Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "More About Maggie Astor"


25 mentions found


She said that the dog proved “untrainable,” “dangerous to anyone she came in contact with” and “less than worthless” as a hunting dog — so she shot her in a gravel pit. “I hated that dog,” Ms. Noem wrote. She also alluded to Commander in elaborating on her decision to shoot Cricket: “A dog who bites is dangerous and unpredictable (are you listening, Joe Biden?) — especially if you are running a business where people interact with your dogs,” she wrote. Imagining becoming president in 2025 and sending Mr. Biden’s dog to meet his maker, Ms. Noem added: “Commander, say hello to Cricket for me.”
Persons: Donald J, , Ms, Noem, Joe Biden, Organizations: South, Cricket, CBS Locations: South Dakota
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. sought to make the case on Sunday that he can do something no third-party or independent candidate has come close to doing in modern U.S. history: win a presidential election. Although polls show him far behind, both major-party campaigns, those of President Biden and former President Donald J. Trump, view Mr. Kennedy as a potential spoiler. Speaking at a rally on Long Island outside New York City, Mr. Kennedy cited polls that he said his campaign had conducted, showing him winning in two scenarios: one in which he faced only Mr. Biden without Mr. Trump in the race, and one in which he faced Mr. Trump without Mr. Biden. The reason he is behind in a three-way race, he maintained, is that “so many Americans are voting out of fear.”“Their only strategy is to try to keep me off the ballot and then to make everybody terrified of Donald Trump,” he said of Democrats, “and on the other side, they do the same thing,” he added of Republicans. “When somebody is telling you to vote out of fear, they are trying to manipulate you into abandoning your values,” he said.
Persons: Robert F, Kennedy Jr, Biden, Donald J, Trump, Mr, Kennedy, ” “, Donald Trump, , Locations: Long, New York City
Nikki Haley won the Republican primary in Washington, D.C., on Sunday, logging her first victory after a string of losses to former President Donald J. Trump. She received about 63 percent of the vote to Mr. Trump’s 33 percent, according to The Associated Press, securing all 19 available delegates and becoming the first woman ever to win a Republican presidential primary. The contest was tiny: Just over 2,000 Republicans voted in the overwhelmingly Democratic city of Washington, compared with 110,000 in Iowa, 325,000 in New Hampshire and 757,000 in South Carolina. Ms. Haley seemed to acknowledge that in a post on X. “Thank you, DC!” she wrote.
Persons: Nikki Haley, Donald J, Ms, Haley, Organizations: Republican, Washington , D.C, Trump, Associated Press Locations: Washington ,, Democratic, Washington, Iowa, New Hampshire, South Carolina
Senate Republicans’ campaign arm on Tuesday endorsed Kari Lake in Arizona, signaling the party’s embrace of a firebrand candidate in a state central to their efforts to regain a majority. The National Republican Senatorial Committee’s endorsement, first reported by Politico, reflects Ms. Lake’s efforts to make nice with a Republican establishment that she blasted in her 2022 campaign for governor, and that has long had concerns about her electability. “Kari Lake is one of the most talented candidates in the country,” the committee’s chairman, Senator Steve Daines of Montana, said in a statement. “Kari is building out an effective campaign operation that has what it takes to flip Arizona’s Senate seat in November.”Ms. Lake is seeking the Republican nomination in what could be a three-way race for the seat currently held by Senator Kyrsten Sinema. Representative Ruben Gallego is the front-runner on the Democratic side, and Ms. Sinema, who left the Democratic Party in 2022 to be an independent, has not confirmed whether she will run for re-election.
Persons: Republicans ’, Kari Lake, “ Kari Lake, Steve Daines, “ Kari, , Kyrsten Sinema, Ruben Gallego, Sinema Organizations: Republicans, National Republican, Politico, Republican, Democratic, Democratic Party Locations: Arizona, Montana
Extending a weekslong right-wing meltdown over Taylor Swift’s political preferences, former President Donald J. Trump declared on Sunday that it would be “disloyal” for Ms. Swift to endorse President Biden for re-election, given that Mr. Trump signed legislation that made it easier for artists to collect royalties when their songs are streamed. “I signed and was responsible for the Music Modernization Act for Taylor Swift and all other Musical Artists,” Mr. Trump wrote on his social media platform, referring to a 2018 bill that passed Congress with near unanimous support from members of both parties. “Joe Biden didn’t do anything for Taylor, and never will. Swift urged her fans to register to vote and tens of thousands obliged, and since Mr. Kelce appeared in a Pfizer ad campaign urging people to get Covid and flu vaccines.
Persons: Taylor, Donald J, Trump, , Swift, Biden, , Taylor Swift, ” Mr, “ Joe Biden didn’t, Crooked Joe Biden, Travis, — Travis Kelce, Kelce Organizations: Liberal, Kansas City Chiefs, Pfizer
Ron DeSantis of Florida said on Sunday that, if elected president, he would pursue legislation that would “supersede” the Affordable Care Act, echoing former President Donald J. Trump’s comments, which Democrats seized upon last week. “We’re going to look at the big institutions that are causing prices to be high — big pharma, big insurance and big government — but it’s going to need to be where you have a reform package that’s going to be put in place,” he said. “Obamacare promised lower premiums. After President Biden’s campaign denounced the statement, Mr. Trump wrote: “I don’t want to terminate Obamacare, I want to REPLACE IT with MUCH BETTER HEALTHCARE. Obamacare Sucks!!
Persons: Ron DeSantis, Donald J, Mr, DeSantis, , Trump’s, “ We’re, “ Obamacare, Trump, Biden’s Organizations: Affordable, Press, pharma Locations: Florida
At the same time, Ms. Haley earned a new lift from the super PAC, called Independents Moving the Needle. It said it would initially focus on New Hampshire, where Republican voters are more moderate than in many other states — and, crucially, where voters who are not registered with a party can choose to participate in the Republican or Democratic primary race. After the New Hampshire primary on Jan. 23, the group will turn to South Carolina — Ms. Haley’s home state — and to “selected Super Tuesday states with open primaries,” according to a memo shared with The New York Times. “We all believe that Nikki Haley is an outstanding leader,” the memo says. “She has by far the best electability of any Republican presidential candidate in 2024.
Persons: Haley, , Nikki Haley, Donald Trump, , , Frank Laukien, Jonathan Bush, George W . Bush, Bonnie Anderson, Robert Fisher, Tamra Laukien, Laukien, Haley “ Organizations: Republican, Democratic, New, South Carolina —, The New York Times Locations: New Hampshire, South Carolina, Ukraine, Israel
To be eligible to participate in the debates, candidates will be required to have at least 15 percent support in national polls. It is also unclear whether Mr. Biden will be interested in participating. His team has not committed to debating Mr. Trump, who could be convicted of felonies before the events begin. And the Biden campaign is still upset with the commission over what it sees as lax enforcement of Covid protocols at the first debate in 2020, soon after which Mr. Trump was diagnosed with the virus. A spokesman for Mr. Biden declined to comment on Monday, and a spokesman for Mr. Trump did not comment on the record.
Persons: Frank Fahrenkopf, Antonia Hernández, Robert F, Kennedy Jr, Donald J, Trump, Mr, Biden, Maggie Haberman Organizations: United, Democratic, Republican National Committee, Mr Locations: United States
A Colorado judge ruled on Friday that former President Donald J. Trump could remain on the primary ballot in the state, rejecting the argument that the 14th Amendment prevents him from holding office again — but doing so on relatively narrow grounds that lawyers for the voters seeking to disqualify him said they would appeal. With his actions before and during the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol, Judge Sarah B. Wallace ruled, Mr. Trump engaged in insurrection against the Constitution, an offense that Section 3 of the 14th Amendment — which was ratified in 1868 to keep former Confederates out of the government — deems disqualifying for people who previously took an oath to support the Constitution. But Judge Wallace, a state district court judge in Denver, concluded that Section 3 did not include the presidential oath in that category. The clause does not explicitly name the presidency, so that question hinged on whether the president was included in the category “officer of the United States.”
Persons: Donald J, Trump, Sarah B, Wallace, , Judge Wallace, Organizations: U.S . Capitol, Constitution Locations: Colorado, Denver, United States
New Hampshire’s presidential primary will be held Jan. 23, state officials announced on Wednesday. The date had been in contention since the Democratic National Committee decided earlier this year to change its nominating calendar, which had long given New Hampshire the first primary slot after the Iowa caucuses. The new Democratic calendar puts South Carolina first, followed by New Hampshire and Nevada together on one day, then Georgia, then Michigan. But New Hampshire officials have made clear that they will refuse to abide by the D.N.C.’s decision. “We will be holding our primary first,” Ray Buckley, the chairman of the New Hampshire Democratic Party, said last year after initial reports that the D.N.C.
Persons: ” Ray Buckley, Buckley, Organizations: Democratic National Committee, Democratic, South Carolina, But New, Republican Party, Iowa, New Hampshire Democratic Party, Granite State Locations: Hampshire, Iowa, New Hampshire, Nevada, Georgia, Michigan, But, But New Hampshire, South Carolina, Granite
Jill Stein, who ran unsuccessfully for president on the Green Party ticket in 2012 and 2016, will run again in 2024, she announced on Thursday — adding yet another name to the field even as the two major parties appear almost certain to nominate the same two candidates who ran in 2020. “Democrats have betrayed their promises for working people, youth and the climate again and again, while Republicans don’t even make such promises in the first place,” she said in a video announcing her candidacy, and accused both parties of being “a danger to our democracy.”A spokesman for Ms. Stein’s campaign, LeBeau Kpadenou, confirmed that she intended to again seek the Green Party’s nomination. That institutional backing would spare her some of the challenges in gaining ballot access that will be faced by two prominent independent candidates in the race: the progressive activist and professor Cornel West and the anti-vaccine activist Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who left the Democratic primary last month.
Persons: Jill Stein, don’t, , Stein’s, LeBeau Kpadenou, Cornel, Robert F, Kennedy Jr Organizations: Green Party, , Cornel West, Democratic
The third debate of the Republican presidential primary takes place on Wednesday, Nov. 8, from 8 to 10 p.m. Eastern time. The debate, sanctioned by the Republican National Committee and hosted by NBC News, will be held in Miami. Salem Radio Network, a debate partner, and Sky News will both have the debate on their stations, as will the streaming platform Rumble. Noticias Telemundo will broadcast the debate with Spanish translations on its website, mobile app and social media accounts. Only five candidates qualified for this debate, down from seven who qualified for the previous debate in September.
Persons: Chris Christie, Ron DeSantis, Nikki Haley, Vivek Ramaswamy, Tim Scott, Doug Burgum, Mike Pence Organizations: Republican, Republican National Committee, NBC News, NBC, Salem Radio Network, Sky News, Telemundo, Universo, United Nations, Gov Locations: Miami, Spanish, New Jersey, Florida, South Carolina, North Dakota
A Colorado judge on Wednesday refused a request from lawyers for former President Donald J. Trump to throw out a case challenging his eligibility to hold office again, saying she was not yet prepared to decide on what she called “significant legal issues, many of which have never been decided by any court.”The decision by the judge, Sarah B. Wallace, means the trial will continue through the rest of the week before a final ruling. It came after a lawyer for Mr. Trump had made a motion for a “directed verdict” — essentially a conclusion, even before the defense had called any witnesses, that no legally sufficient basis existed for the plaintiffs to prevail. The Trump team argued that his words and actions leading up to the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol were definitively protected by the First Amendment. Judge Wallace, who is presiding over the case in a state district court in Denver, declined to grant the motion. The case — one of several similar ones around the country — was filed by six Colorado voters who argue that Mr. Trump is disqualified under Section 3 of the 14th Amendment, which bars from office anyone who “engaged in insurrection or rebellion” against the Constitution after having taken an oath to support it.
Persons: Donald J, Trump, Sarah B, Wallace, ” —, Judge Wallace, , Organizations: Trump, Capitol, Colorado Locations: Colorado, Denver
Former President Donald J. Trump sued Michigan’s top elections official, seeking to ensure he would be on the ballot for the 2024 presidential election. In a 64-page filing on Monday, Mr. Trump’s lawyers said that Jocelyn Benson, Michigan’s secretary of state, had created “uncertainty” by failing to respond to communications from the Trump campaign about his ballot eligibility. Mr. Trump is the dominant front-runner for the Republican Party’s presidential nomination. Plaintiffs in that case then sued in Michigan state court to have the court order Ms. Benson to disqualify Mr. Trump. Ms. Benson has noted that she is watching for the results of that case.
Persons: Donald J, Trump, Michigan’s, Jocelyn Benson, Benson, , Mr, Ms Organizations: Republican Locations: Michigan
Former President Donald J. Trump still has a huge lead in Iowa, according to a poll released Monday, but Nikki Haley has surged to tie Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida for a distant second place. Mr. DeSantis and Ms. Haley, the former governor of South Carolina and former United Nations ambassador, are tied at 16 percent. That is a decline of three percentage points for Mr. DeSantis and an increase of 10 points for Ms. Haley, driven in part by increasing support for Ms. Haley among independent voters. The poll was conducted by J. Ann Selzer and has a margin of error of plus or minus 4.9 percentage points.
Persons: Donald J, Trump, Nikki Haley, Ron DeSantis, Iowa’s, DeSantis, Haley, Ann Selzer Organizations: Gov, Des Moines Register, NBC, Mr, United Nations, J Locations: Iowa, Florida, South Carolina
Judge Wallace has laid out nine topics to be addressed at the trial, which is scheduled to last all week. These questions have been debated since the Jan. 6 attack, especially since Mr. Trump announced that he was running for president again, but there is little precedent to help answer them. The 14th Amendment was ratified shortly after the Civil War, and the disqualification clause was originally applied to people who had fought for the Confederacy. The courts have rarely had occasion to assess its modern application, and never in a case of this magnitude. But that view is far from universal among legal scholars, and several have told The New York Times over the past few months that the questions are complicated.
Persons: Wallace, , Trump, William Baude, Michael Stokes Paulsen, J, Michael Luttig, Laurence H . Organizations: Confederacy, New York Times
“If this was done by a foreign national, deport them,” Mr. Scott wrote on X, formerly known as Twitter, on Wednesday morning. We must stand up against this evil anti-Semitism everywhere we see it — especially on elite college campuses.”Gov. The suggestion of punishing anti-Israel views is part of a broader campaign against liberal-leaning campus environments, which many Republicans claim indoctrinate students. Mr. Trump made the same proposal at his own recent event in Iowa, also not providing details. And it’s not great now if companies refuse to hire kids who were part of student groups that once adopted the wrong view on Israel.”
Persons: Donald J, Ron DeSantis, Tim Scott of, , ” Mr, Scott, Doug Burgum, , Mr, Burgum, Trump, DeSantis, Ray Rodrigues, Nikki Haley, ” Ms, Haley, Vivek Ramaswamy, couldn’t, it’s Organizations: Republican, Trump, Gov, George Washington University, West Bank —, , Civil, Harvard, New York University, State University System, for Justice, The State University System, Governors, Ministry, United Nations, Locations: Gaza, Israel, Florida, Tim Scott of South Carolina, Palestine, North Dakota, , S.U.S, , Iowa, U.S
The second debate of the Republican presidential primary is on Wednesday, Sept. 27, from 9 to 11 p.m. Eastern time. The debate, sanctioned by the Republican National Committee and hosted by Fox Business Network, will take place at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library in Simi Valley, Calif.Where can I watch it? Fox Business Network will broadcast the debate. The debate will be broadcast simultaneously on Fox News, with programming starting at 8:30 p.m. Fox Nation, the channel’s streaming network, will carry it as well. Asa Hutchinson of Arkansas failed to meet the increased requirements for the second debate, which demanded 50,000 individual donors (up from 40,000) and 3 percent in a minimum of two national polls accepted by the R.N.C.
Persons: Ronald Reagan, Doug Burgum, Chris Christie, Ron DeSantis, Florida Nikki Haley, Mike Pence, Vivek Ramaswamy, Tim Scott of, Donald J, Trump, Trump’s, DeSantis, Asa Hutchinson of Organizations: Republican, Republican National Committee, Fox Business Network, Ronald Reagan Presidential, Fox News, Fox Nation, Univision, North Dakota Former Gov, New, New Jersey Gov, United Nations, Gov Locations: Simi Valley, Calif, Spanish, North, New Jersey, Florida, South Carolina, Tim Scott of South Carolina, Iowa, New Hampshire, Asa Hutchinson of Arkansas
The suggestions by Mr. DeSantis and Mr. Ramaswamy that Jan. 6 rioters and conspirators were being punished more harshly than people who participated in Black Lives Matter protests align with Republicans’ broader grievances that the federal justice system has been “weaponized” against conservatives. But most of the Black Lives Matter protests in the summer of 2020, when the movement reached a peak, were peaceful. Those who had been sentenced at the time of the A.P. investigation had received prison terms of a little over two years on average. But of the more than 1,100 cases related to Jan. 6, according to an NPR database, the median sentence for those who received prison time has been 120 days.
Persons: Vivek Ramaswamy, DeSantis, Ramaswamy, Jan Organizations: Associated Press, NPR Locations: America, B.L.M
Six Colorado voters filed a lawsuit on Wednesday seeking to keep former President Donald J. Trump off the state’s ballots under the 14th Amendment, which says anyone who “engaged in insurrection or rebellion” against the Constitution after taking an oath to defend it is ineligible to hold office. The lawsuit, which was filed in a state district court in Denver with the help of the watchdog group Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, demands that the Colorado secretary of state not print Mr. Trump’s name on the Republican primary ballot. Mr. Trump would surely appeal any ruling that he was ineligible, and a final decision could rest with the Supreme Court, which has a conservative supermajority that includes three justices he appointed. A spokesman for Mr. Trump did not respond to a request for comment. Jena Griswold, the Colorado secretary of state, said in a statement, “I look forward to the Colorado court’s substantive resolution of the issues, and am hopeful that this case will provide guidance to election officials on Trump’s eligibility as a candidate for office.”
Persons: Donald J, Trump, , Jena Griswold, Organizations: Colorado, Republican, Trump, Supreme, Mr Locations: Denver, Washington, Colorado
We feel like we’re in a new place.”What I want people to understand is Mississippi now has somebody that’s going to fight for every single person. I’m going to fight for people in District 66 — those are the people I represent. legislation comes up, which I know it will, I am going to fight that every single day. I’m not only going to the Capitol to fight against anti-L.G.B.T.Q. And then the next thing you know, we’ve got a harmful piece of legislation coming out.
Persons: I’m, You’ve, We’ve, , we’ve Organizations: Capitol, American Locations: Mississippi, District
The NewsA Florida judge struck down the state’s congressional map on Saturday, ruling that it violated the Florida Constitution by diminishing the influence of Black voters, and ordering the State Legislature “to enact a new map which complies with the Florida Constitution.”Under state constitutional amendments that Florida voters passed in 2010, lawmakers are forbidden to draw districts “with the intent or result of denying or abridging the equal opportunity of racial or language minorities to participate in the political process or to diminish their ability to elect representatives of their choice.”In a 55-page ruling, Judge J. Lee Marsh of the Leon County Circuit Court ruled that lawmakers had violated that prohibition with the new maps they drew after the 2020 census. Judge Marsh rejected the Florida secretary of state’s argument that the prohibition didn’t apply to this case because Black voters had been a plurality, rather than a majority, in a district that the new map dismantled. The secretary inaccurately conflated two pieces of the law, he ruled. One requires the creation of new majority-minority districts in certain circumstances. The other limits the “diminishment” of existing districts in which voters from a minority group had sufficient numbers and influence to elect their candidate of choice, even if they weren’t an absolute majority — and that was the piece that applied to this case, he said.
Persons: Judge J, Lee Marsh, Judge Marsh Organizations: Legislature, Circuit Locations: Florida, Leon
“Yep, that’s what happened to you,” Mr. Trump replied. They’re the radicals. And I think exceptions are very important. You and I talked about that.”Ms. Dixon took a hard line on abortion during her campaign, expressing support for a total ban except in life-threatening emergencies. How, exactly, Mr. Trump wants to approach abortion is not clear.
Persons: Mr, Trump, Ms, Dixon, wasn’t —, “ I’ve, , Gretchen Whitmer, Organizations: Fox, Gov, Democratic, Republican
The memo, which was first reported by Axios, does not mention Mr. Trump, and the restrictions apply to all candidates who aren’t participating — a category that also includes those who didn’t meet the donor and polling thresholds to qualify. In practice, though, it will affect Mr. Trump more significantly than anyone else, since he is the front-runner in the Republican primary and is actively trying to snub the debate while still getting its benefits. Mr. Trump’s decision to skip the first Republican National Committee-sanctioned debate of the 2024 race was a slap in the face to both the party and Fox News. Mr. Trump has frequently complained about Fox News’s coverage of him. At least three senior members of Mr. Trump’s campaign — Chris LaCivita, Jason Miller and Steven Cheung — plan to attend the debate in person, The Times has reported.
Persons: Axios, Trump, Tucker Carlson, Chris LaCivita, Jason Miller, Steven Cheung —, Kari Lake, Trump’s, Donald Trump Jr, Marjorie Taylor Greene, Matt Gaetz, Byron Donalds of, Fox, , Caroline Wren Organizations: Republican, Republican National Committee, Fox News, Fox, Twitter, Times, Trump, NBC Locations: Arizona, Trump’s, Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia, Florida, Byron Donalds of Florida
The first Republican primary debate of the 2024 presidential race will be held Wednesday, Aug. 23, from 9 to 11 p.m. Eastern. The debate, taking place in Milwaukee, is sanctioned by the Republican National Committee and hosted by Fox News. Fox News Channel will broadcast the event, with live coverage starting at 8 p.m. Eastern — an hour before the debate itself — and running past midnight. The debate will be moderated by two Fox News hosts, Bret Baier and Martha MacCallum. Mr. Baier has previously moderated Republican debates in 2015 and 2016, and he and Ms. MacCallum led a town-hall event with Mr. Trump in 2020.
Persons: Doug Burgum, Chris Christie, Ron DeSantis, Nikki Haley, Asa Hutchinson of, Mike Pence, Vivek Ramaswamy, Tim Scott of, Donald J, Trump, Tucker Carlson, Carlson, Bret Baier, Martha MacCallum, Baier, MacCallum Organizations: Republican, Republican National Committee, Fox News, Fox News Channel, Fox Business Network, Gov, Trump Locations: Milwaukee, North Dakota, New Jersey, Florida, South Carolina, Asa Hutchinson of Arkansas, Tim Scott of South Carolina
Total: 25