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2024 Elections

'Jaw-dropping': Harris supporter behind white women's Zoom call reveals 2-hour cash haul

During an appearance on MSNBC with host Katie Phang, Shannon Watts, one of the women who put together the "White Women: Answer the Call" Zoom call that set a record for Zoom attendees, explained how it came together and proudly announced the most recent donation total that was raised for Vice President Kamala Harris.

Watts, the nation's preeminent advocate for decreasing gun violence and the founder of Moms Demand Action, was prompted by host Phang, "I was so excited to have you on the show, because look, I dialed in for that Zoom call on Thursday. I was even doing it remotely from a plane, but I was so excited to hear the energy on that call. "

"But I need to know, at last count it was nearly 200,000 women that raised over $8.5 million in less than 90 minutes, but I think these numbers are still growing. So what are the latest on that call? " she asked.

EXCLUSIVE: Trump’s ‘secretary of retribution’ has a ‘target list’ of 350 people he wants arrested

"I woke up to an email this morning saying that we have now raised over $11 million from a two-hour call, which is pretty astronomical," Watts reported. "And I'm just so thrilled and grateful for everyone who has donated."

II mean, I have to pick up my jaw off the floor a little bit, because I saw from followers and people on social media, a lot of these people, that gave the money from this call, these are some first-time donors, number one, but number two, a lot of them signed up for recurring contributions because they believe so much in this," Phang replied.

Watts gave credit to earlier mass Zoom calls made by Black women and explained to Phang, "When i woke up Tuesday morning I thought, are white women going to do this, too?"

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'Put it on a bumper sticker': Dems rally behind calling Republicans 'weird, sick freaks'

In 2024, the Democratic Party has decided to abandon the strategy of "when they go low, we go high."

Former First Lady Michelle Obama coined that moniker, which was eventually embraced by 2016 Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton in her unsuccessful campaign against Donald Trump. According to a Saturday report in Rolling Stone, one unnamed Democratic operative said Vice President Kamala Harris' campaign is now aiming to "shak[e] off the stink" of that failed strategy.

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'How dare he': 'Mediocre' Trump buried for new slur aimed at Kamala Harris

Reacting to yet another slur aimed at Vice President Kamala Harris by Donald Trump, this time at a Turning Point USA speech on Friday night, a former GOP campaign strategist rained hell on the former president whom she labled "mediocre" at best.

During an appearance on MSNBC's "The Weekend," Tara Setmayer, a fierce Trump critic, blasted the ex-president for calling Harris a "bum" and detailed a substantial number of Trump foibles that make him the actual "bum."

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'I hate the police': J.D. Vance railed at cops in bombshell email release from friend

At the same time that Donald Trump is flooding his Truth Social account with sketchy reports that Vice President Kamala Harris wanted to defund the police — when she was questioning where the funding should go — comes news from the New York Times that Sen. J.D. Vance (R-OH) was once a fierce critic of cops ,going so far as to claim he "hated" them.

In emails and texts obtained by the Times from Vance's longtime friend Sofia Nelson, in 2014 the newly annointed GOP vice presidential nominee railed at the police after the shooting of 18-year-old Black teen Michael Brown by a white police officer in Ferguson, Missouri.

As the Times is reporting, Nelson wrote to Vance about the shooting that left Brown dead and suggested all police should wear body cameras which led Vance to complain about police conduct.

ALSO READ: Associated Press issues warning about iconic Trump assassination attempt photo

He wrote to Nelson, "I hate the police. Given the number of negative experiences I’ve had in the past few years, I can’t imagine what a Black guy goes through.”

The report notes that the earlier version of Vance showed some enthusiasm for reparations, writing to Nelson, "I have at least been convinced of the virtue of compensating modern victims who’ve suffered redlining or denial of federal benefits.”

You can read more here.

'Deeply disturbing': J.D. Vance's wife 'expressed revulsion' with Trump over Jan. 6 riot

In interviews with friends and colleagues of Usha Vance, wife of Sen. J.D. Vance (R-OH) who has assumed the role as Donald Trump's running mate in the 2024 presidential election, many expressed surprise that she is going along with the campaign considering her past comments about the former president.

According to a report from the Washington Post, attorney Usha Chilukuri Vance has a reputation for being close-mouthed about her political leanings but did "express revulsion" and misgivings about Trump during the coup attempt by his followers which he encouraged after he lost to President Joe Biden.

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NY AG Letitia James pounces on Trump and Project 2025 in MSNBC interview

During a rare interview on MSNBC, New York Attorney General Letitia James made an impassioned endorsement of Vice President Kamala Harris as the next president and then launched a fiery attack on Donald Trump and his ties to the controversial Project 2025.

Speaking with "The Weekend" co-hosts Michael Steele and Symone Sanders-Townsend, James stated she recently took part in a mass call urging support for Harris and then launched into an explanation on how Trump is already implementing elements of Project 2025 as part of his campaign.

"Kamala Harris clearly is capable and is the most qualified individual to run for president, in fact more qualified than the last four presidents," she began before adding, " And it's important that individuals recognize our basic liberties and freedoms right now are being jeopardized."

ALSO READ: Boebert, MTG and far-fight friends derail Speaker Mike Johnson’s summer plans

"As the attorney general of the state of New York, I have joined with others to analyze Project 2025, and this is not something that is new to us," she continued. "This is something which Donald Trump is true too. Why? Because when he was president of these United States, I, and other attorney generals, Democrats attorneys generals, we had to sue him. In fact under my leadership, my office sued Donald Trump over 100 times and the basis of all of that was Project 2025."

"So he cannot distance himself from something that he has attempted to implement when he was president of these United States and we were successful, 70% of the time," she elaborated. "We were the firewall, Democratic attorney generals, and she, Kamala Harris, given her experience, given her background, someone who was obviously concerned about liberty and freedoms in this country and our democracy as a whole, she is the most qualified candidate to be president of these United States."

"And it's my singular focus to have her elected president of these United States, organizing, mobilizing and educating individuals about all that Trump did to divide us on constructs such as race, class, and gender," she added.

Watch below or at the link:

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Josh Shapiro’s school voucher record gets renewed scrutiny as Harris seeks running mate

Thrust into the national limelight as a leading candidate to become Vice President Kamala Harris’ presidential running mate, Gov. Josh Shapiro is brooking criticism from groups that both support and oppose expanding public funding for alternatives to traditional public schools.

Since his campaign for governor two years ago, Shapiro has said he backs an expansion of Pennsylvania’s programs using tax dollars to help families pay for educational expenses, including private and religious school tuition.

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'They're talking about couches and cat ladies': Trump campaign warned it's floundering

During an appearance on MSNBC's "The Weekend," former GOP strategist Tara Seymayer pointed out to the Donald Trump campaign that it has hit a major speed bump now that Vice President Kamala Harris will be the former president's opponent in November.

And a big part of that speed bump, she noted, is his choice of running mate, Sen. J. D. Vance (R-OH), who is being dogged by controversies both real and fake that have taken social media by storm.

Now that Vance's comments in 2021 that "childless cat ladies," were "miserable" and had no "direct stake" in the country have been dredged up, combined with a fake claim on X that Vance wrote about having sex wth a couch in his best-selling "Hillbilly Elegy," Setmayer claimed that Trump's message to voters is being drowned out.

ALSO READ: Boebert, MTG and far-fight friends derail Speaker Mike Johnson’s summer plans

Speaking with co-host Michael Steele, Setmayer stated, "It hasn't even been a week, people, it hasn't even been a week. In this time frame, we've got Donald Trump and MAGA and J.D. Vance playing defense. They are talking about couches and cat ladies and we are talking about Kamala Harris and record-breaking activity, whether it is fundraising, whether it is the grassroots organizing."

"I say it is a pretty great week for the Democrats. They need to maintain this, right? We talk about it is only 100 days — it is a sprint at this point, it is not a marathon," she added. "We are in the final days of this 2024 election, which feels like it never ended. It has been going on for years."

"Women are fired up and ready to go," she later added. "The audacity of J.D. Vance to call women 'miserable cat ladies.' Women aren't miserable, they are motivated and look out," she claimed.

Watch below or at the link.

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'These numbers are insane': MSNBC panel stunned by massive sign-up of Harris volunteers

On Saturday morning the co-hosts and panel of guests on MSNBC's "The Weekend" were stunned by the number of volunteers who have signed up to help Vice President Kamala Harris win the presidency in November.

Kicking off the segment on Saturday, MSNBC's Symone Sanders-Townsend pointed out to her co-host Michael Steele that the Harris campaign has signed up a whopping 170,000 volunteers and has scheduled over 2,300 events in battleground states.

As she put it, "Vice President Kamala Harris is hitting the ground not just running but literally sprinting because it is just about 100 days that she has to make her case to the people."

ALSO READ: Boebert, MTG and far-fight friends derail Speaker Mike Johnson’s summer plans

"The Kamala Harris coalition is hosting 2300 events to motivate voters in key swing states, the campaign has more than 250 battleground offices to organize in the months ahead. And since Sunday, 170,000 new volunteers — these numbers are insane — have joined the campaign effort," she reported.

That led co-host Steele to speak to guest Tara Setmayer, a former GOP strategist, and point out, "Tara, you and I have been having a lot of fun over the last week watching the politics evolve around the vice president and how she has been able to transition from behind the curtain, if you will, to, you know, to the main stage. What is your assessment of this transitional week for her?"

"As Symone mentioned, 170,000 people, think about that, volunteered within a three or four day span to work on her campaign, raised over, well over $100 million, and seemingly has started to get under Donald Trump's skin," he added.

"There is one word and it is reinvigorated," Setmayer replied. "The country, the voters, the Democratic base is reinvigorated.That is evidenced by what we have seen since last Sunday. It hasn't even been a week, people — it hasn't even been a week."

Watch below or at the link.

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U.S. voter registrations surge as Republicans try to limit ballot access

The group behind a popular get-out-the-vote technology platform said Friday that it's registered more than 100,000 new U.S. voters since President Joe Biden withdrew from the 2024 presidential race, a surge that came amid mounting Republican efforts to make it harder to register and vote.

Vote.org said that 84% of voters registered in the new wave are under age 35. Nearly 1 in 5 new registrees is 18 years old. Andrea Hailey, the group's CEO, said that "since 2020, we have led the largest voter registration drive in U.S. history," with more than 7.8 million people registered.

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GOP candidates scrambling as Trump's tricks fall flat for them

Republican candidates seeking to tap into the energy that Donald Trump brings to his public appearances are finding it near impossible to emulate his style, leaving them scrambling for new ways to engage voters.

According to a report from Politico's Calder McHugh, Donald Trump's speeches are larded with riffs, jokes, barbs and applause lines that hit the mark with his MAGA fans and immediately go viral. GOP candidates are quickly finding out that what works for Trump, a natural showman after years on TV, looks easier to do than it actually is.

"Throughout the hundreds of rallies in the Trump era, the former president honed a style that is perfectly pitched to his supporters: a wink and a nod at some of his more outlandish ideas, sandwiched between humor and charisma to soften his rhetoric," the report from Politico before adding, " Even many of his harshest critics will admit that he’s funny. His imitators are not."

Case in point: his new running mate, Sen. J.D. Vance (R-OH) who replaced former VP Mike Pence (R-IN) on the ticket this go-around.

ALSO READ: Boebert, MTG and far-fight friends derail Speaker Mike Johnson’s summer plans

Vance's curious attempt to make a joke this week about racism out of his drinking Diet Mountain Dew not only fell flat with the crowd, but became fodder for late-night comedians and social media critics who noted his extreme awkwardness. And things have not gotten better for him since.

As McHugh wrote, "But what’s striking about the moment — and much of the rest of the rally, in which Vance clumsily tried to joke about local Middletown hot spots before launching into various grievances against Democrats — is how much it sounded like a cheap imitation of a Trump rally."

The report notes that Vance is not alone, citing Gov. Ron DeSantis' humiliating bid to unseat Trump as the GOP's 2024 presidential nominee that exposed him nationally as a horrible speaker on the stump which led to his campaign crashing and burning after blowing through millions in campaign donations.

"But what’s distinct about the Trump imitators is that without the humor, all that’s left is the grievance politics, which turns off at least some voters," Politico's McHugh wrote before adding, "It’s an interesting puzzle."

"Many of Trump’s ideas are largely unpopular with voters; without his charisma, his ideological allies are left with policy positions like abortion bans that most Americans don’t really like. It’s Trump’s personality that keeps him happily ensconced at the head of the party. The result is that candidates like Vance up and down state ballots try to build on Trump’s political legacy without being able to capture his personal one," the report adds.

You can read more here.

'We sure this dude is a Republican?' MAGA influencer slams 'moron' JD Vance

Sen. JD Vance's (R-Ohio) idea to "punish" Americans with higher tax rates if they choose not to have children isn't going over well — particularly with one MAGA-aligned social media personality.

During a podcast segment with far-right activist Charlie Kirk in 2022 before announcing his run for Senate, Vance suggested that he would be in favor of alternate tax rates for Americans with children vs. Americans who don't have children.

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'Making him squirm': Expert pours cold water on 'desperate' Mike Johnson's new challenge

Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) is making a "desperate" move with his recent comment that Vice President Kamala Harris can't get on the ballot in all 50 states, one election expert said.

Speaking to MSNBC's Nicolle Wallace on Friday, election lawyer Marc Elias of Democracy Docket addressed Jake Tapper's CNN interview with Johnson on Monday, in which Johnson invented a conspiracy about the ballot.

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