Friday, November 1, 2024. Annette’s News Roundup.
Kamala is always busy.
Wall Street Journal today: "The Next President Inherits a Remarkable Economy"
— Michael Beschloss (@BeschlossDC) October 31, 2024
Tonight, we join more than 1 billion people across America and around the world lighting diyas and celebrating the fight for good over evil, knowledge over ignorance, and light over darkness.
— Vice President Kamala Harris (@VP) October 31, 2024
Happy Diwali to everyone celebrating the Festival of Lights! pic.twitter.com/VhgCkjeieg
Happy Diwali, the Hindu Festival of Lights.
In celebration of Diwali, we illuminated the Vice President’s Residence and remember to see the light in our world, in each other, and in ourselves. pic.twitter.com/bUXatRNHNO
— Vice President Kamala Harris (@VP) November 1, 2024
Unity 🇺🇸 https://t.co/fclXa0kvBl
— Republicans against Trump (@RpsAgainstTrump) October 31, 2024
Wisconsin yesterday.
Touch to see the crowd.👇
Here's the moment when @KamalaHarris entered the arena in Madison, Wisconsin tonight pic.twitter.com/7TkTa46leA
— Ben Wikler (@benwikler) October 31, 2024
It all comes down to Wisconsin.
— Tammy Baldwin (@tammybaldwin) October 31, 2024
VOTE EARLY! pic.twitter.com/VFfVeDULEM
Help Tammy Baldwin if you can. Sprint to the finish.
Volunteer, donate, vote. Last money 💰 does so much.
https://app.oath.vote/donate?p=niemtzow-baldwin&ref=PPIAM0N1Reno yesterday.
Excited to go on stage soon with @KamalaHarris here in Reno to get everyone out to vote! pic.twitter.com/utgDyBONUk
— Catherine Cortez Masto (@CortezMasto) October 31, 2024
Touch to watch the Vice President.👇
Tune in to Vice President @KamalaHarris' speech in Reno, Nevada as she rallies voters ahead of Election Day. https://t.co/wEUIIXuei1
— The Democrats (@TheDemocrats) November 1, 2024
Phoenix yesterday.
Kamala Harris was greeted in Phoenix by two Republicans officials who have endorsed her, former Sen. Jeff Flake (here with his wife Cheryl Flake) and Mesa Mayor John Giles pic.twitter.com/iGp6LaJYs2
— Jennifer Epstein (@jeneps) October 31, 2024
Wisconsin tomorrow.
BREAKING @CNN — Choice for President of people who said they already voted.
— Morgan J. Freeman (@mjfree) October 31, 2024
If this is the case in Michigan, Wisconsin, and Pennsylvania, Trump is cooked when Democrats show up! Vote, Vote and Vote! 🌊🌊🌊🌊🌊🌊🌊#HarrisSurge pic.twitter.com/VGfnj0B1Ae
Trump answered Trump saying he would “protect” women, “whether they liked it or not.”
Watch her!!!👇
Vice President Harris: Did everyone hear what Trump said yesterday? That he will do what he wants, 'whether the women like it or not.' We have got to listen to people when they tell us who they are pic.twitter.com/hXPqPaBwSG
— Kamala HQ (@KamalaHQ) October 31, 2024
Tim Walz weighed in.
This race isn't just about our future – it's about theirs. pic.twitter.com/QyydStanv7
— Tim Walz (@Tim_Walz) November 1, 2024
Ads.
Touch to watch.👇
America’s little girls are watching, hoping you won’t vote for a man who sees them as less. Don’t let Trump decide your daughter’s future. pic.twitter.com/j1lLC8tXOL
— The Lincoln Project (@ProjectLincoln) October 31, 2024
This is the excellent Julia Roberts ad that so provoked Snowflake Charlie Kirk.pic.twitter.com/KVZK6RV6So
— Bill Kristol (@BillKristol) October 31, 2024
Endorsements.
The Economist endorsed Harris, saying a second Trump term carried “unacceptable risks.”
The Economist announced Thursday that the outlet is backing Vice President Harris over former President Trump in the upcoming election, now less than a week away.
“While some newspapers refused to back a presidential candidate this year, today The Economist is endorsing Kamala Harris,” Economist editors wrote in the endorsement published early Thursday. “Tens of millions of Americans will vote for Mr. Trump next week. Some will be true believers. But many will take a calculated risk that in office his worst instincts would be constrained.”
The writers added later that if Trump were to win election, “Americans would be gambling with the economy, the rule of law and international peace.”
“Harris’s shortcomings, by contrast, are ordinary. And none of them are disqualifying,” The Economist endorsement reads. “If The Economist had a vote, we would cast it for her.” (The Hill).
I voted for @KamalaHarris without hesitation. When it comes to policy and personal integrity, the contrast could not be clearer, and I hope undecided voters with a history of supporting candidates in both parties join me. https://t.co/BpMWe9Hx6u pic.twitter.com/HvVLkh9dCU
— Mike Bloomberg (@MikeBloomberg) October 31, 2024
What are we even talking about here?? When I think about my kids and my family and how they will grow up, the choice is clear to me. VOTE KAMALA HARRIS!!! pic.twitter.com/tYYlTmQS6e
— LeBron James (@KingJames) October 31, 2024
Madonna has endorsed Kamala Harris. pic.twitter.com/bmKLBQpaXF
— Pop Base (@PopBase) October 31, 2024
Touch to activate. 👇
Did you catch these drones flying high above the Steelers’ stadium Monday night? ✨
— Kamala for PA (@KamalaforPA) October 30, 2024
From the streets to the sky, support for our movement is growing every day.
Pennsylvanians are ready to chart a #NewWayForward and make @KamalaHarris the next President of the United States. pic.twitter.com/lGYR5OHhW4
Vote for Kamala#Vote #Kamala #KamalaHarris2024 pic.twitter.com/1FbhQq4yyU
— Smokey Robinson (@smokeyrobinson) October 31, 2024
I am so pleased to hereby endorse Kamala Harris for President of the USA.
— Peter Frampton (@peterframpton) November 1, 2024
Bigsby too! pic.twitter.com/kk6ty9CNBB
Eve’s 1000 postcards had an effect.
For her last 400 postcards, she had to individually print the stamps. But she got them mailed. Apparently she was not alone.
There’s a Postcard Stamp Shortage in NYC — and Kamala Harris Is the Reason Why
When Becca Shapiro was waiting in line at the post office in Brooklyn last week, the man in front of her made an unusual request: he wanted to buy 1,000 postcard stamps.
When Becca Shapiro was waiting in line at the post office in Brooklyn last week, the man in front of her made an unusual request: he wanted to buy 1,000 postcard stamps.
At first, Shapiro was confused. “I was like, ‘Why is this guy sending so many postcards?’” she told THE CITY.
But other people in line immediately understood: the man was part of a postcard-sending campaign aimed at mobilizing swing state voters to the polls. Other customers in line had been sending postcards, too. Soon, they were talking about the ways they had gotten involved with the election. Shapiro described it as a “Kamala love fest.”
“Brooklyn, at least my part of Brooklyn, could not be any bluer,” said Shapiro, who lives in Park Slope. “It felt like people are really doing their part.”
Unfortunately for the man seeking a thousand stamps, he wouldn’t get any from that office. According to Shapiro, the clerk told him that they had been sold out for weeks.
At post offices all over the five boroughs THE CITY visited — and especially in Democratic strongholds like the Upper West Side and Park Slope — postcard stamps have been selling out at an unprecedented pace. According to multiple postal workers, they suspect that’s due to New Yorkers taking part in postcard-mailing campaigns ahead of the November election.
Campaigns like Postcards to Swing States recruit volunteers to mail handwritten postcards to Democratic and independent voters in states like Arizona, Georgia, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, and North Carolina. The idea is to boost turnout, and messages on cards don’t focus on particular candidates.
According to Reid McCollum, the program outreach director of the political action committee running that campaign, New York has the most volunteers of any state except California. “I’m not surprised that some post offices have run out of postcard stamps,” McCollum said. This year, Postcards to Swing States has signed up volunteers to send 40.3 million postcards. In New York City alone, 10,000 volunteers have signed up.
Even though postcards could technically be mailed with letter stamps, there’s one key advantage to using the correct stamp: it’s cheaper. Regular stamps cost $0.73 and postcard stamps cost $0.56. That can make a big difference; the Brooklyn man who wanted to buy 1,000 postcard stamps stood to save $170.
Amy Mosedale, an Upper West Side resident, has had mixed success purchasing the special stamps for postcards. She’s writing postcards with her 92-year-old mother, also an Upper West Sider, to send to voters in North Carolina. Over the course of the last few months, Mosedale has purchased postcard stamps in bulk from her closest post office, but has also had to venture to other locations on the West Side. “They have run out of stamps, it’s true,” she said. She’s gone “on my mom’s behalf” in her hunt, buying countless bundles of postage. Her estimate? She couldn’t guess — “a lot,” she said.
Mosedale hopes that the postcard writing will make a difference. “It feels like something. I hope it is,” she said. “People aren’t used to getting handwritten things in the mail anymore.”
One postal worker in Manhattan, who declined to give their name, said that they’ve been trying to stay on top of ordering the stamps, but it’s been impossible to keep up with demand. “People come in here and buy 300, 400” at a time, the worker said.
“In one week, we sold about 1,500 postcard stamps,” the worker told THE CITY. Another post office in Brooklyn sold out of 6,000 postcard stamps just last week.
From Arizona to Alaska
According to the United States Postal Service, the problem is local.
“The Postal Service is not aware of any nationwide shortage of postcard rate stamps,” said USPS communications specialist Amy Gibbs in a statement. “Individual post offices may be out of stock or low on stock, but customers can always order from usps.com/stamps or at 844-737-7826 for delivery to their homes.”
But at least one postcard-writer far outside the five boroughs had the same issue, they told THE CITY. Carrie Watterson of Arizona tried to send her postcards while she was on a business trip in Alaska, but the Anchorage post office she visited had only about 60 stamps for sale. That was not enough to cover the huge stack she had ready to send.
“They just don’t normally stock them because nobody sends postcards anymore,” the clerk told her, Watterson recalled. She said that her friend in Colorado had warned her that the search might be harder than anticipated: in Denver, there were no postcard stamps to be found, she said.
Others in New York City had to go far outside the city to find postage. Kimberly Williams of Brooklyn signed up to write postcards while Joe Biden was still the Democratic nominee — but she was overjoyed when Harris announced. “Truly if it were an urn of Joe Biden’s ashes, I was going to vote for Joe Biden,” she said. “But it’s such a good feeling. I’m very excited.”
Williams ordered stamps online, but she says they never came. Ultimately, her father brought her 200 postcard stamps from his home in Florida while they were both visiting family in Georgia.
“I did them in chunks of 10 here, 20 there,” Williams said, explaining how she was able to manage writing hundreds of postcards by hand. “It was over a long period of time.” (The. City).
Vote today. Widen this lead. Make it insurmountable by Election Day when all the MAGA vote. pic.twitter.com/UsTJnX8umB
— Mueller, She Wrote (@MuellerSheWrote) October 31, 2024
Trump is always crazy.
Trump is always deranged and dangerous.
BREAKING: In a terrifying moment, Donald Trump says that his Project 2025 plan to round up migrants will be a bloody operation. This is what fascism looks like. Retweet to make sure every American sees this and knows how dangerous Trump is.pic.twitter.com/VsQgSFzqUC
— Kamala’s Wins (@harris_wins) October 31, 2024
🚨🚨🚨🚨 Heads up, Philadelphia!!! 🚨🚨🚨🚨
— Art Candee 🍿🥤 (@ArtCandee) October 31, 2024
Almost 4000 flawed ballots have been found in Philadelphia.
Election workers held a press conference and are urging folks to scan the QR code to make sure that you didn't fill one out.
They outline the steps to take if your name is… pic.twitter.com/qdMnsGxl5V
BREAKING: In a terrifying moment, Donald Trump says that his Project 2025 plan to round up migrants will be a bloody operation. This is what fascism looks like. Retweet to make sure every American sees this and knows how dangerous Trump is.pic.twitter.com/VsQgSFzqUC
— Kamala’s Wins (@harris_wins) October 31, 2024
When RFK is part of your strategy, you are deranged.
I am so pleased to hereby endorse Kamala Harris for President of the USA.
— Peter Frampton (@peterframpton) November 1, 2024
Bigsby too! pic.twitter.com/kk6ty9CNBB
Your daily reminder.
Trump is a convicted felon.
On May 30th, he was found guilty on 34 felony counts by the unanimous vote of 12 ordinary citizens.
The Convicted Felon Donald J. Trump was scheduled to be sentenced on July 11th and September 18th. He will now be sentenced on November 26.
I want to tell my daughter that this little girl grew up to The President of the United States -- not that we elected 34x convicted felon adjudicated rapist.
— Morgan J. Freeman (@mjfree) October 31, 2024
❤️ if you agree pic.twitter.com/pgGhZoYmuz
Another reminder too.
Just as a reminder: here’s a picture of Trump and his staff celebrating House repeal of the ACA pic.twitter.com/VP7PExYobX
— Neera Tanden🌻 (@neeratanden) October 31, 2024
Hillary and we have a dream. Adam Kinzinger does too.
Wouldn’t it be loverly?
Wouldn't it be great to not have to think about this man ever again?
— Hillary Clinton (@HillaryClinton) October 31, 2024
Five more days. https://t.co/tTgeqxNqYm pic.twitter.com/X0IWISNhez
BREAKING: Republican Adam Kinzinger says “I can’t wait until we flush Trump down the toilet of history”
— PoliticsVideoChannel (@politvidchannel) October 31, 2024
Thoughts? pic.twitter.com/rt84mSVC1V
Why Eve and I are going to Pennsylvania Sat., Sun., Mon., Tues.
We are going to help voters “cure” mail in ballots that have an error - could be a wrong date, or a missing date, no signature, no “secrecy” envelope. In Pennsylvania, a voter can “cure” their “defective” ballot.
Every ballot cured means a vote to make Kamala Harris the 47th President of the United States.
🚨🚨🚨🚨 Heads up, Philadelphia!!! 🚨🚨🚨🚨
— Art Candee 🍿🥤 (@ArtCandee) October 31, 2024
Almost 4000 flawed ballots have been found in Philadelphia.
Election workers held a press conference and are urging folks to scan the QR code to make sure that you didn't fill one out.
They outline the steps to take if your name is… pic.twitter.com/qdMnsGxl5V
Here is the QR code to scan and check your ballot in Philadelphia to see if it's on the list of the flawed ballots that have been received. I tried it and it works! pic.twitter.com/s1L6791dci
— Art Candee 🍿🥤 (@ArtCandee) October 31, 2024