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Friday, June 28, 2024

Why it's so hard for Democrats to replace Joe Biden — even after disastrous debate - National Post

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There is no evidence Biden is willing to end his campaign. And it would be nearly impossible for Democrats to replace him unless he chooses to step aside

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President Joe Biden’s halting debate performance has led some in his own party to begin questioning whether he should be replaced on the ballot before November.

There is no evidence Biden is willing to end his campaign. And it would be nearly impossible for Democrats to replace him unless he chooses to step aside.

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Here’s why:

Delegates Biden won in the primaries are bound to support him

Every state has already held its presidential primary. Democratic rules mandate that the delegates Biden won remain bound to support him at the party’s upcoming national convention unless he tells them he’s leaving the race.

Biden indicated that he had no plans to do that, telling supporters in Atlanta shortly after he left the debate stage, “Let’s keep going.” Biden campaign spokesperson Lauren Hitt was even clearer, saying Friday: “Of course he’s not dropping out.”

The conventions and their rules are controlled by the political parties. The Democratic National Committee could convene before the convention opens on Aug. 19 and change how things will work, but that isn’t likely as long as Biden wants to continue seeking reelection.

The current rules read: “Delegates elected to the national convention pledged to a presidential candidate shall in all good conscience reflect the sentiments of those who elected them.”

U.S. President Joe Biden
U.S. President Joe Biden walks off stage during the CNN Presidential Debate at the CNN Studios on June 27, 2024 in Atlanta, Georgia. Photo by Justin Sullivan /Getty Images

VP Kamala Harris couldn’t automatically replace Biden

The vice president is Biden’s running mate, but that doesn’t mean she can swap in for him at the top of the ticket by default. Biden also can’t decree that she replace him should he suddenly decide to leave the race.

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The Democratic National Convention is being held in Chicago, but the party has announced that it will hold a virtual roll call to formally nominate Biden before in-person proceedings begin. The exact date for the roll call has not yet been set.

If Biden opts to abandon his reelection campaign, Harris would likely join other top Democratic candidates looking to replace him. But that would probably create a scenario where she and others end up lobbying individual state delegations at the convention for their support.

That hasn’t happened for Democrats since 1960, when John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson jockeyed for votes during that year’s Democratic convention in Los Angeles.

Donald Trump
Republican presidential candidate, former U.S. President Donald Trump participates in the CNN Presidential Debate at the CNN Studios on June 27, 2024 in Atlanta, Georgia. Photo by Justin Sullivan /Getty Images

Other potential Democratic candidates would also face challenges

In addition to the vice president, others that had endorsed Biden in 2024 while harboring their own presidential aspirations for future cycles include California Gov. Gavin Newsom, Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro, Illinois Gov. J. B. Pritzker and California Rep. Ro Khanna.

Still others who Biden bested during the party’s 2020 presidential primary could also try again, including Sens. Bernie Sanders of Vermont, Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts and Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota, as well as Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg.

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If Biden were to abruptly leave the race, conservative groups have suggested they will file lawsuits around the country, potentially questioning the legality of the Democratic candidate’s name on the ballot.

But Elaine Kamarck, a senior fellow in governance studies at the Brookings Institution in Washington, who wrote a book about the presidential nominating process and is also a member of the Democratic National Committee’s rulemaking arm, said that courts have consistently stayed out of political primaries as long as parties running them weren’t doing anything that would contradict other constitutional rights, such as voter suppression based on race.

“This is very clear constitutionally that this is in the party’s purview,” Kamarck said in an interview before the debate. “The business of nominating someone to represent a political party is the business of the political party.”

U.S. presidential debate
Guests at the Old Town Pour House watch a debate between President Joe Biden and presumptive Republican nominee former President Donald Trump on June 27, 2024 in Chicago, Illinois. Photo by Scott Olson /Getty Images

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June 28, 2024 at 11:49PM
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Why it's so hard for Democrats to replace Joe Biden — even after disastrous debate - National Post

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House G.O.P. Begins Push on Hard-Right Spending Bills, Teeing Up Future Battles - The New York Times

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The Republican-led House voted on Friday to strip President Biden’s homeland security secretary and secretary of state of their salaries. It approved measures banning military installations from having drag queen story hours for children. And it passed legislation prohibiting paid leave for Pentagon employees who get an abortion.

The provisions were included in three spending bills to fund the Departments of Defense, State and Homeland Security that House Republicans muscled through largely along party lines — even though none of them have any hope of becoming law.

With a government funding deadline looming at the end of September and a high-stakes election in November, lawmakers have entered a period of legislative theatrics, where each chamber is advancing spending bills that the other will never approve.

In the House, for a second year in a row, that has meant that Republican leaders have opened the floodgates to a barrage of conservative priorities. They include defunding initiatives to combat climate change and promote diversity and slashing the budgets of Biden administration officials — sometimes with little resistance from Democrats, who know those proposals will never be enacted.

“None of these bills — none of them — will be signed into law the way they are written right now,” said Representative Jim McGovern, Democrat of Massachusetts. “We all know that this is not about serious legislating. This is about show business right now, performing for the most extreme right wing of the Republican base, and it is a waste of time.”

The scenes played out this week in the House, as lawmakers voted on dozens of amendments that presaged the bitter spending fight Congress will take up this fall. The House-passed bills provide a starting marker for bipartisan negotiations, meaning lawmakers will have to yet again bridge a vast chasm between the legislation passed by the Republican-led House and the Democratic-controlled Senate.

In the Senate, Democrats and Republicans are sparring over how to divvy up federal dollars between military and domestic spending. Republicans are seeking a significant increase in money for the military, while Democrats insist that cannot happen without an equivalent increase in domestic spending.

Privately, most appropriators acknowledge that a stopgap, short-term spending bill will most likely be needed to avert a government shutdown at the end of September, punting the debate over federal spending until after the November elections.

Many of the conservative policy riders House Republicans are trying to advance fell out of the spending bills passed this year, after Democrats refused to accept them. The measure targeting drag queen story hours at military bases and another proposal barring the F.B.I. from building a new headquarters in Maryland, for example, were included in the spending bills the House passed last cycle but were ultimately jettisoned by Democrats.

Republicans have insisted they are using their power of the purse to rein in federal agencies that have strayed from their core missions.

“There are some who say cuts of this magnitude jeopardize United States leadership in the world and make us less safe,” Representative Mario Diaz-Balart of Florida said of the State Department bill. “I completely disagree. In fact, it is just the opposite. It eliminates controversial or ineffective programs that American taxpayers do not support and that, quite frankly, our allies and partners don’t support, either.”

House Republicans on Wednesday and Thursday killed a number of divisive amendments offered by their far-right colleagues. Among them were a series of measures that called for ending aid and arms sales to Ukraine, and another proposal — identical to one the House passed last year that was jettisoned in negotiations with the Senate — that would have reduced the salary of Defense Secretary Lloyd J. Austin III to $1.

The legislation approved on Friday would slightly increase funding for the Pentagon, providing a 4.5 percent pay raise for all military personnel while cutting roughly $670 million for anti-climate change and diversity initiatives. It would reduce funding for the State Department and related agencies by 12 percent, and provide a slight boost to funding for the Department of Homeland Security.

“This bill funds the core responsibilities of the department that protects the homeland,” said Representative Mark Amodei, Republican of Nevada. “What it doesn’t do is fund liberal priorities that further contribute to the chaos at our southern border.”

The Pentagon funding bill passed 217 to 198. The legislation to fund the State Department passed 212 to 200. And the bill to fund the Department of Homeland Security passed 212 to 203.

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June 29, 2024 at 12:10AM
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House G.O.P. Begins Push on Hard-Right Spending Bills, Teeing Up Future Battles - The New York Times

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A Minneapolis restaurant was working hard to beautify the neighborhood with flowers. A flower thief was working harder. - Star Tribune

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For weeks, frustrated staff at El Sazon Cocina & Tragos had watched surveillance footage of what appears to be a well-dressed woman tiptoeing around the restaurant's patio at Lyndale Avenue S. to pilfer posies in the dead of night.

Again and again, cameras captured her heading to the same corner, to the same planter, to carry off one of the six attractive flower arrangements that ring the outdoor seating area. Later, the cameras caught her carrying off the replacement flowers. And the replacement flower replacements.

"I don't mean to laugh, because it's kind of upsetting, but it's also ridiculous," said Karen de Leon, who co-owns the restaurant with her husband, Cristian. "A flower is not going to break us, but it's annoying."

Eventually, the restaurant posted an appeal for help on social media before El Sazon's plant replacement budget starts cutting into its delicious taco budget.

"Any ideas on how to stop her???" they asked.

El Sazon's many fans had many ideas. Stakeouts. Booby traps. Burying AirTags in the pots to track them down later. Instead of garden gnomes, someone suggested the restaurant could place photos of the woman from the surveillance tapes in the flower beds.

In the end, the best suggestion came from their friendly neighborhood florists. Bachman's on Lyndale dropped off a gift card to help cover the cost of a replacement for the replacement for the replacement flowers — along with a suggestion: Next time, "maybe try a cactus planter."

"They do such a beautiful job of beautifying the neighborhood," said Karen Bachman Thull, the company's director of marketing and communication. "From one family business to another family business, we just thought it would be nice to support them and continue to support them to beautify the neighborhood."

With any luck, El Sazon's flowers will bloom where they were planted from now on. The mystery figure, in her heels and distinctive denim jacket, has not reappeared on the security cameras since news of the thefts broke. El Sazon's patio is in full bloom.

"Now," de Leon said, "we're just hoping for good weather."

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June 28, 2024 at 06:21AM
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A Minneapolis restaurant was working hard to beautify the neighborhood with flowers. A flower thief was working harder. - Star Tribune

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'It's hard to debate a liar,' Biden tells reporters - MSNBC

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June 28, 202404:56

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Post-debate President Biden tells reporters 'it's hard to debate a liar' after growing questions about his performance.

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June 28, 2024 at 08:08PM
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'It's hard to debate a liar,' Biden tells reporters - MSNBC

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Thursday, June 27, 2024

Former Timberwolves analyst pleads guilty for stealing hard drive with proprietary data - Yahoo Sports

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A former Minnesota Timberwolves coaching analyst pled guilty on Wednesday to a misdemeanor charge of unauthorized computer access, ESPN reported.

Somak Sarkar was fired by the Timberwolves in March and arrested after allegedly stealing thousands of internal files from a team executive which included "strategic NBA information."

The original charges accused Sarkar of taking a hard drive belonging to Sachin Gupta, a Timberwolves executive vice president. The hard drive was connected to a laptop in Gupta's office when he left for the weekend and was missing when he returned on the following Monday.

Security footage showed Sarkar entering Gupta's office twice that Saturday, looking to make sure no one saw him, according to the criminal complaint. Sarkar was fired the following week.

Gupta is in charge of the Timberwolves' analytics department and had proprietary information — including player data, team decision-making, contract details and trade negotiations — that the front office would not want other teams to see, reports the Minneapolis Star-Tribune.

Another team employee who was a friend of Sarkar got the hard drive back and returned it to Gupta. A subsequent forensic analysis showed that 5,700 files were copied from the device. Investigators also determined that Sarkar's computer was used to open the drive.

After Sarkar was arrested, a search warrant was executed at his home where police found several hard drives, a computer and three tablets. One of the devices searched had information from Gupta's hard drive, according to ESPN.

Gupta told police that Sarkar was moved to an analyst role with the coaching staff due to issues with his superior. But he was eventually transferred to another department due to poor job performance, the criminal complaint stated. Sarkar had previously worked in analytics with the Houston Rockets, New Orleans Pelicans and New York Knicks.

Sarkar was also charged with third-degree felony burglary, but that will be dismissed as part of him pleading guilty to the misdemeanor charge, according to his attorney. He will be sentenced and spared jail time in Hennepin County on July 9.

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June 28, 2024 at 07:19AM
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Former Timberwolves analyst pleads guilty for stealing hard drive with proprietary data - Yahoo Sports

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Aileen Cannon in 'Hard Place' Over Donald Trump Ruling: Ex-Trump Attorney - Newsweek

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Judge Aileen Cannon faced criticism from a former Donald Trump lawyer following her failure to rule on whether the FBI search of Mar-a-Lago violated the former president's rights, giving his legal team the right to a full hearing.

Ty Cobb, who served on Trump's White House legal team, told CNN that the ruling by Cannon, a Trump appointee, was "highly irregular."

"She's in a hard place for herself," Cobb said. "She either has to disappoint Trump, which obviously is difficult for her, or she has to make a decision that supports Trump but will get her removed from the case when it goes [on appeal] to the 11th Circuit."

Ty Cobb at theWhite House
Ty Cobb at the White House in Washington, D.C. The former Trump administration lawyer said Judge Aileen Cannon is in a "hard place" in her handling of pretrial motions in Trump's classified documents case in... Ty Cobb at the White House in Washington, D.C. The former Trump administration lawyer said Judge Aileen Cannon is in a "hard place" in her handling of pretrial motions in Trump's classified documents case in Florida. Susan Walsh/ASSOCIATED PRESS

Cobb said that Cannon has shown bias toward Trump in her allowance of numerous motions that "most judges wouldn't have seen any merit to," including a motion to have Special Counsel Jack Smith removed from the case.

Cobb said it would not make a difference to the case if the Department of Justice sought a new prosecutor to replace Smith.

"To expedite things, they could take that course," he said. "But she [Cannon] has already done her duty to Trump by pushing this case off to the point where it's not going to get tried before the election."

Cannon indefinitely delayed the trial last month, pending the resolution of pretrial litigation issues concerning the classified evidence used by prosecutors. The judge has faced accusations of showing partiality toward the former president, including by choosing to delay the trial until after Election Day in November, as Trump is the presumptive Republican nominee for a second term in the White House.

The case against Trump is based on 40 federal charges alleging that he illegally retained classified documents after leaving the White House in 2021 and obstructed the government's efforts to retrieve them. Trump's indictment came after the FBI served a warrant at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Palm Beach, Florida, in August 2022.

In May, Trump became the first former U.S. president to be convicted of a crime when a New York City jury found him guilty on 34 counts of falsifying business records regarding hush money payment to adult film star Stormy Daniels before the 2016 election.

He also faces federal felony charges in a Washington, D.C.-based case concerning 2020 election interference, while a separate state-level election subversion case remains active in Georgia.

Trump maintains his innocence in all cases and insists he is the victim of "persecution" and a "witch hunt" that he claims is being orchestrated by Democrats.

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June 27, 2024 at 11:42PM
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Aileen Cannon in 'Hard Place' Over Donald Trump Ruling: Ex-Trump Attorney - Newsweek

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Christina Applegate's 13-Year-Old Daughter Admits It's 'Hard' to See Her Mom Living with MS: 'I Want to Help' - PEOPLE

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Christina Applegate’s daughter Sadie says that since her mom was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis in 2021, “it’s definitely hard seeing my mom struggle.”

The 13-year-old, whom Applegate calls the “reason I get up in the morning and my joy of my life” is a guest on the new episode of MeSsy, the podcast hosted by Applegate and close friend, actress Jamie-Lynn Sigler, who also lives with MS.

The "Dead to Me" actress introduced her teen daughter, whom she shares with husband, musician Martyn Le Noble, as “my favorite guest we could possibly ever have.”

Christina Applegate and daughter Sadie in February 2023.

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Sadie said coming on the podcast was her idea, and she shared what it’s been like to see MS affect her mom: “When she got diagnosed, it kind of just felt like...not like everything was over but it was hard seeing my mom lose a lot of the abilities she used to have in my childhood, When I was a kid, we would dance in her room for hours at a time.”

Applegate tells Sadie she feels "incredibly guilty" when she has a bad MS day "because I don't ever want you to feel that I'm not capable to be your protector, your mother, you know, I love you," she said. "I want to make you food. I want to bring it to you. I want to do all the things and I do when I can. And I feel incredibly guilty when I can't."

Christina Applegate and Jamie-Lynn Sigler's podcast, MeSsy.

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And though Sadie admitted it's been a "difficult" time for their family, she added, “it’s also been nice being able to help her and support her.” But, she joked, her mom doesn't always want the help on offer.

"Every time we go to a concert, she always is like, 'You cannot push my wheelchair, Sadie, you're going to run into a wall,'" she said. "And I will beg. I'm just like, 'Please, mom, let me push your wheelchair.' Because I want to help her, so that's definitely why I want to do it, but it's also funny because she's always saying, 'No, I want this person to do it'... and it's never me."

Applegate defended her case, telling Sadie, "I just always get afraid that...if there was like a ramp that you would just let go because you thought it was funny!" But, she conceded, "You are darn good at pushing the wheelchair."

Christina Applegate and Martyn LeNoble in 2015.

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On the podcast, Sadie shared that when Applegate first was diagnosed "she made us put on socks with sand or like balloons with sand...to help me understand the pain of walking," she said. "It was a very uncomfortable experience."

Sadie's own health issues have also helped her relate. The teen says she suffers from misophonia, which causes intense, overwhelming emotional and physical reactions to certain sounds ("my two worst are breathing and chewing," she says), and she was recently diagnosed with POTS, or postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome. POTS can cause dizziness, fatigue, heart palpitations and headaches.

Christina Applegate with daughter Sadie in 2011.

"When my mom's like, 'I'm in pain right now. I'm having tremors.' If I didn't have [POTS], I probably would be like...I don't know what you're talking about. But I actually have tremors from POTS," Sadie says. "It's definitely a lot easier to understand what she's going through when I have something I'm going through as well."

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June 25, 2024 at 07:00PM
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Christina Applegate's 13-Year-Old Daughter Admits It's 'Hard' to See Her Mom Living with MS: 'I Want to Help' - PEOPLE

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