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Ten nonprofits serving young people in Detroit will get an unusual, lasting gift as part of a campaign started by Lisa Ford and her husband, Bill Ford, the executive chairman of Ford Motor Co. Endowments are funds a nonprofit can invest and the annual financial returns from those investments can go into the nonprofit’s budget. Detroit-area nonprofits may apply in June, when Michigan Central Station will reopen, and ten selected organizations will each receive $500,000 to launch an endowment. The Children's Foundation will manage the nonprofits’ endowments and offer them guidance and technical support over two years. Lisa Ford said the idea for creating endowments for youth nonprofits evolved out of their commitment to supporting a robust and vibrant future for the city and the automotive industry.
Persons: Lisa Ford, Bill Ford, ’ ”, Andrew Stein, , ” Ford, Todd Ely, Ely, ” Ely, Meadow Didier, Stein Organizations: Ford Motor Co, Children’s Foundation, Michigan Central, Children’s Hospital of Michigan, Harvard, Foundation, Children’s, Endowments, Internal Revenue Service, University of Colorado, Nonprofit Finance Fund, Children's, Ford, Associated, Lilly Endowment Inc, AP Locations: Detroit, Michigan, University of Colorado Denver
JPMorgan Chase parted with four stocks in its list of favorite picks heading into November, including an upscale athletic retailer. The bank made a single addition for November on its Analyst Focus List, highlighting food service stock Aramark . The bank also removed mortgage company NMI Holdings from the focus list, as well as oncology firm Revolution Medicines . Other stocks on the focus list include Capital One , included as a value stock, with a $111 per share price target. AMZN YTD mountain Amazon stock.
Persons: JPMorgan Chase, Andrew Steinman, Richard Shane, NMI, Eric Joseph, Doug Anmuth's, Mark Murphy, — CNBC's Michael Bloom Organizations: JPMorgan, NMI Holdings, Medicines, Amazon, Microsoft
I Backed Trump, but Now I’m for Haley
  + stars: | 2023-10-27 | by ( Andrew Stein | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
Journal Editorial Report: The week's best and worst from Dan Henninger, Mary O’Grady and Kim Strassel. Images: Reuters/AFP/Getty Images/Bloomberg News Composite: Mark KellyI supported Donald Trump twice, but I now think the country would be best served with a different candidate in 2024—Nikki Haley. Mr. Trump did a good job as president, from improving the economy to securing the border and maintaining world peace. But a Trump re-election would be difficult, and half the country will never accept him as president. It would keep us divided while we face international situations that require this country to be unified.
Persons: Dan Henninger, Mary O’Grady, Kim Strassel, Mark Kelly, Donald Trump, — Nikki Haley, Trump Organizations: AFP, Getty, Bloomberg
If Biden Bows Out, How About Michelle Obama?
  + stars: | 2023-05-15 | by ( Douglas Schoen | Andrew Stein | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: +1 min
Wonder Land: Whether it's the border, the economy or crime, the progressive way of governance is that no policy mistake can change—ever. The latest ABC News/Washington Post poll finds President Joe Biden with a 36% approval rating and trailing Mr. Trump by 6 points in a race for the White House. We aren’t the only Democrats considering alternatives and wondering: If not Mr. Biden, who should be the nominee? To be sure, Mr. Biden will remain a candidate as long as he is both physically able and politically viable. Unfortunately for the president, the majority of the country—including many Democratic voters—are already on board with making that case.
An ex-Clinton pollster boosted Ron DeSantis and dismissed Joe Biden as the way to defeat Donald Trump. Mark Penn's commentary is "significant" and "dangerous," on Democratic group, Third Way, warns. Ron DeSantis — and dismissal of President Joe Biden — as the way to defeat former President Donald Trump in 2024 is "significant" and "dangerous," one Democratic group warned on Monday. "There is nothing 'dangerous' in questioning whether Joe Biden can beat Donald Trump," he added. "If we do get to the Biden/Trump rematch, I will surely be writing 'How Joe Biden can beat Donald Trump,'" he wrote.
The demonization of political opponents is entering its next depressing but predictable phase—the use of the most partisan parts of the criminal-justice system to arrest and prosecute political opponents on flimsy charges. Too much of the public, increasingly divorced from bedrock national values, is cheering it on. It’s the logical extension of Donald Trump’s claiming he won the election he lost; of Joe Biden’s branding “MAGA Republicans” a “clear and present danger” to “our democracy”; of right-wing groups planning and executing an assault on the Capitol; of the Russia-collusion hoax; of partisan impeachments; of tech companies censoring political and scientific information to promote ideological and partisan agendas; of retired intelligence officials interfering with the 2020 election by making false claims about the Hunter Biden laptop; of law students shouting down federal judges with the encouragement of university administrators.
Trump or Biden? How About Neither?
  + stars: | 2022-11-18 | by ( Mark Penn | Andrew Stein | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
Joe Biden and Donald Trump: Please do the country a service and don’t run for president in 2024. America is in gridlock over the both of you, and it’s time to let the country progress and find a unifying force that can lead it into the next decade. According to a Nov. 10-14 Morning Consult poll, 65% of Americans don’t want Mr. Biden to run again, and 65% say the same of Mr. Trump. Both of you have served this country, yet both of you have flaws and problems that stand in the way of a successful second term.
Brace Yourself for a Republican Wave
  + stars: | 2022-10-18 | by ( Douglas Schoen | Andrew Stein | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
The Republican Party is on the cusp of a substantial midterm election victory that could rival their wins in 1994 and 2010. There has been a 3-point swing to Republicans in generic-ballot polling in just the last month, according to the RealClearPolitics average. Democrats led by as much as 1.3 points in September, but as of Monday, Republicans were up by 1.8.
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