Quantcast
Channel: BuzzFeed News
Viewing all 15742 articles
Browse latest View live

Rubio On Decking Kid With Football: "We Have Some Work To Do With That Young Man"

$
0
0

“Hey listen, the quarterback’s always gonna get the blame.”

"I felt bad for the kid. Hey listen, the quarterback's always gonna get the blame. I need to put the ball a little out front the next time. I thought it was a good throw, but we have some work to do with that young man. I'm looking forward to next time. I put up on Twitter yesterday, 'the quarterback always gets the blame.' We had a great time in Iowa."

- Florida Sen. Marco Rubio to the Simon Conway Show this week on (accidentally) decking a kid in the face with a football during a visit to Iowa.


View Entire List ›


How Trump 2016 Ends

$
0
0

4. He stops going far enough

5. He leaves the country

6. The country forgets to vote

7. He bows out because he is confronted with the reality that he will win

8. Hillary Clinton tells him he can stop running

9. He jumps into the Democratic primary

10. He is weakened, spiritually

11. His supporters turn on him for a reason that can’t yet be predicted

12. His supporters leave the country

13. His supporters are revealed to be, to their surprise, undocumented immigrants and therefore unable to vote, and we are also revealed to not be who we believe ourselves to be in both literal and figurative ways, as in the Twilight Zone movie — the one with John Lithgow — and as a freshman philosophy seminar-esque mass hysteria envelops the United States as we consider what identity actually means, the election is postponed

14. His organization struggles to meet the existing requirements to get him on the ballot in various states

15. State Republican Parties begin changing rules to make it more difficult for him to appear on the ballot in various states

16. A tiger eats him

17. Tigers eat most living Republicans

18. The tigers nominate John Kasich

Donald Trump Once Saved A Woman's Farm From Foreclosure

$
0
0

“The only way I can explain it was God touched his heart.”

New York Magazine

It was September 1986, and Annabel Hill, 66, was facing an auction where she would lose the farm that had been in her family for five generations.

Hill's husband, Lenard, had committed suicide eight months earlier, 20 minutes before a scheduled auction, in a last-ditch attempt to save his property with life insurance money. The life insurance money wasn't enough, covering only $175,000 of debts than ran in excess of $300,000, from two years of a drought that Hill said had ruined their livelihood. Even when several hundred acres of the 1,300-acre Waynesboro, Georgia, farm were sold, the now-widowed Annabel still found herself deep in debt and facing an auction.

That's when real estate tycoon Donald Trump and a series of other personalities stepped in to help save Hill's farm.

The push to save Hill's farm began with Frank Argenbright, a well-regarded Atlanta businessman. Argenbright had helped another farmer keep his land, according to reports. Argenbright asked Hill to appear at a news conference with him in the city. That news conference made its way onto NBC's Nightly News and was watched Trump.

"I saw a story on the news about Annabel Hill, who'd hit bottom," The Donald writes in his book The America We Deserve.

"It was a very sad situation, and I was moved," Trump writes in The Art of the Deal. "Here were people who'd worked very hard and honestly all their lives, only to see it all crumble before them. To me, it just seemed wrong."

Trump reached out to Argenbright, who was able to put Trump in touch with bank that held Hill's mortgage.

"The next morning, I called and got some vice president on the line," writes Trump. "I explained that I was a businessman from New York, and that I was interested in helping Mrs. Hill. He told me he was sorry, but that it was too late. They were going to auction off the farm, he said, and 'nothing or no one is going to stop it.'"

It was then, Trump claims, he decided to talk tough to the banker.

"That really got me going," he writes. "I said to the guy: 'You listen to me. If you do foreclose, I'll personally bring a lawsuit for murder against you and your bank, on the grounds that you harassed Mrs. Hill's husband to his death.' All of a sudden the bank officer sounded very nervous and said he'd get right back to me. Sometimes it pays to be a little wild."

"An hour later I got a call back from the banker, and he said, 'Don't worry, we're going to work it out, Mr. Trump.'"

At a press conference at the entrance to the Burke County Courthouse where the foreclosure sale was set to begin, Argenbright and members of the Hill family discussed their plan to save the farm. Neighbors and friends of the Hills, who had planned to console the family after their sale, were instead "stunned" with the news of a rescue plan, according to the Chicago Tribune.

Argenbright and Trump had put up the money with Federal Land Bank that morning for a 30-day option to purchase the farmland. The auction was called off less than two hours before it was to begin.

"It was a business decision that waiting a month doesn't put the bank in any worse position, and [the earnest money shows] that this is no sham," the bank's manager said. "In this case, there was a lot of cooperation and effort on their part. We don't always get that in foreclosure cases."

Annabel Hill told the media her husband "would be overjoyed with the idea that the land will be saved. Truly, I don't believe he will have died in vain, because one of these days this land will be coming back to the Hill family, and crops will be raised on it again."

During the 30-day option period, a donation drive to collect the $187,000 necessary to pay the debt was launched. It instantly took off, thanks in no small part to Trump's celebrity and his connections.

"By the end of the week, we'd raised $40,000. [Don] Imus alone raised almost $20,000 by appealing to his listeners," writes Trump in The Art of the Deal. After a successful swarm of donations the debt still stood at $78,000.

That was when Trump offered to help pay half and Dallas farmer and landowner Tom McKamy matched Trump's offer.

"Financially this was obviously no big deal," writes Trump in The America We Deserve. "But in human terms, there aren't words to express what Annabel Hill gave to me. Most of us have a few things in life we would never give back, no matter what. Helping Annabel is that way for me."

That Christmas, at the atrium of the Trump Tower, The Donald and Annabel Hill, flanked by the media and others who had donated, burned Hill's mortgage.

"It feels wonderful, it really does — especially at this time of the year," Hill said. 'I'm just so grateful to these men. It's really hard with the main person in your family gone. This kind of eases the ache a little bit."

''I never gave up hope. Farmers don't ever give up hope,'' Mrs. Hill added.

"It was unreal, almost like my mom was Cinderella," Hill's daughter Betsy told BuzzFeed News. "We couldn't believe that we were going up to New York to actually meet Donald Trump in person and sit down and have a meal with him. He was just precious to help save our farm. It was just like we couldn't believe it."

"It's nice to see that other side of a big real estate, investor and businessman to want to help such small, little unknown people," she added.

At the Christmas event, Trump, struck a similar chord to what he says today.

"We give a lot of money to foreign countries that don't give a damn about us, but we don't help the American farmers," Trump said.

Annabel Hill passed away at the age of 91 in 2011. She said about the motives of Trump's charity, "the only way I can explain it was God touched his heart."

Trump kept in touch with Hill for a while after the mortgage burning.

"I would see Annabel, whether it was in church or whether, you know, out in the community and she was always saying, 'Well, you know I'm praying for Mr. Trump, I am praying for Mr. Trump,'" Marty Baker, a pastor at the local church, told BuzzFeed News. "And she just, you know, really stayed in contact with him some and continually just prayed for him."

"I saw a side of him that was very caring, very sincere," Argenbright told Lost Tycoon author Henry Hurt in his book.

"He would call her up and check on her [even after the publicity died out]. There was no feeling of, 'well, Frank, okay, you've done the deal. Annabel's gone. The publicity is over with. There's no benefit to Donald Trump now.' Not any of that ever."

The Hills, according to Annabel's son, Jim, who spoke with BuzzFeed News by phone, had never heard of Trump before he called up their family.

"It was a small Southern town," Jim Hill said.

Jim Hill said that after their farm was saved, the family became the unofficial spokespeople for farmers losing their lands to banks in foreclosure.

"She sort of kind of became the spokesperson of the entire group of farmers that committed suicide or were losing their properties or losing the remainder of their properties," he said.

Leonard Hill, Annabel's son, who currently lives on the farm, says the family is deeply indebted to Trump.

"I've got three daughters and it allowed them to grow up on the farm," Leonard Hill told BuzzFeed News. "We have been very blessed, very blessed."

"My wife was pregnant with our youngest daughter when Mr. Trump came into the picture, and she grew up and decided to be a lawyer and went to the Catholic law school in Washington, D.C., and probably would not have been able to do that without Mr. Trump," he stated.

"We about lost our names, I wouldn't even know who I was. It was a tremendous blessing."

RNC Chairman: Trump "A Positive For Our Party"

$
0
0

“I think it’s a net positive.”

Alex Wong / Getty Images

Republican National Committee chairman Reince Priebus says he views Donald Trump as a positive force for the Republican Party.

"I think it brings a lot of interest to the Republican field," Priebus said on WISN's Upfront this weekend. "I think it's a net positive."

Priebus said Trump has "tapped into" the vein of people upset with Washington, D.C. and attributed the large ratings for the Republican debate in the beginning of August to people's increased interest in the presidential field.

"I think it is a positive for our party. When you have 30 million people watching, not to mention the fact that we have 16 other incredible candidates out there I think we are showing America that we are the young, diverse party, offering a whole slew of options for people and that's a good thing."

Priebus pointed to the Democratic nomination being a "coronation," as a contrast.

Still, Priebus said Hillary Clinton only has a "coin flip" chance of being the Democratic nominee, adding that Vice President Joe Biden is "far more likable" than Clinton.

"I think likability is the number one thing on the ballot in a presidential election," he said.

On Cats Roundtable on AM970 "The Answer," Preibus on Sunday struck a similar tone on Trump.

"To his credit, he's done a good job of getting that message out," he stated. "I mean, understanding the electorate. Knowing your audience, channeling your own concerns and frustrations in a way that the audience should best hear it and he's having a lot of success in bringing that to the table."

"He's always been good to our party. He's always been good to me personally and as chairman of the party he's been generous to us. He's a Republican running for president and we're built to support whoever the nominee should be."

w.soundcloud.com

Arizona Senator Jeff Flake On Trump Candidacy: "Offensive,""Laughable,""Not Serious"

$
0
0

“I don’t think it’s a very serious candidacy, frankly.”

View Video ›

Senator Jeff Flake, a Republican from Arizona, slammed Donald Trump last week in an interview with a local PBS-affiliate, taking aim at everything from Trump's immigration policy proposals to his past controversial statements on undocumented immigrants.

"My feelings about Mr. Trump and his candidacy are probably well known," Flake said to Arizona Horizons last week. "I've not been a fan and I saw that he just introduced his immigration plan such as it is. It's not a serious plan and I don't think it's a very serious candidacy, frankly."

Flake said Trump's rhetoric made it very difficult for the Republican Party to broaden its appeal and win national elections.

"These statements range from offensive to simply laughable," Flake said.

He called Trump's comments on fellow Arizona Sen. John McCain's war record, "the most ridiculous statement I'd ever heard."

Asked why the Donald was leading in Arizona polls, Flake said it was all about timing.

"You know the election isn't until next year and now's the time where I think people can express their displeasure at Washington -- which they're doing and justified in doing so and maybe expressing their displeasure with the status quo," he said. "But as we get into next year, and we look seriously about someone who can lead this country and lead the most powerful country in the world, then I think we tend to look a little more carefully and that will come."

Watch Trump Describe His Infant Child As Only The Donald Can

$
0
0

Meet the “tough,” “vicious,” and “violent” Barron Trump, future entrepreneur.

View Video ›

"That's Barron. He's strong, he's smart, he's tough, he's vicious, he's violent — all of the ingredients you need to be an entrepreneur, and most importantly, hopefully he's smart because smart is really the ingredient. So Barron good luck, you have a long way to go."

- Donald Trump speaking to his child as he has a star unveiled on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 2007.

Full video:

youtube.com

National Council Of La Raza President: Trump's Wall Will Be Between The GOP And Latino Voters

$
0
0

NCLR president Janet Murguia blames Trump for the beating of a Hispanic man in Boston and says the GOP’s attacks on birthright citizenship and immigration will further damage its reputation with Latinos.

Brynn Anderson / AP

Pointing to an assault against a Hispanic man last week allegedly inspired by Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump, National Council of La Raza (NCLR) president Janet Murguia said the GOP's embrace of Trump and lurch to the right on birthright citizenship and immigration could damage them in 2016 with Latino voters.

On Wednesday, two Boston white men with extensive criminal histories allegedly urinated on and beat a homeless Hispanic man, justifying their actions to police with "Donald Trump was right, all these illegals need to be deported."

"Enough is enough," Murguia said in an interview with BuzzFeed News after publishing a blog post titled Trumpification of the Republican Party Reaches Turning Point this weekend. "They must find their courage and their voice to push back on the bigotry and demagoguery Trump is promoting and reject the demonization of an entire community that now has put a target on the back of Latinos in this country."

Murguia said studies have proven that words can incite violence, citing the work of the Anti-Defamation League,

"He's going by the book to scapegoat and dehumanize a group of people," she said. "What Trump is doing now is going beyond talking about policy and being passionate. He's using words and a tone that's motivating people to take harmful actions against others."

The Anti-Defamation League has previously linked derogatory rhetoric and violence against immigrants by far-right extremists to the national debate around immigration.

But while Murguia laid the blame for the incident at Trump's feet, she said the embrace by multiple Republican candidates of his call to end birthright citizenship is also troubling, framing this stance as the antithesis of the pro-DREAMer argument. DREAMers, undocumented youth brought to the country as children, have largely been viewed sympathetically by Americans in the larger immigration debate. Ending birthright citizenship would take away citizenship from the children of undocumented immigrants.

Of the GOP candidates for president, seven have indicated they would support ending birthright citizenship, including Trump, Scott Walker, Rand Paul, Chris Christie and Rick Santorum. Walker later walked back his comments, saying that until the border is secured and immigration laws are enforced, nothing else matters.

At a big speech in Alabama Friday, Trump said 7.5% of all births in the country are to "illegal immigrants."

In 2012, Mitt Romney's comments on immigration in the primary including the idea that undocumented immigrants should "self-deport," were widely credited with hurting him in the general election.

Romney only received the support of 27% of Hispanics, and Republicans working hard to get those numbers back up to respectable levels were already worried that Trump was putting their work in jeopardy — but that was six weeks ago.

Leading the largest Hispanic civil rights organization in the country, Murguia has emerged as someone increasingly willing to challenging politicians, including Democrats. Last year she made waves and drew the ire of the administration when she called President Obama the "deporter-in-chief." This year she blasted House Republicans for refusing to advance an immigration overhaul.

Murguia said all of it — the rhetoric, the policies, the use of the controversial term "anchor baby" by Trump and Jeb Bush — will "motivate the community in a historic way, there's no question that will be the outcome of all of this."

Echoing her blog post, she said if the GOP isn't careful, this electoral energy from Hispanics won't be good for them.

"Trump may succeed in getting his wall but it will be a permanent wall between the Republican Party and Latino voters."

LINK: Donald Trump Could Seriously Damage The Real Republican Efforts To Reach Latinos

LINK: National Latino Groups Slam Donald Trump, Say His Comments About Immigrants Incite Violence


View Entire List ›

Liberal Groups Criticize Reported Immigration Detention Plans For Trans Women

$
0
0

The groups allege in a letter to President Obama that GEO Group, a private organization that runs a detention facility in Southern California, cannot be trusted to care for transgender women. GEO Group “strongly refutes” the claims.

Brendan Smialowski / AFP / Getty Images

WASHINGTON — More than 90 progressive groups are expressing concern over reports that some transgender women in immigration custody will be transferred to a facility run by an organization they allege has a history of mistreating transgender women.

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement issued new guidance in June on the treatment of transgender people in its custody. Shortly after the new guidance was issued, it was reported that some transgender women were to be moved to the Adelanto Detention Facility run by GEO Group.

On Monday, the groups — led by Immigration Equality and including the ACLU and several Latino and LGBT groups — wrote to President Obama that they "are extremely concerned about recent news that transgender women may soon be transferred to Adelanto Detention Facility in Southern California. Adelanto is run by the private GEO Group, which has a record of abusing detained people including transgender women."

Specifically, they note concerns about the availability of medical care, claims of sexual harassment, and reports of solitary confinement, concluding, "GEO Group cannot be trusted to care for transgender women or house them safely."

A spokesman for GEO Group, Pablo Paez, told BuzzFeed News, "GEO's facilities, including the Adelanto Detention Facility, provide high quality services in safe, secure, and humane residential environments, and our company strongly refutes allegations to the contrary."

He added, "During its most recent ACA accreditation audit, the Adelanto Detention Facility received a perfect score of 100%."

Notably, two of the largest Latino and LGBT rights organizations, respectively — the National Council of La Raza and the Human Rights Campaign — are not signatories to the letter.

ICE spokesperson Jennifer Elzea referred questions to the White House, given that the letter was sent to President Obama, adding, "We're confident that the agency will respond through the appropriate channels."

A White House spokesperson did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

GEO Group's Adelanto Detention Facility:

GEO Group's Adelanto Detention Facility:

Via geogroup.com

Read the letter:


View Entire List ›


Steve King On Trump's Immigration Plan: "I Support That Plan"

$
0
0

“I can say that if I have to take it all as a package or none of it I like all of it as a package, under those conditions. “

Mark Wallheiser / Getty Images

Rep. Steve King, a Republican from Iowa who has been outspoken in his opposition to illegal immigration, endorsed over the weekend Donald Trump's proposal to remove undocumented immigrants, end birthright citizenship, and build a wall on the Mexican border (that Mexico will pay for).

"Well, I read the Trump proposal that came out I believe on this past Sunday and I recognize much of what was in it and in one place or another I've introduced legislation, brought an amendment, authored legislation that reflected a good number of the principles that he had in his immigration plan," King said in a local press interview uploaded to YouTube Sunday. "So I support that plan. And I can say that if I have to take it all as a package or none of it I like all of it as a package, under those conditions. "

King said he supported Trump's call to end birthright citizenship.

"We need to put an end to it. Donald Trump sees that, as do I think a number of the other candidates," said King.

"I'm glad for Trump's policy," King said of Trump's call to build a wall on the border. "I think there are others out there that are pretty close to the same place he is. He put it in print first and I'm glad he did."

Here's the video:

youtube.com

David Duke On Trump: He's "Certainly The Best Of The Lot" Running For President

$
0
0

“I think he understands the real sentiment of America.”

Burt Steel / AP

David Duke, a former grand wizard of the Ku Klux Klan and self-described "racial realist," says Donald Trump is the best Republican candidate for president because he "understands the real sentiment of America."

Duke, who unsuccessfully ran for president as a Democrat in 1988 and later served in the Louisiana House of Representatives, noted Trump's experience as a salesman and his "great sense" of what people want to buy.

"I praise the fact that he's come out on the immigration issue. I'm beginning to get the idea that he's a good salesman. That he's an entrepreneur and he has a good sense of what people want to hear what they want to buy," said Duke on his radio program last week after noting that he had previously been critical of Trump's run.

"And I think he realizes that his path to popularity toward power in the Republican Party is talking about the immigration issue. And he has really said some incredibly great things recently. So whatever his motivation, I don't give a damn. I really like the fact that he's speaking out on this greatest immediate threat to the American people."

Later in his show, Duke said his view on Trump was evolving.

"I've said from the beginning I think his campaign is good in the sense that it's bringing these issues to a discussion which we have to have in America. And he's continuing to move the envelope further and I think he understands the real sentiment of America."

Duke, who said he wasn't sure if Trump's proposals are sincere or are just a means to getting the nomination, spoke favorably of Trump's policy calling for mass deportation of undocumented immigrants, saying it was the government's role.

After going on a rant about "Jewish domination" of the media, Duke said Trump is saying things few other Republicans say about immigration

"Trump, he's really going all out. He's saying what no other Republicans have said, few conservatives say. And he's also gone to point where he says it's not just illegal immigration, it's legal immigration," Duke said, adding Trump has also talked about companies are taking advantage of the H1B visa program. Duke added that he felt the big technology companies were headed by "Zios."

Duke said The Donald, while untrustworthy, was "the best of the lot" running.

"So this is a great opportunity," Duke said. "So although we can't trust him to do what he says, the other Republican candidates won't even say what he says. So he's certainly the best of the lot. And he's certainly somebody that we should get behind in terms, ya know, raising the image of this thing."

Here's the audio of the program:

w.soundcloud.com

Scott Walker's Remarkably Consistent, Two Decade Fight Against Abortion

$
0
0

Tami Chappell / Reuters

In July, Scott Walker signed a bill banning abortions after 20 weeks in Wisconsin with only one exception: when the mother is undergoing a medical emergency.

The new law is similar to those passed in other states in recent years, but for Walker this was the culmination of decades of political activism. The Republican presidential candidate’s public union busting may have made him a hero to conservatives and a villain to organized labor. But the driving position of his career — even back in college — has been something else entirely: restricting abortion.

“I'm pro-life, I've always been pro-life, and I've got a position that I think is consistent with many Americans out there,” Walker told Megyn Kelly in the first Republican debate, “in that I believe that that is an unborn child that's in need of protection out there. And I've said many a time that that unborn child can be protected, and there are many other alternatives that can also protect the life of that mother.”

And in interviews with 20 lawmakers, friends, and advocates on either side of the issue in the state of Wisconsin, people told BuzzFeed News the same thing: Walker’s opposition to abortion has been unwavering and intense.

It even got him elected in the first place.

“Support of abortion opponents is credited in Walker’s victory,” read the Milwaukee Journal headline in 1993 after he successfully secured the Republican nomination in a contentious five-way primary to fill a vacant state assembly seat.

An outspoken opponent of abortion rights might be a risky bet in some parts of Wisconsin — but in the conservative Wauwatosa, there was ample opportunity to fill the seat with the staunchest ally pro-life groups could find, and they did, in Walker.

Mary Jo Baas, the only pro-choice Republican in that race, called Walker’s position “an essential issue for him” — something that set him apart in a crowded Republican field, and left him poised to capitalize on the support of a pro-life movement eager to maximize its power and influence.

“When everybody is Republican, and everybody wants lower taxes, and everybody wants school choice, and everybody wants economic development,” Baas told BuzzFeed News, “it was an issue where he had — he was knowledgeable, he was active, he felt passionate about it, and it was at a time when the pro-life organizations could make a huge difference in the campaign.”

Baas and another opponent in that race, Barbara Kraetsch, cited abortion and Walker’s position as the decisive issue. “That hasn't changed for him,” Kraetsch said. “I don't know that he has necessarily modified that position in any way.” Kraetsch noted that Walker in particular benefited from the campaign work of Wisconsin Right to Life, the group which Walker had first encountered during his time at Marquette University where he’d served as the Students for Life campus president.

“He was always — he's very, very sincerely in favor of life, and in favor of protection of unborn children, in favor of assisting their mothers,” recounted Barbara Lyons who retired last year after 27 years as the executive director of Wisconsin Right to Life. She identified herself as “a personal friend” to both Walker and his wife, though declined to speak as a representative of Wisconsin Right to Life.

In the legislature, Walker certainly made good on his promise. From 1995 — the first year for which complete records are readily available — until the time he left Madison in 2002, Walker leant his name as either sponsor or co-sponsor to nearly every piece of legislation aiming to restrict abortion in the Assembly’s records.

Aside from a smattering of bills from when Walker was running for Milwaukee County Executive — many of which he had supported in the past – there are only three abortion-restricting bills from those years that do not bear Walker’s name.

“There are some people who just vote pro-life, and some who are out in front on the issues,” Rep. Glenn Grothman, who was vice-chair of the Republican caucus in the Wisconsin State Assembly, told BuzzFeed News. “He was out in front on that issue.”

The legislation that Walker sponsored or co-sponsored in the Assembly sought to curtail abortion in a wide variety of ways, although most of it was never signed into law. Aside from the now-enjoined partial-birth abortion ban, the only other major piece of Walker-backed legislation explicitly about abortion that became law while Walker was in the Assembly was a 1995 bill that broadened Wisconsin’s “informed consent” requirements.

The bill required that a woman seeking an abortion be told, among other things, “[t]he details of the medical or surgical method that will be used in performing or inducing the abortion,” and “[t]hat the state encourages the woman to view an ultrasonic image and hear the heartbeat of her unborn child before she decides to have an abortion.” The bill also instituted a 24-hour waiting period between when a woman was told the requisite information, and when the abortion could be performed.

On its way to passage, the state senate amended the bill to allow for waivers of the waiting period in cases when the pregnancy at issue was the result of rape or incest. When the bill was returned to the Assembly, Walker and three other lawmakers offered another amendment, restricting such waivers to cases in which the rape or incest has been reported to “law enforcement authorities,” and “the physician who is to perform or induce the abortion, a qualified person assisting the physician or another qualified physician” receives confirmation from those authorities that such a report has been made.

In such cases, the amendment allowed for the waiting period to be waived for pregnancies resulting from rape, and “reduced to at least two hours” for pregnancies resulting from incest. The amendment was included in the version of the bill that was signed into law.

“Gov. Walker was very instrumental in trying to get legislation passed to protect all life,” former Rep. Bonnie Ladwig told BuzzFeed News. She worked with Walker on a 1997 bill to make the performance of a partial-birth abortion a Class A felony — subjecting violators to life imprisonment. While the ban that they worked on was signed into law, its enforcement is currently enjoined — because it made exception only for abortions necessary to protect the life, and not the health, of the mother.

Most of the bills Walker backed, however, never made it out of the legislature.

Among these were multiple bills that would have shielded from civil liability physicians who failed to inform prospective parents of fetal abnormalities that may have led the parents to choose to abort.

A Walker-backed bill that would have barred providers that engage in “abortion-related activity” from participating in Wisconsin’s “volunteer health care provider program,” also failed to pass, as did several bills Walker co-sponsored that would have tightened the restrictions on public funding of organizations that perform “abortion-related activities,” or affiliate with organizations that do so.

Walker also supported an ill-fated bill that would have modified the state’s “parental consent” law. That bill would have eliminated the right of adult family members other than parents and legal guardians to sign the form granting consent for an un-emancipated minor to have an abortion, and would have required the parent’s signature to be notarized. The bill also curtailed the ability of members of the clergy to assist a minor in receiving a waiver of the parental consent requirement. Finally, the bill would have done away with an existing exception to the consent requirements, for cases when “a psychiatrist or psychologist states in writing that he or she believes that the minor is likely to commit suicide rather than seek consent or a judicial waiver.”

In addition to sponsoring or co-sponsoring legislation, Walker was the lead author on two sets of abortion-related bills.

In the 1997-1998 session, Walker introduced a bill that would have placed “prohibitions on the use of public employes [sic] and public property for activities relating to abortion.”

The proposed prohibitions would have gone far beyond restricting the use of taxpayer dollars to pay for abortion procedures.

Opponents of the bill alleged that Walker’s proposal would prohibit public hospitals from performing abortions to save the life of the mother and would also forbid medical students and residents in the University of Wisconsin system to learn about abortion through performing them at UW hospitals.

A representative of the Wisconsin Section of the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists testified that the bill “would severely compromise the ability of Wisconsin women to obtain abortion services for medically indicated second trimester terminations of pregnancy in this state.”

“The abortion issue in the United States has been and continues to be one its [sic] most divisive issues,” the testimony continues. “This bill, however, crosses the line into legislating what is accepted as well grounded, legitimate, reasonable medical practice.”

After the bill was defeated, Walker tried to have its contents incorporated into the annual budget two years later. He told the Associated Press that he was unconcerned about the measure’s ramifications for the teaching of medicine in the state.

“To me, there's a parallel with some of the limitations that are put on us as legislators,” Walker told the AP. "We can't put campaign literature out of the Capitol with taxpayers' money. This is the same kind of limitation."

It was also in 1997 that Walker introduced for the first of three consecutive sessions a “conscience clause” bill intended to protect medical professionals with religious objections from performing duties that they felt went against the dictates of their faith, including pharmacists who refused to fill a prescription for the morning-after pill. The bill was mainly directed at activities and medications related to abortion and euthanasia, including the morning-after pill.

Walker left the Assembly in 2002, after winning a special election for Milwaukee County Executive, a position that didn’t lend itself to the same kind of anti-abortion actions that Walker had taken as a legislator.

In 2006, Walker entered the Republican gubernatorial primary, eventually losing the nomination to Mark Green. Before he dropped out, however, Walker dropped his long-standing opposition to the death penalty, which, according to media reports from that time, was closely tied to his position on abortion.

“Walker's turnabout caught some of his friends by surprise because he had been an ardent death penalty foe, saying that stance was in line with his anti-abortion views,” an article in the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel read.

“The timing certainly doesn't hurt,” the article quotes Walker acknowledging. “‘You're not going to get me hiding from that.”

In a statement released at the time, Walker noted that in the past he had been concerned that innocent people could be put to death, and that’s why he believed death-penalty convictions should be based solely on the existence of solid DNA evidence.

“Finally, it is something of a conflict for people like me who have pro-life beliefs and who always to seek to protect innocent life, but the connection to the scientifically pure DNA evidence insures that only the guilty will face the death penalty in this state,” Walker said in the statement.

The flip didn’t hurt Walker’s standing with the right-to-life movement in Wisconsin — when he ran (successfully) for governor again four years later, he was endorsed by both Wisconsin Right to Life and Pro-Life Wisconsin.

After he was elected governor in the 2010 Republican wave, he launched a fight against public-sector unions that brought him into the national spotlight, but also continued to advocate for abortion-limiting measures. Walker signed a mandatory-ultrasound bill, and signed into law measures that prevented state funds from going to Planned Parenthood — which ultimately resulted in the organization closing five health centers in rural areas.

The one exception: an ad that ran during Walker’s difficult re-election bid in 2014 — and angered people on both sides of the debate.

In the ad, he defended legislation that put limits on abortion. In the process, he said the final decision rests between “a woman and her doctor.”

“Hi, I'm Scott Walker,” Walker says, looking directly into the camera. "I’m pro-life, but there’s no doubt in my mind the decision of whether or not to end a pregnancy is an agonizing one.”

“That’s why I support legislation to increase safety and to provide more information for a woman considering her options,” he continues. “The bill leaves the final decision to a woman and her doctor.”

“Now, reasonable people can disagree on this issue,” Walker concludes. “Our priority is to protect the health and safety of all Wisconsin citizens."

The ad, according to spokesperson for Walker’s presidential campaign, was specifically about mandatory pre-abortion ultrasounds.

“His point was that requiring it was a safety enhancer. But abortion is still legal and the decision, after the ultrasound, which by law has to be visible to the woman, she and her doctor decide,” the spokesperson wrote in an email to BuzzFeed News.

Even a year later, the mere mention of the ad elicits strong reactions from advocates — even though nobody seems to think that it reflects Walker’s true feelings on the issue.

“He talks about ‘abortion is a difficult issue that should be left between a woman and her doctor,’ that’s directly from one of Planned Parenthood’s — that’s our language that we use, right?” said Nicole Safar, policy director at Planned Parenthood of Wisconsin. “He certainly didn’t have any qualms with going up on TV and saying that, while at the same time having worked his entire career to make abortion illegal in our state.”

“The business of politics is messy,” said Julaine Appling, the president of a conservative advocacy group called Wisconsin Family Action. “You know, the governor was making those decisions — whether I liked it or not, those were his decisions to make.”

“Does it give me pause as to where the governor himself is?” Appling said. “No.”

Texas Appeals Court Stops Execution Of Nicaraguan Man That Was Set For Wednesday

$
0
0

Bernardo Tercero, a Nicaraguan national, was convicted for the murder of Robert Berger in 1997. According to the appeals court, however, Tercero’s lawyers claim the state presented false testimony at trial.

A member of the Nicaraguan Human Rights Center holds a picture of Nicaraguan Bernardo Aban Tercero during a demonstration against his scheduled execution in Managua, Nicaragua, Monday, Aug. 24, 2015.

Esteban Felix / AP

WASHINGTON — Texas's highest criminal court on Tuesday put the scheduled execution of Bernardo Aban Tercero, a Nicaraguan national, on hold. Tercero was set to be executed on Wednesday.

Tercero was convicted in 2000 for the 1997 murder of Robert Berger, who was killed while Tercero and another person were attempting to rob a dry cleaners.

Scheduled for execution Wednesday, Tercero filed an application with the trial court claiming that "he was denied due process because the State presented false testimony at his trial."

On Tuesday, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals found that Tercero's claim met the state's requirements to bring a claim at such a late date — meaning it either includes new information that could not have been presented previously or that it provides evidence that, but for an unconstitutional action, no reasonable juror could have reached the conclusion this jury reached.

The appeals court sent Tercero's request back to the trial court and put his execution on hold until the trial court resolves the claim.

One judge on the appeals court dissented.

The Unofficial Spokesperson For Biden’s Unofficial Presidential Campaign Could Be A Problem

$
0
0

Joe Biden might run for president. He might not. But the consideration of a run has already drawn him closer to a person — former South Carolina Democratic chair Dick Harpootlian — who could be a liability the moment Biden made it official.

Yuri Gripas / Reuters

WASHINGTON — For Vice President Biden, the presidential speculation that has lit up political coverage in recent weeks is all about South Carolina. And that means it's all about Biden's loudest, brashest, and most public supporter: former state Democratic Party Chair Dick Harpootlian.

That could be a problem.

Harpootlian is an old-school politico, with connections across South Carolina that are the envy of his fellow Democrats and a political acumen that draws him praise from the most prominent Republicans in the state. He's Biden's best ally should a presidential run be afoot: He's got money, connections and at least could conceptually put the South Carolina primary in play, according to observers in the state.

But, in an era in which an increasingly diversified Democratic coalition stresses the politics of inclusive language, Harpootlian's got a mouth on him — one that sometimes brings joy to Democrats, often brings eyerolls, and on many occasions has at least skirted with the line if not outright crossed it.

"Dick is like a great defensive end in football," South Carolina' last Democratic governor, Jim Hodges, a Hillary Clinton supporter, told BuzzFeed News in an interview earlier this month. "He's going to get you a lot of sacks but on occasion he's going to get you a roughness call."

If Biden runs, for instance, Harpootlian's infamous antagonism toward South Carolina's Republican governor, Nikki Haley, could prove a particular woe for the Biden team, particularly as Haley has seen a recent national political resurgence after her successful bid to take down the Confederate flag from the grounds of the state capitol. In 2013, he predicted the defeat of Haley, the daughter of Indian immigrants, by promising his party would "send Nikki Haley back to wherever the hell she came from." The line came while Harpootlian was at a party event featuring Biden as the keynote speaker. Harpootlian called Republican outcry at the comment "attempting to feign insult" and told Politico he meant "Lexington County" when he said "wherever the hell she came from."

A couple days later, he added another layer to the clarification for the comments seen as racially tinged that was seen as tinged with sexism.

"She's from Bamberg, South Carolina, where she was an accountant in her parents' clothing store called Exotica," Harpootlian told MSNBC. "All I'm suggesting is she needs to go back to being an accountant in a dress store rather than being this fraud of a governor that we have." The interview blew up, and Jon Stewart condemned it.

A year earlier, Harpootlian became news at the Democratic National Convention just across the South Carolina border in Charlotte. He said Haley's participation in daily Republican press conferences held in a basement near the site of the DNC meant she was "down in the bunker a la Eva Braun." It is a general rule of thumb that Nazi comparisons are far over the line, and Republicans, led by party chair Reince Priebus, did what anyone would and attacked the comment.

On the floor of the DNC, one South Carolina delegate told a reporter, "Dick gets a little carried away sometimes."

Harpootlian did not see it that way. "Hell no. What am I apologizing for?" he told CNN. "I don't even know if Eva Braun was a Nazi or not, but I know she dated one." He also said he was surprised to learn Haley had feelings to be hurt, and said his comment was about the location of GOP's convention press conferences, not the political leanings of the governor.

In the current cycle, Harpootlian has been a go-to source for comments about Hillary Clinton that other Democrats won't make, or at least won't make on the record. "There's always another shoe to drop with Hillary," he told the Washington Post in March. "The chatter down here is, 'Is this the best we can do?'"

He later told told Bloomberg Clinton was "uniquely unqualified to run a campaign."

Harpootlian has been a close political ally of Biden's in the past, and has stepped up into a bigger role as the new round of Biden speculation began. Earlier this month, Harpootlian — who made his fortune as a trial attorney in South Carolina — gave $10,000 to Draft Biden, the super PAC pushing Biden to run. Harpootlian also joined up with the group, pledging to raise money for it, and donate more of his own.

Harpootlian is quoted constantly in stories about a Biden presidential run, but his penchant for over-the-top rhetoric could mean he quickly becomes more trouble than he's worth to a Biden campaign. Earlier this month, while Biden was in South Carolina on vacation and mulling a bid, he met with Harpootlian for an hour, according to the New York Times. After the meeting, Harpootlian was once again Biden's chief presidential spokesperson, telling the paper details of the meeting and plans laid down by the vice president to take further steps down the road toward a run.

Draft Biden recently overhauled its communications and fundraising infrastructure, adding in more experienced talent to manage media relations and raising money that could quickly be converted into resources for Biden's presidential campaign, should the time come. The expansion at Draft Biden could mean Harpootlian's role as unofficial spokesperson for the vice president might diminish, at least when it comes to on-the-record quotes.

A top aide at Draft Biden praised Harpootlian as a Biden ally, as a Democratic strategist, and as a political supporter. The South Carolinian is a consistent and reliable supporter of Biden — unsurprisingly, perhaps, there is a lot of positive sentiment about him among people ready to help should Biden decide to run. Harpootlian is not a central strategist at the group and is not on daily strategy calls or part of the regular daily routine at Draft Biden, according to the aide. The source declined to comment on Harpootlian's incendiary comments about Haley in the past, saying those questions were best left to Harpootlian himself. Questions about what role Harpootlian would play in a presidential campaign were best left to a potential Biden campaign manager, the aide said.

Harpootlian did not respond to several emails. Biden's office declined to comment on the vice president's current relationship with Harpootlian.

Though Harpootlian has been one of the harshest critics of Clinton and her campaign, her supporters in South Carolina do not have any hard feelings.

"You want someone like Dick on your team. I'm on Hillary's team and I say you want someone like Dick on your team," Bakari Sellers, a former Democratic state House member and current vice chair of the South Carolina Democrats, told BuzzFeed News in an interview early this month. "I would definitely rather have him on my team than cutting us every day."

Sellers, 30, is leading voice in a new generation of South Carolina political leaders. He said Harpootlian's style was effective.

"Dick Harpootlian, and we're moving away from this because of social media and because of the role South Carolina, Dick Harpootlian is the last true kingmaker," he said. He recounted a story of another Democratic presidential candidate asking to be Harpootlian's "second choice" during a meeting he witnessed in late July.

"I don't think it's outdated," Sellers said, when asked if Harpootlian's tone was missing the mark in modern politics, where the outbursts of supporters can often come back to haunt a candidate. "Dick is gonna Dick. That's the best way you can put it. He's gonna do what he's gonna do."

The Biden for president idea was considered years ago, and has reemerged in recent weeks, amid reports that some in the VP's orbit are pressing him to take on Clinton and try a third run for the White House, particularly in the midst of some concern about Clinton's standing.

Republicans in South Carolina say Harpootlian fits the Biden brand, even if that means comments that might not be the most helpful to a presidential candidate.

"Voters seem to want authenticity above all else...so it's no surprise Joe Biden and Dick Harpootlian might join forces," Matt Moore, South Carolina Republican Party chair, told BuzzFeed News. "They are the polar opposite of Hillary Clinton and her scripted campaign."

A Biden run might be an uphill climb, but Harpootlian has nothing to lose and has the skills necessary to make it at least uncomfortable for the Clinton team in South Carolina, according to observers in the state.

"There's really no downside for Harpootlian," Moore said. "He will never again be on the Clinton's Christmas card list."

In South Carolina, where rowdy politics basically rule, Harpootlian's tongue hasn't yet lost him the hearts of many politicos in the state, regardless of the side they're on.

"Most people don't talk shit about him publicly," said a prominent South Carolina Republican strategist. "He's an awesome guy."

Huckabee Says China, Not Mexico, Is Number One Source Of Undocumented Immigrants

$
0
0

Mexico is in fact the number one source of undocumented immigrants in America. One demographer told BuzzFeed News Huckabee is mixing up legal and illegal immigration.

Mandel Ngan / AFP / Getty Images

Former Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee said on the radio Tuesday that China, not Mexico, is the largest source of illegal immigration to the United States.

"Well, I think the key is seal the border, you know we talk about it," stated Huckabee 103.7 "The Buzz" on Tuesday. "So we know we can do this, but when people talk about, 'well what are we going to do with the folks who are here' and on and on. I mean all of those are important things, but not until we secure the border because until that happens nothing matters."

"But there're a couple of myths. Mexico is actually not the number one source of illegal immigrants, China is, and I think Indonesia is second. Mexico is third. So while a lot of people assume that all the illegal immigration is coming south of the border, that's actually not the case. Most of it is coming from Asia these days."

Huckabee appeared to be referencing a census report from earlier this year, which showed India and China surpassing Mexico as the top source of total immigration to the United States. The researchers counted any person who was foreign-born as an immigrant. It did not take into account their legal status.

According to one demographer, Huckabee is mixing up legal and illegal immigration.

"The Census report from earlier this year showed that among new immigrants overall (both legal and unauthorized), China now out numbers Mexico, and Mexico is now tied with India (not Indonesia)," Mark Lopez director of Hispanic research at Pew Research Center told BuzzFeed News.

"But, not all new immigrants are in the country illegally," stated Lopez. "And Mexico still dominates that population."

"China leads only among the combined (legal and undocumented)," added Lopez.

Take a listen to the audio:

w.soundcloud.com

The Behind The Scenes Jockeying To Speak To Univision And Telemundo Ahead Of 2016

$
0
0

Top campaigns are making the pilgrimage to Miami to talk with the Spanish-language giants — and some aren’t. But there is also tension between the Bush and Clinton camps on how the more adversarial Univision has covered them.

Univision

Shortly after Emily Benavides joined Jeb Bush's campaign as Hispanic media director, she took a trip to the nearby Hialeah headquarters of Telemundo and also met with Univision. Shortly after Amanda Renteria joined Hillary Clinton's campaign earlier this year as national political director, she too took a trip to South Florida, this one to Univision.

There, each took a series of meetings with executives, producers, and journalists at the giants in the Hispanic media industry that continued beyond those first encounters. This is not a coincidence — it's the new normal. The deep and consistent outreach to Spanish-language networks and journalists by the two campaigns represent an early bet that Hispanic voters will play a key role in deciding the next president of the United States.

But cultivating relationships with the networks — Univision, which reaches 93% of Latinos, and Telemundo — means more than simple meetings. Campaign officials navigate the complex series of relationships and past coverage, a high-stakes dance in playing networks and anchors off each other, where Univision is king and more adversarial, and Telemundo is rising and hoping to establish itself during the 2016 cycle.

Take, for instance, the example of the Bush campaign.

During her trip to Hialeah, Benavides met with Telemundo executives and talent, including anchor Jose Diaz-Balart. She's had lunch with journalist Maria Peña from La Opinión, connected with the Spanish-language newswire EFE, and Skyped into the studios down in Florida to get face time with reporters from Univision and Telemundo. Her efforts represent the broad-based approach that many of the campaigns are taking — at least the ones with an eye toward the Hispanic vote.

But the campaign has also been frustrated with, in particular, Univision, the network that often draws the ire of Republicans for its immigration coverage, and ties to Clinton. In April, before Bush formally announced that he was running, Univision ran a segment on his wife's aunt, who works for meager wages in Mexico.

The segment featured a Mexican woman saying that she hoped Columba Bush would remember her people if she becomes the First Lady — and concluded with Columba Bush's aunt saying she hoped her niece would remember her blood. Hispanic Republicans and the campaign were annoyed with the segment, and Bush gave his first national Spanish-language interview instead to Telemundo's Diaz-Balart at the end of July.

Telemundo is smaller than Univision but has seen an uptick in viewership. During weekdays in July, it registered "the smallest gap with Univision in its history" with only 238,000 viewers separating it among the coveted 18-49 group. Comparatively, in July 2013, "the gap between Telemundo and Univision was nearly 1.2 million adults 18-49 in weekday primetime," according to numbers reported by the network.

The interview with Telemundo and Bush should be seen through that prism. A source said when Obama, who has no love lost for Univision's Jorge Ramos after his tough interviews of the president on immigration, sat down with Telemundo earlier this year, the White House took into account the network's relationship with different NBC News properties. Telemundo's parent company is NBCUniversal. (NBCUniversal announced plans to invest in BuzzFeed.)

This interview may have already paid dividends. A Gallup poll released Monday found that besides Donald Trump cratering with Hispanics, Jeb Bush's favorability went up a significant 21 points from July when it was +1, to August when it was +22. The Telemundo interview, where Bush talked about his Hispanic family, was July 27.

The tension between the campaign and Univision appears to be ongoing. On at least one occasion, Bush who speaks fluent Spanish, has gotten himself on Univision without having to speak directly to the network. In an interview with ABC News shortly after his official announcement, a source said his campaign requested a Spanish-speaking reporter to give soundbites to, which Univision was then forced to take because it has a partnership with ABC News.

Univision — across party lines — remains a point of contention. Marco Rubio and the network had a high-profile spat in 2011. The network planned a story on a decades-old drug bust of the senator's brother-in-law, but offered to approach on-air coverage of the story differently — if Rubio agreed to an interview with Ramos. Sources say the relationship is not perfect but has improved since then.

This year, he's spoken to Ramos on Univision and Diaz-Balart on Telemundo — and his campaign already has existing relationships with many of the network's producers and reporters in Florida, as well.

The Clinton campaign, too, has been frustrated by Univision. Clinton participated an interview with Maria Elena Salinas on Univision two weeks ago. Taking place two weeks after Bush's interview with Telemundo, the campaign perhaps hoped to also make the interview more biographical and personal. But while the interview was wide-ranging, a source said the campaign was annoyed with questions about her private email server, which have also dominated English-language media.

This is not the first time the campaign has chided Univision for its coverage, a source outside the network said. At the kickoff event on Roosevelt Island in New York City earlier this summer, communications director Jennifer Palmieri spoke with Univision and said the campaign would like to see the network cover more issues besides immigration.

Earlier this year, Renteria met with the president and vice president of news at Univision. She met with producers and journalists, too, spending a morning there and taking the time to shoot some biographical segments for the Fusion network.

Clinton campaign officials told BuzzFeed News they have engaged Spanish-language media on issues like education, the economy, and voting rights, in addition to immigration.

The network is able to push the campaigns because it is still a dominant presence when it comes to reaching Latinos. Univision.com is the most visited Spanish-language website among U.S. online Hispanics and 83% of its flagship Noticiero Univision 18-49 audience does not watch any of the English-language evening news programs on ABC, CBS, or NBC, according to internal Univision figures.

Still, many Republican campaigns have not made outreach to the Spanish-language networks a priority. Scott Walker's campaign, which hasn't made Latino voters a priority in general, is said to not be engaging the networks, with Ted Cruz being difficult to get and Rand Paul, as well.

"Telemundo wishes Republicans would reach out more," a source at the network said, calling it an opportunity for them. The lack of engagement costs Republicans who need Hispanic voters more, the source said, noting that Telemundo has reached out often.

A Univision source said representatives have reached out to all 17 Republican candidates and the five Democratic candidates, but not all of them are available to sit down with the network. A separate source said Univision's message to the Clinton campaign, for example, was that they don't just want access at the lower levels, but to officials like campaign chairman John Podesta, Palmieri, and Renteria, as well as Clinton herself.

Martin O'Malley, who went on Ramos' Al Punto last year during the height of the surge of unaccompanied minors from Central America, benefits from the relationships of one of his top staffers, Gabriela Domenzain. She used to work at Univision and led Obama's 2012 Hispanic media operation. O'Malley has been on locally on Univision in Nevada and the campaign has plans to bring him down to Florida soon. Bernie Sanders was recently interviewed by Ramos in Fort Lauderdale for Univision and Fusion, has been on Univision affiliates in Las Vegas and San Francisco, and has a national Telemundo interview coming.

And the networks are looking forward to showcase events featuring the candidates next year, too. Telemundo is holding a Republican debate with NBC News and National Review, in Houston, Texas on Feb. 26. After public finger-pointing with the RNC when it didn't get a debate, Univision will hold a Republican candidates' forum in addition to its March DNC debate.

For the candidates who do speak to this crucial but harder to reach audience, there is an opportunity to show a side that Hispanic voters may identify with, but English-language media may not pick up on.

In his interview with Diaz-Balart on Telemundo, Bush talked about instances when his kids faced discrimination because they were Latino, he told the story of falling in love with his Mexican-American wife, and made a promise that he would make "immigration reform" a priority.

Speaking to Salinas, Clinton shared what she learned from losing to an "extraordinarily charismatic, impressive candidate" like Obama, about how her education plan would help Latinos who are going to college at higher rates, and about how she seeks to make an immigration overhaul with a path to citizenship a mobilizing voting issue for Hispanics.

And Latinos were the only ones watching.


View Entire List ›


Hillary Clinton Camp Sees Proof Of Undercover Conservative Sting

$
0
0

Andrew Burton / Getty Images

For the Hillary Clinton campaign, a four-day investigation has come to a close.

Aides point to emails and a screenshot, uncovered on Tuesday, as proof that Project Veritas is linked to a string of recent incidents in Iowa: a series of undercover maneuvers by fake supporters to trick or provoke Clinton volunteers and operatives into doing illegal, inappropriate, or embarrassing things.

The documents, provided by the campaign, show messages sent to Tom D’Angora, a Clinton volunteer in New York, by a woman called Allison Holmes.

The correspondence, dated Aug. 19, appears to link Holmes to the conservative group, Project Veritas — and to what the Clinton campaign has described as the recent attempts by three supposed supporters in Iowa, one of whom also went by Allison Holmes, to bait staffers and volunteers into stepping outside protocol.

On Friday, the Clinton campaign identified Holmes as one of three people linked to these alleged Iowa sting operations, as first reported by TIME.

In the new messages, pictured below, Holmes asks D'Angora, the New York volunteer, if she and two friends can attend a voter registration event on Aug. 22. (Incidentally, there was no such event planned for Aug. 22, according to the campaign.) Holmes identifies the friends as Jamie Kingston and Michelle Harvey.

But Holmes's initial email to D'Angora also came with an apparently inadvertent attachment: a screenshot suggesting that at least one of those "friends" — Kingston — was presenting him or herself under a false identity.

The image appears to show an email listing Kingston's name and contact information, prefaced by the note, "Hey my falsified information is..."

Project Veritas, founded five years ago by the activist James O’Keefe, did not deny the claims or the evidence put forward by Clinton officials. The organization, according to a statement provided by communications director Daniel Pollack, "does not comment on ongoing investigations, real or imagined."

The Iowa incidents allegedly involving Holmes, as well as two other women, according to campaign officials, bear all the markings of what they described as a subversive effort four to ensnare Clinton supporters and volunteers into bad behavior. The two other women went by Jess Koski and Jess Jones, aides said.

The campaign described four separate occasions involving Holmes, Koski, or Jones: The first took place on July 17 in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, when one of the women attempted to hand a cash contribution to Clinton campaign volunteers and interns. (Campaign finance regulation does not allow cash donations.) Next, on Aug. 13, one of the women identified herself as Canadian and asked a Clinton campaign "fellow," or unpaid organizer, for instructions to falsify a donation. (Another violation.)

On Aug. 19, a woman asked the Clinton campaign if her parents could give an additional $2,700 to the campaign in her own name, in order to skirt campaign contribution limits. And most recently, on Aug. 20, one of the women returned to a campaign office in Des Moines after supposedly registering Iowans to vote, when she asked staffers there whether she could refuse to register non-Clinton supporters. (Doing so would amount to yet another violation.)

On Friday, just after the episode in Des Moines, the Clinton campaign went public with their suspicions in the TIME report, apparently hoping to smoke out Project Veritas or the motivations behind the three women in question.

In response, Project Veritas posted a headline on their website homepage that ran, "Paranoia in Hillary's Campaign?" An attached blogpost added, “The level of paranoid within the Clinton campaign is certainly interesting...One wonders what they are hiding over at Clinton HQ, aside from perhaps a few emails."

The founder of Project Veritas, O’Keefe, is still best known for his aggressive video campaign in 2009 against the group, now defunct, known as ACORN, or the Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now.

The email exchange, provided by the Clinton campaign on Tuesday, starts with a woman who identifies herself as Allison Holmes asking to bring a friend to a voter registration event.

Courtesy of the Clinton Campaign

Attached to that email, according to the campaign, was this screenshot.

Courtesy of the Clinton Campaign

The campaign volunteer responded to the email from Holmes with information about the planned weekend of action (there was no voter registration event scheduled) and asked for the contact information of the friend.

Courtesy of the Clinton Campaign

Holmes responded with the information for Kingston. In the prior screenshot, Kingston's name and contact information is listed as "my falsified information." The screenshot appears to have been sent inadvertently.

Courtesy of the Clinton Campaign

Federal Judge Temporarily Halts Mississippi Executions

$
0
0

Judge Henry Wingate gave the order verbally on Tuesday in a case that challenges the state’s lethal injection methods as cruel and unusual. He has not yet elaborated on the reasoning behind the order.

The lethal injection chamber at the Mississippi State Penitentiary in Parchman, Miss., in 2002.

Rogelio Solis / ASSOCIATED PRESS

A federal judge has temporarily halted Mississippi from carrying out executions.

U.S. District Court Judge Henry Wingate gave the order verbally on Tuesday in response to a suit brought by death row inmates challenging Mississippi's lethal injection methods as cruel and unusual. There was no further written explanation, but Jim Craig, an attorney for one of the inmates on death row, said the judge is expected to give a longer explanation in the coming days.

Mississippi had hoped to execute inmate Richard Jordan on Thursday for a murder as part of a kidnapping in 1976. The state's execution protocol calls for three drugs — a sedative, followed by a paralytic and then a drug to cause cardiac arrest. The protocol is similar to the one approved by the U.S. Supreme Court this year, but inmates counter that the state is lacking safeguards that other states have — such as an EKG to verify the inmate is actually unconscious.

The inmates also say Mississippi is further constrained by state law that mandates executions be performed with an "ultra short-acting barbiturate or other similar drug." In the middle of litigation, the state switched its anesthetic to midazolam, the drug the Supreme Court recently approved. However, it is not a barbiturate.

Mississippi, like many other death penalty states, attempts to keep the supplier of its execution drugs a secret.

Attorney General Jim Hood's office has filed a notice with Wingate's court that it is appealing the ruling.

Martin O’Malley, Critic Of Sparse Debate Schedule, Was Accused Of Avoiding Debate In Maryland

$
0
0

As a presidential candidate struggling in the polls, O’Malley has called for more primary debates. When running for mayor and governor as the frontrunner, he faced criticism from his primary opponents for avoiding debates and forums.

Charlie Riedel / AP

Martin O'Malley has repeatedly criticized the Democratic National Committee for limiting the number of presidential primary debates to six, calling it "un-democratic" and part of the DNC's "coronation" of Hillary Clinton.

But as an incumbent mayor running for reelection in Baltimore and, later, during his campaign to be governor of Maryland, O'Malley was seen by his primary opponents as avoiding direct confrontations while coasting on his frontrunner status.

O'Malley was frequently attacked by Democratic primary opponent Douglas M. Duncan for avoiding direct confrontation during the 2006 race to be governor.

At one forum they both attended, the Baltimore Sun reported that O'Malley rebuffed the attempts of the Associated Press to get him on stage with his adversary. But while he was standing there alone, Duncan challenged him from his seat in the crowd, asking when they would debate each other.

O'Malley said, "Closer to election day," prompting Duncan to fire back, "Why not now? I'm here."

At the event, Duncan also used language reminiscent of O'Malley's current criticisms of the DNC and Clinton, arguing that the Democratic nominee in the previous gubernatorial election had won in a "coronation" and lost the general election as a result.

Duncan's campaign manager further criticized O'Malley for running a "classic front-runner's campaign" and thinking "he can avoid other candidates and issues." Those comments came as O'Malley was leading Duncan 47 to 33 in the polls.

As the 2006 gubernatorial campaign wore on, Duncan grew increasingly creative in his efforts to appear on stage with the face of Martin O'Malley. That June, according to the Washington Post, he appeared next to incumbent Republican Gov. Robert L. Ehrlich Jr. and O'Malley -- in the form of cardboard cutouts.

"That's the closest I can come to them," Duncan quipped. Duncan would withdraw from the race later that month before any debates were held, leaving O'Malley unchallenged.

A spokesperson for O'Malley's presidential campaign told BuzzFeed News that O'Malley's calls for more debates is consistent with the number of primary debates he has participated in during previous elections.

"It's a time honored tradition in Iowa and New Hampshire to hear early and often from Presidential candidates in debates, and this year's unquestionably restricted and limited schedule is unprecedented," O'Malley spokesperson Haley Morris told BuzzFeed News.

"Governor O'Malley has called for at least three debates in Iowa before the caucus and three debates in New Hampshire before the primary, which on the whole, is consistent with the number of primary debates he participated in in his previous elections."

According to the Baltimore Sun, in the 2003 mayoral reelection, O'Malley declined to attend an array of mayoral forums with his opponents in the months leading up to the Democratic primary, before finally agreeing to participate in three debates.

That August, after O'Malley agreed to participate in three debates, his primary opponent, Andrey Bundley, said, "The mayor has skipped out on at least four forums so far. He thought he could minimize my campaign by not showing up, but I guess he realized it was hurting him."

An O'Malley spokesperson noted that the number of debates O'Malley ultimately participated in during the Baltimore mayoral primary is consistent with the number of debates that have been held in that election previously and since.

In 2006 Maryland governor's general election race against Ehrlich, O'Malley and his team appeared more eager to engage. In the months leading up to the election, his and Ehrlich's spokespeople traded barbs, each accusing the other of obstructing attempts to schedule a debate.

That October, the two men having yet to meet for a formal debate and the Post reporting that Ehrlich was refusing to schedule one past mid-October, O'Malley's spokesman said, "At this point, we really don't think Bob Ehrlich is interested in debating."

The candidates ultimately debated each other twice, both on October 14, with one debate broadcast on that night and the other on the next.

Hillary Clinton On VA Shooting: "We Cannot Wait Any Longer" To Stop Gun Violence

$
0
0

Clinton tweeted her reaction to the shooting death of two journalists just outside of Roanoke, Virginia on Wednesday.

Isaac Brekken / Getty Images

Likewise, Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe, a longtime supporter of tighter gun restrictions, told the Washington Post it's time to "come together" to address gun violence.

"There are too many guns in the hands of people who should not have guns," McAuliffe said. "That is why I've long advocated for background checks. … We've got, in America, we've got to come together. There's too much gun violence in the United States of America."


View Entire List ›

Rand Paul: High Trump Poll Numbers Result Of Eager Pollsters

$
0
0

“…this is a poll of the undecided leaners.”

Ethan Miller / Getty Images

Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul says support for Donald Trump's presidential campaign is the result of pollsters pushing people to say who they are "kind of for now" and does not reflect a real commitment to Trump.

Paul's campaign has faltered in recent weeks and is suffering from lagging poll numbers.

"Well, one of the few things very people know is when they ask any poll right now two-thirds of the people who respond say they're undecided," Paul told radio host Mike Gallagher earlier this week of Trump's support.

"And they say, 'no really, tell us who you're really kind of for now,'" he continued. "And so really this is a poll of the undecided leaners. And so these are undecided that's leaning a direction. So it's very very much not a commitment."

"It's very early and if this were in January it'd be alarming because I don't think the country really needs a celebrity reality TV star to be our nominee. And so it's not January, a lot of time between."

Take a listen to the audio:

w.soundcloud.com

Viewing all 15742 articles
Browse latest View live




Latest Images