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A Campaign That Just Started Is Almost Over
  + stars: | 2024-08-23 | by ( Jess Bidgood | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
She used the opening words of the biggest speech of her life to change the subject. Because Harris has been atop her party’s ticket for only about a month, she and Trump have sprinted in a matter of days through campaign elements that normally take months. Harris has raced to define herself and her candidacy, running a campaign heavy on rallies and light on policy and taking questions from the press. Trump, who built a campaign premised on defeating President Biden, has struggled to change up his attacks. Here’s my road map to the rest of the campaign.
Persons: Kamala Harris, ” Harris, “ Let’s, Donald Trump, Harris, Trump, Biden Organizations: Democratic, Convention
Democrats Say the Joy Is Back. Kamala Harris’s campaign has been trying to get voters to feel the joy. “I would say it’s her energy; she’s a joyful, energetic person.”“It just feels really exciting to turn the corner,” she added. Not only did Democrats use more words indicating joy and hope about the election, they also used words indicating feelings of anxiety and apprehension. Still, more than 25 percent of Republicans in July used words like “scared” or “nervous” to describe their feelings about the election.
Persons: Kamala Harris’s, Bill Clinton, Harris, Biden’s, , Harris’s, Mr, Biden, Tim Walz, . Walz, , Nancy Rohr, “ I’m, we’re, Jeff Fitzsimmons, Donald J, Trump, ” Mr, Kid Rock, Stephanie Rhodes, Joel Daria, they’re, Daria, it’s, Carroll Doherty Organizations: Democratic National Convention, New York Times, Siena College, Times, Republican, Old, Trump, Republican National Convention, , Labor, Pew Research Center Locations: Siena, Arizona , Georgia, Nevada , Michigan, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Orange County, Calif, Norman County, Minn, Silverhill, Ala, Dublin , Ohio
Democrats Are Upbeat, but Face a Tough Race Ahead
  + stars: | 2024-08-23 | by ( Matthew Cullen | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
In Chicago, where thousands of Democrats spent the week celebrating their nomination of Kamala Harris for president, confidence has been overflowing. “The mood in Chicago was just really ebullient,” said Jess Bidgood, who writes the On Politics newsletter and spent the week at the convention. But joy in the summer does not always last, or translate to votes in the fall. They were riding high at their convention last month, just after Trump survived an assassination attempt and before President Biden stepped aside. Harris and other top Democrats seem to be well aware that things can change.
Persons: Kamala Harris, , Jess Bidgood, Harris, Jess, Trump, Biden Locations: Chicago
If you are Vice President Kamala Harris, another Democrat or any other person who happens to want Harris to become president, the last two weeks and five days have probably felt like a dream. There is a tougher reality for Harris, though, belied by the euphoric haze. She has smashed fund-raising records and held overflowing rallies, and she seems to be tugging key swing states her way. But as Harris wraps up a battleground campaign tour with her brand-new running mate this weekend and turns her attention toward the Democratic National Convention this month, fresh challenges are in the offing. And the short campaign leaves a candidate who is still introducing herself to voters with little time for do-overs.
Persons: Kamala Harris, Harris, Donald Trump Organizations: The, Democratic, Convention Locations: Wisconsin, Michigan, The New York
The Kamala Harris Vibe Shift
  + stars: | 2024-07-25 | by ( Jess Bidgood | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
Dianne Schwartz, an 80-year-old Chicagoan who listens to political podcasts while she exercises, felt something today. “I realized today, while I was listening to my podcasts, that I spent the last few days without worrying and being depressed,” Schwartz told me. But since President Biden bowed out of his tepid re-election campaign on Sunday, and his party instantaneously coalesced behind Vice President Kamala Harris, Schwartz has found herself feeling strangely, impossibly good about politics. “I haven’t been this excited about an election,” Schwartz said, “since Kennedy.”Call it the Kamala Harris vibe shift. A presidential race that felt to many Democrats like a dispiriting slog toward an all-but-certain defeat by Trump suddenly feels lighter.
Persons: Dianne Schwartz, , ” Schwartz, Schwartz, Donald Trump, Biden, Kamala Harris, Kennedy, , Trump
Trump Can’t Help Himself. Will That Help Him Win?
  + stars: | 2024-07-19 | by ( Jess Bidgood | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
A call with Vice President Kamala Harris struggled to reassure major donors that there was little to worry about. More than 25 million people watched former President Trump’s speech at the Republican National Convention. The delegates in front of former President Trump were euphoric. Everyone there, from the show runners to Hulk Hogan to Melania Trump, had nailed their role in a glitzy production aimed at returning Trump to the real Oval Office. “I’d better finish strong,” Trump said, nearly 45 minutes into his acceptance speech.
Persons: Biden, Kamala Harris, Trump’s, Trump, Hulk Hogan, Melania Trump, “ I’d, ” Trump Organizations: Republican National Convention, Trump Locations: Milwaukee
Republicans Get Pumped for Trump’s Muscular Finale
  + stars: | 2024-07-18 | by ( Jess Bidgood | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
The night Mitt Romney accepted the Republican presidential nomination in 2012, he was introduced by party stalwarts like Newt Gingrich and Jeb Bush. In 2004, George W. Bush went with Gov. Tonight, former President Donald Trump will be preceded by Kid Rock, Hulk Hogan and the chief executive of the Ultimate Fighting Championship. It is less a display of political lineage than an unapologetic show of masculine kitsch. The lineup suggests a swing back to the bellicose political style that defined Trump’s rise.
Persons: Mitt Romney, Newt Gingrich, Jeb Bush, George W, Bush, George Pataki, Donald Trump, Kid Rock, Hulk Hogan, brawn, burnish Organizations: Gov, New, Trump Locations: New York
There’s No Zealot Like a Trump Convert
  + stars: | 2024-07-17 | by ( Jess Bidgood | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
Today, I’m looking at how the Republican National Convention has become a conversion story. His long history of disparaging Trump, whom he has called an “idiot” and “cultural heroin,” does not make him less suited for elevation within his party. Rather, it makes him a better avatar for the tale Trump wants to tell. Vance is a political convert, whose remaking of himself and his political image in order to thrive in Trump’s Republican Party proves and reinforces Trump’s power. And he will serve as a capstone for a convention that has been a conversion story unto itself.
Persons: J.D, Vance of Ohio, Donald Trump, Trump, , Vance Organizations: Republican National Convention, Republicans, Republican Party Locations: Milwaukee
What’s in Biden’s Survival Kit
  + stars: | 2024-07-08 | by ( Jess Bidgood | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
Tonight, we’re taking a look at the strategy behind President Biden’s efforts to steady his candidacy. The latest developmentsAn expert on Parkinson’s disease visited the White House eight times in eight months, including at least once for a meeting with President Biden’s physician. Jill Biden, the first lady, emphasized to voters in several states that her husband was “all in” on his campaign. A defiant President Biden sent a simple message on Monday to the detractors who say he needs to bow out of the presidential race: Bring it. “Any of these guys that don’t think I should run, run against me.
Persons: Biden’s, Biden, Jill Biden, , ” Biden, Joe ” Organizations: Republicans, Trump, White House, Democratic Locations:
Tonight, I’ll start by telling you the very latest, and then I’ll explain how six days turned politics upside down. We’re also looking at how Biden is fighting for his candidacy on the air. But I didn’t think it would take less than a week for American politics to turn wholly upside down. In just six days, President Biden’s bid for re-election plunged into crisis, so buffeted by doubt about his fitness to face former President Donald Trump in November that, according to a key ally, even the president himself is considering whether or not he can recover. With four months to go until the election, Biden isn’t running against Trump right now.
Persons: We’re, Biden, Biden’s, Donald Trump Organizations: Trump,
About halfway through Thursday night’s presidential debate, the moderators asked former President Donald Trump about Jan. 6. Amid all the focus on President Biden’s unsteady performance, it might have been easy to miss Trump’s answer. Trump seized the moment to turn the debate stage — with the biggest audience he’s enjoyed since his presidency — into the latest theater for his yearslong effort to rewrite the story of Jan. 6, 2021. And he twice ignored questions about whether he would accept the results of the next election before agreeing to do so only under certain conditions. Over the course of several exchanges with Biden and the moderators, CNN’s Jake Tapper and Dana Bash, Trump downplayed the most damaging attack on the Capitol since the War of 1812, falsely blamed the security lapses that day on former Speaker Nancy Pelosi and defended the more than 1,000 people who have been charged with participating in the deadly violence.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, he’s, , Biden, Jake Tapper, Dana Bash, Nancy Pelosi Organizations: Jan, Capitol
Here’s the debate people want
  + stars: | 2024-06-26 | by ( Jess Bidgood | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
President Biden and former President Donald Trump have starkly different visions for the presidency and the future of the country. I don’t know if we’ll get the debate we want, or just the debate we deserve, but I do know that the questions Tapper and Bash choose to ask really matter. Last week, I asked readers to tell me the questions you hope to hear at the debate, and I received hundreds of insightful and occasionally trollish responses. It’s clear you are hungry for a debate about issues that aren’t getting a lot of attention on the campaign trail. You’re also looking for Biden and Trump to convince you why, in their second go-round, you should get excited about them.
Persons: Jake Tapper, Dana Bash, Biden, Donald Trump, we’ll, Tapper, Bash, Trump Organizations: CNN, Biden
Will the Debate Be ‘Rah-Rah’ or ‘Ruh-Roh?’
  + stars: | 2024-06-24 | by ( Jess Bidgood | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
It’s debate week! She has a plan for Thursday’s presidential debate between President Biden and former President Donald Trump — and a plan B if things go south. “Bingo might turn into a drinking game instead if things go badly.”Last week, I asked you all how you were feeling about the first 2024 general election debate. But many of you, like Lowe and her friends, want Biden to do well but worry he will slip up. Some described real despair about the prospect of seeing Trump on a debate stage once more.
Persons: — Jess Bidgood Laurie Lowe, Laurie !, Biden, Donald Trump —, ” Lowe, “ ruh, Lowe, Trump Organizations: Democratic, Biden, Trump, roh Locations: Atlanta, Florida,
Jay Bodenstein, a lifelong Democrat who lives in the Villages retirement community in Florida, plans to sit down this week for a night of television he regards with terror. He will not be watching a horror movie. He’ll be watching the debate between President Biden and former President Donald J. Trump. “I’m fearful, I really am,” Mr. Bodenstein, 76, said. “I think he could possibly lose the election, which would be tragic,” Mr. Bodenstein said, adding that he wished the men weren’t debating at all.
Persons: Jay Bodenstein, Biden, Donald J, , Mr, Bodenstein Organizations: Trump Locations: Florida
The Other Showdown to Watch Next Week
  + stars: | 2024-06-21 | by ( Nicholas Fandos | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
Today, we’re looking at a political brawl that’s become a high-stakes battle for the future of the Democratic Party. Then I’ll take you behind the scenes of a photo shoot featuring Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s ravens. — Jess BidgoodThis time last year, Representative Jamaal Bowman of New York seemed finally to be hitting his stride. Come Tuesday, when New York holds its House primaries, he may be looking for a new line of work. His stand — for a cease-fire and against American military aid — galvanized younger Democrats and the party’s left flank.
Persons: that’s, Robert F, Kennedy Jr, Nicholas Fandos, — Jess Bidgood, Jamaal Bowman, Bowman, , , George Latimer Organizations: Democratic Party, Republicans, New, Democratic, Hamas Locations: New York, New York City, Gaza, Israel
Trump’s Anti-Vaccine Problem
  + stars: | 2024-06-14 | by ( Jess Bidgood | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
Former President Donald Trump’s chaotic and denial-filled response to the Covid-19 pandemic turned off independent voters and arguably cost him the 2020 presidential election. Four years later, a different aspect of his handling of the pandemic has emerged as a sensitive subject with another slice of the electorate: his own die-hard supporters. The vaccines, a scientific breakthrough, have been given to 270 million Americans and are estimated to have saved millions of lives. “I’m not real thrilled with the accelerated rollout of the vaccine,” said Amaris Angell, the owner of a recently shuttered food truck business, who went to see Trump in Las Vegas on Sunday. “He still seems to be proud of himself for that.”
Persons: Donald Trump’s, Trump, “ I’m, , Amaris Angell, Organizations: Trump Locations: Las Vegas
Trump’s Vegas Strategy: Run on Bad Luck
  + stars: | 2024-06-10 | by ( Jess Bidgood | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: 1 min
Keith Rose, a 64-year-old hot tub salesman, arrived at former President Donald Trump’s Las Vegas campaign rally yesterday wearing a necklace with a golden pendant shaped like a tiny horn. “It’s an Italian horn, a sign of luck,” Rose told me, although he clarified that, as a longtime Vegas resident who knows the house always wins, he does not believe in luck. “The odds are always going to be against you, no matter what,” he said. That’s the case for Trump these days, he added. He told Oprah Winfrey in the 1980s that there was no word more important than luck; he recently declared himself the personal good luck charm for the winner of the Miami Grand Prix.
Persons: Keith Rose, Donald Trump’s Las, It’s, ” Rose, , Oprah Winfrey Organizations: Vegas, Trump, Miami Grand Prix Locations: Donald Trump’s Las Vegas
President Biden’s decision this week to seal the border temporarily to most asylum seekers was a striking policy shift. It sharply divided his party, invited comparisons to policies backed by former President Donald Trump and made him the owner of the most restrictive immigration measure ever to be carried out by a modern Democratic president. It also aligned him with a broad swath of the public on a key issue in an election year. In doing so, they hope to neutralize an issue that the former president has made a major focus of his campaign. “It’s part of the overall effort to not just neutralize but to show the Republicans for their hypocrisy.”
Persons: Biden’s, Donald Trump, Trump, , Tom Suozzi, Organizations: Democratic, Trump, Biden, White House Locations: New York, Long
Darren Van Dreel, a 58-year-old electrician from Oshkosh, Wis., has followed the twists and turns of the investigations into former President Donald Trump over the years: the Mueller report, two impeachments and a flurry of criminal cases, most of which have been mired in delays. So on Thursday evening, while he and his wife, Misty McPhee, were on a long drive from Wisconsin to the Washington, D.C., area, there was only one thing to do when the verdict came in. “I high-fived my wife,” said a grinning Van Dreel, as he waited for a sandwich on Friday morning in the liberal Del Ray neighborhood of Alexandria, Va. “I was just so pleasantly surprised that finally somebody’s holding him accountable.”When a Manhattan jury found Trump guilty of 34 counts of falsifying business records on Thursday, Trump’s campaign declared that the country had “fallen,” and his allies painted a picture of a nation consumed by rage. His supporters flooded corners of the internet with angry imagery (more on that below), and echoed his claims that the verdict was illegitimate.
Persons: Darren Van Dreel, Donald Trump, Mueller, Misty McPhee, , Van Dreel, Del, Trump, Trump’s Organizations: D.C Locations: Oshkosh, Wis, Wisconsin, Washington, , Del Ray, Alexandria, Va, Manhattan
Republican candidates in all eight of the country’s most competitive Senate races have changed their approach on the issue of abortion, softening their rhetoric, shifting their positions and, in at least one case, embracing policies championed by Democrats. From Michigan to Maryland, Republicans are trying to repackage their views to defang an issue that has hurt their party at the ballot box since the Supreme Court overturned federal abortion rights. While the pivot is endemic across races in swing states, the most striking shifts have come from candidates who unsuccessfully ran for the Senate just two years ago in their home states, with abortion views that sounded very different. When Bernie Moreno, a Republican businessman, ran for a Senate seat in Ohio in 2022, he described his views as “absolute pro-life, no exceptions.”“Life begins at conception” and “abortion is the murder of an innocent baby,” he said on social media.
Persons: Bernie Moreno, Organizations: Republican Locations: Michigan, Maryland, Ohio
Today, at 11:28 a.m., a jury of 12 New Yorkers began deliberating in the criminal trial against former President Donald Trump. It’s worth lingering on that point. It’s a sharp contrast from the norm in a presidential campaign where so much has seemed baked in, starting with two candidates. Trump and President Biden emerged from primary elections that generated nothing in the way of suspense to face each other in a matchup Americans have already seen. We have no idea how it will shape the campaign in the months to come or whether, whichever way it goes, voters will care.
Persons: Donald Trump, , Trump, Biden Organizations: Yorkers Locations: Manhattan
Earlier this week, a couple of former Republican members of Congress sent an email to dozens of fellow G.O.P. retirees with a clear and urgent subject line. “Join the Republicans for Biden,” it said. “PLEASE.”The email invited the former lawmakers to a virtual meeting next week with members of President Biden’s campaign team — a meeting that, for many of them, would be their first official interaction with Biden’s re-election campaign since it kicked off last year. Some recipients were quick to offer their help.
Persons: Biden, , , Biden’s, didn’t, he’s, Chris Shays Organizations: Trump, Republican Locations: Connecticut
How Today’s Economy Could Matter in November
  + stars: | 2024-05-22 | by ( Jess Bidgood | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
Ortiz, 32, lives in Bethlehem, Pa., and has a job that she loves, analyzing claims of malpractice and other issues. But with prices still feeling high and a recent round of layoffs at work, she feels like the economy has gotten worse. Now, after sitting out the presidential elections in 2016 and 2020, Ortiz has been paying a lot of attention to politics. And right now, Ortiz, a onetime Obama voter, is leaning toward former President Donald Trump. “When he was president, we got a raise in my job,” Ortiz said, as she loaded a couple of packages of energy drinks into the back of a big S.U.V.
Persons: Syd Ortiz, Ortiz, Donald Trump, ” Ortiz, Biden Locations: Bethlehem, Pa, New York
The Good News for Biden in Our Battleground Polls
  + stars: | 2024-05-17 | by ( Jess Bidgood | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
It’s the weekend! Tonight, we’re looking at a bright spot for Biden in our battleground polls — and, inspired by a certain Supreme Court justice, we want to hear your stories of political spats with your neighbors. A series of polls of battleground states released this week was full of doom and gloom for President Biden. He is trailing Donald Trump in five key states he won in 2020, with Nevada and Georgia looking all but out of reach. Eleven percent of the voters in six battleground states — Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, Georgia, Arizona, Nevada and Michigan — said that abortion was the most important issue in deciding their vote, in the polls by The New York Times, Siena College and The Philadelphia Inquirer.
Persons: Biden, Donald Trump, Roe, Wade, Michigan —, It’s Organizations: Biden, The New York Times, Siena College, The Philadelphia Inquirer Locations: Nevada, Georgia, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, Arizona , Nevada, Michigan
What the Last Biden-Trump Debate Tells Us Now
  + stars: | 2024-05-15 | by ( Jess Bidgood | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: 1 min
It was late October 2020. President Trump had just recovered from a serious case of Covid. A planned second debate between Trump and Joe Biden had been canceled. And now, in front of a muted crowd, the two men strode onstage in Nashville in dark suits as Biden peeled a cloth mask away from his face. It appears to be the last time the former and current president were in the same room together — but it turned out not to be their ultimate showdown.
Persons: Trump, Joe Biden, strode, Biden Organizations: Trump Locations: Nashville
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