission, reduced criminal justice involvement, and greater likelihood of employment,” the institute reports.

    The roots of the MAT program at Middleton came after a 2018 federal lawsuit by an inmate, Geoffrey Pesce, who had been medically treated with methadone prior to his arrest and jailing for driving without a license.

    Pesce, along with the American Civil Liberties Union of Massachusetts and a law firm, successfully sued for his access to methadone while at Middleton Jail.

    In the lawsuit, the federal court was asked to require ECSD to provide Pesce with the prescribed medication onsite or to transport him daily to a medical facility where he could get his daily dosage.

    “Pesce suffered opioid use disorder and had been in recovery for two years with help of doctor-prescribed medication,” the ACLU of Boston said. “Pesce struggled with addiction for nearly six years, experiencing unemployment, homelessness, and estrangement from his family and son. After his doctor prescribed medication-assisted treatment, he made a dramatic recovery.”

    The hope is with the continued treatment behind bars, individuals won’t want to seek drugs when they are released. Brooke Pessinis, a licensed mental health counselor affiliated with the MAT program, said the goal is “harm reduction” and readying the inmate for success when they leave lock up.

    The inmates are also given Narcan, a medication which can reverse an opioid overdose, when they leave, ECSD Assistant Superintendent Jason Faro said.

    The medication dispensed in MAT are “highly managed” and kept in a safe approved by the Drug Enforcement Administration, he said.

    “You’d probably need 100 sticks of dynamite to blow the door off of it,” Faro said of the safe.

    In October, the MAT program will be among discussion topics at the International Association of Chiefs of Police Conference being held this year in Boston.

    But off stage, anecdotally, on a local level, Faro said he has seen the benefits of the MAT program through a former inmate he occasionally runs into in the Merrimack Valley. The man has a lengthy criminal record that stretches back to when he was 17.

    After MAT treatment and release, the man has now reconnected with his family and children, obtained his commercial drivers’ license and appears to be thriving.

    Notably, Faro said his crimes were “all driven by drug use.”

    Follow staff reporter Jill Harmacinski on Twitter @EagleTribJill.

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    By Jill Harmacinski | Staff Writer

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  • Harris outlines an ‘opportunity economy’ centered on cutting food, housing, family costs

    Harris outlines an ‘opportunity economy’ centered on cutting food, housing, family costs

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    U.S. Vice President and Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris speaks at an event at the Hendrick Center for Automotive Excellence in Raleigh, North Carolina, U.S., August 16, 2024. 

    Jonathan Drake | Reuters

    Vice President Kamala Harris on Friday delivered an economic policy pitch aimed to appeal to middle-class voters by focusing on lowering the costs of food, housing, health care and childcare.

    In a speech in Raleigh, North Carolina, the Democratic presidential nominee sketched a vision of what she described as an “opportunity economy,” with basic financial security at its core.

    Her plan would impose a federal ban on price gouging on groceries, enact a new $6,000 child tax credit for families with newborn children and give first-time home buyers $25,000 in down-payment support, among a slew of other proposals.

    Harris framed it in stark contrast to the proposals put forward by her rival, former President Donald Trump.

    She blasted the Republican nominee’s support for sweeping tariffs on imported goods as a “Trump tax,” while accusing him of seeking to cut taxes on billionaires and corporations.

    “I think that if you want to know who someone cares about, look who they fight for,” Harris said.

    While still light on specific details, her plans have already garnered fierce criticism from Republicans and economic analysts who have warned that they veer toward government price fixing.

    “Having the government set prices is a really, really big mistake,” said Kevin Hassett, a top economic advisor in the Trump White House, during a press call earlier Friday.

    The nonprofit Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, meanwhile, estimated that the policies in Harris’ economic plan would raise deficits by $1.7 trillion over the next 10 years.

    Friday’s address was Harris’ first policy speech since she took over from President Joe Biden following his withdrawal from the race last month.

    With less than 90 days until Election Day, Harris is working to take credit for the Biden administration’s economic accomplishments, while trying to flip the script on a key issue where her predecessor got consistently low marks.

    Here’s what else her economic plan includes, according to her campaign.

    Groceries and food

    In an effort to tackle the stubbornly high price of groceries, Harris will work with Congress to advance the first-ever federal ban on “corporate price-gouging” on food and groceries.

    This would include setting “clear rules of the road” so that corporations “can’t unfairly exploit consumers to run up excessive corporate profits” on grocery staples, according to the fact sheet.

    To investigate and penalize alleged violations, Harris would empower the Federal Trade Commission and state attorneys general.

    A Harris administration would also take an aggressive regulatory approach to proposed mergers and consolidation among the biggest food producers.

    Affordable housing and rent

    Harris’ plan would help cash-strapped renters by blocking data firms from hiking lease rates, and by preventing Wall Street investors from buying homes in bulk to resell at a premium.

    U.S. President Joe Biden raises the hand of Vice President Kamala Harris, during an event on Medicare drug price negotiations, in Prince George’s County, Maryland, U.S., August 15, 2024.

    Ken Cedeno | Reuters

    Harris will also call for the U.S. to construct 3 million new housing units over the next four years. In order to facilitate that, she will call for new tax incentives for builders who construct “starter homes.”

    Any changes to the tax code require congressional approval, and depend heavily on which party controls the House and Senate.

    As the supply of entry-level homes expanded, the Harris plan would “provide working families who have paid their rent on time for two years and are buying their first home up to $25,000 in down-payment assistance, with more generous support for first-generation homeowners,” according to the fact sheet.

    Read more CNBC politics coverage

    Health-care costs

    Harris would seek to expand the Biden administration’s landmark $35 price cap on insulin for Medicare recipients to cover insulin for all Americans, not just the elderly.

    US President Joe Biden along with vice president Kamala Harris (not seen) and North Carolina governor Roy Cooper (not seen) delivers remarks about healthcare in Raleigh, North Carolina, United States on March 26, 2024. 

    Peter Zay | Anadolu | Getty Images

    Similar to her cost-cutting plans for the food industry, Harris’ health-care policy relies in part on stiffer regulations and strict antitrust enforcement.

    The plan calls for “cracking down on pharmaceutical companies who block competition and abusive practices by pharmaceutical middlemen,” according to the Harris campaign.

    Tax cuts

    Restoring the expanded child tax credits that were first introduced during the Covid pandemic is a longstanding goal of the Biden administration, and one that Harris will take up if she is elected president.

    She will also go one step further, and propose expanded tax relief of up to $6,000 for families with a newborn.

    The Harris campaign calls this a “year when many family’s expenses are highest—with cribs, diapers, car seats and more.” It also notes that many parents who do not have access to paid leave are forced to choose between spending time with their baby and working enough hours to make ends meet.

    The stakes

    U.S. President Joe Biden embraces Vice President Kamala Harris at an event on Medicare drug price negotiations, in Prince George’s County, Maryland, U.S., August 15, 2024. 

    Elizabeth Frantz | Reuters

    The landmark negotiations — enabled through Biden’s centerpiece spending legislation, the Inflation Reduction Act — will lead to around $6 billion in net savings for Medicare when they officially go into effect in 2026, according to the government.

    The vice president’s speech came just two days after Trump gave his own economy-focused speech in North Carolina.

    Speaking in Asheville, Trump fired off personal attacks at Harris while blaming her for the high consumer prices that Biden has spent much of his presidency working to reverse.

    Recent polls suggest the state that Trump won in both the 2016 and 2020 presidential elections is now within reach for Harris in 2024.

    A new round of battleground state poll results released Wednesday by the Cook Political Report showed Harris leading Trump in North Carolina by 1 percentage point, 48 – 47, still well within the survey’s margin of error.

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

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

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

    Getty Images

    Housing

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

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

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

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

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

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

    Child tax credit

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

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

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

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

    Jared Walczak

    Vice president of state projects at the Tax Foundation

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    Student loans

    Vance has spoken out against student loan forgiveness policies.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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  • Harris erases Trump’s lead on economy among younger Americans, CNBC/Generation Lab survey finds

    Harris erases Trump’s lead on economy among younger Americans, CNBC/Generation Lab survey finds

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    U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris and Republican presidential nominee and former U.S. President Donald Trump.

    Brendan Mcdermid | Elizabeth Frantz | Reuters

    Younger Americans do not appear to hold Vice President Kamala Harris responsible for what many of them believe is a worsening U.S. economy under the Biden-Harris administration, according to a new survey from CNBC and Generation Lab.

    The latest quarterly Youth & Money Survey, taken after Biden dropped out of the race in July, reveals that 69% of Americans between 18 and 34 years old believe the economy is getting worse under President Joe Biden.

    But they also think the candidate best able to improve the economy is the de facto Democratic nominee Harris, not Republican nominee and former President Donald Trump.

    Harris was viewed as the best candidate for the economy by 41% of poll respondents, while 40% chose Trump, while 19% said the economy would do better under someone else, like third party candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr.

    The results amount to a seven-point swing in Democrats’ favor on the economy since CNBC asked the same question in May’s Youth & Money Survey. At that time, only 34% of respondents believed Biden, then the likely Democratic nominee, was the best candidate to boost the economy, with 40% choosing Trump and 25% saying Kennedy.

    The shift in voting support for Harris is even wider among respondents overall. If the presidential election were held today, the latest poll found Harris holding a 12-point lead over Trump among younger Americans, 46% to 34%, while 21% said they would vote for either Kennedy or another candidate.

    Three months ago, the same survey found Trump and Biden effectively tied, with 36% for Biden and 35% for Trump, and 29% planning to vote for Kennedy.

    This jump in support for Harris today is all the more notable because of how significant the economy is to the voting choices of younger Americans.

    Read more CNBC politics coverage

    According to the new CNBC survey data, the “economy and cost of living” was cited more than any other issue when respondents were asked what will impact their decisions about who to vote for, with 66% of respondents naming it among their top three. Running second with 34% was “access to abortion and reproductive rights,” followed by “gun violence/control” at 26%.

    Nonetheless, these results also contain warning signs for Harris and the Democratic Party.

    To win the White House, Harris will likely need to do even better among young people in November than her current 12-point lead in the CNBC and Generation Lab’s survey.

    ‘Bidenomics’ may not be a drag on Harris

    With fewer than 90 days to go before Election Day on Nov. 5, these new results could have significant implications for a presidential contest that was altered by Biden’s decision to drop out.

    As pollsters race to gather data on how Harris’ candidacy is — or is not — changing the race, one of the biggest unanswered questions for both parties is whether Americans will transfer their well-documented frustration with Biden, after years of high inflation and high interest rates, directly over to Harris.

    These findings suggest that the political drag of “Bidenomics” has so far not rubbed off on Harris — at least not among younger people.

    In 2020 for example, Biden won voters age 18 to 29 by a margin of 24 percentage points, with 59% of the vote to Trump’s 35%.

    And while young people have long made up a crucial constituency for Democratic candidates, this year, depending upon which states Kennedy appears on the ballot, the embattled anti-vaccine independent might still be able to peel away enough votes from Harris to cut into her overall margins.

    Turnout is also a potential trouble spot for Democrats. The 18- to 34-year-old cohort makes up roughly a quarter of the total U.S. population, or around 76 million people, according to U.S. Census Bureau data. During the last presidential election in 2020, 57% of this age group turned out to vote.

    In this survey, 77% of respondents said they either definitely or probably will vote. But in past elections, the number of people who say they plan to vote is typically much higher than those who actually do.

    Economy is still a wild card

    Lastly, as is always the case in an election, the economy itself could either hurt or help Harris, depending upon where it goes.

    For example, this poll was taken between July 22 and July 29, before the latest jobs report showed a contraction, spurring new fears of an economic recession.

    It was also taken before the market sell-off on Aug. 5, which was triggered in part by fears stemming from the rocky jobs report.

    Meanwhile, most polls that sample all adults, and not just younger people, still show Trump holding on to his advantage when it comes to which candidate voters trust more to improve the economy.

    Any more bad economic news between now and November could see voters blame Harris — who has yet to fully articulate an economic agenda distinct from Biden’s — and pivot back to the perceived safety of Trump’s familiar economic agenda.

    The survey interviewed 1,043 adults between the ages of 18 and 34, with a margin of error of 3.0%.

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  • Olympics draw new investments to niche sports and women’s teams

    Olympics draw new investments to niche sports and women’s teams

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    Players of Team United States celebrate following victory during the Women’s Rugby Sevens Bronze medal match between Team United States and Team Australia on day four of the Olympic Games Paris 2024 at Stade de France on July 30, 2024 in Paris, France. 

    Michael Steele | Getty Images Sport | Getty Images

    The 2024 Paris Olympics are attracting new funds for lesser-known sports and women’s teams, with USA women’s rugby sevens, water polo and women’s track and field scoring major contributions this year.

    The USA women’s rugby sevens team earned a $4 million gift from investor Michele Kang earlier this week. Rapper and reality TV personality Flavor Flav threw his support behind water polo, and Alexis Ohanian, the husband of tennis superstar Serena Williams and the co-founder of Reddit, is investing in women’s track and field.

    “Niche sports often don’t get the spotlight they deserve, but they are packed with incredible talent and heart,” Flavor Flav said in announcing his support for water polo in July.

    Flavor Flav announced a five-year partnership with USA water polo, which includes funds for the 2024 USA women’s team as well as serving as the “official hype man” for both the men’s and women’s teams. The size of his contribution wasn’t disclosed.

    He pledged to his support after player Maggie Steffens posted on Instagram that she and her teammates often have to work a second or third job in order to compete, given that water polo doesn’t garner as much attention as other sports.

    The USA women’s water polo team has won gold for the past three Olympics, and Flavor Flav aims to elevate their visibility. The partnership includes his commitment to boosting USA water polo on social media, beyond cheering poolside.

    Growing support

    Beyond the Games

    Ohanian already co-own’s a women’s soccer club, and he told CNBC’s “Squawk Box” this week that he aims to extend the popularity of women’s track and field beyond its Olympics peak.

    He announced in April that his venture capital firm will host a competition in late September with the largest ever prize pool for a women’s track and field event. Ohanian is doubling the stakes of the Paris Games with a $30,000 top prize.

    “Nothing about this is charity nor should it be charity,” Ohanian said. “This is about excellence, about celebrating it.”

    — CNBC’s Jessica Golden, Kasey O’Brien and Nicolas Vega contributed to this report.

    Disclosure: CNBC parent NBCUniversal owns NBC Sports and NBC Olympics. NBC Olympics is the U.S. broadcast rights holder to all Summer and Winter Games through 2032.

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