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The first person I met at a Monday night meet-and-greet for Dan Osborn, the independent Nebraska Senate candidate, was a Donald Trump-voting Republican named Joe Hallett. He’d worked, alongside his wife, Sherri, with Osborn at Omaha’s Kellogg plant. Explaining Osborn’s appeal, Joe said, “He’s not a millionaire or anything like that.” Sherri added: “He works hard. We did the same thing.”Neither was a fan of Osborn’s opponent, the Republican senator Deb Fischer. It drew a few dozen people — more Democrats and independents than Republicans — and Osborn stayed to talk and shake hands until the place closed.
Persons: Dan Osborn, Donald Trump, Joe Hallett, He’d, Sherri, Osborn, Joe, “ He’s, ” Sherri, Deb Fischer, , , ” Osborn, Republicans —, Fischer, he’d Organizations: Nebraska Senate, Republican, Republicans Locations: Nebraska, Omaha’s Kellogg, Ashland, Omaha, Washington
Some wealthy Harris backers have called for Khan’s replacement, including the LinkedIn co-founder Reid Hoffman, who donated $10 million to a Democratic super PAC this year. Because Harris’s economic views seemed fuzzy and her ties to Silicon Valley are strong, some on the left worried she might give in to the pressure. Wes Moore of Maryland, a close ally of the vice president, was asked on CNBC about jettisoning Khan, and suggested that Harris might break from President Biden’s aggressive approach to antitrust. “There are going to be different dynamics that are going to require different philosophies,” said Moore. As the broad outlines of Harris’s economic approach have emerged over the last week, it seems at least as populist as Biden’s.
Persons: Kamala Harris, Lina Khan —, , Harris, Reid Hoffman, Barry Diller, Khan, Wes Moore, jettisoning Khan, Biden’s, , Moore Organizations: Democratic, Federal Trade Commission, LinkedIn, CNBC, IAC, Expedia, Gov Locations: Silicon, Maryland
to fake an image of an enthusiastic crowd greeting her when she arrived in Michigan. “There was nobody at the plane, and she ‘A.I.’d’ it, and showed a massive ‘crowd’ of so-called followers, BUT THEY DIDN’T EXIST!,” Trump wrote on his vanity website Truth Social. She should be disqualified because the creation of a fake image is ELECTION INTERFERENCE.”One way to read this post is that Trump is delusional. But however disordered Trump’s mind might be, I suspect there’s also a sort of strategy at work here. He is helping his supporters build a rationale for rejecting the election results if Harris wins.
Persons: Donald Trump, Kamala Harris, , ” Trump, , , Trump, Harris, there’s Locations: Michigan
To the Editor:Re “Mothers Are Told That Natural Childbirth Is Best. It Isn’t,” by Michelle Goldberg (“Don’t Tell My Friends, But …” series, Aug. 4):Ms. Goldberg needs to take a breath. The natural birth movement changed the balance of power for women. Women still need C-sections. To associate the natural birth movement with anti-vaxxers is a real disservice to the feminist pioneers who worked so hard to put women back in charge of childbirth.
Persons: Michelle Goldberg, Goldberg, Carol Brady Locations: Beach, Fla
Opinion | Tim Walz Is Vibing
  + stars: | 2024-08-09 | by ( Michelle Cottle | Ross Douthat | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +39 min
michelle goldbergI mean, I’m a huge Walz fan, and I was worried. ross douthatSo, yeah, I mean, I’m having made the case that this pick makes sense in vibes terms. michelle goldbergYeah, I don’t think that he necessarily overperforms among conservative voters strictly defined. You don’t think that there’s a part of the country that just finds joy like a really refreshing change? I’m going there.
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Patrick Healy: Kamala Harris will announce her running mate very soon. Michelle Goldberg: Like a lot of progressives, I barely knew who Tim Walz was two weeks ago. Now I love him, even though I worry that his normal Midwestern guy affect is starting to border on shtick. Goldberg: He reads like an all-American heartland normie — a hunter and former high school football coach — who can articulate progressive priorities in a plain-spoken, unapologetic way. And branding Republicans “weird” was a stroke of genius, capturing the large part of the Venn diagram where sinister authoritarianism and ridiculous online subcultural tics overlap.
Persons: Patrick Healy, Jamelle Bouie, Ross Douthat, Michelle Goldberg, Kamala Harris, Donald Trump, Harris, JD Vance, Tim Walz, it’s, Andy Beshear, Healy, Michelle, Walz, Goldberg, Organizations: Electoral College, Democrats, Trump Locations: shtick, Kentucky
With Democratic enthusiasm for Kamala Harris at a fever pitch, the New York Times Opinion columnist Michelle Goldberg spent a day in Atlanta at one of her rallies speaking with voters. In this audio essay, Goldberg argues that the energy among voters she met there is real, and more importantly, will last. (A full transcript of this audio essay will be available within 24 hours of publication in the audio player above.)
Persons: Kamala Harris, Michelle Goldberg, Goldberg Organizations: Democratic, New York Locations: Atlanta
Tracy Nailor, a 56-year-old Atlanta pediatrician, wasn’t particularly impressed with Kamala Harris when she first ran for president. She thought Harris wasn’t experienced or accomplished enough to merit the Democratic nomination. “I didn’t do my homework.” Instead of Harris, she supported the trusted, familiar Joe Biden in the last election. “I’m a person that believes in spirit, and I’m a person who believes that but God. “I’ve seen people that I haven’t seen in decades.
Persons: Tracy Nailor, wasn’t, Kamala Harris, , , Harris wasn’t, Harris, Joe Biden, Nailor, ebullient Harris, I’ve, “ I’ve, It’s Organizations: Democratic, Convocation Locations: Atlanta, Georgia
The natural-parenting movement, like the anti-vaccine movement, relies on our forgetfulness about what life was like before the innovations that it denounces. Also like the anti-vaccine movement, the natural-parenting movement is a reaction to very real failures in our medical system, which has more than earned people’s distrust. Natural parenting has since been thoroughly secularized, but it still preaches something akin to spiritual transcendence through female sacrifice. Even if you distrust the natural-parenting movement, its pressures are hard to escape. If the natural-parenting movement really cared about children, it would do some introspection about how often it makes their parents miserable.
Persons: I’d, , , who’ve, thrall, It’s, Carla Cevasco, don’t, , Amy Tuteur, Dick, Read, Ina May Gaskin, William Sears, God, Emily Oster, Long, Gaskin, who’d, saccharine condescension Organizations: World Health Organization, OB, Harvard Medical, Leche League, Daily Locations: British, Leche
After months of alternating between despair and terror, a lot of Democrats are feeling positively unburdened. In the day since President Biden stepped aside and the party coalesced behind Vice President Kamala Harris, a euphoric giddiness has fallen over the party. Intuitively, it seems like the newly effervescent vibes should help in the very serious project of defeating Donald Trump, but I’ve been curious if the political science literature backs that up. “I don’t know of any political science or economic forecasting models that explicitly include a measure of voter enthusiasm,” the political scientist Alan Abramowitz told me. But the scholar Samuel Popkin, whose books include “The Candidate: What It Takes to Win — and Hold — the White House,” said that intangibles like joy and passion can matter a lot.
Persons: Biden, Kamala Harris, Charli, Ariana Grande, Donald Trump, I’ve, Alan Abramowitz, Samuel Popkin, Organizations: Democratic
nominee should be this year. This conversation has been edited for length and clarity. Patrick Healy: Michelle, Lydia, Ross and David, I’ll cut to the chase: Is the Democratic Party making a mistake by quickly going all in on Kamala Harris as its likely presidential nominee? Michelle Goldberg: This is a hard question, because for the party to do otherwise would mean trying to restrain the passions, enthusiasms and calculations of its members. Healy: Did that flood of support seem organic to you, Michelle, or orchestrated by Harris’s campaign?
Persons: Patrick Healy, Ross Douthat, David French, Michelle Goldberg, Lydia Polgreen, Kamala Harris, Donald Trump, Michelle, Lydia, Ross, David, I’ll, Harris, Healy Organizations: Democratic, Democratic Party
Ever since President Biden’s calamitous debate last month, many Democrats who’ve lost faith in his candidacy have been frozen, fearing mutually assured destruction. The president has had a few good moments in recent weeks, including a great speech in Michigan. It’s time for Democrats who want a new nominee to hold hands and jump. There is no salvaging this campaign; Biden has lost his party’s confidence. The campaign is in a death spiral that threatens to pull down-ticket Democrats into the vortex.
Persons: Biden’s calamitous, who’ve, Biden, he’ll, Donald Trump, we’ve, , Chuck Schumer, Nancy Pelosi Organizations: Democratic, Wednesday, Associated Press Locations: Michigan
Patrick Healy, the deputy Opinion editor, hosted an online conversation with the Times Opinion columnists Ross Douthat, David French, Michelle Goldberg and Bret Stephens to discuss Donald Trump’s choice of J.D. Vance as his running mate — why Mr. Trump picked him, how Mr. Vance could help the ticket, what’s surprising and unusual about the vice-presidential nominee, and what if anything worries our columnists about Mr. Vance. Patrick Healy: The answer to one of the biggest questions of the presidential election has now been revealed: Donald Trump has chosen J.D. Vance as his running mate. What was the first thing that popped into your minds when you heard Trump had picked the first-term senator from Ohio and why?
Persons: Patrick Healy, Ross Douthat, David French, Michelle Goldberg, Bret Stephens, Donald Trump’s, Vance, , Trump, Donald Trump, Fareed Zakaria’s, Trumper Organizations: Fareed Zakaria’s CNN, Republican Party, Trump Locations: Ohio, United States
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
What do they do about their candidate for president, and their campaign to beat Donald Trump? Michelle Goldberg: I think Biden has to get out. As you know, I’ve been arguing since 2022 that he’s too old to run for re-election. But recently, when people have asked me about it, I’ve wondered, is it too late? And I think that’s rapidly becoming the consensus not just among panicky pundits, but among senior Democrats.
Persons: Patrick Healy, I’ve, Biden’s, Kamala Harris, Biden, , Donald Trump, Michelle, Michelle Goldberg, Hakeem Jeffries, , Healy, Bret, “ Biden, It’s Organizations: Democratic National Convention, Associated Press, Biden, America, Democratic
candidate who would make a genuine difference for Trump in the campaign and in the November election vote? What matters most about Trump’s choice? First, as Democrats like to point out when questions of Joe Biden’s age come up, Trump is also pretty damn old. So the possibility that his vice president would succeed Trump in the middle of his term is not implausible. Ross Douthat: It’s not just that Trump is old, it’s also that — fears of his permanent power notwithstanding — he’s term-limited, which means that his V.P.
Persons: Patrick Healy, Ross Douthat, David French, Michelle Goldberg, Bret Stephens, Donald Trump’s, Trump, Biden’s, Donald Trump, Bret, Joe Biden’s, Doug Burgum, Marco Rubio, It’s, it’s, Mike Pence’s, there’s Organizations: Trump Locations: MAGA, Florida
Opinion | Jamaal Bowman’s Political Malpractice
  + stars: | 2024-06-24 | by ( Michelle Goldberg | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +3 min
Now Israel’s champions, many of whom have never been comfortable with Bowman, are striking back, capitalizing on a political environment transformed by Oct. 7. Bowman’s challenger is the Westchester County executive, George Latimer, who refuses to criticize Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel, putting Latimer not just to Bowman’s right but also to the right of President Biden and Senator Chuck Schumer, the majority leader. I think Sanders was exaggerating, but the contest is probably the most important congressional primary this year. It’s setting a precedent for big money interference in local politics and tearing at the longtime progressive alliance between Black people and Jews. There is something deeply admirable about his refusal to subordinate his values to political expediency.
Persons: Jamaal Bowman, Bowman, Eliot Engel, George Latimer, Benjamin Netanyahu, Israel, Latimer, Biden, Chuck Schumer, Emerson, , Bernie Sanders, Sanders, Hamas’s, he’s Organizations: Democrat, Westchester County, American Israel Public Affairs Committee’s, Israel Locations: New York’s, Israel, Westchester, Vermont, Black, Bronx, America, Gaza
This week I finally got to see “The Apprentice,” an absorbing, disturbing movie about the relationship between the red-baiting mob lawyer Roy Cohn and a young Donald Trump. The “Succession” star Jeremy Strong captures both Cohn’s reptilian menace and, eventually, his pathos, as he’s wasted by AIDS but, closeted to the end, refuses to admit it. Just as impressive is Sebastian Stan, who makes Trump legible as a human being rather than the grotesque hyperobject we all know today. It’s not a sympathetic portrayal, exactly; this is, after all, a movie that depicts Trump raping his first wife, Ivana. I wish you could see it.
Persons: Roy Cohn, Donald Trump, Trump, Jeremy Strong, Sebastian Stan, Ivana, Ivana Trump, , , Cohn, Joseph McCarthy — Organizations: Cannes, Trump, Manhattan’s Locations: Midtown
That is how we should understand Trump’s ranting in the wake of his 34 felony convictions last week. And as if to underline Biden’s refusal to interfere in Justice Department decisions, the federal prosecution of the president’s son Hunter Biden begins this week. In spinning this fantasy about Biden, Trump is telegraphing that, should he return to the White House, he will try to use the Justice Department in exactly the way he’s pretending it was used against him. In his telling, he never called for Hillary Clinton to be imprisoned, and magnanimously resisted the entreaties of others to punish her. “According to Sessions, the President asked him to reverse his recusal so that Sessions could direct the Department of Justice to investigate and prosecute Hillary Clinton,” the Mueller report said.
Persons: Trump, Donald Trump, Biden, , Alvin Bragg, Hunter Biden, Alexei Navalny, Vladimir Putin, Hillary Clinton, magnanimously, ‘ Lock, Mueller, Jeff Sessions, who’d, Clinton, , Sessions, John Huber of Utah, Huber Organizations: Department, Biden, White, Justice Department, Fox News, Fox, Sessions, Department of Justice, Clinton Foundation Locations: Manhattan, Russian
Listen to and follow ‘Matter of Opinion’With Lydia Polgreen in South Africa covering its elections, Ross Douthat out on parental leave and Michelle Cottle reporting from a saloon in Colorado, Carlos Lozada turns the “Matter of Opinion” mic over to his Times Opinion colleagues to respond to the news about Donald Trump’s guilty verdict in the New York hush-money trial. The columnists Michelle Goldberg and David French — who calls himself “a recovering litigator” — join the deputy Opinion editor, Patrick Healy, to discuss Trump’s 34 guilty counts and debate what they mean for the former president, whether he’ll face prison time and how it will affect the 2024 presidential race. Below is a lightly edited transcript of their conversation. To listen to this episode, click the play button below.
Persons: Lydia Polgreen, Ross Douthat, Michelle Cottle, Carlos Lozada, Donald Trump’s, Michelle Goldberg, David French —, , litigator ” —, Patrick Healy Locations: South Africa, Colorado, New
Since the constitutional right to abortion was taken away in Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization in 2022, Democratic spending on abortion-related ads has jumped. Line chart showing the percentage of television ad spending devoted to abortion from 2018 to 2024. Democratic spending jumped up to around one-third in 2022 after the Dobbs ruling and has stayed high. In the first four months of this year alone, 48 percent of Democratic ad spending on broadcast networks in Pennsylvania centered on abortion. Democrats are seizing the moment, devoting two-thirds of their ad spending to abortion there.
Persons: Roe, Wade, Dobbs, Emily Holzknecht, Adam Westbrook, Trump, overperformed, , N.M, Andy Beshear’s, Daniel Cameron’s, Mr, Biden Organizations: Democratic, Republican, Republicans, Jackson, Health Organization, Democrats, Republicans Pennsylvania, Arizona, Michigan, Georgia, Wisconsin, Supreme Court, Data, Pew Research, Ore ., Nev . Ohio Ill, Conn . Iowa Pa, Ind, Del . Utah Colo, Religion Research Locations: Dobbs v, Pennsylvania, Michigan, Arizona, Georgia, . Arizona, . Maine, Mont, Minn . Vt, Ore, Ore . Idaho, Wis, N.Y, S.D . Mich, R.I, Wyo, Conn . Iowa Pa . N.J, Nev . Ohio, Del . Ind . Utah Md, Colo, W.Va . Va . Calif, Kan, Mo, Ky, N.C, Tenn, Okla, ., N.M . Miss ., Ala . Texas, Fla . Alaska Hawaii, Conn . Iowa, Neb . N.J, Del . Utah, W.Va . Md . Va . Calif, United States, Nevada , Arizona , Montana , Colorado, South Dakota , Nebraska , Missouri , Arkansas, Florida , New York, Maryland, Nevada , Arizona , Wisconsin , Michigan, Kentucky, Gaza, Ukraine
Royce White, a Black former pro basketball player who led protests in Minneapolis after the murder of George Floyd, made his first appearance on “The Alex Jones Show” about two years ago. Jones, a purveyor of conspiracy theories about everything from 9/11 to the murder of children at Sandy Hook Elementary School, was thrilled by their conversation. “You’re awesome, you’re dead-on, and we’re going to learn a lot from you,” he enthused. to accommodate his generalized anxiety disorder, a public stand that won him journalistic admiration even as his athletic career faltered. “Royce White Towers Above the Minneapolis Protests, and Thousands Are Looking Up to Him,” said a Washington Post headline.
Persons: Royce White, George Floyd, Alex Jones, , Jones, White, Dave Zirin, Billie Jean King, Muhammad Ali, “ Royce, Donald Trump, ” White, Louis Farrakhan, Robert Malone ” —, Steve Bannon, Bannon, Trump’s, delighting, it’s, Tulsi Gabbard Organizations: Sandy Hook Elementary, Minneapolis Protests, Washington Post, CNN, Democratic, Trump Locations: Minneapolis, Israel
If I’d pictured Donald Trump’s first criminal trial a few years ago, I’d have imagined the biggest, splashiest story in the world. In a recent Yahoo News/YouGov poll, only 16 percent of respondents said they were following the trial very closely, with an additional 32 percent following it “somewhat” closely. When people were asked how the trial made them feel, the most common response was “bored.” TV ratings tell a similar story. “Network coverage of Donald Trump’s hush money trial has failed to produce blockbuster viewership,” Deadline reported at the end of April. I’m aware of no similar effort to dramatize this trial’s testimony, and I almost never hear ordinary people talking about it.
Persons: Donald Trump’s, , Yahoo News’s Andrew Romano, who’d, Robert Mueller’s, Robert DeNiro, Rosie Perez, Laurence Fishburne, you’re, you’ve, Trump, Organizations: Republican, Yahoo, Cable, MSNBC
Opinion | Wokeness Is Dying. We Might Miss It.
  + stars: | 2024-05-17 | by ( Michelle Goldberg | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
There is much about that febrile moment worth satirizing, including the white-lady struggle sessions inspired by the risible Robin DiAngelo and the inevitable implosion of Seattle’s anarchist Capitol Hill Autonomous Zone. Bowles dissects both in the book’s best sections. “At various points, my fellow reporters at major news organizations told me roads and birds are racist,” she writes. Exercise is super racist.” Even allowing for 2020’s great flood of social-justice click bait, these are misleading and reductive caricatures. It’s hardly revisionist history, for example, to point out that Interstates were tools of racial segregation.
Persons: Nellie Bowles, George Floyd, Donald Trump’s, , , Robin DiAngelo, Bowles dissects, Tom Wolfe’s “, Joan Didion’s “, It’s Organizations: New York Times, Capitol, Capitol Hill Autonomous Locations: Capitol Hill, Bethlehem
John McEntee — who started out carrying Donald Trump’s bags and rose to become, in the chaotic final days of Trump’s presidency, his most important enforcer — has a TikTok account. In a video he published last week, he explains how he likes to keep “fake Hollywood money” in his car to give to homeless people. Kristi Noem, thirsty for a bigger role in MAGA world, might have thought she could ingratiate herself by bragging about killing a puppy. Partly in response, they’ve developed what’s sometimes called vice signaling, the defiant embrace of cruelty and disdain for social norms. And no one, of course, does vice signaling like Trump, who keeps comparing himself to the gangster Al Capone.
Persons: John McEntee —, Donald Trump’s, Trump’s, , , Trump, Patrick Bateman, Christian Bale, Kristi Noem, MAGA, ingratiate, they’ve, George, Bateman, Ron DeSantis, Al Capone Organizations: White, Office, South Dakota Gov, Florida Gov
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