التصنيف: أخبار

  • As Trump, Harris woo Arab Americans, Michigan mayor readies to up pressure | US Election 2024 News

    As Trump, Harris woo Arab Americans, Michigan mayor readies to up pressure | US Election 2024 News

    Dearborn, Michigan – Abdullah Hammoud was pacing across his office, having an animated phone conversation about former President Bill Clinton’s claim that Hamas “forces” Israel to kill Palestinian civilians.

    By the time the mayor of the Detroit suburb of Dearborn sat down for an interview, he had shaken off the anger – at least on the surface.

    Hammoud, 34, appeared clear-eyed about the future of the city known as the capital of Arab America and the way forward for its bereaved community amid Israel’s war on Gaza and Lebanon.

    “There’s a blanket of grief that has just covered this community, and people are just trying to manage, obviously, amidst the entirety of the presidential election with the backdrop of a genocide, the war in Lebanon, the bombing in Yemen and so on,” Hammoud told Al Jazeera.

    Hammoud, one of the most prominent Arab American elected officials in the United States who served in the State Legislature as a Democrat, has not endorsed any of the candidates, urging residents to “vote their conscience” instead.

    In a close race, the tens of thousands of Arab voters in Dearborn – a city of 110,000 people – and across Michigan may prove crucial for the outcome of the election in the state and possibly the country.

    That’s not lost on the candidates: on Friday, Trump is expected to visit Dearborn, and Harris has met Hammoud previously during the campaign, but not in Dearborn.

    Hammoud stressed the need to come out and vote for the community to make its voice heard.

    “In this moment in time, what is more important than anything else is standing firm in our values and our principles and standing firm on the side of one another in the city,” he said.

    But for Hammoud, the struggle to end Israel’s killing machine in Gaza and Lebanon – the ancestral home of thousands of Dearborn residents, including the mayor himself – does not end when the polls close on November 5 and a new president is elected.

    “Whoever assumes that office, we’re prepared to hold their feet to the fire and hold them to account,” he said. “Everybody’s promising a ceasefire, but nobody’s saying how they’re going to deliver it.”

    ‘Pressure will be turned up’

    Democratic candidate Kamala Harris has said she would push for ending the war and her Republican rival Donald Trump has promised “peace” in the Middle East.

    But both the vice president and former president are staunch in their support for Israel.

    Hammoud noted that the two candidates have not articulated how they would deal with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who has pledged repeatedly to continue the carnage until “total victory”.

    “But the pressure will be turned up from our end. And we’ll be leaning on the broader antiwar coalition that has been built – our union labour leaders, who have all stepped forward and called for not only a ceasefire, but also an arms embargo against Israel,” the mayor said.

    “Heck, even at this point, I’ll be leaning on young Republicans who favour an arms embargo.”

    For Hammoud, change is possible regardless of the outcome of the election. “The policy is there. Americans, by the millions, support this,” he said.

    “And what you’re not going to see is 50 million, 100 million Americans move on their values and principles. I think it’s feasible for us to believe that millions of Americans can move a single person in the White House on this issue.”

    Dressed in a blue blazer over a white shirt, Hammoud hit out at both major candidates over their stance on the Middle East as well as their approach to the Arab community in Michigan.

    In his office hung a map of Lebanon over a Yemeni dagger, a firefighter’s helmet, an American football with the Detroit Lions logo, the city’s seal – featuring an old car owing to the city’s manufacturing history as the hometown of industrial pioneer Henry Ford – as well as other items representing Dearborn’s history and diverse communities.

    ‘Policy outcomes aren’t dissimilar’

    Hammoud enumerated some of Trump’s anti-Muslim and anti-Palestinian policies, including moving the US embassy to Jerusalem, cutting off humanitarian aid to Palestinians and recognising Israel’s claimed sovereignty over Syria’s occupied Golan Heights.

    He also invoked Trump’s ban on travel from several Muslim-majority countries as well as recent comments by the former president’s surrogate Rudy Giuliani, who proclaimed that Palestinians are “taught to kill us” at two years old.

    “But I think the difficulty is you want to counter Trump with something that seems to be more welcoming,” Hammoud said.

    “And so when you see the remarks of former President Bill Clinton, talking about how Israel is forced to kill civilians, and how the Israeli government’s claim to the land predates the existence of Islam, it gets extremely frustrating.”

    Clinton was addressing Arab American voters at an official Harris campaign event in Michigan when he made those comments this week.

    Earlier this month, Harris also campaigned in Michigan with ex-Republican Congresswoman Liz Cheney – the daughter of former Vice President Dick Cheney, one of the architects of the invasion of Iraq and the so-called “war on terror”.

    “When you have surrogates like Liz Cheney campaigning across the state of Michigan, talking about how even Dick Cheney – the war criminal – is supporting Vice President Harris, is that supposed to be a welcoming message to this community?” Hammoud asked.

    He also noted that the Biden-Harris administration did not reverse Trump’s pro-Israel policies.

    “Yes, rhetoric may be different,” he said, referring to the approach of Harris and Trump. “Sometimes policy outcomes aren’t dissimilar, and I think that’s been the frustration for many.”

    ‘Hope exists’

    With the race for Michigan heating up, attention is turning to Dearborn, the country’s first Arab-majority city.

    Campaign billboards can be seen across the city. Residents are getting piles of advertisements in their mailboxes daily, focusing on Arab issues and Israel’s war on Gaza and Lebanon.

    But residents do not appear to match the enthusiasm of the campaign. The city’s Arab American community, especially its large Lebanese American population, is dealing with the anguish of watching the war that is destroying their homeland from afar.

    The conflict is deeply personal to them. Their families are being displaced, home villages decimated and loved ones killed by mostly US-supplied bombs. The community lost a respected leader, Kamel Jawad, who was killed in an Israeli bombing in south Lebanon on October 1.

    “We’re attending funerals far more frequently than celebratory events,” Hammoud said.

    Across the city, Lebanese and Palestinian flags and yard signs for school board candidates far outnumber those for Trump and Harris.

    Despite voters’ frustration and the growing sense of disenchantment with the political system, Hammoud warned against disengaging from the political process, calling it a “great fear”.

    The mayor highlighted the importance of elections, especially at the local level. He cited the election of officials like himself and other representatives, including Congresswoman Rashida Tlaib, who have amplified the community’s demands around the conflict.

    He said while people are struggling with the presidential question, “hope exists” on the ground.

    “There are rallies happening all across this world, and the centre of America has moved on Israel-Palestine, and the centre of the world has moved,” he said.

    “I think we are one generation away from having a generation of elected leaders who will be more reflective of the policy stances and the values and the principles of the broader electorate.”

  • New Hampshire will decide incumbent’s fate in 1 US House district and fill an open seat in the other

    New Hampshire will decide incumbent’s fate in 1 US House district and fill an open seat in the other

    CONCORD, N.H. (AP) — Democrats are hoping to maintain their dominance in New Hampshire’s congressional delegation Tuesday, while Republicans seek to regain a foothold by ousting an incumbent or picking up an open seat.

    In the 1st District, which covers the eastern half of the state and includes Manchester, its largest city, Democratic U.S. Rep. Chris Pappas is running for a fourth term. He faces Republican former state Sen. Russell Prescott. The district once was quite politically volatile, with party control flipping five times in six election cycles from 2006 to 2016.

    The 2nd District, which includes the cities of Nashua and Concord, hasn’t been in Republican hands since 2013. That seat is open because Democratic U.S. Rep. Annie Kuster, the longest serving member in the district’s history, is retiring after six terms. Former White House aide Maggie Goodlander, a Democrat, faces Republican activist Lily Tang Williams in the race for Kuster’s seat.

    Those are New Hampshire’s only congressional districts. Neither of the state’s U.S. senators, both Democrats, were up for reelection.

    1st Congressional District

    Both Pappas and Prescott served on the governor’s Executive Council, a five-member panel that approves state contracts and judicial nominees. They overlapped during the last of Pappas’ three terms and the first of Prescott’s two terms.

    Pappas, who considers himself a pragmatic voice in Washington, touted his support from women, veterans and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce during the campaign. He made abortion rights a top issue, calling Prescott “radically out of step” and accusing him of distrusting women to make health care decisions.

    “I don’t believe that politicians should be making this decision,” he said during a debate last week. “I take my cues directly from the people of New Hampshire.”

    Prescott, who spent 10 years in the state Senate, said he opposes abortion but would not support a federal ban on the procedure. He said he would focus on U.S.-Mexico border security and reducing inflation and taxes. He said Pappas has spent his time in Washington backing liberal policies that he claims have increased taxes and illegal immigration.

    Prescott ran for the same congressional seat in 2022, finishing fourth in the GOP primary, but defeated six candidates this year to win the nomination.

    “I’m asking you to look into my record and to my behavior and to who I am as a person,” he said in last week’s debate. “And I’m asking for your trust again to work for you to make sure we solve our border problems, our economy and make sure that we have energy independence.”

    2nd Congressional District

    Tang Williams also took two tries to win the GOP nomination. She finished third in 2022 before beating a dozen candidates in this year’s Republican primary. Goodlander defeated one opponent to win the Democratic nomination.

    Goodlander, who is married to President Joe Biden’s national security advisor, grew up in Nashua and recently moved back there from Washington. She worked in the Justice Department as a top antitrust official and as counsel to Attorney General Merrick Garland before moving to the White House chief of staff’s office earlier this year.

    During her campaign, she promised to protect democracy, expand abortion access and take on corporate monopolies that she says are jacking up the price of housing, health care, prescription drugs and groceries.

    The 2024 election is here. This is what to know:

    News outlets around the world count on the AP for accurate U.S. election results. Since 1848, the AP has been calling races up and down the ballot. Support us. Donate to the AP.

    “We can still come together as Democrats and Republicans to tackle the challenges that unite us as Americans, and that’s what I’ve done on the front lines of the fight against some of the biggest drivers of high costs for people across this state,” she said during a debate last week.

    Tang Williams is a native of China who became a U.S. citizen in 1994 and now works as a business and legal consultant. A former chair of the Colorado Libertarian Party, she unsuccessfully ran for office there before moving to New Hampshire.

    Describing herself as the embodiment of the American dream, she said her priorities in Washington will be reducing inflation, improving border security and stopping what Republicans say is a “weaponization” of government against conservatives.

    “Do you want somebody who truly represents the people or do you want somebody from the D.C. swamp?” she said during last week’s debate. “I will represent you with pride and transparency.”

  • US election 2024 live updates: Trump launches insults at final rally as Harris ends campaign promising to ‘get to work’ | US elections 2024

    Trump insults opponents at final Michigan rally

    In Michigan, Trump then goes on to talk insultingly about President Joe Biden, former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, and representative Adam Schiff, the lead investigator in Trump’s first impeachment.

    “Joe Biden in one of his crazy moments said that we were all garbage,” Trump remarked adding “They stole the election from a president,” in apparent reference to Biden’s dropping out of the campaign to be replaced by Harris.

    The crowd cheers as Donald Trump arrives to speak at a campaign rally in Grand Rapids, Michigan.
    The crowd cheers as Donald Trump arrives to speak at a campaign rally in Grand Rapids, Michigan. Photograph: Carlos Osorio/AP

    He then says of Pelosi “she’s a crooked person … evil, sick, crazy b… oh no! It starts with a ‘b’ but I won’t say it! I wanna say it.”

    He said of “Adam Shifty Schiff”: “He’s got the biggest head, he’s an unattractive guy both inside and out.”

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    Key events

    After touting Joe Rogan’s endorsement of him, Trump has invited his daughter-in-law Lara Trump, the co-chair of the National Republican Committee, to take the mic.

    She says “we send a loud and clear message” to “the mainstream media” and “the swamp” among other people “that it is we who get to choose the president”.

    She says it has been “a very special night for our family”, adding “it has been my honour to be a part of this family, to be out speaking on behalf of a man whom I love … who is going to save this country and is going to save the world.”

    It’s approaching 2am in Michigan.

    Trump has now called his family up to the stage, including his sons Eric and Donald Jr, Tiffany Trump and her husband Michael Boulos and Eric’s wife Lara, who is the co-chair of the National Republican Committee.

    His daughter Ivanka Trump, who was a White House advisor to him during his first term, and his wife Melania, are notable by their absence.

    Trump has given shoutouts to a list of people supporting him, including Arkansas governor Sarah Huckabee Sanders and the ambassador to Germany during his time in office, Rick Grenell.

    He goes into a story about former chancellor Angela Merkel, saying that when Grenell “was taken out it was the happiest day of her life”.

    At one point he adds as an aside, “We can’t let them forget that we stopped that big Chinese plant in Mexico!” and “Let’s put it this way if they build it theyre going to lose their ass”. It wasn’t clear who or what plant he was referring to – see our earlier post.

    The crowds are reportedly beginning to thin out at Trump’s rally in Michigan. He’s been talking for over an hour now.

    As the clock ticked past 1am in Grand Rapids, the crowd at this final Trump rally began to thin. Trump has brought much more energy here than he did in Pittsburgh but it’s getting laaaate.

    — Garrett Haake (@GarrettHaake) November 5, 2024

    It’s 1.30am in Michigan and Trump has now moved back to talking about cutting energy prices and the cost of groceries again.

    He tells a familiar story about an old woman going into a shop to buy three apples but only being able to afford two and having to put one back in the fridge (“refrigeration”). It’s not clear where or when this happened.

    “That shouldn’t be happening in our country,” he says.

    After some more insults hurled at Kamala Harris and California governor Gavin Newsom, Trump begins making further inflammatory remarks about immigration, accusing Harris of wanting open borders and of allowing an “invasion” of immigrants including those from “mental institutions”.

    “The day I take office the migrant invasion ends,” he says, later adding that we “live in an occupied country”.

    He also repeats his call for the death penalty for any illegal immigrant who kills and American citizen and his plan to ban sanctuary cities.

    Trump has promised to restore and expand his most controversial immigration policies, including the travel ban aimed at mostly Muslim countries. He has consistently promised to stage the “largest deportation operation in American history”.

    Trump talks briefly about groceries (“People say ‘groceries,’ right? I haven’t used tha … it’s such a sort of an old term.”)

    Then he talks for a while about the attempt to assassinate him in Pennsylvania in July. He calls his survival a “miracle” and at one point mentions that “illegal immigration saved me” although I didn’t catch how.

    He then moves into an anecdote about visiting Abraham Lincoln’s bedroom with Melania Trump. He says that the assassinated president suffered from “melancholia” and adds that: “He was very tall, he was six foot six, that’s the equivalent of a Barron Trump today … the bed was very long.”

    After a few asides about Melania’s book, he returns to the theme of the attempt on his life.

    Trump has returned to the theme of plants and Mexico, telling a convoluted story about a businessman friend and China’s intention to build a plant in Mexico which was going “to destroy Michigan”.

    He says that his threats to “put a 100% tariff on every single car coming out of that plant” had led to a decision not to build the purported plant.

    “I saved Detroit and Michigan a lot and I did that without even being president,” he claims.

    It’s not clear what plant he’s referring to. Newsweek has previously reported after similar remarks he made at the end of last month that his campaign could not confirm what plant it was but that it appeared to be one planned by auto manufacturer BYD and that there was no evidence the claim was true.

    Trump and Harris get three votes each as election kicks off in New Hampshire

    Jonathan Yerushalmy

    Jonathan Yerushalmy

    Kamala Harris and Donald Trump have tied with three votes each in the tiny New Hampshire town which traditionally kicks off voting on election day.

    Since the 1960’s, voters in Dixville Notch, located close to the border with Canada, have gathered just after midnight to cast their ballots. Votes are then counted and results announced – hours before other states even open their polls.

    According to CNN, four Republicans and two undeclared voters participated took part in the vote just after midnight on Tuesday.

    Town Moderator Tom Tillotson, left, accepts the first ballot from Les Otten during the midnight vote on Election Day in Dixville Notch, N.H. Photograph: Charles Krupa/AP

    Trump then launches into some familiar insults of Kamala Harris and Hillary Clinton of whom he says, “She called me and conceded [presumably eight years ago] and then spent seven years saying how she was a good sport.”

    He calls Harris a “low IQ person” and then begins on a long story about Elon Musk and his rockets.

    Trump insults opponents at final Michigan rally

    In Michigan, Trump then goes on to talk insultingly about President Joe Biden, former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, and representative Adam Schiff, the lead investigator in Trump’s first impeachment.

    “Joe Biden in one of his crazy moments said that we were all garbage,” Trump remarked adding “They stole the election from a president,” in apparent reference to Biden’s dropping out of the campaign to be replaced by Harris.

    The crowd cheers as Donald Trump arrives to speak at a campaign rally in Grand Rapids, Michigan. Photograph: Carlos Osorio/AP

    He then says of Pelosi “she’s a crooked person … evil, sick, crazy b… oh no! It starts with a ‘b’ but I won’t say it! I wanna say it.”

    He said of “Adam Shifty Schiff”: “He’s got the biggest head, he’s an unattractive guy both inside and out.”

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    In Michigan, Trump claims to have done 930 rallies during his campaign, which I can’t confirm. Then he continues:

    If you make one slip up and you know I wrote a beautiful speech I haven’t even gotten to it yet … rarely do they ever catch me making a mistake!

    Those ellipses are covering for a series of meandering comments which included remarks on his use of teleprompters and the state of the country.

    Trump starts his rally in Michigan apparently talking about his first election run, saying “we were given a three per cent chance” in Michigan and then begins a series of rambling remarks about Detroit, (“I’ve heard a lot about Detroit”) and adds “We killed the plant in Mexico”. It’s not clear what he was referring to.

    He then moved on to immigration, saying the US was suffering the “invasion of some of the biggest criminals in the world… we’re going to end that immediately.”

    “We don’t have to live this way,” he adds.

    Then he moves on to Kamala Harris, mocking her and claiming, “Nobody knew who the hell she was.” He then made some more inflammatory comments about transgender people .

    Photograph: Carlos Osorio/Reuters
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    Trump has finally arrived at his final rally in Grand Rapids, Michigan, almost two and a half hours behind schedule.

    Rachel Leingang

    Rachel Leingang

    A few dozen conservative voters gathered at a Phoenix park to launch a canvass with Turning Point Action the night before the election, pulling up an app to get names and locations of voters they could talk to and convince to head to the polls.

    Turning Point, the conservative youth organization, has run its “chase the vote” program in Arizona and Wisconsin to reach low propensity voters. Monday’s “super chase” canvass involved a data-driven approach to a part of town that the group says has right-leaning voters who haven’t yet turned in ballots.

    “We actually modeled this program around a lot of what the Democrats have built in years prior,” said Andrew Kolvet, the group’s spokesman.

    People from 47 states have come to Arizona and Wisconsin to volunteer with the group to turn out voters, Kolvet said. At the Phoenix park, teams of at least two – often wearing red Maga hats and toting clipboards – set off to knock some doors.

    “The job is not to convince a swing voter necessarily, or to convince a Democrat to vote Republican,” Kolvet said. “These are people that we know are probably our people that just haven’t got their vote in.”

    Registered Republicans have so far turned in more ballots than their Democratic counterparts in Arizona, a reversal of the last two cycles when Republicans trailed in early voting (though Republicans before 2020 often had a lead in early votes).

    “We’re feeling as good as we could feel,” Kolvet said. “I’m not predicting victory. I’m just saying we have done the hard work and set the state up to have a really good day tomorrow. Anything could happen.”

    Harris ends campaign ‘with energy, with joy’ at final rally in Philadelphia

    Lauren Gambino

    Lauren Gambino

    Dispatch from Philadelphia: Kamala Harris has run a remarkable 107-day presidential campaign, the shortest in modern political history.

    It began on a Sunday morning with a call from the president saying he was stepping down. On election eve, hours before polls opened, she finished the final speech of a campaign she cast as a fight for American democracy.

    But Harris has also sought to inject hope and optimism into her campaign.

    “Tonight, then, we finish, as we started with optimism with energy, with joy,” she said.

    “Generations before us led the fight for freedom, and now the baton is in our hands,” she said.

    “We need to get to work and get out the vote,” she concluded.

    US vice-president Kamala Harris (R) and US second gentleman Doug Emhoff. Photograph: Matthew Hatcher/AFP/Getty Images
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    Georgia poll worker arrested over bomb threat, prosecutors say

    A Georgia poll worker was arrested on Monday on US charges that he sent a letter threatening to bomb election workers that he wrote to appear as if it came from a voter in the presidential election battleground state. Reuters reports:

    Federal prosecutors said Nicholas Wimbish, 25, had been serving as a poll worker at the Jones County Elections Office in Gray, Georgia, on Oct. 16 when he got into a verbal altercation with a voter.

    The next day, Wimbish mailed a letter to the county’s elections superintendent that was drafted to appear as if it came from that same voter, prosecutors said. The letter complained that Wimbish was a “closeted liberal election fraudster” who had been distracting voters in line to cast ballots, according to charging papers.

    Authorities said the letter, signed by a “Jones county voter,” said Wimbish and others “should look over their shoulder” and warned that people would “learn a violent lesson about stealing our elections!”

    Prosecutors said the letter ended with a handwritten note: “PS boom toy in early vote place, cigar burning, be safe.”

    Wimbish was charged with mailing a bomb threat, conveying false information about a bomb threat, mailing a threatening letter, and making false statements to the FBI, prosecutors said. A lawyer for Wimbish could not be immediately identified.

    Georgia is one of seven closely contested states expected to decide the outcome of Tuesday’s presidential election match up between Republican former President Donald Trump and Democratic Vice President Kamala Harris.

    Concerns about potential political violence have prompted officials to take a variety of measures to bolster security during and after Election Day.

  • Polling Map for Kamala Harris vs. Donald Trump

    Polling Map for Kamala Harris vs. Donald Trump

    We’ve created a Harris vs. Trump polling map. This will replace the Biden vs. Trump polling map that is no longer being updated.

    The polling map does not consider forecasts of how the election will go in November. It is best thought of as an ‘if the election was today’ view of things.

    State-level polling for the nascent general election match-up is extremely limited to this point, but should become more plentiful in the weeks ahead.

    Given the lack of polling, each state on the map is rated based on the following methodology:

    1. The calculated Harris vs. Trump polling average (if multiple qualifying polls) or most recent poll (if only one)
    2. If nothing available in #1, we use the Biden vs. Trump average (or most recent poll if only one) as of July 21, the date of the president’s withdrawal
    3. If nothing available in #2, we use the 2020 margin between Trump and Biden

  • الاستخبارات الأميركية تكثف تحذيراتها بشأن التدخل الأجنبي في الانتخابات

    الاستخبارات الأميركية تكثف تحذيراتها بشأن التدخل الأجنبي في الانتخابات

    كثف كبار مسؤولي الاستخبارات الأميركية، يوم الاثنين، تحذيراتهم بشأن التدخل الأجنبي في الانتخابات، خصوصا من جانب روسيا.

    وجاء هذا القلق من مكتب مديري الاستخبارات الوطنية ومكتب التحقيقات الاتحادي ووكالة الأمن السيبراني وأمن البنية التحتية، بعد تحذيرات صدرت يوم الجمعة بشأن هذا التدخل. وقالت الوكالات الثلاث إنها “رصدت خصوما أجانب، وخصوصا روسيا، يقومون بعمليات تأثير إضافية تهدف إلى تقويض ثقة الجمهور في نزاهة الانتخابات الأميركية وإثارة الانقسامات بين الأميركيين”.

    وأوضحت أن هذه الجهود ستتكثف طوال يوم الثلاثاء، يوم الانتخابات، وما بعده، وستكون مركزة على الولايات السبع الرئيسية التي قد تحسم الفائز في التصويت وهي: أريزونا ونيفادا وميشيجان وويسكونسن وبنسلفانيا وجورجيا ونورث كارولاينا. وجاء في البيان المشترك: “تعد روسيا التهديد الأكثر نشاطا”.

    وقال الفريق إن “جهات التأثير” المرتبطة بروسيا تنتج مقاطع فيديو وأخبارا مزيفة لتقويض شرعية الانتخابات، وتخويف الناخبين من العملية، وإيهامهم بأن اشخاصا من ذوي الآراء السياسية المعاكسة يستخدمون العنف ضد بعضهم بعضا.

    وأضافت الوكالات: “هذه الجهود قد تثير العنف، بما في ذلك ضد مسؤولي الانتخابات”. وتابعت: “نتوقع أن يقوم الفاعلون الروس بنشر محتوى مصطنع إضافي بهذه المواضيع خلال يوم الانتخابات وفي الأيام والأسابيع التي تلي إغلاق صناديق الاقتراع”.

    وأضاف البيان: “هؤلاء الفاعلون قاموا أيضا بإنتاج وتضخيم مقطع فيديو حديث يصور بشكل زائف مقابلة مع شخص يدعي وجود تزوير انتخابي في أريزونا لدعم نائبة الرئيس كمالا هاريس”. وأضاف: “سكرتير ولاية أريزونا نفى بالفعل الادعاء الوارد في الفيديو باعتباره كاذبا”.

    وجاء في البيان أيضا أن إيران أطلقت “أنشطة سيبرانية خبيثة” تهدف إلى التأثير سلبا على ترمب. كما تحاول الحكومة في طهران التأثير على الانتخابات من خلال مقاطع فيديو ومنشورات مزيفة تهدف إلى تأجيج العنف. وأضاف مسؤولو الاستخبارات أن إيران لا تزال مصممة على الثأر لمقتل قاسم سليماني، الذي قتل في العراق في غارة جوية أميركية بأمر من ترامب في يناير (كانون الثاني) 2020.

  • رئيس “العربية لحقوق الإنسان”: تقدمنا بتقريرين لآلية الاستعراض الدورى الشامل

    رئيس “العربية لحقوق الإنسان”: تقدمنا بتقريرين لآلية الاستعراض الدورى الشامل


    قال علاء شلبى رئيس المنظمة العربية لحقوق الإنسان، إن المنظمة تعتزم المشاركة في الدورة الرابعة لآلية الاستعراض الدوري الشامل لحقوق الإنسان في يناير 2025 في جنيف لمتابعة مناقشة تقريري مصر والعراق المقدمين إلى الآلية، وذلك عبر إيفاد وفد يضم عدد من أعضاء مجلس الأمناء من 4 دول عربية لمتابعة مناقشات التقريرين.


    وأشارعلاء شلبى في تصريحات لـ”اليوم السابع”، الى عزم المنظمة المشاركة أيضاً في جلسة اعتماد نتائج الاستعراض لكلا الدولتين خلال دورة مجلس حقوق الإنسان المقبلة في مارس المقبل، موضحا أن المنظمة تقدمت بتقريرين في سياق تقارير أصحاب المصلحة لآلية الاستعراض الدوري الشامل لحقوق الإنسان بالأمم المتحدة في يوليو الماضي بشأن استعراض وضع حقوق الإنسان في كل من مصر والعراق.


    ولفت علاء شلبى الى أن المنظمة شاركت في المجموعة الاستشارية للاستعراض الدوري الشامل في مصر والتي شكلتها اللجنة العليا الدائمة لحقوق الإنسان في أغسطس 2024، كما شاركت في جلسة التشاور التي نظمتها لجنة حقوق الإنسان بمجلس النواب خلال اكتوبر 2024، وتقدمت بعدد من التوصيات، يتقدمها الإسراع بإقرار قانون الإجراءات الجنائية الجديد على النحو الذي وعد به رئيس مجلس النواب خلال شهري يونيو ويوليو 2024، مع الاهتمام لمعالجة بعض بواعث القلق التي أثيرت حول مشروع القانون وفق المسودة القديمة التي تم تداولها في بداية سبتمبر 2024.  


    وتابع رئيس المنظمة العربية لحقوق الانسان :”كما دعت المنظمة لاستئناف المشاورات التي بادرت إليها اللجنة العليا الدائمة لحقوق الإنسان في يونيو 2023 لتحديث قانون العقوبات العتيق 1937، بالإضافة للإسراع بإنشاء المفوضية الوطنية لمناهضة التمييز وفق المادة 53 من الدستور ضمن استحقاقات تفعيل الاستراتيجية الوطنية لحقوق الإنسان في عامها الرابع”.

     

  • Conservative Christians, Israel and the US vote in 2024 election | US Election 2024 News

    Conservative Christians, Israel and the US vote in 2024 election | US Election 2024 News

    Trump and the Republican party continue to connect with several segments of Christian voters, a diverse group of denominations that spans racial identities and political perspectives.

    A Pew Research poll released in September found Trump commanded 82 percent of white evangelical Protestant voters, 58 percent of white non-evangelical Protestant voters, and 52 percent of Catholics. Harris, meanwhile, had 86 percent of support among Black Protestants, a group that has long skewed heavily Democratic.

    Those numbers are especially significant in a swing state like Georgia, which carries 16 Electoral votes and went to US President Joe Biden in 2020 by less than 12,000 votes. It was the first time the state had gone to a Democratic presidential candidate in 18 years.

    White evangelical Protestants – themselves divided into several sub-denominations – account for 38 percent of Georgia’s population. That is by far the largest segment of any religious group, followed by Black Protestants at 17 percent.

    Cindye and Stan Coates are seen outside of 'Believers for Trump' event
    Cindye and Stan Coates say they do not agree with the emphasis on Israel support from Republicans ahead of the vote [Joseph Stepansky/Al Jazeera]

    Evangelicals remain some of the staunchest supporters of Israel, according to a recent analysis of polling by the Chicago Council on Global Affairs. The entrenched support is rooted, in part, in some segments of the denomination that believe that Jewish people must be in control of Jerusalem for the second coming of Jesus, which will beckon in the Rapture, when living and dead Christians alike will rise to heaven.

    Polls have shown that up to 82 percent of white evangelical Protestants believe that Israel was given to the Jewish people by God, according to the analysis.

    The group is the most supportive of Israel out of all Christian denominations – at least 60 percent say they fully oppose putting any arms restrictions on Israel, while 64 percent believe that Israel’s actions in Gaza are justified.

    But the polls also show a more complicated story: Thirty-three percent of White evangelicals say they support some form of restrictions on aid to Israel, with another 11 percent reporting that they feel Israel has gone too far in the war on Gaza.

    That may be a reflection of wider trends within the Republican party, with a Data for Progress poll in October showing 52 percent of Republicans aged 18 to 29 supported an arms embargo on Israel.

    Speaking to Al Jazeera after buying a black “Make America Great Again” bucket hat in Austell, 20-year-old voter Troy said he was among those who were uncomfortable with continued aid to Israel, which he broadly categorised with other forms of foreign assistance, including large transfers to Ukraine amid Russia’s invasion.

    “I don’t really understand why Israel is that big of an issue in this election cycle,” said Troy, who declined to give his last name, but identified himself as an Anabaptist Protestant.

    “I don’t think the United States should be so involved in anything overseas like that. We keep sending billions to Ukraine, there are still people reeling from the hurricane that came through,” he said, referring to Hurricane Helene, which ravaged Georgia in September.

    For his part, Trump has framed himself as a “protector” of Israel, even as he has broadly claimed that the October 7 attack on southern Israel, which killed at least 1,139 people, and the war that has spiralled since would not have happened on his watch. Still, speaking during a debate in July, he said US President Joe Biden should allow Israel to “finish the job” in Gaza, and has also claimed to speak to Netanyahu on a near daily basis.

  • Republican Jim Banks, Democrat Valerie McCray vying for Indiana’s open Senate seat

    Republican Jim Banks, Democrat Valerie McCray vying for Indiana’s open Senate seat

    INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Republican Jim Banks, an outspoken supporter of former President Donald Trump, is seeking to capture Indiana’s open U.S. Senate seat in the reliably conservative state against Democrat Valerie McCray.

    Banks, 45, is strongly favored to win the Senate race in the Hoosier state, which Trump won by large margins in 2016 and 2020.

    Banks is a combative defender of Trump who voted against certifying Joe Biden’s presidential election victory after a mob of Trump supporters stormed the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. He had no challenger in the May primary after a series of legal battles ultimately removed egg farmer John Rust from the Republican ballot.

    The sitting congressman represents northeastern Indiana’s 3rd District. He passed on another House term to run for the Senate seat being vacated by fellow Republican Mike Braun who is vying for the Indiana governor’s office. Current Republican Gov. Eric Holcomb is term-limited.

    McCray, a clinical psychologist from Indianapolis, is a political newcomer whose name is appearing on a statewide ballot for the first time. In 2022, she sought to challenge Republican U.S. Sen. Todd Young in his reelection bid but didn’t get enough signatures to secure a spot on the Democratic primary ballot. The Senate seat Young holds will next be up for election in 2028.

    In this year’s May Democratic primary, McCray, 65, defeated trade association executive Marc Carmichael, a former state representative, to become the first Black woman chosen as an Indiana mainstream party’s nominee for U.S. Senate.

    McCray and Libertarian candidate Andy Horning met for the only Senate debate on Oct. 29, but Banks did not attend.

    Michael Wolf, a professor of political science and department chairman at Purdue-Fort Wayne, said Banks and McCray have largely parroted their national parties’ talking points in the leadup to Election Day, with Banks emphasizing border security and immigration and McCray healthcare and abortion rights.

    He said Banks is a “formidable candidate who’s got name recognition” and a well funded campaign that didn’t have to spend on a GOP primary race because he had no challenger.

    While Wolf said Democrats have been energized by McCray’s candidacy, he notes that the party hasn’t had much luck in statewide elections in recent years as Indiana voters have grown more conservative.

    “She’s got a lot of work to do and she’s working against trends,” he said.

  • Cardi B says Harris inspired her to vote as candidates hold dueling Wisconsin rallies – as it happened | US elections 2024

    Supreme court rejects Republican argument on Pennsylvania ballot counting: AP

    The supreme court on Friday rejected an emergency appeal from Republicans that could have led to thousands of provisional ballots not being counted in Pennsylvania, the Associated Press reports.

    The justices left in place a state supreme court ruling that elections officials must count provisional ballots cast by voters whose mail-in ballots were rejected.

    As of Thursday, about 9,000 ballots out of more than 1.6 million returned have arrived at elections offices around Pennsylvania lacking a secrecy envelope, a signature or a date, according to state records.

    Pennsylvania is the biggest presidential election battleground this year, with 19 electoral votes. Donald Trump won the state in 2016, then lost it in 2020.

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    Key events

    Summary

    Donald Trump and Kamala Harris campaigned in midwest swing states today, ending with dueling rallies in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, seen as a crucial state to win. Here are some of today’s key updates from myself and my colleagues:

    • Cardi B spoke at Harris’ Milwaukee rally, saying that she had not been planning to vote in this presidential election, but that Harris convinced her to do so. She called Harris an “underdog” whose accomplishments as a woman have been repeatedly demeaned and underestimated.

    • Despite facing criticism over saying yesterday that his prominent Republican critic Liz Cheney should have rifles shooting at her, Trump revisited his remarks about Cheney and her father Dick Cheney, calling her a war hawk and a coward. Harris had called Trump’s rhetoric about Cheney “disqualifying”.

    • The supreme court rejected an emergency appeal from Republicans that could have led to thousands of provisional ballots not being counted in Pennsylvania, and left in place a state supreme court ruling that election officials must count provisional ballots cast by voters whose mail-in ballots were rejected.

    • Trump visited Dearborn, Michigan, to tout his support among Arab Americans and Muslim Americans who are angry with the Biden Harris administration over their support for Israel and the human death toll in Gaza and Lebanon. While key Arab American leaders chose not to meet with Trump, some called his in-person visit important, and criticized Harris and the Democratic party.

    • Dearborn’s Democratic mayor, Abdullah Hammoud, posted on X, “The architect of the Muslim Ban is making a campaign stop in Dearborn…To the Dems – your unwillingness to stop funding & enabling a genocide created the space for Trump to infiltrate our communities. Remember that.”

    • The prominent vaccine skeptic Robert F Kennedy Jr campaigned for Trump in Michigan and Wisconsin, earning big cheers from Trump supporters as the former third-party candidate reportedly is aiming for a major healthcare role in Trump’s White House.

    • A federal judge on Friday denied an attempt by America Pac – the political action committee founded by Elon Musk to support Donald Trump’s campaign for a second presidency – to move to federal court a civil suit brought by the Philadelphia district attorney over a daily $1m prize draw for registered voters. A hearing was scheduled in Pennsylvania state court on Monday, the day before the election.

    • Arizona’s attorney general has launched an investigation into whether Donald Trump violated state law through his violent rhetoric against Liz Cheney. In a statement to 12News on Friday, attorney general Kris Mayes said: “I have already asked my criminal division chief to start looking at that statement, analyzing it for whether it qualifies as a death threat under Arizona’s laws.”

    • The justice department announced on Friday it is deploying election monitors in 86 jurisdictions in 27 states for the general election on 5 November. “The Justice Department enforces federal voting rights laws that protect the rights of all eligible citizens to access the ballot,” an official statement said. “The department regularly deploys its staff to monitor for compliance with federal civil rights laws in elections in communities all across the country.”

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    Trump has wrapped up his Milwaukee rally, not long before 11 pm local time.

    Despite the late hour, the crowd in Milwaukee rose to its feet to give him a standing ovation as Donald Trump listed off the actions he would take against migrants who commit crimes, the Associated Press reports.

    Trump has centered his campaign on hardline tactics to stop illegal immigration, including the death penalty for migrants who are in the country illegally and kill an American citizen.

    We are counting down to just three days and a few hours before the 2024 election, and Donald Trump is still riffing to a crowd of supporters in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, as Kamala Harris has already arrived at her hotel for the night, according to the White House pool reporter.

    Harris’ Milwaukee speech tonight was short, peppy, and relentlessly on message. Trump, as is his style, is rambling, hitting his attack lines on the economy and immigration, but also making extraneous attacks, such as criticizing the hair of ABC anchor David Muir, saying 60 Minutes should be shut down, and complaining that he is not allowed to call the Democratic governor of Illinois fat. (Again, he is in Wisconsin.)

    “Is there a chance she would resign before the election? Three days?” Trump asks of his Democratic competitor, Kamala Harris. It’s not clear why Trump is airing this idea, other than as part of his claim that Harris looks “rattled”.

    “I actually think they should have left Joe, he would have done just as well, maybe better,” Trump says.

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    Now Trump, speaking in Wisconsin, is attacking the Democratic governor of Illinois, JB Pritzker.

    “I am not allowed to use the fat word. That’s the other word you cannot use,” Trump says, to some laughter from the crowd. “You are not allowed to use the fat word so I will not do it, but that guy is disgusting.”

    “I took a lot of heat about two months ago because I said, ‘I think women like me, I do, I think the suburban housewives like me,” Trump said. There are high-pitched cheers from the audience.

    “I think they like me because they know I’m going to protect them,” Trump says.

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    Talking about his plans for mass deportation of migrants, and expediting deportation of gang members, Trump says that he will invoke the Alien Enemies Act of 1798, and said that it’s “incredible” that “we had to go back so far” to find the law he needed.

    “That’s when we ran a tough country,” he says, of the year 1798.

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    It is past 10pm in Milwaukee and Donald Trump is still talking. He is riffing freely, criticizing journalist David Muir’s hair, and revisiting what he saw as the unfairness of his debate against Kamala Harris, which Muir moderated.

    Then he spoke about his lawsuit against CBS News and 60 Minutes, saying it “should be forced to close”.

    Trump sounds a bit tired, and he is delivering his attack lines in a gentler tone that he did earlier in the day in Michigan.

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    “You were a very difficult state,” Trump says of Wisconsin, talking about how hard the state was for him to win in 2016, and then falsely claiming that he actually won the state again in 2020. (He did not.)

    The AP has a fact check of Trump’s comments just now on the economy, and what his comments leave out: two major hurricanes as well as big strikes.

    Donald Trump is saying that the US jobs report today, which showed that employers added 12,000 jobs in October, showed that the Biden-Harris administration is failing on the economy. Last month’s hiring gain was down significantly from the 223,000 jobs that were added in September.

    “This is like a depression,” Trump said of the numbers as he heaped insults on Harris.

    Economists estimate that Hurricanes Helene and Milton, combined with strikes at Boeing and elsewhere, pushed down net job growth by tens of thousands of jobs in October.

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    Kamala Harris appears to be wrapping up her speech, urging her supporters to remind everyone they know to vote, and to reach out to people through text and conversation.

    “Let’s please be intentional about building community,” she adds. “There’s something intentional about this whole Trump era. It’s been powered by this idea that Americans should be pointing fingers at each other, and to make people feel alone and to make people feel small, when we all know we have so much more in common than what separates us.”

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    “I love Gen Z. I really do,” Kamala Harris laughs, talking about “all the younger leaders I see who are voting for the very first time.”

    “Here’s what I love about you guys. You are rightly impatient for change. I love that about you. You are determined to live free from gun violence. You are going to take on the climate crisis. You are going to shape the world you inherit. I know that. I know that.”

    “And here’s the thing about our young leaders. None of this is theoretical for them. None of this is political for them. It’s their lived experience. It’s your lived experience, and I see your power, I see your power, and I am so proud of you.”

    “I see her today … she’s exhausted. She looks like … she’s exhausted,” Trump says of Kamala Harris, at his Milwaukee rally.

    Harris is simultaneously speaking very energetically to her cheering crowd a few miles away.

    Both Trump and Harris are performing with a surprising deal of energy tonight after a long day of travel and multiple swing state events.

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    The crowd at Trump’s rally has been frustrated with the sound levels in the Fiserv Forum in Milwaukee, even chanting earlier, “Fix the mic!” the Associated Press reports.

    Trump eventually got the message and ripped the microphone from the podium to hold it closer to his mouth. “I think this mic stinks,” Trump said.

    Trump has been jumping from topic to topic, mentioning that this is his third campaign rally today, then referencing his rally at New York’s Madison Square Garden nearly a week ago, and then hurling insults at his Democratic rival.

    In two different venues across Milwaukee and its suburbs, both Donald Trump and Kamala Harris’ Wisconsin crowds have been waiting hours to hear the candidates speak, and both crowds sound fired up and enthusiastic.

  • 100 Days Until the 2024 Presidential Election

    100 Days Until the 2024 Presidential Election

    Sunday, July 28 marks 100 days until the November 5 presidential election.

    Interest in the election – at least in terms of visits to 270toWin – has picked up significantly since the debate in late June, and has accelerated since President Biden’s subsequent withdrawal from the race last Sunday. July visitor traffic has doubled since the same month in 2020.

    As a nice round number, there will be no shortage of articles mentioning ‘100 days until the election’. Here are links to a few of them.

    Polls

    There have been quite a number of Harris vs. Trump polls released in recent days. Broadly speaking, Trump still holds a small edge, but the race seems to have tightened since Biden’s withdrawal and endorsement of the Vice President.