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Washington CNN —President Joe Biden’s struggle to prove he’s got the strength and cognitive capacity for a second term is becoming an excruciating personal and national ordeal. While his interview performance was far stronger than the president’s often incoherent showing at the CNN debate in Atlanta, that’s not saying much. He appeared more composed and fluent than at the CNN debate. But Democratic Rep. Brad Sherman of California told CNN that the president needed to do a prolonged and live television interview unlike the recorded one on ABC. But increasingly, it seems as though the fear of a Trump term may be overwhelming satisfaction with Biden’s achievements.
Persons: Joe Biden’s, he’s, Biden, , that’s, Friday, Virginia Sen, Mark Warner, Hakeem Jeffries, I’m, ” Biden, , Almighty, ‘ Joe, ’ I’d, Almighty’s, Donald Trump, he’d, , , Trump’s, Trump, Biden’s, George Stephanopoulos, Brad Sherman, George Washington’s, Seth Moulton, Mike Quigley, ” “, ” Quigley, Maura Healey Organizations: Washington CNN, CNN, Democratic, Democrats, ABC News, Trump, NATO, ABC, , Boston, Illinois, MSNBC, United, Affordable Locations: Atlanta, Wisconsin, Washington, California, ” Massachusetts, United States, Massachusetts, America
Maura Healey issued a statement Friday urging President Joe Biden to “carefully evaluate” whether he remains the Democratic Party’s best hope to defeat Donald Trump in the 2024 election. “President Biden saved our democracy in 2020 and has done an outstanding job over the last four years. Over the coming days, I urge him to listen to the American people and carefully evaluate whether he remains our best hope to defeat Donald Trump. Those calls were signs of the unsteadiness of Democratic support for their top candidate. His Wednesday meeting with the governors came after some of them expressed frustration with not having heard from the president.
Persons: Maura Healey, Joe Biden, , Donald Trump, Biden, ” Healy, ” Healey, Healey, Lloyd Doggett of, Raúl, Arizona –, , Hakeem Jeffries, Chuck Schumer, Doggett, Grijalva, – he’s, Joe Biden’s, Gavin Newsom, Gretchen Whitmer, ABC’s George Stephanopoulos Organizations: Washington CNN —, Democratic, CNN, Congress – Rep, ” Biden, , Michigan Gov, ” CNN Locations: Washington CNN — Massachusetts, ” California, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania
Reed Hastings, the Netflix co-founder who in recent years has become one of the biggest donors to the Democratic Party, called on Wednesday for President Biden to relinquish his place atop of the Democratic presidential ticket. Mr. Hastings became one of the first to say publicly what many Democratic megadonors are saying privately. “Biden needs to step aside to allow a vigorous Democratic leader to beat Trump and keep us safe and prosperous,” he said in an email with The Times. Mr. Biden and White House officials have said he has no plans to step aside. Mr. Hastings and his wife, Patty Quillin, during the Trump era joined the Democratic Party’s most generous donor couples.
Persons: Reed Hastings, Biden, Hastings, “ Biden, , Patty Quillin, Trump, Mr Organizations: Netflix, Democratic Party, Democratic, Trump, The Times, White, Democrats
Though Joe Biden’s debate performance last week was among the most painful things I’ve ever witnessed, it at least seemed to offer clarity. Suddenly, even many people who love this president realized that his campaign has become untenable. In the debate’s miserable aftermath, there was finally space to acknowledge the obvious: Biden is too old for this. “Not everything that is faced can be changed, but nothing can be changed until it is faced,” James Baldwin wrote. Since then, however, the Biden campaign has quickly moved to squash that reckoning, framing the divide in the Democratic Party as one between naïve, hysterical outsiders and savvy, resolute insiders.
Persons: Joe Biden’s, Biden, ” James Baldwin, Biden surrogates, , MAGA, Quentin Fulks, Jen O’Malley Dillon, Barack Obama’s, Mitt Romney, Donald Trump’s unswerving, , Trump, Jonathan Capehart Organizations: Democratic, Democratic Party, Obama, MSNBC
CNN —Joe Biden’s family on Sunday encouraged the president to stay in the 2024 race and privately discussed whether top aides should be fired on the heels of Biden’s stunningly poor debate performance, which has thrown his campaign into turmoil. Biden’s family, including first lady Jill Biden, son Hunter Biden and their grandchildren, convened at Camp David for a previously scheduled get-together and implored the president to keep fighting in his bid for reelection, Biden advisers told CNN. Biden, however, is known for being loyal to and protective of his close advisers, and does not like to fire aides. The admiration and support that Biden’s family showed the president Sunday mirrored the first lady’s effusive public praise for her husband in recent days. The opinion of Biden’s family would be crucial in determining his political future – even more so than the president’s famously insular inner circle of top advisers.
Persons: Joe Biden’s, Jill Biden, Hunter Biden, Biden, Donald Trump –, preemptively, , Donald Trump, Annie Leibovitz, John Morgan, Anita Dunn, Bob Bauer, “ Biden, ” Morgan Organizations: CNN, Camp, Democratic, Biden, Camp David Locations: Atlanta, Florida
There were discussions with political advisers about arcane rules under which Mr. Biden might be removed from the ticket against his will and replaced at or before the Democratic National Convention, according to a person familiar with the effort. In Silicon Valley, a group of megadonors, including Ron Conway and Laurene Powell Jobs, were calling, texting and emailing one another about a situation they described as a possible catastrophe. The donors wondered about whom in the Biden fold they could contact to reach Jill Biden, the first lady, who in turn could persuade her husband not to run, according to a person familiar with the conversations. A Silicon Valley donor who had planned to host an intimate fund-raiser featuring Mr. Biden this summer decided not to go through with the gathering because of the debate, according to a person told directly by the prospective host. Another major California donor left a debate watch party early and emailed a friend with the subject line: “Utter disaster,” according to a copy of the email.
Persons: Biden’s, Biden, Ron Conway, Laurene Powell Jobs, Jill Biden Organizations: Democratic, Democratic National Convention Locations: America, Silicon Valley, California
“It’s kind of a DEFCON 1 moment,” David Plouffe, former President Barack Obama’s campaign manager, told MSNBC star Rachel Maddow following the debate. The people who were texting with me were very concerned about President Biden seeming extremely feeble, seeming extremely weak,” Reid said. And while MSNBC’s hosts pointed to the flood of lies from Trump during Thursday night’s debate, the conversation continually returned to Biden’s performance. “President Biden is a good man who capped a long career in public service with a successful presidential term. “Predictably, Biden’s poor performance led to some chatter about his stepping down and letting someone else be the nominee.
Persons: CNN —, Alex Wagner, ” Wagner, Donald Trump, Joe Biden, Joe Biden’s, Trump, ” David Plouffe, Barack Obama’s, Rachel Maddow, Joy Reid, Biden, , ” Reid, , Nicolle Wallace, ” Wallace, Chris Hayes, Nicholas Kristof, “ Joe Biden, , ” David Corn, Mother Jones, ” Mehdi Hasan, ” Hasan, Symone Sanders Organizations: CNN, MSNBC, Democratic, Fox News, Republican, Trump, ” New York Times, Biden Locations: Atlanta, America
New York is a closed primary state, meaning Democrats and Republicans can vote only in their own parties’ primaries. Bowman and Mr. Latimer may serve as harbingers of many political benchmarks. Mr. Latimer is largely supportive of Israel, calling for a return of all hostages before any potential cease-fire. Mr. Latimer has received $14.5 million in support from the American Israel Public Affairs Committee. It has also featured negative characterizations, with Mr. Latimer portraying Mr.
Persons: Jamaal Bowman, George Latimer, luminary, Bowman, Latimer, , Israel, Alexandria Ocasio, Cortez, Bernie Sanders of, Bowman’s, Nancy Goroff, Nick LaLota, John Avlon, Avlon, Margaret Hoover, Goroff, Avlon’s, Rudolph W, Giuliani, Goroff’s, Lee Zeldin, Cook, John W, Mannion, Sarah Klee Hood, Brandon Williams, Assemblywoman Stefani Zinerman, Eon Huntley, Zinerman, Hakeem Jeffries, Letitia James, Didi Barrett, Claire Cousin, Eddie Gibbs, Xavier Santiago, Gibbs, Grace Ashford, Jeffery C, Mays, Nicholas Fandos Organizations: Democratic, Congressional, Mr, Democratic Party’s, American Israel Public Affairs Committee, Republican, CNN, PBS, Republican Party, , an Air Force, New York, State Senate, Legislature, Progressives, Democratic Socialists of America Locations: New York, Westchester County, Long, Israel, Gaza, Cortez of New York, Bernie Sanders of Vermont, New, Sag Harbor, Suffolk County, Central New York, State, DeWitt, Bedford, Stuyvesant, Brooklyn, Hudson, East Harlem
When Representative Jamaal Bowman of New York won a Democratic primary in 2020 as an untested middle-school principal, his upset was heralded as evidence of the left’s ascent. Bowman is now the one fighting for his political life, battling to turn back a primary challenge from George Latimer, the Westchester County executive heavily backed by the American Israel Public Affairs Committee. The results of Tuesday’s contest in the 16th Congressional District, which covers parts of Westchester County and the Bronx, may test the durability of the Democratic Party’s progressive faction: If Mr. Bowman was to lose, he would be the first member of the House’s left-wing “squad” to be unseated. Bowman trailing in the polls, some of the left’s biggest luminaries have come to his defense, including Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont, who joined Mr.
Persons: Jamaal Bowman, Bowman, George Latimer, , Alexandria Ocasio, Cortez, Bernie Sanders of Organizations: New York, Democratic, American Israel Public Affairs Committee, Congressional, Democratic Party’s Locations: Westchester County, Bronx, Bernie Sanders of Vermont
Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York has declared the race her most pressing electoral priority. Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont is slated to join her for a pre-election rally in the Bronx. And a powerful pro-Israel lobby working for the other side has already shattered spending records. On one side, nearly the entire local Democratic establishment, including Mr. Sanders’s 2016 rival, Hillary Clinton, has lined up behind Mr. Latimer, the Westchester County executive. So has the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, a pro-Israel lobby that has already spent $12 million — more than any other race in its history — to try to defeat Mr.
Persons: Alexandria Ocasio, Cortez, Bernie Sanders, Jamaal Bowman, George Latimer, Sanders’s, Hillary Clinton, Latimer, , Bowman, Israel Organizations: Democratic, American Israel Public Affairs Committee Locations: Cortez of New York, Vermont, Bronx, Israel, New York, Westchester County
CNN —Former President Donald Trump lately has dangled some very specific promises to his audiences. But Trump’s campaign has prioritized flipping Nevada and the Democratic Party’s historical advantage in Latino communities, and polling suggests they have made progress on both fronts. Trump’s campaign confirmed the former president intends to seek a legislative change. “President Trump will ask Congress to eliminate taxes on tips,” spokesperson Karoline Leavitt told CNN. Trump has published an entire website to host many of his proposals for a second term.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, Joe Biden’s, ” Trump, hasn’t, Ron Wyden, Sheldon Whitehouse, Trump’s, , , Karoline Leavitt, “ Joe Biden, Biden, Chase Oliver, Ross Ulbricht, Ulbricht, Ross, Joe Biden, ” Oliver, Harris, ” Biden, Quentin Fulks, headwinds, Shawn Fain Organizations: CNN, Las, Libertarian, Trump, Republican, Biden, Democratic, National Rifle Association, Senate Democrats, Washington Post, Oregon Democrat, Rhode, Culinary Workers Union Local, Garden State, US Department of Justice, Black Voters, Black, United Auto Workers, Fox Locations: Las Vegas, Michigan, In Nevada, Nevada, U.S, Oregon, Rhode Island, Wildwood , New Jersey, Garden, battlegrounds, Detroit
For more than a decade, America’s campaign watchdog agency was a portrait of dysfunction. Divided equally between three Republicans and three Democrats, the Federal Election Commission deadlocked so often it became a political punchline as investigations languished, enforcement slowed and updated guidelines for the internet era stalled. Now, the commission has suddenly come unstuck. Reform groups are aghast at what they see as the swift unraveling of longstanding restraints. Those on both sides of the ideological divide agree on one thing: The changes amount to some of the most significant regulatory revisions since the campaign finance law, the McCain-Feingold Act, was put in place two decades ago.
Persons: Marc Elias Organizations: Democratic, McCain, Feingold
He runs a podcast and has attended over 100 presidential campaign events. I’ve asked presidential candidates pointed and respectful questions. At an “Our Great American Comeback” event in New Hampshire, DeSantis evaded responding to my question about the peaceful transfer of power. Gen Z journalists are often shut down by authoritative figures and officials, and student journalists across the country are not guaranteed complete constitutional First Amendment protection — discouraging active participation from students and rousing fear of litigation. While some might think we’re “too young” to be concerned about or understand national policy, these outcomes determine our future: a future that Gen Z is increasingly concerned about.
Persons: Quinn Mitchell, CNN —, Quinn Mitchell Kristopher Radder, I’ve, who’s, , , Ron DeSantis, DeSantis, , Nikki Haley, Haley, Young, Z Organizations: CNN, Trump, Republican, Democratic, Florida Gov, South Carolina Gov, Tufts, Twitter Locations: Walpole , New Hampshire, New England, Brattleboro, New Hampshire, Florida
After Hamas’s Oct. 7 attack on Israel, pro-Israel political groups put the Democratic Party’s most outspoken critics of the Jewish state on notice: An avalanche of spending was coming to either unseat them or force them to change their posture on the Middle East. But the first expeted target of that avalanche, Representative Summer Lee of Pittsburgh, will face only nominal opposition in the Pennsylvania primary on Tuesday. And though groups like Democratic Majority for Israel and United Democracy Project, an affiliate of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, have raised tens of millions of dollars to make good on their threats, they have so far mostly declined to spend it. Pro-Israel groups were unable to recruit an experienced, well-known primary challenger to Ms. Lee. That is not the case in primaries to come, especially Representative Jamaal Bowman’s in New York in June and Representative Cori Bush’s in Missouri in August.
Persons: Summer Lee, Lee, Jamaal Bowman’s, Cori Bush’s Organizations: Israel, Democratic, United Democracy Project, American Israel Public Affairs Committee, Synagogue Locations: Israel, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Squirrel, New York, Missouri
Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez warned on Friday that Israel’s blockade of Gaza had put the territory on the brink of severe famine, saying publicly for the first time that the nation’s wartime actions amounted to an “unfolding genocide.”In a speech on the House floor, Ms. Ocasio-Cortez, a New York Democrat, forcefully called on President Biden to cut off U.S. military aid to Israel unless and until it begins to allow the free flow of humanitarian assistance into the Gaza Strip. “If you want to know what an unfolding genocide looks like, open your eyes,” she said. “It looks like the forced famine of 1.1 million innocents. It looks like thousands of children eating grass as their bodies consume themselves, while trucks of food are slowed and halted just miles away.”The comments were a sharp rhetorical escalation by Ms. Ocasio-Cortez, the de facto leader of the Democratic Party’s left wing, and they illustrated the intense pressure buffeting party officials as they grapple with how to respond to Israel’s war tactics and the deepening humanitarian crisis.
Persons: Alexandria Ocasio, Cortez, Ocasio, Biden, Organizations: New, New York Democrat, Democratic Party’s Locations: Gaza, Cortez, New York, Israel
The Supreme Court and the Election
  + stars: | 2024-03-04 | by ( David Leonhardt | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
During those hearings, millions of Americans heard new details about the efforts by Donald Trump and his supporters to overturn the 2020 election result. Republicans whom he had backed in primaries performed about five percentage points worse on average in the general election than other Republicans, a Times analysis found. This history feels particularly relevant after the Supreme Court issued a decision last week that will delay Trump’s federal trial for election subversion. The court agreed to hear Trump’s claim that he is immune from prosecution because the alleged crimes occurred while he was president. The court’s move reduces the chances of a trial verdict before Election Day.
Persons: Donald Trump, Biden’s, Trump Organizations: Republicans, Democratic
What to Watch for in Michigan’s Primaries
  + stars: | 2024-02-27 | by ( Reid J. Epstein | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
When President Biden made Michigan one of the first states on the Democratic Party’s presidential nominating calendar, he increased the political influence of a populous, diverse battleground state. Mr. Biden is still widely expected to win Michigan’s Democratic primary election on Tuesday by a significant margin. But a homegrown campaign to persuade Michiganders to vote “uncommitted” will measure the resistance he faces among Arab Americans, young voters, progressives and other Democrats over his stance on the war in Gaza. A high number of “uncommitted” votes would send a warning to his campaign nationally and set off alarms in Michigan, which he won in 2020 but where polls show weakness against former President Donald J. Trump. A low number, by contrast, would give Mr. Biden and his Democratic allies renewed faith that he can weather the tensions and focus on campaign priorities like the economy and abortion rights.
Persons: Biden, Biden’s, Michiganders, uncommitted, Donald J, Trump Organizations: Democratic Locations: Michigan, Gaza
CNN —The law clerk Donald Trump accused of “co-judging” his civil fraud trial is running for her own seat in Manhattan civil court in the upcoming November elections. Allison Greenfield was a frequent point of contention for Trump’s legal team – even costing Trump thousands in fines for violating a gag order barring him from talking about her. Engoron imposed a gag order in the first week of trial after Trump published negative social media posts about Greenfield accusing her of bias and made an unfounded claim about a relationship with a top senator. The judge later expanded the gag order to cover the attorneys and fined Trump twice for violating the order after continued public criticisms of Greenfield. The Manhattan Democratic Party’s Civil Court Independent Judicial Screening Panel named her as one of the “most highly qualified” candidates earlier this month.
Persons: Donald Trump, , Allison Greenfield, , Judge Arthur Engoron, Engoron, Trump, Greenfield, Trump’s, Alina Habba, ” Greenfield Organizations: CNN, Trump, Democratic, Manhattan Democratic Party, The Manhattan Democratic Party’s Civil Locations: Manhattan, Greenfield
Representative Andy Kim, a third-term Democratic congressman, won an early but significant victory on Saturday against New Jersey’s first lady, Tammy Murphy, as they compete in one of the country’s most closely watched Senate primaries. Ms. Murphy, 58, lives in Monmouth County, and Mr. Kim represents a large swath of the affluent, predominantly coastal region. Mr. Menendez has not ruled out running for re-election, but he did not compete for the Monmouth County nomination. Two other candidates, Patricia Campos-Medina, a union leader, and Larry Hamm, a Newark-based social justice activist, won nominal support Saturday. (Mr. Hamm withdrew from contention Saturday, a county leader told delegates, but his name remained on the ballot.)
Persons: Andy Kim, New Jersey’s, Tammy Murphy, Kim, Murphy, Robert Menendez, Menendez, Patricia Campos, Larry Hamm, Hamm Organizations: Democratic, New, Portuguese Club of Long Locations: Monmouth County, Monmouth, Medina, Newark
Future Forward, the main Democratic super PAC supporting Mr. Biden’s bid, has a $250 million ad blitz planned. Mr. Trump still carried veterans, but his erosion of support followed an array of evidence that he had been disrespectful to military officials and families. Credit... Justin T. Gellerson for The New York Times“There’s political ramifications to all this,” Mr. Soltz said. VoteVets had $11 million in cash at the end of 2023, according to its filing with the Federal Election Commission. Mr. Soltz said VoteVets intended to conduct focus group research and polling of its network of families of veterans and active-duty service members.
Persons: Biden, Jon Soltz, VoteVets, Mr, Biden’s, MoveOn, Donald J, Trump, Hillary Clinton, Soltz, aren’t, , “ hasn’t, Justin T, , Ruben Gallego, Elissa Slotkin of, Andy Kim of, Robert Menendez, Trump’s, Brian Mast Organizations: Democratic, Senate, PAC, Mr, Pew Research, , Capitol, VoteVets, The New York Times, Gold Star, League of Conservation Voters, Federal, Commission, Democrats, Trump Locations: Iraq, Afghanistan, VoteVets ., Montana , Nevada , Pennsylvania, Ohio, Ruben Gallego of Arizona, Elissa Slotkin of Michigan, Andy Kim of New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Florida
The GOP’s South Carolina primary won’t be held until Feb. 24. Arguing that voters of color should play a larger role in determining the Democratic presidential nominee, Biden championed a calendar beginning in South Carolina. South Carolina was also where Biden reversed his fortunes with a resounding victory during the 2020 Democratic primary after defeats in Iowa, New Hampshire and Nevada. “I wouldn’t be here without the Democratic voters of South Carolina, and that’s a fact,” Biden said at the state's Democratic Party’s “First-in-the-Nation” celebration dinner last weekend. Associated Press writer Ayanna Alexander in Columbia, South Carolina, contributed to this report.
Persons: Joe Biden, Biden, Dean Phillips, Marianne Williamson, ” Harris, Jill Biden, Barack Obama, Jim Clyburn, , ” Biden, Donald Trump, , LaJoia Broughton, Charles Trower, Still, don’t, Phillips, it's, Harris, Trump, ” Trump, ___ Weissert, Ayanna Alexander Organizations: COLUMBIA, South, Democratic, Black, Minnesota Rep, Democratic National Committee, South Carolina, AP VoteCast, Black Democrats, DNC, Republican, America, , Capitol, Associated Press Locations: Iowa, South Carolina, GOP’s, Carolina, South Carolina State, Orangeburg, Nevada, Michigan, Iowa , New Hampshire, Columbia, Blythewood , South Carolina, ” New Hampshire, Florida, North Carolina, Washington, Columbia , South Carolina
It seemed then that — under the influence of progressive radicalism, institutional groupthink and coronavirus fears — the liberal establishment was untethering itself from American normalcy to a politically suicidal degree. Joe Biden was elected as a moderate but was too aged and diminished to actually impose moderation on his party. And elite liberalism was increasingly associated with a mixture of Covid overreaction and ideological hysteria: Imagine a double-masked bureaucrat running a white-privilege workshop, forever. Liberalism in 2024 is still in all kinds of trouble, but the truly epochal defeat seems less likely than it did back then. But the other reason that liberalism is surviving its disconnect from what remains of American normalcy is conservatism’s inability to just be normal itself, even for a minute.
Persons: Glenn Youngkin, Donald Trump, Joe Biden Organizations: Democratic Locations: Virginia, Pennsylvania
Take, for example, New Hampshire, where President Biden boycotted the primary election last Tuesday, after the state jumped the line in the Democratic Party’s new schedule to keep its first-in-the-nation primary status. If you’re a Republican there, you will not vote until Feb. 24, after fellow party members in Nevada have their say. That is tied to the party’s caucuses on Feb. 8, and Ms. Haley will not be part of that process. If you support former President Donald J. Trump, you can vote for him in the caucuses, but not in the primary. That’s because the Nevada Republican Party opposed conducting the primary by mail, which is part of why it scheduled the caucuses to begin with.
Persons: Biden, didn’t, you’re, Nikki Haley, Haley, Donald J, Trump Organizations: Democratic, Democrat, Republican, State of, Nevada Republican Party Locations: New Hampshire, South Carolina, Nevada, State of Nevada
He spent years spreading the lie that Barack Obama, America’s first Black president, was ineligible to hold office. But as he seeks the presidency for a third time, Trump is aiming to win over an unlikely constituency: Black voters. Political Cartoons View All 253 ImagesFor Biden, the biggest risk isn’t a dramatic move among Black voters toward Trump. When he won the New Hampshire primary this week, Sen. Tim Scott, the chamber’s only Black Republican, stood prominently behind him. And in contrast to past Democratic efforts, the Biden campaign has opted for an early engagement strategy with core constituencies like Black voters.
Persons: — Donald Trump, Trump, Barack Obama, America’s, , ” Trump, Joe Biden, Biden, , they’re, , Chris LaCivita, “ That’s, ” Cornell Belcher, Obama, “ I’m, ” Belcher, I’ve, Nikki Haley’s, Kanye, Lil Wayne, Sen, Tim Scott, Scott, Trump . Biden, aren't, Ketanji Brown Jackson, Jaime Harrison, Donald Trump, ” Harrison, Kamala Harris, Harrison, ” ____ Matt Brown Organizations: WASHINGTON, New, Trump, Biden, Democratic, Black, Democratic Party’s, Democrats, Rhode, Republican, GOP, Trump ., Mother Emanuel AME Church, Supreme, Democratic Party, Democratic National Committee, Republican National Committee, Associated Press, AP Locations: New York, Africa, U.S, Atkinson , New Hampshire, Georgia, Pennsylvania, Michigan, India, New Hampshire, Charleston , South Carolina, America, South Carolina, Iowa, Black
JERUSALEM (AP) — The U.N. world court on Friday came down hard on Israel’s war on Hamas in the Gaza Strip, calling on Israel to “take all measures” to prevent a genocide of the Palestinians. Israel celebrated the court’s rejection of the cease-fire request and said it had endorsed the country’s right to self-defense. Yet harsh criticism of Israel’s campaign in Gaza could further dent its image in the court of public opinion. “But it’s something that Israel can live with.”THE WAR GOES ONNothing in the court's ruling requires Israel to halt the war from a legal standpoint. The U.S. has said it would like to see a revitalized authority, ousted by Hamas in 2007, return to power in Gaza after the war.
Persons: , Israel, Israel “, Yuval Shany, , Benjamin Netanyahu, Netanyahu, Barak Medina, Merav Michaeli, Pnina Sharvit Baruch, Joe Biden’s, Balkees Jarrah, Friday’s, Julia Frankel, Sam McNeil Organizations: JERUSALEM, South, Israel Democracy Institute, Hebrew, Labor Party, military’s, Israel's Institute for National Security Studies, Democratic, Palestinian Foreign Ministry, Palestinian Authority, West Bank, The, Human Rights Watch, Israel Locations: Gaza, Israel, United States, , , The U.S, New York
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