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2024 Elections

Nikki Haley: 'Count me as a mom for liberty'

At the very end of her appearance on stage in Philadelphia at a convention held by the far-right, radical group Moms for Liberty, GOP presidential candidate Nikki Haley said, “When they mentioned that this was a terrorist organization, I said, ‘Well, then count me as a Mom for Liberty, because that’s what I am,’” The Philadelphia Inquirer reported.

Near the very beginning of her 40-minute remarks, Haley told her story of growing up as a minority, and how her mother told her that her job was to be like every one else – then suggested America needed more people doing that.

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Revealed: GOP presidential candidate has reportedly been accepting $10k 'consulting' payments from developer for years

Miami Mayor Francis Saurez's longshot campaign to win the Republican Party's 2024 presidential nomination now has a larger cloud hanging over it after the Miami Herald acquired emails that appear to show he has been meeting with and taking $10,000 payments from a local developer dating back to 2021, despite his previous denials.

Suarez is already under federal investigation for accepting "consulting "fees from developer Rishi Kapoor as the GOP lawmaker helped to fashion a new city law that would ease the way for Kapoor's $70 million Coconut Grove real estate project.

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'Houston, we've got a problem': Trump rival makes brutal observation about his electability

In an interview with Newsweek Larry Elder, who is making an outside bid to be the 2024 Republican Party presidential nominee, made his case that Donald Trump has no chance of being re-elected in 2024.

Explaining that he is not specifically running against Trump but actually running against President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris, Elder -- who previously flopped as a candidate in California's gubernatorial recall vote in 2021 -- said Republican voters can judge for themselves whether the former president stands a chance.

Speaking with Newsweek, Elder proposed that GOP primary voters -- before casting their ballots -- ask themselves, "Have you lost friends because of Donald Trump? Are you walking on eggshells at work because of Donald Trump? Do you have strained relationships with your family and relatives because of Donald Trump?"

Continuing in that vein he added, "If the answer is yes, Houston we've got a problem, and that problem is called electability."

"I think at some point in this long process, Republican voters are going to realize in order to win in November 2024 they're going to have to unite behind a candidate whose last name is other than Trump, but for whom a sufficient number of swing voters and swing states will vote so we can win in November 2024, and I'm making the case that I'm that person," he added.

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'We don’t want to have to tackle people': Trump aides menace reporters who try talking with supporters

Reporters following Donald Trump's third run for the presidency are finding new restrictions in place as they follow him on the campaign trail, with aides to the former president yelling and threatening them if they try to talk to any of his supporters.

According to a report from the Daily Beast's Jake Lahut, journalists attending Trump events are having their movements monitored to the point where they can't go to the bathroom without an escort.

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DeSantis has 'no game': Trump rival's campaign floundering as GOP lawmakers keep their distance

Adding to Gov. Ron DeSantis' problems in making inroads into knocking off Donald Trump as the leading candidate for the Republican Party's 2024 presidential nomination is his inability to round up more than a smattering of endorsements from members of the GOP-controlled House.

According to a report from the Daily Beast's Jake Lahut, the Florida governor refuses to use the personal touch and call up lawmakers seeking their support, leaving it instead to aides, and not only is that flopping, he's alienating the very lawmakers whose backing he needs.

Days after an NBC poll showed DeSantis taking a stunning drop of 9 points against Trump from April to June, GOP strategists who had suggested he would start lining up endorsements after he announced his presidential bid are complaining about how he is floundering.

According to the report, the Florida Republican has only managed to round up five House members to publicly support him while Trump has 62 in his pocket.

READ MORE: Judge blasts disgraced Ohio GOP House speaker as a 'bully' — and sends him straight to jail

As The Beast report notes, DeSantis' personal awkwardness is coming into play with Republicans in the House where he once served.

Prior to officially announcing, "stories circulated not just of his interpersonal awkwardness but his operation’s apparent lack of interest in cultivating influential GOP supporter," Lahut wrote.

“There’s really no game that DeSantis has, and members have said this: When you’re having staffers reach out to members of Congress—who have bloated egos as it is—they don’t want to have a staffer tell you, ‘Oh we really need your endorsement.' No. They wanna hear it from the f--king candidate,” Lahut added.

You can read more here.

DeSantis was just endorsed by a lawmaker on the Oath Keepers roster — but will Republican voters care?

The presidential campaign of Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis has demonstrated a knack for lining up support from state legislators, including some who see his chief rival Donald Trump as a drag on the Republican ticket.

Out of the 113 state lawmakers in DeSantis’ home state of Florida, 99 pledged support. In New Hampshire: 51. In Iowa: 37. In Michigan: 19.

And that was all before DeSantis announced his candidacy.

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Activists urge states to investigate No Labels for misleading and disenfranchising voters

The grassroots progressive group MoveOn on Wednesday called on secretaries of state across the U.S. to open investigations into No Labels, the political organization that has reportedly managed to gather the support it needs to be included on 2024 election ballots in four states so far.

The group has done that, said MoveOn, by having canvassers mislead voters into signing party enrollment forms and making it look like it has more affiliated members in the states than it really does—all while disenfranchising those voters.

MoveOn Executive Director Rahna Epting wrote to secretaries of state to warn them that No Labels, which aims to run a so-called "unity ticket" in 2024 with a Democratic and a Republican candidate, is sending organizers into communities with what they claim are petitions to support the group's inclusion on ballots.

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State loses court battle, enabling Iowans to again receive non-English voting materials

An Iowa judge has blocked the state from attempting to prevent election officials from offering non-English voting materials to the public.

Under the ruling, Iowa counties will again be allowed to provide citizens with non-English ballots, voter-registration forms, and absentee ballot applications. The decision dissolves a 15-year-old injunction that blocked the practice.

The ruling was handed down in a lawsuit that was filed on behalf of the League of United Latin American Citizens of Iowa (LULAC). The lawsuit challenged the state’s application of the English Language Reaffirmation Act to election materials. The act, which was signed into law by Gov. Tom Vilsack in 2002, requires that all political documents from the state “shall be in the English language” unless the materials are deemed “necessary to secure the rights guaranteed by the Constitution.”

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Arizona county's elections director resigns under a cloud of scrutiny

Pinal County’s elections director abruptly resigned this week after facing harsh criticism from the county GOP. Her scathing resignation letter led many to compare her departure to those of other elections directors across the country who are facing harassment and resigning in droves as GOP leaders and residents confront them with false accusations about elections. But the circumstances here are far different.

There have been real problems in Pinal County’s elections, and Geraldine Roll was under the microscope to fix them fast.

The scrutiny Roll faced from the supervisors and the public since she took the position in December – especially, of late, from Republicans in the county who say they are concerned about election integrity – put immense pressure on Roll as she tried to quickly fix problems, develop new procedures, and hire a new team. At the same time, there were signs of growing tension with county supervisors.

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Third-party candidates may have an easier time getting on the ballot in Texas

A federal judge in Austin has blocked Texas from enforcing a more than century-old state law that requires third-party candidates to collect petition signatures on paper to qualify for a place on the ballot.

U.S. District Judge Robert Pitman ruled on Monday that the requirement was unconstitutionally applied to minor political parties and candidates. Major political parties are not required to get signatures.

“Texas first adopted that procedure in 1905, and defendants admitted that it has not been significantly updated or improved in the 118 years since,” Pitman said in his order.

The lawsuit was filed in 2019 by four minor political parties: the Libertarian Party of Texas, the Green Party of Texas, America's Party of Texas and the Constitution Party of Texas.

“Speaking for myself and for libertarians, generally, we are obviously partisan and want to benefit libertarian candidates and voters,” Whitney Bilyeu, chair of the Libertarian Party of Texas said. “One of the most important things to us is just preserving free and fair elections.”

Bilyeu said that now that signatures can be obtained electronically, less time, money and human resources will have to be invested by third-party candidates to get on the ballot.

State law required minor party candidates to obtain 83,717 paper signatures in 75 days.

Under the new order, they can now obtain those signatures electronically.

“I think the most important thing is that Judge Pitman’s order eliminates a major obstacle to free, open and competitive elections in Texas that present voters with meaningful choices at the polls,” Oliver Hall, founder and executive director of Center for Competitive Democracy said.

CCD was joined by Shearman & Sterling, a multinational law firm in representing the plaintiffs in this case.

“Judge Pitman got it right for sure on this one. We’re very pleased that we were able to play a role in it,” David Whittlesey, a partner for Shearman & Sterling’s Austin office said.

Whittlesey added the case was done on a pro bono basis and Shearman & Sterling’s New York and Washington, D.C., offices assisted in the lawsuit.

A statement released by Shearman & Sterling said that plaintiffs in this case spent $600,000 in 2020 in order to obtain the required number of signatures to get on the ballot.

“The only way to get the signatures is if you have enough money to go out and hire people to go get the signatures. That’s not fair and that’s not right,” Whittlesey said.

“There are a lot of things that have changed in the 118 years, but not the way you fill out the forms to get on the ballot. So it’s a long overdue change. And we were excited to be a part of it.”

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Conservative law firm challenges new Minnesota law restoring voting rights to felons

A conservative law firm is challenging the constitutionality of a new Minnesota law restoring voting rights to felons once they’re released.

Previously, felons had to wait until they were off probation or parole and had paid their fines or restitution. About 55,000 Minnesotans who have been convicted of a felony but aren’t imprisoned are eligible to vote in the next election.

On behalf of a conservative outfit, Minnesota Voters Alliance, the Upper Midwest Law Center filed a lawsuit challenging the law, which went into effect in June.

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Trump threatens to launch event to compete with GOP debate over unfair treatment by Fox News

Former President Donald Trump is threatening to skip the first Republican primary debate and host his own "alternative" event instead, reported Reuters on Thursday — partly because he is already so far ahead in the polls, and partly because he resents what he perceives to be unfair coverage from Fox News, which will be hosting the debate.

"In a telephone interview with Reuters, Trump said 'possibly not' when asked if he would be at the debate, to be hosted by Fox News in Milwaukee on Aug. 23," said the report.

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Ex-Trump campaign official cooperating with Jack Smith in election interference probe: report

Special counsel Jack Smith has secured the cooperation of Mike Roman, a one-time campaign official for former President Donald Trump, as part of the investigation into the plot to overturn the 2020 presidential election, CNN reported Thursday.

"One of the sources said that the agreement, known as a proffer agreement, means that Roman may not have to appear before the grand jury but could instead speak to prosecutors in a more informal setting. Under such an agreement, prosecutors generally agree not to use those statements against them in future criminal proceedings," reported Zachary Cohen and Kaitlan Collins. "Roman, who received a grand jury subpoena months ago and had his phone seized, was involved in efforts to put forward slates of fake Trump electors following the 2020 election."

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