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Donald Trump is facing calls both from his allies and from within his own campaign to pull his endorsement from scandal-plagued North Carolina gubernatorial candidate Mark Robinson, according to four people familiar with the discussions. “North Carolina is a vital part of that plan. Additionally, Republican members of the North Carolina congressional delegation, including Sens. Ted Budd and Thom Tillis, and Republican National Committee Chairman Michael Whatley, who is from North Carolina, planned to privately urge Trump to pull his endorsement of Robinson, according to a person familiar with the conversations. Recent polling has had Trump in a statistical dead heat with Vice President Kamala Harris in the state, at roughly 48%.
Persons: Donald Trump, Mark Robinson, Robinson, , Trump, Martin Luther King, Trump’s, ” Trump, Karoline Leavitt, Biden, Harris, , Ted Budd, Thom Tillis, Michael Whatley, Budd, Tillis, Whatley, , ” Robinson, Clarence Thomas, “ Robinson, Kamala Harris, outperforms Robinson, Josh Stein, Robinson’s, Roy Moore, Madison Cawthorn’s, Herschel Walker Organizations: North Carolina, CNN, White, Trump, NBC News, North, Republican National, Republican, Republican Governors Association, North Carolina Rep, Georgia Senate Locations: “ North Carolina, North Carolina, Sens, Wilmington , North Carolina, Alabama, Georgia
Some lawmakers have called for more Secret Service funding, while others said the Secret Service could be more effective by shifting resources. But if it's signed into law, Trump and Harris would be granted the same standard of Secret Security protection as President Joe Biden. Biden said this week that the Secret Service "needs more help" and called on Congress to act. And both Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., have committed to getting the Secret Service what they need. Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, said he wants the Secret Service to provide “clarification of what the current practices are” to confirm that.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, Kamala Harris, Mike Lawler, Ritchie Torres, it's, Harris, Joe Biden, , ” Lawler, , Biden, Chuck Schumer, Mike Johnson, GOP Sen, Rick Scott of, ” Scott, Sen, John Cornyn, President Trump, Cornyn, Dick Durbin, ” Torres, Durbin, Torres, Joe Raedle, Ryan Wesley Routh, Ronald Rowe, Rowe Organizations: WASHINGTON —, Service, GOP, FBI, Scott's, Act, , Democratic, Senate, Trump International Golf, Secret, Trump, Secret Service Locations: U.S, , Rick Scott of Florida, America, Texas, Butler , Pennsylvania
A Republican-controlled chamber could thwart Harris’ nominees to fill out her administration and the courts, along with her legislative agenda. Top Senate Republicans told NBC News she would need their sign-off to secure votes on any judicial nominees, including for the Supreme Court. The prospect of a split Congress looms over a possible Harris win even if Democrats have a strong year and sweep every swing state. And if it’s a GOP-led Senate, Republicans would control a floor vote. Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, would have seniority to be the next Judiciary Committee chair and said he intends to claim the position if Republicans win control.
Persons: Kamala Harris, Harris, , , Frankie Veltri, Biden, ” Sen, John Cornyn, Mitch McConnell, “ They’re, ” Cornyn, Democratic Sen, Jon Tester, “ It’s, you’ve, Nanette Barragán, ” Charlie Veltri, Frankie, Ruben, Gallego, We’ve, She’s, didn’t, Jimmy Carter, it’s, John Thune, Sen, Chuck Grassley, “ I’m, Richard Blumenthal, Conn, Merrick Garland, Barack Obama’s, Blumenthal, Sheldon Whitehouse, they’d, Henry Wade, he’s, ” Louis Olivas, he’s “, “ she’s, ” “ They’re, ” Olivas, Sahil Kapur, Alex Tabet Organizations: Republican, Top, Republicans, NBC News, Supreme, GOP, Senate, Democratic, Pentagon, Republican Party, City Locations: Montana, Goodyear , Arizona, Texas, — West Virginia, Florida, Arizona, Iowa, Maricopa , Arizona, Tempe , Arizona, Washington, Phoenix
He bemoaned that, despite those milestones, which he framed as being on behalf of the Jewish people, he had not seen an increase in support from Jewish voters. The Trump campaign did not immediately respond to a request for further comment on the former president's remarks. At a separate event in the capital on Thursday evening, he shared a similar warning with Jewish voters about the stakes of their support in the election. As Trump continues to court Jewish voters ahead of the November general election, he has continued to publicly assail high-profile Jewish leaders like Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and Pennsylvania Gov. Trump’s comments Thursday echo his years of frustration at Jewish voters’ lack of support for him (they historically lean Democratic, according to the Pew Research Center.)
Persons: WASHINGTON —, Donald Trump, I’m, ” Trump, Trump, , , Israel, Chuck Schumer, Josh Shapiro, Schumer, Shapiro, Benjamin Netanyahu, Trump’s Organizations: Jewish, Embassy, Office, - American, National Summit, Pennsylvania, Trump, Pew Research Center, Democratic Locations: WASHINGTON, America, U.S, Tel Aviv, Jerusalem, Israel, Lago, Florida
LINCOLNVILLE, Maine — As Republicans in Nebraska consider changing state law to give Donald Trump an extra Electoral College vote this fall, their Democratic counterparts in Maine have little recourse to even the score. In 2020, Trump won one electoral vote from Maine’s rural 2nd Congressional District and is heavily favored to do so again, while Joe Biden won one from Nebraska’s Omaha-based 2nd Congressional District. And Maine GOP leaders have already signaled they have no interest in helping Democrats do away with their unusual formula for awarding electoral votes. “Maine has the gold standard of presidential election processes in the United States,” state House Minority Leader Billy Bob Faulkingham told the Bangor Daily News on Thursday. But unlike the previous times, there no longer appears to be a good way for Maine — and therefore national Democrats — to counter a change in Nebraska.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, Joe Biden, Sen, Lindsey Graham, Billy Bob Faulkingham, , , Kamala Harris, Harris, Biden, Harris ’, JD Vance, Democrats —, Dan Ankeles, ” Alex Seitz, Wald, Ben Kamisar Organizations: Republicans, Electoral, Democratic, Republican, Nebraska Republicans, Maine Democrats, Trump, Congressional, Maine Legislature, Maine GOP, Bangor Daily, Electoral College, Representatives, Maine, Democrats, National Locations: LINCOLNVILLE, Maine, Nebraska, Nebraska’s Omaha, “ Maine, United States, Bangor, Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin, R, Ohio, Lincolnville, Washington ,
The SALT deduction allows tax payers to deduct up to $10,000 of property, sales or income taxes that have already been paid to state and local governments. Historically, most of the tax payers who claim the deduction reside in high tax states such as New York, Connecticut, New Jersey and California. There was no cap on SALT prior to the Trump tax bill. Some of those recent conversations have featured Trump's new stance on bringing back the full SALT deduction, despite his bill being the cause for the $10,000 cap. Rep. Young Kim, R-Calif., told CNBC in a statement that the SALT cap is "hurting" her constituents and said Trump's most recent take on SALT shows he's listened to "Americans across the country hurting from the SALT cap."
Persons: Josh Gottheimer, Donald Trump's, Trump, Andrew Garbarino, Garbarino, Anthony D'Esposito, Nick LaLota, Jason Smith, Smith, Young Kim, he's, Kim, they'll Organizations: United States Capitol, Republicans, Senate, Capitol, New York Republicans, CNBC, Democrats, The New, The New Jersey House, Democratic Locations: Washington ,, New York , Connecticut , New Jersey, California, The, The New Jersey
CNN —A fired-up Vice President Kamala Harris adopted a rapid-response mentality to seize on the key issue of abortion rights this week. Harris’ strength on abortion rights is built on key groups that she hopes will show up in droves for her on Election Day. Among Black voters, 83% trust Harris, and among Hispanic voters, it was 63%. Eva Marie Uzcategui/Bloomberg/Getty ImagesWill men consider abortion rights when they vote? Abortion rights may not be a motivating issue for men.
Persons: CNN —, Kamala Harris, , Harris, Oprah Winfrey, CNN’s Priscilla Alvarez, Trump, Joe Biden’s, ” Alvarez, Donald Trump, Roe, Wade, “ I’m, ” Harris, Shanette Williams, Amber Nicole Thurman, ProPublica, Thurman, Winfrey, CNN’s Brianna Keilar, Nisha Verma, ” Verma, ” “, Verma, White, Walz, Eva Marie Uzcategui, CNN’s Arit John, Eva McKend, David Wright Organizations: CNN, Georgia, New York Times, Siena College, Trump, Black, Democratic, Republican, Biden, Bloomberg, Getty Locations: Atlanta, Michigan, Georgia, Chicago, North Carolina, Boynton Beach , Florida, Pennsylvania
Read previewWith less than two months to go before the 2024 election, top Republicans and allies of former President Donald Trump are pushing for a last-minute change to the Electoral College. The GOP effort centers on Nebraska, a traditionally Republican state that awards its Electoral College votes in an unusual way. AdvertisementThe Electoral College mathUnder the Electoral College, a candidate needs to win 270 votes — a majority of the 538 total electors — in order to win. AdvertisementMaine earlier this year threatened to switch to a winner-take-all system for Electoral College votes if Nebraska did the same. How one vote could change the electionAs Graham noted, just one Electoral College vote is at stake in Nebraska.
Persons: , Donald Trump, Kamala Harris, Joe Biden, Biden, Harris, Sen, Lindsey Graham of, Graham, Trump, There's, he's, it's, That's, Jen O'Malley Dillon, Jim Pillen Organizations: Service, Electoral College, Business, Electoral, Biden, Trump, Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, CBS, Nebraska, Democratic, Maine's, Sun, Representatives, Republicans, Republican Gov, Nebraska Examiner, GOP Locations: Nebraska, Omaha, Lindsey Graham of South, Lincoln, Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin, Nevada , Arizona, Georgia, North Carolina, Maine, Trump, Maine's, Nevada, state's
We will ultimately eliminate the federal Department of Education,” he said earlier this month during a rally in Wisconsin. Previously, federal education programs were housed in other agencies. Ending the department may not eliminate federal education fundingFederal funding programs for K-12 schools that help support the education of students from low-income families and children with disabilities predated the creation of the Department of Education. Calls to abolish the Department of Education or merge it with another federal agency are not new. When Trump was president, his administration proposed merging the Education and Labor departments into one federal agency.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, , I’m, , ” Trump, Kamala Harris, ” Harris, Jimmy Carter, Pell, Joe Biden’s, Frederick Hess, Marguerite Roza, ” Roza, Ronald Reagan Organizations: Washington CNN —, Department of Education, of Education, Democratic National Convention, National Education Association, Department, Education’s, IDEA, Civil, Joe Biden’s Department of Education, Obama, Education, American Enterprise Institute, , Georgetown University, Brookings Institution, Republican, Labor, Republicans Locations: Wisconsin, Georgia, Israel
And Democrats have several times thought North Carolina was ripe to pick off in recent elections — only for it to stubbornly stay red. But his new problems quickly pushed North Carolina even further to the forefront of the presidential race. How Trump can mitigate the damageThe KFile investigation about Robinson landed the Trump campaign with a suddenly breaking crisis. Mark Robinson walks past former President Donald Trump after being introduced at a Trump campaign event in Asheboro, North Carolina, on August 21, 2024. Those 16 electoral votes would open hugely significant possibilities for Harris, but Democrats have seen their hopes dashed in North Carolina before.
Persons: Donald Trump, Mark Robinson, Robinson, MAGA, CNN’s KFile, “ Martin Luther King, Kamala Harris ’, Trump’s, Harris, Trump, — Robinson, Josh Stein, David Plouffe, , Barack Obama, , Joe Biden, Sarah Huckabee Sanders, envelops Trump, she’s, Oprah Winfrey, Chuck Burton, Karoline Leavitt, Biden, ” Leavitt, Margaret Hoover, ” Hoover, CNN’s Erin Burnett, “ MAGA, CNN’s Alayna Treene, Kristen Holmes, Harris The Harris, doesn’t, Carolina’s, Roy Cooper, “ Donald Trump, ” Cooper, Obama, Mitt Romney, Hillary Clinton, Nate Silver, CNN’s Jake Tapper, ” Silver, he’ll Organizations: CNN, Republican, Gov, Trump, White, Trump GOP, Republican Party, Electoral, Democratic, North Carolina, North, Arkansas Gov, Asian Pacific, America, Black, Asheboro, Harris The, NC GOP Locations: North Carolina, Trump, Pennsylvania , Wisconsin, Michigan, House, Springfield , Ohio, New York, Black, Asheville , North Carolina, Carolina, Asheboro , North Carolina, Virginia
A mural is displayed in an alley downtown on September 16, 2024 in Springfield, Ohio. Former President Donald Trump and running mate JD Vance's unfounded claims about Haitian immigrants in Springfield, Ohio weaken the Republican Party's border message, Ohio Governor Mike DeWine wrote in an op-ed published Friday. "The Biden administration's failure to control the southern border is a very important issue that Mr. Trump and Mr. Vance are talking about and one that the American people are rightfully deeply concerned about," DeWine, a Republican, wrote in the New York Times. "But their verbal attacks against these Haitians — who are legally present in the United States — dilute and cloud what should be a winning argument about the border," he said. Trump's latest immigration claims thrust Springfield, Ohio into the national spotlight, after he and Vance — who represents Ohio in the Senate — promoted unfounded rumors that Haitian immigrants were stealing and eating city resident's pets.
Persons: Donald Trump, JD, Mike DeWine, Biden, Trump, Vance, , Joe Biden, Kamala Harris, Vance — Organizations: Republican, New York Times Locations: Springfield , Ohio, Ohio, United States
Read previewSeptember 30 could be a consequential day for the US economy if two major negotiations don't get hammered out in time. Congress must pass a stopgap spending bill by the last day of this month to avoid a partial government shutdown. September 30 is also the deadline for the International Longshoremen's Association and several East Coast and Gulf Coast ports to strike a contract. A government shutdownThe rejection of Johnson's plan on Wednesday ratcheted up tensions in Congress as the September 30 deadline draws ever nearer. This would pause the strike while negotiations continued.
Persons: , there's, Mike Johnson, Johnson, There's, Donald Trump, Mitch McConnell, Joe Biden, Taft, Hartley Organizations: Service, International Longshoremen's Association, Business, GOP, United States Maritime Alliance, Street, White House, Washington Post, Street Journal, Social Security, Medicare, Congressional, Office, International Longshoremen's, Retail Industry, Association Locations: East Coast, Gulf Coast, Maine, Texas, West Coast, RILA
Trump is “immensely happy with JD’s performance,” said a person who speaks with Trump and is familiar with his thinking. “I didn’t discuss it with JD, in all fairness,” Trump said when pressed on the issue during his debate last week with Vice President Kamala Harris. “I know from experience, nobody speaks for Donald J. Trump except for Donald J. Trump, right?”“Vice President Pence viewed his role as a translator for President Trump to traditional Republican audiences,” a Trump ally said. 2Short also believes the relationship between Vance and Trump is different than the one Pence and Trump had prior to their falling out. “He loves that he has a smart person with balls who doesn’t only do Fox,” a person close to the campaign said.
Persons: Sen, JD Vance, Donald Trump’s, , Trump, ” Vance, Vance weren’t, Vance, , Vance “, Garrett Ventry, Elise Stefanik, ” Trump, Mike Pence, Pence, Trump’s mildest, Kamala Harris, Marc Short, ‘ JD, ’ ” Vance, Dana Bash, “ He’s, Kari Lake, Marjorie Taylor Greene, podcaster Shawn Ryan, Joe Biden’s, Barack Obama, Brian Hughes, ” Hughes, Harris, Biden, recapping, obsequious Trump, , Donald J, ” “, ” Trump’s, Mike, I’m, he’s, septuagenarian Trump, brags, Vince Lombardi —, JD, “ ‘ Lombardi, Organizations: NBC News, Republican, Trump, U.S, Capitol, Press, CNBC, Arizona GOP, JD, NATO, Yale Law School, Green Bay Packers Locations: , Springfield , Ohio, Raleigh , North Carolina, Springfield, “ State, Kari, Ukraine, Russia, America, Raleigh, Ohio
Biden makes history with 12th Senate-confirmed LGBTQ judge
  + stars: | 2024-09-19 | by ( ) www.nbcnews.com   time to read: +3 min
That surpassed the record of Democratic former President Barack Obama, who had secured the confirmation of 11 openly LGBTQ judges during his eight years in office. Only in the last three decades have presidents nominated openly gay people to the federal bench. Circuit Judge Alison Nathan joined the bench as a trial judge in Manhattan following her nomination by Obama. Circuit Judges Beth Robinson of the 2nd Circuit and Nicole Berner of the 4th U.S. The bulk of openly LGBTQ nominees have come from Democratic presidents, though Republican former President Donald Trump appointed two openly gay judges.
Persons: Joe Biden, Mary Kay Costello, Biden, Barack Obama, Lena Zwarensteyn, ” Zwarensteyn, Costello, Saul Ewing, Akin Gump Strauss Hauer, Feld, Judge Vaughn Walker, George H.W, George H.W . Bush, Deborah Batts, Bill Clinton, Alison Nathan, Obama, Nathan, Beth Robinson, Nicole Berner, Donald Trump Organizations: Democratic, Eastern District of Pennsylvania, Conference, Civil, Human, U.S . Air Force, Temple University, Attorney’s, Eastern, Former U.S, Republican, Gay, U.S, Circuit, Appeals, 2nd, NBC Locations: Philadelphia, Eastern District, San Francisco, George H.W ., Manhattan, New York City
Users also “lacked any meaningful control over how personal information was used for AI-fueled systems” on the companies’ platforms, according to the report. The report includes staff recommendations calling for federal privacy legislation, as well as more efforts from companies to prioritize privacy in their data collection and recommendation systems. "Protecting users – especially children and teens – requires clear baseline protections that apply across the board," the FTC said in the report. The privacy of children and teens were not adequately protected on these social media platforms and streaming services, according to the report. However, children and teens are known to be on social media, and the FTC wrote that companies "should not ignore this reality."
Persons: Lina Khan, , Twitch, Kate Sheerin, Sheerin Organizations: Federal Trade Commission, Committee, Energy, Commerce, FTC, Amazon, Facebook, Meta, Twitter, YouTube, COPPA Locations: Canada
While school meal prices vary throughout the country, a survey conducted by the School Nutrition Association, a trade organization, found that lunches typically cost about $2.83 for elementary school students, $3 for middle school students and $3.05 for high school students. The prices mean that the $100 million in transaction fees could have bought another 33 million or so school lunches or over 55 million school breakfasts. “Junk fees on school lunch should not exist. A handful of states have made universal school meals permanent, but most have returned to the pre-pandemic format. “School lunch should always be free, and definitely free of judgment,” Fetterman said at the hearing on Wednesday.
Persons: Tom Vilsack, Sen, Elizabeth Warren, , , Bernie Sanders, ” Warren, NBC News . Sen, John Fetterman, Warren, Sanders, Fetterman, Bob Casey, Debbie Stabenow, Sherrod Brown, Raphael Warnock of, Brian Schatz, , Marisa Kirk, Epstein, ” Fetterman Organizations: Agriculture Department, NBC News, Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, School Nutrition Association, NBC News ., USDA, NBC, Sens, Supplemental, Assistance, SNAP Locations: Vermont, Pennsylvania, Michigan, Ohio, Raphael Warnock of Georgia, Hawaii, Vilsack
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailCoinbase CEO Brian Armstrong on the rise of the crypto voting blocCoinbase CEO Brian Armstrong, who has spent years lobbying lawmakers on the importance of the crypto industry, weighs in on the rise of the crypto voting bloc in the 2024 election cycle. Crypto businesses and individuals have raised more than $190 million so far, with Armstrong himself giving over $1.3 million to a mix of PACs including the bipartisan, pro-crypto Fairshake and JD Vance for Senate Inc., as well as directly to Democrats and Republicans running for both House and Senate seats.
Persons: Brian Armstrong, Armstrong, JD Vance Organizations: Senate Inc
CNN —Donald Trump’s obsession with election fraud that doesn’t exist in any significant form could drive the country into a government shutdown — and may even put the Republican House majority at risk. But given the tiny House GOP majority and Trump’s looming presence, every step the speaker takes will be perilous – especially if he hopes to cling to his job if Republicans succeed in holding the House in November. Trump seems to be setting the GOP up for an intra-party fight that could turn into a disaster in November. Win McNamee/Getty ImagesA potential self-inflicted wound for the GOP in Trump’s birth stateIronically, Trump was on Wednesday in the state where his stand could wreak the most political damage for House Republicans. Johnson has been happy to indulge Trump’s voter fraud claims – both after the 2020 election and this cycle.
Persons: Donald Trump’s, Mike Johnson, Trump, Johnson, shutdowns, isn’t, Mitch McConnell, , Win McNamee, Mike Lawler, Kaitlan Collins, ” Lawler, Marc Molinaro, ” Molinaro, , we’ll, Marjorie Taylor Greene, Johnson –, , Kevin McCarthy, Kamala Harris, Republicans don’t, Donald Trump, Frank Franklin II, it’s, relishes, Harris, Joe Biden’s, ” Trump Organizations: CNN, Republican, GOP, Democrats, Capitol, House Republicans, Congressional, New York Republican, Louisiana Republican, Georgia Republican, Democratic, Social Network, Republicans, SAVE, Nassau Coliseum, Trump, New, New York, State, Teamsters Union, Locations: Washington, Kentucky, New York, Uniondale, Uniondale , New York, Long, New York City, New, Florida
GOP presidential nominee Donald Trump has called for Republicans to shut down the government if they can’t pass the voting measure known as the SAVE Act. Many Democrats are pushing for an extension into December that would not include the SAVE Act, which is viewed as a non-starter in the Senate. “House Republicans don’t seem to have any plan for actually keeping the government open, so the Senate will step in,” Schumer said in floor remarks. “Many Republican House members, as many of you have reported, are smart enough to know if there is a shutdown, it will be a Republican shutdown. There never is a shutdown — hardly ever is a shutdown,” said Senate Majority Whip Dick Durbin, a Democrat from Illinois.
Persons: Chuck Schumer, Mike Johnson, Johnson, “ I’m, ” Johnson, we’ll, John Thune, Thune, ” Schumer, Schumer, , , Donald Trump, Republicans don’t, ” “, I’m, ” Trump, isn’t, Dick Durbin, CNN’s Morgan Rimmer Organizations: Washington CNN, GOP, CNN, Republicans, SAVE, , Trump, Truth, Republican Locations: Illinois
Trump says Fed's rate cut was 'political move'
  + stars: | 2024-09-19 | by ( ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +1 min
Republican presidential nominee and former U.S. President Donald Trump holds a rally at Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum, in Uniondale, New York, U.S., September 18, 2024. Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump said on Thursday the U.S. Federal Reserve's decision to cut interest rates by half of a percentage point was "a political move." Most people thought it was going to be half of that number, which probably would have been the right thing to do," Trump said in an interview with Newsmax. The Federal Reserve on Wednesday kicked off what is expected to be a series of interest rate cuts with an unusually large half-percentage-point reduction. Trump said last month that U.S. presidents should have a say over decisions made by the Federal Reserve.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump Organizations: Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum, Republican, U.S, U.S . Federal, Newsmax, Federal Reserve, Senate, Fed Locations: Uniondale , New York, U.S, U.S .
The HOMES Act would establish a new federal housing development authority charged with building and rehabilitating more than a million permanently affordable homes. This so-called "social housing" is notably different from traditional public housing, which is entirely reserved for the poorest households. Rent for all tenants in social housing would be capped at 25% of their income. "There is another way: social housing," Ocasio-Cortez and Smith said in their op-ed. And in California, lawmakers introduced a bill to construct mixed-income social housing on government-owned land.
Persons: , Alexandria Ocasio, Sen, Tina Smith, Cortez, Gianpaolo Baiocchi, Smith, Baiocchi, Emily Gallagher's, Kamala Harris, she's, Donald Trump, Smith —, Harris, Walz Organizations: Service, New, New York Democrat, Minnesota Democrat, Senate, Business, Urban Democracy Lab, New York Times, New York Locations: Alexandria, Cortez, New York, Minnesota, New, California, Vienna
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailCoinbase CEO Brian Armstrong on the rise of the crypto voting blockCoinbase CEO Brian Armstrong, who has spent years lobbying lawmakers on the importance of the crypto industry, weighs in on the rise of the crypto voting bloc in the 2024 election cycle. Crypto businesses and individuals have raised more than $190 million so far, with Armstrong himself giving over $1.3 million to a mix of PACs including the bipartisan, pro-crypto Fairshake and JD Vance for Senate Inc., as well as directly to Democrats and Republicans running for both House and Senate seats.
Persons: Brian Armstrong, Armstrong, JD Vance Organizations: Senate Inc
Harris' labor split screen: From the Politics Desk
  + stars: | 2024-09-18 | by ( The Politics Desk | ) www.nbcnews.com   time to read: +8 min
In today’s edition, we explore one positive and on negative development for Kamala Harris' support from organized labor. The influential Teamsters union on Wednesday declined to issue an endorsement in the presidential race, Megan Lebowitz and Alexandra Marquez report. Prior to the announcement, the Teamsters also released survey data showing more rank-and-file members preferred to endorse Trump than Harris. Still, Harris has won the endorsement of just about every other major labor union in the country (the International Association of Fire Fighters remains a notable holdout). Instead, the Trump campaign appears to be approaching this apparent assassination attempt as an opportunity rather than as a moment to reflect.
Persons: Kamala Harris, Chuck Todd, Harris, Megan Lebowitz, Alexandra Marquez, Natasha Korecki, Donald Trump, Joe Biden, Trump, , Sean O’Brien, Verrett, , Chuck Todd There’s, We’ve, isn’t, Chuck → 🗞️, ✂ ️, eason, alf, lea Organizations: NBC, White House, Capitol, Teamsters, Democratic, Big Business, International Association of Fire Fighters, Belt . Workers, Service Employees International Union, Culinary Workers Union, AFL, SEIU Locations: California , Illinois, New York, Arizona, Georgia, Nevada, North Carolina, Butler , Pennsylvania, America
Clean energy and clean vehicle companies added nearly 150,000 new jobs in 2023, the first full year of the Inflation Reduction Act, the report found. Of that total, the South added more than 54,000 clean energy jobs, accounting for 36% of all new jobs in the region. By comparison, the Midwest, Northeast and West combined added 95,000 clean energy jobs in 2023. The employment sectors analyzed in E2’s “Clean Jobs America” report include clean vehicles, renewable energy, battery storage, grid modernization and biofuels. Clean energy jobs now account for about 1 in 16 new jobs created in the U.S.E2 has released annual reports on clean energy job growth in the U.S. since 2015.
Persons: Kamala Harris, , Donald Trump, Harris, Biden, Bob Keefe, We’re, Organizations: Biden, Senate, Jobs America, Republicans Locations: United States, U.S, Midwest, Northeast, Southern, Alabama, Kentucky, Oklahoma, California, Florida, Texas
WASHINGTON — Billie Jean King will become the first individual female athlete to be awarded the Congressional Gold Medal. Reps. Brian Fitzpatrick of Pennsylvania and Mikie Sherrill of New Jersey announced Tuesday that their bipartisan legislation had passed the House of Representatives and would be sent to President Joe Biden for his signature. The bill to honor King, the tennis Hall of Famer and activist, had already passed unanimously in the Senate. The medal, awarded by Congress for distinguished achievements and contributions to society, has previously been given to athletes including baseball players Jackie Robinson and Roberto Clemente, and golfers Jack Nicklaus, Byron Nelson and Arnold Palmer. King had already been awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2009.
Persons: WASHINGTON, Billie Jean King, Brian Fitzpatrick, Mikie Sherrill, Joe Biden, King, Sherrill, King’s, Bobby Riggs, , Jackie Robinson, Roberto Clemente, Jack Nicklaus, Byron Nelson, Arnold Palmer, Fitzpatrick Organizations: of Famer, Republican, NBC Locations: Pennsylvania, Mikie Sherrill of New Jersey,
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