<![CDATA[Politics – NBC10 Philadelphia]]> https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/politics/ Copyright 2024 https://media.nbcphiladelphia.com/2024/08/WCAU_station_logo_light_7d8feb.png?fit=278%2C58&quality=85&strip=all NBC10 Philadelphia https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com en_US Thu, 19 Sep 2024 05:16:04 -0400 Thu, 19 Sep 2024 05:16:04 -0400 NBC Owned Television Stations House rejects government funding bill linked to proof of citizenship for new voters https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/politics/house-vote-stopgap-funding-bill-to-avert-partial-shutdown/3973542/ 3973542 post 9893647 Jose Luis Magana/AP (File) https://media.nbcphiladelphia.com/2024/09/MIKE-JOHNSON-STOPGAP-SPENDING.jpg?quality=85&strip=all&fit=300,169 The House on Wednesday rejected Speaker Mike Johnson’s proposal that would have linked temporary funding for the federal government with a mandate that states require proof of citizenship when people register to vote.

Next steps on government funding are uncertain. Lawmakers are not close to completing work on the dozen annual appropriations bills that will fund federal agencies during the next fiscal year, so they’ll need to approve a stopgap measure to prevent a partial shutdown when that budget year begins Oct. 1.

The vote was 220-202. Now, Johnson will likely pursue a Plan B to avoid a partial shutdown, though he was not ready before the vote to share details of such a proposal.

Johnson pulled the bill from consideration last week because it lacked the votes to pass. He worked through the weekend to win support from fellow Republicans but was unable to overcome objections about spending levels from some members, while others said they don’t favor any continuing resolutions, insisting that Congress return to passing the dozen annual appropriations bills on time and one at a time. Democrats overwhelmingly opposed the measure.

Requiring new voters to provide proof of citizenship has become a leading election-year priority for Republicans raising the specter of noncitizens voting in the U.S., even though it’s already illegal to do so and research has shown that such voting is rare.

Opponents also say that such a requirement would disenfranchise millions of Americans who do not have a birth certificate or passport readily available when they get a chance to register at their school, church or other venues when voter registration drives occur.

But Johnson said it is a serious problem because even if a tiny percentage of noncitizens do vote, it could determine the outcome of an extremely close race. He noted that Republican Rep. Mariannette Miller-Meeks of Iowa won her seat back in 2020 by six votes.

“It’s very, very serious stuff and that’s why we’re going to do the right thing,” Johnson said. “We’re going to responsibly fund the government and we’re going to stop noncitizens voting in elections.”

Meanwhile, Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump weighed in again just hours before the vote. seemingly encouraging House Republicans to let a partial government shutdown begin at the end of the month unless they get the proof of citizenship mandate, referred to in the House as the SAVE Act.

“If Republicans don’t get the SAVE Act, and every ounce of it, they should not agree to a Continuing Resolution in any way, shape, or form,” Trump said on the social media platform Truth Social.

Johnson told reporters he was not ready to discuss an alternative plan to keep the government funded.

“Let’s see what happens with the bill, all right. We’re on the field in the middle of the game. The quarterback is calling the play. We’re going to run the play,” Johnson said.

House Democrats said the proof of citizenship mandate should not be part of the continuing resolution to keep the government funded and urged Johnson to work with them on a bill that can pass both chambers.

“This is not going to become law,” said Rep. Pete Aguilar, D-Calif. “This is Republican theatrics that are meant to appease the most extreme members of their conference, to show them that they are working on something and that they’re continuing to support the former president of the United States in his bid to demonize immigrants.”

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said the only way to prevent a government shutdown was for both sides to work together on an agreement. He said the House vote announced by Johnson was doomed to fail.

“The only thing that will accomplish is make clear that he’s running into a dead end,” Schumer said. “We must have a bipartisan plan instead.”

The legislation would fund agencies generally at current levels while lawmakers work out their differences on a full-year spending agreement.

Democrats, and some Republicans, are pushing for a short extension. A temporary fix would allow the current Congress to hammer out a final bill after the election and get it to Democratic President Joe Biden’s desk for his signature.

But Johnson and some of the more conservative members of his conference are pushing for a six-month extension in the hopes that Republican nominee Donald Trump will win the election and give them more leverage when crafting the full-year bill.

Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky declined to weigh in on how long to extend funding. He said Schumer and Johnson, ultimately, will have to work out a final agreement that can pass both chambers.

“The one thing you cannot have is a government shutdown. It would be politically beyond stupid for us to do that right before the election because certainly we would get the blame,” McConnell said.

Regardless of the vote outcome Wednesday, Republican lawmakers sought to allay any concerns there would be a shutdown at the end of the month. Rep. Mike Lawler, R-N.Y., said if the bill fails, then another stopgap bill should be voted on that would allow lawmakers to come back to Washington after the election and finish the appropriations work.

“The bottom line is we’re not shutting the government down,” Lawler said.

But Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries accused Republicans of engaging in a “shutdown effort.”

“That’s not hyperbole,” Jeffries said. “It’s history. Because in the DNA of extreme MAGA Republicans has consistently been an effort to make extreme ransom demands of the American people, and if those extreme ransom demands are not met, shut down the government.”

The House approved a bill with the proof of citizenship mandate back in July. Some Republicans who view the issue as popular with their constituents have been pushing for another chance to show their support for the measure.

Many have investigated noncitizen voting and found little evidence of it, NBC News reported. The Brennan Center found just 30 suspected noncitizen votes amid 23.5 million votes in 2016, suggesting that suspected noncitizen votes accounted for 0.0001% of votes cast. Trump’s own election integrity commission disbanded without releasing evidence of voter fraud, even though he’d claimed 3 million undocumented immigrants had voted in 2016 costing him the popular vote.

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Wed, Sep 18 2024 03:14:27 PM Wed, Sep 18 2024 06:57:23 PM
Montco officials unveil new efforts to provide election security https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/local/montco-officials-unveil-new-efforts-to-provide-election-security/3973159/ 3973159 post 9892239 NBC10 https://media.nbcphiladelphia.com/2024/09/34498154552-1080pnbcstations.jpg?quality=85&strip=all&fit=300,169 Officials in Montgomery County have unveiled new tools that, they said, they hope to use to ensure the upcoming election is “fair and safe.”

According to a statement from the office of District Attorney Kevin Steele, the county has established an Election Day Tip Line — which is available at 610-292-2024 — to allow voters to report any suspicious activity around the ballot drop boxes, at polls on Election Day or threats to election and public officials.

“To anyone thinking about disrupting this election in any way, I’m here to tell you that my office, the Montgomery County Detective Bureau and the entire Montgomery County law enforcement community, is standing together to make sure that we have a fair and safe election, not only on Nov. 5th, but also in the next 50 days leading up to it,” said Steele in a statement. “We will not tolerate abuse of public officials, threats to election officials or abuse of individuals helping out at the drop box locations. Period.”

Officials said that anyone who has concerns of “something of an exigent nature related to the drop boxes such as someone attempting to break into a ballot drop box, vandalizing or damaging a drop box or otherwise doing something criminal, they should immediately call 911, then report it to the Election Tip Line of 610-292-2024.”

Also, if a voter sees any suspicious activity around the ballot boxes, suspicious activity at a polling place or knows of any threat to a public or election official, they should report that information to the Election Tip Line, officials said.

“Tips can include suspicious activity at ballot drop boxes, at polling locations on Election Day or threats to election officials or public officials,” officials said in a statement.

Montgomery County Detectives will review tips for potential criminal activity or possible violations of the election code and, officials said in a statement, threat reports will be referred to the Montgomery County Detective Bureau’s newly launched Threat Assessment Management Unit.

The Threat Assessment Management Unit, officials said, is charged with investigating “any threats against public officials, election officials, schools, houses of worship and any activity that endangers the community at large and individuals within the county.”

The 18 secure ballot drop-box locations, spread throughout Montgomery County, will be available to drop off ballots beginning in early October and continue through 8 p.m. on Election Day.

All ballot drop-box locations are under video surveillance.

Addresses for secure drop boxes, as well as voting instructions, can be found on the county’s website at https://www.montgomerycountypa.gov/3587/Secure-Ballot-Drop-Box-Locations.

First Assistant District Attorney Ed McCann Jr., Assistant District Attorney Jediah Grobstein and Montgomery County Detectives will work with federal, state, county and local law enforcement, as well as other government officials, to protect access to and the integrity of the Nov. 5, 2024 election.

Reported violations of election laws will be investigated, and if appropriate, prosecuted.

Any potential problems on Election Day, should be reported to the Election Tip Line at 610-292-2024, emailing jediah.grobstein@montgomerycountypa.gov or by calling the County Department of Public Safety Communications Center at 610-275-1222.

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Wed, Sep 18 2024 01:04:18 PM Wed, Sep 18 2024 01:04:31 PM
Atlantic City Mayor Marty Small, wife indicted for child abuse of teen daughter https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/politics/atlantic-city-mayor-marty-small-child-abuse-indicted/3973136/ 3973136 post 9419076 https://media.nbcphiladelphia.com/2024/04/Atlantic-City-Mayor-Marty-Small-press-conference.jpg?quality=85&strip=all&fit=300,169

What to Know

  • Atlantic City Mayor Marty Small Sr. and his wife, La’Quetta, the city’s superintendent of schools, have been indicted on child endangerment and other charges for allegedly beating their teenage daughter on numerous occasions.
  • The indictment was made Tuesday by a grand jury that accused the couple of child endangerment.
  • Marty Small also was charged with assault and making terroristic threats. Prosecutors said both parents hit and emotionally abused the girl, who was 15 to 16 years old, on multiple occasions in December and January.

Months after allegations of child abuse against Atlantic City Mayor Marty Small and his wife, La’Quetta Small, came to light, the couple was indicted on a child endangerment charge.

The indictment against the 50-year-old mayor and his 47-year-old wife were delivered on Sept. 17, 2024, and revealed to the public by the Atlantic County Prosecutor’s Office the following day.

Léelo en español aquí.

The charge both of the Smalls face is second-degree endangering the welfare of a child, the prosecutor’s office said. Mayor Small was also indicted for third-degree terroristic threats, and third-degree aggravated assault.

What the Smalls are accused of doing

“It is alleged that during the months of December 2023 and January 2024, the defendants physically and emotionally abused their 15/16-year-old-daughter on multiple occasions,” prosecutors wrote.

The mayor was accused of repeatedly hitting his daughter in the head with a broom until she blacked out, and repeatedly punching her in the legs, court documents say. Her mother was accused of dragging her by her hair, punching her in the chest and face, and hitting her with a belt.

The root of the conflict, according to the court document, was the Smalls’ disapproval of their daughter’s boyfriend.

In a statement about the indictment, prosecutors laid out their case:

“During one incident, on January 13, 2024, Marty Small, Sr. is alleged to have hit his daughter multiple times in the head with a broom causing her to lose consciousness. Another incident on January 3, 2024, alleged that Marty Small, Sr., during an argument with his daughter, continuously threatened to hurt her by “earth slamming” her down the stairs, grabbing her head and throwing her to the ground, and smacking the weave out of her head. Another incident involved Marty Small, Sr. punching his daughter repeatedly in her legs causing bruising.

“It is alleged that La’Quetta Small, during one incident, punched her daughter multiple times on her chest leaving bruising. Another incident alleged that La’Quetta Small dragged her daughter by her hair then struck her with a belt on her shoulders leaving marks. Another incident alleged that La’Quetta Small punched her daughter in the mouth during an argument.”

An affidavit filed in the spring by the Atlantic County Prosecutor’s Office says the girl at one point acknowledged making up the accusations against her parents because she was angry they wouldn’t let her go out with friends.

But in many other sections, the affidavit includes detailed claims by the girl that the abuse was real, and it said she photographed bruises she said were inflicted by her parents and sent them to her boyfriend, who shared them with detectives.

The office of Prosecutor William Reynolds cited evidence including recordings of interactions between the girl and her parents; her statements to police, school personnel, a therapist and state child welfare investigators, and messages she sent to friends asking for help, saying she did not feel safe at home.

The Smalls have asserted their innocence, calling the situation a “private family issue.”

Their lawyer, Ed Jacobs, said in the past the mayor and his wife “are completely innocent of any wrongdoing and will ultimately be vindicated.” On Wednesday, Jacobs reiterated that this incident is a private issue between a mom, dad and child and has nothing to do with mayoral misconduct.

Jacobs said that Small is an upstanding citizen and will ultimately be proven innocent of the charges.

It could not immediately be determined if the girl is still living at home with her parents.

Prosecutor’s have yet to reveal next steps in the case.

Marty Small continues as mayor of Atlantic City, wife continues to lead city schools

In his first public comments following the allegations of abuse coming to light in April, Marty Small said he would not be distracted from his duties.

“We’ve all seen news accounts of what’s going on with myself personally,” the Democratic mayor said in a speech at the Hard Rock casino. “It’s just that: personal.

“But I pledge to each and every one of you, it doesn’t change my commitment, number one, to my family, and it doesn’t change my commitment here to the great city of Atlantic City,” the mayor said.

Marty Small has kept to the pledge and continued mayoral duties through the summer.

La’Quetta Small continues to serve as the superintendent of Atlantic City Public Schools.

Just last week, the principal of Atlantic City High School was indicted on official misconduct, child endangerment and other charges for allegedly failing to notify child welfare authorities that the Smalls’ teenage daughter had been hurt at home by her parents.

The Atlantic County Prosecutor’s Office said Thursday, Sept. 12, 2024, that the eight-count indictment against Constance Days-Chapman was made by a grand jury a day earlier.

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Wed, Sep 18 2024 11:09:14 AM Wed, Sep 18 2024 12:11:36 PM
Rutgers president explains why he plans to leave top job at NJ's flagship university https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/politics/rutgers-president-holloway-leaving-nj/3972375/ 3972375 post 9892227 Michael A. McCoy/Getty Images https://media.nbcphiladelphia.com/2024/09/Rutgers-Johnathan-Halloway.jpg?quality=85&strip=all&fit=300,202

What to Know

  • Jonathan Holloway became the first Black president of Rutgers University when he took office in the summer of 2020. He said Tuesday that he will leave office when the academic year ends June 30.
  • Holloway plans to take a yearlong sabbatical and then return to the university as a fulltime professor.
  • The university president dealt with the first faculty strike in school history and received national scrutiny earlier this year from Republican lawmakers for Holloway’s decision to end a pro-Palestinian encampment through negotiations rather than police force.

The embattled president of Rutgers University announced Tuesday that he will step down next year after a tenure that has included contending with the COVID-19 pandemic, overseeing the university’s first-ever strike and surviving a no-confidence vote by the faculty senate.

Jonathan Holloway, 57, who became the first Black president of New Jersey’s flagship institution of higher learning when he took office in the summer of 2020, said he will leave office when the current academic year ends June 30. He then plans to take a yearlong sabbatical before returning to the university as a fulltime professor.

“This decision is my own and reflects my own rumination about how best to be of service,” Holloway wrote in a statement posted on the university’s website on Sept. 17, 2024. Holloway said that he notified the chairwoman of the Rutgers Board of Governors about his plans last month.

“Serving as the university president has been an enormous privilege and responsibility,” he wrote. “Throughout my tenure, I have been appreciative of the former and respectful of the latter. I welcomed the opportunity to join the Rutgers community in July 2020 because I found inspiration in the possibilities that this institution represented: a belief that cutting-edge research could thrive in a university that was committed to making education as accessible as possible to a profoundly diverse student population. The reality behind this inspiration has been reaffirmed time and again during my tenure.”

Holloway currently receives a base salary of $888,540 and bonus pay of $214,106 for a total of more than $1.1 million a year. He will receive his full salary during his sabbatical, school officials said.

Holloway began his tenure in the throes of the COVID-19 pandemic, as students were returning to campus from lockdown, and also dealt with the first faculty strike in school history last year, when thousands of professors, part-time lecturers and graduate student workers hit the picket lines. He also faced a largely symbolic no-confidence vote by the faculty senate in September 2023 and received national scrutiny earlier this year from Republican lawmakers for his decision to end a pro-Palestinian encampment through negotiations rather than police force.

Founded in 1766, Rutgers has nearly 68,000 students in its system.

School officials said Tuesday that they plan to conduct a national search to find the university’s next president. They noted that during Holloway’s presidency, Rutgers broke records in undergraduate admissions, climbed significantly in national rankings and exceeded its fundraising goals.

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Wed, Sep 18 2024 07:39:47 AM Wed, Sep 18 2024 07:42:23 AM
Harris pledges to ‘earn the vote' of Black men, as Trump makes gains https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/business/money-report/harris-pledges-to-earn-the-vote-of-black-men-as-trump-makes-gains/3972863/ 3972863 post 9891829 Piroschka Van De Wouw | Reuters https://media.nbcphiladelphia.com/2024/09/108035449-17265990302024-09-17t184728z_711308282_rc2i2aauy720_rtrmadp_0_usa-election-harris.jpeg?quality=85&strip=all&fit=300,176
  • Vice President Kamala Harris laid out how her economic policy proposals could boost opportunities for young Black men in an interview panel with NABJ journalists.
  • Her message outlined an economy-focused a pitch to the key voting bloc of young Black male voters that have been slipping to Donald Trump this election cycle.
  • During his own sit-down with NABJ journalists in July, Trump faced backlash for impugning Harris’ racial identity and calling her a “DEI hire.”
  • Vice President Kamala Harris on Tuesday laid out how her economic proposals could specifically help young Black men, a key Democratic voting bloc that polls show Republican former President Donald Trump gaining ground with in this election cycle.

    “I think it’s very important to not operate from the assumption that Black men are in anybody’s pocket,” Harris said in a sit-down interview with a panel from the National Association of Black Journalists. “I’m working to earn the vote, not assuming I’m going to have it because I am Black.”

    A new poll by the civil rights group NAACP released Friday found that more than a quarter of Black men under 50 years old support Trump over Harris.

    To win those votes, Harris is focused on an economic argument. At NABJ, she described embarking on an “economic opportunity tour focused on Black men” earlier this year, before she was a candidate for president.

    She also pointed to her work “getting billions more dollars” into community banks to expand access to startup capital.

    “We have so many entrepreneurs in the community who do not have access to capital, but they’ve got great ideas, an incredible work ethic, the ambition, the aspiration, the dream … but don’t have the relationships, necessarily” to get financing or grow a small business, Harris said.

    The Democratic presidential nominee cited proposals like a $50,000 small business tax deduction and the elimination of medical debt from credit scores — both of which she believes would target historic economic disparities within Black communities.

    “When they do better economically, we all do better,” said Harris.

    Proposals like these could help Harris address two distinct vulnerabilities for the Democratic party in this election cycle: public perceptions of the economy, and young Black men who lean toward voting for Trump.

    Before Harris took over the Democratic ticket from President Joe Biden in July, NBC News polling found 25% of Black voter respondents ages 18 to 49 favored Trump over Biden.

    Biden won 92% of Black voters in the 2020 election, according to a Pew Research Center analysis. The prospect that Democrats could lose a quarter of prime voting age Black adults to a Republican set off alarm bells.

    Polls suggest that Trump’s unusual strength with Black voters this election cycle could be due in part to nostalgia for the pre-Covid economy that he presided over.

    Over the course of the Biden-Harris administration, high costs of living became the utmost voter concern, as the U.S. economy precariously recovered from the sky-high inflation in the wake of the pandemic.

    As Harris works to pitch herself as the candidate of economic relief, her campaign is simultaneously working to shore up Black voter support.

    During his own sit-down with NABJ journalists in July, Trump drew backlash for impugning Harris’ racial identity and calling her a “DEI hire.” He also scolded the interviewers for their questions about his past remarks about Black people, which both Democrats and Republicans have said were racist.

    “It was the same old show. The divisiveness and the disrespect,” Harris said Tuesday about Trump’s NABJ appearance. “And let me just say, the American people deserve better.”

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    Tue, Sep 17 2024 11:27:24 PM Tue, Sep 17 2024 11:41:34 PM
    ‘A crying shame': Harris rips Trump's remarks about Springfield https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/national-international/a-crying-shame-harris-rips-trumps-remarks-about-springfield/3972570/ 3972570 post 9890871 Win McNamee/Getty Images https://media.nbcphiladelphia.com/2024/09/GettyImages-2172682589.jpg?quality=85&strip=all&fit=300,200 Vice President Kamala Harris on Tuesday ripped Donald Trump’s repeated bashing of Haitian immigrants in Springfield, Ohio, saying the former president was “spewing lies grounded in tropes.”

    “It’s a crying shame. Literally,” Harris said in her most extensive remarks to date about her Republican opponent’s baseless claims.

    “I know that people are deeply troubled by what is happening to that community in Springfield, Ohio, and it’s got to stop,” she said during a discussion hosted by the National Association of Black Journalists.

    Follow live campaign coverage here

    The city has been hit with dozens of bomb threats, some at elementary schools, after Trump and his running mate, Sen. JD Vance of Ohio, promoted false rumors that immigrants were eating residents’ pet dogs and cats.

    “I mean, my heart breaks for this community. You know there were children, elementary school children,” who had to be evacuated on what was supposed to be school picture day, Harris said.

     “A whole community put in fear,” she added.

    During last week’s presidential debate, which was viewed by more than 67 million people, Trump said: “In Springfield, they’re eating the dogs. The people that came in. They’re eating the cats. They’re eating — they’re eating the pets of the people that live there.”

    Harris said of Trump on Tuesday, “When you have that kind of microphone in front of you, you really ought to understand how much your words have meaning.”

    “You say you care about law enforcement? Law enforcement resources being put into this because of these serious threats,” Harris said.

    “The American people deserve and, I do believe, want better than this,” she added.

    The Trump campaign did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Harris’ remarks.

    Vance, speaking at an event in Michigan, said he and Trump are not to blame for the threats to Springfield.

    “The governor of Ohio came out yesterday and said every single one of those bomb threats was a hoax, and all of those bomb threats came from foreign countries. So the American media for three days has been lying and saying that Donald Trump and I are inciting bomb threats when, in reality, the American media has been laundering for this information. It is disgusting,” he said Tuesday.

    In his statement Monday, Gov. Mike DeWine, a Republican, said that “many of these threats are coming from overseas,” but he did not say all of them originated abroad. He also announced he was deploying dozens of state troopers to help sweep schools.

    DeWine was in Springfield on Tuesday and visited elementary school students accompanied by a therapy dog.

    In an interview with ABC News on Sunday, DeWine said the immigrants in Springfield are there legally, that there is no evidence that they have been eating pets and that the conspiracy theories were “garbage.”

    Springfield Mayor Rob Rue, a Republican, told reporters Tuesday that school attendance is down and that “there’s a high level of fear in our community,” which has been plagued by threats to government offices, as well.

    “We did not have threats seven days ago,” Rue said, referring to the Sept. 10 presidential debate, at which Trump amplified the baseless claims.

    “We need those on the national stage to stop this and tell the truth,” he said.

    This story first appeared on NBCNews.com. More from NBC News:

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    Tue, Sep 17 2024 05:30:54 PM Wed, Sep 18 2024 08:22:03 AM
    Trump and Harris hit battleground states as Sunday's attack continues to roil the race https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/local/trump-and-harris-hit-battleground-states-as-sundays-attack-continues-to-roil-the-race/3972060/ 3972060 post 9871377 https://media.nbcphiladelphia.com/2024/09/image-2024-09-10T095515.058.png?fit=300,169&quality=85&strip=all Presidential election campaigning revs back up Tuesday, with Donald Trump heading to Michigan and Vice President Kamala Harris answering questions at a forum for Black journalists in Pennsylvania — even as authorities continue to investigate a second apparent assassination attempt against Trump that’s roiled the race.

    Trump is holding a town hall in Flint, Michigan, and has appearances later in the week in New York, Washington and North Carolina. Harris will participate in a Philadelphia gathering of the National Association of Black Journalists. She skipped the group’s recent gathering in Chicago, but an openly antagonistic appearance there by Trump sparked an uproar when he questioned the vice president’s racial identity.

    Harris has her own stops in Washington, as well as Michigan and Wisconsin, planned in coming days, with both sides zeroing in on the industrial Midwest and Pennsylvania and North Carolina — all battleground areas that could swing an election expected to be exceedingly close.

    Trump has claimed, without evidence, that months of criticisms against him by Harris and President Joe Bideninspired the latest attack. That’s despite the former president’s own long history of inflammatory campaign rhetoric and advocacy for jailing or prosecuting his political enemies.

    Both Biden and Harris have so far avoided politics in reacting to the attack. Harris has condemned political violence while Biden has called on Congress to increase funding to the Secret Service.

    Authorities say Ryan Wesley Routh camped outside the golf course in West Palm Beach, where Trump was playing on Sunday, for nearly 12 hours with food and a rifle but fled without firing shots when a Secret Service agent spotted and shot at him.

    Subsequently arrested, Routh’s past online posts suggest the suspect has not been consistent about his politics in terms of supporting Democrats or Republicans.

    That attack came barely two months after Trump was wounded during a rally in Pennsylvania. In fundraising emails, he’s implored supporters, “Fear not.” During an interview on the X social media platform, Trump recounted his experience Sunday, saying he was golfing with a friend and heard “probably four or five” shots being fired in the air.

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    Tue, Sep 17 2024 11:15:13 AM Wed, Sep 18 2024 08:06:20 AM
    Democrats run unopposed to fill 2 Pa. House vacancies in Philadelphia https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/decision-2024/democrats-2-state-house-vacancies-philadelphia/3971805/ 3971805 post 3565385 NBC10 https://media.nbcphiladelphia.com/2019/09/Pennsylvania-Voting-Election-Generic-Voting.jpg?quality=85&strip=all&fit=300,169

    What to Know

    • Philadelphia voters are filling two vacant seats in the Pennsylvania House of Representatives. In both cases the Democratic candidates are the only ones on the ballot.
    • Tuesday’s special elections are for positions vacated this summer when state Reps. Donna Bullock and Stephen Kinsey resigned.
    • Keith Harris is seeking Bullock’s seat, and Andre Carroll is in line to succeed Kinsey. Harris and Carroll also face no opposition on the ballot in November for full two-year terms.

    Philadelphia voters on Tuesday will fill two vacant state House seats in special elections, and in both cases a Democratic candidate is the only person on the ballot.

    Keith Harris is seeking to replace Rep. Donna Bullock, while Andre Carroll is in line to succeed Rep. Stephen Kinsey. Bullock and Kinsey both resigned in mid-July. Bullock took a job with Project HOME, a nonprofit that works to address homelessness, while Kinsey, who had not been planning to run for reelection, moved up his departure date and took another job.

    Neither Harris nor Carroll has an opponent in the Nov. 5 general election, where they are seeking full two-year terms.

    Harris, 63, is a Democratic ward leader and community activist who has worked to clean up graffiti in Philadelphia. The district is in the northern area of the city.

    Carroll, 33, has worked in city and state government. The northwest Philadelphia district has overwhelmingly Democratic voter registration and is older and less affluent than the state as a whole.

    The House has a 102-101 Democratic majority, counting the Bullock and Kinsey seats.

    Polls are open from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. Click here to find your polling place.

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    Tue, Sep 17 2024 07:31:16 AM Tue, Sep 17 2024 07:31:24 AM
    Biden talks HBCU funding, apparent assassination attempt on Trump, while in Philly https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/decision-2024/joe-biden-hbcu-funding-philadelphia-donald-trump-attempted-assassination/3971448/ 3971448 post 9887549 Getty Images https://media.nbcphiladelphia.com/2024/09/GettyImages-2172437044.jpg?quality=85&strip=all&fit=300,200 President Joe Biden announced more than $1 billion in additional funding for Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) while speaking in Philadelphia on Monday.

    Biden announced additional federal investments at HBCUs totaling $1.3 billion while speaking at the National HBCU Week Conference in Center City. He also said the new investments combined with the previously announced $16 billion set a record of over $17 billion in federal investments in HBCUs from 2021 through 2024.

    “The Biden Harris Administration has advanced racial equity, economic opportunity, and educational excellence through HBCUs since Day One, including by reestablishing the White House Initiative on Advancing Educational Equity, Excellence, and Economic Opportunity through Historically Black Colleges and Universities,” a spokesperson for the Biden Administration wrote. “The Biden-Harris Administration is the most diverse administration in history and many members are HBCU graduates, including Vice President Kamala Harris, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Michael Regan, and Federal Energy Regulatory Commission Chairman Willie Phillips.”

    In addition to the HBCU announcement, Biden also addressed and condemned the apparent assassination attempt on former President Donald Trump in Florida over the weekend.

    “I’ve always condemned political violence,” Biden said. “In America we resolve our differences peacefully at the ballot box, not at the end of the gun. America has suffered too many times the tragedy of an assassin’s bullet. It solves nothing and just tears the country apart. We must do everything we can to prevent it and never give it any oxygen.”

    Biden in his speech added that Ronald Rowe, the acting director of the Secret Service, was in Florida “assessing what happened and determining whether any further adjustments need to be made to ensure” Trump’s safety.

    Prior to his stop in Philadelphia, Biden also told reporters outside the White House that he was thankful Trump was OK. He also stated he believed the Secret Service needed more help and that Congress should look into their needs.

    Trump, meanwhile, claimed without evidence on Monday that Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris’ previous comments calling him a threat to democracy inspired the assassination attempt on his life.

    “Their rhetoric is causing me to be shot at, when I am the one who is going to save the country and they are the ones that are destroying the country — both from the inside and out,” Trump said in comments to Fox News Digital.

    The Republican former president’s statements are a sharp departure from how he reacted after an assassination attempt in July during a rally in Butler, Pennsylvania, in which a bullet grazed his ear.

    Then, Trump called for national unity, saying in a social media post that “it is more important than ever that we stand United.” A few days later, though, the former president returned to his usual commentary where he has sharply criticized Democrats and relishes political bombast.

    While authorities continue to investigate the motives of both the gunman in Pennsylvania and the person arrested Sunday in Florida, Trump has made clear that he sees attempts on his life as politically motivated — and blames his rivals for them.

    That’s despite Trump himself drawing repeated criticism for his rhetoric. He has talked about prosecuting his political rivals and alleged without evidence that Democrats have brought the felony cases against him for political reasons.

    In a post on his social media site on Monday, Trump again claimed that he had been the target of politically motivated attacks, writing that the left “has taken politics in our Country to a whole new level of Hatred, Abuse, and Distrust.” He said “it will only get worse” and then veered into comments about immigration, even though there is no evidence the person arrested in connection with the apparent assassination attempt was an immigrant.

    That follows the former president during last week’s debate and in the days after it amplifying false rumors that Haitian immigrants in Ohio are abducting and eating pets. The community days later evacuated schools and government buildings amid bomb threats, adding to the sense of an especially unstable and tense moment in America even before Sunday’s stunning development.

    ]]>
    Mon, Sep 16 2024 05:00:56 PM Mon, Sep 16 2024 05:29:10 PM
    Pa. court rejects Cornel West's bid to get on ballot, clears way for mail voting https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/local/pa-court-rejects-cornel-wests-bid-to-get-on-ballot-clears-way-for-mail-voting/3971259/ 3971259 post 8661130 Getty Images https://media.nbcphiladelphia.com/2023/06/GettyImages-1238679483.jpg?quality=85&strip=all&fit=300,200 Pennsylvania’s Supreme Court on Monday upheld a lower court ruling that rejected a bid to get independent presidential candidate Cornel West on the ballot for the November election in the battleground state.

    The courts sided with the secretary of state’s office under Democratic Gov. Josh Shapiro in rejecting West’s candidacy paperwork. The decision also sets in motion the process for counties to start printing, testing and sending out mail-in ballots to voters who requested one ahead of the Nov. 5 election.

    “As soon as the court rules on that, we’ll certify the official list and then counties can complete their preparations to mail out ballots and to have voters, if they choose, go to a county election office to apply in person,” Secretary of State Al Schmidt said in an interview earlier Monday.

    The court case had been among a raft of partisan legal maneuvering around third-party candidates, as backers of Republican nominee Donald Trump and Democratic nominee Kamala Harris had aimed to derail third-party candidates who might siphon away support — or to help others who might hurt their opponent.

    In an unsigned one-page order, the state Supreme Court said it had affirmed the lower Commonwealth Court decision. In it, the court had agreed with the Schmidt’s office that West’s campaign lacked the required affidavits for 14 of West’s 19 presidential electors.

    The deadline to submit them was Aug. 1.

    Now, Trump and Harris will appear on Pennsylvania’s ballot with the Green Party’s Jill Stein and the Libertarian Party’s Chase Oliver. Stein and Oliver submitted petitions to get on Pennsylvania’s presidential ballot without being challenged.

    The Nov. 5 election is expected to be close in Pennsylvania, whose 19 electoral votes are tied with Illinois for fifth-most, and arguably are the most awarded by any battleground state.

    Counties, which typically send out mail-in ballots weeks before the election to voters who request them, have been waiting for the court to rule on the final ballot-access cases. Now that it has, county election officials say they will need time to test, print and mail the ballots.

    That process could drag into October, depending on the county.

    Under state law, counties must start delivering or mailing the official mail-in ballots to voters who applied for one as soon as a ballot is certified and available.

    Counties may also have mail-in ballots available earlier for over-the-counter service for voters who come into a county election office and apply for a ballot in person.

    The deadline for counties to receive a completed mail-in ballot is when polls close, by law, at 8 p.m. on Election Day. The deadline to apply for a mail-in ballot is Oct. 29, one week before the Nov. 5 election.

    ___

    Follow Marc Levy at https://x.com/timelywriter.

    ]]>
    Mon, Sep 16 2024 02:38:34 PM Mon, Sep 16 2024 02:38:50 PM
    Days of prep and one final warning: How Kamala Harris got ready for the debate in Philly https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/local/prep-and-one-final-warning-kamala-harris-debate-philly/3970214/ 3970214 post 9884584 AP Photo/Alex Brandon https://media.nbcphiladelphia.com/2024/09/AP24255050172249.jpg?quality=85&strip=all&fit=300,200 It was almost time for the presidential debate, but Kamala Harris’ staff thought there was one more thing she needed to know. So less than an hour before the vice president left her Philadelphia hotel, two communications aides got her on the phone for one of the strangest briefings of her political career.

    They told her that Donald Trump had been posting on social media about a false and racist rumor that Haitian migrants in Springfield, Ohio, were eating people’s pets. The former president might mention it during the debate, they said.

    The warning, described by two people with knowledge of the conversation, proved spot on.

    While answering a question about immigration policy, Trump said migrants in Springfield were “eating the dogs” and “they’re eating the cats.” Harris laughed, shook her head and stared at her Republican opponent in amazement. “Talk about extreme,” she said, and then moved on.

    It was easily the most bizarre moment from last week’s debate, spawning an explosion of online memes and parody videos. Now, Harris is trying to use her performance as an ongoing source of momentum, hoping to rekindle the kind of energy that she generated when she replaced President Joe Biden at the top of the Democratic ticket.

    It is unclear whether the debate will affect the outcome of the Nov. 5 election. In a flash poll of viewers conducted by CNN afterward, opinions of Trump were unchanged and Harris received only a slight bump in the share of people who view her favorably. But her team is making the most of it, turning key points into television advertisements and flooding the internet with clips. No equivalent effort is apparent from Trump’s side, despite his repeated insistence that he came out on top.

    There almost certainly will not be another debate; Trump has said he will not do one. That means the debate at the National Constitution Center in Philadelphia may be the only chance that voters will have to see the candidates side by side.

    This story is based on interviews with five people close to Harris, who spoke on condition of anonymity to describe private conversations and reveal new details about how she prepared for and handled the debate. It was her first time meeting Trump in person.

    Harris spent five days getting ready at a hotel in downtown Pittsburgh after a breakneck few weeks of campaigning.

    Her team recreated the set where she would debate Trump on the night of Sept. 10. It was a far more professional setup than Harris had used eight years earlier as she was running for Senate in California, when campaign staff taped together cardboard boxes to serve as makeshift lecterns.

    Two communications aides — one man, one woman — stood in for David Muir and Linsey Davis, the ABC News debate moderators.

    Philippe Reines, a longtime aide to Hillary Clinton, reprised his role as Trump, which he played when the former secretary of state ran for president. Reines wore a dark suit, a long red tie and orange bronzer to embody Trump.

    One challenge would be the microphones.

    When Biden was running, his team agreed that the debate microphones should be muted when it was not a candidate’s turn to speak. But Harris’ staff wanted the microphones hot at all times, which would allow her to jump in and create more opportunities for Trump to make outbursts.

    But their campaign could not reach an agreement to change the rules, and the original plan remained in place.

    Harris decided to make the most of the split screen format, where each candidate would be on camera at all times. Biden had flubbed the visual test when he debated Trump in June, often looking aimless with his mouth slightly agape. Harris provided silent commentary through her expressiveness — laughing, raising her eyebrows, bringing her hand to her chin with a quizzical look.

    At one point during preparations, staff members suggested practicing mannerisms that Harris could use. The vice president waved them off, saying she would be fine without that kind of rehearsal.

    Harris rarely left the hotel during preparations. On Sept. 7, she took a field trip to Penzeys Spices, where she picked up some seasoning mixes. One woman in the store wept as Harris hugged her. On Sept. 8, Harris and her husband, Doug Emhoff, went to a military airbase and took a walk for about a half hour. Because of security considerations, the tarmac was the only place where they could stretch their legs.

    Asked if she was ready for the debate, Harris gave reporters a thumb’s up and said “ready.”

    She ended up leaving Pittsburgh on Sept. 9 rather than the day of the debate, canceling an extra mock debate and getting to Philadelphia earlier than expected.

    As the clock ticked down to the start of the debate, dozens of staff members in the campaign’s Delaware headquarters assembled in assigned seats in front of four television screens. Some were nervous, still rattled from watching Biden implode in his own debate with Trump.

    But Harris’ opening move, striding toward Trump to shake his hand as they took the stage, helped ease those jitters.

    Throughout the debate, Harris mocked and needled Trump, throwing him off balance with jabs about the size of crowds at his campaign rallies. She pounced on questions about abortion and promised the country a new generation of leadership, while Trump became increasingly agitated and missed opportunities to press his case against her.

    During the final commercial break, Trump departed the stage with a sigh. Harris stayed at her lectern, writing on her notepad, reviewing her words and taking a sip of water.

    In her closing statement, she told viewers that “I think you’ve heard tonight two very different visions for our country — one that is focused on the future and the other that is focused on the past.”

    Trump ended his remarks by calling Harris “the worst vice president in the history of our country.”

    There was no live audience in the room to react to the candidates, and it was not always clear whether certain lines or expressions were hitting their marks.

    So when Harris left the stage, she had a question for her staff: How did I do?

    ]]>
    Sun, Sep 15 2024 08:55:54 AM Sun, Sep 15 2024 10:04:03 AM
    McCormick's hedge fund days are a double-edged sword in Pa. Senate race https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/decision-2024/mccormicks-hedge-fund-days-double-edged-sword-pa-senate-race/3970203/ 3970203 post 9884567 AP Photo https://media.nbcphiladelphia.com/2024/09/AP24258609531413.jpg?quality=85&strip=all&fit=300,204 Before he ran for the U.S. Senate in Pennsylvania, David McCormick was a big name on Wall Street.

    He was the CEO of the world’s largest hedge fund, a world-traveled executive who was sought after for speaking engagements and prominent board positions.

    His wealth and connections got him flagged by Republicans as someone who could both raise campaign cash and pay his own way for a Senate campaign.

    But McCormick’s Wall Street days haven’t been such an asset of late. They provided grist for attacks by Republican primary rivals in McCormick’s failed 2022 run for Senate and now by Democrats in his challenge to third-term Sen. Bob Casey.

    Casey, in speeches and ads, hammers away at investments made by Bridgewater Associates while McCormick was CEO, including in Chinese companies that are considered part of Beijing’s military and surveillance industrial complex.

    “While I was fighting for union rights and fighting for working families in Pennsylvania, he was making a lot of money investing in China,” Casey recently told a union crowd at a Teamsters hall in suburban Harrisburg. “He not only invested in Chinese companies, he invested in companies that built the Chinese military.”

    McCormick declined an interview request.

    The need to fend off accusations that he profited at America’s expense comes at an unfortunate time for McCormick as China’s relationship with Washington has grown increasingly tense.

    But Bridgewater was hardly alone.

    U.S. investment in Chinese companies surged while McCormick was Bridgewater’s CEO as hedge funds, institutional investors and fund managers plunged money into those same companies.

    Some still do, according to a congressional report released this year after both the Trump and Biden administrations tried to block American investment in what they viewed as China’s military and surveillance apparatus.

    America’s political community soured on China as early as 2016, but the U.S. financial sector “plowed right through that,” said Derek Scissors, a China specialist at the American Enterprise Institute in Washington who served on the U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission.

    The economic ties extend beyond Wall Street. Semiconductor companies, farmers, tech and others in manufacturing rely on China for customers or components, Scissors said.

    As Bridgewater’s CEO in 2019, McCormick described China as America’s “most defining bilateral relationship of our time,” even as calls began in Washington to block American investments in Chinese companies that could pose a threat to U.S. security.

    As a candidate, McCormick has described China as an “existential” threat to the United States. He called for the federal government to develop a comprehensive strategy for America to outperform China economically and technologically, and said his experience with China means he can go “toe to toe” with its government on trade issues.

    But McCormick also defends himself, both minimizing Bridgewater’s investments in China, saying it was 2% of the company’s assets, and describing investment in China as “unavoidable” because of client expectations and the rapid growth of that country’s economy.

    In a book he published last year, he wrote: “As is, U.S. dollars finance Communist China’s most egregious acts and ambitions.”

    While campaigning, McCormick barely talks about his time at the hedge fund. If he mentions it at all, he tells audiences he ran a “financial firm” or an “investment firm.”

    Instead, he dwells on other entries on his resume. Those include playing football and wrestling in high school, graduating from the U.S. military academy at West Point and serving with the Army in the first Gulf War, where he won a Bronze Star.

    But if he is not talking up his Wall Street days, Wall Street does not seem to care. In his two campaigns for Senate, super political action committees that support McCormick have raised tens of millions of dollars and counting from the finance world.

    McCormick, 59, earned a Ph.D from Princeton University, ran the online auction house FreeMarkets Inc., which had its name on a skyscraper in Pittsburgh during the tech boom, and served in senior positions in President George W. Bush’s administration.

    There, he likes to say, he gained a reputation as a tough negotiator with the Chinese when tasked with Commerce Department policy over export controls of sensitive technologies.

    When Bridgewater Associates hired McCormick in 2009 to be president, its founder, Ray Dalio, had a reputation for being bullish on China.

    Today, Bridgewater is as prominent as any foreign investment firm in China.

    Regulatory disclosures in China show that it has at least 10 billion renminbi — or at least $1.4 billion, and maybe much more — invested in Chinese assets there, said Harry Handley, a senior associate at Z-Ben Advisors, a financial advisory firm based in Shanghai.

    That is the most of any foreign firm, Handley said.

    McCormick, who was an executive at Bridgewater for 12 years, joined the company when investment banks, venture capital firms and hedge funds were fueling an investment boom in a growing Chinese economy.

    “The Chinese economy was doing well for a long time and there was money to be made there,” said Greg Brown, a University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill professor of finance who researches hedge funds.

    McCormick spent his last five years at Bridgewater as co-CEO or CEO, and those were big years for investing in China. That is when Chinese regulators relaxed restrictions over foreign investment in stocks and bonds, unleashing several years of particularly heavy investment, Brown and others say.

    Bridgewater forged a reputation among foreign firms as an aggressive investor in Chinese companies — “over the past few years they’ve kind of dominated among the global firms in China,” Handley said — and reputedly handled money for the Chinese government.

    In early 2022, McCormick left Bridgewater to run for Senate in Pennsylvania in a seven-way GOP primary.

    Bridgewater’s connections with China followed him.

    In one attack by a Republican primary rival, a video by Mehmet Oz ‘s campaign showed “finance bros” Chad and Tad at a bar when Tad asks Chad, “Do you think saying ‘I invest in China’ is a good pickup line?” Chad responds, “Investing in foreign adversaries always plays!”

    At a rally days before the 2022 primary, former President Donald Trump, aiming to help Oz, his endorsed candidate, derided McCormick as having been with a company that “managed money for communist China.”

    McCormick lost narrowly to Oz.

    This summer, Casey’s campaign launched two ads that ran in Pennsylvania’s major TV markets attacking McCormick over Bridgewater’s investments in companies tied to China’s military.

    “Dave McCormick sold us out to make a fortune,” say hard-hatted speakers in one ad. “That’s the real Dave McCormick.”

    McCormick has tried to tie Casey to China, saying Casey had money invested in Chinese companies through mutual funds and that the Casey-supported clean-energy policies of the Biden administration are making the U.S. more reliant on Chinese lithium batteries and solar panels.

    Meanwhile, each candidate is trying to show that he is the tougher one on China. That has put the contrast between McCormick the CEO and McCormick the candidate into sharp relief, with McCormick explicitly calling for an end to U.S. investment in technologies in China that are critical to national security or tied to its military.

    “McCormick has changed his tune because he’s a political type,” Scissors said. “If he was in the business community, he’d still be pushing for relations with China. Because that’s what they do.”

    ___

    Follow Marc Levy at https://x.com/timelywriter.

    ]]>
    Sun, Sep 15 2024 08:19:04 AM Mon, Sep 16 2024 08:21:51 AM
    Pennsylvania mail-in ballots with flawed dates on envelopes can be thrown out, court rules https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/politics/pennsylvania-mail-in-ballots-flawed-dates-on-envelopes-ruling/3969303/ 3969303 post 9883605 AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster https://media.nbcphiladelphia.com/2024/09/AP24257723656570.jpg?quality=85&strip=all&fit=300,198 Pennsylvania voters could have their mail-in ballots thrown out if they do not write accurate dates on envelopes they use to return them under a state Supreme Court ruling issued Friday that could impact the presidential race.

    The state’s high court ruled on procedural grounds, saying a lower court that found the mandate unenforceable should not have taken up the case because it did not draw in the election boards in all 67 counties. Counties administer the nuts and bolts of elections in Pennsylvania, but the left-leaning groups that filed the case only sued two of them, Philadelphia and Allegheny counties.

    Commonwealth Court two weeks ago had halted enforcement of the handwritten dates on exterior envelopes. The Supreme Court’s reversal of that decision raises the prospect that thousands of ballots that arrive in time might get thrown out in a key swing state in what is expected to be a close presidential contest.

    Far more Democrats than Republicans vote by mail in the state. In recent elections, older voters have been disproportionately more likely to have had their mail-in ballots invalidated because of exterior envelope date problems.

    Republican National Committee Chairman Michael Whatley in a release called it a major victory for election integrity “that will protect commonsense mail ballot safeguards and help voters cast their ballots with confidence.”

    Lawyers who helped represent the 10 community organizations that sued said in a statement that the decision left open the possibility of more litigation on the topic.

    “Thousands of voters are at risk of having their ballots rejected in November for making a meaningless mistake,” said Mimi McKenzie, legal director of the Public Interest Law Center in Philadelphia. She urged voters to “carefully read and follow the instructions for submitting a mail-in ballot to reduce the number of ballots being rejected for trivial paperwork errors.”

    The justices ruled 4-3, with two Democrats joining both Republicans on the Supreme Court to vacate the Commonwealth Court decision.

    The dissent by three other Democratic justices said the high court should have taken up the dispute.

    “A prompt and definitive ruling on the constitutional question presented in this appeal is of paramount public importance inasmuch as it will affect the counting of ballots in the upcoming general election,” wrote Justice David Wecht. He and the two other dissenters would have ruled on the matter based on written briefs.

    The lawsuit, brought in May, argued that the mandate was not enforceable under a state constitutional provision that says all elections are “free and equal.”

    Based on recent Pennsylvania elections, more than 10,000 ballots in this year’s general election might be thrown out over bad or missing envelope dates, which could be enough to swing the presidential race. Pennsylvania’s 19 electoral votes make it the largest prize among the seven swing states.

    In previous Pennsylvania elections, ballots have been rejected for lacking any date on the envelope or for clearly inaccurate dates, such ones in the future or before mail-in ballots were printed. Although state law requires envelope dates, election officials do not use them to ensure ballots arrive on time. Mail-in ballots are logged in and time-stamped when received, and must arrive at county elections offices before polls close on Election Day.

    Pennsylvania voters will also decide this fall whether to replace incumbent U.S. Sen. Bob Casey, a Democrat, with Republican challenger Dave McCormick. Also on the ballot are 228 state legislative contests and elections for state treasurer, auditor general and attorney general.

    ]]>
    Sat, Sep 14 2024 06:09:26 AM Sat, Sep 14 2024 06:09:36 AM
    Bill would ban sports betting ads during games, forbid bets on college athletes https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/sports/bill-would-ban-sports-betting-ads-during-games-forbid-bets-on-college-athletes/3969078/ 3969078 post 5402398 https://media.nbcphiladelphia.com/2020/09/sports-betting.jpg?quality=85&strip=all&fit=300,169

    What to Know

    • A federal bill has been proposed to ban in-game advertising and bets on college athletes.
    • Democratic Congressman Paul Tonko of New York and Democratic Senator Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut introduced the bill Thursday. They say the rapid expansion of legal sports betting in the U.S. since 2018 has been harmful.
    • The measure also would forbid the use of credit cards to fund online gambling accounts.
    • The bill also would ban “prop” bets on the performance of college or amateur athletes, such as how many passing yards a quarterback will rack up during a game.

    The federal government would ban in-game advertising and bets on college athletes under a sports betting regulation bill proposed by two northeastern legislators.

    Rep. Paul Tonko of New York and Sen. Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut introduced the bill Thursday. It’s designed to address what they say are the harmful effects of the rapid expansion of legal sports betting in the U.S. since 2018.

    The measure also would forbid the use of credit cards to fund online gambling accounts.

    The Democratic legislators say sports betting, now legal in 38 states plus the District of Columbia, has increased gambling addiction and other problems. Every moment of every game is a chance to gamble, Tonko said.

    “That’s resulted in a frightening rise in gambling disorder, which has in turn enacted a horrific toll on individuals, many of whom have lost their home, job, marriage, and their lives,” Tonko said.

    Blumenthal called the measure a matter of public health.

    “It is a matter of stopping addiction, saving lives, and making sure that young people particularly are protected against exploitation,” Blumenthal said.

    The legislation already faces strong opposition from the gambling industry, which has said for years that it should self-regulate sports betting advertising to avoid the federal government imposing standards on it.

    The American Gaming Association, the gambling industry’s national trade association, said sports books already operate under government supervision, contribute billions of dollars in state taxes, and offer consumers protections that don’t exist with illegal gambling operations.

    “Six years into legal sports betting, introducing heavy-handed federal prohibitions is a slap in the face to state legislatures and gaming regulators who have dedicated countless time and resources to developing thoughtful frameworks unique to their jurisdictions,” it said in a statement.

    The industry has adopted sports betting practices that include some limits on advertising, but critics say they don’t go far enough.

    Harry Levant, director of gambling policy at the Public Health Advocacy Institute at Northeastern University School of Law, compared gambling to drugs and alcohol in terms of potential addictiveness.

    “With every other addictive product or substance, the government regulates the advertising, promotion, distribution, and consumption of the product,” he said. “With gambling, sadly, the exact opposite is occurring.”

    The National Council on Problem Gambling says “gambling problems may increase as sports gambling grows explosively” across America.

    The bill would prohibit operators from accepting more than five deposits from a customer over a 24-hour period, and check on a customer’s ability to afford depositing more than $1,000 in 24 hours or $10,000 in a month.

    The bill also would ban “prop” bets on the performance of college or amateur athletes, such as how many passing yards a quarterback will rack up during a game.

    And it would prohibit the use of artificial intelligence to track a customer’s gambling habits or to create gambling products including highly specific “micro-bets,” which are based on scenarios as narrow as the speed of the next pitch in a baseball game.

    ]]>
    Fri, Sep 13 2024 02:23:30 PM Fri, Sep 13 2024 04:31:31 PM
    Former drilling foe Harris now says she supports it. ‘Sprint to the middle' or climate betrayal? https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/politics/kamala-harris-now-says-she-supports-oil-drilling/3968840/ 3968840 post 9881303 AP Photo/Ralph Wilson, File https://media.nbcphiladelphia.com/2024/09/AP24256746320505.jpg?quality=85&strip=all&fit=300,240 The House on Wednesday rejected Speaker Mike Johnson’s proposal that would have linked temporary funding for the federal government with a mandate that states require proof of citizenship when people register to vote.

    Next steps on government funding are uncertain. Lawmakers are not close to completing work on the dozen annual appropriations bills that will fund federal agencies during the next fiscal year, so they’ll need to approve a stopgap measure to prevent a partial shutdown when that budget year begins Oct. 1.

    The vote was 220-202. Now, Johnson will likely pursue a Plan B to avoid a partial shutdown, though he was not ready before the vote to share details of such a proposal.

    Johnson pulled the bill from consideration last week because it lacked the votes to pass. He worked through the weekend to win support from fellow Republicans but was unable to overcome objections about spending levels from some members, while others said they don’t favor any continuing resolutions, insisting that Congress return to passing the dozen annual appropriations bills on time and one at a time. Democrats overwhelmingly opposed the measure.

    Requiring new voters to provide proof of citizenship has become a leading election-year priority for Republicans raising the specter of noncitizens voting in the U.S., even though it’s already illegal to do so and research has shown that such voting is rare.

    Opponents also say that such a requirement would disenfranchise millions of Americans who do not have a birth certificate or passport readily available when they get a chance to register at their school, church or other venues when voter registration drives occur.

    But Johnson said it is a serious problem because even if a tiny percentage of noncitizens do vote, it could determine the outcome of an extremely close race. He noted that Republican Rep. Mariannette Miller-Meeks of Iowa won her seat back in 2020 by six votes.

    “It’s very, very serious stuff and that’s why we’re going to do the right thing,” Johnson said. “We’re going to responsibly fund the government and we’re going to stop noncitizens voting in elections.”

    Meanwhile, Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump weighed in again just hours before the vote. seemingly encouraging House Republicans to let a partial government shutdown begin at the end of the month unless they get the proof of citizenship mandate, referred to in the House as the SAVE Act.

    “If Republicans don’t get the SAVE Act, and every ounce of it, they should not agree to a Continuing Resolution in any way, shape, or form,” Trump said on the social media platform Truth Social.

    Johnson told reporters he was not ready to discuss an alternative plan to keep the government funded.

    “Let’s see what happens with the bill, all right. We’re on the field in the middle of the game. The quarterback is calling the play. We’re going to run the play,” Johnson said.

    House Democrats said the proof of citizenship mandate should not be part of the continuing resolution to keep the government funded and urged Johnson to work with them on a bill that can pass both chambers.

    “This is not going to become law,” said Rep. Pete Aguilar, D-Calif. “This is Republican theatrics that are meant to appease the most extreme members of their conference, to show them that they are working on something and that they’re continuing to support the former president of the United States in his bid to demonize immigrants.”

    Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said the only way to prevent a government shutdown was for both sides to work together on an agreement. He said the House vote announced by Johnson was doomed to fail.

    “The only thing that will accomplish is make clear that he’s running into a dead end,” Schumer said. “We must have a bipartisan plan instead.”

    The legislation would fund agencies generally at current levels while lawmakers work out their differences on a full-year spending agreement.

    Democrats, and some Republicans, are pushing for a short extension. A temporary fix would allow the current Congress to hammer out a final bill after the election and get it to Democratic President Joe Biden’s desk for his signature.

    But Johnson and some of the more conservative members of his conference are pushing for a six-month extension in the hopes that Republican nominee Donald Trump will win the election and give them more leverage when crafting the full-year bill.

    Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky declined to weigh in on how long to extend funding. He said Schumer and Johnson, ultimately, will have to work out a final agreement that can pass both chambers.

    “The one thing you cannot have is a government shutdown. It would be politically beyond stupid for us to do that right before the election because certainly we would get the blame,” McConnell said.

    Regardless of the vote outcome Wednesday, Republican lawmakers sought to allay any concerns there would be a shutdown at the end of the month. Rep. Mike Lawler, R-N.Y., said if the bill fails, then another stopgap bill should be voted on that would allow lawmakers to come back to Washington after the election and finish the appropriations work.

    “The bottom line is we’re not shutting the government down,” Lawler said.

    But Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries accused Republicans of engaging in a “shutdown effort.”

    “That’s not hyperbole,” Jeffries said. “It’s history. Because in the DNA of extreme MAGA Republicans has consistently been an effort to make extreme ransom demands of the American people, and if those extreme ransom demands are not met, shut down the government.”

    The House approved a bill with the proof of citizenship mandate back in July. Some Republicans who view the issue as popular with their constituents have been pushing for another chance to show their support for the measure.

    Many have investigated noncitizen voting and found little evidence of it, NBC News reported. The Brennan Center found just 30 suspected noncitizen votes amid 23.5 million votes in 2016, suggesting that suspected noncitizen votes accounted for 0.0001% of votes cast. Trump’s own election integrity commission disbanded without releasing evidence of voter fraud, even though he’d claimed 3 million undocumented immigrants had voted in 2016 costing him the popular vote.

    ]]>
    Fri, Sep 13 2024 12:22:10 PM Fri, Sep 13 2024 12:23:09 PM
    Trump campaigns in Western states as Harris focuses on critical Pennsylvania https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/decision-2024/trump-campaigns-california-harris-focuses-pennsylvania/3968544/ 3968544 post 9879064 Getty Images https://media.nbcphiladelphia.com/2024/09/image-2024-09-12T154111.541-e1726483687800.png?fit=300,169&quality=85&strip=all

    What to Know

    • Former President Donald Trump will be campaigning in Western states as his opponent, Vice President Kamala Harris keeps her focus on one of the biggest battleground prizes, Pennsylvania.
    • Trump is scheduled to hold what’s being billed as a news conference in the morning at his Los Angeles-area golf club before heading to northern California for a fundraiser, followed by a rally in Las Vegas.
    • Harris, meanwhile, heads to Johnstown and Wilkes-Barre on Friday as she tries to capitalize on her momentum after Tuesday night’s debate. It’s her second day of back-to-back rallies after holding two events in North Carolina, another swing state, on Thursday.

    Former President Donald Trump will campaign Friday in Western states as his opponent, Vice President Kamala Harris keeps her focus on one of the biggest battleground prizes in the East, Pennsylvania.

    Trump is scheduled to hold what’s being billed as a news conference at his Los Angeles-area golf club. He’ll speak at the seaside club perched on a cliff overlooking the Pacific Ocean before heading to northern California for a fundraiser, followed by a rally in Las Vegas, the largest city in swing state Nevada.

    Harris, meanwhile, heads to Johnstown and Wilkes-Barre on Friday, campaigning in counties where Trump won in 2016 and 2020, as she tries to capitalize on her momentum after Tuesday night’s debate.

    It’s her second day of back-to-back rallies after holding two events in North Carolina, another swing state, on Thursday. Her campaign is aiming to hit every market in every battleground state over four days, with stops by Harris, her running mate, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, and other surrogates in Michigan, Wisconsin, Arizona and Georgia.

    While speaking in Charlotte, Harris took a victory lap for her debate performance in which she needled Trump and kept him on the defensive. Recounting one moment while campaigning in North Carolina, she mocked Trump for saying he had “concepts of a plan” for replacing the Affordable Care Act.

    “Concepts. Concepts. No actual plan. Concepts,” she said as the crowd roared with laughter.

    Her campaign said she raised $47 million from 600,000 donors in the 24 hours after her debate with Trump.

    Harris said the candidates “owe it to voters to have another debate.” But Trump said he won’t agree to face off with her again.

    Trump’s morning event will mark the second Friday in a row that the Republican has scheduled a news conference, though at his last appearance in New York, the former president didn’t take any questions. Instead, the Republican for nearly an hour railed against women who have accused him of sexual misconduct over the years, resurrecting the allegations in great detail before his debate with Harris.

    It’s unclear whether Trump plans to speak about any subject in particular at Friday’s news conference, but his campaign has added more to his schedule since early August as he tries to contrast himself with Harris. She has not held a news conference since becoming a presidential candidate and the Democrat has sat for just one in-depth interview.

    Her campaign has said she will start doing more interviews with local media outlets in battleground states.

    After appearing at his golf club in upscale Rancho Palos Verdes, Trump will head to a fundraiser in the afternoon in the Bay Area town of Woodside that is being hosted by billionaire software developer Tom Siebel and his wife, Stacey Siebel. Tom Siebel is the second cousin once removed of Jennifer Siebel Newsom, the wife of California Gov. Gavin Newsom, a Democrat and surrogate for Harris.

    Attendees will pay at least $3,300 per person or raise $10,000 for the campaign, according to an invitation. Top-tier donors will get a photo, reception and roundtable, paying $500,000 for a couple to be on the host committee or $150,000 per person to be a co-host.

    It’s Trump’s second fundraising stop in California in as many days as he tries to make up fundraising ground against Harris.

    Even before she raked in cash after the debate, the vice president reported raising $361 million in August from nearly 3 million donors, her first full month as a candidate after replacing President Joe Biden. Trump brought in $130 million over the same period. Harris’ campaign reported that it started September with $109 million more on hand than Trump’s did.

    On Friday night, Trump heads to Las Vegas, where he’ll have a rally in the city’s downtown area. Trump was in the city last month for a brief stop to promote his proposal to end federal taxes on workers’ tips, something that’s expected to especially resonate in the tourist city, where much of the service-based economy includes workers who rely on tips. He announced a new proposal Thursday to end taxes on overtime pay.

    The swing state is one that Trump narrowly lost in 2016 and 2020 and is among about half a dozen that both campaigns are heavily focused on.

    The Republican presidential ticket has visited Clark County, Nevada, four times since June. Trump has held campaign events in Las Vegas three times, while his running mate, Sen. JD Vance, held a rally in suburban Henderson in July.

    The Democratic ticket also has visited four times, although two of those campaign events were by President Joe Biden before he dropped out of the race. Harris and Walz held a joint rally in Las Vegas last month, and Walz visited the city again Tuesday.


    Long reported from Washington. Associated Press writers Jill Colvin in New York, Michael R. Blood in Los Angeles, Chris Megerian in Washington and Tom Verdin in Sacramento contributed to this report.

    ]]>
    Fri, Sep 13 2024 11:54:38 AM Fri, Sep 13 2024 11:54:48 AM
    Smartmatic's defamation suit against Newsmax over 2020 election reporting appears headed for trial https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/national-international/smartmatics-defamation-suit-against-newsmax-headed-for-trial/3968804/ 3968804 post 9881171 RONALDO SCHEMIDT/AFP via Getty Images https://media.nbcphiladelphia.com/2024/09/GettyImages-825588258.jpg?quality=85&strip=all&fit=300,170 The House on Wednesday rejected Speaker Mike Johnson’s proposal that would have linked temporary funding for the federal government with a mandate that states require proof of citizenship when people register to vote.

    Next steps on government funding are uncertain. Lawmakers are not close to completing work on the dozen annual appropriations bills that will fund federal agencies during the next fiscal year, so they’ll need to approve a stopgap measure to prevent a partial shutdown when that budget year begins Oct. 1.

    The vote was 220-202. Now, Johnson will likely pursue a Plan B to avoid a partial shutdown, though he was not ready before the vote to share details of such a proposal.

    Johnson pulled the bill from consideration last week because it lacked the votes to pass. He worked through the weekend to win support from fellow Republicans but was unable to overcome objections about spending levels from some members, while others said they don’t favor any continuing resolutions, insisting that Congress return to passing the dozen annual appropriations bills on time and one at a time. Democrats overwhelmingly opposed the measure.

    Requiring new voters to provide proof of citizenship has become a leading election-year priority for Republicans raising the specter of noncitizens voting in the U.S., even though it’s already illegal to do so and research has shown that such voting is rare.

    Opponents also say that such a requirement would disenfranchise millions of Americans who do not have a birth certificate or passport readily available when they get a chance to register at their school, church or other venues when voter registration drives occur.

    But Johnson said it is a serious problem because even if a tiny percentage of noncitizens do vote, it could determine the outcome of an extremely close race. He noted that Republican Rep. Mariannette Miller-Meeks of Iowa won her seat back in 2020 by six votes.

    “It’s very, very serious stuff and that’s why we’re going to do the right thing,” Johnson said. “We’re going to responsibly fund the government and we’re going to stop noncitizens voting in elections.”

    Meanwhile, Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump weighed in again just hours before the vote. seemingly encouraging House Republicans to let a partial government shutdown begin at the end of the month unless they get the proof of citizenship mandate, referred to in the House as the SAVE Act.

    “If Republicans don’t get the SAVE Act, and every ounce of it, they should not agree to a Continuing Resolution in any way, shape, or form,” Trump said on the social media platform Truth Social.

    Johnson told reporters he was not ready to discuss an alternative plan to keep the government funded.

    “Let’s see what happens with the bill, all right. We’re on the field in the middle of the game. The quarterback is calling the play. We’re going to run the play,” Johnson said.

    House Democrats said the proof of citizenship mandate should not be part of the continuing resolution to keep the government funded and urged Johnson to work with them on a bill that can pass both chambers.

    “This is not going to become law,” said Rep. Pete Aguilar, D-Calif. “This is Republican theatrics that are meant to appease the most extreme members of their conference, to show them that they are working on something and that they’re continuing to support the former president of the United States in his bid to demonize immigrants.”

    Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said the only way to prevent a government shutdown was for both sides to work together on an agreement. He said the House vote announced by Johnson was doomed to fail.

    “The only thing that will accomplish is make clear that he’s running into a dead end,” Schumer said. “We must have a bipartisan plan instead.”

    The legislation would fund agencies generally at current levels while lawmakers work out their differences on a full-year spending agreement.

    Democrats, and some Republicans, are pushing for a short extension. A temporary fix would allow the current Congress to hammer out a final bill after the election and get it to Democratic President Joe Biden’s desk for his signature.

    But Johnson and some of the more conservative members of his conference are pushing for a six-month extension in the hopes that Republican nominee Donald Trump will win the election and give them more leverage when crafting the full-year bill.

    Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky declined to weigh in on how long to extend funding. He said Schumer and Johnson, ultimately, will have to work out a final agreement that can pass both chambers.

    “The one thing you cannot have is a government shutdown. It would be politically beyond stupid for us to do that right before the election because certainly we would get the blame,” McConnell said.

    Regardless of the vote outcome Wednesday, Republican lawmakers sought to allay any concerns there would be a shutdown at the end of the month. Rep. Mike Lawler, R-N.Y., said if the bill fails, then another stopgap bill should be voted on that would allow lawmakers to come back to Washington after the election and finish the appropriations work.

    “The bottom line is we’re not shutting the government down,” Lawler said.

    But Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries accused Republicans of engaging in a “shutdown effort.”

    “That’s not hyperbole,” Jeffries said. “It’s history. Because in the DNA of extreme MAGA Republicans has consistently been an effort to make extreme ransom demands of the American people, and if those extreme ransom demands are not met, shut down the government.”

    The House approved a bill with the proof of citizenship mandate back in July. Some Republicans who view the issue as popular with their constituents have been pushing for another chance to show their support for the measure.

    Many have investigated noncitizen voting and found little evidence of it, NBC News reported. The Brennan Center found just 30 suspected noncitizen votes amid 23.5 million votes in 2016, suggesting that suspected noncitizen votes accounted for 0.0001% of votes cast. Trump’s own election integrity commission disbanded without releasing evidence of voter fraud, even though he’d claimed 3 million undocumented immigrants had voted in 2016 costing him the popular vote.

    ]]>
    Fri, Sep 13 2024 09:50:24 AM Fri, Sep 13 2024 10:07:06 AM
    Congress to get increased security for election certification on Jan. 6 https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/politics/jan-6-election-certification-extra-security-prevent-another-riot/3967992/ 3967992 post 9879353 Photo By Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images https://media.nbcphiladelphia.com/2024/09/GettyImages-1230600966.jpg?quality=85&strip=all&fit=300,200 In an effort to prevent another riot like the one on Jan. 6, 2021, the Homeland Security secretary has designated the congressional count and certification of the presidential election as a national special security event overseen by the Secret Service.

    Both political parties’ national conventions, the presidential inauguration and the U.N. General Assembly already have this designation, but it’s the first time the Jan. 6 vote count and certification have received it.

    The Secret Service said Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas made the designation following a request from the mayor of Washington, D.C. The move means these are particularly high-profile events that might be targets for terrorists or criminals.

    The Secret Service is in charge of running security for such events in a planning process that kicks off many months in advance. A steering committee for the Jan. 6 certification has been formed and will begin meeting in the coming weeks, the Secret Service said.

    The goal is to improve planning and coordination, especially when it comes to pulling in resources across the federal government.

    “National Special Security Events are events of the highest national significance,” Eric Ranaghan, the special agent in charge of the U.S. Secret Service’s Dignitary Protective Division, said in a statement. The agency and its partners “are committed to developing and implementing a comprehensive and integrated security plan to ensure the safety and security of this event and its participants,” he said.

    Rioters seeking to overturn the results of the 2020 election descended on Capitol Hill on Jan. 6, 2021. They scaled walls, shattered windows, beat police and hunted down lawmakers in the halls of Congress. About 140 police officers were injured that day. One officer collapsed and died. Four others later died by suicide. A Trump supporter seeking to climb through a broken window was shot and killed by authorities.

    In the aftermath of the riot, 1,500 criminal cases have been brought to court with more than 900 people pleading guilty and roughly 200 convicted.

    House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries said Thursday that House Democrats are “committed to protecting the democracy, we’re committed to free and fair elections and we’re committed to the peaceful transfer of power that will begin on Jan. 6.”

    Asked if the special security designation was needed, he said that given what happened in 2021, “and the refusal by many extreme MAGA Republicans to stop something like that from ever happening again … this designation by national security professionals seems to have been necessary.”

    It’s a high-profile job for an agency struggling to defend its reputation in the wake of the assassination attempt against Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump on July 13 in Butler, Pennsylvania.

    The Secret Service has been criticized for failing to secure the building that Thomas Matthew Crooks climbed on top of and opened fire as Trump spoke. A bullet nicked Trump on the ear. The agency’s director, Kim Cheatle, resigned after a heated congressional hearing, and the agency’s decisions and planning are the subject of multiple investigations.

    ___

    AP Writer Lisa Mascaro contributed reporting.

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    Thu, Sep 12 2024 05:31:52 PM Thu, Sep 12 2024 05:33:05 PM
    Now you can not only vote in US Congressional elections, but bet on them, too https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/local/now-you-can-not-only-vote-in-us-congressional-elections-but-bet-on-them-too/3967774/ 3967774 post 9867536 Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images https://media.nbcphiladelphia.com/2024/09/GettyImages-2170346666.jpg?quality=85&strip=all&fit=300,169 People began betting on which political party would win control of Congress in the November elections within minutes of a judge’s ruling Thursday allowing the bets — the only ones to be legally approved by a U.S. jurisdiction.

    New York startup company Kalshi began taking what amounts to bets on the outcome of the November congressional elections after a judge refused to block them from doing so.

    The ruling enabled the company, at least temporarily, to offer prediction contracts — essentially yes-or-no bets — on which party will win control of the Senate and the House in November.

    “The Kalshi community just made history, and I know we are only getting started,” said Tarek Mansour, a co-founder of the company. “Now is finally the time to allow these markets to show the world just how powerful they are at providing signal amidst the noise, and giving us more truth about what the future holds.”

    It was not clear whether the company intends to offer bets beyond the ones posted Thursday for congressional races, including potentially taking bets on the presidential race.

    It also was not immediately clear whether sports books or online casinos would seek to offer similar political bets in light of the ruling.

    Prices on Kalshi’s so-called predictive contracts varied throughout the early afternoon. As of mid-afternoon, a bet on the Republicans to win control of the Senate was priced at 76 cents; a $100 bet would pay $129. A bet on the Democrats to win control of the House was priced at 63 cents, with a $100 bet paying out $154.

    It was not clear how long such betting might last; the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, which last year prohibited the company from offering them, said it would appeal the ruling as quickly as possible.

    Better Markets, a nonprofit organization that says it advocates for the public interest in financial markets, called the development “a dangerous move that opens the floodgates to unprecedented gambling on U.S. elections, eroding public trust in both markets and democracy.”

    Contrasting his client with foreign companies who take bets from American customers on U.S. elections without U.S. government approval, Roth said Kalshi is trying to do things the right way, under government regulation.

    “It invested significantly in these markets,” he said during Thursday’s hearing. “They spent millions of dollars. It would be perverse if all that investment went up in smoke.”

    But Raagnee Beri, an attorney for the commission, said allowing such bets could invite malicious activities designed to influence the outcome of elections and undermine already fragile public confidence in the voting process.

    “These contracts would give market participants a $100 million incentive to influence the market on the election,” she said. “There is a very severe public interest threat.”

    She used the analogy of someone who has taken an investment position in corn commodities.

    “Somebody puts out misinformation about a drought, that a drought is coming,” she said. “That could move the market on the price of corn. The same thing could happen here. The commission is not required to suffer the flood before building a dam.”

    Thursday’s ruling will not be the last word on the case. The commission said it will appeal on an emergency basis to a Washington D.C. circuit court, and asked the judge to stay her ruling for 24 hours. But the judge declined, leaving no prohibition in place on the company offering election bets, at least in the very near term.

    The company already offers yes-no positions on political topics including whether a government shutdown will happen this year, whether a new Supreme Court justice will be confirmed this year, and whether President Joe Biden’s approval rating will be above or below a certain level by the end of the year.

    The Kalshi bets are technically not the first to be offered legally on U.S. elections. West Virginia permitted such bets for one hour in April 2020 before reversing itself and canceling those betting markets, deciding it had not done the proper research beforehand.

    ___

    Follow Wayne Parry on X at www.twitter.com/WayneParryAC

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    Thu, Sep 12 2024 03:42:57 PM Fri, Sep 13 2024 08:17:05 AM
    Biden to host ‘Quad' leaders from Australia, India, Japan in Delaware https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/politics/biden-host-australia-india-japan-leaders-delaware/3967792/ 3967792 post 9878805 Zhang Xiaoyou - Pool/Getty Images https://media.nbcphiladelphia.com/2024/09/GettyImages-1398920439_023a22.jpg?quality=85&strip=all&fit=300,200

    What to Know

    • President Joe Biden will host the leaders of Australia, India and Japan next weekend in his Wilmington, Delaware, hometown, the White House announced, as he looks to burnish his legacy before leaving office in January.
    • Biden was the first American president to host a summit of the so-called Quad leaders in 2021, with annual summits since then, as the U.S. looked to pivot its foreign policy focus to the Indo-Pacific region to counter China.
    • This will be the first time he has hosted foreign leaders in Delaware during his presidency, as Biden has been spending more time in his home state since dropping his bid for reelection in July.

    President Joe Biden will host the leaders of Australia, India and Japan next weekend in his Wilmington, Delaware, hometown, the White House announced, as he looks to burnish his legacy before leaving office in January.

    Biden, 81, was the first American president to host a summit of the so-called Quad leaders in 2021, with annual summits since then, as the U.S. looked to pivot its foreign policy focus to the Indo-Pacific region to counter China. This will be the first time Biden has hosted foreign leaders in Delaware during his presidency, as he has been spending more time in his home state since dropping his bid for reelection in July.

    Press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said Biden’s decision to host Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida in Wilmington was “a reflection of his deep personal relationships with each of the Quad Leaders, and the importance of the Quad to all of our countries.”

    “The Quad Leaders Summit will focus on bolstering the strategic convergence among our countries, advancing our shared vision of a free and open Indo-Pacific region and delivering concrete benefits for partners in the Indo-Pacific in key areas,” Jean-Pierre said.

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    Thu, Sep 12 2024 02:29:59 PM Thu, Sep 12 2024 02:30:08 PM
    Debate was ‘eye opener' in suburban Philadelphia and Kamala Harris got closer look https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/decision-2024/debate-eye-opener-bucks-county-kamala-harris/3967091/ 3967091 post 9874864 Getty Images https://media.nbcphiladelphia.com/2024/09/GettyImages-2170587742.jpg?quality=85&strip=all&fit=300,200

    What to Know

    • In suburban Philadelphia’s Bucks County, a critical area in a vital state, the presidential debate between Kamala Harris and Donald Trump is producing hard thinking about what to do in November.
    • Millions of Americans elsewhere have made up their minds but in purple Pennsylvania, plenty of voting choices are still in play.
    • There’s a first-time voter backing Trump, fed up with high prices; a Democrat who can’t shake off Trump bringing up false statements about immigrants eating pets; a truly undecided Republican voter; and a lifelong Republican who found the debate to be an “eye opener” and plans to vote for Harris.

    The presidential debate this week was the final affront to Rosie Torres’ lifelong Republicanism. She said her allegiance to Donald Trump, already strained by his stand on abortion, snapped in the former president’s “eye opener” encounter with Kamala Harris.

    It’s time to put “country before party,” Torres, 60, said Wednesday in Bristol, a riverfront town in suburban Philadelphia. Trump left her frustrated after his appearance recently at Arlington National Cemetery when a member of his staff pushed a cemetery official, she said.

    “I still was willing to vote for Donald Trump,” Torres said. “But you know, I think that what he did at the cemetery for the veterans — that was very disrespectful. I feel like our country is being disrespected.”

    In Bucks County, a critical area in a vital swing state, the debate is producing a lot of hard thinking about what to do in November. Millions of Americans elsewhere have made up their minds but in purple Pennsylvania, plenty of voting choices are still in play.

    In interviews in Bristol and Langhorne, another longtime Republican came away from the debate intrigued but not sold on Harris, a young first-time voter is going for Trump, and a Democrat is still trying to shake the image in his head of people eating pets after Trump’s “moronic” talking point on that subject Tuesday night.

    A closer look at what voters in a key part of the country are thinking after what could be the only presidential debate:

    She’s still shopping

    There’s Mary Nolan, 70, of Bensalem, a registered Republican for 50 years who voted for Hillary Clinton in 2016 and Trump in 2020. She has more thinking to do after a debate in which Harris both impressed and frustrated her.

    “I wasn’t happy with Biden-Trump,” she said of the options before President Joe Biden abandoned his reelection campaign. “I didn’t feel we had any good choices. And I’m still not sure we do. We might. But I still want to see more about Kamala Harris.”

    She said she and her husband, who’s registered as a Democrat, split their party registrations so they could have a say as a family in primary elections. Immigration, the economy (she said she had just paid $6 for a pound of butter) and the infrastructure bill that Biden signed into law were her top issues.

    “I like that Kamala Harris does say I am going to be the president for everyone,” Nolan said. “I don’t think our politicians say that often.”

    She figures she’ll make her voting decision by the end of October, just days before the election. Meantime, she’s aggressive about collecting information.

    “I take different opinions from all over. I don’t do any blogs. It’s simply news. Different interest groups like AARP.”

    Her political ideology? “I think the world is changing fast, and I’m still in my values from 1960,” Nolan said.

    What values?

    “Family, home, morals. You know, our kids don’t have the upbringing that you did or I did because the streets are different now. I think if someone would say, you know, this is what I’m going to do to improve life in the United States, I definitely would vote for them.”

    She said she thought Harris had a good debate, but dodged some things.

    “I did not like that she avoided questions. She talked around them when they asked her direct questions about abortion. There was one about abortion. There was another about immigration. And there were a couple that said, hey, you’ve been here three and a half years, but you haven’t done those things that you’re saying are so important. Why not? She ran off into her talking points and never gave a direct answer.”

    But Harris gave her a good impression. Trump did not.

    “I think yesterday, definitely Kamala Harris presented herself very well. She’s dignified. … She would be a good representative of our country.”

    Trump? “I think his policies are good. I just want a more stable, dignified president.” She wants “someone that doesn’t yell and scream and call people names.”

    This Democrat saw history unfold

    Terry Culleton, 68, of Langhorne, Pennsylvania, is a retired high school English literature teacher and was reading “Autocracy, Inc.” by Anne Applebaum at a cafe Wednesday morning. His support for labor, then for civil rights and human rights, made him a Democrat.

    He thought Harris held her own against Trump and articulated her plans well.

    But what really stuck with him was Trump’s false comments about immigrants in Ohio eating pets.

    “So moronic a thing to say and to repeat that I just can’t get it out of my head that somebody would go on national TV and state that,” he said.

    He said he got a sense of history unfolding watching the debate last night.

    “I think it’s democracy versus something close to totalitarianism. I think it’s a matter of supporting democratic governments as opposed to supporting the kind of governments that (Russian President Vladimir) Putin is trying to export, which Trump has no problem with, as far as I can tell.”

    Inflation led her to Trump

    Kelli Surline of Langhorne was at a café with her fiancé and young daughter who wore an Eagles kelly green T-shirt. She described herself as politically unengaged until the pinch of higher prices got to her. She didn’t watch the debate, in part, because she’s made up her mind.

    “I’m 28 years old and I’ve never seen the country this bad ever,” she said. “So I made the choice to get my voter’s registration, and I’m definitely voting for Trump.”

    She talked about how difficult it has been to get ahead.

    “We wanted to get a place together,” Surline said, motioning to Geoffrey Trush, 40, her fiancé. “We’re not able to do that.” Instead, she’s living with her mom. Unaffordable prices make it “a struggle every week.”

    He was once a Democrat

    Ron Soto, 86, of Levittown, Pennsylvania, is a longtime Trump supporter and retired tractor-trailer driver and Army veteran who left the Democratic Party in the 1990s for the GOP after coming to realize he disagreed with Bill and Hillary Clinton’s positions.

    He said he tuned into the debate Tuesday, his hound dog, Sam, by his side, after watching the Phillies game.

    Illegal immigration is a major issue for him and Harris didn’t win him over.

    “The biggest issue is I don’t like her, and I don’t like Joe Biden.”

    Saying he served in the Army from 1955 to 1963, Soto asked: “What the hell did I stick my neck out for? Why? So you can give it away? The Democrats can open the gates, the floodgates, and tell the whole world. You’re welcome. Come on in.” He added: “These people have ruined this country.”

    She had her fill of politics

    Christine Desumma, 50, a former Trump voter and the owner of a salon on Bristol’s quaint shop-lined street, expressed frustration with both parties and said she won’t be voting at all in November. She said her taxes were lower when Trump was in office and recalled the sting of COVID-19 shutdowns.

    She got fed up, particularly with social media and Facebook. Online debates, she said, were driving a wedge within her own family, and she’s washing her hands of it.

    “I just made the decision that I’m not going to vote and I don’t want to hear it,” she said. “Now I choose to not watch, not pay attention.” She’s found another pursuit.

    “I’m studying yoga,” she said. “I got myself back.”

    ]]>
    Thu, Sep 12 2024 06:31:26 AM Thu, Sep 12 2024 06:31:36 AM
    Court could clear the way for Americans to legally bet on US elections https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/politics/court-could-clear-the-way-for-americans-to-legally-bet-on-us-elections/3966612/ 3966612 post 9478607 Getty Images https://media.nbcphiladelphia.com/2024/04/GettyImages-1440337651.jpg?quality=85&strip=all&fit=300,223

    What to Know

    • Amid the explosion of legal gambling in the U.S., some things have remained off-limits, including betting on the outcome of U.S. elections. But that could be about to change.
    • A federal judge in Washington has struck down a decision by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission to prohibit a company from offering what amounts to bets on the outcome of Congressional elections.
    • But the matter is on hold at least through a planned hearing Thursday involving a New York company’s plan to take what amounts to bets on control of Congress in this fall’s elections.

    Amid the explosion of legal gambling in the United States, some things have remained off-limits, including betting on the outcome of U.S. elections.

    But that could be about to change.

    A federal judge in Washington has struck down a decision by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission to prohibit a company from offering what amounts to bets on the outcome of Congressional elections.

    Last Friday, U.S. District Court Judge Jia Cobb ruled in favor of New York-based Kalshi, but did not detail her reasoning.

    The judge paused the matter until after a planned hearing Thursday, when the court will presumably outline the rationale for its decision. It also could rule on the agency’s request for a two-week delay in the case.

    “The commission lost, fair and square, on the law,” Kalshi wrote in a court filing. “It should not be allowed to snatch a procedural victory from the jaws of defeat by running out the clock” until the Congressional elections happen this fall.

    “As the election nears, Kalshi and the public deserve access to the contracts that the CFTC has blocked for too long already,” the company wrote.

    No U.S. jurisdiction has authorized betting on elections, and several states explicitly ban it.

    But such bets are readily available to gamblers who use foreign web sites; the practice of elections betting is widespread in Europe.

    In a Sept. 2023 decision, the commission told Kalshi it could not offer yes-no prediction bets on which party would control the House of Representatives and the Senate, ruling that it constituted illegal gambling activity that is contrary to the public interest.

    Such bets “could potentially be used in ways that would have an adverse effect on the integrity of elections, or the perception of integrity of elections — for example, by creating monetary incentives to vote for particular candidates,” the agency wrote.

    Kalshi officials did not respond to requests for comment Tuesday and Wednesday. An attorney representing them in the case referred an inquiry back to the company. Likewise, attorneys representing the commission did not respond to a message seeking comment.

    Had the judge not agreed to pause the matter until at least Thursday, Kalshi would have been free to list and accept money from customers on its Congressional markets.

    It was not immediately clear whether it or other companies would also seek to offer bets on other elections, including the presidential race.

    In 2020, several of the country’s major sportsbooks told The Associated Press they would be eager to take bets on the U.S. presidential elections if it were legal to do so.

    Vice President Kamala Harris was listed Wednesday as a slight favorite to win the election on the websites of many European bookmakers, who gave her a 54% to 55% probability of prevailing following her performance in Tuesday night’s debate.

    ]]>
    Wed, Sep 11 2024 01:50:48 PM Wed, Sep 11 2024 01:51:01 PM
    Fact-checking the presidential debate between Trump and Harris https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/politics/fact-checking-the-presidential-debate-between-trump-and-harris/3966155/ 3966155 post 9873978 Doug Mills/The New York Times/Bloomberg via Getty Images https://media.nbcphiladelphia.com/2024/09/GettyImages-2170586272.jpg?quality=85&strip=all&fit=300,200 The House on Wednesday rejected Speaker Mike Johnson’s proposal that would have linked temporary funding for the federal government with a mandate that states require proof of citizenship when people register to vote.

    Next steps on government funding are uncertain. Lawmakers are not close to completing work on the dozen annual appropriations bills that will fund federal agencies during the next fiscal year, so they’ll need to approve a stopgap measure to prevent a partial shutdown when that budget year begins Oct. 1.

    The vote was 220-202. Now, Johnson will likely pursue a Plan B to avoid a partial shutdown, though he was not ready before the vote to share details of such a proposal.

    Johnson pulled the bill from consideration last week because it lacked the votes to pass. He worked through the weekend to win support from fellow Republicans but was unable to overcome objections about spending levels from some members, while others said they don’t favor any continuing resolutions, insisting that Congress return to passing the dozen annual appropriations bills on time and one at a time. Democrats overwhelmingly opposed the measure.

    Requiring new voters to provide proof of citizenship has become a leading election-year priority for Republicans raising the specter of noncitizens voting in the U.S., even though it’s already illegal to do so and research has shown that such voting is rare.

    Opponents also say that such a requirement would disenfranchise millions of Americans who do not have a birth certificate or passport readily available when they get a chance to register at their school, church or other venues when voter registration drives occur.

    But Johnson said it is a serious problem because even if a tiny percentage of noncitizens do vote, it could determine the outcome of an extremely close race. He noted that Republican Rep. Mariannette Miller-Meeks of Iowa won her seat back in 2020 by six votes.

    “It’s very, very serious stuff and that’s why we’re going to do the right thing,” Johnson said. “We’re going to responsibly fund the government and we’re going to stop noncitizens voting in elections.”

    Meanwhile, Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump weighed in again just hours before the vote. seemingly encouraging House Republicans to let a partial government shutdown begin at the end of the month unless they get the proof of citizenship mandate, referred to in the House as the SAVE Act.

    “If Republicans don’t get the SAVE Act, and every ounce of it, they should not agree to a Continuing Resolution in any way, shape, or form,” Trump said on the social media platform Truth Social.

    Johnson told reporters he was not ready to discuss an alternative plan to keep the government funded.

    “Let’s see what happens with the bill, all right. We’re on the field in the middle of the game. The quarterback is calling the play. We’re going to run the play,” Johnson said.

    House Democrats said the proof of citizenship mandate should not be part of the continuing resolution to keep the government funded and urged Johnson to work with them on a bill that can pass both chambers.

    “This is not going to become law,” said Rep. Pete Aguilar, D-Calif. “This is Republican theatrics that are meant to appease the most extreme members of their conference, to show them that they are working on something and that they’re continuing to support the former president of the United States in his bid to demonize immigrants.”

    Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said the only way to prevent a government shutdown was for both sides to work together on an agreement. He said the House vote announced by Johnson was doomed to fail.

    “The only thing that will accomplish is make clear that he’s running into a dead end,” Schumer said. “We must have a bipartisan plan instead.”

    The legislation would fund agencies generally at current levels while lawmakers work out their differences on a full-year spending agreement.

    Democrats, and some Republicans, are pushing for a short extension. A temporary fix would allow the current Congress to hammer out a final bill after the election and get it to Democratic President Joe Biden’s desk for his signature.

    But Johnson and some of the more conservative members of his conference are pushing for a six-month extension in the hopes that Republican nominee Donald Trump will win the election and give them more leverage when crafting the full-year bill.

    Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky declined to weigh in on how long to extend funding. He said Schumer and Johnson, ultimately, will have to work out a final agreement that can pass both chambers.

    “The one thing you cannot have is a government shutdown. It would be politically beyond stupid for us to do that right before the election because certainly we would get the blame,” McConnell said.

    Regardless of the vote outcome Wednesday, Republican lawmakers sought to allay any concerns there would be a shutdown at the end of the month. Rep. Mike Lawler, R-N.Y., said if the bill fails, then another stopgap bill should be voted on that would allow lawmakers to come back to Washington after the election and finish the appropriations work.

    “The bottom line is we’re not shutting the government down,” Lawler said.

    But Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries accused Republicans of engaging in a “shutdown effort.”

    “That’s not hyperbole,” Jeffries said. “It’s history. Because in the DNA of extreme MAGA Republicans has consistently been an effort to make extreme ransom demands of the American people, and if those extreme ransom demands are not met, shut down the government.”

    The House approved a bill with the proof of citizenship mandate back in July. Some Republicans who view the issue as popular with their constituents have been pushing for another chance to show their support for the measure.

    Many have investigated noncitizen voting and found little evidence of it, NBC News reported. The Brennan Center found just 30 suspected noncitizen votes amid 23.5 million votes in 2016, suggesting that suspected noncitizen votes accounted for 0.0001% of votes cast. Trump’s own election integrity commission disbanded without releasing evidence of voter fraud, even though he’d claimed 3 million undocumented immigrants had voted in 2016 costing him the popular vote.

    ]]>
    Wed, Sep 11 2024 01:10:51 AM Wed, Sep 11 2024 02:13:04 PM
    Harris, Trump detail their starkly different visions in a tense, high-stakes debate in Philly https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/decision-2024/philadelphia-presidential-debate-road-closures-live-updates/3964824/ 3964824 post 9873435 Getty Images https://media.nbcphiladelphia.com/2024/09/GettyImages-2171250794.jpg?quality=85&strip=all&fit=300,204

    What to Know

    • Donald Trump and Kamala Harris faced each other on the debate stage for the first and possibly the last time. The Democratic vice president opened Tuesday night’s debate at Philadelphia’s National Constitution Center by marching across the stage to Trump’s lectern to shake his hand. The exchange set the tone for the next 90 minutes.
    • Harris controlled the conversation at times, baiting Trump with jabs at his economic policy, his refusal to concede his 2020 election loss and even his performance at his rallies.
    • Trump was measured early on but grew more annoyed as the debate went on. While Trump was often on defense, he did drive the core message of his campaign that inflation and immigration are hammering Americans.
    • During the debate, hundreds of pro-Palestinian protesters marched outside the National Constitution Center.

    Kamala Harris and Donald Trump squared off in the presidential debate at the National Constitution Center in Philadelphia Tuesday night. Get a full recap of the debate, the events leading up to it and the aftermath below:

    ]]>
    Tue, Sep 10 2024 12:22:19 PM Wed, Sep 11 2024 01:44:08 AM
    NJ Democrat George Helmy sworn in as replacement for Bob Menendez in US Senate https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/politics/nj-democrat-george-helmy-senate-menendez/3964291/ 3964291 post 9870600 AP Photo/Rod Lamkey, Jr. https://media.nbcphiladelphia.com/2024/09/AP24253809535803.jpg?quality=85&strip=all&fit=300,200 New Jersey has a new U.S. senator after the August resignation of Democrat Bob Menendez.

    Sen. George Helmy, a Democrat and former chief of staff to New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy, was sworn in on Monday and will serve in office for about two months until the November election. Democratic Rep. Andy Kim and Republican hotelier Curtis Bashaw are vying for the seat in November and the winner will immediately replace Helmy.

    Menendez resigned in August after he was convicted on charges that he used his influence to meddle in three different state and federal criminal investigations. Prosecutors said he helped one bribe-paying friend get a multimillion-dollar deal with a Qatari investment fund and another keep a contract to provide religious certification for meat bound for Egypt.

    Murphy appointed Helmy to the temporary role after Menendez announced his intention to resign. Murphy said he picked Helmy because he understands the role after serving as an aide to New Jersey U.S. Sen. Cory Booker and the late New Jersey U.S. Sen. Frank Lautenberg.

    Booker, now the state’s senior senator, stood with Helmy as he was given the oath of office by Washington Sen. Patty Murray, who is the senior-most Democrat and serves as Senate president pro tempore.

    Helmy, 44, served as Murphy’s chief of staff from 2019 until 2023 and then served as an executive at one of the state’s largest health care providers, RWJBarnabas Health. He previously served as Booker’s state director in the Senate. He is the son of Egyptian parents who immigrated to New Jersey

    After he was sworn in, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer welcomed Helmy to the chamber and said that he was making history as the first member of the Coptic Orthodox Church to become a senator. Dozens of Helmy’s friends and family watched from the gallery above.

    “We wish him nothing but success and are ready to assist him however necessary in the weeks and months to come,” Schumer said.

    When Murphy announced his appointment, Helmy said he had never sought and would never seek elected office. He said he would focus on serving the public during his short stint in the Senate.

    “New Jersey deserves its full voice and representation in the whole of the United States Senate,” he said.

    Menendez was also convicted of taking actions that benefited Egypt’s government in exchange for bribes, including providing details on personnel at the U.S. Embassy in Cairo and ghostwriting a letter to fellow senators regarding lifting a hold on military aid to Egypt. FBI agents also said they found stacks of gold bars and $480,000 hidden in Menendez’s house.

    Menendez has denied all of the allegations against him and has said he’s planning to appeal the convictions.

    ]]>
    Tue, Sep 10 2024 08:12:31 AM Tue, Sep 10 2024 08:50:44 AM
    Delaware Democrats back Sarah McBride's bid to become first openly transgender person in US Congress https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/decision-2024/delaware-2024-primary-election/3964691/ 3964691 post 5533734 EFE https://media.nbcphiladelphia.com/2020/11/sarah-mcbride.jpg?quality=85&strip=all&fit=300,168 Delaware in November could elect the first openly transgender member of Congress and the state’s first Black U.S. senator.

    On Tuesday, voters in the Blue Hen State were deciding their fall nominees in several political contests, including picking Matt Meyer, the chief executive of Delaware’s most populous county, in the Democratic primary for governor.

    State Sen. Sarah McBride, meanwhile, won the Democratic primary for Delaware’s lone seat in the U.S. House of Representatives and now has the chance to make history as the first openly transgender person elected to Congress.

    “My heart is filled with hope and gratitude,” McBride told The Associated Press. “I’m grateful, I’m hopeful and I’m motivated.”

    McBride said Tuesday’s results reflect the “goodness” of Delawareans who judge a candidate “based on ability, not identity.”

    “I’m not running to make history,” McBride said. “I’m running to make historic progress for Delawareans.”

    “The only identity I want to be known for is my identity as a proud Delawarean,” she said, adding that she wasn’t saying her identity doesn’t matter. “It’s just one part of who I am.”

    McBride won Tuesday’s primary over businessmen Earl Cooper and Elias Weir, neither of whom reported raising any money for their campaigns. Cooper is a political newcomer, while Weir finished dead last in a 2016 congressional primary with less than 1% of the vote.

    McBride, meanwhile, raised almost $3 million in contributions from around the country. McBride achieved national recognition at the 2016 Democratic National Convention as the first openly transgender person to address a major party convention in the United States.

    McBride will face James Whalen IIII, a retired state police officer and construction company owner from Millsboro, who won the GOP primary race against Donyale Hall, a Dover businesswoman and a Gulf War-era veteran of the U.S. Air Force. Democrats have held the seat since 2010.

    The House seat is being vacated by Rep. Lisa Blunt Rochester, who has no primary opponent as she seeks the U.S. Senate seat being vacated by Democratic Sen. Tom Carper, who held the seat since 2001. With a victory in November Blunt Rochester would be the state’s first Black U.S. senator.

    Meanwhile, in state legislative contests, Kamela Smith knocked off House Speaker Valerie Longhurst. Smith is director of community education and engagement for ChristianaCare, Delaware’s largest hospital system. On her campaign website she says she “believes in lifting up and speaking for the silenced, the marginalized, the voices of those vulnerable who don’t often get heard in Legislative Hall.”

    Here’s a closer look at other key races:

    Democratic gubernatorial primary

    Meyer defeated Lt. Gov. Bethany Hall-Long and former state Environmental Secretary Collin O’Mara in Tuesday’s election. Meyer led all candidates in fundraising, but his campaign also was helped by a scandal involving Hall-Long.

    Meyer will likely be considered the favorite in a November general election contest to succeed Gov. John Carney. He will face state Rep. Mike Ramone, who is the current GOP minority leader and won in a three-way race in his party’s primary.

    Hall-Long has held public office since winning a state House seat in 2002, but she has been enmeshed in a campaign scandal that led several top staffers to resign and prompted election officials to commission a forensic audit.

    The audit found that, during seven years as his wife’s campaign treasurer, Dana Long wrote 112 checks to himself or cash. The checks totaled just under $300,000 and should have been reported as campaign expenditures. Instead, 109 were not disclosed in finance reports, and the other four, payable to Dana Long, were reported as being written to someone else. Hall-Long has said the checks reflect repayment of loans that she made to her campaign but did not report.

    “I think Delawareans are looking for a new way forward,” Meyer told The Associated Press on Tuesday night before addressing supporters at a watch party in Wilmington.

    Meyer said Delaware voters are looking for leaders with “honesty and accountability,” though he declined to speculate on how much of an effect Hall-Long’s campaign finance scandal played in the Democratic primary.

    “We’re looking forward, not back, and we know that our state’s future is brighter together,” he said.

    His Republican opponent Ramone was elected to the state House in 2008 and is known for his willingness to work across party lines. He has won reelection several times in a district where Democrats heavily outnumber Republicans.

    On the campaign trail, Ramone has argued that restoring political balance to state government, where Democrats control the executive and legislative branches, would benefit Delaware voters and taxpayers. He nevertheless faces an uphill battle against Meyer, given the advantage that Democrats have in statewide voter registration numbers.

    Democratic primary for Wilmington mayor

    Carney easily won the Democratic nomination for mayor of Wilmington and will become chief executive of the state’s largest city.

    Carney, who is prohibited by law from seeking a third term as governor, defeated former Wilmington city Treasurer Velda Jones-Potter on Tuesday. He will face no opposition in November.

    “It really came down to my experience and the trust that people had developed over many, many years over what I said was going to do,” Carney said.

    While taking a step down on the political ladder, Carney will remain in a chief executive role as mayor, given that he faces no opposition in November. Carney has said he wants to build on the investments his administration has made in Wilmington, with a focus on improving public schools, expanding affordable housing and helping small businesses.

    ]]>
    Tue, Sep 10 2024 06:44:34 AM Wed, Sep 11 2024 06:18:43 PM
    The Harris-Trump debate becomes the 2024 election's latest landmark event https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/national-international/harris-trump-debate-becomes-2024-elections-latest-landmark-event/3964666/ 3964666 post 9866099 AP Photo https://media.nbcphiladelphia.com/2024/09/AP24251607643180.jpg?quality=85&strip=all&fit=300,209 Kamala Harris and Donald Trump will meet for the first time face-to-face Tuesday night for perhaps their only debate, a high-pressure opportunity to showcase their starkly different visions for the country after a tumultuous campaign summer.

    The event, at 9 p.m. Eastern in Philadelphia, will offer Americans their most detailed look at a campaign that’s dramatically changed since the last debate in June. In rapid fashion, President Joe Biden bowed out of the race after his disastrous performance, Trump survived an assassination attempt and bothsides chose their running mates.

    Harris is intent on demonstrating that she can press the Democratic case against Trump better than Biden did. Trump, in turn, is trying to paint the vice president as an out-of-touch liberal while trying to win over voters skeptical he should return to the White House.

    Trump, 78, has struggled to adapt to Harris, 59, who is the first woman, Black person and person of South Asian descent to serve as vice president. The Republican former president has at times resorted to invoking racial and gender stereotypes, frustrating allies who want Trump to focus instead on policy differences with Harris.

    The vice president, for her part, will try to claim a share of credit for the Biden administration’s accomplishments while also addressing its low moments and explaining her shifts away from more liberal positions she took in the past.

    The debate will subject Harris, who has sat for only a single formal interview in the past six weeks, to a rare moment of sustained questioning.

    “If she performs great, it’s going to be a nice surprise for the Democrats and they’ll rejoice,” said Ari Fleischer, a Republican communications strategist and former press secretary to President George W. Bush. “If she flops, like Joe Biden did, it could break this race wide open. So there’s more riding on it.”

    Tim Hogan, who led Sen. Amy Klobuchar’s debate preparations in the 2020 Democratic presidential primaries, said Harris, a former California attorney general, would bring a “prosecutor’s instincts to the debate stage.”

    “That is a very strong quality in that setting: having someone who knows how to land a punch and how to translate it,” Hogan said.

    The first early ballots of the presidential race will go out just hours after the debate, hosted by ABC News. Absentee ballots are set to be sent out beginning Wednesday in Alabama.

    Trump plans to hit Harris as too liberal

    Trump and his campaign have spotlighted far-left positions she took during her failed 2020 presidential bid. He’s been assisted in his informal debate prep sessions by Tulsi Gabbard, the former Democratic congresswoman and presidential candidate who tore into Harris during their primary debates.

    Harris has sought to defend her shifts away from liberal causes to more moderate stances on fracking, expanding Medicare for all and mandatory gun buyback programs — and even backing away from her position that plastic straws should be banned — as pragmatism, insisting that her “values remain the same.” Her campaign on Monday published a page on its website listing her positions on key issues.

    The former president has argued a Harris presidency is a threat to the safety of the country, highlighting that Biden tapped her to address the influx of migrants as the Republican once again makes dark warnings about immigration and those in the country illegally central to his campaign. He has sought to portray a Harris presidency as the continuation of Biden’s still-unpopular administration, particularly his economic record, as voters still feel the bite of inflation even as it has cooled in recent months.

    Trump’s team insist his tone won’t be any different facing a female opponent.

    “President Trump is going to be himself,” senior adviser Jason Miller told reporters during a phone call Monday.

    Gabbard, who was also on the call, added that Trump “respects women and doesn’t feel the need to be patronizing or to speak to women in any other way than he would speak to a man.”

    His advisers suggest Harris has a tendency to express herself in a “word salad” of meaningless phrases, prompting Trump to say last week that his debate strategy was to “let her talk.”

    The former president frequently plows into rambling remarks that detour from his policy points. He regularly makes false claims about the last election, attacks a lengthy list of enemies and opponents working against him, offers praise for foreign strongmen and comments about race, like his false claim in July that Harris recently “happened to turn Black.”

    Harris wants to argue Trump is unstable and unfit

    The vice president, who has been the Biden administration’s most outspoken supporter of abortion access after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in 2022, is expected to focus on calling out Trump’s inconsistencies around women’s reproductive care, including his announcement that he will vote to protect Florida’s six-week abortion ban in a statewide referendum this fall.

    Harris was also set to try to portray herself as a steadier hand to lead the nation and safeguard its alliances, as war rages in Ukraine more than two years after Russia’s invasion and Israel’s war with Hamas in Gaza drags on with no end in sight.

    She is likely to warn that Trump presents a threat to democracy, from his attempts in 2020 to overturn his loss in the presidential election, spurring his angry supporters to attack the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, through comments he made as recently as last weekend. Trump on social media issued yet another message of retribution, threatening that if he wins he will jail “those involved in unscrupulous behavior,” including lawyers, political operatives, donors, voters and election officials.

    Harris has spent the better part of the last five days ensconced in debate preparations in Pennsylvania, where she participated in hours-long mock sessions with a Trump stand-in. Ahead of the debate, she told radio host Rickey Smiley that she was workshopping how to respond if Trump lies.

    “There’s no floor for him in terms of how low he will go,” she said.

    ___

    AP Polling Editor Amelia Thomson-DeVeaux in Washington and Associated Press writers Thomas Beaumont in Las Vegas, Bill Barrow in Atlanta and Josh Boak in Pittsburgh contributed to this report.

    ]]>
    Tue, Sep 10 2024 05:23:12 AM Tue, Sep 10 2024 06:56:10 AM
    Philly officials promise ‘bigger,' ‘better' protections for upcoming presidential election https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/local/philly-officials-promise-bigger-better-protections-election-day/3963805/ 3963805 post 7543058 Mark Makela/Getty Images https://media.nbcphiladelphia.com/2022/11/GettyImages-1244618261.jpg?quality=85&strip=all&fit=300,200 In a gathering at the National Constitution Center — where Republican and former President Donald Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris, a Democrat, will face off in a debate on Tuesday — Philadelphia District Attorney Larry Krasner joined officials in law enforcement and voting on Monday to discuss protecting the sanctity of the upcoming presidential election.

    And, according to Krasner, with the help of partnering agencies, this year’s efforts by his office’s Election Task Force will be bigger and better than in the past.

    “We are trying to do it bigger and we are trying to do it better,” Krasner said. “Because I think everyone understands how very important it is to make sure that every vote is counted from whatever source and based upon whatever belief.”

    In discussing preparations for Tuesday’s debate between Harris and Trump, Philadelphia Police Department Commissioner Kevin Bethel said that officers are ready to ensure the event will be held without incident.

    “We are fully prepared and working with our state and local partners,” Bethel said.

    He also said that, just as in years prior, the city’s police force will be ready to ensure a safe and fair election day in November.

    “We are prepared, as we have been for decades and decades at the police department, to ensure that we will protect the voters as they go about their business,” Bethel said.

    Yet, Krasner took a moment to remind those in attendance that it wasn’t that long ago — the last presidential election, in fact — that there were election security concerns in the city.

    He recalled the arrests of two Virginia men who were found with guns, including an AR-style weapon, and ammunition not far from where Philadelphia was counting mail-in ballots in 2020.

    “Last presidential election a couple of guys thought it made sense to come to Philly to mess with the counting of the vote, and then they got arrested, and then they got incarcerated, and then they got convicted for felonies,” Krasner said. “We are not messing around.”

    City commissioner Omar Sabir, one of the three members who make up the city’s board of elections, said that since that incident, protections for election integrity have only grown in the city.

    In fact, he said “we are seeing an unprecedented collaboration,” between law enforcement agencies to protect election integrity.

    “Philadelphia, we have to understand, that now is the time and our time is now to participate in our elections,” said Sabir. “There are election deniers who are going to tell you lies about our election system. We are encouraging everyone to use the system. And, it’s critical that you vote.”

    Commissioner Seth Bluestein, the city’s only Republican city commissioner, took a moment to note that the city has as bipartisan board of elections who are working to ensure that everyone — no matter their party affiliation — has the right to vote.

    “Philadelphia’s election is going to be free and fair. It is going to be both secure and accessible for any eligible Philadelphian who wants to vote,” said Bluestein.

    The commissioners plan to operate 10 satellite offices throughout the city, to be open seven days a week, as the election approaches to help people register to vote and get information in order to participate in the upcoming elections.

    Voters who experience any irregularities at their polling location can call the DAO Election Task Force hotline at 215-686-9641. Voters can also contact the national nonpartisan Election Protection hotline at 1-866-OUR-VOTE and any voters with questions about the election process should call the Philadelphia City Commissioners’ Office at 215-686-VOTE.

    ]]>
    Mon, Sep 09 2024 12:10:27 PM Mon, Sep 09 2024 12:36:25 PM
    What voters want to hear from Harris, Trump during presidential debate in Philly https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/politics/presidential-debate-philadelphia-kamala-harris-donald-trump-national-constitution-center/3963838/ 3963838 post 9868012 https://media.nbcphiladelphia.com/2024/09/34281520619-1080pnbcstations.jpg?quality=85&strip=all&fit=300,169 Former President Donald Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris are set to face off at the National Constitution Center in Philadelphia for the presidential debate on Tuesday, Sept. 10. In the latest episode of Battleground Politics, NBC10’s Lauren Mayk speaks with National Constitution Center president and CEO Jeffrey Rosen about the preparations being made. She also speaks with Pennsylvania voters about what they want to hear from both Trump and Harris during the debate and the rest of the presidential race. Here’s a full breakdown of the episode:

    Jeffrey Rosen, National Constitution Center President and CEO

    :33 – The significance of having the presidential debate in Philadelphia

    1:08 – How the National Constitution Center is preparing for the debate

    1:49 – The stakes of Tuesday’s presidential debate

    2:27 – How the rules impact the dynamics of the presidential debate

    3:18 – The importance of watching the entire presidential debate  

    4:07 – Appearance vs. substance in presidential debates

    5:34 – The impact of the 2008 debate between Obama and Clinton at the National Constitution Center

    6:31 – Things to watch for during Tuesday’s debate

    Majesty Moreland, voter

    7:50 – How she feels about the presidential race

    8:09 – What she’s looking for in Tuesday’s debate

    9:00 – How she feels about Kamala Harris and her policies

    10:35 – Whether or not she will vote in November

    11:20 – Issues she hopes Harris, Trump address in the debate

    Neil Stolar, voter

    11:53 – Keeping an open mind as the presidential race continues

    12:40 – Whether or not the debate will influence who he votes for

    Irma Fralic, voter

    14:10 – What she wants to hear during the debate

    14:35 – Whether or not she has an idea of what both candidates would do with foreign policy

    Pam Barnes, voter

    15:17 – What she hopes to hear from Harris, Trump during the debate

    16:33 – Who she will vote for and why  

    You can subscribe to Battleground Politics on Apple, Google, Spotify, or wherever else you get your favorite podcasts. You can also watch or listen to every episode right here on NBC10.com, the NBC10 YouTube channel, and in rotation on our streaming channels.

    Subscribe to Battleground Politics anywhere you get your podcasts: Spotify | Amazon Music | Apple Podcasts | Google Play (soon) | Art19 | RSS | Watch on YouTube

    ]]>
    Mon, Sep 09 2024 11:53:06 AM Tue, Sep 10 2024 11:58:52 AM
    When is the 2024 presidential debate? How to watch the Trump, Harris debate https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/decision-2024/when-is-the-2024-presidential-debate-how-to-watch-the-presidential-debate-between-trump-harris/3963944/ 3963944 post 9818086 Reuters https://media.nbcphiladelphia.com/2024/08/108018074-1723130402111-Untitled-3_f8f71d.jpg?quality=85&strip=all&fit=300,176 Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump will square off at Tuesday night’s presidential debate in Philadelphia.

    After a disastrous performance in the first general election debate of this cycle in June, President Joe Biden ended his reelection bid, upending the campaign in its closing months and kicking off the rapid-fire process that allowed Harris to rise as Democrats’ nominee in his place.

    As was the case for the June debate, there will be no audience present.

    Pennsylvania is perhaps the nation’s premier swing state, and both candidates have spent significant time campaigning across Pennsylvania. Trump was holding a rally in Butler, in western Pennsylvania, in mid-July when he was nearly assassinated by a gunman perched on a nearby rooftop. Harris chose Philadelphia as the spot where she unveiled Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz as her running mate in August.

    In 2020, it was Pennsylvania’s electoral votes that put Biden over the top and propelled him into the White House, four years after Trump won the state. Biden’s victory came after more than three days of uncertainty as election officials sorted through a surge of mail-in votes that delayed the processing of some ballots, and the Trump campaign mounted several legal challenges.

    An estimated 51.3 million people watched Biden and Trump in June. But that was before many people were truly tuned into the election, and the potential rematch of the 2020 campaign was drawing little enthusiasm.

    Tuesday’s debate will almost certainly reach more people, whether or not it approaches the record debate audience of 84 million for the first face-off between Hillary Clinton and Trump in 2016.

    Here’s a look at what to expect:

    When is the presidential debate?

    The presidential debate between Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump takes place at 8 p.m. CT/9 p.m. ET on Tuesday, Sept. 10, at the National Constitution Center in Philadelphia.

    The planned debate comes nearly three weeks after the conclusion of the 2024 Democratic National Convention, in which Harris formally accepted the party’s nomination after a turbulent month kickstarted by Biden’s withdrawal.

    How to watch the presidential debate

    NBC News will broadcast the full debate live and offering extensive primetime coverage beginning at 8 p.m. ET.

    NBC Nightly News anchor Lester Holt and TODAY co-anchor Savannah Guthrie will anchor a pre-debate primetime special starting at 8 p.m. ET on NBC, followed by a live presentation of the ABC News-hosted debate at 9 p.m. ET. Holt and Guthrie will continue special coverage following the debate. 

    Viewers can watch the debate live on their local NBC station or via the local NBC station’s streaming channel, which is available 24/7 and free of charge across nearly every online video platform, including Peacock, YouTube, Samsung TV Plus and the NBC News app on smartphones and smart TVs.

    Will mics be on or off? Full list of debate rules

    The parameters now in place for the Sept. 10 debate are essentially the same as they were for the June debate between Trump and President Joe Biden.

    According to ABC News, the candidates will stand behind lecterns, will not make opening statements and will not be allowed to bring notes during the 90-minute debate. David Muir and Linsey Davis will moderate the event.

    “Moderators will seek to enforce timing agreements and ensure a civilized discussion,” the network noted.

    A Harris campaign official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss planning around the debate, said a candidate who repeatedly interrupts will receive a warning from a moderator, and both candidates’ microphones may be unmuted if there is significant crosstalk so the audience can understand what’s happening.

    After a virtual coin flip held Tuesday and won by Trump, the GOP nominee opted to offer the final closing statement, while Harris chose the podium on the right side of viewers’ screens. There will be no audience, written notes or any topics or questions shared with campaigns or candidates in advance, the network said.

    Here’s the full list of rules:

    – The debate will be 90 minutes with two commercial breaks.

    – The two seated moderators, David Muir and Linsey Davis, will be the only people asking questions.

    – A coin flip was held virtually on Tuesday, Sept. 3, to determine podium placement and order of closing statements; former President Donald Trump won the coin toss and chose to select the order of statements. The former president will offer the last closing statement, and Vice President Harris selected the right podium position on screen (stage left).

    – Candidates will be introduced by the moderators.

    – The candidates enter upon introduction from opposite sides of the stage; the incumbent party will be introduced first.

    – No opening statements; closing statements will be two minutes per candidate.

    – Candidates will stand behind podiums for the duration of the debate.

    – Props or prewritten notes are not allowed onstage.

    – No topics or questions will be shared in advance with campaigns or candidates.

    – Candidates will be given a pen, a pad of paper and a bottle of water.

    – Candidates will have two-minute answers to questions, two-minute rebuttals, and one extra minute for follow-ups, clarifications, or responses.

    – Candidates’ microphones will be live only for the candidate whose turn it is to speak and muted when the time belongs to another candidate.

    – Candidates will not be permitted to ask questions of each other.

    – Campaign staff may not interact with candidates during commercial breaks.

    – Moderators will seek to enforce timing agreements and ensure a civilized discussion.

    – There will be no audience in the room.

    Are other debates planned?

    Though the September debate is currently the only debate currently planned between Harris and Trump, Harris’ campaign said that a potential October debate was contingent on Trump attending the Sept. 10 debate.

    In addition to the planned Harris-Trump debate on Sept. 10, vice presidential candidates Tim Walz and JD Vance also agreed to a debate, scheduled to be hosted by CBS News on Oct. 1.

    When is Election Day?

    Voters will officially head to the polls just over a month later Tuesday, Nov. 5, for Election Day, though early voting starts significantly earlier in many states.

    ]]>
    Mon, Sep 09 2024 07:36:49 AM Tue, Sep 10 2024 09:48:14 AM
    Little debate that Pa. is key as Harris and Trump prep for Philly showdown https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/local/pa-key-debate-harris-trump/3963102/ 3963102 post 9866099 AP Photo https://media.nbcphiladelphia.com/2024/09/AP24251607643180.jpg?quality=85&strip=all&fit=300,209 When Donald Trump and Kamala Harris meet onstage Tuesday night in Philadelphia, they’ll both know there’s little debate that Pennsylvania is critical to their chances of winning the presidency.

    The most populous presidential swing state has sided with the winner of the past two elections, each time by just tens of thousands of votes. Polling this year suggests Pennsylvania will be close once more in November.

    A loss in the state will make it difficult to make up the electoral votes elsewhere to win the presidency. Trump and Harris have been frequent visitors in recent days, and the former president was speaking in Butler County on July 14 when he was the target of an assassination attempt.

    The stakes may be especially high for Harris: No Democrat has won the White House without Pennsylvania since 1948.

    Pennsylvanians broke a string of six Democratic victories in the state when they helped propel Trump to victory in 2016, then backed native son Joe Biden in the 2020 race against Trump.

    “They say that ‘If you win Pennsylvania, you’re going to win the whole thing,’” Trump told a crowd in Wilkes-Barre’s Mohegan Arena in August.

    Republicans are looking to blunt Trump’s unpopularity in Pennsylvania’s growing and increasingly liberal suburbs by criticizing the Biden administration’s handling of the economy. They hope to counter the Democrats’ massive advantage in early voting by encouraging their base to vote by mail.

    Harris is looking to reassemble the coalition behind Biden’s winning campaign, including college students, Black voters and women animated by protecting abortion rights.

    Democrats also say it will be critical for Harris to win big in Philadelphia — the state’s largest city, where Black residents are the largest group by race — and its suburbs, while paring Trump’s large margins among white voters across wide swaths of rural and small-town Pennsylvania.

    The debate is set for the National Constitution Center in Philadelphia. The city is a Democratic stronghold where Trump in 2020 notoriously said “ bad things happen,” one of his baseless broadsides suggesting that Democrats could only win Pennsylvania by cheating.

    Biden flipped Pennsylvania in 2020 not just by winning big in Philadelphia, but by running up bigger margins in the heavily populated suburbs around Philadelphia and Pittsburgh. He also got a boost in northeastern Pennsylvania in the counties around Scranton, where he grew up.

    Ed Rendell, a former two-term Democratic governor who was hugely popular in Philadelphia and its suburbs, says Harris can do better than Biden in the suburbs.

    “There’s plenty of votes to get, a Democrat can get a greater margin in those counties,” Rendell said.

    Lawrence Tabas, chair of Pennsylvania’s Republican Party, said Trump can make gains there, too. The GOP’s polling and outreach shows that the effect of inflation on the economy is a priority for those suburbanites, he said, and that the issue works in the party’s favor.

    “A lot of people are really now starting to say, ‘Look, personalities aside, they are what they are, but we really need the American economy to become strong again,’” Tabas said.

    Rendell dismisses that claim. He said Trump is veering off script and saying bizarre things that will ensure he gets a smaller share of independents and Republicans in the suburbs than he did in 2020.

    “He’s gotten so weird that he’ll lose a lot of votes,” Rendell said.

    Harris has championed various steps to fight inflation, including capping the cost of prescription drugs, helping families afford child care, lowering the cost of groceries and offering incentives to encourage home ownership.

    Pennsylvania’s relatively stagnant economy usually lags the national economy, but its unemployment rate in July was nearly a full percentage point lower. The state’s private sector wage growth, however, has slightly lagged behind the nation’s since Biden took office in 2021, according to federal data.

    Meanwhile, Democrats are hoping the enthusiasm since Biden withdrew from the race and Harris stepped in will carry through Election Day in November.

    For one, they hope she will do better with women and Black voters, as the first female presidential nominee of Black heritage. Rendell said he is more optimistic about Harris’ chances to win Pennsylvania than he was with Biden in the race.

    “I think we’re the favorite now,” Rendell said.

    The debate takes place before voting starts — in Pennsylvania and everywhere else.

    A national Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research survey conducted in July showed that about 8 in 10 Democrats said they would be satisfied with Harris as the party’s nominee compared with 4 in 10 Democrats in March saying they would be satisfied with Biden as the candidate.

    There is some optimism among Pennsylvania Democrats even in Republican-leaning counties, including a number of whiter, less affluent counties near Pittsburgh and Scranton that once voted for Democrats consistently.

    In Washington County, just outside Pittsburgh in the heart of the state’s natural gas-producing region, Larry Maggi, a Democratic county commissioner, thinks she will outrun Biden there.

    Maggi is seeing more lawn signs for Harris than he ever saw for Biden, as well as more volunteers, many of whom are young women concerned about protecting abortion rights.

    “I’ve been doing this for 25 years and I’m seeing people I’ve never seen,” Maggi said.

    Democrats also hope there is a growing number of voters like Ray Robbins, a retired FBI agent and registered independent, who regrets voting for Trump in 2016. Robbins did so, he said, because he thought a businessperson could break congressional deadlock.

    “He’s a liar,” Robbins said. “I think he’s totally devoid of any morals whatsoever. And you can quote me: I think he’s a despicable human being even though I voted for him.”

    But Republicans have reason to be optimistic, too.

    In the nation’s No. 2 gas-producing state, even Democrats acknowledge that Harris’ prior support for a fracking ban in her run for the 2020 nomination could prove costly. In this campaign, the vice president said the nation can achieve its clean energy goals without a ban, though Trump insists she will reverse course again.

    Meanwhile, the Democratic advantage in the state’s voter registration rolls has steadily shrunk since 2008, from 1.2 million to about 350,000 now.

    Republicans credit their outreach to younger voters, as well as Black, Asian and Hispanic voters.

    “A lot of them tell us it’s the economy,” Tabas said. “And in Philly, it’s also the crime and safety in the neighborhoods and communities.”

    Those gains have yet to translate into GOP wins as Democrats have beaten Republicans by more than 2-to-1 in statewide contests the past decade.

    Daniel Hopkins, a political science professor at the University of Pennsylvania, chalks up the narrowing registration gap, in part, to “Reagan Democrats” who have long voted for Republicans, but did not change their registration right away.

    One of those voters is Larry Mitko, a longtime Democrat-turned-Republican who lives in a Pittsburgh suburb.

    Mitko, 74, voted for Trump in 2016 and Biden in 2020, and was leaning toward voting for Trump in 2024 because of inflation and Biden’s handling of the economy before Biden exited the race.

    That is when Mitko became sure he would vote for Trump.

    “I don’t like the fact of how they lied to us telling us, ‘He’s OK, he’s OK,’ and he can’t walk up the steps, he can’t finish a sentence without forgetting what he’s talking about,” Mitko said of Biden.

    Harris’ late entry into the race could mean that many voters are still learning about her, said Kathleen Hall Jamieson, a University of Pennsylvania professor of communication who researches presidential debates.

    More voters than usual may not be locked into a decision even as voting looms, Jamieson said, so this debate could make a difference.

    ]]>
    Sun, Sep 08 2024 08:55:55 AM Sun, Sep 08 2024 11:15:57 AM
    Road closures in effect near Philly's National Constitution Center ahead of presidential debate https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/decision-2024/philadelphia-road-closures-presidential-debate-kamala-harris-donald-trump/3962584/ 3962584 post 9864659 https://media.nbcphiladelphia.com/2024/09/image-100-1.png?fit=300,169&quality=85&strip=all The House on Wednesday rejected Speaker Mike Johnson’s proposal that would have linked temporary funding for the federal government with a mandate that states require proof of citizenship when people register to vote.

    Next steps on government funding are uncertain. Lawmakers are not close to completing work on the dozen annual appropriations bills that will fund federal agencies during the next fiscal year, so they’ll need to approve a stopgap measure to prevent a partial shutdown when that budget year begins Oct. 1.

    The vote was 220-202. Now, Johnson will likely pursue a Plan B to avoid a partial shutdown, though he was not ready before the vote to share details of such a proposal.

    Johnson pulled the bill from consideration last week because it lacked the votes to pass. He worked through the weekend to win support from fellow Republicans but was unable to overcome objections about spending levels from some members, while others said they don’t favor any continuing resolutions, insisting that Congress return to passing the dozen annual appropriations bills on time and one at a time. Democrats overwhelmingly opposed the measure.

    Requiring new voters to provide proof of citizenship has become a leading election-year priority for Republicans raising the specter of noncitizens voting in the U.S., even though it’s already illegal to do so and research has shown that such voting is rare.

    Opponents also say that such a requirement would disenfranchise millions of Americans who do not have a birth certificate or passport readily available when they get a chance to register at their school, church or other venues when voter registration drives occur.

    But Johnson said it is a serious problem because even if a tiny percentage of noncitizens do vote, it could determine the outcome of an extremely close race. He noted that Republican Rep. Mariannette Miller-Meeks of Iowa won her seat back in 2020 by six votes.

    “It’s very, very serious stuff and that’s why we’re going to do the right thing,” Johnson said. “We’re going to responsibly fund the government and we’re going to stop noncitizens voting in elections.”

    Meanwhile, Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump weighed in again just hours before the vote. seemingly encouraging House Republicans to let a partial government shutdown begin at the end of the month unless they get the proof of citizenship mandate, referred to in the House as the SAVE Act.

    “If Republicans don’t get the SAVE Act, and every ounce of it, they should not agree to a Continuing Resolution in any way, shape, or form,” Trump said on the social media platform Truth Social.

    Johnson told reporters he was not ready to discuss an alternative plan to keep the government funded.

    “Let’s see what happens with the bill, all right. We’re on the field in the middle of the game. The quarterback is calling the play. We’re going to run the play,” Johnson said.

    House Democrats said the proof of citizenship mandate should not be part of the continuing resolution to keep the government funded and urged Johnson to work with them on a bill that can pass both chambers.

    “This is not going to become law,” said Rep. Pete Aguilar, D-Calif. “This is Republican theatrics that are meant to appease the most extreme members of their conference, to show them that they are working on something and that they’re continuing to support the former president of the United States in his bid to demonize immigrants.”

    Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said the only way to prevent a government shutdown was for both sides to work together on an agreement. He said the House vote announced by Johnson was doomed to fail.

    “The only thing that will accomplish is make clear that he’s running into a dead end,” Schumer said. “We must have a bipartisan plan instead.”

    The legislation would fund agencies generally at current levels while lawmakers work out their differences on a full-year spending agreement.

    Democrats, and some Republicans, are pushing for a short extension. A temporary fix would allow the current Congress to hammer out a final bill after the election and get it to Democratic President Joe Biden’s desk for his signature.

    But Johnson and some of the more conservative members of his conference are pushing for a six-month extension in the hopes that Republican nominee Donald Trump will win the election and give them more leverage when crafting the full-year bill.

    Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky declined to weigh in on how long to extend funding. He said Schumer and Johnson, ultimately, will have to work out a final agreement that can pass both chambers.

    “The one thing you cannot have is a government shutdown. It would be politically beyond stupid for us to do that right before the election because certainly we would get the blame,” McConnell said.

    Regardless of the vote outcome Wednesday, Republican lawmakers sought to allay any concerns there would be a shutdown at the end of the month. Rep. Mike Lawler, R-N.Y., said if the bill fails, then another stopgap bill should be voted on that would allow lawmakers to come back to Washington after the election and finish the appropriations work.

    “The bottom line is we’re not shutting the government down,” Lawler said.

    But Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries accused Republicans of engaging in a “shutdown effort.”

    “That’s not hyperbole,” Jeffries said. “It’s history. Because in the DNA of extreme MAGA Republicans has consistently been an effort to make extreme ransom demands of the American people, and if those extreme ransom demands are not met, shut down the government.”

    The House approved a bill with the proof of citizenship mandate back in July. Some Republicans who view the issue as popular with their constituents have been pushing for another chance to show their support for the measure.

    Many have investigated noncitizen voting and found little evidence of it, NBC News reported. The Brennan Center found just 30 suspected noncitizen votes amid 23.5 million votes in 2016, suggesting that suspected noncitizen votes accounted for 0.0001% of votes cast. Trump’s own election integrity commission disbanded without releasing evidence of voter fraud, even though he’d claimed 3 million undocumented immigrants had voted in 2016 costing him the popular vote.

    ]]>
    Fri, Sep 06 2024 10:18:12 PM Tue, Sep 10 2024 12:36:05 PM
    Trump hush money sentencing postponed past Election Day, judge rules https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/business/money-report/trump-hush-money-sentencing-postponed-past-election-day-judge-rules/3962143/ 3962143 post 9863646 Justin Lane | Via Reuters https://media.nbcphiladelphia.com/2024/09/107422268-17171047652024-05-30t213018z_767890376_rc2518as056d_rtrmadp_0_usa-trump-new-york.jpeg?quality=85&strip=all&fit=300,176
  • Former President Donald Trump will not be sentenced in his New York criminal hush money case until after the presidential election, Judge Juan Merchan ruled.
  • Merchan has yet to rule on Trump’s request to dismiss the case in light of a Supreme Court ruling expanding the scope of presidential immunity.
  • The hush money case centers on a payment Trump’s former lawyer Michael Cohen made to keep porn star Stormy Daniels from speaking publicly about an alleged one-night stand with Trump.
  • Former President Donald Trump will not be sentenced in his New York criminal hush money case until after the Nov. 5 presidential election, a judge ruled Friday.

    The sentencing, which was set for Sept. 18, will instead take place on Nov. 26, Manhattan Supreme Court Judge Juan Merchan ruled.

    Trump, the Republican presidential nominee, will not be sentenced at all if the court grants his request to dismiss the case in light of a Supreme Court ruling expanding the scope of presidential immunity.

    Merchan in his four-page order said he will rule on Trump’s bid to vacate the jury’s guilty verdict on Nov. 12. Trump will be sentenced “if necessary” two weeks later, Merchan ruled.

    “This matter is one that stands alone, in a unique place in this Nation’s history,” the judge wrote.

    If Trump is sentenced, then the public deserves “a sentencing hearing that is entirely focused on the verdict of the jury,” and one that is “free from distraction or distortion.”

    “Unfortunately, we are now at a place in time that is fraught with complexities rendering the requirements of a sentencing hearing, should one be necessary, difficult to execute,” Merchan wrote.

    The case centers on a $130,000 payment made by Trump’s then-attorney Michael Cohen to keep porn star Stormy Daniels from speaking ahead of the 2016 presidential election about an alleged one-night stand with Trump years earlier. Trump reimbursed Cohen in monthly installments after he won the election.

    Trump in mid-July had asked Merchan to dismiss the case and vacate the guilty verdict against him, pointing to the Supreme Court’s bombshell July 1 ruling that granted former presidents “presumptive immunity” for their official acts in office.

    Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg’s office replied saying that ruling was irrelevant to the hush money case, and would not support erasing the jury’s verdict even if it did apply.

    The Supreme Court’s ruling had already spurred Merchan to delay Trump’s sentencing, which was originally scheduled for July 11, by more than two months.

    Trump campaign spokesman Steven Cheung in a statement Friday said, “There should be no sentencing in the Manhattan DA’s Election Interference Witch Hunt.”

    “As mandated by the United States Supreme Court, this case, along with all of the other Harris – Biden Hoaxes, should be dismissed,” Cheung said.

    A spokesperson for Bragg told NBC News that the Manhattan DA’s office “stands ready for sentencing on the new date set by the court.”

    Trump’s lawyers have repeatedly sought to get Merchan to recuse himself from the case. They accused him of political bias before and during the trial, in large part due to his adult daughter’s work for a political firm whose clients include high-profile Democrats such as President Joe Biden.

    Merchan rejected two recusal requests ahead of the trial, which began in mid-April and ended in late May with Trump’s conviction on 34 criminal counts of falsifying business records.

    On Aug. 13, Merchan shot down Trump’s third recusal bid, describing one of his arguments — an attack on the still-present gag order restricting some of Trump’s statements related to the case — as “nothing more than an attempt to air grievances against this Court’s rulings.”

    One day later, Trump’s team urged Merchan to push the sentencing date until after the Nov. 5 election. “Sentencing is currently scheduled to occur after the commencement of early voting in the Presidential election,” they noted in a court filing.

    Delaying the sentencing date, they argued, would “reduce, even if not eliminate, issues regarding the integrity of any future proceedings.”

    Trump has also tried, unsuccessfully, to move the hush money case to federal court. Trump’s lawyers on Wednesday asked a federal appeals court to pause a U.S. District Court order sending the case back to New York state court.

    Bragg’s office told the appeals court in a letter Thursday that Merchan had indicated he would share his decision Friday on whether or not to delay Trump’s sentencing date.

    ]]>
    Fri, Sep 06 2024 01:13:09 PM Fri, Sep 06 2024 03:56:20 PM
    Pa. voters can cast a provisional ballot if their mail ballot is rejected, court says https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/decision-2024/pennsylvania-voters-provisional-ballot-mail-ballot-court/3961089/ 3961089 post 9852134 Aimee Dilger/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images https://media.nbcphiladelphia.com/2024/09/GettyImages-1255336104.jpg?quality=85&strip=all&fit=300,214

    What to Know

    • A court decision in the presidential battleground of Pennsylvania means voters can cast a provisional ballot in place of a mail-in ballot that is rejected for a garden-variety mistake they made when they returned it.
    • Lawyers in the case say Thursday’s decision will apply to all counties.
    • Parties in the case couldn’t immediately say how many Pennsylvania counties don’t let voters replace a rejected mail-in ballot with a provisional ballot.

    A court decided Thursday that voters in the presidential battleground of Pennsylvania can cast provisional ballots in place of mail-in ballots that are rejected for a garden-variety mistake they made when they returned it.

    Democrats typically outvote Republicans by mail by about 3-to-1 in Pennsylvania, and the decision by a state Commonwealth Court panel could mean that hundreds or thousands more votes are counted in November’s election, when the state is expected to play an outsized role in picking the next president.

    Léelo en español aquí.

    The three-member panel ruled that nothing in state law prevented Republican-controlled Butler County from counting two voters’ provisional ballots in the April 23 primary election, even if state law is ambiguous.

    A provisional ballot is typically cast at a polling place on Election Day and is separated from regular ballots in cases when elections workers need more time to determine a voter’s eligibility to vote.

    The case stems from a lawsuit filed by two Butler County voters who received an automatic email before the primary election telling them that their mail-in ballots had been rejected because they hadn’t put them in a blank “secrecy” envelope that is supposed to go inside the ballot return envelope.

    They attempted to cast provisional ballots in place of the rejected mail-in ballots, but the county rejected those, too.

    In the court decision, Judge Matt Wolf ordered Butler County to count the voters’ two provisional ballots.

    Contesting the lawsuit was Butler County as well as the state and national Republican parties. Their lawyers had argued that nothing in state law allows a voter to cast a provisional ballot in place of a rejected mail-in ballot.

    They have three days to appeal to the state Supreme Court.

    The lawsuit is one of a handful being fought in state and federal courts over the practice of Pennsylvania counties throwing out mail-in ballots over mistakes like forgetting to sign or write the date on the ballot’s return envelope or forgetting to put the ballot in a secrecy envelope.

    The decision will apply to all 67 counties, lawyers in the case say. It’s not entirely clear how many Pennsylvania counties haven’t let voters replace a rejected mail-in ballot with a provisional ballot, although the plaintiffs’ lawyers listed nine other counties that they say may have had followed such a policy in April’s primary election.

    The voters were represented by the American Civil Liberties Union of Pennsylvania and the Public Interest Law Center. The state Democratic Party and Democratic Gov. Josh Shapiro’s administration also took their side in the case.

    Approximately 21,800 mail ballots were rejected in 2020’s presidential election, out of about 2.7 million mail ballots cast in Pennsylvania, according to the state elections office.

    ]]>
    Fri, Sep 06 2024 10:56:05 AM Fri, Sep 06 2024 11:20:14 AM
    Trump in court as lawyers fight to overturn verdict in E. Jean Carroll sex abuse suit https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/national-international/donald-trump-e-jean-carroll-new-york-court/3961877/ 3961877 post 9862294 Getty Images https://media.nbcphiladelphia.com/2024/09/GettyImages-1952469044.jpg?quality=85&strip=all&fit=300,211 Veering from the campaign trail to a courtroom, Donald Trump quietly observed Friday as one of his lawyers fought to overturn a verdict finding the former president liable for sexual abuse and defamation.

    The Republican nominee and accuser E. Jean Carroll, a writer, sat at tables about 15 feet apart, in a federal appeals court. He didn’t acknowledge or look at Carroll as he passed directly in front of her on the way in and out, but he shook his head at points, such as when Carroll’s attorney said he sexually attacked her.

    Trump attorney D. John Sauer told 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals judges that the civil trial in Carroll’s lawsuit was muddied by improper evidence.

    “This case is a textbook example of implausible allegations being propped up by highly inflammatory, inadmissible” evidence, Sauer said, noting that the jury was allowed to consider such items as the infamous “Access Hollywood” tape in which Trump boasted years ago about grabbing women’s genitals.

    Carroll’s lawyer, Roberta Kaplan, said the evidence in question was proper, and that there was plenty of proof in the nearly two-week-long trial of Carroll’s claim that Trump attacked her in a luxury department store dressing room decades ago.

    “E. Jean Carroll brought this case because Donald Trump sexually assaulted her in 1996, in a dressing room at Bergdorf Goodman, and then defamed her in 2022 by claiming that she was crazy and made the whole thing up,” Kaplan said.

    Trump left court in a motorcade before staging a news conference at Trump Tower where he said again that Carroll was telling a “made up, fabricated story.” Carroll, standing with Kaplan outside the courthouse afterward, declined to comment.

    The three-judge panel, if it follows the pattern of other appeals, would be unlikely to rule for weeks, if not months.

    A jury found in May 2023 that Trump sexually abused Carroll. He denies it. That jury awarded Carroll $5 million.

    Trump did not attend the trial and has expressed regret that he was not there.

    The civil case has both political and financial implications for Trump.

    Vice President Kamala Harris, the Democratic presidential nominee, has jabbed at Trump over the jury’s verdict, noting repeatedly that he had been found liable for sexual abuse.

    And last January, a second jury awarded Carroll another $83.3 million in damages for comments Trump had made about her while he was president, finding that they were defamatory. That jury had been instructed by the judge that it had to accept the first jury’s finding that Trump had sexually assaulted Carroll.

    Trump, 78, testified less than three minutes at the second trial and was not permitted to refute conclusions reached by the May 2023 jury. Still, he was animated in the courtroom throughout the two-week trial, and jurors could hear him grumbling about the case.

    The appeal of that trial’s outcome, which Trump labeled “absolutely ridiculous!” immediately afterward, will be heard by the appeals court at a later date.

    Carroll, 80, testified during both trials that her life as an Elle magazine columnist was spoiled by Trump’s public comments, which she said ignited such hate against her that she received death threats and feared going outside the upstate New York cabin where she lives.

    During Friday’s arguments, Trump’s attorney said testimony from witnesses who said Carroll told them about the 1996 encounter with Trump immediately afterward was improper because the witnesses had “egregious bias” against Trump.

    Sauer also attacked the trial judge’s decision to let two other women testify about similar acts of sex abuse they say Trump committed against them in the 1970s and in 2005. He denies those allegations.

    Trump’s lawyers have also argued that Kaplan wrongly disallowed evidence that Carroll lied during her deposition, and other evidence they say would reveal bias and motives to lie for Carroll and other witnesses against Trump. The verdict, they wrote, was “unjust and erroneous,” resulting from “flawed and prejudicial evidentiary rulings.”

    The judge is no relation to Carroll’s attorney.

    Trump has insisted that Carroll made up the story about being attacked to sell a new book. He has denied knowing her.

    Trump’s lawyers also challenged the repeated airing at trial of the 2005 “Access Hollywood” videotape, in which Trump is heard saying that he sometimes just starts kissing beautiful women and “when you’re a star they let you do it.” He also said that a star can grab women’s genitals because “you can do anything.”

    In their written arguments, Carroll’s lawyers said Trump was wrongly demanding “a do-over” based on unfounded “sweeping complaints of unfairness” and other “distortions of the record, misstatements or misapplications of the law, and a steadfast disregard of the district court’s reasoning.”

    “There was no error here, let alone a violation of Trump’s substantial rights. This Court should affirm,” Carroll’s lawyers said.

    The Associated Press does not identify people who say they have been sexually assaulted unless they come forward publicly, as Carroll has done.

    Associated Press writer Jennifer Peltz contributed to this report.

    ]]>
    Fri, Sep 06 2024 09:34:10 AM Fri, Sep 06 2024 01:19:16 PM
    US charges former Trump 2016 campaign adviser Dimitri Simes over work for sanctioned Russian TV https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/politics/us-charges-former-trump-2016-campaign-adviser-dimitri-simes-over-work-for-sanctioned-russian-tv/3961065/ 3961065 post 9859963 Alexei Danichev/Photo host Agency RIA Novosti via AP https://media.nbcphiladelphia.com/2024/09/AP24249608791808.jpg?quality=85&strip=all&fit=300,200 The U.S. government has charged a Russian-born U.S. citizen and former adviser to Donald Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign with working for a sanctioned Russian state television network and laundering the proceeds.

    Indictments announced Thursday by the Department of Justice allege that Dimitri Simes and his wife received over $1 million dollars and a personal car and driver in exchange for work they did for Russia’s Channel One since June 2022. The network was sanctioned by the U.S. in 2022 over Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

    Simes, 76, and his wife, Anastasia Simes, have a home in Virginia and are believed to be in Russia.

    “These defendants allegedly violated sanctions that were put in place in response to Russia’s illegal aggression in Ukraine,” U.S. Attorney Matthew M. Graves said in a statement announcing the indictments. “Such violations harm our national security interests — a fact that Dimitri Simes, with the deep experience he gained in national affairs after fleeing the Soviet Union and becoming a U.S. citizen, should have uniquely appreciated.”

    The indictments come at a time of renewed concern about Russian efforts to meddle with the upcoming U.S. election using online disinformation and propaganda. On Wednesday federal authorities charged two employees of the Russian media organization RT with covertly funding a Tennessee company that produced pro-Russian content.

    Simes, who led a Washington think tank called the Center for the National Interest, figured prominently in special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election and potential ties to the Trump campaign.

    The report chronicles interactions that the Soviet-born Simes, who immigrated to the U.S. in the 1970s, had with assorted figures in Trump’s orbit, including Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner.

    Before one such meeting, according to the Mueller report, Simes sent Kushner a letter detailing potential talking points for Trump about Russia and also passed along derogatory information about Bill Clinton that was then forwarded to other representatives of the campaign.

    Simes’s think tank helped arrange a foreign policy speech at the Mayflower Hotel in Washington at which Simes introduced Trump. Among those present was Sergei Kislyak, the then-Russian ambassador to the U.S.

    Simes was never charged with any crime in relation to the investigation.

    After the report was released, Simes defended himself in an interview in The Washington Post: “I did not see anything in the Mueller report that in any way that would indicate any questionable activity on my part or on the center’s part.”

    A second indictment alleges that Anastasia Simes, 55, received funds from sanctioned Russian businessman Alexander Udodov. Udodov was sanctioned last year for his support for the Russian government. He is the former brother-in-law of Russian Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin and has been linked to business dealings with both of them. Udodov also has been investigated for money laundering.

    If convicted of the charges, the couple face a sentence of up to 20 years in prison.

    Messages left with an attorney for Simes and the Trump campaign were not immediately returned on Thursday.

    ]]>
    Thu, Sep 05 2024 02:26:36 PM Thu, Sep 05 2024 02:27:03 PM
    Trump and Harris campaigns agree to rules for ABC debate https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/decision-2024/trump-harris-sept-10-presidential-debate/3953581/ 3953581 post 9837292 USA TODAY https://media.nbcphiladelphia.com/2024/08/harris-trump-split.png?fit=300,169&quality=85&strip=all Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump are set to debate each other next week for the first time after their campaigns on Wednesday agreed to the ground rules set by host network ABC.

    The Sept. 10 event in Philadelphia will use the same rules and format as the June debate between Trump and President Joe Biden.

    Both campaigns had previously agreed to hold the debate on that date, but the agreement appeared to be in jeopardy after Trump suggested he might back out and Harris’ team sought to change the rule on muted microphones.

    Candidate microphones will be live only for the candidate whose turn it is to speak.

    Trump campaign official Jason Miller said in a statement that the former president’s campaign was “thrilled that Kamala Harris and her team of Biden campaign leftovers” have “accepted the already agreed upon rules.”

    “Americans want to hear both candidates present their competing visions to the voters, unburdened by what has been,” Miller said. “We’ll see you all in Philadelphia next Tuesday.”

    In a letter to ABC, the Harris campaign agreed to the muted microphone rule but said she “will be fundamentally disadvantaged by this format, which will serve to shield Donald Trump from direct exchanges with the Vice President.”

    “Notwithstanding our concerns, we understand that Donald Trump is a risk to skip the debate altogether, as he has threatened to do previously, if we do not accede to his preferred format. We do not want to jeopardize the debate. For this reason, we accepted the full set of rules proposed by ABC, including muted microphones,” the letter said, bringing an end to the stalemate.

    The 90-minute debate will be held without an audience in Philadelphia’s National Constitution Center at 9 p.m. ET, and will be moderated by David Muir and Linsey Davis of ABC News. Neither candidate will be allowed notes or props, and both will stand for the entire debate. Both will have two minutes to answer questions and two-minute rebuttals, with an additional minute to each candidate for follow-up, clarification or response.

    The rules mirror the June 27 CNN debate between Trump and Biden. The president’s performance in the debate was widely panned and eventually led to him exiting the race and endorsing Harris in July.

    0 seconds of 2 minutes, 48 secondsVolume 89%

    The standoff over muted or live microphones had threatened to derail the debate, and the Harris campaign took jabs at Trump during the impasse.

    “Both candidates have publicly made clear their willingness to debate with unmuted mics for the duration of the debate to fully allow for substantive exchanges between the candidates — but it appears Donald Trump is letting his handlers overrule him. Sad!” a Harris campaign spokesperson previously said in a statement to NBC News.

    Trump had told reporters that he was considering backing out of the debate because he didn’t like how Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., was treated in an interview on ABC News’ “This Week.”

    “When I looked at the hostility of that, I said, ‘Why am I doing it? Let’s do it with another network.’ I want to do it,” Trump said.

    He also acknowledged at the time that he didn’t have an issue with both microphones being live, but said that “we agreed to the same rules” as the June 27 debate with Biden. “I’d rather have it probably on, but the agreement was it would be the same as it was last time. In that case, it was muted,” Trump said.

    Trump publicly relented on ABC hosting the debate in a post on Truth Social on Aug. 27 when he said he had “reached an agreement” with the network.

    A virtual coin flip on Tuesday determined podium placement and the order of closing statements for Sept. 10, ABC News said. Trump won the coin toss and decided to speak last during closing statements. Harris selected the right podium position on the screen.

    NBC news’ Rebecca Shabad, Zoë Richards and Megan Lebowitz contributed.

    This story first appeared on NBCNews.com. More from NBC News:

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    Wed, Sep 04 2024 08:44:33 PM Thu, Sep 05 2024 09:17:18 AM
    Menendez co-defendant Daibes pleads guilty to separate bank fraud charges https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/national-international/menendez-co-defendant-diabes-to-plead-guilty-to-separate-bank-fraud-charges/3962159/ 3962159 post 9856772 Getty Images https://media.nbcphiladelphia.com/2024/09/GettyImages-2161640078.jpg?quality=85&strip=all&fit=300,200 Fred Daibes, the man convicted of bribing Sen. Bob Menendez (D-N.J.) with gold bars and cash, pleaded guilty in federal court in Newark on Thursday to a separate count of bank fraud.

    The judge said that Daibes, a New Jersey developer, faces between 18 and 37 months in prison under the plea deal for the fraud charge. Sentencing was scheduled for Jan. 23.

    Daibes and Sen. Menendez were convicted in July as part of a wide-ranging bribery scheme, a bribery case that was prosecuted in New York’s Southern District. 

    One part of the bribery scheme was an attempt by Daibes to pay Menendez cash and gold bars, prosecutors said, and in exchange Menendez tried to use his power to interfere with the New Jersey U.S. Attorney in order to get Daibes lenient treatment in the bank fraud case he was facing.

    Daibes was originally offered probation in the New Jersey bank fraud case that had 16 separate criminal counts. But after the separate “gold bar” bribery indictment was announced in New York, New Jersey Judge Susan Wigenton threw out the original Daibes bank fraud plea deal — as well as the DOJ’s proposed sentence of probation — in Oct. 2023.

    Justice Department officials say the Senator’s attempts to improperly impact the outcome of that bank fraud case played no role in the decision by federal prosecutors to offer Daibes probation for bank fraud.  

    Menendez and Daibes are scheduled to be sentenced in New York on Oct. 29 for their bribery convictions.

    ]]>
    Wed, Sep 04 2024 04:50:32 PM Wed, Sep 04 2024 04:50:32 PM
    ‘Pizza Capital of the US': Connecticut's welcome to drivers may irk NY, NJ residents https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/national-international/pizza-capital-us-connecticut-welcome-drivers-i-95-ny/3960525/ 3960525 post 9856190 CT DOT https://media.nbcphiladelphia.com/2024/09/image-31.png?fit=300,169&quality=85&strip=all Connecticut has a new way to welcome drivers as they enter the state — which may elicit strong reactions from other parts of the tri-state.

    The new “Welcome to Connecticut” signs are meant to highlight aspects of the state that are near and dear to Nutmeggers, but also may get some passionate responses from New York and New Jersey residents.

    A sign reading “Welcome to Connecticut, Home of the Pizza Capital of the United States” has been placed on I-95 and I-84 entering Connecticut from New York.

    “These new signs are not just markers on our highways, they are a reflection of what makes Connecticut special,” Gov. Ned Lamont said in a release. “We want everyone entering our state to immediately feel proud of what we do well here, whether it’s making the nation’s best pizza, world class meals, national championships, or the most complex machines in the world. Each sign is an invitation to experience all that we have to offer as one of the best states to live, work, and play.”

    Needless to say, the proclamations did not go over well with at least one of Gov. Lamont’s counterparts. New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy responded on X, replying to Lamont’s announcement tweet by saying “You’re not even the pizza capital of the tri-state area.”

    Murphy continued his tongue-in-cheek criticism of the self-anointed title, saying Thursday on X “We’re from the pizza capital of the world, and you’re not. Especially you, Connecticut.”

    But it’s not just pizza that the state is looking to lay claim to being the best at.

    “Welcome to Connecticut, Home of the Basketball Capital of the World” will now greet drivers on I-91, I-84, and I-395 entering Connecticut from Massachusetts.

    Along the shoreline, drivers entering Connecticut from Rhode Island will now see a sign reading “Welcome to Connecticut, Home of the Submarine Capital of the World.”

    Drivers entering Connecticut from Rhode Island will be greeted by a sign reading “Welcome to Connecticut, Stop for a bite in the Foodie Capital of New England.”

    “These new signs are not just markers on our highways, they are a reflection of what makes Connecticut special,” Governor Lamont said. “We want everyone entering our state to immediately feel proud of what we do well here, whether it’s making the nation’s best pizza, world class meals, national championships, or the most complex machines in the world. Each sign is an invitation to experience all that we have to offer as one of the best states to live, work, and play.”

    ]]>
    Wed, Sep 04 2024 01:45:00 PM Thu, Sep 05 2024 08:43:13 PM
    Man arrested at Trump rally in Pa. wanted to hang a protest banner, police say https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/local/man-arrested-trump-rally-pa-protest-banner-police-say/3958811/ 3958811 post 9855287 AP Photo/Alex Brandon https://media.nbcphiladelphia.com/2024/09/AP24243785406705.jpg?quality=85&strip=all&fit=300,200 A man arrested last week at a Pennsylvania rally for Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump had hoped to hang a banner to protest Trump’s policies, Johnstown’s police chief said Tuesday.

    Authorities announced that misdemeanor charges of disorderly conduct and resisting arrest were filed against Stephen A. Weiss, 36, of Pittsburgh, who was taken into custody at Friday’s Trump rally.

    Johnstown Police Chief Richard Pritchard said investigators do not know what the banner said because arena staff apparently discarded it. He said it was made from a bed sheet and that Weiss told a detective that he does not believe in Trump’s policies.

    Pritchard said Weiss faked a foot injury and concealed a tube of glue in a metal crutch.

    Weiss declined comment when reached by phone Tuesday, saying he was seeking legal advice.

    The arrest affidavit by a Johnstown police detective said Weiss “ran onto the arena floor, jumped onto the media stage (and) began to yell towards the main stage where President Trump was speaking.” Weiss allegedly would not release himself from steel barricade fencing “and force had to be used,” police said in the charging document.

    A man who accompanied Weiss to the rally told police he was unaware of Weiss’ plan, Pritchard said. The second man was not charged, the chief said.

    Weiss also was charged with disrupting a public meeting, a misdemeanor. The Secret Service questioned Weiss on Friday and he was released later that night. He has a court hearing scheduled for Oct. 9.

    A Trump campaign spokesman offered no immediate comment Tuesday.

    The disruption occurred shortly after Trump criticized major media outlets for what he said was unfavorable coverage.

    As Weiss was led away, the former president told the crowd: “Is there anywhere that’s more fun to be than a Trump rally?”

    There has been heightened scrutiny of security at Trump rallies since a gunman fired at him, grazing his ear, during an outdoor rally in July in Butler, Pennsylvania. Security at political events has been noticeably tighter since then.

    ]]>
    Wed, Sep 04 2024 09:39:29 AM Wed, Sep 04 2024 09:39:44 AM
    Ready or not, election season in US, Pa. is about to start. First ballots available within days https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/decision-2024/2024-election-season-ballots-harris-trump-issues/3951248/ 3951248 post 9852134 Aimee Dilger/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images https://media.nbcphiladelphia.com/2024/09/GettyImages-1255336104.jpg?quality=85&strip=all&fit=300,214

    What to Know

    • Election Day on Nov. 5 is only about two months away, and major dates, events and political developments will make it fly by.
    • The first mail ballots will start going out to voters on Friday. The first presidential debate between Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump is set for Sept. 10.
    • In Pennsylvania, counties are allowed to begin processing mail ballot applications up to 50 days before the election, or Sept. 16 this year, unless a county decides to do it earlier. But counties do not yet have a certified ballot from the state because there are three third-party ballot-access challenges pending in the state Supreme Court.

    It might feel like the presidential election is still a long way off. It’s not.

    Election Day on Nov. 5 is only about two months away, and major dates, events and political developments will make it fly by. The stretch between now and then will go as fast as summer break from school in most parts of the country.

    The first mail ballots will be sent to voters this Friday. The first presidential debate is set for Sept. 10. Former President Donald Trump, the Republican nominee, is scheduled to be sentenced in his New York hush money case on Sept. 18. And early in-person voting will start as soon as Sept. 20 in some states.

    Léelo en español aquí.

    Here’s a look at why the calendar will move quickly, with the Democratic and Republican conventions over and Labor Day signaling the traditional start of campaign season.

    Who’s ready to vote (including in Pennsylvania)?

    The first batch of ballots typically sent out are ones to military and overseas voters. Under federal law, that must happen at least 45 days before an election — which this year is Sept. 21.

    Some states start earlier.

    Election offices in North Carolina are scheduled to begin sending mail ballots to all voters who request them on Friday. That could be delayed because presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has sued to have his name removed from the state’s ballot after he suspended his campaign.

    In Pennsylvania, counties are allowed to begin processing mail ballot applications up to 50 days before the election, or Sept. 16 this year, unless a county decides to do it earlier. But counties do not yet have a certified ballot from the state because there are three third-party ballot-access challenges pending in the state Supreme Court. After certification, counties will need time to print and test the ballot, leading some county officials to caution that they might not go out until late September or early October. Kennedy has successfully withdrawn from the ballot in Pennsylvania.

    Voter registration deadlines vary by state, with most falling between eight and 30 days before the election, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures. The deadline is Oct. 7 in Georgia, one of this year’s most prominent presidential battlegrounds.

    Nearly all states offer some version of in-person voting, though the rules and dates vary considerably.

    The gloves come off

    Whether, where and under what rules the Democratic and Republican presidential and vice presidential nominees will debate has been a point of contention for weeks. But for now, two match-ups are on the calendar.

    Trump and Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris have accepted an invitation from ABC News to debate Sept. 10 in Philadelphia.

    Harris’ pick for vice president, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, and Trump’s, Ohio Sen. JD Vance, have agreed to an Oct. 1 debate hosted by CBS News in New York City.

    Harris has forecast a possible second debate with Trump, but her proposal appeared to be contingent on the GOP nominee’s participation in the Sept. 10 debate. Trump has proposed three presidential debates with different television networks.

    Vance has challenged Walz to another vice presidential debate on Sept. 18, although it’s not been set.

    A possible criminal sentence for former President Donald Trump

    Trump is scheduled to be sentenced Sept. 18 in his hush money criminal case, though his lawyers have asked the judge to delay the proceeding until after Election Day. A decision is expected early this month.

    In a letter to Judge Juan M. Merchan, Trump’s lawyers suggested that holding the sentencing as scheduled, about seven weeks before Election Day, would amount to election interference. On Sept. 16, Merchan is expected to rule on Trump’s request to overturn the guilty verdict and dismiss the case because of the U.S. Supreme Court’s July presidential immunity ruling.

    Trump was convicted in May on 34 counts of falsifying business records to conceal a $130,000 hush money payment to porn actor Stormy Daniels just before the 2016 presidential election. Falsifying business records is punishable by up to four years in prison. Other potential sentences include probation, a fine or a conditional discharge that would require Trump to stay out of trouble to avoid additional punishment.

    Next steps in Trump’s other New York cases

    On Friday, the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals will hear arguments in Trump’s appeal of a jury’s verdict last year ordering him to pay $5 million to writer E. Jean Carroll after it found him liable for sexually assaulting and defaming her. Trump also is appealing a verdict in a second trial in January in which a jury found him liable on additional defamation claims and ordered him to pay Carroll $83.3 million. Trump’s lawyers have until Sept. 13 to file a brief in that appeal.

    On Sept. 26, a New York appeals court will hear oral arguments in Trump’s challenge of a nearly $500 million civil fraud judgment in state Attorney General Letitia James’ lawsuit against him. The court typically rules about a month after arguments, meaning a decision could come before the November election. Trump’s lawyers argue that a judge’s Feb. 16 finding that the former president lied for years about his wealth as he built his real estate empire was “erroneous” and “egregious.” State lawyers responded in court papers this week that there’s “overwhelming evidence” to support the verdict.

    What about Trump’s election and document cases?

    A state case in Georgia that charged Trump and 18 others in a wide-ranging scheme to overturn his 2020 loss in the state is stalled with no chance of going to trial before the election.

    Federal prosecutors have brought two criminal cases against Trump, but one was dismissed by a judge last month and the other is likely to be reshaped by the recent U.S. Supreme Court opinion that conferred broad immunity on former presidents for official acts they take in office.

    Special counsel Jack Smith has appealed the dismissal by U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon of an indictment charging Trump with hoarding classified documents at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida and obstructing the FBI’s efforts to get them back. But even if a federal appeals court reinstates the case and reverses the judge’s ruling that Smith’s appointment was unconstitutional, there’s no chance of a trial taking place this year.

    In light of the Supreme Court’s immunity ruling, a federal judge in Washington is now tasked with deciding which allegations in a separate case charging Trump with plotting to overturn the 2020 election can remain part of the prosecution and which ones must be discarded. Deciding which acts are official and which are not is likely to be an arduous process.

    Fights over voting and the election

    Before the first ballots are even cast, both camps are gearing up to fight over voting.

    Battles over election rules have become a staple of American democracy, but they’re expected to reach new heights this year. Trump installed his own leadership team at the Republican National Committee, including a director of election integrity who helped him try to overturn Biden’s win in 2020. The RNC has filed a blizzard of lawsuits challenging voting rules and promises that more are on the way.

    Democrats also are mobilizing and assembling a robust legal team. Among other things, they are objecting to GOP efforts to remove some inactive voters or noncitizens from voter rolls, arguing that legal voters will get swept up in the purges.

    Republicans have particularly escalated their rhetoric over the specter of noncitizens voting, even though repeated investigations have shown it almost never happens. Some also are pushing to give local election boards the ability to refuse to certify election results.

    All indications are these efforts are laying the groundwork for Trump to again claim the election was stolen from him if he loses and to try to overturn the will of the voters. But there’s no way to know if that will happen until the ballots are cast.


    Associated Press writers Kate Brumback and Christina A. Cassidy in Atlanta, Meg Kinnard in Chicago, Nicholas Riccardi in Denver, Michael R. Sisak in New York and Eric Tucker in Washington contributed to this report. AP election researcher Ryan Dubicki in New York also contributed.

    ]]>
    Tue, Sep 03 2024 10:32:14 AM Thu, Sep 05 2024 08:29:23 AM
    Harris opposes US Steel's sale to a Japanese firm during joint Pennsylvania event with Biden https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/local/harris-biden-attend-labor-day-parade-pa/3957738/ 3957738 post 9849869 AP Photo/Stephanie Scarbrough https://media.nbcphiladelphia.com/2024/09/AP24244524403707.jpg?quality=85&strip=all&fit=300,200 The House on Wednesday rejected Speaker Mike Johnson’s proposal that would have linked temporary funding for the federal government with a mandate that states require proof of citizenship when people register to vote.

    Next steps on government funding are uncertain. Lawmakers are not close to completing work on the dozen annual appropriations bills that will fund federal agencies during the next fiscal year, so they’ll need to approve a stopgap measure to prevent a partial shutdown when that budget year begins Oct. 1.

    The vote was 220-202. Now, Johnson will likely pursue a Plan B to avoid a partial shutdown, though he was not ready before the vote to share details of such a proposal.

    Johnson pulled the bill from consideration last week because it lacked the votes to pass. He worked through the weekend to win support from fellow Republicans but was unable to overcome objections about spending levels from some members, while others said they don’t favor any continuing resolutions, insisting that Congress return to passing the dozen annual appropriations bills on time and one at a time. Democrats overwhelmingly opposed the measure.

    Requiring new voters to provide proof of citizenship has become a leading election-year priority for Republicans raising the specter of noncitizens voting in the U.S., even though it’s already illegal to do so and research has shown that such voting is rare.

    Opponents also say that such a requirement would disenfranchise millions of Americans who do not have a birth certificate or passport readily available when they get a chance to register at their school, church or other venues when voter registration drives occur.

    But Johnson said it is a serious problem because even if a tiny percentage of noncitizens do vote, it could determine the outcome of an extremely close race. He noted that Republican Rep. Mariannette Miller-Meeks of Iowa won her seat back in 2020 by six votes.

    “It’s very, very serious stuff and that’s why we’re going to do the right thing,” Johnson said. “We’re going to responsibly fund the government and we’re going to stop noncitizens voting in elections.”

    Meanwhile, Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump weighed in again just hours before the vote. seemingly encouraging House Republicans to let a partial government shutdown begin at the end of the month unless they get the proof of citizenship mandate, referred to in the House as the SAVE Act.

    “If Republicans don’t get the SAVE Act, and every ounce of it, they should not agree to a Continuing Resolution in any way, shape, or form,” Trump said on the social media platform Truth Social.

    Johnson told reporters he was not ready to discuss an alternative plan to keep the government funded.

    “Let’s see what happens with the bill, all right. We’re on the field in the middle of the game. The quarterback is calling the play. We’re going to run the play,” Johnson said.

    House Democrats said the proof of citizenship mandate should not be part of the continuing resolution to keep the government funded and urged Johnson to work with them on a bill that can pass both chambers.

    “This is not going to become law,” said Rep. Pete Aguilar, D-Calif. “This is Republican theatrics that are meant to appease the most extreme members of their conference, to show them that they are working on something and that they’re continuing to support the former president of the United States in his bid to demonize immigrants.”

    Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said the only way to prevent a government shutdown was for both sides to work together on an agreement. He said the House vote announced by Johnson was doomed to fail.

    “The only thing that will accomplish is make clear that he’s running into a dead end,” Schumer said. “We must have a bipartisan plan instead.”

    The legislation would fund agencies generally at current levels while lawmakers work out their differences on a full-year spending agreement.

    Democrats, and some Republicans, are pushing for a short extension. A temporary fix would allow the current Congress to hammer out a final bill after the election and get it to Democratic President Joe Biden’s desk for his signature.

    But Johnson and some of the more conservative members of his conference are pushing for a six-month extension in the hopes that Republican nominee Donald Trump will win the election and give them more leverage when crafting the full-year bill.

    Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky declined to weigh in on how long to extend funding. He said Schumer and Johnson, ultimately, will have to work out a final agreement that can pass both chambers.

    “The one thing you cannot have is a government shutdown. It would be politically beyond stupid for us to do that right before the election because certainly we would get the blame,” McConnell said.

    Regardless of the vote outcome Wednesday, Republican lawmakers sought to allay any concerns there would be a shutdown at the end of the month. Rep. Mike Lawler, R-N.Y., said if the bill fails, then another stopgap bill should be voted on that would allow lawmakers to come back to Washington after the election and finish the appropriations work.

    “The bottom line is we’re not shutting the government down,” Lawler said.

    But Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries accused Republicans of engaging in a “shutdown effort.”

    “That’s not hyperbole,” Jeffries said. “It’s history. Because in the DNA of extreme MAGA Republicans has consistently been an effort to make extreme ransom demands of the American people, and if those extreme ransom demands are not met, shut down the government.”

    The House approved a bill with the proof of citizenship mandate back in July. Some Republicans who view the issue as popular with their constituents have been pushing for another chance to show their support for the measure.

    Many have investigated noncitizen voting and found little evidence of it, NBC News reported. The Brennan Center found just 30 suspected noncitizen votes amid 23.5 million votes in 2016, suggesting that suspected noncitizen votes accounted for 0.0001% of votes cast. Trump’s own election integrity commission disbanded without releasing evidence of voter fraud, even though he’d claimed 3 million undocumented immigrants had voted in 2016 costing him the popular vote.

    ]]>
    Mon, Sep 02 2024 07:09:09 AM Mon, Sep 02 2024 08:45:08 PM
    The 10 states where abortion rights will be on the ballot this fall https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/politics/10-states-where-abortion-rights-will-be-on-the-ballot-this-fall/3957440/ 3957440 post 9677232 Photo by Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images https://media.nbcphiladelphia.com/2024/07/GettyImages-2159051859.jpg?quality=85&strip=all&fit=300,200 After months of gathering signatures, filing petitions and navigating lawsuits, constitutional amendments that would protect or expand abortion rights are officially set to appear on the general election ballot in 10 states.

    Voters in the swing states (Arizona and Nevada), blue-leaning states (Colorado, Maryland and New York) and red-leaning states (Florida, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska and South Dakota) will have the ability to directly decide the future of abortion access this fall. Among the organizers who submitted signatures to qualify an abortion rights amendment for this year’s ballot, only those in Arkansas fell short.

    These 10 initiatives will be the latest to pursue enshrining abortion access in a state’s constitution since the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in 2022.

    Here is what the proposed amendments would do if passed — and how they would impact current abortion care laws in those states.

    Arizona

    The proposed constitutional amendment on the ballot in this crucial southwestern battleground would create a “fundamental right” to an abortion up until fetal viability, or about the 24th week of pregnancy. After that point, the measure would bar the state from restricting abortion in situations when the health or the life of the pregnant person is at risk, according to the treating health care professional.

    Under current Arizona law, abortion is legal up until the 15th week of pregnancy, with an exception after that to save the woman’s life and no exceptions after that for rape or incest. If voters approve the proposed ballot measure in November, it would effectively undo the 15-week ban. It needs a simple majority of support to pass.

    Colorado

    The proposed amendment in Colorado would declare formally that “the right to abortion is hereby recognized” and that “government shall not deny, impede or discriminate against the exercise of that right.”

    It also explicitly states that the government may not prohibit health insurance coverage for abortion, including insurance plans for public employees and publicly funded insurance plans. That provision would effectively undo a 1984 law that barred people from using their health insurance to pay for abortion care.

    The ballot measure in Colorado — where there are no laws restricting abortion and no gestational limits at all for women seeking an abortion — is intended to formally enshrine those rights, a move organizers say is crucial to prevent lawmakers from having any future opportunity to undo them.

    To pass in November, the measure requires the support of 55% of voters under state law, not just a simple majority.

    Florida

    The state’s ballot initiative would bar restrictions on abortion before fetal viability and would include exceptions past that point for “the patient’s health, as determined by the patient’s healthcare provider.”

    Passage of the amendment would effectively undo the state’s six-week ban on abortion, which includes exceptions for rape, incest and the life of the woman.

    Under Florida law, the measure must receive the support of 60% of voters in November, rather than a simple majority, to pass.

    Maryland

    Lawmakers, who control the amendment process in Maryland rather than citizens, voted to place a measure on the ballot that would enshrine abortion rights in the state constitution.

    It would add language to guaranteeing the right to “to make and effectuate decisions to prevent, continue, or end one’s own pregnancy.”

    Abortion is already legal in the state through fetal viability, with exceptions afterward when the woman’s life or health is at risk, or when a fetal anomaly is detected. A simple majority is needed for passage.

    Missouri 

    Missouri’s amendment would enshrine language in the state constitution to protect abortion rights up until fetal viability, with exceptions after that point for the life and health of the mother.

    The amendment specifically states that the government “shall not deny or infringe upon a person’s fundamental right to reproductive freedom,” which the amendment defines as all decisions related to reproductive health care, explicitly including “birth control,” “abortion care” and “miscarriage care” — up until fetal viability. The proposal also deems any “denial, interference, delay or restriction” of such care as “invalid.”

    After that point, the government may regulate abortion except in cases where a treating health care professional has judged the “life or physical or mental health” of the mother to be at risk.

    At the same time, the amendment would allow lawmakers and state officials to restrict or limit abortion rights in situations in which doing so “is for the limited purpose and has the limited effect of improving or maintaining the health of a person seeking care, is consistent with widely accepted clinical standards of practice and evidence-based medicine, and does not infringe on that person’s autonomous decision-making.”

    Missouri currently has one of the strictest abortion bans in the U.S. in place, with exceptions to protect the life of the mother and for medical emergencies. If the amendment were to pass, it would effectively undo that law. A simple majority is needed for passage.

    Montana

    The ballot measure in Montana would amend the state constitution to provide a right to “make and carry out decisions about one’s own pregnancy, including the right to abortion.” It would also “prohibit the government from denying or burdening the right to abortion before fetal viability,” and  “prohibit the government from denying or burdening access to an abortion when a treating healthcare professional determines it is medically indicated to protect the pregnant patient’s life or health.”

    Abortion is currently legal in Montana until fetal viability, so enshrining abortion rights in the state constitution would serve to make it more difficult for lawmakers to undo current protections in the future. A simple majority is needed for passage.

    Nebraska

    In Nebraska, two dueling constitutional amendments will appear on the November ballot.

    One of the ballot measures, known as “Protect the Right to Abortion,” would amend the state’s constitution to state that “all persons shall have a fundamental right to abortion until fetal viability, or when needed to protect the life or health of the pregnant patient.”

    The other, called “Protect Women and Children,” bars abortions in the second and third trimesters, except in the case of a medical emergency or when the pregnancy is a result of sexual assault or incest.

    Nebraska law currently bans abortion after 12 weeks of pregnancy, with exceptions for rape, incest and saving the mother’s life. The pro-abortion rights measure would effectively undo that law, while the other would basically codify the law in the state constitution.

    For a ballot measure to pass in Nebraska, it needs to receive a majority of the vote and at least 35% of the total votes cast in the election in favor of it. If both amendments pass, the one with the most votes prevails.

    Nevada

    In Nevada, abortion is already legal until the 24th week of pregnancy. But fearing that such rights could be undone in the future, reproductive rights advocates succeeded in placing a constitutional amendment on the November ballot that would enshrine similar language, protecting abortion rights up until fetal viability.

    Under state law, even if the measure passes in November, voters would need to approve it again in 2026 before the Nevada constitution is formally amended.

    New York

    As in Maryland, lawmakers, not citizens, control the amendment process in New York. State legislators voted to put a measure on the ballot that would enshrine abortion rights in the state constitution.

    The Equal Protection of Law Amendment doesn’t actually explicitly mention abortion, but would enshrine rights in the state constitution designed to protect against anything the government does to affect a person’s “pregnancy, pregnancy outcomes, and reproductive healthcare and autonomy.”

    In New York, abortion is legal up to around the 24th week of pregnancy. Passage of the proposal — which requires a simple majority — would effectively cement those projections constitutionally. 

    South Dakota

    The proposed constitutional amendment on the ballot in South Dakota would make abortion legal in all situations in the first trimester of pregnancy. It would allow “regulation” by the state of abortion in the second trimester of pregnancy, but such regulation “must be reasonably related to the physical health of the pregnant woman.” 

    The amendment would allow “regulation or prohibition” by the state in the third trimester, except in cases when a physician has determined that the care would be necessary to “preserve the life or health” of the woman.

    If it passes, the amendment would effectively undo the state’s near-total ban on abortion, which snapped back into effect after Roe v. Wade was struck down in 2022. The law, which abortion advocates say is among the harshest in the U.S., prohibits all abortions except when necessary to save the woman’s life.

    The ballot measure will need to win a simple majority to pass.

    This article first appeared on NBCNews.com. Read more from NBC News here:

    This story uses functionality that may not work in our app. Click here to open the story in your web browser.

    ]]>
    Sun, Sep 01 2024 12:37:25 PM Sun, Sep 01 2024 12:41:28 PM
    DNC Recap: On the floor at the convention as Pres. Biden passes the torch to VP Kamala Harris https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/politics/dnc-recap-on-the-floor-at-the-convention-as-pres-biden-passes-the-torch-to-vp-kamala-harris/3951650/ 3951650 post 9831262 NBC10 Philadelphia https://media.nbcphiladelphia.com/2024/08/image-92-4.png?fit=300,169&quality=85&strip=all NBC10 political reporter Lauren Mayk was on the floor with delegates at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago. In this episode, hear her conversations with lawmakers (Philadelphia Councilmember Katherine Gilmore Richardson, Congresswoman Madeleine Dean and Senator Chris Coons) – and an unexpected appearance by Delaware Governor John Carney – on the night Hillary Clinton and President Biden took the stage at the DNC. She also spoke with former Congressman Patrick Murphy from Bucks County about his friendship with Gov. Tim Walz and his family. 

    1:06 – Philadelphia Council member Katherine Gilmore Richardson reflects on Hillary Clinton’s run in 2016

    1:34 – Richardson on chants of “Lock Him Up” during Hillary Clinton’s speech

    2:44 – Pennsylvania Congresswoman Madeleine Dean how she’s feeling being at the DNC for the first time

    4:47 – Rep. Dean on President Joe Biden stepping aside and not running again

    5:55 – Delaware Gov. John Carney joins the conversation to reflect on President Biden’s life in politics

    8:30 – Delaware Senator Chris Coons on the historic nature of the DNC

    9:21 – Sen. Coons shares the advice Pres. Biden shared with him

    10:07 – Coons talks about Biden’s decision to step aside for Vice President Kamala Harris to run for the White House

    11:05 – Coons discusses Biden’s potential impact on VP Harris’ campaign and possible administration

    13:20 – Coons on protests regarding the Israel-Hamas War and the election

    14:55 – Former Congressman Patrick Murphy from Bucks County shares insight into knowing Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz

    17:02 – Murphy shares his thoughts on former President Donald Trump’s criticism of Walz’s military service

    18:33 – Murphy how Bucks County voters will view Walz’s record as governor in Minnesota

    You can subscribe to Battleground Politics on Apple, Google, Spotify, or wherever else you get your favorite podcasts. You can also watch or listen to every episode right here on NBC10.com, the NBC10 YouTube channel, and in rotation on our streaming channels.

    Subscribe to Battleground Politics anywhere you get your podcasts: Spotify | Amazon Music | Apple Podcasts | Google Play (soon) | Art19 | RSS | Watch on YouTube

    ]]>
    Sat, Aug 24 2024 03:43:57 PM Sat, Aug 24 2024 03:44:09 PM
    Robert F. Kennedy Jr. says in a Pennsylvania court filing that he will be endorsing Donald Trump https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/politics/robert-f-kennedy-jr-endorsing-donald-trump-pennsylvania-court-filing/3951147/ 3951147 post 9829429 Getty Images https://media.nbcphiladelphia.com/2024/08/GettyImages-2154519456.jpg?quality=85&strip=all&fit=300,205 Ahead of a planned speech, Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s campaign said in a Pennsylvania court filing Friday that he is endorsing Donald Trump for president.

    Kennedy’s independent campaign also requested that he be removed from the Pennsylvania ballot, though it was not immediately clear that he was officially dropping out of the race.

    Kennedy was about to speak in Arizona “about the present historical moment and his path forward,” according to his campaign. Hours later, Trump will hold a rally in neighboring Glendale. Trump’s campaign has teased that he will be joined by “a special guest,” though neither campaign responded to messages about whether Kennedy would be that guest.

    Kennedy withdrew from the ballot in Arizona late Thursday, less than a week after he submitted well more than the required number of signatures to appear on the ballot. But his critics raised questions about the validity of some of the signatures, and the involvement of a pro-Kennedy super PAC to collect them risked potentially running afoul of rules against coordination between candidates and independent political groups.

    A year ago, some would have thought it inconceivable that Kennedy — a member of the most storied family in Democratic politics — would work with Trump to keep a Democrat out of the White House. Even in recent months, Kennedy has accused Trump of betraying his followers, while Trump has criticized Kennedy as “the most radical left candidate in the race.”

    But the two campaigns have ramped up their compliments to each other and engaged in behind-the-scenes discussions in recent weeks, according to those familiar with the efforts. Both campaigns have spent months accusing Democrats of weaponizing the legal system for their own benefit. And both have hinted publicly that they could be open to joining forces, with the shared goal of limiting the election chances of Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris.

    Last month, during the Republican National Convention, Kennedy’s son posted and then quickly deleted a video showing a phone call between Kennedy and Trump, in which the former president appeared to try to talk Kennedy into siding with him.

    Talks between the two camps continued, with close Trump allies quietly lobbying Kennedy to drop out of the race and support the Republican nominee, according to a person familiar with the efforts who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss private conversations.

    Trump told CNN on Tuesday that he would “love” an endorsement from Kennedy, whom he called a “brilliant guy.” He also said he would “certainly” be open to Kennedy playing a role in his administration if Kennedy drops out and endorses him.

    Kennedy’s running mate, Nicole Shanahan, also openly suggested on a podcast this week that his campaign might “walk away right now and join forces with Donald Trump.” While she clarified that she is not personally in talks with Trump, she entertained the idea that Kennedy could join Trump’s administration as secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services.

    “I think that Bobby in a role like that would be excellent,” Shanahan said. “I fully support it. I have high hopes.”

    The scheduled remarks by Kennedy, a son of former Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy and a nephew of former President John F. Kennedy, come as his campaign’s momentum has slipped.

    Kennedy Jr. first entered the 2024 presidential race as a Democrat but left the party last fall to run as an independent. He built an unusually strong base for a third-party bid, fueled in part by anti-establishment voters and vaccine skeptics who have followed his anti-vaccine work since the COVID-19 pandemic. But he has since faced strained campaign finances and mounting legal challenges, including a recent ruling from a New York judge that he should not appear on the ballot in the state because he listed a “sham” address on nominating petitions.

    Recent polls put his support in the mid-single digits. And it’s unclear if he’d get even that in a general election, since third-party candidates frequently don’t live up to their early poll numbers when voters actually cast their ballots.

    There’s some evidence that Kennedy’s staying in the race would hurt Trump more than Harris. According to a July AP-NORC poll, Republicans were significantly more likely than Democrats to have a favorable view of Kennedy. And those with a positive impression of Kennedy were significantly more likely to also have a favorable view of Trump (52%) than Harris (37%).

    In an interview with MSNBC at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago on Thursday, Harris communications director Michael Tyler said her campaign welcomes Kennedy voters should the independent candidate drop out.

    For voters who see Trump as a threat, who are looking for a new way forward, or who want “government to get the hell out of the way of their own personal decisions, there’s a home for you in Kamala Harris’ campaign,” Tyler said.

    For Trump, Friday will mark the end of a week’s worth of battleground state visits in which he has sought to draw attention away from Democrats’ celebration of Harris’ presidential nomination in Chicago.

    He traveled to Pennsylvania, Michigan, North Carolina and Arizona’s U.S.-Mexico border for events focused on his policy proposals on the economy, crime and safety, national security and the border. He will close out the week Friday with stops in Las Vegas and Glendale.

    ]]>
    Fri, Aug 23 2024 02:38:40 PM Fri, Aug 23 2024 02:38:47 PM
    Mayor Dwan Walker talks inspiration, Pete Buttigieg speaks on the presidential race https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/politics/mayor-dwan-walker-talks-inspiration-pete-buttigieg-speaks-on-the-presidential-race/3950286/ 3950286 post 9826122 https://media.nbcphiladelphia.com/2024/08/33858541345-1080pnbcstations.jpg?quality=85&strip=all&fit=300,169 Aliquippa Mayor Dwan Walker’s spirited statements during the ceremonial roll call has made him one of the breakout stars of the Democratic National Convention. In the latest episode of Battleground Politics, Lauren Mayk spoke with Mayor Walker about his late sister and how she inspired him. She also spoke with U.S. Secretary of Transportation Pete Buttigieg about Harris and the importance of Pennsylvania in the 2024 presidential election.

    Here’s a full breakdown of the episode:

    Interview with Pete Buttigieg

    :38 – The importance of Pennsylvania in the 2024 presidential election

    1:18 – Kamala Harris’ stance on fracking

    2:05 – Whether or not a Harris administration would be similar to Biden’s administration

    3:02 – What the VP nomination process was like

    4:05 – Attacks on Tim Walz’s military service

    4:21 – Robert F. Kennedy Jr.

    5:16 – Whether or not Buttigieg would serve in a Harris administration

    5:31 – Whether or not Buttigieg would run for president again

    Interview with Mayor Dwan B. Walker

    6:15 – Mayor Walker introduces himself and Aliquippa

    6:30 – What the roll call was like at the DNC

    7:03 – How Walker’s late sister inspired him

    9:43 – What it’s like to nominate a Black woman as president

    11:08 – What made Walker attend the DNC

    11:34 – What Walker represents

    12:33 – Speaking with voters about the economy

    You can subscribe to Battleground Politics on Apple, Google, Spotify, or wherever else you get your favorite podcasts. You can also watch or listen to every episode right here on NBC10.com, the NBC10 YouTube channel, and in rotation on our streaming channels.

    Subscribe to Battleground Politics anywhere you get your podcasts: Spotify | Amazon Music | Apple Podcasts | Google Play (soon) | Art19 | RSS | Watch on YouTube

    ]]>
    Thu, Aug 22 2024 03:54:32 PM Thu, Aug 22 2024 03:54:43 PM
    Philly Mayor Cherelle Parker talks Harris, Walz, Shapiro at the DNC https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/decision-2024/philly-mayor-cherelle-parker-talks-harris-walz-shapiro-at-the-dnc/3950275/ 3950275 post 9826138 CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Imag https://media.nbcphiladelphia.com/2024/08/GettyImages-2165184196.jpg?quality=85&strip=all&fit=300,200 Philadelphia Mayor Cherelle Parker attended the Democratic National Convention in Chicago. In the latest episode of Battleground Politics, Lauren Mayk spoke with Parker about Democratic nominee Kamala Harris, Harris’ choice of Tim Walz as a runningmate over Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro, and Parker’s plans to turn out voters in Philadelphia this fall. 

    Here’s a full breakdown of the episode:

    :37 – Parker’s goals at the DNC

    1:45 – Parker on whether Harris can win Pa. without Shapiro as her running mate

    3:12 – Whether or not promoting Shapiro for VP ended up backfiring

    4:46 – How Parker’s connections with Philly voters will impact the presidential election

    6:50 – Whether or not Parker is nervous about what Harris could face as a woman of color running for office

    8:21 – Trump’s comments on Harris’ race

    9:23 – Whether she would consider no taxes on tips in Philly

    12:06 – Whether she’d consider serving in a Harris administration

    You can subscribe to Battleground Politics on Apple, Google, Spotify, or wherever else you get your favorite podcasts. You can also watch or listen to every episode right here on NBC10.com, the NBC10 YouTube channel, and in rotation on our streaming channels.

    Subscribe to Battleground Politics anywhere you get your podcasts: Spotify | Amazon Music | Apple Podcasts | Google Play (soon) | Art19 | RSS | Watch on YouTube

    ]]>
    Thu, Aug 22 2024 03:45:33 PM Thu, Aug 22 2024 03:45:42 PM
    Pa. Gov. Josh Shapiro responds to Trump calling him an ‘overrated Jewish Governor' https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/decision-2024/pennsylvania-dnc-governor-josh-shapiro-responds-to-donald-trump-calling-him-an-overrated-jewish-governor/3950165/ 3950165 post 9825635 https://media.nbcphiladelphia.com/2024/08/33855929619-1080pnbcstations.jpg?quality=85&strip=all&fit=300,169 The House on Wednesday rejected Speaker Mike Johnson’s proposal that would have linked temporary funding for the federal government with a mandate that states require proof of citizenship when people register to vote.

    Next steps on government funding are uncertain. Lawmakers are not close to completing work on the dozen annual appropriations bills that will fund federal agencies during the next fiscal year, so they’ll need to approve a stopgap measure to prevent a partial shutdown when that budget year begins Oct. 1.

    The vote was 220-202. Now, Johnson will likely pursue a Plan B to avoid a partial shutdown, though he was not ready before the vote to share details of such a proposal.

    Johnson pulled the bill from consideration last week because it lacked the votes to pass. He worked through the weekend to win support from fellow Republicans but was unable to overcome objections about spending levels from some members, while others said they don’t favor any continuing resolutions, insisting that Congress return to passing the dozen annual appropriations bills on time and one at a time. Democrats overwhelmingly opposed the measure.

    Requiring new voters to provide proof of citizenship has become a leading election-year priority for Republicans raising the specter of noncitizens voting in the U.S., even though it’s already illegal to do so and research has shown that such voting is rare.

    Opponents also say that such a requirement would disenfranchise millions of Americans who do not have a birth certificate or passport readily available when they get a chance to register at their school, church or other venues when voter registration drives occur.

    But Johnson said it is a serious problem because even if a tiny percentage of noncitizens do vote, it could determine the outcome of an extremely close race. He noted that Republican Rep. Mariannette Miller-Meeks of Iowa won her seat back in 2020 by six votes.

    “It’s very, very serious stuff and that’s why we’re going to do the right thing,” Johnson said. “We’re going to responsibly fund the government and we’re going to stop noncitizens voting in elections.”

    Meanwhile, Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump weighed in again just hours before the vote. seemingly encouraging House Republicans to let a partial government shutdown begin at the end of the month unless they get the proof of citizenship mandate, referred to in the House as the SAVE Act.

    “If Republicans don’t get the SAVE Act, and every ounce of it, they should not agree to a Continuing Resolution in any way, shape, or form,” Trump said on the social media platform Truth Social.

    Johnson told reporters he was not ready to discuss an alternative plan to keep the government funded.

    “Let’s see what happens with the bill, all right. We’re on the field in the middle of the game. The quarterback is calling the play. We’re going to run the play,” Johnson said.

    House Democrats said the proof of citizenship mandate should not be part of the continuing resolution to keep the government funded and urged Johnson to work with them on a bill that can pass both chambers.

    “This is not going to become law,” said Rep. Pete Aguilar, D-Calif. “This is Republican theatrics that are meant to appease the most extreme members of their conference, to show them that they are working on something and that they’re continuing to support the former president of the United States in his bid to demonize immigrants.”

    Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said the only way to prevent a government shutdown was for both sides to work together on an agreement. He said the House vote announced by Johnson was doomed to fail.

    “The only thing that will accomplish is make clear that he’s running into a dead end,” Schumer said. “We must have a bipartisan plan instead.”

    The legislation would fund agencies generally at current levels while lawmakers work out their differences on a full-year spending agreement.

    Democrats, and some Republicans, are pushing for a short extension. A temporary fix would allow the current Congress to hammer out a final bill after the election and get it to Democratic President Joe Biden’s desk for his signature.

    But Johnson and some of the more conservative members of his conference are pushing for a six-month extension in the hopes that Republican nominee Donald Trump will win the election and give them more leverage when crafting the full-year bill.

    Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky declined to weigh in on how long to extend funding. He said Schumer and Johnson, ultimately, will have to work out a final agreement that can pass both chambers.

    “The one thing you cannot have is a government shutdown. It would be politically beyond stupid for us to do that right before the election because certainly we would get the blame,” McConnell said.

    Regardless of the vote outcome Wednesday, Republican lawmakers sought to allay any concerns there would be a shutdown at the end of the month. Rep. Mike Lawler, R-N.Y., said if the bill fails, then another stopgap bill should be voted on that would allow lawmakers to come back to Washington after the election and finish the appropriations work.

    “The bottom line is we’re not shutting the government down,” Lawler said.

    But Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries accused Republicans of engaging in a “shutdown effort.”

    “That’s not hyperbole,” Jeffries said. “It’s history. Because in the DNA of extreme MAGA Republicans has consistently been an effort to make extreme ransom demands of the American people, and if those extreme ransom demands are not met, shut down the government.”

    The House approved a bill with the proof of citizenship mandate back in July. Some Republicans who view the issue as popular with their constituents have been pushing for another chance to show their support for the measure.

    Many have investigated noncitizen voting and found little evidence of it, NBC News reported. The Brennan Center found just 30 suspected noncitizen votes amid 23.5 million votes in 2016, suggesting that suspected noncitizen votes accounted for 0.0001% of votes cast. Trump’s own election integrity commission disbanded without releasing evidence of voter fraud, even though he’d claimed 3 million undocumented immigrants had voted in 2016 costing him the popular vote.

    ]]>
    Thu, Aug 22 2024 01:32:41 PM Thu, Aug 22 2024 08:34:33 PM
    RFK Jr. is planning to drop out of the 2024 presidential race and endorse Trump https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/national-international/rfk-jr-is-planning-to-drop-out-of-the-2024-presidential-race-and-endorse-trump/3949334/ 3949334 post 9822695 Liam Kennedy/Bloomberg via Getty Images https://media.nbcphiladelphia.com/2024/08/GettyImages-2162975674.jpg?quality=85&strip=all&fit=300,200 The House on Wednesday rejected Speaker Mike Johnson’s proposal that would have linked temporary funding for the federal government with a mandate that states require proof of citizenship when people register to vote.

    Next steps on government funding are uncertain. Lawmakers are not close to completing work on the dozen annual appropriations bills that will fund federal agencies during the next fiscal year, so they’ll need to approve a stopgap measure to prevent a partial shutdown when that budget year begins Oct. 1.

    The vote was 220-202. Now, Johnson will likely pursue a Plan B to avoid a partial shutdown, though he was not ready before the vote to share details of such a proposal.

    Johnson pulled the bill from consideration last week because it lacked the votes to pass. He worked through the weekend to win support from fellow Republicans but was unable to overcome objections about spending levels from some members, while others said they don’t favor any continuing resolutions, insisting that Congress return to passing the dozen annual appropriations bills on time and one at a time. Democrats overwhelmingly opposed the measure.

    Requiring new voters to provide proof of citizenship has become a leading election-year priority for Republicans raising the specter of noncitizens voting in the U.S., even though it’s already illegal to do so and research has shown that such voting is rare.

    Opponents also say that such a requirement would disenfranchise millions of Americans who do not have a birth certificate or passport readily available when they get a chance to register at their school, church or other venues when voter registration drives occur.

    But Johnson said it is a serious problem because even if a tiny percentage of noncitizens do vote, it could determine the outcome of an extremely close race. He noted that Republican Rep. Mariannette Miller-Meeks of Iowa won her seat back in 2020 by six votes.

    “It’s very, very serious stuff and that’s why we’re going to do the right thing,” Johnson said. “We’re going to responsibly fund the government and we’re going to stop noncitizens voting in elections.”

    Meanwhile, Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump weighed in again just hours before the vote. seemingly encouraging House Republicans to let a partial government shutdown begin at the end of the month unless they get the proof of citizenship mandate, referred to in the House as the SAVE Act.

    “If Republicans don’t get the SAVE Act, and every ounce of it, they should not agree to a Continuing Resolution in any way, shape, or form,” Trump said on the social media platform Truth Social.

    Johnson told reporters he was not ready to discuss an alternative plan to keep the government funded.

    “Let’s see what happens with the bill, all right. We’re on the field in the middle of the game. The quarterback is calling the play. We’re going to run the play,” Johnson said.

    House Democrats said the proof of citizenship mandate should not be part of the continuing resolution to keep the government funded and urged Johnson to work with them on a bill that can pass both chambers.

    “This is not going to become law,” said Rep. Pete Aguilar, D-Calif. “This is Republican theatrics that are meant to appease the most extreme members of their conference, to show them that they are working on something and that they’re continuing to support the former president of the United States in his bid to demonize immigrants.”

    Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said the only way to prevent a government shutdown was for both sides to work together on an agreement. He said the House vote announced by Johnson was doomed to fail.

    “The only thing that will accomplish is make clear that he’s running into a dead end,” Schumer said. “We must have a bipartisan plan instead.”

    The legislation would fund agencies generally at current levels while lawmakers work out their differences on a full-year spending agreement.

    Democrats, and some Republicans, are pushing for a short extension. A temporary fix would allow the current Congress to hammer out a final bill after the election and get it to Democratic President Joe Biden’s desk for his signature.

    But Johnson and some of the more conservative members of his conference are pushing for a six-month extension in the hopes that Republican nominee Donald Trump will win the election and give them more leverage when crafting the full-year bill.

    Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky declined to weigh in on how long to extend funding. He said Schumer and Johnson, ultimately, will have to work out a final agreement that can pass both chambers.

    “The one thing you cannot have is a government shutdown. It would be politically beyond stupid for us to do that right before the election because certainly we would get the blame,” McConnell said.

    Regardless of the vote outcome Wednesday, Republican lawmakers sought to allay any concerns there would be a shutdown at the end of the month. Rep. Mike Lawler, R-N.Y., said if the bill fails, then another stopgap bill should be voted on that would allow lawmakers to come back to Washington after the election and finish the appropriations work.

    “The bottom line is we’re not shutting the government down,” Lawler said.

    But Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries accused Republicans of engaging in a “shutdown effort.”

    “That’s not hyperbole,” Jeffries said. “It’s history. Because in the DNA of extreme MAGA Republicans has consistently been an effort to make extreme ransom demands of the American people, and if those extreme ransom demands are not met, shut down the government.”

    The House approved a bill with the proof of citizenship mandate back in July. Some Republicans who view the issue as popular with their constituents have been pushing for another chance to show their support for the measure.

    Many have investigated noncitizen voting and found little evidence of it, NBC News reported. The Brennan Center found just 30 suspected noncitizen votes amid 23.5 million votes in 2016, suggesting that suspected noncitizen votes accounted for 0.0001% of votes cast. Trump’s own election integrity commission disbanded without releasing evidence of voter fraud, even though he’d claimed 3 million undocumented immigrants had voted in 2016 costing him the popular vote.

    ]]>
    Wed, Aug 21 2024 04:58:14 PM Wed, Aug 21 2024 06:47:03 PM
    Montco GOP official says he was ‘swatted' after endorsing Kamala Harris https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/local/matthew-mccaffery-republican-gop-upper-merion-pennsylvania-swatted-kamala-harris-donald-trump/3947246/ 3947246 post 9814884 Chang, David (206094360) https://media.nbcphiladelphia.com/2024/08/Matthew-McCaffery-swatting-incident.jpg?quality=85&strip=all&fit=300,193 The House on Wednesday rejected Speaker Mike Johnson’s proposal that would have linked temporary funding for the federal government with a mandate that states require proof of citizenship when people register to vote.

    Next steps on government funding are uncertain. Lawmakers are not close to completing work on the dozen annual appropriations bills that will fund federal agencies during the next fiscal year, so they’ll need to approve a stopgap measure to prevent a partial shutdown when that budget year begins Oct. 1.

    The vote was 220-202. Now, Johnson will likely pursue a Plan B to avoid a partial shutdown, though he was not ready before the vote to share details of such a proposal.

    Johnson pulled the bill from consideration last week because it lacked the votes to pass. He worked through the weekend to win support from fellow Republicans but was unable to overcome objections about spending levels from some members, while others said they don’t favor any continuing resolutions, insisting that Congress return to passing the dozen annual appropriations bills on time and one at a time. Democrats overwhelmingly opposed the measure.

    Requiring new voters to provide proof of citizenship has become a leading election-year priority for Republicans raising the specter of noncitizens voting in the U.S., even though it’s already illegal to do so and research has shown that such voting is rare.

    Opponents also say that such a requirement would disenfranchise millions of Americans who do not have a birth certificate or passport readily available when they get a chance to register at their school, church or other venues when voter registration drives occur.

    But Johnson said it is a serious problem because even if a tiny percentage of noncitizens do vote, it could determine the outcome of an extremely close race. He noted that Republican Rep. Mariannette Miller-Meeks of Iowa won her seat back in 2020 by six votes.

    “It’s very, very serious stuff and that’s why we’re going to do the right thing,” Johnson said. “We’re going to responsibly fund the government and we’re going to stop noncitizens voting in elections.”

    Meanwhile, Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump weighed in again just hours before the vote. seemingly encouraging House Republicans to let a partial government shutdown begin at the end of the month unless they get the proof of citizenship mandate, referred to in the House as the SAVE Act.

    “If Republicans don’t get the SAVE Act, and every ounce of it, they should not agree to a Continuing Resolution in any way, shape, or form,” Trump said on the social media platform Truth Social.

    Johnson told reporters he was not ready to discuss an alternative plan to keep the government funded.

    “Let’s see what happens with the bill, all right. We’re on the field in the middle of the game. The quarterback is calling the play. We’re going to run the play,” Johnson said.

    House Democrats said the proof of citizenship mandate should not be part of the continuing resolution to keep the government funded and urged Johnson to work with them on a bill that can pass both chambers.

    “This is not going to become law,” said Rep. Pete Aguilar, D-Calif. “This is Republican theatrics that are meant to appease the most extreme members of their conference, to show them that they are working on something and that they’re continuing to support the former president of the United States in his bid to demonize immigrants.”

    Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said the only way to prevent a government shutdown was for both sides to work together on an agreement. He said the House vote announced by Johnson was doomed to fail.

    “The only thing that will accomplish is make clear that he’s running into a dead end,” Schumer said. “We must have a bipartisan plan instead.”

    The legislation would fund agencies generally at current levels while lawmakers work out their differences on a full-year spending agreement.

    Democrats, and some Republicans, are pushing for a short extension. A temporary fix would allow the current Congress to hammer out a final bill after the election and get it to Democratic President Joe Biden’s desk for his signature.

    But Johnson and some of the more conservative members of his conference are pushing for a six-month extension in the hopes that Republican nominee Donald Trump will win the election and give them more leverage when crafting the full-year bill.

    Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky declined to weigh in on how long to extend funding. He said Schumer and Johnson, ultimately, will have to work out a final agreement that can pass both chambers.

    “The one thing you cannot have is a government shutdown. It would be politically beyond stupid for us to do that right before the election because certainly we would get the blame,” McConnell said.

    Regardless of the vote outcome Wednesday, Republican lawmakers sought to allay any concerns there would be a shutdown at the end of the month. Rep. Mike Lawler, R-N.Y., said if the bill fails, then another stopgap bill should be voted on that would allow lawmakers to come back to Washington after the election and finish the appropriations work.

    “The bottom line is we’re not shutting the government down,” Lawler said.

    But Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries accused Republicans of engaging in a “shutdown effort.”

    “That’s not hyperbole,” Jeffries said. “It’s history. Because in the DNA of extreme MAGA Republicans has consistently been an effort to make extreme ransom demands of the American people, and if those extreme ransom demands are not met, shut down the government.”

    The House approved a bill with the proof of citizenship mandate back in July. Some Republicans who view the issue as popular with their constituents have been pushing for another chance to show their support for the measure.

    Many have investigated noncitizen voting and found little evidence of it, NBC News reported. The Brennan Center found just 30 suspected noncitizen votes amid 23.5 million votes in 2016, suggesting that suspected noncitizen votes accounted for 0.0001% of votes cast. Trump’s own election integrity commission disbanded without releasing evidence of voter fraud, even though he’d claimed 3 million undocumented immigrants had voted in 2016 costing him the popular vote.

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