Saturday, September 20, 2024. Annette’s News Roundup.
We should have stopped Trump in 2016. We stopped him in 2020. Now is our chance to stop him for good.
How lucky are we to have this chance again.
Do all you can. It’s up to us.
44 days to go.
Unite for America with Vice President Harris and Oprah Winfrey.
A special rally by video.
Oprah made an appeal for your vote for Kamala. Touch to see.👇
.@Oprah: For all of you watching who are still on the fence, in the middle, independent as I am, or whether you just still don't know what you're gonna do. This is the moment for all decent and caring people who want the best for yourself and other people. This is the moment for… pic.twitter.com/QCHIHF3oyB
— Kamala HQ (@KamalaHQ) September 20, 2024
She also said this -
Oprah Winfrey told Independent and undecided voters, "This is the moment for all decent people. All caring people. Who want the best for yourself and you want the best for other people.. People who are exhausted by the craziness and the made up stories and the conspiracies."
Governor Gretchen Whitmer was there, live in Michigan. Touch to watch.👇
Gretchen Whitmer showed up to the Unite for America Rally with Vice President Kamala Harris and Oprah Winfrey!
— Art Candee 🍿🥤 (@ArtCandee) September 20, 2024
Big Gretch has a message for us ladies.
We've definitely gotta "do something!" pic.twitter.com/YhPh0ayePj
Jennifer Lopez endorsed the Vice President on air. 👇
Jennifer Lopez endorses Kamala Harris for President at the Unite for America event hosted by Oprah Winfrey. pic.twitter.com/SRWEqDUhag
— Jennifer Lopez Updates (@JLopezUpdate) September 20, 2024
The Vice President was specific on policies and values.
Touch to watch. 👇
On small business.👇
Vice President Harris: Part of my plan is to give startup small businesses a $50,000 tax deduction. Right now, it's $5,000. Nobody can start a small business with $5,000@Oprah: That’s a teeny tiny business
— Kamala HQ (@KamalaHQ) September 20, 2024
Vice President Harris: That's a 'concept' of a business pic.twitter.com/xGXCUkwZMU
On school shootings.👇
Vice President Harris: My opponent heard about a shooting and said, ‘Get over it.’ No, we're not getting over it. I have personally prosecuted homicide cases. I've seen autopsies. I've seen what these weapons do to the human body. Assault weapons are literally designed to be a… pic.twitter.com/Zwu6pxofDv
— Kamala HQ (@KamalaHQ) September 20, 2024
On border security. 👇
Kamala Harris, in Michigan event with Oprah Winfrey, slams Trump for killing the bipartisan border security bill. “He’d prefer to run on a problem instead of fixing a problem. And he has put his personal political security before border security.” pic.twitter.com/mlpBxiHiem
— Keith Boykin (@keithboykin) September 20, 2024
“Ultimately, the question before us is: What kind of country do we want to live in?”
Also, Vice President Harris responded to the emotional stories from the mother and sisters of Amber Thurman, a pregnant mother whose preventable death is attributable to Trump’s abortion ban in Georgia.
Tim Walz, on brand and brilliant.
Touch to watch.👇
This might be the most brilliant video from Tim Walz so far from this entire election cycle.
— MeidasTouch (@MeidasTouch) September 20, 2024
"Look, they didn't give me a manual for this if you didn't plan on using it to fix your truck. They didn't create that Project 2025 just to have it sit around as a doorstop." pic.twitter.com/9lmkRUvXh6
More on Mark Robinson, MAGA candidate for Governor in North Carolina.
Here is a larger list ( or the start of one) about who the man Trump called “Martin Luther King on Steroids” is.
From Historian Heather Cox Richardson - And yet the big story today is that Republican North Carolina lieutenant governor Mark Robinson frequented porn sites, where between 2008 and 2012 he wrote that he enjoyed watching transgender pornography; referred to himself as a “black NAZI!”; called for reinstating human enslavement and wrote, “I would certainly buy a few”; called the Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. a “f*cking commie bastard”; wrote that he preferred Adolf Hitler to former president Barack Obama; referred to Black, Jewish, Muslim, and gay people with slurs; said he doesn’t care about abortions (“I don’t care. I just wanna see the sex tape!” he wrote); and recounted that he had secretly watched women in the showers in a public gym as a 14-year-old.
Andrew Kaczynski and Em Steck of CNN, who broke the story, noted that “CNN is reporting only a small portion of Robinson’s comments on the website given their graphic nature.”
After the first story broke, Natalie Allison of Politico broke another: that Robinson was registered on the Ashley Madison website, which caters to married people seeking affairs.
Robinson is running for governor of North Carolina. He has attacked transgender rights, called for a six-week abortion ban without exceptions for rape or incest, mocked survivors of school shootings, and—after identifying a wide range of those he saw as enemies to America and to “conservatives”—told a church audience that “some folks need killing.”
More on the Teamster Brouhaha.
President Biden and I fought to protect the pensions of over 1 million union workers and retirees.
— Vice President Kamala Harris (@VP) September 19, 2024
Our Administration is proud to be the most pro-union Administration in American history. pic.twitter.com/gJildwlLua
The NY-14 Teamsters mentioned here have actually voted overwhelmingly to endorse Harris-Walz.
— Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (@AOC) September 19, 2024
Just as Teamsters in Michigan, Nevada, and Pennsylvania have, too.
It’s a big thing to be wrong about.
So let’s set the record straight: Teamsters Local 202 are all in for Harris.💪🏽💙 https://t.co/ZYizRdGwIL pic.twitter.com/UBaoPyUrNm
Iowa Teamsters union endorses Kamala Harris after International Teamsters fail to endorse https://t.co/r686NPaS1V
— Des Moines Register (@DMRegister) September 20, 2024
"The path to him getting to the White House is going to start in Michigan," Michigan Teamsters President Kevin Moore said of Republican Donald Trump. "We're going to make sure that's not an obtainable goal for him." https://t.co/zS1cvraapJ
— Craig Mauger (@CraigDMauger) September 19, 2024
Check out this ad on FB for Trump featuring his lawyer!
Touch! 👇
Aren’t they not just weird, but really weird!!
“ Don’t we have the best looking team in the nation?”
She said that. Watch.
Trump delivered some gratuitous antisemitism on Thursday.
Trump: If I don’t win this election.. the Jewish people would have a lot to do with that if that happens pic.twitter.com/N9skHU0hnu
— Acyn (@Acyn) September 20, 2024
Trump’s suggestion that Jews could cost him the race creates fear of an antisemitic reprisal.
Donald Trump’s repeated assertion on Thursday that “the Jewish people would have a lot to do with” his loss if Kamala Harris prevailed on Election Day set off a mix of outrage and concern among Jewish leaders on Friday, raising fears that ardent supporters of the former president could be incited against Jews in an era of rising political violence.
“With all I have done for Israel, I received only 24 percent of the Jewish vote” in 2020, Mr. Trump said in Washington on Thursday afternoon in a speech to a largely Jewish audience at a campaign event billed as about “fighting antisemitism in America.”
“In my opinion, the Jewish people would have a lot to do with a loss,” he added.
Shortly after, Mr. Trump repeated that argument in a speech at the annual summit of the Israeli American Council, a hawkish pro-Israel and right-leaning group, saying, “If I don’t win this election,” then “the Jewish people would have a lot to do with a loss.”
Jews make up only about 2.4 percent of the United States population, with the biggest concentrations in New York, Florida and California, which are outside the presidential battlegrounds. In an extremely tight election, they could make a difference in swing states, but the same could be said for many other ethnic, religious and racial groups.
And Mr. Trump’s comments come at a time when many Jews feel squeezed between overt antisemitism on the right and a rising antisemitic strain among pro-Palestinian activists on the left.
“Pre-emptively blaming American Jews for your potential election loss does zero to help American Jews,” Jonathan Greenblatt, the chief executive officer of the Anti-Defamation League, a Jewish-led human rights group, said on Friday in response to Mr. Trump. “It increases their sense of alienation in a moment of vulnerability when right-wing extremists and left-wing anti-Zionists continually demonize and slander Jews. Let’s be clear, this speech likely will spark more hostility and further inflame an already bad situation. ”
Noting that Mr. Trump had made his remarks at an event billed as combating antisemitism, Mr. Greenblatt added: “Calling out hate is important, but I can’t overstate how the message is diluted and damaged when you employ hate to make your point.”
Mr. Trump’s institutional support among right-leaning Jews has remained solid. Matthew Brooks, the longtime head of the Republican Jewish Coalition, staunchly defended the former president’s comments, calling them “Trump being Trump.”
Mr. Brooks said his organization had been saying all year that in an extremely tight election, Jewish votes for Mr. Trump in swing states could secure victory. All Mr. Trump was doing was stating the converse, he argued: that Jewish voters could cost him the election.
“At the end of the day, you can’t look at Donald Trump and believe he endorses or supports any antisemitism,” Mr. Brooks said.
But Nathan J. Diament, executive director of public policy for the Union of Orthodox Jewish Congregations of America, which leans conservative, said he was troubled by Mr. Trump’s remarks, which he was present for.
On the one hand, Mr. Diament said, Mr. Trump had been recounting how his support among Jewish voters had grown from 2016 to 2020 as he consistently demonstrated his support for Israel’s government. And he said that Mr. Trump’s assertion that Jewish voters could make a difference in 2024 was accurate.
“As an analytical point, some portion of the Jewish vote is a swing vote and can be impactful,” Mr. Diament said.
But he said he was nonetheless disturbed by Mr. Trump’s remarks.
“It is concerning for him or any candidate to say, ‘If I lose, it’s because of a specific group,’” Mr. Diament said. “That is the kind of accusation that can be misused and abused by people who are enemies of the Jewish people.”
Jewish votes might be comparatively few, but among Jews, the 2024 election has been fraught. Hamas’s attack on Israel on Oct. 7 and the retaliatory war in Gaza have raised tensions between the traditionally pro-Israel center of the Democratic Party and an increasingly vocal left that wants the party to break with the Jewish state.
Republicans, led by Mr. Trump, have tried to exploit that divide to woo Jewish voters and their campaign donations.
But the Republican Party also has the support of open antisemites, a point that was back in the news on Thursday when CNN reported that the Republican lieutenant governor of North Carolina, who is running to be the state’s governor, had once called himself a “black NAZI!”
Jewish Republicans, too, have had a difficult relationship with Mr. Trump at times. After Mr. Trump blamed “both sides” for the bloody, antisemitic march in Charlottesville, Va., in 2017, his White House Economic Council director, Gary D. Cohn, said the Trump administration “can and must do better” to condemn hate. He drafted a letter of resignation, though he did not submit it.
The Republican Jewish Coalition has had its own struggles with Mr. Trump. Without condemning Mr. Trump, the coalition denounced what it called “the virulent antisemitism of Kanye West and Nick Fuentes” in 2022, just after the former president dined at his Florida home with Mr. West, the antisemitic rapper now known as Ye, and Mr. Fuentes, a white supremacist. The coalition called “on all political leaders to reject their messages of hate and refuse to meet with them.”
The casino magnate Sheldon Adelson, who died in 2021, was the biggest backer of the Republican Jewish Coalition as well as a founder of the Israeli American Council and a key Trump ally. Mr. Trump has sought support from his widow, Miriam Adelson, who after sitting out the 2024 Republican primary has returned to Mr. Trump’s fold.
After Hamas’s attack on Israel last Oct. 7, the coalition offered President Biden high praise for what Mr. Brooks called his “tremendous” and “unwavering support” of Israel.
Now, however, the coalition is all in on Mr. Trump’s election.
“When he says Jews need to have their head examined, he’s absolutely right,” Mr. Brooks said of Mr. Trump’s repeated assertion that the Jewish tilt toward Democrats is illogical given Republicans’ support for Israel and the rise of antisemitism in the pro-Palestinian left.
Ms. Harris’s campaign pushed back hard on any defense of Mr. Trump’s words. Morgan Finkelstein, a campaign spokeswoman, accused the former president of “resorting to the oldest antisemitic tropes in the book.”
“When Donald Trump loses this election,” she said, “it will be because Americans from all faiths, ethnicities and backgrounds came together to turn the page on the divisiveness he demonstrates every day.”
A majority of American Jews have sided with Democrats since the era of Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Until Mr. Trump, Republican support for the Israeli government had at least as much to do with courting evangelical Christian voters as with vying for Jewish ones.
But Mr. Trump has repeatedly told American Jews, in what many consider condescending or offensive terms, that his policies in the Middle East should have won them over.
This summer, Mr. Trump claimed that Ms. Harris “doesn’t like Jewish people” and seemed to agree with a radio host who called her Jewish husband, Doug Emhoff, “a crappy Jew.” (New York Times).
Vote First Day. Vote Blue First Day.
Vote Kamala. Tim. And down ballot blue too.
It's official, the first votes in the 2024 general election are being cast TODAY in Virginia.
— Aaron Parnas (@AaronParnas) September 20, 2024
This is a state that is going to elect Kamala Harris and Tim Walz this November. Let's roll!pic.twitter.com/PblUovVpQ0
Proudly cast my ballot today for @KamalaHarris and @Tim_Walz.
— Alicia V. Oken (@AliciaVOken) September 20, 2024
Find when your state’s early voting starts at https://t.co/SkwiGtaI7I. pic.twitter.com/L4KYE4P2oI
Minnesota September 20 too. Also South Dakota.
https://x.com/umichvoterAlready in play. Alabama. Pennsylvania. Wisconsin.
Here is Wisconsin yesterday.
WOW. Check out the huge Harris rally in Madison Wisconsin tonight. pic.twitter.com/aXq0it7F6i
— Republicans against Trump (@RpsAgainstTrump) September 21, 2024
Here is news from Virginia on Day One of voting.👇
First day of early voting in Virginia & 3x more people have voted on Day 1 than in 2020
— WTFGOP (@DogginTrump) September 21, 2024
Vote In Numbers They Can’t Ignore! #HarrisWalz24 🇺🇸💙
Call people and tell them to play. This is serious.
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.
Convicted Felons have strange conversations with themselves.