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RNC to name Milwaukee as 2024 GOP convention host city

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The Republican National Committee on Friday will formally name Milwaukee as the host city for the GOP’s 2024 presidential nominating convention.

The vote by all 168 RNC committee members will take place as the national party committee holds the final session of its annual summer meeting, which is being held this year in Chicago.

“We are very excited about Milwaukee,” RNC chair Ronna McDaniel emphasized in a Fox News Digital interview on the eve of the vote.

Milwaukee and Nashville, Tennessee were the final two cities among a large list that were initially in contention to host the 2024 Republican National Convention. However, Tennessee’s capital city fell out of contention on Tuesday night as Nashville’s Metro Council voted down a draft agreement to host the convention.

NASHVILLE VOTES DOWN HOLDING 2024 CONVENTION, LEAVING MILWUAKEE AS ​​LAST CITY STANDING

Officials in Milwaukee presented a mock-up of the 2024 GOP presidential nominating convention.  The Republican National Committee on Friday Aug. 5, 2022 will formally name Milwaukee as the 2024 host city.

Officials in Milwaukee presented a mock-up of the 2024 GOP presidential nominating convention. The Republican National Committee on Friday Aug. 5, 2022 will formally name Milwaukee as the 2024 host city.
(RNC/Milwuakee 2024 host committee)

Milwaukee approved its draft resolution in June, and two weeks ago the Republican National Committee’s (RNC) Site Selection Committee — which oversees the 2024 convention planning — recommended Milwaukee over Nashville.

The two national parties often hold their presidential nominating conventions in competitive general election states. While Tennessee is a reliably red state in presidential contests, Wisconsin’s a key battleground.

“It is a purple state,” McDaniel said of Wisconsin. “It is exactly the voters that we are trying to bring into our party, and they have done such a great job. We’re excited not only to elect our future president out of Milwaukee as a Republican, but we’re excited to showcase a wonderful city and a wonderful state.”

Democratic National Committee officials are continuing to visit the cities hoping to host the Democrats’ 2024 presidential nominating convention. The DNC may announce their choice when they hold their annual summer meeting in early September.

DEMOCRATS POSTPONE DECISION ON CHANGING THEIR 2024 PRIMARY CALENDAR

The RNC full membership in April voted unanimously to make no changes to their 2024 presidential nominating calendar, keeping Iowa, New Hampshire, South Carolina and Nevada as their four early voting states.

The DNC’s in the process of upending their nominating calendar, with the likelihood that Iowa – and possibly New Hampshire – will lose their cherished lead-off spots. Republicans in both states have used the move by the DNC as ammunition against Democrats running for re-election this November in hotly contested showdowns.

The Iowa Caucuses display at the State Historical Museum of Iowa, on Jan. 15, 2020.

The Iowa Caucuses display at the State Historical Museum of Iowa, on Jan. 15, 2020.
(FoxNews)

When asked if the move by the DNC may hurt Democrats in Iowa and New Hampshire, which is a crucial general election battleground state, McDaniel told Fox News “we recognize that there’s a history there, that voters are very in tune. Retail is key to winning the nomination in both of those states… we are very proud to have kept our calendar the same. I hope that people in those states recognize that the Democrats just walked away from their states.”

While the 2024 election is on the agenda at the RNC meeting, on top of many minds is November’s midterms.

Democrats face historical headwinds, as the party that wins the White House and control of Congress traditionally suffers major setbacks in the House and Senate in the ensuing midterm elections. They are also up against a very unfavorable political climate, fueled by record inflation and soaring crime, and symbolized by President Biden’s deeply negative approval ratings.

McDaniel said RNC committee members are “very confident, very excited, even more so when we look at the candidates we have…as we are getting out of these primaries and really coming together to prepare to win in November.”

DEMOCRATS SPENDING MILLIONS THIS WEEK TARGETING GOP NOMINEES OVER ABORTION

However, pointing to the issues of gun violence, following a slate of high-profile mass shootings in recent months, and abortion in the wake of the move by the Supreme Court’s conservative majority to overturn the landmark Roe v. Wade ruling, which sent the issue of abortion regulation back to the states. Democrats see an energized electorate that will help them define the current expectations by political prognosticators.

Signs in favor and against the Kansas Constitutional Amendment On Abortion are displayed outside Kansas 10 Highway on Aug. 1, 2022, in Lenexa, Kansas.

Signs in favor and against the Kansas Constitutional Amendment On Abortion are displayed outside Kansas 10 Highway on Aug. 1, 2022, in Lenexa, Kansas.
(Kyle Rivas/Getty Images)

Democrats were further energized by Tuesday’s resounding victory in Kansas by pro-choice activists – in the first ballot box test of legalized abortion since the blockbuster high court ruling.

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When asked about the full court press by Democrats to leverage the issue of abortion in the midterms, McDaniel argued “the Democrats have a problem with inflation, with gas prices, with baby formula still missing, with an open border, with the drug crisis. I know they want to make this a big issue but the American people every day, when they go to the grocery store, when they go to the gas pump, realize what Democrat policies are doing to their pocketbook, and pocketbook issues are going to be the number one issue in November.”

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Frozen in horror: Notes from inside the Parkland school massacre site

Bullet holes also mark the walls of the Parkland, Florida, school where Nikolas Cruz killed 14 students and three staff members.

A lock of dark hair remains on a floor more than four years after the body of a victim was taken away. Valentine’s Day gifts and cards are strewn about, as shards of glass crunched beneath the feet of visitors.

These are the unsettling notes from a group of reporters allowed to enter the building after jurors completed their walk-through to provide details to media outlets across the country, including CNN.

FIRST FLOOR

We entered from the east stairwell just as Cruz did. In the stairwell where Cruz entered and assembled his gun from him, a stuffed white teddy bear lay dirtied on the floor next to a bag with Valentine’s Hearts on it, probably dropped by a fleeing student.

Everywhere you walk throughout the building there are shards of broken safety glass that crunch loudly as you walk over them. They are especially loud and crunchy in the threshold of each door.

ROOM 1218

Brittany Sinitch’s English class: No one was killed or wounded here, but this is where Cruz fired first his shots. Textbooks on the desks were open to a section discussing Mercutio. A Valentine’s teddy bear was on a desk. A 2017 Stoneman Douglas football poster was on the wall — photo of the team with the motto: Faith Family Football. A pink note wishing a Happy Valentine’s Day sat on a desk next to a worksheet belonging to student Sarah Louis. A clear plastic drink cup sat half-full on a desk, its contents now a dark brown sludge. On a desk a Valentine’s Day card that reads “I don’t just like you, I really, really like you.”

ROOM 1215

Study Hall led by Spanish teacher Juletta Matlock: There is dried blood outside the door where Luke Hoyer, Martin Duque and Gina Montalto were killed. Just inside the door, some earphones with a long cord lay on the floor. The book “To Kill a Mockingbird” remains on a desk. On the wall is a poster titled “Let’s Guac About It” with basic Spanish words: Padre, Madre, Abuelo, Abuela.” On another wall is a poster of common Spanish phrases and colors.

ROOM 1213 — Ronit Reoven’s AP Psychology class:

On the far wall away from the door is a table with a large pool of blood. This is where Carmen Schentrup died from a bullet wound to her head. She and the children hid behind the teacher’s desk, which is in the southeast corner of the room. In front of the desk where Maddy Wilford lay wounded, the teacher’s desk phone lay on the floor. On the walls behind the desk are photos of what appears to be the teacher’s family and an 8 X 10 drawing of President Trump with the saying “We will win in everything we do.” On the north wall is a bulletin board with about two dozen wallet size photos of students. A lone white sneaker remains on the floor.

HALLWAY – HIXON SITE

Hixon, after he was shot dashing through the west door, took cover in an alcove in front of the elevator about 20 feet from the door. Cruz shot him a second time as he passed, but he remained alive and spent about 10 minutes trying to get up, according to video played in court. There is a large bloodstain on the floor and on the wall. A black rubber shoe, possibly, a Croc, lay on the floor there.

Room 1214 — “The Holocaust Room” – Teacher Ivy Schamis’ room

She taught Holocaust Studies. This is where Nick Dworet and Helena Ramsay died.

On the whiteboard is the hashtag #TogetherWeRemember. There are also references to eyewitness accounts. On a table are two yellowed Sun Sentinel newspapers, there are bullet strike marks on desks, laptops still open, headphones, and a water bottle still on a desk. On the floor is a tossed 2017-2018 school year planner. Blood-stained markings where Dworet and Ramsay died. Their blood coats a book called “Tell Them We Remember” by Susan Bachrach and “Listen to the Wind” by Greg Mortenson There is a Holocaust sign on a bulletin board with the words “we will never forget.” One desk had a white plug and earbuds on top. Indicating the rapid way everything unfolded

The learning objective on the board “To be aware of the world and its surroundings.”

Room 1216

No one classroom had as many of the murdered and wounded as Dara Hass’ English class. A blue folder with Alaina Petty’s name still on the desk – right behind that – between the teacher’s desk and the wall is a large bloodstain. Bullet holes in the walls.

Right next to the bloodstain on the floor where Alyssa Alhadeff and Alaina Petty died – is a handwritten paper about Malala Yousafzai – “the girl who wanted to go to school” – the paper goes on to say “a bullet went straight to her head but not her brain” ending with “In conclusion, we the people should have freedom for education.”

(Note: Malala is the Pakistani girl who was shot by the Taliban – she has fought to advocate for education access for girls and women).

Essays written by the students remain on their desks, never to be recovered. “We go to school every day of the week and we take it all for granted,” one student wrote. “We cry and complain without knowing how lucky we are to be able to learn.”

On cabinet doors, a previous assignment is on display. It shows headstones with epitaphs written by the students.

“RIP Here lies pretty.”

“RIP Here lies funny.”

“RIP Here lies nice.”

Next to a shoe on the ground is a pink Valentine’s Day stuffed animal and balloons.

The pooling of blood looks aged, dark, caked, flaky.

Desks are covered in a thin layer of dust, a landline phone lays upside on the ground.

At Alex Schachter’s desk – a bloodstain on the other side of a silver bar that connects the plastic seat to the desk.

WEST STAIRWELL

Near west stairs – where Hixon was shot – there is a discarded shoe.

SECOND FLOOR – HALLWAY QUOTES

Quote on hallway between rooms 1221 and 1229

“Dream as if you’ll live forever, live as if you’ll die today.” -James Dean

Further down the hallway it reads:

“Never live in the past but always learn it.” -anonymous

Room 1230

A large heart shaped box of Valentine’s Day chocolates on a desk.

On another an open pen and pencil case.

Room 1232

Calculators still on desks, spiral notebooks still open to math subject, students were working on algebra problems.

Room 1231

Clustered Desks

“Class of 2018” photos of students in casual settings (not formal pics).

THIRD FLOOR

Room 1256, Scott Beigel’s classroom:

Entering the hallway from the east side stairs, the first thing you see is a pool of caked blood that’s much smaller than others. This is where Scott Beigel’s body fell in front of classroom 1256. Unlike other rooms, the window on his door is intact. Beigel died holding the door open. His body blocked the door from closing. The children hiding in the front of his room were vulnerable, but Cruz did not choose to enter it.

Plastic world maps about the size of a placemat on most desks. There were three wall clocks lying face down by the door. On Beigel’s desk were worksheets comparing Christianity and Islam. On the whiteboard, notes on the 2018 Winter Olympics medal-winners. A deflated Valentine’s Day balloon lays on the ground.

Room 1255, Stacey Lippel’s classroom:

The door is pushed open — like others to signify that Cruz shot into it — and a “No Bully Zone” hangs on the inside. The creative writing assignment for the day is written on the whiteboard: “How to write the perfect love letter.”

The teacher’s desk is to the left and one can imagine students huddled behind it. The desks are in disarray, some pushed on top of each other from what was described in testimony as a mad rush back to get back inside. A top one desk is an enviable Valentine’s Day spread — a large gift bag with tissues stuffed inside it, a box of round, silver-wrapped candies, and a heart-shaped box.

Moving down the hallway, dry, cracked rose petals mixed with the glass shards lend a cinematic feel to the scene. There’s a large pool of blood in the middle of the third-floor hallway where Anthony Borges was injured. A sign above the water fountains has a quote from Star Wars’ Yoda: “Do or do not. There is no try.”

Beneath the water fountains, three large pools of dried blood mark the spots to where authorities dragged the bodies of Cara Loughran, Meadow Pollack, and Joaquin Oliver. A faint trail of blood traces the path of the girls’ bodies from the alcove where their bodies fell after being shot. A pool of blood is observed in the alcove outside 1249 where Pollack and Loughran died. They remained there, injured, after the rest of the group that was huddled in the alcove with Ernie Rospierski fled down the hallway. Then Cruz returned and shot them again.

ROOM 1249, Ernie Rospierski

There is an unfinished chess game. A friend of Peter Yang testified they were playing a game when the fire alarm went off.

Room 1250

Valentine’s Day balloons, flower petals, stuffed white bear.

One of the most disturbing sights is the alcove outside the bathroom where Joaquin Oliver died. There’s a large pool of blood and holes from bullets that were fired at him at close range. There are blood drops leading into the alcove from the first shots where he was wounded. But most of the blood is from when Cruz caught up to Oliver in the alcove and fired. We know from the evidence that Oliver was conscious after he was hit. He could not run when the others fled. He heard Cruz coming. Heard the shots into Pollack and Loughran. He knew he was next. We know from testimony that he held his hands up to protect himself. Two bullets in the wall show how vain that attempt was. There’s a lock of dark hair on the floor near where his body would have been. The corner of a heart-shaped paper Valentine’s Day decoration (perhaps was a card) is collapsed, presumably was drenched with blood

Moving down the hall toward the west wall, bullets scraped against the south walls, an indication that Cruz was aiming for the fleeing students and not just randomly firing ahead of him.

We see the corner in front of the stairwell where Peter Wang fell after being shot as he ran down the hallway. The wall is drawn into squares resembling search quadrants. It is stained with dark splotches of blood and yellow-greenish material that was described in testimony as brain matter. Pin-sized holes in the wall have circles drawn around them and are marked “fragment D” and “fragment F.”

There are six bullet holes in the window above where Wang died. Cruz tried to blow the windows out to shoot the fleeing students.

Jaime Guttenberg was struck outside the stairwell but fell inside. There is very little blood where she fell. The bullet never left her body.

In the teacher’s lounge, a windowpane facing the 1300 building has 4 bullet holes. Another window pane next to it has another bullet hole. These overlook the courtyard and a parking lot where students were fleeing.

A poster next to a windowpane reads like so:

“Typical or Troubled?

Notice: Notice if you are seeing trouble signs in a student.

Talk: Talk with the student

Act: Share observations with school mental health staff

Changing a life’s course.

School Social Work 754-321-1618

Family Counseling 754-321-1590

Broward Public Schools”

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Russia ‘ready to discuss’ prisoner swap but will resist pressure to free Brittney Griner | Brittney Griner

Russia is ready to discuss a prisoner swap for imprisoned Americans, said foreign minister Sergei Lavrov, but added that the Kremlin would resist public pressure to free US basketball star Brittney Griner and others being held in Russian prisons.

Lavrov’s remarks came one day after Griner received a nine-year prison sentence on drug charges that were seen as a gambit to demand an exchange for high-profile Russians in prison in the US, including the arms trafficker Viktor Bout.

“We are ready to discuss the issue. [of a swap]but this should be done via the channel approved by the presidents, Putin and Biden,” Lavrov said during a press conference in Cambodia.

He referred to a backchannel that had been set up by Joe Biden and Vladimir Putin, saying “no matter who says what in public, this channel remains relevant”.

That backchannel appeared to have been successful in arranging the release of Trevor Reed, an ex-marine who had been detained in Russia for more than two years before he was exchanged in April for Konstantin Yaroshenko, a Russian pilot who had been held for more than a decade on drug smuggling charges.

But Lavrov also warned that Russia would not respond to “megaphone diplomacy”, demanding that any negotiations be carried out discreetly.

“If this is another case of the Americans resorting to public diplomacy and loud statements on their pending steps, it’s their business or I would even say their problem, because the Americans often fail to honor the agreement on doing calm, professional work,” he said.

Griner and her legal team tried to steer clear of politics during her trial. “I know everybody keeps talking about ‘political pawn’ and ‘politics’, but I hope that is far from this courtroom,” Griner said in a closing statement on Thursday.

Lavrov said that he had not discussed the issue of a swap with the US secretary of state, Antony Blinken, who also attended the ASEAN conference in Cambodia’s capital Phnom Penh.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov declined to comment on a potential swap for Bout, the arms trafficker. “These swaps will never happen if we start discussing any nuances of the exchange in the press,” he told reporters on Friday.

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1 dead, 2 injured following shooting at Mirage on Las Vegas Strip

LAS VEGAS, Nev. (FOX5) – The Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department is investigating a deadly shooting inside a room at the Mirage Hotel and Casino on the Las Vegas Strip late Thursday night.

Captain Dori Koren with the Homicide and Sex Crimes Bureau said one person has been pronounced dead inside the hotel room and two others are at a local hospital in critical condition as a result of the shooting.

“We can tell you at least preliminarily, that there was an altercation that happened in the room between four individuals we believe all known to each other. And during that altercation, the one individual shot the three other individuals,” Captain Koren said at an overnight briefing.

Multiple posts on Twitter indicated a heavy police presence inside the hotel. At one point people were saying police locked down the hotel completely.

As for the suspect, police say a manhunt is underway.

Koren said police are looking for a man who took off from the scene.

LVMPD posted to its Twitter just after 10 pm alerting the public of the shooting.

“These types of incidents these types of extreme violence that happen in our city we take very seriously, you’ve seen it with all the investigations we conduct, we’re fortunate to have the best homicide investigative unit in the country with the highest clearance rates for a reason so we’re confident we will solve this case,” Koren added.

On Friday morning, Koren tweeted that the suspect involved was “identified, located and arrested” within six hours of the shooting. Details on the suspect’s identity weren’t disclosed immediately.

FOX5 will provide additional information when it is made available.

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Lightning strikes near White House kills 2, injures 2 others

A couple from Janesville, Wisconsin, died after a lightning strike in Lafayette Square, the public park right next to the White House.

A couple from Janesville, Wisconsin, died after a lightning strike in Lafayette Square, the public park right next to the White House.

Two others were left with critical injuries Thursday night.

DC police tell WTOP the elderly couple died overnight.

The strike occurred as severe storms moved across the region bringing with them thunder, lightning and heavy rain.



“Upon arrival we found four patients,” said DC Fire and EMS spokesman Vito Maggiolo. “All four were suffering critical, life-threatening injuries. We were able to quickly treat and transport those four individuals to area hospitals.”

The two men and two women were found near a cluster of trees, and it wasn’t immediately clear whether they were hit directly by lightning or whether they were struck by a falling tree.

“I cannot describe the injuries,” Maggiolo said. “All we know for sure is that there was a lightning strike in their immediate vicinity, and all four were injured.”

Maggiolo stressed that their location was not safe during the severe weather.

“Anytime there’s lightning, you should go indoors or you should go to a safe place,” he said. “Trees of course are not safe places. So anybody who goes to seek shelter under a tree, that’s a very dangerous place to be.”

Officials with the US Secret Service and the US Park Police were nearby and were able to help, potentially saving their lives, Maggiolo said.

“I want to thank them because their agents and their officers witnessed this lightning strike and immediately began to render aid to the four victims,” Maggiolo said.

The incident was similar to one that happened a couple of years ago, when National Guard members were in DC due to protests in June of 2020.

Two members of the National Guard were injured when lightning struck in Lafayette Square, which is where they were stationed.

WTOP’s Mike Jakaitis contributed to this report.

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© 2022 WTP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

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Jury to decide if Alex Jones has to pay punitive damages to Sandy Hook parents : NPR

Infowars founder Alex Jones listens to a supporter at the Texas State Capital building in April 2020 in Austin, Texas.

Sergio Flores/Getty Images


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InfoWars host Alex Jones returns to court Friday for his defamation trial, where he is being sued for falsely saying the 2012 Sandy Hook Elementary school shooting was a hoax.

The jury will decide if Jones has to pay punitive damages to Neil Heslin and Scarlett Lewis, the parents of Sandy Hook first-grader Jesse Lewis, who was gunned down along with 25 other children and school staffers at Sandy Hook in Newtown, Conn.

Jones was ordered Thursday to pay $4.1 million in compensatory damages to the couple, who said they received death threats and were harassed due to Jones’s false claims that the federal government orchestrated the shooting to crack down on guns. Heslin and Lewis are seeking $150 million in damages in their lawsuit.

Jones said in 2015 on his InfoWars radio show that “Sandy Hook is synthetic, completely fake with actors, in my view, manufactured.”

“I am a mother, first and foremost, and I know that you’re a father. And my son existed,” Lewis said to Jones on Thursday. “You’re still on your show implying that I’m an actress, that I’m deep state, and I don’t understand. Truth is so vital to our world.”

Jones conceded Wednesday that the shooting, the deadliest at an elementary school in US history, was not a fabricated event.

The conspiracy theorist has been booted off Twitter, Facebook, YouTube and other mainstream platforms over hate speech and lies. But Infowars is still broadcast on many radio stations, and its website still attracts millions of visitors each month.

In this next phase of Jones’ trial, lawyers for the parents are expected to say that Jones is hiding millions of dollars in assets.

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Dems unwilling to back Biden

Correction: This table has been corrected to reflect that Mandela Barnes and John Fetterman are lieutenant governors, not senators. Data: Axios research; Table: Axios Visuals

A starting number of lawmakers in President Biden’s own party have been unwilling in recent days to say he should seek re-election in 2024, amid gnawing fears he’ll be too old or unpopular to win.

Why it matters: Backing your own party’s first-term president is usually so automatic that no one would bother to ask. But behind the scenes, there’s a very real concern that going all in on Biden could be a mistake.

reality check: Some Democrats privately don’t want Biden to run again, for three reasons:

  1. He’s deeply unpopular. Many Americans associate him with inflation, high gas prices, entrenched COVID-19 and an inglorious end to the war in Afghanistan.
  2. Progressives want to move away from centrism and convention.
  3. Many Democratic voters want generational change. Biden was older when he took office than Ronald Reagan was when he left office. If re-elected, Biden would be 86 at the end of his second term.

Driving the news: Just this week, two high-ranking New York Democrats cast doubt on the president’s future.

  • Rep. Jerry Nadler and Carolyn Maloney were asked, during a Democratic primary debate for the 12th congressional district, whether Biden should run again in 2024. Neither would answer in the affirmative.
  • That followed a refusal by Sen. Joe Manchin (DW.Va.) to commit to Biden ’24 while trying to get a climate change deal over the finish line, and flat-out “no”s to Biden ’24 from two House Democrats in Minnesota during local interviews.

Yes but: Some strategists see all this as a misdirection of Democrats’ nervous energy.

  • “The chatter right now is more about anxiety about ’22 than ’24, and it is not really helpful for Democrats,” David Axelrod, director of the University of Chicago’s Institute of Politics and a former senior adviser to President Obama, told Axios. “This is a Washington parlor game.”
  • “Now’s not the time for the conversation. What voters say about an election two years and change away is about as meaningful as the Farmer’s Almanac.”
  • Biden’s age is “an issue he’ll have to consider and, if he runs, he’ll have to confront. But he doesn’t have to right now.”

The outcome of November contests and whether Democrats lose control of one or both chambers of Congress is likely to shape Biden’s fate.

  • There’s no party consensus around how to have a what’s-next conversation, or who could be the strongest alternative if Biden ultimately decided not to pursue a second term.
  • Vice President Kamala Harris has the standing as Biden’s No. 2 but faces concerns about her popularity within her own party as well as her general election prospects.

By the numbers: Biden’s overall approval rating with Americans has sunk to 39%.

  • Only one in four Democratic voters said they’d want him to run again in 2024, per a July poll from The New York Times and Siena College.
  • Age and job performance were the top factors. Roughly 94% of Democrats under 30 don’t want him to be the nominee next time.

What they’re saying: Democrats running competitive statewide campaigns in swing states are quick when asked about Biden to refocus on the issues they say voters want their party to address — like abortion access, the economy and inflation, crime and gun violence.

  • John Fetterman’s Senate campaign told Axios: “Pennsylvanians care about whether they have a senator who’s actually from Pennsylvania, understands their struggles, and will actually fight for abortion rights and to combat inflation.”
  • Nevada Gov. Steve Sisolak told us he is “more focused on lowering costs for Nevadans and continuing our state’s quick economic recovery,” but that he would support Biden’s re-election.

  • “Biden is the leader of our party and if he runs again I’ll support him, but if he’s going to win Ohio back in 2024 I’d urge him to keep a laser focus on lowering costs for working families – which is exactly what I’m doing in this race,” Nan Whaley, running for Ohio governor, told Axios.
  • Josh Shapiro, the Democratic nominee for governor in Pennsylvania, takes the president at his word” that he’s running again. His campaign told Axios that Shapiro is more focused on whether his GOP opponent Doug Mastriano, if elected, would discard legitimate votes in 2024 if he didn’t like the outcome.

A handful of vocal House Democrats have been clear they don’t think President Biden should — or will — run again.

  • Rep. Dean Phillips (D-Minn.) told a local radio show last week: “I think the country would be well served by a new generation of compelling, well-prepared, dynamic Democrats who step up,” after replying “no” to the question of whether he would support Biden in 2024.
  • Rep. Angie Craig (D-Minn.) told MinnPost: “I think Dean Phillips and I are in lockstep and alignment with that, and I’m going to do everything in my power as a member of Congress to make sure that we have a new generation of leadership.”
  • Rep. Dan Kildee (D-Mich.) told Axios he has heard rumblings on the Hill that some want younger leadership, even though he doesn’t agree with that. “If the president decides not to run again obviously it’s going to be game on,” Rep. Kildee said. “But he’s got to make that decision.”
  • Rep. Carolyn Maloney (DN.Y.) said—on two separate occasions — that she doesn’t believe Biden will run for president again. She has since clarified that she wants him to run, but maintained during a CNN interview on Thursday: “I happen to think you [Biden] won’t be running.”

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Energy prices have dipped, but oil stocks are still a buy: Investor

Oil prices have fallen sharply from their recent peaks, but there’s still a case for buying oil stocks, according to Bill Smead, chief investment officer at Smead Capital Management.

That’s because energy prices are likely to stay high or even increase further, he told CNBC’s “Street Signs Asia” on Thursday.

He described the slide in crude prices as “the first significant correction” in a bull market that started in the spring of 2020 after prices crashed.

“You have this huge move, you go from $20 a barrel to $120 and then you pull back — and now people are going, ‘Oh yeah, that’s all over, that’s going to cure the inflation right there,'” Smead said.

We like the oil stocks here. You can buy ’em here, Warren Buffett is buying it here.

bill smead

Chief investment officer, Smead Capital Management

But several factors suggest that prices are going to increase, he said.

The US has to replace 180 million barrels of strategic reserves that were drawn down to meet demand, and supply remains tight, he pointed out.

“What happens when China’s economy gets open in full … get past their quarantines and just get out,” he asked, suggesting that demand will come back up again.

Covid flare-ups in China have spurred lockdowns this year, and caused consumption of energy to drop in the world’s most populous country.

Read more about energy from CNBC Pro

Demand will likely to spring back when more movement restrictions are eased.

“We like the oil stocks here. You can buy ’em here, Warren Buffett is buying it here,” Smead said.

Brent crude futures and US West Texas Intermediate futures both soared to levels above $120 per barrel this year, but are now at $96.88 and $90.88 per barrel, respectively.

Still, both benchmarks are more than 40% up from a year ago.

— CNBC’s Thomas Franck and Yun Li contributed to this report.

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‘They all knew’: textile company misled regulators about use of toxic PFAS, documents show | PFAS

A French industrial fabric producer that poisoned drinking water supplies with PFAS “forever chemicals” across 65 sq miles (168 sq km) of southern New Hampshire misled regulators about the amount of toxic substance it used, a group of state lawmakers and public health advocates charge .

The company, Saint Gobain, now admits it used far more PFAS than regulators previously knew, and officials fear thousands more residents outside the contamination zone’s boundaries may be drinking tainted water in a region plagued by cancer clusters and other health problems thought to stem from PFAS pollution.

Saint Gobain in 2018 agreed to provide clean drinking water in the 65-sq-mile area as part of a consent agreement with New Hampshire regulators, and damning evidence suggesting it used more PFAS than previously admitted surfaced in a trove of documents released in a separate class-action lawsuit.

“People are sick, there are really high cancer rates and people literally have died, so when you see what’s happening and the company acts like this – it’s really upsetting,” said Mindi Messner, a state representative who analyzed the documents and sent them to the New Hampshire attorney general and state regulators.

Saint Gobain has denied wrongdoing. PFAS, or per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances, are a class of about 12,000 chemicals used across dozens of industries to make products resist water, stains and heat. The highly toxic compounds don’t naturally break down, and are linked to cancer, thyroid disease, kidney problems, decreased immunity, birth defects and other serious health problems. They have been called “forever chemicals” due to their longevity in the environment.

Saint Gobain Performance Plastics’ Merrimack, New Hampshire, plant had for decades treated its products with PFOA, one type of PFAS, to make them stronger. The company released PFOA from its smokestacks and the chemicals, once on the ground, moved through the soil and into aquifers. Hundreds of residential and municipal wells pull from the groundwater.

As the company and New Hampshire department of environmental services (DES) negotiated the 2018 consent agreement, company officials repeatedly said they didn’t use pure PFOA, or didn’t have a record of using it, but instead used a diluted PFOA mixture of which the toxic chemical only comprised about 2%.

In a 2016 letter to state regulators, Saint Gobain wrote that it “never used [pure PFOA] as a raw material at any point in time” in Merrimack, and in 2014 told the EPA it “is not and never has been a… user of PFOA per se anywhere in the United States.”

The diluted PFOA wouldn’t spread as widely as pure PFOA, and the modeling that determined the boundaries within which Saint Gobain would be responsible for providing clean drinking water supplies and remediating contamination was developed with the diluted solution as an input.

But the documents released as part of the lawsuit show Saint Gobain knew it used pure PFOA years before the consent decree.

Among the evidence are 2003 emails between company employees explicitly stating the Merrimack facility treated its fabric with pure PFOA. Meanwhile, a former Saint Gobain attorney who is now whistleblowing testified that sales records from 3M, which sold PFOA to Saint Gobain, show the company bought “hundreds if not thousands” of pounds of pure PFOA. The 3M sales records are under seal in the class-action suit.

And a salesman for DuPont, which also sold PFAS products to Saint Gobain, testified last year that he had “learned that they were using [pure PFOA] …and adding it to our products”.

The modeling used to develop the original contamination zone’s boundaries is “fundamentally flawed” because it did not account for the pure PFOA, an engineer hired by Saint Gobain testified in February.

Saint Gobain no longer denies that it used pure PFOA; however, in a statement to the Guardian, the company wrote it “vehemently denies any allegation it withheld data, or misled, the New Hampshire Department of Environmental Services”. The information was “not new” because it was in 90,000 documents it gave the DES since 2016, the company wrote.

Messmer said she’s skeptical of that explanation: “If you throw 90,000 papers at someone, is that really notifying them?”

In response to a follow-up question about why it developed the consent decree modeling assuming diluted PFOA instead of pure PFOA, the company said the type of PFOA was only “one factor considered in setting the boundaries”.

In their July letter to the attorney general’s office and DES, Messmer and other lawmakers asked for an investigation and to expand the boundaries of the contamination zone. The state has “sound legal basis to hold Saint Gobain fully accountable for their pollution, including beyond the current [boundary]”, the letter reads. The attorney general’s office told the Guardian it is reviewing the documents while the DES did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Some are also frustrated with the DES. Documents show it knew it didn’t have Saint Gobain’s complete PFAS purchase records from before 2004, but still entered into the consent agreement.

“The regulatory agency is broken, and I’m really angry with the state departments that are supposed to be there to protect the environment and residents,” said Laurene Allen, a Merrimack resident and clean water activist. “Think of the harm that could have been prevented.”

The documents reveal a company executive stating in 2006 that Saint Gobain “ought to downplay the potential health risks” of PFOA relative to other PFAS, and argue there are “no proven” health risks. But a 1995 company memo shows management had issued a decree to stop using PFOA “because of its toxicity and long half-life”.

The company had also in 2006 conducted blood tests for PFOA on its employees but the results remain under seal, and the plant’s previous owner in 1980 investigated why its male employees were experiencing impotence and “polymer fever”.

“They all knew,” Messmer said.

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US

1 dead in shooting at Mirage hotel on Las Vegas strip

One person was fatally shot inside a Las Vegas hotel room Thursday night, prompting authorities to place the entire building on lockdown.

The shooting occurred inside a hotel room on the eighth floor of the Mirage on the Las Vegas Strip, police said.

Another two people are believed to have been injured in the shooting, according to the local station 8 News, which cited a source with knowledge of the investigation.

Metropolitan police are stationed outside The Mirage in response to a fatal shooting in the hotel-casino on Thursday, Aug. 4, 2022, in Las Vegas.
Police are responding to a fatal shooting that occurred in the Mirage hotel-casino late Thursday night.
AP

The Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department asked the public to avoid the area as the situation and investigation are still active. The gunman remains at large.

Videos posted to Twitter show a heavy police presence at the hotel and hotel guests said no one is being let into or out of the building as officers go room to room to check on guests. In one video, an officer can be seen carrying a ballistic shield.

Police officer during shooting at Mirage hotel
The shooting occurred inside a hotel room on the eighth floor.
@saeed_ahmed on Twitter
Shooting at Mirage hotel in Vegas
Las Vegas authorities are requesting that people avoid the area.
@saeed_ahmed on Twitter

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