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From: Les H7/21/2024 6:59:59 PM
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How Kamala Harris Performs Against Donald Trump in the Polls
The vice president could enter the general election campaign in a better position than President Biden.

nytimes.com

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From: Don Green7/21/2024 7:33:57 PM
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Aaron Sorkin Takes Back Divisive Op-Ed Urging Democratic Party to Select Mitt Romney: Kamala ‘Harris for America!'

Story by Michaela Zee

Aaron Sorkin no longer believes the Democratic Party should select Republican Senator Mitt Romney as its candidate in the 2024 presidential race.

Earlier on Sunday, an op-ed by Sorkin was published by the New York Times, in which the "West Wing" creator suggested that the Democratic Party should select a Republican candidate to defeat former President Donald Trump this November.

"At their convention next month, the Democrats should nominate Mitt Romney," Sorkin wrote.

However, after President Joe Biden announced hours later that he was dropping out of the race, Sorkin retracted his sentiment - or his "pitch to the writers' room," as he put it in his op-ed. He also publicly endorsed Vice President Kamala Harris, who launched her campaign for the White House.

"I take it all back. Harris for America!" Sorkin wrote on Sunday, asking "West Wing" star Josh Malina to share the statement on his X/Twitter account. Sorkin's publicist Jodie Oriol confirmed to Variety that the statement is real.

In his NYT op-ed, Sorkin argued that Romney as the Democratic presidential nominee would be "a clear and powerful demonstration" about "stopping a deranged man from taking power."

"The choice is between Donald Trump and not-Trump, and the not-Trump candidate needs only one qualification: to win enough votes from a cross section of Americans to close off the former president's Electoral College path back to power," Sorkin added.

Harris is unchallenged as yet for the Democratic nomination, which will be formally decided at the Aug. 19 convention in Chicago.

"I am honored to have the President's endorsement and my intention is to earn and win this nomination," Harris said in a statement. "I will do everything in my power to unite the Democratic Party-and unite our nation-to defeat Donald Trump and his extreme Project 2025 agenda. We have 107 days until Election Day. Together, we will fight. And together, we will win."

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From: Don Green7/21/2024 7:43:17 PM
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Tulsi Gabbard calls out Kamala Harris after President Biden endorsement: 'Unfit and unqualified'

msn.com

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From: tntpal7/21/2024 8:05:35 PM
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Sen. Joe Manchin considering rejoining Democratic Party to challenge Harris

Sen. Joe Manchin (I-W.V.) is considering running against Vice President Harris for the Democratic nomination.

A source familiar with Manchin confirmed that the West Virginia senator is considering reregistering as a Democrat to seek the nomination.

thehill.com


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To: Les H who wrote (42973)7/21/2024 10:51:42 PM
From: Les H
   of 45709
 
Who is Josh Shapiro? The potential first Jewish vice president
The Pennsylvania governor has been mooted as a potential running mate to Kamala Harris should she win the nomination

thejc.com

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From: Don Green7/22/2024 6:16:14 AM
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From: Don Green7/22/2024 6:28:19 AM
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Frank Biden makes shocking statement about his brother's decision to drop out of the race that sparks fury from Joe's familyPresident Joe Biden's youngest brother said Sunday that he believed the 81-year-old was bowing out of the race due to health concerns.

Frank Biden made comments to both CBS and ABC News, telling CBS 'in my humble opinion absolutely' the president's health was part of Biden's decision to announce that he wouldn't run for reelection - endorsing Vice President Kamala Harris in the process.

'Selfishly, I will have him back to enjoy whatever time we has left,' Frank Biden told CBS.

He also told ABC News that the decision 'boils down' to Biden's 'overall health and vitality' but also 'beating this genuine threat to our nation in the form of Donald Trump.'

But a Biden family source poured very hot water on Frank's claims. 'Frank Biden suffers from alcoholism and hasn't spoken to his brother in weeks,' the source told CBS. 'What he said ... is completely untrue.'



Frank Biden, the president's youngest brother, said he believed Biden bowed out of the race due to health concerns

Biden is also said to not have made his decision based on his health or age, despite showing signs of cognitive decline.

He was in Rehoboth Beach, Delaware, battling COVID when he and his closest aides composed the letter announcing he would step aside.

Frank Biden has caused tension with the rest of the family for using the president's name when discussing his business.

On his brother's inauguration day in 2021, he touted his relationship with the new White House occupant in an advertisement for a law firm where he worked as an advisor.

The back-and-forth with Frank came after Hunter Biden put out a statement where he praised his father for being able to 'absorb the pain of countless everyday Americans' after he withdrew from the presidential race.'

The 54-year-old first son was spotted near his home in Los Angeles over the weekend before his dad made the extraordinary decision to step aside and endorse Kamala Harris to take on Donald Trump in the November general election.

'That unconditional love has been his North Star as a President, and as a parent. He is unique in public life today, in that there is no distance between Joe Biden the man and Joe Biden the public servant of the last 54 years,' Hunter said in a statement on Sunday night.

'He is unique in public life today, in that there is no distance between Joe Biden the man and Joe Biden the public servant of the last 54 years.

'I'm so lucky every night I get to tell him I love him, and to thank him. I ask all American to join me tonight in doing the same.

Thank you, Mr. President. I love you, Dad.'

Biden's move throws the presidential race into chaos, but leaves time for Democrats to get their house in order before their August convention.

Hunter and his father speak on the phone, and in the weeks since the disastrous debate he has been seen in meetings in the White House and with the president's inner circle.

Joe Biden has supported his troubled son through his many battles, including his addiction to crack cocaine and the trial where he was found guilty of three federal gun charges - for which the president has vowed not to pardon him. dailymail.co.uk

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To: Don Green who wrote (42979)7/22/2024 6:32:32 AM
From: Don Green
   of 45709
 
"You can just feel it: Let's go"

Data: The Miller Center at the University of Virginia. Chart: Simran Parwani/Axios
President Biden quickly endorsed Vice President Harris for the nomination, as did the Clintons. But the Democratic Party is leaving open the possibility of a competitive nomination process, Mike and Jim write.

  • Former President Obama held off on an endorsement, saying: "We will be navigating uncharted waters in the days ahead."
Between the lines: As we told you in a column two weeks ago, Harris will be almost impossible to beat for the nomination, thanks to endorsements, money, optics and 2028 politics. Given the Democratic base, are you really going to take down the first Black American, the first South Asian American and the first woman to be elected vice president?

  • Sen. Joe Manchin (I-W.Va.) is making noises about re-registering as a Democrat to take on Harris. There may be other flurries around Democrats who know talk of challenging Harris would bring huge publicity.
?? James Carville, who two weeks ago had advocated for regional town halls to help determine a nominee, now tells us it's too late for such a process. "You can just feel it: Let's go," he said. "I don't have any sense there's time or appetite."

  • Harris immediately enjoyed "broad, swift consolidation" among major Democratic donors, who are feeling optimism for the first time in weeks, the N.Y. Times reports.
  • But Sen. Peter Welch of Vermont, the first Democratic senator to call for Biden to drop out, told CBS' Norah O'Donnell during yesterday's breaking coverage that Harris would "be strengthened by a process that's seen as open." He said the party should "take advantage of the extraordinary energy that's been unleashed by the president's decision ... and show that we're confident about engaging everyday Democrats to participate."


A campaign sign with President Biden's name cut out in Northwood, N.H., yesterday. Photo: Holly Ramer/AP
Carville said the expected convention photo of Harris with Second Gentleman Doug Emhoff and their large blended family will send a message of "change, youth, vigor, different — every f***ing word that counts is in that photograph."

  • "The most thunderous sound in politics is the sound of a turning page," Carville added.
?? What we're hearing: Many top Democrats have reservations about Harris, including the fact that few loyalists have risen with her — a rarity in politics.

  • Two months into the administration, Biden named her to lead diplomatic and other efforts to reduce illegal migration at the Southwest border — one of the top issues former President Trump will try to use against her.
  • Watch for Trump to claim the fix is in by the "real powers"— an argument Elon Musk made mere minutes after Biden's announcement. Some of the claims are contradictory. David Sacks, a top Silicon Valley venture capitalist who spoke at the GOP convention in Milwaukee, yesterday took to Musk's X to assert that Harris had "staged a coup."
Threat level: Democrats tell us Harris instantly puts reproductive rights at the center of the campaign — a potential game-changer. Harris — age 59, making her 19 years younger than Trump — will try to turn the age and fitness issue on the GOP. And as a former San Francisco district attorney and California attorney general, she'll push a "prosecutor vs. convicted felon" frame.

  • Trump officials know there's danger for him in debating a woman with historic status. "When women confront Trump, he can be impolitic and imprudent, and say politically dangerous things," one GOP insider told us.
  • So Trump could alienate women and many other non-MAGA voters the campaign is eyeing. Plus Harris could look better-versed on reproductive rights, and more evocative of the future than the past.


Via Truth Social
?? The other side: Republican officials won't admit it publicly, but they know they were better off running against Biden. The Atlantic's Tim Alberta wrote in a lengthy article before the convention that they're "all but praying that he remains their opponent."

  • Chris LaCivita, co-manager of Trump's campaign, told us his candidate "survived an assassin's bullet. The last thing we are worrying about is Laffin' Kamala" — the nickname Trump recently gave her. "You can move the chairs on a sinking boat all you want ... doesn't change the result," LaCivita added.
  • We obtained a 12-page internal memo showing the Trump campaign was preparing for the possibility of a Biden alternative back in May — with section headings that include "Act of God," "Insider Rebellion" and "Popular Uprising."
The bottom line: If Harris loses, history will likely be harsh on Biden for running again, on aides who concealed his condition, and on Democrats who wanted to coronate Harris rather than letting a process play out.

Go deeper: Jon Meacham sketches in the N.Y. Times the story that "history will tell of Joe Biden. With American democracy in an hour of maximum danger ... [h]e staved off an authoritarian threat at home, rallied the world against autocrats abroad, laid the foundations for decades of prosperity, managed the end of a once-in-a-century pandemic ... History and fate brought him to the pinnacle in a late season in his life, and in the end, he respected fate — and he respected the American people." ( Gift link)


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To: Don Green who wrote (42980)7/22/2024 6:36:22 AM
From: Don Green
   of 45709
 
Biden doubted Harris' chances
Photo illustration: Natalie Peeples/Axios. Photos: Brandon Bell/Getty Images, Chris duMond/Getty Images

President Biden hesitated to drop his re-election campaign in part because he and his senior advisers worried that Vice President Harris wasn't up to taking on Donald Trump, Alex Thompson reports from three Biden aides familiar with recent talks about his plans.

  • Why it matters: Biden, 81, ultimately decided to withdraw under pressure from the partyand endorsed Harris. But his private anxieties reflect broader questions among some Democratic leaders about Harris as their nominee this November.
This next week will be critical for Harris, 59, to prove doubters wrong as she moves quickly to try to clear the field of potential challengers for the Democratic nomination.

  • Harris' time as vice president has been occasionally rocky, defined in part by staff turnover and retreating from politically risky responsibilities.
?? The intrigue: The relationship between the vice president's office and the West Wing has often been tense.

  • At times, Harris aides suspected Biden's team didn't want to give Harris opportunities to shine to avoid her being seen as a viable alternative to Biden ahead of his re-election bid.
Keep reading.


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To: Les H who wrote (42977)7/22/2024 9:03:19 AM
From: Les H
   of 45709
 
China cuts several major interest rates to support fragile economy
By Reuters
July 22, 2024

SHANGHAI, July 22 (Reuters) - China surprised markets by cutting major short and long-term interest rates on Monday, its first such broad move since August last year, signalling intent to boost growth in the world's second-largest economy just days after a Communist Party leadership meeting.

The cuts to the central bank's key short-term policy rate, its market operations rates and benchmark bank lending rates came after China reported weaker-than-expected second-quarter economic data last week and its top leaders met for a plenum that occurs roughly every five years.

reuters.com

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