Tag: Kamala Harris

  • Kanye West Apologizes, Deletes Sexually Explicit Remarks About Kamala Harris in Twitter Rant

    Kanye West Apologizes, Deletes Sexually Explicit Remarks About Kamala Harris in Twitter Rant

    In a series of provocative posts on X, Ye, formerly known as Kanye West, has once again stirred controversy with his unfiltered comments.

    From making inappropriate comments about former U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris to expressing unwavering support for Donald Trump, West has reaffirmed his reputation for courting controversy and defying expectations.

    In a now-deleted post on X (formerly Twitter), West made shocking remarks about Kamala Harris, claiming he had a sexual interest in her but retracting his statement after her political losses. “I used to want to f*ck Kamala until she lost. I don’t f*ck losers anymore,” he wrote. The post was later removed, with West jokingly attributing the deletion to pressure from Democrats, though he quickly dismissed the idea, stating, “Dey don’t control black people no more. Trump 4 life.” Shortly after, he attempted to backtrack, posting, “Kamala seems like a very nice human. I just wanna say sorry to her kids.”

    West also took the opportunity to praise former President Donald Trump, declaring, “Trump’s back in office. Ye’s back a billionaire. The world might just be ok.”

    Trump has previously associated himself with West, even inviting the star to the White House in 2018 but in more recent years has made efforts to distance himself from the musician.

    Donald Trump and Kanye West meet in the Oval Office in 2018 (AFP via Getty Images)

    He later said, in reference to the infamous red MAGA hat: “I risked my life to wear a red hat then he turned it black.”

    This statement followed his recent claim that he has regained billionaire status. West’s posts grew increasingly bold as he flaunted his wealth and freedom, writing, “Damn. Just warming up. I’m rich. I can say whatever the fuck I want. I do this for the broke me. Shout out to broke me this one’s for you.”

    Among a slew of posts from the rapper around the same time, was one which read: “Hey kids, Twitter is a great way to express yourself and crash three companies at once.”

    Adding to his string of bold statements, Ye hinted at his ongoing feud with Taylor Swift, revealing that she is the only person he follows on Instagram.

    Meanwhile, Ye is facing legal trouble as model Jenifer An, a former contestant on America’s Next Top Model, has filed a lawsuit accusing him of sexual assault during a 2010 music video shoot. The lawsuit alleges that the incident took place at the Chelsea Hotel in New York City, where West reportedly singled her out among a group of models in a manner that made her feel uncomfortable, according to Page Six.

    Despite the backlash, Ye remains unapologetic, asserting, “I’m rich. I can say whatever the f*** I want.”

    Meanwhile, West is nominated for Best Rap Song at this year’s Grammys for his song “Carnival”. The awards will take place on Sunday 2 February. Follow all the news about the 2025 Grammy Awards here.

  • Who is Susie Wiles, The “ice maiden” Who Will Be Trump’s Chief Of Staff?

    Who is Susie Wiles, The “ice maiden” Who Will Be Trump’s Chief Of Staff?

    • Wiles got her start working for Republican President Ronald Reagan’s successful 1980 campaign.
    • Wiles is the daughter of Pat Summerall, who was a prominent football player and sportscaster.

    (Reuters)-Republican President-elect Donald Trump named campaign chief Susie Wiles as his White House chief of staff on Thursday.

    It was his first appointment since winning Tuesday’s election against Democratic Vice President Kamala Harris.

    Here are some key facts about Wiles, who is set to run day-to-day operations at the White House:

    Wiles, a longtime Republican strategist, is widely credited – along with co-campaign manager Chris LaCivita – with running the most disciplined and sophisticated of Trump’s three presidential campaigns.

    She did not always succeed at stopping Trump from going off-script, but she kept damaging media leaks to a relative minimum, launched a bold and successful strategy to win over some Latino and Black voters and led the former president to a decisive win.

    Wiles got her start working for Republican President Ronald Reagan’s successful 1980 campaign. For years, she worked with some moderate Republicans who promoted dramatically different policies than those of Trump.

    Early in her career, she worked for Republican US representatives Jack Kemp, an ardent advocate of free trade, and Tillie Fowler, who was widely considered a moderate on several issues, including gun control.

    She also served briefly as the manager of former Utah Governor Jon Huntsman Jr.’s 2012 presidential campaign. Huntsman was arguably the most moderate Republican in the field that year. He sharply criticized Trump after the January 6, 2021, attack on the US Capitol by Trump’s supporters.

    Later in her career, Wiles started working for more combative party figures, some of whom would become Trump allies, including US Senator Rick Scott of Florida.

    Notably, she was a key figure in Ron DeSantis’ successful 2018 Florida gubernatorial campaign. She was dismissed by DeSantis after he took office.

    When Trump and DeSantis squared off in the Republican presidential primary, she presided over an aggressive and successful strategy to portray her old boss as personally off-putting and out of touch on some key policy issues.

    While Wiles is personally friendly, she is relatively little-known and enigmatic for a political strategist of her stature. She rarely gives televised interviews and avoids speaking engagements. Like many successful campaign managers, she can be ruthless when merited.

    Her personality contrasted with that of LaCivita, who was notably garrulous and outspoken.

    During his victory speech, Trump referred to Wiles as the “ice maiden.”

    Wiles is the daughter of Pat Summerall, who was a prominent football player and sportscaster. Summerall played in the National Football League for a decade and later announced 16 Super Bowls. He died in 2013.

  • Where The Kamala Harris Campaign Went Wrong

    Where The Kamala Harris Campaign Went Wrong

    (CNN)- It was supposed to be everything short of a free ad – a panel of women not containing their excitement to welcome Kamala Harris, ready to introduce her to their committed daytime audience of exactly the type of women the vice president’s campaign always hoped were going to be critical to her base.

    It was a moment that encapsulated one of the biggest challenges facing her campaign – which, in the end, proved insurmountable.

    “What, if anything, would you have done something differently than President Biden during the past four years?” co-host of ABC’s “The View” Sunny Hostin asked Harris, looking to give her a set for her to spike over the net.

    “There is not a thing that comes to mind,” she said.

    Even Harris realized she had a problem, trying to adjust a moment later by saying she would put a Republican in her Cabinet.

    Aides didn’t wait until Harris was off the set to start trying to clean it up. A Democrat who had spoken with her told CNN at the time that she didn’t want to name her differences with President Joe Biden – including a higher capital gains tax rate, a bigger child tax credit and a tougher border policy – because she thought it would look disloyal to the man who had picked her as his running mate and then stepped aside for her.

    The thud fell in a campaign already struggling with a listless October, which had replaced the late summer exuberance and a September debate that nearly everyone political observer other than Donald Trump acknowledged she crushed.

    As aides new to the Harris orbit exerted control, she struggled with preparation. She grew hesitant, losing some of the confidence and swagger that had defined the early weeks of her reintroduction to the country. Aides who had successfully pushed her out of her comfort zone earlier in the year felt like they were running into the kind of walls she used to put up.

    CNN spoke with over a dozen senior Harriscampaign aides both in the Wilmington, Delaware, campaign headquarters and on the ground in the states, as well as multiple volunteers and local elected officials, over the course of the final weeks of the race.

    Soft pedal change

    A country crying out for change got a candidate who, at a crucial moment as more voters were tuning in, decided to soft-pedal the change she knew she represented.

    In the scope of a Democratic ticket that pulled off the biggest turnaround in approval ratings and the fastest consolidation around a new candidate in the history of modern presidential politics, this may have seemed like a minor moment. But it reflected deeper problems: some, like with the staff around her, that she might have been able to adjust; and one, with Biden, that she could never shake, with internal polls showing overwhelming majorities of voters thought the country was on the wrong track.

    By the time Harris got a clearer, sharper contrast answer out on the Biden question, the situation had congealed in ways she never got past – both among voters wavering in the center who wanted to hear her rebuff the president on his handling of the economy and voters on the left who wanted to hear her more forcefully disavow Biden’s support for Israel.

    But perhaps the bigger problem with Biden, top Democrats fumed in the aftermath of that fateful debate in June and then again as they watched the results turn red on Tuesday, is that he should have never been anywhere near the 2024 race.

    If he had stepped aside after the midterms, as some aides urged him to, the Democratic Party process could have played out in a primary campaign. Candidates’ kinks could have been worked out – or not.

    Almost certainly whoever emerged as the nominee would have gone into the final weeks without so many Americans complaining they didn’t know enough, as they said about Harris. Biden could have taken on a role as steward and elder statesman, rather than a guy the Harriscampaign never knew quite what do with.

    If the election had been two weeks ago, senior aides to Harris were admitting in recent days, the vice president probably would have lost. But they went into Tuesday feeling like she had gotten herself to a likely squeaker victory.

    One-on-one conversations volunteers were having as they knocked on doors seemed to be clicking. For the first time in his nine years dominating American politics,

    Trump’s character seemed to be breaking through as an actual weight on people who wanted to vote for him.

    Leading Democrats smiled just thinking about what it would mean to beat Trump with the first female president — a woman of color, a child of two immigrants, a prosecutor, and a candidate who talked about joy and offered up her smile against the scowl that had become his most common expression. Her candidacy sparked in them the unfamiliar feeling of hope.

    That sentiment evaporated by 11 pm on Tuesday. But for many anxious Democrats, this is just the beginning. Going into Election Day, many top Democratic operatives across the campaign and in the states told CNN different versions of the same thought: If this didn’t work – with the massive campaign they’d put together, with millions of doors knocked by volunteers who flooded into battleground states, with GOP former Rep Liz Cheney and former President Bill Clinton united under the same tent stumping hard for her, with celebrities from Bad Bunny and Arnold Schwarzenegger throwing their cultural weight behind her – what will?

    “I can’t imagine, I can’t even get my mind around what it would be like if Donald Trump won, because he is telling us such dark and sinister things that he’s going to do, and I believe him,” Sen Cory Booker told CNN after a campaignstop late Monday afternoon in Bucks County, Pennsylvania – one of the key swing districts in the crucial battleground state.

    The New Jersey Democrat said he had already warned his own staff about not giving up.

    “We need to get up the next morning and forge forward,” Booker said. “I told them how much I don’t like hearing people say, ‘Oh, if so-and-so wins, I’m going to go to Canada. That’s just not our history. We’ve seen really bad outcomes out of bad historical events in our country, and we’re here because of the resiliency, the toughness, the strength of our country — and people even in the worst of times dug in and tried to do the best for our country.”

    Internal fights

    Harris’ team would have gladly taken more time to introduce the vice president to the country, or to put together an operation, which, after the ticket switch in July, woke up every morning at campaign headquarters and in the states feeling behind on planning.But by the time the campaign pulled off its multi-state simultaneous rally across battleground states Monday evening – which ended with Lady Gaga singing her song “The Edge of Glory” and adding in, “I’m an American woman on the edge” on the steps of the Philadelphia Museum of Art – a nervous feeling of maybe having made a movement happen was spreading among Harris aides and top supporters.

    Those aides were a hodgepodge. Biden hadn’t just struggled as a candidate, but had failed to attract some top talent to his campaign because a generation of up-and-coming Democrats could never get excited about him. Harris tried to graft some of her own team onto them, even overlooking tensions between them from the early days of the Biden administration with campaign chair Jen O’Malley Dillon and keeping her in charge.

    But some of those who had been in Wilmington for a year before Harris became the candidate bucked at their new bosses. Alumni of Barack Obama – most prominently his 2008, campaignmanager David Plouffe, but also many others who moved into state operations – tried to flex a sometimes dated but often more incisive sense of how to win voters.

    Along the way, multiple aides told CNN how much they were grinding on one another. But the mission to beat Trump and the short timeline to try to get there helped paper over a lot of the infighting that might have exploded in a longer campaign. It instead just raged behind the scenes as aides like Stephanie Cutter moved to exert dominance over defining how and what Harris said what she said.

    And those tensions manifested from almost the start of this short campaign, in the internal wrangling over who Harris should pick as her running mate. The case for Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro was strong, and not just because Harris’ brother-in-law Tony West was telling her they looked like the future of the Democratic Party together, and that the popular governor would make sure she won Pennsylvania.

    Right-wing media types weren’t the only ones who noticed how much Shapiro had made himself into an Obama clone, as much a Jewish guy from the Philadelphia suburbs could be: The Obama alumni suddenly rushing onto her campaign were pushing for Shapiro.

    Harris liked Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, though. She liked his line about Republicans being weird. She liked the way he came off as easy and unassuming. She liked the way they’d gotten along in their interview, including his very open stress that he would mess up in a debate with Trump’s running mate, Ohio Sen. JD Vance. And she liked the way Walz had been so deferential to however she would define the job for him.

    In the end, Harris made a decision that simultaneously reflected her newfound confidence and her long-standing insecurity, solid with trusting her own instincts, fine with going against her family and against the Obama orbit, but also with no interest in having anyone who would possibly outshine her.

  • Trump Claims Victory After Fox News Projects He Has Won US Presidency

    Trump Claims Victory After Fox News Projects He Has Won US Presidency

    (Reuters) – Republican Donald Trump claimed victory in the 2024 presidential contest after Fox News projected that he had defeated Democrat Kamala Harris, which would cap a stunning political comeback four years after he left the White House.

    “America has given us an unprecedented and powerful mandate,” he said early on Wednesday to a roaring crowd of supporters at the Palm Beach County Convention Center.

    Other news outlets had yet to call the race for Trump, but he appeared on the verge of winning after capturing the battleground states of Pennsylvania, North Carolina and Georgia and holding leads in the other four, according to Edison Research.

    Harris did not speak to her supporters, who had gathered at her alma mater Howard University. Her campaign co-chair, Cedric Richmond, briefly addressed the crowd after midnight, saying Harris would speak publicly on Wednesday.

    “We still have votes to count,” he said.

    The former president was showing strength across broad swaths of the country, improving on his 2020 performance everywhere from rural areas to urban centers.

    Republicans won a U.S. Senate majority after flipping Democratic seats in West Virginia and Ohio. Neither party appeared to have an edge in the fight for control of the House of Representatives where Republicans currently hold a narrow majority.

    Trump went into Election Day with a 50-50 chance of reclaiming the White House, a remarkable turnaround from Jan. 6, 2021, when many pundits pronounced his political career to be over. That day, a mob of his supporters stormed Congress in a violent attempt to overturn the results of the 2020 election.

    Trump picked up more support from Hispanics, traditionally Democratic voters, and among lower-income households that have keenly felt the sting of price rises since the last presidential election in 2020, according to exit polls from Edison.

    Trump won 45% of Hispanic voters nationwide, trailing Harris with 53% but up 13 percentage points from 2020.

    About 31% of voters said the economy was their top issue, and they voted for Trump by a 79%-to-20% margin, according to exit polls. Some 45% of voters across the country said their family’s financial situation was worse off today than four years ago, and they favored Trump 80% to 17%.

    Global investors were increasingly pricing in a Trump win late on Tuesday. U.S. stock futures and the dollar pushed higher, while Treasury yields climbed and bitcoin rose – all flagged by analysts and investors as trades that favor a Trump victory.

    At Howard University, where a large watch party was being held for Harris, supporters were leaving in droves, anticipating that the vice president would not address the crowd on Tuesday night.

    Cedric Richmond, a co-chair of the Harris campaign, briefly addressed the crowd and said Harris would not speak. “We still have votes to count,” he said. “We still have states that haven’t been called yet.”

    TRUMP OUTPERFORMS 2020

    Trump was earning a bigger share of the vote than he did four years ago in nearly every corner of the country.

    By 12:30 a.m. ET, officials had nearly completed their count of ballots in more than 1,600 counties – about half the country – and Trump’s share was up about 2 percentage points compared to 2020, reflecting a broad if not especially deep shift in Americans’ support for the president they ousted four years ago.

    He improved his numbers in suburban counties, rural regions and even some large cities that are historically bastions of Democratic support; in high-income counties and low-income ones; and in places where unemployment was comparatively high and in places where it is now at record lows.

    Harris had banked on big margins among urban and suburban voters, but her support in those places was running well behind President Joe Biden’s in the 2020 election.

    Nearly three-quarters of voters said American democracy is under threat, according to the exit polls, underscoring the depth of polarization in a nation where divisions have only grown starker during a fiercely competitive race.
    Trump employed increasingly apocalyptic rhetoric while stoking unfounded fears that the election system cannot be trusted. Harris warned that a second Trump term would threaten the underpinnings of American democracy.

    Hours before polls closed, Trump claimed on his Truth Social site without evidence that there was “a lot of talk about massive CHEATING” in Philadelphia, echoing his false claims in 2020 that fraud had occurred in large, Democratic-dominated cities. In a subsequent post, he also asserted there was fraud in Detroit.

    “I don’t respond to nonsense,” Detroit City Clerk Janice Winfrey told Reuters.

    A Philadelphia city commissioner, Seth Bluestein, replied on X, “There is absolutely no truth to this allegation.”

    DIZZYING CAMPAIGN

    Trump voted earlier near his home in Palm Beach, Florida.

    “If I lose an election, if it’s a fair election, I’m gonna be the first one to acknowledge it,” Trump told reporters.

    Tesla CEO Elon Musk, a prominent Trump backer, watched the results at Mar-a-Lago with Trump.

    Millions of Americans waited in orderly lines to cast ballots, with only sporadic disruptions reported across a handful of states, including several non-credible bomb threats that the FBI said appeared to originate from Russian email domains.

    Tuesday’s vote capped a dizzying race churned by unprecedented events, including two assassination attempts against Trump, Biden’s surprise withdrawal and Harris’ rapid rise.

    No matter who wins, history will be made.

    Harris, 60, the first female vice president, would become the first woman, Black woman and South Asian American to win the presidency. Trump, 78, the only president to be impeached twice and the first former president to be criminally convicted, would also become the first president to win non-consecutive terms in more than a century.

  • When Will The US Election Results Be Announced?

    When Will The US Election Results Be Announced?

    (Reuters) – The U.S. presidential election will take place on Nov. 5, but the winner of the razor-thin race between Democrat Kamala Harris and Republican Donald Trump may not be known for days after the polls close.

    As ballots are counted, one candidate may appear to be leading based on early returns, only for a rival to close the gap as more votes are tallied.

    In 2020, some states experienced a “red mirage,” in which Trump appeared to be leading on election night, before a “blue shift” saw Democrat Joe Biden overtake him, a phenomenon Trump used to amplify his false claims that the election was stolen.

    Nothing untoward had occurred. Democrats tend to live in more populous urban areas, where counting votes takes longer. Democrats also have embraced mail voting more readily than Republicans after Trump’s false claims that mail ballots are untrustworthy, and those ballots take longer to count than Election Day votes. Trump has both encouraged and criticized early and mail-in voting in 2024.

    Democrats are outpacing Republicans in mail ballots once again this year, according to an early vote tracker maintained by the University of Florida’s Election Lab, though Republicans have narrowed the gap.

    There are seven battleground states likely to decide the election, each with its own rules for handling and counting ballots. Here’s what to expect on Election Day and beyond:

    ARIZONA

    Voting by mail is extremely popular in Arizona; nearly 90% of voters cast their ballots early, most by mail, in 2020. Election officials in Arizona can begin processing and tabulating mail ballots upon receipt, but results cannot be released until one hour after polls close.

    Any mail ballots dropped off on Election Day itself cannot be processed until the polls have closed. That is often a sizable number – in 2022, those “late early” votes comprised one-fifth of all ballots in Maricopa County, the state’s largest – and can take days to count.

    The initial results on election night should be mostly early votes, which could favor Harris, before the numbers shift toward Trump as Election Day votes are tallied.

    GEORGIA

    Early in-person voting is popular in Georgia, where officials expect 65% to 70% of ballots to be cast at early poll locations. Absentee or mail ballots, which may comprise around 5% of the vote, can be processed – which includes steps such as verifying signatures – starting two weeks before the election, though workers must wait until Election Day to begin counting them.

    All early votes – in-person and mail – must be counted and reported by 8 p.m. ET (0000 GMT) on election night, according to state law, which could create a “blue mirage” in Harris’ favor at first. Officials are aiming to have all votes, including those from Election Day, tallied by midnight.

    Ballots from overseas and military voters will be accepted up to three days after the election if postmarked by Nov. 5. There were more than 21,000 such ballots requested, so an extremely close election might not be resolved until those votes are tabulated.

    MICHIGAN

    Since the 2020 election, Michigan has instituted early in-person voting for the first time and begun permitting jurisdictions with more than 5,000 people to begin processing and tabulating mail ballots eight days before Election Day. Smaller jurisdictions can do so the day before Nov. 5.

    Officials hope those changes will allow the state to report results more quickly than in 2020, when mail ballots could not be processed in advance. That created a “red mirage” on election night, when the state’s early counts of Election Day votes favored Trump. Biden eventually surpassed Trump on the strength of mail ballots, which took longer to tally. Trump falsely claimed he was the victim of fraud.

    NEVADA

    Nevada’s slow vote counting in 2020 – news outlets did not call the state for Biden until five days after Election Day – launched countless memes, but officials say changes since then should speed up the process.

    Most notably, counties were permitted to begin processing and counting mail ballots on Oct. 21. In addition, workers can start tabulating early in-person votes at 8 a.m. PT (1500 GMT) on Election Day, rather than waiting until polls close.

    But Nevada still might not get called right away. Mail voting has grown popular in the state, and it is the only battleground that accepts late-arriving mail ballots. That could also create a “blue shift” as more votes are counted.

    Any ballot postmarked by Nov. 5 will still be counted if it arrives within four days. Those late ballots historically favor Democrats, so a shift toward Harris could occur as votes are counted after Election Day.

    NORTH CAROLINA

    Election officials start processing and scanning mail ballots ahead of Election Day. After polls close, the first reported results will likely be mostly mail ballots as well as early in-person votes. Election Day votes will be counted and reported throughout the evening, with full results expected by midnight.

    Harris may appear to lead early thanks to mail ballots, while Trump could close the gap as Election Day votes are counted.

    If the election is as close as polls suggest, the outcome in North Carolina may remain unclear for a week or more. Absentee ballots that arrive on Nov. 5, as well as ballots from overseas and military voters, are tallied during the 10-day canvass period that follows Election Day. In 2020, media outlets did not call North Carolina for Trump until Nov. 13, 10 days after the election.

    PENNSYLVANIA

    Perhaps the most important battleground, Pennsylvania did not have a clear winner in 2020 for four days after Election Day, as officials sifted through a huge backlog of mail ballots. The state is among only a handful that do not permit election workers to process or tabulate mail ballots until 7 a.m. ET on Election Day, which means it will likely again take days before the outcome is known.

    With more Democrats than Republicans voting by mail, the early results – based on in-person Election Day votes – will probably show Trump ahead, but his lead will likely shrink as more mail ballots are counted.

    That pattern in 2020 prompted Trump to falsely claim fraud. This year, a new law requires most counties to announce at midnight on election night how many mail ballots remain to be counted in an effort to forestall conspiracy theories.

    WISCONSIN

    Like Pennsylvania, Wisconsin is among the few states that do not allow election officials to process or count mail ballots until the morning of the election, which means there can be a delay in reporting the results of those early votes.

    In addition, many of the state’s largest cities transport mail ballots to a centralized location for processing and tabulating. That can lead to significant batches of votes getting reported all at once in the early morning after polls close.

    In 2020, Trump and his allies falsely claimed fraud after Milwaukee, the state’s largest city, reported nearly 170,000 absentee ballots around 3:30 a.m. CT (0830 GMT), giving Biden a huge spike that moved him into the lead for the first time. But that increase was expected due to the way the city processes those ballots and the fact that Democrats were more likely to vote by mail. A similar pattern is probable in 2024.

  • How Trump Is Preparing The Ground To Challenge The US Election

    How Trump Is Preparing The Ground To Challenge The US Election

    (FRANCE 24)-History, as the saying goes, doesn’t repeat itself, but it does often rhyme. Four years after refusing to concede to Joe Biden with unproven claims of electoral fraud that culminated in the January 6 assault on the Capitol, former president Donald Trump is once again casting doubt on the US presidential election.

    Now in a close race against Vice President Kamala Harris, Trump and his allies have prepared for years to challenge the outcome if he loses, with strategies aimed at questioning election integrity on multiple fronts.

    From the outset of his campaign, Trump has focused heavily on casting doubt on the election process. During the June presidential debate, he was asked three times if he would accept the results of the 2024 election. His answer: he would only do so if the election was “fair and legal and good”.

    At his campaign rallies, Trump has urged supporters to anticipate a victory while implying that any loss would be due to corruption.

    “I’d love to win the popular vote with them cheating. Let them cheat, because that’s what they do; they do it very well, they’re very professional. But I think we have a really good chance to win the popular vote,” he told supporters at a rally in Salem, Virginia, on Saturday.

    On social media, he has amplified claims of fraud, especially in battleground states like Pennsylvania, where he recently posted allegations about “fake ballots” and other claims of supposed irregularities.

    “We caught them CHEATING BIG in Pennsylvania. Must announce and PROSECUTE, NOW!” Trump wrote on Truth Social, adding, “Who would have ever thought our country could be so CORRUPT?”

    This rhetoric sparked rapid responses from officials. Democratic Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro responded on X, saying, “In 2020, Donald Trump attacked our elections over and over. He’s now trying to use the same playbook to stoke chaos, but hear me on this: we will again have a free and fair, safe and secure election – and the will of the people will be respected.”

    Secretary of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania Al Schmidt, a Republican, echoed this, telling CNN that any allegations of fraud were “completely and totally unfounded”. “Voters should have confidence we will have a fair election in 2024, just like we had in 2020,” Schmidt said.

    Lawsuits galore

    After Trump’s loss in 2020, his team initiated 60 court cases across multiple states to challenge the results, alleging widespread fraud, though none succeeded. This experience led Trump’s team to refine their approach for 2024. According to Olivier Richomme, an electoral law expert and professor of American history at Lyon 2 University, the strategy this time is broader and more calculated.

    “Trump has an army of lawyers, co-ordinated by his political adviser Stephen Miller,” Richomme explained. “They’ve already initiated lawsuits well ahead of the election and intend to continue afterward.”

    The Republican National Committee (RNC) filed more than 120 lawsuits in 26 states from 2020 through August this year, contesting various election rules. An RNC spokesperson claimed the party’s primary goal was to address issues in voting systems to prevent illegal ballots before Election Day.

    “Our Election Integrity operation is focused on securing transparency and fairness for every legal vote,” RNC spokesperson Claire Zunk told Reuters last month. “This ensures voters feel confident that their ballots are counted properly, which ultimately inspires voter turnout.”

    Launched in April, the Election Integrity Network is the largest initiative of its kind in US history, enlisting thousands of lawyers and volunteers to address perceived election interference. A number of high-profile conservative donors contributed over $140 million to some 50 groups working to support this effort, according to the Wall Street Journal, funding a comprehensive network for election monitoring, and extensive litigation.

    But investigations have found that voter fraud is actually quite rare. A comprehensive audit of elections in the US state of Georgia released last month found that only 20 noncitizens had tried to registered to vote out of 8.2 million registered voters; an additional 156 were flagged for further investigation. Claims that voting machines can be rigged to “flip” votes from one candidate to another have also circulated for years. But “every single” such instance is attributable to human error and not a hacked machine, according to David Becker, founder of the Center for Election Innovation and Research, in an interview with CBS News.

    Breeding distrust for future elections

    Unlike four years ago, Trump no longer holds presidential powers, which limits his influence over US institutions. Without a vice president on his side or a direct line to the attorney general, Trump’s means of challenging the election are reduced.

    However, Trump’s years of sowing doubt in the electoral process have done irreparable damage to public confidence. “The real problem is that he has planted the idea in the minds of the American people that there is a problem with electoral fraud,” Richomme said. “We’re seeing a growing part of the electorate suspicious of elections.”

    Trump’s allies within the GOP are mirroring his rhetoric, with nearly half of Republican candidates for Congress or state office publicly questioning the upcoming election’s integrity. For instance, Illinois House Representative Brian Babin recently posted on X, claiming that “Democrat counties refuse to clean up voter rolls, are counting aliens in censuses, and are using Harris’ open borders to replace US voters to hold a perpetual majority”.

    Richomme warns that this rising tide of mistrust could alter American politics well beyond this election.

    “There are more and more cases of Republican elected officials who make a habit of questioning election results. They will run for office but refuse to accept election results when they don’t go their way.”

    ‘A weakening of American democracy’

    Democrats are also gearing up for a contested election, including any premature declarations of victory from Trump. Vice President Kamala Harris announced plans for a rapid-response strategy to counter any such claims.

    “We are sadly ready if he does and, if we know that he is actually manipulating the press and attempting to manipulate the consensus of the American people … we are prepared to respond,” Harris said during an interview with ABC in late October.

    Democrats have also prepared a team of thousands of lawyers to respond to any legal challenges lodged by the Trump campaign.

    However, in the event of an actual Trump win, Democrats have signaled they would refrain from questioning the results. As Richomme points out, “It’s not in the Democrats’ tradition, and they campaigned against such actions when Trump was doing it. They’ve made it clear they believe the electoral system functions effectively.”

    Regardless of the outcome, this election will likely leave a significant impact on American democratic institutions. Richomme observes that the damage from Trump’s rhetoric may linger long after the votes are counted.

    “We are witnessing a weakening of American democracy. This erosion of confidence in the electoral system poses serious threats,” he warned.

    With Americans increasingly sceptical of the integrity of US elections, the November vote could prove a defining moment for the future of US political norms.

  • US Vice President Harris Calls Trump Presidency ‘Huge Risk For America’

    US Vice President Harris Calls Trump Presidency ‘Huge Risk For America’

    In the US, Democratic nominee and Vice President Kamala Harris in a Pennsylvania rally called Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump “unstable and unhinged” for wanting “unchecked power.”

    Harris addressed a rally in Pennsylvania’s Erie County on Monday, using a big screen to show clips of Trump’s calls to outlaw dissent.

    “A second Trump term would be a huge risk for America. And dangerous. Donald Trump is increasingly unstable and unhinged. And he is out for unchecked power,” Harris claimed, as the crowd chanted her words against the rival candidate.

    Explaining the consequences of having Trump in power, she emphasized measures a Trump presidency could take to undermine Americans’ quality of life, saying, “He wants to send the military after American citizens. He has worked to prevent women from making their own health care decisions.”

    This week, Harris kicked off a series of rallies across the northern states of Pennsylvania, Michigan, and Wisconsin, a trio of states that are expected to be key indicators of election results.​​​​​​​

    “With just three weeks until Election Day, Vice President Harris and Governor Walz are leaving it all on the field — blanketing the battlegrounds with an aggressive campaign schedule,” according to an email from a Harris campaign official obtained by NBC.

  • Biden Says ‘Not Confident’ Of Peaceful US Election

    Biden Says ‘Not Confident’ Of Peaceful US Election

    (AFP)-Biden’s warning came with lawmakers and analysts voicing concern over increasingly bellicose campaign language ahead of the vote.

    Trump — who survived an assassination bid in July and another apparent plot in September — alleged widespread fraud after his defeat to Biden, and pro-Trump rioters riled up by his false claims ransacked the US Capitol.

    “I’m confident it will be free and fair. I don’t know whether it will be peaceful,” Biden told reporters as he discussed the election.

    “The things that Trump has said and the things that he said last time out when he didn’t like the outcome of the election were very dangerous.”

    Trump was impeached in 2021 for inciting the insurrection after hundreds of his supporters — exhorted by the defeated Republican to “fight like hell” — battered police as they smashed windows at the Capitol and broke through doors.

    ‘They cheat like hell’

    He has been indicted over what prosecutors allege was a “private criminal effort” to subvert the election that culminated in the violence.

    Former US president Donald Trump campaigned in the swing state of North Carolina, where he reprised his claims of 2020 voter fraud. Logan Cyrus / AFP

    Trump — who is due to return to the venue of his first assassination bid in Butler, Pennsylvania on Saturday — has long been assailed over his violent rhetoric.

    Biden made his comments during what was the first appearance of his presidency in the White House briefing room, where he touted his administration’s achievements as his vice president, Kamala Harris, battles Trump.

    Harris and Trump meanwhile were barnstorming the battleground states that are likely to decide who wins the White House.

    Trump campaigned Friday in North Carolina, where he reprised his claims of 2020 voter fraud: “We should get elected, but remember this, they cheat like hell,” he said.

    He also visited neighboring Georgia, a swing state narrowly claimed by Biden four years ago but won by Trump in 2016 — and one of the biggest prizes of the 2024 election map.

    The Republican inserted himself aggressively into Georgia politics after his 2020 defeat, pushing for state officials to “find” enough votes to overturn Biden’s victory.

    Trump, 78, was charged by state prosecutors with racketeering, in a case that is on pause and expected to start up again after the election. He denies wrongdoing.

    ‘Biggest loser’

    On Friday Trump joined Georgia Republican Governor Brian Kemp after receiving a briefing on the devastation wreaked by Hurricane Helene, the deadliest storm to hit the US mainland since Katrina in 2005.

    Trump has repeatedly spread misinformation about the federal response to the disaster, falsely alleging that funding for relief has been misappropriated by Harris and redirected towards migrants.

    US Vice President Kamala Harris used her campaign stop in Flint, Michigan to shore up her pro-labor credentials and knock election rival Donald Trump for causing job losses in the state when he was president © Geoff Robins / AFP

    Harris, who is neck-and-neck with Trump in all seven swing states, rallied Friday in Michigan — a union stronghold that epitomized the US manufacturing decline of the 1980s.

    The Democratic contender accused Trump of jeopardizing Michigan auto jobs.

    “This is a man who has only ever fought for himself. This is a man who has been a union buster his entire career,” she said at a stop in Detroit.

    Later, in the city of Flint, she branded Trump “one of the biggest losers of manufacturing jobs in American history.”

    Flint is a majority Black city where a 2010s scandal over lead-tainted water highlighted government mismanagement and the disproportionate damage to poor and non-white communities.

    She reminded rallygoers that the election is just one month away, and early voting has already begun in several states.

    “Folks, the election is here. And we need to energize, organize and mobilize,” Harris said.

    Earlier her campaign announced the country’s first Black president, Barack Obama, would stump for her in Pennsylvania and other swing states from next week as she woos undecided voters in the US heartland.

  • ‪Harris Challenges Trump To CNN Debate In October, Trump Refuses‬

    ‪Harris Challenges Trump To CNN Debate In October, Trump Refuses‬

    Kamala Harris on Saturday, September 22, challenged Donald Trump to another debate in the lead-up to the US presidential election, with her campaign saying she had accepted a debate invitation from CNN for October 23.

    “Vice President Harris is ready for another opportunity to share a stage with Donald Trump,” campaign chair Jen O’Malley Dillon said in a statement. “Trump should have no problem agreeing to this debate.”

    The Republican snubbed the offer, saying it was “too late.” It would have been their second debate, after a September 10 encounter she was widely considered to have won.

    Speaking at a campaign rally in the battleground state of North Carolina, Trump said he would like to debate – calling it “good entertainment value” – but that the start of early voting in some states had taken the air out of the idea. “It’s just too late, voting has already started,” he said. However, in 2020, the last presidential debate between Biden and Trump took place on October 22. In 2016, the third debate between Hillary Clinton and Trump happened on October 19.

    He added, to a large and enthusiastic crowd of supporters, that while CNN had been “very fair” when he debated President Joe Biden in June, “they won’t be fair again” after criticism for the handling of the first debate.

    Vice President Harris replaced her boss at the top of the Democratic ticket after the 81-year-old Biden’s disastrous performance against Trump. His exit from the race left Trump, 78, now the oldest presidential nominee against a much younger Harris, 59.

    Race remains neck-and-neck

    Saturday’s announcement came as some states have already begun early voting in what is an agonizingly close race. On the campaign trail on Friday, Harris cast Trump and his party as “hypocrites” over abortion, blaming the former president for an abortion ban in the battleground state of Georgia that she said had caused the deaths of two women.

    Trump has frequently bragged on the campaign trail that his three Supreme Court picks paved the way for the 2022 overturning of the national right to abortion, turning the decision over to states. At least 20 states have since brought in full or partial restrictions, with Georgia banning most abortions after six weeks of pregnancy.

    The race remains neck-and-neck, with Trump running with the support of a conservative religious voter base and others, many of whom feel disaffected by the country’s political and economic status quo. Hardline anti-immigrant rhetoric has become a centerpiece of his election campaign.

    The race between Harris and Trump has continued amid a tense atmosphere that was brought to the fore last weekend when a gunman appeared to have tried to assassinate Trump in Florida, the second such threat in as many months. Every vote will count in the race, whose result Trump has once again refused to say he will accept if he loses.

    Trump faces criminal charges for allegedly trying to overturn the 2020 result, after which his supporters violently stormed the US Capitol on January 6, 2021. The result is expected to hinge on just seven battleground states, including North Carolina.

    Trump has sought to lay the blame for any potential loss at the door of Jewish American voters, sparking outrage. “If I don’t win this election… in my opinion the Jewish people would have a lot to do with a loss,” Trump told an anti-Semitism event on Thursday, repeating his grievance that Jewish voters have historically leaned Democratic.

  • Kamala Harris Formally Accepts Democratic Nomination For US President

    Kamala Harris Formally Accepts Democratic Nomination For US President

    US Vice President Kamala Harris formally accepted the Democratic presidential nomination Thursday evening, vowing to be a “president of all Americans.”

    “I will be a president who unites us around our highest aspirations,” Harris said during her speech on the final night of the 2024 Democratic National Convention (DNC) in Chicago, Illinois.

    “A president who leads and listens, who is realistic, practical and has common sense and always fights for the American people,” she said.

    “From the courthouse to the White House, that has always been my life’s work,” she added.

    She noted that the November presidential elections are “one of the most important in the life of our nation.”

    Harris calls Trump ‘unserious man’

    Harris later went on to say that her Republican rival, Donald Trump, is an “unserious man” and the consequences of putting Trump back in the White House are “extremely serious.”

    “Donald Trump tried to throw away your votes. When he failed, he sent an armed mob to the United States Capitol, where they assaulted law enforcement officers,” she said, referring to the Jan. 6, 2021 US Capitol riot.

    “For an entirely different set of crimes, he was found guilty of fraud by a jury of everyday Americans and separately found liable for committing sexual abuse,” she added.

    Harris later criticized Trump for his stance on abortion and the Supreme Court’s overturning of Roe v. Wade, which had protected the rights of women to seek abortions, saying that too many women in the US are not able to make their own decisions about their own lives.

    “I’ve traveled across our country. And women have told me their stories. Husbands and fathers have shared theirs. Stories of women miscarrying in a parking lot, developing sepsis, losing the ability to ever again have children. All because doctors are afraid they may go to jail for caring for their patients,” she said.

    ‘I will always stand up for Israel’s right to defend itself’

    Harris said she and President Joe Biden are “working around the clock” to get a Gaza cease-fire and hostage deal “done.”

    “I will always stand up for Israel’s right to defend itself, and I will always ensure Israel has the ability to defend itself, because the people of Israel must never again face the war that a terrorist organization called Hamas caused on Oct. 7,” she said.

    “At the same time,” she continued, “what has happened in Gaza over the past 10 months is devastating. So many innocent lives lost. Desperate, hungry people fleeing for safety, over and over again,” she said.

    Harris said the scale of suffering in Gaza is “heartbreaking,” adding: “President Biden and I are working to end this war such that Israel is secure, the hostages are released, the suffering in Gaza ends, and the Palestinian people can realize their right to dignity, security, freedom and self-determination.”

    She said the US must also be “steadfast” in advancing its security and values abroad.

    “I will ensure America always has the strongest, most lethal fighting force in the world,” she said, while noting that her rival Trump “threatened to abandon NATO.”

  • Barack Obama Casts Harris As His Heir In Convention Speech

    Barack Obama Casts Harris As His Heir In Convention Speech

    Barack and Michelle Obama closed out the Democratic National Convention’s second night by pitching Kamala Harris as an heir to their political legacy. And they derided Donald Trump as a “racist” egomaniac who’d squandered his own presidency, and needed to be kept out of power.

    “This convention has always been pretty good to kids with funny names who believe in a country where anything is possible,” the former president said in his closing remarks, an echo to the convention address that launched his national career 20 years ago. Harris’s parents had “crossed oceans because they believed in the promise of America,” evoking the story he’d told Democrats in that same 2004 speech about his Kenyan father coming to a “magical place.”

    “I’m fired up!” Obama told the crowd, setting up one of the signature chants of his 2008 and 2012 campaigns..

    Appearing on stage not long after his wife, the former president made a tribute to Joe Biden, his one-time vice president, and said “one of my best” decisions as the party’s nominee in 2008 was picking Biden, before hailing Biden’s own achievements as president.

    But Obama quickly pivoted to attack Trump, breaking out the Democrats’ favorite new refrain— ”weird” — to say he had a “weird obsession with crowd sizes.” He glanced quickly at his hands, a joke about masculinity and a reminder that Democrats were no longer worried that anti-Trump ridicule might backfire.

    “America is ready for a new chapter,” he said, “We are ready for a President Kamala Harris.”

    Obama ran through Harris’ record as a prosecutor, adding that she had “pushed me and my administration hard,” after the subprime mortgage crisis to help people who lost their homes in the fallout, later saying that Harris would work to bolster the middle class as president.

    On Tim Walz, Obama said “he knows who he is, and he knows what’s important.” Together, he said, they had a vision to ensure all Americans could “get along with each other,” and deliver for everyone.

    “Yes she can!” Obama said, sparking an immediate chant in the crowd — another echo to 2008.

    “We will build a country that is more secure, more just, more equal, and more free,” he said, leaving to a standing ovation.

    Speaking immediately before his speech, Michelle Obama was welcomed by her own standing ovation and rapturous applause from the audience in Chicago, the Obamas’ hometown. Her speech recalled the same spirit of 2008, starting with a declaration that “hope is making a comeback!” But she also gave voice to the collective “mourning” Democrats had been feeling, an oblique nod to how far the party’s fortunes — and optimism — appear to have changed since Biden left the race.

    The former first lady also drew many links between her own life and Kamala’s history: “Her story is your story. It’s my story. It’s the story of the vast majority of Americans trying to build a better life.”

    “There is no other choice than Kamala Harris and Tim Walz,” she said, painting a picture of Harris as the polar opposite to Donald Trump, while also warning that he could revisit many of the same tactics he used to attack the Obamas in the past. She threw out a quip about how the presidency was a “Black job,” recalling Trump’s terminology, which came up in a contentious interview at the National Association of Black Journalists earlier this summer.

    Above all, she urged Democrats to channel their emotions into action.

    “Michelle Obama is asking, no I’m telling you all, to do something!” she said at one point.

    Ultimately, the major theme of the primetime speeches was drawing a contrast between the future that Harris offered as opposed to Trump, and, aside from a tribute by Obama, brief or no references to Biden by name.

    Second Gentleman Doug Emhoff spoke of Harris’ ability to take America forward: “America, in this election, you have to decide who to trust with your family’s future. I trusted Kamala with our family’s future. It was the best decision I ever made.”

    Also speaking on stage Tuesday were Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker, New Mexico Gov. Michelle Grisham, and Illinois Sen. Tammy Duckworth.

    Appearing early in the evening, Schumer set up an immediate contrast between “Trump’s American carnage” and the future Harris might offer. To deliver it, Schumer said, a Democratic majority in the Senate would be crucial: Democrats currently hold a two-seat majority and 34 seats are up for election in November, 23 of which are held by Democrats or Independents.

    Sanders, an Independent who caucuses with the Democrats, applauded Harris’ economic agenda, calling it a plan for “an economy that works for all of us,” before repeatedly using the term “radical,” a word often used to attack the left by Republicans, to describe Trump and the GOP’s policies.

    It was a big tent at the convention. While Sanders, a socialist and icon among the party’s progressive wing, denounced the “billionaire class,” Pritzker, heir to a massive family fortune, followed that speech by using his wealth to poke fun at Trump.

    “Take it from an actual billionaire, Trump is rich in only one thing: stupidity,” the Illinois governor said.

  • Tim Walz: 5 Facts About Kamala Harris Running Mate Pick

    Tim Walz: 5 Facts About Kamala Harris Running Mate Pick

    Minnesota Governor Tim Walz has been selected as Vice President Kamala Harris’s running mate for the 2024 presidential election.

    Known for his down-to-earth approach and strong focus on veterans’ issues, Walz has made a mark both as a former educator and a leader in Minnesota.

    His selection highlights his role in shaping state policy and his appeal beyond traditional Democratic strongholds.

    As a key figure in this election, Walz’s partnership with Harris aims to bring a fresh perspective to the Democratic ticket.

    Tim Walz

     

    Who is Tim Walz?

    Timothy James Walz, born on April 6, 1964, is an American politician, former educator, and retired U.S. Army non-commissioned officer.

    He has served as the 41st governor of Minnesota since 2019. As a member of the Democratic Party, he is the presumptive nominee for vice president in the 2024 United States presidential election.

    Walz was a member of the United States House of Representatives from 2007 to 2019, representing Minnesota’s 1st congressional district.

    Born in West Point, Nebraska, he joined the Army National Guard and worked a blue-collar manufacturing job after high school.

    He later earned a teaching degree from Chadron State College in Nebraska before moving to Minnesota in 1996.

    Walz became governor of Minnesota on November 6, 2018, defeating the Republican nominee, Hennepin County Commissioner Jeff Johnson.

    He was reelected in the 2022 Minnesota gubernatorial election, defeating Republican nominee Scott Jensen.

    On August 6, 2024, Vice President Kamala Harris announced her selection of Walz as her running mate in the 2024 U.S. presidential election.

    5 Facts About Kamala Harris Running Mate Pick

    Vice President Kamala Harris has chosen Minnesota Governor Tim Walz as her running mate for her White House bid.

    Walz, a 60-year-old Democrat and military veteran, gained attention with straightforward TV appearances after President Joe Biden announced he wouldn’t seek a second term.

    He has turned Minnesota into a hub of liberal policy. This year, he made Minnesota one of the few states to protect fans buying tickets online for Taylor Swift concerts and other live events.

    Here are some things to know about Walz.

    1. Tim hails from rural America.

    Tim Walz vividly represents the American heartland. Born in West Point, Nebraska, a small town northwest of Omaha with about 3,500 people, he joined the Army National Guard and became a teacher in Nebraska.

    In the 1990s, he and his wife moved to Mankato in southern Minnesota. There, he taught social studies and coached football at Mankato West High School.

    He led the 1999 team to win the first of the school’s four state championships. He still proudly mentions his union membership from that time.

    Walz served 24 years in the Army National Guard, retiring in 2005 as a command sergeant major, one of the military’s highest enlisted ranks.

    2. He is experienced in navigating a divided government.

    In his first term as governor, Tim Walz faced a split Legislature with a Democratic-led House and a Republican-controlled Senate that resisted his proposals for higher taxes to fund schools, health care, and roads.

    Despite this, he brokered compromises, making the divided government productive. In his second year, bipartisan cooperation became tougher.

    Walz used emergency powers during the COVID-19 pandemic to close businesses and schools, leading to Republican pushback and the removal of some agency heads.

    Republicans also criticized his response to the violent unrest after George Floyd’s murder in 2020.

    Things improved for Walz in his second term after defeating Republican Scott Jensen. Democrats gained control of both legislative chambers, allowing for more liberal policies.

    They eliminated state abortion restrictions, protected gender-affirming care for transgender youth, and legalized recreational marijuana.

    They also funded free school meals, free tuition for families earning under $80,000, a paid family and medical leave program, and health insurance coverage regardless of immigration status.

    3. Tim Walz has a keen ear for sound-bite politics.

    Last month, Walz called Republican nominee Donald Trump and his running mate JD Vance “just weird” during an MSNBC interview.

    The Democratic Governors Association, chaired by Walz, echoed this point on X.

    Walz repeated this description on CNN, pointing to Trump’s frequent references to the fictional serial killer Hannibal Lecter from “Silence of the Lambs” in his speeches.

    The term “weird” quickly became a theme for Harris and other Democrats. It has the potential to become a key word in the undeniably unusual 2024 election.

    4. He could be a valuable asset to the ticket in crucial Midwestern states.

    Although Walz isn’t from a key “blue wall” state like Wisconsin, Michigan, or Pennsylvania, he is right next door. His role is crucial in keeping Minnesota under Democratic control.

    This is important because former President Donald Trump has targeted Minnesota this year, despite the state not electing a Republican to statewide office since 2006.

    No GOP presidential candidate has won the state since Richard Nixon’s landslide in 1972, but Trump has already campaigned there.

    5. He has a proven track record of connecting with conservative voters.

    In his first Congressional race in 2006, Walz defeated six-term Republican Rep. Gil Gutknecht in a largely rural district in southern Minnesota.

    He leveraged voter frustration with President George W. Bush and the Iraq war to win. During his six terms in the U.S. House, Walz focused on veterans’ issues.

    He has also displayed a down-to-earth side through social media.

    One video last fall featured him and his daughter, Hope, trying out a ride called “The Slingshot” at the Minnesota State Fair, where they joked about fair food and her being a vegetarian.

    Personal life

    Walz and his wife, Gwen, married in 1994. They lived in Mankato, Minnesota, for nearly 20 years before moving to Saint Paul with their two children after his election as governor.

    Walz is a member of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America.

    In 2016, Walz’s brother Craig died after a tree fell on him during a storm. Craig’s wife and their son, who was severely injured, survived him.

  • Trump Edges Out Harris In New Wall Street Journal Poll Following Biden’s Exit

    Trump Edges Out Harris In New Wall Street Journal Poll Following Biden’s Exit

    Former US President Donald Trump leads Vice President Kamala Harris by 2 points in the latest Wall Street Journal poll conducted after President Joe Biden’s exit from the 2024 presidential race.

    Trump received 49% support among 1,000 registered voters, while Harris garnered 47%, according to the poll.

    Published on Friday, the polls suggest Kamala Harris’s performance marked a significant improvement over Biden’s, who trailed Trump by six points in a Wall Street Journal poll earlier this month.

    That poll followed Biden’s poor debate performance, which led to increased calls for him to withdraw from the race.

    Biden ended his campaign last weekend after weeks of internal party debates about his age, mental fitness, and ability to win the White House in November.

    The poll also revealed a sharp increase in Harris’s favorability among registered voters, rising from 35% earlier this month to 46%, an 11-point jump. In contrast, Trump’s favorability stood at 47%, while Biden’s was at 39%.

    After Biden suspended his campaign, Harris quickly gained key endorsements from party members. She also experienced a surge in fundraising and secured commitments from enough delegates to clinch the nomination.

    The Wall Street Journal poll, conducted from July 23-25, has a margin of error of plus or minus 3.1% points, according to the Journal’s article.

  • Trump Touts Warm Ties To Israel’s Netanyahu, Blasts Harris

    Trump Touts Warm Ties To Israel’s Netanyahu, Blasts Harris

    Former U.S. President Donald Trump touted his close relationship with Benjamin Netanyahu when he hosted the Israeli prime minister on Friday and accused U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris of making “disrespectful” comments about the Gaza war.

    Netanyahu met Trump, the Republican nominee in the 2024 U.S. presidential race, a day after talks with Democratic President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris, who is running against Trump in the Nov. 5 U.S. election.

    Trump greeted Netanyahu and his wife Sara at Mar-a-Lago, his Florida resort, and criticized Harris, who had voiced concern after meeting the Israeli leader about the toll on Palestinian civilians from Israel’s 9-month-old campaign in Gaza.

    “I think her remarks were disrespectful,” Trump said.

    Netanyahu said he hoped his U.S. trip would lead to a quicker ceasefire deal.

    “I hope so. But I think time will tell,” he told reporters. He said he thought there had been movement in efforts to forge a ceasefire because of Israeli military pressure and said he would dispatch a team to talks in Rome.

    Netanyahu had angered Trump when he congratulated Biden on his victory over Trump in the 2020 election. Trump falsely claims the election was stolen from him by voter fraud.

    Trump more recently criticized Netanyahu for Israeli security failures that enabled Hamas to carry out the Oct. 7 attack on Israel that triggered the Israeli offensive in Gaza.

    Trump dismissed any suggestion of tensions with Netanyahu.

    “We have a very good relationship,” he said, noting policy changes during his presidency including moving the U.S. embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem and pulling the United States out of the international nuclear deal with Iran.

    Opinion polls put Harris and Trump in a close race for the White House, prompting world leaders like Netanyahu, traditionally more aligned with Trump’s Republicans than Biden’s Democrats, to strike a balance in dealings with the U.S.

    HUMANITARIAN SITUATION A ‘SERIOUS CONCERN,’ HARRIS SAYS

    Harris had pressed Netanyahu on the suffering of Palestinians in the enclave in talks on Thursday that were watched for signs of how she might shift American policy if she becomes president.

    “I made clear my serious concern about the dire humanitarian situation there,” Harris said. “I will not be silent.”

    “Israel has a right to defend itself. And how it does so matters,” she said.

    Members of Netanyahu’s delegation were disappointed by some of Harris’ remarks in private and in public out of concern that it showed “daylight” between the governments and could signal how relations would develop if she wins the presidency, according to a person familiar with the matter.

    Netanyahu heads a far-right-leaning coalition government opposed to Palestinian statehood, a policy at odds with U.S. support for a two-state solution to ending decades of conflict.

    In defiant remarks to Congress on Wednesday, Netanyahu defended Israel’s military and dismissed criticism of a campaign which has devastated Gaza and killed more than 39,000 people, according to health officials in the Hamas-ruled enclave.

    Dozens of Democrats boycotted Netanyahu’s speech, voicing dismay over the thousands of civilian deaths in Gaza, destruction of its infrastructure and displacement of most of its 2.3 million people.

    In Wednesday’s speech, Netanyahu praised Biden’s support for Israel.

    But to cheers from Republicans, he touched on Trump’s pro-Israel record as president. He praised Trump’s decision to move the U.S. embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, a long-held goal of conservatives that infuriated Palestinians.

    He also cited the Abraham Accords, landmark U.S.-brokered agreements signed during Trump’s White House years that normalized bilateral relations between Israel and both Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates.

    Hamas and its allies killed 1,200 people and took 250 hostage in the Oct. 7 attack, according to Israeli tallies. Some 115 hostages are still being held though Israel believes one in three are dead.

    Israeli officials estimate that some 14,000 fighters from militant groups including Hamas and Islamic Jihad have been killed or taken prisoner out of a force they estimated to number more than 25,000 at the start of the war.