Tag: campaign

  • Biden launches campaign then delivers speech not mentioning it

    Biden launches campaign then delivers speech not mentioning it

    [ad_1]

    biden 14347

    As an official White House event, Biden was not there in his capacity as a candidate. Instead, the speech was a campaign launch without an explicit launch of the campaign. He shook every hand on stage. He flashed a big grin more than once. He peppered his speech with booming yells about workers being the backbone of American and bottom-out economics.

    But while the crowd erupted into a “Let’s go Joe” chant, Biden left talk of 2024 somewhere behind the dais. It was an implicit recognition that the actual act of running for office comes with certain legal restrictions, an illustration of how tricky it can be to walk the line between president and incumbent presidential candidate.

    Though Biden’s speech came just hours after he formally launched his 2024 campaign with a three-minute video in which he asked voters to help him “finish the job,” he made no such ask of the union members before him.

    Still, Tuesday’s speech at the Washington Hilton previewed how the president will make his case in the coming months — with official and political events and travel to highlight his administration’s accomplishments before kicking off a barnstorming general election campaign in 2024. He zeroed in on legislative accomplishments, from the Inflation Reduction Act to the bipartisan infrastructure law, while making the case that his core economic plan was working.

    “Under my predecessor, Infrastructure Week was a punchline. On my watch, Infrastructure Week has become a decade headline — a decade. That’s where you all come in. We’ve already announced over 25,000 infrastructure projects in 4,500 towns across America and we’re just getting started,” Biden said.

    “Union workers will build roads and bridges, lay internet cable, install 500,000 electric vehicle chargers throughout America. Union workers are going to transform America. And union workers are going to finish the job.”

    Biden, who would be 86 at the end of a second term in the White House, is battling an approval rating stuck in the low 40s. But White House aides have repeatedly emphasized the unpopularity of his political opponents, particularly Trump. Biden will have 18 months to fundraise before Election Day, which could present a rematch with the opponent he beat in 2020, former President Donald Trump.

    But on Tuesday, the president’s mood appeared unfazed by the great obstacles hovering over his announcement. The room full of union workers buzzed with chatter about the timing of his appearance.

    “As they say, he’s the most pro-labor, pro-union president in the history of the United States. It’s pretty fitting that he announced this today,” said Dustin Himes, of Bricklayers Local 15, a labor union in Kansas City, Mo. “It’s pretty special.”

    [ad_2]
    #Biden #launches #campaign #delivers #speech #mentioning
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • This is who’s running Joe Biden’s campaign

    This is who’s running Joe Biden’s campaign

    [ad_1]

    election 2024 biden rodriguez 96725

    A longtime Democratic aide, she’s currently the highest ranking Latina in the White House. She also served in several roles in the Obama administration, and is the granddaughter of labor icon Cesar Chávez.

    Quentin Fulks, Principal Deputy Campaign Manager

    A democratic strategist, Fulks was most recently the campaign manager for Sen. Raphael Warnock’s reelection campaign last year — the first successful reelection bid for a Democratic senator in Georgia in more than 30 years. Before that, he was the deputy campaign manager and senior political adviser to Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker, helping flip the seat blue in 2018. He has also held several positions at the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, EMILY‘s List and Priorities USA.

    Kevin Muñoz, Media Relations

    Most recently an assistant White House press secretary, Muñoz will take care of press for the reelection bid initially as a larger team is built out. None of the other hires on the comms team or their potential roles in the campaign have been set in stone, two people familiar with the process said. At least one other campaign staffer is set to be announced soon.

    National Co-chairs

    Rep. Lisa Blunt-Rochester (D-Del.) has been close with Biden for years, helping him choose his running mate for the last campaign. A long-time family friend, she’s also the first woman and first African American to represent Delaware in Congress.

    Rep. Jim Clyburn (D-S.C.), another longtime ally, threw his support behind Biden in 2020. That gave the president a stamp of approval among Black voters at at a critical time for the campaign, following a string of losses to Sen. Bernie Sanders and coming just days before the state’s primary.

    Sen. Chris Coons (D-Del.) has served as the “bridge” between the Hill, the White House and foreign capitals during the Biden presidency. Abroad, he has served almost as a proxy to Biden, being talked about in the U.S. and internationally as a shadow secretary of State.

    Sen. Tammy Duckworth (D-Ill.), a veteran and the first Thai American woman in Congress, was floated as a vice presidential candidate in 2020. Since then, she has been a Biden ally, but also challenged the president two years ago for not naming Asian American Cabinet secretaries, vowing to oppose nominees on the floor before backing down.

    Rep. Veronica Escobar (D-Texas) has been a staunch defender of the administration’s handling of the southern border crisis, an issue that’s likely to be central in the 2024 presidential campaign. One of the first two Latinas to represent Texas in the House of Representatives, she represents El Paso, the largest city at the U.S. border.

    Jeffrey Katzenberg, a film producer and major Democratic fundraiser, has been key to Biden’s presidential endeavors, backing him in 2020 and raising millions of dollars for Dems alongside the president.

    Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, who was also floated as a potential vice presidential candidate, has been a close Biden ally for years. She vocally backed the president despite dwindling Democratic enthusiasm earlier this year, and endorsed him for president in 2020.

    [ad_2]
    #whos #running #Joe #Bidens #campaign
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • The keys to a hypothetical Tucker Carlson 2024 campaign

    The keys to a hypothetical Tucker Carlson 2024 campaign

    [ad_1]

    voting machines defamation lawsuit 70384

    Some urged him to get in quickly. Several advised the Fox star to go directly after Donald. One even joked that he should launch a ticket with his fellow freshly ousted cable exile Don Lemon.

    One would-be 2024 primary competitor even goaded Carlson to join the fray. “I think he’d be a good addition to the race,” Vivek Ramaswamy told POLITICO in an interview Monday, hours before he had initially planned to join Carlson’s show as a guest. “I think someone should only do this if they feel called to do it, but I think it’d be good for the country if he got in, to be honest with you.”

    Here’s what the rest of our impromptu panel had to say:

    Dave Kochel, veteran Iowa Republican strategist:

    “I can’t wait to see the look on some of these people’s faces who are cheering Tucker Carlson’s demise when he announces for president. They’ll be like, ‘Oh, shit.’”

    “He had three-and-a-half million viewers … Obviously, his show was a bigger cultural phenomenon than just that. He’s well known to 20 million people, probably, but all of them are political watchers. I guess anything is possible. And we live in the stupidest timeline ever. I just don’t see it happening.”

    “Could he win an Iowa Caucus? I mean, Mike Huckabee did. I do think Iowa caucus voters are probably more sophisticated than that to think, ‘well, we’re mad that they took him off Fox News, let’s give him White House as a consolation prize.’ But then again, he’s very good at understanding where the parade is headed and jumping in front of it.”

    Dave Carney, New Hampshire Republican strategist:

    “What would be the nickname that Trump gives him?”

    But Carney thinks Carlson could have a case to make: “He could actually indict Trump’s record as president more seriously than anyone else. ‘He always promises, doesn’t deliver,’ things he alludes to sometimes during his show. I don’t think he would have any fear of going right after Trump and inheriting some of that support and peeling it off. Every vote he gets will be out of Trump’s hide and really impact the race dramatically.

    Still, he said, “I think if he’s running, the departure would have been better handled.”

    Alex Conant, a Republican strategist and former adviser to Marco Rubio’s 2016 and Tim Pawlenty’s 2012 presidential campaigns:

    “I think it depends a little on what terms he left Fox under. I think a lot of the presidential primary is going to play out on Fox. In fact, a lot of it was playing out on his show. I think if Fox is really turning the page on Tucker Carlson, and are not going to give him airtime to promote his campaign, that would be a real challenge for him. It appears that he certainly did not decide that he no longer wanted to be the top-rated anchor on cable news.

    “If he’s going to run, my advice would be to not wait too long. The presidential campaign has already begun. While voters haven’t necessarily tuned in, there’s a lot already happening in the early states and with donors, and I think anyone who wants to run for president can’t wait.”

    Chuck Coughlin, Arizona political strategist:

    “I can’t see that’s the best use of his time to go do something like that.“

    “Clearly he’s got a lane, but it’s in direct competition to Trump, and similarly if not even more so, he’s got an even bigger challenge of how to get outside of the path which has condemned all the Trump candidates to losing since 2018. He can’t win unaffiliated voters, and he’s clearly not going to win Democratic voters. He’s a base motivator.”

    Beth Miller, Republican strategist in California

    “As crazy as it may sound, we have certainly seen crazier, and Tucker Carlson has strong name ID … He certainly has a base from his years on air with Fox News, and one of the things we know about Fox News viewers is they do tend to vote.”

    On the other hand, Miller said, “He certainly would bring in a lot of baggage, and opposition research would have a field day … I haven’t read through all of his transcripts on all of his shows, but my guess is over the years he’s taken some interesting positions that could come back to haunt him.”

    Charlie Gerow, a Republican strategist who is vice chair of the Conservative Political Action Committee:

    “There’s no doubt that he has a following, that he has the name identification and political base to build a national campaign if he chose to do that. It would take an awful lot of work, and again, [with Trump] he’d be running against an incumbent in his own party, in effect, which is never an easy path.”

    On the other hand, Gerow said, “He’s been on television more than Donald Trump was when he came down the escalator.”

    He recommended that if Carlson wants to run, he “take whatever severance package Fox is giving him and put it into a campaign account immediately, and then carve off a sizable chunk for me.”

    And, the vice chair of CPAC said, “He has to be at CPAC next year.”

    Mike Madrid, the Republican strategist who was a co-founder of the anti-Trump Lincoln Project:

    “If he wanted the nomination, I think he’s really the only person who could beat Donald Trump. He’s truly the tip of the spear on defining what Republicans are going to be opposed to on literally any given night. He has the platform, he has the audience, he has the influence.”

    Madrid said that if he were advising Carlson, he would “start the media chatter that this is happening” by “prognosticating about the future of the country in written form … He can say, ‘This is not the end, this is the beginning.’”

    “In many ways, it’s kind of like where Trump was in 2015,“ he said. “People weren’t really thinking about it, it wasn’t a real thing … What Trump really showed and proved is that the Republican base is anti-establishment, right? It’s counter-cultural, and that’s literally what Tucker has been articulating, is a counter voice against the establishment, as it were. And that celebrity is what they look for.”

    Rob Stutzman, a Republican strategist

    “Start slow, do some rather conventional things, like pop into early states … You’ve got to get out there and measure how people would react to you being a candidate without you just instantly becoming one.”

    More than most candidates, Stutzman said, Carlson has time. “He has the advantage of being famous, so he doesn’t have to start as early as Asa Hutchinson or Tim Scott.”

    “But my goodness, talk about epic pay-per-view, pro wrestling, Trump vs. Carlson must-see TV. The internet might melt.”

    Like most Republican strategists, Stutzman would be surprised if Carlson actually pulled the trigger. Speculation about a potential candidacy, he figured, was always more a statement about how powerful Carlson had become, not about his prospects of running.

    If he does run, Stutzman added, “Will Don Lemon be his running mate?”

    [ad_2]
    #keys #hypothetical #Tucker #Carlson #campaign
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Eleni Kounalakis first to launch campaign for California governor in 2026

    Eleni Kounalakis first to launch campaign for California governor in 2026

    [ad_1]

    california primary statewide offices 81642

    Her formal entry jumpstarts the race and puts pressure on other would-be contenders to announce gubernatorial bids of their own, perhaps sooner than they otherwise planned. California statewide campaigns are among the most expensive in the country, with TV ads in major markets costing millions each week and politicians taking years and even decades to establish their brands. Republicans don’t pose a serious threat in top-of-the-ticket races, so the scramble for early money and endorsements will take place primarily among Democrats.

    Kounalakis has been acting governor more than a dozen times. When Gov. Gavin Newsom was away on holiday last spring, she became the first woman in the state’s 171-year history to sign a bill into law. Last fall, she was a prominent voice for Proposition 1, the voter-approved measure that guaranteed access to abortions after the U.S. Supreme Court overturned federal protections. Yet Kounalakis remains far from a household name across the state. She compared the race to a marathon, adding, “You really have to start early. I’m committed to this. I’m ready to run it.”

    The timing of her launch is reminiscent of Newsom’s first successful run for governor. In February 2015, Newsom opened a committee to begin raising money for his marathon 2018 governor’s race just a few months after Jerry Brown was sworn in for his final term. Like Newsom did before her, Kounalakis expects to lean into her two terms as the understudy as well as the financial and ballot title advantages that can come with the role. Two of the state’s last four governors immediately preceded their time in the office as lieutenant governors.

    Kounalakis has about $4.4 million in her campaign committee, which she will ultimately shift into the governor’s race. She informed Newsom of her plans to run for the office.

    In her current role, Kounalakis, 57, presented herself as a seasoned operator focused on the cost of higher education and efforts to combat climate change. She pushed back on tuition and fee hikes at universities and state institutions and fought to add more slots for resident students as a member on governing boards of the UC and CSU systems. As the state’s representative for international affairs and trade, she represented California abroad at the United Nations Climate Summit. Kounalakis also talked up her experience opposing the Trump administration to halt offshore drilling and developing policies to help deliver three major offshore wind projects.

    But the lieutenant governor’s office — largely regarded as a stepping-stone post for which candidates in California campaign independent of the governor — offers little in the way of built-in responsibilities. Kounalakis has made no secret of her ambitions and about wanting a bigger role. And she’s spoken openly about the need for a state of nearly 40 million people and the world’s fifth largest economy to have a woman governor.

    Despite its reputation as a progressive policy laboratory, California has been led only by men. Sen. Dianne Feinstein and former state Treasurer Kathleen Brown, the daughter of one California governor and sister of another, lost governor’s races to a male rival. More recently, Jerry Brown defeated Republican Meg Whitman, the billionaire former eBay chief executive, in 2010.

    Kounalakis referenced her immigrant family’s roots and connected her work for their housing development company with the need to build more dwellings in the state. She also touched on the historic implications of her run.

    “We’re in a time where women’s rights are being attacked in ways that were inconceivable before Donald Trump won,” she said. “I am the first woman elected lieutenant governor of California, and God willing, I will be the first woman elected governor.”

    EMILY’s List President Laphonza Butler, a strategist and former labor leader with deep roots in California, expects Kounalakis to be the first of several women to join the race.

    “It is not only strategic for them, but it is essential for women who are running for statewide office to really get their campaigns moving and get them moving early,” Butler said in an interview. “It is how they are able to elevate their campaigns and spark fundraising. And as the data notes, women have always had to prove more relative to fundraising and competitiveness.”

    Butler said it was too early to say whether EMILY’s List would endorse in the governor’s race, but added, “it’s an opportunity to continue to shatter glass ceilings and we definitely have to look at it very carefully.”

    Long before Kounalakis ascended to elected office, she emerged as a political player by navigating an insider’s lane. She donated and raised millions for Democrats and served as a delegate to several national conventions. Along the way Kounalakis and her family forged close ties with the Clintons, and she later spearheaded an effort of Greek American donors to Hillary Clinton’s 2008 campaign. She turned her focus to Barack Obama when he won the primary. The next year, when Kounalakis was 43, Obama named her as his ambassador to Hungary, and she served in the post from 2010 to 2013 as one of the administration’s youngest representatives abroad.

    Kounalakis anticipated returning to the federal government in a Clinton administration, but after Democrats were upset in 2016, she felt compelled to make a run of her own.

    “I knew immediately California would be important in the fight against Donald Trump,” she said in an interview. “And when I looked at my options and I heard Hillary Clinton calling for women to stand up and run, that was completely the impetus for me making that decision.”

    In the 2020 campaign, she staked out a role as a fierce ally of Kamala Harris, helping organize a group of Californians who advocated to advisers of Joe Biden for her place on the 2020 ticket just as Harris’ vice presidential rivals were getting serious looks.

    Kounalakis’ rise inside California political circles is owed not just to her prolific networking but also to her lineage. She is the daughter of builder and philanthropist Angelo Tsakopoulos, a Greek immigrant whose story is part of Sacramento lore. As a young man, he labored as a field worker, sold melons on the street and was a waiter in the Governor’s Mansion before building his family real estate business into a development empire. Tsakopoulos, a mega-donor even by modern standards, established himself as a benefactor for Greek candidates like Michael Dukakis, Paul Tsongas and Paul Sarbanes. Former California Treasurer Phil Angelides, the Democratic nominee for governor in 2006, was an investment partner for Tsakopoulos, who donated millions to his political campaigns.

    In 2018, Tsakopoulos helped seed a campaign committee to support his daughter, who had spent nearly 20 years at the family’s company and rose to be its president. Kounalakis’ mid-career first run for office has drawn some comparisons to former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, another longtime San Franciscan who ran in monied circles before translating her fundraising prowess into a seat in Congress.

    “She is not a cookie-cutter politician,” said former California Sen. Barbara Boxer, who has known Tsakopoulos’ family for decades and met Kounalakis as an intern on her 1992 campaign. “I hate to say it’s kind of rare in politics — it’s the old fashioned way. If somebody gave you their word, it was their word. She’s like that. She’s authentic.”

    Boxer said when Kounalakis first approached her about running for governor, she encouraged her to do so — and also to do it early.

    “I think it’s very smart. You can’t do it in 15 minutes,” Boxer said. “But again, she’s not like the usual politician who is going to run and you ask them and they say, ‘I haven’t made up my mind, I’m talking it over with my family, yada, yada, yada.’ She’s very clear. She doesn’t give you a word salad.”

    Kounalakis’ gubernatorial campaign team includes many of the state’s top operatives who have worked closely with Sen. Alex Padilla, Newsom, Harris and Brown. Kristin Bertolina Faust, who helmed Padilla’s political operation, is her general consultant, along with Bearstar Strategies on media and strategy, Tim Tagaris’ Aisle 518 on digital and pollster David Binder. Peter Ragone and Stefanie Roumeliotes are senior advisers, and the fundraising operation includes Angie Georgoulias and Stephanie Daily Smith.

    Californians are expected to have no shortage of Democratic candidates for governor in three years, potentially including state Senate President Pro Tem Toni Atkins and state Attorney General Rob Bonta, among others. Depending on how the Senate race to succeed Feinstein shakes out, the field could grow to include the likes of Democratic Reps. Adam Schiff and Katie Porter, should they turn their attention stateward.

    [ad_2]
    #Eleni #Kounalakis #launch #campaign #California #governor
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Biden eyeing former Booker campaign aide for top reelection role

    Biden eyeing former Booker campaign aide for top reelection role

    [ad_1]

    Both people familiar with the deliberations cautioned that no decision has been made. But Biden’s consideration of Tyler for the senior position is another marker of a campaign in waiting inching closer to an actual announcement.

    The president is slated to release a video as soon as Tuesday that would formally declare his intention to run for office again — though like any Biden-specific decision, it is subject to his whims and the timing could change.

    But the president and his top aides are well into the process of identifying some prominent staffers for the reelection effort. He is eyeing Julie Chavez Rodriguez, who is currently a senior adviser and assistant to the president, for the role of campaign manager.

    While she has extensive experience from working in both the Biden and Obama White Houses, and has served on previous campaigns, Rodriguez has not held a job that approaches the typical responsibilities of a campaign manager in a presidential race. Bloomberg was first to report that Rodriguez was under serious consideration for the post after POLITICO and other outlets included her name in several stories about Biden’s shortlist.

    Biden famously keeps close counsel and has leaned on largely the same group of aides to chart his political career over the course of several decades. But, like Tyler, Rodriguez is not widely considered to be a core Biden insider, suggesting that the president may be looking to expand — and diversify — his inner circle as he embarks on a bid for a second term at the age of 80.

    [ad_2]
    #Biden #eyeing #Booker #campaign #aide #top #reelection #role
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • BJP steps up Karnataka campaign

    BJP steps up Karnataka campaign

    [ad_1]

    Bengaluru: The Bharatiya Janata Party has stepped up its campaign for Karnataka assembly polls with party chief JP Nadda holding a roadshow and rally in Bidar and Union Home Minister Amit Shah holding a meeting with Karnataka BJP leaders.

    Karnataka Chief Minister Basavaraj Bommai was also present at Shah’s meeting with Karnataka BJP leaders. Amit Shah is on a three-day visit to Karnataka as part of BJP’s preparations for May 10 assembly polls.

    Shah was supposed to hold a roadshow in Devanahalli but it was cancelled due to rain.

    MS Education Academy

    “Due to heavy rain could not be there among the people of Devanahalli. I bow to them for turning out in large numbers despite adverse weather. I will certainly visit Devanahalli soon for a campaign. Their enthusiasm shows that the BJP will win a massive victory in Karnataka,” he said in a tweet.

    Shah also shared a video of a local man who was seen wiping rainwater from cutouts of Prime Minister Narendra Modi put up on the way to a proposed BJP roadshow in Devanahalli.

    “The unwavering trust in PM Narendra Modiji and the selfless affection for him is what the BJP has earned and it is its source of strength. Have a look at this beautiful video from Devanahalli, Karnataka,” Shah said in another tweet.

    Amid the political battle in Karnataka, PM Modi held a telephone conversation with Karnataka BJP leader and former minister KS Eshwarappa.

    “I didn’t expect his (PM) call, it inspires me to win Shivamogga city and we’ll try all possibilities to bring the BJP government back in Karnataka. It’s not something special I have done. I have told the same to PM,” he said.

    Nadda, who is on a two-day visit to the state, held a roadshow in Bidar on Friday in support of party candidates.

    He also addressed a public gathering. “BJP has always worked with a sense of commitment towards the betterment of society, whereas Congress has had a long history of interrupting social welfare schemes established by either the Centre or the previous BJP governments,” he said.

    The battle in the Hubli-Dharwad Central constituency is set to get more interesting with a ‘guru-shishya’ type flavour to the fight between two prominent Lingayat leaders.

    Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) has fielded Mahesh Tenginkai against former Karnataka Chief Minister Jagadish Shettar, who was denied the ticket. Shettar has joined the Congress.

    Tenjinakai had on April 18 sought blessings from Jagadish Shettar before filing his nomination for the seat.

    “Jagadish Shettar has been my guru. This fight is between a guru and his shishya. I am confident that my guru will bless me,” Tenjinakai said.

    Shettar, however, told ANI that he is neither Tenginkai’s guru nor is he “shishya”.

    “His Guru is in Delhi and he is a loyal disciple of his guru in Delhi. BL Santhosh is his Guru. Because of his guru, he got the ticket.”

    The former Karnataka chief minister accused Tenginkai of running a ‘whispering campaign’ against him over the past six to seven months.

    “What is his contribution? Just being an office bearer is not enough. The people of Hubballi want involvement in their representative in the constituency. Just getting the ticket from BJP is not sufficient.”

    Shettar joined the Congress after quitting the BJP for being denied a ticket for the May 10 assembly polls in the state.

    Shetter said he left the BJP as his self-respect was hurt.

    “Earlier whoever contested from this constituency (from BJP) everybody lost. I built the party here in this place. In 1994, I contested for the first time and also got elected. Subsequently, I have been re-elected from the seat. So it is pretty clear that the people have faith in me. I maintained the same relationship with the people of Hubballi,” Shettar said.

    “My self-respect was damaged and because of this. I challenged them. After joining Congress, I went across areas in my constituency. People ushered warm welcome…My first meeting after joining Congress, it was all clear. Congress chief Khargeji and others assured me that I will always get respect from the congress party. I want no power. I only want respect. I am not an ambitious person. I am not a power-hungry man,” he added.

    A day after the Karnataka High Court dismissed D K Shivakumar’s plea in a disproportionate assets case, the Congress leader said that he will fight till his last breath.

    “I will approach the High Courts, I will fight till the last breath. I believe in a court of law. I still believe they have done an injustice. Everything is transparent,” said Shivakumar, who is Karnataka Pradesh Congress Committee (KPCC) President

    “I believe in people’s court, they (BJP) are trying to use various agencies…I am very cautious on every move, I am also a political animal,” Shivakumar said.

    [ad_2]
    #BJP #steps #Karnataka #campaign

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Biden to launch re-election campaign next week: Report

    Biden to launch re-election campaign next week: Report

    [ad_1]

    Washington: US President Joe Biden is preparing to announce his re-election campaign next week, a media outlet has reported.

    Biden’s team has been working on a video that could be released on Tuesday, the fourth anniversary of his 2020 election run, The Washington Post reported, citing unidentified officials, who, it added, have warned that the official announcement could be delayed.

    President Biden has been signalling a willingness to seek a second term even as a debate rages, including in the Democratic party, about his fitness for it given his age. He is 80 now and already the oldest President in US history. He will be 86 at the end of his second term if he wins.

    MS Education Academy

    Biden said last October that it’s his “intention” to seek a second term and that he will decide in consultation with his family. He repeated that in an interview with a US media outlet in February. Though he did not go any further, his wife, First Lady Jill Biden did, saying he will run as he is “not done yet”.

    The 2024 run will be his fourth campaign for the White House. He first ran in 1988 and then in 2008, which was won by President Barack Obama, who picked him for his vice-president. Biden was widely expected to run in 2016, at the end of Obama’s second term, but gave it a miss.

    Biden succeeded on his third, in 2020, and now his fourth.

    As sitting President, the Democratic party nomination is his, even though two people have announced so far their desire to seek it as well – self-help author Marianne Williamson and Robert F. Kennedy Jr., a nephew of late President John F. Kennedy and son of Robert F. Kennedy, whose run for the White House was ended by his assassination. Neither of them is capable of mounting a credible challenge to the President.

    The Republican line-up is still taking shape with former President Donald Trump, who has already announced; Nikki Haley, the former ambassador to the UN and Asa Hutchinson, the former governor of Arkansas the others. Also preparing to jump is Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, who has emerged as the palatable Trump; former Vice-President Mike Pence and former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo.

    All eyes are on Trump. He leads all polls of Republican contenders, but is beset with mounting legal troubles, including an indictment in a New York court. He won’t be deterred by these cases, he has said, and he could, legally and constitutionally, continue his run even if was jailed.

    [ad_2]
    #Biden #launch #reelection #campaign #week #Report

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • The Kennedy campaign the Kennedys don’t want to see

    The Kennedy campaign the Kennedys don’t want to see

    [ad_1]

    election 2024 kennedy 92685

    “Most American families, they never have any differences with each other. So when it happens with a family, it’s really huge news, like, everywhere,” the now-candidate Kennedy said to laughter from a standing-room crowd that packed the ballroom of the Boston Park Plaza hotel to see him.

    “I have no ill will” toward any of them, he added.

    Kennedy, if nothing else, is aware of the value of the family brand. Now 69, he opined at length about his famous forbearers, flashing old photos and brandishing his family name in one of his Uncle Ted’s old fundraising haunts as he peddled the type of anti-vaccine rhetoric his living relatives have disavowed. He drew parallels to his father in one breath and blasted government censorship and “corporate” media misinformation in another. He largely steered clear of Biden, who’s spoken at length of his deep regard for the Kennedy family and modeled his “cancer moonshot” after JFK’s initiative.

    Kennedy said he chose Boston for his launch because of the time he spent here as a kid, but also because Massachusetts is Kennedy country.

    Yet top Democratic operatives here, many of whom have worked for at least one Kennedy and in some cases remain close to the family, have publicly and privately pilloried him as a disgrace to his family whose views stand at odds with their values. His rally drew none of the state’s leading Democratic politicians.

    “It’s a disservice to their long service and success in politics and antithetical to everything they stood for,” Boston-based Democratic consultant Mary Anne Marsh, who’s worked on Kennedy campaigns, said. “The movement Bobby Kennedy Jr. is involved in is not a Democratic one, capital ‘D’ or small ‘d’. It looks more like an effort to undermine Democrats.”

    Kennedy joins self-help author Marianne Williamson in the Democratic presidential primary. Both poll far behind Biden in recent surveys. Still, Kennedy picked up 10-percent support in a Morning Consult survey from early April. And he earned the backing of 14 percent of Biden voters in a Suffolk University/USA Today poll released ahead of his Wednesday kickoff. Beyond that, he has some names he can rely on; not just his own but former Rep. Dennis Kucinich (D-Ohio), who introduced him on Wednesday at the Park Plaza Hotel.

    Yet the brass band that played and the red, white and blue bunting that draped the balconies of the hotel ballroom belied any serious shot at real relevance for him.

    With the absence of Kennedys — and Democrats — Kennedy surrounded himself on Wednesday with an eclectic mix of vaccine skeptics, independent voters and conservatives, several of whom had flown in from across the country and many of whom were fed up with what they characterized as a corrupt, dishonest federal government. Clad in Kennedy 2024 shirts and pins, they cast the Kennedy outcast as misunderstood, or unfairly ignored.

    They waved signs that said “heal the divide” and punctured his rambling, two-hour speech with ear-piercing whistles.

    Then, near the end, an emergency alarm blared telling people to evacuate.

    Kennedy brushed it aside.

    “Nice try,” he said, to a standing ovation.

    Kelly Garrity and Sam Stein contributed to this report.

    [ad_2]
    #Kennedy #campaign #Kennedys #dont
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Dubai Sheikh Mohammed donates Dh250-million to ‘1 Billion Meals’ campaign

    Dubai Sheikh Mohammed donates Dh250-million to ‘1 Billion Meals’ campaign

    [ad_1]

    Abu Dhabi: Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Vice President and Prime Minister of the UAE and Ruler of Dubai, on Tuesday announced his personal contribution of real estate assets and monetary contributions worth 250 million Dirhams (Rs 5,59,34,02,975) towards the “1 Billion Meals Endowment” campaign, the Dubai Media Office (DMO) reported

    “Ramzan is a special time in the UAE thanks to the acts of kindness it encourages, to the people of this nation and to the noble values instilled in us by the late Sheikh Zayed. The UAE stands strong because of its charity efforts, and because of the prayers of millions of people who benefit from them,” Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid said.

    Sheikh Mohammed expressed his gratitude to all donors whose contributions greatly supported the Ramzan food aid campaign, which exceeded its target in less than a month.

    MS Education Academy

    Sheikh Mohammed said that generosity and the Emirates are two sides of the same coin, and that the One Billion Meal Endowment campaign will continue to welcome donations throughout the year.

    In a tweet, Sheikh Mohammed said that “the outcome of the One Billion Meal Endowment campaign has reached more than one billion and seventy-five million dirhams, in which more than 180,000 people participated.”

    1 Billion Meals Endowment campaign

    The “1 Billion Meals Endowment” campaign, which started on the first day of Ramzan, launched by Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Vice President and Prime Minister of the UAE and Ruler of Dubai, to establish the largest Ramzan sustainable food aid endowment fund.

    The “1 Billion Meals Endowment” campaign has seen a remarkable response at the community level to donate and help provide a food safety net for underprivileged communities around the world. The Endowment Fund will continue to welcome contributions throughout the year.

    The campaign received donations in the form of land, corporate shares, and cash contributions from companies and individuals, as well as daily subscriptions to be donated by thousands of community members.



    [ad_2]
    #Dubai #Sheikh #Mohammed #donates #Dh250million #Billion #Meals #campaign

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • The Relentless Campaign to Fix Democracy, Starting in Minnesota

    The Relentless Campaign to Fix Democracy, Starting in Minnesota

    [ad_1]

    lede traub fairvote 22

    In the meantime, Donald Trump had happened. However one felt about candidates winning without majorities, ranked choice voting’s potential to reduce extremism and encourage broad-based appeals suddenly made it feel much more urgent. And Minnesota had run out of new cities to enroll. In 2020 Massey approached her board with an audacious plan to identify state legislators and candidates of either party who would embrace ranked choice voting and do everything possible to put them over the top in the coming election.

    Maureen Reed, a retired physician who chairs the board, recognized the logic. “I was not an emergency room physician,” she told me over lunch in the Rathskeller, the vaulted basement restaurant of Minnesota’s stately Capitol. “I did internal medicine and geriatric care. I was trying to keep people healthy.” In her own search for root causes, Reed had migrated from medicine to public health to public policy. Her own work on health care had convinced her that “the rhetoric of hyper-partisanship has led to gridlock.” The board authorized Massey’s plan. The organization received large gifts for its lobbying and education program from local, regional and national foundations; by far the biggest, $1,755,000 over three years plus $150,000 for More Voices Minnesota, FairVote’s PAC, came from John Arnold, a Houston hedge fund manager and philanthropist. Arnold is indeed located out-of-state, but the funds were publicly disclosed. He does not appear to have any connection to George Soros.

    The Covid-era election of 2020 proved to be a warm-up exercise. In the 2022 election, FairVote dispensed $140,000 in political donations to Democratic candidates, a significant sum for statewide races, while also conducting its energetic door-knocking campaign. Ranked choice voting was hardly the chief issue that year; abortion and criminal justice issues in the aftermath of George Floyd’s death mattered far more. But FairVote’s money and energy helped flip the state Senate and produced a “trifecta” — a Democratic House, Senate and governor. Many of those Democrats have reason to feel grateful to FairVote. While I was trailing Massey across the State Capitol, I asked why state Sen. Heather Gustafson had agreed to speak at the rally the next day. “She’s a big supporter,” Massey explained. “We targeted swing districts” — including hers. (Gustafson did not, in fact, show up for the rally.)

    The trifecta made ranked choice voting legislation possible — but just barely. Though prominent moderate Republicans in the state, including former U.S. Sen. Dave Durenberger and ex-Gov. Arne Carlson, endorsed the idea, the Minnesota GOP, like the party almost everywhere, has become both more conservative and more truculent. Today’s Republicans treat almost all facially neutral political reforms, whether eliminating gerrymandering, reducing the influence of money or instituting nonpartisan primaries, as a plot to elect Democrats. It’s no surprise, then, that not a single Republican legislator in the state has publicly supported ranked choice voting.

    When I asked Mark Koran, a Republican member of the state House and leading critic, why he opposed the bill, he first told me about the out-of-state dark money, though without repeating the Soros canard. Koran disputed the ranked choice voting talking points. “There’s a claim that we can create a kinder, gentler electoral system,” he said. But in the aftermath of the killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis, he said, progressive candidates had run inflammatory campaigns. Minnesota already had high turnout and a wide diversity of candidates, he added. Why fix what isn’t broke? If there was a problem, he said, it was “transparency.” Outside dark money, he claimed, had been deployed to defeat county prosecutors prepared to investigate vote fraud. Koran told me about the 2008 U.S. Senate race in which Democrat Al Franken had defeated Republican Norm Coleman thanks, he said, to “11,000 fraudulent votes,” including 340 ineligible felons. That was the real electoral issue — and no one was looking at it.

    Jeanne Massey had lined up a star witness for the House Elections Committee hearing — Mary Peltola, the Alaska Democrat who had defeated Palin for Congress last year. Peltola had won only 10 percent of the votes in the state’s open primary, but that had been enough to vault her into the general election, where she defeated Palin largely because 15,000 people who had voted for more moderate Republican Nick Begich had listed Peltola rather than Palin as their second choice. At the same time, Sen. Lisa Murkowski, who had voted to impeach Trump for inciting the Jan. 6 Capitol riot, finished in a virtual dead heat with Trumpist Kelly Tshibaka and then retained her seat thanks to votes she received after a Democrat was eliminated. Alaska was providing proof of concept — and vindication of the fears on the right.

    The room in which the committee met had tables, chairs and microphones in the center with seats rising up on either side. As if by an unspoken prior design, the blue shirts filled one set of seats and the oranges the other. The hearing thus bore an odd resemblance to a college football game, though refs do not typically have to silence fans as the presiding member did to the blues during testimony from an ranked choice voting opponent. Democratic state Rep. Cedrick Frazier, the sponsor of the bill in the House, spoke first. Frazier, who is Black, argued that ranked choice voting encourages ethnic and racial minorities, as well as other outsiders, to run for office since they might win in later rounds.

    Then Peltola took a seat beside him. A native Yup’ik, Peltola has a warm smile and an air of gentle dignity. She spoke of the lawn-placard dynamics of ranked choice voting. “I could not afford to alienate my opponents’ supporters,” she said, “because second- and third-choice voters were critical in determining who would win. I could not take any vote for granted or write any voter off.” In testimony later that morning before a state Senate Committee, Peltola made a striking point about nonpartisan primaries. “I would not have made it out of a primary,” she said, “because I’m not liberal enough.” With partisan primaries, she complained, “We go farther to the right and farther to the left.”

    [ad_2]
    #Relentless #Campaign #Fix #Democracy #Starting #Minnesota
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )