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Minnesota Democratic party chair Ken Martin has formally announced his bid to lead the Democratic National Committee, as the party attempts to piece itself together following a stinging defeat against Donald Trump. Martin, a DNC vice chair and leader of the Association of State Democratic Committees, has gained early traction with some delegates according to interviews with several state DNC members. Martin is a big backer of the DNC acting as an umbrella organization that strengthens state parties across the board. “Whoever the next DNC chair is really has to, I believe, have a fierce commitment to making sure that they support the 57-state party strategy itself.”Nebraska Democratic Party chair Jane Kleeb is among those backing Martin, saying in an earlier interview that she was interested in seeking the ASDC chair post that Martin now holds. Wisconsin Democratic Party Chair Ben Wikler is also interested in a run.
Persons: Ken Martin, Donald Trump, that's, Martin, Martin O'Malley, “ That’s, ” Martin, Jane Kleeb, Ben Wikler, “ Ben, Rahm Emanuel —, Barack Obama — Organizations: Minnesota Democratic, Democratic National Committee, DNC, Association of State Democratic Committees, Washington D.C, ” Nebraska Democratic Party, Wisconsin Democratic, NBC Locations: Minnesota, Washington, U.S, Japan, Chicago
The race for Democratic Party chair has officially launched with a onetime Maryland governor and unsuccessful presidential candidate Martin O'Malley announcing a bid to take the reins. The contest comes as former DNC Chair Jaime Harrison is leaving his post. One of the people most often cited in Democratic circles as a possibility for DNC chair is Wisconsin Democratic Party Chair Ben Wikler. Several DNC members privately said they were already backing Minnesota Democratic Party Chair Ken Martin. Kleeb is backing Martin for DNC chair, she said, while she is interested in seeking the ASDC chair post that Martin now holds.
Persons: Martin O'Malley, O'Malley, Jaime Harrison, Harrison, Ben Wikler, “ Ben, Ken Martin, Martin, I've, Rahm Emanuel —, Barack Obama —, Emanuel, Sen, Dick Durbin, JB Pritzker, Jane Kleeb, Donald Trump Organizations: Democratic Party, Democratic National Committee, Democratic, Social Security Administration, Democratic Governors Association, New York Times, Wisconsin Democratic, Democrats, NBC, DNC, Minnesota Democratic, NBC News, Association of State Democratic, Nebraska Democratic Party Locations: Maryland, U.S, Japan, Chicago, Illinois, Iowa, New Hampshire
During Trump’s first term, for example, he was blocked by the Senate from using recess appointments to replace then-Attorney General Jeff Sessions. Florida Sen. Rick Scott on Sunday quickly posted on X endorsing Trump’s post : “100% agree. The question of recess appointments will now throw a major wrench in the Senate GOP’s leadership election when senators return to Washington this week. Recess appointments were once controversial, last-ditch efforts for presidents to install their nominees after facing long confirmation odds in the Senate. When senators left town, the Senate held a “pro forma” session to prevent any recess appointments.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, , , , ” Trump, , Jeff Sessions, Florida Sen, Rick Scott, Elon Musk, Dakota Sen, John Thune, who’s, Schumer, ” Thune, Sen, John Cornyn of, Biden’s, George W, Bush, John Bolton, Harry Reid, Mitch McConnell, Barack Obama, CNN’s Ted Barrett, Sarah Ferris Organizations: CNN, GOP, Trump –, Republican, United States, Capitol Hill, Sunday, Florida Republican, Republicans, Democratic, United Nations, Democrat, Senate, Supreme Locations: Florida, , Dakota, John Cornyn of Texas, Washington, United
Nicola Coughlan said she was "spooked" after encountering her AI vocal likeness on TikTok. AI-generated audio featuring the vocal likeness of public figures is common on social media. But Coughlan herself experienced a new horror — running into her AI-generated vocal likeness. "It was just an AI version of my voice, and it spooked me so badly," Coughlan told Time. Voice actor Connor Fogarty told Business Insider in September that he had encountered AI-generated videos featuring his voice on social media, which a fan took down at his request.
Persons: Nicola Coughlan, , Coughlan, Coughlan didn't, she's, Drake, Munch, Donald Trump, Joe Biden, Barack Obama, Biden, unpresidential, Donald's, that's Donald Grump, Scarlett Johansson, OpenAI, Johansson, Connor Fogarty Organizations: Service, YouTube, Hollywood, WGA Locations: Hollywood, TikTok, States
CNN —Donald Trump is invoking a vision of an extreme new White House term that would transform America and rock the world. And Vice President Kamala Harris has only three weeks to avert it, as she struggles to restore momentum in a neck-and-neck race to Election Day. Supporters of Vice President Kamala Harris listen to her speak during a rally at Ripon College, in Wisconsin, on October 3. With the nation in such a sour mood, Harris’ incumbency as vice president is a liability. His post underscored what Harris represents for those who fear the very real prospect of Trump’s return.
Persons: Donald Trump, Kamala Harris, Trump baselessly, Harris, , , heckler, Trump, Joe Biden, Sen, JD, genuflection, Vladimir Putin, Bill Clinton, Barack Obama —, “ He’s, Jim Vondruska, Dread, Hillary Clinton, Biden, he’s, ABC’s, it’s, Trump’s, Will Harris, Brendan Smialowski, Doug Sosnik, Harris plateaued, David Chalian, Sosnik, ” Harris, Obama, ” Obama, “ Donald Trump, Chris Murphy, ” Murphy Organizations: CNN, Republican, Sunday, Fox News, Democratic, CBS, Kremlin, Trump, Ripon College, Democrats, ABC, NBC, Electoral College, White, NBC News, Air Force, Joint Base Andrews, Getty Images, Connecticut Democrat Locations: , Ohio, Arizona, Colorado, United States, illegals, California, Covid, Russian, North Carolina, Wisconsin, Afghanistan, Pennsylvania, Michigan, Georgia, Maryland, America, Connecticut
— In their first and only debate of an unusually competitive Maryland Senate race Thursday, Prince George's County Executive Angela Alsobrooks and former Gov. Larry Hogan sparred over the issue of abortion and whether the deep blue state would be best represented by a staunch Democrat or an anti-Donald Trump Republican. Hogan distanced himself from the former president and current GOP presidential nominee, framing himself as someone willing to put "country over party." Alsobrooks dismissed that frame, arguing that a vote for Hogan would mean a vote for a Senate Republican majority that would threaten abortion rights and support for Ukraine. Hogan criticized Alsobrooks and "both sides" of the aisle for "trying to change the rules so they can pack the court."
Persons: OWINGS MILLS, Angela Alsobrooks, Larry Hogan sparred, Donald Trump, Hogan, Alsobrooks, Chuck Todd, — Deborah Weiner, Tracee Wilkins, Jeff Salkin — Hogan, Roe, " Hogan, Alsobrooks —, Wes Moore, Barack Obama —, Maryland's, Joe Biden, Amy Coney Barrett's, Barrett, Brett Kavanaugh, Trump, “ I’m, , I'm, I've, Democratic Sen, Ben Cardin, Chris Van Hollen, Cardin, Benjamin Netanyahu's, Van Hollen's, Netanyahu's, I'm Angela Alsobrooks, Alsobrooks wouldn't Organizations: Maryland Senate, Democrat, Donald Trump Republican, Republican, Ukraine, Democratic, NBC News, NBC, NBC Washington, Maryland Public Television, Republican Party, Maryland, Gov, National Democrats, Republicans, GOP, Supreme, Republican Jewish Coalition, Foreign Relations, NATO Locations: Md, , Prince George's, Maryland, Baltimore, Trump, Israel, Gaza, U.S, Ukraine, Washington
Iowa shifted from being a swing state to one where Republicans are firmly in the driver's seat. In Iowa, the gender gap is as pronounced as it is in many swing states. AdvertisementIn the latest Iowa poll, state voters gave Harris an 11-point point edge over Trump (53% to 42%) on the issue of abortion. AdvertisementStill, the poll shows why the intense focus on the seven swing states can sometimes be detrimental. The Iowa poll found that six percent of voters still back Kennedy, a decrease from June but still a number that could cause headaches.
Persons: , Donald Trump's, Trump, Barack Obama —, Joe Biden, Biden, Kamala Harris, Harris, Roe, Wade, It's, That's, Win McNamee, J, Ann Selzer, Nate Silver's, Robert F, Kennedy Jr, Kennedy, Mary Peltola, Lyndon B, Johnson, he's, Hillary Clinton Organizations: Service, Republicans, GOP, Business, Iowa, Trump, Democratic, Des Moines Register, Biden . Iowa Democrats, Biden, Des, Register, Republican, Iowa Republicans, White Locations: Iowa, Midwest, . Iowa, Illinois, Des, , Hawkeye, Georgia, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Alaska, Alaska's, Trump, Michigan , Wisconsin
Advisers to former President Donald J. Trump said they would not commit to another debate, one they had already agreed to participate in, now that the Democrats have changed candidates from President Biden to Vice President Kamala Harris. Mr. Biden and Mr. Trump had agreed to two general election debates, the first of which took place on June 27. The two men agreed months ago to a second debate, to be held on Sept. 10, and hosted by ABC News. Mr. Trump complained at the time that they should have even more. The only major Democrat yet to endorse Ms. Harris — former President Barack Obama — is expected to imminently.
Persons: Donald J, Trump, Biden, Kamala Harris, Mr, Harris, Harris —, Barack Obama — Organizations: ABC News, Democratic Party, Mr, Republican
In my 20 years of covering presidential campaigns as a journalist, there have been just two political conventions where the presidential nominees, their teams, the delegates and the party spent all four days radiating the confidence of a winner. The first was the Democrats’ in 2008 with Barack Obama — I’ll never forget how everyone I spoke with was certain of victory in November. The second one was the Republicans’ this week in Milwaukee, where Trump supporter after Trump supporter calmly, clearly insisted that Donald Trump would win this November. Don’t get me wrong: Many of the convention speakers spewed grievances to tear down Joe Biden and Kamala Harris, and there was a certain fraudulence to the whole event — with Republicans lying about their war on abortion rights by censoring any talk of it, and misleading the audience about the economy, immigration, crime and more. But the tone and tenor of the convention were ecstatic about Trump, who was portrayed and praised as a man who survived an assassination attempt by the grace of God and emerged as a “lion” (a word used multiple times this week).
Persons: Barack Obama — I’ll, Donald Trump, Don’t, Joe Biden, Kamala Harris, Trump, God Organizations: Republicans, Trump Locations: Milwaukee
Wall Street’s game theoryAs more leading Democrats say privately that President Biden should withdraw from the presidential race, some of the party’s most prominent backers on Wall Street spent the holiday weekend debating what to do next. If they favor calling for him to step back, they discussed what their next moves should be. Wall Street is taking a different approach than Hollywood. (Many are also reportedly irate at Jeffrey Katzenberg, Biden’s campaign co-chair.) And many donors want to maintain their influence within the Democratic Party.
Persons: Biden, Larry Fink, BlackRock, Robert Rubin, Jon Gray, Blackstone, Peter Orszag, Lazard, Blair Effron, Robert Wolf, Barack Obama —, DealBook, Reed Hastings, Barry Diller, Rob Reiner, Abigail Disney, Jeffrey Katzenberg Organizations: Wall, Treasury, Centerview Partners, UBS, Hollywood, Netflix, IAC, Democratic Party
Washington CNN —Former President Donald Trump made more than two dozen false claims at his Tuesday campaign rally in Racine, Wisconsin, including two significant attempts to rewrite Wisconsin history. “By the way, you know, Kenosha: I saved Kenosha, do you know that? Evers, not Trump, deployed the Wisconsin National Guard during the rioting in Kenosha — and Evers first deployed the Guard the day before Trump publicly demanded that Evers do so. Evers continued to deploy more Wisconsin National Guard troops in the coming days, and he also accepted National Guard troops from three other states; they were never federalized. Other Trump false claimsTrump made lots of other false claims during the Racine rally.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, Tony Evers, ” Trump, “ Kenosha, wouldn’t, I’m, Evers “ wouldn’t, , Evers, Tim Walz, Walz, Jacob Blake, Evers wouldn’t, Racine, Here’s, Al Capone, Nancy Pelosi, Barack Obama —, Biden Organizations: Washington CNN, Wisconsin, Gov, Democrat, Kenosha, Wisconsin National Guard, Kenosha —, Guard, Democratic, National Guard, CNN, Trump, US Marshals Service, FBI, White, Republicans, Capitol Locations: Racine , Wisconsin, Wisconsin, Kenosha, Minnesota, Minneapolis, Washington, DC, China, Syria, Turkey, Ottoman Empire
Today, at a time of turmoil and instability in various parts of the African continent, Kenya is an oasis of relative calm and stability. But it is another matter entirely for an American president to set foot onto African soil in person. Over 90% of its energy comes from renewable sources, and the United States is Kenya’s largest export market. Ruto departs the United States with the new status of “major non-NATO ally” strengthening his administration and providing valuable protection for his country. He is also receiving assurance that the vital African Growth and Opportunity Act, providing African states with duty-free status in the United States, will be extended.
Persons: Joyce M, Davis, Dan Gleiter, William Ruto, Rachel Ruto, Joe Biden, Barack Obama, Biden, , Uhuru Kenyatta —, Ruto, Jill Biden, Kamala Harris —, Ruto’s, , He’ll, Americans — Organizations: Patriot -, World Affairs Council, CNN, Washington, Black, Americans, Biden, White, Criminal Court, United, Kenyan, America, Delta Airlines, Kenya Airways, NATO, Twitter, Facebook, African, voters Locations: Harrisburg , Pennsylvania, Kenya, Nairobi, United States, Kenyan, Africa, America, US, East, Central Africa, China, Russia, Washington, Haiti
In “Civil War,” tanks trample democracy. But the messages they send may be more dangerous than the violence depicted onscreen: The collapse of democracy is inevitable. In the film, Humphrey Bogart plays Rick, the cynical owner of a Moroccan nightclub at the onset of World War II. John Springer Collection/Corbis Historical/Getty ImagesOther World War II-era films like “Don’t be a Sucker,” which emphasized racial and religious tolerance in America, emphasized the same message. The box office success of “Civil War” ensures, though, that more “American carnage” stories are likely headed our way .
Persons: Yuval Noah Harari, Harari, Volodymyr Zelensky, , Alex Garland’s “, Donald Trump, Casablanca ’, Humphrey Bogart, Rick, “ We’ll, Dooley Wilson, Ingrid Bergman, Everett, Rick —, Adolf Hitler’s, Democracy’s, Cristóbal, Berry, , Frank Capra, Frank Sinatra, Sinatra, ” Frank Sinatra, John Springer, Kermit Roosevelt III, Roosevelt, ” Roosevelt, Reagan, Obama, Ronald Reagan, Barack Obama —, Diana Walker, ” Reagan, Reagan’s, Barack Obama, Chuck Kennedy, Trump, hasn’t, Walt Whitman, Whitman, ” Whitman, ” Read Whitman, ” Walt Whitman, Ian Beacock, ” Beacock, Beacock, Ivan Illich, ” Kirsten Dunst, John Blake Organizations: CNN, Casablanca, paragon, Library of Congress, Nazi, Convention, Former, Lions, Hulton, Locations: Russia, Ukraine, Ukrainian, Russian, America, United States, , Casablanca, Moroccan, Adolf Hitler’s Nazi, Nazi, Charlottesville , Virginia, Vietnam, Kansas, Kenya, Denver , Colorado, Austrian, China
Donald Trump has inexplicably flip-flopped from his years of previous remarks disparaging the voting system and is now supporting absentee and early voting. "Absentee voting, early voting, and election day voting are all good options," the former president wrote on Truth Social on Friday afternoon. This story is available exclusively to Business Insider subscribers. AdvertisementWhile "vote-by-mail" and "absentee voting" are phrases often used interchangeably, there are minor differences in the procedures for each system. AdvertisementNicholas Grossman, an assistant professor of Political Science at the University of Illinois, told Business Insider it's unlikely Trump will maintain his newfound position supporting absentee and early voting.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, Jack Smith, Mitt Romney, Barack Obama —, Nicholas Grossman, Grossman, he's, That's, couldn't Organizations: Service, Business, US Post Office, Los Angeles Times, Science, University of Illinois, GOP, Trump, CNN, Republicans Locations: Trump, California
The election could be determined by "double haters," or voters who view both candidates negatively. In 2016, Trump won among "double haters." These voters are often called "double haters," as they'll have to choose between two candidates that they don't like. In 2016, Trump won among "double haters," as former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton's once-high favorable ratings cratered during the campaign. AdvertisementIn the end, the "double haters" could end up saving Biden's presidency.
Persons: Biden, Trump, , Joe Biden, Donald Trump, It's, Hillary Clinton's, Biden —, Barack Obama — Organizations: Trump, Service, New York Times, Siena, Biden, Times, Capitol Locations: Siena, Israel
AdvertisementMost Americans worry they won't be able to pay expensive medical bills if they experience an emergency, and it's impacting their economic outlook. Voters also identified prescription drug prices, out-of-pocket medical costs, and The Affordable Care Act as priorities for how they will vote in the 2024 election. Over 70% of Democrats, Republicans, and Independents answered that general healthcare costs are their main financial stressor. AdvertisementTrump has been vocal about his plans to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act should he win reelection. Still, KFF found that seven in 10 Republican voters don't think Trump has an alternate affordable healthcare plan.
Persons: , Joe Biden, Donald Trump —, Biden, Trump, Roe, Wade, Barack Obama —, KFF, Nikki Haley, Haley Organizations: Service, KFF, Kaiser Family Foundation, Affordable, Republicans, Independents, Medicare, Services, Democratic, US Department of Health, Human Services, Trump, Republican, Biden
He served as mayor of Solo city, where he was born to a working-class family in illegally built shacks along a river, then became governor of the capital, Jakarta, before clinching his first presidential term. Widodo was the first Indonesian president to emerge outside the political and military elite. But critics say he thrived on political compromises, became beholden to political party supporters and accommodated ex-generals who served under the late authoritarian leader Suharto. Under Widodo, Indonesia saw a period of remarkable growth averaging 5% annually, except in 2020, when the economy contracted due to the coronavirus pandemic. His economic roadmap, called “Golden Indonesia 2045,” projects Indonesia becoming one of the world’s top five economies with GDP of up to $9 trillion, exactly a century after it won independence from Dutch colonizers.
Persons: Widodo —, Barack Obama —, Widodo, Suharto, Prabowo Subianto, ” Widodo, Gibran Rakabuming Raka, Widodo’s, , Metallica, Subianto, we’ve, , Dwi Mustikarini, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, Vladimir Putin, Joe Biden, Xi Jingping, Jim Gomez Organizations: White, Bloomberg Television, Associated Press Locations: JAKARTA, Indonesia, Borneo, Southeast Asia, Solo, Jakarta, Surakarta, Central Java, Widodo's, New York, Widodo, Kyiv, Moscow, China
Judge Kevin Newsom, a Trump appointee, pushed back against the Fearless Fund's argument that the grants are protected by the First Amendment because they are charitable donations. He asked the Fearless Fund's attorneys whether the same protection would apply to a contest open only to white applicants. “I think that's a pretty simple yes or no,” Newsom said, interrupting when the attorney for the Fearless Fund, Jason Schwartz, started to reply. They’re saying, no, we want all the pie,” Ben Crump, a civil rights attorney who is also representing the Fearless Fund Fund, said a news conference following the hearing. But since the lawsuit was filed, the Fearless Fund has had trouble securing new investment, said co-founder Arian Simone.
Persons: Donald Trump, Barack Obama —, Fearless, Kevin Newsom, Edward Blum, ” Newsom, Jason Schwartz, Schwartz, ” Schwartz, ” Ben Crump, , Morgan Chase, Arian Simone, , ” Simone, Newsom, ______ Olson Organizations: MIAMI, American Alliance for Equal Rights, Trump, American Alliance, Black, Bank of America, Mastercard, Locations: U.S, Black, Miami, America, , New York
The idea is for three Democratic presidents — Biden, Bill Clinton and Barack Obama — to appear together at a fundraiser this spring, the four people familiar with the discussions said. The Biden campaign did not respond to requests for comment. The Biden campaign in recent days shifted into a general election posture — earlier than the president's aides anticipated. The Biden campaign also is poised to launch a multi-million-dollar ad campaign aimed at drawing a contrast with Trump, according to two people familiar with the plans. But the Biden campaign also hopes the presidential trio will help mobilize the party base.
Persons: Joe Biden, Barack Obama, John Fetterman, Josh Shapiro, Joe Biden's, — Biden, Bill Clinton, Barack Obama —, It's, Biden, Spokespeople, Clinton, Obama, Donald Trump, Kamala Harris, Trump Organizations: Democratic U.S, Democratic, WASHINGTON, Biden, Republican, White, GOP, White House Locations: Philadelphia , Pennsylvania, U.S, New Hampshire, Iowa, South Carolina, Nevada, Biden's State
CNN —Longtime political analyst Larry Sabato was asked by CNN anchor Jim Acosta this weekend about former President Donald Trump’s increasingly frequent mental lapses. In response, Sabato told Acosta the truth: Trump’s supporters “don’t care” if he’s lost a step or two. They thought Bush because Bush supposedly was a military person — great.” He then added about Bush, “He got us into the Middle East. In that same speech, Trump also erred in telling the audience that Orban’s nation shared a border with Russia. Thank you very much.”The problem was that Trump was in Sioux City, Iowa — not in Sioux Falls, a city in South Dakota.
Persons: Dean Obeidallah, CNN —, Larry Sabato, Jim Acosta, Donald Trump’s, Barack Obama — alarmingly, Sabato, Acosta, , he’s, Trump, ” Sabato, Barack Obama, Joe Biden, Obama, , couldn’t, “ Hillary Clinton ’, Biden, Jeb Bush, George W, Bush, Viktor Orban, Viktor Orban —, He’s, ” Trump, Orban, Hungary, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, Sen, Brad Zaun, Obama ”, — Obama, Florida Gov Ron DeSantis, Donald Trump, won’t, Organizations: CNN, CNN — Longtime, White, Trump, Republican, , South, GOP, Iowa Republican, Florida Gov, Democratic Locations: United States, South Carolina, Florida, Iraq, New Hampshire, Turkey, Russia, Hungary, Sioux, Sioux City , Iowa, Sioux Falls, South Dakota, Iowa, Sioux City, Claremont , New Hampshire
As Romney continued to listen to Trump, the then-president told him that he had given Utah "two million square miles of land," according to the book. AP Photo/Douglas C. Pizac, FileRomney, aware that Trump had mixed up square miles and acres, didn't say anything to the then-president, but noted with some lightheartedness that "two millions square miles would be, like, half the country." AdvertisementAdvertisementThe entire state of Utah, the 13th-largest state by area in the United States, is roughly 85,000 square miles. "I know the difference between acres and square miles," he volunteered during the conversation, according to the book. "This was square miles."
Persons: Romney, Trump, McKay Coppins, , Mitt Romney, Orrin Hatch, Donald Trump, Barack Obama, Douglas, Joe Biden Organizations: Service, Trump —, Republican, Bears, Republicans, AP, Senate, Trump Locations: Utah, Washington, Escalante Canyons, United States, Alaska, Ukraine, Escalante
Yoel Roth slammed Elon Musk's decision to reinstate a user that posted a child torture image. Yoel Roth, Twitter's former head of trust and safety, took a dig at Elon Musk's decision to reinstate an account that had posted an obscured image of a toddler being tortured. "For now, we will delete those posts and reinstate the account," Musk wrote on X, after McGee's suspension brought backlash from his right-wing supporters and a number of "Free Dom" posts. Roth, the site's former head of trust and safety, wrote on BlueSky that he found Musk's decision to be confusing. But after resigning from the role two weeks into Musk's ownership, Roth changed his tune.
Persons: Yoel Roth, Elon, Musk, Twitter's, Roth, Twitter —, Dominick McGee, McGee, he'd, Peter Scully, Dom, Barack Obama — Organizations: Morning, Elon, Twitter, Washington Post Locations: Australian, Philippines, British
Worsening living conditions in the city’s public housing system have vast implications. NYCHA’s developments are home to more than 330,000 people, a population larger than that of Orlando or Pittsburgh. Rents for public housing residents tend to be capped at 30 percent of their income, and the average rent is less than $560 per month. New York’s public housing system was once heralded as a progressive triumph. A new public benefit corporation, created by the state last year, could also give the access to more funds.
Persons: Eric Adams, Barack Obama, NYCHA, Adams, Lisa Bova, Hiatt, Jamie Rubin Locations: York City, Orlando, Pittsburgh, Chelsea
Former Obama advisor David Axelrod said that Cornel West could flip the 2024 election to Trump. Axelrod brought up the 2016 election, as many Democrats feel Jill Stein cost Hillary Clinton the race. West is running on a progressive platform and could siphon some of Biden's support with young voters. "In 2016, the Green Party played an outsized role in tipping the election to Donald Trump," Axelrod tweeted, pointing to Jill Stein's candidacy in the contest featuring Trump and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. "Now, with Cornel West as their likely nominee, they could easily do it again.
Persons: David Axelrod, Cornel, Axelrod, Jill Stein, Hillary Clinton, Cornel West's, Joe Biden, Donald Trump, Biden, Axelrod —, Barack Obama —, Jill Stein's, Trump, Cornel West, Stein, Clinton Organizations: Trump, Service, White House, Biden, Green Party, Democratic, House, Black Locations: Wall, Silicon, Wisconsin, Michigan
Donald Trump is reportedly the only living US president whose ancestors did not own slaves. That's because Trump's ancestors came to America after slavery had already been abolished. Even Barack Obama — the country's first Black president — is the descendant of a slaveowner on his white mother's side of the family. According to Reuters, the slaveholding ancestors of living US presidents include:Joe Biden — One direct ancestor, five generations removed, owned one slaveBarack Obama — One director ancestor, six generations removed, owned two slavesGeorge Bush — One director ancestor, six generations removed, owned 25 slavesBill Clinton — One director ancestor, five generations removed, owned one slavesJimmy Carter — One director ancestor, four generations removed, owned 54 slavesBut Trump stands out among the bunch. While other presidents have deep ancestral roots in America, Trump's ancestors did not immigrate to the United States until after slavery was abolished in 1865.
Persons: Donald Trump, Barack Obama, , Mitch McConnell, Sen, Lindsey Graham, Sens, Elizabeth Warren, Tammy Duckworth, Joe Biden —, George Bush —, Bill Clinton —, Jimmy Carter —, Trump, Mary, Confederate, Robert E, Lee Organizations: Service, Reuters, Department of Defense Locations: America, United States, Kallstadt, Germany, Scotland, Charlottsville , Virginia
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