Tag: shake

  • The under-the-radar issues that could shake up 2024

    The under-the-radar issues that could shake up 2024

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    Former Sen. Heidi Heitkamp (D-N.D.), who is now director of the University of Chicago’s Institute of Politics:

    “I think if you’re looking for the one issue that could potentially cut a lot of different ways, it’s education. I think education is undervalued. You saw it being a big issue in Virginia, parents’ participation, but none of these people want people to ban books. So it’s going to be what these conservative state legislators are doing with the help of politicians in Washington who amplify those messages.

    “It’s not just going to be parental involvement. It’s going to be transgender issues. It’s going to be the issues of banning books.”

    Tresa Undem, a pollster for progressive causes and whose clients have included Planned Parenthood, Sierra Club and Time’s Up:

    “Any issue that relates in some way to race or to gender is going to be a big deal,” especially as it pertains to border issues or crime. “If you look at what’s happening at the border, it’s about race more than security. … If you look at white voters and ask how they feel about safety, it almost always has little to do with safety. It’s about whether they support Black Lives Matter.”

    David Axelrod, former adviser to Barack Obama:

    “I don’t know that this is under the radar, but it is evolving. I think the state of the economy, whether we have or don’t have a recession in 2024, I think is a big factor.

    “The challenge with presidential politics is that, we had no idea when we began in January of 2007 that by the time September of 2008 rolled around, the country would be hurtling into a mortgage crisis, and the economy was going to collapse. … There are real concerns because we’re due for a recession, and if it hits at the wrong time, it can have deleterious effects for the incumbent.”

    Lis Smith, senior adviser to Pete Buttigieg’s 2020 presidential campaign:

    “None of us were thinking about a global pandemic at this time [ahead of the 2020 election], so I think it’s probably something we have no idea about.”

    Marc Elias, a voting rights attorney who also served as Hillary Clinton’s campaign lawyer:

    “States not having the resources and the people to administer elections. … We’re seeing all around the country good people driven out of the process of election administration. … If you don’t have enough people to run elections, you can’t open polling locations and you can’t mail absentee ballots. So, I worry about the machinery of elections being negatively impacted by a target against election officials and against adequate funding of elections.”

    Republican Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger:

    “World events and geopolitical issues.”

    Tom Bonier, a Democratic political strategist and CEO of TargetSmart:

    “There are certain issues that Republicans will try to make more salient. The playbook that they ran successfully in 2021, especially in Virginia — freedom, family and school choice — and they thought they could use in 2022 and Dobbs wiped it out. Republicans are taking great pains to bring it back on the radar. We’ll see how successful they are. It’s the repetition of ‘wokeism.’…

    “Ukraine could also become more elevated, but I’m not sure it’s likely because there’s still a majority in the Republican Party that supports what the president is doing there. So that’s one to watch.”

    Benjamin Gibson of the Election Official Legal Defense Network

    “Depending on the results, both sides attack the credibility of the election, and that has long-term really deleterious effects on the country.”

    Brenda Gianiny, a Republican pollster and founding principal of Axis Research

    “I don’t think we know yet. I don’t think we’re seeing it.”

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    #undertheradar #issues #shake
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • As strong tremors shake hospital, doctors perform surgery in Anantnag

    As strong tremors shake hospital, doctors perform surgery in Anantnag

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    Jahangeer Ganaie

    Bijbehara, Mar 22: At a time when most of the people were seen running for safety during an earthquake that shook Jammu and Kashmir and parts of north India yesterday evening, doctors at sub district hospital Bijbehara in south Kashmir’s Anantnag district were seen performing surgery on a patient.

    A video of the hospital theatre, where doctors were seen performing surgery during strong tremors, also went viral on social media with netizens praising the team of doctors and paramedical staff.

    In the video, theatre monitor could be seen shaking and lights were also disrupted, however, doctors continue to perform surgery despite strong tremors.

    Dr Shabeena Shah, a gynaecologist at SDH Bijbehara, who was performing the surgery told the news agency—Kashmir News Observer (KNO) that the woman was the third patient on Tuesday evening whose surgery was being conducted.

    She said that it is necessary to show maturity during panic situation which they did and everything went smoothly.

    “Earlier, we too feared for our safety because we too are human beings, but then we realized that patient should be our priority under all circumstances. We remained focussed and successfully completed the surgery,” she said.

    Meanwhile, as the video went viral on social media platforms, netizens could be seen praising the doctors for their commendable job.

    “Must be awarded and rewarded for showing calmness and composure and safeguarding life of new born and the patient”, a Twitter user wrote—(KNO)

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    #strong #tremors #shake #hospital #doctors #perform #surgery #Anantnag

    ( With inputs from : roshankashmir.net )

  • Seeing the huge international aid to Turkey, Millions of Pakistanis shake themselves at the same time to create fake earthquake

    Seeing the huge international aid to Turkey, Millions of Pakistanis shake themselves at the same time to create fake earthquake

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    The most powerful earthquake to strike Turkey and Syria in nearly a century killed over 2,600 people on Monday, sparked frantic rescues and was felt as far away as Greenland. The 7.8-magnitude early morning quake, followed by dozens of aftershocks, wiped out entire sections of major Turkish cities in a region filled with millions who have fled Syria’s civil war and other conflicts.

     

    Various governments and international organisations have responded with offers of support after an earthquake of magnitude 7.8 struck central Turkey and northwest Syria.

     

    Seeing Turkey getting huge international support, millions of Pakistanis came together to create a fake earthquake scenario. The Pakistanis held the random object and started vibrating fanatically. The Pakistanis demanded international support from the various countries and organisations.

     

    Thousand of Pakistanis injured themselves in this attempt of creating fake earthquake scenario. However, Pakistanis forgot to shake the richter scale.

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    #huge #international #aid #Turkey #Millions #Pakistanis #shake #time #create #fake #earthquake

    [ Disclaimer: With inputs from The Fauxy, an entertainment portal. The content is purely for entertainment purpose and readers are advised not to confuse the articles as genuine and true, these Articles are Fictitious meant only for entertainment purposes. ]

  • DNC votes to shake up presidential primary calendar

    DNC votes to shake up presidential primary calendar

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    Iowa, which has held its caucuses first since 1972, will fall out of the early nominating process altogether.

    “We are overdue in changing this primary calendar,” said Michigan Rep. Debbie Dingell, who has led her state’s effort to join the early window for almost two decades. “No one state should have a lock on going first.”

    The DNC reopened the presidential nominating calendar earlier this year, under pressure from both inside and outside the party to diversify the voters who get to participate early in the process. In December, Biden recommended his preferred slate, giving a particular nod to states like South Carolina and Georgia that gave him a boost in his 2020 presidential bid. It also nearly eliminates any path for a potential Democratic primary challenge ahead of 2024 by elevating states that represent the president’s base of support.

    The vote comes on the heels of a rare joint appearance by Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris in back-to-back speeches Friday night, previewing the likely 2024 ticket as the pair road tested campaign one-liners and themes of attack against the GOP.

    But there are still logistical challenges that Democrats must face before implementing the new lineup, particularly around New Hampshire and Georgia, where Republican-controlled legislatures and governors stand in the way of changing the primary dates.

    Resistance out of New Hampshire is particularly fierce, where elected officials and party leaders insist that they cannot comply with the DNC’s new calendar because it directly conflicts with state law, which requires them to host the first presidential primary one week before any other state. They have vowed to hold their contest first regardless of the DNC’s decision.

    On Saturday morning, the New Hampshire and Iowa Democrats made a final appeal to DNC members, urging them to reconsider the proposal. But it did not change the vote.

    “This is not about New Hampshire’s history or state pride. This is about a state law that we cannot unilaterally change,” said Joanne Dowdell, who represents New Hampshire on the Rules and Bylaws Committee.

    She also raised the possibility that if Biden doesn’t file in New Hampshire, a potential sanction against the state, “it could provide an opening for an insurgent candidate” who could “potentially win the first presidential primary of 2024, something that no one in this room wants to see.”

    But some DNC members pushed back on New Hampshire, including Leah Daughtry, a Rules and Bylaws committee member who said she’s “heard a lot about a state law” that “somehow gives some people a divine right of privilege,” but “none of that is more important than what the party says it wants in its process.”

    Though the DNC members approved the calendar on Saturday, there are still several outstanding questions that linger. POLITICO lays out what’s still ahead for the Democratic presidential calendar:

    Sanctions delayed

    Even though Democrats approved the new calendar on Saturday, there’s no guarantee it will hold in 2024. New Hampshire and Georgia haven’t moved their primary dates yet. Earlier this month, the Rules and Bylaws committee granted the pair extensions to June 3, which has also kicked any discussion of sanctions against those states that don’t comply to the summer.

    Each state faces different challenges. New Hampshire Democrats have vowed that they will hold their first-in-the-nation primary, arguing that they are “willing to withstand” the consequences as “long as the penalties don’t have an impact on our candidates,” said New Hampshire Democratic Party Chairman Ray Buckley at a press conference on Friday afternoon.

    But it’s not clear the severity of the sanctions the DNC might levy against New Hampshire. Last year, the Rules and Bylaws Committee voted to strengthen their penalty power over states that jump the line. Not only will those states automatically lose half their delegates, the DNC also broadly empowered the national party chair to take any other “appropriate steps” to enforce the early window.

    Georgia, meanwhile, faces an even steeper uphill climb. Georgia’s Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, a Republican, sets the state’s primary date, and his office already ruled out splitting the Democratic and Republican primaries into two different dates. The office also said it wouldn’t schedule a primary that jeopardizes delegates for either party.

    Any changes would also need “to be equitable to both political parties,” said Deputy Secretary of State Jordan Fuchs last month.

    Republican Gov. Brian Kemp also announced last month that he wouldn’t support any changes.

    Should Georgia fail to move its primary date, then it would fall out of the early window, shrinking the number of early states from five to four.

    How will Republicans respond?

    Reordering the DNC’s primary calendar unlinks Democrats from Republicans, which have held nearly identical line ups since 2008. The Republican National Committee, which has an open presidential primary contest in 2024, voted last year to affirm its current early-state slate of Iowa, New Hampshire, South Carolina and Nevada. They also could impose sanctions on states that choose to jump the line.

    “The RNC unanimously passed its rules over a year ago and solidified the traditional nominating process the American people know and understand,” said RNC Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel in a statement released soon after the DNC’s vote. “The DNC has decided to break a half-century precedent and cause chaos by altering their primary process, and ultimately abandoning millions of Americans in Iowa and New Hampshire.”

    For Michigan Republicans, that could be particularly problematic since they now face a Democratic-controlled state legislature and governor’s mansion. Last week, Michigan’s legislature passed a bill to change the state’s primary date, which is expected to be signed by Democratic Gov. Gretchen Whitmer.

    An RNC party aide noted that states have until Oct. 1 to alert the RNC for how they plan to allocate their delegates, and “if Michigan’s primary date violates our rules, the state party can choose to hold its own process on a compliant date or accept the delegate penalty,” the aide continued.

    Doing this again in 2026

    Democrats will revisit the early nominating calendar ahead of 2028, reopening the application process to states to be a part of the early window. But it could present a bigger challenge to Democrats, who are expected to face an open presidential primary in 2028, potentially making it harder for the party to impose sanctions against states or candidates who seek to go outside the approved calendar.

    It’s not yet clear how the 2024 calendar might set a precedent for 2028, but “those three states will have experience,” Daughtry said, referring to South Carolina, Nevada and Michigan, the three states that are likeliest to appear in the early window in 2024.

    “To the extent that experience running an early primary is a plus, that’s a plus,” Daughtry said.

    New Hampshire’s approach in 2024 could also impact its ability to regain entry to the early window in 2028, several DNC members noted privately.

    But Buckley said that “it’ll be an open presidential race,” which will change the dynamics and incentives for candidates to campaign in New Hampshire, and “we’ll have that conversation in 2026 and 2027.”

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )